Thursday, July 2, 2026

Cash shortage in taxpayer's proprietary concern not taxable as deemed dividend

 Recently, the Bangalore Tribunal held that a cash shortage in a taxpayer's proprietary concern cannot, by itself, be treated as a deemed dividend from a company in which the taxpayer is a substantial shareholder. The Tribunal clarified that, unless the Revenue establishes that the company has actually advanced funds or conferred a benefit on the shareholder, no addition can be made under the deemed dividend provisions.


Background:

  • The taxpayer was a substantial shareholder (holding more than 10% of the share capital) and Director of a private limited company.
  • During the search proceedings, a cash shortage of approximately INR 79.73 lakh was noticed in the books of the taxpayer's proprietary concern.
  • Assessing Officer (AO) treated cash shortage as a loan or advance received from the company and made an addition under Section 2(22)(e) of the Income-tax Act, 1961 (the provision which taxes the loans or advances given by closely held companies to substantial shareholders as 'deemed dividend') – (herein referred as ‘deemed dividend provisions’).


Revenue's Arguments: The taxpayer was a substantial shareholder in the private limited company and therefore covered within the ambit of deemed dividend provisions. The cash shortage represented an amount withdrawn by the taxpayer and was liable to be taxed as deemed dividend.

Taxpayer's Arguments: The cash shortage pertained solely to the books of the proprietary concern and not to the books of the private limited company. There was no evidence of any withdrawal, loan or advance from the company to the taxpayer. Accordingly, the essential conditions for invoking deemed dividend provisions were not satisfied.

Bangalore ITAT Held:

  • Deemed dividend provisions can be invoked only where a company is regarded as having made a loan or advance to a specified shareholder.
  • A cash shortage in the books of a proprietary concern cannot be equated with a loan or advance from the company.
  • The Revenue failed to establish that there was any cash shortage or diversion of funds from the books of the private limited company.
  • In the absence of any evidence showing that company funds had been advanced to the taxpayer, the addition under deemed dividend provisions was unsustainable.

Key Takeaway:
The ruling is a helpful precedent for shareholders / promoters of closely-held companies, as it reiterates that the deeming fiction under deemed dividend provisions have a limited scope and cannot be extended based on presumptions or accounting discrepancies outside the company's books. Maintaining proper accounting records and a clear audit trail of transactions of fund flow between the company and its shareholders remains essential to mitigate litigation under these provisions

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