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2025 (5) TMI 899 - HC - Income Tax


The core legal questions considered in this judgment revolve around the validity of the reopening of the assessment under Section 148 of the Income Tax Act, 1961 for the Assessment Year 2016-17. Specifically, the issues are:

1. Whether the Assessing Officer had valid reasons to believe that income had escaped assessment due to understatement of closing stock/Work In Progress (WIP) by the petitioner-company.

2. Whether the reopening of the assessment was justified on the basis of the material advance shown in the 3rd Running Account (RA) Bill and its treatment as closing stock or WIP.

3. Whether the material advance received and accounted for by the petitioner could be equated to unutilized stock leading to escapement of income.

4. Whether the reopening notice issued under Section 148 was legally sustainable in light of the facts and submissions made during the original assessment proceedings.

Issue-wise Detailed Analysis

Issue 1: Validity of Reason to Believe for Reopening Based on Understatement of Closing Stock/WIP

The legal framework for reopening an assessment under Section 148 requires the Assessing Officer to have a "reason to believe" that income chargeable to tax has escaped assessment. This reason must be based on tangible material and not mere change of opinion. Precedents emphasize that reopening cannot be based on information already available and considered in the original assessment.

The Assessing Officer's reason to believe was founded on the discrepancy between the closing stock of Rs. 60,77,207/- shown in the profit and loss account and the material advance of Rs. 3,10,94,615/- reflected in RA Bill No. 3. The Assessing Officer concluded that the closing stock was understated by Rs. 2,50,17,408/- leading to escapement of income.

The Court scrutinized the material and found that the Assessing Officer's reason was based solely on the difference between the material advance and closing stock figures, without appreciating the accounting treatment and explanations furnished by the petitioner during the original assessment. The petitioner had accounted for the material advance as an advance payment received in the subsequent assessment year and not as stock in hand for the year under consideration.

The Court held that the Assessing Officer's reason was based on material already on record and examined during the original assessment, and thus, did not constitute fresh tangible material justifying reopening.

Issue 2: Treatment of Material Advance in RA Bill and Its Impact on Closing Stock/WIP

The petitioner raised detailed submissions explaining that the material advance of Rs. 3,10,94,615/- shown in RA Bill No. 3 was not representative of unutilized stock or closing inventory for the Assessment Year 2016-17. Instead, it was an advance received in April 2016 to purchase materials for the subsequent year (Assessment Year 2017-18).

The petitioner also demonstrated that the material advance was adjusted against advances received in RA Bill No. 2, and the net difference did not amount to any unaccounted stock. This was supported by the reconciliation of income and tax deducted at source (TDS) details during the original assessment proceedings.

The Court found that the Assessing Officer misinterpreted the material advance as closing stock, which was incorrect. The advance payment could not be equated to stock in hand, and thus, there was no understatement of closing stock or WIP.

Issue 3: Application of Law to Facts Regarding Escapement of Income

Since the material advance did not constitute unutilized stock in hand, the alleged understatement of closing stock was not established. The Court noted that closing stock for one year becomes opening stock for the next year and does not itself result in escapement of income unless there is clear evidence of suppression or misstatement.

The petitioner's accounts and explanations were consistent and supported by audit reports and statutory documents submitted during the original assessment. The Assessing Officer's reliance on the difference between material advance and closing stock without further corroboration was insufficient to justify reopening.

Issue 4: Legality of Reopening Notice Issued Under Section 148

The Court emphasized that reopening of assessment is an extraordinary power and must be exercised strictly in accordance with law. The Assessing Officer must have fresh and credible material to form a reason to believe that income has escaped assessment.

In this case, the reopening notice dated 28th March 2021 was issued on the basis of the same material that was already available and considered during the original assessment. The objections raised by the petitioner explaining the accounting treatment were not adequately considered before passing the order rejecting the objections.

The Court held that the reopening was a mere change of opinion based on an erroneous interpretation of the material advance as stock. Such a reason does not meet the threshold required for valid reopening under Section 148.

Significant Holdings

"The respondent-Assessing Officer could not have assumed the jurisdiction to re-open the assessment on the basis of the information which is already available on record and considered during the regular course of assessment by the then Assessing Officer by wrongly interpreting the material advanced equivalent to the closing stock of the raw materials."

"The reopening is not justified merely on the ground that there is a difference between the material advance and the closing stock shown in the accounts, especially when the advance is accounted for in the subsequent assessment year and does not represent stock in hand."

"Closing stock for one year becomes opening stock for the next assessment year and cannot by itself be a ground for escapement of income unless there is clear evidence of suppression or concealment."

"The impugned notice dated 28th March, 2021 issued under Section 148 of the Income Tax Act, 1961 is hereby quashed and set aside."

The Court established the core principle that reopening of assessment under Section 148 must be based on fresh and tangible material indicating escapement of income, and mere differences in accounting treatment or advances accounted for in subsequent years cannot justify reopening. The final determination was that the reopening notice was invalid and was quashed accordingly.

 

 

 

 

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