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2025 (5) TMI 747 - AT - Income Tax


The core legal questions considered by the Appellate Tribunal (AT) in these cross appeals arising from the assessment year 2010-11 pertain to:

1. Whether income pertaining to the consumer's portion of overachievement of minimum target or efficiency gain amounting to Rs. 59,18,86,000/- should be recognized as taxable income of the assessee or derecognized.

2. Whether the addition under section 43B of the Income-tax Act, 1961 (the Act) on account of the unpayable portion of Energy Tax is justified.

3. Whether the interest paid on additional consumer security deposits is allowable as a deduction.

4. The appropriate rate of depreciation on Uninterruptible Power Supply (UPS) equipment.

5. Whether deduction under section 80IA of the Act is admissible on enhanced profits arising from additions to income.

6. General grounds raised by both parties which did not require specific adjudication.

Issue 1: Recognition of Income Pertaining to Consumer's Portion of Overachievement of Minimum Target or Efficiency Gain

The legal framework involves the Income-tax Act, 1961, the Delhi Electricity Reforms Act, 2000, and policy directions issued by the Government of National Capital Territory of Delhi (GNCTD) and the Delhi Electricity Regulatory Commission (DERC). The assessee operates in the electricity distribution business, governed by a transfer agreement dated 31.05.2002 and related regulatory provisions.

According to the policy, the company is entitled to a guaranteed return of 14% plus a supply margin of up to 2% per annum on DERC-approved equity, conditional on achieving Aggregate Transmission and Commercial (AT&C) loss reduction targets. Overachievement results in additional revenue, part of which the company can retain, while the balance must be transferred to a contingency reserve or utilized as directed by DERC for future tariff determinations.

The Tribunal relied on a coordinate bench decision for subsequent assessment years and the jurisdictional High Court's ruling, which applied the Supreme Court's decision in Poona Electric Supply Company Limited vs. CIT (1965). This precedent distinguishes between commercial profits and clear profits, holding that amounts statutorily transferable for consumer benefit do not form part of the assessee's real profit and must be excluded from taxable income.

The Tribunal rejected the CIT(A)'s distinction that the assessee's case differed because the excess amount was not held in a separate consumer benefit reserve account and because the assessee was the beneficial owner of the amount. The Tribunal found that despite the absence of a separate account, the assessee had no right to appropriate the efficiency gain amount freely, as it was effectively at the disposal of DERC. This statutory obligation to transfer or utilize the amount for consumer benefit aligned the facts with the Poona Electric Supply Co. Ltd. principle.

Consequently, the Tribunal held that the derecognition of the consumer's portion of the efficiency gain was justified, dismissing the revenue's challenge.

Issue 2: Addition under Section 43B on Unpayable Portion of Energy Tax

The dispute concerns whether the uncollected energy tax balance of Rs. 13,45,26,097/- outstanding at the year-end should be disallowed under section 43B of the Act, which permits disallowance of certain expenses not paid by the due date.

The assessee's position was that energy tax is payable to the Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD) only upon collection from customers, as per the Delhi Municipal Corporation Bye Laws, 1962. The outstanding balance was not payable as on the balance sheet date, and the amount collected was duly deposited before the due date for filing the return.

The CIT(A) accepted this view, observing that the liability to pay energy tax arises only upon collection and that the assessee is not liable to pay from its own resources. Therefore, the outstanding balance was not a liability under section 43B as on the relevant date.

The Tribunal further relied on the Punjab & Haryana High Court decision in Pr. CIT vs Dakshin Haryana Bijli Vitran Nigam Ltd., which held that section 43B applies only if the liability to pay tax rests on the assessee. Since the electricity duty was a statutory collection from consumers to be passed to the government, and not payable by the assessee itself, section 43B was not attracted.

The Supreme Court's dismissal of the Revenue's Special Leave Petition against that decision reinforced its binding nature. The Tribunal accordingly dismissed the Revenue's ground challenging the deletion of the addition under section 43B.

Issue 3: Deductibility of Interest on Additional Consumer Security Deposits

The assessee challenged the CIT(A)'s confirmation of addition of interest liability on additional consumer security deposits, which arose from a validation exercise revealing a higher amount of security deposits than originally transferred from the erstwhile Delhi Vidyut Board (DVB).

The Electricity Act, 2003, section 47(4), mandates that distribution licensees pay interest on security deposits at a rate specified by the State Commission. The Delhi Electricity Regulatory Commission (DERC) had directed the Government of NCT Delhi to ensure transfer of the excess security deposits and payment of interest thereon to the assessee, which was under dispute and subject to writ proceedings.

The assessee had paid interest in accordance with DERC regulations and the interim order of the Delhi High Court directing continuation of such payments.

The Tribunal held that the interest paid was a statutory obligation incurred wholly and exclusively for the purpose of business, and thus allowable as a deduction under the Act. This conclusion was supported by the statutory provisions and judicial directions.

Issue 4: Rate of Depreciation on UPS Equipment

The assessee claimed higher depreciation on UPS equipment, which the AO restricted to 15%. The question was whether UPS qualifies for higher depreciation rates applicable to computer accessories and peripherals.

The Tribunal followed the jurisdictional High Court's decision in CIT vs BSES Rajdhani Power Limited, which held that computer accessories and peripherals integral to computer systems are entitled to higher depreciation rates (60%). UPS being integral to the computer system qualified for the higher rate.

The Tribunal allowed the assessee's ground and directed recomputation of depreciation accordingly.

Issue 5: Deduction under Section 80IA on Enhanced Profits

The assessee sought deduction under section 80IA on additions made to income, including commission, maintenance charges, and miscellaneous income, totaling Rs. 24.99 crores.

The Tribunal referred to the jurisdictional High Court decision and CBDT Circular No. 37/2016, which clarified that disallowances under sections such as 32, 40(a)(ia), 40A(3), 43B, etc., which result in enhanced profits of the eligible business, do not affect the entitlement to deduction under Chapter VI-A. The deduction under section 80IA is admissible on profits enhanced by such disallowances.

The Tribunal therefore allowed the assessee's ground for enhanced deduction and dismissed the Revenue's challenge.

Issue 6: General Grounds

Both parties raised general grounds which the Tribunal found did not require specific adjudication and accordingly did not address them in detail.

Significant Holdings and Core Principles Established:

1. The Tribunal affirmed the principle from Poona Electric Supply Company Limited vs. CIT that amounts statutorily earmarked for consumer benefit, even if reflected in the assessee's accounts, do not constitute taxable income of the assessee. The statutory obligation to transfer or utilize such amounts for consumer benefit precludes their recognition as the assessee's real profits.

2. Section 43B disallowance applies only where the liability to pay tax or duty rests on the assessee. Statutory collections such as energy tax or electricity duty collected from customers and payable to government authorities only upon collection do not attract section 43B disallowance on outstanding balances not yet collected.

3. Interest paid on consumer security deposits is a statutory obligation under the Electricity Act, 2003, and related regulatory orders. Such interest payments are deductible expenses incurred wholly and exclusively for business purposes.

4. Computer accessories and peripherals integral to computer systems, including UPS, are entitled to higher depreciation rates applicable to computer equipment.

5. Deduction under section 80IA on profits enhanced by disallowances under various sections of the Act is permissible, as clarified by the CBDT Circular and judicial precedents.

6. The Tribunal consistently followed binding precedents and regulatory provisions, emphasizing the statutory framework governing electricity distribution businesses and the principles of income recognition and allowable deductions under the Income-tax Act.

 

 

 

 

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