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2025 (5) TMI 2092 - AT - Income TaxAddition u/s 68 - cash deposits were made out of sale proceeds - HELD THAT - As undisputed fact during assessment and appellate proceedings cash sales and corresponding purchases already been accepted and books of accounts have not been rejected and without rejection of the books of accounts AO made the disallowance which is confirmed by the CIT(A) u/s 68 of the Act cannot be sustained as per precedents mentioned hereinbefore and deserves to be deleted. Assessee appeal allowed.
1. ISSUES PRESENTED and CONSIDERED
The core legal questions considered by the Tribunal in this appeal are: (a) Whether the addition of Rs. 61,20,000/- made by the Assessing Officer (AO) to the assessee's income under section 68 of the Income Tax Act, 1961 (the Act) is justified and sustainable. (b) Whether the addition confirmed by the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) [CIT(A)] was based on valid legal grounds or merely on conjectures, whims, and surmises without rejecting the books of accounts or pointing out any infirmity therein. (c) Whether the explanation offered by the assessee regarding the source of cash deposits in the bank account, particularly cash sales during the demonetization period, was adequately considered and accepted by the authorities below. (d) Whether the authorities erred in ignoring the books of accounts and related evidence submitted by the assessee to explain the source of cash deposits. (e) Whether the addition under section 68 can be sustained without rejection or adverse findings on the books of accounts, purchases, sales, and stock records. 2. ISSUE-WISE DETAILED ANALYSIS Issue (a) and (b): Justification and legality of addition under section 68 Relevant legal framework and precedents: Section 68 of the Act deals with unexplained cash credits. The AO is empowered to add unexplained cash credits to the income of the assessee if the assessee fails to satisfactorily explain the nature and source of such credits. However, the addition under section 68 cannot be sustained if the books of accounts are not rejected and no infirmity is found in the accounts or transactions recorded therein. The Tribunal relied on precedents including the coordinate bench decisions in Cumin Infotech Pvt. Ltd. vs. ITO, Bharat Agro Industries vs. DCIT, and Shivinder Pal Singh Chahal vs. ACIT, where it was held that additions under section 68 are not sustainable if the explanation of the assessee is not disproved and the books of accounts remain intact. Court's interpretation and reasoning: The Tribunal noted that the AO made the addition of Rs. 61,20,000/- on the premise that the cash deposits during the demonetization period were unexplained and represented unaccounted money. The AO contended that the assessee failed to provide a list of customers for cash sales and that the large cash deposits were suspicious. However, the AO did not reject the books of accounts or point out any defects or discrepancies in the audited accounts, purchases, sales, or stock records. The CIT(A) confirmed the addition without addressing the absence of any infirmity in the books. Key evidence and findings: The assessee submitted audited financial statements, VAT returns, monthly sales and purchase details, stock status, cash account, and ledger accounts to substantiate the source of cash deposits. The assessee explained that the cash sales were primarily made during October-November 2016 due to clearance of obsolete stock coinciding with the demonetization period and that VAT was paid on these sales. The Tribunal observed that there was no dispute regarding the genuineness of sales, purchases, or stock records, nor was there any rejection of books of accounts by the AO or CIT(A). Application of law to facts: The Tribunal applied the principle that unexplained cash credits under section 68 cannot be added to income if the assessee's books are intact and the explanation is plausible and supported by evidence. The absence of any adverse finding on the books or transactions meant the addition was unsustainable. Treatment of competing arguments: The Revenue argued that the timing and magnitude of cash deposits during the demonetization period were suspicious and unexplained. The assessee countered by providing documentary evidence and logical explanations for the cash sales and deposits. The Tribunal favored the assessee's submissions, emphasizing the lack of any rejection or infirmity in the books and the acceptance of sales and purchases by the Revenue. Conclusions: The addition under section 68 was held to be without basis and liable to be deleted. The Tribunal directed the AO to delete the addition of Rs. 61,20,000/-. Issue (c) and (d): Consideration of the source of cash deposits and treatment of books of accounts Relevant legal framework and precedents: The law requires that additions under section 68 be based on cogent reasons and evidence. Mere suspicion or surmises without rejecting the books of accounts or pointing out defects therein cannot sustain such additions. The Tribunal relied on the coordinate bench rulings which held that if the books of accounts explain the source of cash deposits and are not rejected, the addition under section 68 is not tenable. Court's interpretation and reasoning: The Tribunal found that the CIT(A) and AO failed to consider the books of accounts and documentary evidence submitted by the assessee explaining the source of cash deposits. The Tribunal highlighted that the assessee's explanation regarding cash sales during the demonetization period was supported by VAT returns and stock records, which were not disputed. Key evidence and findings: The assessee's books reflected the cash sales and corresponding purchases, VAT returns confirmed payment of tax on sales, and stock records corroborated the explanation of clearance of obsolete stock. The Tribunal noted that the AO did not challenge these evidences nor reject the books of accounts. Application of law to facts: The Tribunal applied the principle that additions under section 68 require rejection of the books or demonstration of defects to be sustainable. Since the books were not rejected and the explanation was supported by evidence, the addition was unwarranted. Treatment of competing arguments: The Revenue's reliance on the timing of cash deposits was insufficient to override the documentary evidence and intact books of accounts. The Tribunal rejected the Revenue's argument as speculative and unsupported by any adverse finding on the books. Conclusions: The Tribunal held that ignoring the books of accounts and documentary evidence was erroneous and the addition under section 68 could not be sustained on such grounds. Issue (e): Sustainability of addition without rejection or adverse findings on books, purchases, sales, and stock Relevant legal framework and precedents: The Tribunal relied on established precedents that additions under section 68 cannot be made without rejection of books or pointing out infirmities in purchases, sales, or stock records. The principle is that the books of accounts form the primary evidence of transactions and cannot be discarded without valid reasons. Court's interpretation and reasoning: The Tribunal observed that the AO and CIT(A) did not reject the books or find any irregularities in purchases, sales, or stock. The additions were made solely on the basis of unexplained cash deposits during demonetization without any adverse material against the books. Key evidence and findings: The assessee's books and related documents were accepted by the Revenue and no adverse material was brought on record to justify the addition. Application of law to facts: Applying the legal principle, the Tribunal held that additions under section 68 without rejection or infirmity in books are not sustainable. Treatment of competing arguments: The Revenue's argument based on timing and volume of cash deposits was insufficient to override the principle that intact books cannot be disregarded. Conclusions: The Tribunal concluded that the addition of Rs. 61,20,000/- was not sustainable and directed its deletion. 3. SIGNIFICANT HOLDINGS "In the absence of rejection of books of accounts and pointing out any defects in the books of accounts, not disputing the purchases, sales, stocks and cash in hand there is no justification in treating the cash deposits as unexplained money of the assessee ignoring the explanation of the assessee that the cash deposits made in the bank account are from sale proceeds only." "If the parties during the period of demonetization has purchases huge quantity of jewellery on cash which has been duly recorded in the books of accounts of the assessee and also tally with the quantity of stock, then simply because there was a huge cash sale in a particular month cannot be a reason for treating it as an undisclosed income from undisclosed sources." "Once the assessee has recorded the sales in its books and there is no adverse finding qua stock and purchases are made, invoking the provision of section 68 of the Act, would not be justified." "The disallowance made by the AO and confirmed by the Ld. CIT(A), is not sustainable, hence, we direct that the same be deleted." Core principles established: - Additions under section 68 require rejection of books of accounts or pointing out of defects in the books or transactions to be sustainable. - Mere suspicion or timing of cash deposits without adverse findings on books or transactions cannot justify addition under section 68. - Acceptance of sales, purchases, stock, and books of accounts by the Revenue precludes addition under section 68 on unexplained cash credits. Final determinations: The Tribunal allowed the appeal and set aside the addition of Rs. 61,20,000/- made under section 68 of the Act, holding that the addition was unsustainable in law and not supported by any adverse findings or rejection of books of accounts. The AO was directed to delete the addition accordingly.
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