Facts of the Case

·         The petitioner, Export Promotion Council for Handicrafts, applied for a tax exemption under Section $10(23C)(iv)$ of the Income Tax Act, 1961, for the financial years 2007-2008 to 2009-2010 (corresponding to assessment years 2008-2009 to 2010-2011).

·         In the first round of litigation [WP(C) No. 5579/2008], the Revenue raised a solitary objection: the petitioner had invested certain accumulated funds in India Exposition Mart Limited (IEML), which did not conform to the permitted investment modes prescribed under Section 11(5) of the Act.

·         Vide an order dated 29.01.2009, the Delhi High Court disposed of the initial writ petition with the consent of the Revenue's counsel. The court permitted the petitioner to withdraw its non-compliant investments from IEML within eight weeks and file a fresh substitute application.

·         Crucially, the High Court directed that this fresh application would be deemed to have been filed on the original date of application (22.05.2007) and would act as an absolute substitute for the initial application.

·         The petitioner complied with the judicial directive by withdrawing the funds from IEML within the stipulated eight weeks and depositing the entire amount into a valid current account with a scheduled bank (Oriental Bank of Commerce) effective from 31.03.2009.

·         Consequent to this compliance, the Director General of Income Tax (Exemptions) processed the substitute application but granted the exemption selectively only for the assessment years 2009-2010 and 2010-2011, while arbitrarily denying the exemption for the assessment year 2008-2009. Aggrieved by this partial denial, the petitioner initiated this second round of litigation.

Issues Involved

1.      Whether the Director General of Income Tax (Exemptions) was legally justified in refusing the statutory exemption under Section $10(23C)(iv)$ specifically for the assessment year 2008-2009, despite the petitioner completely rectifying the investment defect under Section 11(5) within the judicially mandated timeline.

2.      Whether a substitute application deemed by judicial order to be effective from the original filing date (22.05.2007) can be fragmented by the Revenue to deny exemption for an intervening assessment year that fell squarely within the scope of the original block application.

Petitioner’s Arguments

·         The petitioner argued that they had meticulously complied with the specific directives issued by the High Court in the previous order dated 29.01.2009 by liquidating the unapproved investment from IEML and re-investing it in a scheduled bank under Section 11(5) within the permitted timeframe.

·         It was contended that since the High Court had explicitly ruled that the fresh application would serve as an entire substitute for the original application and would date back to 22.05.2007, the application must be evaluated as a single cohesive unit covering all the assessment years (AY 2008-2009 to AY 2010-2011).

·         The petitioner maintained that the Revenue could not unilaterally isolate Assessment Year 2008-2009 for rejection once the underlying statutory defect, which applied to the block application as a whole, was legally cured and accepted.

Respondent’s Arguments

·         The Revenue supported the impugned order passed by the Director General of Income Tax (Exemptions).

·         The respondent argued that since the actual compliance and shift of funds into an authorized scheduled bank occurred on 31.03.2009, the alignment with Section 11(5) was only achieved during the period corresponding to the subsequent assessment years.

·         Therefore, the Revenue contended that the exemption was rightly restricted to AY 2009-2010 and AY 2010-2011, and properly denied for AY 2008-2009 as the funds remained in an unapproved mode for that financial cycle.

Court Order / Findings

·         The Division Bench of the Hon'ble Delhi High Court, comprising Justice Badar Durrez Ahmed and Justice V.K. Jain, observed that a plain reading of the previous court order left no room for ambiguity. The Revenue’s counsel had explicitly conceded in the first round that the non-compliance with Section 11(5) was the only objection against the petitioner.

·         The Court highlighted the explicit mandate of the previous order: upon compliance, the fresh application was to be treated as an absolute substitute for the original application and was legally deemed to have been filed on 22.05.2007.

·         The Bench held that because the petitioner successfully cured the defect within eight weeks, it was legally impermissible for the Director General of Income Tax (Exemptions) to break the continuity of the application block and deny the exemption specifically for the assessment year 2008-2009.

·         Consequently, the High Court set aside the impugned order to the extent that it denied the benefit for AY 2008-2009. The Court allowed the writ petition without an order as to costs and directed the respondents to grant the Section $10(23C)(iv)$ exemption for the assessment year 2008-2009 as well.

Important Clarification

This judgment establishes an important procedural precedent: when a High Court allows an assessee to cure a statutory investment defect through a "substitute application" that dates back to the original filing date, the Revenue cannot bypass the judicial directive by executing a split-year assessment. Once the defect is cured within the judicially permitted timeline, the compliance operates retrospectively across the entire block of assessment years contemplated under the original application. The Revenue cannot treat the date of actual rectification as a dividing line to block exemptions for earlier years covered by the substitute mechanism.

Section Involved

·         Section 10(23C)(iv) of the Income Tax Act, 1961 (Inclusion of income received by any fund or institution established for charitable purposes).

·         Section 11(5) of the Income Tax Act, 1961 (Prescribed forms and modes of investing or depositing the accumulated funds of a charitable trust or institution).

 

Link to download the order - https://delhihighcourt.nic.in/app/case_number_pdf/2010:DHC:2640-DB/BDA11052010CW29692010.pdf 


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