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2025 (5) TMI 364 - HC - Income Tax


1. ISSUES PRESENTED and CONSIDERED

The core legal questions considered by the Court were:

  • Whether the issuance of notices under Section 153C of the Income Tax Act, 1961, in respect of multiple Assessment Years (AYs) was valid when no incriminating material was found during the search under Section 132 or requisition under Section 132A of the Act relating to the petitioner;
  • Whether the seized material (gold bullion and jewellery parcels) constituted incriminating material having a bearing on the petitioner's income for the relevant AYs;
  • Whether the notices issued under Section 153C were barred by limitation;
  • Whether the Assessing Officer (AO) had properly recorded satisfaction that the seized material had a bearing on the petitioner's income for the relevant AYs, as required under Section 153C;
  • The applicability and interpretation of the legal framework governing initiation of proceedings under Section 153C, including the requirement of satisfaction and the scope of incriminating material;
  • Reliance on precedent decisions regarding the conditions precedent for issuance of notices under Section 153C and the necessity of incriminating material having a bearing on the income of the person searched or requisitioned.

2. ISSUE-WISE DETAILED ANALYSIS

Issue 1: Validity of Notices under Section 153C in Absence of Incriminating Material

Legal Framework and Precedents: Section 153C of the Income Tax Act permits the AO to initiate proceedings against a person other than the one searched if, during a search or requisition under Sections 132 or 132A, incriminating material is found belonging to that other person. The Supreme Court in Commissioner of Income Tax-III, Pune v. Sinhgad Technical Education Society and subsequent decisions have clarified that the AO must record satisfaction that the material seized has a bearing on the income of the person against whom proceedings are initiated. The Delhi High Court in Saksham Commodities Ltd. v. Income Tax Officer reiterated that mere seizure of material is insufficient unless it is incriminating and relevant to the income of the person concerned.

Court's Interpretation and Reasoning: The Court noted that the AO's satisfaction note dated 03.09.2019 did not record any finding that the seized material had a bearing on the petitioner's income for the AYs 2012-13 to 2017-18. The Court emphasized that without such satisfaction, initiation of proceedings under Section 153C was impermissible.

Key Evidence and Findings: The seized parcel contained 49 grams of fine gold valued at Rs. 1,32,288/-, sent by the petitioner to another person for job work. The petitioner did not dispute dispatching the parcel and claimed it was reflected in its books of accounts. The Court found that this did not amount to incriminating material warranting reopening of assessments.

Application of Law to Facts: Since no incriminating material was found that could affect the petitioner's income, and the AO failed to record satisfaction to that effect, the issuance of notices under Section 153C was held invalid.

Treatment of Competing Arguments: The respondent argued that the seizure of gold parcels justified the notices. The Court rejected this, holding that mere seizure without incriminating evidence or AO's satisfaction was insufficient.

Conclusion: The notices under Section 153C were invalid and liable to be quashed.

Issue 2: Limitation on Issuance of Notices under Section 153C

Legal Framework: The limitation period for issuance of notices under Section 153C is governed by the same principles applicable to reassessment proceedings under the Income Tax Act. The Court referred to the petitioner's contention that the impugned notices were issued beyond the limitation period.

Court's Reasoning: Although the judgment does not elaborate extensively on limitation, it implicitly supports the petitioner's contention by setting aside the notices on grounds including lack of incriminating material and absence of AO's satisfaction, which are prerequisites for valid issuance within limitation.

Conclusion: The notices were also liable to be quashed on limitation grounds intertwined with substantive invalidity.

Issue 3: Requirement of AO's Satisfaction under Section 153C

Legal Framework and Precedents: The Supreme Court and High Courts have consistently held that the AO must record a satisfaction note that the seized material has a bearing on the income of the person against whom proceedings are initiated. This is a mandatory condition precedent for valid issuance of notices under Section 153C.

Court's Interpretation: The Court observed that the AO's satisfaction note did not indicate any such finding for the petitioner. This omission rendered the proceedings invalid.

Conclusion: The absence of AO's recorded satisfaction was fatal to the validity of the notices and subsequent proceedings.

Issue 4: Nature of Seized Material and Its Bearing on Income

Facts and Findings: The seized parcel was sent by the petitioner for job work and was accounted for in its books. The Court held that such material could not be treated as incriminating or having a bearing on undisclosed income.

Legal Application: The Court applied the principle that material must be both incriminating and relevant to the income for reopening assessments, which was not the case here.

Conclusion: The seized gold parcel did not constitute incriminating material justifying reassessment.

Issue 5: Precedential Support and Consistency

Precedents Relied Upon: The Court relied on Saksham Commodities Ltd. v. Income Tax Officer, Commissioner of Income Tax-III, Pune v. Sinhgad Technical Education Society, and Deputy Commissioner of Income Tax Central Circle 20 v. M/s U.K. Paints (Overseas) Ltd., which collectively establish the necessity of AO's satisfaction and incriminating material for valid Section 153C proceedings.

Reasoning: The Court applied these precedents to the facts, reinforcing the principle that procedural safeguards and substantive conditions must be satisfied before reopening assessments under Section 153C.

Conclusion: The impugned notices and order failed to meet the established legal standards and were therefore set aside.

3. SIGNIFICANT HOLDINGS

The Court held:

"Absent any incriminating material for the relevant assessment years, the proceedings under Section 153C of the Act could not be initiated for the said years."

"The AO having jurisdiction in case of the petitioner had not recorded any satisfaction to the said effect."

"The impugned notices and the impugned order are set aside. All proceedings initiated by the AO pursuant to the said notices are also set aside."

Core principles established include:

  • Initiation of proceedings under Section 153C requires the AO to record satisfaction that incriminating material seized during search or requisition has a bearing on the income of the person against whom proceedings are initiated;
  • Mere seizure of material without such satisfaction and without the material being incriminating and relevant to undisclosed income does not justify reopening assessments;
  • Notices issued beyond the prescribed limitation period or without compliance with procedural safeguards are liable to be quashed;
  • Precedents mandate strict adherence to the conditions precedent under Section 153C to prevent arbitrary reopening of assessments.

Final determinations on each issue resulted in setting aside the impugned notices and order, thereby quashing all proceedings initiated thereunder.

 

 

 

 

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