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1 - 10 of 27 (0.35 seconds)Section 115Q in The Income Tax Act, 1961 [Entire Act]
Section 115O in The Income Tax Act, 1961 [Entire Act]
Commissioner Of Income Tax vs M/S Creative Dyeing & Printing Pvt. Ltd. on 22 September, 2009
20. Similar view has been expressed by various Courts in CIT Vs.
Creative Dyeing & Printing Pvt Ltd [2009] 318 ITR 476 (Delhi), CIT Vs.
Ambassador Travels Pvt Ltd [2009] 318 ITR 376 (Delhi), CIT Vs. Raj
Kumar [2009] 318 ITR 462 (Delhi), CIT Vs. Nagindas M Kapadia
[1989] 177 ITR 393 (Bombay), Jamuna Vernekar Vs CIT [2021] 432
ITR 146 (Karnataka),CIT Vs. Amrik Singh [2015] 56 taxmann.com 460
(P & H),and CIT Vs Atul Engineering Udyog [2014] 51 taxmann.com
569 (Allahabad). This legal position is further fortified from the CBDT
Circular No.19/2017 (Pg No.77 of PB-I), where it has been clarified
that trade advances in the nature of commercial transactions would
not fall within the ambit of the provisions of section 2(22)(e) of the Act
and that such views have attained finality. The CBDT, therefore,
stated that it is a settled position that trade advances, which are in
the nature of commercial transactions, would not fall within the ambit
of the word 'advance' in section 2(22)(e) of the Act. Though, the
Assessing Officer and LD.CIT(A) have taken cognizance of the said
circular and applied the same to the appellant's case keeping in view
the trading transactions between the appellant company and
recipient companies, which resulted in debit balance in the account of
the recipient companies at the end of the year, but both authorities
have misdirected themselves in holding that payments made to the
recipient companies in excess of 150% or 200% of purchases from
such company cannot be treated as 'trade advances' in the nature of
commercial transactions. The AO has wrongly treated the payments
in excess of 150% of the purchases as 'loans or advance' and
wrongly held the same to be deemed dividend u/s 2(22)(e) of the Act.
Similarly, the LD.CIT(A) has wrongly treated the payments in excess
of 200% of the purchases as 'loans or advance' and wrongly upheld
the same to be deemed dividend u/s 2(22)(e) of the Act. In our
considered view, the said approach of the AO/CIT(A) is arbitrary and
the same is not founded on any settled principle laid down by the
Courts or on any stipulation conveyed by the Board through a circular
regarding the reasonableness of the quantum of trade advances. The
AO/CIT(A) has not revealed the basis on which they arrived at the
threshold of 150%/200% of purchases for accepting the
reasonableness of the quantum of trade advances. In the absence of
47
ITA Nos.1067, 1068, 1071 and 1072/Hyd/2024 &
ITA No.1123/Hyd/2024
specification of the relevant basis by the AO/CIT(A), the same is
required to be regarded as arbitrary and non-maintainable. Further,
having accepted that purchases are being made regularly from the
recipient companies and payments in the nature of trade advances
are being made to the said companies against the purchases, the
AO/CIT(A) has drawn an artificial line for segregating the payments
into 'trade advances' which are in the nature of commercial
transactions and 'loans or advance' which do not have such
commercial character. Such an approach of the AO/CIT(A) is not
permissible since the extent to which trade advances are paid is
purely a commercial decision which is contingent on the business
expediencies. The AO/CIT(A) cannot place himself in the arm-chair of
the businessman and usurp his role for deciding what constitutes
reasonable level of trade advances that can be given against the
purchases. In this regard, reliance is placed on the decision of the
Hon'ble Supreme Court in the case of Hero Cycles (P) Ltd Vs.CIT
[2015] 379 ITR 347 (SC) (Pg No.97-99 of PB-I), wherein it was held
that the Revenue cannot justifiably claim to put itself in the arm-
chair of the businessman or in the position of the Board of Directors
and assume the role to decide how much is reasonable expenditure
having regard to the circumstances of the case. The Hon'ble Apex
Court further held that the income tax authorities must put
themselves in the shoes of the assessee and see how a prudent
businessman would act. The Hon'ble Court further held that the
authorities must not look at the matter from their own viewpoint but
that of a prudent businessman. The said ratio laid down by the
Hon'ble Supreme Court in the context of reasonableness of the
expenditure laid out for the purpose of business is applicable with
equal force in respect of reasonableness of the quantum of trade
advances given against purchases. We, therefore, are of the
considered view that the action of the AO/CIT(A) in holding that
amounts paid upto 150% / 200% of the purchases alone can be
considered as reasonable quantum of trade advances in
contravention of the binding decision of the Hon'ble Supreme Court
cited above and the same is untenable on facts and in law. Having
accepted the factum of purchases and payment of trade advances
against the purchases, the AO/CIT(A) could not have imposed an
imaginary and artificial limit on the quantum of payments that can be
regarded as trade advances by sitting in the arm-chair of the
businessman. Therefore, we are of the considered view that the entire
amount of payments made against purchases has to be regarded as
'trade advances' without any artificial limitation on the quantum of
such trade advances. As a result, the amounts paid to recipient
company in excess of 200% of the purchases also have to be regarded
as 'trade advances' which are in the nature of commercial
transactions only and they cannot be characterized as 'loans or
advance' constituting deemed dividend within the meaning of section
2(22)(e). The addition made by the AO and upheld by the CIT(A)
48
ITA Nos.1067, 1068, 1071 and 1072/Hyd/2024 &
ITA No.1123/Hyd/2024
towards deemed dividend is therefore wholly untenable and needs to
be deleted.
Commissioner Of Income Tax-I, Ludhiana vs Amrik Singh Prop Nexo Products (India) on 29 June, 2016
20. Similar view has been expressed by various Courts in CIT Vs.
Creative Dyeing & Printing Pvt Ltd [2009] 318 ITR 476 (Delhi), CIT Vs.
Ambassador Travels Pvt Ltd [2009] 318 ITR 376 (Delhi), CIT Vs. Raj
Kumar [2009] 318 ITR 462 (Delhi), CIT Vs. Nagindas M Kapadia
[1989] 177 ITR 393 (Bombay), Jamuna Vernekar Vs CIT [2021] 432
ITR 146 (Karnataka),CIT Vs. Amrik Singh [2015] 56 taxmann.com 460
(P & H),and CIT Vs Atul Engineering Udyog [2014] 51 taxmann.com
569 (Allahabad). This legal position is further fortified from the CBDT
Circular No.19/2017 (Pg No.77 of PB-I), where it has been clarified
that trade advances in the nature of commercial transactions would
not fall within the ambit of the provisions of section 2(22)(e) of the Act
and that such views have attained finality. The CBDT, therefore,
stated that it is a settled position that trade advances, which are in
the nature of commercial transactions, would not fall within the ambit
of the word 'advance' in section 2(22)(e) of the Act. Though, the
Assessing Officer and LD.CIT(A) have taken cognizance of the said
circular and applied the same to the appellant's case keeping in view
the trading transactions between the appellant company and
recipient companies, which resulted in debit balance in the account of
the recipient companies at the end of the year, but both authorities
have misdirected themselves in holding that payments made to the
recipient companies in excess of 150% or 200% of purchases from
such company cannot be treated as 'trade advances' in the nature of
commercial transactions. The AO has wrongly treated the payments
in excess of 150% of the purchases as 'loans or advance' and
wrongly held the same to be deemed dividend u/s 2(22)(e) of the Act.
Similarly, the LD.CIT(A) has wrongly treated the payments in excess
of 200% of the purchases as 'loans or advance' and wrongly upheld
the same to be deemed dividend u/s 2(22)(e) of the Act. In our
considered view, the said approach of the AO/CIT(A) is arbitrary and
the same is not founded on any settled principle laid down by the
Courts or on any stipulation conveyed by the Board through a circular
regarding the reasonableness of the quantum of trade advances. The
AO/CIT(A) has not revealed the basis on which they arrived at the
threshold of 150%/200% of purchases for accepting the
reasonableness of the quantum of trade advances. In the absence of
47
ITA Nos.1067, 1068, 1071 and 1072/Hyd/2024 &
ITA No.1123/Hyd/2024
specification of the relevant basis by the AO/CIT(A), the same is
required to be regarded as arbitrary and non-maintainable. Further,
having accepted that purchases are being made regularly from the
recipient companies and payments in the nature of trade advances
are being made to the said companies against the purchases, the
AO/CIT(A) has drawn an artificial line for segregating the payments
into 'trade advances' which are in the nature of commercial
transactions and 'loans or advance' which do not have such
commercial character. Such an approach of the AO/CIT(A) is not
permissible since the extent to which trade advances are paid is
purely a commercial decision which is contingent on the business
expediencies. The AO/CIT(A) cannot place himself in the arm-chair of
the businessman and usurp his role for deciding what constitutes
reasonable level of trade advances that can be given against the
purchases. In this regard, reliance is placed on the decision of the
Hon'ble Supreme Court in the case of Hero Cycles (P) Ltd Vs.CIT
[2015] 379 ITR 347 (SC) (Pg No.97-99 of PB-I), wherein it was held
that the Revenue cannot justifiably claim to put itself in the arm-
chair of the businessman or in the position of the Board of Directors
and assume the role to decide how much is reasonable expenditure
having regard to the circumstances of the case. The Hon'ble Apex
Court further held that the income tax authorities must put
themselves in the shoes of the assessee and see how a prudent
businessman would act. The Hon'ble Court further held that the
authorities must not look at the matter from their own viewpoint but
that of a prudent businessman. The said ratio laid down by the
Hon'ble Supreme Court in the context of reasonableness of the
expenditure laid out for the purpose of business is applicable with
equal force in respect of reasonableness of the quantum of trade
advances given against purchases. We, therefore, are of the
considered view that the action of the AO/CIT(A) in holding that
amounts paid upto 150% / 200% of the purchases alone can be
considered as reasonable quantum of trade advances in
contravention of the binding decision of the Hon'ble Supreme Court
cited above and the same is untenable on facts and in law. Having
accepted the factum of purchases and payment of trade advances
against the purchases, the AO/CIT(A) could not have imposed an
imaginary and artificial limit on the quantum of payments that can be
regarded as trade advances by sitting in the arm-chair of the
businessman. Therefore, we are of the considered view that the entire
amount of payments made against purchases has to be regarded as
'trade advances' without any artificial limitation on the quantum of
such trade advances. As a result, the amounts paid to recipient
company in excess of 200% of the purchases also have to be regarded
as 'trade advances' which are in the nature of commercial
transactions only and they cannot be characterized as 'loans or
advance' constituting deemed dividend within the meaning of section
2(22)(e). The addition made by the AO and upheld by the CIT(A)
48
ITA Nos.1067, 1068, 1071 and 1072/Hyd/2024 &
ITA No.1123/Hyd/2024
towards deemed dividend is therefore wholly untenable and needs to
be deleted.
Commissioner Of Income Tax, Kolkata vs Mukundray K. Shah on 10 April, 2007
In the opinion of this court, in the light of the
decision of the Supreme Court in Mukundray K.
Shah (supra), any payment made by a company in which a
shareholder has shareholding exceeding 10 per cent of the
voting power to any concern in which such shareholder
has substantial interest, would be deemed to be dividend
in his hands if any benefit from such transaction has been
received by such shareholder. The intention of the
legislature is to tax funds ultimately received by a
shareholder holding more than 10% voting power in the
company, which have been routed through different
modes/concerns. What needs to be taxed as deemed
dividend is the amount ultimately used for the benefit of
the shareholder. It is not the case of the Assessing Officer
in the reasons recorded for reopening the assessment that
the petitioner has received any amount as holder of
substantial shares from the loan giver company or the loan
receiver company. Therefore, in the absence of any benefit
having been received by the petitioner, there was no
obligation cast upon him to disclose such transactions."
Commissioner Of Income-Tax vs Nagindas M. Kapadia on 8 December, 1988
20. Similar view has been expressed by various Courts in CIT Vs.
Creative Dyeing & Printing Pvt Ltd [2009] 318 ITR 476 (Delhi), CIT Vs.
Ambassador Travels Pvt Ltd [2009] 318 ITR 376 (Delhi), CIT Vs. Raj
Kumar [2009] 318 ITR 462 (Delhi), CIT Vs. Nagindas M Kapadia
[1989] 177 ITR 393 (Bombay), Jamuna Vernekar Vs CIT [2021] 432
ITR 146 (Karnataka),CIT Vs. Amrik Singh [2015] 56 taxmann.com 460
(P & H),and CIT Vs Atul Engineering Udyog [2014] 51 taxmann.com
569 (Allahabad). This legal position is further fortified from the CBDT
Circular No.19/2017 (Pg No.77 of PB-I), where it has been clarified
that trade advances in the nature of commercial transactions would
not fall within the ambit of the provisions of section 2(22)(e) of the Act
and that such views have attained finality. The CBDT, therefore,
stated that it is a settled position that trade advances, which are in
the nature of commercial transactions, would not fall within the ambit
of the word 'advance' in section 2(22)(e) of the Act. Though, the
Assessing Officer and LD.CIT(A) have taken cognizance of the said
circular and applied the same to the appellant's case keeping in view
the trading transactions between the appellant company and
recipient companies, which resulted in debit balance in the account of
the recipient companies at the end of the year, but both authorities
have misdirected themselves in holding that payments made to the
recipient companies in excess of 150% or 200% of purchases from
such company cannot be treated as 'trade advances' in the nature of
commercial transactions. The AO has wrongly treated the payments
in excess of 150% of the purchases as 'loans or advance' and
wrongly held the same to be deemed dividend u/s 2(22)(e) of the Act.
Similarly, the LD.CIT(A) has wrongly treated the payments in excess
of 200% of the purchases as 'loans or advance' and wrongly upheld
the same to be deemed dividend u/s 2(22)(e) of the Act. In our
considered view, the said approach of the AO/CIT(A) is arbitrary and
the same is not founded on any settled principle laid down by the
Courts or on any stipulation conveyed by the Board through a circular
regarding the reasonableness of the quantum of trade advances. The
AO/CIT(A) has not revealed the basis on which they arrived at the
threshold of 150%/200% of purchases for accepting the
reasonableness of the quantum of trade advances. In the absence of
47
ITA Nos.1067, 1068, 1071 and 1072/Hyd/2024 &
ITA No.1123/Hyd/2024
specification of the relevant basis by the AO/CIT(A), the same is
required to be regarded as arbitrary and non-maintainable. Further,
having accepted that purchases are being made regularly from the
recipient companies and payments in the nature of trade advances
are being made to the said companies against the purchases, the
AO/CIT(A) has drawn an artificial line for segregating the payments
into 'trade advances' which are in the nature of commercial
transactions and 'loans or advance' which do not have such
commercial character. Such an approach of the AO/CIT(A) is not
permissible since the extent to which trade advances are paid is
purely a commercial decision which is contingent on the business
expediencies. The AO/CIT(A) cannot place himself in the arm-chair of
the businessman and usurp his role for deciding what constitutes
reasonable level of trade advances that can be given against the
purchases. In this regard, reliance is placed on the decision of the
Hon'ble Supreme Court in the case of Hero Cycles (P) Ltd Vs.CIT
[2015] 379 ITR 347 (SC) (Pg No.97-99 of PB-I), wherein it was held
that the Revenue cannot justifiably claim to put itself in the arm-
chair of the businessman or in the position of the Board of Directors
and assume the role to decide how much is reasonable expenditure
having regard to the circumstances of the case. The Hon'ble Apex
Court further held that the income tax authorities must put
themselves in the shoes of the assessee and see how a prudent
businessman would act. The Hon'ble Court further held that the
authorities must not look at the matter from their own viewpoint but
that of a prudent businessman. The said ratio laid down by the
Hon'ble Supreme Court in the context of reasonableness of the
expenditure laid out for the purpose of business is applicable with
equal force in respect of reasonableness of the quantum of trade
advances given against purchases. We, therefore, are of the
considered view that the action of the AO/CIT(A) in holding that
amounts paid upto 150% / 200% of the purchases alone can be
considered as reasonable quantum of trade advances in
contravention of the binding decision of the Hon'ble Supreme Court
cited above and the same is untenable on facts and in law. Having
accepted the factum of purchases and payment of trade advances
against the purchases, the AO/CIT(A) could not have imposed an
imaginary and artificial limit on the quantum of payments that can be
regarded as trade advances by sitting in the arm-chair of the
businessman. Therefore, we are of the considered view that the entire
amount of payments made against purchases has to be regarded as
'trade advances' without any artificial limitation on the quantum of
such trade advances. As a result, the amounts paid to recipient
company in excess of 200% of the purchases also have to be regarded
as 'trade advances' which are in the nature of commercial
transactions only and they cannot be characterized as 'loans or
advance' constituting deemed dividend within the meaning of section
2(22)(e). The addition made by the AO and upheld by the CIT(A)
48
ITA Nos.1067, 1068, 1071 and 1072/Hyd/2024 &
ITA No.1123/Hyd/2024
towards deemed dividend is therefore wholly untenable and needs to
be deleted.
Commissioner Of Income Tax, Agra vs M/S Atul Engineering Udyog, Nunihai ... on 26 September, 2014
The business expediency for making huge payments to MSN
Laboratories Pvt. Ltd is revealed by this crucial fact also in addition to
the explanation furnished in the preceding paragraph. Therefore, the
payments made by the appellant to MSN Laboratories Pvt. Ltd which
are evidently imbued with business expediency cannot be considered
to be falling under the ambit of "advance or loans" under section
2(22)(e) so as to constitute deemed dividend. Further, the provisions
of deemed dividend are not attracted in the facts of the case for the
49
ITA Nos.1067, 1068, 1071 and 1072/Hyd/2024 &
ITA No.1123/Hyd/2024
instant assessment years as the basic ingredient to invoke the said
provisions that payments by way of 'advance or loans' have been
made by the appellant company to the recipient companies in which
Sri. M.S.N.Reddy is the common substantial shareholder, is non-
existent. Therefore, in our considered view, the addition made by the
AO, to the extent upheld by the CIT(A), towards deemed dividend u/s
2(22)(e) in the hands of the appellant for the purpose of levy of
dividend distribution tax without the satisfaction of the said basic
condition laid down in the section is unwarranted and untenable.
Commissioner Of Income Tax, ... vs The India Fruits Limited, Kadiyam on 15 October, 2014
This is evident from the summary of transactions between
the appellant company and the recipient companies, i.e., MSN
Laboratories Pvt Ltd and MSN Organics Pvt Ltd for both assessment
years. From the above, it is undisputedly proved that these are trade
advances, which arises in the course of carrying out purchases in the
normal course of the business and which result in closing debit
balance in the account of the recipient company in the books of payer
company and thus, these trade advances in the ordinary course of
business cannot be regarded as payment of 'loans or advances' to the
recipient company, since the same are undeniably in the nature of
commercial transactions. It is a settled position of law that trade
advances given in the normal course of business on account of
trading transactions cannot be treated as 'loans or advances' so as to
constitute deemed dividend u/s 2(22)(e) of the Act. This legal position
is fortified by the decisions in the case of CIT Vs. India Fruits Ltd
[2015] 53 taxmann.com 307 (Andhra Pradesh), where it has been
held as under :
C.I.T.,Kanpur,U.P. vs Raj Kumar Arora on 10 February, 2014
4) CIT vs. Raj Kumar [2009] 318 ITR 462 (Delhi) (PB-I: Pg 84-88).