TMI - Tax Management India. Com
Follow us:
  Facebook   Twitter   Linkedin   Telegram

Home Case Index All Cases Income Tax Income Tax + AT Income Tax - 2025 (7) TMI AT This

  • Login
  • Cases Cited
  • Summary

Forgot password       New User/ Regiser

⇒ Register to get Live Demo



 

2025 (7) TMI 100 - AT - Income Tax


1. ISSUES PRESENTED and CONSIDERED

The core legal questions considered by the Tribunal in these appeals filed by the Department of Revenue against the orders of the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) relate primarily to the following issues:

  • Whether the deletion of substantive additions made in the hands of the assessee company on account of commission earned by providing accommodation entries was correct.
  • Whether the assessee company, as a separate legal entity, is liable to be taxed separately for income earned by facilitating accommodation entries, notwithstanding the treatment of beneficiaries.
  • Whether the deletion of addition on account of unexplained entries in the bank account under Section 68 of the Income Tax Act was justified, given the assessee's alleged failure to produce concrete evidence regarding the source of such credits.
  • Whether deletion of addition on account of unaccounted commission earned from providing accommodation entries was appropriate, considering the assessee's alleged nondisclosure.
  • General grounds challenging the correctness and tenability of the orders of the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals).

2. ISSUE-WISE DETAILED ANALYSIS

Issue 1 & 2: Deletion of substantive addition on commission income and separate taxation of the assessee company

The Department contended that the assessee company, being a separate legal entity under the Income Tax Act and Companies Act, should be taxed separately for income earned by facilitating accommodation entries. The Revenue argued that the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) erred in deleting the addition made on account of commission income and ignoring the separate entity principle.

The assessee's representative countered by relying on a coordinate bench decision in the case of a similarly placed assessee, where the Tribunal dismissed the Revenue's grounds on identical facts. It was argued that once the beneficiaries and accommodation entry providers are identified and taxed, the conduit companies should not be subjected to additional taxation on the same income to avoid double taxation.

The Tribunal examined the coordinate bench ruling in the case of Holeon Traders Pvt. Ltd., which had considered identical issues for the same assessment years. The Tribunal noted that the prior ruling upheld the deletion of protective additions on unexplained cash credits and held that commission income had already been accounted for and taxed in the hands of the accommodation entry providers. The Tribunal further observed that the assessee company acted merely as a conduit and that taxing the same income again in its hands would be inappropriate.

The Tribunal rejected the Revenue's argument for separate taxation of the assessee company on commission income, holding that the deletion of the addition by the CIT(A) was justified. The Tribunal relied on the principle that income should not be taxed multiple times across entities for the same transaction and that the assessee had satisfactorily demonstrated that commission income was accounted for and taxed elsewhere.

Issue 3: Addition under Section 68 for unexplained bank credits

The Revenue challenged the deletion of additions made under Section 68 of the Income Tax Act for unexplained credits in the assessee's bank accounts. The Revenue contended that the assessee failed to discharge the onus of proving the nature and source of such credits, which were allegedly derived from accommodation entries.

The assessee relied on the Tribunal's earlier decision in the Holeon Traders Pvt. Ltd. case, where similar additions were deleted following detailed examination of the facts and evidence. The Tribunal noted that the additions were made on a protective basis by the Assessing Officer and that the CIT(A) had rightly deleted them after considering the evidence.

The Tribunal also referred to a prior ruling in the case of Shri Anand Kumar Jain, which upheld deletion of protective additions on unexplained credits for similar facts. The Tribunal observed that the Revenue did not dispute these findings or place any material evidence to distinguish the present case from the coordinate bench decisions.

Accordingly, the Tribunal upheld the deletion of additions under Section 68 and dismissed the Revenue's ground in this regard.

Issue 4: Addition on account of unaccounted commission income

The Revenue challenged the deletion of additions made on account of unaccounted commission income, submitting that the Assessing Officer's addition based on a commission rate of 0.47% of turnover from accommodation entries was justified. The Revenue relied on the coordinate bench decision in Holeon Traders Pvt. Ltd., which initially allowed the addition of commission income after eliminating circular transactions.

The assessee's representative countered by producing subsequent corrigenda and Tribunal orders in various connected cases, which reversed the initial findings and dismissed the Revenue's ground on commission income. The corrigendum clarified that the CIT(A) was correct in deleting the addition on account of commission income, particularly since the commission income had already been accounted for and taxed in the hands of the accommodation entry providers (individuals identified as Anand Kumar Jain and Naresh Kumar Jain).

The Tribunal carefully examined the corrigendum dated 31/07/2023 and noted that the net commission income had been duly considered and taxed in the hands of the individuals, and thus the assessee company should not be subjected to the addition again. The Tribunal also reviewed multiple recent Tribunal orders on similar facts, all of which favored the assessee and dismissed the Revenue's grounds on commission income.

The Tribunal found no material distinction in the present case and held that the deletion of the addition on account of commission income was justified. The Revenue's ground was accordingly dismissed.

General Grounds (5 to 7)

These grounds were general in nature and did not require separate adjudication. The Tribunal dismissed these grounds accordingly.

3. SIGNIFICANT HOLDINGS

The Tribunal's significant legal conclusions and principles established in the judgment include the following:

  • "The deletion of the protective addition on account of unexplained cash credits is upheld."
  • "The assessee company, being a conduit concern, cannot be subjected to separate taxation on commission income which has already been accounted for and taxed in the hands of the accommodation entry providers."
  • "The net commission income earned by the assessee company has been duly considered and taxed in the hands of the individuals identified as accommodation entry providers; therefore, addition on account of commission income in the hands of the assessee company is not justified."
  • "The Assessing Officer's addition on protective basis under Section 68 was rightly deleted by the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) and upheld by the Tribunal following coordinate bench decisions."
  • "The determination of commission rate and expenses is based on incriminating material specifically found during search and seizure operations and cannot be generalized to other cases."

Overall, the Tribunal dismissed the Revenue's appeals for the Assessment Years 2012-13 to 2016-17, affirming the orders of the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) which deleted the additions made by the Assessing Officer on account of accommodation entries and related commission income. The Tribunal relied heavily on consistent coordinate bench precedents and factual findings that the commission income was taxed in the hands of the actual providers of accommodation entries, and the assessee company was merely a conduit, thereby precluding double taxation.

 

 

 

 

Quick Updates:Latest Updates