"1 1 IN THE INCOME TAX APPELLATE TRIBUNAL “SMC” BENCH, CHANDIGARH PHYSICAL HEARING HON’BLE SHRI MANOJ KUMAR AGGARWAL, AM आयकर अपील सं. / ITA No.1287/CHANDI/2025 (िनधाŊरण वषŊ / Assessment Year: 2015-16) Shri Gurmeet Singh Village Manakpur Devilal, Pinjore Panchkula, Haryana - 134109 बनाम/ Vs. ITO Ward 5 Panchkula Haryana - 134112 ̾थायीलेखासं./जीआइआरसं./PAN/GIR No. CTNPS-5895-M (अपीलाथŎ/Appellant) : (ŮȑथŎ / Respondent) अपीलाथŎकीओरसे/ Appellant by : None ŮȑथŎकीओरसे/Respondent by : Sh. Vivek Vardhan (Addl. CIT) – Ld. Sr. DR सुनवाईकीतारीख/Date of Hearing : 08-01-2026 घोषणाकीतारीख /Date of Pronouncement : 14-01-2026 आदेश / O R D E R 1. Aforesaid appeal by assessee for Assessment Year (AY) 2015- 16 arises out of an order of learned Addl. / Joint Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals)-1, Mumbai [CIT(A)] dated 18-03-2025 in the matter of an assessment framed by Ld. Assessing Officer [AO] u/s 143(3) r.w.s. 147 of the Act on 14-11-2019. At the time of hearing, none appeared for assessee. However, Ld. Sr. DR pointed out that the impugned issue stood covered against the assessee by the recent decision of this Tribunal in bunch of appeals titled as Shri Ajay Kumar & Ors. (ITA Nos.463/Chd/2023 & ors. dated 11-11-2025). A copy of the order has been placed on record. In the above Printed from counselvise.com 2 2 background, the appeal is disposed-off as under. The registry has noted delay of 129 days in the appeal which stand condoned. The sole issue that arises in the appeal is taxability of interest on enhanced compensation for Rs.11,16,597/-. 2. The assessee received interest on enhanced compensation u/s 28 of Land Acquisition Act of 1894 for Rs.22,33,294/- which was claimed to be exempt. The Ld. AO opined that 50% of the same would be taxable. The Ld. AO, following various binding judicial precedents and considering the amendment made by Finance Act 2009 by way of insertion of clause (viii) under sub-section 2 of Sec.56, brought the same to tax. The Ld. CIT(A) confirmed the same against which the assessee is in further appeal before Tribunal. 3. As rightly pointed out by Ld. Sr. DR, this issue has elaborately been adjudicated upon by coordinate bench of this Tribunal in the cited case as under: - 59. The following propositions emerge from a conjoint reading of the relevant statutory provisions of the income tax after its amendment w.e.f 1/4/2010 reproduced hereinabove : (i) By inserting Section 56(2)(viii) and Section 145B(1) with effect from 1st April 2010, the Legislature introduced a specific charging mechanism mandating that interest received on compensation or enhanced compensation shall be taxable under the head “Income from Other Sources”, and that such income shall be brought to tax on receipt basis. (ii) This amendment marks a substantive legislative departure from the earlier scheme of Section 45(5), wherein the entire compensation, including enhanced compensation, was treated as part of capital gains. The post-2010 regime thus establishes a distinct head of income and a clear basis of charge for interest on such compensation. (iii) It is pertinent to note that the opening words of Section 56(2)—“In particular, and without prejudice to the generality of the provisions of sub section (1), the following incomes shall be chargeable to income-tax under the head ‘Income from Other Sources’”—constitute a deeming provision, bringing within its sweep certain categories of income which might not otherwise fall under this head. The inclusion of clause (viii) therein deems interest on compensation or enhanced compensation to be taxable as Printed from counselvise.com 3 3 Income from Other Sources, notwithstanding its earlier characterization under capital gains. (iv) A conjoint reading of Section 2(24), Section 2(28A), Section 4, Section 10(37), Section 14, Section 45(5), Section 56(2)(viii), Section 145B(1) and Section 194LA of the Act makes it abundantly clear that any income which arises or is deemed to arise or accrue in India is chargeable to tax in the hands of a resident assessee. (v) The definition of “interest” under Section 2(28A) specifically includes any interest payable in any manner in respect of moneys borrowed or debt incurred, including a deposit, claim, or other similar right or obligation. The expression “claim” is wide enough to encompass the amount of compensation or consideration payable to an assessee, particularly in cases of compulsory acquisition. (vi) Further, under Section 14 read with Section 56(2)(viii), any income not falling under other specific heads shall be chargeable to tax under the head “Income from Other Sources.” The timing of such taxation, as per Section 145B(1), is on receipt basis. (vii) Consequently, the definition of “interest” under Section 2(28A) squarely covers interest on enhanced compensation, which—being in the nature of a claim—falls within the charging ambit of Section 4 of the Act. (viii) Hence, such interest is deemed to be taxable in the hands of the assessee under the specific deeming provision contained in Section 56(2)(viii), read with Section 145B(1), in accordance with the legislative scheme introduced by the Finance Act, 2010. 60. It is trite law that once Parliament enacts a specific charging provision dealing with a particular species of income, characterisation under another 57 statute cannot override such specific provision. The Income-tax Act is a self contained code, and definitions or deeming fiction under another statute (including the Land Acquisition Act) cannot be imported unless expressly incorporated. Reference in this regard may be made to Scindia Steam Navigation (supra), and Vatika Township (supra). Further at the time of passing of the order by Hon'ble Supreme Court in the case of Ghanshyam (HUF) (supra) , did not have the benefit of examining the various provisions of law, as mentioned herein above. 61. Equally, the principle is well-settled that a judicial interpretation continues to apply only until the Legislature steps in and amends the law. In Sedco Forex International Drilling Inc. v. CIT (2005) 279 ITR 310 (SC), the Hon’ble Supreme Court held that judicial interpretation stands superseded when the statutory provision is subsequently amended prospectively. It was held as under:- XXXXX 62. Applying these settled principles, it is clear that the ratio of Ghanshyam (HUF) (supra) represents the legal position under the unamended law, whereas with the introduction of Section 56(2)(viii) read with Section 145B(1), the Legislature has provided an explicit statutory mandate governing the tax treatment of interest on enhanced compensation for assessment years from 01.04.2010 onwards. Accordingly, for post-amendment years, interest on enhanced compensation is taxable under Section 56(2)(viii) irrespective of its characterisation under the Land Acquisition Act, and Printed from counselvise.com 4 4 the deeming fiction under Section 28 of the Land Acquisition Act cannot displace the statutory scheme enacted in the Income-tax Act. 63. In view of the above legal position, we hold that the amended provisions apply prospectively from 01.04.2010 and govern the present assessment year. Consequently, the judicial interpretation in Ghanshyam (HUF) (supra) applies only to pre-amendment years and cannot be relied upon to exclude such income from tax under the amended scheme. The authorities below have correctly applied the statutory provisions inserted by the Finance Act, 2010, and the taxability of the impugned receipt under Section 56(2)(viii) stands confirmed. The assessee has placed reliance on the decisions of the Hon’ble Supreme Court in Union of India v. Hari Singh & Ors. (2018) 408 ITR 1 (SC) and Commissioner v. Braham Prakash (SLP (C) Diary No. 22662/2018, SC) to contend that interest awarded under Section 28 of the Land Acquisition Act continues to partake the character of compensation 59 and, therefore, cannot be brought to tax under the head “Income from Other Sources”. We have carefully examined these authorities. It is noted that both decisions merely reiterate the principles laid down in CIT v. Ghanshyam (HUF) (2009) 315 ITR 1 (SC), particularly directing the tax authorities to treat interest under Section 28 as part of compensation for the assessment years governed by the pre-amendment law. Effect of Hari Singh (supra) and Braham Prakash (supra) 64. Importantly, neither Hari Singh (supra) nor Braham Prakash (supra) considered or dealt with the effect of the statutory amendment introduced by the Finance Act, 2010, inserting Section 56(2)(viii) read with Section 145B(1). These judgments were rendered in the context of the legal framework prior to the insertion of the specific charging provision, and are silent on the income tax consequences post-amendment. The Hon’ble Supreme Court in these cases did not examine, interpret, or pronounce upon the effect, scope, or applicability of Section 56(2)(viii). 65. It is a settled principle that a precedent is an authority only for what it explicitly decides, and cannot be extended to situations or statutory regimes which the Court did not consider. [See State of Orissa v. Sudhansu Sekhar Misra (1968) AIR SC 647; Union of India v. Major Bahadur Singh (2006) 1 SCC 368]. In the latter decision it was noted by Hon’ble SC XXXXX Therefore, the reliance placed by the assessee on these decisions to govern the post- amendment regime is misplaced. 66. With the introduction of Section 56(2)(viii) and Section 145B(1), Parliament has enacted a specific charging mechanism to tax interest received on compensation or enhanced compensation as “Income from Other Sources” on receipt basis, thereby legislatively modifying the tax character of such receipts for assessment years commencing 01.04.2010 onwards. Once a direct charging provision exists, the characterisation of such receipt under the Land Acquisition Act or the judicial interpretation rendered 61 under the erstwhile regime cannot prevail over the express statutory mandate of the Income-tax Act. Printed from counselvise.com 5 5 67. Accordingly, Hari Singh (supra) and Braham Prakash (supra) are confined to the legal position prevailing prior to the amendment and do not assist the assessee for post- amendment assessment years. The statutory change having altered the tax treatment expressly, reliance on these cases for the present assessment year is untenable. Dealing With Per-Incuriam Argument 68. The assessee has argued that the decisions of the Hon’ble Delhi High Court and the Hon’ble Punjab & Haryana High Court, which have upheld the post-amendment taxability of interest on enhanced compensation under Section 56(2)(viii), are per incuriam as they did not expressly consider the Hon’ble Supreme Court’s rulings in Hari Singh and Braham Prakash. We are unable to accept this contention. 69. At the outset, it is trite law that a lower forum cannot declare a judgment of a High Court per incuriam, much less when such a judgment binds this Tribunal within its territorial jurisdiction. The doctrine of per incuriam is a narrow exception to stare decisis and applies only in exceptional situations where a court ignores a binding statute or binding precedent—not where the later decision arises in a different statutory context or post-amendment framework. As observed in Bajaj Allianz decision of supreme court, the rule of per incuriam cannot be invoked merely because another decision or line of reasoning exists. 70. In the present factual and legal matrix, both Hari Singh and Braham Prakash dealt with the pre-amendment legal regime and reiterated Ghanshyam (HUF) in that context. Neither decision examined nor interpreted the effect of the Finance Act, 2010 inserting Sections 56(2)(viii) and 145B(1). As held by the Hon'ble Supreme Court in Sedco Forex (279 ITR 310), a judicial interpretation governs only until the statute is amended. Therefore, the High 62 Court decisions dealing with the post-amendment regime cannot be said to be per incuriam for not referring to decisions governing a prior legal regime 71. The assessee’s reliance on the per incuriam doctrine is also misconceived because a binding High Court judgment cannot be disregarded by the Tribunal on the ground that the Court did not refer to some Supreme Court decision, particularly where the subject judgments (Hari Singh and Braham Prakash) did not adjudicate upon the statutory amendment now in issue. In State of Orissa v. Sudhansu Sekhar Misra AIR 1968 SC 647, the Hon’ble Supreme Court cautioned that a decision is an authority only for what it decides and must be read in the factual and statutory context. 72. Further as observed in Haryana Vidyut Prasaran Nigam Ltd. [2025] 170 taxmann.com 204 (Punjab & Haryana)/[2025] 303 Tax. It was held as under :- XXXXX 73. In the case of citvs Thana Electricity Supply Ltd.*1994] 206 ITR 727 (Bombay)/[1993] 112 CTR 356 (Bombay) hon’ble Bombay high court had held as under :- XXXXX 74. In the case of Mylan Laboratories Ltd. [2022] 137 taxmann.com 178 (Telangana) it was held as under :- Printed from counselvise.com 6 6 XXXXX 75. In view of above decision jurisdictional discipline and hierarchy of courts prohibit the Tribunal from questioning the binding force of a High Court judgment on the ground of alleged oversight. 76. Respectfully following the principle that a Tribunal cannot sit in appeal over, or test for per incuriam, a judgment of the High Court, we hold that the decisions of the Hon’ble High Courts upholding the applicability of Section 56(2)(viii) post-amendment cannot be disregarded. The assessee’s argument that such judgments are per incuriam is accordingly rejected. 77. In the light of the above discussion, the common legal ground raised in the lead matter stands decided against the assessee. Consequently, the appeal of the assessee is dismissed. Since the common legal issue has been adjudicated against the assessee, we do not find it necessary to adjudicate upon the individual grounds raised in these sets of appeals, as the same have become academic in nature. 78. In view of the foregoing, all the appeals filed by the assessee are dismissed, and the order passed by the Assessing Officer is hereby restored and upheld. 79. As regards the appeals filed by the Revenue, the same are allowed, and the order of the Assessing Officer is accordingly sustained The bench, following the decision of Hon’ble Punjab & Haryana High Court in the case of Mahender Pal Narang (120 Taxmann.com 400) as well as the decision of Hon’ble Delhi High Court in the case of Inderjit Singh Sodhi (161 Taxmann.com 301) held such interest to be taxable as income from other sources u/s 56(2)(viii). Respectfully, following the same, I confirm the impugned addition as made by Ld. AO. 4. The appeal stands dismissed. Order pronounced on 14th January, 2026. -Sd- (MANOJ KUMAR AGGARWAL) ACCOUNTANT MEMBER Dated: 14-01-2026 Printed from counselvise.com 7 7 आदेश की Ůितिलिप अŤेिषत /Copy of the Order forwarded to : 1. अपीलाथŎ/Appellant 2. ŮȑथŎ/Respondent 3. आयकरआयुƅ/CIT 4. िवभागीयŮितिनिध/DR 5. गाडŊफाईल/GF ASSISTANT REGISTRAR ITAT CHANDIGARH Printed from counselvise.com "