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2024 (9) TMI 423 - AT - Income Tax


Issues Involved:

1. Taxability of Rs. 11 crores received from the sale of a trademark.
2. Disallowance of Rs. 9,16,000/- for provision of leave encashment.
3. Non-acceptance of capital loss of Rs. 1,16,17,56,990/- on surrender of land to DDA.
4. Typographical error in taxable capital gains figure.
5. Deletion of penalty imposed by the AO.

Detailed Analysis:

1. Taxability of Rs. 11 crores received from the sale of a trademark:

The assessee received Rs. 11 crores from ITC Agro Tech Ltd. for the sale of the trademark "Rath" and a non-compete agreement. The AO treated this amount as a trading receipt and taxable, arguing that the assessee continued its Vanaspati business. The AO also considered the receipt as a capital gain taxable under section 50 of the Act, stating that the cost of acquisition being nil does not exempt it from tax. The CIT(A) upheld this view.

The Tribunal, however, noted that the trademark "Rath" was a self-generated asset and not a depreciable one. It was concluded that the receipt should be treated as a capital gain, not a trading receipt. The Tribunal dismissed the ground of the assessee, stating that the transaction is chargeable to tax under capital gains.

2. Disallowance of Rs. 9,16,000/- for provision of leave encashment:

The AO disallowed Rs. 9.16 lakhs for leave encashment, which was upheld by the CIT(A), stating that the certificate of actuary cannot supersede the law.

The Tribunal, referencing the Supreme Court decision in Bharat Earthmovers Ltd. vs. CIT, allowed the assessee's claim, stating that if a business liability has definitely arisen, it should be allowed even if the quantification happens later.

3. Non-acceptance of capital loss of Rs. 1,16,17,56,990/- on surrender of land to DDA:

The AO disallowed the capital loss claim, stating that the actual possession of the land by DDA occurred in AY 2004-05. The CIT(A) upheld this decision.

The Tribunal noted that the assessee had made a similar claim in AY 2004-05, which was dismissed. The Tribunal allowed the claim for capital loss in the current AY 2001-02, directing the AO to allow the claim.

4. Typographical error in taxable capital gains figure:

The assessee argued that the AO adopted the figure of taxable capital gains as Rs. 6,98,80,603/- instead of Rs. 6,90,79,603/-. The Tribunal remitted the issue back to the AO for verification and correction.

5. Deletion of penalty imposed by the AO:

The AO imposed a penalty of Rs. 50,33,42,168/- for unsubstantiated claims. The CIT(A) deleted the penalty, stating that the claims were debatable and did not automatically attract penalties.

The Tribunal upheld the CIT(A)'s decision, referencing the Jurisdictional High Court's decision in CIT v. Nalwa Sons Investments Ltd., which held that no penalty could be levied when tax is computed under section 115JB, as the concealment did not lead to tax evasion.

Conclusion:

- The Tribunal dismissed the assessee's ground on the taxability of Rs. 11 crores as a trading receipt.
- The Tribunal allowed the assessee's claim for provision of leave encashment.
- The Tribunal allowed the capital loss claim for the surrender of land to DDA in AY 2001-02.
- The Tribunal remitted the issue of typographical error in taxable capital gains back to the AO for correction.
- The Tribunal upheld the deletion of the penalty imposed by the AO.

 

 

 

 

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