July 2025

Commissioner Of Gift Tax vs N.S. Getti Chettiar

In a landmark judgment on Hindu Undivided Family (HUF) taxation, the Supreme Court of India definitively ruled that a partition within an HUF, even where the karta receives a disproportionately smaller share of the assets, does not constitute a taxable ‘gift’ under the Gift Tax Act, 1958. The Court’s analysis hinges on the fundamental principle of Hindu law that a coparcener’s interest in joint family property is nebulous and unquantified until the very act of partition crystallizes it. Consequently, the karta’s acceptance of a lesser allotment cannot be construed as a ‘transfer’ of a pre-existing definite share. This decision reinforces the distinct nature of partition from conventional transfers and provides crucial clarity on the application of gift tax provisions to traditional Hindu family arrangements, safeguarding them from being recharacterized as taxable dispositions.

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Indo-Aden Salt Mfg. & Trading Co. (P) Ltd. vs Commissioner Of Income Tax

INDO-ADEN SALT MFG. & TRADING CO. (P) LTD. vs. CIT (SC): A landmark reaffirmation of the assessee’s sacrosanct duty of full and true disclosure of all primary facts under section 147(a) of the Income Tax Act, 1961. The Supreme Court decisively upheld the validity of reassessment proceedings spanning eight assessment years (1955-56 to 1962-63). The crux of the Revenue’s case was the assessee’s omission to disclose that its salt pans, reservoirs, and channels were predominantly (93%) earthworks, not masonry structures, a material fact directly impacting the admissible depreciation rate. By claiming depreciation applicable to masonry, the assessee secured excessive allowances, leading to income escapement. The Court, invoking settled precedent, held that the nature of the asset’s construction was a primary fact, the non-disclosure of which validly triggered reassessment jurisdiction. The judgment underscores that the burden of disclosure is absolute and cannot be shifted by claiming the ITO could have investigated further. This ruling fortifies the principle that reassessment is justified where material facts embedded in disclosed evidence are not explicitly brought to the assessing officer’s attention, causing under-assessment.

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Ravi Agrawal vs The Union Of India And Another

In the landmark case of Ravi Agrawal v. Union of India, the Supreme Court upheld the constitutional validity of the restrictive condition in Section 80DD of the Income Tax Act, 1961, and the corresponding LIC Jeevan Aadhar Policy, which allows annuity or lump sum payments to a disabled dependant only after the death of the parent/guardian. The petitioner, filing a Public Interest Litigation, argued this amounted to discrimination under Article 14, as it deprived disabled persons of benefits during their caregiver’s lifetime, unlike other insurance policies. The Court, however, ruled that the provision represents a reasonable classification. It is specifically tailored to address the distinct concern of parents/guardians about securing the future maintenance of their disabled wards after their own death. The legislative history confirms this was a conscious policy choice to provide posthumous financial security, not immediate annuity. The Court declined to mandate an amendment, reinforcing judicial restraint in fiscal policy matters where a valid rationale exists.

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Commissioner Of Gift Tax vs P. Gheevarghese, Travancore Timber& Products

In this landmark gift tax judgment, the Supreme Court clarified two critical issues: (1) Goodwill transferred as part of business assets to a partnership is not a separate taxable gift when shares in assets are proportionate to capital contributions, rejecting the Revenue’s piecemeal approach. (2) The exemption under Section 5(1)(xiv) of the Gift Tax Act requires proof that the gift was integrally connected to and made bona fide for business purposes, not merely during business operations. The Court emphasized that personal motives, such as family advancement, do not satisfy the statutory test, aligning with principles of commercial expediency but requiring concrete evidence of business necessity.

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KERALA STATE CO-OPERATIVE AGRICULTURAL AND RURAL DEVELOPMENT BANK LTD KSCARDB vs THE ASSESSING OFFICER, TRIVANDRUM AND ORS

In a landmark ruling on co-operative taxation, the Supreme Court clarified the distinction between co-operative societies and co-operative banks for Section 80P deductions. The appellant, Kerala State Co-operative Agricultural and Rural Development Bank Ltd., an apex society lending exclusively to member co-operative societies, sought deduction under Section 80P(2)(a)(i). The revenue authorities denied it, citing Section 80P(4), which excludes ‘co-operative banks.’ The Court, applying the Mavilayi Service Co-operative Bank precedent, held that the appellant is not a ‘co-operative bank’ as it does not engage in ‘banking business’—specifically, accepting deposits from the public—as defined under the Banking Regulation Act 1949. Its activities as a development bank, governed by state co-operative laws, do not bring it within the exclusionary ambit of Section 80P(4). This judgment reinforces a substance-over-form approach, ensuring that co-operative societies providing credit to members without public deposit-taking remain eligible for tax deductions, promoting rural and agricultural development.

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Calcutta State Transport Corporation vs Commissioner Of Income Tax

In a landmark ruling on tax exemptions for statutory bodies, the Supreme Court of India has clarified the stringent criteria for qualifying as a ‘local authority’ under the Income Tax Act 1961. The case involved the Calcutta State Transport Corporation (CSTC), which sought exemption under Section 10(20) by claiming ‘local authority’ status. The Court, applying the definitive tests from Union of India vs. R.C. Jain (1981), held that CSTC—a road transport service provider—lacked the essential characteristics of a local authority: it had no popular representation, its functions were commercial (not governmental like municipal services), and it lacked powers of taxation or compulsion. The decision reinforces that mere statutory creation or public service delivery is insufficient; entities must mirror municipal bodies in function, autonomy, and democratic accountability to avail tax exemptions. This judgment provides critical guidance for assessing the tax status of state-owned corporations and prevents overbroad claims of exemption, ensuring fiscal clarity for the Revenue.

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Dhandhania Kedia & Co. vs Commissioner Of Income Tax

In this landmark judgment, the Supreme Court of India clarifies the taxation of distributed accumulated profits upon company liquidation under the Indian Income Tax Act 1922. The case involves a taxpayer from Udaipur (later Rajasthan) who received profits from a liquidator, arguing non-taxability due to the absence of prior income tax laws in the region. The Court decisively interprets Section 2(6A)(c), holding that ‘six previous years’ refers to the company’s six accounting years immediately preceding liquidation, not the assessment-linked definition in Section 2(11). This ruling reinforces legislative intent to prevent tax avoidance through liquidation distributions, ensuring such profits are taxed as dividend, subject to the six-year look-back period. The decision underscores principles of statutory interpretation, emphasizing context over rigid definitions, and has significant implications for cross-border and historical tax liabilities in merged territories.

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Commissioner Of Income Tax vs Canara Bank

In this landmark judgment, the Supreme Court of India, comprising Justices A.K. Sikri and Ashok Bhushan, delivered a decisive ruling on the interpretation of TDS exemptions under the Income Tax Act 1961. The case involved the Commissioner of Income Tax challenging the non-deduction of tax at source by Canara Bank on interest payments to the New Okhla Industrial Development Authority (NOIDA). The Revenue argued that NOIDA, established under the Uttar Pradesh Industrial Area Development Act 1976 via a notification, did not qualify as a ‘corporation established by a State Act’ under the exemption notification dated 22.10.1970. The Court, applying principles of statutory interpretation, held that the distinction between ‘established by’ and ‘established under’ is not material in this context. It affirmed the decisions of the lower authorities, ruling that NOIDA is a statutory corporation established by the State Act, thereby exempting banks from TDS obligations under Section 194A. This judgment clarifies the scope of TDS exemptions for statutory bodies and reinforces a contextual approach to interpreting tax provisions, providing significant relief to financial institutions and development authorities.

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