Facts of the Case

The case revolves around the assessment year 2001-02, which was the first year of operation for the respondent/assessee company, prior to the commencement of its commercial production. During this assessment year, the Assessing Officer (AO) observed that the assessee had received a fresh share application money of ₹31,66,000 and a loan/credit of ₹2,25,000.

The AO formed an opinion that the assessee company failed to prove the identity of some of the creditors, the creditworthiness of the share applicants/creditors, and the genuine nature of these transactions. Consequently, the AO made an addition of ₹28,15,000 regarding share application money. Additionally, an amount of ₹2,25,000 advanced by Mr. G.L. Sharma (the father of the company’s Managing Director) was treated as an unexplained cash credit under Section 68 of the Income-Tax Act, on the grounds that his creditworthiness was not established. Notably, Mr. G.L. Sharma had also subscribed to the share capital to the tune of ₹12,50,000, which formed a portion of the initial share application addition.

On appeal, the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) [CIT(A)] partly allowed the assessee’s appeal by reducing the share application addition from ₹28,15,000 to ₹19,85,000, while confirming the addition of ₹2,25,000. Both the Revenue and the assessee preferred appeals before the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT). The ITAT dismissed the Revenue’s appeal and allowed the assessee's appeal, completely deleting the remaining additions of ₹19,85,000 and ₹2,25,000. The Revenue then appealed to the High Court.

Issues Involved

  1. Whether the additions made by the Assessing Officer under Section 68 of the Income-Tax Act on account of share application money and small cash credits were sustainable when the identity of the investors/creditors was established and the company had not commenced commercial production.
  2. Whether the findings of the ITAT deleting the additions based on circumstantial and documentary proof of creditworthiness constituted a substantial question of law.

Petitioner’s (Revenue’s) Arguments

The Senior Standing Counsel representing the Revenue argued that the Assessing Officer was fully justified in making the additions under Section 68 of the Income-Tax Act. The Revenue contended that the respondent/assessee had failed to conclusively establish the creditworthiness of the primary share applicant, Mr. G.L. Sharma, as he had no known, well-documented source of regular income. It was further contended that since the primary source of funding was doubtful, any consequential investments (such as the loan given by Mr. Jitender Kumar Sharma using funds from Mr. G.L. Sharma) and other minor cash credits remained unexplained and lacked cross-verifiable economic substance.

Respondent’s (Assessee’s) Arguments

The counsel for the assessee maintained that this was the very first year of the company, and all share application monies were received prior to the commencement of commercial production, establishing that the company had no undisclosed source of income to route back. The assessee proved the identity of the vital investor, Mr. G.L. Sharma, and demonstrated the genuineness of the transaction by presenting secondary evidence, including his will, which outlined a distribution of valuable family assets, ownership of agricultural land, and a residential house. Furthermore, for the remaining small cash credits (ranging between ₹5,000 and ₹20,000), the assessee provided signed confirmations and sworn affidavits from the respective creditors deposing that they had advanced the money out of personal savings.

Court Order / Findings

The High Court of Delhi upheld the order passed by the ITAT and dismissed the Revenue's appeals. The Court observed the following:

  • Deletion regarding Mr. G.L. Sharma: The ITAT correctly analyzed that Mr. G.L. Sharma was a man of means based on the distributed properties, agricultural holdings, and assets mentioned in his will. Thus, his creditworthiness could not be doubted, validating the deletion of the ₹12,50,000 addition.
  • Deletion regarding other small cash credits: For the individual investor Mr. Jitender Kumar Sharma (who invested ₹1,65,000 using funds received from Mr. G.L. Sharma), the addition was unsustainable on the same logic since Mr. G.L. Sharma's financial capability was accepted. For the other six creditors, they had provided specific affidavits and confirmations. Given that the individual amounts were minimal (between ₹5,000 and ₹20,000), they could reasonably be expected from the standard savings of manual or domestic labor.
  • Application of Precedent: The High Court confirmed that since the identity of the share applicants was not doubted, the legal proposition laid down by the Hon’ble Delhi High Court in the case of CIT vs. Sophia Finance Ltd. [205 ITR 98] was squarely applicable.
  • Conclusion: The High Court concluded that the determinations made by the ITAT were pure findings of facts based on evidence. Since no substantial question of law arose from the record, both the appeals filed by the Revenue were dismissed.

Important Clarification

The ruling clarifies that when a company is in its pre-commencement phase prior to commercial production, it possesses no hidden operational mechanisms to generate unexplained money of its own to route back as share capital. If the identity of the share applicants is undisputed and reasonable secondary evidence (such as wills, asset distributions, or affidavits for small sums) proves their financial means, additions cannot be sustained under Section 68 of the Income-Tax Act simply because the investors do not possess a standard or traditional source of taxable income. Small credits ranging between ₹5,000 and ₹20,000 are completely justifiable through regular personal savings.

Section Involved

  • Section 68 of the Income-Tax Act, 1961 (Unexplained Cash Credits).

Link to download the order -

https://delhihighcourt.nic.in/app/case_number_pdf/2011:DHC:14771-DB/AKS25072011ITA5962010_161730.pdf

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