Section 54F relief was available if sale consideration was invested in
purchase of residential building as per provisions; in such a case extent of
construction of residential building was irrelevant.
The
High Court held in favour of assessee as under:
1) What the law (i.e., section 54F) contemplates
is, after selling the property, if the assessee invests the sale consideration
in purchase of a residential property, he is entitled to exemption under
section 54F;
2) What should be the extent of construction of
residential building, what facilities should be provided in such constructions
to be eligible for the exemption, have not been set out in the Act;
3) The Authorities have ensure, whether what is
purchased is a residential construction or not?;
4) If the material on record showed that prior to
the sale, the vendor lived there and had sold the site along with the
residential construction, merely because the property was not suitable to the
assessee and construction materials were kept there, would not be a valid grounds
to deny exemption under section 54F;
5) Thus, assessee was entitled to avail of relief
under section 54F – CIT v. Dr. R. Balaji [2014] 41 taxmann.com 411 (Karnataka)
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