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2025 (5) TMI 1880 - HC - Income TaxAddition u/s 68 - unsecured loans reflected as Receipts from two entities - ITAT deleted addition - said additions were deleted on the ground that one of Assessee s group company had disclosed that it had generated unaccounted cash by inflating purchases which it claimed that part of which had been infused as unsecured loans in the Assessee company through other entities HELD THAT - As is apparent from the plain reading of Section 68 of the Act the same is applicable only where the Assessee offers no explanation about the nature and source thereof or the explanation offered by him is not in the opinion of the AO satisfactory. In the present case ostensibly the amount of unsecured loans had been received from two sham companies. Assessee has explained that the real source of the same is cash generated from inflating purchases by AMPPL. Thus the credits reflected in the books of the Assessee were received from AMPPL although through the route of two sham companies. There is no dispute that AMPPL and Assessee are part of the same group as is also acknowledged by the AO in the assessment order which notes that the search was conducted in AMP group of entities. Once an entitiy has made a disclosure and has availed the benefit of settlement under Chapter XIXA of the Act the amount as disclosed can no longer be considered as unexplained. Assessee s case is not required to be examined as a stand alone case by ignoring the disclosures made by its group company which has admittedly introduced the funds and debited in the books of account of the Assessee. We find no ground to interfere with the concurrent findings of the CIT(A) as well as ITAT that the unsecured loan to the tune of Rs. 10.96 Crores as reflected in the Assessee s books of account were explained and cannot be considered as undisclosed income. Decided in favour of the Assessee
1. ISSUES PRESENTED and CONSIDERED
The core legal question considered by the Court was whether the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT) was justified in deleting the addition of Rs. 10,37,50,000/- made by the Assessing Officer (AO) under Section 68 of the Income Tax Act, 1961 (the Act) in respect of unsecured loans reflected in the books of the Assessee from two non-genuine entities. Specifically, the question was whether the explanation offered by the Assessee, that the source of these unsecured loans was cash generated by inflating purchases by a group company which had already paid tax on the income, was satisfactory so as to negate the addition under Section 68. 2. ISSUE-WISE DETAILED ANALYSIS Issue: Whether the addition under Section 68 of the Act on account of unsecured loans from two sham companies can be sustained where the source of funds was explained as cash generated by inflating purchases by a group company, which had paid tax on such income and obtained settlement under the Income Tax Settlement Commission (ITSC). Relevant Legal Framework and Precedents: Section 68 of the Act deals with cash credits and mandates that if any sum is credited in the books of an Assessee and the Assessee fails to satisfactorily explain the nature and source of such sum to the satisfaction of the AO, the amount may be charged to income tax as the income of the Assessee. The provisos to Section 68 require that where the sum credited is a loan or borrowing, the person in whose name the credit is recorded must also offer a satisfactory explanation. The principle underlying Section 68 is that unexplained credits are presumed to be income unless satisfactorily explained. However, where the source is satisfactorily explained and corroborated, the addition cannot be sustained. The Court also relied on a coordinate Bench decision involving similar facts, where undisclosed income routed through group companies and introduced as share capital was held not to be taxable again in the hands of the recipient company once the income had been taxed in the hands of the group company and accepted by the Settlement Commission. Court's Interpretation and Reasoning: The Court noted that the AO had found the two companies from which the unsecured loans were received to be non-genuine, and the directors untraceable, a fact not disputed by the Assessee. However, the Assessee explained that the real source of these funds was cash generated by inflating purchases by its group company, AMPPL. During search and seizure operations under Section 132 of the Act, statements and disclosures were made by AMPPL, including an admission of inflating purchases to generate cash, which was then routed as unsecured loans through the two sham companies to the Assessee. AMPPL had filed an application before the ITSC and surrendered the said amount to tax, and the ITSC had accepted the explanation and verified the cash flow statements. The Court emphasized that once the group company had made a disclosure and paid tax on the income, the same amount could not be taxed again in the hands of the Assessee merely because it was routed through sham entities. The Court referred to the corrigendum issued by the ITSC which clarified that the unsecured loans and share capital introduced through these routes were explained as application of undisclosed income generated by inflating purchases. The cash flow statements had been verified by the Principal Commissioner of Income Tax (PCIT), and no further addition was called for. Key Evidence and Findings:
Application of Law to Facts: The Court applied the provisions of Section 68, noting that the addition under this section can only be sustained if the explanation offered by the Assessee and the person in whose name the credit is recorded is unsatisfactory. Here, the explanation was that the funds originated from AMPPL's undisclosed income which was taxed after disclosure before the ITSC. The funds were routed through sham companies but ultimately originated from a group company which had paid tax on the income. Thus, the explanation was satisfactory. The Court held that the Assessee's books reflected receipt of unsecured loans from sham companies, but the real source was the group company's disclosed income. Since the group company had already paid tax on the income and the ITSC had accepted the explanation, the amount could not be treated as unexplained credit in the hands of the Assessee. Treatment of Competing Arguments: The Revenue argued that the unsecured loans were from non-genuine entities and thus additions under Section 68 were justified. The AO did not accept the explanation since the ITSC application by AMPPL was pending at the time of assessment. However, the Court found that once the ITSC accepted the disclosure and the group company paid the tax, the explanation became satisfactory. The Court rejected the Revenue's contention that the addition should be sustained merely because the loans were routed through sham companies. Conclusions: The Court concluded that the ITAT was justified in deleting the addition under Section 68. The unsecured loans were satisfactorily explained as funds generated by AMPPL through inflating purchases and routed through sham companies. Since AMPPL had paid tax on the income and the ITSC had accepted the explanation, the amount could not be taxed again in the hands of the Assessee. 3. SIGNIFICANT HOLDINGS The Court held: "Since the group company has paid taxes on such inflated purchases, we do not find any reason why the same amount when re-introduced in the books should be taxed again." "Once an entity has made a disclosure and has availed the benefit of settlement under Chapter XIXA of the Act, the amount as disclosed can no longer be considered as unexplained." "The Assessee's case is not required to be examined as a stand-alone case by ignoring the disclosures made by its group company, which has admittedly introduced the funds and debited in the books of account of the Assessee." The Court affirmed the principle that unexplained credits under Section 68 cannot be taxed when the source is satisfactorily explained and has already been subjected to tax in the hands of the originating entity. The Court dismissed the Revenue's appeal, confirming the deletion of additions under Section 68 on the facts of the case.
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