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The Commissioner Of Income Tax vs M/S Shahi Export House
2010 Latest Caselaw 3635 Del

Citation : 2010 Latest Caselaw 3635 Del
Judgement Date : 6 August, 2010

Delhi High Court
The Commissioner Of Income Tax vs M/S Shahi Export House on 6 August, 2010
Author: A.K.Sikri
*            IN THE HIGH COURT OF DELHI AT NEW DELHI
                        {ITA No. 106/2009}

%                            Judgment delivered on: August 6,2010


The Commissioner of Income Tax                     ....Appellant

                       Through    Ms. Prem Lata Bansal, Advocate

                   Versus

M/s Shahi Export House                             ....Respondent

                       Through    Mr.M.P.Rastogi and Mr.Deepak K.
                                  Malik, Advocates

CORAM:-

      HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE A.K. SIKRI
      HON'BLE MS. JUSTICE REVA KHETRAPAL

      1.     Whether Reporters of Local newspapers may be
             allowed to see the Judgment?
      2.     To be referred to the Reporter or not?
      3.     Whether the Judgment should be reported in the
             Digest?


A.K. SIKRI,J. (ORAL)

1. Admit.

2. The question which arises in this appeal is as under:-

"Whether ITAT was correct in law in allowing benefit of netting of interest to the assessee while computing deduction u/s 80HHC of the Act?"

3. We have heard the final arguments with the consent of

counsel for the parties.

4. It so happened that the assessee had earned interest on

Rs.14,24,027/- on certain fixed deposit receipts. The question that

arose was as to whether it has to be taken into consideration while

computing the benefit under Section 80HHC of the Income Tax Act

and netting of the interest is to be allowed by deducting the same

from the interest paid by the assessee on certain guarantees

made by him from banks.

5. Both the parties agree that the matter is covered by the

judgment of this court in Commissioner of Income Tax v. Shri Ram

Honda Power Equip; 289 ITR 475. It is the application of the legal

principle laid down in the said case, to the facts of this case, on

which there is an issue between the parties.

6. In Shri Ram Honda Power Equip (Supra) after a detailed

discussion on various aspects touching the interpretation of

Section 80HHC of the Income Tax Act, the court summarized the

conclusions in the following words:

"(i) In computing what the profits derived from exports for the purposes of section 80HHC(1) read with section 80HHC(3) are, the nexus test has to be applied to exclude that which does not partake of profits that can be said to have been derived from the business of exports.

(ii) In the specific context of clause (baa) of the Explanation to section 80HHC, while determining the "profits of the business", the Assessing Officer has to undertake a two-step exercise in the following sequence. He has to first "compute" the profits of the business under the head "Profits and gains of business or profession." In other words, he will have to compute business profits, in terms of the Act, by applying the provisions of sections 28 to 44 thereof.

(iii) In arriving at profits of the business by the above method, the Assessing Officer will exclude all such incomes which partake of the character of "income from other sources" which in any event are treated under sections 56 and 57 of the Act and are therefore not to be reckoned for the purposes of section 80HHC.

The Assessing Officer will apply the law as explained in the judgments of the Kerala High Court referred to above which have been affirmed by the hon'ble Supreme Court.

(iv) Where surplus funds are parked with the bank and interest is earned thereon it can only be categorized as income from other sources. This receipt merits separate treatment under section 56 of the Act which is outside the ring of profits and gins from business and profession. It goes entirely out of the reckoning for the purposes of section 80HHC.

(v) Interest earned on fixed deposits for the purposes of availing of credit facilities from the bank, does not have an immediate nexus with the export business and therefore has to necessarily be treated as income from other sources and not business income.

(vi) Once business income has been determined by applying accounting standards as well as the provisions contained in the Act, the assessee would be permitted to, in terms of section 37 of the Act, claim as deduction, expenditure laid out for the purposes of earning such business income.

(vii) In the second stage, the Assessing Officer will deduct from the profits of the business computed under the head "Profits and gains of business or profession" the following sums in order to arrive at the "profits of the business" for the purposes of section 80HHC(3):

(a) 90 per cent. Of any sum referred to in clauses (iiia), (iiib) and (iiic) of section 28 i.e., export incentives;

(b) 90 per cent of any receipts by way of brokerage, commission, interest, rent, charges or any other receipt of a similar nature included in such profits; and

(c) Profits of any branch, office, warehouse or any other establishment of the assessee situated outside India.

(viii) The word "interest" in clause (baa) of the Explanation connotes "net interest" and not "gross interest". Therefore, in deducting such interest, the Assessing Officer will take into account the net interest i.e., gross interest as reduced by expenditure incurred for earning such interest. The decision of the Special Bench

of the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal in Lalsons [2004] 8 ITR 25 (Delhi) to this effect is affirmed. In holding as above, we differ from the judgments of the Punjab and Haryana High Court in Rani Paliwal [2004] 268 ITR 220 and the Madras High Court in Chinnapandi [2006]282 ITR 389 and affirm the ruling of the Special Bench of the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal in Lalsons [2004] 8 ITR 25 (Delhi).

(ix) Where, as a result of the computation of profits and gains of business and profession, the Assessing Officer treats the interest receipt as business income, then deduction should be permissible, in terms of Explanation (baa) of the net interest, i.e., the gross interest less that expenditure incurred for the purposes of earning such interest. The nexus between obtaining the loan and paying interest thereon (laying out the expenditure by way of interest) for the purpose of earning the interest on the fixed deposit, to draw an analogy from section 37, will require to be shown by the assessee for application of the netting principle."

7. A conjoint reading of conclusions No.1,4,5 and 6 and

particularly No.5 would clearly demonstrate that only in those

cases where interest earned on fixed deposits have an immediate

nexus with the export business would be treated as income from

business and interest earned on fixed deposits which does not

have an immediate nexus with the export business, it would be

treated as income from other sources. The court opined that when

the interest was earned on the fixed deposits for the purposes of

availing of credit facilities from the bank, it did not have such a

nexus with the export business and therefore had to be

necessarily treated as income from other sources and not the

business income.

8. Thus, insofar as earning of interest on fixed deposit is

concerned, the determinative test is as to whether such interest

has "immediate nexus" with the export business.

9. In the present case, the interest is earned from certain fixed

deposit receipts. These fixed deposit receipts were not, as a result

of some surplus funds available to the assessee which was parked

with the bank and the interest earned thereon. It has been found,

as a fact, that the money was deposited in the bank and the fixed

deposit receipt was taken by the assessee for the purposes of

giving bank guarantees to enable the assessee to procure quota

for export. Certain other fixed deposit receipts were of EEFC

Account. Such receipts were deposited with the Apparel Export

Promotion Council (AEPC) against guarantees being legal pre-

condition for procurement of quota in the absence of which no

business is done. It clearly implies that without such quota, which

was ultimately procured by the assessee, no export of garment

could be made. This quota is obtained from AEPC and AEPC

sanctions the quota only when fixed deposit receipts are pledged

with it in the form of a bank guarantee. It is because of the reason

that the exporter is required to meet various conditions prescribed

for allowing the quota. One of the conditions is to make actual

exports to the extent of quota. If the exports are deficient then

penalties can be imposed and to safeguard that, guarantees are

obtained. Likewise, fixed deposit receipts on EEFC account also

relate to the export.

10. It would, thus, be clear that furnishing of these fixed deposit

receipts is an obligation, and is a pre-condition for obtaining

export quota in the absence of which exports cannot be made. In

such a scenario, the furnishing of these bank guarantees is a

direct nexus with the export activities of the assessee and interest

earned thereupon would clearly be treated as having an

immediate nexus with the export business.

11. We are, therefore, of the opinion that CIT appeal as well as

Income Tax Appellate Tribunal has rightly applied the principle laid

down in Shri Ram Honda Power Equip (Supra). It may be

useful to mention that in Shri Ram Honda Power Equip (Supra)

this court specifically affirmed the judgment of Special Bench of

the Tribunal in Lal Sons Enterprises v. Commissioner of

Income Tax; 2004 (89) ITD 25 (Delhi) and particularly the

following observations which were extracted by this court as

under:-

"if the interest received is found to have a nexus with the business, still it remains to be excluded from the profits of the business by virtue of Explanation (baa)(1), but the claim is that the quantum of such interest income to be excluded must be determined in accordance with the computation provisions relating to business by allowing expenditure by way of interest which bears a nexus with the interest receipt. The computation provisions included section 37(1) under which any expenditure incurred or laid wholly and exclusively for the purpose of the business is to be allowed as a deduction. Therefore, any expenditure incurred which has a connection or nexus with interest receipt has to be allowed as a deduction and only the balance can be excluded from the business profits."

12. Once this positions is accepted, as per the formulation of

principle laid down in Shri Ram Honda Power Equip (supra) itself,

netting has to be allowed by the adjustment of aforesaid interest

received against the interest paid by the assessee to the bank on

the credit facilities availed as is clear from the conclusion No.8 in

the judgment.

13. We, accordingly, concur with the aforesaid view of the ITAT

and thus answer the question in favour of the assessee and

against the revenue, as a result this appeal is dismissed.

(A.K. SIKRI) JUDGE

(REVA KHETRAPAL) JUDGE AUGUST 06, 2010 sv

 
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