Introduction
The Supreme Courtās judgment in Jeyar Consultant & Investment Pvt. Ltd. vs. Commissioner of Income Tax (2015) 373 ITR 0087 (SC) is a landmark ruling on the interpretation of Section 80HHC of the Income Tax Act, 1961, which provides deductions for profits derived from export business. The core issue was whether an assessee is entitled to a deduction under Section 80HHC when the export segment of its business incurs a loss, even if the overall business (including domestic operations) shows a net profit. The Court, affirming the High Courtās decision, held that the deduction is contingent upon the existence of positive profit from export operations. This case commentary delves into the facts, legal reasoning, and implications of this judgment, emphasizing the strict statutory interpretation of export incentives.
Facts of the Case
The appellant, Jeyar Consultant & Investment Pvt. Ltd., was engaged in the export of marine products and also in financial consultancy and trading in equity shares. For the Assessment Year 1989-1990, the Assessing Officer initially denied the deduction under Section 80HHC, but the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT) set aside this order and directed the Assessing Officer to grant relief. On remand, the Assessing Officer found that the appellant had not earned any profits from the export of marine products; in fact, it had suffered a loss from that segment. Consequently, the Assessing Officer held that the deduction under Section 80HHC was nil, as per Section 80AB, which limits deductions to the amount of income included in the total income.
The appellant challenged this order before the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals), who dismissed the appeal on the ground that an order giving effect to the ITATās direction was not appealable under Section 246 of the Act. The ITAT upheld the Assessing Officerās order, leading the appellant to seek a reference to the High Court under Section 256(2). The High Court answered the questionāwhether the Tribunal was right in holding that the deduction under Section 80HHC was nilāagainst the assessee, stating that the deduction is only for profits derived from export, and in the absence of profits, no benefit is allowable. The Supreme Court granted leave and heard the appeal.
Reasoning of the Supreme Court
The Supreme Courtās reasoning centered on the precise language of Section 80HHC and its interplay with Section 80AB. The Court emphasized that the deduction under Section 80HHC(1) is for āprofits derived by the assessee from the export of such goods or merchandise.ā The term āprofitā in this context mandates a positive figure. The Court relied on its earlier precedents in IPCA Laboratory Ltd. vs. Deputy Commissioner of Income Tax (2004) 12 SCC 742 and A.M. Moosa vs. Commissioner of Income Tax (2007) 9 SCR 831 to clarify that the computation of profits under Section 80HHC(3) must account for losses.
The Court analyzed Section 80HHC(3)(b), which applies when the business does not consist exclusively of exports. The formula prescribed is: Profit of the Business Ć Export Turnover / Total Turnover. The Court noted that the term āprofit of the businessā in this formula refers to the profits computed under the head āProfits and gains of business or professionā as per the Income Tax Act. This computation must include all business activitiesāboth export and domestic. If the export segment shows a loss, that loss must be set off against profits from domestic business to determine the net profit. Only if the net result is a positive profit after such set-off is the deduction under Section 80HHC admissible.
The Court rejected the appellantās argument that the formula should be applied mechanically without considering the export loss. The appellant contended that even if the export business suffered a loss, the overall profit from the business (including domestic income) should be used in the formula, thereby yielding a deduction. The Court held that this interpretation would defeat the purpose of Section 80HHC, which is to incentivize profitable export earnings. The deduction is not a blanket benefit for earning foreign exchange; it is specifically for āprofits derived from export.ā If the export segment itself is loss-making, there are no profits to deduct.
The Court also addressed the CBDT Circular No. 564 dated 05.07.1990, which prescribed the formula: Profit of the Business Ć Export Turnover / Total Turnover. The Court clarified that this circular does not override the statutory requirement of computing profits as per the Act. The term āprofit of the businessā must be computed after setting off losses from export against profits from other business. The Court further noted that the appellantās domestic income included brokerage, dividend, and interest, which the Revenue argued should not be part of ātotal turnover.ā The Court agreed, citing legislative intent that ātotal turnoverā does not include receipts like brokerage, commission, or interest, as clarified in the Finance (No.2) Bill, 1991.
The Court distinguished the appellantās case from A.M. Moosa, where the assessee had both self-manufactured goods and trading goods, and the profits and losses from both trades were adjusted to arrive at a net profit. In the present case, the export segment was entirely loss-making, and the domestic income was not from business turnover but from passive sources like brokerage and interest. Therefore, the formula could not be applied to generate a deduction.
Finally, the Court upheld the High Courtās decision, reinforcing that Section 80AB governs the computation of deductions under Chapter VI-A. Section 80AB requires that the income eligible for deduction must be computed in accordance with the provisions of the Act before allowing the deduction. Since the export segment showed a loss, the income from that segment was nil, and consequently, the deduction under Section 80HHC was nil.
Conclusion
The Supreme Courtās judgment in Jeyar Consultant & Investment Pvt. Ltd. vs. Commissioner of Income Tax is a definitive interpretation of Section 80HHC, emphasizing that the deduction is strictly for profits derived from export operations. The Court clarified that losses from export business must be set off against profits from domestic business to determine net profit. If the export segment itself is loss-making, no deduction is allowable, even if the overall business shows a net profit. This ruling reinforces the revenueās stance on strict adherence to statutory language and ensures that export incentives are not misused to offset losses. The decision has significant implications for exporters, particularly those with diversified business activities, as it underscores the need to compute export profits accurately before claiming deductions.
