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May 2008

Capital gains : Sale of property received under will : Expenditure on obtaining probate & travel expenses of executors deductible

By K. B. Bhujle, Advocate
Reading Time 2 mins

New Page 1

II. Reported :



 


16 Capital gains : Computation : Deduction :
A.Y. 1996-97 : Sale of property received under will : Expenditure incurred on
obtaining probate and travel expenses of executors are deductible.

[Mrs. June Perrett v. ITO, 298 ITR 268 (Kar); 215 CTR
267 (Kar.)]

In the A.Y. 1996-97, the assessee had sold a property
inherited by her under a will. While computing capital gain, she claimed
deduction of the expenditure incurred on obtaining probate and travel expenses
of executors. The claim was disallowed by the Assessing Officer. Disallowance
was upheld by the Tribunal.

 

On appeal by the assessee, the Karnataka High Court allowed
the claim and held as under :

“(i) While computing the capital gains u/s.48(i) of the
Income-tax Act, 1961, any expenditure incurred wholly and exclusively in
connection with the transfer of the property has to be deducted, and similarly
the cost incurred by the assessee for any improvement thereto is deductible.

(ii) The executors who were residing in London were
required to obtain probate and letters of administration and any expenses
incurred by the executors in order to obtain probate and letters of
administration were to be treated as expenses incurred by them in connection
with the transfer of property in question, since the executors could not sell
the property to any party without letters of administration.

(iii) Similarly, without paying the court fee, no letter of
administration would be issued by the court. Therefore, Rs.1,23,000 paid by
the executors as court fee at the time of obtaining the letters of
administration had to be treated as expenditure incurred in connection with
the transfer of property.”

 


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