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2025 (6) TMI 1764 - AT - Income Tax


1. ISSUES PRESENTED and CONSIDERED

The core legal questions considered by the Tribunal are:

(a) Whether the immovable property sold by the assessee, being agricultural land, qualifies as a capital asset liable to capital gains tax under section 2(14) of the Income-tax Act, 1961;

(b) Whether the agricultural land sold for Rs. 3 crore is amenable to long term capital gains tax;

(c) Whether the impugned order passed by the National Faceless Appeal Centre (NFAC) violated principles of natural justice by failing to consider submissions of the assessee and denying opportunity of hearing;

(d) Ancillary issues arising from the above, including the correctness of the calculation of capital gains and treatment of unexplained cash credits under section 68 of the Income-tax Act.

2. ISSUE-WISE DETAILED ANALYSIS

Issue (a): Whether the immovable property sold was agricultural land and not a capital asset chargeable to tax under section 2(14)

Relevant legal framework and precedents: Section 2(14) of the Income-tax Act defines "capital asset" and excludes certain agricultural lands from this definition, thereby exempting gains arising from their transfer from capital gains tax. The jurisprudence of the Hon'ble Supreme Court, various High Courts, and Coordinate Benches of the Tribunal have consistently held that if land is recognized as agricultural land in revenue records and is actually used for agricultural purposes, gains arising from its sale do not constitute taxable capital gains.

Court's interpretation and reasoning: The Tribunal noted that the assessee contended the land was agricultural land, supported by revenue records such as 7/12 extracts and continuous declaration of agricultural income in returns. The Tribunal observed that the NFAC did not conclusively decide whether the land was a capital asset or not. Instead, NFAC directed recalculation of capital gains on Rs. 3 crore sale consideration but simultaneously confirmed capital gains addition of Rs. 16,78,378/- without addressing the fundamental issue of asset classification.

Key evidence and findings: The assessee's evidence included revenue records recognizing the land as agricultural, proof of cultivation, and consistent agricultural income reporting. The Tribunal found merit in the assessee's contention that the land was agricultural and not converted to non-agricultural land.

Application of law to facts: Given the land's status as agricultural in revenue records and its cultivation, the Tribunal held that the gain arising on sale should not be treated as capital gain taxable under section 2(14). The contradictory approach of NFAC in confirming capital gains while ordering recalculation was identified as an error.

Treatment of competing arguments: The Revenue relied on the NFAC order and sought confirmation, but did not provide additional evidence to disprove the agricultural nature of the land. The Tribunal favored the assessee's submissions and precedent authorities supporting exemption of agricultural land from capital gains tax.

Conclusion: The Tribunal found that NFAC erred in not deciding the issue of classification of the land as a capital asset and remanded the matter for fresh adjudication on this point after affording the assessee a reasonable opportunity of hearing and consideration of evidence.

Issue (b): Whether the agricultural land sold is amenable to long term capital gains tax

This issue is consequential to the first. Since the Tribunal remanded the question of whether the land qualifies as a capital asset, the question of applicability of long term capital gains tax cannot be conclusively determined without resolving issue (a). The Tribunal accordingly held this ground to be consequential and did not adjudicate it separately.

Issue (c): Alleged violation of principles of natural justice by NFAC

The assessee contended that NFAC failed to consider submissions and did not provide hearing despite requests. The Tribunal noted that since the matter was remanded for fresh consideration, the NFAC was directed to provide reasonable opportunity of hearing to the assessee and consider all submissions and evidence. The Tribunal did not separately adjudicate this ground but implicitly addressed it by mandating opportunity of hearing on remand.

Issue (d): Treatment of unexplained cash credit under section 68

The NFAC had deleted the addition of Rs. 2,20,00,000/- as unexplained cash credit under section 68 and treated the amount as received against sale of agricultural land. The Tribunal did not disturb this finding and the issue was not challenged before it.

3. SIGNIFICANT HOLDINGS

"We find force in the arguments of Ld. counsel of the assessee that Ld. CIT(A)/NFAC has erred in not deciding the issue raised by the assessee and therefore we deem it appropriate to remand the matter back to the file of Ld. CIT(A)/NFAC to decide the issue raised before us through ground no.1- that whether the long term asset being immovable property sold by the assessee was agricultural land and not a capital asset chargeable to tax within the meaning of section 2(14) of the IT Act, afresh and as per fact and law after providing reasonable opportunity of hearing to the assessee."

This establishes the principle that the classification of an asset as agricultural land or capital asset under section 2(14) is a fundamental issue that must be conclusively decided based on facts and law, with due opportunity to the assessee.

The Tribunal also held that contradictory directions in the appellate order-simultaneously confirming capital gains and directing recalculation-constitute an error warranting remand.

Grounds relating to consequential issues and general allegations of natural justice violations were dismissed or left for fresh adjudication on remand.

Ultimately, the appeal was allowed for statistical purposes, reflecting that the substantive issues remain to be decided by the NFAC on remand.

 

 

 

 

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