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2024 (5) TMI 1571 - HC - Income Tax


1. ISSUES PRESENTED and CONSIDERED

The core legal questions considered by the Court in these writ petitions arising under Section 153C of the Income Tax Act, 1961, are as follows:

  • Whether the issuance of notices under Section 153C for multiple Assessment Years (AYs) is justified in the absence of incriminating material relating to those AYs in the Satisfaction Note of the jurisdictional Assessing Officer (AO) of the petitioner.
  • What is the scope and limitation of the jurisdictional AO's power to issue notices under Section 153C, particularly regarding the requirement of satisfaction that the seized material is likely to have a bearing on the determination of total income of the person under assessment.
  • Whether the mere existence of power to assess or reassess multiple AYs justifies the indiscriminate invocation of Section 153C for all those years, or whether the AO must identify incriminating material specific to each AY before issuing notices and abating pending assessments.
  • The procedural and substantive requirements for the formation of opinion and satisfaction by the AO under Section 153C before initiating assessment or reassessment proceedings.

2. ISSUE-WISE DETAILED ANALYSIS

Issue 1: Justification for Issuance of Section 153C Notices for Multiple AYs in Absence of Incriminating Material

Relevant Legal Framework and Precedents: Section 153C of the Income Tax Act empowers the jurisdictional AO of a person other than the searched person to initiate assessment or reassessment proceedings on the basis of books of account, documents, or assets seized or requisitioned during a search conducted on another person. The AO must be satisfied that such material is likely to have a bearing on the determination of the total income of the person under assessment for the relevant AYs.

The Court relied heavily on its recent precedent in Saksham Commodities Limited vs. Income Tax Officer, which clarified the threshold of satisfaction and the scope of Section 153C.

Court's Interpretation and Reasoning: The Court emphasized that the jurisdictional AO's Satisfaction Note dated 30 June 2022 did not refer to any incriminating material for the petitioner for any of the AYs in question. This absence of material meant that no basis existed to justify the issuance of notices under Section 153C. The Court observed that only the AO of the searched person had referred to incriminating material for one AY (2016-17), but this was not recorded or acted upon by the jurisdictional AO of the petitioner.

Key Evidence and Findings: The Satisfaction Note of the jurisdictional AO was a critical document. It lacked any reference to incriminating material for the petitioner's AYs, which was undisputed. The Court found this absence fatal to the validity of the notices issued under Section 153C.

Application of Law to Facts: Given that Section 153C requires the AO to be satisfied that the seized material is likely to impact the income determination of the person under assessment, and such satisfaction was not recorded, the issuance of notices was held to be without jurisdiction.

Treatment of Competing Arguments: The respondents presumably argued for the validity of notices based on the power to assess or reassess multiple AYs following a search. The Court rejected this, holding that the mere power does not justify indiscriminate issuance of notices without satisfaction of the statutory condition.

Conclusion: The notices under Section 153C were quashed as the jurisdictional AO failed to record satisfaction or identify incriminating material relating to the petitioner for the AYs concerned.

Issue 2: Scope and Limitations of AO's Power under Section 153C and Requirement of Satisfaction

Relevant Legal Framework and Precedents: The Court extensively analyzed the statutory scheme of Sections 153A and 153C, distinguishing their procedural and substantive requirements. Section 153A mandates automatic issuance of notices upon search or requisition, while Section 153C requires prior formation of opinion and satisfaction by the AO that the seized material is likely to affect the income of the person under assessment.

The precedent in Saksham Commodities Limited was relied upon for detailed exposition of these principles.

Court's Interpretation and Reasoning: The Court elucidated that under Section 153C, the AO's power to issue notices and abate pending assessments arises only after the AO has formed a prima facie opinion that the material received is likely to have a bearing on the determination of total income for specific AYs. This is a precondition and cannot be bypassed.

The Court explained that the AO must first receive and examine the seized documents or assets, evaluate their contents, and then form the requisite satisfaction. Only thereafter can the AO issue a notice under Section 153C and abate pending proceedings.

Key Evidence and Findings: The Court found that the jurisdictional AO did not record any reasons or satisfaction indicating how the seized material related to the petitioner's AYs, thus failing the statutory requirement.

Application of Law to Facts: Since the AO's Satisfaction Note was silent on incriminating material for the petitioner, the Court held that the statutory precondition for invoking Section 153C was not met, rendering the notices invalid.

Treatment of Competing Arguments: The Court rejected any argument that the power to assess or reassess multiple AYs under Section 153C could be mechanically or indiscriminately exercised without the satisfaction requirement.

Conclusion: The AO's power under Section 153C is circumscribed by the mandatory requirement of forming satisfaction regarding the material's bearing on income determination. Absent such satisfaction, notices and consequent proceedings are invalid.

Issue 3: Whether Section 153C Can Be Invoked for All AYs in the Block Without Specific Incriminating Material

Relevant Legal Framework and Precedents: The Court referred to the statutory language and the precedent in Saksham Commodities Limited, which clarified that Section 153C proceedings relate only to those AYs for which incriminating material is found or likely to impact income determination.

Court's Interpretation and Reasoning: The Court held that the "incriminating material" must be identified with respect to the specific AYs before initiating proceedings under Section 153C. The mere existence of a power to assess or reassess a block of AYs does not justify a sweeping or indiscriminate invocation of Section 153C.

Key Evidence and Findings: The Court noted that only one AY of the searched person had incriminating material recorded, and none for the petitioner's AYs. Hence, the notices for all AYs were unwarranted.

Application of Law to Facts: The Court applied the principle that the AO's jurisdiction under Section 153C is confined to those AYs for which incriminating material exists or is likely to influence income computation.

Treatment of Competing Arguments: The Court disapproved any approach that would allow a mechanical issuance of notices for all AYs in the block without specific incriminating material for each.

Conclusion: Section 153C cannot be invoked indiscriminately for all AYs in the block; it must be limited to those years for which incriminating material is found.

3. SIGNIFICANT HOLDINGS

The Court's crucial legal reasoning is preserved in the following verbatim excerpts from the Saksham Commodities Limited precedent, which the Court adopted:

"On an overall consideration of the structure of Sections 153A and 153C, we thus find that a reopening or abatement would be triggered only upon the discovery of material which is likely to 'have a bearing on the determination of the total income' and would have to be examined bearing in mind the AYs' which are likely to be impacted. It would thus be incorrect to either interpret or construe Section 153C as envisaging incriminating material pertaining to a particular AY having a cascading effect and which would warrant a mechanical and inevitable assessment or reassessment for the entire block of the 'relevant assessment year'."

"Abatement of the six AYs' or the 'relevant assessment year' under Section 153C would follow the formation of opinion and satisfaction being reached that the material received is likely to impact the computation of income for a particular AY or AYs' that may form part of the block of ten AYs'. Abatement would be triggered by the formation of that opinion rather than the other way around."

"The jurisdictional AO would have to firstly be satisfied that the material received is likely to have a bearing on or impact the total income of years or years which may form part of the block of six or ten AYs' and thereafter proceed to place the assessee on notice under Section 153C. The power to undertake such an assessment would stand confined to those years to which the material may relate or is likely to influence. Absent any material that may either cast a doubt on the estimation of total income for a particular year or years, the AO would not be justified in invoking its powers conferred by Section 153C."

Core principles established include:

  • The AO's power under Section 153C is conditional on prior satisfaction that the seized material is likely to affect the total income of the person under assessment for specific AYs.
  • Notices under Section 153C and consequent abatement of pending assessments can only be issued for those AYs to which the incriminating material relates or is likely to have a bearing.
  • The mere existence of power to assess or reassess a block of AYs does not justify indiscriminate or mechanical issuance of notices under Section 153C.
  • The procedural sequence under Section 153C requires receipt and examination of seized material, formation of satisfaction, issuance of notice, and then abatement of assessments.

Final determinations on the issues were:

  • The impugned notices dated 30 June 2022 issued under Section 153C for multiple AYs were quashed for lack of jurisdiction and non-compliance with statutory requirements.
  • All consequential proceedings arising from such notices were also quashed.

 

 

 

 

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