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Tax litigation: A case of no returns

About 66 percent of our direct tax cases together add up to a paltry 1.8 percent of total amount under tax litigation. It will be more efficacious for the government to simply abandon those claims

October 05, 2020 / 11:47 IST
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Which pocket of the Government should be enriched has taken forty-four years to decide — a classic case of what ought not to be!” — Thus began a scathing judgment from the Supreme Court recently. The dispute wasn’t particularly remarkable. The assessee was the government-owned National Cooperative Development Corporation (NCDC), set up by Parliament in 1962 to advance loans or grant subsidies to co-operative societies, out of funding from the central government.

The funds so received from the central government were a capital receipt, and therefore not chargeable to tax. The interest received by the NCDC on loans advanced by it is chargeable as business income — again undisputed. The dispute was only whether the interest paid by the NCDC to the government on funds received was allowable as a business expense. After protracted litigation spanning four decades, the Supreme Court ruled that the expense was deductible, but not without admonishing the government for its role in the mounting case-docket confronting the judiciary.

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To be sure, the government is well aware of the problem. The Economic Survey 2017-18 estimated that as of March 2017, there were 137,176 pending tax cases, out of which 66 percent involved each less than Rs 10 lakh in claimed amount, and cumulatively constituting a mere 1.8 percent of locked up value of the total pending cases. What is even more surprising is that 90 percent of all of these petitions are filed by the department, while its success rate was under 30 percent. [Table Below].