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2017 (10) TMI 381 - HC - Income TaxRevision u/s 263 - Tribunal upholding the validity of the revisionary order passed under section 263 - Held that:- We are of the considered view that no inquiry, as envisaged in law, was carried out, hence, question of the Commissioner taking an alternate possible view does not arise. The Assessing Officer cannot be said to have taken a plausible view, as envisaged in law, and the view taken by the Commissioner to be an alternative one. Finding of the Commissioner that the order is erroneous is not on account of his mere disagreement with the view taken by the Assessing Officer. Any inquiry, without application of mind, is nonest. The given facts warranted the Assessing Officer to have conducted complete and proper inquiry and only thereafter, assessed the income so declared by the Assessee. He ought to have considered that the Assessee had sought to revise the return by declaring an income 1872% higher than what was originally returned and that too after action for scrutinizing the return was initiated. All transactions of sale of agricultural produce were in cash. Income declared was (a) disproportionately high only with respect to the relevant year and never in the preceding or succeeding years, (b) investment of huge amount of ₹ 3.8 crore was carried out by the Assessee himself, be from whatever source and there was no reference thereof in the original return. As such, omission or wrong statement cannot be said to be bonafide. Prima facie returns, being invalid, ought to have been rejected. The case in hand being that of no inquiry, and the amplitude of the powers of the Commissioner being wide enough to pass “such order” as the circumstances of the case justify, including (a) cancelling the assessment, (b) modifying the order of assessment, (c) directing fresh assessment, as such, the Commissioner was well within his right to pass an appropriate order of remission. Scope of the Tribunal to examine correctness of the exercise of jurisdiction by the Commissioner is wide enough and not limited and restricted to the record as defined under clause (b) of sub-section (1) of Section 263 of the Act. In any case, even this definition is inclusive. It includes all records relating to any proceedings under the Act, be that of the Assessee or a third party, available at the time of examination by the Commissioner. The record need not pertain to the proceedings of the Assessee alone, be it for the relevant year or assessments pertaining to other years. It can also pertain to any other assessee. In fact, record of any proceedings under this Act available at the time of examination can be considered. Such record need not be placed by the parties. He has power to call for and examine the record of “any proceedings under this Act”. As is evident, definition of word “record”, inclusive in nature, is restricted to and confined only to the exercise of power by the Commissioner and would not relate to the amplitude of the power exercisable by the Tribunal “to pass such orders” “as it deems fit”. - Decided against assessee.
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