{"id":18035,"date":"2018-03-03T14:37:51","date_gmt":"2018-03-03T09:07:51","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/itatonline.org\/archives\/?p=18035"},"modified":"2018-03-03T14:37:51","modified_gmt":"2018-03-03T09:07:51","slug":"cornerstone-property-investments-pvt-ltd-vs-ito-itat-bangalore-s-68-bogus-share-capital-share-premium-received-can-be-assessed-as-undisclosed-income-if-a-directors-are-allotted-shares-at-par-while","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/itatonline.org\/archives\/cornerstone-property-investments-pvt-ltd-vs-ito-itat-bangalore-s-68-bogus-share-capital-share-premium-received-can-be-assessed-as-undisclosed-income-if-a-directors-are-allotted-shares-at-par-while\/","title":{"rendered":"Cornerstone Property Investments Pvt. Ltd vs. ITO (ITAT Bangalore)"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>6.1 The only issue for consideration and adjudication on merits before us in  the addition of Rs.49.50 Crores shown as &ldquo;Share Premium&rdquo; as &lsquo;Income from other  sources&rsquo;. It was observed by the Assessing Officer that a company by name, M\/s.  Walden Properties Pvt. Ltd., had invested an amount of Rs.50 Crores and in lieu  thereof the assessee had issued 5 lakh shares of face value of Rs.10 per share.  Therefore, the amount of Rs.50 Crores represents Rs.50 lakhs of share capital  and Rs.49.50 Crores as share premium @ Rs.990 per share. For the detailed  reasons in the order of assessment for Assessment Year 2008-09, the Assessing  Officer held the aforesaid transaction to be a conduit as part of a layering  process and held the said premium amount of Rs.49.50 Crores as income of the  assessee under the head &ldquo;Income from other sources.&rdquo; On appeal, the learned CIT  (Appeals) upheld the Assessing Officer&rsquo;s view in the matter and the assessee is  now before us in the present appeal.<\/p>\n<p>  6.2 In the reasons recorded by the Assessing Officer for issue of notice  under Section 148 of the Act, it has been mentioned that an amount of Rs.50  Crores intended for some illegal payments has been routed through various  layers of companies and the assessee is one such conduit in the layering process.  As part of the layering process, the assessee had received an amount of Rs.50  Crores from M\/s. Walden Properties Investment Pvt. Ltd., @ Rs.1,000 per share  as against the face value of Rs.10 per share. In the order of assessment, the  Assessing Officer examined the issue from the prerspective of procedures and  principles, from the angle of the investor company and the recipient company  (i.e. the assessee in the case on hand) and held the transaction to be not a  genuine one and added the premium amount of Rs.49.50 Crores to the income of  the assessee.<\/p>\n<p>  6.3 From the submissions put forth, the gist of the assessee&#8217;s contentions  are that;<\/p>\n<p>  (i) The said transaction is a genuine, bona fide transaction, as evident by  the fact that the entire transaction has been through regular banking channels  and is properly documented.<\/p>\n<p>  (ii) The source of funds and identity of the payee has been established;<\/p>\n<p>  (iii) How much premium should be charged on the issue of share capital is in  the domain of the decision making of the assessee company and Revenue  authorities cannot dictate as to how much premium can be charged on the shares  issued;<\/p>\n<p>  (iv) Since Revenue has accepted the transaction of investment in the hands  of the investor, i.e. M\/s. Walden Properties Investment Pvt. Ltd., therefore  the addition of Rs.49.50 Crores made in the hands of the assessee is untenable.<\/p>\n<p>  (v) It is settled principle, upheld by the Hon&#8217;ble    Apex Court, that bogus share transactions cannot  be added in the hands of the company in which the investment is made and  therefore, the action of the Assessing Officer is bad in law.<\/p>\n<p>  (vi) The provisions of Sec. 56(1)(viib) has been introduced by Finance Act,  2012 w.e.f. 1.4.2013 and do not apply to Assessment Year 2008-09, i.e. the year  under appeal in the case on hand.<\/p>\n<p>  6.4 At the outset, it needs to be mentioned that the argument of the  assessee that the provisions of Sec.56(1)(viib) of the Act does not apply to  the case on hand for the year under consideration as it has been introduced by  Finance Act, 2012 w.e.f. 1.4.2013 is a misplaced one. From a reading of the  order of assessment, it is clear that the Assessing Officer has invoked the  provisions of Sec. 68 of the Act. This leads us to the question of whether the  provisions of Sec. 68 of the Act can be invoked for the nature of transactions  involved in the case, where sums of money are credited in the name of share  premium. This question has been addressed by the Hon&#8217;ble Calcutta High Court in  the case of <a href=\"http:\/\/itatonline.org\/archives\/pragati-financial-management-pvt-ltd-vs-cit-calcutta-high-court-bogus-share-capital-mere-fact-that-payment-was-received-by-cheque-or-that-the-applicants-were-companies-borne-on-the-file-of-the-regist\/\">Pragati Financial Management Pvt. Ltd. Vs. CIT<\/a> in C.A. 887 &amp;  998 of 2016 and others dt.7.3.2017. In its order (supra) on the issue of  whether enquiry under Section 68 of the Act can be carried out for examining  the genuineness of the share premium transaction, the Hon&#8217;ble High Court held  that Sec. 68 of the Act can be invoked to conduct enquiry on the genuineness of  share premium transactions. At paras 5 to 15 thereof, the Hon&#8217;ble High Court  held as under :<\/p>\n<p>  <em>&ldquo; 5. The direction for inquiry, as contained in the<\/em> <em>order of  the C.I.T., is essentially a step towards charging<\/em> <em>the receipts  reflected as share capital issued at premium<\/em> <em>to income tax as income  of the assessee of that previous<\/em> <em>year in the event the assessing  officer remained<\/em> <em>unsatisfied with explanation of the assessee given  after<\/em> <em>conducting the inquiry in the manner provided in the order<\/em> <em>of  the C.I.T. The assessee preferred an appeal before the<\/em> <em>Income Tax  Appellate Tribunal against this order of the<\/em> <em>Commissioner issued under  Section 263 of the Act. It was<\/em> <em>contended before the Tribunal that the  order of the<\/em> <em>assessing officer was neither erroneous nor prejudicial  to<\/em> <em>the interest of the Revenue, and sufficient inquiry was<\/em> <em>made  by the assessing officer. The Tribunal dealt with<\/em> <em>several appeals  pertaining to the assessment years 2008&ndash;<\/em> <em>09 and 2009&ndash;10 relating to  different assessees and the<\/em> <em>appeal of Pragati was dismissed by a  common order<\/em> <em>passed on 4th November, 2015. Orders in respect of<\/em> <em>other  appellants were passed on different dates, but<\/em> <em>as we have already  observed, reasoning in all the orders<\/em> <em>of the Tribunal has been substantially  the same. The<\/em> <em>Tribunal, while dismissing the appeals followed an  earlier<\/em> <em>order by which a large number of cases on similar issues<\/em> <em>were  dismissed. The lead case on which reliance was<\/em> <em>placed by the Tribunal  was its own decision in the case<\/em> <em>of Subhalakshmi Vanijya Pvt. Ltd. Vs.  C.I.T. (I.T.A<\/em> <em>No.1104\/Kol\/2014), which was decided on 30th July<\/em> <em>2015,  pertaining to the assessment year 2009&ndash;10. In the<\/em> <em>case of Subhalakshmi  (supra), the Tribunal examined the<\/em> <em>question as to whether such an  inquiry was permissible or<\/em> <em>not. While addressing this question, the  Tribunal<\/em> <em>examined as to whether the assessing officer could<\/em> <em>examine  genuineness of transactions of receipt of<\/em> <em>share capital with premium  or not. If such a course was<\/em> <em>permissible, and upon completion of the  inquiry the<\/em> <em>assessee failed to satisfy the assessing officer on the<\/em> <em>identity and capacity of the subscribers and genuineness<\/em> <em>of  transactions, then, the Tribunal opined, addition under<\/em> <em>Section 68 of  the Act would have been called for. That<\/em> <em>would be the ultimate outcome  of the inquiry directed by<\/em> <em>the C.I.T., provided of course, the  assessing officer<\/em> <em>remained unsatisfied with the explanation furnished  by<\/em> <em>the assessees. Section 68 of the Act permits adding the<\/em> <em>sum  credited to the income of an assessee in situations<\/em> <em>specified under  that provision. For the assessment years<\/em> <em>concerned, Section 68 of the  Act read:-<\/em><\/p>\n<p>  <em>&ldquo;Where any sum is found<\/em> <em>credited in the books of an<\/em> <em>assessee  maintained for any<\/em> <em>previous year, and the assessee<\/em> <em>offers no  explanation about the<\/em> <em>nature and source thereof or the<\/em> <em>explanation  offered by him is not,<\/em> <em>in the opinion of the [Assessing]<\/em> <em>Officer,  satisfactory, the sum so<\/em> <em>credited may be charged to incometax<\/em> <em>as  the income of the assessee<\/em> <em>of that previous year.&rdquo;<\/em><\/p>\n<p>  <em>6. There was amendment to the aforesaid Section and<\/em> <em>following  provisos were added to Section 68 by the Finance<\/em> <em>Act, 2012, with  effect from 1st April, 2013:-<\/em><\/p>\n<p>  <em>&ldquo;Provided that where the<\/em> <em>assessee is a company (not being a<\/em> <em>company in which the public are<\/em> <em>substantially interested), and the  sum<\/em> <em>so credited consists of share<\/em> <em>application money, share  capital, share<\/em> <em>premium or any such amount by<\/em> <em>whatever name  called, any explanation<\/em> <em>offered by such assessee- company<\/em> <em>shall  be deemed to be not satisfactory,<\/em> <em>unless &ndash;<\/em><\/p>\n<p>  <em>(a) The person, being a resident<\/em> <em>in whose name such credit is<\/em> <em>recorded in the books of such<\/em> <em>company also offers an<\/em> <em>explanation  about the<\/em> <em>nature and source of such<\/em> <em>sum so credited; and<\/em><\/p>\n<p>  <em>(b) Such explanation in the<\/em> <em>opinion of the Assessing<\/em> <em>Officer  aforesaid has been<\/em> <em>found to be satisfactory:<\/em><\/p>\n<p>  <em>Provided further that nothing<\/em> <em>contained in the first proviso  shall apply<\/em> <em>if the person, in whose name the sum<\/em> <em>referred to  therein is recorded, is a<\/em> <em>venture capital fund or a venture capital<\/em> <em>company as referred to in clause (23FB)<\/em> <em>of section 10.&rdquo;<\/em><\/p>\n<p>  <em>7. Along with this provision, Section 56(2) (viib) and<\/em> <em>Sections  and 92BA and 92C were also amended by the<\/em> <em>Finance Act, 2012. These  amended provisions were<\/em> <em>incorporated in the statute book primarily to  introduce the<\/em> <em>concept of arm&rsquo;s length pricing in share transactions<\/em> <em>particularly in relation to closely held companies. For the<\/em> <em>purpose  of adjudication of these appeals, however,<\/em> <em>reproduction of these  provisions is not necessary. Since<\/em> <em>in course of hearing Mr. Abhratosh  Majumdar, learned<\/em> <em>counsel for the appellants brought to our notice  these<\/em> <em>amendments, we are referring to these provisions in this<\/em> <em>judgment.  In the decision of Subhalakshmi Vanijya Pvt.<\/em> <em>Ltd. (supra), the  Tribunal rejected the appeal of the<\/em> <em>assessee, inter alia, holding that  the amended provision<\/em> <em>of Section 68 of the Act was retrospective in  operation.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>  <em>The Tribunal specifically observed:-<\/em><\/p>\n<p>  <em>&ldquo;We, therefore, hold that<\/em> <em>though amendment to section 56<\/em> <em>(2)  (viib) is prospective, but to<\/em> <em>section 68 is retrospective. If that is<\/em> <em>the position, then the assessee is<\/em> <em>always obliged to prove the  receipt<\/em> <em>of share capital with premium etc.<\/em> <em>to the  satisfaction of the A.O,<\/em> <em>failure of which calls for addition<\/em> <em>U\/S.69.&rdquo;<\/em><\/p>\n<p>  <em>8. The Tribunal rejected the appeal of Pragati as<\/em> <em>well as the  appeals of other appellants before us, relying<\/em> <em>on the aforesaid  decision, and sustained the order of the<\/em> <em>C.I.T. directing inquiries,  as we have referred to earlier.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>  <em>9. Main thrust of the appellant&rsquo;s case is that the<\/em> <em>provisions  of Section 68 of the Act as amended could not<\/em> <em>be given retrospective  operation and if that position of<\/em> <em>law was accepted, then it was not  open to the C.I.T. to<\/em> <em>direct an enquiry to ascertain the source and<\/em> <em>genuineness of the sums being projected by the<\/em> <em>appellants as  capital receipts. Mr. Majumdar wants us<\/em> <em>to reject the finding of the  Tribunal that Section 68 of<\/em> <em>the Act, as amended, has retrospective  operation. In<\/em> <em>support of his submissions on this point, he has<\/em> <em>relied  on a Constitution Bench judgment of Supreme<\/em> <em>Court delivered in the  case of the Commissioner of<\/em> <em>Income Tax Vs. Vatika Township Pvt. Ltd.  [(2015) 1 SCC<\/em> <em>1]. Argument of the appellant is that in the event the<\/em> <em>amendment made to section 56 (2) of the Act is given<\/em> <em>prospective  effect along with provisos to Section 68,<\/em> <em>then sums received as share  capital or share premium<\/em> <em>would not be taxable in the light of  particulars already<\/em> <em>disclosed by each appellant, and the exercise  directed by<\/em> <em>the C.I.T. would be a futile or redundant exercise. Mr.<\/em> <em>Majumdar wants the appeal to be admitted on<\/em> <em>formulating the  following question, which, according to<\/em> <em>him, would involve substantial  question of law:-<\/em><\/p>\n<p>  <em>&ldquo;Whether in the facts and<\/em> <em>circumstances of the case and<\/em> <em>in  law, the learned Tribunal erred<\/em> <em>in holding that the proviso to<\/em> <em>Section  68 inserted by the Finance<\/em> <em>Act, 2012 with effect from <\/em><em>April<\/em> <em>1, 2013<\/em><em> would be applicable to<\/em> <em>Assessment Year<\/em> <em>2008 &ndash; 09?&rdquo;<\/em><\/p>\n<p>  <em>10. A Coordinate Bench of this Court in dealing with<\/em> <em>an almost  identically worded order of the C.I.T. in the<\/em> <em>case of Rajmandir  Estates Private Limited Vs.<\/em> <em>Principal Commissioner of Income Tax,  Kolkata &ndash; III,<\/em> <em>Kolkata, [G.A No.509 of 2016 with I.T.A.T No.113 of<\/em> <em>2016] found such order to be sustainable in law. In the<\/em> <em>judgment,  Their Lordships construed the provisions of<\/em> <em>section 68 as it was  before the aforesaid amendment<\/em> <em>being the law which prevailed in the  relevant previous<\/em> <em>year in that proceeding, and held, inter alia:-<\/em><\/p>\n<p>  <em>&ldquo;We are unable to accept the submission that<\/em> <em>any further  investigation is futile because the money<\/em> <em>was received on capital  account. The Special<\/em> <em>Bench in the case of Sophia Finance Ltd. (supra)<\/em> <em>opined that &ldquo;the use of the words &ldquo;any sum found<\/em> <em>credited in the  books&rdquo; in Section 68 indicates that<\/em> <em>the said section is very widely  worded and an<\/em> <em>Income-tax Officer is not precluded from making<\/em> <em>an  enquiry as to the true nature and source thereof<\/em> <em>even if the same is  credited as receipt of<\/em> <em>share application money. Mere fact that the<\/em> <em>payment was received by cheque or that the<\/em> <em>applicants were  companies, borne on the file of<\/em> <em>Registrar of Companies were held to be  neutral<\/em> <em>facts and did not prove that the transaction was<\/em> <em>genuine  as was held in the case of CIT &ndash;Vs&ndash; Nova<\/em> <em>Promoters and Finlease (P)  Ltd. (supra). Similar<\/em> <em>views were expressed by this Court in the case  of<\/em> <em>CIT &ndash;Vs&ndash; Precision Finance Pvt. Ltd. (supra). We<\/em> <em>need not  decide in this case as to whether the<\/em> <em>proviso to Section 68 of the  Income Tax Act is<\/em> <em>retrospective in nature. To that extent the question  is<\/em> <em>kept open. We may however point out that the<\/em> <em>Special Bench  of Delhi High Court in the case of<\/em> <em>Sophia Finance Ltd. (supra) held  that &ldquo;the ITO may<\/em> <em>even be justified in trying to ascertain the source  of<\/em> <em>depositor&rdquo;. Therefore, the submission that the<\/em> <em>source of  source is not a relevant enquiry does<\/em> <em>not appear to be correct. We  find no substance in<\/em> <em>the submission that the exercise of power under<\/em> <em>Section 263 by the Commissioner was an act of<\/em> <em>reactivating stale  issues.&rdquo;<\/em><\/p>\n<p>  <em>12. This judgment was carried up in appeal by the<\/em> <em>assessee  before the Hon&rsquo;ble Supreme Court by filing a<\/em> <em>petition for special  leave to appeal (Petition(s) for Special<\/em> <em>Leave to Appeal (c) &hellip; cc No<\/em> <em>(s) 22566-22567\/2016). On <\/em><em>9th   January, 2017<\/em><em>, the<\/em> <em>Hon&rsquo;ble Supreme Court was  pleased to dismiss the<\/em> <em>special leave petition finding no reason to  entertain the<\/em> <em>same. A copy of the order of the Hon&rsquo;ble Supreme Court<\/em> <em>has been made available to us by Mr. Nizamuddin,<\/em> <em>learned counsel  representing the Revenue.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>  <em>13. In that judgment, the Coordinate Bench had<\/em> <em>referred to  particulars of the assessee&rsquo;s account in<\/em> <em>detail. Reference was made  specifically to its subsisting<\/em> <em>share capital, quantum rise in share  capital and reserve<\/em> <em>and surplus on issue of share capital with high  premium<\/em> <em>during the relevant previous year. In this judgment, we<\/em> <em>do  not consider it necessary either to reproduce the<\/em> <em>particulars of  accounts of individual assessees or to refer<\/em> <em>to the manner in which  the capital receipts were realised.<\/em> <em>The factual background of these  cases are more or less<\/em> <em>similar to the facts involved in the case of  Rajmandir<\/em> <em>Estates Private Ltd. (supra), and learned counsel for the<\/em> <em>parties have also confined their submissions to points of<\/em> <em>law  only. The capital receipts in respect of which<\/em> <em>inquires have been  ordered by the C.I.T. have similar<\/em> <em>features, being fresh share capital  issued at high<\/em> <em>premium. Mr. Majumdar, however, drew his strength<\/em> <em>to  urge the point that it was only after the aforesaid<\/em> <em>amendments such  inquiries would have relevance. He<\/em> <em>sought to take cue from the  observation of the Coordinate<\/em> <em>Bench that the question as to whether  proviso to<\/em> <em>Section 68 of Income Tax Act is retrospective in nature or<\/em> <em>not was being kept open. He also cited the judgment of<\/em> <em>the Hon&rsquo;ble  Supreme Court in the case of Sneh Vs.<\/em> <em>Commissioner of Customs [(2006)7  SCC 714] to contend<\/em> <em>that a judgment is the authority on the  proposition which<\/em> <em>it decides and not what can logically be deduced  from,<\/em> <em>and sought to distinguish the case of Rajmandir Estates<\/em> <em>Pvt.  Ltd. (supra) on that basis. Submission of the<\/em> <em>appellants is that the  points of law urged in these<\/em> <em>appeals were not raised before the  Coordinate Bench.<\/em> <em>Main argument of the appellants before us has been  that<\/em> <em>the amendment to Section 68 does not have<\/em> <em>retrospective  operation. According to the appellants, if<\/em> <em>it is found that the  amended provisions of Section 68<\/em> <em>of the Act do not have retrospective  operation, then<\/em> <em>having regard to what has been held by the Tribunal in<\/em> <em>the case of Subhalakshmi Vanija Pvt. Ltd. (supra), the<\/em> <em>inquiry, as  directed would be impermissible.<\/em> <em>14. We have already observed that the  judgment in<\/em> <em>the case of Rajmandir Estates Private Ltd. (supra) was<\/em> <em>delivered considering the unamended provision of<\/em> <em>Section 68 of the  Act. In the case of the assessees<\/em> <em>before us, there is no differing  feature so far as<\/em> <em>applicability of the said statutory provision is<\/em> <em>concerned, even though the Tribunal in Subhalakshmi<\/em> <em>Vanijya Pvt.  Ltd. (supra) had held that the provisos to<\/em> <em>Section 68 of the Act are  retrospective in their<\/em> <em>operation, and delivered the decision against  the<\/em> <em>assessee in that case that reasoning. In the appeal of<\/em> <em>Rajmandir  Estates Private Ltd. (supra), the Coordinate<\/em> <em>Bench did not consider it  necessary to examine the<\/em> <em>question of retroactivity of the aforesaid  provision. The<\/em> <em>Coordinate Bench found the order of the C.I.T. to be<\/em> <em>valid examining the order applying the unamended<\/em> <em>provision of  Section 68 of the Act only. We do not find<\/em> <em>any other distinguishing  element in these appeals<\/em> <em>which would require addressing the question  as to<\/em> <em>whether the amendment to Section 68 of the Act was<\/em> <em>retrospective  in operation or not. Neither do we need<\/em> <em>to address the issue that if  the inquiries, as directed,<\/em> <em>revealed that share capital infused were  actually<\/em> <em>unaccounted money, whether the same could be taxed<\/em> <em>in  accordance with Section 56(2) (vii b) or not. The ratio<\/em> <em>of the  Constitution Bench decision of the Hon&rsquo;ble<\/em> <em>Supreme Court in the case  of VedikaTownship Private<\/em> <em>Ltd. (supra) does not apply in the legal  context in which<\/em> <em>we are deciding these appeals. It is not necessary in<\/em> <em>these appeals to deal with the question of retroactivity<\/em> <em>of the  aforesaid provisions, for which that authority<\/em> <em>was cited.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>  <em>15. Arguments in all these appeals have been<\/em> <em>advanced in the  same line, and for that reason we<\/em> <em>have not recorded in this judgment  the submissions<\/em> <em>made individually in each appeal. Another decision of<\/em> <em>a Coordinate Bench in ITA No. 723 of 2008 in the case<\/em> <em>of  Commissioner of Income Tax, Central II, Kolkata Vs.<\/em> <em>Shyam Sel Ltd.  decided on 28th June 2016 was<\/em> <em>referred to on behalf of the appellants.  This decision<\/em> <em>was cited to contend that the assessee cannot be asked<\/em> <em>to discharge the onus of proving the genuineness of<\/em> <em>transaction  relating to the source of its source of share<\/em> <em>application. But in the  decision of Rajmandir Estate<\/em> <em>Pvt. Ltd. (supra), the Coordinate Bench  had directly<\/em> <em>addressed this issue and observed that source of<\/em> <em>source  can be relevant inquiry.&rdquo;<\/em><\/p>\n<p>  6.5 What emerges from the aforesaid decision of the Hon&#8217;ble Calcutta High  Court (supra), are the following principles:-<\/p>\n<p>  (i) Sec. 68 of the Act can be invoked to make enquiries on the genuineness  of amounts credited in the books of account in the nature of share premium (the  above cited decision covers the assessment year in question i.e. ;A.Y.  2008-09).<\/p>\n<p>  (ii) The use of words, &ldquo;any sum found credited in the books &ldquo; in Section 68  of the Act indicates that the said section is very widely worded and the  Assessing Officer is not precluded from making an enquiry as to the true nature  and source thereof even if the same is credited as receipt of share application  money.<\/p>\n<p>  (iii) The mere fact that the payment was received by cheque OR that the  applicants were companies, borne on the file of Registrar of Companies (ROC)  were held to be neutral facts and did not prove that the transaction was  genuine.<\/p>\n<p>  6.6 From the above, it is clear that the Assessing Officer is empowered to  examine the genuineness of the transactions characterized as share premium by  invoking the provisions of Section 68 of the Act. As per Section 68 of the Act,  the initial onus is upon the assessee to establish not only the identity and  capacity of the creditor, but also the genuineness of the transaction. From the  order of assessment, it is clear to us that the Assessing Officer has sought to  do just this; i.e. to examine the genuineness of the transaction and therefore  his action cannot be faulted on this score.<\/p>\n<p>  6.7 Another submission put forth by the assessee is that no addition can be  made on account of share application money received and in this regard reliance  was placed by the learned Authorised Representative on the decision of the  ITAT, Delhi Bench in the case of ACIT Vs.  NRA Iron &amp; Steel Pvt. Ltd. in ITA No.3611\/Del\/2014 dt.15.1.2017 wherein the  additions were made towards unexplained share capital and reference and  reliance was placed on the decision of the Hon&#8217;ble Apex Court in the case of  CIT Vs. Lovely Exports Pvt. Ltd. (2008) 216 CTR 195 and many other judicial  pronouncements. In all these cases, a clear finding has been rendered that the  assessee has discharged the onus of establishing the genuineness of the  investment made in the share capital of the company. In the above cited case,  placing reliance on the decision of the Hon&#8217;ble Delhi High Court in the case of  CIT Vs. Kamadhenu Steel &amp; Alloys Ltd. (2012) 206 Taxman 54 (Delhi) the  following paras 39 &amp; 40 thereof were extracted by the Tribunal which  indicates the thought process and line of reasoning that went into the  Tribunal&rsquo;s decision in NRA Iron &amp; Steel Pvt. Ltd. (supra) :-<\/p>\n<p>  &ldquo; 39. We may repeat what is often said, that a delicate balance has to be  maintained while walking on the tight rope of sections 68 and 69 of the Act. On  the one hand, no doubt, such kind of dubious practices are rampant, on the  other hand, merely because there is an acknowledgement of such practices would  not mean that in any of such cases coming before the Court, the Court has to  presume that the assessee in questions as indulged in that practice. To make  the assessee responsible, there has to be proper evidence. It is equally  important that an innocent person cannot be fastened with liability without  cogent evidence. One has to see the matter from the point of view of such  companies (like the assessee herein) who invite the share application money  from different sources or even public at large. It would be asking for a moon  if such companies are asked to find out from each and every share  applicant\/subscribers to first satisfy the assessee companies about the source  of their funds before investing. It is for this reason the balance is struck by  catena of judgements in laying down that the Department is not remediless and  is free to proceed to reopen the individual assessment of such alleged bogus  shareholders in accordance with the law. That was precisely the observation of  the Supreme Court in Lovely Export (supra) which holds the fields and is  binding.<\/p>\n<p>  40. In conclusion, we are of the opinion that once adequate  evidence\/material is given, as stated by us above, which would prima facie  discharge the burden of the assessee in proving the identity of shareholders,  genuineness of the transaction and creditworthiness of the shareholders,  thereafter in case such evidence is to be discarded or it is proved that it has  &lsquo;created&rdquo; evidence, the Revenue is supposed to make thorough probe of the  nature indicated above before it could nail the assessee and fasten the  assessee with such a liability under Sections 68 and 69 of the Act.&rdquo;<\/p>\n<p>  6.8 As can be seen from the above, the judicial pronouncements in the cases  cited in the ITAT, Delhi Bench order (supra) have been rendered in the context  of the facts of that particular case. In those cases, the companies had invited  share application money from different sources and there being multiple  investors, it was held that the company cannot be expected to be having the  details of source of their funding and it is the Revenue that should conduct  the enquiry in the case of individual shareholders. Even then it was held that  Revenue should carry out a thorough probe.<\/p>\n<p>  6.9 However, in the case on hand, the content and factual matrix are  different. A finding has been rendered that there has been routing of money for  illegal purposes through a chain of companies in which the assessee is a  conduit in the layering process. The Assessing Officer has highlighted several  factors before concluding that the real purpose of transfer of funds is not for  the purpose of investment but is only a conduit to route the funds involved as  a layering process. The Assessing Officer has pointed out that &#8211;<\/p>\n<p>  (i) The Director of the assessee company has been allotted shares at par  around the same time that M\/s. Walden Properties Pvt. Ltd., were allotted  shares at a huge premium of Rs.990 per share.<\/p>\n<p>  (ii) The assessee was unable to furnish a proper valuation report to justify  the high premium charged.<\/p>\n<p>  (iii) The assessee could not substantiate the high premium, based on the  manner in which such valuations are done supported by financials.<\/p>\n<p>  (iv) Based on the financial details of the assessee, the value of the said  shares is very much less and no genuine investor would buy the shares at a  hefty premium of Rs.990 per share.<\/p>\n<p>  (v) Several discrepancies \/ abnormal features were highlighted which are  clear pointers to the fact that the aforesaid transaction is &ldquo;made up&rdquo; to  camouflage the real purpose \/ intention.<\/p>\n<p>  (vi) In respect of the project for which the investor was supposed to have  made the investment, even application for the same has not been made by the  assessee company.<\/p>\n<p>  6.10 After bringing on record several facts and factors, the Assessing  Officer was of the view that the genuineness of the said transaction of  purchase of 5 lakh shares of the assessee company @ Rs.1,000 per share i.e. at  a premium of Rs.990 per share by M\/s. Walden Properties Pvt. Ltd. in the year  under consideration has not been established. It is settled principle that the  burden of proof lies with the assessee to prove the credits in its books of  account are not its income, which onus, in our view has not been discharged by  the assessee in the case on hand. Even before us, the assessee has not put  forth any cogent reasons to controvert and repudiate any of the above findings  rendered by the Assessing Officer. The arguments put forth by the assessee has  been only to state and reiterate the principle that share premium cannot be  assessed in the hands of the company. As we had already held, the facts of the  case on hand are different from the facts and context in which the cited  judicial pronouncements were rendered. The case on hand is one in which the  Assessing Officer has examined the genuineness of the credits in the books of  account, in continuation of earlier enquiries which established that the  assessee is a conduit as part of a layering process. In view of the facts and  circumstances of the case, as discussed above, we do not find any infirmity in  the decision of the Assessing Officer in holding that the receipt of Rs.49.50  Crores by the assessee as its income under the head &ldquo;Income from Other Sources&rdquo;  and confirm the decision of the learned CIT (Appeals) in upholding the  aforesaid addition of Rs.49.50 Crores. Consequently, Ground No.3 of the  assessee&#8217;s appeal is dismissed.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>The argument of the  assessee that the provisions of Sec.56(1)(viib) of the Act does not apply to  the case on hand for the year under consideration as it has been introduced by  Finance Act, 2012 w.e.f. 1.4.2013 is a misplaced one. From a reading of the  order of assessment, it is clear that the Assessing Officer has invoked the  provisions of Sec. 68 of the Act. This leads us to the question of whether the  provisions of Sec. 68 of the Act can be invoked for the nature of transactions  involved in the case, where sums of money are credited in the name of share  premium. This question has been addressed by the Hon&#8217;ble Calcutta High Court in  the case of <a href=\"http:\/\/itatonline.org\/archives\/pragati-financial-management-pvt-ltd-vs-cit-calcutta-high-court-bogus-share-capital-mere-fact-that-payment-was-received-by-cheque-or-that-the-applicants-were-companies-borne-on-the-file-of-the-regist\/\">Pragati Financial Management Pvt. Ltd. Vs. CIT<\/a> in C.A. 887 &amp;  998 of 2016 and others dt.7.3.2017. In its order (supra) on the issue of  whether enquiry under Section 68 of the Act can be carried out for examining  the genuineness of the share premium transaction, the Hon&#8217;ble High Court held  that Sec. 68 of the Act can be invoked to conduct enquiry on the genuineness of  share premium transactions<\/p>\n<div class=\"read-more\"><a href=\"https:\/\/itatonline.org\/archives\/cornerstone-property-investments-pvt-ltd-vs-ito-itat-bangalore-s-68-bogus-share-capital-share-premium-received-can-be-assessed-as-undisclosed-income-if-a-directors-are-allotted-shares-at-par-while\/\">Read more &#8250;<\/a><\/div>\n<p><!-- end of .read-more --><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"jetpack_post_was_ever_published":false,"_jetpack_newsletter_access":"","_jetpack_dont_email_post_to_subs":false,"_jetpack_newsletter_tier_id":0,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paywalled_content":false,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":"","jetpack_publicize_message":"","jetpack_publicize_feature_enabled":true,"jetpack_social_post_already_shared":true,"jetpack_social_options":{"image_generator_settings":{"template":"highway","default_image_id":0,"font":"","enabled":false},"version":2}},"categories":[4,8],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-18035","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-all-judgements","category-tribunal","judges-jason-p-boaz-am","judges-sunil-kumar-yadav-jm","section-561viib","section-368","counsel-h-n-khincha","court-itat-bangalore","catchwords-bogus-share-capital","catchwords-share-premium","catchwords-undisclosed-income","genre-domestic-tax"],"acf":[],"jetpack_publicize_connections":[],"jetpack_featured_media_url":"","jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/itatonline.org\/archives\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/18035","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/itatonline.org\/archives\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/itatonline.org\/archives\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/itatonline.org\/archives\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/itatonline.org\/archives\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=18035"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/itatonline.org\/archives\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/18035\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/itatonline.org\/archives\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=18035"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/itatonline.org\/archives\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=18035"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/itatonline.org\/archives\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=18035"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}