In a major relief to the hospitality industry, the Supreme Court has
held that tips paid by customers to staff for availing services in
restaurants do not constitute salary, and therefore, the employer is not
liable to deduct tax at source on such payments under income-tax laws.
However, the court observed that such tips at the hands of employees would be chargeable as ''income from other sources''.
With this, the Supreme Court has set aside the Delhi High Court's May
2011 judgment, which held that the receipt of such tips constitutes
income at the hands of the recipient and is chargeable to income tax
under the head 'salary' under Section 15 of the Income-Tax Act.
What else the Court said?
According to the court, the employer merely acts in a fiduciary capacity
as a trustee for payments that are received from customers, which they
disburse to their employees for services rendered to the customer. The
employer, therefore, has no obligation to withhold tax on such payments
made to employees, regardless of whether the tips are received directly
in cash, or collected through credit card by employer, and subsequently
disbursed to employees.
Background:
The Delhi High Court in 2011 had ruled that when a tip is paid by way of
a credit card by a customer—since such a tip goes into the account of
the employer, after which it is distributed to employees—the receipt of
such money from the employer would amount to ''salary'' within the
extended definition contained in Section 17 of the Act. However, the
High Court had also held that when tips are received by employees
directly in cash, the employer has no role to play and would therefore
be outside the purview of Section 192 of the Act.
Challenging the High Court judgment before the Supreme Court, ITC and
others had argued that tips by customers are paid out of their own
volition and discretion, and are in the nature of gratuitous payment
made directly to the waiters/staff as a reward in appreciation of
services rendered to them. ITC further added that employees cannot claim
any vested right thereto, since the employer neither pays nor is bound
to pay any amount to the employee as a tip.
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