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1978 (6) TMI 49 - HC - Income Tax

Issues:
Whether the interest on securities realized by an assessee-bank is taxable as business income under section 28 of the Income-tax Act, 1961.

Analysis:
The Karnataka Bank Ltd., engaged in banking, treated a sum as interest on securities sold during the accounting year. The Income-tax Officer initially taxed this sum under section 28 of the Act, considering it part of banking profits. The Appellate Assistant Commissioner initially allowed the appeal, but the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal remanded the case to determine the nature of the receipt. The Tribunal concluded that the sum was not interest but part of business income, as it was the price of the expectancy of interest, not realized interest. This finding was upheld as the securities were part of the bank's circulating capital, following precedents like Punjab Co-operative Bank Ltd. v. CIT and Sardar Indra Singh and Sons Ltd. v. CIT, establishing that profits from securities sales are business income.

The Tribunal's decision was based on the understanding that the sum in question was not interest but a component of the sale consideration linked to interest receivable up to the sale date. This aligns with the principle that profits from securities sales, integral to banking operations, constitute business income. The Supreme Court's rulings in Sardar Indra Singh and Sons Ltd. v. CIT and Bihar State Co-operative Bank Ltd. v. CIT further reinforce this position, emphasizing that investing funds in readily available assets, like securities, forms part of a bank's normal business operations, with returns from such investments constituting business profits.

In conclusion, the income treated as interest by the assessee-bank was correctly categorized as business income under section 28 of the Income-tax Act. The Tribunal's decision to tax this sum aligns with established legal principles regarding profits from securities sales in banking operations. Therefore, the question referred is answered affirmatively, allowing the department to recover costs and advocate's fees.

 

 

 

 

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