Facts of the Case

The appellant, M/s Lotus Trans Travels P. Ltd., is an approved tour operator primarily managing itineraries for Japanese tourists visiting the Buddhist Circuit in India. The appellant receives advance bookings in convertible foreign exchange prior to the tourists landing in India to arrange for their stay and transportation. These advance amounts are placed into short-term fixed deposits in Indian banks, yielding interest income.

The appellant claimed deduction under Section 80HHD of the Act by treating this interest income as business profits and processing it through the statutory proportional formula. While the Assessing Officer (AO) classified the interest under "profits and gains of business or profession", he disallowed the Section 80HHD benefit, arguing it was not "derived from" services to foreign tourists. The Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) allowed the deduction, but the Income-Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT) subsequently reversed the CIT(A)'s order.

Issues Involved

  1. Whether the Income-Tax Appellate Tribunal was justified in law in holding that interest on fixed deposits in banks and other interest were not eligible for deduction under Section 80HHD of the Income-Tax Act, 1961?
  2. Whether interest income generated from advances parked in domestic bank deposits can be legally interpreted as profits "derived from" services provided to foreign tourists?

Petitioner’s Arguments

  • Strict Statutory Formula: The appellant argued that "profits derived from services provided to foreign tourists" must be quantified using the rigid, mathematical formula provided in Section 80HHD(3), which apportions total business profits based on foreign vs. total receipts and leaves no room for manual deviations.
  • Analogy with Section 80HHC: The petitioner relied on the Supreme Court judgments in P.R. Prabhakar Vs. CIT and CIT Vs. Baby Marine Exports, stating that under similar export-incentive provisions, profits computed under business heads qualify for deduction even if they are not strictly or directly derived from exports.
  • Liberal Construction of Beneficial Provisions: As Section 80HHD is aimed at boosting precious foreign exchange reserves, it must receive a liberal construction favoring the assessee.

Respondent’s Arguments

  • Lack of Direct Nexus: The Revenue contended that for an income to qualify under Section 80HHD, it must be directly "derived from" services rendered to foreign tourists, a criteria that bank interest fails to fulfill.
  • Income from Other Sources: The Department argued alternatively that since the interest was cataloged as "other income" by the assessee, it should naturally fall under "income from other sources", rendering it ineligible for the Section 80HHD business deduction mechanism.

Court Order / Findings

The High Court of Delhi dismissed the appeals of the assessee and ruled in favor of the Revenue. The Court emphasized the narrow legal scope of the phrase "derived from" over "attributable to", drawing upon the Supreme Court precedents in CIT Vs. Sterling Foods, Hindustan Lever Ltd. Vs. CIT, and Liberty India Vs. CIT.

The Court observed that Parliament intended to cover income sources only within the first degree of closeness. Interest earned from a bank deposit is a step removed; it is income generated from a secondary investment source rather than a direct result of tour operations. Furthermore, the interest income was received from Indian banks in Indian currency, failing the core criterion of being received in convertible foreign exchange.

Important Clarification

  • The beneficial tax deduction under Section 80HHD of the Income-Tax Act, 1961, applies strictly to profits that maintain a direct, first-degree causal relationship with the eligible business activity.
  • To qualify for this deduction, the underlying income must be directly generated from services provided to foreign tourists; secondary generation of income—such as earning interest by depositing advance receipts into domestic bank accounts—is legally considered a step removed and does not qualify.
  • There is a strict currency requirement attached to the provision: the qualifying profit derived from services must be received in convertible foreign exchange, whereas interest paid out by domestic banks in Indian currency fails to satisfy this core eligibility criterion.

Sections Involved

  • Section 80HHD of the Income-Tax Act, 1961: Deduction in respect of earnings in convertible foreign exchange from hotel or tour operator business.
  • Section 80HHC of the Income-Tax Act, 1961: Deduction in respect of profits retained for export business (referenced contextually).

Link to download the order -https://delhihighcourt.nic.in/app/case_number_pdf/2010:DHC:6287-DB/AKS24122010ITA2412004.pdf

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