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2025 (5) TMI 1711 - AT - Income Tax


The core legal issues considered by the Tribunal in these appeals revolve around the taxability of amounts received by certain trustees upon their relinquishment of trusteeship in a charitable educational trust. Specifically, the issues include:

1. Whether the amounts received by the trustees for relinquishing their trusteeship rights in the Carmel Educational Trust constitute capital receipts or income under the Income Tax Act.

2. Whether such receipts qualify as capital gains under the relevant provisions of the Income Tax Act, particularly in light of the absence of any cost of acquisition for the trusteeship rights.

3. The legal validity and effect of the trustees' en bloc resignation and transfer of trust assets and management to a new body of trustees nominated by another entity.

4. The appropriate head of income under which the amounts received by the trustees should be assessed for tax purposes.

Issue-wise Detailed Analysis:

Issue 1: Nature of the Receipts - Capital Receipt or Income

The legal framework involves the provisions of the Income Tax Act, particularly sections dealing with capital gains (sections 45, 48, 49, 55) and income from other sources (section 56). The Tribunal initially held that the amount received by the trustees for relinquishing their trusteeship rights was a capital receipt and not taxable as income. This was based on the reasoning that the trusteeship rights constituted a capital asset, and the consideration received upon relinquishment was a capital gain.

The Hon'ble High Court, however, disagreed with the Tribunal's conclusion. It examined the trust deed and relevant legal principles, including the Supreme Court's decision in Sheikh Abdul Kayum v. Mulla Alibhai, which clarified that trustees cannot unilaterally renounce their trusteeship except under certain conditions (permission of court, consent of beneficiaries, or authority under the trust deed). The Court noted that the trust deed did not empower the trustees to abdicate their office en bloc or transfer the trust assets to another body of trustees. Therefore, the purported relinquishment and transfer were illegal and void in law.

Consequently, the Court held that the amounts received by the trustees for such relinquishment could not be treated as capital receipts arising from the transfer of a capital asset. Instead, these amounts represented income in the hands of the trustees and were taxable accordingly.

Issue 2: Applicability of Capital Gains Provisions and Cost of Acquisition

The Tribunal relied heavily on precedents including the Supreme Court's ruling in CIT v. B.C. Srinivasa Shetty, which dealt with the taxability of amounts received on surrender of tenancy rights. The Supreme Court had held that for a capital gain to be taxable, the asset must be capable of acquisition at a cost, and the cost of acquisition must be ascertainable or deemed nil under section 55(2). If no cost can be determined, capital gains provisions cannot be applied.

The Tribunal reasoned that trusteeship rights, akin to tenancy rights, could be treated as capital assets acquired without cost, and thus the receipts were capital gains but not taxable due to absence of cost of acquisition. The High Court, however, distinguished this case on the ground that trusteeship rights are not transferable assets in the legal sense and cannot be equated with tenancy or similar rights. The Court emphasized that the trustees' resignation and transfer of trust assets were not authorized by law or the trust deed, making the transaction invalid as a transfer of capital asset.

Thus, the High Court concluded that the capital gains provisions were inapplicable, and the amounts could not be assessed as capital gains.

Issue 3: Legality of the Trustees' Relinquishment and Transfer of Trust Assets

The High Court extensively analyzed the trust deed and the Indian Trusts Act provisions (sections 46 and 47) which, while not directly applicable to public charitable trusts, embody general principles of trust law. The Court noted that trustees cannot delegate or abdicate their duties without proper authority or consent, and the power to appoint new trustees does not equate to the power to replace the entire body of trustees.

The Court found that the purported en bloc resignation and transfer of trust assets to a new set of trustees nominated by the Believers Church was illegal and void. This finding was critical because it negated the premise that the trustees had transferred a capital asset (their trusteeship rights) for consideration, thereby affecting the taxability of the amounts received.

Issue 4: Appropriate Head of Income for Tax Assessment

Following the High Court's ruling that the amounts were not capital receipts, the matter was remanded to the Tribunal to determine the correct head of income under the Income Tax Act. The Tribunal examined the six heads of income under section 14 and concluded that the amounts did not fall under salary, interest, house property, business income, or capital gains.

Accordingly, the Tribunal held that the amounts received by the trustees for relinquishment of their shares in the trust were taxable under the residual head of "Income from Other Sources" under section 56 of the Income Tax Act. This conclusion was supported by the absence of any other applicable head and the nature of the receipts as non-capital, non-business income.

The Tribunal also rejected the assessee's argument that the initial assessment officer's taxation of the amounts as income from other sources was irrelevant, given the doctrine of merger whereby the ITAT's order superseded the AO's order. The Tribunal emphasized that the AO had not specifically taxed the amounts under income from other sources but as unexplained receipts, and the final determination rested with the Tribunal in light of the High Court's directions.

Competing Arguments and Their Treatment

The assessee contended that the amounts were capital receipts not taxable as income, relying on the ITAT's earlier decision and the analogy with tenancy rights surrender cases. They further argued that if the High Court had intended the amounts to be taxed as income from other sources, it would have affirmed the AO's order rather than remanding the matter.

The Tribunal and the High Court rejected these contentions, emphasizing the legal invalidity of the trustees' relinquishment and the absence of any statutory provision treating trusteeship rights as capital assets transferable for consideration. The High Court's detailed analysis of trust law principles and the trust deed underscored the illegality of the transaction, which the Tribunal accepted in its final determination.

Significant Holdings:

"A person who is appointed a trustee is not bound to accept the trust; but having once entered upon the trust he cannot renounce the duties and liabilities except with the permission of the Court or with the consent of the beneficiaries or by the authority of the trust deed itself."

"The provision for the appointment of new trustees cannot by any stretch of imagination be held to mean the substitution of the old body of trustees by a new body. That provision only permits the old trustees to add to their number. Nor does the power to frame rules and regulations for the benefit and efficient running of the school authorise the trustees to give up the management of the school themselves or to divest themselves of the properties entrusted to them by the trust deed and vest them in other persons."

"The act of the trustees, who were appointed by the trust deed, in handing over the management of the school to the Hakimia Society and the properties of the school to the members of the governing body of the Hakima Society was illegal and void in law."

"An asset which is capable of acquisition at a cost would be included within the provisions pertaining to the head 'Capital gains' as opposed to assets in the acquisition of which no cost at all can be conceived."

"Since the assessee had not incurred any cost of acquisition in respect of gain on account of relinquishment of trusteeship in Carmel Educational Trust, it cannot be brought to tax as capital gains."

"If the income cannot be taxed under section 45 [capital gains], it cannot be taxed at all under the residuary head of income from other sources." (As per Supreme Court precedents, but distinguished on facts in this case.)

"The amounts received by the assessee's for relinquishment of their shares of Carmel Educational Trust is taxable under the head 'income from other sources'."

In conclusion, the Tribunal dismissed the appeals filed by the assessee and upheld the High Court's direction that the amounts received on relinquishment of trusteeship rights, being illegal transfers of trust property and not capital assets, are taxable as income under the head "Income from Other Sources" under the Income Tax Act.

 

 

 

 

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