🧾 Section 14A and Rule 8D: Can You Disallow What Was Never Claimed?
- Bhagya Lakshmi
- Jul 8
- 3 min read
💡 "You can’t disallow what was never claimed. No exempt income, no disallowance — simple as that."
📘 Introduction
Section 14A of the Income Tax Act was introduced to plug a gap — to prevent taxpayers from claiming deductions on expenses incurred to earn tax-free income like dividends or interest on tax-free bonds. That sounds reasonable. But over time, its application — especially via Rule 8D — became mechanical and detached from the basic principle: there must be exempt income first.

In a notable case — CIT v. Reliance Communications Ltd. [2024] 456 ITR 1 (Bom HC) — the Bombay High Court stepped in with much-needed clarity: if there is no exempt income and no expense claimed toward earning it, there can be no disallowance under Section 14A.
Let’s break down the provisions, the misapplications, and what this case means for taxpayers.
🔎 Understanding Section 14A
What it says:
Section 14A disallows deductions for expenses incurred in relation to income not forming part of the total income — i.e., tax-exempt income.
Three Clauses:
14A(1): No deduction for expenditure incurred in relation to exempt income.
14A(2): If the Assessing Officer (AO) is not satisfied with the assessee’s claim about such expenditure, he may determine it using the prescribed method.
14A(3): Applies even where the assessee claims no expenditure was incurred.
⚙️ Rule 8D – The Calculation Engine
Rule 8D (introduced in 2008) prescribes a formula to calculate disallowance if the AO is dissatisfied with the taxpayer's claim.
✏️ Applicable Formula (Post AY 2016-17):
1% of the average monthly value of investments from which exempt income is expected.(Earlier versions included actual interest and administrative expenses.)
❗ Cap: Disallowance under Rule 8D cannot exceed the total expenditure claimed by the assessee.
📌 Important:
Rule 8D does NOT apply automatically.The AO must record dissatisfaction with the assessee’s working before invoking this rule.
🧑⚖️ Case Focus: CIT v. Reliance Communications Ltd.
📁 Facts of the Case:
Reliance Communications Ltd. had invested in shares and mutual funds — assets capable of generating exempt income.
But during the relevant AY:
The company did not earn any exempt income.
It did not claim any expenses as incurred to earn exempt income.
🧾 AO's Action:
Despite the above, the AO:
Applied Section 14A,
Invoked Rule 8D, and
Disallowed a notional amount, presuming administrative expenses.
🏛️ High Court Verdict:
The Bombay High Court quashed the disallowance, holding:
No exempt income was earned.
No expenditure was claimed in relation to such income.
Therefore, no disallowance can be made under Section 14A.
This was in line with earlier decisions by the Supreme Court and various High Courts.

🔗 Related Judicial Precedents
🧑⚖️ Case | 🏛️ Court | ⚖️ Verdict |
Chettinad Logistics Pvt. Ltd. [2020] 115 taxmann.com 8 | Supreme Court | No exempt income = No 14A disallowance |
PCIT v. Oil Industry Development Board [2019] 103 taxmann.com 326 | Supreme Court | Confirmed earlier HC view that Rule 8D doesn’t apply when no exempt income exists |
CIT v. Corrtech Energy Pvt. Ltd. [2014] 223 Taxman 130 | Gujarat HC | Existence of investment alone does not justify disallowance without exempt income |
Maxopp Investment Ltd. v. CIT [2018] 402 ITR 640 | Supreme Court | AO must record dissatisfaction with assessee’s computation; Rule 8D is not automatic |
🧠 Practical Interpretation for Taxpayers
✅ When 14A applies:
You earned exempt income, AND
You claimed related expenses, OR AO believes you did.
❌ When it doesn’t apply:
No exempt income is earned, even if investments exist.
No expense claimed — AO cannot assume disallowance.
💡 Pro Tip:
Always track your exempt income and maintain clarity on your investment-related expenses. This will support your defense if Rule 8D is invoked arbitrarily.
📊 Summary Table
Scenario | Exempt Income | Expenses Claimed | Disallowance Allowed? |
No income, no expense | ❌ | ❌ | ❌ Not allowed |
Income earned, no expense | ✅ | ❌ | ✅ If AO records dissatisfaction |
Income earned, expense claimed | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ Rule 8D applies |
Investment exists, no income | ❌ | ❌ | ❌ Disallowance not justified |
📌 Conclusion
The Reliance Communications case reinforces a simple but powerful point:
“You can’t disallow what wasn’t earned or claimed.”
Tax law must be grounded in reality — not presumptions. The mechanical application of Rule 8D to extract disallowances where there’s neither exempt income nor related expense goes against the legislative intent. This judgment is a strong precedent for fair tax treatment and protects compliant businesses from excessive litigation.
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