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2023 (7) TMI 1572 - AT - Income Tax


1. ISSUES PRESENTED and CONSIDERED

The core legal questions considered in these appeals arising under the Income Tax Act, 1961, relate to the correctness of additions and disallowances made by the Assessing Officer (AO) and the subsequent deletions or restrictions thereof by the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) [CIT(A)]. The key issues include:

  • Whether the deduction claimed under section 80IAB is rightly disallowed by the AO.
  • Whether the adoption of the Percentage of Completion Method (POCM) for revenue recognition by the assessee is permissible.
  • Whether capitalization of interest expenses is justified or disallowable under section 36(1)(iii) of the Act.
  • Whether brokerage and commission expenses are rightly disallowed.
  • Whether additions on account of net contingency deposits are justified.
  • Whether proportionate overhead expenditure should be allocated to other group entities and disallowance made for non-allocation.
  • Whether disallowance under section 14A read with Rule 8D is justified and the extent thereof.
  • Whether business income is rightly recharacterized as income from house property.
  • Whether notional rent on vacant properties is taxable.
  • Whether depreciation claimed on certain buildings is allowable.
  • Whether expenses of personal nature, specifically helicopter and aircraft expenses, are rightly disallowed.
  • Whether income from carbon credits is taxable as business income or capital receipt.
  • Whether disallowance on account of short or non-allocation of overhead expenditure to windmill units is justified.
  • Whether prior period expenses are allowable or require disallowance.

2. ISSUE-WISE DETAILED ANALYSIS

Deduction under Section 80IAB (Ground No. 1)

The AO disallowed deduction claimed under section 80IAB. However, the Tribunal relied on its earlier decisions in the assessee's own case for A.Y. 2008-09, where identical facts were considered and the deduction was allowed. The reasoning included consideration of group concerns and similar circumstances where the deduction was permitted. The Revenue failed to distinguish facts or law. Accordingly, the Tribunal upheld the CIT(A)'s deletion of the addition, rejecting the Revenue's ground.

Revenue Recognition under Percentage of Completion Method (POCM) (Ground No. 2)

The AO added income on account of revenue recognition as per POCM. The Tribunal referred to its earlier decision in the assessee's own case for A.Y. 2006-07, where POCM adoption was approved, subject to certain inquiries. The CIT(A) followed this precedent and the earlier findings in favour of the assessee for A.Y. 2009-10. The Revenue failed to provide any contrary evidence or legal basis to interfere. Therefore, the Tribunal upheld the CIT(A)'s order allowing the POCM method.

Capitalization of Interest Expenses (Ground No. 3)

This issue involved disallowance of interest expenses capitalized by the assessee. The Tribunal extensively analyzed the matter, relying on its own prior decisions for A.Y. 2006-07 and 2008-09, and various judicial precedents including decisions of the Bombay High Court and coordinate Benches. The key points of analysis included:

  • The proviso to section 36(1)(iii) disallows interest deduction on capital borrowed for acquisition of capital assets during the period before the asset is put to use. However, in this case, the interest related to inventory (stock-in-trade), not capital assets.
  • Accounting Standard 16 (AS-16) requires capitalization of borrowing costs on qualifying assets, but the provisions of the Income Tax Act prevail over accounting standards.
  • Loans were used for business purposes, including advances to subsidiaries, and interest income earned on such loans was offered to tax, negating any diversion of funds for non-business purposes.
  • Judicial precedents such as CIT vs. Lokhandwala Constructions Industries Ltd. and Calico Dyeing & Printing Works v. CIT were cited to establish that interest paid on capital borrowed for business purposes, including for stock-in-trade, is allowable.
  • The Tribunal rejected the AO's adhoc disallowance and artificial formula for proportionate disallowance, emphasizing presumption in favour of the assessee where mixed funds are used.

Accordingly, the Tribunal confirmed the deletion of the addition related to capitalization of interest.

Brokerage and Commission Expenses (Ground No. 4)

The AO's disallowance of brokerage and commission was deleted by the CIT(A), relying on the Tribunal's earlier orders in the assessee's own case for A.Y. 2006-07 and 2008-09. The AO himself did not make any disallowance for A.Y. 2016-17. The Tribunal found no error in the CIT(A)'s findings and rejected the Revenue's ground.

Net Contingency Deposits (Ground No. 5)

The issue was considered in the assessee's own case for A.Y. 2006-07, where the Tribunal ruled in favour of the assessee. The CIT(A) followed the same reasoning and deleted the addition. The AO did not make any addition on this issue for A.Y. 2016-17. The Tribunal upheld the deletion.

Non-allocation of Proportionate Overhead Expenditure to Group Entities (Ground No. 6)

The AO disallowed expenses for non-allocation of overheads to other group entities. The CIT(A) deleted the addition based on prior findings in the assessee's own case for A.Y. 2006-07 to 2011-12 and subsequent years. The Tribunal agreed that the AO's disallowance was based on static reasoning borrowed from earlier years and rejected the Revenue's ground.

Disallowance under Section 14A read with Rule 8D (Ground No. 7)

The CIT(A) restricted the addition under section 14A read with Rule 8D to a nominal amount, relying on settled legal principles and the decision in Maxopp Investment Ltd. vs. CIT. The AO had not recorded satisfaction for disallowance beyond the amount self-disallowed by the assessee. The Tribunal found no reason to interfere with the CIT(A)'s order.

Recharacterization of Business Income as Income from House Property (Ground No. 8)

The CIT(A) followed the findings of predecessor authorities and the Tribunal's earlier decisions in the assessee's own case for A.Y. 1996-97 and 2006-07, which held that the income was rightly treated as business income. The Tribunal upheld the deletion of the addition.

Notional Rent on Vacant Properties (Ground No. 9)

The CIT(A) deleted the addition based on earlier findings in the assessee's own case for A.Y. 2005-06 and 2009-10. The AO himself did not make any addition for A.Y. 2016-17. The Tribunal upheld the deletion.

Depreciation on DLF Central Building (Ground No. 10)

The CIT(A) deleted the addition following prior orders for A.Y. 2006-07 to 2011-12. The Revenue had not challenged the relief in higher forums and the AO did not make any addition for A.Y. 2016-17. The Tribunal found no merit in the Revenue's ground.

Personal Nature Expenses - Helicopter and Aircraft (Ground No. 11)

The CIT(A) rejected the AO's disallowance of helicopter and aircraft expenses, holding that such expenses were incurred wholly and exclusively for business purposes, given the nature of the assessee's business involving frequent travel of directors, executives, and consultants across multiple project sites in India and abroad. The Tribunal relied on the decision in Sayaji Iron and Engineering Co. Ltd. and the assessee's own case for A.Y. 2010-11 and 2011-12, which upheld the business purpose of such expenses. The Revenue failed to cite any contrary authority. The Tribunal dismissed the ground.

Carbon Credits (Ground No. 12)

The AO added income on account of carbon credits, treating it as business income. The CIT(A) deleted the addition relying on judicial decisions including the Andhra Pradesh High Court ruling in Commissioner of Income Tax vs. My Home Power Ltd., which held that carbon credits are capital receipts arising from environmental concerns and not business income. The Tribunal upheld the deletion.

Short/Non-allocation of Overhead Expenditure to Windmills (Ground No. 13)

The AO disallowed expenditure on the ground that the assessee did not allocate establishment, finance, and general administrative expenses to windmill units in Gujarat and Karnataka, which claimed deduction under section 80IA. The CIT(A) deleted the disallowance after noting that separate books of accounts were maintained for the windmill units, and all operational, general, and administrative expenses were debited to respective divisions. The AO's adhoc allocation based on income ratio was found unsustainable, especially as the AO failed to point out any defect in the separate books of account. The Tribunal relied on the Allahabad High Court decision in CIT v. Translam Ltd., which requires the AO to identify defects in separate books before making such disallowances. The Tribunal upheld the CIT(A)'s deletion.

Prior Period Expenses (Ground No. 14)

The AO disallowed prior period expenses. The CIT(A) allowed them, holding that the liability arose and was payable during the relevant year. The Tribunal relied on earlier decisions in the assessee's own case for A.Y. 2006-07 and noted that the Revenue had not challenged the relief in higher forums. The AO did not make any addition for A.Y. 2016-17. The Tribunal rejected the Revenue's ground.

3. SIGNIFICANT HOLDINGS

The Tribunal, following consistent precedents and the principle of judicial discipline, upheld the CIT(A)'s orders deleting or restricting the additions made by the AO across multiple grounds. The following core principles and determinations were established:

  • Deduction under Section 80IAB: The assessee is entitled to claim deduction under section 80IAB where the conditions are met, and the Revenue cannot disallow such deduction without distinguishing facts or law from earlier decisions.
  • Revenue Recognition by POCM: The adoption of Percentage of Completion Method for revenue recognition in real estate business is permissible and not liable to interference where approved in earlier assessments.
  • Capitalization of Interest: Interest paid on capital borrowed for business purposes, including inventory, is allowable under section 36(1)(iii). The proviso disallowing interest applies only to capital assets, not stock-in-trade. Accounting standards cannot override the Income Tax Act provisions.
  • Disallowance of Expenses: Expenses such as brokerage, commission, contingency deposits, and proportionate overheads must be disallowed only if there is concrete evidence of non-allocation or non-incurrence. Mere adhoc or formula-based disallowance without basis is unsustainable.
  • Section 14A Disallowance: Disallowance under section 14A read with Rule 8D requires satisfaction of AO and cannot be arbitrary. Self-disallowance by the assessee limits the scope of further disallowance.
  • Characterization of Income: Business income cannot be recharacterized as income from house property or vice versa without sound basis. Similarly, carbon credits represent capital receipts arising from environmental concerns, not business income.
  • Personal Expenses: Expenses incurred for business purposes, including travel by aircraft and helicopter for executives and directors, are allowable. Personal expenditure identified on individuals is taxable as perquisite, not disallowable as business expense.
  • Separate Books of Account: Where separate books of account are maintained for different business units or divisions, the AO must point out defects before making disallowances on account of non-allocation of expenses.
  • Prior Period Expenses: Expenses relating to prior periods are allowable if the liability arises in the current year and is payable.

The Tribunal concluded that the Revenue's appeals lacked merit and dismissed all grounds accordingly.

 

 

 

 

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