IN THE ITAT MUMBAI BENCH ‘D’
Rainy Investments (P.) Ltd.
v.
Assistant Commissioner of Income-tax
IT APPEAL NO. 5491 (MUM.) OF 2011
[ASSESSMENT YEAR 2008-09]
JANUARY 16, 2013
Share application money’, to the extent it is actually so, so that it only represents amount/s paid by way of application for allotment of shares, the same cannot be regarded as an investment in shares, or an asset (or asset class) yielding tax-free income, and neither is it capable of yielding any tax-free income. The same would, therefore, in our clear view, have to be excluded in working out the disallowance u/r. 8D. Further, though the Revenue has not disputed the sums reflected as ‘share application money’ in the assessee’s balance-sheet, the AO, to whom the matter is to be in any case restored for working out the disallowance by excluding the same, shall, in the set aside proceedings, also examine the veracity of the assessee’s claim with regard to the same being ‘share application money’. This is in view of the pertinent questions raised by the Bench in its respect, to which no satisfactory answer was forthcoming during hearing, nor – to be fair to the ld. AR, could possibly be in the absence of any details on record. We state so as the ‘share application money’ would ordinarily only be ‘public money’ and, thus, except perhaps where toward shares of private limited companies, subject to stringent procedure, as is generally in place for such funds. We may further clarify that the exclusion of ‘share application money’, as opined by us, is not in the least for the reason that it did not yield any tax-free income for the relevant year, but for the reason that it is incapable of any such income. The same is only in the nature of application (offer) money, which would though, on allotment, get adjusted against the cost of the said shares, and only whereupon any rights in the investee company inure to the allottee. No rights, not even inchoate, in the share capital of the issuing company arise on the payment of the share application money, irrespective of the time period for which it may outstand. The same may at best yield interest income (for which a special procedure though has to be followed by the company concerned), which is in any case taxable, so that there is no scope for application of sec. 14A thereon.
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