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Allowability of write off of CWIP expenses

Vivek Jalan
Legal Insights: When Can Capital Work in Progress Expenses Be Written Off as Business Expenditures? Key Court Cases Analyzed. The article discusses the legal considerations regarding the write-off of Capital Work in Progress (CWIP) expenses as business expenditures. It references several court cases to illustrate differing outcomes based on the nature of the expenditure. In one case, expenses for an abandoned factory project were deemed capital and not deductible. Conversely, other cases, such as those involving cellular towers and software modules, allowed deductions when expenses were related to existing business operations and did not create new assets. The distinction between capital and revenue expenditure is crucial, with courts favoring practical business perspectives over legalistic interpretations. (AI Summary)

A classic case followed by revenue where the question of law is regarding Allowability  of write off of CWIP expenses is M/S. FAURECIA EMISSIONS CONTROL TECHNOLOGIES INDIA PRIVATE LTD. VERSUS DEPUTY COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX, COMPANY CIRCLE II (3) , CHENNAI - 2016 (3) TMI 368 - ITAT CHENNAI In this case, assessee incurred an expenditure towards setting up a factory at Singur in West Bengal. Due to unrest and protest by the local people, assessee had abandoned the said project, and claimed it as a revenue expenditure as a business expenditure. It was held that the expenditure incurred by the assessee is not for the purpose of carrying on its business, but on the other hand it is incurred for the   purpose of setting up of new business which is in capital filed. It was decided that the expenditure incurred to set up a project at Singur in West Bengal is not an expenditure wholly and exclusively incurred for the purpose of carrying on business    of the assessee or incidental o the carrying on the business of the assessee and it is an expenditure incurred in the capital field and it also cannot be allowed u/s.37 of the Act. Thus, the loss in respect of discarded project had written off by the assessee during the previous year is not allowable expenditure as business deduction and it cannot be allowed.

However, it has to be noted that the law has evolved on the crucial principle that the distinction between capital and revenue expenditure should be determined from  the practical and business view point and in accordance with sound accountancy principles, eschewing the legalistic approach.

In the case of COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX-3 VERSUS M/S. IDEA CELLULAR LTD. - 2016 (10) TMI 181 - BOMBAY HIGH COURT, the Court held that where new cellular towers were constructed by cellular  operator in addition to existing tower and no new business was set up, if project was abandoned, expenditure so far incurred would be allowed as business expenditure. Hence, if an expenditure is incurred for doing the business in a more convenient and profitable manner and has not resulted in bringing any new asset into existence, then, such expenditure is allowable business expenditure, even incase capitalised and then written off later.

In the case of PR. COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX - 8 VERSUS M/S. REDIFF. COM INDIA LTD. - 2021 (10) TMI 174 - BOMBAY HIGH COURT, the issue was that the assessee abandoned some of its incomplete website projects, which were not expected to pay back and  wrote off expenses on account of capital work-in-progress pertaining to such abandoned projects and claimed deduction thereof as revenue expenditure u/s 37 of the Income-tax Act, 1961. The Assessing Officer held that the expenditure was incurred for creating new projects and represented capital assets of its business that  were to yield enduring benefit and that by claiming such expenditure under the head ‘ capital work-in-progress’, the assessee itself had admitted that those expenses were capital in nature and disallowed the assessee’s claim of writing off ‘capital work-in-progress’. The Tribunal held that the expenses incurred were in connection with the existing business and were of routine nature, such as salary and professional fees, and that the expenses were revenue in nature and allowed the assessee’s claim. On appeal by the Revenue, the Bombay High Court upheld the decision of the Tribunal and held that The Tribunal’s view that if an expenditure was   incurred for doing the business in a more convenient and profitable manner and had    not resulted in bringing any new asset into existence, such expenditure was allowable business expenditure u/s. 37 was correct. The expenditure incurred was on salary and professional fees which was revenue in nature and did not bring into    existence any new asset. There was no perversity or application of incorrect principles in its order. No question of law arose.”

On similar grounds it was held in the case of AXIS TECHNICAL GROUP INDIA PVT. LTD. VERSUS DCIT, CIRCLE – 1 (1) , PUNE - 2023 (2) TMI 1001 - ITAT PUNE The issue was that the assessee had capitalized certain revenue costs in respect of certain modules which  it was trying to use in the software development business, but abandoned them during the year under consideration. It was held that costs incurred earlier on such  modules, which are otherwise of revenue nature, cannot be treated as capital expenditure, incapable of deduction on their write off. Rather it is a case of incurring  revenue expenditure, which was initially capitalized and now written off because of  abandoning the modules, that were no more required in the software development  business. The cost of salary and computer rent is eligible for deduction. The ground  of appeal was allowed.

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