Monday, October 6, 2025

Rental Income Doesn’t Disqualify Trusts from Charitable Status: ITAT

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The Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT) Pune has held that earning rental income does not automatically disqualify a trust from being recognized as a charitable institution under the Income Tax Act, 1961.

The bench of Justice (Retd.) C V Bhadang (President) and R. K. Panda (Vice President) overturned an order by the Commissioner of Income Tax (Exemption), Pune, which had denied registration under Section 12A to a Latur-based public trust, alleging that its substantial rental income amounted to a profit-making activity rather than charitable work.

The department argued that out of the trust’s total income of ₹20.33 lakh in FY 2022–23, rental earnings of ₹6.66 lakh (32.76%) formed a major component, suggesting that the primary activity was commercial in nature. It further claimed that spending on charitable activities was disproportionately low.

The trust, however, countered that the rental income from shop premises was deliberately structured as a sustainable revenue source to fund its educational and community initiatives, including subsidized library access for underprivileged students.

The court emphasized that income from property rentals, when reinvested into charitable objects, cannot be treated as a profit-driven business. The Tribunal cited several landmark judgments — including DIT vs. Shri Vile Parle Kelavani Mandal (Bombay HC), CIT vs. Madras Stock Exchange Ltd.(Madras HC, upheld by Supreme Court), and its own Pune Bench ruling in Oswal Bandhu Samaj vs. ITO — which clarified that incidental rental income used for charity does not attract the restrictive proviso to Section 2(15).

Correcting the Revenue’s claim, the Tribunal also noted that the trust had in fact spent over ₹5.59 lakh — not merely ₹50,000 — on charitable purposes during the year.

The ITAT directed the restoration of the trust’s provisional registration and ordered the grant of registration under Section 12A, observing, “rental income utilized for achieving the objects of a trust cannot be treated as a business activity disentitling it from exemption under the Act.”

Case Details

Case Title: Marwadi Navyuvak Vachanalaya Versus CIT (Exemption)

Case No.: ITA No.561/PUN/2025

Date:  29-09-2025

Counsel For  Appellant: Bhuvanesh Kankani

Counsel For Respondent: Amol Khairnar

Read More: Non-Furnishing Of Information Under Table 14 of FORM GSTR-9C Can’t Be Construed As A Discrepancy Till FY 2022-2023: Gauhati HC

Amit Sharma
Amit Sharma
Amit Sharma is the Content Editor at JurisHour. He has been writing about the Indian legal market. He has covered tax & company litigation stories from the Supreme Court, High Courts and Various Tribunals. Amit graduated from MLSU Law College with B.A.LL.B. and also holds an LL.M. from MLSU, Udaipur, Rajasthan. An Advocate in Taxation, and practised in Tribunals as well as Rajasthan High Court and pursued Masters in Constitutional Law. He started out small with little resources but a big plan to take tax legal education to the remotest locations across India and eventually to the world. His vision is to make tax related legal developments accessible to the masses.

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