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TravelKhana, an award-winning start-up, riding high on profits and bullish on expansion till last December, is now wondering whether it will exist in the next six months.
The Noida-based start-up, a pioneer in delivering food to passengers travelling by train, was slapped with an ‘angel tax’ order of Rs 2.30 crore on 21 December. On 5 February, the Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT) froze the company’s four company accounts and withdrew the entire sum of Rs 33 lakh from them.
After desperate pleas by company founder Pushpinder Singh, CBDT un-froze the accounts but has left them penniless. Stung by this unprecedented behaviour, Singh is now questioning the company’s survival. “The question is really of our existence right now,” Singh told The Quint on Thursday.
Singh has been running from pillar to post to have his company’s bank balance restored but he says all he has got so far are empty responses from senior tax officials.
Singh said that tax officials had been posing many questions about the capital he had raised in Financial Year 2015-16. He was slapped with an angel tax order on 21 December 2018 during the same time that he was asked to comply with the tax queries. The charge was made under section 68 of the Income Tax Act which deals with unaccounted cash credits.
Singh had made two abeyance requests to the CBDT, the second one made on 4 February. The very next day he found out that tax officials had frozen all four of his company’s accounts. Upon approaching the senior tax officers he said that the CBDT did acknowledge that it was “an error on their part and against natural justice”. While they did unfreeze TravelKhana’s accounts but that was hardly a balm on the company’s wounds.
Singh realised that even though the accounts had been restored, the combined total of the four accounts, amounting to Rs 33 lakh had been withdrawn by the tax department. CBDT withdrew the amount on the pretext of tax liability on investments raised by the company from angel investors.
Singh said he feels that tax assessment officers are unwilling to “look at the fact that we are a start-up, we are someone who are known in the field. They just acted assuming that we are criminals, who are into money laundering.” He said that despite everything being done legally including the issuance of shares, the filings with the ministry of corporate affairs done and filings with RBI.
What has happened with TravelKhana is an issue that the start-up community has been pleading desperately with the government to address.
Just 20 days before the company’s entire bank balance was wiped clean, a group of 70 start-ups from across India had submitted an appeal letter to Prime Minister Narendra Modi imploring him to do away with the arbitrary tax.
On the evening the same day that the letter was submitted to the PMO, the Ministry of Commerce, headed by Suresh Prabhu, issued a notification announcing changes to section 56 (2) (vii b) of the Income tax Act, which imposes the ‘angel tax’.
However, the relief among start-ups was tempered by the feeling that provisions of the notification did little to address the real concerns of India’s start-up ecosystem.
Apprehensive of further backlash from the start-up ecosystem, on Monday, 4 February, the Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT), under the aegis of the Ministry of Commerce, organised a round table with start-ups, investors and CBDT officials to find an agreeable way forward.
“Angel Tax”, at the heart of the discontent among start-ups, under Section 56(2) (viib) of the Income Tax (I-T) Act, taxes any investments made by an Indian entity in an unlisted Indian company above fair market value as income. It treats investment as income.
The other relevant provision in this regard is section 68 under this section that Singh’s company was charged. CBDT, in a press release said “on ascertaining the facts it is seen that the additions in the case were made u/s 68 of the Income-tax Act, 1961 on account of unexplained cash credits and not u/s 56(2)(viib) on account of premium on shares, as has been alleged.”
This valuation done arbitrarily and by income tax officials with no domain knowledge lies at the heart of the unrest and distress within the community.
In a press release late on Friday, CBDT issued the following clarification.
During the assessment proceedings, the assessing officer requested for confirmation of the persons from whom deposits had been received. Wherever confirmations were submitted, the same were accepted by the assessing officer and no addition was made.
The assessee did not obtain any stay in respect of the demand raised. Had the stay been obtained, recovery proceedings would not have been instituted by the department. Since there was no stay against recovery and the demand had become due, the department recovered Rs. 36 lakh after attaching the bank accounts of the assesse. Thereafter, all the bank accounts were released.
It may also be noted that neither the assessee nor its Director submitted any certificate from DIPP to indicate its status of being a startup, either during the assessment proceedings or thereafter, which is a mandatory requirement as per extant instructions in the matter. Had such a certificate been furnished, this situation would not have arisen.
Thus, it is clear that the case of Travel Khana is not covered by the instruction issued by CBDT dated 24th December, 2018 prohibiting coercive measures for enforcing recovery of outstanding demand in Angel Tax cases as the addition was made under section 68 of the IT Act and not under section 56(2)(viib).
(Update: The story was updated with CBDT’s response at 11:30 pm on 8 February.)
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