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Generate professional replies to Show Cause Notices, assessment orders, audit objections, and other legal communications using TaxTMI's AI Drafter.
Step 1 – Issue Identification & Review
The AI analyses your query, notice, order, or uploaded documents and identifies the key issues involved.
• Review the issues identified by the AI
• Add, edit, remove, or refine issues as required
Step 2 – Draft Generation
Once you approve the issues, the AI performs issue-wise legal research and prepares a structured draft response.
• Relevant statutory provisions
• Judicial precedents and Supreme Court, High Court and other citations
• Issue-wise legal analysis
• Practical arguments and supporting content
• Professionally structured draft ready for further review. 
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Issues: (i) Whether losses arising on sale of shares in the three jute mills and in other share transactions were revenue losses or capital/unreal losses; (ii) whether litigation expenses incurred in connection with the Murli Hills dispute were deductible as revenue expenditure; (iii) whether the claimed speculation loss was an admissible deduction.
Issue (i): Whether losses arising on sale of shares in the three jute mills and in other share transactions were revenue losses or capital/unreal losses.
Analysis: The assessee-companies were found to be dealers in shares, and the transactions in question were held to be genuine business dealings. The prior history and ultimate movement of the shares were not treated as sufficient, by themselves, to displace the finding that the purchases and sales were entered into in the ordinary course of business. The Tribunal's view that the motive for acquisition did not, on the materials before it, establish an ulterior non-trading purpose was not shown to be legally erroneous.
Conclusion: The losses on the share transactions were revenue losses and were admissible deductions.
Issue (ii): Whether litigation expenses incurred in connection with the Murli Hills dispute were deductible as revenue expenditure.
Analysis: Expenditure is revenue where it is laid out for maintaining an existing asset or title, but capital where it is incurred to acquire, perfect, or create title to a capital asset. On the facts, the assessee had no independent legal title to the quarry land and the litigation was directed towards obtaining a future lease and securing a capital asset rather than preserving an existing business asset or title.
Conclusion: The litigation expenses were capital in nature and were not allowable as revenue expenditure.
Issue (iii): Whether the claimed speculation loss was an admissible deduction.
Analysis: The speculative transactions were found to be real, the corresponding profits had been assessed in the hands of the counterparty, and the Tribunal accepted the loss on the basis of the recorded facts. No legal error was shown in the finding that the loss arose from genuine speculation transactions.
Conclusion: The speculation loss was an admissible deduction.
Final Conclusion: The references were disposed of by sustaining the allowance of the share-trading and speculation losses, but rejecting the claim for deduction of the litigation expenses as revenue expenditure.
Ratio Decidendi: In income-tax law, genuine share-dealing losses arising in the ordinary course of business are allowable as revenue losses, but litigation expenditure incurred to acquire or perfect title to a future capital asset is capital expenditure and not deductible as revenue.