Business Standard

I-T ATTACHES SHAH RUKH KHAN’S ALIBAG FARMHOUSE

Tax dept issued provisiona­l attachment notice in December under Benami Act

- SHRIMI CHOUDHARY Mumbai, 30 January

The income-tax (I-T) department has provisiona­lly attached actor Shah Rukh Khan’s farmhouse in Alibag, a beach town in Maharashtr­a.

The attachment notice was issued to Déjà Vu Farms under the Prohibitio­n of Benami Property Transactio­ns (PBPT) Act in December.

Confirming the developmen­t, a senior I-T officer said under Section 24 of the Act, if the investigat­ing officer believed that the person was benamidar, he (the officer) could issue the attachment notice to that person or the property’s beneficial owner (if his or her identity was known).

According to the law, the attachment of the property could be for at most 90 days from the date the notice was issued, he said.

The circle rate of the attached property is

~146.7 million.

However, the market price would be five times more, said another I-T official. Considered a luxury property, the farmhouse is spread over 19,960 square metres, and has amenities such as a swimming pool and private helipad.

An email sent to Khan’s company Red Chillies Entertainm­ent and Kolkata Knight Riders’ chief executive officer on January 24 remained unanswered despite several reminders.

The major allegation against Khan is that he had applied for purchasing agricultur­al land for farming, but instead constructe­d a farmhouse there for personal use.

“The said transactio­n falls under the definition of benami transactio­n as per the Section 2 (9) of the PBPT Act, where Déjà Vu Farms has acted as

benamidar for the ultimate benefits of Khan. Thus, the actor is a beneficiar­y for the said under the prescribed law,” said I-T investigat­ion report, submitted to the adjudicati­ng authority, while seeking provisiona­l attachment. Business Standard has reviewed the copy of the attachment and the investigat­ion report.

The report says the Maharashtr­a Tenancy and Agricultur­al Lands Act debars transfers of agricultur­al land to non-agricultur­ists without the permission of the collector or the state government.

Since Khan could not have purchased the land in his own name, Déjà Vu was used as a front for farming.

Citing the filings with the Ministry of Corporate Affairs, the I-T department said Déjà Vu Farms was incorporat­ed by two shareholde­rs — Srinivas Parthasara­thy and Somasekhar Sundaresan — in 2004.

In December 2004, the share transfer certificat­es were signed by the first shareholde­rs in the name of Shah Rukh Khan and Gauri Khan. The first director was replaced by three directors — Ramesh Chhiba, Savita Chhiba, and Moreshwar Rajaram Ajgaonkar on the same day, the report noted. Khan gave an unsecured loan of ~84.5 million to Déjà Vu Farms.

Since it was a piece of agricultur­al land during the time of representa­tion, Ajgaonkar declared himself an agricultur­ist.

Accordingl­y, the additional collector allowed the purchase of the land on condition that it would be used for farming within three years.

In 2011, Namita Chhiba was appointed director of Déjà Vu in place of Ajgaonkar.

The I-T investigat­ion said that to date, the company had not shown any income from farming. The report suggests all the unsecured loans from Khan were used by Déjà Vu for purchasing land.

The report said that Ramesh Chhiba, Savita Chhiba, and Namita Chibba were Khan’s father-in-law, mother-in-law and sister-in-law, respective­ly.

The only source of income of the farm was by way of the loan advanced by Khan to his company, which ultimately was owned by the actor himself.

“Any person aggrieved by the order of the adjudicati­ng authority can file an appeal to the appellate tribunal within 45 days from the date of the order. An appeal against the order of the tribunal may be preferred to the high court within 60 days,” explained official cited above.

The issue became prominent when Raigad District Collector Vijay Suryawansh­i said a bungalow purportedl­y owned by the actor was among 87 properties on which his office had sought legal opinion so that it could take action for coastal regulatory zone violations.

The finance ministry said earlier this month that the I-T department had stepped up action under the PBPT Act, which provides for provisiona­l attachment and subsequent­ly confiscati­ng benami properties, whether movable or immovable.

It also allows for prosecutin­g the beneficial owner, the

benamidar, and those abetting benami transactio­ns, and it may result in rigorous imprisonme­nt of up to seven years and a fine up to 25 per cent of the fair market value of the property.

The statement added that the department had set up 24 dedicated benami prohibitio­n units under its investigat­ion directorat­es all over India.

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