A delay in filing the audit report in Form 10B is a curable procedural defect and should not be a reason to deny a charitable trust’s tax exemption.
Issue
Is the timely filing of the audit report in Form 10B a mandatory, substantive condition that is fatal to a charitable trust’s claim for tax exemption under Sections 11 and 12 of the Income-tax Act, 1961, or is it a procedural requirement where a delay can be condoned?
Facts
- A Public Charitable Trust filed its tax return for the Assessment Year 2021-22 but failed to file the mandatory audit report in Form 10B by the statutory due date.
- As a result of this procedural lapse, the Centralized Processing Center (CPC) processed the return and disallowed the trust’s entire claim for tax exemption under Sections 11 and 12, treating its entire income as taxable.
- The Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT), however, allowed the assessee’s appeal. It relied on a Gujarat High Court decision which held that the filing of Form 10B is a procedural requirement, and a delay in this step should not defeat a genuine claim for exemption.
- The revenue department’s appeal against the Tribunal’s order was also dismissed by the High Court.
- The department then took the matter to the Supreme Court by filing a Special Leave Petition (SLP).
Decision
The Supreme Court dismissed the revenue department’s SLP, ruling decisively in favour of the assessee.
The dismissal was based on two separate grounds:
- Delay: The revenue’s own petition before the Supreme Court was filed with a significant and unexplained delay of 237 days.
- Merits: The court also dismissed the petition on its merits, which implicitly means it agreed with the consistent view of the High Court and the Tribunal that the delay in filing Form 10B was a curable procedural issue and not a valid reason to deny the exemption.
Key Takeways
- Filing Form 10B is Procedural, Not Substantive: The Supreme Court’s dismissal of the case on its merits gives its stamp of approval to the long-held view of many High Courts that the requirement to file Form 10B is directory or procedural in nature.
- Substance Over Form: This is a strong affirmation of the legal principle of “substance over form.” The substantive condition is that the trust is genuinely charitable and has actually had its accounts audited. The procedural act of uploading the audit report by a certain date is considered secondary to this.
- A Delay Can Be Excused: A genuine charitable trust should not be burdened with a massive and potentially crippling tax liability for a minor, procedural mistake like the late filing of a form. Such a delay is a curable defect.
- A Consistent Judicial View: This case demonstrates a consistent and uniform view across the entire judicial hierarchy—from the Tribunal to the High Court and now implicitly by the Supreme Court—that the tax department should not take such a hyper-technical and rigid view that defeats the very purpose of granting tax exemptions to charitable institutions.
“9. In the present case, it is undisputed that the assessee trust is registered under section 12AA of the Act for the past 40 years and the said registration is still in existence. It is also not the case of the Revenue that the assessee has ceased to be a religious or charitable institution. Further, it is also not the case of the Revenue that the accounts of the assessee have not been audited by an accountant, and an audit report in Form 10B has not been obtained. Only on the technical aspect that Form 10B was not filed along with the return of income for the relevant assessment year, the exemption claimed under section 11 of the Act has been denied to the assessee without going into the merits. Further, no relief was granted to the assessee even when the assessee filed the application under section 154 of the Act. We find that while dealing with similar facts the Coordinate Bench of the Tribunal in Trinity Education Trust v. ITO [IT Appeal No. 669 (Srt.) of 2018, dated 28.02.2022], decided the issue in favour of the taxpayer by observing as under:
“8. We have considered the rival submissions both the parties and perused the order of lower authorities carefully. We find that there is no dispute that at the time of filing of return of income, the audit report has required under Form 10B was not uploaded once uploaded on the system consequently the AO/CPC not allowed the exemption claimed under section 11. Assessing Officer/CPC brought the entire receipt as taxable income. On receipt intimation under section 143(1) of the Act the assessee uploaded in Form 10B and filed application for rectification under section 154 of the Act. The application of the assessee was rejected on the ground report in Form 10B was not furnished before due date of return of income. The ld. CIT(A) dismissed the appeal of the assessee by taking view the audit report in Form 10B was not uploaded before due date of return of income.
9. We find that the Hon’ble jurisdictional High Court in case of CIT v. Xavier Kalavani Mandal (P.) Ltd. (supra) held that in order to claim exemption under section 11, the assessee can filed audit report in Form 10B even at later stage either before the Assessing Officer or before appellate authority by showing a sufficient cause. Further, Hon’ble jurisdictional High Court decision in case of Sarvodaya charitable Trust v. ITO (Exemption) (supra) also held that where the assessee is a public charitable trust registered under section 12A of the Act and substantially satisfied condition for availing benefit of exemption as a charitable could not be denied exemption, the assessee merely on bar of limitation in furnishing audit report in Form 10B. Considering the aforesaid and legal discussion, we find that though the assessee has not filed any return of income at the time, however, it was available before the Id. CIT(A) as it was uploaded much before filing application under section 154. Therefore, respectfully following the decisions of Hon’ble jurisdictional High Court in case of CIT v. Xavier Kalavani Mandal (P.) Ltd. (supra) and in Sarvodaya charitable Trust v. ITO (Exemption) (supra), we find that the assessee has complied the procedural requirement, therefore, the Assessing Officer/CPC is directed to verify the claim of the assessee and grant necessary deduction under section 11 of IT Act. In the result, the appeal of the assessee is allowed for statistical purposes.”