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2025 (5) TMI 1336 - HC - Income Tax


The core legal questions considered by the Court in this appeal under Section 260A of the Income Tax Act, 1961 relate to the validity of reopening the assessment for the assessment year 2013-14. Specifically, the issues raised by the revenue and examined by the Court include:

(a) Whether the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT) erred in not considering that the entire transactions were stage-managed to enable the assessee to convert unaccounted income into fictitious Long Term Capital Gains (LTCG) and claim bogus exemption;

(b) Whether the ITAT was justified in not acknowledging that the assessee manipulated share prices of a penny stock, M/s. Tuni Textile Mills Ltd., to record fictitious LTCG;

(c) Whether the ITAT failed to consider evidence establishing manipulation of share prices as a colourable device to generate fictitious LTCG for tax evasion;

(d) Whether the ITAT erred in holding that "tangible information" for reassessment under Section 147 cannot include "borrowed information" from the investigation wing, and whether the Assessing Officer's (AO) satisfaction based on such information can be said to be "borrowed satisfaction"; and

(e) Whether the ITAT ignored the Supreme Court's ruling that the AO's "reason to believe" under Section 147 requires only cause or justification to suppose income has escaped assessment, not conclusive legal proof.

On the first three issues concerning the genuineness of transactions and manipulation of share prices, the Tribunal had found that the AO did not apply his mind but merely acted mechanically on information from the investigation wing. The Tribunal relied heavily on the Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT) instruction dated 10th January 2018, which prescribes a standard procedure for recording satisfaction under Section 147. It held that the AO failed to independently examine the return and details before reopening the assessment after four years, and thus the reopening was bad in law.

Regarding the fourth issue on the nature of "tangible information" and "borrowed satisfaction," the Tribunal took the view that information received from the investigation wing cannot be treated as tangible information unless the AO forms his own independent satisfaction. It distinguished "borrowed information" from "borrowed satisfaction," implying that relying solely on investigation reports without independent application of mind is impermissible.

On the fifth issue, the Tribunal did not fully consider the Supreme Court's authoritative interpretation in Assistant CIT v. Rajesh Jhaveri Stock Brokers Pvt. Ltd. (2008) 14 SCC 208, which clarified that the AO's "reason to believe" is a subjective satisfaction based on cause or justification to suppose income has escaped assessment, and need not be based on conclusive legal evidence.

In analyzing these issues, the Court first clarified the legal status of the CBDT instruction. It held that the instruction is merely a guiding note for the AO and does not constitute a binding rule, regulation, or mandatory direction. Therefore, the Tribunal erred in elevating the instruction to a status that binds the assessee or invalidates the AO's action solely because the instruction was not strictly followed.

The Court then extensively examined the AO's assessment order dated 25.09.2021. The AO had set out the information received from the investigation wing, which implicated the assessee among others. The AO had scrutinized the return filed by the assessee, the contract notes, share certificates, and other transaction details. He observed that the shares of M/s. Tuni Textile Mills Ltd. had appreciated abnormally-about 4.5 times in a little over a year-resulting in significant LTCG claimed as exempt under Section 10(38).

The AO further analyzed the company's financials, including profit and loss accounts, balance sheets, and cash flow statements, and concluded that the company's fundamentals were weak. The abnormal price rise was thus artificial and manipulated. The AO issued a show cause notice, considered the assessee's replies, and found no new evidence to rebut the allegations. He concluded that the transactions were pre-arranged accommodation entries orchestrated by a group of operators and shell companies to convert unaccounted money into bogus LTCG. The AO applied the "test of human probabilities" as established in Supreme Court precedents (CIT v. Durga Prasad More and Sumati Dayal v. CIT), which supported his conclusion.

The Court found that the Tribunal's conclusion that the AO had not applied his mind was factually incorrect. The AO had conducted a detailed examination and formed a reasoned opinion. The Court also noted that the appellate authority (National Faceless Appeal Centre) had re-examined the facts, considered the assessee's grounds and submissions, and upheld the AO's findings, including the finding that the assessee was a beneficiary of accommodation entries used to claim bogus LTCG/STCG exemptions.

Regarding the issue of "borrowed satisfaction," the Court held that the AO's reliance on information from the investigation wing did not amount to borrowed satisfaction because the AO independently examined the return and other materials before recording his reasons for reopening. The Court emphasized the Supreme Court's interpretation that "reason to believe" is a subjective satisfaction based on cause or justification, not a conclusive legal finding, and that the AO is entitled to act on relevant material even if it is initially received from an investigation wing.

The Court concluded that the Tribunal committed a serious factual and legal error by invalidating the reopening on the ground that the AO did not apply his mind and by elevating the CBDT instruction to a binding status. The Court quashed the Tribunal's order and allowed the revenue's appeal, answering the substantial questions of law in favor of the revenue.

Significant holdings include the following verbatim reasoning:

"The word 'reason' in the phrase 'reason to believe' would mean cause or justification; if the assessing officer has cause or justification to know or suppose that income had escaped assessment, it can be said to have reason to believe that an income had escaped assessment. The expression cannot be read to mean that the assessing officer should have finally ascertained the fact by legal evidence or conclusion."

"The CBDT instruction is a guiding note for the assessing officer and not for the assessee... the Tribunal committed an error too by elevating the status of an instruction which is issued for the guidance of the assessing officer to be taken as a rule or a regulation which would also be binding on the assessee."

"The assessing officer has applied his mind by examining the return, contract notes, share certificates, financial statements of the company and other materials before recording reasons for reopening. The transactions were found to be pre-arranged accommodation entries to convert unaccounted income into bogus LTCG."

Core principles established include:

- The AO's "reason to believe" under Section 147 is a subjective satisfaction based on cause or justification, not conclusive proof.

- Information from the investigation wing can constitute tangible information if the AO applies independent mind before reopening assessment.

- CBDT instructions are guiding notes and do not bind the assessee or override the AO's statutory powers.

- Reopening of assessment after four years requires the AO to form an independent opinion based on relevant material, which can include investigation reports.

Final determinations on the issues are that the reopening of the assessment was validly made by the AO based on sufficient cause and justification, the transactions were rightly characterized as fictitious accommodation entries to evade tax, and the Tribunal erred in setting aside the reopening on procedural grounds without appreciating the AO's detailed examination and application of mind.

 

 

 

 

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