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2025 (6) TMI 1702 - AT - Income TaxDenying the approval u/s 80G(5)(iii) - charitable activity u/s 2(15) - as per CIT(E) assessee trust reported surplus every year which is not utilized towards charitable purposes and they had been accumulated in FDs and received interest income AND fee receipts which are forming part of the total receipts do not fall under the purview of donation u/s. 80G - HELD THAT - For the purpose of granting approval u/s 80G of the Act the only relevant section is sub-sections (5). Commissioner (Exemptions) after receiving the application for granting approval u/s 80G of the Act shall call for such document or information and make such enquiry as he/she thinks necessary in order to satisfy himself/herself about the genuineness of the activity of such institution or fund and the fulfillment of all the conditions laid down in clause (i) to (v). At the time of granting of approval u/s 80G of the Act the authority has to satisfy herself that the chartable institution is established in India for charitable purposes and the activities of the assessee trust are genuine and the assessee trust also fulfilled all the conditions as mentioned above. CIT(Exemptions) in our view has also not brought any material on record to show that the activities of the assessee trust are not genuine or the conditions as specified above are not fulfilled by the assessee trust. We allow the appeal of the assessee trust and direct the ld. CIT(E) to grant approval u/s 80G of the Act to the assessee as applied in form 10AB on 10.08.2024. Appeal filed by the assessee is allowed.
The core legal questions considered by the Tribunal in this appeal against the rejection of approval under section 80G of the Income Tax Act, 1961 ("the Act") include:
1. Whether the learned Commissioner of Income Tax (Exemptions) ("CIT(E)") erred in denying approval under section 80G(5)(iii) despite granting registration under section 12AB of the Act to the assessee trust. 2. Whether the CIT(E) was justified in holding that the assessee trust failed to furnish sufficient proof of its activities within the meaning of section 2(15) of the Act. 3. Whether the CIT(E) was correct in rejecting the approval on the ground that the assessee reported surpluses not applied towards charitable purposes, but accumulated in fixed deposits earning interest income. 4. Whether fee receipts and other income of the trust fall within the purview of donations eligible for deduction under section 80G. 5. Whether the CIT(E) erred in ignoring capital expenditure and permissible accumulation under section 11(1)(a) of the Act while computing application of income. 6. The scope of enquiry and satisfaction required by the CIT(E) for granting approval under section 80G(5) of the Act. Issue-wise Detailed Analysis 1. Grant of Approval under Section 80G vis-`a-vis Registration under Section 12AB Legal Framework and Precedents: Section 80G(5) lays down conditions for grant of approval for donations to be eligible for deduction. Section 12AB registration is prerequisite for exemption under sections 11 and 12, and requires verification of genuineness of activities. However, approval under section 80G is a separate process requiring satisfaction of additional conditions. Court's Interpretation and Reasoning: The Tribunal noted that the CIT(E) had granted registration under section 12AB after satisfying herself about the genuineness of the trust and its activities. The Tribunal opined that such satisfaction should logically extend to approval under section 80G, as the latter requires the CIT(E) to be satisfied about genuineness and fulfillment of conditions under clauses (i) to (v) of section 80G(5). Application of Law to Facts: The CIT(E) did not bring any material to show that the trust's activities were not genuine or that conditions under section 80G(5) were not fulfilled. Therefore, rejection of approval under section 80G despite registration under section 12AB was held to be erroneous. Conclusion: The Tribunal held that the CIT(E) ought to have granted approval under section 80G after granting registration under section 12AB, absent any adverse material. 2. Sufficiency of Proof of Activities under Section 2(15) Legal Framework: Section 2(15) defines "charitable purpose" and is critical in determining eligibility for exemption and approval. The CIT(E) must be satisfied that the trust carries out activities within this definition. Court's Reasoning: The CIT(E) had rejected the application on the ground that sufficient details or proof of activities were not furnished. However, the Tribunal observed that the CIT(E) had earlier granted registration under section 12AB based on the same facts and materials, which entails verification of genuineness and charitable nature of activities. Key Findings: No new material was produced to contradict the genuineness of activities. The Tribunal emphasized that the CIT(E) did not demonstrate that the activities were non-charitable or that the trust failed to meet section 2(15). Conclusion: The Tribunal found the CIT(E)'s conclusion on insufficiency of proof to be without basis and inconsistent with the earlier registration decision. 3. Treatment of Surplus and Accumulation of Income Legal Framework: Section 11(1) and 11(1)(a) permit accumulation of up to 15% of income for application towards charitable purposes. The application of income and accumulation are relevant for exemption but not necessarily for approval under section 80G. Court's Reasoning: The CIT(E) rejected approval partly on the ground that the trust reported surplus income not applied towards charitable purposes but accumulated in fixed deposits earning interest. The assessee argued that capital expenditure and permissible accumulation under section 11(1)(a) were ignored. Application of Law to Facts: The Tribunal held that the scope of enquiry for approval under section 80G is limited to satisfaction about genuineness of activities and compliance with conditions under section 80G(5). Detailed scrutiny of income application, surplus, or accumulation is to be conducted during assessment proceedings, not at the approval stage. Conclusion: The CIT(E) erred in rejecting approval on the basis of surplus accumulation without considering capital expenditure and permissible accumulation under section 11(1)(a). Such matters are beyond the scope of approval proceedings. 4. Nature of Fee Receipts vis-`a-vis Donations Eligible under Section 80G Legal Framework: Only donations qualify for deduction under section 80G. Fee receipts for services rendered are not donations. Court's Reasoning: The CIT(E) held that fee receipts do not fall under donations eligible for deduction. The assessee contended that it receives both fee receipts and donations/grants, and only donations are eligible for 80G certificates, which it issues accordingly. Application of Law to Facts: The Tribunal observed that the presence of fee receipts as part of total receipts does not disqualify the trust from approval under section 80G. The approval relates to the institution's charitable status and genuineness of activities, not the classification of individual receipts. The question whether fee receipts qualify as donations is irrelevant in approval proceedings. Conclusion: The Tribunal held that the CIT(E) erred in conflating fee receipts with donations and denying approval on that basis. 5. Scope of Enquiry and Conditions under Section 80G(5) Legal Framework: Section 80G(5) specifies conditions (i) to (v) that must be fulfilled for approval: income not liable to inclusion under sections 11 and 12, instrument of constitution restricting income application to charitable purposes, non-benefit to any particular religious community or caste, maintenance of regular accounts, and constitution as a public charitable trust or recognized educational institution. Court's Reasoning: The Tribunal emphasized that the CIT(E) must be satisfied about the genuineness of activities and fulfillment of these conditions before granting approval. The CIT(E) did not bring any material to show non-fulfillment of these conditions. Application of Law to Facts: Since the trust was registered under section 12AB and provisional approval under section 80G had been granted earlier, the Tribunal found no basis for denial of permanent approval. Conclusion: The Tribunal concluded that the CIT(E) failed to apply the correct legal test under section 80G(5) and ought to have granted approval. 6. Treatment of Competing Arguments and Evidence The CIT(E) relied on the existence of surpluses, accumulation of income, and fee receipts to deny approval. The assessee argued for limited scope of enquiry at approval stage, proper consideration of capital expenditure and accumulation, and distinction between fee receipts and donations. The Tribunal found the CIT(E)'s observations to be unsupported by evidence or contrary to the legal framework. The CIT(E) did not point to any specific activity as non-genuine or any condition under section 80G(5) as unfulfilled. The Tribunal gave greater weight to the registration under section 12AB and provisional approval already granted. Accordingly, the Tribunal accepted the assessee's arguments and rejected the CIT(E)'s grounds for denial. Significant Holdings "The scope of enquiry by the learned CIT(Exemptions) while dealing with the application for grant of approval u/s. 80G of the Act extends only to the satisfaction of the genuineness of the activities of such trust/institutions and the fulfillment of all the conditions laid down in clauses (i) to (v) of Section 80G(5) of the Act and not the actual computation of surplus." "The provisions of section 11 & 12 along with section 13 including application of fund by the charitable organization are to be examined during the course of assessment proceedings and not at the time of granting approval u/s 80G of the Act." "Mere fact of the assessee being an educational institution which received tuition & other fees along with hostel fees, the approval u/s 80G of the Act cannot be denied specially when it is established for the charitable purposes within the meaning of section 2(15) of the Act and the registration u/s 12A of the Act has already been granted after verifying the genuineness of the activities carried out by the Assessee trust." "The learned CIT(Exemptions) has also not brought any material on record to show that the activities of the assessee trust are not genuine or the conditions as specified above are not fulfilled by the assessee trust." The Tribunal ultimately allowed the appeal and directed the CIT(Exemptions) to grant approval under section 80G as applied in Form 10AB dated 10.08.2024.
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