Facts of the Case

  1. The assessee, PNB Finance & Industries Ltd., filed its return of income for Assessment Year 2003-04.
  2. The assessee declared long-term capital gains and claimed set-off of carried-forward long-term capital losses from earlier years.
  3. During scrutiny assessment, the Assessing Officer observed that the assessee's Memorandum of Association permitted dealing in shares.
  4. The Assessing Officer treated the income arising from sale of shares as Business Income instead of Long-Term Capital Gains.
  5. Consequently, the Assessing Officer disallowed the set-off of long-term capital losses and made an addition of Rs. 2,65,77,430.
  6. The assessee contended that:
    • Shares were held as investments.
    • No trading activity in shares was carried out after 1 April 1997.
    • Shares of Times Bank (later converted into HDFC Bank shares) were purchased as long-term investments.
    • Investments were consistently reflected as "Long-Term Investments" in audited financial statements.
  7. The Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) accepted the assessee's contention and deleted the addition.
  8. The Income Tax Appellate Tribunal affirmed the order of the CIT(A).
  9. Aggrieved, the Revenue filed an appeal before the Delhi High Court under Section 260A of the Income Tax Act, 1961.

Issues Involved

1. Whether income earned from sale of shares and securities was taxable as Business Income or Long-Term Capital Gains?

2. Whether the Tribunal was justified in deleting the addition of Rs. 2,65,77,430 made by the Assessing Officer after disallowing set-off of long-term capital losses?

3. Whether the Tribunal correctly applied the principles laid down by the Supreme Court relating to distinction between investment and trading transactions?

4. Whether the Tribunal's order suffered from perversity due to non-consideration of the Assessing Officer's findings?

Petitioner’s (Revenue's) Arguments

  • The assessee was engaged in the business of purchase and sale of shares.
  • The Memorandum of Association authorized dealing in shares and securities.
  • Income arising from sale of shares constituted business profits.
  • The shares were acquired for profit-making purposes and therefore formed part of business activities.
  • The Tribunal wrongly treated the gains as capital gains.
  • Set-off of long-term capital losses was wrongly allowed.

Respondent’s (Assessee's) Arguments

  • The company had discontinued share trading activities long before the relevant assessment year.
  • The shares sold were acquired in 1996 and were held for more than seven years.
  • Investments were consistently disclosed under the head "Long-Term Investments" in audited accounts.
  • No purchases of shares as stock-in-trade were made after 31 March 1996.
  • The company earned dividend income from the shares, demonstrating investment intent.
  • No borrowed funds were used for acquisition of the shares.
  • Past assessments had accepted the shares as investment assets.
  • Mere inclusion of an object clause permitting share dealings could not convert investments into stock-in-trade.

Court Findings / Observations

The Delhi High Court held that:

  • A dealer in shares may still acquire certain shares as investments.
  • Mere authorization in the Memorandum of Association to deal in shares does not automatically make every share transaction a business transaction.
  • Intention, conduct, nature of holding and surrounding circumstances are crucial factors.
  • The shares were purchased in January 1996 and retained for more than seven years.
  • No regular activity of purchase and sale of shares was established by the Revenue.
  • The assessee had consistently shown the shares as investments in its books of account.
  • The assessee had not carried on share trading activity after 1 April 1997.
  • The Revenue failed to prove that the shares constituted stock-in-trade.
  • The profit arose from realization of investments and therefore constituted capital gains.

Court Order

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

Profit arising from sale of shares held as investments for more than seven years was assessable as Long-Term Capital Gains and not as Business Income.

The Tribunal and CIT(A) were justified in deleting the addition of Rs. 2,65,77,430.

No substantial question of law arose for consideration.

The appeal filed by the Revenue was dismissed.

Important Clarification

The Court clarified that:

  • A taxpayer can simultaneously maintain:
    • an Investment Portfolio generating Capital Gains; and
    • a Trading Portfolio generating Business Income.
  • No presumption exists that every share acquired by a company dealing in shares is necessarily stock-in-trade.
  • The decisive test is the intention behind acquisition and holding of the shares, as evidenced from conduct, accounting treatment, duration of holding and surrounding circumstances.
  • Mere presence of an enabling clause in the Memorandum of Association permitting trading in shares is not sufficient to classify gains as business income.

Sections Involved

Income Tax Act, 1961

  • Section 2(42A) – Long-Term Capital Asset
  • Section 143(1) – Processing of Return
  • Section 143(2) – Scrutiny Assessment
  • Section 260A – Appeal to High Court
  • Section 271(1)(c) – Penalty Proceedings
  • Section 234B – Interest for Default in Payment of Advance Tax
  • Section 234D – Interest on Excess Refund

Link to download the order –https://delhihighcourt.nic.in/app/case_number_pdf/2010:DHC:5102-DB/DMA18102010ITA3062010.pdf

 

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