The core of the dispute revolved around the precise meaning of the phrase “a residential house” in the unamended Section 54(1) of the Income Tax Act, which governs the reinvestment of capital gains arising from the sale of a house property to avoid taxation
In a significant pronouncement for individual taxpayers, the Bombay High Court has elucidated the interpretation of Section 54(1) of the Income Tax Act, thereby allowing long-term capital gains exemption for the purchase of multiple residential houses, provided the transactions occurred prior to the the 2014 amendment to the provision. This ruling addresses a contentious issue that has led to considerable litigation.
The core of the dispute revolved around the precise meaning of the phrase “a residential house” in the unamended Section 54(1) of the Income Tax Act, which governs the reinvestment of capital gains arising from the sale of a house property to avoid taxation. Prior to its amendment by the Finance (No. 2) Act, 2014, the law stipulated that if the capital gain was utilized for “purchasing or constructing a residential house” within a three-year timeframe, no tax would be levied. The 2014 amendment prospectively altered this phrase to “one residential house,” effective from April 1, 2015.
The case brought before the High Court involved Krishnagopal B. Nangpal, an assessee who had sold a flat in Mumbai and subsequently utilized the entire capital gain, exceeding ?1 crore, to acquire seven row houses in Pune. Critically, both the sale and purchase transactions were concluded before the 2014 amendment came into force. The Income Tax Department had denied Nangpal the full deduction, a decision that was partially upheld by the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT), which limited the exemption to the purchase of only one house.
A Division Bench of Chief Justice Alok Aradhe and Justice Sandeep VMarne, after a thorough review of the facts and legal arguments, observed that the established legal position supported a broader interpretation of the unamended provision. The Court noted that the phrase “a residential house” in Section 54(1), as it stood before the amendment, was not intended to signify a singular residential unit but could encompass multiple residential properties.
“The emphasis in the unamended Section 54 (1) of the Act is on residential nature of the property and the objective was never to restrict the number of residential houses purchased against capital gains. The words ‘a residential house’ were merely descriptive nature of the assets sold/purchased and not restrictive of the number of assets sold or purchased. The position got modified by the Legislature only w.e.f. 01 April 2015,” the bench said.
The Bench reinforced its conclusion by drawing upon previous rulings by the Karnataka High Court in the case of Arun K. Thiagarajan and the Madras High Court in C. Tilokchand & Sons Cases. These precedents had similarly held that the term “a” in Section 54, preceding its substitution by “one,” permitted the inclusion of plural residential units.
Consequently, the High Court quashed the orders of the Assessing Officer and the ITAT to the extent that they deprived Nangpal of the full exemption benefit under Section 54(1) of the Act.
Tax experts
Tax experts have welcomed the judgment. Amit Maheshwari, Tax Partner at AKM Global, stated that this decision aligns with earlier High Court pronouncements and clarifies that the phrase “a residential house” was not meant to restrict reinvestment to a single property. He further noted the significant implications for “legacy cases” where exemptions might have been denied solely due to the acquisition of multiple units.
“This judgment underscores that the tax benefit under Section 54 is intrinsically linked to the residential character and the genuine purpose of reinvestment—not to the number of units acquired,” Maheshwari remarked. He added that the decision reinforces legal certainty and ensures equitable relief for taxpayers in similar cases awaiting adjudication.
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