Taxability of Interest on Compensation or Enhanced Compensation Under Section 56(2)(viii)

Here’s a detailed analysis of the taxability of interest on compensation or enhanced compensation under Section 56(2)(viii) of the Income Tax Act, 1961:

1. Scope of Section 56(2)(viii)

  • Applies to: Interest received on compensation or enhanced compensationawarded under laws like the Land Acquisition Act, 1894.
  • Taxable as“Income from Other Sources”(not capital gains), effective post-2010 amendments.

2. Key Judicial Interpretations

  • Pre-2010 Position:
    • Interest under Section 28of the Land Acquisition Act was treated as capital gains (accretion to compensation) per CIT vs. Ghanshyam (HUF).
  • Post-2010 Amendment:
    • Finance (No. 2) Act, 2009 overruledGhanshyam by inserting Section 56(2)(viii), mandating taxation as “Income from Other Sources”.
    • Delhi High Courtin PCIT vs. Inderjit Singh Sodhi upheld this amendment, clarifying that interest is now taxable separately from compensation.

3. Tax Treatment

  • Taxable Amount50% of interest receivedis deductible under Section 57(iv), with the balance taxed at slab rates.
    • Example: ₹5 lakh interest → ₹2.5 lakh taxable after 50% deduction.
  • TDS: Applicable under Section 194A if interest exceeds ₹50,000/year.

4. Exemptions & Controversies

  • Agricultural Land: Compensation for compulsory acquisition of agricultural land may be exempt under Section 10(37).
  • Conflicting Rulings:
    • Gujarat High Court(Movaliya Bhikhubhai) held interest under Section 28 remains capital gains.
    • Delhi/Punjab & Haryana HCstreat it as “Income from Other Sources” post-amendment.

5. Compliance & Reporting

  • Disclosure: Report under Schedule OSin ITR.
  • Documentation: Maintain award copies, interest certificates, and valuation reports.

Note: The 50% deduction is not available under the new tax regime

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