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2016 (6) TMI 1505 - AT - Income TaxRevision u/s 263 - Maintainability of appeal filed by the assessee against the order passed by AO giving effect to the CIT s order u/s 263 is maintainable before the CIT(A) or the Appellate Tribunal CIT has directed the AO to modify the original assessment made by disallowing the entire job work charges paid to the two sister concerns u/s 40(a)(ia) - HELD THAT - Principal Commissioner (or) Commissioner can pass such order thereon as the circumstances of the case justify including an order enhancing or modifying the assessment or cancelling the assessment and directing a fresh assessment. The words pass such order thereon as the circumstances of the case justify shows that it is the order u/s 263 which has to be looked into to find out as to what is the intention of the Commissioner. In the present case clearly there is no intention on the part of the Commissioner to cancel the assessment and direct a fresh assessment but it is clear one where the original assessment has been modified by him. Once the Principal Commissioner/Commissioner passes an order under section 263 cancelling the amendment and directing a fresh assessment then the Assessing Officer gives effect to such order u/s 153(2A) which also prescribes the time limit in case the Principal Commissioner/ Commissioner has directed a fresh assessment. This is because the words used in section 153(2A) is an order of fresh assessment in pursuance to an order under section 250 or section 254 or section 263 or section 264 setting aside or cancelling an assessment . Thus if there is a cancellation of an assessment under section 263 and direction for fresh assessment then in view of the provisions of section 153(1) r/w section 153(2A) AO has to do a fresh assessment as per the directions given in the order under section 263. If there is no cancellation of an assessment but it is only a modification of the assessment then the AO only gives effect to the order of the Commissioner u/s 263 and such order giving effect to the order under section 263 does not take colour of an order under section 143(3) or 144 and it remains an order under section 263 and it is only for the purpose of computation of total income and raising of the demand that the AO does in the order giving effect to the order under section 263. Appealable orders before the CIT(Appeals) is very specific insofar as it is an order of assessment u/s 143(3) or 144 where the assessee objects to the amount of income assessed or to the amount of tax determined which is appealable before the CIT(A). A perusal of the provisions of section 253 provides for the appeal against the order under section 263 to the appellate Tribunal. Thus it can be noticed that an order u/s 263 can be one where there is an enhancement or modification of the assessment and one where there is cancelling of the assessment and directing of the fresh assessment. When it is an issue of enhancing or modifying the assessment order then the AO only gives effect to the order under section 263 by re-computing the total income / total tax liability and such orders where Assessing Officer has given effect by only re-computing as per order of the Commissioner of Income Tax under section 263 is not appealable before the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals). In a case where the Commissioner of Income Tax has by invoking his powers u/s 263 has cancelled the assessment and has directed a fresh assessment he would have to give specific directions in regard to the methodology of the fresh assessment. A failure on this part by the Commissioner of Income Tax would render the order under section 263 unsustainable. This view gets support from the decision of Gabriel India Ltd. 1993 (4) TMI 55 - BOMBAY HIGH COURT If the entire assessment has not been cancelled and only a part of the assessment order is tinkered with by the CIT u/s 263 it falls under the category of enhancing or modifying the assessment. The enhancing or modifying the assessment having been by the Commissioner of Income Tax the AO is precluded from applying his opinion to such enhancement or modification and consequently the order giving effect by the AO in respect of such enhancement or modification cannot be challenged in appeal before the CIT (Appeals) insofar as it would in effect be a challenge before the CIT (Appeals) in respect of order passed under section 263 by the Commissioner of Income Tax. Shorn of all the frills an order giving effect to an order passed u/s 263 by the Commissioner of Income Tax is not an appealable order before the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) or the appellate Tribunal insofar as when the Commissioner of Income Tax invokes his powers under section 263 he is invoking his coterminous powers of the Assessing Officer and is doing the assessment in the shoes of the Assessing Officer after examining or causing inquiry to be conducted as provided in the provisions of section 263. In the present case admittedly the order under section 263 has only modified the assessment. The assessment order has not been cancelled nor any fresh assessment directed by the Commissioner of Income Tax under section 263. This being so the entertainment of the appeal by the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) itself is erroneous and without jurisdiction. No appeal against the order giving effect to the order passed by the Commissioner of Income Tax under section 263 by the Assessing Officer is maintainable before the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) nor before the appellate Tribunal also as this appeal is not against the order passed u/s 263 by the Commissioner of Income Tax. In these circumstances the appeal filed by the assessee stands dismissed as not maintainable.
1. ISSUES PRESENTED and CONSIDERED
The core legal questions considered by the Tribunal are: (a) Whether the appeal filed by the assessee against the order passed by the Assessing Officer giving effect to the Commissioner of Income Tax's order under section 263 is maintainable before the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) or the Appellate Tribunal; (b) The scope and effect of an order passed under section 263 of the Income Tax Act, particularly distinguishing between an order modifying/enhancing the assessment and an order cancelling the assessment and directing a fresh assessment; (c) The appellate remedy available against orders passed under section 263 and orders giving effect to such orders; (d) The correctness of the additions and disallowances confirmed by the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) in respect of unexplained cash credits under section 68, disallowance under section 40(a)(ia), additions under section 69 in respect of investment in tread dies, and additions on account of interest on recurring deposits and deposits. 2. ISSUE-WISE DETAILED ANALYSIS Issue (a) and (c): Maintainability of appeal against order giving effect to section 263 order Relevant legal framework and precedents: Section 263(1) empowers the Commissioner to call for and examine the record of any proceeding and if satisfied that the order is erroneous and prejudicial to the interests of revenue, to pass such order as the circumstances justify, including enhancing, modifying, or cancelling the assessment and directing a fresh assessment. Section 253 provides the right of appeal against orders passed under section 263 to the Appellate Tribunal. Section 153(2A) deals with time limits and procedures for giving effect to orders passed under sections including 263. The Hon'ble Bombay High Court's decision in Gabriel India Ltd. (203 ITR 108) supports the proposition that if the Commissioner cancels the assessment and directs a fresh assessment, the Assessing Officer must conduct a fresh assessment as per the directions. Conversely, if the Commissioner only modifies or enhances the assessment, the Assessing Officer's role is limited to giving effect to the order by recomputing income and tax liability. Court's interpretation and reasoning: The Tribunal observed that the Commissioner of Income Tax's order under section 263 in this case directed modification of the original assessment, not cancellation and fresh assessment. The Assessing Officer's subsequent order dated 15/12/2010 was only to give effect to the Commissioner's directions. The Tribunal emphasized that an order giving effect to a section 263 order modifying the assessment is not an independent appealable order before the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) or the Appellate Tribunal. The Tribunal reasoned that the Commissioner under section 263 exercises coterminous powers with the Assessing Officer and effectively redoes the assessment in the Commissioner's order. Therefore, the appeal lies only against the section 263 order itself, not against the Assessing Officer's order giving effect to it. The Tribunal noted that the appeal before the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) was erroneously entertained as the Assessing Officer's order was not appealable. Application of law to facts: The Tribunal found no cancellation of the original assessment or direction for fresh assessment by the Commissioner under section 263. Hence, the appeal against the order giving effect to the section 263 order was not maintainable. Both the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) and the Departmental Representative could not justify entertaining or adjudicating the appeal against the Assessing Officer's order giving effect to the section 263 order. Treatment of competing arguments: The assessee contended that the appeal was maintainable against the order giving effect to the section 263 order. The Department did not object to condonation of delay but did not provide any substantive explanation on maintainability. The Tribunal rejected the assessee's appeal on maintainability grounds, holding that the appeal should have been filed against the section 263 order itself, not the Assessing Officer's order giving effect to it. Conclusions: The appeal against the order giving effect to the section 263 order is not maintainable before the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) or the Appellate Tribunal. The appeal filed by the assessee was dismissed as not maintainable. Issue (b): Scope and effect of order under section 263 - modification versus cancellation Relevant legal framework: Section 263(1) empowers the Commissioner to pass an order enhancing, modifying, cancelling, or directing fresh assessment if the original order is erroneous and prejudicial to revenue. Section 153(2A) prescribes the procedure for giving effect to such orders. The distinction between modification/enhancement and cancellation directing fresh assessment is critical for determining the Assessing Officer's role and appealability. Court's interpretation and reasoning: The Tribunal analyzed the Commissioner's order dated 23/03/2010 and noted that it directed the Assessing Officer to modify the original assessment by including unexplained gifts under section 68, disallowing expenses under section 40(a)(ia), adding investments under section 69, and including interest income. The Commissioner explicitly held the original assessment erroneous and prejudicial but did not cancel it or direct a fresh assessment. The Tribunal held that when the Commissioner modifies or enhances the assessment under section 263, the Assessing Officer's role is limited to giving effect to the order by recomputing income and tax liability. If the Commissioner cancels the assessment and directs fresh assessment, the Assessing Officer must conduct a fresh assessment within prescribed time limits. The Tribunal emphasized that failure by the Commissioner to give specific directions for fresh assessment renders the order unsustainable. Application of law to facts: The Commissioner's order was a modification/enhancement order, not a cancellation and fresh assessment order. The Assessing Officer's order dated 15/12/2010 was a mechanical exercise to give effect to the Commissioner's directions. Therefore, the appeal against the Assessing Officer's order was not maintainable. Treatment of competing arguments: Neither party disputed the nature of the Commissioner's order as a modification. The Tribunal relied on authoritative interpretation to clarify the legal consequences of such orders. Conclusions: The order under section 263 was a modification/enhancement order and not a cancellation and fresh assessment order. The Assessing Officer's order giving effect to it is not an independent appealable order. Issue (d): Substantive additions and disallowances confirmed by Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) Relevant legal framework: Sections 68, 40(a)(ia), and 69 of the Income Tax Act deal respectively with unexplained cash credits, disallowance of certain expenses for non-deduction of tax at source, and unexplained investments. The Commissioner of Income Tax under section 263 directed additions on these grounds. Court's interpretation and reasoning: The Tribunal did not delve into the substantive merits of these additions and disallowances because the appeal was dismissed on maintainability grounds. The Tribunal noted that the Commissioner of Income Tax after invoking section 263 had conducted the inquiry and passed a detailed order modifying the assessment. The Assessing Officer merely implemented these directions. Application of law to facts: Since the appeal was not maintainable against the order giving effect to the section 263 order, the Tribunal did not entertain arguments on the correctness of the additions and disallowances. Treatment of competing arguments: The assessee challenged the additions as unjustified, but the Tribunal did not consider these arguments due to the procedural issue of maintainability. Conclusions: The additions and disallowances confirmed by the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) stand upheld by default due to dismissal of appeal on maintainability grounds. 3. SIGNIFICANT HOLDINGS The Tribunal's crucial legal reasoning is encapsulated in the following verbatim extract: "An order giving effect to an order passed under section 263 by the Commissioner of Income Tax is not an appealable order before the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) or the appellate Tribunal insofar as when the Commissioner of Income Tax invokes his powers under section 263 he is invoking his coterminous powers of the Assessing Officer and is doing the assessment in the shoes of the Assessing Officer after examining or causing inquiry to be conducted as provided in the provisions of section 263." Further, the Tribunal held: "If there is no cancellation of an assessment, but it is only a modification of the assessment, then the Assessing Officer only gives effect to the order of the Commissioner under section 263 and such order giving effect to the order under section 263 does not take colour of an order under section 143(3) or 144 and it remains an order under section 263." Core principles established include: - The distinction between modification/enhancement and cancellation/fresh assessment under section 263 is determinative of the Assessing Officer's role and appealability of subsequent orders. - Appeals against orders giving effect to section 263 orders modifying assessment are not maintainable before the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) or the Appellate Tribunal. - The Commissioner of Income Tax's order under section 263 is effectively a reassessment in the Commissioner's shoes when modifying or enhancing the assessment. - The Assessing Officer's order giving effect to such section 263 orders is a ministerial/computational exercise and not an independent assessment order. Final determinations on each issue: (a) The appeal against the order giving effect to the section 263 order is dismissed as not maintainable. (b) The Commissioner's order under section 263 was a modification/enhancement order, not a cancellation and fresh assessment order. (c) The Assessing Officer's order giving effect to the section 263 order is not appealable. (d) The substantive additions and disallowances confirmed by the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) stand upheld due to dismissal of the appeal on maintainability grounds.
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