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2013 (11) TMI 896 - AT - Income Tax


Issues Involved:
1. Disallowance under Section 14A of the Income Tax Act.
2. Rebate under Section 88E while computing tax liability under Minimum Alternate Tax (MAT) provisions.

Detailed Analysis:

1. Disallowance under Section 14A of the Income Tax Act:

The Assessing Officer (AO) disallowed Rs. 41.69 Lakhs under Section 14A of the Income Tax Act, which pertains to expenses incurred for earning exempt income. The assessee had received dividend income of Rs. 39.71 Lakhs and paid interest of Rs. 86.45 Lakhs. The AO applied Rule 8D to compute the disallowance, considering the average value of investments and total assets.

The First Appellate Authority (FAA) upheld the AO's application of Rule 8D but directed the AO to verify the interest figure and calculate disallowance under Rule 8D(ii). The FAA also upheld the disallowance of Rs. 19.24 Lakhs under Rule 8D(iii).

The assessee argued that it had sufficient interest-free funds to make investments and that the net interest should not be considered for disallowance. The assessee cited the jurisdictional High Court decision in Reliance Utilities and Power Ltd., which states that if sufficient interest-free funds are available, a presumption arises that investments are made from these funds, thus no disallowance under Section 14A should be made.

The Tribunal found that the assessee's own funds had increased and the amount of investment had decreased. It concluded that further verification and investigation were necessary and restored the matter to the AO for a fresh decision, directing the AO to provide a reasonable opportunity of hearing to the assessee and to pass a speaking order if invoking Rule 8D(2).

2. Rebate under Section 88E while computing tax liability under MAT provisions:

The AO found that the assessee had paid tax under the normal provisions of the Act, which worked out to Rs. 5.84 Crores before rebate under Section 88E. The AO directed the assessee to justify the computation of MAT under Section 115JB and explain why tax should not be taken as per MAT provisions.

The FAA held that there was no prohibition in claiming rebate in respect of STT paid against Income Tax payable under MAT under Section 115JB. The FAA relied on decisions from various tribunals and concluded that rebate under Section 88E could also be available against tax payable under Section 115JB.

The Tribunal found that the issue was covered by the decisions relied upon by the FAA and the Karnataka High Court judgment in the case of Horizon Capital Ltd. The High Court had observed that the rebate under Section 88E is available even when the total income is assessed under Section 115JB, as it avoids double taxation on the same income.

The Tribunal, following the Karnataka High Court decision and the orders of coordinating benches, decided the ground against the AO.

Conclusion:
The Tribunal partly allowed the grounds related to Section 14A for both the AO and the assessee, directing further verification by the AO. The Tribunal decided against the AO regarding the rebate under Section 88E, affirming that the rebate is applicable even under MAT provisions.

 

 

 

 

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