Income-tax Officer vs.
Nishant Lalit Jadhav
G.S.Pannu (A. M.) and
Pawan Singh (J. M.)
ITA No.: 6883/MUM/2014
A. Y.: 2011-12. Date
of Order: 26th April, 2017
Counsel for Revenue / Assessee: Suman Kumar / Hari S. Raheja
FACTS
The assessee is a
Non-resident Indian (NRI) and during the year under consideration he, inter-alia,
earned a long term capital gain of Rs.67.07 lakh from sale of residential
property located at Mumbai. He claimed exemption u/s. 54 on the ground that the
capital gain arising on the sale of property was utilised in the purchase of a
residential property at New York, USA. The Assessing Officer denied the claim
of exemption as the property was
acquired outside India. For the purpose he relied upon the decision of the Ahmedabad
Tribunal in the case of Smt. Leena J. Shah, (6 SOT 721). According to the
CIT(A), the requirement of making the investment in a property in India was
inserted by the Finance (No.2) Act, 2014 w.e.f. 01./04./2015 and, therefore, in
the instant assessment year the claim of exemption u/s. 54 could not be denied.
In coming to such conclusion, the CIT(A) also relied upon the decision of the
Mumbai Tribunal in the case of Mrs.
Prema P. Shah & Sanjiv P. Shah vs. ITO (100 ITD 60), ITO vs. Girish
M. Shah in ITA No.3582/Mum/2009 and Vinay Mishra vs. CIT, in ITA
No.895/(Bang) of 2012.
Before the Tribunal, the revenue contended that even prior to amendment
by Finance (No.2) Act, 2014, it was to be implicitly understood that the
requirement of section 54 was to make investments in a new residential house
within India only. The assessee pointed
out that the decision of the Ahmedabad Tribunal in the case of Smt. Leena J.
Shah, which was relied upon by the Assessing Officer has since been reversed by
the Gujarat High Court in its judgment in ITA No. 483 of 2006 dated
14./06./2016.
HELD