The tribunal ruled that such exemption claims can still be considered if made during reassessment proceedings, provided they are directly linked to income under reassessment.
Case background
The ruling relates to M Sheikh, an individual taxpayer who had not filed an original return within the prescribed timeline. Following a reassessment notice under Section 148, he filed a return declaring long-term capital gains from the sale of a residential property and claimed an exemption of ₹49 lakh under Section 54 on the basis of reinvestment in another residential house.
Section 54 provides exemption on long-term capital gains arising from the sale of a residential property if the gains are reinvested in another residential property within the specified time period.
Tax department view rejected
The assessing officer denied the exemption on the ground that no original return was filed under Section 139(1). The Commissioner (Appeals) upheld this view.
The ITAT, however, set aside this interpretation. It observed that reassessment proceedings, while aimed at addressing escaped income, also allow consideration of claims directly connected to such income.
The tribunal held that a procedural lapse such as non-filing of an original return cannot, by itself, be a ground to deny a substantive exemption if statutory conditions are otherwise met.
Key clarification
The ruling establishes that:
- Section 54 exemption cannot be rejected solely due to absence of an original return
- Claims linked to reassessed income can be raised during reassessment proceedings
- Substantive eligibility under tax law prevails over procedural lapses
Khalid Masood, Managing Director, Shalimar Corp, said the ruling reflects continued investor interest in residential reinvestment despite procedural and regulatory complexities. He added that property remains a preferred long-term asset class due to stability and potential appreciation, while regulatory clarity supports sustained confidence among buyers.
Rajnikant Mishra, Founder and Managing Director, Amrawati Group, said the judgment addresses practical issues in property transactions where reinvestment often happens before compliance processes are fully completed. He noted that the clarification reduces uncertainty around tax exposure during reassessment and better reflects the realities of real estate dealings.
Ravikant, Co-Founder, Elegance Enterprises & Elegance Infra, said investors continue to reinvest capital gains into residential property, driven by capital safety and long-term growth considerations.
He added that while intent remains strong, decision-making has become more structured, with greater emphasis on upfront clarity in documentation and timelines, particularly in higher-value transactions.
Advocate Prateek Jha, Supreme Court of India, said capital gains taxation has increasingly become a procedural friction point in real estate transactions.
He noted that while recent rulings provide relief, inconsistency in interpretation at the implementation level continues to create uncertainty, making clarity and uniform application critical for genuine transactions.
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