S. 194J requires tax to be deducted at source when payment of any sum is made to a “resident” by way of “fees for professional services”. The term “professional services” is defined in Explanation (a) to mean services rendered by a person inter alia in the course of carrying on medical profession. The term “resident” is not confined to a natural person. The argument that the medical profession can only be carried on by an individual and that consequently a hospital cannot be regarded as carrying on the medical profession and hence payments made by TPAs to a hospital cannot be treated as fees for professional services is not correct because in defining the expression “professional services” Parliament has not confined it to mean services rendered by an individual who carries on the medical profession. If Parliament intended to restrict the ambit of s. 194J only to fees received by an individual, it was open to Parliament to use words that would be indicative of that position. In fact, in defining the character of the person who is to make the payment, Parliament has excluded from the ambit of the expression “any person” an individual and a HUF. However, in defining the character of the payee, Parliament has used the wider expression “resident”. Further, the words “services rendered by a person in the course of carrying on” in the definition include services which are incidental to the carrying out of the medical profession
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