India: Supreme Court Clarifies Taxation Of Offshore Discretionary Trust
- Supreme Court reiterates the principle that income of a discretionary trust cannot be taxed in the hands of a beneficiary unless distributed to the beneficiary.
- Where trustees have clearly retained the income of the trust and brought it forward year to year without disbursing it to the beneficiaries, the trust is discretionary.
- Fallout of this judgment (although not raised in this dispute) is the uncertainty it creates on the taxability of capital/corpus distributions to beneficiaries.
INTRODUCTION
In its decision in Commissioner of Wealth Tax, Rajkot v Estate of Late HMM Vikramsinhji of Gondal,1 the Supreme Court has reiterated the primary basis for difference in taxation of discretionary trusts versus determinate (or specific) trusts in respect of an offshore trust.
A discretionary trust is one where the specific shares of the beneficiaries are not known. That is, the trustee has the discretion to decide, from time to time, who (if anyone) among the beneficiaries is to benefit from the trust, and to what extent. In a determinate trust, the entitlement of the beneficiaries is fixed by the settlor, the trustees having no discretion in determining the amount of distributions to be made to the beneficiaries.
As per the Income Tax Act, 1961, the income of a discretionary trust is taxed in the hands of the trustee while the income of a determinate trust may be taxed either in the hands of the beneficiary or of the trustee in his capacity as the representative assesse. If it is the latter, the taxation in the hands of a trustee must be in the same manner and to the same extent that it would have been levied on the beneficiary. That is, the trustee would generally be able to avail all the benefits/deductions, etc. available to the beneficiary with respect to that beneficiary’s share of income.
BACKGROUND
Gondal’s2 former ruler, Maharaja Vikramsinhji had created two private trusts (“Settlor“) in the U.K.3 by executing two similar trust deeds in the U.K. in 1964. A foreign national was designated as the ‘Original Trustee’ under the two trust deeds. Beneficiaries of these two trusts were the Settlor, his children and remoter issue and any spouse of such children and remoter issue. The trust deeds defined the term ‘the Trustees’ to mean and include the Original Trustee or the other trustees for the time being appointed in terms of these deeds.
During his lifetime, the Settlor included the whole of the income arising from these trusts in his personal returns of income tax. After his death, the Settlor’s son (the “Taxpayer“) also included such income in his personal returns of income tax for certain assessment years. However, for later assessment years (which were in dispute in this appeal) the Taxpayer had not shown the income of the trusts claiming that inclusion of such income in earlier assessment years was done under a mistake. Notes attached to the statement of income claimed that the trusts were discretionary and the Taxpayer had not received any income from the trusts since the trustee decided to retain the net income. For this reason, the Taxpayer claimed that the trusts’ income was not includible in his income and was not liable to be taxed in his hands. However, the Assessing Officer added the income of the trusts to the Taxpayer’s personal return and assessed it to income tax.
The Taxpayer’s appeals against this order were decided against him both by the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) and the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal. However, the Gujarat High Court held in favour of the Taxpayer and the Revenue appealed to the Supreme Court.
CLAUSES IN DISPUTE
In order to determine whether the income was taxable to income tax in the hands of the Taxpayer, the key question to be decided was the nature of the trusts as discernible from the terms of the trust deeds. In the trust deeds in question, the interpretation of two clauses4 was in dispute.
Clause 3(2) provided that the Trustees shall hold the Trust Fund and income upon trust for the Beneficiaries for their advancement and maintenance and education at the discretion of the Trustees or of any other persons as the Maharaja shall appoint at any time during the specific period provided always that such power of appointment shall not be capable of being exercised: (a) by anyone other than the Settlor or his elder son or younger son; or (b) in favour of the person making the appointment save with the consent of the Trustees (being at least two in number or a trust corporation) such consent to be testified by their being parties to the deed of appointment and executing it.
Clause 4 provided that, subject to Clause 3, the Trustees shall hold the Trust Fund and income upon trust under certain terms, being that: (a) income of the Trust Fund accruing during the life of the Settlor shall belong and be paid to the Settlor; and (b) subject to the above, income of the Trust Fund accruing during the life of the elder son shall belong and be paid to the elder son. There were similar additional conditions regarding the younger son and descendants of the elder and younger sons.
PARTIES’ CONTENTIONS
The Taxpayer took the stand that:
- The trusts were discretionary in nature and income of these trusts was liable to tax in the hands of the trustees alone and not the beneficiaries.
- The statement of funds and income account of the trusts indicated that the trustee retained the net income of the trusts and brought it forward from year to year. The trustee had clearly exercised discretion and not disbursed any amount to the Beneficiaries.
- The trust deeds did not prescribe any time limit within which an additional trustee had to be appointed. The trust had already come into existence with the appointment of the foreign national as the sole trustee. Creation of the trust did not depend on appointment of additional trustees under Clause 3.
- Income of the UK trusts was not received or earned in India. Neither did it arise or accrue in India since the Beneficiaries’ right to receive had not been established.
- The Settlement Commission’s conclusion that the trust was not valid due to lack of trustee appointment cannot be accepted since the trust deeds’ definition of trustee included ‘Original Trustee’.
The Revenue argued that:
- The Supreme Court had already confirmed5 the order of the Settlement Commission that the trusts were specific and this could not be challenged in later proceedings on the same issue involving different Assessment Years.
- The Settlement Commission had held that the trusts were specific trusts by virtue of Clause 4. In its view, Clause 3(2) never came into operation because the additional trustees contemplated by that clause were never appointed. Therefore, Clause 4 came into operation under which the trusts’ income were payable in specific shares to identified beneficiaries.
- The Settlor and the Taxpayer had a duty to appoint additional trustees. They could not take advantage of a default in carrying out their duty to argue that Clause 4 did not come into operation.
- In the absence of additional trustees, the original trustee had the duty to apply the trust income as per Clause 4.
- In fact, both Settlor and Taxpayer had been receiving income from the trusts. They would not have included the income in their returns otherwise. The Settlement Commission (and the Supreme Court) had treated these returns as proof of the Settlor’s and Taxpayer’s real intention.
THE SUPREME COURT’S VIEW
The Supreme Court upheld the decision of the Gujarat High Court6 that the trusts were discretionary. The Gujarat High Court had noted that the Settlement Commission’s order and the Supreme Court’s decision were not binding on the present appeals due to different facts. In contrast to the previous round of litigation, the Taxpayer here did not admit to having received the income; he did not receive the income and he had not shown the income as taxable in his returns. The Gujarat High Court’s reasoning (as listed below) was upheld by the Supreme Court:
- The UK trusts were discretionary trusts. The trusts’ income should not be includible in the Taxpayer’s income for levying income tax since the trusts’ income was retained in the trusts and not disbursed to the beneficiaries;
- Mere failure of the Settlor or the Taxpayer to appoint additional trustees did not change the essential nature of the trusts as discernible from the terms of the trust deeds;
- For the same reasons, the value of the trusts’ assets could not be includible in the estate of the deceased Settlor for the purpose of wealth tax.
In support of its interpretation, the Supreme Court quoted Snell’s Principles of Equity7: “A discretionary trust is one which gives a beneficiary no right to any part of the income of the trust property, but vests in the trustees a discretionary power to pay him, or apply for his benefit, such part of the income as they think fit. The trustees must exercise their discretion as and when the income becomes available, but if they fail to distribute in due time, the power is not extinguished so that they can distribute later. They have no power to bind themselves for the future. The beneficiary thus has no more than a hope that the discretion will be exercised in his favour.”
WHAT DOES THIS DECISION MEAN IN PRACTICE?
- Beneficiaries of a discretionary trust should not include any part of the trust’s income in their individual returns unless it is actually received by them.
- Taxation of the income of a trust and income of a beneficiary depend on the nature of the trust. The nature of the trust is determined by looking at the trust deed as a whole, supported by records of the trustees’ decisions and the trusts’ financial statements. The Settlor must make sure that his intention as to the nature of the trust is clearly reflected in the trust deed in unambiguous language. Further, trustees must maintain a record of their decisions and reasons for it.
One key issue that has not been addressed in the decision is whether it is only income distributions made by the trustee that would be taxed in India or even capital/corpus distributions from a trust to its beneficiaries are taxable. This question arises on a consideration of whether the distribution can be categorised to be in the nature of capital distribution that should generally not be taxed or if the same can be treated as ‘income from other sources’ under S. 56 of the Income Tax Act, 1961. Under S. 56(2) (vii), income received by an individual or Hindu Undivided Family from a person without consideration or for inadequate consideration (subject to meeting certain value thresholds) are chargeable to income tax under certain circumstances. Since a trust is not a ‘person’ under the Income Tax Act, there has been discussion on whether this would cover situations where the trustee of a family private trust makes income distributions to family beneficiaries.
In this decision, the Supreme Court has mentioned that the beneficiary can be taxed on a receipt basis. Considering that it has not addressed the issue of capital receipt v. income receipt, it would be difficult to consider this decision as laying down a principle that all distributions by a discretionary trust to its beneficiaries once received are taxable in the hands of the beneficiaries. However, what this judgement highlights is that both trustees and beneficiaries must take steps to clearly identify the nature of the distributions. Trustees must keep separate accounts for income and capital, clearly record when amounts are disbursed from the corpus and the purpose of the distribution. Similarly, it may also be helpful for beneficiaries to keep separate accounts for receiving income and capital disbursements from the trust, and in communications with the trustee to clearly indicate the right under which the beneficiaries claim the funds.
Footnotes
1 Civil Appeal No. 2312 of 2007.
2 Gondal is a former princely state now in the State of Gujarat.
3 The Maharaja had also settled 3 U.S. trusts for the same beneficiaries. The taxation of income of these trusts was also in dispute but the Revenue had accepted the Gujarat High Court’s decision in relation to the U.S. trusts.
4 These clauses being long have not been reproduced here but have been paraphrased. The original text of these clauses is reproduced on pages 4 and 5 of the judgment. The judgment can be accessed by clicking on http://www.stpl-india.in/SCJFiles/2014_STPL(Web)_335_SC.pdf.
5 Jyotendrasinhji v. S.I. Tripathi (1993) 111 CTR (SC) 370. In this decision, the Supreme Court held that the issue regarding the true nature of the trusts was purely academic because the Settlor and his son had included the income in their returns and they had never said that they did not receive the income from the trusts.
6 [2010]326ITR594(Guj) 7 28th edition, p. 138