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2025 (6) TMI 1761 - AT - Income TaxDisallowance of loss - Speculative transaction or not - AO observed that Transactions that were settled without effecting delivery - Commodity transactions on NSEL platform - addition made as assessee was engaged in paper transactions - Additions on the basis of Special Auditor s report under section 142(2A) - HELD THAT - AO concluded that the transactions on the National Spot Exchange Limited (NSEL) platform where these trades purportedly occurred were essentially financing transactions and settled without actual delivery thus he held the loss as speculative. Before us Ld. AR submitted that the assessee had already substantiated that the transactions have not been carried out at the NSEL Platform which has been accepted by the CIT(A) and hence they are not the speculative transactions of the assessee; the Ld. CIT(A) however has made the addition only on the basis of the observation that no delivery challans had been submitted by the assessee to substantiate the delivery of such goods within a short time of 1 day. The assessee has submitted copies of purchase of Cotton Washed Oil as well as the sale made to Tirupati Proteins Pvt Limited. Since the transactions have not been in question the profit or loss arising out of the same would have the consequent effect. Hence the addition made by the AO solely on the basis that that the transactions are with Tirupati Proteins Pvt Limited and hence the losses cannot be allowed is not an acceptable proposition. The appeal of the assessee on this ground is allowed. Disallowance of loss from future and option (commodities) transactions - assessee submitted that these transactions were undertaken to hedge its existing stock and thus should be considered a business loss under the proviso to Section 43(5) of the Act rather than a speculative loss as held by the AO - HELD THAT - When the main business of the assessee was to manufacture such goods it is implied that the sales made by the assessee include the sales of the manufactured goods under contracts of supply on Actual Delivery Basis. The provisions of Section 43(5) are squarely applicable to the facts of the instant case hence the same cannot be treated as speculative transaction. The appeal of the assessee on this ground is allowed. Disallowance of the interest u/s 36(1)(iii) - Depreciation shall be allowed on the capitalization of interest. The appeal on this ground is hereby allowed for statistical purposes. Addition on account of prior period income - The details pertaining to prior period income and prior period expense was duly provided by the appellant company in Form No. 3CD. (PB 68). This amount was considered in earlier year by the appellant by furnishing a revised computation of income and the appellant company has filed challan on 02.11.2012 which is reflected in Form 26AS (PB 66). The said tax is paid on the basis of revised computation in which prior period income taken into consideration is Rs. 1, 19, 45, 801/-. There was an error in the amount as Rs. 1, 19, 45, 801/- instead of Rs. 1, 05, 89, 948/- which stands corrected. The Assessing Officer shall verify these facts from the record and allow. The appeal of the assessee on this ground is allowed. Purchase of Cotton Wash Oil and Mustard Seed - allegations of the AO that Rs. 80.51 crores have not been paid against the purchase of goods - HELD THAT - The purchase of Cotton Wash Oil were made from Rajkot and reflected in the stock register.The payments have been made through NSEL Settlement Account and such payments were through banking channel.Letter dated 24thJanuary 2018 addressed by NSEL to Assessing Officer confirmed that purchases made by NKPL were on peer-to-peer basis and payment was made against such purchases by Rajkot Depot of the Company.These purchases were recorded in books of account of Kota Branch and payment was also made against such purchases.NSEL has confirmed the details of payment. With regard to purchase of mustard seeds at Kota branch from NSEL NSEL has stated that as per Exchange Appellant has purchased mustard seeds in Mustard Kota Contract which was launched during FY 2011-12. NSEL has further confirmed that assessee has purchased mustard seeds on electronic exchange trading platform and payment in respect of such purchases has been made by NKPL from NKPL-NSEL Settlement Account by settlement date mentioned in the contracts. Thus from the reading of the remand report and the reply of NSEL it is proved beyond doubt that the payments have been indeed made. Assessee appeal allowed. Disallowance of additional depreciation - As per AO such assets were put to use in preceding AY for less than 180 days and therefore assessee is eligible for depreciation at only 50% rate in preceding year and balance 50% depreciation have to forego and not allowable in succeeding year following section 32(1)(iia) - HELD THAT - As relying on Godrej Industries Ltd 2018 (12) TMI 64 - BOMBAY HIGH COURT as held that intention of the legislation is absolutely clear that the assessee shall be allowed certain additional benefit which was restricted by the proviso to only half of the same being granted in one assessment year if certain condition was not fulfilled. But that in our considered view would not restrain the assessee from claiming the balance of the benefit in the subsequent assessment year. Additional depreciation allowed under Section 32(1)(iia) of the Act is a onetime benefit to encourage industrialization and the provisions related to it have to be construed reasonably liberally and purposively to make the provision meaningful while granting the additional allowance - we find no reason to interfere with the order of the Ld. CIT(A) deleting the impugned disallowance. The appeal of the Revenue on this ground is hereby dismissed.
1. ISSUES PRESENTED and CONSIDERED
The core legal questions considered in the appeals relate to: (a) Validity and consequences of the special audit conducted under section 142(2A) of the Income-tax Act, 1961, particularly whether the special audit was justified on the basis of press reports and complexity of accounts; (b) Whether the loss of Rs. 1,00,00,000/- on trading in Cotton Washed Oil (CWO) with group concerns, alleged to be paper/fictitious transactions without physical delivery, is allowable as business loss or should be disallowed as speculative or bogus loss; (c) Whether the hedging loss of Rs. 4,20,57,547/- from Futures & Options (F&O) transactions qualifies as a business loss or speculative loss under section 43(5) of the Act; (d) Allowability of interest expenditure of Rs. 4,88,000/- capitalized as part of work-in-progress under section 36(1)(iii); (e) Treatment of prior period income of Rs. 1,05,89,848/- shown in the Profit & Loss account but claimed to be offered to tax in an earlier assessment year; (f) Whether the purchases of Cotton Washed Oil and Mustard Seed amounting to Rs. 73.07 crores and Rs. 7.44 crores respectively were substantiated by payments made by the assessee; (g) Allowability of additional depreciation of Rs. 1,27,09,375/- claimed on assets put to use for less than 180 days; (h) Disallowance of interest expenses of Rs. 4,24,000/- and Rs. 61,677/- under section 36(1)(iii). 2. ISSUE-WISE DETAILED ANALYSIS (a) Validity of Special Audit under Section 142(2A) The assessee challenged the validity of the special audit conducted solely on the basis of press reports, contending that the nature of accounts was not complex and had remained unchanged for years. The Tribunal did not specifically dwell on this issue in the final order, but the special audit report formed the basis of the Assessing Officer's (AO) findings regarding paper transactions and fictitious losses. The Tribunal proceeded on the basis that the special audit was valid and the report admissible. (b) Disallowance of Rs. 1,00,00,000/- Loss on Cotton Washed Oil Transactions Legal Framework and Precedents: The issue involves distinguishing between genuine business loss and speculative or bogus loss. Section 43(5) defines speculative transactions as contracts settled otherwise than by actual delivery or transfer. Losses on speculative transactions are not allowed to be set off against business income. The burden lies on the assessee to establish genuineness and delivery of goods. Court's Interpretation and Reasoning: The AO relied on the special auditor's report and statements recorded under section 133A, which revealed that the assessee and its group concerns engaged in circular paper transactions on the National Spot Exchange Limited (NSEL) platform without physical delivery of goods. The modus operandi involved simultaneous buy-sell contracts rolled over to obtain finance, with no actual delivery or stock movement. The assessee admitted these facts in statements and emails, including admission that warehouse stocks were fictitious and that transactions were financing in nature. The AO held that the losses of Rs. 1,00,00,000/- were fictitious, speculative, and not incurred in the normal course of business, hence disallowable. The CIT(A) confirmed the disallowance, emphasizing lack of delivery challans, short time gap between purchase and sale of identical quantities with group concerns, and absence of third-party corroborative evidence. The CIT(A) rejected the assessee's contention that no revenue loss occurred as both parties were taxable at maximum marginal rates, holding that speculative losses cannot be set off against business income. Before the Tribunal, the assessee argued that transactions were not on NSEL platform and thus not speculative. The Tribunal found that the CIT(A) had accepted that transactions were not on NSEL platform but disallowed the loss solely because of lack of delivery proof within a short period. The Tribunal held that since the transactions were not disputed, the resultant profit or loss should be recognized. The addition solely on the basis that transactions were with group concerns and lack of delivery challans was not sustainable. Accordingly, the Tribunal allowed the appeal of the assessee on this ground. Application of Law to Facts: The Tribunal distinguished the AY 2011-12 facts where losses were held speculative due to no delivery on NSEL platform, from the instant year where transactions were not on NSEL platform and delivery was not disputed. The Tribunal emphasized that losses arising from genuine transactions cannot be disallowed merely because parties are related or delivery challans were not produced. Treatment of Competing Arguments: The Revenue relied on the special audit and AO findings to assert the losses were fictitious and speculative. The assessee argued genuineness and lack of speculative nature. The Tribunal found the assessee's argument on genuineness of transactions persuasive for the year under consideration. Conclusion: The loss of Rs. 1,00,00,000/- on CWO transactions was allowed by the Tribunal. (c) Disallowance of Hedging Loss of Rs. 4,20,57,547/- on Futures & Options Legal Framework: Section 43(5) defines speculative transactions and excludes genuine hedging contracts from being treated as speculative. The proviso to section 43(5) clarifies that contracts entered into for raw materials to guard against price fluctuations in respect of contracts for actual delivery of goods manufactured by the assessee are not speculative. Court's Reasoning: The AO disallowed the loss on F&O transactions as speculative, noting the assessee failed to provide working details. The CIT(A) upheld the disallowance, holding that the assessee did not produce evidence of existing contracts for supply of finished goods for actual delivery, a condition precedent to treat F&O transactions as hedging under section 43(5). The CIT(A) concluded that absence of such contracts rendered the F&O transactions speculative. The Tribunal examined that the assessee is a manufacturer of edible and non-edible oils using commodities as raw materials. The assessee contended that its business necessarily involves contracts for sale of finished goods on actual delivery basis, implying that F&O transactions were genuine hedges. The Tribunal held that the proviso to section 43(5) applies squarely, and the transactions cannot be treated as speculative if they relate to raw materials for manufacturing and are entered to hedge price fluctuations in respect of contracts for actual delivery of finished goods. Application of Law to Facts: The Tribunal accepted the assessee's contention that the business involves sale of manufactured goods under contracts for actual delivery, thereby qualifying the F&O transactions as hedging and not speculative. The absence of explicit contract evidence was not fatal given the nature of business. Treatment of Arguments: The Revenue's reliance on absence of specific contracts was rejected in light of the business context and statutory proviso. The assessee's argument was upheld. Conclusion: The Tribunal allowed the claim of loss on F&O transactions as business loss and not speculative loss. (d) Disallowance of Interest Capitalization of Rs. 4,88,000/- The Tribunal allowed the capitalization of interest expenditure for statistical purposes, following the principle that interest on borrowed capital used for acquisition or construction of capital assets can be capitalized. (e) Addition of Prior Period Income of Rs. 1,05,89,848/- Legal Framework: Income pertaining to prior years, if offered to tax in the relevant earlier year, should not be taxed again. The assessee must prove that such income was offered and assessed in the earlier year. Court's Reasoning: The AO disallowed the claim that prior period income was offered in AY 2011-12, as the assessee did not file a revised return for that year, only a revised computation. The CIT(A) confirmed the addition on the same grounds. The Tribunal examined the facts and found that the assessee had furnished a revised computation and paid tax accordingly, evidenced by challan and Form 26AS. The Tribunal directed the AO to verify these facts and allow the claim. Conclusion: The prior period income was allowed to be excluded from current year income subject to verification. (f) Purchase of Cotton Wash Oil and Mustard Seed Legal Framework: The assessee must substantiate payments made for purchases to claim deductions. Failure to prove payments can lead to disallowance under the Act. Court's Reasoning: The AO disallowed purchases aggregating Rs. 80.51 crores on the ground that payments were not substantiated, relying on survey reports and absence of payment details. The CIT(A) deleted the disallowance after considering remand reports and confirmation from NSEL that payments were made through a settlement account maintained by the assessee with NSEL. The CIT(A) noted that the AO did not dispute the payments in remand reports and that goods were received and used in manufacturing. The Tribunal concurred with the CIT(A), noting that payments were made through the NSEL settlement account and confirmed by NSEL itself. The Tribunal held that the AO's initial objections were overcome by the evidence and remand reports. The Tribunal declined to interfere with the deletion of addition. Conclusion: The purchases of CWO and mustard seed were held substantiated and allowable. (g) Disallowance of Additional Depreciation of Rs. 1,27,09,375/- Legal Framework and Precedents: Section 32(1)(iia) allows additional depreciation of 20% on new plant and machinery. The proviso restricts additional depreciation to 50% if assets are used for less than 180 days in the previous year. The question arises whether the balance 50% can be claimed in the succeeding year. Judicial precedents from Karnataka High Court and Madras High Court have held that balance 50% depreciation can be claimed in the next assessment year. The Finance Act, 2016 inserted a third proviso to section 32(1) clarifying this right. Court's Reasoning: The CIT(A) allowed balance 50% depreciation in the succeeding year. The Tribunal followed the ratio of the High Courts and held that the assessee is entitled to claim the remaining 50% depreciation in the subsequent year. The amendment is clarificatory and applies retrospectively. Conclusion: The disallowance of additional depreciation was deleted. (h) Disallowance of Interest Expenses of Rs. 4,24,000/- and Rs. 61,677/- The Revenue's appeal on this ground was allowed due to the small quantum and the assessee did not contest the disallowance. The Tribunal allowed the Revenue's appeal accordingly. 3. SIGNIFICANT HOLDINGS "The loss of Rs. 1,00,00,000/- on Cotton Washed Oil transactions, being not disputed as transactions and not carried out on NSEL platform, cannot be disallowed merely on the ground of lack of delivery challans or because the transactions were with group concerns." "The proviso to section 43(5) of the Income-tax Act excludes contracts entered into for raw materials in the course of manufacturing business to guard against loss through price fluctuations in respect of contracts for actual delivery of goods manufactured by the assessee from being treated as speculative transactions." "The balance 50% of additional depreciation restricted in the year of acquisition for assets used less than 180 days can be claimed in the immediately succeeding assessment year as per the third proviso to section 32(1) of the Act and judicial precedents." "Prior period income shown in the current year cannot be excluded from income unless it is proved to have been offered to tax in the earlier year by filing revised return or otherwise accepted by the Assessing Officer." "Purchases of goods substantiated by payments through the NSEL settlement account and confirmed by the Exchange cannot be disallowed merely on the basis of initial objections or survey reports." Final determinations:
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