1. ISSUES PRESENTED and CONSIDERED
The primary legal questions considered by the Tribunal were:
(a) Whether the reassessment proceedings initiated under section 147 read with section 148 of the Income Tax Act were valid when the notice under section 148 was issued in the name of a deceased assessee.
(b) Whether the reassessment proceedings were barred by limitation.
(c) Whether proper approval was obtained from the competent authority before initiation of reassessment proceedings.
(d) Whether the reasons recorded for initiation of reassessment proceedings were proper and valid.
(e) Whether the addition of Rs. 40,39,241/- made by the Assessing Officer under section 68 of the Act, treating the long-term capital gain as unexplained income, was justified.
2. ISSUE-WISE DETAILED ANALYSIS
Issue (a): Validity of reassessment proceedings initiated against deceased assessee
Relevant legal framework and precedents: The reassessment proceedings were initiated under section 147 and notice issued under section 148 of the Income Tax Act. Section 159 of the Act governs the continuation of proceedings against legal representatives after the death of an assessee. The key precedent relied upon was the decision of the Hon'ble Delhi High Court in Savita Kapila -vs.- ACIT (2020) 118 taxmann.com 46 (Delhi), which held that in the absence of a statutory provision, legal representatives are under no statutory obligation to intimate the Income Tax Department about the death of the assessee, and issuance of notice to a deceased person does not constitute a mistake or defect under section 292B of the Act.
Court's interpretation and reasoning: The Tribunal observed that the deceased assessee died on 31.01.2021, but the notice under section 148 was issued on 31.03.2021 in the name of the deceased. The Tribunal noted that while proceedings against an assessee do not abate on death and may continue against legal representatives, initiation of proceedings specifically against the deceased person post-death is invalid. The Tribunal relied heavily on the Delhi High Court ruling which clarified that legal heirs are not obliged to inform the Department about the death, and hence issuance of notice to a deceased person is invalid and does not fall within the ambit of rectifiable mistakes under section 292B.
Key evidence and findings: The appellant/legal heir had applied for appointment as legal heir on the Income Tax Portal, which was rejected. The appellant also informed the Income Tax authorities about the death through postal notices. Despite this, the Assessing Officer issued the notice in the deceased's name and did not initiate proceedings against the legal heir as required under section 159.
Application of law to facts: The Tribunal found that the reassessment proceedings initiated against the deceased person were null and void. The Assessing Officer failed to issue notice to the legal representative and did not follow the procedure prescribed under section 159. The CIT(Appeals) also erred by passing orders in the name of the deceased without addressing the legal heir's status.
Treatment of competing arguments: The Revenue contended that the appellant failed to inform the Department about the death, justifying issuance of notice to the deceased. The Tribunal rejected this, holding that there is no statutory obligation on legal heirs to intimate death and that the Department's failure to update records cannot validate issuance of notice to a deceased person.
Conclusion: The reassessment proceedings initiated by issuing notice under section 148 in the name of the deceased assessee were invalid and void ab initio. The proceedings could not be sustained without proper initiation against the legal representative under section 159.
Issue (b): Bar of limitation on reassessment proceedings
The Tribunal did not explicitly analyze limitation in detail, as the primary issue of invalidity of notice due to issuance to a deceased person was dispositive. The question of limitation was raised but not adjudicated upon in light of the primary finding.
Issue (c): Approval from competent authority before reassessment
The appellant argued that reassessment was bad in law due to lack of proper approval. The Tribunal did not find it necessary to delve into this issue given the invalidity of the notice itself. No detailed discussion on approval was recorded.
Issue (d): Validity of reasons recorded for reassessment
The appellant contended that reasons recorded were improper. The Tribunal did not analyze this issue in detail because the reassessment was set aside on procedural grounds related to issuance of notice to a deceased person. Hence, this issue was not addressed substantively.
Issue (e): Justification of addition under section 68 treating long-term capital gain as unexplained income
The addition of Rs. 40,39,241/- was made by the Assessing Officer under section 68, based on information from the Investigation Wing alleging bogus share transactions in penny stocks generating accommodation entries. The appellant challenged this addition.
The Tribunal did not consider the merits of this addition because the reassessment itself was held to be invalid. Therefore, the addition could not be sustained as the reassessment proceedings were null and void.
3. SIGNIFICANT HOLDINGS
The Tribunal held that:
"The notice issued under section 148 of the Act is bad in law and reassessment proceedings initiated by the ld. Assessing Officer is null and void in view of the ratio laid down by the Hon'ble Delhi High Court in the case of Savita Kapila -vs.- ACIT."
"In absence of a statutory provision, a duty cannot be cast upon legal representatives to intimate factum of death of assessee in the Income Tax Department. Consequently, the legal heirs are under no statutory obligation to intimate the death of the assessee to the revenue."
"Issuance of notice upon a dead person and non-service of notice does not come under the ambit of mistake, defect or omission. Therefore, section 292B of the Act does not apply to the present case."
"The ld. CIT(Appeals) also has not taken any step to initiate the proceedings against the legal representative as prescribed under section 159 of the Act."
"Considering the totality of the facts and circumstances of the case, I am of the view that the notice issued under section 148 of the Act is bad in law and reassessment proceedings initiated by the ld. Assessing Officer is null and void."
The core principle established is that reassessment proceedings cannot be validly initiated by issuing notice to a deceased assessee after death, and the proper procedure requires initiation against the legal representative under section 159. Legal heirs are not statutorily obliged to inform the Department of the death, and failure to do so cannot validate defective issuance of notice.
The final determination was to set aside the reassessment proceedings and allow the appeal of the assessee on this ground alone, without adjudicating other raised issues.