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2025 (7) TMI 298 - AT - Income Tax


The core legal issue presented in this appeal concerns the determination of the date of acquisition for the purpose of computing long-term capital gains (LTCG) tax on the sale of an immovable property, specifically whether the date of acquisition should be reckoned from the letter of intent dated 14.02.2011 (claimed as the date of allotment) or from the date of registration and possession in 2017-18. Additionally, the appeal raises questions regarding the inclusion of miscellaneous acquisition charges and transfer expenses in the cost of acquisition for capital gains computation, as well as the correctness of interest and penalty proceedings initiated by the Assessing Officer (AO).

Issue-wise detailed analysis is as follows:

1. Date of Acquisition and Computation of Long-Term Capital Gains (Grounds 1 & 2)

The primary legal question is whether the assessee's right in the property arose from the letter of intent dated 14.02.2011, thus entitling him to indexation benefits from that date, or whether the right crystallized only upon registration and possession in 2017-18, as held by the AO and DRP.

Relevant Legal Framework and Precedents:

The issue revolves around the interpretation of "holding" and "acquisition" under the Income Tax Act, 1961, particularly sections 2(42A), 2(29AA), 45, and Explanation (iii) to section 48. Section 2(42A) defines a short-term capital asset as one held for not more than 36 months preceding the date of transfer. The term "held" is critical, and courts have distinguished it from "owned" or "registered owner."

Several authoritative precedents were cited by the assessee:

  • Mrs. Madhu Kaul v. CIT (Punjab & Haryana High Court) - Held that allotment of a flat and payment of the first installment confers a right to hold the property, and possession delivery later does not negate this right.
  • PCIT v. Vembu Vaidyanathan (Bombay High Court and Supreme Court) - Affirmed that the date of allotment is the relevant date for capital gains tax, as allotment is final unless cancelled under exceptional circumstances.
  • Anita D. Kanjani v. ACIT (Mumbai ITAT) - Emphasized that the legislature intended "held" to mean de facto possession or right, not necessarily legal ownership via registration.
  • Fatema Jaffer Ghadiali v. ITO (Mumbai ITAT) and Snehal Bimal Parekh v. PCIT (Mumbai ITAT) - Held that holding period starts from the date of allotment letter, not registration.
  • Praveen Gupta v. ACIT (Delhi ITAT) - Recognized that an agreement to allot a flat confers a capital asset right, and indexation should be computed from payment dates.

The Revenue relied on the Supreme Court decision in Suraj Lamps & Industries Pvt. Ltd. v. State of Haryana and other cases emphasizing that legal ownership and transfer of immovable property are effective only upon registration under the Transfer of Property Act. The DRP and AO took the view that since the letter dated 14.02.2011 was only a "letter of intent" and not an allotment letter or agreement of sale, the right to the property did not vest until registration and possession, thus indexation should start only from 2017-18.

Court's Interpretation and Reasoning:

The Tribunal examined the letter of intent and the subsequent confirmation letter from the builder dated 18.01.2023, which explicitly confirmed that the letter of intent was treated as the allotment letter, and the flats were specifically earmarked and allotted to the assessee on 14.02.2011. The Tribunal observed that the letter of intent contained detailed terms, including the flat number, total consideration, payment schedule, and conditions binding on the assessee to pay irrespective of execution of a formal sale agreement.

The Tribunal noted that the assessee had complied with the payment schedule and that the possession and registration occurred only after full payments and completion of construction milestones. Importantly, the Tribunal emphasized that the legal ownership under the Transfer of Property Act and the tax holding period under the Income Tax Act are distinct concepts. The holding period for capital gains tax is to be computed from the date the assessee acquired the right to the capital asset, which in this case was the date of allotment as evidenced by the letter of intent and builder's confirmation.

The Tribunal relied on the principle that the legislature's use of the word "held" in section 2(42A) was deliberate and intended to cover de facto holding of a capital asset, not necessarily legal ownership by registration. It further held that the AO is bound to follow the coordinate bench's earlier decision in the assessee's own case for AY 2019-20, which had similar facts and was decided in favour of the assessee, allowing indexation from the date of letter of intent. The Tribunal rejected the AO's and DRP's reliance on the Supreme Court rulings concerning legal ownership under the Transfer of Property Act, clarifying that those cases do not govern the computation of holding period under the Income Tax Act.

Treatment of Competing Arguments:

The Tribunal acknowledged the Revenue's contention that the letter was only a letter of intent and not an allotment letter, but found this argument unpersuasive in light of the builder's confirmation and the conduct of the parties. It also rejected the AO's observation that the ITAT order in the earlier case was under challenge before the High Court, holding that until such order is set aside or stayed, the AO is bound to follow it. The Tribunal emphasized judicial discipline and the binding nature of coordinate bench decisions.

Conclusion:

The Tribunal held that the date of acquisition for the purpose of computing long-term capital gains and indexation benefit is the date of the letter of intent, 14.02.2011, and not the date of registration or possession in 2017-18. The capital asset was held for more than 36 months, qualifying the gain as long-term capital gain. Grounds 1 and 2 were allowed in favour of the assessee.

2. Consideration of Miscellaneous Charges and Transfer Expenses (Grounds 3 & 4)

The assessee contended that the AO erred in not considering miscellaneous charges amounting to Rs. 70,10,912 (including MVAT, service tax, and other charges) incurred on acquisition, and brokerage expenses of Rs. 12,39,000 incurred on sale, as part of the cost of acquisition and transfer expenses respectively for computing capital gains under section 45.

The Tribunal directed the AO to consider these expenses in accordance with law while recomputing the capital gains, thus restoring these grounds to the file for statistical purposes. No detailed adjudication was made on the merits of these claims.

3. Interest and Penalty Proceedings (Grounds 5 & 6)

The assessee challenged the computation of interest under sections 234B and 234D and the initiation of penalty proceedings under section 270A for underreporting of income. The Tribunal observed that these grounds are premature and do not require adjudication at this stage.

Significant Holdings and Principles Established:

"The holding period for the purpose of capital gains tax is to be computed from the date on which the assessee acquires the right to the capital asset, which may be evidenced by an allotment letter or its equivalent, and not necessarily from the date of registration or possession."

"The letter of intent, when it contains specific terms, earmarks the property, and is acted upon by the parties through payments and acceptance, can be treated as an allotment letter conferring a right to hold the capital asset."

"Legal ownership under the Transfer of Property Act and the concept of holding under the Income Tax Act are distinct; the latter is broader and includes de facto rights to the asset."

"The AO is bound to follow coordinate bench decisions unless set aside or stayed, and cannot disregard them merely because they are under challenge in a higher forum."

"Miscellaneous acquisition costs and brokerage expenses incurred wholly and exclusively in connection with acquisition and sale of the capital asset are allowable for computing the cost of acquisition and transfer expenses respectively under section 48 and section 45 of the Income Tax Act."

Final Determinations:

  • The date of acquisition for computing long-term capital gains and indexation benefit is 14.02.2011, the date of the letter of intent treated as allotment.
  • The capital gains arising on sale of the property are long-term capital gains.
  • The AO is directed to consider miscellaneous acquisition charges and brokerage expenses while computing capital gains.
  • Interest and penalty grounds are premature and not adjudicated.
  • The appeal is allowed accordingly for statistical purposes with directions to the AO to recompute the capital gains as per the Tribunal's findings.

 

 

 

 

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