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2025 (6) TMI 1699 - AT - Income TaxCorrect head of income - rental income - treating the income as House Property Income as business income by the assessee while filing the return of income - HELD THAT - AR drew our attention to the decision of assessee s own case for A.Y. 2011-12 2017 (12) TMI 1894 - ITAT MUMBAI wherein the Coordinate Bench had held primary issue that the assessee s rental income was assessable as Income from Business. DR also conceded that the facts and circumstances for the year under consideration are identical to those of A.Y. 2011-12 which was decided in favour of the assessee. Accordingly no infirmity in the order passed by the Ld. CIT(A) - Decided against revenue.
1. ISSUES PRESENTED and CONSIDERED
The core legal questions considered by the Tribunal in this appeal filed by the revenue against the order of the National Faceless Appeal Centre (NFAC) under section 250 of the Income-tax Act, 1961, for Assessment Year 2012-13, are as follows: (a) Whether the income offered by the assessee from letting out an industrial park and related activities should be treated as income from house property or as business income; (b) Whether the CIT(A) erred in not applying the Supreme Court decision in Shambhu Investments (P) Ltd. regarding the characterization of rental income as income from property rather than business income; (c) Whether the interest expense of Rs. 31,05,000/- relating to interest-free advances to a sister concern should be allowed or disallowed; (d) Whether the interest expenses of Rs. 21,52,380/- debited to the profit and loss account were wholly and exclusively incurred for earning other income and hence allowable; (e) Whether the claim of unabsorbed depreciation of Rs. 83,56,774/- under section 72 of the Act is allowable given the treatment of income as house property income; (f) Whether the disallowance under section 14A of the Act amounting to Rs. 11,87,946/- should be upheld, particularly in light of the clarificatory explanation inserted vide Finance Act 2022; (g) Whether the disallowance of expenses amounting to Rs. 6,99,171/- under section 37(1) of the Act relating to interest on service tax is justified; (h) General grounds for amendment or alteration of the appeal grounds. 2. ISSUE-WISE DETAILED ANALYSIS Issues (a) and (b): Characterization of Income as Business Income vs. Income from House Property The central dispute was whether the income from letting out an industrial park and associated commercial activities should be treated as income from house property or business income. The assessee had declared the rental income as business income, but the Assessing Officer (AO) treated it as income from house property, denying depreciation and other business-related deductions. The CIT(A) upheld the assessee's characterization of the income as business income, relying on judicial precedents and the assessee's own previous years' decisions. The Tribunal noted that the issue had been conclusively decided in the assessee's favor by a coordinate bench of ITAT Mumbai in AY 2011-12 (ITA No. 4833/Mum/2015) following multiple earlier decisions. The Tribunal emphasized that no new facts or contrary judgments were brought on record to rebut those findings. Regarding the Supreme Court decision in Shambhu Investments (P) Ltd., which held that income from letting out property with additional rights and facilities is income from property and not business income, the Tribunal found this precedent distinguishable or inapplicable in the present facts. The Tribunal deferred to the coordinate bench's previous well-reasoned findings that the assessee's activities amounted to business exploitation of the property. Thus, the Tribunal concluded that the CIT(A)'s treatment of the income as business income was justified and dismissed the revenue's challenge on these grounds. Issue (c): Disallowance of Interest Expense on Interest-Free Advances to Sister Concern The assessee had outstanding borrowings and had given an interest-free advance to its sister concern. The AO disallowed proportionate interest expense of Rs. 31,05,000/- on the basis that such interest-free advances were not used for earning house property income. The CIT(A) partially allowed the appeal, directing the AO to disallow interest only on the interest-free advances. The Tribunal noted that this issue had also been decided in the assessee's favor in AY 2009-10 by the coordinate bench (ITA No. 1992/M/13), and accordingly remitted the matter back to the AO with similar directions. Hence, the Tribunal allowed the ground for statistical purposes, instructing the AO to follow the earlier decision. Issue (d): Allowability of Interest Expenses of Rs. 21,52,380/- The AO disallowed interest expenses of Rs. 21,52,380/- on the ground that the assessee failed to prove these were wholly and exclusively for earning other income under section 57(iii) of the Act. The assessee contended that since the interest income had nexus to business activity, the interest expenses should be allowed as business deductions. The CIT(A) allowed the claim, relying on earlier orders in the assessee's own case for AY 2011-12 and relevant case law. The Tribunal noted that this issue had been decided in the assessee's favor by the coordinate bench (ITA Nos. 2745 & 2748/M/2013 for AY 2007-08 & 2009-10), and remitted the matter back to the AO with directions to allow the claim accordingly. Issue (e): Claim of Unabsorbed Depreciation of Rs. 83,56,774/- The AO denied the claim of set-off of unabsorbed depreciation relating to AYs 2006-07 and 2008-09, reasoning that since rental income was assessed under house property, depreciation was not allowable. The CIT(A) allowed the claim, following the coordinate bench's earlier decision for AY 2011-12, which had held that the income was business income, entitling the assessee to claim depreciation and set off losses. The Tribunal upheld this view, noting no new facts or contrary judgments were presented, and dismissed the revenue's ground. Issues (f) and (g): Disallowance under Section 14A and Allowability of Interest on Service Tax under Section 37(1) The AO disallowed Rs. 11,87,946/- under section 14A read with Rule 8D, over and above the assessee's suo-moto disallowance of Rs. 69,536/-, on account of expenditure relating to exempt income. The assessee argued that no exempt income was earned during the year, hence section 14A should not apply. The CIT(A) deleted the disallowance, relying on the Supreme Court decision in Commissioner of Income Tax (Central) vs. Chettinad Logistics (P.) Ltd., which held that section 14A cannot be invoked where no exempt income is earned in the relevant year. The Tribunal concurred and allowed the ground. Regarding the disallowance of interest on service tax of Rs. 6,99,121/- under section 37(1), the AO rejected the claim treating it as penalty. The CIT(A) allowed the claim relying on the Supreme Court decision in Mahalakshmi Sugar Mills Co. vs. CIT, which held that interest for delayed payment of statutory dues is an allowable deduction under section 37(1) and not a penalty. The Tribunal upheld this view and allowed the ground. Issue (h): General Grounds The revenue's general ground to add, amend, alter or delete any grounds was noted but not adjudicated as it was of a general nature. 3. SIGNIFICANT HOLDINGS The Tribunal's crucial legal reasoning and principles established are as follows: "After having gone through the facts of the present case as well as considering the orders passed by revenue authorities and Hon'ble ITAT as mentioned above in assessee's own case, we find that the identical issue has already been decided by the Hon'ble ITAT in assessee's own case... no new facts or contrary judgments have been brought on record before us in order to controvert or rebut the findings so recorded by Ld. CIT(A). Therefore, there are no reasons for us to interfere into or deviate from the findings recorded by the Ld. CIT(A). Hence, we are of the considered view that the findings so recorded by the Ld.CIT(A) are judicious and are well reasoned." "Section 14A cannot be invoked where no exempt income was earned by the assessee in the relevant assessment year." "Interest for delayed payment of statutory dues is an allowable deduction under section 37(1) of the Act and it cannot be held as penalty paid for infringement of law." The Tribunal consistently applied the principle of judicial consistency by following coordinate bench decisions in the assessee's own case for earlier assessment years, thereby ensuring uniformity in tax treatment. Final determinations on each issue were as follows:
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