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Issues Involved:
1. Whether the transaction of purchasing property and selling it after converting it into small housing plots amounted to an adventure in the nature of trade. 2. Whether the surplus arising from the sale of plots should be taxed as revenue profits or capital gains. Summary: Issue 1: Nature of the Transaction The primary issue was whether the assessee's transaction of purchasing property and subsequently selling it after converting it into small housing plots amounted to an adventure in the nature of trade. The Income-tax Officer (ITO) concluded that the assessee's actions constituted an adventure in the nature of trade, thus making the profits taxable as revenue profits. The assessee contended that the property was purchased as an investment and was sold in plots only to realize the best price, not as a business activity. The Tribunal found no material evidence to prove that the assessee intended to engage in trading activity at the time of purchase, thus ruling that the transaction was not an adventure in the nature of trade. Issue 2: Taxation of Surplus The second issue was whether the surplus from the sale of plots should be taxed as revenue profits or capital gains. The ITO taxed the profits as revenue profits, while the assessee argued that the surplus should be considered capital gains. The Tribunal, relying on the decision in CIT v. Kasturi Estates (P.) Ltd. [1966] 62 ITR 578, held that the sale of plots was a realization of a capital investment and not a trading activity. Consequently, the surplus was assessable only as capital gains. Court's Analysis and Conclusion: The High Court examined the principles laid down by the Supreme Court in G. Venkataswami Naidu and Co. v. CIT [1959] 35 ITR 594, which emphasized that the nature of the transaction must be determined based on the totality of circumstances. The Court noted that the Revenue failed to provide positive evidence that the assessee intended to engage in a trading activity. The Court also referenced the decision in CIT v. Kasturi Estates (P.) Ltd., which supported the view that the sale of immovable property, even if developed into plots, does not necessarily constitute a trading activity. The High Court concluded that the Tribunal's decision was correct and that the surplus from the sale of plots should be taxed as capital gains. The question of law was answered in the affirmative and against the Department, with no costs awarded due to the absence of representation for the assessee.
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