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2025 (5) TMI 1413 - AT - Income TaxClaim made through additional grounds of appeal for the first time before the First Appellate Authority - HELD THAT - As gone through the order of the First Appellate Authority; there is no finding of the First Appellate Authority in context of additional grounds of appeal raised by appellant before him. Thus having heard the ld. Counsels appearing for the parties and having regard to the facts and circumstances of the case we dispose of this ground of appeal by remitting the issue to the Ld. CIT(A) to deal with the same afresh along with the main issue having relevance with the additional ground and to pass orders accordingly upon granting an opportunity of being heard to the assessee and upon considering the evidence on record or any other evidence which the assessee may choose to file at the time of hearing of the matter. In the result ground of appeal is allowed for statistical purpose. Computation of tax payable in view of the facts that the order of assessment has been concluded at an assessed loss - In the facts of the appellant company has returned loss of Rs. 2, 65, 21, 112/- which after making the disallowance by ld. AO has been reduced to Rs. 53, 55, 148 thus we are inclined to accept the contention of appellant that computation of tax payable of Rs. 51, 31, 916/- is invalid and therefore the same is directed to be deleted and in the result ground of appeal is allowed.
1. ISSUES PRESENTED and CONSIDERED
The core legal questions considered by the Tribunal in this appeal are:
2. ISSUE-WISE DETAILED ANALYSIS Issue 1: Nature of License Fee Payment - Capital or Revenue Expenditure Relevant legal framework and precedents: The key statutory provision is Section 35ABB of the Income Tax Act, which provides for amortization of expenditure incurred on acquiring a license to operate telecommunication services over the period for which the license is granted. The Supreme Court's judgment in the case of CIT vs. Bharti Hexacom Ltd. (458 ITR 593) is pivotal, wherein the Apex Court reversed the earlier decision of the Delhi High Court and held that the acquisition of the right to carry on telecommunication business is a capital asset. Consequently, the payments made towards acquisition of such rights are capital expenditure and not deductible as revenue expenditure in the year of payment but are to be amortized under Section 35ABB. Court's interpretation and reasoning: The AO initially treated the license fee paid under the revenue sharing regime as capital expenditure, relying on the National Telecom Policy 1999, which changed the method of calculating license fees but did not alter the nature of the license or the payments. The AO held that the license granted for twenty years starting from FY 2014-15 remained a capital asset, and the license fee paid should be amortized over the remaining fourteen years. The First Appellate Authority upheld this view, referencing the Supreme Court's judgment in Bharti Hexacom, which settled the issue in favor of capital treatment of such payments. Key evidence and findings: The appellant company paid Rs. 2,27,94,115/- as license fee under the revenue sharing regime. The AO disallowed Rs. 2,11,65,964/- in the year under consideration, allowing only one fourteenth of the amount (Rs. 16,28,151/-) as amortization. The appellant initially disputed this disallowance but subsequently accepted the Supreme Court's ruling in Bharti Hexacom, which mandated capital treatment and amortization under Section 35ABB. Application of law to facts: The Tribunal noted that the National Telecom Policy 1999 merely altered the calculation method of license fees, not the character of the license or payments. The Supreme Court's ruling conclusively established that such license fees are capital expenditure amortizable over the license period. Accordingly, the disallowance by AO and its confirmation by the First Appellate Authority are legally sound. Treatment of competing arguments: The appellant initially argued the license fee was revenue expenditure and hence deductible in the year of payment. However, post the Supreme Court judgment, the appellant accepted the capital expenditure treatment. The Tribunal did not find merit in revisiting this settled issue. Conclusion: The license fee payment is capital expenditure and must be amortized under Section 35ABB. The disallowance of the bulk of the payment in the year of assessment is justified. Issue 2: Admission and Adjudication of Additional Grounds of Appeal Raised Before CIT(A) Relevant legal framework and precedents: The principles governing admission of additional grounds of appeal before the appellate authorities require that such grounds be admitted if they pertain to the same assessment year and are supported by relevant evidence. The appellate authority must consider such grounds on merits after providing an opportunity of hearing. Court's interpretation and reasoning: The appellant filed an application dated 9.5.2024 before the CIT(A) seeking admission of additional grounds relating to deduction of license fee disallowed in past years. The First Appellate Authority neither admitted nor rejected these additional grounds and proceeded to dismiss the appeal on the main issue. The Tribunal observed that the CIT(A) failed to deal with the additional grounds at all. Key evidence and findings: The record shows no adjudication or reasoned order on the additional grounds by the CIT(A). The appellant's request for admission of these grounds was unaddressed. Application of law to facts: Given the absence of any finding on the additional grounds, the Tribunal found it appropriate to remit the matter back to the CIT(A) for fresh consideration. The CIT(A) is directed to hear the appellant on these grounds, consider relevant evidence, and pass a reasoned order. Treatment of competing arguments: The Revenue did not oppose remand for fresh adjudication. The appellant emphasized the need for a fair hearing on these additional grounds. Conclusion: The issue of additional grounds is remitted to the CIT(A) for fresh adjudication with opportunity to the appellant to present evidence and arguments. Issue 3: Validity of Computation of Tax Payable Despite Assessed Loss Relevant legal framework and precedents: The computation of tax payable must be consistent with the final assessment result. If the assessment reflects a loss, no tax liability should be computed. Court's interpretation and reasoning: The appellant declared a loss of Rs. 2,65,21,112/-, which after disallowance was reduced to Rs. 53,55,148/-. Despite this, the assessment order computed tax payable at Rs. 51,31,916/-, which the appellant challenged as invalid. Key evidence and findings: The Tribunal found that computing tax payable when the assessment is at a loss is incorrect and inconsistent with the assessment order. Application of law to facts: The Tribunal directed deletion of the tax payable computation, accepting the appellant's contention. Treatment of competing arguments: No contrary submissions were recorded from the Revenue on this point. Conclusion: The computation of tax payable at Rs. 51,31,916/- is invalid and is set aside. 3. SIGNIFICANT HOLDINGS The Tribunal made the following key determinations:
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