Case Law
Subject : Legal - Income Tax
The judgment, delivered by Justices
Tashi Rabstan
and
Puneet Gupta
, arose from an income tax appeal (ITA No.1/2022) challenging the computation of capital gains arising from the sale of shares by Dr.
The dispute pertained to the financial year 1997-98. Dr.
The Assessing Officer (AO), however, disputed this calculation. The AO's primary contention was that the value of the land (measuring 225.85 kanals) on which the company's hotel building stood should be excluded from the valuation of shares because the land was not owned by
Aggrieved by the assessment order, the assessee appealed to the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) [CIT(A)]. The CIT(A) sided with the assessee, deleting the addition. The CIT(A) reasoned that M/s.
The revenue challenged the CIT(A)'s order before the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT). The Tribunal dismissed the revenue's appeal, upholding the CIT(A)'s decision. The ITAT further held that the reopening of the assessment was not in accordance with law and also allowed the cross-objections filed by the assessee. The Tribunal emphasized that the Assessing Officer had himself applied the Fair Market Value of assets (specifically buildings) in the assessment, validating the use of FMV over book value or valuation methods under the Wealth Tax Rules (like Rule 1D), which the revenue had suggested. The ITAT reiterated that the fair market value, as defined under Section 2(22B) and relevant for computing cost of acquisition under Section 55(2)(b)(ii), is the price an asset would fetch in the open market on 01.04.1981.
The Principal Commissioner of Income Tax then filed the present appeal before the High Court of
The High Court, after hearing arguments from both sides, found itself in agreement with the CIT(A) and the ITAT. The court noted that M/s.
The bench found the AO's action of excluding the land value from the company's asset valuation for share valuation purposes to be "apparently erroneous and unsustainable in law." A significant point highlighted by the court was the inconsistency in the revenue's approach – the AO had excluded the land value from
The judgment emphasized:
> "We are also in agreement with the learned Tribunal that the lease hold interest in the land is an asset of the company and is capable of valuation; as such the same is to be included in the value of asset of M/s. Jyoti Private Limited so as to determine the fair market value of shares held by the assessee as well as other shareholders."
The court further affirmed that for capital gains computation under Section 45, the relevant value is the fair market value of the asset (shares, determined by the underlying assets' FMV as per Section 55(2)(b)(ii) read with Section 2(22B)), not the book value or valuation under Wealth Tax Rules, especially when the AO had already applied the FMV concept for other assets. The long unexpired lease period supported the view that the leasehold interest held significant value that could not be ignored.
Concluding that the impugned order of the Tribunal was "well defined and reasoned," the High Court found "no substantial question of law" arising for its consideration.
Consequently, the appeal filed by the Principal Commissioner of Income Tax was dismissed. This ruling reinforces the principle that the economic reality of control and value derived from long-term leasehold interests must be considered when valuing the shares of a private company for capital gains tax purposes.
Bench: Hon’ble Mr. Justice Tashi Rabstan , Judge and Hon’ble Mr. Justice Puneet Gupta , Judge Case: ITA No.1/2022 Pronounced: 02.03.2024
#IncomeTax #CapitalGains #TaxLaw #JammuandKashmirHighCourt
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