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2025 (5) TMI 1179 - AT - Income Tax


The core legal questions considered in these appeals pertain primarily to the allowability of depreciation on non-compete fees paid by the appellant-company under section 32(1)(ii) of the Income-tax Act, 1961 ("the Act") across multiple assessment years. Additional issues include the validity of disallowances under section 14A regarding expenditure related to exempt income, disallowance of expenses related to proposed rights issue, disallowance of belated remittance of employees' contributions to ESI and Labour Welfare Funds under section 36(1)(va), and denial of brought forward MAT credit.

The principal issue is whether the non-compete fee paid by the appellant-company constitutes an intangible asset eligible for depreciation under section 32(1)(ii) of the Act or whether it is capital expenditure not eligible for such allowance. This issue was recurrent across assessment years 2011-12, 2012-13, 2013-14, 2014-15, and 2017-18. Other issues, such as disallowance under section 14A and treatment of rights issue expenses, were relevant for certain years.

Issue-wise Detailed Analysis:

1. Allowability of Depreciation on Non-Compete Fee under Section 32(1)(ii)

The appellant-company entered into a non-compete agreement with its promoters, paying a lump sum consideration to prevent them from operating competing businesses for a specified period. The company claimed depreciation on this payment, asserting it acquired a commercial right classified as an intangible asset under section 32(1)(ii).

The AO disallowed depreciation relying on the Delhi High Court decision in Sharp Business Solution v. CIT, which held that non-compete fees are capital in nature but not eligible for depreciation. The CIT(A) upheld this view, also relying on the Sharp Business Solution decision and its subsequent application in Fortis Hospitals Ltd.

The appellant challenged these findings, citing contrary decisions from various High Courts, including the Madras High Court in CIT v. Areva T & D India Ltd., Bombay High Court in PCIT v. Music Broadcast (P.) Ltd., Gujarat High Court in PCIT v. Ferromatic Milacron India (P.) Ltd., Karnataka High Court in CIT v. Ingersoll Rand International Ind. Ltd., and Kerala High Court in B.Ravindran Pillai v. CIT. These judgments recognized non-compete fees as intangible assets eligible for depreciation under section 32(1)(ii).

The Tribunal examined the non-compete agreement and found no dispute regarding its genuineness or purpose. It noted the enduring benefit to the business and the acquisition of a commercial right. The Tribunal distinguished the Sharp Business Solution decision on factual grounds, particularly as noted by the Madras High Court in Asianet Communications Ltd. v. CIT, where the factual matrix differed significantly, including the nature of business continuity and the period of the non-compete covenant.

The Tribunal applied the principle from the Supreme Court in CIT v. Vegetable Products Ltd. that where two reasonable constructions of a taxing provision exist, the one favoring the assessee must be adopted. It concluded that the non-compete fee qualified as an intangible asset, entitling the appellant to depreciation under section 32(1)(ii). Accordingly, the Tribunal allowed the claim of depreciation on non-compete fees for all relevant assessment years.

2. Disallowance under Section 14A of the Act

The AO disallowed certain expenses under section 14A, which pertains to expenditure incurred to earn exempt income. The CIT(A) confirmed the disallowance relying on the explanation inserted to section 14A by the Finance Act, 2022, which permits disallowance even in the absence of exempt income.

The Tribunal noted that prior to this amendment, the settled position of law was that without exempt income, no disallowance under section 14A could be made. It cited authoritative Supreme Court and High Court decisions, including Redington (India) Ltd. v. Addl.CIT, CIT v. Chettinad Logistics Pvt. Ltd., Cheminvest Ltd. v. CIT, Pr.CIT v. Amadeus India Pvt. Ltd., and Pr.CIT v. Novell Software Development (India) Pvt. Ltd., which supported this view.

The Tribunal further observed that the amendment to section 14A is prospective, applicable from assessment year 2023-24, as held by the Delhi High Court in Pr.CIT v. Era Infrastructure (India) Ltd. Therefore, the CIT(A) erred in confirming the disallowance based on the explanation to section 14A for earlier years. Consequently, the Tribunal allowed the grounds challenging section 14A disallowances for the relevant years.

3. Disallowance of Proposed Rights Issue Expenses

The AO disallowed expenses incurred towards a proposed rights issue that was subsequently abandoned. The CIT(A) confirmed the disallowance relying on Supreme Court decisions in Brook Bond India Ltd. v. CIT and CIT v. Kodak India Ltd., which held that expenditure incurred on capital expansion is capital expenditure and not deductible as revenue expenditure.

The appellant contended the expenditure was revenue in nature, relying on Tribunal decisions such as Nimbus Communications Ltd. v. ACIT. However, the Tribunal found that since the rights issue was abandoned and the expenditure was not incurred in the relevant previous year, it did not qualify as revenue expenditure under section 37(1). The Tribunal upheld the disallowance as capital expenditure, dismissing the appellant's ground on this issue.

4. Disallowance of Belated Remittance of Employees' Contribution to ESI and Labour Welfare Funds under Section 36(1)(va)

The AO disallowed belated remittance of employees' contributions to ESI and Labour Welfare Funds. The CIT(A) upheld this disallowance relying on the Supreme Court decision in Checkmate Services Pvt. Ltd. v. CIT, which clarified the strictness of the provision.

The appellant challenged this disallowance, but the Tribunal found no merit in the appeal, as the decision of the CIT(A) was consistent with the Supreme Court's authoritative ruling. Accordingly, this ground was dismissed.

5. Denial of Brought Forward MAT Credit

For assessment year 2017-18, the appellant challenged denial of brought forward Minimum Alternate Tax (MAT) credit. The Tribunal noted absence of any material to establish availability of such credit and dismissed this ground of appeal.

Significant Holdings:

On the issue of depreciation on non-compete fees, the Tribunal held:

"The non-compete fee paid by the appellant-company was for the purpose of its business having enduring benefit resulting in an acquisition of intangible asset, which qualifies for allowance of depreciation u/s.32(1) of the Act."

It further observed that the decision in Sharp Business Solution (Delhi High Court) was distinguished by the Madras High Court and was not applicable on the facts of the present case. The Tribunal emphasized the Supreme Court's principle that where two reasonable constructions are possible, the one favoring the assessee must be adopted.

Regarding section 14A disallowance, the Tribunal concluded:

"The statute is amended by insertion of explanation to sec.14A of the Act, by Finance Act, 2022 proposing to make disallowance of expenditure even in the absence of actual exempt income u/s.14A. This explanation was held to be prospective in nature applicable from assessment year 2023-2024 by the Hon'ble Delhi High Court... The CIT(A) had clearly fell in error in confirming the disallowance u/s.14A of the Act, placing reliance on the explanation to sec.14A."

On rights issue expenses, the Tribunal reaffirmed the established principle from Supreme Court decisions that expenditure on capital expansion is capital in nature and not deductible as revenue expenditure.

On belated remittance of employees' contributions, the Tribunal upheld the disallowance consistent with Supreme Court authority.

In conclusion, the Tribunal allowed the appeals relating to depreciation on non-compete fees for all relevant assessment years, allowed the appeals challenging section 14A disallowances for earlier years, dismissed the appeal on rights issue expenses, upheld disallowance on belated ESI contributions, and dismissed the appeal on MAT credit denial. The decisions reflect a careful application of statutory provisions, judicial precedents, and principles of tax interpretation.

 

 

 

 

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