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2025 (7) TMI 51 - HC - Income Tax


Issues Presented and Considered

The core legal questions considered by the Court are:

1. Whether the reassessment notice dated 15.07.2022 issued under Section 148 of the Income Tax Act, 1961 ("the Act") read with the Taxation and Other Laws (Relaxation and Amendment of Certain Provisions) Act, 2020 ("TOLA") is valid or time-barred.

2. Whether the earlier notice dated 30.06.2021 issued under Section 148 of the Act is valid, considering the procedural and temporal requirements prescribed by the Supreme Court in Union of India v. Ashish Agarwal and Union of India v. Rajeev Bansal.

3. The applicability and interpretation of the Supreme Court's rulings in Ashish Agarwal and Rajeev Bansal on the reassessment notices issued under the old and new regime of the Income Tax Act, particularly in relation to the timelines for issuance of notices between 1 April 2021 and 30 June 2021.

4. The impact of the procedural safeguards introduced by Section 148A(b) and Section 148A(d) of the Act and the interplay with TOLA provisions on the validity of reassessment notices.

Issue-wise Detailed Analysis

Issue 1 & 2: Validity of the reassessment notices dated 30.06.2021 and 15.07.2022

Relevant Legal Framework and Precedents:

The reassessment provisions under the Income Tax Act, 1961, particularly Sections 148, 148A(b), and 148A(d), govern the reopening of assessments. Section 148 allows the Assessing Officer to issue a notice for reassessment if income has escaped assessment. The TOLA, enacted in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, relaxed certain procedural timelines, including the extension of limitation periods for issuance of reassessment notices.

The Supreme Court's decision in Union of India v. Ashish Agarwal introduced a legal fiction deeming reassessment notices issued under the old regime as show cause notices under Section 148A(b) of the new regime, thereby balancing the equities between the Revenue and the assessee by allowing the assessee an opportunity to respond before reassessment. The Court emphasized strict adherence to timelines and procedural safeguards.

Subsequently, in Union of India v. Rajeev Bansal, the Supreme Court clarified the modalities for validating reassessment notices issued between 31.3.2021 and 30.6.2021 under TOLA. It prescribed that the time for issuance of reassessment notices under the new regime starts only after the assessee responds to the show cause notice, and any notice issued beyond the surviving time limit is invalid and time-barred.

Court's Interpretation and Reasoning:

The Court analyzed the timelines in light of Rajeev Bansal ruling, noting that the notice dated 30.06.2021 was issued at the very end of the extended period allowed under TOLA. The Apex Court's directions required a minimum 14-day opportunity for the assessee to respond to the show cause notice under Section 148A(b) after the Ashish Agarwal decision dated 21.05.2022. This meant the assessee's last date to reply was 05.06.2022, and the Assessing Officer had 61 days from the receipt of the reply to issue the reassessment notice under Section 148, i.e., until 12.06.2022.

However, the impugned notice was issued on 15.07.2022, beyond the prescribed surviving time limit. The Court held that the notice dated 30.06.2021, which triggered the reassessment process, was invalid as it did not comply with the procedural timelines mandated by the Supreme Court. Consequently, the subsequent notice dated 15.07.2022 was also invalid and time-barred.

Key Evidence and Findings:

The Court relied on the timeline calculations and the Supreme Court's detailed directions in paragraphs 92, 93, and 110-114 of the Rajeev Bansal judgment, which elucidated the effect of the legal fiction created in Ashish Agarwal and the consequent suspension and resumption of limitation periods. The fact that the notice dated 15.07.2022 was issued after the expiry of the surviving time limit was undisputed and critical to the Court's decision.

Application of Law to Facts:

Applying the Supreme Court's rulings, the Court found that the Assessing Officer failed to issue the reassessment notice within the surviving time limit post receipt of the assessee's reply. The invalidity of the initial notice dated 30.06.2021, which was issued at the tail end of the TOLA extension period without affording the assessee the mandated time to respond, rendered the entire reassessment proceeding defective.

Treatment of Competing Arguments:

The learned Senior Standing Counsel for the Revenue did not controvert the facts or the legal position as laid down by the Supreme Court in Rajeev Bansal. The Revenue implicitly accepted that the notice dated 15.07.2022 was time-barred and that the notice dated 30.06.2021 was invalid. The petitioner's argument, grounded in the Supreme Court's authoritative pronouncements, was thus accepted without dispute.

Conclusions:

The Court concluded that both the notice dated 30.06.2021 and the subsequent notice dated 15.07.2022 were invalid and liable to be quashed as they were issued beyond the surviving time limit prescribed under the Income Tax Act read with TOLA and the Supreme Court's directions.

Issue 3: Applicability and Interpretation of Supreme Court's Rulings in Ashish Agarwal and Rajeev Bansal

Relevant Legal Framework and Precedents:

The Supreme Court's rulings in Ashish Agarwal and Rajeev Bansal serve as the cornerstone for interpreting reassessment notices issued in the transitional period between the old and new regimes of the Income Tax Act, particularly with the overlay of TOLA's extensions.

Court's Interpretation and Reasoning:

The Court emphasized that Ashish Agarwal introduced a legal fiction to treat old regime notices as show cause notices under the new regime, thereby protecting vested rights and ensuring procedural fairness. Rajeev Bansal further refined this by prescribing strict timelines and clarifying that the limitation period for reassessment notices begins only after the assessee's response to the show cause notice.

The Court underscored that TOLA's extensions apply only to actions or proceedings falling between 20 March 2020 and 31 March 2021, and that reassessment notices issued after this period must comply with the surviving time limits.

Key Evidence and Findings:

The Court relied heavily on the Supreme Court's detailed analysis in paragraphs 92, 93, and 110-114, which explained the interplay between the old and new regimes, the effect of the legal fiction, and the calculation of surviving time limits for issuance of reassessment notices.

Application of Law to Facts:

The Court applied these principles to the facts, noting that the reassessment notices in question fell outside the permissible time frame as per the Supreme Court's directions, rendering them invalid.

Treatment of Competing Arguments:

No substantive challenge was made against the applicability of these precedents. The petitioner's reliance on these rulings was accepted, and the Revenue did not dispute the legal position.

Conclusions:

The Court affirmed the binding nature of the Supreme Court's rulings and held that reassessment notices issued beyond the surviving time limit prescribed therein are invalid and liable to be quashed.

Significant Holdings

"The reassessment notices issued under Section 148 of the new regime, which are in pursuance of the deemed notices, ought to be issued within the time limit surviving under the Income Tax Act read with TOLA. A reassessment notice issued beyond the surviving time limit will be time-barred."

"The directions in Ashish Agarwal will extend to all the ninety thousand reassessment notices issued under the old regime during the period 1 April 2021 and 30 June 2021."

"The time during which the show cause notices were deemed to be stayed is from the date of issuance of the deemed notice between 1 April 2021 and 30 June 2021 till the supply of relevant information and material by the assessing officers to the assesses in terms of the directions issued by this Court in Ashish Agarwal, and the period of two weeks allowed to the assesses to respond to the show cause notices."

"The impugned notice dated 15.7.2022 as well as notice dated 30.6.2021 are hereby quashed and set-aside."

Core principles established include the strict adherence to the surviving time limits for issuance of reassessment notices post the legal fiction introduced by Ashish Agarwal and clarified by Rajeev Bansal, and the invalidity of notices issued beyond these prescribed timelines, even if initially issued under TOLA's extended period.

 

 

 

 

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