Facts of the Case

  1. ICAI was constituted under the Chartered Accountants Act, 1949 as a statutory body for regulating the profession of Chartered Accountants in India.
  2. ICAI had historically been granted exemption under Section 10(23C)(iv) and had been treated as a charitable institution by income tax authorities.
  3. ICAI applied for renewal of exemption for subsequent assessment years.
  4. The Assessing Officer denied exemption primarily on the grounds that:
    • ICAI conducted coaching classes for students.
    • Fees were charged for such coaching services.
    • Such activities allegedly constituted business activities.
    • Separate books of account were not maintained.
    • Financial transactions with ICAI Accounting Research Foundation allegedly violated statutory requirements.
  5. The Assessing Officer consequently treated income earned from coaching activities as taxable business income and raised substantial tax demands.

Issues Involved

  1. Whether ICAI qualified as an institution established for charitable purposes under Section 2(15) of the Income Tax Act.
  2. Whether coaching and revisionary classes conducted by ICAI constituted business activities.
  3. Whether fees collected from coaching activities disentitled ICAI from claiming exemption.
  4. Whether payments made to ICAI Accounting Research Foundation violated Section 13 of the Income Tax Act.
  5. Whether ICAI was entitled to exemption under Section 10(23C)(iv).

Petitioner's Arguments

ICAI argued that:

  • Conducting coaching and revisionary classes was an integral part of its educational functions.
  • Such activities were undertaken in discharge of statutory obligations under the Chartered Accountants Act.
  • The coaching activities were not carried out with any commercial motive.
  • The fees charged merely covered educational and administrative expenditure.
  • Educational materials including study material, question banks and model papers were provided without profit motive.
  • Financial assistance provided to ICAI Accounting Research Foundation represented application of funds toward research and educational objectives and did not constitute investment or deposit.
  • Educational functions constituted one of the principal charitable objects under Section 2(15).

Respondent's Arguments

The Revenue authorities argued that:

  • Coaching activities conducted by ICAI involved charging consideration and therefore amounted to business activity.
  • Income generated from coaching activities constituted business income.
  • Separate books of account were not maintained.
  • ICAI violated Section 13(1)(d) through amounts outstanding in the books relating to ICAI Accounting Research Foundation.
  • Consequently ICAI was not entitled to exemption under Sections 11 and 10(23C)(iv).

Court Findings / Order

The Delhi High Court held:

1. ICAI Performs Charitable Functions

The Court observed that ICAI was established under statute to regulate and maintain standards of the profession of Chartered Accountants and carried out substantial educational functions.

2. Coaching Activities Were Not Business Activities

The Court clarified that:

  • ICAI's coaching and revisionary classes formed part of its educational function.
  • These activities could not be equated with private coaching institutions.
  • Such activities were merely incidental and ancillary to the principal statutory objectives.

3. Dominant Purpose Test Applied

The Court emphasized that the dominant and primary object of ICAI remained charitable and regulatory rather than profit generation.

4. Fees Collection Does Not Automatically Convert Activity into Business

Charging fees by itself was not sufficient to characterize activities as commercial.

5. Exemption Could Not Be Denied Merely Because Incidental Activities Generated Income

The Court found that incidental revenue generation does not change the character of a charitable institution.

Court Order

The Court set aside the rejection orders passed by the Director General of Income Tax (Exemptions) and held that ICAI remained entitled to consideration for exemption under Section 10(23C)(iv).

Important Clarification

The Court made an important distinction:

  • Educational activities conducted by a statutory body for achieving its objectives cannot be treated as ordinary commercial coaching activities.
  • The mere charging of fees does not transform a charitable activity into trade, commerce or business.
  • The dominant object and purpose of the institution must be examined.
  • Ancillary or incidental activities undertaken for fulfillment of the primary object do not alter charitable character.

Sections Involved

Income Tax Act, 1961

  • Section 2(15) — Definition of Charitable Purpose
  • Section 10(23C)(iv) — Exemption for Charitable Institutions
  • Section 11 — Income from Property Held for Charitable Purposes
  • Section 11(5) — Permitted Modes of Investment
  • Section 13(1)(d) — Violation of Investment Conditions
  • Section 143(3) — Assessment
  • Section 263 — Revision by Commissioner
  • Section 260A — Appeal to High Court

Chartered Accountants Act, 1949

  • Section 3
  • Section 15
  • Section 24A
  • Section 30

Link to download the order -https://delhihighcourt.nic.in/app/case_number_pdf/2013:DHC:3108-DB/VIB04072013CW71812012.pdf

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