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Issues:
1. Whether interest income is exempt under the principle of mutuality and section 11 of the IT Act. 2. Whether the assessee has spent 75% of its income on charitable purposes. 3. Whether the assessee is eligible for exemption under section 11 of the Act. 4. Whether the principle of mutuality applies to income from interest received from the bank. 5. Whether the assessee is required to be registered under section 12A of the Act. Analysis: 1. The assessee, a company, declared Nil income for the assessment year 1980-81 but had interest income from fixed deposits. The Income Tax Officer (ITO) held that the interest income was not covered by the principle of mutuality as it was not from its own members. The alternative submission that the entire income was exempt under section 11 was also rejected as the assessee had not spent 75% of its income on charitable purposes. The ITO brought the interest amount to tax. The Appellate Assistant Commissioner (AAC) relied on Supreme Court decisions and held that the dominant purpose of the assessee being charitable, the principle of mutuality was applicable, and accepted the appeal. 2. The Revenue appealed, arguing that the exemption under section 11 was not applicable as the assessee had not met the 75% expenditure requirement. They contended that the principle of mutuality could not apply to interest income from the bank. Additionally, they claimed that the AAC erred in granting exemption as the assessee was not registered under section 12A of the Act. 3. The assessee's representative argued that the Memorandum and Articles of Association highlighted the charitable purpose of the assessee. They emphasized that 75% of income should be calculated based on total receipts, not net income. They also mentioned that the registration under section 12A was granted to the assessee, even though the Revenue raised concerns about it. 4. The Tribunal found that the assessee had applied for registration under section 12A, and since there was no evidence to show rejection, the ground raised by the Revenue was dismissed. The Tribunal also held that total income should be considered for calculating the 75% expenditure requirement under section 11(2). Considering the charitable nature of the assessee, as per the Memorandum and Articles of Association, and in line with Supreme Court decisions, the Tribunal upheld the AAC's decision that the principle of mutuality applied, and the assessee was not a profit-earning association. Consequently, the appeal by the Revenue was dismissed.
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