Deemed Dividend: Re-computation of Net Debit Balance Considering Day-to-Day Accrued Interest
Facts
-
The Parties: The assessee is a significant shareholder holding more than 10% shares in a closely-held company.
-
The Transaction: The assessee maintained a running current account with the said company during the Assessment Year 2021-22.
-
The Discrepancy: For a brief window of 8 days, the account reflected a net debit balance (loan/advance from the company) of ₹76.74 lakh. For the rest of the year, the account maintained credit balances (amount owed by the company to the shareholder).
-
The Addition: The Assessing Officer (AO) treated the peak debit balance of ₹76.74 lakh as “Deemed Dividend” under Section 2(22)(e).
-
The Conflict: The AO made this addition as a gross amount, failing to set off or consider the interest that would have accrued to the shareholder during the much longer periods when the company held the shareholder’s funds (credit balance).
Decision
-
Final Verdict: The matter was partly decided in favour of the assessee, with a direction to the AO to re-compute the amount.
-
Ratio Decidendi:
-
Netting Principle: The Tribunal accepted the alternate contention that for a running current account, the “deemed dividend” should not be an arbitrary peak figure if there are offsetting factors.
-
Interest Adjustment: Since the account had credit balances for the majority of the year, the benefit of accrued interest on those credit balances on a day-to-day basis must be adjusted against the debit balance.
-
Refinement of Addition: Only the resulting net debit balance, after allowing for such accrued interest benefits, can be legally treated as a deemed dividend. The AO was directed to perform this specific mathematical re-computation.
-
Key Takeaways
-
Running Account Scrutiny: Professionals should advise clients that maintaining a running account between a shareholder and a company is a high-risk area. However, if a debit balance occurs, the tax liability should be calculated on the net impact, not necessarily the peak gross amount.
-
Interest as a Shield: In cases of temporary debit balances, one can argue for the reduction of the deemed dividend amount by factoring in interest on credit balances or previous repayments made within the same financial year.
-
Accounting Precision: To defend such cases, taxpayers must provide a daily ledger analysis or a “day-to-day interest set-off” calculation to prove that the actual benefit received by the shareholder was lower than the AO’s peak-balance estimation.
-
Section 2(40) (Act of 2025): The fundamental concept of Deemed Dividend remains consistent in the new Act. The requirement to prove that a “loan or advance” actually occurred (net of adjustments) continues to be a vital defense strategy for substantial shareholders.
and Vinay Bhamore, Judicial Member
[Assessment years 2021-22]
| “1 | . On the facts & circumstances prevailing in the case & as per the provisions of the Act it be held that the additions so made on account deemed dividend under clause e of sub section 22 of section 02 amounting to Rs. 76,73,718/- is unjust and inappropriate. The additions so made be deleted. Just and proper relief be granted. |
| 2. | Without prejudice to ground no. 1 the additions so made on account of deemed dividend under clause e of sub-section 22 of section 02 be calculated on the net debit balance which should be done after cumulatively taking into consideration the implied daily interest on the daily balances of current account maintained with the company – AEPL. |
| 3. | The appellant prays to be allowed to add, amend, modify, rectify, delete, and raise any grounds of appeal at the time of hearing.” |
“7. Section 2(22)(e) as it stood at the material time defined dividend to include ‘any payment by a company not being a company in which the public are substantially interested, of any sum by way of advance Dr lean to a shareholder, being a person de jure which is the foundation of the statutory fiction incorporated in section 2(6A)(e) of 1922 Act. There was no dispute that the company was a controlled (private limited) company in which the public were not substantially interested within the meaning of section 23A of 1922 Act. Further, the assessee was admittedly a shareholder and managing director of that company. It was also beyond controversy that at all material times, the company possessed ‘accumulated profits’ in excess of the amount which the assessee-shareholder was paid during the previous year. The ITO found that on 1-1-1956, the accumulated profits of the company amounted to Rs. 6,83,005 while from 11-1-1956, to 12-11-1956, the assessee received in cash from time to time from the company payments aggregating Rs. 4,97,442. After deducting the opening credit balance and some other items credited to his amount, the ITO found that in the previous year the assessee-shareholder had received a net payment of Rs. 2,72,703 by way of loan or advance from the company. The company’s business was not money-lending and it could not be said that the loans had been advanced by the company in the ordinary course of its business. Thus, all the factual conditions for raising the statutory fiction created by sections 2(6A)(e) and 12(1B) of 1922 Act appeared to have been satisfied in the instant case.
As the taxability of an income is related to its receipt or accrual in the previous year, the moment a dividend is received, whether it is actual dividend declared by the company or is a deemed dividend, income taxable under the residuary head, ‘income from other sources’, arises. The charge being on accrual or receipt the statutory fiction created by section 2(6A)(e) of 1922 Act and section 12(1B) of 1922 Act would come into operation at the time of the payment by way of advance or loan, provided the other conditions are satisfied.
For the foregoing reasons, it could be said that payment by a company not being a company in which the public were substantially interested within the meaning of section 23A of 1922 Act, of any sum by way of advance or loan to a shareholder, not exceeding the accumulated profits possessed by the company was to be deemed as his dividend under section 2(6A)(e) read with section 12(1B) of the 1922 Act, even if that advance or loan was subsequently repaid in its entirety during the relevant previous year in which it was take.
who has a substantial interest in the company to the extent to which the company possesses accumulated profits: in the instant case, there is no dispute that the appellant had a substantial interest in the company. The nature of the company is also not in dispute.
8. From the facts, as stated hereinabove, it appears that the withdrawals made by the appellant from the company amounted to grant of loan or advance by the company to the shareholder. The legal fiction came into play as soon as the monies were paid by the company to the appellant. The assessee must be deemed to have received dividends on the dates on which she withdrew the aforesaid amounts of money from the company. The loan or advance taken from the company may have been ultimately repaid or adjusted but that will not alter the fact that the assessee, in the eye of law, had received dividend from the company during the relevant accounting period.
9. It was held by this Court in the case of Smt. Tarulata Shyam v. CIT [1977] 108 ITR 345 that the statutory fiction created by section 2(6A)(e) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 would come into operation at the time of the payment of advance or loan to a shareholder by the company. The Legislature had deliberately not made the subsistence of the loan or advance, or its remaining outstanding, on the last date of the previous year relevant to the assessment year a prerequisite for raising the statutory fiction.
10. In the instant case, excess withdrawals were made by the assessee on various dates between 3-7-1972 to 22-3-1973 when the account of Mahesh had not been debited. The assessee’s account was consequently overdrawn. On the very last day of accounting year some adjustment was made but that will not alter the position that the assessee had drawn a total amount of Rs. 93,027 between 3-7-1972 to 22-3-1973 from the company when her account with the company did not have any credit balance at all. That means these advances made by the company to the assessee will have to be treated as deemed dividends paid on the dates when the withdrawals were allowed to be made. Subsequent adjustment of the account made on the very last day of the accounting year will not alter the position that the assessee had received notional dividends on the various dates when she withdrew the aforesaid amounts from the company.
Firstly, it is important to note that the Parliament has itself in the exercise of its legislative judgment raised a conclusive presumption, that in all cases where loans are advanced to a shareholder in a private limited company having accumulated profits, the advances should be deemed to be the dividend income of the shareholder. It is this presumption juris et
