Generate professional replies, appeals, opinions to Show Cause Notices, assessment orders, audit objections, and other legal communications using TaxTMI's AI Drafter.
Appeal allowed as redemption of preference shares not deemed dividend under section 2(22)(d). No distribution of profits. The Tribunal allowed the appeal, ruling that the redemption of preference shares did not lead to a reduction in authorized share capital, thus not ...
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.
Appeal allowed as redemption of preference shares not deemed dividend under section 2(22)(d). No distribution of profits.
The Tribunal allowed the appeal, ruling that the redemption of preference shares did not lead to a reduction in authorized share capital, thus not constituting deemed dividend under section 2(22)(d). The addition of Rs. 20,74,170 was deleted as there was no distribution of accumulated profits. The issue of exemption under section 10(34) was not addressed as it became unnecessary following the deletion of the primary addition.
Issues Involved: 1. Addition under section 2(22)(d) on account of deemed dividend from redemption of preference shares. 2. Applicability of section 10(34) for exemption of the deemed dividend.
Detailed Analysis:
1. Addition under section 2(22)(d) on account of deemed dividend from redemption of preference shares:
The primary issue in this appeal is whether the amount of Rs. 20,74,170 received by the assessee on redemption of preference shares constitutes a deemed dividend under section 2(22)(d) of the Income Tax Act. The assessee argued that the redemption was made out of the original amount of shares allotted for valuable consideration, and thus, it did not result in a distribution of assets or reduction of capital as per section 2(22)(d).
The Tribunal considered the factual matrix where the assessee received redeemable preference shares in lieu of his credit balance with the erstwhile firm, which was converted into a private limited company. The Tribunal noted that the redemption of preference shares at par did not lead to a reduction in the company's authorized share capital, as per section 80(3) of the Companies Act, 1956. Consequently, the provisions of section 2(22)(d) were deemed inapplicable since there was no distribution of accumulated profits.
The Tribunal referenced the decision in the case of Parle Biscuits Pvt. Ltd., which held that redemption of preference shares does not equate to a reduction of authorized share capital and thus cannot be treated as deemed dividend under section 2(22)(d). Following this precedent, the Tribunal concluded that the addition made by the AO and upheld by the CIT(A) was factually unsustainable and deleted the addition of Rs. 20,74,170.
2. Applicability of section 10(34) for exemption of the deemed dividend:
The assessee raised additional grounds arguing that even if section 2(22)(d) was applicable, the amount of deemed dividend would be exempt under section 10(34) of the Act. The Tribunal, however, did not find it necessary to adjudicate this issue since the primary grievance was resolved by deleting the addition under section 2(22)(d).
Conclusion:
The Tribunal allowed the appeal, holding that the redemption of preference shares did not result in a reduction of the authorized share capital and thus did not attract the provisions of section 2(22)(d). Consequently, the addition of Rs. 20,74,170 as deemed dividend was deleted, and the necessity to address the additional grounds regarding exemption under section 10(34) was obviated.
Full Summary is available for active users!
Note: It is a system-generated summary and is for quick reference only.