
Invalid Reopening of Assessment Based on Share Valuation Derived Solely from Share Premium in Third-Party Transaction
An Integrated Analysis with Statutory Framework and Finality by the Supreme Court
I. Introduction
The controversy surrounding reopening of completed assessments on the issue of share valuation has been a recurring theme in income-tax litigation, particularly where the Revenue seeks to rely on share premium paid in isolated or third-party transactions as a benchmark to allege understatement of income.
The recent decision of the Delhi High Court in Ramesh Chandra & Ajay Chandra v. Deputy Commissioner of Income Tax and its subsequent affirmation by the Supreme Court of India has now conclusively settled this issue, both on jurisdictional validity of reopening and on the substantive law governing share valuation.
This article presents a detailed, integrated, and statute-centric analysis, tracing the legal journey from reassessment proceedings to their final termination by the Supreme Court.
II. Statutory Framework Governing Reopening and Share Valuation
1. Reopening of Assessment – Sections 147 & 148
Section 147 empowers the Assessing Officer (AO) to reopen an assessment only if he has “reason to believe” that income chargeable to tax has escaped assessment.
Absence of mere suspicion, conjecture, or borrowed satisfaction.
Section 148 operationalizes this power through issuance of notice, but the notice stands or falls on the validity of reasons recorded under Section 147.
For the relevant assessment years, Section 56(2)(vii)(c) provided that:
The statute mandates that FMV must be determined in the prescribed manner.
3. Rule 11UA of the Income-tax Rules, 1962
Rule 11UA prescribes exhaustive methods for valuation of unquoted equity shares:
Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) Method (through a merchant banker).
is permissible under law.
•The AO initiated reassessment proceedings alleging undervaluation of shares.
A single third-party transaction where Telenor Asia Pte. Ltd. paid a premium of ₹179.73 per share in respect of certain Unitech Wireless companies.
IV. Fundamental Defect in the AO’s Approach
The AO: Ignored Section 56(2)(vii)(c);
•Treated share premium paid by Telenor as a universal benchmark.
•Substituting lawful valuation mechanisms with subjective perception.
VI. Delhi High Court Decision
Case: Ramesh Chandra & Ajay Chandra v. DCIT
Key Observations
The Delhi High Court held:
1.The entire reopening was founded on the same solitary transaction involving Telenor.
2.That very transaction had already been examined and rejected in:
•Pr. CIT-7 v. Shri Sanjay Chandra (ITA 249/2024).
3.The AO had no independent tangible material.
4.Reopening amounted to:
Borrowed satisfaction, Change of opinion, and Circumvention of statutory valuation rules.
Notice under Section 148 and the reassessment order dated 22 March 2018 were quashed.
VII. Supreme Court – Final Seal on the Controversy
Case: Deputy Commissioner of Income Tax, Circle 27(1) v. Ramesh Chandra
There was a delay of 141 days, No plausible or bona fide explanation was offered, A coordinate Bench had already dismissed a similar SLP on 17.12.2025.
Result: The SLP was dismissed, and the lis attained finality.
Forecloses any further challenge by the Revenue.
By,
Ajay Kumar Agarwal, FCA (Sr. Partner)
(Ajay K. Agarwal & Associates Chartered Accountants, New Delhi)
Disclaimer:
This article is intended solely for academic and professional discussion. It does not constitute legal advice or a formal opinion. The views expressed are personal and based on the author’s understanding of the statutory provisions, CBDT instructions and judicial precedents as on the date of writing. Readers are advised to consult the relevant statutory provisions and professional advisors before acting on the basis of this article.




