Income from other sources is a
residuary head of income i.e. income not chargeable under any other head, and
which is not excluded from the total income under the Act, is chargeable to tax
under this head. All incomes other than income from salary, house property,
business and profession or capital gains are covered under “Income from other
sources”.
As back as in the year 1966, the
Apex Court in the case of Nanikant Ambalal Mody v. S.A.L. Narayan Roy, CIT
(1966) 61 ITR 428 : (1967) AIR 193 : (1966) SCR 295 (SC) had an occasion to
deal with an interesting proposition that when an item of income was not
taxable under a particular head, can it be brought to the tax within the
clutches of the residuary Section 12 of the then prevailing 1922 Act. The Apex
Court in a majority judgement held that it cannot be , though there was a
dissenting opinion too.
Sections dealing with taxation of Income from Other Sources
In order to have an overview on Income from Other
Sources taxation, we will see the sections of Income Tax Act, 1961 dealing with
Income from Other Sources taxation. The sections are as given below:—
S.No.
|
Section
|
Contents
|
|
1.
|
56(1)
|
Chargeability of Income from other sources under the Income-tax
Act, 1961
|
|
2.
|
56(2)(i)
|
Dividends
|
|
3.
|
56(2)(ib)
|
Winnings from lotteries, crossword puzzles, races, card games, etc.
|
|
4.
|
56(2)(ic)
|
Employee’s contribution towards provident fund, superannuation fund
or Employees’ State Insurance Fund
|
|
5.
|
56(2)(id)
|
Income from interest on securities
|
|
6.
|
56(2)(ii)
|
Income from machinery, plant, or furniture which is let on hire
|
|
7.
|
56(2)(iii)
|
Income from composite letting of plant, machinery or furniture and
building
|
|
8.
|
56(2)(iv)
|
Any sum received under a Keyman Insurance Policy including bonus
|
|
9.
|
56(2)(v)
|
Where money exceeding Rs. 25,000 received without consideration
between 01.09.2004 and 31.03.2006
|
|
10.
|
56(2)(vi)
|
Income to include gift of money from unrelated persons—Where money
exceeding Rs. 50,000 received without consideration between 01.04.2006 and
30.09.2009
|
|
11.
|
56(2)(vii)
|
Income to include transfer of money and/or property received between
01.10.2009 and 31.03.2017
|
|
12.
|
56(2)(viia)
|
Taxability of shares received by firm or company for inadequate or
without consideration between 01.06.2010 and 31.03.2017
|
|
13.
|
56(2)(viib)
|
Share premium in excess of fair market value to be taxed as income
|
|
14.
|
56(2)(viii)
|
Income by way of interest received on compensation or on enhanced
compensation referred to in section 145A(b)
|
|
15.
|
56(2)(ix)
|
Any sum of money, received as an advance or otherwise in the course
of negotiations for transfer of a capital asset
|
|
16.
|
56(2)(x)
|
Money/property received without consideration or inadequate
consideration on or after 01.04.2017
|
|
17.
|
56(2)(xi)
|
Taxability of compensation in connection to employment
|
|
18.
|
57
|
Deductions
|
|
19.
|
57(i)
|
Dividend or Interest on securities
|
|
20.
|
57(ia)
|
Employee’s contribution towards Provident Fund, Superannuation Fund,
ESI Fund or any other fund setup for the welfare of such employees
|
|
21.
|
57(ii)
|
Rental income letting of plant, machinery, furniture or building
|
|
22.
|
57(iia)
|
Family pension
|
|
23.
|
57(iii)
|
Any other expenditure, not being an expenditure
of a capital natural, laid out or expended wholly and exclusively for the
purpose of making or earning such income can be claimed as a deduction
|
|
24.
|
57(iv)
|
Deduction from interest on compensation or enhanced compensation
|
|
25.
|
58(1)
|
Provision in respect to amount not deductible
from Income from other sources
|
|
26.
|
58(1A)
|
Any sum paid on account of income-tax/wealth tax is not deductible
|
|
27.
|
58(2)
|
Any amount specified by section 40A is not
deductible while calculating income under the head “Income from other
sources”
|
|
28.
|
58(3)
|
In respect of foreign companies expenditure in
respect of royalties and technical service fees as specified by section 44D
is not deductible
|
|
29.
|
58(4)
|
Expenditure in connection with winnings from lotteries, crossword
puzzles, races, games, gambling or betting is not deductible
|
|
30.
|
59(1)
|
Profits chargeable to tax
|
|
31.
|
Income exempt from tax
|
||
32.
|
10(10BC)
|
Compensation received or receivable by an individual of his legal
heir on account of any disaster
|
|
33.
|
10(10D)
|
Any sum received under a life insurance policy
|
|
34.
|
10(15)
|
Interest on securities which is wholly excluded from total income
|
|
35.
|
10(19)
|
Family pension received by family members of armed forces including
para military forces
|
|
36.
|
10(34)
|
Any income by way of dividends referred to in section 115-O
|
|
37.
|
Other provisions relating to Taxation of Income from other sources
|
||
38.
|
180
|
Provision related to Royalties or copyright fee, etc. for literary or
artistic work (Rule 9(2)
|
|
180A
|
Provision related to consideration for know-how
|
||
39.
|
Deemed Incomes : With effect from 01.04.2013
|
||
40.
|
68
|
Cash credits
|
|
41.
|
69
|
Unexplained investments
|
|
42.
|
69A
|
Unexplained money, etc.
|
|
43.
|
69B
|
Amount of investments, etc. not fully disclosed in books of account
|
|
44.
|
69C
|
Unexplained expenditure, etc.
|
|
45.
|
69D
|
Amount borrowed or repaid on hundi
|
|
[1] Dividends other than the
dividends referred to in Section 115-O [Section 56(2)(i)]
Section 56(2)(i) deals with dividend income. In
common parlance the dividend means the sum paid to or received by a shareholder
proportionate to his shareholding in a company out of the total sum
distributed. Dividend becomes income of the shareholder on the date of its
declaration at the annual general Meeting and not on the date of its actual
payment.” - [CIT v. Laxmi Das Mul Raj Khatau (1948) 16 ITR 248 (Bom.)]
Dividend
means
‘Dividend’, generally, means the
sum paid to or received by a share holder in proportion to his shareholding in
a company out of the total profit distributed. The word ‘deemed’ has not been
defined anywhere in the Act.
Meaning as understood under company law is relevant
Being an inclusive
definition, the expression ‘dividend’ means dividend as ordinarily understood
under the Companies Act, and also the heads of payment or distribution
specified therein.
[Hari Prasad Jayantilal & Co. v. V. S. Gupta, ITO
(1966) 59 ITR 794 (SC)]
Dividend from Indian company or units of mutual fund
Dividend is paid by a company to
the shareholder who possesses shares of the company. Dividend is a return to
the purchasers of shares. On every year ending, dividend which is declared to
the shareholders is decided according to the terms which are declared while
issuing the shares.
Dividend is not impressed with character of profit
‘Dividend’ in its
ordinary connotation means the sum paid to or received by a shareholder
proportionate to his shareholding in a company out of the total sum
distributed. Dividend distributed by a Company being a share of its profits
declared as distributable among the shareholders, is not impressed with the
character of the profits from which it reaches the hands of the shareholders.
[CIT v. Nalin Behari Lall Singha (1969) 74 ITR 849
(SC)]
Distribution can be physical or constructive
The expression
‘distribution’ is to give each a share. It can be physical; it can also be
constructive. One may distribute amounts between different shareholders either
by crediting the amount due to each one of them in their respective accounts or
by actually paying to each one of them amount due to him. The only difference
between the expression ‘Paid’ and the expression ‘distribution’ is that the
latter necessarily involves the idea of division between several persons which
is the same as payment to several persons. Distribution is a culmination of a
process. - [Punjab Distilling Industries
Ltd. v. CIT (1965) 57 ITR 1 (SC)]
Apportionment must be among more than one person
The expressions
‘distribution’ and ‘payment’ connote different meanings; distribution is
division amongst several persons. It connotes an idea of apportionment among
more than one person. In the case of ‘distribution’ the recipients would be
more than one, while in the case of ‘payment’ the recipient may be a single
person.- [CIT v. P.V. John (1990) 52
Taxman 221 (Ker)]
Distribution need not be in cash
Dividend need not
be distributed in cash; it may be distributed by delivery of profit or right
having monetary value. - [Kantilal
Manilal v. CIT (1961) 41 ITR 275 (SC)]
Shares distributed as dividend must be valued at market
value
When shares are
distributed as dividend, amount of dividend should be taken to be the market
value of those shares as on date on which person concerned becomes entitled to
those shares; the fact that shareholder retains them and does not sell them is
irrelevant. It would be wrong to say that when shares are distributed as
dividend, the person who receives them gets only their face value in terms of
money. What he really receives is the market value of those shares as on the
date he became entitled to those shares. - [CIT
v. Central India Industries Ltd. (1971) 82 ITR 555 (SC)]
Receipt not falling under statutory definition may yet
be included
The definition of
dividend is an inclusive definition and a receipt by a shareholder which does
not fall within the definition, may possibly be regarded as ‘dividend’ within
the meaning of the Act unless the context negatives that view. - [CIT v. Nalin Behari Lall Singha (1969) 74
ITR 849 (SC)]
Dividend” does not include
Dividend shall not include the following:
(i) Advance or loan made by
money lending company in the ordinary course of business
Any
advance or loan to a shareholder or specified concern by a company in the
ordinary course of its business, where the lending of money is a substantial
part of the business of the company. ‘Ordinary course of business’ shall mean
that the loan or advance should be given to such shareholder at the same rate
and terms as it is given to other borrowers.
Where
interest accrued on advance was assessed to tax as business income of the
assessee in the preceding years, it was held that writing off such advance
shall amount to bad debt allowable under section 36(1)(vii) as the assessee was
held to be in money lending business. - [CIT v. Realst Builders &
Services Ltd. (2009) 178 Taxman 163 (Del.)]
In case where money lending is a
substantial part of the business of a company, any advance or loan made to a
share holder or the concern by the company in the ordinary course of business
is not taxable as dividend. - [CIT v. Sivasubramaniam (1998) 231 ITR 656
(Mad)]
(ii) Dividend set off against
loan which is deemed Dividend under section 2(22)(e)
Any
dividend paid by a company which is set off by the company against the whole or
any part of loan or advance previously paid by it and which has been treated as
deemed dividend under section 2(22)(e). In this case the dividend so set off
shall not be treated as dividend in the hands of shareholder.
However if the dividend paid is
not set off against earlier deemed dividend, then in absence of set off such dividend will be taxable.
[Walchand & Co. (P) Ltd
v. CIT (1993) 204 ITR 146 (Bom)]
FOR EXAMPLE
XYZ
Ltd., gave a loan of Rs. 2,00,000 to Mr. A who had 12% shares in the company.
The loan is still outstanding. Thereafter the company declared dividend and has
to pay a dividend of Rs. 40,000 to Mr. A and the same is set off against such
loan. In this case Rs. 2,00,000 shall be deemed dividend in the hands of
Mr. A .
However, dividend of Rs. 40,000 which has been
set off against such loan would not be liable to tax in the hands of Mr. A. But
if such dividend has been declared after the loan is refunded by Mr. A, then
Mr. A would be liable to pay tax on Rs. 40,000.
(iii) Buy back of
shares in accordance with the provisions of section 77A of the Companies Act,
1956
Any
payment made by a company on purchase of its own shares from a shareholder in
accordance with the provisions of section 77A of the Companies Act, 1956. It will be taxable as capital
gains / loss to share holders as per section 46A.
(iv)
Distribution under clause (c) or clause (d) of section 2(22) in respect of
preference shares who are not entitled to participate in the surplus assets in
the event of liquidation.
(v) Any
distribution of shares made in accordance with the scheme of demerger by the
resulting company to the shareholders of the demerged company whether or not
there is a reduction of capital in the demerged company is to be excluded from the definition of dividend.
Distribution to share holders in
the event of liquidation or on reduction of share capital, to the extent of the
accumulated profits of the company is included as dividend. But any such
distribution in respect of any share issued for full consideration, where the
share holder is not entitled to participate in the surplus assets in event of
liquidation is excluded from the definition of dividend. In other words
distribution to preference share holder on liquidation or reduction of capital
shall not be treated as deemed dividend.
Distribution by a company of accumulated
profits in the form of debentures, debenture-stock [Section 2(22)(b)]
(a)
Any distribution to its
shareholders by a company of Debenture, Debentures-Stock or Deposit
Certificates in any form, whether with or without interest, to equity
shareholders or preference shareholders ; and
(b)
Any distribution of Bonus
Shares to its Preference Shareholders.
to the extent to which the company possesses accumulated profits, whether capitalize or not.
to the extent to which the company possesses accumulated profits, whether capitalize or not.
KEY NOTE
(i)
In above case the distribution need not entail
release of assets of the company as it is required under section 2(22)(a).
(ii)
This section is vary specific to define what is
dividend like distribution of debenture to shareholders to the extent of
accumulated profits shall be treated as Dividend.
(iii)
Issue of Bonus Shares to Preference Shareholders is
treated as Dividend under section 2(22)(b). But this is not so in case of issue
of Bonus shares to equity shareholders either in Section 2(22)(a) or (b).
Distribution of accumulated profits at
the time of liquidation [Section 2(22)(c)]
Any distribution made to the shareholders
of a company on its liquidation, to the extent to which the distribution is
attributable to the accumulated profits of the company immediately before its
liquidation, whether capitalised or not…
Distribution by a liquidator by itself does
not trigger taxability as dividend income, unless the company had accumulated
profits before it went into liquidation.
KEY NOTE
Shareholders are subject to capital gains
tax under section 46 (1) on assets distributed on liquidations. Capital Gain is
calculated after deducting from consideration price or market value, the deemed
dividend under section 2(22)(c).
Where
on liquidation of company assets are sold at a price less than actual cost,
profits assessable by virtue of fiction under section 41(2) would not form part
of the accumulated profits for purpose of section 2(22)(c).
[CIT v. Express News Papers Ltd.
(1998) 96 Taxman 548 (SC)]
Distribution must be actual, and
not notional
The
amount which did not reach the liquidator at any time cannot be treated as
accumulated profits in his hands for the purpose of section 2(22)(c) by
applying section 531A of the Companies Act.
[K.N. Narayana Iyer v. CIT
(1993) 202 ITR 774 (Ker)]
Face value of shares is not
deductible
The
entire amount paid by the company to its shareholder will have to be treated as
dividend. The face value of the shares cannot be deducted from such payment of
dividend.
[CIT v. Jai Hind Investment
Industries (P) Ltd. (1993) 202 ITR 316 (Cal)]
Accumulation need not be prior
to liquidation
The
words ‘attributable to the accumulated profits of the company immediately
before its liquidation’ in section 2(6A)(c) of the 1922 Act cannot be read as
equivalent to ‘accumulated before its liquidation’ in the sense that the
company had gathered the amount in its hands before the date of liquidation.
The phraseo-logy would only seem to indicate that the company had kept,
collected and did not distribute, disburse or make some other similar provision
in respect of the amount.
[CIT v. Scindia Steam Navigation
Co. Ltd. (1980) 125 ITR 118 (Bom)]
Liquidation followed by
distribution must be present
In
order that section 2(22)(c) should apply, there must be a liquidation and in
such liquidation there is distribution and that distribution is attributable to
the accumulated profits of the company immediately before its liquidation. - [Southern Agencies (P) Ltd. v. CIT (1968) 70
ITR 838 (Mad)]
Date of dissolution is not date
of liquidation
The
date of liquidation under section 2(22)(c) cannot be interpreted to mean the
date of dissolution.
[Kanhaiya
Lal Bhargava v. Official Liquidator (1965) 56 ITR 393 (All)]
Amount referable to accumulated
profits is taxable
The
amount received by a shareholder from the liquidator which is referable to the
accumulated profits of the company, is taxable as dividend by virtue of section
2(6A)(c). - [Gautam Sarabhai v. CIT
(1964) 52 ITR 921 (Guj)]
Distribution of accumulated profits on
the reduction of its capital [Section 2(22)(d)]
Any distribution to its shareholders by a
company on the reduction of its capital, to the extent to which the company
possesses accumulated profits which arose after the end of the previous year
ending next before the 1st day of April, 1933, whether such accumulated
profits have been capitalised or not.
Distribution to share holders on account of
reduction of share capital attracts tax implications under section 2(22)(d) of
the Act and also capital gains taxation under section 45 of the Act. - [Kartikeya v. Sarabhai v. CIT (1997) 228 ITR
163 (SC)
Date of resolution, and not date
of payment, is relevant
The
date of the resolution for the reduction of capital and not the several dates
of payments to the shareholders, is the date for ascertaining the quantum of accumulated
profits under section 2(6A)(d) of the 1922 Act [corresponding to section
2(22)(d) of the 1961 Act] - [Punjab
Distilling Industries Ltd. v. CIT (1965) 57 ITR 1 (SC)]
‘Accumulated
Profits’ redefined for purpose of Deemed Dividend [Section 2(22)(d)]
Up to assessment year 2018-19, any distribution of
accumulated profits (whether capitalized or not) to the shareholders by a
company is subject to Dividend Distribution Tax.
Companies
with large accumulated profits used to adopt the amalgamation route to reduce
accumulated profits so as to by pass the provisions of deemed dividend under
Section 2(22)(d).
With
a view to prevent such abusive arrangements, a new Explanation 2A has been
inserted in section 2(22) to widen the scope of the term ‘accumulated profits’.
Applicable from Assessment Year 2019-20
As per the Explanation 2A, the accumulated profits/losses
of an amalgamated company shall be increased by the accumulated profits of the
amalgamating company (whether capitalized or not) on the date of amalgamation.
EXPLANATION 2A TO
SECTION 2(22)
With
effect from assessment year 2019-20, as per Explanation 2A in section 2(22) of
the Act provide that in the case of an amalgamated company, the accumulated
profits, whether capitalised or not, or loss as the case may be, shall be
increased by the accumulated profits of the amalgamating company, whether
capitalized or not, of the amalgamating company on the date of amalgamation.
Distribution of accumulated profits by
way of advance or loan – Deemed dividend [Section 2(22)(e)]
Any
payment by a company, (other than a company in which the public are
substantially interested), of any sum (whether as representing a part of the
assets of the company or otherwise) by way of advance or loan, to the extent of
accumulated profits (excluding capitalised profits) to—
(a)
a equity shareholder, who is beneficial owner of shares holding not less than
ten per cent of the voting power; or
(b) any concern in which such shareholder (holding not less
than 10% voting power) is a member or a partner and in which he has a
substantial interest; or
(c) any person, on behalf, or for the individual benefit,
of any such shareholder. Such shareholder here means a shareholder who is
beneficial owner of share holding not less than 10% voting power,
Ø
shall be treated as deemed dividend in the hands
of the shareholder.
Application
of Dividend Distribution Tax to Deemed Dividend under section 2(22)(e)
With effect from 01.04.2018, Dividend Distribution Tax chargeable under
section 115-O also include dividend under section 2(22)(e) in the hands of
company @ 30% (without gross up) With effect from 01.04.2018 Dividend
Distribution Tax (DDT) structure—
v
Dividend covered under section 2(22)(a) to
2(22)(d) – DDT @ 15% (with gross up)
v
Dividend covered under section 2(22)(e) – DDT @
30% (without gross up)
Deemed Dividend under section 2(22)(e) is chargeable
to Divident Distribution Tax (DDT) @ 30% in hands of closely held co.
Conditions
Following conditions are required to be fulfilled for the
applicability of section 2(22)(e):—
v TYPE
OF COMPANY – should be one in which the public are not substantially interested
i.e. should be a closely held Company.
v PERSON
– should be a shareholder having not less than 10% of voting power.
v PAYMENT
– should be by way of Advance or Loan, and made out of Accumulated Profits of
the Company.
v In
case loan or advance is to a concern, shareholder should have a substantial
interest in that concern at any time during the year.
Substantial Interest
A person shall be deemed to have
a substantial interest in a concern other than a company if he is, at any time
during the previous year, beneficially entitled to not less than 20% income of
such concern. In the case of a company, if he beneficially holds atleast 20%
equity capital of the company.
This provision is applicable only
with effect from 01.06.1987 and is applicable only to companies in which the
public are not substantially interested i.e. closely held companies. Further,
such loan and advance given to such person shall be deemed to be dividend only
to the extent to which it is shown that the company possesses accumulated
profits on the date of loan, etc. (exclusive of capitalised profits).
Trade advances which were in nature of
commercial transactions cannot be assessed as deemed dividend
Trade
advances which were in nature of commercial transactions cannot be assessed as
deemed dividend Dismissing the appeal of the revenue the Court held that; Trade
advances which were in nature of commercial transactions cannot be assessed as
deemed dividend. - [CIT v. Deepak Vegpro
(P) Ltd. (2018) 300 CTR 98 : 161 DTR 170 (Raj)]
Deemed dividend-Does not apply to a
non-shareholder
The High
Court rejected the contention of the revenue that the definition of deemed
dividend under section 2(22)(e) does not contemplate or does not stipulate any
requirement of assessee being a shareholder of the assessee like the one in the
present case. The view taken in the present case that the recipient/ assessee
was not a shareholder, thus is in consonance with the legal position noted by
us hereinabove. We are of the further view that this Court merely restated this
principle and which remains unaltered throughout from the case of Rameshwarlal
Sanwarmal v. CIT(1980) 122 ITR 1 (SC). Followed CIT v. Universal Medicare (P)
Ltd (2010) 324 ITR 263 (Bom). - [CIT v.
Impact Containers (P) Ltd (2014) 367 ITR 346 : 270 CTR 337 : 225 Taxman 322
(Bom)]
Share application money cannot be treated
as loan or deposit - Not assessable as deemed dividend
When the
Tribunal gave a finding that the amount received by the assessee-company was
share application money, the sum could not be treated as loan or deposit.
Furthermore, share application money was retained for some months and shares
were allotted in following year. Therefore, sec. 2(22)(e) was not applicable. (Related Assessment year 2008-2009) - [CIT v. Alpex Exports (P) Ltd. (2014) 361
ITR 297 (Del)]
Where the money was advanced by
the company to a shareholder to purchase the property which ultimately did not
materialize and such amount was paid back by the said shareholder, the Delhi
Tribunal held that since the amount was given for business purposes of company
i.e. to purchase a suitable business premises, and the assessee could validly
perform such act on behalf of company in accordance with authority held by him
through resolution of board of directors of company, amount in question could
not be considered as deemed dividend. - [Sunil Sethi v. DCIT (2008) 26 SOT
95 (ITAT Delhi)].
Profits must be
understood in commercial sense
The expression ‘accumulated profits’ occurring in section
2(6A)(e) of the 1922 Act (corresponding to section 2(22)(e) of the 1961 Act) or
for the matter in any other clause means profits in the commercial sense and
not assessable or taxable profits liable to tax as income under the 1922 Act. -
[P. K. Badiani v. CIT (1976) 105 ITR 642
(SC)]
Deeming loans/advances as dividend is not violative of
Constitution
Section 2(6A)(e) of
1922 Act [Section 2(22)(e) of 1961 Act] is not beyond the legislative
competence of the Legislature. It also does not contravene the rights conferred
under articles 19(1)(f) and 19(1)(g) of the Constitution. - [Navnit Lal C. Javeri v. K.K. Sen, AAC
(1965) 56 ITR 198 (SC)]
Loan advanced to shareholder in
ordinary course of business where lending of money is substantial activity of
company – Cannot be treated as deemed income. - [ITO v.
Krishnonics Ltd (2009) 308 ITR 8 : 120 TTJ 650 : 15 DTR 366 (ITAT Ahmedabad)]
No deemed dividend under section 2(22)(e) on
trade advance in the nature of commercial transactions
CBDT vide Circular No. 19/2017,
dated 12.06.2017 has clarified that trade advances which are in the nature of
commercial transactions would not fall within the ambit of word “advance” for
the purposes of Section 2(22)(e) of the Act and, as a result, does not qualify
as dividend under such clause.
The above clarification has been
issued by CBDT in the light of the various judgments wherein consistent view
has been adopted on this issue.
Taxation of
Dividends under Income Tax Act, 1961 - Section 115-O(1): Tax on Distributed
Profits of Domestic Companies
In addition to the income-tax on total income of a domestic company for
any assessment year:—
v Any
amount declared, distributed or paid by such company.
v By
way of dividends (whether interim or otherwise).
v
Whether out of current or accumulated profits
shall be charged to dividend distribution tax @ 15% (plus applicable surcharge
and Health & Education Cess). Payable even if no income-tax is payable by a
domestic company on its total income.
v DDT
should be paid to the credit of the Central Government within fourteen days
from the date of:
v declaration
of any dividend; or
v distribution
of any dividend; or
v payment
of any dividend,
whichever is
earlier.
No deduction shall be allowed to
the company or a shareholder for DDT or any expense on dividend income
“Dividends” for Section 115-O are as referred in section 2(22) except
sub-clause (e) thereof.
No DDT on SEZ company -
developing, developing & operating, developing, operating & maintaining
Credit For Dividend Received
From Subsidiary [Section 115-O(IA)]
To mitigate cascading effect of
DDT, relief is provided that dividend received by a company which is liable to
DDT shall be reduced by dividend (for same Financial Year) which satisfies the
following conditions:—
v Received
from its subsidiary
v Subsidiary
has paid DDT on such dividend
Company shall be subsidiary for
reduction where another company holds more than half in nominal value of the
equity share capital of the company. Further, same amount of dividend shall be
taken into account for reduction only once. Interest payable for non-payment of
tax by domestic companies simple
interest @ 1% for every month or part thereof where the entire DDT payable is
not paid within prescribed time from period beginning on the date immediately
,after the last date on which such tax was payable and ending with the date on
which tax ax is actually paid.
Dividend received from a domestic company in excess of Rs.
10,00,000 is taxable in the hands of shareholders [Section 115BBDA]
With effect from assessment year
2017-18, as
per section
115BBDA, dividend received in excess of Rs. 10,00,000 is
taxable in the hands of shareholders in case following conditions are fulfilled
-
v Person receiving
dividend is a resident Individual or HUF or firm
v Dividend received
from a domestic company is in excess of Rs. 10,00,000
Rate of tax
In case above mentioned conditions are
fulfilled, dividend in excess of Rs. 10,00,000 is taxable at the rate of 10% .
Section
115BBDA is not applicable
v Section
115BBDA is not applicable on dividend specified in section
2(22)(e). [loan/advance paid to shareholder holding more than 10%
voting rights; or
v to a business entity
in which such shareholder has substantial interest]
Section
115BBDA would be applicable
With effect from assessment year 2018-2019, Section
115BBDA would be applicable to all persons except following -
(i)
Domestic company
(ii)
Charitable Trust or institution registered under
Income Tax Act
(iii)
Fund, Institution, Trust, University, Educational
Institution, Hospital, Other medical institution referred to in Section
10(23C) of the Income Tax Act.
No deduction to be allowed from
dividend taxable at special rate under section 115BBDA(1)[Section 115BBDA(2)]
No deduction in respect of any
expenditure or allowance or set off of loss shall be allowed to the assessee
under any provision of Income-tax Act in computing the income by way of
dividends referred to in section 115BBDA(1)(a).
KEY NOTE
With effect from assessment year
2018-19, the provisions of section 115BBDA shall be applicable to a specified
assessee resident in India.
Specified Assessee [Clause (a)
To Explanation under Section 115 BBDA]
“specified assessee” means a person other than,—
(i) a domestic company; or
(ii) a fund or institution
or trust or any university or other educational institution or any hospital or
other medical institution referred to in sub-clause (iv) or sub-clause (v) or
sub-clause (vi) or sub-clause (via) of clause (23C) of section 10; or
(iii) a trust or institution registered under section 12AA.
In other words, all assessees other than a domestic company or a charitable
trust approved under section 10(23C) or registered under section 12A or section
12AA shall be liable to pay tax @ 10% on the dividend income received by them
in exceeding of Rs. 10,00,000/-.
GROSSING
UP:
As TDS is deducted from such
income @ 30%, such TDS is included in Dividend income actually received by way
of reverse engineering. Such reverse engineering is also required to be done in
case the organizing company pays tax on behalf of winner. It is to be noted
that such calculation is required only in the case where dividend income
actually received is given and not when dividend income is given. Reverse
engineering is done in following manner:—
Dividend
Income received × 100
(100
– 30)
Exempting section [Section 10(34)]
Any income by way of dividends referred to in section
115-O shall be exempt from income-tax.
In other words, Dividend received from an Indian
company which has suffered dividend distribution tax is exempt from tax under
section 10(34).
Dividend from a Cooperative Society
Taxable dividend in case of a co-operative society is
calculated as follows:—
S. No.
|
Description
|
Amount (in Rs.)
|
(i)
|
Gross dividend
|
xxx
|
(ii)
|
Less : Collection
charges
|
xxx
|
Less : Interest on
money borrowed
|
xxx
|
|
Less : Any other expenditure
|
xxx
|
|
(iii)
|
TAXABLE DIVIDEND
|
xxx
|
[2]
Winnings from lotteries, crossword
puzzles, horse races and card games etc. - Income referred to in section 2(24)(ix)
[Section 56(2)(ib)]
The winnings from lotteries,
crossword puzzles, races including horse races, card games and other games of
any sort or from gambling or betting of any form or nature whatsoever is
taxable under section 56 under the head ‘income from other sources’.
Tax treatment
(i) No benefit of basic
exemption
The
benefit of basic exemption limit (i.e. For the assessment year 2020-21 - Rs.
2,50,000) is not allowed. In other words, if assessee earns Rs. 2,00,000 from
casual income which is the total income in a financial year then also tax will
be deducted irrespective of basic exemption limit.
(ii) No deduction is allowed
under Chapter VI-A against casual income.
(iii) Expense incurred to earn such income is not allowed
as deduction. Only deduction on account of expenses relating to owning and
maintaining horses is allowed.
(iv)
Tax on casual income is deducted at flat rate of 30% for all assessees under
section 115BB.
(v)
Losses cannot be set-off against casual income. Even casual losses cannot be
set-off against casual income.
Casual income means any receipts which are of a
casual and non-recurring nature. For example, income earned by way of winnings
from lotteries, races including horse races, crossword puzzles, etc.
Prizes in kind
If the prizes awarded are in kind, the prize
distributor will, before releasing the prize, ensure that tax has been paid in
respect of the winnings.
It will either recover it from the winner or bear
the tax liability itself and deposit TDS.
But if prizes are partly in cash and partly in
kind, tax is deducted on the total value of the cash and kind from the cash.
And, if the cash is insufficient to meet the TDS liability, either the winner
or the prize distributor pays the deficit. This will depend entirely on the
terms and conditions of prize scheme.
Winning of prize money on unsold lottery ticket
held by the distributor of lottery is subject to rates prescribed under section
115BB
The receipt of the prize money
is not in his capacity as a lottery ticket distributor but as a holder of the
lottery ticket which won the prize. Therefore, the High Court held that the
rate of 30% prescribed under section 115BB is applicable in respect of winnings
from lottery received by the distributor.—
[Manjoo & Co. v. CIT (2011) 335 ITR 527 (Kerala)]
Income accruing to an agent/trader in respect of prizes on unsold/
unclaimed lottery ticket
Income accruing to an agent/trader
in respect of prizes on unsold/ unclaimed lottery ticket in possession of the
agent/trader is income from business and does not constitute winning form
lotteries.
[Director of State Lotteries v. CIT (1999) 238
ITR 1 (Gau.)]
Bonus on prize is a winnings from lottery and not business income
Lottery agent receiving 10% as
bonus on prize won on tickets sold by him—Bonus was dependent on winning of
sold tickets by stockiest/agent— Not business income but winnings from lottery
income.—[CIT v. G. Krishnan (1997) 228 ITR 557 (Mad.)]
Prize on winning a motor rally
Up to the assessment year
1972-73, receipts of a casual and non-recurring nature were exempt from tax.
The Finance Act, 1972 introduced a statutory fiction so as to enlarge the
concept of “income” by including with effect from the assessment year 1973-74,
winnings from lotteries, crossword puzzles, races (including horse races), card
games and other games of any sort or from gambling or betting of any form or
nature. In the context of this legislative step and the dictionary meaning of
the word “winnings”, it is clear that what is intended to be taxed is only a
windfall that reaches a person without any effort or without any skill.
Tax incidence on winnings from lotteries, etc.
Section 115BB provides that gross
winnings from lotteries, crossword puzzles, races including horse races (other
than income from the activity of owning and maintaining race horses), card
games and other games of any sort or from gambling or betting of any nature
whatsoever are chargeable to income-tax, at a flat rate of 30% (plus surcharge,
2% education cess and 1% secondary and higher education cess) on the gross
winnings without claiming any allowance or expenditure irrespective of the fact
whether such income is taxable as business income or income from other sources.
The tax is to be levied on the entire gross winnings. However, where there is a
diversion by overriding title as in the case of certain lotteries, a certain
percentage has to be for gone either in favour of the Government or an agency
conducting lotteries, then such amount will not be taxed in the hands of the
recipient.
Even if the argument of the
assessee that the winning from lottery is taken to to be received by him in the
course of his business, it was held that the rate of 30% prescribed under
section 115BB is applicable in respect of winnings from lottery received by the
distributor. - [CIT v. Manjoo & Co. (2010) 195 Taxman 39 (Ker.)]
As lottery income is taxed at flat
rate, the basic maximum exemption of income (say Rs. 2,50,000 for the
assessment year 2020-21 is not available to the assessee. - [K. B. Syam
Kumar v. ITO (2006) 284 ITR 218 (Cochin)]
Even if the assessee’s total
income from other sources is less than exemption limit, entire winnings from
lotteries, cross word puzzles etc. shall be taxable @ 30%.
In which year it is chargeable to tax
Where an assessee does not
maintain any books of account lottery prize won by him would accrue in the year
in which it is received by the assessee and not in year in which the prize is
declared. - [CIT v. M. Ramachandran (2000) 74 ITD 385 (Mad.)]
Grossing up if net winnings is given
Tax is deducted at source under
sections 194 and 194BB on payments in respect of winnings from lotteries or
cross word puzzle or card game and other game of any sort exceeding Rs. 10,000
(Rs. 5000 in case of winnings from horse races) at the rate of 30%.
In case amount of prize is net received (after
deduction of tax), it has to be grossed up:
PROVISIONS ILLUSTRATED
Winnings from lottery or Horse race in case of “A”
|
||
S. No.
|
|
Amount (in Rs.)
|
(i)
|
Winnings on 20.03.2019
|
10,00,000
|
(ii)
|
Less : Tax deduction @ 30%
|
3,00,000
|
(iii)
|
Net amount received by “A” [ i – ii ]
|
7,00,000
|
If a person wins a lottery of Rs. 10,00,000, tax must
have been deducted @ 30% and net amount received by the assessee would be Rs.
7,00,000 (1,00,00,000 – 3,00,000). Grossing up would be done as follows:—
Source
|
Mode of conversion
|
Net winnings from lotteries or crossword puzzle or horse race or card games and other games
|
NET x 100/100 – (30) i.e.
|
Winnings from other races, gambling or betting
|
7,00,000 x 100 = 10,00,000
100 – 30
|
Amount not deductible [Section 58(4)]
In the case of an assessee having
income chargeable under the head “Income from other sources”, no deduction in
respect of any expenditure or allowance in connection with such income shall be
allowed under any provision of this Act in computing the income by way of any
winnings from lotteries, crossword puzzles, races including horse races, card
games and other games of any sort or from, gambling or betting of any form or
nature, whatsoever:
PROVIDED that nothing contained in this sub-section
shall apply in computing the income of an assessee, being the owner of horses
maintained by him for running in horse races, from the activity of owning and
maintaining such horses.
Explanation : For the purposes of this
sub-section, “horse race” means a horse race upon which wagering or betting may
be lawfully made.
Thus, as per section 58(4), in
the case of an assessee having income from winnings from lotteries, crossword
puzzles, etc., no deduction in respect of any expenditure or allowance in
connection with such income shall be allowed while computing such income. In
other words, the entire income of winnings, without any expenditure or
allowance, will be taxable. The deduction under sections 80C to 80U from Gross
Total Income will also not be available from such income although such income
is a part of the total income.
Where an assessee has incurred loss in horse race and
has won another horse race, such loss shall not be allowed to set off from the
winning of another horse race.
[3] Employees’ Contributions to Provident Fund etc.
(i. e. towards staff welfare schemes) [Section 56(2)(ic)]
As per section 2(24)(x) read with section 56(2)(ic),
any sum received by the assessee from his employees as contributions to any
provident fund, recognized or unrecognized or superannuation fund or any fund
set up under the provisions of the Employees’ State Insurance Act, 1948, or any
other fund for the welfare of such employees is taxable in the hands of the
employer under the head “Income from other sources” if it is not chargeable to
income-tax under the head “Profits and gains of business or profession”.
“Due Date”.
Here, the due date means the
date by which the assessee is required as an employer to credit an employee’s
contribution to the employees’ account in the relevant fund under an Act, rule,
etc. issued in that behalf [Section 36(1)(va)].
Section 36 of the Act provides
for deduction in computing the income referred to in section 28. The relevant
provisions applicable to the present cases would be Section 36(1)(va). As per
section 36(1)(va), assessee shall be entitled to the deduction in computing the
income referred to in section 28 with respect to any sum received by the
assessee from his employees to which the provisions of sub-clause (x) of clause
(24) of section 2 apply, if such sum is credited by the assessee to the
employees’ accounts in the relevant fund or funds on or before the
Section 36(1)(va) : Any sum
received by the assessee from any of his employees to which the provisions of
sub-clause (x) of clause (24) of section 2 apply, if such sum is credited by
the assessee to the employee’s account in the relevant fund or funds on or
before the due date.
Explanation : For the
purpose of this clause, “due date” means the date by which the assessee is
required as an employer to credit an employee’s contribution to the employee’s
account in the relevant fund under any Act, rule, order or notification issued
there under or under any standing order, award, contract or service or
otherwise.”
Therefore, any sum received by
the assessee from his employees as contributions to any fund as aforesaid and
is not deposited or deposited belatedly to the employee’s account, it becomes
income of the assessee.
PROVISIONS ILLUSTRATED
XYZ Ltd. earned a profit of Rs. 17,00,000 during the previous year
2019-20 after debiting salary to employees Rs. 13,00,000. A contribution of
Rs. 1,00,000 is included in the amount of salary of Rs. 13,00,000 by way of
employees’ contribution towards provident fund. Out of the amount of Rs.
1,00,000, the company transferred Rs. 60,000 before the due date of crediting
such payment and Rs. 40,000 after the due date of crediting such payment.
Calculate
the taxable income of XYZ Ltd. for the assessment year 2020-21.
|
SOLUTION:
S. No.
|
Particulars
|
Amount (in Rs.)
|
(i)
|
Net profit as per P&L A/c
|
17,00,000
|
(ii)
|
Add: Employees’ contribution towards provident fund treated as
income of the company
|
1,00,000
|
(iii)
|
Total Income
|
16,00,000
|
(iv)
|
Less : Amount credited by the company before the due date of
crediting such sum 60,000
|
60,000
|
(v)
|
Taxable income of XYZ Ltd.
|
15,40,000
|
Thus, the company is not allowed
the deduction of Rs. 40,000 credited by it after the due date of crediting such
sum. The same interpretation holds while computing income from business or
profession. If the credit of employees’ contribution is not made upto the “due
date”, deduction under section 36(1) (va) is not available even if—
(i) salary is actually paid to employees before the, “due date”, or
(ii) employees’ contribution to provident fund is paid within the
previous year.
[4] Income by way of Interest on Securities [Section 56(2)(id)]
Interest by way of interest on securities provided
the income is not chargeable to income-tax under the head “profits and gains of
business or profession”.
Basis of charge – chageability
of interest on securities
Interest on securities is
taxable under the head “Income from other sources” if the same is not
chargeable to tax under the head “Profits and gains of business or profession”
when the securities are held as investment.
Interest on securities may be
taxable on “due” basis or on “receipt” basis, depending upon the system of
accounting if any adopted by the assessee. If the assessee follows the cash
system of accounting, then the interest is taxable on “receipt basis” otherwise
it shall be taxable on due basis. If no system of accounting is adopted by
assessee, it will always be taxable on “due” basis. It is taxable in hands of
the person who holds the securities on record date (date on which interest becomes
due) and whole amount of interest would be taxable in hands of assessee who
holds it on record date whether he holds securities for whole period or not.
Meaning of “Interest on
Securities” [Section 2(28B)]
According to section 2(28B) “interest on securities” means,—
(i) interest on any security of the Central Government or a State
Government;
(ii)
interest on debentures or other securities for money issued by or on behalf of
a local authority or a company or a
corporation established by a Central, State or Provincial Act;
Provision regarding Interest on
Securities
Government or other organisation
issue securities other than shares which provide some amount as interest in
return to securities’ holders. Issuing securities is an another way of getting
loan from public so interest is paid in return to such loan.
There are two types of
securities. They are tax free security and taxable security. Taxable security
only attract TDS so it is necessary to gross up the net amount of tax free
security. Generally they provide the net amount after deducting the TDS from it
so we have to gross it up by reverse calculation. If a listed security which is
recognized by stock exchange and unlisted securities are taxed at 10% of TDS.
Therefore, the net amount is divided by 90 and multiplied by 100 to gross it
up. Interest on securities is taxed on the person who holds the security at the
time of declaring such interest. When a person sells his security at a day
before the date of declaring the interest by the company or government,
interest is provided to the person who buys it.
Tax Implications—Investment in Debentures :
Interest income
v Interest
received by investors is included in regular income.
v Premium
received, if any, on redemption of debentures can be considered as interest
income.
Interest on Securities Exempt
The interest on securities of the following description is exempt from
tax—
(i) interest on notified
securities, bonds or certificates issued by the Central Govt.
(ii) interest to an individual
or a HUF on 7% Capital investment Bond or on notified Relief Bonds.
(iii) interest to non-resident Indians on notified bonds.
(iv) interest on securities held by issue Department of the Central
Bank of Ceylon.
Interest received from bonds
A bond is a fixed income instrument carrying a
coupon rate of interest and is issued for a fixed tenure.
The
tenure of the bonds is usually 10/15 or even 20 years. They are also listed on
stock exchanges to offer an exit route to investors. The bonds are tax-free,
secured, redeemable and non-convertible in nature.
There are three ways in which assessee can buy bonds
– (i) through debt funds, (ii) capital gain bonds and (iii) tax-free bonds.
(i) TAXATION ON INCOME FROM DEBT FUNDS
Debt
funds deliver two kinds of returns – dividends and capital gains. Dividends
earned from debt funds are tax-free in the hands of investors. However, the
fund house pays a dividend distribution tax of 28.84% on your behalf.
Corporate
bonds are debt securities issued by private or public corporations. Interest on
corporate bonds is taxable on accrual basis at slab rates. Interest will be
charged according to method of accounting followed.
Assessee
can trade these bonds on the markets. In which case, capital gains will apply
to his returns. If assessee holds debt funds for under three years, his returns
will be short-term gains, and he will have to pay tax according to applicable
slab. If assessee hold it for three years or more, he will have to pay
long-term capital gains at the rate of 20% with indexation or 10% without.
(ii) TAXATION ON INCOME FROM CAPITAL GAIN BONDS
Capital
gains bonds are a great way to invest your long-term capital gains to save tax.
Under section 54EC of the Act, assessee can get tax exemption if he put his
long-term gains, say from property investments, into these special bonds issued
by government bodies National Highway Authority of India or the Rural
Electrification Corporation Limited. He earns a guaranteed rate of interest on
the bond.
There
are, however, certain conditions that he must fulfill:
(a) He must invest
his LTCG within six months of the transaction.
(b) Bonds will not
be redeemable before 36 months.
(c) The maximum
limit for investment in any financial year is Rs. 50 lakh.
The interest
assessee earns on these bonds is, however, taxable according to his income
slab.
The
difference between the purchase and sale price of the bond is treated as
capital gains. The capital gains will be long-term if these bonds are held for
more than 12 months otherwise the gains will be short-term. These are tax efficient if held for more than
1 year. Capital gains are taxed on redemption of bonds; Short-term capital
gains - as per slab rates; long-term capital gains - 10%, without indexation
interest – As per slab rates. Bonds held for a period up to 12 months can
result in short-term capital gain that is taxed as ordinary income.
(iii) TAX ON INCOME FROM TAX-FREE BONDS
Tax-free
bonds are issued by government organizations, typically in the infrastructure
sector. To encourage investments into these bonds, the government has given a
100% tax exemption on interest income from tax-free bonds under section
10(15)(iv)(h) of the Act. Some of the public undertakings which raise funds
through the issue of tax-free bonds are IRFC, PFC, NHAI, HUDCO, REC, NTPC, and
Indian Renewable Energy Development Agency.
NO TAX ON INTEREST INCOME FROM TAX-FREE BONDS [SECTION 10(15)(iv)(h)]
As the name suggests, interest
earned from tax-free bonds is exempt from tax. In simple terms, irrespective of
the income slab one need not pay any income-tax on the interest income. The
interest received from tax free bonds is exempt under Section 10(15)(iv)(h) of
the Act. There will, however, not be any tax benefit on the amount of
investment made in such bonds. Further investment in tax free bonds is also
deliberated as risk free as the investment is made in government securities.
Also if these bonds are redeemed upon maturity then the capital gain is taxable
at a concessional rate of 10% (without indexation).
NO APPLICABILITY OF TDS ON INTEREST INCOME
There is no applicability of TDS on interest income.
Such bonds are also listed on stock exchanges and traded only through demat
accounts.
[5] Income from letting out
of Plant, Machinery or Furniture [Section 56(2)(ii)]
Income from plant, machinery or furniture belonging
to the assessee and let on hire is taxable as income from other sources if the
same is not chargeable to tax under the head “Profits and gains from business or
profession”.
Permissible deductions from income from letting out of machinery,
plant or furniture [Section 57(ii)]
As per section 57(ii), where
income is derived from letting out of machinery, plant or furniture on hire and
also buildings where the letting of building is inseparable from the letting of
such machinery, plant or furniture and the income from such letting is not
chargeable to income-tax under the head “Profits and gains of business or
profession”, the following expenses incurred in respect of these assets are
deductible :
The following deductions are available:
(a) Current repairs to the premises held otherwise than as a tenant;
Current
repairs of building – The expression “current repairs” connotes repairs which
are attended to when the need for them arises from the point of view of the
assessee and which are not allowed to be accumulated. As a result of
expenditure for current repairs an already existing asset is preserved and
maintained. The object of such expenditure is not to bring a new asset into
existence. If the amount spent is for the purpose of bringing into existence a
new asset or obtaining a new advantage, then such an expenditure would be a
capital expenditure which is not allowed to be deducted.
(b) Insurance Premium towards
physical safety of the premises;
Insurance
premium against risk of damage or destruction of the premises – As per section
30, any premium paid in respect of insurance against risk of damage or
destruction of premises is deductible.
(c) Current repairs to plant,
machinery, or furniture;
Amount
spent on account of current repairs of machinery, plant and furniture are
deductible while computing income from other sources in respect of machinery,
plant or furniture let on hire alongwith building under section 57(ii) of the
Act.
(d) Insurance of plant,
machinery or furniture;
Amount
spent on account of insurance of machinery, plant and furniture are deductible
while computing income from other sources in respect of machinery, plant or furniture
let on hire alongwith building under section 57(ii) of the Act.
(e) Deduction for depreciation
in respect of machinery, plant and furniture;
Depreciation
on building, plant, machinery or furniture used upon block of assets in the
same manner as allowed under section 32 in the case of Profits & Gains from
Business & Profession. Deduction for depreciation in respect of machinery,
plant, furniture and building is allowed to be deducted in respect of loss or
decline in their value which gradually occurs due to physical wear, tear and
decay over their useful life; it is generally limited to losses or decline in
value which cannot be restored by current repairs and maintenance.
(f)
Any other expenditure not being expenditure of capital nature expanded wholly
or exclusively for the purpose of
earning such income.
Section
56(2)(ii) provides that income from machinery, plant or furniture belonging to
the assessee and let on hire is taxable as ‘Income from other sources’ if the
same is not chargeable to tax under the head “profits and gains of business or
profession”. Where the assessee-company leased out printing machinery and a
distillery plant on rent and the assessee never carried on at any time either
the business of printing or that of a distillery, it was held that the income
received by the assessee by way of rent from leasing of printing machinery,
etc., should be assessed under the head “Income from other sources”. - [Dharak Ltd. v. CIT (1986) 25 Taxman 196
(Ker.)]
[6] Income from Composite Letting of Plant, Machinery or Furniture and
Building [Section 56(2)(iii)]
If an assessee lets on hire machinery, plant or
furniture and also buildings and the letting of building is inseparable from
the letting of machinery, plant or furniture, the income from such letting
would be chargeable to tax under the residuary head where it is not chargeable
under the “Profits and gains of Business or Profession”. Broadly classifying
following nature of rent received on hire of assets specified above is taxed
under Income from Other Sources:
(a) If there is
letting of Building as well as the assets & both form Part & Parcel of
the same transaction since the two lettings are inseparable, e.g., Theatre
Building and its Furniture is taxable under the head “Income from Other
Sources”, if not charged as Business Income.
(b) If there is
letting of Building as well amenities but without any letting of Assets, then
this section is not applicable & the whole of such Income earned will be
taxed under “Income from House Property”.
Text of Section 56(2)(iii)
Where an assessee lets on hire machinery, plant or furniture belonging
to him and also buildings, and the letting of the buildings is inseparable from
the letting of the said machinery, plant or furniture, the income from such
letting, if it is not chargeable to income-tax under the head “Profits and
gains of business or profession”.
Permissible
deductions from income from composite letting of plant, machinery or furniture
and building [Section 57]
The following deductions are available:
v Current repairs to building
v Repairs to plant, furniture
v Depreciation
v Insurance premium or
v Any other expenditure
v
is
allowed under section 57. It is to be noted that Deduction on account of only
current repairs is allowed, in case of capital repairs, depreciation on such
capital repairs is allowed.
Income from inseparable lease of building and furniture
Lease of building fully equipped
and furnished for running a hotel and other ancillary purposes on fixed monthly
rent for building and also hire for the furniture and fittings — Inseparable
letting of building and furniture — Income liable to be assessed under section
12 of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 (corresponding to section 56(2)(iii) of
the Income-tax Act, 1961).
Where the assessee company
leased out a building fully equipped and furnished for the running of a hotel
and other ancillary purposes on a fixed monthly rent for the building and also
a fixed monthly hire for the furniture and fittings and the letting out of the
building and the furniture was inseparable, it was held that the income derived
by the assessee from the lease was liable to be assessed under section 12 of
the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 (corresponding to section 56(2)(iii) of the
Income-tax Act, 1961).
When a building and plant, machinery or furniture
are inseparably let, the Act contemplates the rent from the building as a
residuary head of income.
What is therefore, necessary to
examine is whether the letting is by way of business. Whether a particular
letting is of business has to be decided in the circumstances of each case.
Each case has to be looked at from a businessman’s point of view to find out
whether the letting was the doing of business or the exploitation of his
property by the owner. A commercial asset is only an asset used in a business
and nothing else, and business may be carried on with practically all things.
Therefore, it is not possible to say that a particular activity is business
because it is concerned with an asset with which trade is carried on.—[Sultan
Brothers Private Ltd. v. CIT (1964) 51 ITR 353 (SC)]
Where facilities are provided to the tenants of the
leased house property, the services charges could be taxable as income from
other sources. - [Tarapore & Co. v. CIT (2002) 259 ITR 389 (Mad.)]
FOR EXAMPLE
Mr. ‘A’ lets out buildings along
with air conditioning plant, tube-wells, refrigerators, etc. Though separate
rent is fixed in the lease deed refers to them collectively as “demised
premise”, it will be a case of inseparable letting and the entire rental income
will be assessable as income from other sources.
[7] Any sum received under a Keyman Insurance
Policy including Bonus [Section 56(2)(iv)]
Income referred to in section 2(24)(xi), if such
income is not chargeable to income-tax under the head “Profits and gains of
business or profession” or under the head “Salaries”. In other words, any sum
received by a person including bonus on a Keyman Insurance Policy may be
chargeable under profits and gains of business or profession or as salaries.
Text of Section 2(24)(xi)
Any sum received under a Keyman insurance policy including the sum
allocated by way of bonus on such policy.
Explanation : For the purposes of this
clause, the expression “Keyman insurance policy” shall have the meaning
assigned to it in the Explanation to clause (10D) of section 10;
Keyman insurance can be defined as an insurance
policy where the proposer as well as the premium payer is the employer, the
life to be insured is that of the employee and the benefit, in case of a claim,
goes to the employer. The ‘keyman’ here would be any person employed by a
company having a special skill set or substantial responsibilities and who
contributes significantly to the profits of that organization.
Who can be a Keyman
Anybody with specialized skills, whose loss can cause a financial
strain to the company are eligible for Keyman Insurance. For example, they
could be:
(i) Directors of a Company
(ii) Key Sales People
(iii) Key
Project Managers
(iv) People
with Specific Skills
A keyman insurance policy, as
defined in Explanation to section 10(10D) means a life insurance policy
taken by a person on the life of another person who is or was the employee of
the first-mentioned person or is or was connected in any manner whatever with
the business of the first mentioned person.
The above
definition implies the following ingredients of a keyman insurance policy:
(i) It
is a life insurance policy.
(ii) It is
a policy taken by one person on the life of another person.
(iii) The relationship between such persons should
either be that of an employer-employee or any other business relationship.
FOR EXAMPLE
Mr. ‘A’ is the Chief
Operating Officer of XYZ Ltd. (the company). XYZ Ltd. is heavily dependent upon
Mr. A for its business operations and, thus, Mr. ‘A’ is ‘a key person’ or a
‘keyman’ of the company. Sudden death of Mr. ‘A’ will seriously affect the
business operations of the company. To insure against such losses, the company
may take out an insurance policy on the life of Mr. ‘A’. Such a policy is known
as ‘Keyman Insurance Policy’.
Tax Treatment
Tax treatment of keyman insurance policy can be classified as follows:—
(a) In the hands of
the person taking the policy
The premium
paid by the person taking the keyman insurance policy (hereinafter referred to
as the first mentioned person) is an allowable expenditure in his hands under
section 37(1) of the Income-tax Act. Section 37(1) reads as below:—
“Any
expenditure (not being expenditure of the nature described in sections 30 to 36
and not being in the nature of capital expenditure or personal expenses of the
assessee), laid out or expended wholly and exclusively for the purposes of the
business or profession shall be allowed in computing the income chargeable
under the head ‘Profits and gains of business or profession’.” The premium for
keyman insurance policy is a revenue expenditure laid out or expended wholly
and exclusively for the purpose of the business or profession of the assessee and,
hence, is squarely covered by the above provision. Even in case of a firm,
premium paid for a keyman insurance policy taken on the life of a partner, is
an allowable expenditure under section 37(1).
This has been judicially upheld by the Mumbai Tribunal ‘B’ Bench in the
case of ITO v. Modi Motors (2009) 27 SOT 476.
It
was held that the premium paid against Keyman Insurance Policy in the name of
partners is allowable expenditure.— [ITO v. Modi Motors (2009) 27 SOT
476 (Mum.)]
As
far as the maturity proceeds are concerned, generally any amount received,
under a life insurance policy, including the sum allocated by way of bonus on
such policy, is excluded from the total income of the recipient under clause
(10D) of section 10 of the Act. However, the Finance (No. 2) Act, 1996, has
amended section 10(10D) so as to exclude receipts under keyman insurance policy
from the ambit of exemption. Simultaneously, sub-clause (xi) has been inserted
in clause (24) of section 2 so as to include the sum received under keyman
insurance policy in the definition of ‘income’. Further, clause (vi) has also
been inserted in section 28 by the above Finance Act.
The
net effect of the above amendments is that if the policy matures in the hands
of the first mentioned person, then the maturity proceeds are taxable as
business income in his hands.
(b) In the hands of keyman
The
premium paid by the first-mentioned person is not taken as a perquisite under
section 17(2) in the hands of the keyman. This is because; keyman policy is for
the benefit of the first mentioned person and not the keyman. Since no personal
advantage or benefit is derived by the keyman, it cannot be termed as a
perquisite in his hands.
Maturity proceeds in the hands
of keyman
Ordinarily, a keyman insurance
policy can mature only in the hands of the first-mentioned person. However, the
first mentioned person may assign the policy in favour of the keyman or his
family members.
Section 17(3) has been similarly
amended by the Finance (No. 2) Act, 1996 so as to include any sum received
under a ‘Keyman Insurance policy’ within the ambit of ‘profits in lieu of
salary’. A similar amendment has been made in section 56(2). A reasonable
interpretation of the above two amendments in section 17(3) and section 56(2)
implies that if the first mentioned person assigns the policy in favour of the
keyman or any of his family members, then the surrender value will be taxable
in the hands of the
keyman under section 17(3) or in the hands of the family members under
section 56(2)(iv).
Needless to say that after
assignment, the policy will loose the character of a ‘Keyman insurance policy’
and, hence, the ultimate maturity in such a case will be covered by section
10(10D).
Amount received from a life insurance policy – Exempt from tax
Any amount received under a life insurance policy,
including bonus is exempt from tax under section 10(10D).
[8] Where
money exceeding Rs. 25,000 received without consideration
between 01.09.2004 and 31.03.2006 [Section
56(2)(v)]
Text
of Section 56(2)(v)
[1][Where any sum of money exceeding twenty-five
thousand rupees is received without consideration by an individual or a Hindu
undivided family from any person on or after the 1st day of April 2004
[2][but before the 1st day of April, 2006],
the whole of such sum:
PROVIDED that this clause shall not apply to any sum
of money received—
(a) from
any relative; or
(b) on
the occasion of the marriage of the individual; or
(c) under
a will or by way of inheritance; or
(d) in
contemplation of death of the payer; or
(e) from
any local authority as defined in the Explanation to section 10(20); or
(f) from
any fund or foundation or university or other educational institution or
hospital or other medical institution or any trust or institution referred to
in section 10(23C); or
(g) from
any trust or institution registered under section 12AA.
Explanation
: For the purposes of this clause,
“relative” means—
(i) spouse of the individual;
(ii) brother or sister of the individual;
(iii) brother or sister of the spouse of the
individual;
(iv) brother
or sister of either of the parents of the individual;
(v) any
lineal ascendant or descendant of the individual;
(vi) any
lineal ascendant or descendant of the spouse of the individual;
(vii) spouse of the person referred to in
clauses (ii) to (vi);]
KEY NOTE
1. Inserted by the Finance (No.
2) Act, 2004, with effect from 01.04.2005.
2. Inseted by the Taxation Laws (Amendment)
Act, 2006, with retrospective effect from 01.04.2006.
Objective
of introducing section 56(2)(v)
In the Budget Speech of 2004 while introducing the Finance (No. 2) Act,
2004, Finance Minister stated the objective of amendment as follows:
“......... I abolished gift-tax in 1997. That
decision remains, but the loophole requires to be plugged to prevent money
laundering. Accordingly, purported gifts from unrelated persons, above the
threshold limit of Rs. 25,000, will now be taxed as income.”
Explanatory Memorandum to Finance (No. 2) Bill,
2004 Modification of the definition of income to include receipts in cash or
credit otherwise than for consideration.
It is proposed to insert a new sub-clause in the
definition of income so as to provide that any sum received on or after the 1st
day of September, 2004, by an individual or a Hindu undivided family from any
person, in cash or by way of credit, otherwise than by way of consideration of
goods and services shall be included within the definition of income under
section 2(24) of the Income-tax Act. It is also proposed to provide a general
threshold limit of Rupees twenty-five thousand. In addition to this, in the
case of an individual’s marriage, the aggregate of gifts received upto Rupees
one hundred thousand will not be charged to tax.
Gift received on the occasion of daughter’s marriage of assessee is
not exempt from tax
Assessee received the gift from
NRI friends and relatives on the occasion of marriage of daughter as shoguns.
The Assessing Officer has held that the gifts were received on occasion of
assessee’s daughter’s marriage and not the marriage of assessee and the cheques
were in the name of the assessee and the same were credited by the assessee to
his bank account hence, the said amount is taxable as income from other
sources, which was upheld by the Commissioner (Appeals). On appeal to the Tribunal,
the Tribunal held that “A perusal of the provisions of section 56(2)(vi) read
with the proviso
thereunder clearly reveals that they shall not
apply to any sum of money received ‘on the occasion of the marriage of the
individual’. Therefore, the word ‘individual’ in the context of marriage can
only be the bride or bridegroom and cannot include group of individuals”. As
the cheques were in the name of assessee which were credited to his account the
addition was justified as income from other sources. On appeal High Court
affirmed the view of Tribunal (Related Assessment year 2007-08). - [Rajinder
Mohan Lal v. DCIT (2013) 263 CTR 231 : 218 Taxman 213 : 95 DTR 126 (P&H)]
Maternal Cousin (mother’s sister’s son) is not a relatives
The assessee received gift from
his mother’s sister’s son which was added to income by the Assessing Officer on
the ground that maternal cousin was not a relative as per section 56(2)(v).
Gift received from mother’s sister’s son is taxable under the head “income from
other sources”. Mother’s sister’s son is not a relative as per section 56(2)(v)
and therefore, gift received from him is taxable under the Act. (Related
Assessment year 2006-07) - [ACIT v. Masanam Veerakumar (2013) 143 ITD 664 :
157 TTJ 141 (ITAT Chennai)]
Amount received by legal heir for abstaining from contesting the
will of deceased
Assessee, a legal heir of
deceased having received a compromise amount under a settlement with the
legatee for agreeing to the Court granting probate in respect of the last will
of the deceased and withdrawing his caveat against grant of probate, the
abstinence of the assessee from contesting the will constituted the
consideration for payment and, therefore the provisions of section 56(2)(v) are
not attracted and the amount received by the assessee can not be treated as
income under section 56(2)(v). (Related Assessment Year 2006-07). - [Purvez
A. Poonawala v. ITO (2011) 138 TTJ 773 : 55 DTR 297 (ITAT Mumbai )
Gift received from HUF—Exempt—HUF is a “relative” under section
56(2)(v), (vi) & (vii)
Where assessee receives gift
from HUF it was held that though the definition of the term “relative” does not
specifically include a Hindu Undivided Family, an ‘HUF” constitutes all persons
lineally descended from a common ancestor and includes their mothers, wives or
widows and unmarried daughters. As all these persons fall in the definition of
“relative”, an HUF is ‘a group of relatives’. As a gift from a “relative” is
exempt, a gift from a ‘group of relatives’ is also exempt since the singular
will include the plural. (Related Assessment year 2005-06). - [Vineetkumar
Raghavjibhai Bhalodia v. ITO (2011) 46 SOT 97 : 58 DTR 412 : 140 TTJ 58 (ITAT
Rajkot)]
Gifts received by minor sons - Maternal Uncle
Section 56(2)(v), read with Explanation speaks of
relationship between the donor and donee and not deemed assessee, maternal
uncle of the assessee who made gifts of Rs. 5 Lakhs to two minor sons of the
assessee is not a “relative” of the donees within the meaning of Explanation to
section 56(2)(v) and therefore, the impugned sum is chargeable to tax in the
hands of the assessee under the provisions of section 56 read with section 64.
(Related Assessment year 2005-06)
[ACIT v. Lucky Pamnani (2011) 135 TTJ 607 :
129 ITD 489 : 49 DTR 501 (ITAT Mumbai)]
Amount received and repaid as a loan cannot come
within the ambit of section 56(2)(v). - [CIT v. Saranapal Singh (HUF) (2011)
237 CTR 50 : 198 Taxman 202 (P & H)]
Where the repayment capacity of assessee is very poor, interest free
loan is not to be treated as gift under section 56(2)(v)
Assessee received a huge loan without any security and interest as a
mark of gratitude, irrespective of his repayment capacity. The Assessing
Officer made addition under section 56(2)(v) vide raising contention that in
absence of any obligation on part of assessee to repay loan, entire transaction
was of nature of gift which was given a colour of a loan. It was held that
there no provision under section 56(2)(v) to treat loan as gift, which might
not be repaid. - [Chandrakant H. Shah v. ITO (2009) 28 SOT 315 (ITAT Mumbai)]
Lineal Ascendant or Descendant
Lineal ascendant or descendant
means ascendant or descendant in the right line without any deviation. This
will include line from father to son, and grand son and great grand son and vice
versa, from mother to daughter, and grand daughter and great grand daughter
and vice versa. - [CIT v. Dhannalal Devilal (1956) 29 ITR 165 (Raj)]
[9]
Income to include gift of money from unrelated persons – where money exceeding
Rs. 50,000 received without consideration between 01.04.2006 and 30.09.2009 [Section
56(2)(vi)]
Section 56(2)(vi) has been introduced by Taxation
Laws (Amendment) Act, 2006. It replaces Section 56(2)(v) with effect from
assessment year 2007-08. Section 56(2)(vi) applies to any sum of money received
without consideration by an individual or HUF, from any person, if the
aggregate value thereof exceeds Rs. 50,000 in a previous year. The section was
effective upto 30.09.2009.
In other words, Section 56(2)(vi) provides that any
sum of money (in excess of the prescribed limits of Rs. 50,000) received
without consideration by an individual or HUF will be chargeable to income-tax
in the hands of the recipient under the head “income from other sources”.
However, anything which is received in kind having ‘money’s worth’
i.e. property is outside the purview of the existing provisions.
Text of Section 56(2)(vi)
[1][Where any sum of money, the aggregate value of
which exceeds Rs.50,000, is received without consideration by an individual or
a Hindu Undivided Family, in any previous year from any persons on or after
01.04.2006 [2][but before the 1st day of
October, 2009], the whole of aggregate value of such sum shall be chargeable to
income-tax under the head “income from other sources”:
PROVIDED that this clause shall not apply to any sum
of money received—
(a) from
any relative; or
(b) on
the occasion of the marriage of the individual; or
(c) under
a will or by way of inheritance; or
(d) in
contemplation of death of the payer; or
(e) from
any local authority as defined in the Explanation to clause (20) of section 10;
or
(f) from
any fund or foundation or university or other educational institution or
hospital or other medical institution or any trust or institution referred to
in clause (23C) of section 10; or
(g) from
any trust or institution registered under section 12AA.
Explanation
: For the purposes of this clause,
“relative” means—
(i)
spouse of the individual;
(ii)
brother or sister of the individual;
(iii) brother or sister of the spouse of the
individual;
(iv) brother or sister of either of the
parents of the individual;
(v)
any lineal ascendant or descendant of the individual;
(vi) any
lineal ascendant or descendant of the spouse of the individual;
(vii) spouse of the person referred to in
clauses (ii) to (vi).]
KEY NOTE
1.
Inserted by the Taxation Laws (Amendment) Act, 2006, with effect from
01.04.2007.
2.
Inserted by the Finance (No. 2) Act, 2009, with effect from 01.10.2009.
PROVISIONS ILLUSTRATED : GIFTS [Section 56(2)(vi)]
The amount of gifts is taxable as follows:—
S. No.
|
Particulars
|
Amount taxable
|
(i)
|
Cash Gift Rs. 50,000
|
whole amount is taxable
|
(ii)
|
Immovable property without consideration with stamp duty value
exceeding Rs. 50,000
|
whole amount is taxable
|
(iii)
|
Movable property without consideration with fare market value
exceeding Rs. 50,000
|
whole amount is taxable
|
(iv)
|
Movable property without adequate consideration and difference
between fare market value and consideration exceeds Rs. 50,000
|
the whole of difference between fare market value
and consideration is taxable
|
In case of immovable property if
there is inadequate consideration, Tax would be charged on the transferor in
nature of capital gains on the basis of stamp duty value but there would be no
tax on the transferee.
Difference between the provisions of erstwhile Section 56(2)(v) and
Section 56(2)(vi)
The only difference between the
provisions of erstwhile Section 56(2)(v) and Section 56(2)(vi) was that Section
56(2)(v) applied to each individual gift exceeding Rs. 25,000 whereas Section
56(2)(vi) applied to a case where aggregate value of gifts received during the
previous year exceeded Rs.50,000. In a case where the aggregate value of
amounts received during the previous year exceeded Rs. 50,000, the entire
amount was chargeable under this clause and not merely the excess over Rs.
50,000.
KEY NOTE
Amounts received from relatives
as also amounts received on the occasion of marriage of the individual, under a
will or by way of inheritance, in contemplation of death of the payer, etc.
were not chargeable under this clause.
Gifts – Trust – Beneficiary - Amount received by beneficiary from
trusts could not be said to be received without consideration and hence could
not be taxed under section 56(2)(vi)
Allowing
the appeal of the assesse, the Tribunal held that ,amount received as
beneficiary from trusts was nothing but his own income in his status as a
beneficiary of said trust character of income in hands of beneficiary would
remain same, hence the amount received cannot be sad to be without
consideration hence cannot be assessed under section 56(2)(vi). (Related
Assessment Year 2008 - 09) [Sharon Nayak v. DCIT (2016) 159 ITD 143
(ITAT Banglore)]
Gift - Where assessee was an AOP sum of Rs. 1.60 crore received by it
without consideration could not be included in its total income
Assessee
was a beneficiary trust assessed in status of AOP. It received a gift from
settlor's wife during year towards trust fund which was not included in total
income in terms of Section 56(2)(vi). The Assessing Officer included said
amount in income of trust. The ITAT held that any sum exceeding Rs. 50,000/-
can fall within ambit of section 56(2)(vi) only if it is received by an individual
or HUF. Since assessee was an AOP and not any individual or HUF, such a receipt
could not be included in its total income within framework of Section
56(2)(vi). (Related Assessment Year 2010-2011)
[Mridu Hari Dalmia Parivar Trust v. ITO (2016) 179 TTJ 577 : 158 ITD
521 : 139 DTR 143 (ITAT Delhi)]
Distribution of income by trust to
beneficiaries not chargeable to tax under section 56(2)(vi)
Distribution
of income by a trust to its beneficiaries would not be construed as amounts
received without consideration by the beneficiaries, and hence, section
56(2)(vi) of the Act would not apply to such receipts. It also held that the
Assessing Officer had an option to assess the amount received by the taxpayer
from various trusts as a beneficiary of such income, either in the hands of the
trust or in the hands of the beneficiary. The Tribunal further held that if
such option was exercised by the Assessing ffocer and income was taxed in the
beneficiary’s hands, income would be classified in the hands of the beneficiary
in the same manner as it was classified in the hands of the trust.
[Mrs. Sharon
Nayak v. DCIT – Date of Judgement : 27.05.2016 (ITAT Bangalore)]
Lump sum
alimony from ex-husband - Not assessable as income from other sources
In August 2007 i.e. during previous year assessee
received lump sum payment from her ex-husband, a foreign national as per
diverse agreement executed in the year 1990. Assessing Officer held that as the
amount received without consideration and the assessee has not received the same
from the persons covered under definition of relative as provided in exemptions
to section 56(2)(vi) hence assessable as income from other sources. On appeal
Tribunal held that receipt represented accumulated monthly installments of
alimony, which had been received as a consideration for relinquishing all her
past and future claims, and therefore, provisions of section 56(2)(vi) would
not be applicable. (Related Assessment Year 2008-09) - [ACIT v. Meenakshi
Khanna (2013) 158 TTJ 782 :143 ITD 744 :
96 DTR 220 (ITAT Delhi]
[10]
Income to include transfer of money and/or property receiver between
01.10.2009 and 31.03.2017 [Section 56(2)(vii)]
The Finance Act, 2009 inserted section 56(2)(vii)
with effect from 01.10.2009. Simultaneously with introduction of this section,
section 56(2)(vi) was deleted. Section 56(2)(vi) did not cover receipts in kind
whereas section 56(2)(vii) covers receipts in kind as well. Section 56(2)(vii)
covers receipt of property mentioned therein. Such receipt may be without
consideration or for a consideration which is less than its stamp duty
value/fair market value Receipt of immovable property without consideration is
chargeable to tax if such receipt is on or after 01.10.2009 and other
conditions are satisfied.
Text of
Section 56(2)(vii)
[1][Where an individual or a Hindu undivided
family receives, in any previous year, from any person or persons on or after
the 1st day of October, 2009 [2][but before the 1st day of April, 2017,—
(a) any sum of money, without consideration,
the aggregate value of which exceeds fifty thousand rupees, the whole of the aggregate value of
such sum;
[3][(b) any immovable property,—
(i) without consideration, the stamp duty
value of which exceeds fifty thousand rupees, the stamp duty value of such
property;
(ii) for a
consideration which is less than the stamp duty value of the property by an
amount exceeding fifty thousand rupees, the stamp duty value of such property
as exceeds such consideration:
PROVIDED that where the date of the agreement
fixing the amount of consideration for the transfer of immovable property and
the date of registration are not the same, the stamp duty value on the date of
the agreement may be taken for the purposes of this sub-clause:
PROVIDED FURTHER that the said proviso shall
apply only in a case where the amount of consideration referred to therein, or
a part thereof, has been paid by any mode other than cash on or before the date
of the agreement for the transfer of such immovable property;]
(c) any property, other than immovable property,—
(i)
without consideration, the aggregate fair market value of which exceeds
fifty thousand rupees, the whole of the aggregate fair market value of such
property;
(ii)
for a consideration which is less than the aggregate fair market value
of the property by an amount exceeding fifty thousand rupees, the aggregate
fair market value of such property as exceeds such consideration:
PROVIDED that where the stamp duty value of
immovable property as referred to in sub-clause (b) is disputed by the assessee
on grounds mentioned in section 50C(2), the Assessing Officer may refer the
valuation of such property to a Valuation Officer, and the provisions of
section 50C and section 155(15) shall, as far as may be, apply in relation to
the stamp duty value of such property for the purpose of sub-clause (b) as they
apply for valuation of capital asset under those sections:
PROVIDED FURTHER that this clause shall not
apply to any sum of money or any property received—
(a)
from any relative; or
(b)
on the occasion of the marriage of the individual; or
(c)
under a will or by way of inheritance; or
(d)
in contemplation of death of the payer or donor, as the case may be; or
(e)
from any local authority as defined in the Explanation to clause (20) of
section 10; or
(f) from any fund or foundation or university or
other educational institution or hospital or other medical institution or any
trust or institution referred to in clause (23C) of section 10; or
(g)
from any trust or institution registered under section 12AA; or
[4](h) by way of transaction not regarded as
transfer under clause (vicb) or clause (vid) or clause (vii) of section 47
Explanation : For the purposes of this clause,—
(a) “assessable” shall have the meaning assigned
to it in the Explanation 2 to section 50C(2);
(b) “fair market value” of a property, other
than an immovable property, means the value determined in accordance with the
method as may be prescribed;
(c) “jewellery” shall have the meaning
assigned to it in the Explanation to section 2(14)(ii);
(d) “property” [5][means the following capital
asset of the assessee, namely:—]
(i)
immovable property being land or building or both;
(ii)
shares and securities;
(iii)
jewellery;
(iv)
archaeological collections;
(v)
drawings;
(vi)
paintings;
(vii)
sculptures; [6][***]
(viii) any work of art; [7][or]
(ix)
bullion;
[8][(e)
“relative” means,—
(i) in case of an individual—
(A) spouse of the individual;
(B) brother or sister of the individual;
(C) brother or sister of the spouse of the
individual;
(D) brother or sister of either of the
parents of the individual;
(E) any lineal ascendant or descendant of
the individual;
(F) any lineal ascendant or descendant of
the spouse of the individual;
(G) spouse of the person referred to in
items (B) to (F); and
(ii) in case of a Hindu undivided family,
any member thereof;
(f) “stamp duty
value” means the value adopted or assessed or assessable by any authority of
the Central Government or a State Government for the purpose of payment of
stamp duty in respect of an immovable property;
KEY NOTE
1. Inserted
by Finance (No. 2) Act, 2009, with effect from 01.10.2009.
2.
Inserted by Finance Act, 2017, with effect from 01.04.2017
3. Substituted by the Finance Act, 2013, with effect from
01.04.2014. Prior to its substitution, sub-clause (b), as substituted by the
Finance Act, 2010, with retrospective effect from 01.10.2009, read as under:
“b)
any immoveable property, without consideration, the stamp duty value of
which exceeds fifty thousand rupees, the stamp duty value of such property”
4. Inserted by the Finance Act, 2016, with
effect from 01.04.2017]
5. substituted
for “means-” by the Finance Act, 2010, w.r.e.f. 01.10.2009,
6. Word “or” omitted. Ibid. with effect from
01.06.2010.
7. Inserted.
ibid
8. Substituted by the Finance Act, 2012, with
retrospective effect from 01.10.2009. Prior to its substitution, clause (e)
read as under:
(e) “relative” shall have the meaning assigned to
it in the Explanation to clause (vi) of sub-section (2) of this section”
Transfer of immovable property for a consideration which is less
than the stamp duty value, the difference is assessable as income in the
transferee’s hands [Section 56(2)(vii)]
If purchase value and stamp
assessable value difference to be assessed as deemed income from other sources
in the hands of the buyer of a property. These provisions have been amended
with effect from 01.04.2014 so as to provide that where any immovable property
is received by an individual or HUF for a consideration which is Rs. 50,000/-
less than stamp duty value of the property. The stamp duty value of such
property as exceeds such consideration shall be taxable in the hands of the
individual or HUF under the head “Income from other sources”. However, the
provision is applicable for transactions above Rs. 50,000/-.
In other words, Finance Act, 2013
has substituted clause (b) of section 56(2)(vii) with effect from 01.04.2014
providing, inter alia, that where an individual or Hindu Undivided
Family receives, in any previous year, from any person or persons any immovable
property on or after 01.10.2009—
(i)
Without consideration, the stamp duty value of which exceeds fifty thousand
rupees, the stamp duty value of such property;
(ii) For a consideration which is less than the stamp duty
value of the property by an amount exceeding fifty thousand rupees, the stamp
duty value of such property as exceeds such consideration
v shall be chargeable to income-tax under the
head “Income from Other Sources”.
Section 56(2)(vii) applicable in the case of Individual & HUF
only
It is important to note that
provision of section 56(2)(vii) applicable in case of transferee of immovable
property covers only Individual or HUF, whereas provisions of section 50C/43CA
applicable to the transferor of the property cover all the assessees. It
implies that if the transferee of property is a person other than individual or
HUF i.e. a Company, Firm, LLP etc., provision of section 56(2)(vii) shall not
be applicable. Thus, if an immovable property is purchased by a person other
than an individual or HUF for a consideration which is less than Stamp Duty
Value/Circle Rate, there will not be any implication or attraction of the
provision of this section.
Taxability under section 56(2)(vii) at a glance
Nature of assets
|
Conditions for
Taxability
|
Whether single or all receipts are considered for limit of Rs.
50,000
|
Value chargeable to tax
|
|||
Any sum of Money without
consideration
|
If aggregate value exceeds Rs. 50,000
|
All receipts
|
Whole amount if same exceeds
Rs. 50,000
|
|||
Any immovable property without consideration
|
If stamp duty value exceeds Rs. 50,000
|
Single receipt
|
Stamp duty value
|
|||
Any movable property without consideration
|
If fair market value (FVM) exceeds Rs. 50,000
|
All receipts
|
The aggregate fair market value of which exceeds Rs. 50,000, the
whole of the aggregate fair market value of such property
|
|||
Any movable property for consideration which is less than fair market
value (FVM)
|
If fair market value (FVM) exceeds Rs. 50,000
|
All receipts
|
Consideration which is less than the aggregate fair market value of
the property by an amount exceeding Rs. 50,000, the aggregate fair market
value of such property as exceeds such consideration [i.e. whole of such
aggregate FMV less consideration].
|
|||
Provisions Illustrated : Taxability under section 56(2)(vii)
|
||||||
S. No.
|
Transaction
|
Is there an eligible gift [i.e., it can be the transaction to be
considered as “gift” for the purpose of section 56(2)(vii)]
|
Is the gift taxable
|
|||
(i)
|
Mr. “A” received a sum of Rs. 2,00,000 on the occasion of his
birthday, from his friend
|
Yes [sum of money received is ‘eligible gift’]
|
Yes [since the transaction does not fall under exempted category]
|
|||
(ii)
|
Mr. “B” received a sum of Rs. 2,00,000 on the occasion of his
marriage, from his friend
|
Yes [sum of money received is ‘eligible gift’]
|
No [since the transaction falls under exempted category]
|
|||
(iii)
|
Mr. “C” purchased a site in Bangalore for Rs. 40,00,000. Its stamp
duty value was Rs. 50,00,000
|
Yes [immoveable property received for inadequate consideration is
‘eligible gift’]
|
Yes [since the transaction does not fall under
exempted category]. The difference between ’actual consideration and stamp
duty value exceeds Rs. 50,000. Hence, the transaction is taxable. The taxable
amount is Rs. 10,00,000 which is the amount of difference between purchase
price and stamp duty value.
|
(iv)
|
Mr. “D” received 2 Kgs of Gold from his employer who was on death bed
contemplating his death.
|
Yes [moveable property without consideration is ‘eligible gift’]
|
No [since the transaction falls under exempted category]
|
(v)
|
Mr. “E” received a gift of M. F. Hussain Paintings through his
Uncle’s Will.
|
Yes [moveable property without consideration is ‘eligible gift’]
|
No [since the transaction falls under exempted category]
|
(vi)
|
Mr. “F” was given ‘Ancient Sculptures’ worth Rs. 75,00,000 by the
local authority of Mumbai, for being its Brand Ambessador.
|
Yes [moveable property without consideration is ‘eligible gift’]
|
No [since the transaction falls under exempted category]
|
(vii)
|
Mr. “G” received a gift of M. F. Hussain Paintings through his
Uncle’s Will.
|
No [moveable property has been acquired for
adequate consideration and hence there is no ‘gift’ as per provisions of
section 56(2)(vii)]
|
|
(viii)
|
Mr. “H” received Rs. 5,00,000 from ‘ABC’ Trust
(Registered under section 12AA) for meeting his medical expenses.
|
Yes [sum of money received is ‘eligible gift’]
|
No [since the transaction falls under exempted category]
|
(ix)
|
Mr. “I” received a scholarship of Rs. 3,00,000
from his college
|
Yes [sum of money received is ‘eligible gift’]
|
No [since the transaction falls under exempted category]
|
(x)
|
Mr. “J” received Preference Shares of XYZ Ltd., on the death of his
father as inheritance.
|
Yes [moveable property received without
consideration is ‘eligible gift’]
|
No [since the transaction falls under exempted category]
|
Provisions of section 56(2)(vii) not applicable
Provisions of section 56(2)(vii) not applicable to
following transactions, not regarded as transfer under section 47:—
(a) Section 47(vicb)—Business reorganisation of co-operative bank
TEXT OF SECTION
47(vicb)
“any
transfer by a shareholder, in a business reorganisation, of a capital asset
being a share or shares held by him in the predecessor co-operative bank if the
transfer is made in consideration of the allotment to him of any share or
shares in the successor co-operative bank.
Explanation
: For the purposes of clauses (vica) and (vicb), the expressions “business
reorganisation”, “predecessor co-operative bank” and “successor co-operative
bank” shall have the meanings respectively assigned to them in section 44DB;”
(b) Section 47(vid)—Scheme of Demerger
TEXT OF SECTION
47(vid)
“any
transfer or issue of shares by the resulting company, in a scheme of demerger
to the shareholders of the demerged company if the transfer or issue is made in
consideration of demerger of the undertaking;”
(c) Section 47(vii) – Scheme of Amalgamation
TEXT OF SECTION
47(vii)
“any
transfer by a shareholder, in a scheme of amalgamation, of a capital asset
being a share or shares held by him in the amalgamating company, if—
(a) the transfer is made in consideration of the allotment
to him of any share or shares in the amalgamated company except where the
shareholder itself is the amalgamated company, and
(b) the amalgamated company is an Indian company;]
Section 56(2)(vii) not to apply if the property is Stock-in-Trade in
the hands of the recipient
The provisions section
56(2)(vii) will not apply to stock-in-trade, raw material and consumable stores
in case of any business of such recipient. The scope of deemed income is only
to tax the transactions which are in kind and not the transactions entered into
in the normal course of business or trade, the profits of which are taxable
under specific head of income.
Gifts not chargeable to tax [Section 56(2)(vii)]
Any sum of money or property received by an
individual or HUF in the following circumstances shall not be chargeable to
tax:—
(a) Gifts received by an individual from his relatives;
(b) Gifts received by an HUF from any of its Member;
(c) Gifts received by an individual on occasion of his/her marriage;
(d) Gifts received by an individual or HUF under a will or by way of
Inheritance;
(e) Gifts received in contemplation of death of the payer;
(f) Gifts received from any local authority;
(g) Gifts received from any fund, foundation, university,
educational institution, hospital, medical institution, any trust or
institution referred to in Section 10(23C);
(h)
Gifts received from any trust or institution registered under Section 12AA;
(i) Share received as a consequences of demerger or
amalgamation of a company under clause (vid) or clause (vii) of section 47,
respectively;
(j)
Share received as a consequences of business reorganization of a co-operative
bank under section 47(vicb).
What is meant by “in contemplation of death”
Under clause (d) of the second
proviso to section 56(2)(vii), any sum of money or other specified movable
property received ‘in contemplation of the death of the payer’ is granted
exemption from tax. It is, therefore, necessary to understand the exact import
of what is meant by ‘in contemplation of death’.
The requirements of a ‘gift in
contemplation of death’ are laid down in section 191 of the Indian Succession
Act, 1925. This section reads as follows:
“191. Property transferable by gift made in contemplation of death—
(1) A man may dispose, by gift made in contemplation of
death, of any movable property which he could dispose of by will.
(2) A gift is said
to be made in contemplation of death where a man, who is ill and expects to die
shortly of his illness, delivers, to another the possession of any movable
property to keep as a gift in case the donor shall die of that illness.
(3) Such a gift may be resumed by the giver, and shall not
take effect if he recovers from the illness during which it was made; nor if he
survives the person to whom it was made.”
Thus, two important requirements laid down in this
sub-section are,—
(i) the donor must be ill and expects to die shortly of the illness,
and
(ii)
possession of the property should be delivered to the donee, apparently during
the lifetime of the donor.
The requirement of ‘delivery’ is
well-impressed in the three Illustrations given below section 191 of the Indian
Succession Act, 1925, which read as follows:—
ROVISIONS ILLUSTRATED - 1
A, being ill, and in expectation of death, delivers to B, to be
retained by him in case of A’s death,—
v a watch:
v a bond granted by C to A:
v a bank-note:
v a promissory note of the Central Government
endorsed in blank:
v a bill of exchange endorsed in blank:
v certain mortgage-deeds.
A dies of the illness during which he delivered these articles. B is
entitled to—
v the watch:
v the debt secured by C’s bond:
v the bank-note:
v the bill of exchange:
v the money secured by the mortgage-deeds.
PROVISIONS ILLUSTRATED - 2
Mr. “A”, being ill, and in
expectation of death, delivers to Mr. “B” the key of a trunk or the key of a
warehouse in which goods of bulk belonging to Mr. “A” are deposited, with the
intention of giving him the control over the contents of the trunk, or over the
deposited goods, and desires him to keep them in case of Mr. A’s death. Mr. “A”
dies of the illness during which he delivered these articles. Mr. “B” is
entitled to the trunk and its contents or to Mr. A’s goods of bulk in the
warehouse.
PROVISIONS ILLUSTRATED - 3
Mr. “A”, being ill, and in
expectation of death, puts aside certain articles in separate parcels and marks
upon the parcels respectively the names of Mr. “B” and Mr. “C”. The parcels are
not delivered during the life of Mr. “A”. Mr. “A” dies of the illness during
which he set aside the parcels. Mr. “B” and Mr. “C” are not entitled to the
contents of the parcels.
Kinds of gifts received taxable under section 56(2)(ii)
With effect from 01.10.2009, the
following three kinds of gifts received by an individual or HUF from an
unrelated person or persons shall be taxable under section 56(2)(vii).
(i) GIFT OF MONEY:
Where
any sum of money is received by an individual or a Hindu Undivided from any
person or persons without consideration the aggregate value of which exceeds
Rs. 50,000, the whole of aggregate value of such sum shall be taxable in the
hands of the recipient.
(ii) GIFT OF IMMOVABLE PROPERTY:
(a) Without
consideration—
Where
any immovable property is received by an individual or HUF from any person
without consideration the stamp duty value of which exceeds Rs. 50,000, the
stamp duty value of such property shall be taxable.
(b)
Acquired for inadequate consideration—
Where
such immoveable property is acquired by an individual or HUF for a
consideration which is less than the stamp duty value of the property by an
amount exceeding Rs. 50,000, the stamp duty value of such property as exceeds
such consideration shall be taxable in his hands.
(iii) GIFT OF PROPERTY OTHER THAN IMMOVABLE PROPERTY:
(a) Without
consideration—
Where
any property other than immoveable property is received by an individual or
HUF, the aggregate fair market value of which exceeds Rs. 50,000, the whole of
the aggregate fair market value of such property shall be taxable.
(b) Acquired for the
inadequate consideration—
Where
such property other than immoveable property is acquired for a consideration
which is less than the aggregate fair market value of the property by amount
exceeding Rs. 50,000 the aggregate fair market value of such property as
exceeds such consideration shall be taxable.
PROVISIONS ILLUSTRATED
Mr. “A”, the friend of Mr. “B”, has gifted an
immovable property to Mr. “B” whose stamp duty value on the date of gift is Rs.
90,00,000
(a) What shall be the value of gift taxable under section 56(2)(vii)
(b)
What shall be the amount taxable if Mr. “B” purchased the above property from A
for a consideration of Rs. 70,00,000
SOLUTION:
(a) The whole of amount of Rs. 90,00,000 shall be taxable with hands of
Mr. “B”
(b)
Rs. 20,00,000 i.e. Rs. 90,00,000 – Rs. 70,00,000 shall be the value of
inadequate consideration so taxable.
Sum of money received without consideration (commonly known as
monetary gift) by an individual
PROVISIONS ILLUSTRATED
During the year 2017-18, Mr. “A” Raja received a
gift of Rs. 5,00,000 from his father. Apart from gift of Rs. 5,00,000, he
received gift of Rs. 3,00,000 from his friends residing abroad and gift of
Rs. 25,000 from friends of his spouse on his wedding anniversary. Compute
taxability of the gifts in the hands of Mr. “A”.
|
SOLUTION
|
Any sum of money (i.e., generally known as gift)
received by an individual/ HUF without adequate consideration is charged to
tax, if the following conditions are satisfied:—
(i) The sum of money is
received by an individual or HUF on or after 01.10.2009.
(ii) Such sum of money is
received without consideration.
(iii) The aggregate value of
such sum received during aforesaid period exceeds Rs. 50,000.
Considering the
above provisions, the tax treatment of gifts in the hands of Mr. “A” will be
as follows:—
(a)
Gift received from father will not be taxed, since father falls under the
definition of a relative. Hence, nothing will be charged to tax in respect of
gift of Rs. 5,00,000 received from father.
(b)
Gift received from any person other than relative and otherwise than on
prescribed occasions is fully taxed. Hence, gift of Rs. 3,00,000 received
from friends of Mr. “A” residing abroad and gift of Rs. 25,000 received from
friends of spouse of Mr. “A” on the occasion of his wedding anniversary will
be fully taxed.
|
Immovable property received without consideration/adequate
consideration by an individual
PROVISIONS ILLUSTRATED
On 01.08.2017, Mr. “A” gifted a plot of land to
his friend, Mr. “X”. The market value of such plot was Rs. 30,00,000 and the
value of the plot adopted by the Stamp Valuation Authority for charging stamp
duty was Rs. 40,00,000.
On 25.03.2018, Mr. “X” purchased a residential
building (building P) from one of his friends. The building was purchased for
Rs. 52,00,000, however, the value of the building adopted by the Stamp
Valuation Authority for charging stamp duty was Rs. 60,00,000. Advise Mr. “X”
regarding the tax treatment of above items.
|
SOLUTION
|
Any immovable property received without
consideration (i.e., received by way of a gift) by an individual/HUF is
charged to tax, if the following conditions are satisfied:—
(i) Any immovable property is
received by an individual or HUF on or after 01.10.2009.
(ii) Such property is received
without consideration.
(iii) The stamp duty value of such property exceeds Rs. 50,000.
In
above case, the stamp duty value of the property adopted by the Stamp
Valuation Authority for charging stamp duty will be treated as income of the
receiver.
Considering above provisions, full stamp duty
value in respect of plot of land of Rs. 40,00,000 will be charged to tax in
the hands of Mr. “X” .
Since
the building acquired on or after 01.04.2013, the entire difference of Rs.
8,00,000 (being greater than Rs. 50,000) would have been changed to tax.
|
Specified movable property received without consideration (commonly
known as non-monetary gift) by an individual
PROVISIONS ILLUSTRATED
During the Financial year 2017-18, Mrs. “X” received following gifts
from her relatives/friends:—
(i) Painting received from her friend. Fair
market value of the painting is Rs. 3,00,000.
(ii) Archaeological collection received from her mother. Fair market
value of such archaeological collection is Rs. 4,00,000.
(iii) Jewellery received from her relatives on her birthday. Fair
market value of the jewellery is Rs. 5,00,000.
􀂾 Advise
her regarding the tax treatment of above items.
|
SOLUTION
|
In the above case, the fair market value of the prescribed movable
property will be treated as income of the receiver.
Nothing contained in aforesaid provisions will apply to the following
cases:
v Property
received from relatives.
v Property
received by a HUF from its members.
v Property
received on occasion of the marriage of the individual.
v Property
received under Will/ by way of inheritance.
v Property
received in contemplation of death of the payer or donor.
v Property
received from a local authority.
v
Property received from any fund, foundation,
university, other educational institution, hospital or other medical
institution, any trust or institution referred to in section 10(23C).
Considering above
provisions, the tax treatment of various items received by Mr. “X” will be as
follows:—
(i) In respect of painting received from her friend, the fair market
value of the painting, i.e., Rs. 3,00,000 will be treated as her taxable
income.
(ii) Nothing will be charged to tax in respect of
archaeological collection received from her mother, since mother comes under
the definition of relative.
(iii) Nothing will be charged to tax in respect of jewellery received
from her relatives on her birthday.
|
Specified movable property received without
adequate consideration by an individual
PROVISIONS ILLUSTRATED
During the year 2012-13, Mr. “A” purchased the following capital
assets:
(a) Shares purchased for Rs. 5,00,000, the fair market value of the
shares is Rs. 7,00,000.
(b) Sculptures purchased for Rs. 3,85,000; the fair market value of
the sculptures is Rs. 4,50,000.
(c) Motor-car purchased for Rs. 8,84,000; the fair market value of
motor-car is Rs. 8,00,000.
Ø Advise
him regarding the tax treatment of above items.
|
SOLUTION
|
Any prescribed movable property acquired for less
than its fair market value by an individual/HUF is charged to tax if the
following conditions are satisfied:—
(i) Any prescribed movable
property is received by an individual or HUF on or after 01.10.2009.
(ii) Such property is received for a
consideration, but aggregate fair market value of such properties received by
the assessee during the previous year exceeds the consideration of these
properties by Rs. 50,000. In other words, the aggregate fair market value of
all such properties is higher than the consideration and the aggregate gap is
more than Rs. 50,000.
Prescribed
movable property means shares/securities, jewellery, archaeological
collections, drawings, paintings, sculptures or any work of art and with
effect from 01.06.2010 bullion, being capital asset of the assessee.
In above
case, aggregate fair market value in excess of aggregate consideration of such properties will be
charged to tax.
Nothing
contained in aforesaid provisions will apply to the following cases:
·
Property received from relatives.
·
Property received by a HUF from its members.
·
Property received on occasion of the
marriage of the individual.
·
Property received under Will/by way of
inheritance.
·
Property received in contemplation of death
of the payer or donor.
·
Property received from a local authority.
·
Property received from any fund, foundation,
university, other educational institution, hospital or other medical
institution, any trust or institution referred to in section 10(23C).
Considering above
provisions, the tax treatment of various items received by Mr. “A” will be as
follows:—
·
The
above provisions will apply only in respect of prescribed movable property.
Considering
the definition of prescribed movable property, shares and sculptures will
only come under the definition of prescribed movable property.
(a) The fair market value of shares is Rs. 7,00,000 and
the purchase price is Rs. 5,00,000. The excess of fair market value over the
purchase price will amount to Rs. 2,00,000 for shares. Hence, Rs. 2,00,000
will be charged to tax in respect of purchase of shares.
(b) The fair market value of sculptures is Rs. 4,50,000,
respectively, and the purchase price is Rs. 3,85,000. The excess of fair
market value over the purchase price will amount to Rs. 65,000 for
sculptures. Hence, Rs. 65,000 will be charged to tax in respect of purchase
of shares and sculptures.
(c) Motor-car does not come under the definition of
prescribed movable property. Hence, nothing will be taxed in respect of
purchase of motor-car.
|
Reference to Valuation Officer under section 142A(1)
The Assessing Officer may for
the purposes of assessment or reassessment, make a reference to a Departmental
Valuation Officer (DVO) to estimate the value including fair market value, of
any asset, property or investment for the purposes of section 56(2). The
provision is enabling provision to give effect to the powers of the Assessing
Officer under section 56(2)(vii)/(viia).
Relative - Hindu Undivided Family (HUF) -
Gift by the mother of the Karta of the HUF, to the HUF is liable to be taxed as
the mother can not be considered as member of HUF - Revision was held to be
justified – Assessee was directed to produce valuation report as per rule
11UA
Dismissing
the appeal of the assesse the Tribunal held that; Proviso to section 56 (2)
(vii) provides definition of “relatives‟ in case of individual and HUF
separately. It provides that above clause for taxability shall not apply to any
sum of money or property received from any “relative‟. The “relative‟ have been
mentioned separately with respect to an individual, and with respect to a Hindu
undivided family. Therefore, in case of Hindu undivided family, if the gift is
not received from member of such HUF then such sum is chargeable to tax. The
“relatives‟ mentioned with respect to an individual cannot be considered when
the recipient of the property is an HUF. Further, it substitutes the earlier
definition of the “relative‟ when there was no reference about what constitutes
“relatives‟ with respect to the HUF. It only talks about “relatives‟ with
respect to an individual. Therefore, earlier the issue was that if the gift is
received by an HUF from its members, probably it was taxable. To remove that
lacuna and to give benefit to the HUF, the above amendment was made. The
amendment also speaks through “notes on clauses‟ that now the definition of
„relative‟ shall also include any sum or property received by an Hindu
undivided family from its members apart from the persons referred to in the
explanation with respect to an individual. It does not provide that if gift is
made to an HUF by any of the „relatives‟ of those individuals comprising the
HUF, who is not the member of the HUF, then such gift is not chargeable to tax.
If such a view were accepted, then gift to HUF would never be chargeable to tax
if it were received from the “relatives” of the members of such HUF. We are
afraid that is not the language as well as the intention of the legislature.
Even otherwise, When the language of the law is clear, support of the “notes on
clauses‟ to the amendment does not help the assessee. Revision was held to be
justified, however the assessee was directed to produce valuation report as per
rule 11UA. (Related Assessment year
2013-14)
[Subodh Gupta (HUF) v. PCIT(2018) 169 ITD 60
(ITAT Delhi)]
Gift received by an individual
from HUF is not exempt
The assessee
claimed that gift of certain amount received from his Hindu undivided family
(HUF) was exempt from tax under section 56(2)(vii). However, the Assessing
Officer held that the term 'relative' in Explanation (e) to Section 56(2)(vii)
does not include HUF as donor and, therefore, added the impugned amount to
assessee's income under Section 68.
On further appeal,
the Tribunal held in favour of revenue that as per Explanation to Section
56(2)(vii) members of an HUF are its relatives. Therefore, if HUF receives any
sum from any of its member, such sum shall not be chargeable to tax. However,
in vice-versa cases when member receives any sum from the HUF, same would be
chargeable to tax as the term ‘relatives’ defined under said Explanation does
not include HUF as a relative of such individual. The legislative intent is
very clear that an HUF is not to be taken as a donor in case of an individual
recipient. Thus, the assessee's plea of having received a valid gift from his
HUF was rightly declined and impugned addition was to be upheld. - [Gyanchand
M. Bardia v. ITO (2018) 93 taxmann.com 144 (ITAT Ahmedabad)]
Receipt of bonus shares not subject to tax
under section 56(2)(vii)
Receipt by
an individual shareholder of bonus shares issued by the company would not be
subject to tax in the recipient’s hands, although the same was received without
consideration.
Delving into
the legislative history of section 56(2)(vii) of the Act, the Tribunal observed
that this provision was primarily introduced to address abuse arising out of
abolition of the Gift Tax Act, 1958. It also observed that the erstwhile Gift
Tax Act never included within its ambit issue of bonus shares issued by a
company to its shareholders as gift. Further, it also observed that the bonus
issue was detrimental to the shareholder in terms of value per share, which was
counterbalanced by the additional number of bonus shares received. Therefore,
the total value of equity shares post issuance of bonus shares remained the
same. Since the issue of bonus shares was by capitalising profits of the
company, it did not result in increase in net asset value of the company. In addition,
any profit derived by the taxpayer on account of receipt of bonus shares was
theoretically offset by the depression in the value of the equity shares
already held by him. Therefore, it did not result in the taxpayer getting a
property without consideration. Relying on the case of Sudhir Menon HUF, and
also on the Supreme Court decision in the case of CIT v. Dalmia Investment Co.
Limited (1964) 252 ITR 567 (SC), it observed that the bonus shares were ranked
pari passu with the original shares, and they had to be valued at the average
of both bonus and the original shares, with the total value of all shares
remaining the same. Therefore, the Bangalore Tribunal held that in case of
issuance of bonus shares, consideration had indeed flown out from the holder of
the shares, which was reflected in the depression in the intrinsic value of the
original shares held by him, and the bonus shares could thereby not be said to
have been received without consideration. - [DCIT
v. Dr. Rajan Pai [ITA No. 1290/ Bang/ 2015 (ITAT Bangalore)]
Gift received from HUF - Exempt - HUF
is a “relative” under section 56(2)(v), (vi) & (vii)
Where
assessee receives gift from HUF it was held that though the definition of the
term “relative” does not specifically include a Hindu Undivided Family, a ‘HUF”
constitutes all persons lineally descended from a common ancestor and includes
their mothers, wives or widows and unmarried daughters. As all these persons
fall in the definition of “relative”, an HUF is ‘a group of relatives’. As a gift
from a “relative” is exempt, a gift from a ‘group of relatives’ is also exempt
since the singular will include the plural. (Related Assessment year 2005- 06). - [Vineetkumar Raghavjibhai Bhalodia v. ITO (2011) 140 TTJ 58 : 58 DTR
412 : 46 SOT 97 (ITAT Rajkot)]
Karta’s
mother not relative of HUF, upholds taxability of gift under section 56(2)(vii)
Delhi ITAT upholds revision under section 263 in
order to tax gift received by assessee-HUF from mother of Karta (not member of
HUF) under section 56(2)(vii) for assessment year 2013-14; During relevant
assessment year, assessee received 75000 equity shares from mother of the Karta
of assessee-HUF, rejects assessee’s stand that the said gift was not covered by
56(2)(vii) taxability as it would qualify as gift from ‘relative’; Firstly,
ITAT notes that the proviso to Section 56(2)(vii) provides definition of
‘relatives’ in case of individual and HUF separately, clarifies that the
‘relatives’ mentioned with respect to an individual cannot be considered when
the recipient of the property is an HUF; ITAT observes that Karta’s mother was
not member of assessee-HUF and accordingly not covered by the ‘relative’
definition for HUF, thus rejects assessee’s stand that gift from karta’s mother
amounts to gift from relative; Also rejects assessee’s stand that where all the
members of the HUF are individuals related to the donor, then they very much
also fall within the definition of the term ‘relative’ on collective basis,
further distinguishes assessee’s reliance on plethora of rulings on facts; With
regards to valuation, ITAT rejects Revenue’s adoption of the definition of
‘fair market value’ (‘FMV’) as provided under section 2(22B), ITAT notes that
specific Rule 11UA shall be applicable which provides for valuation for the purposes
of Section 56 and remits matter back to Assessing Officer to verify FMV as per
Rule 11UA:
[11] Taxability Of Shares Received by a Firm or a
Company for Inadequate or without consideration between 01.06.2010 and
31.03.2017 [Section 56(2)(viia)]
Text of Section 56(2)(viia)
[1][Where a
firm or a company not being a company in which the public are substantially
interested, receives, in any previous year, from any person or persons, on or
after the 1st day of June, 2010, [2][but
before the 1st day of April, 2017], any property, being shares of a company not
being a company in which the public are substantially interested,—
(i) without
consideration, the aggregate fair market value of which exceeds fifty thousand
rupees, the whole of the aggregate fair market value of such property shall be
taxable in the hands of recipient;
(ii) for a consideration which is less than the aggregate
fair market value of the property by an amount exceeding fifty thousand rupees,
the aggregate fair market value of such property as exceeds such consideration
shall be taxable in the hands of the recipient:
PROVIDED that this clause shall not apply to any such property
received by way of a transaction not regarded as transfer under section 47(via)
or (vic) or (vicb) or (vid) or (vii).
Explanation : For the
purposes of this clause, “fair market value” of a property, being shares of a
company not being a company in which the public are substantially interested,
shall have the meaning assigned to it in the Explanation to clause (vii).]
KEY NOTE
1. Inserted by the Finance Act, 2010, with
effect from 01.06.2010.
2. Inserted by the Finance Act, 2017, with
effect from 01.04.2017.
With effect from 01.06.2010, if the following conditions are satisfied,
then the value of such shares will be taxable:—
(i) Recipient is a firm or closely held Company (i.e.
Company in which public are not substantially interested).
(ii)
The asset (which is received) is in the form of shares in a closely held
Company.
(iii)
These shares are received from a person or group of persons on or after June 1,
2010.
(iv)
Without consideration or inadequate consideration.
(v)
Such shares are not received by way of transaction in a scheme of amalgamation,
demerger.
If the above
conditions are satisfied, then the value of such shares will be taxable in the
hands of recipient as follows:—
(a) If such shares are received without consideration , the
aggregate fair market value on the date of transfer would be taxed as income of
the recipient firm, Company, if it exceeds Rs. 50000/-.
(b) If shares are received for inadequate consideration,
the difference between the aggregate fair market value and consideration would
be taxed as income of the recipient firm or the Company, if such difference
exceeds Rs. 50,000/-.
WITHOUT CONSIDERATION
The aggregate Fair market value of which exceeds Rs.
50,000, such amount of FMV is to be taxed in hands of recipient.
FOR INADEQUATE CONSIDERATION
Where difference between Fair Market Value and
Consideration exceeds Rs. 50,000, such difference is to be taxed in hands of
recipient.
KEY NOTE
This section would not include transactions
undertaken for the purpose of re-organization, amalgamation and demerger.
Transactions not covered under section 56(2)(viia) [Proviso to
Section 56(2)(viia)]
The transactions undertaken for
business reorganization, amalgamation and demerger which are not regarded as
transfer under section 47(via), (vic), (vicb), (vid) and (vii) shall be
excluded from the application of section 56(2)(viia). Hence, the following
transactions shall not be covered under section 56(2)(viia):—
(i) Transfer of shares held in an Indian company, in a
scheme of amalgamation, by the amalgamating foreign company to the amalgamated
foreign company subject to certain conditions being satisfied. [Section
47(via)]
TEXT OF SECTION
47(via)
Any
transfer, in a scheme of amalgamation, of a capital asset being a share or
shares held in an Indian company, by the amalgamating foreign company to the
amalgamated foreign company, if—
(a) at least twenty-five
per cent of the shareholders of the
amalgamating
foreign company continue to remain shareholders of the amalgamated foreign
company, and
(b)
such transfer does not attract tax on capital gains in the country, in which
the amalgamating company is incorporated.
(ii) Transfer of shares held in an Indian company, in a
scheme of demerger, by the demerged foreign
company to a resulting foreign company subject to certain conditions
being satisfied. [Section 47(vic)]
TEXT OF SECTION 47(vic)
Any
transfer in a demerger, of a capital asset, being a share or shares held in an
Indian company, by the demerged foreign company to the resulting foreign
company, if—
(a) the shareholders holding not less than three-fourths in
value of the shares] of the demerged foreign company continue to remain
shareholders of the resulting foreign company; and
(b) such transfer does not attract tax on capital gains in
the country, in which the demerged foreign company is incorporated.
(iii) Transfer by a shareholder, in a business
reorganization shares held by him in the predecessor co-operative bank, in
consideration of allotment of shares in the successor co-operative bank.
[Section 47(vicb)]
TEXT OF SECTION 47(vicb)
Any
transfer by a shareholder, in a business reorganisation, of a capital asset
being a share or shares held by him in the predecessor co-operative bank if the
transfer is made in consideration of the allotment to him of any share or
shares in the successor co-operative bank.
(iv)
Transfer or issue of shares by the resulting company, in a scheme of demerger
to the shareholders of the demerged company in consideration of demerger of the
undertaking. [Section 47(vid)]
TEXT OF SECTION
47(vid)
Any
transfer or issue of shares by the resulting company, in a scheme of demerger
to the shareholders of the demerged company if the transfer or issue is made in
consideration of demerger of the undertaking.
(v) Transfer by a shareholder, in a scheme of amalgamation,
of shares in the amalgamating company in consideration of allotment to him of
shares in the amalgamated Indian company. [Section 47(vii)]
TEXT OF SECTION
47(vii)
Any
transfer by a shareholder, in a scheme of amalgamation, of a capital asset
being a share or shares held by him in the amalgamating company, if—
(a) the transfer is made in consideration of the allotment
to him of any share or shares in the amalgamated company except where the
shareholder itself is the amalgamated company, and
(b) the amalgamated
company is an Indian company.
PROVISIONS IN BRIEF
Chargeability section
|
Income as per section
|
For the period applicable assessment years
|
Limit of exemption
|
|
56(2)(v)
|
2(24)(xiii)
|
01.03.2004 to 30.03.2006
|
2005-06, 2006-07
|
25,000/-
|
56(2)(vi)
|
2(24)(xiv)
|
01.04.2006 to 30.09.2009
|
2007-08, 2008-09, 2009-10, 2010-11
|
50,000/-
|
56(2)(vii)
|
2(24)(xv)
|
01.10.2009 onwards
|
2010-11 and onwards
|
50,000/-
|
56(2)(viia)
|
2(24)(xv)
|
01.06.2010 onwards
|
2011-12 and onwards
|
50,000/-
|
CBDT’s Circular No. 3/2019 dated
21.01.2019
Subject : Section 56 of The Income-Tax Act,
1961 - Income From Other Sources - Chargeable As - Applicability of Section
56(2)(viia) or Similar Provisions under Section 56(2) For issue of Shares By a
Company
As mentioned in Circular No. 02/2019, a comprehensive review of the
subject matter relating to interpretation of the term "receives" as
used in, inter alia, section 56(2)(viia) of the Income-tax Act, 1961 (the Act)
and similar provisions contained in section 56(2) of the Act has been made by
the Board in view of pendency of this issue in various judicial forums and
clarifications sought by stakeholders. Based on the above, the following
position is hereby clarified.
2. Keeping in view the plain reading as well as the legislative intent
of section 56(2)(viia) and similar provisions contained in section 56(2) of the
Act, being anti-abuse in nature, it has been decided that the view, as was
taken in Circular No. 10/2018 [subsequently withdrawn by Circular No. 02/2019]
that section 56(2)(viia) of the Act would not apply to fresh issuance of
shares, would not be a correct approach, as it could be subject to abuse and
would be contrary to the express provisions and the legislative intent of
section 56(2)(viia) or similar provisions contained in section 56(2) of the
Act.
3. Therefore, any view expressed by the Board in Circular No. 10/2018
shall be considered to have never been expressed and accordingly, the said
circular shall not be taken into account by any Income-tax authority in any
proceedings under the Act.
CBDT’s Circular No. 02/2019 dated
04.01.2019
Reference is invited to the Circular No. 10/2018 dated 31.12.2018 on
the captioned subject.
2. It has been brought to the notice of the Board that the matter
relating to interpretation of the term "receives" used in section
56(2)(viia) of the Income-tax Act, 1961 (the Act) is subjudice in certain
higher judicial forums. Further, representations have been received from
stakeholders seeking clarification on other similar provisions in section 56 of
the Act.
3. Accordingly, the matter has been reconsidered by the Board. Given
the fact that the matter relating to interpretation of the term 'receives' used
in section 56(2)(viia) of the Act is pending before judicial forums and
stakeholders have sought clarifications on similar provisions in section 56 of
the Act, the Board is of the view that the matter is required to be examined
afresh so that a comprehensive circular on the matter can be issued
4. In view of the above, the Circular No. 10/2018 dated 31st December,
2018 issued from file No. 173/616/2018-ITA-I is hereby withdrawn and the aid
circular shall be considered to have been never issued.
5. A fresh comprehensive circular on the subject shall be issued in due
course.
Under valuation of shares - The "fair
market value" of shares acquired has to be determined by the taking the
book values of the underlying assets and not their market values
Allowing the
appeal of the assesse the Tribunal held that; on the plain reading of above
Rule, it is revealed that while valuing the shares the book value of the assets
and liabilities declared by the TEPL should be taken into consideration. There
is no whisper under the provision of 11UA of the Rules to refer the fair market
value of the land as taken by the Assessing Officer as applicable to the year
under consideration. Therefore, we are of the view that the share price
calculated by the assessee of TEPL for Rs. 5 per shares has been determined in
accordance with the provision of Rule 11UA. (Related Assessment year 2014-15) - [Minda SM Tecnocast (P) Ltd. v. ACIT (2018) 170 ITD 12 (ITAT Delhi)]
There is no applicability of section
56(2)(viia) of the Act in case of buy back of shares by the Company from its
existing shareholder
Hon’ble ITAT
while deciding the issue of applicability of the provision of section 56(2)
(viia) of the Act referred to the Memorandum explaining the said provision and
observed that a combined reading of the said provision and the memorandum
suggests that the provision has role to play only when the subject matter (i.e.
shares) is of other company and not of the same company who receives it.
Hon’ble ITAT categorically observed that own shares cannot become a property of
the recipient company for the applicability of section 56(2)(viia) of the Act
and cannot be brought to tax. It categorically held that if the present
situation of buy back of shares were to be taxed under section 56(2)(viia) of
the Act, the language of the section would have been completely different. It
finally concluded that there is no applicability of section 56(2)(viia) of the
Act to the facts under consideration and allowed the issue in favour of the
Assessee and against the Revenue.
Section 56(2)(viia) is a counter evasion
mechanism to prevent laundering of unaccounted income under the garb of gifts.
The primary condition for invoking Section 56(2)(viia) is that the asset gifted
should become a “capital asset” and property in the hands of recipient. If the
assessee-company has purchased shares under a buyback scheme and the said
shares are extinguished by writing down the share capital, the shares do not
become capital asset of the assessee - company and hence section 56(2)(viia)
cannot be invoked in the hands of the assessee company.
The provisions of section 56(2)(viia)
should be applicable only in cases where the receipt of shares become property
in the hands of recipient and the shares shall become property of the recipient
only if it is “shares of any other company”. In the instant case, the assessee
herein has purchased its own shares under buyback scheme and the same has been
extinguished by reducing the capital and hence the tests of “becoming property”
and also “shares of any other company” fail in this case. Accordingly we are of
the view that the tax authorities are not justified in invoking the provisions
of section 56(2)(viia) for buyback of own shares. (Related Assessment
Year 2014-15) - [Vora Financial Services (P) Ltd v. ACIT (2018) 194 TTJ 746 : 171 ITD
646 : (2019) 178 DTR 58 (ITAT
Mumbai)]
Interest income from fixed deposits must be
netted off against pre-operative expenses incurred in connection with setting
up of its project where the fixed deposits are raised by the assessee solely
with the intention of utilizing them in setting up its project.
The ITAT
while deciding the issue of applicability of the provision of section 56(2)
(viia) of the Act referred to the Memorandum explaining the said provision and
observed that a combined reading of the said provision and the memorandum
suggests that the provision has role to play only when the subject matter (i.e.
shares) is of other company and not of the same company who receives it.
Hon’ble ITAT categorically observed that own shares cannot become a property of
the recipient company for the applicability of section 56(2)(viia) of the Act
and cannot be brought to tax. It categorically held that if the present
situation of buy back of shares were to be taxed under section 56(2)(viia) of
the Act, the language of the section would have been completely different. It
finally concluded that there is no applicability of section 56(2)(viia) of the
Act to the facts under consideration and allowed the issue in favour of the
Assessee and against the Revenue. - [Shristi Hotel (P) Ltd. v. DCIT - Date of Judgement : 18.07.2018 (ITAT Kolkata)]
[12] Share Premium in excess of fair market value to be taxed as
income [Section 56(2)(viib)]
The Finance Act, 2012 has introduced a new clause
(viib) to section 56(2) in the Act, according to which, with effect from April
1, 2013, that portion of consideration received for the issue of shares of a
public unlisted company or private company to an Indian resident that is in
excess of the fair market value of those shares, will be subject to tax in the
hands of the companies under the head “income from other sources”.
Background
Section 56(2) lists income chargeable to income-tax
under the head ‘Income from Other Sources’. Finance Act, 2012 inserts clause
(viib), with effect from 01.04.2013 (assessment year 2013-14) to include ‘share
premium’ received by a company in excess of its fair market value, as its
income chargeable under the head ‘Income from other sources’. The clause is as
follows:—
“Where a company, not being a company in which the
public are substantially interested, receives, in any previous year, from any
person being a resident, any consideration for issue of shares, in such a case
if the consideration received for issue of shares exceeds the fair value of
such shares, the aggregate consideration received for such shares as exceeds
the fair market value of the shares shall be chargeable to income-tax under the
head “Income from other sources.”
Finance Act, 2012 simultaneously amends the
definition of ‘income’ in section 2(24) by inserting clause (xvi) to include
the above consideration exceeding fair market value as ‘income’. With a view to
safeguard the genuine investment by bonafide companies it is provided that this
clause will not apply to:
(i)
A venture capital undertaking receiving the consideration for issue of shares
from a venture capital company or a venture capital fund; and
(ii) A company
receiving the consideration from a class or clases of persons (‘Notified
persons’) as may be notified by Central Government.
The exception given to venture
capital companies and venture capital funds appears to stem from the fact that
these entities are regulated under the SEBI (Alternative Investment Fund)
Regulations, 2012 and hence there is some measure of scrutiny already in place
over investments made by them.
The explanation to Category I
AIF under SEBI (AIF) Regulations provides that “Venture Capital Company” or
“Venture Capital Fund” will be eligible for tax “pass through” benefits as per
Section 10(23FB) of the Income Tax Act, 1961.
As such this clause (viib)
introduced by the amendment will mainly affect the participation of private
equity funds or high net worth individuals or risk capital. The clause will
also impact genuine start-ups and other Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs)
looking to grow rapidly particularly in the services sector, as they depend
upon angel investors or private equity funds for their funding as they are
thinly capitalized. Such funding is normally at a substantial premium as the
underlying assets of the start up do not support a higher fair market value.
Thus, such funding normally depends on future prospects of the company rather
than the current value of the assets of the company. This provision could
destroy the developing culture of angel investors and private equity funds;
funding promising entrepreneurs, who have the skills or intellectual property
but very few tangible assets. The provisions may therefore encourage companies
to form Limited Liability Partnerships, to raise foreign exchange from angel
investors residing outside India, subject to applicable FDI requirements or to
raise funds from individual Indian resident investors by issuing convertible
debentures of the company.
With a view to address concerns
raised by the angel investors, exclusion has been granted from levy of such tax
to certain notified class of persons by way of an enabling provision. Since the
notification has not been issued by the Central Government in this regard, it
is difficult to comment on the group of permitted class of investors that would
be excluded. It is applicable from the assessment year 2013-14 as follows:—
(a) Recipient is a Private Limited Company.
(b) It receives consideration for issue of shares (preference shares or
equity shares) from a resident.
(c) Shares are issued at a premium.
If the above conditions are
satisfied, the aggregate consideration received for such shares exceeds the
fair market value of shares, shall be chargeable to tax as income from other
sources in the hands of recipient Company.
Objective of the amendment to section 56(2)(viib)
The amendment has been classified
under the heading “Measures to Prevent Generation and Circulation of
Unaccounted Money”. Companies were issuing shares at a substantial premium to
convert the unaccounted money without providing any valuation justifying the
premium.
The amendment covers such
unjustified premium and the excess is being taxed as income in the hands of the
company. The provisions of section 56(2)(viib) are applicable in the context of
shares issued by a closely held company to a resident shareholder (the said provisions
do not apply to shares issued to non-residents).
The amendment of the Rules to
allow DCF valuation for valuing the equity shares is a welcome change. This
will avoid taxation which could have otherwise arisen if only Balance Sheet
based book values were allowed to be taken for valuation purposes. Further, in
the case of investment by nonresident shareholders, while clause (viib) of
section 56(2) would not have applied, any indirect downstream investment (say,
through a holding company into other operating companies) could have created
tax exposures for the downstream operating company, had the DCF method not been
allowed. Also, this would have conflicted with the FDI policy, where even down
stream investment by an Indian company having FDI (and owned/ controlled by
non-residents) is required to be made as per DCF valuation.
With the amendment to section 68
by the Budget, 2012, in respect of share capital and share premium, the
insertion of section 56(2)(viib) to treat the amount in excess of FMV as income
is not warranted. If we look through both the amendments to section 56(2)(viib)
and section 68, it is short of a double jeopardy. The department should not
resort to the new provisions of section 56(2)(viib) if the source of amount in
the hands of shareholder/ applicant of shares is satisfactorily proved under
section 68, as the new proviso to section 68 itself casts a onerous duty. The
law makers have not envisaged a situation where an addition may be made under
section 68 and if the shares are issued at price more than FMV, the Assessing
Officer may also make deemed addition under section 56(2)(viib). It is
suggested that a proviso should be added to section 56(2)(viib) to mitigate
such hardship by providing that the addition under section 56(2)(viib) will not
be made to the extent income is deemed under section 68. Moreover, the Hon’ble
FM should also keep in mind that as a result of amendment by the Budget, 2012,
the tax rate for amounts to be added under section 68 is now prescribed at
highest marginal rate under section 115BBE with effect from the assessment year
2013-14.
Extract of object Memorandum of Finance Bill, 2012
The new clause will apply where a
company, not being a company in which the public are substantially interested,
receives, in any previous year, from any person being a resident, any
consideration for issue of shares. In such a case if the consideration received
for issue of shares exceeds the face value of such shares, the aggregate
consideration received for such shares as exceeds the fair market value of the
shares shall be chargeable to income-tax under the head “Income from other
sources”. However, this provision shall not apply where the consideration for
issue of shares is received by a venture capital undertaking from a venture
capital company or a venture capital fund.
Further, it is also proposed to
provide the company an opportunity to substantiate its claim regarding the fair
market value. Accordingly, it is proposed that the fair market value of the
shares shall be the higher of the value—
(i) as may be determined in
accordance with the method as may be prescribed; or
(ii) as may be
substantiated by the company to the satisfaction of the Assessing Officer,
based on the value of its assets, including intangible assets, being goodwill,
know-how, patents, copyrights, trademarks, licences, franchises or any other
business or commercial rights of similar nature.
This amendment will take effect
from 1st April, 2013 and will,
accordingly, apply in relation to the assessment year 2013-14 and
subsequent assessment years.
Text of Section 56(2)(viib)
Where a company, not being a company in which the public are
substantially interested, receives, in any previous year, from any person being
a resident, any consideration for issue of shares that exceeds the face value
of such shares, the aggregate consideration received for issue of share that exceeds the fair market value of
such share shall be deemed to be the income of that company chargeable to
income-tax for the previous year in which such failure has taken place and, it
shall also be deemed that the company has underreported the said income in
consequence of the misreporting referred to in sub-section (8) and sub-section
(9) of section 270A for the said previous year.
PROVIDED that this clause shall not apply where the consideration for issue of
shares is received—
(i) by a venture capital undertaking from a
venture capital company or a venture capital fund; or a specified fund”
(ii) by a company from a class or classes of
persons as may be notified by the Central Government in this behalf.
Provided further that where
the provisions of this clause have not been applied to a company on account of
fulfilment of conditions specified in the notification issued under clause (ii)
of the first proviso and such company fails to comply with any of those
conditions, then, any consideration received for issue of share that exceeds
the face value of such share shall be deemed to be the income of that company
chargeable to income-tax for the previous year in which such failure has taken
place.
Explanation: For the
purposes of this clause,—
(a) the fair market value of the
shares shall be the value—
(i) as may be determined in
accordance with such method as may be prescribed; or
(ii) as may be substantiated by the company to the
satisfaction of the Assessing Officer, based on the value, on the date of issue
of shares, of its assets, including intangible assets being goodwill, know-how,
patents, copyrights, trademarks, licences, franchises or any other business or
commercial rights of similar nature,
(aa) “specified fund” means a fund established or
incorporated in India in the form of a trust or a company or a limited liability
partnership or a body corporate which has been granted a certificate of
registration as a Category I or a Category II Alternative Investment Fund and
is regulated under the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Alternative
Investment Fund) Regulations, 2012 made under the Securities and Exchange Board
of India Act, 1992;
(ab) “trust” means a trust established under the Indian
Trusts Act, 1882 or under any other law for the time being in force;’;
whichever is higher;
(b) “venture capital company”, “venture
capital fund” and “venture capital undertaking” shall have the meanings
respectively assigned to them in clause (a), clause (b) and clause (c) of
Explanation to clause (23FB) of section 10;
Applicability of clause (viib) to section 56(2)
Applicability of clause (viib)
to section 56(2) applies to closely held company (a company in which public are
not substantially interested) receiving any consideration for issue of share
from any resident. The consideration for the issue of shares exceeds face value
of the shares. The aggregate consideration received for issue of shares exceeds
the Fair Market Value of the shares. Such excess over and above the Fair Market
Value shall be taxable in the hands of Company under the head ‘Income from
Other Sources’.
The section applies only if a
closely held company issues shares at a premium. The reason for not applying
this section to a widely held company is that SEBI monitors and approves the
price at which shares are issued by a widely held company.
v
This section does not apply where a closely held
company issues shares to a Non-Resident at a premium in excess of FMV. The
reason seems to be that non-resident will not like to convert his white money abroad in dollars into black
money in India. Moreover, the money received from non-resident is regulated by
FEMA and also by rules of RBI.
v
With a view to safeguard the genuine investment
by bonafide companies it is provided that this clause will not apply to:
(i)
A venture capital undertaking receiving the consideration for issue of shares
from a venture capital company or a venture capital fund; and
(ii) A company receiving the consideration from a class or
classes of persons (‘Notified persons’) as may be notified by Central
Government.
Upto
Assessment year 2019-20 - Definition
of venture capital fund only includes Category I AIFs
Section 56(2)(viib) of the ITA provides
that where a company, not being a company in which the public are substantially
interested receives any consideration, from a resident for issuance of shares,
that exceeds the face value of such shares, the aggregate consideration
received for such shares as exceeds the fair market value (“FMV”) of the shares shall be charged
to tax. However, this provision does not apply to consideration for issuance of
shares received: (i) by a venture capital undertaking from a venture capital
company or a venture capital fund; or (ii) by a company from a class or classes
of persons as may be notified by the Government in this behalf.
From
Assessment year 2020-21 - Incentives for Category
II Alternative Investment Fund (AIF)
With a view to facilitate venture
capital undertakings to receive funds from Category II AIF, the Finance Act,
2019 with effect from Assessment year 2020-21 amended the said section to
extend this exemption to fund received by venture capital undertakings from
Category II AIF as well.
Alternate Investment Fund ("AIF")
Alternative
Investment Fund or AIF means any fund established or incorporated in India
which is a privately pooled investment vehicle which collects funds from
sophisticated investors, whether Indian or foreign, for investing it in
accordance with a defined investment policy for the benefit of its investors.
AIF
does not include funds covered under the SEBI (Mutual Funds) Regulations, 1996,
SEBI (Collective Investment Schemes) Regulations, 1999 or any other regulations
of the Board to regulate fund management activities.
Further,
certain exemptions from registration are provided under the AIF Regulations to
family trusts set up for the benefit of 'relatives‘ as defined under Companies
Act, 1956, employee welfare trusts or gratuity trusts set up for the benefit of
employees, 'holding companies‘ within the meaning of Section 4 of the Companies
Act, 1956 etc.
Categories AIF
(a) Category I AIF:
o Venture capital
funds (Including Angel Funds)
o SME Funds o
Social Venture Funds
o Infrastructure
funds
AIFs which invest
in start-up or early stage ventures or social ventures or SMEs or
infrastructure or other sectors or areas which the government or regulators
consider as socially or economically desirable and shall include venture
capital funds, SME Funds, social venture funds, infrastructure funds and such
other Alternative Investment Funds as may be specified.
(b) Category II AIF
AIFs which do not
fall in Category I and III and which do not undertake leverage or borrowing
other than to meet day-to-day operational requirements and as permitted in the
SEBI (Alternative Investment Funds) Regulations, 2012.
Various types of
funds such as real estate funds, private equity funds (PE funds), funds for
distressed assets, etc. are registered as Category II AIFs.
(c) Category III AIF
AIFs which employ diverse or complex
trading strategies and may employ leverage including through investment in
listed or unlisted derivatives.
Various types of funds such as hedge
funds, PIPE Funds, etc. are registered as Category III AIFs.
Venture
capital
Venture
capital is financing that investors provide to
startup companies and
small businesses that are believed to have long-term growth potential. Venture capital generally comes
from well-off investors,investment banks and any other
financial institutions.
Venture Capital Funds
Venture capital funds are investment funds
that manage the money of investors who seek private equity stakes in startup
and small- to medium-sized enterprises with strong growth potential. These
investments are generally characterized as high-risk/high-return opportunities.
Venture capital is a type of equity
financing that gives entrepreneurial or other small companies the ability to
raise funding. Venture capital funds are private equity investment
vehicles that seek to invest in firms that have high-risk/high-return
profiles, based on a company's size, assets, and stage of product development.
v Venture capital funds manage the money of
investors who want private equity stakes in startup and small- to
medium-sized enterprises.
v Unlike mutual funds and hedge funds,
venture capital funds focus on early-stage investment, and high-growth firms
that are risky, and have long investment horizons.
v Venture capital funds are considered seed
money or early-stage capital.
v Investors make a return when a portfolio
company exits, either through an IPO, merger, or acquisition.
Compliance with the notification
of exemption issued under section 56(2)(viib) [With effect from Assessment year
2020-21]
Notified companies (start-up companies) are exempted from taxability of
consideration received for issue of shares, in excess of the FMV of such
shares, subject to fulfilment of certain specified conditions.
With effect from Assessment year 2020-21, the said provision has been amended so that it provides that
exemption will be withdrawn if the company fails to comply with any of the
specified conditions and the income will be liable to tax in the year of such
failure.
Determination of fair market value [Rule 11UA—Income Tax Rules]
Fair Market Value of the shares shall be determined in accordance with:
(i) Such method as prescribed
under Rule 11U and Rule 11UA or
(ii) As may be
substantiated by the company to the satisfaction of the Assessing Officer,
based on the value, on the date of issue of shares of its assets, including
intangible assets being goodwill, know - how, patents, copyrights, trademarks,
licences, franchises or any other business or commercial rights of similar
nature, whichever is higher.
Applicability
of section 56(2)(viib)
PROVISIONS
ILLUSTRATED
The following are the details of the shares issued by XYZ Ltd. Discuss
the applicability of provisions of section 56(2)(viib) in the hands of the
company:
S.
No.
|
Face
Value
of
Shares
(in
Rs.)
|
Fair
Market Value (FVM)
of
shares (in Rs.)
|
Issue
price of shares (in Rs.)
|
Applicability
of section 56(2)(viib)
|
|
(i)
|
100
|
150
|
270
|
The provisions of section 56(2)(viib) are attracted in this case
since the shares are issued at a premium [i.e. issue price exceeds the face
value of shares]. The excess of the issue price of the shares over the FMV
would be taxable under section
56(2)(viib). Rs. 120 [i.e. Rs. 270 – Rs. 150] shall be treated as income in
the hands of XYZ Ltd.
|
|
(ii)
|
100
|
120
|
110
|
The
provisions of section 56(2)(viib) are attracted in this case since the shares
are issued at a premium. However, no sum shall be chargeable to tax under the
said section as the shares are issued at a price less than the FVM of shares.
|
|
(iii)
|
100
|
90
|
98
|
The
provisions of section 56(2)(viib) are not attracted in this case since the
shares are issued at a discount, though the issue price is greater than the
FMV.
|
|
(iv)
|
100
|
90
|
110
|
The
provisions of section 56(2)(viib) are not attracted in this case since the
shares are issued at a premium. The excess of the issue price of the shares
over the FMV would be taxable under section 56(2)(viib). Therefore, Rs. 20 (Rs.
110 – Rs. 90) shall be treated as income in the hands of XYZ Ltd.
|
Unquoted equity shares - Discounted cash
flow method - Net asset value method - Option to adopt the method of valuation
is with assessee - When no defect is found in valuation of shares arrived on
basis of discounted cash flow method addition made by the Assessing Officer on
basis of net asset value method was to be set aside
The assessee
submitted valuation per equity share computed on the discounted cash flow
method as per the certificate of Chartered Accountants wherein the value per
shares was arrived at Rs. 54. 98 per share. The Assessing Officer did not
accept said valuation and applied Net Asset Value method as per which value of
share came to Rs. 26.69 per share. Applying the said value, the Assessing
Officer made addition under Section 56(2)(vii)(b) of the Act. Tribunal held
that the provisions of Section 56(2)(vii)(b) gives an options to assessee to
adopt any of methods which can be compared with Net Asset Value Method and Assessing
Officer shall adopt value whichever is higher. Accordingly the since discounted
cash flow method is one of prescribed method and, moreover, Assessing Officer
had not found any serious defect in facts and details used in determining fair
market value under said method, impugned addition made by him was deleted. (Related Assessment year 2014-15) - [ACIT v. Safe Decore (P) Ltd. (2018) 169 ITD
328 : 165 DTR 339 (ITAT Jaipur)]
Provisions
of section 56(2)(viib) couldn’t be invoked in the case of the assessee-co.
because by virtue of introducing cash in the company by 'S' for allotment of
equity shares with unrealistic premium the benefit had only passed on to her
daughter 'V' and there was no scope in the Act to tax when cash or asset was
transferred by a mother to her daughter. - [Vaani Estates (P) Ltd. v. ITO (2018)
98 taxmann.com 92 (ITAT Chennai)]
Provisions of section 56(2)(viib) can apply
to excess consideration despite satisfactory explanation provided under section
68 of the Act
It was held that
whether the amount received by the taxpayer in the form of share premium has
been correctly offered to tax, is an issue to be examined with reference to
section 56(2)(viib) of the Income-tax Act, 1961 (the Act) and if it is found
that the share premium has not been correctly offered to tax as provided
therein, the taxpayer has to be assessed in accordance with the said provision.
[WA No. 1297
of 2018 in WP (C) No. 3485/ 2018 - Kerala High Court ]
Market value of other business
assets not relevant to determine FMV value of unlisted shares of a company
The
assessee-company was deriving its income under the head 'rental and interest
income'. It acquired shares of another entity at Rs. 5 per share. The value of
such shares was derived on basis of book value of assets of issuing co. in
accordance with Rule 11UA of the Income Tax Rules. Valuation Report from a CA
firm was also produced in support of claim.
The Assessing
Officer was of the view that the fair market value (FMV) of the land as per the
circle rate should be taken into consideration while determining the value of
the shares of issuing co. Accordingly, he substituted the book value of the
land with FMV of the land as per the circle rate and determined the value of
shares at Rs. 45.72 per share.
The Tribunal held
in favour of assessee that Rule 11UA contains the provisions for determination
of fair market value of a property, other than an immovable property. Rule 11UA
provides that while valuing the shares the book value of the assets and liabilities
declared by the issuing co. should be taken into consideration. There is no
provision in Rule 11UA as to substitute the FMV of land with its book value
while calculating the FMV of shares. Therefore, the share price calculated by
the assessee of issuing co. at Rs. 5 per share had rightly been determined in
accordance with the provisions of Rule 11UA.
[Minda S M
Technocast (P) Ltd. v. ACIT (2018) 92 taxmann.com 29 (ITAT Delhi)]
Builder developer –
Section applies only to individuals and HUF and also, held that it seeks to tax
the transferee of the property and not the transferor
The assessee was a builder/developer following the project completion method of accounting. During relevant assessment year, the assessee offered certain net profit on sale of flats as its business income. Assessing Officer took a view value of flats sold was to be determined by applying provisions of section 56(2)(vii)(b)(ii). High Court held that said section applies to individuals and Hindu Undivided Family. It also held that it seeks to tax the transferee of the property for having given consideration less than the stamp value by ₹ 50,000/ or more for purchase of the property. (Related Assessment year 2009-10)
The assessee was a builder/developer following the project completion method of accounting. During relevant assessment year, the assessee offered certain net profit on sale of flats as its business income. Assessing Officer took a view value of flats sold was to be determined by applying provisions of section 56(2)(vii)(b)(ii). High Court held that said section applies to individuals and Hindu Undivided Family. It also held that it seeks to tax the transferee of the property for having given consideration less than the stamp value by ₹ 50,000/ or more for purchase of the property. (Related Assessment year 2009-10)
[CIT v. Neelkamal
Realtors & Erectors India (P) Ltd. (2017) 246 Taxman 274 (Bom)]
[13]
Income by way of interest received on compensation or on enhanced compensation
referred to in section 145A(b) [Section 56(2)(viii)]
As per section 56(2)(iii), any
income by way of interest received on compensation or on enhanced compensation,
as the case may be, shall be chargeable to tax under the head “Income from
other sources”, and as per section 145B(1) such income shall be deemed to be
the income of the year in which it is received, irrespective of the method of
accounting followed by the assessee.
KEY NOTE
Up to assessment year 2010-11,
such interest was taxable on due basis as per Supreme Court’s decision in the
case of Rama Bai v. CIT (1990) 181 ITR 400 (SC).
Background
The statutory provisions for the income in the nature
of ‘Interest received on compensation or on enhanced compensation’ were brought
to Income Tax by the Finance Act, 2009. When these provisions were introduced,
the Memorandum explaining the provisions of the Finance Bill, 2009 had this to
say:
Rationalization of provisions for taxation
of interest received on delayed compensation or enhanced compensation
The existing provisions of Income-tax Act provide
that income chargeable under the head “Profits and gains of business or
profession” or “Income from other sources”, shall be computed in accordance
with either cash or mercantile system of accounting regularly employed by the
assessee. Further, the Hon’ble Supreme Court, in the case of Rama Bai v. CIT
(1990) 181 ITR 400) has held that arrears of interest computed on delayed
or enhanced compensation shall be taxable on accrual basis. This has caused
undue hardship to taxpayers.
With a view to mitigate the hardship, it is
proposed to amend section 145A to provide that the interest received by an
assessee on compensation or enhanced compensation shall be deemed to be his
income for the year in which it is received, irrespective of the method of
accounting followed by the assessee. Further, it is proposed to insert clause
(viii) in section 56(2) to provide that income by way of interest received on
compensation or on enhanced compensation referred to in section 145A(2) shall
be assessed as “income from other sources” in the year in which it is received.
This amendment will take effect from 01.04.2010 and shall accordingly apply in
relation to assessment year 1998-99 (wrongly mentioned in the Bill, as it
appears; please read as 2010-11) and subsequent assessment years.’’
Text of
Section 56(2)(viii)
[1][Income by way of interest
received on compensation or on enhanced compensation referred to in [2] [sub-section (1) of section 145B(1);]
KEY NOTE
1. Inserted by the Finance (No. 2)
Act, 2009, with effect from 01.04.2010.
2. Substituted for “clause
(b) of section 145A” by the Finance Act, 2019 with retrospective effect from
1st April, 2017 and will, accordingly, apply in relation to the assessment year
2017-2018 and subsequent assessment years.
Text
of Section 145B(1)
145B. (1)
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained in section 145, the
interest received by an assessee on any compensation or on enhanced
compensation, as the case may be, shall be deemed to be the income of the
previous year in which it is received.
Deduction
from such Interest [Section 57(iv)]
In the case of above
interest, which is taxable under other sources, a deduction of a sum equal to
50% of such income shall be allowed under section 57(iv) even if the actual
expenditure is less than the said deduction. Apart from this no other
deduction shall be allowed from such an income under any other clause of
section 57.
Interest on enhanced compensation of land in case of cash system of
accounting
Where the assessee is following
cash system of accounting interest received on enhanced compensation under Land
Acquisition Act, is taxable on receipt basis irrespective of pendency of appeal
in higher Courts in respect of such compensation. - [CIT v. Smt. Burfi
(2010) 46 DTR 354 (P&H)]
[14]
Any sum of money, received as an advance or otherwise in the course of
negotiations for transfer of a capital asset [Section 56(2)(ix)]
Section 56(2)(ix) provides that any
amount received as advance or otherwise in the course of negotiations for
transfer of a capital asset which has been forfeited by the seller for
non-compliance by the buyer with the clauses in the agreement would be taxable
as income under head ‘Income from Other Sources’.
Text
of Section 56(2)(ix)
[1] [any
sum of money received as an advance or otherwise in the course of negotiations
for transfer of a capital asset, if,––
(a) such sum is forfeited; and
(b) the negotiations do not result in
transfer of such capital asset.]
KEY
NOTE
1.
Inserted by the Finance (No. 2) Act, 2014, with effect
from 01.04.2015.
Reasons for
introduction of section 56(2)(ix) – change in tax treatment of amount forfeited
There were several problems and
complexities in the old law and many a times it was also used to regulate the
unaccounted money and therefore the new law has been introduced with Section
56(2)(ix) coming into force from Assessment Year 2015-16 onwards. A proviso for
the same has also been inserted in Section 51 for the same so as to ensure that
double taxation does not happen.
Background
The case of Travancore Rubber & Tea Co. Ltd.
v. CIT (2000) 243 ITR 158 (SC) is quashed by Finance Act, 2014 with effect
from assessment year 2015- 16 & onwards, in which it was held that, the
advance money forfeited, by the seller of capital asset, shall be reduced from
the cost of the assets and if the advance money forfeited, exceeds the cost of
acquisition, then the excess shall be a Capital Receipt not taxable.
But, the same has now been
annulled by the Finance Act, 2014; the amount forfeited would be taxed as
income from other sources under section- 56, and subsequently no question
arises for capital receipt not taxable.
Old law with respect to amount forfeited on
sale of property
Earlier the amount forfeited on the sale of asset
was reduced from the cost of acquisition of asset. As the cost of acquisition
was reduced, the net gains on the sale of property would automatically
increase.
The old and
the New Provisions can be explained with the help of the following
PROVISIONS
ILLUSTRATED
Mr. “A” purchased a property for Rs. 15,00,000 in 2003 and sold it
to Mr. “B” in 2016 for Rs. 85,00,000 and received an advance of Rs. 5,00,000
for the same.
The deal
did not materialise as Mr. “B” was unable to make the balance payment as a
result of which Mr. “A” forfeited the entire amount. Mr. “B” now intends to
resell this property to Mr. “C” for Rs. 95,00,000 in 2018.
|
Tax treatment under new law
Tax on amount forfeited in 2016:—Advance forfeited
of Rs. 5,00,000 in 2014 would be taxable under head “Income from Other Sources”
in the year of receipt.
Tax on Sale in 2018:—Long Term Capital Gains = Sale Price (-) Indexed
Cost of Acquisition
Tax treatment under old law
Under Section 51, the amount forfeited of Rs.
5,00,000 was required to be subtracted from the cost of acquisition i.e. Rs. 15,00,000.
Therefore, the net cost of acquisition would be Rs. 10,00,000 (15,00,000 –
5,00,000). This cost of acquisition would be indexed and then subtracted from
the sale price to arrive at the Long Term Capital Gains.
Under the Old Law – no tax was required to be paid
in the year in which the advance was forfeited and is only liable to be paid in
the year of actual sale.
However, under the New Law – tax would be required to be paid both in
the year of forfeiture as well as in the year of Sale.
Tax treatment in the hands of the buyer
(a)
The amount paid by the Buyer which has been forfeited does not amount to
relinquishment of a right and therefore would not be allowed to be claimed as a
Capital Loss.
(b)
If the Seller fails to honour the deal and pays back the Buyer the advance as
well as some amount because of failure to dishonor the deal, this amount would
be treated as Capital Gain because it amounts to relinquishment of a right by a
buyer.
(c)
The amount forfeited which was paid for purchase of a Commercial Building will
not be regarded as Revenue Loss.
For the purpose of this section,
Capital Asset will be taken as defined in section 2(14).
Accordingly, where any capital asset was on any
previous occasion, the subject-matter of negotiation for its transfer and any
advance money or other money received is forfeited by the assessee, then the
amount so forfeited shall be taxable as Income from other sources under section
56(2)(ix).
Here, other money received includes:
(a) any earnest
money received for guaranteeing the performance of the contract and not forming
part of sales consideration.
(b)
any advance amount received under an agreement to sell & subsequently
purchaser failed to pay balance amount as per agreement.
Taxability of advance for transfer of a
capital asset in brief [Section 56(2)(ix)]
v Taxability
of any sum of money, received as an advance or otherwise in the course of
negotiations for transfer of a capital asset.
v
Such sum shall be chargeable to income-tax under
the head ‘income from other sources’ if such sum is forfeited and the
negotiation do not result in transfer of such capital asset.
In order to avoid double taxation of the
advance received and retained
With effect from assessment year 2015-16, Section 51
provides that where any sum of money received as an advance or otherwise in the
course of negotiation for transfer of a capital asset has been included in the
total income of the assessee for any previous year, in accordance with the
provision of clause (ix) of section 56(2), such amount shall not be deducted
from the cost for which the asset was acquired or the written down value or the
fair market value, as the case may be, in computing the cost of acquisition.
PROVISIONS
ILLUSTRATED - 1
An Agreement for Sale of property on 29.11.2017 for a total
consideration of Rs. 70,00,000/- to be paid on or before 05.03.2018 and,
towards earnest money, an amount of Rs. 4,00,000/- was paid on 29.11.2017 and
another Rs. 3,00,000/- on 30.11.2017, that means, altogether Rs. 7,00,000/-
was paid, being 10% of the total sale consideration. The purchaser, however,
could not pay the balance amount of Rs. 63,00,000/- before 05.03.2018,
consequently, the sale deed could not be executed. Seller, therefore, did not
return the earnest money to the purchaser. The same property was purchased by
the assessee in September, 2013 for Rs. 50,00,000/-. Compute taxable income
for assessment year 2018-19.
|
SOLUTION
|
In the present case, 10% of advance money forfeited i.e. Rs. 7,00,000/-
will be taxable as “Income from other sources” under section 56(2)(ix) for
the assessment year 2018-19.
|
PROVISIONS
ILLUSTRATED - 2
Mr. X purchased an asset on 01.01.2010 for Rs.5, 00,000. He entered
into an agreement to sell the asset on 31.07.2017 and received Rs. 7,50,000
as earnest money. The sale did not materialize and he forfeited Rs. 7,50,000
on 15.08.2017.
|
SOLUTION
|
Now as per section 51, the forfeited amount on capital asset will be
taxed as income from other sources. Here the above mentioned case was
nullified by the amendment made in Finance Act, 2014.
v The
excess amount of money forfeited over and above the cost of acquisition which
is Capital Receipt not being taxed as upheld in judgment of Supreme Court in Travancore
Rubber & Tea Co. Ltd. v. CIT (2000) 243 ITR 158 (SC) is now taxable
in the Financial year of receipt of money of advance which pertains to
forfeited amount.
v
Where
in case the cost of acquisition of asset is more than the forfeited amount of
money, then the said amount is taxable in the year of receipt of forfeited
money under the head “Income from other sources” as against existing
provision which leads to delay in taxation of forfeited amount, as the same
is taxable in the year of sale of capital asset.
|
[15] Money/Property received without consideration
or inadequate consideration on or after 01.04.2017 [Section 56(2)(x)]
Background
Under the provisions of section
56(2)(vii), any sum of money or any property which is received without
consideration or for inadequate consideration (in excess of the specified limit
of Rs. 50,000) by an individual or Hindu undivided family is chargeable to
income-tax in the hands of the resident under the head “Income from other
sources” subject to certain exceptions. Further, receipt of certain shares by a
firm or a company in which the public are not substantially interested is also
chargeable to income-tax in case such receipt is in excess of Rs. 50,000 and is
received without consideration or for inadequate consideration. The definition
of property for the purpose of this section includes immovable property, jewellery,
shares, paintings, etc. These anti-abuse provisions are currently applicable
only in case of individual or HUF and firm or company in certain cases.
Therefore, receipt of sum of money or property without consideration or for
inadequate consideration does not attract these anti-abuse provisions in cases
of other assessees.
In order to prevent the practice
of receiving the sum of money or the property without consideration or for
inadequate consideration, the Finance Act, 2017, inserted a clause (x) in sub-section
(2) of section 56 so as to provide that receipt of the sum of money or the
property by any person without consideration or for inadequate consideration in
excess of Rs. 50,000 shall be chargeable to tax in the hands of the recipient
under the head “Income from other sources”.
Text of Section 56(2)(x)
[1] [where any person receives, in any previous year,
from any person or persons on or after the 1st day of April, 2017,—
(a) any sum of money, without consideration, the aggregate
value of which exceeds fifty thousand rupees, the whole of the aggregate value
of such sum;
(b) any immovable property,—
(A) without consideration, the stamp duty value of which exceeds
fifty thousand rupees, the stamp duty value of such property;
[2][(B) for a consideration,
the stamp duty value of such property as exceeds such consideration, if the
amount of such excess is more than the higher of the following amounts,
namely:—
(i) the amount of fifty thousand rupees; and
(ii) the amount equal to five per cent of the
consideration:]
Provided that where the date of agreement fixing the amount of consideration for
the transfer of immovable property and the date of registration are not the
same, the stamp duty value on the date of agreement may be taken for the purposes
of this sub-clause :
Provided further that the provisions of the first proviso shall apply
only in a case where the amount of consideration referred to therein, or a part
thereof, has been paid by way of an account payee cheque or an account payee
bank draft or by use of electronic clearing system through a bank account, on
or before the date of agreement for transfer of such immovable property:
Provided also that where the stamp duty value of immovable property is disputed by the
assessee on grounds mentioned in sub-section (2) of section 50C,
the Assessing Officer may refer the valuation of such property to a Valuation
Officer, and the provisions of section 50C and
sub-section (15) of section 155 shall,
as far as may be, apply in relation to the stamp duty value of such property
for the purpose of this sub-clause as they apply for valuation of capital asset
under those sections;
(c) any property, other than immovable property,—
(A) without consideration, the aggregate fair market value of
which exceeds fifty thousand rupees, the whole of the aggregate fair market
value of such property;
(B) for a consideration which is less than the aggregate fair
market value of the property by an amount exceeding fifty thousand rupees, the
aggregate fair market value of such property as exceeds such consideration :
Provided that this clause shall not apply to any sum of money
or any property received—
(I) from any
relative; or
(II) on the occasion of
the marriage of the individual; or
(III) under a will
or by way of inheritance; or
(IV) in contemplation of death of the payer or
donor, as the case may be; or
(V) from any local
authority as defined in the Explanation to
clause (20) of section 10;
or
(VI) from any fund
or foundation or university or other educational institution or hospital or
other medical institution or any trust or institution referred to in clause (23C) of section 10;
or
(VII) from or by any trust or institution registered
under section 12A or section 12AA;
or
(VIII) by any fund or trust or institution or any
university or other educational institution or any hospital or other medical
institution referred to in sub-clause (iv)
or sub-clause (v) or sub-clause
(vi) or sub-clause (via) of clause (23C) of section 10;
or
(IX) by way of
transaction not regarded as transfer under clause (i) or [3] [clause (iv) or clause (v) or] clause (vi) or clause (via) or clause (viaa) or clause (vib) or clause (vic) or clause (vica) or clause (vicb) or clause (vid) or clause (vii) of section 47;
or
(X) from an
individual by a trust created or established solely for the benefit of relative
of the individual.
Explanation.—For the purposes of this clause, the expressions
"assessable", "fair market value", "jewellery",
"property", "relative" and "stamp duty value"
shall have the same meanings as respectively assigned to them in the Explanation to clause (vii).]
KEY NOTE
1.
Inserted
by Finance Act, 2017, with effect from 01.04.2017.
2.
Substituted
for existing item (B) of sub-clause (x) of sub-section (2) of Section 56 by
Finance Act, 2018, with effect from 01.04.2019.
3.
Inserted
by Finance Act, 2018, with effect from 01.04.2018.
Clause (x) is inserted in section 56(2) to provide that the following
receipts during a previous year would be taxable as income in the hands of any
person, under the head ‘Income from Other Sources’ subject to the other
provisions relating thereto, made in the clause:
(a) Any
sum of money without consideration, in aggregate exceeding Rs. 50,000 during
the financial year; or Any immovable property without consideration, the stamp
duty value of which exceeds 50,000; or
(b) Any
immovable property for a consideration which is less than stamp duty value by
an amount exceeding Rs. 50,000; or
(c) Any
movable property (as defined and specified) without consideration where
aggregate fair market value whereof exceeds Rs. 50,000; or
(d) Any
movable property (as defined and specified) for consideration which is less
than fair market value by an amount exceeding Rs. 50,000.
Analysis of
the proposed clause (x) to section 56(2) - Scope of taxation of gifts as income
from other sources expanded for all taxpayers
The inserted clause (x) to section 56(2)(x) is a comprehensive
provision that incorporates:
(i) the existing provisions of
section 56(2)(vii) (which applied to individuals and HUFs);
(ii) the existing provisions of section
56(2)(viia) (which applied to closely held companies and firms); and
(iii) certain additional
features.
Scope of taxation of gifts as income from other sources expanded for
all taxpayers
Unlike the provisions of section 56(2)(vii) and
section 56(2)(viia), which applied only to specified categories of persons
referred to therein, the inserted clause (x) will apply to all persons. Thus,
all individuals, HUFs, companies (regardless of whether they are companies in
which the public are substantially interested or individuals and artificial
judicial persons will be covered by this provision.
Taxation of money received
without consideration [Section 56(2)(x)(a)]
If any sum
of money is received by any person without consideration, the aggregate in
whole year if exceeds Rs. 50,000/-. - Then, whole of the aggregate value of
money received will be considered as “Income from Other Sources”.
Taxation of immovable property
received [Section 56(2)(x)(b)]
Section 56(2)(x)(b) inter alia, provides that:
(a)
A person receives an immovable property from any
person.
(b)
Stamp duty value is more than consideration.
(c)
Difference between consideration and stamp duty value
is more than Rs. 50,000.
Ø If these
conditions are satisfied, the difference between consideration and stamp duty
value is taxable as income in the hands of recipient under section 56(2)(x)
under the head “Income from other sources”.
Here
property term include the following :
v
Land and building (immovable)
v
Shares and securities (Securities Include debenture,
bonds etc).
v
Jewellery (Jewellery includes ornaments made of gold,
silver, platinum or any other precious metal whether or not attach any precious
or semi-precious stone, and whether or not worked or sewn into any wearing
apparel .Precious or semi-precious stones also include in the term of jewelry,
whether it is set or not in any furniture, utensil or other article or worked
or sewn into any wearing apparel)
v
Archeological collection
v
Drawings
v
Paintings
v
Sculpture
v
Any work of art
v
Bullion (Gold And silver in their purest form)
KEY NOTE
Only single transaction is considered for calculating threshold limit of
Rs. 50,000/- In the case of immovable property received as a gift. Where as in
other cases (cash or movable property) all transactions in financial year are
taken into consideration for calculating threshold limit of Rs. 50,000/-
Exceptions to
Section 56(2)(x)
Section 56(2)(x) shall not
apply to any sum of money or any
property received from following [Fourth Proviso to Section 56(2)(x)]
(i) From any relative
(ii) On the occasion of the marriage of the
individual
Gift received by any person (without limit) on the occasion of the
marriage is tax free in the hand of individual (recipient).
For example:
If your friend or relative or any other person gift you on your marriage
than nothing will be taxable.
(iii) Under a will or by way of inheritance
Any
sum of money or any property is received under a will or by way of
inheritance it is totally exempt from Gift Tax. So if any person gets a
Property worth Rs 50,00,000 and some other things worth Rs 50, 00,000 through
inheritance, than he will not have to pay any tax on such gift received.
(iv) In contemplation of death of the payer or
donor, as the case may be
Any sum of money or any property is received in contemplation of
death is also exempt from gift tax.
A gift received in
contemplation of death means when men, who is ill and expects to die shortly
because of his illness, give his movable property possession to another to keep
as a gift in case if he will die because of that illness.
Such a gift may be resumed
by the giver; and shall not take effect if he recovers from the illness during
which it was made; nor if he survives the person to whom it was made.
(v) From any local authority as defined in the
Explanation to clause (20) of section 10
There is no tax liability
occur when any amount received from local authority trust or university as a
gift hence recipient is not liable to pay tax on such gift.
(vi) from any fund or
foundation or university or other educational institution or hospital or other
medical institution or any trust or institution referred to in clause (23C) of
section 10; or
(vii) from or
by any trust or institution registered under section 12A or section 12AA; or
(viii) by any fund or trust or institution or any university
or other educational institution or any hospital or other medical institution
referred to in subclause (iv) or sub-clause (v) or sub-clause (vi) or
sub-clause (via) of clause (23C) of section 10
(ix) by way of
transaction not regarded as transfer under clause (i) or clause
(iv) or clause (v) or clause (vi) or
clause (via) or clause (viaa) or clause (vib) or clause (vic)
or clause (vica) or clause (vicb) or clause (vid) or
clause (vii) of section 47; or
(X)
from an individual by a trust created or established solely for the benefit of
relative of the individual.
KEY
NOTE
Section
47(i) : distribution of capital assets on the total or partial partition of a
HUF
Section
47(iv) : transfer of a Capital assets by a company to its subsidiary company
Section
47(v) : transfer of a Capital assets by a subsidiary Company to the holding company.
Section
47(vi) : transfer during amalgamation… where amalgamated Company is an Indian
Company
Section
47(via) : transfer during amalgamation where amalgamated company is foreign
company.
Section
47(viaa) : transfer during amalgamation of a banking company with a banking company.
Section 47(vib) : transfer, in a demerger, of a Capital
assets by the demerged company to the resulting company, if the resulting company.
is an Indian company.
Section 47(vic) : transfer in a demerger, of a Capital assets,
being a share(s) held in an Indian company., by the demerged foreign company.
Section 47(vica) : any transfer in a business reorganization,
of a Capital assets by the predecessor co-operative bank to the successor
co-operative bank
Section 47(vicb) : any transfer by a shareholder, in a
business reorganization, of a capital asset being a share or shares held by him
in the predecessor co-operative bank
Section 47(vid) : any transfer or issue of shares by the
resulting company, in a scheme of demerger to the shareholders of the demerged company
if the transfer or issue is made in consideration of demerger of the
undertaking
Section 47(vii) : any transfer by a shareholder, in a scheme
of amalgamation, of a Capital assets being a share or shares held by him in the
amalgamating company
No
adjustment where the variation between stamp duty value and the sale
consideration is not more than 5% of the sale consideration [With effect from
assessment year 2019-20]
Where any person receives any immovable property for
a consideration, the stamp duty value of such property as exceeds such
consideration, if the amount of such excess is more than the higher of the following amounts, namely:—
(i) the amount of Rs. 50,000; or
(ii) the amount of 5% of the consideration
Ø
shall be charged to tax under the head ”Income
from other sources”
In other words, Section 56(2)(x) applicable only if
stamp duty value exceeds 105% of consideration - From the
assessment year 2019-20, section 56(2)(x) will be applicable if the following
conditions are satisfied —
(i)
A person receives an immovable property from any
person.
(ii)
Stamp duty value exceeds 105 per cent of
consideration.
(iii)
Difference between consideration and stamp duty value
is more than Rs. 50,000.
From the assessment year 2019-20, the difference
between stamp duty value and consideration is taxable under the head “Income
from other sources” only if the above conditions are satisfied.
PROVISIONS ILLUSTRATED – 1:—
S. No.
|
Nature of asset
|
Consideration type
|
Existing Taxable Value
|
Taxable value for Financial Year 2019-20
|
1
|
Money
|
Without Consideration
|
The whole amount if it exceeds Rs. 50,000
|
Same
|
2
|
Movable property
|
Without Consideration
|
FMV (Fair market value) of the property if it exceeds Rs. 50,000
|
Same
|
3
|
Movable property
|
Inadequate Consideration
|
Difference between FMV and actual consideration if such difference
exceeds Rs. 50,000
|
Same
|
4
|
Immovable property
|
Without Consideration
|
Stamp value of the property if it exceeds Rs. 50,000
|
Same
|
5
|
Immovable
property
|
Inadequate
Consideration
|
Difference between
stamp value and actual consideration if such
difference exceeds Rs. 50,000
|
Difference between stamp value and
actual consideration if such difference exceeds
Rs 50,000 or 5% of consideration whichever is higher
|
PROVISIONS ILLUSTRATED – 2:—
Say Mr. X sold a flat to Mr. Y for a consideration of Rs. 80 Lacs.
However at the time of registration, value adopted by stamp valuation
authority is Rs. 82 Lacs. Then in such a case:
For Mr. X: Full value of consideration (i.e. sale price) will be
deemed to be Rs. 80 Lacs only. Since stamp duty value does not exceed 105% of
consideration (i.e. 105% of Rs. 80 Lacs = 84 Lacs).
For Mr. Y : Rs. 0 (NIL) will be treated as Income from other sources
(Since difference of Rs. 2 Lac is less than Rs. 4 Lacs (i.e. Rs. 50,000 or 5%
of Rs. 80 lacs = 4 Lacs, whichever is higher).
|
PROVISIONS ILLUSTRATED – 3:—
Say Mr. X sold a flat to Mr. Y for a
consideration of Rs. 80 Lacs. However at the time of registration, value adopted
by stamp valuation authority is Rs. 90 Lacs. Then in such a case:
For Mr. X: Full value of consideration (i.e. sale price) will be
deemed to be Rs. 90 Lacs only. Since stamp duty value is > 105% of
consideration.
For Mr. Y : Rs. 10 Lacs will be treated as Income from other sources
(Since difference of Rs. 10 Lac is greater than Rs. 4 Lacs (i.e. Rs. 50,000
or 5% of Rs. 80 Lacs = 4 Lacs, whichever is higher).
|
Section 56(2)(x) not applicable in transactions between holding and
100% subsidiary companies
Fourth proviso to section 56(2)(x) has been amended
with effect from the assessment year 2018-19. After this amendment, section
56(2)(x) will not be applicable if a capital asset is received by a holding
company from its 100 per cent subsidiary company (and vice versa) provided
the transferee-company is an Indian company.
Illegally encroached land is not a capital asset; profit arising on
its sale is taxable as income from other
source
Property
illegally encroached by assessee would not be considered as ‘Capital asset’
under section 2(14) and, consequently, gain arising from transfer of such
property could not be assessed as capital gain but as income from other sources. - [ITO v.
Bhagwant T. Fatnani (2015) 58 taxmann.com 227 (ITAT Mumbai)]
[16] Taxability of
compensation in connection to business or employment [Section 56(2)(xi)]
Section
56(2)(xi) provides that any compensation or other payment, due to or received
by any person, by whatever name called, in connection with the termination of
his employment or the modification of the terms and conditions relating
thereto, shall be chargeable to income tax under the head "Income from
other sources".
Text
to Section 56(2)(xi)
[1][any compensation or other payment, due to or received by any
person, by whatever name called, in connection with the termination of his
employment or the modification of the terms and conditions relating thereto.]
KEY NOTE
1. Inserted by Finance Act, 2018, with effect from
01.04.2019.
The amendment by making all compensations (whether capital or revenue
in nature) received on termination of contract subject to tax has remove the
ambiguity on whether any compensation received on the termination of a contract
is taxable under the Income Tax Act, considering that it was arguable to treat
such compensation as capital receipt.
Head
|
Section
|
Particulars
|
Business Income
|
28(ii)(e)
|
any compensation due or received by any person, by whatever name
called, at or in connection with the termination or the
modification of the terms and conditions, as the
case may be, of any contract relating to his business shall be chargeable to
tax under the head “Profits and gains of business or profession”.
|
Income from Other
Sources
|
56(2)(xi)
|
any compensation due or received by any person, by whatever name called, at or in
connection with the termination of his employment or the modification of the
terms and conditions relating thereto shall be chargeable to tax under the
head “Income from Other Sources”.
|
Excellent sir, comprehensive article sir...
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