Tax Management India. Com
Law and Practice  :  Digital eBook
Research is most exciting & rewarding
  TMI - Tax Management India. Com
Follow us:
  Facebook   Twitter   Linkedin   Telegram

Home Case Index All Cases Income Tax Income Tax + AT Income Tax - 2014 (8) TMI AT This

  • Login
  • Cases Cited
  • Referred In
  • Summary

Forgot password       New User/ Regiser

⇒ Register to get Live Demo



 

2014 (8) TMI 105 - AT - Income Tax


Issues Involved:
1. Deletion of addition on account of under-pricing of sales to a sister concern entitled to 10B exemption.
2. Deletion of afforestation expenses treated as capital in nature.
3. Contribution towards the construction of a bridge treated as capital expenditure.

Detailed Analysis:

Issue 1: Deletion of Addition on Account of Under-Pricing of Sales to Sister Concern
The department contended that the assessee sold iron ore to its sister concern, M/s. Ramacanta Velingkar Minerals (100% EOU), at prices significantly below market rates, which led to a reduction in taxable income. The Assessing Officer (AO) observed discrepancies in the invoices and concluded that the sales were under-priced to shift profits to the tax-exempt sister concern, invoking Section 10B(7) of the IT Act. The AO recomputed the sales value and added Rs. 4.95 crores to the total income.

The CIT(A) deleted the addition, noting that:
- The AO replaced the price of Run of Mine (ROM) ore with processed ore, which was incorrect.
- There was no proof that the assessee received any money back or that the book results were unreliable.
- The AO's assumptions were based on market price estimates, not actual prices.
- Judicial precedents (CIT v. A. Raman and Co., CIT v. Calcutta Discount) support that market prices cannot replace actual transaction prices unless the transactions are proven to be sham.

The tribunal upheld the CIT(A)'s decision, emphasizing that the AO wrongly compared ROM prices with processed ore prices and that the assessee sold the ore at market rates. The tribunal also cited judicial precedents supporting that taxing authorities cannot substitute market prices for actual transaction prices without evidence of sham transactions.

Issue 2: Deletion of Afforestation Expenses Treated as Capital in Nature
The assessee claimed expenses of Rs. 1,07,73,000/- for land compensation and Rs. 1,93,899/- for afforestation charges as revenue expenditure. The AO treated these expenses as capital in nature, arguing that they were for acquiring a capital asset.

The CIT(A) allowed the claim, stating:
- The payments were made to the Government Forest Department as a necessity for continuing mining operations.
- The payments did not result in acquiring any tangible capital asset.
- The jurisdictional ITAT, Panaji, in Dr. Prafulla R. Hede v. CIT, held similar payments as revenue expenditure.

The tribunal agreed with the CIT(A), noting that the payments were for compensating ecological degradation due to mining, not for acquiring a capital asset. The tribunal also referenced the Bombay High Court's decision in Deputy Commissioner of Income Tax v. Timblo Pvt. Ltd., which held that such payments are for commercial expediency and should be treated as revenue expenditure.

Issue 3: Contribution Towards Construction of Bridge Treated as Capital Expenditure
The assessee contributed Rs. 15 lakhs towards the construction of a bridge, which the AO treated as capital expenditure, arguing it was not directly related to the assessee's business.

The tribunal found that:
- The bridge was used for transporting ore and by the public.
- The assessee did not own the bridge, and the contribution was a necessity for business operations.
- The expenditure was in the nature of revenue, not capital.

The tribunal allowed the assessee's claim, treating the contribution as revenue expenditure necessary for business operations.

Conclusion:
The tribunal dismissed the revenue's appeal and upheld the CIT(A)'s decisions on all grounds, confirming that the transactions and expenses in question were correctly treated by the assessee as per the applicable legal provisions and judicial precedents. The tribunal's comprehensive analysis reinforced that the AO's assumptions and market price estimates could not replace actual transaction prices without concrete evidence of sham transactions.

 

 

 

 

Quick Updates:Latest Updates