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2015 (7) TMI 487 - HC - Income TaxEntitlement to claim deduction under section 80-IA - AO disallowed the assessees claim under Section 80IA of the Income Tax Act primarily on the ground that carried forward loss of earlier years should be set off before computing the profit for the current year. - Held that - All the business undertakings are wind mills and they have claimed the benefit of deduction under Section 80IA of the Income Tax Act for the assessment years in question and for the subsequent years as well. Having exercised their option and their losses have been set off already against other income of the business enterprise, the assessee in this appeal falls within the parameters of Section 80IA of the Income Tax Act. See Velayudhasamy Spinning Mills (2010 (3) TMI 860 - Madras High Court ) - Decided in favour of the assessee.
Issues Involved:
1. Entitlement to claim deduction under Section 80-IA of the Income Tax Act. 2. Treatment of losses and deductions set off against income of previous years for the purpose of computing current year income under Section 80-IA. Issue-wise Detailed Analysis: 1. Entitlement to Claim Deduction under Section 80-IA of the Income Tax Act: The core issue in this Tax Case (Appeal) concerns whether the respondent/assessee is entitled to claim deduction under Section 80-IA of the Income Tax Act. This issue has already been decided by the High Court in the decision reported in (2012) 340 ITR 477 (Velayudhaswamy Spinning Mills V. Asst. CIT). The court relied on the Supreme Court's decision in Liberty India V. CIT (2009) 317 ITR 218, which held that Chapter VI-A provides for incentives in the form of tax deductions essentially belonging to the category of "profit-linked incentives." The court concluded that the assessee should not be denied the admissible deduction under Section 80-IA once the losses and other deductions have been set off against the income of the previous year. 2. Treatment of Losses and Deductions Set Off Against Income of Previous Years: The court extracted relevant portions of the previous decision to clarify that the deduction is given to the profits and gains derived from eligible business and is allowed for ten consecutive assessment years. The court emphasized that once losses and other deductions have been set off against the income of previous years, they should not be reopened for the purpose of computing current year income under Section 80-IA. The court highlighted that Section 80-IA(5) contains a non obstante clause, deeming provision, and fiction that the eligible business is the only source of income during the initial assessment year and every subsequent assessment year. The court noted that this fiction does not allow the Revenue to bring forward losses notionally from earlier years that have already been set off against other income. The court referenced the Rajasthan High Court's decision in CIT V. Mewar Oil and General Mills Ltd. (2004) 271 ITR 311, which held that it is not required to reopen losses or other deductions that have already been set off against the income of previous years for computing current income under Section 80-I. The court agreed with this view, stating that the Revenue cannot rework the set-off amount and bring it notionally once it has been set off in earlier years. Conclusion: The court dismissed the appeal, confirming the Tribunal's order and holding that the assessee is entitled to claim deduction under Section 80-IA. The court reiterated that losses set off against other income in earlier years cannot be brought forward notionally for the purpose of computing current year income under Section 80-IA. The questions of law raised in the appeal were answered against the Revenue and in favor of the assessee. The appeal was dismissed with no costs.
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