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December 2008

Capital gains : Immovable property : S. 50C : Constitutional validity : Provision not arbitrary or violative of Article 14 : Constitutionally valid.

By K. B. Bhujle, Advocate
Reading Time 3 mins

New Page 1

24 Capital gains : Immovable property : Cost
of acquisition : S. 50C of Income-tax Act, 1961 : A.Y. 2003-04 : Constitutional
validity : Complete safeguard provided for assessee in Stamp Act and Income-tax
Act : Provision not arbitrary or violative of Article 14 : Provision
constitutionally valid.


[K. R. Palanisamy v. UOI, 306 ITR 61 (Mad.)]

The assessee sold his capital assets for a price lower than
the market price. The Assessing Officer applied S. 50C of the Income-tax Act,
1961 for computation of capital gain. The assessee filed a writ petition
challenging the constitutional validity of S. 50C.

 

The Madras High Court upheld the validity of S. 50C and held
as under :

“(i) S. 50C of the Act was incorporated to prevent
large-scale undervaluation of the real value of the property in the sale deed
so as to defraud the Government of revenue it was legitimately entitled to by
pumping in black money.

(ii) Article 246 of the Constitution of India gives
exclusive power to Parliament to make laws in respect of the matters
enumerated in List I of the Seventh Schedule. The legislative competence of
Parliament to insert a provision for arresting leakage of income had been
considered by the Supreme Court in several cases and the uniform opinion in
all those cases was that the entries in the legislative Lists should be
construed more liberally and in their widest amplitude and not in a narrow or
restricted sense. Every safeguard had been provided under the provisions of
the Stamp Act to the assessee to establish before the authorities the real
value for which the capital asset had been transferred.

(iii) Thus, what was stated in S. 50C as real value
could not be regarded as a notional or artificial
value and such real value is determinable only after hearing the assessee in
accordance with the statutory provisions. There was no indication either in
the provisions of S. 50C of the 1961 Act, or S. 47A of the Stamp Act or rules
made thereunder about the adoption of the guideline value. Hence, the
contention that S. 50C was arbitrary and violative of Article 14 of the
Constitution of India could not be accepted.

(iv) The principle of determining the market value of the
assets had been stated in detail in rule 5 of the Tamil Nadu Stamp (Prevention
of Undervaluation of Instruments) Rules, 1968. Hence the question of the
guideline value forming the basis for determination of the full value did not
arise.

(v) Capital assets and trading assets or stock-in-trade
were treated differently under the scheme of the Act. They could not be
compared on par with each other by considering them as a class of assets. The
discrimination on the ground of valid consideration which answers the test of
intelligible differentia did not attract Article 14 of the Constitution of
India.

(vi) A provision could be rendered inoperative only when it
was found to be violative of the constitutional mandate. The provision could
not be rendered inoperative on the ground that the speech of the Finance
Minister or the administrative instructions issued by the Central Board of
Direct Taxes had not explained the reasons for incorporation of the provision
when the object was evident from the provision itself.


 

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