Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 3725 of 2007
PETITIONER:
Commissioner of Income Tax, Bangalore
RESPONDENT:
Infosys Technologies Ltd.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 04/01/2008
BENCH:
S.H. Kapadia & B. Sudershan Reddy
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
with
Civil Appeal No. 16 of 2008 @ S.L.P.(C) No. 16926 of 2007
KAPADIA, J.
Leave granted.
2. Respondent-assessee is public limited IT company based in
Bangalore. To implement Employees Stock Option Scheme
(\023ESOP\024), the assessee created a Trust known as Technologies
Employees Welfare Trust and allotted 7,50,000 warrants at
Re. 1/- each to the said Trust. Each warrant entitled the Holder
thereof to apply for and be allotted one equity share of the face
value of Rs. 10/- each for total consideration of Rs. 100/-. The
Trust was to hold the warrant and transfer the same to the
employees of the company under the Terms and Conditions of the
scheme governing ESOP. During the assessment years 1997-98,
1998-99 and 1999-2000, warrants were offered to the eligible
employees at Re. 1/- each by the Trust. They were issued to
employees based on their performance, security and other
criteria. Under the ESOP Scheme, every warrant had to be
retained for a minimum period of 1 year. At the end of that
period, the employee was entitled to elect and obtain shares
allotted to him on payment of the balance Rs. 99. The option
could be exercised at any time after 12 months but before expiry
of the period of 5 years. The allotted shares were subject to a lock
in period. During the lock in period, the custody of shares
remained with the Trust. The shares were non-transferable. The
employee had to continue to be in service for 5 years. If he
resigned or if his services be terminated for any reason, he lost
his right under the scheme and the shares were to be re-
transferred to the Trust for Rs. 100 per share. Intimation was
also given to BSE that 734500 equity shares were non-
transferable and would not constitute good delivery. Till
13.9.1999 all the shares were stamped with the remark \023non-
transferable\024. Thus the said shares were incapable of being
converted into money during the lock in period.
3. For the assessment year 1999-2000, the AO held that the
total amount paid by the employees consequent to the exercise of
option was Rs. 6.64 crores whereas the market value of those
shares was Rs. 171 crores. He held that the \023perquisite value\024
was the difference between the market value and the price paid
by the employees for exercise of the option. He, therefore, treated
Rs. 165 crores as \023perquisite value\024 on which TDS was charged
at 30%. It was held that the respondent-assessee was a defaulter
for not deducting TDS under Section 192 amounting to Rs. 49.52
crores on the above perquisite value of Rs. 165 crores. Similar
orders were also passed by the AO for assessment years 1997-98
and 1998-99. These orders were confirmed by CIT(A). No
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weightage was given by both the authorities to the lock in period.
Both the authorities took into account the \023perquisite value\024 as
on the date of exercise of option.
4. Aggrieved by the aforesaid decisions, the respondent-
assessee carried the matter in appeal to the Tribunal, which took
the view that the right granted to the employee for participating
in the scheme was not a \023perquisite\024 under Section 17(2)(iii) of
the Income Tax Act, 1961 (\0231961 Act\024). This decision of the
Tribunal stood confirmed by the impugned judgment delivered by
the Karnataka High Court on 15.12.2006. Hence, these civil
appeals by the Department.
5. Whether tax had to be deducted under Section 192 of the
1961 Act, by the respondent-assessee, on the amount earned by
its employees from exercise of stock option granted to them by
the company through the Trust, is the question which arises for
determination in these civil appeals.
6. In the case of Govind Saran Ganga Saran v.
Commissioner of Sales Tax and Ors. [(1985) 155 ITR 144 (SC)]
this Court held that there are four components of tax. The first
component is the character of the imposition, the second is the
person on whom the levy is imposed, the third is the rate at
which tax is imposed and the fourth is the value to which the
rate is applied for computing tax liability. It was further held that
if there is ambiguity in any of the four concepts then levy would
fail. In this case, we are concerned with the forth concept. There
is one more principle which is required to be noted. A
benefit/receipt under the 1961 Act must be made taxable before
it can be regarded as \023income\024.
7. During the assessment years 1997-98, 1998-99 and 1999-
2000 there was no provision in the said 1961 Act which made the
benefit by way of ESOP taxable as income specifically. It became
specifically taxable only with effect from 1.4.2000 when Section
17(2)(iiia) stood inserted.
8. At the outset, we may state that in these civil appeals we are
not concerned with taxability but with the value of a perquisite.
9. The question for consideration is whether \023perquisite\024 could
be said to accrue at the time when warrants were granted or at
the time when the option vested in the employee or at the time
when the options stood exercised or at the time when the lock-in
conditions were removed or at the time when the shares were to
be sold in the share market. According to the AO, the \023perquisite
value\024 was the difference between the total amount paid by the
employee(s) consequent to the exercise of option amounting to
Rs. 6.46 crores on which date the market value of the shares was
in all Rs. 171 crores. Therefore, according to the AO, the benefit
arose on the date when the options stood exercised. In this case
we are concerned with the period prior to 1.4.2000.
10. We quote hereinbelow Sections 17(1) and (2), which read as
follows:
\023"Salary", "perquisite" and "profits in lieu of
salary" defined.
17. For the purposes of sections 15 and 16
and of this section,-
(1) "salary" includes-
(i) wages;
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(ii) any annuity or pension;
(iii) any gratuity;
(iv) any fees, commissions, perquisites or
profits in lieu of or in addition to any salary or
wages;
(v) any advance of salary;
(va) any payment received by an employee in
respect of any period of leave not availed of by
him;
(vi) the annual accretion to the balance at the
credit of an employee participating in a
recognised provident fund, to the extent to
which it is chargeable to tax under Rule 6 of
Part A of the Fourth Schedule; and
(vii) the aggregate of all sums that are
comprised in the transferred balance as
referred to in sub-rule (2) of Rule 11 of Part A
of the Fourth Schedule of an employee
participating in a recognised provident fund, to
the extent to which it is chargeable to tax
under sub-rule (4) thereof;
(2) "perquisite" includes-
(i) the value of rent-free accommodation
provided to the assessee by his employer;
(ii) the value of any concession in the matter of
rent respecting any accommodation provided to
the assessee by his employer;
(iii) the value of any benefit or amenity granted
or provided free of cost or at concessional rate
in any of the following cases:-
(a) by a company to an employee who is a
director thereof;
(b) by a company to an employee being a
person who has a substantial interest in the
company;
(c) by any employer (including a company) to
an employee to whom the provisions of
paragraphs (a) and (b) of this sub-clause do not
apply and whose income under the head
"Salaries" (whether due from, or paid or allowed
by, one or more employers), exclusive of the
value of all benefits or amenities not provided
for by way of monetary payment, exceeds
twenty-four thousand rupees;
Explanation. -For the removal of doubts, it is
hereby declared that the use of any vehicle
provided by a company or an employer for
journey by the assessee from his residence to
his office or other place of work, or from such
office or place to his residence, shall not be
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regarded as a benefit or amenity granted or
provided to him free of cost or at concessional
rate for the purposes of this sub-clause.\024
(emphasis supplied)
11. Warrant is a right without obligation to buy. Therefore,
\023perquisite\024 cannot be said to accrue at the time when warrants
were granted in this case. Same would be the position when
options vested in the employees after lapse of 12 months. It is
important to note that in this case options were exercisable only
after the cooling period of 12 months. Further, it was open to the
employees not to avail of the benefit of option. It was open to the
employees to resign. There was no certainty that the option would
be exercised. Further, the shares were not transferable for 5
years (lock-in period). If an employee resigned during the lock-in
period the shares had to be retransferred. During the lock-in
period, the possession of the shares, which is an important
ingredient of shares, remained with the Trust. The Stock
Exchange was duly notified about non-transferability of the
shares during the lock-in period. The shares were stamped with
the remark \023non-transferable\024 during the lock-in period. It was
not open to the employees to hypothecate or pledge the said
shares during the lock-in period. During the said period, the said
shares have no realisable value, hence, there was no cash in flow
to the employees on account of mere exercise of options. On the
date when the options were exercised, it was not possible for the
employees to foresee the future market value of the shares.
Therefore, in our view, the benefit, if any, which arose on the date
when the option stood exercised was only a notional benefit
whose value was unascertainable. Therefore, in our view, the
Department had erred in treating Rs. 165 crores as perquisite
value being the difference in the market value of shares on the
date of exercise of option and the total amount paid by the
employees consequent upon exercise of the said options.
12. We also do not find merit in the contention advanced on
behalf of the Department that Section 17(2)(iiia) inserted by
Finance Act, 1999 w.e.f. 1.4.2000 was clarificatory and,
therefore, retrospective in nature.
13. We quote hereinbelow Section 17(2)(iiia), which reads as
under:
\023(iiia) the value of any specified security
allotted or transferred, directly or indirectly, by
any person free of cost or at concessional rate,
to an individual who is or has been in
employment of that person :
Provided that in a case where allotment or
transfer of specified securities is made in
pursuance of an option exercised by an
individual, the value of the specified securities
shall be taxable in the previous year in which
such option is exercised by such individual.
Explanation.-For the purposes of this clause,-
(a) cost means the amount actually paid
for acquiring specified securities and
where no money has been paid, the cost
shall be taken as nil;
(b) specified security means the
securities as defined in clause (h) of
section 2 of the Securities Contracts
(Regulation) Act, 1956 (42 of 1956) and
includes employees stock option and
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sweat equity shares;
(c) sweat equity shares means equity
shares issued by a company to its
employees or directors at a discount or for
consideration other than cash for
providing know-how or making available
rights in the nature of intellectual
property rights or value additions, by
whatever name called; and
(d) value means the difference between
the fair market value and the cost for
acquiring specified securities;\024
(emphasis supplied)
14. As stated above, unless a benefit/receipt is made taxable, it
cannot be regarded as \023income\024. This is an important principle of
taxation under the 1961 Act. Applying the above principle to the
insertion of clause (iiia) in Section 17(2) one finds that for the
first time w.e.f. 1.4.2000 the word \023cost\024 stood explained to mean
the amount actually paid for acquiring specified securities and
where no money had been paid, the cost was required to be taken
as nil.
15. In the case of Commissioner of Income-Tax, Bangalore v.
B.C. Srinivasa Setty [(1981) 128 ITR 294 (SC)] this Court held
that the charging section and computation provision under the
1961 Act constituted an integrated code. The mechanism
introduced for the first time under the Finance Act, 1999 by
which \023cost\024 was explained in the manner stated above was not
there prior to 1.4.2000. The new mechanism stood introduced
w.e.f. 1.4.2000 only. With the above definition of the word \023cost\024
introduced vide clause (iiia), the value of option became
ascertainable. There is nothing in the Memorandum to the
Finance Act, 1999 to say that this new mechanism would operate
retrospectively. Further, a mechanism which explains \023cost\024 in
the manner indicated above cannot be read retrospectively unless
the Legislature expressly says so. It was not capable of being
implemented retrospectively. Till 1.4.2000, in the absence of the
definition of the word \023cost\024, value of the option was not
ascertainable. In our view, clause (iiia) is not clarificatory.
Moreover, the meaning of the words \023specified securities\024 in
section (iiia) was defined or explained for the first time vide
Finance Act, 1999 w.e.f. 1.4.2000. Moreover, the words allotted
or transferred in clause (iiia) made things clear only after
1.4.2000. Lastly, it may be pointed out that even clause (iiia) has
been subsequently deleted w.e.f. 1.4.2001. For the aforestated
reasons, we are of the view the clause (iiia) cannot be read as
retrospective.
16. Be that as it may, proceeding on the basis that there was
\023benefit\024, the question is whether every benefit received by the
person is taxable as income? In our view, it is not so. Unless the
benefit is made taxable, it cannot be regarded as income. During
the relevant assessment years, there was no provision in law
which made such benefit taxable as income. Further, as stated,
the benefit was prospective. Unless a benefit is in the nature of
income or specifically included by the Legislature as part of
income, the same is not taxable. In this case, the shares could
not be obtained by the employees till the lock-in period was over.
On facts, we hold that in the absence of legislative mandate a
potential benefit could not be considered as \023income\024 of the
employee(s) chargeable under the head \023salaries\024. The stock was
non-transferable and the stock exchange was also accordingly
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notified. This is where the weightage ought to have been given by
the AO to an important factor, namely, lock in period. This has
not been done. It is important to bear in mind that if the shares
allotted to the employee had no realizable sale value on the day
when he exercised his option then there was no cash inflow to
the employee. It was not possible for the employee to know the
future value of the shares allotted to him on the day he exercises
his option. Even the cost of acquisition as \023nil\024 came to be
introduced in the 1961 Act by the Finance Act, 1999 only with
effect from 1.4.2000. In fact, the later deletion of clause (iiia) is
an indicator of the Ineffective Charge.
17. For the aforestated reasons, we are of the view that the
Department had erred in treating Rs. 165 crores as a perquisite
value for the assessment years 1997-98, 1998-99 and 1999-
2000. During those years, the fifth anniversary had not taken
place and, therefore, it was not possible for the assessee company
to estimate the value of the perquisite during that period. It was
not open to the Department to ignore the lock in period.
Therefore, the Department had erred in treating the respondent
herein as an assessee in default for not deducting the TDS at
30% as stated in the order of assessment. This is not the case of
tax evasion. The assessee had floated the Trust because of the
buy back problems, which were genuine problems in cases where
the employees stood dismissed, removed or in the case of
resignation in which cases they were required to return the
allotment.
18. Estimation of TDS under Section 192 in the absence of clear
provisions on valuation of \023perquisite\024 in this case would not
justify the Department in treating the respondent as assessee in
default. Therefore, in our view, the AO and the CIT(A) had erred
in treating the respondent as defaulter for not deducting TDS
under Section 192. Consequently, Section 201(1) and 201(1A)
were also not applicable to the facts of this case and that the
Department had erred in invoking the said two sections against
the assessee.
19. Before concluding, we express no opinion on the law
prevailing after 1.4.2000 except to the extent indicated
hereinabove.
20. Accordingly, we find no merit in these civil appeals which
stand dismissed with no order as to costs.