Joint Ownership Not a Barrier! ITAT Mumbai Allows Full Rs 3.67 Cr Section 54 Deduction:

The ITAT Mumbai reaffirmed that the Section 54 exemption must be granted based on the assessee’s actual investment in the new property, irrespective of joint ownership.
Tribunal Holds That Section 54 Relief Depends On Actual Investment, Not Joint Ownership

Joint Ownership Not a Barrier! ITAT Mumbai Allows Full Rs 3.67 Cr Section 54 Deduction
The present appeal (I.T.A. No. 2053/Mum/2025) has been filed by an Income Tax Officer (Appellant) in the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT), “B” Bench, Mumbai, before Shri Amit Shukla (Judicial Member) and Ms Padmavathy S (Accountant Member), against a taxpayer named Neelam Shamsher Kashyap (respondent). The appeal is related to the assessment year 2021-22. The case was heard on October 09, 2025, and was decided on October 27, 2025.
The appeal has been filed challenging an order dated 30.01.2025, passed by the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) [CIT(A)], who gave relief to Mrs Neelam Shamsher Kashyap. This case mainly revolves around two issues:
- Cost of acquisition (property value as of 01.04.2001), i.e., what the property was worth when she bought it long ago (for computing capital gains).
- Deduction under Section 54, i.e., how much exemption she can get for reinvesting the sale proceeds into a new residential property.
- The AO himself accepted that the assessee paid most of the money. There is no law saying deduction must be restricted if property is bought jointly; what matters is how much the assessee actually invested. CIT(A) had verified documents (including the rectified deed). Therefore, the ITAT agreed with CIT(A), the full deduction of Rs. 3,67,94,500 was correctly allowed.
- On the cost of acquisition (valuation as on 01.04.2001): The valuer’s report and the stamp authority’s certificate were almost the same. Hence, the value taken by the assessee did not exceed the stamp duty value, and the new proviso to Section 55(2)(b) was not violated. The AO had no valid reason to reject the valuer’s report. Therefore, the valuation adopted by the assessee was accepted.
- In the final ruling, the ITAT Mumbai upheld the order of CIT(A) and found no error in it. Therefore, the Revenue’s appeal was dismissed. Meaning, the final decision has been announced in favour of Mrs Kashyap.
About Author

Saloni Kumari
Content Writer
Saloni is a Content Writer with 2+ years of experience at studycafe.in. She writes legal, taxation, and finance related content including GST, Income Tax etc. Skilled in translating complex judicial pronouncements and regulatory developments into clear, and reader-friendly articles. Experienced in covering judgements of ITAT, High Court, GSTAT, and news related to Income Tax, GST, and corporate law. She can be reached at [email protected].
StudyCafe
Delhi, Delhi, India
2389My Recent Articles
- ITAT Remands Section 69 Unexplained Cash Credit Addition After Bank Statement Was Not ExaminedPremium
- ITAT Remands Transfer Pricing Dispute: DRP to Reassess Comparables and Working Capital AdjustmentPremium
- CBDT Notifies TDS Exemption on Aircraft Lease Payments to IFSC Units Under 20-Year Tax Deduction Scheme Premium
- CBDT Grants TDS Exemption On Ship Leasing Payments To IFSC Units Under 20-Year Tax Deduction SchemePremium
- ITAT Remands Case to CIT(A) After Admitting Crucial Sale Deed as Additional Evidence
Up Next
Loading suggestions…
Recent Posts

All Posts

Tags
Recent Posts

All Posts








