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2015 (3) TMI 887 - AT - Income TaxNature of land - sale of land should be treated as an adventure in the nature of trade - AO thereafter concluded that the lands are not agricultural in nature - Held that:- It is observed that by an ‘Agreement of sale with possession-cum-Irrevocable power of attorney’ dated 12th March, 2007, the land in question was transferred by the assessee to M/s. Varun Constructions alongwith other 13 land owners who were owners of the adjacent lands. The said thirteen parties had also claimed the profit arising from the transfer of their land to M/s. Varun Constructions as exempt on the ground that their lands, being agricultural lands, were not capital assets within the meaning of S.2(14). In their cases also, the claim was not allowed by the Assessing Officer and when the matter reached the Tribunal in the case of six of the said assessees, namely, M/s.Bhavya Constructions Pvt. Ltd., Shri M.S.Raghava Reddy, Shri R.Srinivasa Rao, Shri R.Uma Maheswar, Shri P.Shivakumar and Shri G.C.Subbanaidu, the coordinate bench of this Tribunal vide its order [2014 (9) TMI 85 - ITAT HYDERABAD] decided similar issue in favour of the assessee, holding that the land sold by the said assessees were agricultural lands, and therefore, the profits arising from the transfer of such lands, was not chargeable to tax in the hands of the assessee. In the present case, considering the facts and circumstances of the case it cannot be considered as an adventure in the nature of trade. The intention of the assessee from the inception was to carry on agricultural operations. Merely because of the fact that the land was sold in a short period of holding, it cannot be held that income arising from the sale of land was taxable as profit arising from the adventure in the nature of trade or capital gain. The period of holding should not suggest that the activity was an adventure in the nature of trade. Further, we make it clear that when the land which does not fall under the provisions of section 2(14)(iii) of the IT Act and an assessee who is engaged in agricultural operations in such agricultural land and also being specified as agricultural land in Revenue records, the land is not subjected to any conversion as non-agricultural land by the assessee or any other concerned person, transfers such agricultural land as it is and where it is basis, in such circumstances, in our opinion, such transfer like the case before us cannot be considered as a transfer of capital asset or the transaction relating to sale of land was not an adventure in the nature of trade so as to tax the income arising out of this transaction as business income. the land in question sold by the assessee, being agricultural land, the profit arising from the sale of the same, is not chargeable tot ax in the hands of the assessee as capital gain - Decided in favour of assessee.
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