KPMG FLASH NEWS income' under Section 28(va) of the Act

KPMG FLASH NEWS
KPMG IN INDIA
Slump sale of taxpayer’s business is taxable as capital gains and not 'business
income' under Section 28(va) of the Act
29 June 2012
Background
Recently, the Delhi Bench of the Income Tax
Appellate Tribunal (the Tribunal), in the case of Mrs.
1
Sangeeta Wij (the taxpayer), held that the
consideration received for slump sale of business as
a going concern will be considered as a capital
receipt chargeable to tax as capital gains and not as
a compensation for ‘not carrying out any activity in
relation to any business’ which is chargeable to tax as
business income under Section 28(va) of the Incometax Act, 1961 (the Act).
•
The proprietary concern was taken over by ICTSD Engineering Consultants Pvt. Ltd. (the
purchaser) with effect from 31 October 2007 for a
consideration of INR 12 million vide agreement
dated 4 December 2007 (the Agreement).
•
The purchaser is a joint venture between the
taxpayer and Shri K.K. Kapila, CMD, ICT Pvt. Ltd.
•
Para 11 of the Agreement provided that the
taxpayer shall work exclusively as a whole-time
director of the company for a minimum period of 5
years and that the taxpayer shall not carry out any
activity related to business of the purchaser,
however, the taxpayer shall be at liberty to do any
business after quitting or leaving the purchaser.
•
The taxpayer treated the consideration as capital
receipts chargeable to tax under the head of
income of ‘capitals gains’ and offered the same for
tax accordingly.
Facts of the case
•
•
The taxpayer is an M.Tech (Structures) from IIT,
Delhi specialising in designing of structures,
Public Health Engineering and Fire Protection
Services and has completed 500 projects over 11
years and having experience of 25 years.
The taxpayer was the proprietor of S.D.
Engineering Consultants (Proprietary concern)
and was engaged in providing consultancy in Civil
Engineering.
________________
1
ACIT v. Mrs. Sangeeta Wij (ITA No. 4274(Del)2011 for Assessment Year:
2008-09)
© 2012 KPMG, an Indian Partnership and a member firm of the KPMG network of independent member firms affiliated with KPMG International Cooperative
(“KPMG International”), a Swiss entity. All rights reserved.
•
According to the Assessing Officer (AO) the
consideration was received for ‘not carrying out any
activity in relation to any business’ chargeable to tax
as profits and gains of business under Section 28(va)
of the Act.
•
The Commissioner of Income-tax Appeals [CIT(A)]
deleted the addition made by the AO contending that
the consideration received should be treated as capital
receipts chargeable to capitals gains tax.
any activity in relation to the business purchased
by the purchaser which as per Section 28(va)(a)
of the Act shall be chargeable to tax under the
head ‘profits and gains of business or profession’.
•
Tribunal’s ruling
•
The AO was wrong in observing that the taxpayer
had received ‘compensation’.
•
The AO was wrong in observing that the taxpayer
had
received
compensation
for
the
discontinuance of the proprietary concern.
•
The consideration has been received for the
takeover of the assets and liabilities of the
business of the proprietary concern as a going
concern on the closure of the business on 31
October
2007,
inclusive
of
goodwill,
empanelment, receivables, work in progress and
all other rights and entitlements. This fact has not
been disapproved by the AO.
•
The AO read the Agreement providing that the
taxpayer was to work exclusively as a whole time
Director of the Purchaser as a circumstance
going against the claim of the taxpayer, ignoring
the fact that a whole time employment entails
refraining from engaging in any other activity
related to the business of the Company.
•
The genuineness of the Agreement is beyond any
doubt, even as per the AO.
•
The Agreement could have either been rejected
in totality or accepted in its entirety.
•
Despite the lucid contents of the Agreement, the
AO tried to re-write the Agreement, which is
wholly impermissible in law.
•
The case is covered by the Proviso (i) to Section
28(va) of the Act. The taxpayer has transferred
right to carry on business and that being so,
application of the main Section 28(va)(a) of the
Act is foreclosed and forbidden, by the use of the
words ‘shall not’ in the Proviso.
•
There is no merit in grievance raised by the tax
department and therefore, the tax department’s
appeal is rejected.
Issue before the Tribunal
•
Whether the consideration received by the taxpayer is
liable to tax as capital gains or business income under
Section 28(va) of the Act?
Taxpayer’s contentions
•
The Agreement provided for as under :


•
•
The purchaser had taken over the assets and
liabilities of the proprietary concern as a going
concern, inclusive of Goodwill, on the close of
business as on 31 October 2007 for a total
consideration of INR 12 million.
The taxpayer would work exclusively as a wholetime Director of the purchaser for a minimum
period of 5 years.
The AO has made the addition as a result of complete
misreading of the Agreement.
The present case squarely falls under the Proviso (i) to
Section 28(va) of the Act, where-under, any sum
received on account of transfer of the right to carry on
any business is not taxable under Section 28(va) of
the Act, the same being taxable under the head
‘capital gains’.
Tax department’s contentions
•
The net worth of the proprietary concern being of INR
4,73,725/- as on 31 October 2007 gave rise to a
goodwill of INR 11.52 million which had been grossly
over-valued and not been substantiated by the
financial statement of the proprietorship concern.
•
Para 11 of the Agreement provided that the taxpayer
shall not carry out any activity in any other business
directly or indirectly related to the business of the
purchaser which made it evident that the
compensation of INR 12 million was not a capital
receipt liable for capital gains as claimed by the
taxpayer, but compensation was not for carrying out
The consideration is received for discontinuation
of the taxpayer’s business.
© 2012 KPMG, an Indian Partnership and a member firm of the KPMG network of independent member firms affiliated with KPMG International Cooperative
(“KPMG International”), a Swiss entity. All rights reserved.
Our comments
The Tribunal has re-confirmed the principle that the
authorities are not allowed to rewrite the documents. It is
also confirmed that unless the facts suggest,
consideration for sale of business cannot be arbitrarily
treated as compensation for non-compete taxable under
Section 28(va) of the Act.
© 2012 KPMG, an Indian Partnership and a member firm of the KPMG network of independent member firms affiliated with KPMG International Cooperative
(“KPMG International”), a Swiss entity. All rights reserved.
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(“KPMG International”), a Swiss entity. All rights reserved.