VALIDITY OF SECTION 194N (TDS ON CASH WITHDRAWAL)
(Below article was published before amendment under section 198 vide FA 2019(2), wherein sum deducted u/s 194N shall not be deemed to be income received- However its interesting to read the article in which the Author has suggested such amendment u/s 198)
1. A new section 194N (‘said Section’) is proposed to be
inserted in the Income-tax Act, 1961 (‘the Act’) Vide Finance bill 2019. Said
section provides for withholding of tax by the payer Banks, Co-opt societies
and Post offices engaged in banking activities (hereinafter referred as ‘bank/s’)
while paying any sum, or, as the case may be, aggregate of sums, in cash, in excess
of one crore rupees during the previous year.
2. The Question which arises here is, WHETHER SUCH PROVISION
IS VALID AS PER SCHEME OF THE INCOME TAX ACT?
3. Before arriving at the conclusion, let’s check out the
basic agenda or intention behind bringing
the provisions of TDS in the law of Income-tax.
3.1.Primary intention to bring the provisions of TDS is to
serve two purposes namely
-
Advance
collection of tax on income of payee
-
Reporting
of income of the payee/deductee
That is, a withholding tax is an income tax to be paid to
the government by the payer of the income. The tax is thus withheld or deducted
from the income due to the recipient.
4. Various provisions of the Act clearly state that tax has
to be deducted on the income part of the assessee. Let’s go through the relevant
sections of the Act,
4.1.Section 4 of the Act provides that income tax shall be
deducted on the income chargeable to tax, (section is reproduced
as under)
‘Charge of
income-tax.
4. (1) Where any Central Act enacts that
income-tax shall be charged for any assessment year at any rate or rates,
income-tax at that rate or those rates shall be charged for that year in
accordance with, and subject to the provisions (including provisions for the
levy of additional income-tax) of, this Act in respect of the total income of
the previous year of every person:
Provided that where by virtue of any provision of this
Act income-tax is to be charged in respect of the income of a period other than
the previous year, income-tax shall be charged accordingly.
(2) In respect
of income chargeable under sub-section (1), income-tax shall be deducted at the
source or paid in
advance, where it is so deductible or payable under any provision of this Act.’
4.2.Section 190 of the Act, which is a section under the
chapter XVII ‘Collection and Recovery of Tax’, enabling withholding of taxes on
income is
reproduced as under
‘Deduction at source and advance payment.
190. (1)
Notwithstanding that the regular assessment in respect of any income is to be
made in a later assessment year, the tax on such income shall be payable
by deduction or collection at source or by advance payment or by
payment under sub-section (1A) of section 192, as the case may be, in
accordance with the provisions of this Chapter.
(2) Nothing in
this section shall prejudice the charge of tax on such income under the
provisions of sub-section (1) of section 4.’
4.3.Section 198 of the Act sates that tax deducted is the
income received, (section is reproduced as under)
‘Tax deducted is income received.
198. All
sums deducted in accordance with the foregoing provisions of this Chapter
shall, for the purpose of computing the income of an assessee, be deemed to be
income received :
Provided that
the sum being the tax paid, under sub-section (1A) of section 192 for the purpose of computing the income of an
assessee, shall not be deemed to be income received.’
4.4.Section 199 of the
Act states that tax deducted shall be treated as payment of tax on behalf of the
person from whose income tax is deducted, (section is reproduced as under)
‘Credit for tax deducted.
199. (1) Any deduction made in
accordance with the foregoing provisions of this Chapter and paid to the
Central Government shall be treated as a payment of tax on behalf of the person
from whose income the deduction was made, or of the owner of the security, or
of the depositor or of the owner of property or of the unit-holder, or of the shareholder,
as the case may be.
(2)_ _
(3) _ _’
5. Therefore, from perusal of above highlighted
provisions of the Act it is clear that TAX CAN BE WITHHELD ONLY ON THE
INCOME OF THE RECIPIENT.
6.
Now, coming on the proposal to insert new
section 194N which provides for withholding of tax at the rate of 2% on payment
of any sum in cash exceeding Rs. 1crore in a year.
6.1.The aspect which
needs to be considered is whether the amount or sum paid by bank to the account
holder is the income earned by the account holder from the bank?
6.2.The obvious answer
to this question is NO (except interest payments or similar kind of incomes).
6.3.Bank is an
institute to accept deposits and repay the same on demand. The payment made by
the bank is of that sum which was either deposited by the account holder himself
or received by him in his account from someone else. That is to say, such payment
made by the bank is not the income generated by the account holder from the
bank.
7.
Further, three more aspects which needs
to be considered are that,
7.1.the provisos of
section 198 clearly states that the tax deducted is income received. Therefore,
the 2% amount withheld by the bank would then become income of the recipient.
7.2.also, there is
no amendment in proviso to section 198 where they could have stated that tax
deducted and paid u/s 194N shall not be deemed to be the income received.
(Please Note: amendment under section 198 vide FA 2019(2) has been done, wherein sum deducted u/s 194N shall not be deemed to be income received)
7.3.Further Finance
Act 2019 (2) provides for an amendment in subsection (1) to section 197 of the
Act, by inserting section 194M. Thus enabling deductee assessee to seek certificate
for lower rate of TDS in case of payment u/s 194M. But there is no such
amendment with regard to section 194N. Which means government itself is aware
that such payments by the banks are not forming part of income of the recipient,
and even then they have brought TDS provisions on such payments.
8.
Accordingly, the said section providing
for withholding of tax on such payments by the banks, in my opinion, is not
valid as per the scheme of the Act since tax is to be withheld only in case the
payment made is an income of the recipient which is chargeable to tax. Here, the
payment made by the bank is not the income generated through bank but is mere
transfer of funds.
Thanks and Regards,
Bhuvanesh V Kankani
B Com, CA , LLB
+91 9421847944Bhuvanesh V Kankani
B Com, CA , LLB
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Interesting to read such analysis.
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