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2024 (6) TMI 1468 - AT - Income Tax


The core legal questions considered in this appeal pertain to the genuineness and tax treatment of long term capital gains declared by the assessee on the sale of shares of a company alleged to be a penny stock involved in price manipulation. Specifically, the issues include:

(a) Whether the long term capital gains declared on sale of shares of the company can be considered genuine or are to be treated as bogus/sham transactions aimed at tax evasion and money laundering.

(b) Whether the sale consideration received on sale of shares can be assessed as unexplained cash credit under section 68 of the Income Tax Act.

(c) The applicability and evidentiary value of the investigation wing's report and statements of third parties implicating manipulation of share prices.

(d) The relevance of the financial fundamentals of the company and the price movements of its shares in determining the genuineness of transactions.

(e) The burden of proof on the assessee to establish the genuineness of the transactions and the extent to which the tax authorities can rely on generalized investigation reports without specific material against the assessee.

(f) The legal principles and precedents governing the treatment of share transactions, especially in the context of alleged price rigging and bogus capital gains.

Regarding the first issue on genuineness of long term capital gains, the legal framework involves section 10(38) of the Income Tax Act which exempts long term capital gains arising from transfer of equity shares where Securities Transaction Tax (STT) has been paid. The Assessing Officer (AO) relied heavily on a report from the Income Tax Investigation wing and statements from brokers confessing to accommodation entries and price manipulation schemes involving penny stocks. The AO concluded that the transactions were prearranged and collusive, designed to generate bogus capital gains and evade taxes. The AO also noted that the company's financial results and net worth were negligible and that the share price increase was disproportionate and beyond human probability, indicating sham transactions. Consequently, the AO disallowed the exemption and treated the entire sale consideration as unexplained income under section 68.

The Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) upheld the AO's findings, relying on the Supreme Court decisions in Sumati Dayal and Durga Prasad More, which emphasize the "test of human probability" to assess whether transactions are genuine or sham. The CIT(A) held that the spectacular rise in share prices without corresponding financial justification confirmed the transactions were a facade.

In contrast, the assessee's authorized representative (AR) argued that the shares were purchased through a reputed broker on preferential allotment and later sold on the stock exchange platform with all transactions reflected in the demat account. The assessee had paid and received consideration through banking channels, and STT was paid. The AR submitted that the investigation report was generalized and did not implicate the assessee specifically. The assessee had demonstrated knowledge of the stock market and had invested based on market information and prospects of the company. Further, the AR contended that no independent material was brought on record by the AO to disprove the genuineness of the transactions or connect the assessee to any manipulation scheme. The AR relied on several judicial precedents supporting the view that mere suspicion or generalized reports cannot override documentary evidence of genuine transactions.

The Departmental Representative (DR) countered that preferential allotments are typically made to known persons, suggesting possible collusion. The poor financial fundamentals and disproportionate price rise indicated manipulation. The DR also relied on SEBI's inquiry and orders against other persons involved in manipulation of the company's shares to support the AO's conclusion. The DR distinguished the AR's reliance on precedents by highlighting factual differences, such as the mode of purchase (off-market vs. exchange) and the nature of investigations.

On the evidentiary aspect, the AO's reliance on the investigation wing's report was scrutinized. The Tribunal observed that the report was generalized and did not specifically link the assessee's transactions to the alleged rigging. The AO failed to produce independent evidence connecting the assessee to the manipulation scheme. The assessee's statement under section 131 showed adequate knowledge of stock market operations and disclosed transactions in other shares as well. The assessee purchased shares through a reputed broker, paid consideration via banking channels, held dematerialized shares in the demat account, and sold shares on the stock exchange with receipts through banking channels. The AO did not find any defects in these documents or transactions. The absence of SEBI inquiry against the assessee or her broker further supported the genuineness of the transactions.

The Tribunal applied the legal principle that the burden lies on the revenue to prove that the transactions are sham or bogus. Mere suspicion, conjecture, or generalized investigation reports are insufficient to disallow exemption or treat sale consideration as unexplained cash credit under section 68. The Tribunal noted that the AO accepted the purchase of shares in earlier years and the sale occurred on an online stock exchange platform with proper documentation and banking transactions. Therefore, the sale consideration could not be treated as unexplained income.

The Tribunal extensively relied on binding precedents from the jurisdictional High Court and Supreme Court. These include:

  • The principle that transactions reflected in demat accounts, supported by contract notes, banking transactions, and STT payment, cannot be lightly disregarded as bogus without cogent evidence.
  • The test of human probability must be applied carefully, and extraordinary price movements alone do not establish sham transactions without corroborative evidence.
  • Generalized investigation reports or statements implicating others do not automatically implicate the assessee unless specific material is produced.
  • Decisions where the Tribunal or High Court held that bona fide investors purchasing and selling shares on recognized stock exchanges, with proper documentation and banking channels, are entitled to claim exemptions on long term capital gains.

In particular, the Tribunal cited the Bombay High Court's decision in a similar matter where the Tribunal's interference with concurrent findings of the AO and CIT(A) was upheld because the revenue failed to discharge the onus of proving the assessee's involvement in rigging. The Tribunal also referred to the Bombay High Court's ruling in the case of PCIT vs. Ziauddin A Siddique, emphasizing that share transactions conducted through registered brokers on stock exchanges, with payments through banking channels and STT paid, are presumed genuine absent contrary evidence.

The Tribunal also distinguished decisions relied upon by the DR which were ex-parte or did not consider binding High Court rulings, and thus held them less persuasive. The Tribunal found the facts of the present case aligned with those in which the courts had held in favor of the assessee.

On the issue of section 68, the Tribunal held that since the purchase consideration was accepted in earlier years and the sale consideration was received through stock exchange and banking channels, it could not be treated as unexplained cash credit. The AO's assessment of the entire sale consideration as unexplained income was therefore unsustainable.

In conclusion, the Tribunal set aside the orders of the CIT(A) and AO, deleted the addition made under section 68, and allowed the appeal of the assessee.

Significant holdings include the following verbatim excerpts and principles:

"The investigation report prepared by Investigation wing, Kolkata is a generalized report with regard to the modus operandi adopted in manipulation of prices of certain shares and generation of bogus capital gains. We notice that the AO has placed reliance on the said report without bringing any material on record to show that the transactions entered by the assessee were found to be a part of manipulated transactions."

"The assessee has proved as to how she could purchase the shares of above said company. We also notice that the assessee has (a) purchased these shares by paying consideration through banking channels, (b) dematerialized the shares and kept the same in the Demat account, (c) sold the shares through stock exchange platform, (d) received the sale consideration through banking channels."

"The AO himself has not found any defect/deficiencies in the evidences furnished by the assessee with regard to purchase and sale of shares. The assessee and her broker were not subjected to any enquiry by SEBI, meaning thereby, they were carried on by the assessee during the normal course of investment in shares."

"The sale consideration received on sale of shares cannot be assessed as unexplained cash credit u/s 68 of the Act and the long term capital gains declared by the assessee cannot be doubted with."

"Mere suspicion or generalized investigation reports are insufficient to disallow exemption or treat sale consideration as unexplained cash credit under section 68."

"Transactions reflected in demat accounts, supported by contract notes, banking transactions and STT payment, cannot be lightly disregarded as bogus without cogent evidence."

"The burden lies on the revenue to prove that the transactions are sham or bogus."

"The test of human probability must be applied carefully, and extraordinary price movements alone do not establish sham transactions without corroborative evidence."

Thus, the Tribunal established the principle that in cases involving alleged price manipulation and bogus capital gains, the revenue must produce specific and cogent evidence against the assessee to disallow exemption or treat sale consideration as unexplained income. Generalized investigation reports and suspicious price movements, without direct evidence implicating the assessee, are insufficient to rebut the documentary evidence of genuine share transactions conducted through recognized stock exchange channels with proper banking transactions and dematerialization.

 

 

 

 

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