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2025 (6) TMI 1477 - AT - Income Tax


1. ISSUES PRESENTED and CONSIDERED

The core legal questions considered in this appeal are:

  • Whether the penalty under section 271(1)(c) of the Income Tax Act, 1961 (the Act) for concealment of income or furnishing inaccurate particulars of income is justified in the facts and circumstances of the case.
  • Whether the assessee's voluntary rectification of the mistake during assessment proceedings negates the imposition of penalty.
  • Whether the assessee derived any tax advantage from the disallowed expenditure, given the continuous losses incurred in the relevant and preceding years.
  • Whether the delay in filing the appeal (1175 days) is excusable and should be condoned.
  • The legal effect of furnishing inaccurate particulars of income in the return and the scope of concealment under section 271(1)(c).

2. ISSUE-WISE DETAILED ANALYSIS

Delay in Filing Appeal:

The assessee filed the appeal with a delay of 1175 days and submitted a condonation petition along with a sworn affidavit explaining the delay. The reasons cited included the disruption caused by the COVID-19 pandemic lockdown, non-receipt of communication regarding the penalty order, and the substantial time spent responding to multiple income tax notices. The Tribunal found the explanation satisfactory, held that the delay was unintentional and bona fide, and condoned the delay in the interest of justice and equity.

Penalty under Section 271(1)(c) for Concealment of Income:

Legal Framework and Precedents: Section 271(1)(c) penalizes concealment of income or furnishing inaccurate particulars of income. The Supreme Court in MAK Data (P) Ltd. v. CIT-II held that voluntary disclosure does not absolve the assessee from penalty liability if concealment or inaccuracy is established. The Court emphasized that the obligation is to disclose particulars of income fully and correctly, and any concealment or inaccuracy, whether partial or complete, attracts penalty.

Court's Interpretation and Reasoning: The Tribunal reproduced the detailed reasoning from the appellate order, explaining that concealment can arise from non-disclosure, partial disclosure, or furnishing inaccurate particulars, including misclassification or false deductions. The Tribunal noted that the Assessing Officer (AO) found that the assessee had reduced taxable income by Rs. 4,55,72,663/- on account of interest on debentures written off, which was not correctly added back in earlier years, leading to an understatement of income. The assessee accepted the addition of Rs. 1,76,88,923/- during assessment proceedings but did not file a revised return.

Key Evidence and Findings: The AO initiated penalty proceedings, rejecting the assessee's contention of voluntary disclosure, and imposed penalty @ 100% of the tax sought to be evaded. The CIT(A) upheld the penalty, finding deliberate concealment and furnishing of inaccurate particulars. The Tribunal noted that had the case not been selected for scrutiny, the assessee would have enjoyed an undue tax benefit.

Application of Law to Facts and Treatment of Competing Arguments: The assessee argued that the error was inadvertent and bona fide, relying on the Supreme Court's decision in Price Waterhouse Coopers (P.) Ltd. v. CIT, where penalty was deleted due to absence of intention to conceal or furnish inaccurate particulars. The assessee also submitted additional evidence showing continuous losses from AY 2014-15 to AY 2022-23, contending no tax advantage was derived from the disallowance. The Tribunal admitted this additional evidence despite it not being presented earlier.

The Revenue contended that concealment was deliberate and that the penalty was justified. The Tribunal acknowledged the Revenue's position but emphasized that the assessee's claim of no tax advantage due to continuous losses was a relevant factual aspect requiring verification.

Conclusion and Directions: The Tribunal remanded the matter to the AO for fresh adjudication of penalty, directing verification of the assessee's loss position in the relevant and preceding years in light of the Hon'ble Jurisdictional High Court's decision in Garware Chemicals Ltd., which held that penalty cannot be imposed if no tax advantage is derived. The assessee was to be given a reasonable opportunity of hearing in the remand proceedings.

Whether the Assessee Derived Tax Advantage:

The assessee placed before the Tribunal a detailed chart showing year-wise income/loss and carry-forward losses from AY 2014-15 to AY 2022-23, demonstrating that even after the addition of Rs. 1,76,88,923/- in AY 2014-15, the returned loss remained substantial and that only a portion of losses was adjusted in subsequent years, with a large balance lapsing. This was relied upon to argue that no tax benefit accrued from the disallowed expenditure.

The Tribunal observed that this factual claim was not raised before the lower authorities but admitted it as additional evidence. It directed the AO to verify this claim in the remand proceedings and consider it while deciding the penalty issue.

Voluntary Rectification of Mistake:

The assessee voluntarily rectified the mistake during assessment proceedings by filing a rectified computation and accepting the addition. However, no revised return was filed. The Tribunal observed that voluntary disclosure during assessment does not automatically absolve penalty liability if concealment or furnishing inaccurate particulars is established, as per the MAK Data (P) Ltd. ruling.

Legal Effect of Furnishing Inaccurate Particulars:

The Tribunal reiterated that furnishing inaccurate particulars includes misclassification, false deductions, or incomplete disclosure, and such inaccuracies attract penalty under section 271(1)(c). The Tribunal emphasized that the obligation is to disclose particulars fully and correctly, and any inaccuracy, whether intentional or not, can lead to penalty unless the assessee proves bona fide error without intention to evade tax.

3. SIGNIFICANT HOLDINGS

"If a person obliged to furnish the particulars of his income omits to furnish them, he thereby conceals the particulars. The concealment may take various forms. A glaring illustration of concealment would be where the assessee does not disclose or fully disclose in the return the income derived by him which would fall under a particular head... To the extent he does not disclose that income; he conceals the particulars of income. The obligation is not only to disclose particulars of income but to disclose them correctly and completely."

"The expression particulars of income would have relevance to all the particulars of income which the assessee is required to give in his return fully and truly, including the particulars of income chargeable to tax under various heads and the total income. Therefore, any concealment or inaccuracy in the particulars of income in the return occurring at any stage up to and inclusive of the ultimate stage of working out of total income, would attract the penalty provision of section 271(1)(c) of the Act."

"Voluntary disclosure does not release assessee from mischief of penal proceedings under section 271(1)(c) in terms of section 271(1)(c), Assessing Officer has to satisfy whether penalty proceedings be initiated or not during course of assessment proceedings and Assessing Officer is not required to record his satisfaction in a particular manner or reduce it into writing."

"This was not a simple case of increase of authorized capital because the assessee has sought to issue to the IDBI Bank the optional convertible debentures in view of the restructuring scheme of the said Bank. The assessee was not trying to seek any tax advantage because even after disallowance of this expenditure, huge loss was assessed. In such circumstances... this was not the case falling within the purview of the provisions enabling imposition of penalty."

The Tribunal's final determination was to condone the delay in filing the appeal and remit the penalty issue to the AO for fresh adjudication after verifying the factual claim of continuous losses and absence of tax advantage, directing that the assessee be given a reasonable opportunity of hearing. The appeal was allowed for statistical purposes.

 

 

 

 

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