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2025 (5) TMI 951 - AT - Income Tax


1. ISSUES PRESENTED and CONSIDERED

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

  • Whether the reopening of the assessment under section 147 read with section 143(3) of the Income Tax Act, 1961 (the Act) was valid, particularly focusing on the compliance with the sanction requirement under section 151(2) of the Act for reopening beyond four years from the end of the relevant assessment year.
  • Whether the additions made by the Assessing Officer (AO) under section 69A of the Act relating to unexplained cash deposits amounting to Rs. 34,60,000/- were justified.
  • Whether the addition made under section 68 of the Act amounting to Rs. 30,16,343/- on account of unsecured loan or trade advance from a closely held company was warranted.
  • Whether the AO was justified in making additions without rejecting the books of accounts.
  • Whether the reopening notice issued under section 148 was legally valid, including the question of whether the AO had independently recorded satisfaction or borrowed satisfaction from a higher authority.
  • Whether the levy of interest under section 234B of the Act was justified.
  • Whether the AO's refusal to accept the opening cash balance unless declared in Wealth Tax return was legally sustainable.

2. ISSUE-WISE DETAILED ANALYSIS

Issue 1: Validity of Reopening of Assessment under Section 147 read with Section 143(3) and Compliance with Section 151(2)

Relevant Legal Framework and Precedents:

Section 147 of the Act empowers the AO to reopen an assessment if income has escaped assessment. Section 148 provides for issuance of notice for reopening. Section 151(2) imposes a mandatory requirement that for reopening beyond four years from the end of the relevant assessment year, no notice under section 148 shall be issued by an AO below the rank of Joint Commissioner unless the Joint Commissioner is satisfied on the reasons recorded by the AO that it is a fit case for reopening.

The term "Joint Commissioner" is defined in section 2(28C) of the Act and includes Joint Commissioner or Additional Commissioner of Income Tax appointed under section 117(1). The satisfaction for reopening must be recorded by the Joint Commissioner or Additional Commissioner and cannot be substituted by the Principal Commissioner or Commissioner.

The Tribunal relied heavily on the precedent set by the Hon'ble Bombay High Court in Ghanshyam Khabrani vs. ACIT, which held that sanction for reopening beyond four years must be given by the Joint Commissioner or Additional Commissioner and not by the Principal Commissioner, as the latter is not the competent authority under section 151(2). The Court emphasized that statutory powers must be exercised strictly in accordance with the law, and satisfaction cannot be borrowed or substituted.

Court's Interpretation and Reasoning:

The Tribunal examined the facts and found that the sanction for reopening was given by the Principal Commissioner of Income Tax (Pr. CIT), Thane, instead of the Joint Commissioner or Additional Commissioner, as mandated under section 151(2). This non-compliance rendered the reopening notice under section 148 invalid.

The Tribunal noted that the AO was below the rank of Joint Commissioner and therefore required sanction from the Joint Commissioner or Additional Commissioner, which was not obtained. The Tribunal held that the reopening notice was issued without proper authority, making the entire reassessment invalid.

Key Evidence and Findings:

The record showed the AO obtained sanction from the Pr. CIT, not from the Joint Commissioner or Additional Commissioner. The Tribunal found no statutory provision allowing the Principal Commissioner to exercise the powers of the Joint Commissioner in this context.

Application of Law to Facts:

The statutory mandate of section 151(2) was not complied with. The reopening notice was therefore legally unsustainable.

Treatment of Competing Arguments:

The Department argued that the reopening was valid and the additions justified. However, the Tribunal found the legal defect in sanction fatal to the reopening. The Department's argument was rejected.

Conclusion:

The Tribunal set aside the reopening notice and quashed the reassessment proceedings on the ground of non-compliance with section 151(2).

Issue 2: Addition under Section 69A for Unexplained Cash Deposits of Rs. 34,60,000/-

Relevant Legal Framework and Precedents:

Section 69A deals with unexplained money, bullion, jewellery, or other valuable article found in possession of the assessee. The burden lies on the assessee to satisfactorily explain the source of such cash deposits.

Precedents require the assessee to provide credible and cogent explanation for cash deposits, failing which addition is justified.

Court's Interpretation and Reasoning:

The AO noted that cash deposits in bank account were Rs. 34.60 lakhs, whereas cash withdrawals during the year were only Rs. 14.67 lakhs. The assessee claimed that cash withdrawals from earlier years were redeposited, supported by bank statements showing withdrawals of small amounts of Rs. 500 to Rs. 1000 over three years.

The AO rejected this explanation, questioning why large cash withdrawals were made repeatedly without corresponding expenditure and why the source of the balance cash deposit remained unexplained.

The CIT(A) confirmed the addition, observing that the assessee failed to provide a precise explanation of the cash transactions.

Key Evidence and Findings:

Bank statements showing small withdrawals and deposits were submitted by the assessee, but no clear trail explaining the entire cash deposit of Rs. 34.60 lakhs was furnished.

Application of Law to Facts:

Since the assessee failed to satisfactorily explain the source of the cash deposits, addition under section 69A was made and confirmed.

Treatment of Competing Arguments:

The assessee argued that the cash was redeposited from previous withdrawals and hence legitimate. The AO and CIT(A) found this explanation insufficient and not credible.

Conclusion:

The addition under section 69A was upheld by the CIT(A) but ultimately became infructuous due to the invalidity of reopening.

Issue 3: Addition under Section 68 for Unexplained Credit of Rs. 30,16,343/- from M/s Domech Fabricators Pvt. Ltd.

Relevant Legal Framework and Precedents:

Section 68 deals with unexplained cash credits. Where an assessee credits an amount in books as loan or advance and fails to satisfactorily explain the source or genuineness, the amount can be added to income.

Provisions of deemed dividend under section 2(22)(e) are relevant if the loan is from a closely held company to a shareholder holding more than 10% shares.

Court's Interpretation and Reasoning:

The assessee claimed the amount was a trade advance from the company for business expansion and purchase of a plot for a godown. The assessee submitted an agreement to substantiate the claim and argued that section 2(22)(e) was not attracted.

The AO rejected the claim, noting the assessee had not furnished the lender company's return of income, audited financial statements, bank statements, or affidavits confirming the loan transactions, raising doubts about genuineness.

The CIT(A) confirmed the addition, holding that the assessee failed to substantiate the genuineness of the loan.

Key Evidence and Findings:

Submission of balance sheets of the company showed unsecured loans from the company, but absence of corroborative documents like returns, bank statements, or affidavits weakened the assessee's case.

Application of Law to Facts:

Without proper documentary evidence, the credit was rightly treated as unexplained cash credit under section 68.

Treatment of Competing Arguments:

The assessee's contention that the amount was a trade advance was rejected due to lack of supporting evidence.

Conclusion:

The addition under section 68 was upheld by the CIT(A) but became infructuous due to the invalid reopening.

Issue 4: Addition Without Rejection of Books of Accounts

The assessee challenged the addition made without rejecting the books of accounts. The Tribunal did not explicitly address this issue separately, but implicitly the validity of additions depends on the reopening validity and sufficiency of explanation.

Issue 5: Validity of Notice under Section 148 and Whether AO Borrowed Satisfaction

It was contended that the AO issued notice under section 148 by borrowing satisfaction and not on his own. The Tribunal's analysis under issue 1 implicitly covers this, holding that sanction was not obtained from the competent authority, rendering the notice invalid.

Issue 6: Levy of Interest under Section 234B

The assessee challenged the levy of interest under section 234B. Since the reopening was held invalid, the assessment and consequential interest became infructuous.

Issue 7: Non-Acceptance of Opening Cash Balance Unless Declared in Wealth Tax Return

The AO refused to accept opening cash balance of Rs. 25,64,900/- unless declared in wealth tax return, despite the assessee not being liable to wealth tax. The Tribunal did not expressly rule on this issue but the invalid reopening rendered this moot.

3. SIGNIFICANT HOLDINGS

"No notice shall be issued under section 148 by an Assessing Officer, who is below the rank of Joint Commissioner, after the expiry of four years from the end of the relevant assessment year, unless the Joint Commissioner is satisfied, on the reasons recorded by such Assessing Officer, that it is a fit case for the issue of such notice."

"The Principal Commissioner of Income Tax is not a Joint Commissioner within the meaning of section 2(28C) and therefore cannot give sanction under section 151(2) for reopening assessment beyond four years."

"Where a statute requires something to be done in a particular manner, it has to be done in that manner. The satisfaction which the statute mandates of a distinct authority cannot be substituted by the satisfaction of another."

"Non-compliance with the mandatory requirements of section 151(2) renders the reopening notice invalid and the reassessment proceedings unsustainable in law."

Final determination: The reopening notice issued under section 148 was invalid due to non-compliance with section 151(2). Consequently, all additions made by the AO under sections 69A and 68 were deleted, and the appeal was allowed.

 

 

 

 

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