Section 80G Approval Denied: Outsourcing Hospital & Low Charitable Spend is Not “Charity”
Issue
Whether a trust is entitled to approval under Section 80G if it outsources its primary medical facility to a third party in exchange for a percentage of turnover, and its actual spending on charitable relief is disproportionately low compared to its income.
Facts
The Setup: The assessee-trust acquired a building to run a hospital.
The Operation (or lack thereof): Instead of running the hospital itself, the trust outsourced the hospital functions to another entity.
Revenue Model: The trust earned income calculated as a percentage of the hospital’s turnover, effectively acting as a landlord/partner rather than a charitable operator.
Assessee’s Plea: The trust argued it was still charitable because it ran two medical shops selling generic medicines in the hospital premises.
Financial Discrepancy: The trust’s income was over Rs. 1 Crore, but the relief provided to patients (charitable spend) was barely Rs. 30 Lakhs for FY 2022-23.
Rejection: The Commissioner (Exemption) denied the Section 80G registration, citing a lack of genuine charitable activity.
Decision
Commercial Nature: The Tribunal held that earning income based on a percentage of turnover from an outsourced entity resembles a commercial arrangement (renting/leasing) rather than a charitable obligation.
Insufficient Charity: The Court noted the huge gap between income (>1 Cr) and relief (~30 L). A charitable institution must demonstrate that its primary objective and application of funds are for charitable purposes.
Burden of Proof: The assessee failed to prove it was conducting “pure charitable activities.” Merely running a generic pharmacy while the main hospital is commercially outsourced does not justify 80G status.
Outcome: The denial of approval was upheld. In favour of Revenue.
Key Takeaways
Active vs. Passive: To qualify for 80G, a trust must generally be actively engaged in charity. Simply owning a building and letting someone else run a business in it (even a hospital) often disqualifies the owner from tax benefits unless the arrangement itself is charitable (e.g., free treatment clauses).
Application Ratio Matters: While 85% application is the standard for Section 11 exemption, for 80G approval, the Commissioner looks at the genuineness of the activity. Spending only ~30% of income on actual relief raises red flags.
Substance over Form: You cannot mask a commercial lease agreement (revenue share) as a charitable medical activity.
and Ratnesh Nandan Sahay, Accountant Member
[Assessment years 2023-2024 and 2024-2025]