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2025 (5) TMI 875 - AT - Income Tax


1. ISSUES PRESENTED and CONSIDERED

The core legal questions considered by the Tribunal in this appeal are:

  • Whether the reopening of the assessment under section 148 of the Income Tax Act, 1961, was valid or constituted an impermissible change of opinion, given that the original assessment under section 143(3) was completed after scrutiny of all relevant documents.
  • Whether the Assessing Officer (AO) had sufficient fresh material or reason to believe that income had escaped assessment to justify reopening the assessment.
  • Whether the loss claimed by the assessee on trading shares of a penny stock company, M/s Stampede Capital Ltd., was genuine or bogus, and whether the provisions of section 68 and section 69C of the Act were rightly invoked to add the alleged bogus loss as income.
  • Whether the commission alleged to have been paid by the assessee for acquiring accommodation entries was supported by material on record.
  • Whether the long-term capital gain claimed under section 10(38) was rightly disallowed and added to income under section 68.
  • Whether the reopening of the assessment was justified on the basis of information available in the department's insight portal, without independent application of mind by the AO.

2. ISSUE-WISE DETAILED ANALYSIS

Issue 1: Validity of Reopening of Assessment under Section 148

Relevant legal framework and precedents: Section 147 permits reopening of assessment if the AO has reason to believe that income has escaped assessment. However, reopening cannot be based on mere change of opinion or without fresh material. The Hon'ble Bombay High Court in Infinity.com Financial Securities vs. ACIT and the Hon'ble Delhi High Court in Sashi Mohan Garg vs. ITO have held that reopening is impermissible if the issue was examined during scrutiny and no fresh material is brought on record. The Hon'ble Gujarat High Court in Nimesh Maheshbahi Shah HUF vs. ITO emphasized that reliance solely on information from insight portal without independent application of mind is insufficient to reopen assessment.

Court's interpretation and reasoning: The Tribunal observed that the original assessment under section 143(3) was completed after the AO had examined all relevant documents, including ledger accounts, contract notes, and details of share transactions. The AO had accepted the loss declared by the assessee at that stage. The reopening was based solely on information from the department's insight portal, which related mainly to AY 2015-16 and did not implicate the assessee directly. The AO failed to reconcile this information with the material already on record and ignored the fact that the assessee held closing stock of shares in Stampede Capital Ltd. The Tribunal held that the AO's action amounted to a mere change of opinion without fresh material or reason to believe that income had escaped assessment.

Key evidence and findings: The assessee filed detailed documents during the original assessment, including broker contract notes and purchase-sale ledgers. The AO's order revealed reliance on generic information about the penny stock company and its modus operandi, but no direct evidence against the assessee. The Tribunal noted that the AO himself acknowledged the closing stock of shares with the assessee but disregarded it in his reasoning.

Application of law to facts: Given the absence of fresh material and the acceptance of the loss in the original assessment, the Tribunal concluded that the reopening notice issued under section 148 was invalid and amounted to an impermissible change of opinion.

Treatment of competing arguments: The Revenue contended that information regarding the penny stock nature of Stampede Capital Ltd. surfaced after the original assessment and justified reopening. The Tribunal rejected this, emphasizing the need for independent application of mind and fresh material specific to the assessee, which was lacking.

Conclusions: The reopening notice under section 148 was quashed as bad in law, and the consequential reassessment order under section 147 read with section 143(3) was set aside.

Issue 2: Genuineness of Loss Claimed on Trading Shares of Penny Stock Company

Relevant legal framework and precedents: Section 68 of the Income Tax Act allows the AO to treat unexplained cash credits or transactions as income if the assessee fails to satisfactorily explain the nature and source of such credits. Transactions in penny stocks are often scrutinized for being bogus or accommodation entries. However, mere suspicion or information about the company being a penny stock is insufficient to disallow genuine losses. The Delhi High Court in Harsh Vardhan Bansal vs. ACIT held that reopening on the basis of mere allegation without evidence that transactions were bogus is invalid.

Court's interpretation and reasoning: The Tribunal noted that the assessee had traded through a SEBI-registered broker, maintained proper records, and had not been shown to have any relation with the penny stock company beyond trading. The AO's conclusion that the transactions were sham was based on general information about the company and was not supported by any documentary evidence. The Tribunal further observed that the AO incorrectly treated the closing stock as sold shares, inflating the loss disallowed.

Key evidence and findings: The assessee submitted contract notes, ledger accounts, and other documents proving the genuineness of transactions. The AO's reliance on the insight portal information and the classification of the company as a penny stock was insufficient to prove the transactions were bogus.

Application of law to facts: Since the assessee discharged the onus of proving genuineness and the AO accepted the transactions in the original assessment, the disallowance of loss and addition under section 68 was unjustified.

Treatment of competing arguments: The Revenue argued that the company being a penny stock implied the transactions were accommodation entries. The Tribunal found this argument unsubstantiated in the absence of direct evidence against the assessee.

Conclusions: The loss claimed on trading shares of Stampede Capital Ltd. was genuine and accepted in the original assessment; therefore, disallowance and addition under section 68 were not sustainable.

Issue 3: Alleged Payment of Commission and Application of Section 69C

Relevant legal framework: Section 69C deals with unexplained expenditure, including commission paid for accommodation entries. The AO must establish the payment and its nature to invoke this provision.

Court's interpretation and reasoning: The Tribunal noted that the AO held that a commission of Rs. 2,64,738/- was paid by the assessee without any material on record. The assessee denied such payments and no documentary evidence was produced by the AO to substantiate the claim.

Key evidence and findings: Absence of any material or documentary evidence to prove payment of commission or that it was for accommodation entries.

Application of law to facts: Without evidence, the invocation of section 69C was unwarranted.

Treatment of competing arguments: The Revenue's assertion was unsupported by material; the Tribunal did not accept it.

Conclusions: The addition under section 69C was not justified.

Issue 4: Long-Term Capital Gain Claimed under Section 10(38)

Relevant legal framework: Section 10(38) exempts long-term capital gains arising from transfer of securities. The AO can deny exemption if gains are bogus or transactions are not genuine.

Court's interpretation and reasoning: The Tribunal found that the AO's disallowance was based on the assumption that the gains were bogus, relying on the penny stock classification and insight portal information, without any direct evidence against the assessee. The assessee had proved genuineness of transactions.

Key evidence and findings: Proper records and contract notes submitted by the assessee; no evidence of bogus gains.

Application of law to facts: The exemption under section 10(38) was rightly claimed; denial was unjustified.

Treatment of competing arguments: The Revenue's contention was unsupported by facts.

Conclusions: The long-term capital gain exemption should have been allowed.

3. SIGNIFICANT HOLDINGS

"In view of the facts and by respectfully following the judgment of the various High Courts and Co-ordinate Benches of ITAT, we are of the considered view that in the instant case, the AO has simply proceeded on the basis of the information available in insight portal, without bringing on record any fresh material, therefore, it is a case of change of opinion and thus, initiation of reassessment proceedings by issue of notice u/s 148 is not permissible."

"The assessee has been able to discharge the onus cast upon it to prove the genuineness of the transactions and was accepted by the Department in the order passed u/s 143(3), therefore, now alleging the same as bogus is nothing but mere change of opinion."

"Without forming such opinion solely and mechanically relying upon the information received from the other sources, the respondent-Assessing Officer could not have assumed the jurisdiction to reopen the assessment based on such information."

The Tribunal conclusively held that the reopening notice issued under section 148 was invalid and the reassessment order passed under section 147 read with section 143(3) was quashed. Consequently, the grounds challenging the merits of disallowance of loss, addition under sections 68 and 69C, and denial of exemption under section 10(38) were rendered academic and not adjudicated.

 

 

 

 

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