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2025 (5) TMI 192 - AT - Income Tax


The core legal questions considered by the Tribunal in this appeal include:

(i) Whether the adjustment made by the Centralised Processing Centre (CPC) under section 143(1) of the Income-tax Act, 1961 ("the Act") without issuing a notice under section 143(1)(a) violates the principles of natural justice;

(ii) Whether the CPC has jurisdiction to make substantive adjustments under section 143(1) when the issue requires detailed examination and application of mind;

(iii) Whether the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) (CIT(A)) erred in upholding the CPC's order and enhancing the assessee's income ignoring binding judicial precedents;

(iv) Whether an assessee with multiple sources of income can apply provisions of the Act for one source and provisions of the Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement (DTAA) for another source;

(v) Whether the sale of shares of different entities constitutes different sources of income, thereby permitting separate treatment of Long Term Capital Gains (LTCG) and Long Term Capital Losses (LTCL); and

(vi) Whether the LTCL can be carried forward under the Act when the corresponding LTCG is exempt under the DTAA, specifically under Article 13 of the India-Singapore DTAA.

Issue-wise Detailed Analysis:

1. Jurisdiction and Procedural Compliance under Section 143(1) of the Act

The Tribunal examined whether the CPC's adjustment under section 143(1) without issuing a notice under section 143(1)(a) was valid. The assessee contended that the mandatory procedure prescribed by the first proviso to section 143(1)(a) was not followed, constituting a breach of natural justice. The assessee supported this with evidence including e-proceeding screenshots.

The Tribunal noted settled legal principles that adjustments under section 143(1) cannot be made on debatable issues without proper notice and opportunity to the assessee. Since the issue of allowability of carry forward of LTCL was debatable, the Tribunal held that the CPC's adjustment without notice was improper and violated procedural safeguards. Thus, the Tribunal allowed the grounds challenging the adjustment under section 143(1).

2. Jurisdiction of CPC and CIT(A) to Make Adjustments

The Tribunal considered whether the CPC and CIT(A) had jurisdiction to make the adjustments disallowing carry forward of LTCL and enhancing income. The assessee argued that CPC's jurisdiction was limited and that CIT(A)'s powers were co-extensive with CPC's, hence CIT(A) should not have enhanced income ignoring judicial precedents.

The Tribunal found that the issue was debatable and required detailed examination, which is beyond the scope of summary processing under section 143(1). The CIT(A) erred in enhancing income without proper jurisdiction and ignoring precedents. The Tribunal accordingly held that the CPC and CIT(A) acted without jurisdiction in making the impugned adjustments.

3. Applicability of DTAA and Domestic Law for Multiple Sources of Income

The assessee earned LTCG from sale of shares acquired prior to 01.04.2017, claimed as exempt under Article 13 of the India-Singapore DTAA due to grandfathering provisions. Concurrently, the assessee incurred LTCL from sale of shares of different entities and claimed carry forward under the Act.

The Tribunal analyzed whether the assessee could apply treaty provisions for LTCG and domestic law provisions for LTCL. It relied on coordinate bench decisions which held that each transaction constitutes a separate source of income. The Tribunal referred to the Special Bench decision in Montgomery Emerging Market Fund, which distinguished between 'source of income' and 'head of income', holding that different transactions are different sources even under the same head (capital gains).

The Tribunal further relied on judgments explaining that the taxpayer may choose to apply DTAA provisions or domestic law provisions for each source independently. Thus, the assessee was entitled to claim treaty benefits for LTCG and carry forward LTCL under the Act.

4. Interpretation of Article 13 of the India-Singapore DTAA and Its Interaction with the Act

The Tribunal examined the scope of Article 13 of the India-Singapore DTAA, which provides that gains from alienation of shares acquired before 01.04.2017 are taxable only in the resident state (Singapore), effectively exempting such LTCG from tax in India.

The Tribunal referred extensively to authoritative commentary by Klaus Vogel and judicial precedents, including a coordinate bench decision in J.P. Morgan India Investment Company Mauritius Ltd., which clarified the principles of allocation of taxing rights under tax treaties:

  • Tax treaties allocate taxing rights exclusively or shared between source and residence countries;
  • In cases where the source country waives its taxing rights (as in Article 13(4)), the income is taxable only in the residence country;
  • Losses arising in the source country in earlier years do not get automatically disallowed or set off when treaty benefits are claimed;
  • Section 90(2) of the Act mandates that treaty provisions prevail if more beneficial to the taxpayer;
  • The Supreme Court has upheld that treaty provisions override inconsistent provisions of the Act in matters of chargeability and computation of income.

The Tribunal held that since India has given up its right to tax the LTCG under the treaty, the LTCG does not enter into the computation of total income in India. Consequently, the LTCL cannot be set off against the exempt LTCG in India. The LTCL can be carried forward under the Act, as the taxpayer is entitled to choose to apply treaty provisions or domestic law provisions independently for different sources.

5. Treatment of Competing Arguments on Set-Off of LTCL Against LTCG

The revenue argued that the entire transaction involving LTCG and LTCL should be treated as a single source of income, disallowing the assessee from applying DTAA benefits for LTCG and carry forward of LTCL separately.

The Tribunal rejected this argument relying on the Special Bench ruling in Montgomery Emerging Market Fund, which held that different transactions represent different sources of income even within the same head. It also relied on coordinate bench decisions in Matrix Partners India Investment Holdings LLC and Bay Capital India Fund Ltd., which supported the assessee's position that LTCG and LTCL arising from different transactions are distinct sources, permitting separate application of DTAA and Act provisions.

6. Conclusions on the Issues

The Tribunal concluded that:

  • The CPC's adjustment under section 143(1) without issuing notice under section 143(1)(a) was invalid and violated natural justice;
  • The CPC and CIT(A) lacked jurisdiction to disallow carry forward of LTCL and enhance income on a debatable issue;
  • The assessee is entitled to apply DTAA provisions for LTCG and domestic law provisions for LTCL separately, as each transaction is a distinct source of income;
  • Article 13 of the India-Singapore DTAA exempts LTCG from Indian tax, and hence the LTCG does not enter into total income computation in India;
  • LTCL can be carried forward under the Act and cannot be set off against exempt LTCG;
  • The assessee's grounds challenging the disallowance of carry forward of LTCL and the jurisdictional validity of adjustments were allowed.

Significant Holdings:

The Tribunal preserved crucial legal reasoning verbatim from the coordinate bench decision in J.P. Morgan India Investment Company Mauritius Ltd., which elucidates the principles of treaty taxation and the interplay with domestic law:

"In case of income, where a country consciously gives up its rights to tax 'income' (i.e, positive income) of resident of the treaty partner arising on its own shores, it automatically does not mean that losses which had arisen in earlier year in the subject country are not allowed to be carried forward."

Further, the Tribunal cited the Supreme Court's ruling in Azadi Bachao Andolan:

"If it was not the intention of the legislature to make a departure from the general principle of chargeability to tax under section 4 and the general principle of ascertainment of total income under section 5 of the Act, then there was no purpose in making those sections "subject to the provisions" of the Act. The very object of grafting the said two sections with the said clause is to enable the Central Government to issue a notification under section 90 towards implementation of the terms of the DTAs which would automatically override the provisions of the Income-tax Act in the matter of ascertainment of chargeability to income tax and ascertainment of total income, to the extent of inconsistency with the terms of the DTAC."

The Tribunal also emphasized the Special Bench's distinction between source of income and head of income:

"Source of income does not mean head of income. The Assessing Officer has proceeded on a hypothesis as if the source of income is the head of income itself. This is not a proper construction of law provided in section 70. Short term capital gains/loss as well as long term capital gains/loss both are computed under the head "capital gains" for the aggregation of income culminating into total income which is taxable under the Income-tax Act. What is taxed by the Income-tax Act is not different sources of income independently, but income from different sources clubbed under respective heads and finally aggregated into the total income."

Core principles established include:

  • The taxpayer may elect to apply DTAA provisions or domestic law provisions independently for different sources of income;
  • When the source country waives taxing rights under the treaty, the income does not enter the source country's total income computation;
  • Losses arising under domestic law can be carried forward even if corresponding gains are exempt under treaty;
  • Procedural safeguards under section 143(1)(a) must be followed before making adjustments under section 143(1);
  • The powers of CPC and CIT(A) are limited and cannot be exercised on debatable issues without proper jurisdiction.

Final determinations on each issue were in favour of the assessee, allowing the appeal and holding that the carry forward of LTCL cannot be denied merely because the corresponding LTCG is exempt under the DTAA, and that procedural and jurisdictional lapses vitiate the impugned adjustments.

 

 

 

 

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