Facts of the Case

The present appeal was filed by the Revenue under Section 260A of the Income Tax Act, 1961 against the order of the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT) dated 16.10.2019 for Assessment Year 2010–11.

The dispute revolved around multiple issues including:

  • Applicability of disallowance under Section 14A in absence of exempt income
  • Nature of license fee paid to the Department of Telecommunications (capital vs revenue expenditure)
  • Computation of deduction under Section 10A
  • Allowability of unrealized foreign exchange loss

Issues Involved

  1. Whether Section 14A disallowance can be invoked without earning exempt income
  2. Whether CBDT Circular No. 5/2014 was correctly interpreted
  3. Whether AO properly examined correctness of expenditure claims
  4. Whether telecom license fee is capital or revenue expenditure
  5. Whether deduction under Section 10A should exclude telecom and foreign currency expenses
  6. Whether unrealized foreign exchange loss is allowable as deduction

Petitioner’s Arguments (Revenue)

  • Section 14A does not require actual exempt income for disallowance
  • ITAT misinterpreted CBDT Circular No. 5/2014
  • AO was justified in questioning expenditure claims
  • License fee paid to telecom authorities is capital in nature
  • Export turnover for Section 10A should exclude telecom and foreign currency expenses
  • Foreign exchange fluctuation loss is notional and not allowable under CBDT Instruction No. 3/2010

Respondent’s Arguments (Assessee)

  • Issues relating to Section 14A were already settled by jurisdictional precedents
  • License fee issue covered by earlier Delhi High Court ruling
  • Section 10A computation issue settled by Supreme Court in favour of assessee
  • Foreign exchange loss is allowable as per Supreme Court judgment in CIT vs Woodward Governor India Pvt. Ltd.

The assessee emphasized consistency in accounting treatment and prior acceptance by the department.

Court’s Findings / Order

The Delhi High Court dismissed the Revenue’s appeal and held:

  • Issues under Section 14A are no longer res integra and covered by Joint Investments Pvt. Ltd. vs CIT
  • Telecom license fee issue covered by CIT vs Bharti Hexacom Ltd.
  • Section 10A issue settled by Supreme Court in CIT vs HCL Technologies Ltd.
  • Foreign exchange loss allowable as per CIT vs Woodward Governor India Pvt. Ltd.

The Court observed that:

  • Revenue failed to raise proper grounds regarding non-fulfillment of conditions for foreign exchange loss
  • No substantial question of law arose for consideration

Accordingly, the appeal was dismissed.

Important Clarifications

  • Section 14A disallowance jurisprudence reaffirmed: issue settled in absence of exempt income
  • Foreign exchange fluctuation loss is allowable if consistent accounting practices are followed
  • Courts will not entertain new arguments not raised before lower authorities
  • Reaffirmation of binding precedents limits scope of appeals under Section 260A

Sections Involved

  • Section 14A – Expenditure related to exempt income
  • Section 10A – Deduction for export-oriented undertakings
  • Section 37(1) – Allowability of business expenditure
  • Section 43A – Foreign exchange fluctuation adjustments
  • Section 260A – Appeal to High Court

Link to download the order -https://delhihighcourt.nic.in/app/case_number_pdf/2021:DHC:1091-DB/RAS24032021ITA812021_184417.pdf

Disclaimer

This content is shared strictly for general information and knowledge purposes only. Readers should independently verify the information from reliable sources. It is not intended to provide legal, professional, or advisory guidance. The author and the organisation disclaim all liability arising from the use of this content. The material has been prepared with the assistance of AI tools.