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2012 (8) TMI 695 - AT - Income Tax


Issues Involved:
1. Allowability of expenditure on foreign tour of the director and his wife.
2. Eligibility of storage charges received as part of the profits for claiming deduction under section 80IB.

Detailed Analysis:

1. Allowability of Expenditure on Foreign Tour of the Director and His Wife:

Facts and Decision:
The Assessing Officer (AO) disallowed 50% of the foreign travel expenses amounting to Rs. 2,95,582/- incurred by the director and his wife, considering it as non-business expenditure. Additionally, the AO treated the remaining expenditure as capital expenditure, allowing depreciation and disallowing Rs. 2,19,438/-. The CIT(A) reversed the AO's decision, holding that the expenditure was for business purposes, citing various case laws including CIT v. Alfa Lavel (I) Ltd. and CIT v. Appollo Tyres Ltd.

Tribunal's View:
The Tribunal upheld the CIT(A)'s decision, stating that non-acquisition of machinery cannot be the basis for treating the expenditure as capital or revenue. It was confirmed that the director's wife was an employee and her travel was not for pleasure, thus the expenditure was rightly considered as business expenditure. Consequently, this ground was decided against the revenue.

2. Eligibility of Storage Charges Received for Deduction under Section 80IB:

Facts and Decision:
The AO disallowed the deduction under section 80IB for storage charges of Rs. 17.5 Lacs received from Reliance Industries Ltd., arguing that it was not linked with the business of the company and did not arise from manufacturing activities. The CIT(A) reversed this decision, allowing the deduction by linking the storage charges to the business operations.

Tribunal's View:
The Tribunal analyzed the principles of "derived from" and "attributable to," emphasizing that section 80IB requires a direct nexus between the income and the industrial undertaking. It referred to several cases, including Liberty India v. CIT and CIT v. Alpine Solvex Ltd., to establish that the income must directly flow from the business activities. The Tribunal concluded that the storage charges were incidental and not directly derived from the business, thus not eligible for deduction under section 80IB. This ground was decided in favor of the revenue.

Relevant Case Laws Discussed:
- CIT v. Alfa Lavel (I) Ltd.
- CIT v. Appollo Tyres Ltd.
- Glaxo Laboratories (India) Ltd. v. Second ITO
- Anti-friction Bearings Corpn. Ltd. v. CIT
- Liberty India v. CIT
- CIT v. Alpine Solvex Ltd.
- CIT v. Tribalogy India Ltd.
- CIT v. Malwa Cotton Spinning Mills Ltd.
- CIT v. Wheels India Ltd.
- Kirloskar Electrodyne Ltd. v. Dy. CIT
- CIT v. Buckau Wolf New India Engg. Works Ltd.

Conclusion:
- Ground 1 (Foreign Travel Expenditure): Decided against the revenue, confirming the expenditure as business-related.
- Ground 2 (Storage Charges Deduction under Section 80IB): Decided in favor of the revenue, disallowing the deduction as the income was not directly derived from the business activities.

 

 

 

 

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