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Tax tribunal upholds tax-exempt status of Tata Trusts

Censures Mistry for supplying documents to the tax department soon after his unceremonious exit

Tax tribunal upholds tax-exempt status of Tata Trusts
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Tax tribunal upholds tax-exempt status of Tata Trusts

New Delhi: The Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT) has upheld the tax-exempt status of three Tata Group trusts, quashing a revision order of the Income Tax Department that sought to cancel tax exemption on grounds that they held shares of Tata Sons.

It also censured former Tata Sons Chairman Syrus Mistry for supplying documents to the tax department soon after his unceremonious exit as the head of the salt-to-software group. The ITAT's Mumbai bench - comprising its President Justice P P Bhatt and Vice President Pramod Kumar - passed three separate orders on December 28, upholding the tax-exempt status of Ratan Tata Trust, JRD Tata Trust and Dorabji Tata Trust. It said the March 2019 revision order of the Income Tax Department that sought to cancel tax exemption to the three trusts was "devoid of any legally sustainable merits".

The three trusts collectively hold about 66 per cent in Tata Sons - the holding company of Tata Group. The commissioner of income tax (exemption) (CIT-E) had threatened to upend the decades-old ownership of Tata Sons by the trusts by alleging that such shareholdings are in violation of the income tax laws.

Tata Trusts had appealed to the tribunal, denying the claims of the CIT-E. The ITAT also came down heavily on Mistry, who it said had indulged in "behaviour unheard of in the corporate world". Mistry's act of supplying material to the Income Tax Department just weeks after his removal as chairman of Tata Sons and without authorisation from the company cannot be said to be influenced by "call of pure conscience and high grounds of morality", the tribunal observed.

It said the inputs from those engaged in a rivalry with an assessee should be taken with a reasonable degree of circumspection. Mistry was removed as Tata Sons chairman in October 2016. ITAT said none of the trustees of the trusts had any substantial interest in Tata Sons and the investment in Tata Sons by the trust is not "for the purpose of investment in shares", but "undisputedly for the purpose of sharing the fruits of the success, of the Tata Group, for the benefit of the general public at large". Since the investments by the trusts are in the nature of corpus, it will not make them ineligible for I-T exemption, it said.

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