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2025 (2) TMI 330 - AT - Income Tax


The judgment from the Appellate Tribunal ITAT Mumbai addresses several issues raised by the assessee concerning the assessment year 2020-21. The core issues revolve around the treatment of long-term capital gains and losses, the applicability of penalties, the levy of Minimum Alternate Tax (MAT), and the imposition of interest under various sections of the Income Tax Act.

1. Issues Presented and Considered

The primary issues considered by the Tribunal are:

  • Whether the assessee can carry forward long-term capital losses without setting them off against capital gains, given the provisions of the India-Mauritius Double Tax Avoidance Agreement (DTAA).
  • The initiation of penalty proceedings under Section 270A of the Income Tax Act.
  • The applicability of the Minimum Alternate Tax (MAT) provisions under Section 115JB of the Act to the assessee, a tax resident of Mauritius.
  • The levy of interest under Sections 234A, 234B, 234C, and 234D of the Act.

2. Issue-wise Detailed Analysis

Reduction of Long-Term Capital Loss (LTCL)

The Tribunal examined whether the assessee could carry forward a long-term capital loss of INR 75,20,89,749 without setting it off against long-term capital gains of INR 31,59,01,013, which were claimed as exempt under Article 13(4) of the India-Mauritius DTAA. The assessee argued for a transaction-wise approach, allowing for the beneficial provisions of the DTAA to apply to each transaction separately.

The Tribunal considered the relevant legal framework, including Section 90(2) of the Income Tax Act, which allows the provisions of the Act or a tax treaty to apply to the extent they are more beneficial to the assessee. The Tribunal noted that the DTAA should be interpreted in good faith, in accordance with the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties, and that the treaty provisions should not disadvantage the taxpayer.

The Tribunal held that the assessee could not split gains and losses from the transfer of equity shares during the relevant previous year and treat them separately under the DTAA and the provisions of the Act. The Tribunal concluded that the assessee must choose between the DTAA and the provisions of the Act, and both gains and losses should be treated together for the chosen treatment.

Erroneous Initiation of Penalty under Section 270A

The Tribunal found that this issue was consequential to the decision on the primary issue of capital gains and losses. Since the Tribunal allowed the carry forward of the loss as claimed by the assessee, the initiation of penalty proceedings was deemed unnecessary.

Levy of Tax under Section 115JB (MAT)

The Tribunal dismissed this issue as infructuous in light of its decision on the primary issue. Since the capital gains were exempt under the DTAA, the MAT provisions did not apply.

Levy of Interest under Sections 234A, 234B, 234C, and 234D

Similar to the penalty issue, the Tribunal found this to be consequential. Since there was no taxable income assessed under the final assessment order, the interest levies were not applicable.

3. Significant Holdings

The Tribunal's significant holdings include:

  • The Tribunal upheld the assessee's right to carry forward the long-term capital loss without setting it off against the exempt capital gains under the DTAA, emphasizing the principle that treaty provisions should not disadvantage the taxpayer.
  • The Tribunal reiterated that each transaction could be considered a separate source of income, allowing for the beneficial provisions of the DTAA to apply selectively.
  • The Tribunal dismissed the applicability of MAT and the levy of interest as infructuous and consequential, respectively, due to the primary decision on capital gains and losses.

In conclusion, the Tribunal allowed the appeal in part, granting the carry forward of the long-term capital loss as claimed by the assessee and dismissing other grounds as either consequential or infructuous.

 

 

 

 

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