Following a detailed assessment, the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT) Mumbai has pronounced a significant ruling regarding capital gains tax. It held that a wife receiving a gifted property share from her husband can claim exemption under Section 54 of the Income Tax Act, 1961, provided the conditions are met. However, clubbing and ownership rules still apply.
Kavita Manoj Damani, the assessee, had filed her income return declaring ₹29.6 lakh. Upon scrutiny, the Assessing Officer (AO) questioned her claim of ₹3.96 crore exemption under Section 54. The dispute revolved around the sale of 2 residential flats originally purchased in 2002, which were jointly held by the assessee and her husband.
The AO concluded that the wife did not contribute financially towards the original purchase and was not the real owner. Consequently, in 2017, when her husband gifted his share to her, the AO invoked clubbing provisions under Section 64 of the Act, accounting the income in the husband’s name.
In 2020, the assessee sold the flats for ₹5.98 crore and claimed exemption by purchasing a new flat from her husband worth ₹3.85 crore. The AO rejected the claim for several reasons:
Thus, the AO concluded the transaction was a tax avoidance attempt.
When the case reached the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals), the contention of the AO was upheld. The CIT(A) also noted:
Accordingly, the exemption under Section 54 was denied.
The 2-member bench comprising Judicial Member Amit Shukla and Accountant Member Vikram Singh Yadav re-evaluated the entire matter. The ITAT made key observations:
Despite the financial routing through the company, the tribunal found legal compliance with the timelines under Section 54. The purchase was completed within two years from the sale of original property, and hence the exemption was allowed.
Read More: ₹25 Lakh Gift from Parents: Do I Need to Pay Tax?
The tribunal directed the AO to permit the exemption claimed under Section 54. While the clubbing provisions were applicable in specific cases, the legal transfer through a gift deed and valid reinvestment satisfied necessary statutory compliance.
The ITAT Mumbai’s judgment affirms that capital gain exemption under Section 54 can be claimed on a property gifted by a husband to his wife, granted all statutory conditions are met. However, even when the transaction is legally valid, scrutiny of financial trails and compliance plays a pivotal role in determining eligibility for tax exemption.
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Published on: Jun 16, 2025, 1:48 PM IST
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