Income Tax Appellate Tribunal - Kolkata
Britannia Industries Limited , Kolkata vs Dcit, Circle - 7(1), Kolkata, Kolkata on 3 May, 2019
IN THE INCOME TAX APPELLATE TRIBUNAL "C", BENCH KOLKATA BEFORE SHRI S. S. GODARA, JM &DR. A.L.SAINI, AM आयकरअपीलसं./ITA No.2235/Kol/2017 ( नधा रणवष / Assessment Year:2013-14) Britannia Industries Ltd. Vs. DCIT, Circle-7(1), Kolkata C/o, Pramod Kumar Saraf, Advocate, 238B, A.J.C. Bose Road, 1st Floor, Kolkata-700020.
थायीले खासं . /जीआइआरसं . /PAN/GIR No.: AABCB2066 P
(Assessee) .. (Revenue)
Assessee by :Priyanka Salarpuria, FCA
Respondent by : Dr. P. K. Srihari, CIT DR
सन
ु वाईक तार ख/ Date of Hearing : 07/02/2019
घोषणाक तार ख/Date of Pronouncement :03/05/2019
आदे श / O R D E R
Per Dr. A. L. Saini:
The captioned appeal filed by the assessee, pertaining to assessment year 2013-14, is directed against the fair assessment order passed by the Assessing Officer u/s 144C(13) read with Section 143(3) of the Income Tax Act, 1961 (in short the 'Act'), dated 28.07.2017, which incorporates the directions of the Dispute Resolution Panel under section 144C(5) of the Income Tax Act, order dated 08.06.2017.
2. The grievance raised by the assessee are as follows:
Britannia Industries Ltd.ITA No.2235/ Kol/2017
Assessment Year:2013-14
1. For that on the facts and in the circumstances of the case and in law, the TPO as well as the Hon'ble ORP failed to appreciate that the issuance of corporate guarantees did not have any bearing on profits, incomes, losses or assets of the appellant and therefore it was not covered within the purview of 'international transactions' under Section 92B of the Income-tax Act, 1961 and in that view of the matter the transfer pricing adjustment of Rs.2,18,77,327/- was impermissible and be cancelled.
2. For that on the facts and in the circumstances of the case and in law and without prejudice to the preceding grounds, the TPO as well the Hon'ble DRP failed to appreciate that the corporate guarantees were given by the appellant to AE for pure business considerations and it was in the nature of an owner-shareholder activity and hence no transfer pricing adjustment was warranted in this regard.
3. For that on the facts and in the circumstances of the case and in law and without prejudice to the preceding grounds, the manner & methodology adopted by the Hon'ble DRP to ascertain the fees for corporate guarantee at 150 bps was unjustified, flawed & incorrect and therefore the upward adjustment of Rs.2,18,77,327/- is liable to be deleted and/or reduced.
4. For that on the facts and in the circumstances of the case and in law and without prejudice to the preceding grounds, the CG commission quote of 0.15% obtained by the appellant from banking institution was a good parameter to benchmark the corporate guarantee commission of 0.26% charged from the AE and in that view of the matter the upward adjustment of Rs.2,18,77,327/ - made on account of corporate guarantee commission may kindly be deleted in full and/or reduced.
5. For that on the facts and in the circumstances of the case and in law, the Hon'ble DRP failed to appreciate that the AO had invoked and applied Rule 8D without recording is satisfaction in terms of Section 14A(2) and Rule Pa g e | 2 Britannia Industries Ltd.ITA No.2235/ Kol/2017
Assessment Year:2013-14 8D(1) with regard to the correctness of the claim made by the appellant with reference to the books of Accounts and in that view of the matter the disallowance of Rs.58,27,584/- made by the AO U/s 14A was bad in law and deserves to be deleted.
6. For that on the facts and in the circumstances of the case and in law, the Hon'ble DRP as well the AO erred in computing disallowance of Rs.58,27,584/- towards administrative expenditure under Rule 8D(2)(iii) without establishing any proximate cause between such expenditure incurred and earning of tax free Income.
7. For that on the facts and in the circumstances of the case and in law, the disallowance of Rs.58,27,584/- made under Rule 8D(2)(iii) was highly excessive, unreasonable and therefore deserves to be deleted and/or reduced.
8. For that on the facts and in the circumstances of the case and in law, the provisions of Section 115JB do not contain enabling provision for making adjustment in respect of expenditure disallowed as per Rule 8D and in that view of the matter the Hon'ble DRP as well as the AO erred on facts & in law in increasing the book profit by the sum of Rs.59,27,584/- computed by way of disallowance under Section 14A read with Rule 8D.
9. For that on the facts and in the circumstances of the case and in law, the Hon'ble DRP as well the AO failed to appreciate that the subsidy received from the Government of Bihar & Orissa was in the capital field and not revenue in nature and therefore not eligible to income-tax.
10. For that on the facts and in the circumstances of the case and in law, the appellant had received incentive aggregating to Rs.17,48,00,000/- from the Government of Bihar and Orissa for setting-up up new industries in the respective states in the form of reimbursement of VAT and in that view of Pa g e | 3 Britannia Industries Ltd.
ITA No.2235/ Kol/2017Assessment Year:2013-14 the matter the subsidy so granted by the State Governments was on capital account and therefore the addition of Rs.17,48,00,000/- made by the AO deserves to be deleted in full.
11. For that on the facts and in the circumstances of the case and in law, the Hon'ble DRP as well as the A.O. failed to appreciate that mere appearance of information in ITS data of AIR cannot be the reason for treating Rs. 6,14,238/- as undisclosed receipt.
12. For that the appellant reserves the right to add, to alter or amplify the above grounds of appeal.
3.Ground Nos. 1,2,3, and 4 raised by the assessee relate to transfer pricing adjustment in relation to CorporateGuarantee fees to the tune of Rs. 2,18,77,327/-.
4. After giving our thoughtful consideration to the submission of the parties and perusing the judicial decisions relied upon by the Ld. Counsel for the assessee, we find that the issue involved, in respect to corporate guarantee, in the present appeal is no longer res integra.We note that financial guarantee is a promise made by a person (the guarantor) to a lender(guaranteed party) promising to pay the lender the money owed to it by the borrower (obligor) on whose behalf the guarantee is given, if the borrower fails to pay back the debt due to the lender.A guarantee to a lender that a loan will be repaid, guaranteed by a company other than the one who took the loan, is called a corporate guarantee.
The ld Counsel for the assessee submitted before us that extending corporate guarantee for borrowings by subsidiaries was a shareholder activity, that it was not an international transaction, that no fee was warranted since no cost was incurred, and that bank guarantees were not comparable to corporate guarantees since the business of the bank was different from that of a corporate. Before us, ld DR for the Revenue submitted that there are plethora of judicial pronouncements wherein it has been held that the corporate guarantee is in the nature of service provided by the taxpayer to its associate enterprises(AEs) and Pa g e | 4 Britannia Industries Ltd.
ITA No.2235/ Kol/2017Assessment Year:2013-14 hence should bear a charge. The judgments have explicitly held that after the Income Tax Act,1961 was amended by the Finance Act, 2012 to include 'guarantee' within the definition of "international transaction" with retrospective effect from 01.04.2002, the corporate guarantee should be benchmarked from arm's length perspective.
5. However, after hearing both the parties, we note that thereareplethora of judicial pronouncements wherein it has been held that corporate guarantee does not constitute an international transaction and accordingly there should not be a charge.
We note that in assessee's case under consideration, the corporate guarantees were given by the appellant to AE for pure business considerations and it was in the nature of an owner-shareholder activity and hence no transfer pricing adjustment is warranted in this regard.
We note that the assessee has extended this corporate guarantee as a shareholder activity hence the adjustment should not be made. The primary object of the assessee is to help the subsidiary company and protect its interest and there is no object of the assessee company to earn the interest income by furnishing the corporate guarantee to the associated enterprises. We note that in the judgment of the Co-ordinate Bench of ITAT Ahmadabad, in the case of Micro Ink Limited vs. ACIT [TS-568-ITAT-2015] (Ahd) wherein the Co-ordinate Bench has held that corporate guarantee does not constitute international transaction as per section 92B of the Act as amended by the Finance Act, 2012. The relevant extracts of the judgment is reproduced as under:
"On a conceptual note, thus, there is a valid school of thought that the corporate guarantees can indeed be a mode of ownership contribution, particularly when as is often the case, "where such a guarantee is given, it compensates for the inadequacy in the financial position of the borrower; specifically the fact that the subsidiary does not have enough shareholders funds. There can be number of reasons, including regulatory issues and market conditions in the related jurisdictions, in which such a contribution, by way of a guarantee, would justify to be a more appropriate and preferred mode of contribution vis-a-vis equity contribution ... "
" ... In other words, these guarantees were specifically stated to be in the nature of shareholder activities. The assessee's claim of the guarantees being in the nature of quasi capital, and thus being in the nature of a shareholder's activity, is Pa g e | 5 Britannia Industries Ltd.ITA No.2235/ Kol/2017
Assessment Year:2013-14 not rejected either. The concept of issuance of corporate guarantees as a shareholder activity is not alien to the transfer pricing literature in general.."
".... We have noticed that the 'OECD' Transfer Pricing Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises and Tax Administrations specifically recognizes that an activity in the nature of shareholder activity, which is solely because of ownership interest in one or more of the group members, i.e. in the capacity as shareholder "would not justify a charge to the recipient companies". It is thus clear that a shareholder activity, in issuance of corporate guarantees, is taken out of ambit of the group services. Clearly, therefore, as long as a guarantee is on account of, what can be termed as 'shareholder's activities', even on the first principles, it is outside the ambit of transfer pricing adjustment in respect of arm's length price. "
" .... We are in agreement with these views. There can thus be activities which benefit the group entities but these activities need not necessarily be 'provision for services'. The fact that the OECD considers such activities in the services segment does not alter the character of the activities. While the group entity is thus indeed benefited by the shareholder activities, these activities do not necessarily constitute services ... "
" .... The issuance of financial guarantee in favour of an entity, which does not have adequate strength of its own to meet such obligations, will rarely be done. The very comparison, between the consideration for which banks issue financial guarantees on behalf of its clients with the consideration for which the corporate issue guarantees for their subsidiaries, is ill conceived."
" ... These guarantees do not have any impact on income, profits, losses or assets of the assessee. There can be a hypothetical situation in which a guarantee default takes place and, therefore, the enterprise may have to pay the guarantee amounts but such a situation, even if that be so, is only a hypothetical situation, which are, as discussed above, excluded. When an assessee extends an assistance to the associated enterprise, which does not cost anything to the assessee and particularly for which the assessee could not have realized money by giving it to someone else during the course of its normal business, such an assistance or accommodation does not have any bearing on its profits, income, losses or assets, and, therefore, it is outside the ambit of international transaction under section 92B (1) of the Act .... "
6. We rely on the judgment of the Co-ordinate Bench of ITAT, Delhi in the case of Bharti Airtel Ltd. vs. ACIT in I.T.A. No. 5816/Kol/2012, wherein the definition of international transaction in view of the amendments, vide Finance Act, 2012, had been discussed and it was held that the provision of corporate guarantee is not an international transaction. The relevant extract of the judgment is reproduced as under:
"Para 23 .... The issue whether giving a corporate guarantee amounts to an 'international transaction' has not been raised or discussed in the cases where ALP adjustments have been upheld and therefore those decisions cannot be put against the taxpayer ..... "
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ITA No.2235/ Kol/2017Assessment Year:2013-14 "Para 27.... The Explanation inserted vide Finance Act 2012 is to be read in conjunction with the main provision and in harmony with the scheme of provision under section 92B of the Act. It is essential that in order to be an 'international transaction' providing corporate guarantee should have a bearing on the profits, income losses or assets of the enterprise ...:"
"Para 31.... The contents of the Explanation fortifies, rather than mitigates, the significance of expression 'having a bearing on profits, income, losses or assets' appearing in section 92B( 1) of the Act ... "
"Para 33 .... The onus is on the tax authorities to demonstrate that the transaction is of such nature as to have 'bearing on profits, income, losses or assets of the enterprise' and has to be on real basis even if in present or in future, and not on contingent or hypothetical basis ...."
"Para 32.... There can be a situation in which a guarantee default takes place and therefore, the enterprise may have to pay the guarantee amount but such a situation even if that be so is only a hypothetical situation ....."
"Para 32 ..... When an assessee extends an assistance to the associated enterprise which does not cost anything to the assessee and particularly for which the assessee could not have realized money by giving it to someone else during the course of its normal business, such an assistance or accommodation does not have any bearing on its profits, income, losses or assets and therefore it is outside the ambit of international transaction under section 92B(1) of the Act. ..."
"Para 35 .... In the case of GE Capital Canada -vs- The Queen, the tax court of Canada has indeed dealt with ALP determination of the guarantee fees, but then it was done in the light of their domestic law provisions which are quite at variance with the Indian transfer pricing legislation ....."
Similar views have been held by various coordinate benches, including jurisdictional as under:
i) Tega Industries Ltd. vs. DCIT [I.T.A. No. 912/2012 dated. 03.08.2016, [Kol Trib.]
ii) Marico Ltd. vs. ACIT [TS-411-ITAT-2016 (Mum)-TP]
iii) TVS Logistics Services Ltd. [TS-324-ITAT-2016 (CHNY)-TP]
iv) Manugraph India Ltd. [TS 324-ITAT 2016 (Mum)-TP]
v) Siro Clinpharm Pvt. Ltd. vs. DCIT [ITS-185- ITAT 2016 (Mum)-TP]
vi) Apollo Health Street Ltd. vs. DCIT [TS-184- ITAT 2014 (HYD)-TP] Therefore, based on the above mentioned precedents, we note that the provision of corporate guarantee is not an international transaction. Hence, respectfully Pa g e | 7 Britannia Industries Ltd.ITA No.2235/ Kol/2017
Assessment Year:2013-14 following the judgment of the co-ordinate benches cited above, we delete the upward adjustment of Rs.2,18,77,327/-.12.
7. Ground nos. 5 to 7 relates to addition made by the Assessing Officer and confirmed by the ld. DRP u/s 14A read with Rule 8D of the Rules.
8.After giving our thoughtful consideration to the submission of the parties and perusing the judicial decisions relied upon by the Ld. Counsel, we find that the issue involved in ground Nos. 5 to 7 is no longer res integra. We note that the Assessing Officer was erred in making disallowance of Rs. 58,27,584/- by invoking Rule 8D(2)(iii), without establishing any proximate cause between such expenditure incurred and earning of tax free income. The assessee claimed that during the relevant F.Y. 2012-13, it had earned dividend income of Rs. 10,41,579/- which was claimed as exempt u/s 10(34) of the Act. The said dividend income was derived from 22 investments. In the return of income the company had disallowed sum of Rs.5,73,416/- being expenditure incurred towards earning of dividend income. The ld DRP noted that disallowance made by the assessee was not in accordance with that under Rule 8D, and the assessee has not taken into account many indirect cost while calculating the disallowance. The ld DRP further noticed that in view of judgment of Hon'ble Delhi High court of Cheminvest Ltd. & CIT vs. Holcim India P Ltd. 272 CTR 282 (Del), the A.O. was right in computing the disallowance u/s 14A as per Rule 8D.
9. Coming to the computation aspect of assessee`s administrative expenses, we note that disallowance of administrative expenses is governed by Rule 8D (2) (iii) of the Income Tax Rules. The Coordinate Bench of ITAT Kolkata in the case of REI Agro Ltd. Vs. DCIT 144 ITD 141 (Kol-Trib) has held that it is only the investments which yields dividend during the previous year that has to be considered while adopting the average value of investments for the purpose of Rule 8D(2) (iii) of the I T Rules. The aforesaid view of the Tribunal has since been affirmed as correct by the Hon'ble Calcutta High Court in G.A.No.3581 of Pa g e | 8 Britannia Industries Ltd.
ITA No.2235/ Kol/2017Assessment Year:2013-14 2013 in the appeal against the order of the Tribunal in the case of REI Agro Ltd. (supra).
Respectfully following the judgment of Hon'ble Calcutta High Court, vide G.A.No.3581 of 2013 in case of REI Agro(supra), we direct the assessing officer to compute the disallowance under Rule 8D (2) (iii) of the Income Tax Rules, by taking into account dividend bearing securities. Ground nos. 5 to 7 raised by the assessee, are treated to be allowed for statistical purposes.
10. Grounds No. 8 raised by the assessee relates to increasing the book profit u/s 115JB of the Act to the tune of Rs. 58,27,554/- computed by way of disallowance u/s 14A read with Rule 8D of the IT Rules.
11. We have given a careful consideration to the rival submissions and perused the material available on record, we note that the provisions relating to adjustments by way of increase and decrease to the net profit shown by the assessee in Profit & Loss Account, are very explicit in section 115JB of the Act. The items which are to be added to the net profit have been listed out in Explanation 1 to that section. The learned AO should adhere to that list and cannot travel beyond these items. Since there is no mention of Section 14A in the said Explanation 1 to Section 115JB, the same cannot be added to re-determine the quantum of "Book Profit". The provisions of section 115JB relating to computation of book profit are amply clear and unambiguous. These provisions do not leave any room for adjustment by the assessing officer other than those mentioned in Explanation 1 to section 115JB to the net profit reflected in the accounts of any assessee and adjustment by way of disallowance u/s 14A is not included in the said explanation. This tribunal's discussion in ACIT vs. Vineet Investment Ltd. 82 taxmann.com 415 (Delhi-SB) has already settled this issue in assessee's favour. Therefore, such upward revision in the sum of Rs.58,27,584/- to the book-profit by making disallowance section 14A read with rule 8D is not permitted, therefore we delete the addition of Rs.58,27,584.
12. Grounds no. 9 and 10 raised by the assessee relate to incentive/subsidy received of Rs. 17,48,00,000/- from the Government of Bihar and Orissa for setting up new industry in the respective states in the form of reimbursement of VAT and in that view of the matter, the subsidy granted by the state Government was on capital account.
Pa g e | 9 Britannia Industries Ltd.
ITA No.2235/ Kol/2017Assessment Year:2013-14
13. Brief facts qua the issue are that during the assessment proceedings, the AO noticed that assessee company in note No. 20 of profit & loss account for the A.Y. 2013-14, shown Rs. 22.21 crore as other receipts which included an amount of Rs. 17.48 towards VAT incentive for the Hajipur Factory, Bihar and Khurda Factory, Orissa received in accordance with the State industrial Policy of Bihar and Orissa. However. in computation of income, assessee company deducted the said amount of subsidy of Rs. 17.48 crores mentioning it as capital receipt, from taxable income. The assessing officer made addition and ld DRP also confirmed the action of AO, therefore, the addition of Rs 17,48,00,000/- was made to the total income of the assessee. Aggrieved, by the order of the ld DRP/AO, the assessee is in appeal before us.
14.We have heard both the parties and perused the material available on record. We note that the assessee received the subsidy from the Government of Bihar and Orissa in the form of reimbursement of VAT. The Government of Bihar has extended this incentive to set up the new industry and to help the assessee to purchase fixed asset.
We note that assessee received incentive/subsidy aggregating to Rs. 17,48,00,000/- from the Government of Bihar and Orissa for setting up new industrial projects in the respective states in the form of reimbursement of VAT during the relevant year. In the return of income, the assessee claimed the aforesaid subsidy received to be in the capital field, not eligible to tax, and therefore reduced the same while computing the profits of the business. It further mentioned that subsidy granted by the Governments of Bihar & Orissa under their respective State Industrial Schemes were for the purpose of setting up new industrial undertaking & generating employment in local areas. It is the assessee's contention that subsidy was granted to motivate the company, to set-up new undertaking in the industrially less developed States and hence the subsidy was in the capital field. The incentive in the form of reimbursement of VAT was given with the clear intention of promoting industrialization in the States of Bihar and Orissa. The assessee submits Pa g e | 1 0 Britannia Industries Ltd.
ITA No.2235/ Kol/2017Assessment Year:2013-14 that the purpose for granting subsidy was not to reduce operational costs of the company or facilitate working of the existing undertaking but to set-up new industries in the respective States; accordingly it could not be said to revenue in nature.
We note that the Hon`ble jurisdictional High Court of Calcutta in case of the Rasoi Ltd (2011) (335 ITR 438) (Cal HC) held that subsidy received on account of Sales tax deferment /remission and Industrial promotional Assistance are capital receipts not chargeable to tax.
15. We note that subsidy has been provided by the Government of Bihar and Orissa to set up new project in specified area, to purchase the plant and machinery therefore the purpose and nature of subsidy should be considered.Considering the nature of the subsidy, we are of the view that it is on account of capital therefore, it should not be treated as revenue income of the assessee. For that we rely on the judgment of Hon'ble Calcutta High Court in the case of Pr. CIT vs. Shyam Steel Industries Ltd. wherein it was held as follows:
"An interesting question is raised in this appeal as to whether a subsidy allowed by the State Government on account of power consumption, by its very nature, will make the subsidy a revenue receipt and not a capital receipt, irrespective of the purpose of the scheme under which such incentive or subsidy is made available to a business unit. The appeal is at the instance of the Department. There was a difference of opinion between the judicial member and the accountant member on the Appellate Tribunal. The judicial member relied on the dictum in the Supreme Court judgment at Sahney Steel & Press Works v. CIT [1997] 228 ITR 253/94 Taxman 368. The accountant member, however, relied on a more recent decision of the Supreme Court in CIT v. Ponni Sugars & Chemicals Ltd. [2008] 174 Taxman 87/306 ITR 392 to hold that the purpose of the grant of the subsidy would be the overwhelming consideration in ascertaining whether the subsidy or the money was to be treated as a capital receipt or as a revenue receipt. Upon the difference being referred to a referee, the assessee's point of view was accepted and the purpose of the scheme was regarded to be one for setting up a new unit or expanding an existing unit and, as such, the subsidy had to be treated as a capital receipt notwithstanding the mode and manner of the subsidy.
The issue had been decided in Sahney Steel where the Court was of the opinion that when a benefit was received by an assessee for the purpose of carrying on its business, it was a benefit incidental to its business and, as such, it had to be regarded as a revenue receipt. The matter was seen from a completely different perspective in Ponni Sugars though, at first blush, the manner in which the subsidy or the incentive was to be utilised in Ponni Sugars appeared to be the distinguishing feature of that case and the dictum therein not relatable to the Pa g e | 1 1 Britannia Industries Ltd.ITA No.2235/ Kol/2017
Assessment Year:2013-14 present facts. In Ponni Sugars, the incentive was in reduced duty and in larger allocation for sale of sugar. Clearly, these would amount to revenue receipts. However, the additional amount generated by a unit by virtue of the reduced duty and larger allotment for sale of sugar was required by the applicable scheme to be exclusively utilised for the purpose of repaying the term loans obtained in setting up the unit or expanding the same. The nature of treatment of the additional revenue in the hands of the assessee, thus, made it a capital receipt since the additional money went to repay the term loans obtained for setting up the unit or expanding it.
Indeed, the relevant passage from paragraph 14 of the judgment in Ponni Sugars would tempt the dictum rendered therein to be confined to the manner of use of the subsidy as the law as recognised by the Supreme Court is couched in the following words:
"...That test is that the character of the receipt in the hands of the assessee has to be determined with respect to the purpose for which the subsidy is given. In other words, in such cases, one has to apply the purpose test. The point of time at which the subsidy is paid is not relevant. The source is immaterial. The form of subsidy is immaterial. The main eligibility condition in the scheme with which we are concerned in this case is that the incentive must be utilized for repayment of loans taken by the assessee to set up new units or for substantial expansion of existing units..."
It is easy to fall for such distinguishing feature in Ponni Sugars and confine the test recognised therein to cases only where the quantum of incentive is used to discharge a capital debt or a term loan or some capital expenditure or the like. However, the sweep of the "purpose test" has been expanded in a recent judgment of the Supreme Court in CIT v. Chaphalkar Brothers [2017] 400 ITR 279/252 Taxman 360/[2017] 88 taxmann.com 178 where the subsidy in the form of exemption from payment of entertainment duty by newly set-up multiplex theatres for a certain number of years was regarded as a capital receipt by virtue of the very nature and purpose of the subsidy.
In the present case, the terms of the scheme under which the subsidy was made available to the appellant are of some relevance. Clause B.6.1 of the scheme made it applicable "to all large scale new units and for expansion of existing units on or after July 16, 2004..." In addition, clauses B.8.4 and B.8.5 clearly indicated that certain subsidies on account of capital expenditure could not be availed of by entities opting for the incentive under the subject scheme. It is submitted on behalf of the appellant that since the incentive under the present scheme, as would be evident from the terms thereof, was in lieu of certain other subsidies on account of capital expenditure which may have been obtained by an assessee, the real purpose of the scheme has to be seen as augmenting the capital resourses by a new or expanded unit and not to allow a lower cost of the daily functioning of an existing unit.
The difference may be in degrees but the words of a scheme and the real purpose thereof have to be discerned in assessing whether the incentive or the subsidy thereunder has to be regarded as a capital receipt or a revenue receipt. There may be a scheme, for instance, that permits every entity of a certain class to lower charges for consumption of power, irrespective of the unit being a new unit or it having expanded itself. In such a scenario, the incentive would have to be Pa g e | 1 2 Britannia Industries Ltd.
ITA No.2235/ Kol/2017Assessment Year:2013-14 invariably regarded as a revenue receipt. However, when the scheme itself makes the incentive applicable only to new and expanding units, the fact that the incentive is in the form of a rebate by way of sales tax or concessional charges on account of use of power or a lower rate of duty being made applicable would be of little or no relevance.
When an entrepreneur sets up a business unit, particularly a manufacturing unit, or embarks on an exercise for expanding an existing unit, the entrepreneur factors in the cost of setting up the unit or the cost of its expansion and the costs to be incurred in running the unit or the expanded unit. It is the totality of the capital expenditure and the expenses to run it that are taken into account by the entrepreneur. The investment by an entrepreneur by way of capital expenditure is recovered over a period of time and has a gestation gap. If the running expenses are made cheaper by way of any subsidy or incentive and made applicable only to new units or expanded units, the realisation of the capital investment is quicker and the decision as to the quantum of capital investment is influenced thereby. That is the exact scenario in the present case where the lower operational costs by way of subsidy on consumption of power helps in the quicker realisation of the capital expenditure or the servicing the debt incurred for such purpose. In view of the acceptance of the wider ambit of the "purpose test" in the most recent judgment of the Supreme Court cited by the parties and the scheme in this case being available only to new units and units which have undergone an expansion, the real purpose of the incentive in this case has to be seen as a capital subsidy and has to be regarded, as such, as a capital receipt and not a revenue receipt.
Accordingly, ITA No.37 of 2018 and GA No.3747 of 2017 are dismissed by accepting the majority view of the Tribunal that the incentive or subsidy granted to the assessee under the relevant scheme has to be regarded as a capital receipt and not a revenue receipt."
16. Having gone through the judgment of Hon'ble Calcutta High Court (supra), wherein the "purpose test" has been defined in the most recent judgment of the Hon`ble Supreme Courtin CIT v. Chaphalkar Brothers [2017] 400 ITR 279/252 Taxman 360/[2017] 88 taxmann.com 178 where the subsidy in the form of exemption from payment of entertainment duty by newly set-up multiplex theatres for a certain number of years was regarded as a capital receipt by virtue of the very nature and purpose of the subsidy. In the assessee`scase being available only to new units and units which have undergone an expansion, the real purpose of the incentive in this case has to be seen as a capital subsidy and has to be regarded, as such, as a capital receipt and not a revenue receipt. Therefore, we direct the AO to treat the subsidy as a capital receipt.
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17. Ground No. 11 raised by the assessee reads as under:
"11. For that on the facts and in the circumstances of the case and in law, the Hon'ble DRP as well as the A.O. failed to appreciate that mere appearance of information in ITS data of AIR cannot be the reason for treating Rs. 6,14,238/- as undisclosed receipt."
18. We have heard both the parties and perused the material available on record, we note that issue in this ground is related to reconciliation exercise. We direct the assessee to file the reconciliation statement of AIR data versus data in the books of the assessee. We also direct the assessing officer to examine the reconciliation statement of AIR data versus data in the books of the assessee and adjudicate the issue in accordance with law. Statistical purposes, this ground of the assessee is treated to be allowed.
19. In the result, the appeal of the assessee is partly allowed.
Order pronounced in the Court on 03.05.2019
Sd/- Sd/-
(S.S. GODARA) (A.L.SAINI)
या यकसद य / JUDICIAL MEMBER लेखासद य / ACCOUNTANT MEMBER
कोलकाता /Kolkata;
दनांक/ Date: 03/05/2019
(SB, Sr.PS)
Copy of the order forwarded to:
1. Britannia Industries Ltd.
2. DCIT, Circle-7(1), Kolkata
3. C.I.T(A)- 4. C.I.T.- Kolkata.
5. CIT(DR), Kolkata Benches, Kolkata.
6. Guard File.
True copy
By Order
Assistant Registrar
ITAT, Kolkata Benches
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