23 October 2024
Read More3 October 2024
Read More26 September 2024
Read MoreWe are a family of strong 800+ people including 470+ professionals working from 14 locations across India.
We have a rich heritage and enduring legacy which are pivotal in shaping trust, excellence, and unparalleled legal expertise, thus building a strong reputation and a trusted brand.
Read MoreWe started in 1985 in a single room set up by the two founders with no prior experience of working in a law firm. Both the founders had outstanding academic records and focused on their deep understanding of the law to form the foundation of the firm.
Integrity, Knowledge and Passion are the principles that resonate with every member of our LKS family and the work that we do. These values drive us to build a community of legally sound professionals and well-serviced clients.
Everything we have accomplished over the last four decades is a result of our unique way of thinking which is deeply influenced by our core values and principles that define us.
Read MoreWe and our professionals consistently garner appreciation for the quality of our services and the depth of our legal expertise. This consistent acknowledgment serves as a testament to our unwavering commitment to exceed expectations.
The term ‘going concern’ is neither new to ever growing economy nor to GST. The concept of transfer of business on going concern basis existed even prior to the introduction of GST.
‘Going concern’ is an accounting assumption according to which an enterprise is viewed as continuing in operation for the foreseeable future. The Bombay High Court in the case of Jayaprakash Shamsundar v. Laxminarayan Murlidar [1] held that if a business is to be characterised as a going concern, that business must be run at the time of the assignment. The business must be a live business, a going business when transactions take place from time to time and there must be stock-in-trade.
This article attempts to explain whether the transfer of a business should be treated as a ‘transfer of a going concern, as a whole or an independent part thereof’ which is an exempt supply under GST laws.
The transfer of business on going concern basis is not the same as transfer of individual assets of the business. The assets of any business can be supplied either in piecemeal or for lumpsum consideration.
Under GST, the exemption has been granted for transfer of business as a whole or an independent part thereof.
Uttarakhand Authority for Advance Ruling[2] relied upon the following internationally accepted guidelines issued by Her Majesty’s Revenue & Customs (HRMC) to treat transfer of business as a going concern:
Thus, it emerges that the transfer of business as going concern means transfer of essential business assets along with associated liabilities which enables the transferee to carry out the same business independently in the same manner as the seller used to carry before the transfer.
Here, a question may arise as to what constitutes business or an independent part thereof. The Madras High Court in case of Monsanto Chemicals v. State of Tamil Nadu [3] observed that a person may carry on several lines of business and each line of business would be a unit of business by itself. The Court held that if there is a sale of that unit of the business as a whole, then the assessee would not be liable to be taxed. However, it is relevant to note that retention of few assets of business shall not cause any hinderance in treating the transfer as going concern provided that all the necessary assets required for running the business independently by transferee have been transferred.[4]
Further, the continuity of same kind of business is the essence for transfer of going concern. It may be noted that the very definition of the term ‘going concern’ suggests that the business should be continued for a foreseeable period and there is no intention to liquidate the same, there should be continuity of the same business by the transferee as was being carried on by the transferor. The same has also been recognized by HMRC as one of the characteristics to qualify as transfer of business as going concern. For instance, in case where the transferor, who is running business of manufacturing and sale of goods, transfers its business to a transferee and such transferee in turn leases out the manufacturing facilities then the continuity of same business may be questioned by applying principles laid by HMRC.
Taking another example, in case where the transferee merely intends to further transfer the running business onto another buyer rather than carrying on same business as that of the transferor, the availability of the exemption may be disputed.
In authors’ view in order to constitute transfer as a going concern, the transferee must continue the same kind of business as carried on by the transferor for a foreseeable period of time and what constitutes to be “same kind of business” has to be considered on a case to case basis.
In the backdrop of harlequin history of taxation of transfer of business, it would be interesting to see as to how GST on the same will unfold in the times to come.
[The authors are Joint Partner and Senior Associate, respectively, in GST practice at Lakshmikumaran & Sridharan, Gurugram]
M/S. Indo Rama Co. Petition No. 4 of 2003, Co. Appl. No 762 of 2009, July 23, 2012.