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2013 (9) TMI 523 - AT - Income Tax


Issues Involved:
1. Addition of Rs. 4,70,16,000/- as interest accrued on security deposit placed with MPEB.

Detailed Analysis:

1. Addition of Rs. 4,70,16,000/- as interest accrued on security deposit placed with MPEB:

The assessee company, established for the generation and distribution of power, entered into a Power Purchase Agreement (PPA) with the Madhya Pradesh Electricity Board (MPEB) in 1996. As part of the agreement, the assessee was required to furnish a security deposit of Rs. 52,24,00,000, which was 2% of the project cost, towards achieving financial closure within two months of providing a bankable escrow agreement by MPEB. However, the draft escrow agreement provided by MPEB was not acceptable to financial institutions, leading to the failure of achieving financial closure.

Despite the failure to provide a bankable escrow agreement by MPEB, the assessee requested a refund of the deposit with interest. MPEB refused, stating that the escrow agreement would be provided at the time of commercial operations and threatened to forfeit the deposit if financial closure was not achieved. Eventually, MPEB forfeited the security deposit on 13th July 2002.

The assessee filed a writ petition before the Hon'ble High Court of M.P., which ruled in favor of the assessee on 13th May 2003, quashing the forfeiture and directing MPEB to provide a bankable escrow agreement or refund the deposit with interest. However, the Division Bench of the High Court stayed the order, and the matter was taken to the Hon'ble Supreme Court, which maintained the interim order.

Meanwhile, the management of the assessee company changed, and the new management agreed to forgo the deposit and interest for commercial reasons, leading to the withdrawal of all cases from the courts.

In the assessment year 2006-07, the AO added Rs. 4,70,16,000/- as interest accrued on the security deposit to the income of the assessee under the head "income from other sources". The CIT(A) upheld this addition, referencing similar issues in previous years.

Before the Tribunal, the assessee contended that in earlier assessment years, the Tribunal had held that no income had accrued to the assessee by way of interest on the security deposit with MPEB. The Tribunal, after considering the facts and circumstances, reiterated its earlier findings:

"The sole issue that arises for our adjudication is, whether or not the assessee had a right to receive interest under the facts and circumstances of the case. If the assessee has no right to receive interest, then, it cannot be held that the interest has accrued."

The Tribunal examined the terms of the agreement and the dispute between the assessee and MPEB, noting that the right to receive the deposit with interest was contingent upon achieving financial closure, which was not achieved. The Tribunal referenced several judgments, including CIT vs. A. Gajapathy Naidu, CIT vs. Ashokbhai Chimanbhai, and Seth Pushalal Mansinghka (P) Ltd. vs. CIT, which established that income accrues only when the right to receive it is vested in the assessee.

The Tribunal concluded that the assessee had no right to receive the interest as the financial closure was not achieved, and the security deposit was forfeited. The Tribunal also noted that the matter was sub judice, and there was no enforceable right to the interest during the relevant assessment years. Therefore, the interest did not represent real income and could not be taxed.

In light of the above, the Tribunal held that no income by way of interest on the security deposit with MPEB had accrued to the assessee in the assessment year 2006-07. Consequently, the appeal filed by the assessee was allowed, and the addition made by the AO was deleted.

In conclusion, the Tribunal's decision was based on the principle that income accrues only when there is a right to receive it, which was not the case here due to the failure to achieve financial closure and the subsequent forfeiture of the security deposit.

 

 

 

 

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