Tribunal grants higher depreciation on electrical equipment; clarifies depreciation rates for computers. The Tribunal partially allowed the Assessee's appeal by directing the Assessing Officer to grant higher depreciation on specific electrical equipment. The ...
Cases where this provision is explicitly mentioned in the judgment/order text; may not be exhaustive. To view the complete list of cases mentioning this section, Click here.
Provisions expressly mentioned in the judgment/order text.
Tribunal grants higher depreciation on electrical equipment; clarifies depreciation rates for computers.
The Tribunal partially allowed the Assessee's appeal by directing the Assessing Officer to grant higher depreciation on specific electrical equipment. The Tribunal upheld the CIT (A)'s decision regarding the depreciation rates on computers and peripherals, emphasizing that only computer peripherals could be considered as computers for depreciation purposes, while other items fell under plant and machinery categories.
Issues involved: 1. Disallowance of depreciation on electrical equipments. 2. Disallowance of depreciation on computers and computer peripherals.
Issue 1: Disallowance of depreciation on electrical equipments: The Assessee claimed 80% depreciation on "control panel board and transformer" as electrical equipments under specific categories in the depreciation table. However, the Assessing Officer disallowed the claim and granted depreciation at 15% as machinery and plant. The CIT (A) upheld this decision, stating that the items did not qualify for 80% depreciation as they were not classified under the specified category. The Appellant argued that the items could be classified under the relevant categories for higher depreciation. The Tribunal found merit in the Appellant's contention, applying the principle of EJUSDEM GENERIS, and directed the Assessing Officer to grant depreciation at 80% on the items.
Issue 2: Disallowance of depreciation on computers and computer peripherals: The Assessee claimed depreciation at 60% on various items like scanners, routers, and modems, treating them as computers under specific categories in the depreciation table. However, the Assessing Officer allowed depreciation at 15% for most items, citing discrepancies in the classification and description of the machines. The CIT (A) allowed 60% depreciation on certain items but restricted others to 15%, emphasizing that the machines were not solely computers but part of plant and machinery. The Tribunal concurred with the CIT (A), stating that only computer peripherals could be considered as computers for depreciation purposes, while other items fell under plant and machinery categories. Therefore, the Tribunal upheld the CIT (A)'s decision on this issue.
In conclusion, the Tribunal partly allowed the Assessee's appeal, directing the Assessing Officer to grant higher depreciation on specific electrical equipments and confirming the depreciation rates on computers and peripherals as determined by the CIT (A).
Full Summary is available for active users!
Note: It is a system-generated summary and is for quick reference only.