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2025 (5) TMI 871 - AT - Income Tax


The core legal questions considered by the Appellate Tribunal (AT) in these appeals pertain primarily to two issues: (1) the applicability and correctness of disallowance under section 14A read with Rule 8D of the Income Tax Act, 1961, specifically regarding expenses attributable to exempt income, and (2) the addition of presumed income under section 5 of the Act on interest-free loans advanced to a wholly owned subsidiary company, including the validity of relying on resolutions passed by the borrowing company and the application of the arm's length principle in related party transactions.

Regarding the first issue, the Tribunal examined whether the disallowance made by the Assessing Officer (AO) under section 14A read with Rule 8D(2) was justified. The AO had invoked these provisions to disallow an amount of Rs. 2,22,16,000/- on the ground that the assessee had utilized common infrastructure for earning exempt income from investments, thus necessitating a disallowance of expenses attributable to such exempt income. The CIT(A) had deleted this disallowance, relying on coordinate bench decisions in the assessee's own case for earlier years. The revenue challenged this deletion before the Tribunal.

The Tribunal noted that the facts for the year under consideration were identical to those in previous years where the issue had been decided in favor of the assessee. The legal framework involves section 14A, which disallows expenditure incurred in relation to income that does not form part of the total income under the Act, and Rule 8D, which prescribes the methodology for computing such disallowance. The Tribunal, following binding precedents including decisions by coordinate benches and the Hon'ble Delhi High Court, held that no fresh material or change in circumstances was brought to justify a different conclusion. Consequently, the Tribunal upheld the CIT(A)'s deletion of the disallowance under section 14A and Rule 8D, dismissing the revenue's appeal on this ground.

The second principal issue concerned the addition of Rs. 2,09,61,935/- under section 5 of the Act, which pertains to income chargeable under the head "Income from Other Sources." The AO observed that the assessee had advanced long-term loans to its wholly owned subsidiary company without charging interest, and thus, on a presumptive basis, computed interest income at 9% on such advances. The AO rejected the assessee's contention that this issue had been settled in its favor in earlier years and proceeded to make the addition. The CIT(A) deleted the addition, again relying on precedents from coordinate benches.

The Tribunal analyzed the relevant legal principles, including the doctrine of commercial expediency and the binding precedents in the assessee's own case. It referred to the Hon'ble Supreme Court's decision in SA Builders, which held that expenditure or income treatment can be justified if incurred or foregone on grounds of commercial expediency, even if not mandated by law. The Tribunal noted that the advances were made for business purposes to the subsidiary, which was engaged in retail operations related to the assessee's business. The Tribunal further observed that the subsidiary had ceased the relevant business operations, but this did not negate the commercial expediency of the advances at the time they were made.

Regarding the contention about the resolution passed by the borrowing company and not by the assessee company, the Tribunal found no infirmity in the CIT(A)'s approach, as the substance of the arrangement and the commercial rationale were adequately considered. The Tribunal also addressed the argument about the arm's length principle, noting that the transactions were intra-group but had been consistently treated in the same manner in earlier years without any adverse findings. The Tribunal found no new evidence or legal basis to deviate from the earlier consistent treatment.

Accordingly, the Tribunal upheld the CIT(A)'s deletion of the addition under section 5 of the Act for both assessment years 2020-21 and 2021-22, applying the same reasoning mutatis mutandis for the latter year.

In conclusion, the Tribunal dismissed the revenue's appeals on all grounds, affirming the CIT(A)'s orders deleting the disallowance under section 14A read with Rule 8D and the addition under section 5 of the Act for both assessment years.

Significant holdings include the following verbatim excerpt from the Tribunal's reasoning on the disallowance under section 14A:

"In view of the above discussion, respectfully following the finding of the Tribunal in the case of the assessee as well as finding of the Hon'ble Delhi High Court in the case of Era Infrastructure (India) Ltd. (supra), we do not find any error in the order of the Ld. CIT(A) on the issue-in-dispute and accordingly, we uphold the same."

On the addition under section 5, the Tribunal relied on the principle of commercial expediency as enunciated by the Hon'ble Supreme Court in SA Builders, stating:

"The Hon'ble Supreme Court in SA. Builders (288/TR 1 SC) held that whether expenditure may not have been incurred under any legal obligation, yet it is allowable as a business expenditure if it was incurred on grounds of commercial expediency. The case of the assessee is that the assessee has made advances to its subsidiary for business expediency."

Core principles established include:

  • The applicability of section 14A disallowance requires a factual basis demonstrating expenses incurred specifically in relation to exempt income, and mere presence of investments earning exempt income without demonstrable linkage to expenses may not warrant disallowance.
  • Presumptive income additions under section 5 on interest-free loans to subsidiaries must be examined in light of commercial expediency and the factual matrix, including the business rationale for such advances.
  • Consistency in judicial and quasi-judicial decisions on recurring issues for the same assessee, absent any change in facts or law, is to be maintained to uphold principles of fairness and predictability.
  • Resolutions passed by the borrowing subsidiary company regarding non-payment of interest may be considered valid evidence in the context of intra-group transactions, provided the commercial substance supports such treatment.
  • The arm's length principle, while relevant in transfer pricing contexts, does not automatically mandate additions under section 5 in the absence of contrary evidence or findings.

Final determinations on each issue are:

  • Disallowance under section 14A read with Rule 8D of Rs. 2,22,16,000/- was rightly deleted by the CIT(A), and the Tribunal upheld this deletion.
  • Addition of Rs. 2,09,61,935/- under section 5 on presumed interest income from interest-free loans to the subsidiary was rightly deleted by the CIT(A), and the Tribunal upheld this deletion for both assessment years.
  • The Tribunal rejected the revenue's contention that the resolution for non-payment of interest should have been passed by the assessee company instead of the borrowing company, finding no error in the CIT(A)'s approach.
  • The Tribunal found no merit in the argument that the arm's length principle was violated warranting addition, as no evidence was brought to alter the consistent treatment in earlier years.

 

 

 

 

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