Within hours of Supreme Court dismissing the review petition in the Vodafone's tax case, Law Minister Salman Khurshid said the government will have to refund money (about Rs 2,500 crore and interest) to the firm.
"No curative petition to my knowledge... I suppose government will have to refund Vodafone money," he told reporters after a meeting of top ministers called by Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee this evening.
The curative petition is the last judicial remedy available with the government.
The hurriedly called meeting was attended by Home Minister P Chidambaram, Telecom Minister Kapil Sibal and Attorney General GE Vahanvati, among others.
In its judgement on January 20, the Supreme Court had set aside the Bombay High Court ruling and asked the Income Tax Department to return Rs 2,500 crore deposited by Vodafone International Holdings within two months along with 4% interest.
The apex court had held that the tax department does not have jurisdiction to levy Rs 11,000 crore as tax on the $12 billion overseas deal between Vodafone International Holdings and Hutchison Group.
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Following the judgement, the government had filed the review petition, which was dismissed today.
"I said review has been dismissed, law remains what is being stated by SC," Khurshid said, adding the government can tax a company on the basis of the existing law.
The government, meanwhile, has proposed amendment in the Income Tax Act, under which such overseas mergers and acquisition would be taxed retrospectively from 1962.
"You can only tax on the basis of existing law. We have no right to tax them, current law will prevail so long law is not changed," Khurshid said.