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2015 (11) TMI 1314

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....ons of Section 36(1)(iii) of the Income Tax Act (hereinafter referred to as 'Act'). The aforesaid deduction was disallowed by the Assessing Officer vide his Assesssment Order dated 26.03.1991 on the following two points:- (1) The assessee had advanced a sum of Rs. 1,16,26,128/- to its subsidiary company known as M/s. Hero Fibers Limited and this advance did not carry any interest. According to the Assessing Officer, the assessee had borrowed the money from the banks and paid interest thereupon. Deduction was claimed as business expenditure but substantial money out of the loans taken from the Bank was diverted by giving advance to M/s. Hero Fibres Limited on which no interest was charged by the assessee. Therefore, he concluded tha....

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....e advance given to M/s. Hero Fibres Limited is concerned, the case put up by the assessee even before the Assessing Officer was that it had given an undertaking to the financial institutions to provide M/s. Hero Fibres Limited the additional margin to meet the working capital for meeting any cash loses. It was further explained that the assessee company was promotor of M/s. Hero Fibres Limited and since it had the controlling share in the said company that necessitated giving of such an undertaking to the financial institutions. The amount was, thus, advanced in compliance of the stipulation laid down by the three financial institutions under a loan agreement which was entered into between M/s. Hero Fibres Limited and the said financial ins....

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....ngs and advancing to prove that expenditure was for non-business purposes which the Assessing Officer failed to do. The Department/ Revenue challenged the order of the CIT(Appeal) before the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (hereinafter referred to as 'ITAT'). The ITAT upheld the aforesaid view of the CIT(Appeal) and thus, dismissed the appeal preferred by the Revenue. Further appeal of the Revenue before the High Court filed under Section 260A of the Income Tax Act, however, has been allowed by the High Court vide impugned judgment dated 06.12.2006. Challenging that judgment, special leave petition was filed in which leave was granted and that is how the present appeal comes up for hearing. A perusal of the order passed by the High....

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....of commercial expediency. 27. No doubt, as held in Madhav Prasad Jatia v. CIT [1979 (118) ITR 200 (SC)], if the borrowed amount was donated for some sentimental or personal reasons and not on the ground of commercial expediency, the interest thereon could not have been allowed under section 36(1)(iii) of the Act. In Madhav Prasad's case [1979 (118) ITR 200 (SC)], the borrowed amount was donated to a college with a view to commemorate the memory of the assessee's deceased husband after whom the college was to be named, it was held by this court that the interest on the borrowed fund in such a case could not be allowed, as it could not be said that it was for commercial expediency. 28. Thus, the ratio of Madhav Prasad Jatia's ca....

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....ties must not look at the matter from their own view point but that of a prudent businessman. Applying the aforesaid ratio to the facts of this case as already noted above, it is manifest that the advance to M/s. Hero Fibres Limited became imperative as a business expediency in view of the undertaking given to the financial institutions by the assessee to the effect that it would provide additional margin to M/s. Hero Fibres Limited to meet the working capital for meeting any cash loses. It would also be significant to mention at this stage that, subsequently, the assessee company had off-loaded its share holding in the said M/s. Hero Fibres Limited to various companies of Oswal Group and at that time, the assessee company not only refund....