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2025 (5) TMI 594 - AT - Income Tax


The core legal questions considered by the Appellate Tribunal in this appeal pertain primarily to the allowability of certain business expenses claimed by the assessee for the assessment year 2012-13. Specifically, the issues are:

(1) Whether the disallowance of Rs. 1,25,852/- out of the business promotion expenses claimed by the assessee was justified, given that the assessee had furnished bills and vouchers to substantiate these expenses.

(2) Whether the disallowance of Rs. 2,47,50,818/- out of the cash discount given to dealers and distributors was warranted, considering the verification of transactions and confirmations obtained from parties involved.

Issue 1: Disallowance of Business Promotion Expenses

The relevant legal framework involves the principles governing the allowability of business expenses under the Income Tax Act, which require that expenses claimed must be genuine, supported by proper documentation, and incurred wholly and exclusively for business purposes. The Assessing Officer (AO) initially disallowed 30% of the business promotion expenses on an adhoc basis, alleging incomplete submission of bills and failure to justify the large amount claimed.

During appellate proceedings, the assessee furnished a complete set of invoices and supporting documents. The AO, upon verification in the remand report, acknowledged that the transactions were verifiable and genuine but noted that some bills were not produced during the original assessment proceedings. Consequently, the first appellate authority restricted the disallowance to Rs. 1,25,852/-, the amount for which no bills were produced initially.

The Court analyzed the facts and observed that the AO had specifically requested bills for transactions exceeding Rs. 10,000/-, and the assessee complied accordingly. The AO's initial disallowance was made without pointing out any specific defect in the supporting evidence and was purely adhoc. The subsequent acceptance by the AO of the verifiability of the transactions after examining the additional evidence undermines the basis for disallowance.

The Court also considered the proportionality of the expenses relative to the assessee's total sales turnover of over Rs. 207 crore and the fact that it was the assessee's first year of business, finding the business promotion expenses reasonable. The Court rejected the argument that non-furnishing of some bills during assessment proceedings justifies disallowance, especially when the genuineness of expenses was not disputed after verification.

Accordingly, the Court directed the deletion of the disallowance of Rs. 1,25,852/-.

Issue 2: Disallowance of Cash Discount Expenses

The second issue concerns the disallowance of Rs. 2,47,50,818/- representing 20% of the cash discount expenses claimed by the assessee. The AO's action was premised on the non-receipt of confirmations from some parties to whom discounts were given and the consequent treatment of the disallowed amount as unexplained expenditure under section 69C of the Income Tax Act.

During assessment, the AO issued notices under section 133(6) to only 10 parties, although the assessee had given discounts to approximately 1,100 parties. Out of these 10, six parties confirmed the transactions, while four did not respond. The assessee explained that two of these four parties had no sales transactions during the year, one had shifted premises and later furnished confirmation, and the fourth had closed business but supporting ledger and sales invoices were submitted.

In the remand report, the AO acknowledged that the enquiry was limited and that the assessee had submitted confirmations from 127 parties during appellate proceedings, which were found verifiable. The AO also noted that the discount amounted to about 5.96% of total sales, which was reasonable. However, the AO opined that the disallowance should have been made under section 37(1) (which deals with inadmissible business expenses) rather than section 69C (which pertains to unexplained cash credits).

The Court noted that the AO's enquiry was selective and limited to a small fraction of parties, with most confirmations obtained and transactions found verifiable. The lack of confirmation from one party with a minimal transaction value (approximately Rs. 3,500/-) was insufficient to justify a large adhoc disallowance of 20% of the total discount expenses. The Court found no rational basis or evidentiary support for the disallowance and observed that the AO's failure to provide an opportunity to explain the non-confirmations was a procedural lapse.

Consequently, the Court directed deletion of the disallowance of Rs. 2,47,50,818/-.

Significant Holdings

The Tribunal emphasized the principle that disallowance of business expenses must be based on concrete evidence of defect or inadmissibility rather than adhoc or arbitrary percentages. It stated:

"The aforesaid observations of the A.O. leaves no room for doubt that there is no dispute about the genuineness of the expenses claimed by the assessee. Merely because complete set of bills and vouchers were not produced before the A.O, in course of the assessment proceeding, an amount of Rs. 1,25,852/- should not have been disallowed."

Further, regarding the cash discount disallowance, the Tribunal held:

"In our view, 20% disallowance made out of the expenditure claimed has no rational or sound basis, as it is not backed by any evidence."

The Tribunal also clarified the proper application of law regarding the nature of disallowance:

"It is further submitted that under this head the then AO ought to have made disallowance u/s 37(1) of the IT Act, 1961. However, the then AO made the disallowance u/s 69C of the IT Act, 1961."

In conclusion, the Tribunal allowed the appeal, deleting the disallowances made on both counts, thereby affirming the principle that expenses genuinely incurred and substantiated by verifiable evidence must be allowed, and that adhoc disallowances without proper basis are impermissible.

 

 

 

 

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