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2025 (6) TMI 1122 - AT - Income Tax


The core legal questions considered in this judgment pertain to the validity and scope of the revisionary powers exercised by the Commissioner of Income Tax (CIT) under Section 263 of the Income Tax Act, 1961, specifically:

(i) Whether the CIT was justified in invoking Section 263 to revise the assessment order passed under Section 143(3) for the assessment year 2017-18 on the grounds that the assessment was erroneous and prejudicial to the interests of revenue;

(ii) Whether the enlargement of the scope of limited scrutiny beyond the originally specified issues without obtaining approval from the Competent Authority violated the CBDT Instruction No. 5/2016;

(iii) Whether the jurisdiction of the Assessing Officer (AO) who passed the assessment order was valid, considering the transfer of proceedings between different wards without formal approval under Section 127 of the Act;

(iv) Whether the CIT's findings regarding discrepancies in the opening capital balance and credit card payments were supported by adequate material and justified the exercise of revisionary powers;

(v) The applicability and interpretation of the principles governing the exercise of powers under Section 263, including the requirement that the order of the AO must be both erroneous and prejudicial to the revenue;

(vi) Whether the appeal against the order passed under Section 263 remains maintainable and relevant despite the AO having passed a consequential order following the CIT's directions.

Regarding the jurisdictional issue, the assessee initially filed the original return under Ward-3, Sirsa, and received a notice under Section 143(2) for limited scrutiny on two specific issues: unsecured loans and credit card payments. Subsequently, a fresh notice was issued by Ward-4, Panchkula, after the assessee filed a revised return indicating Panchkula as the jurisdiction. The Tribunal examined whether the transfer of jurisdiction was valid in the absence of formal approval under Section 127. The Tribunal noted that the assessee responded to all notices from Ward-4 without objection and did not raise jurisdictional issues during assessment or before the CIT. Reliance was placed on the Supreme Court precedent holding that failure to object to jurisdiction during assessment proceedings precludes raising it later. Given the assessee's conduct and lack of evidence of formal transfer, the Tribunal held that the jurisdictional challenge lacked merit.

On the issue of scope of scrutiny, the CBDT Instruction No. 5/2016 mandates that in limited scrutiny cases selected through CASS, the AO is to confine enquiry to the parameters forming the basis of selection unless the case qualifies as a revenue potential case and approval is obtained from the Competent Authority for complete scrutiny. The Tribunal observed that in the present case, the scrutiny was limited to unsecured loans and credit card payments and there was no record of approval for expanding the scope. The CIT's action was confined to these issues, but the Tribunal emphasized that any enlargement without approval would be contrary to the Instruction.

Concerning the CIT's exercise of powers under Section 263, the Tribunal analyzed the statutory framework. Section 263 empowers the CIT to call for and examine any proceeding and revise the order if it is found to be erroneous and prejudicial to the revenue. The process involves four stages: calling and examining records; forming an opinion on error and prejudice; issuing a show-cause notice and hearing the assessee; and passing an appropriate order. The Tribunal highlighted that both conditions-error and prejudice-must be satisfied for Section 263 to apply. It also noted that the CIT's powers do not extend to substituting his own opinion for that of the AO if the AO's order is a possible view under law or factually supported.

The Tribunal referred to authoritative precedents and principles, including the requirement that mere differences of opinion or minor errors do not warrant revision under Section 263. It underscored that if the AO has made enquiries, applied mind, and accepted explanations supported by evidence, the CIT cannot overturn the order simply due to dissatisfaction.

On the facts, the AO had issued detailed questionnaires on unsecured loans and credit card payments and received comprehensive replies from the assessee, including PAN details, confirmations, and ledger accounts. The AO was satisfied with the evidence and accepted the return without making additions. Although the AO's assessment order lacked elaborate discussion, the Tribunal held that this did not imply absence of enquiry or erroneous order. The CIT's observations about discrepancies in credit card payments were general and unsupported by specific findings or material demonstrating error or prejudice.

The Tribunal also rejected the CIT's assumption that the limited scrutiny case was converted into a complete scrutiny, finding no evidence on record to that effect. This incorrect factual premise undermined the CIT's conclusions.

Regarding the argument that the appeal was rendered infructuous because the AO had passed consequential orders following the CIT's directions, the Tribunal clarified that statutory appeals against Section 263 orders remain maintainable. It cited Supreme Court authority affirming that the power under Section 263 can be exercised only when the order is erroneous and prejudicial, and that the appellate forum can examine these conditions regardless of consequential orders. The Tribunal distinguished the present facts from cases where the AO failed to investigate, noting that here the AO had conducted enquiries and accepted the assessee's explanations.

In conclusion, the Tribunal found that the CIT had erred in invoking Section 263 as the AO's order was neither erroneous nor prejudicial to the revenue. The jurisdictional challenge was not substantiated, and the enlargement of scrutiny scope without approval was not established. The CIT's findings were based on incorrect facts and general observations lacking material basis. The appeal was allowed, and the order under Section 263 was quashed.

Significant holdings include the following verbatim legal reasoning and principles:

"The CIT must record satisfaction that the order of the AO is erroneous and prejudicial to the interest of the Revenue. Both the conditions must be fulfilled."

"Sec. 263 cannot be invoked to correct each and every type of mistake or error committed by the AO and it was only when an order is erroneous that the section will be attracted."

"If the AO has made enquiries during the course of assessment proceedings on the relevant issues and the assessee has given detailed explanation by a letter in writing and the AO allows the claim on being satisfied with the explanation of the assessee, the decision of the AO cannot be held to be erroneous simply because in his order he does not make an elaborate discussion in that regard."

"If original jurisdiction lies upon the assessee at ITO, Ward-3, Sirsa, then ITO, Ward-4, Panchkula has no jurisdiction unless it is transferred by the Competent Authority u/s 127 of the Income Tax Act."

"The remedy of appeal before the Tribunal would not become infructuous simply for the reason that AO has passed the consequential order."

Core principles established are that the exercise of revisionary powers under Section 263 is circumscribed by the twin conditions of error and prejudice; that jurisdictional objections must be timely raised; that the scope of limited scrutiny cannot be enlarged without approval; and that appellate remedies remain available notwithstanding consequential orders by the AO.

Final determinations are that the CIT's order under Section 263 is quashed for lack of jurisdiction and absence of error or prejudice, the jurisdictional challenge by the assessee is rejected, and the appeal is allowed in favor of the assessee.

 

 

 

 

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