Rule 2A: House Rent Allowance
Rule 2A: House Rent Allowance
Rule 2A: House Rent Allowance
*SECTION 10(13A).
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25 QUANTUM OF EXEMPTION Rule 2A
It is important to note from the above formula that, where rent paid is less than
or equal to 10 per cent of salary, the amount exempt will be nil.
2A.6-1 Meaning of ‘salary’ - In terms of Explanation (ii) to rule 2A, ‘salary’ shall
include dearness allowance if the terms of employment so provide. Thus, ‘salary’
shall not include other allowances & perquisites.
The following points must also be noted :
u Where dearness pay is treated as ‘pay’ for purposes of pension, gratuity
and compensatory allowances including house rent allowance, the term
‘salary’ will include such dearness pay also for purposes of calculating the
exempt portion of HRA—CBDT Circular No. 90, dated 26-6-1972 [Annex
2A.1].
u Where commission based on sales is paid in addition to fixed salary as part
of the contract of employment, such commission will form part of salary
- Gestetner Duplicators (P.) Ltd. v. CIT [1979] 117 ITR 1 (SC).
u Even if commission is paid with reference to profits, it would partake the
character of salary if it is a mode of remuneration or recompense for the
services rendered by the employee—Raja Ram Kumar Bhargava v. CIT
[1963] 47 ITR 680 (All.).
Rule 2A HOUSE RENT ALLOWANCE 26
u The Calcutta High Court had held in one case that commission paid in lieu
of fixed salary is not to be treated as ‘salary’ for the purpose of rule 2A—
CIT v. H.V. Yazdi [1978] 114 ITR 14. This decision cannot be considered as
good law in the light of the subsequent decision of the Supreme Court in
Gestetner Duplicators case (supra).
u Contractual bonus will form part of ‘salary’—CBDT Circular No. 80, dated
4-3-1972. It was however held in the case of CIT v. B. Ghosal [1980] 125
ITR 744 (Ker.) that, for the purpose of rule 2A, salary will not include
bonus.
The Court observed as under :
“The question whether a particular payment made to an employee constitutes ‘salary’
for the purpose of rule 2A will have to be determined only by reference to the
definition of that expression as contained in rule 2(h) of Part A of the Fourth Schedule
to the Act. On a close study of the said rule in conjunction with rules 4 and 5 of the
same Part in the same Schedule, it appears to us to be perfectly clear that bonus
cannot be regarded as falling within the scope of the expression ‘salary’ as defined in
clause (h) of rule 2. Clauses (b) and (c) of rule 4 contain a clear indication that the
expression ‘salary’ takes in only periodical payments made by the employer to the
employee during a year by way of remuneration. Clause (4)(b) of rule 5 empowers the
Commissioner to relax the provisions of rule 4(c) and to permit the crediting by the
employer to the individual accounts of the employees of the periodical bonuses or
other contributions of a contingent nature. If bonus were to form part of the salary
of the employee, the proportionate contribution has to be automatically credited by
the employer and there is absolutely no necessity for this provision for relaxation of
the rules.” (p. 749)
It is, however, not clear whether the payment of bonus in that case was on facts
a contractual payment or it was an ex gratia payment. Moreover, the Kerala High
Court differed with the view of Madras High Court in CIT v. India Radiators Ltd.
[1976] 105 ITR 680 where bonus was held to be a part of the salary after passing
of the Payment of Bonus Act. The view of the Madras High Court appears to reflect
the correct legal position. If the bonus is a contractual payment, as mostly it is these
days, it would be includible in the salary. If it is not a contractual payment but is
an ex gratia payment, it does not partake of the character of salary, as it would not
be compensation for services rendered.
2A.6-2 Period that should be reckoned - In view of Explanation (ii) to rule 2A, basic
pay, dearness allowance and commission are determined on ‘due’ basis in respect
of the period during which rental accommodation is occupied by the employee in
the previous year. Thus, emoluments of a period other than the relevant previous
year are not to be considered, even though such amount is received (as well as
taxed) during the previous year. Again, emoluments of the period during which
rental accommodation is not occupied in the previous year are left out of
computation.
ILLUSTRATIONS
1. An employee working in Bombay is in receipt of house rent allowance of
Rs. 1,250 p.m. He is occupying a residential accommodation, for which rent paid
by him is Rs. 2,000 p.m. He is getting a salary of Rs. 3,500 p.m. and dearness
allowance of Rs. 1,000 p.m. which counts for retirement benefits.
27 HRA AND HOUSING PERQUISITE Rule 2A
rental agreement between the landlord and the employer was for the purpose of
safeguarding the interests of the landlord. The Assessing Officer’s view that since
employer was paying rent, even though the same was recovered from the assessee,
the assessee was not entitled for exemption under section 10(13A) in respect of
HRA, was ill founded. Prima facie, the assessee was eligible to claim exemption
under section 10(13A) in respect of HRA. He, therefore, allowed the claim of the
assessee for exemption under section 10(13A).
It was held that the Commissioner (Appeals) had proceeded to decide the issue on
this basis alone that since the rental agreement between the landlord and the
employer was for the purpose of interest of landlord and the rent was being
reimbursed by the assessee to the employer, the assessee was eligible for exemp-
tion under section 10(13). But he had not considered the second objection of the
Assessing Officer that the assessee was allowed to occupy the leased accommoda-
tion provided by the employer for which the employer paid rent as per lease and
license agreement and this was also one of the reasons given by the Assessing
Officer for disallowing the claim of the assessee under section 10(13A). In the
instant case, the assessee was getting twin benefit from the employer, one of which
was not taxed on the basis of reimbursement of rent by the assessee to the
employer. The first benefit was of rent-free accommodation provided by the
employer to the assessee for which the employer was incurring rental expenditure
of Rs. 1.70 lakhs per month. The second benefit being received by the assessee was
that he was getting HRA of Rs. 3 lakhs per month including special HRA of Rs. 1.70
lakhs per month. Against these two benefits being received by the assessee, the
assessee was making one payment, i.e., reimbursement of rentals to the employer
at the rate of Rs. 1.70 lakhs per month. Now, if this reimbursement of rent to the
employer of Rs.1.70 lakhs per month was considered against the free housing
accommodation provided by the employer to the assessee, then this reimburse-
ment of house rent to employer was no more available to be considered for
exemption under section 10(13A). As per rule 3, the perquisite value of the housing
accommodation provided by the employer has to be worked out at the rate of 15
per cent of the salary or actual amount of lease rental paid by the employer
whichever is lower as reduced by the rent if any actually paid by the employee. In
the instant case, 15 per cent of the salary will be more than the actual rent being
paid by the assessee, i.e., Rs. 1.70 lakhs per month, and the same amount had been
reimbursed by the assessee to the employer and, therefore, perquisite value of
housing accommodation provided by the employer to the assessee was ‘nil’ as per
rule 3. But once, the housing perquisite value was worked out as ‘nil’ after
considering this rental payment of Rs. 1.70 lakhs per month to the employer, there
was no rental payment made by the assessee for the purpose of working out
exemption of HRA under section 10(13A). Therefore, the disallowance made by
the Assessing Officer regarding the claim of the assessee for exemption under
section 10(13A) was in order.
Evidence for claim of house rent allowance
2A.9 Rule 26C provides that the assessee shall furnish name, address and PAN of
the landlord(s) where the aggregate rent paid during the previous year exceeds Rs.
1,00,000. The particulars shall be furnished in Form No. 12BB.
For financial year 2018-19, para 4.6-5 of Circular No. 1/2019, dated 1-1-2019
provides that :
29 EVIDENCE FOR CLAIM OF HRA Rule 2A
“DDOs have been authorized u/s 192 to allow certain deductions, exemptions, or
allowances or set-off of certain loss as per the provisions of the Act for the purpose
of estimating the income of the assessee or computing the amount of tax deductible
under the said section. The evidence/proof/particulars for some of the deductions/
exemptions/allowances/set-off of loss claimed by the employee such as rent receipt
for claiming deduction in HRA, evidence of interest payments for claiming loss from
self-occupied house property, etc., is not available to the DDO. To bring certainty and
uniformity in this matter, section 192(2D) provides that person responsible for paying
(DDOs) shall obtain from the assessee evidence or proof or particular of claims such
as House Rent Allowance (where aggregate annual rent exceeds one lakh rupees);
Leave Travel Concession or Assistance; deduction of interest under the head ‘Income
from house property’ and deduction under Chapter VI-A as per the prescribed Form
No. 12BB laid down by rule 26C of the Rules.”
Para 5.3-9 of above circular provides that
“Section 192(2D) read with rule 26C makes it obligatory for DDO to obtain following
details/evidences in respect of exemptions for house rent allowance :
(i) Rent paid to the landlord
(ii) Name of the landlord
(iii) Address of the landlord
(iv) PAN of the landlord
Where the aggregate rent paid during the financial year exceeds one lakh Rs. the
employee is required to furnish these detail in Form 12BB.”
In Mrs. Meena Vaswani v. Asstt. CIT [2017] 80 taxmann.com 2/164 ITD 120 (Mum. -
Trib.) the assessee received House Rent Allowance (HRA) from her employer
which was claimed as exempt under section 10(13A). In response to show cause
notice, the assessee submitted that she had a self occupied property jointly held
with her husband but she had to live in her mother’s house and pay her rent for
her day-to-day living cost. The Assessing Officer taking a view that the assessee
failed to establish genuineness of payment of rent, rejected her claim.
The Tribunal held that the assessee could not produce any evidence arising in
normal course of transaction of hiring of premises such as leave and license
agreement, letter to society intimating about her tenancy, payment through bank,
cash payments backed with known sources, electricity bill payments through
cheque, water bill payments through cheque, etc. Moreover, the mother of
assessee had also not filed return and the said rental income was not brought to
tax in her hands. On facts, the whole arrangement of rent payment by the assessee
to her mother was a sham transaction which was undertaken with sole intention
to claim exemption of HRA under section 10(13A). Therefore, the Assessing Officer
was justified in rejecting the assessee’s claim.
ANNEXURE TO RULE 2A
ANNEX 2A.1
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