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Issues Involved:
1. Jurisdiction of the Tribunal during the pendency of a settlement application before the Settlement Commission. 2. Alleged failure of the Tribunal to appreciate facts regarding the diversion of profits by the assessee. Issue-wise Detailed Analysis: 1. Jurisdiction of the Tribunal during the pendency of a settlement application before the Settlement Commission: The first miscellaneous application (M.A. No. 321/Bom/1987) challenged the Tribunal's jurisdiction to decide the matter while it was pending before the Settlement Commission. The Department argued that per section 245F(2) of the Income-tax Act, the Settlement Commission had exclusive jurisdiction over the matter once it admitted the application under section 245D(1). The Tribunal noted that the Department did not raise this jurisdictional challenge during the original hearing, either in arguments or by cross objections. Consequently, the Tribunal found no apparent mistake in the record requiring rectification and dismissed the application on preliminary grounds. Further, the Tribunal clarified that the CIT passed the order under section 263 in April 1984, before the Settlement Commission admitted the assessee's application in November 1984. The Tribunal maintained that it had valid jurisdiction when the appeal was filed on 7-6-1984, and the subsequent admission by the Settlement Commission did not interfere with this jurisdiction. The Tribunal emphasized that section 245F(2) does not deprive it of jurisdiction acquired over a case, even if the Settlement Commission later admits the application. Additionally, the Tribunal highlighted that the term "income-tax authority" as defined in section 245A(b) and (d) does not include the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT). Thus, the Settlement Commission cannot supersede the powers of the ITAT. The Tribunal cited the Supreme Court decision in CIT v. B. N. Bhattachargee [1979] 118 ITR 461 to support this interpretation, concluding that the Department's argument was presumptuous and without substance. Therefore, the first miscellaneous application was dismissed. 2. Alleged failure of the Tribunal to appreciate facts regarding the diversion of profits by the assessee: The second miscellaneous application (M.A. No. 95/Bom/1988) contended that the Tribunal failed to appreciate facts on the issue of profit diversion by the assessee to its subsidiary company, PRC Ltd. The Department referenced the Settlement Commission's order dated 31-12-1986 for assessment years 1981-82 and 1982-83, which concluded that the assessee had concealed income and evaded tax. The Tribunal dismissed this application as presumptuous and possibly frivolous. It noted that the Settlement Commission's order was not presented during the original hearing, and the Department did not argue that the issue had already been concluded. The Tribunal reiterated that the term "case" under section 245A(a) pertains to proceedings pending before an income-tax authority, not the ITAT. Therefore, the revision proceedings initiated by the CIT did not fall within this definition. The Tribunal also mentioned that the assessee had withdrawn its appeal before the Tribunal and made an application to the Settlement Commission before the CIT initiated revision proceedings. Section 245M, which allowed withdrawal of appeals to apply to the Settlement Commission, did not include proceedings under section 263. Thus, the Tribunal had independent jurisdiction over the appeal filed against the CIT's order under section 263, and the Settlement Commission's subsequent order did not affect this jurisdiction. The Tribunal concluded that there was no apparent mistake in its order, as all relevant arguments and documents were considered. The second miscellaneous application was also dismissed. In summary, both miscellaneous applications were dismissed. The Tribunal upheld its jurisdiction to decide the appeal despite the pending settlement application and found no merit in the Department's claim of factual misappreciation regarding profit diversion.
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