Facts of the Case

  • The assessee, Naresh Kumar Verma, claimed benefit under Section 10B of the Income Tax Act, 1961.
  • The claim was made on the basis that certain transactions qualified as "deemed exports" under the applicable Export-Import Policy.
  • The Revenue authorities disputed the claim on the ground that statutory conditions under Section 10B had not been fulfilled.
  • Connected proceedings including Income Tax Appeals and Writ Petitions were filed before the High Court.
  • The Delhi High Court recorded that detailed reasons were contained in its judgment delivered on the same date in ITA No.1004/2011 and connected matters.

Issues Involved

  1. Whether transactions treated as "deemed exports" under policy provisions qualify for deduction/exemption under Section 10B of the Income Tax Act.
  2. Whether fulfillment of actual export and receipt of foreign exchange are mandatory requirements under Section 10B.
  3. Whether penalty proceedings against the assessee were sustainable.
  4. Whether the assessee's interpretation of law constituted a bona fide claim.

Petitioner's Arguments

  • The assessee argued that the relevant Export-Import Policy and departmental circulars treated certain domestic transactions as deemed exports.
  • It was submitted that the transactions fell within the meaning of exports and therefore Section 10B benefits should be available.
  • The petitioner further contended that the claim was made under a bona fide interpretation of law and therefore penalty proceedings should not be initiated.
  • Reliance was placed upon applicable policy provisions and departmental circulars.

Respondent's Arguments

  • Revenue argued that Section 10B expressly requires:
    • Actual export outside India.
    • Receipt of consideration in convertible foreign exchange.
  • Revenue contended that the assessee failed to satisfy these statutory requirements.
  • It was further argued that the assessee did not revise returns despite awareness of the legal position and therefore could not claim bona fide conduct.

Court Order / Findings

  • The Delhi High Court observed that Section 10B contains mandatory statutory conditions.
  • The Court noted that export outside India and receipt of foreign exchange through remittance constitute essential prerequisites for availing benefits under Section 10B.
  • Transactions categorized as "deemed exports" under policy provisions cannot automatically satisfy the statutory requirements prescribed under the Income Tax Act.
  • The Court disposed of the connected matters by referring to the detailed judgment delivered in ITA No.1004/2011.

Important Clarification

The judgment clarifies an important distinction:

Benefits available under export policy provisions or administrative circulars do not automatically override or substitute express statutory requirements contained in the Income Tax Act. Classification as a "deemed export" under policy frameworks alone may not be sufficient to claim deduction under Section 10B unless all statutory conditions are independently fulfilled.

Sections Involved

  • Section 10B, Income Tax Act, 1961
  • Section 271(1)(c), Income Tax Act, 1961 (in context of penalty proceedings)
  • Relevant Export-Import Policy provisions concerning deemed exports

Link to download the order -https://delhihighcourt.nic.in/app/case_number_pdf/2014:DHC:2454-DB/SRB08052014ITA442014.pdf

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