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2025 (7) TMI 123 - AT - Income TaxBack Money - assessee had not declared the foreign assets in the column provided in the return of income - as alleged assesse violated the provisions of section 43 of Act in respect of the investment in Barclays Bank PLC Branch Isle of Man - HELD THAT - The foreign bank accounts were duly disclosed by her husband in his respective returns of income along with the interest income which has been duly offered to tax. The assessee also filed her updated return for A.Y. 2022-23 wherein the said foreign assets were disclosed under the FA Schedule thereby evidencing bona fide compliance with the disclosure requirements. The explanation tendered by the assessee during the penalty proceedings including the full disclosure of the relevant bank statements source of funds ITRs of the husband and other supporting documents clearly establishes the assessee s bona fide belief and absence of any willful concealment or intention to evade tax. The co-ordinate benches of the ITAT in the cases of Aditi Avinash Athavankar 2023 (7) TMI 1561 - ITAT MUMBAI Palanirajan Rajarajan 2025 (3) TMI 643 - ITAT CHENNAI and Sanjay Bhupatrai Shah 2025 (3) TMI 797 - ITAT MUMBAI have consistently held that mere technical or venial breaches arising out of bona fide belief especially where the primary holder has already disclosed the foreign assets and income therefrom do not warrant penal consequences under section 43 of the BMA Act. It has also been judicially affirmed that the imposition of penalty u/s 43 is discretionary and must be exercised judiciously taking into account the surrounding facts conduct of the assessee and legislative intent. In the present case the assessee has sufficiently demonstrated that the lapse if any was inadvertent and non-malicious and all the necessary disclosures were duly made by the primary account holder. Moreover the revenue has not brought any material to rebut the explanation or to prove that the assessee was the actual beneficial owner of the said assets or the income therefrom. Thus we are of the considered view that the penalty levied under section 43 of the Act in this case is unjustified and unsustainable. Assessee appeal allowed.
The core legal questions considered by the Tribunal in this matter include:
Issue-wise detailed analysis: 1. Liability to disclose foreign assets held jointly with spouse under section 43 of BMA Act The legal framework mandates disclosure of foreign assets held by a resident individual in the Income Tax Return, specifically in the Foreign Assets Schedule (FA Schedule), introduced from Assessment Year (AY) 2012-13 onwards. Section 43 of the BMA Act imposes penalty for failure to furnish information or for furnishing inaccurate particulars relating to foreign assets. The AO found that the assessee did not disclose foreign bank accounts held jointly with her husband in Barclays Bank PLC, Isle of Man branch, in her returns from AY 2009-10 to AY 2022-23. The AO imposed penalty under section 43 for this non-disclosure. The assessee contended that she was a joint holder but not the first holder of the foreign accounts, which were opened and maintained by her husband. The husband had disclosed these assets and income therefrom in his returns. The assessee also filed updated returns disclosing the accounts. The Tribunal noted that the AO did not establish that the assessee was the beneficial owner or that there was any intention to conceal. The CIT(A) upheld the penalty, observing that section 43 imposes liability for failure to furnish any information or furnishing inaccurate particulars, regardless of ownership status. The Tribunal, however, examined judicial precedents and the facts to determine the scope of this obligation. 2. Imposition of penalty under section 43 of BMA Act for non-disclosure or inaccurate disclosure Section 43 penalizes failure to furnish information or furnishing inaccurate particulars relating to foreign assets. However, the penalty is discretionary ("may" impose penalty) and not automatic upon non-disclosure. The Tribunal relied on decisions of coordinate benches which held that mere non-disclosure or technical lapses, especially where the primary owner has disclosed the asset and income, do not warrant penalty if there is bona fide belief and absence of malafide intent. In the case of Aditi Avinash Athavankar, the Tribunal held that the secondary owner's failure to disclose was bona fide and not motivated by concealment, thus penalty was deleted. Similarly, in Palanirajan Rajarajan, the Chennai Bench emphasized that penalty under section 43 should be imposed only where there is deliberate defiance, dishonest conduct, or conscious disregard of obligation, not for venial or technical breaches arising from bona fide belief. The Tribunal further observed that the legislative intent excludes trivial lapses and that the discretion to impose penalty must be exercised judiciously, considering the facts and conduct of the assessee. 3. Application of law to facts and evidence The assessee furnished comprehensive evidence including bank statements, source of funds, husband's ITRs showing disclosure of the foreign assets and income, and details of remittances under Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS). The assessee's explanation of non-disclosure as a clerical error and absence of intention to evade tax was supported by the updated returns filed. The Tribunal noted that the revenue did not produce evidence to rebut the assessee's bona fide belief or to prove beneficial ownership or tax evasion. The facts showed that the husband was the primary owner and disclosed the assets and income, and the assessee was a joint holder for administrative purposes. The Tribunal also relied on the principle that loan transactions in India used to fund foreign investments do not automatically confer ownership of foreign assets on the lender, as held in Sanjay Bhupatrai Shah case. 4. Treatment of competing arguments and exercise of discretion The revenue argued for strict application of section 43 and upheld the penalty. However, it failed to cite contrary judicial precedents or establish willful concealment or beneficial ownership by the assessee. The Tribunal found the revenue's case unsubstantiated and the penalty order unsustainable. The Tribunal emphasized that the discretion under section 43 must be exercised judicially, considering the legislative intent, nature of breach, and bona fide conduct. Mere possibility of imposing penalty does not justify its imposition where the breach is technical and unintentional. 5. Conclusions The Tribunal concluded that the penalty under section 43 of the BMA Act was unjustified and deleted the penalty of Rs. 10,00,000 imposed on the assessee. The decision in the lead case was applied mutatis mutandis to other appeals with identical facts. Significant holdings include the following verbatim excerpts and principles:
The Tribunal thus established the core principle that the imposition of penalty under section 43 of the BMA Act is discretionary and must be exercised judiciously, taking into account bona fide belief, absence of malafide intent, and actual disclosure by the primary owner of foreign assets. Mere technical or clerical lapses without concealment or evasion do not attract penalty.
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