Tag: Caribú project
Spain vs DIGITEX INFORMÁTICA S.L., February 2021, National Court, Case No 2021:629
DIGITEX INFORMATICA S.L. had entered into a substantial service contract with an unrelated party in Latin America, Telefonica, according to which the DIGITEX group would provide certain services for Telefonica. The contract originally entered by DIGITEX INFORMATICA S.L. was later transferred to DIGITEX’s Latin American subsidiaries. But after the transfer, cost and amortizations related to the contract were still paid – and deducted for tax purposes – by DIGITEX in Spain. The tax authorities found that costs (amortizations, interest payments etc.) related to the Telefonica contract – after the contract had been transferred to the subsidiaries – should have been reinvoiced to the subsidiaries, and an assessment was issued to DIGITEX for FY 2010 and 2011 where these deductions had been disallowed. DIGITEX on its side argued that by not re-invoicing the costs to the subsidiaries the income received from the subsidiaries increased. According to the intercompany contract, DIGITEX would invoice related entities 1% of the turnover of its own customers for branding and 2% of the turnover of its own or referred customers for know-how. However, no invoicing could be made if the operating income of the subsidiaries did not exceed 2.5% of turnover, excluding the result obtained from operations carried out with local clients. Judgement of the Court The Audiencia Nacional dismissed the appeal of DIGITEX and decided in favour of the tax authorities. Excerpt “1.- The income derived from the local contracts for customer analysis and migration services corresponds to the appellant Group entities and designated as PSACs, i.e. to the same affiliates. Therefore, the taxpayer should have re-invoiced the costs of the project to these subsidiaries, according to the revenue generated in each of them. And this by application of the principle of correlation between income and expenditure set out in RD 1514/2007. The plaintiff should not be surprised by this consideration insofar as this was done, at least partially, in the financial year 2010, in which it already re-invoiced EUR 339 978.55. Consequently, it cannot be said that the defendant administration went against its own actions when it took the view that the plaintiff in 2009 should have recorded in its accounts an intangible asset of EUR 50 million, in view of what happened later, in 2010, when the contracts with the subsidiaries were concluded and the PSACs became PSACs. Therefore, it was the plaintiff itself that went against its own actions, acting differently between 2010 and 2011 when it came to allocating the costs derived from the intangible amortisation and the financial expenses of the loan contracted. 2.- Even if we were to admit that the services provided by the plaintiff have added value by incorporating both a trademark licence and know-how, this does not mean that such re-invoicing does not have to be carried out, when, as has been said, in 2009 DIGITEX INFORMATICA S.L was acting as PSAC under the mediation contract, but as a result of the new contracts entered into with the Latin American subsidiaries in 2010, this position as PSAC was assumed by the said subsidiaries present in the seven Latin American countries. As regards the method of determining the profit, it is appropriate to refer to the operating margin expressly contained in the contracts concluded by the plaintiff with the subsidiaries and not to the general margin determined by the plaintiff in accordance with folio 32 et seq. of the application (according to the final result of the profit and loss account), despite the reports provided by the appellant. And so it is that the latter cannot contradict itself by going against its own acts to the point of altering the literal nature of the contracts, even if it indicates that the will of the parties in the other to the contrary, in accordance with the provisions of Article 1281 of the CC.” Click here for English Translation Click here for other translation ...