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Home Case Index All Cases Income Tax Income Tax + AT Income Tax - 2024 (12) TMI AT This

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2024 (12) TMI 1604 - AT - Income Tax


ISSUES:

    Whether additions under section 69C of the Income Tax Act, 1961 can be made based on uncorroborated documents and statements recovered from third parties during search and seizure operations.Whether the presumption under sections 132(4A) and 292C of the Income Tax Act applies to a person not in possession of the seized documents or materials.Whether electronic evidence such as Excel sheets and WhatsApp chats must comply with the requirements of section 65B of the Indian Evidence Act to be admissible.Whether the Assessing Officer's failure to provide opportunity for cross-examination of witnesses whose statements were relied upon violates principles of natural justice.Whether suspicion or presumption can substitute for independent evidence in making additions under the Income Tax Act.

RULINGS / HOLDINGS:

    Additions under section 69C cannot be sustained when based solely on uncorroborated third party documents or statements, as "documents/material found from the premises of a third party or a statement of a third party cannot be relied upon to make additions in the hands of the assessee, unless such material or statement is corroborated by independent evidence linking such material to the assessee."The presumption under sections 132(4A) and 292C applies only to the person from whose possession the documents or materials are seized and cannot be extended to others.Electronic evidence such as Excel sheets recovered from third parties must comply with section 65B of the Indian Evidence Act; mere recovery without proper certification and authentication renders such evidence unreliable.The Assessing Officer's failure to provide the assessee an opportunity to cross-examine witnesses whose statements formed the basis of additions constitutes a violation of natural justice, rendering the additions unsustainable."Suspicion, however strong, cannot take the place of evidence" and "raising presumption itself does not amount to proof," thus additions cannot be made on mere suspicion or uncorroborated presumption.

RATIONALE:

    The Court applied the statutory provisions of the Income Tax Act, 1961, particularly sections 69C (unexplained cash credits), 132 (search and seizure), 132(4A) (presumption as to documents seized), and 292C (presumption as to statements recorded), alongside the Indian Evidence Act, 1872 (section 65B regarding electronic evidence).The Court relied on established precedents emphasizing that additions based on third party evidence require independent corroboration linking the assessee to the alleged undisclosed income or expenditure, citing multiple judgments reinforcing this principle.The Court underscored the principle of natural justice, referencing the Supreme Court's ruling that denial of opportunity to cross-examine witnesses whose statements are relied upon invalidates the assessment order.The Court reiterated the legal maxim that suspicion or presumption cannot substitute for direct evidence, thereby safeguarding the assessee's right against arbitrary additions without substantive proof.No doctrinal shift was indicated; rather, the Court reaffirmed existing legal principles protecting taxpayers from additions based solely on uncorroborated third party material and emphasizing procedural fairness.

 

 

 

 

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