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1. ISSUES PRESENTED and CONSIDERED
The core legal question considered in this judgment is:
Whether the Tribunal was correct in law to set aside the disallowance of capital loss claimed by the assessee, amounting to Rs. 164,48,55,840/-, by holding that there was an extinguishment of rights of 153,340,900 shares when no such extinguishment was made out by the assessee as required under Section 2(47) of the Income Tax Act, and there was no reduction in the face value of the shares.
2. ISSUE-WISE DETAILED ANALYSIS
Relevant Legal Framework and Precedents
The relevant legal framework involves Section 2(47) of the Income Tax Act, which defines the term "transfer" concerning capital assets. The precedents discussed include Vania Silk Mills (P) Ltd. vs. Commissioner of Income Tax and Commissioner of Income-tax Vs. Grace Collis, which provide judicial interpretations of what constitutes a transfer.
Court's Interpretation and Reasoning
The court examined the facts that the number of shares held by the assessee was reduced from 14,95,44,130 to 9988 without a change in the face value of Rs. 10 per share. The Tribunal's interpretation that there was no transfer of shares within the meaning of Section 2(47) was upheld. The court reasoned that the reduction in the number of shares, while maintaining the face value, led to a change in the redeemable value, which justified the claim of capital loss.
Key Evidence and Findings
The key findings were that the reduction in the number of shares was ordered by the High Court of Bombay, and the face value of the shares remained the same. The assessee's shareholding percentage remained at 99.88%, and the voting power was unaffected. The Tribunal found that the reduction in shares constituted an extinguishment of rights, thereby justifying the capital loss claim.
Application of Law to Facts
The court applied the legal principles from the cited precedents to the facts of the case. It concluded that the reduction in the number of shares without a change in face value resulted in a significant loss in the redeemable value, thus constituting a transfer under the Income Tax Act.
Treatment of Competing Arguments
The Revenue argued that there was no effective transfer of shares and that the transaction did not result in relinquishment of rights, as the assessee retained the same percentage of shares. The court rejected this argument, emphasizing the difference between the number of shares and the voting power, and accepted the assessee's position that the reduction in shares led to a capital loss.
Conclusions
The court concluded that the Tribunal was correct in setting aside the disallowance of the capital loss claimed by the assessee. The reduction in the number of shares constituted an extinguishment of rights, justifying the capital loss under the Income Tax Act.
3. SIGNIFICANT HOLDINGS
Preserve Verbatim Quotes of Crucial Legal Reasoning
"The AO's view that the voting power has not changed as the percentage of assessee's share of 99.88% has remained unchanged is untenable because if the shares are transferred at face value, the redeemable value would be Rs. 99,880/- whereas the value of 14,95,44,130 number of shares would have been Rs. 1,49,54,41,300/-."
Core Principles Established
The judgment establishes that a reduction in the number of shares, even without a change in face value, can lead to an extinguishment of rights and justify a capital loss claim if it results in a significant change in the redeemable value of the shares.
Final Determinations on Each Issue
The appeal was dismissed, and the question of law was answered in favor of the assessee and against the Revenue, affirming the Tribunal's decision to allow the capital loss claimed by the assessee.