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2025 (5) TMI 780 - AT - Income Tax


1. ISSUES PRESENTED and CONSIDERED

The core legal questions considered by the Tribunal in this appeal are:

  • Whether the provisions of section 69 or section 69A of the Income Tax Act, 1961, apply to the valuation and addition of nine wrist watches seized during search and seizure proceedings?
  • Whether the addition of unexplained jewellery found during the search and seizure operation amounting to Rs. 2,37,01,947/- is justified under section 69 of the Act?
  • Whether jewellery previously accounted for and added to income in an earlier assessment year can be considered explained for the current assessment year, including appreciation in value?
  • Whether jewellery claimed to belong to family members, supported by affidavits but not examined by the Assessing Officer, can be excluded from addition as unexplained assets?
  • Whether the Assessing Officer should have restored the matter to his file for further inquiry into ownership of jewellery claimed by family members or whether the deletion of additions by the CIT(A) was justified?

2. ISSUE-WISE DETAILED ANALYSIS

Issue 1: Applicability of section 69 versus section 69A to nine wrist watches seized during search

Relevant legal framework and precedents: Section 69 deals with unexplained investments, deeming unexplained investments not recorded in books and not satisfactorily explained to be income. Section 69A deals with unexplained money, bullion, jewellery or other valuable articles found and seized during search, deeming their value to be income unless satisfactorily explained.

Court's interpretation and reasoning: The Tribunal noted that section 69 applies to unexplained investments made by the assessee, which presupposes an investment made by the assessee that is not recorded or satisfactorily explained. In contrast, section 69A applies specifically to unexplained money or valuable articles found during search and seizure operations, provided the assessee claims ownership.

The wrist watches were found and seized from the assessee's residence during search under section 132. The assessee admitted ownership in her statement recorded under section 132(4) and claimed purchase from accounted cash. The AO applied section 69 treating the watches as unexplained investments, valuing them at Rs. 58.70 lakhs as undisclosed income. The CIT(A) deleted this addition, holding that since these were valuable articles found during search, section 69A was the applicable provision, not section 69.

Key evidence and findings: The assessee's statement under section 132(4) admitting ownership and purchase from accounted sources; valuation report of Government Approved Valuer; lack of documentary evidence supporting purchase cost of Rs. 11.60 lakhs claimed by a third party (Shri Ram Dass).

Application of law to facts: Since the watches were seized during search and the assessee admitted ownership, the Tribunal found section 69A applicable rather than section 69. The AO's invocation of section 69 was held to be without basis.

Treatment of competing arguments: Revenue argued that both sections are similar and section 69 should apply. The Tribunal rejected this, emphasizing the distinct nature and applicability of the two provisions.

Conclusions: The Tribunal confirmed the CIT(A)'s deletion of the addition under section 69 and held that section 69A applies to the seized wrist watches, not section 69.

Issue 2: Addition of unexplained jewellery found during search amounting to Rs. 2,37,01,947/-

Relevant legal framework and precedents: Section 69 applies to unexplained investments, while section 69A applies to unexplained money, jewellery or valuable articles found during search. CBDT Instruction No.1916 dated 11.05.1994 allows prescribed jewellery holdings to family members without addition.

Court's interpretation and reasoning: The jewellery found was partly accounted for in an earlier search and assessment year (AY 2013-14) where jewellery worth Rs. 96,15,563/- was added to income. The assessee claimed that the same jewellery, revalued at current rates (Rs. 1,07,22,844/-), should be treated as explained. The CIT(A) accepted this contention, allowing deduction on the appreciated value.

Key evidence and findings: Earlier search and assessment order for AY 2013-14; reconciliation statement filed by assessee; valuation of jewellery at current market rates; affidavits filed by family members claiming ownership of some jewellery.

Application of law to facts: The Tribunal upheld the CIT(A)'s acceptance of the jewellery value previously accounted for, including appreciation, as explained and not liable to addition. For the balance jewellery (approx. 6200 grams), the assessee claimed ownership by family members as per CBDT instructions, supported by affidavits.

Treatment of competing arguments: Revenue challenged the acceptance of affidavits without examination and argued that the matter should have been remanded to the AO for verification. The assessee argued that acceptance of affidavits without cross-examination established ownership.

Conclusions: The Tribunal held that since the assessee admitted ownership during search, the onus was on the assessee to prove ownership of jewellery claimed by family members. As affidavits alone without examination were insufficient, the Tribunal restored the issue of the balance jewellery to the AO for fresh adjudication, directing the AO to verify ownership claims before deciding on addition.

3. SIGNIFICANT HOLDINGS

On the applicability of section 69 versus section 69A, the Tribunal held:

"Going by the first principle of the provisions of section 69, in the present case and in the given facts and circumstances of the case, this provision could not be applied to nine wrist watches seized by the Income Tax Department from the house of the assessee during the course of search under section 132 of the Act, because it falls under section 69A of the Act. Hence, we are of the considered view that applying section 69 is without any basis and hence, the CIT(A) has rightly deleted the addition and we confirm the same."

This establishes the core principle that section 69 applies to unexplained investments, while section 69A applies to unexplained money or valuable articles found during search, provided ownership is established.

Regarding jewellery previously accounted for in an earlier assessment year, the Tribunal affirmed the principle that such jewellery, including appreciation in value, stands explained and is not liable to addition again:

"The gross weight of jewellery found during the course of earlier search needs to be treated as explained and the appellant is eligible for deduction to the extent of the jewellery found in earlier search. The present value as on the date of last search of the jewellery needs to be taken."

On the issue of jewellery claimed by family members, the Tribunal emphasized the need for proper verification and evidence beyond affidavits:

"Since the assessee has given statement u/s 132(4) of the Act, although this is a rebuttable presumption, the assessee has to prove substantially by evidence that the jewellery belongs to family members, which she fails. The assessee simplicitor files the affidavits of the family members and the AO has not examined these parties, whether the jewellery belongs to them or not, the matter needs reconsideration at the level of the AO for this jewellery of 6200 grams only."

Accordingly, the Tribunal restored the issue to the AO for fresh adjudication with directions to verify ownership claims before making any addition.

Final determinations:

  • The addition of Rs. 58.70 lakhs on account of nine wrist watches under section 69 was deleted; section 69A applies instead.
  • The addition of jewellery worth Rs. 1,07,22,844/- previously accounted for and valued at current rates was deleted.
  • The addition of balance jewellery of approx. 6200 grams claimed by family members was set aside and remanded to the AO for verification and fresh decision.
  • The appeal of the Revenue was partly allowed for statistical purposes.

 

 

 

 

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