ITAT Quashes Reopening for Singapore Entity; No Escapement if TDS Deducted under Sec 115A(5)
Issue
Whether the reopening of assessment under Section 147 against a Singapore-based foreign company (FPI) is valid when:
The company had no Permanent Establishment (PE) or Place of Effective Management (POEM) in India.
Its only income was interest on NCDs on which tax was withheld under Section 194LD.
It was exempt from filing a return of income under Section 115A(5).
The reopening was based solely on its status as a “non-filer” in the Non-Filers Management System (NMS) without tangible material suggesting income escapement.
Facts
Assessee: Argos Holdings Pte Ltd, a Singapore tax resident and SEBI-registered FPI (Category III).
Investment: Invested ₹448 Crores in Non-Convertible Debentures (NCDs) of an Indian company, Sugam Vanijya Holdings Pvt. Ltd.
Income: Earned interest income on which TDS was deducted at concessional rates under Section 194LD.
Reopening: The Assessing Officer (AO) reopened the case for AY 2015-16 & 2017-18, alleging income escapement because the assessee had high-value transactions but had not filed a return of income.
Assessment: The AO treated the entire investment (₹448 Cr) and interest as “undisclosed business income,” ignoring the FPI status and TRC, and alleging the assessee was a shell entity controlled from India (POEM).
Assessee’s Defense:
It was wound up/dissolved on 05.06.2021, before the notices were effectively served.
Under Section 115A(5), it was not required to file a return as tax was fully withheld.
The AO failed to establish any PE or POEM in India to tax the global income/investment.
Decision
The ITAT Delhi Bench allowed the appeal and quashed the reassessment proceedings.
No Jurisdiction: The Tribunal held that the AO initiated proceedings without recording proper satisfaction or tangible material. Relying merely on the “non-filer” status was insufficient, especially when the AO knew the assessee was a foreign entity with treaty protection.
Exemption u/s 115A(5): The Tribunal affirmed that since the assessee’s only income was interest covered under Section 194LD and tax was deducted at source, the assessee was statutorily exempt from filing a return under Section 115A(5).
No Escapement: Since there was no obligation to file a return, the non-filing could not constitute an “escapement of income.”
Void Ab Initio: The initiation of proceedings under Section 147 was held to be void ab initio due to lack of jurisdiction and failure to consider the specific exemptions available to non-residents.
Key Takeaways
NMS is Not Conclusive: A flag in the Non-Filers Management System (NMS) is not automatic proof of income escapement. AOs must verify if the non-filing is legally permitted (e.g., u/s 115A(5)).
Foreign Investors Protected: FPIs earning only interest/dividend income on which TDS is deducted are not required to file returns. Reopening assessments solely for non-filing in such cases is illegal.
Jurisdictional Fact: Establishing residence (POEM/PE) is a jurisdictional prerequisite for taxing a foreign company’s global income or investments. Without this foundation, Section 148 notices are invalid.
Dissolved Entity: Though not the primary ground for quashing here, the order notes that notices served on a dissolved foreign entity are generally invalid.
THE INCOME TAX APPELLATE TRIBUNAL
DELHI BENCH ‘D’: NEW DELHI
Argos Holdings Pte. Ltd.,
vs.
DCIT,
6, Raffles Quay, Circle Intl.Tax 1(1)(1),
24-04, Singapore – 999999.
ITA No.3633/DEL/2025
Date of Order : 06.11.2025
Judgement :- 1762428074-8kr8Dy-1-TO