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Home e-Newsletters Index Year 2022 January Day 6 - Thursday

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TMI Tax Updates - e-Newsletter
January 6, 2022

Case Laws in this Newsletter:

GST Income Tax Customs Corporate Laws Insolvency & Bankruptcy Service Tax Central Excise CST, VAT & Sales Tax



Highlights / Catch Notes

  • GST:

    Nature of activity - Job work - manufacturing or services - body building activity on the chassis provided by the principal - the body building and mounting of body on the chassis of different models of Tippers, Tankers, Trucks and Trailers, on the chassis to be supplied by the Principal, on delivery challans, by collecting job work charges for such fabrication work is taxable @18%, - AAAR

  • GST:

    Inclusion in the value of supply as per section 15 of the CGST Act, 2017 or not - The appellant is a recipient of services in the subject case. The impugned transactions are not in relation to the supply of goods or services or both undertaken or proposed to be undertaken by the appellant and therefore, it is outside the purview of mandate given to Advance Ruling Authority/AppeIIate Authority on Advance Ruling. - AAAR

  • GST:

    Classification of goods - Soya husk resulting from the extraction of Soyabean Oil - exemption from payment of GST as Poultry feed and Cattle feed - - Soya husk resulting from the extraction of Soyabean oil, being principal input/ ingredient for manufacture or processing of Cattle feed and Poultry feed which may become value added product in the market. Soya husk being principal input/ ingredient to Poultry feed and Cattle feed industry, which is taxable @ 5% - AAR

  • Income Tax:

    Business expenditure u/s 37 -invocation of explanation to section 37 is uncalled for as the assessee has not made any expenses for purchase of diamonds rather entire expenses are in the nature of preoperative business expenses. The various expenses incurred by the assessee are not at all prohibited by law. All expenses were incurred in anticipation of business. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Exemption claimed u/s 54B - Capital Gain on sale of agriculture land - AO has not made any investigation on the assertion of assessee. AO presumed that growing of grass is not agriculture activities. We noted that the AO arrived on conclusion on the basis of his presumption that Grass is not agriculture product. AO has not brought any adverse evidence to counter the evidence furnished by the assessee. - Mere fact that the assessee has not shown agriculture income from the piece of land would not change its character. In our view, in absence of any adverse material, the presumption of AO that no income is shown from the sale of Ghass is not justified. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Addition u/s 14A r.w. Rule 8D(2)(iii) - In the present case, wherein the assessee does not offer any disallowance under Rule 8D(2)(ii) in respect of exempt income, then the provisions of section 14A(2) r.w. Rule 8D(2) can be invoked u/s.14A(3) of the Act by the AO and there is no necessity of recording further satisfaction by the AO - when the assessee itself fails to make disallowance suo motu u/s. 14A r.w. Rule 8D, then the AO is at liberty to invoke these provisions. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Levy of penalty u/s 271B - not getting books of account audited u/s 44AB - AO has given categorically finding that the assessee had made frequent transaction in both delivery as well as non-delivery based segment of shares and volume and quantity of buying and selling of shares was also found to be substantially high which are sufficient to prove that transactions of share trading carried out by the assessee during the year are in the nature of business. This plea of the assessee that he was ignorant about the provision of getting books of account audited, find no merit as ignorance of law is no excuse and carrying out the transactions of the magnitude in itself leaves no room for the assessee to make an excuse for not getting books of account audited u/s 44AB - AT

  • Customs:

    Smuggling - Gold - plea bargaining versus compounding of offences - The concept of plea bargaining was introduced in Indian criminal jurisprudence by way of amendment Act of 2005 in the Code of Criminal Procedure under Chapter XXIA. Chapter XXIA delineates the guidelines for a Mutually Satisfactory Disposition (MSD). - Had the legislature intended to exclude the applicability of Chapter XXIA Cr.P.C. to those enactments where there are provisions for compounding the offence, then it would have explicitly mentioned the same in Chapter XXIA Cr.P.C. Chapter XXIA Cr.P.C. was introduced to include all statutes, save those that were specifically excluded under Section 265-A(2). It cannot be said that the legislature was unaware of the Customs Act, 1962, while devising the chapter on plea bargaining. Therefore, the presence of Section 137(3) of the Customs Act, 1962, will not take away the applicability of Chapter XXIA Cr.P.C. - HC

  • Customs:

    Jurisdiction - power of Additional Director General of DRI to issue SCN - Penalties were imposed under section 114, 114A and 114 AA of Customs Act - The SCN under Section 124 need not be issued by ‘the proper officer’. However, in the present case the basis for the proposed confiscation of goods and imposition of penalties in the SCN has been the re- assessment of the goods and demand of the duty under Section 28(4). The basis for re-assessment being unsustainable in view of Canon India, the proposals for confiscation and of goods and imposition of penalties cannot service either. - AT

  • Corporate Law:

    Investigation into the affairs of the appellant company - The matter is only at the stage of investigation and otherwise also the appellant company has not been able to point out the prejudice caused to the appellant company in the matter. The respondents have adopted a transparent process. They have given an opportunity of hearing to the appellant company right from initial stages and the respondents are under obligation to follow the procedure prescribed under Section 212 of the Companies Act and the Companies Act is a complete code in itself. - HC

  • Service Tax:

    Nature of activity - service or not - petitioner joined hands with two other owners and sold about 19.07 acres of land, of which, 5.43 acres belongs to the petitioner - There is no merits in this writ petition. It is for the petitioner to convince the appellate authority to come to a conclusion that neither the petitioner has provided any taxable service within the meaning of Section 65 (B) (44) of the Finance Act, 1994 or that the service provided by the petitioner well within the negative list under Section 65 (D) of the Finance Act, 1994 or was exempted under the Mega Exemption notification issued by the Central Government under Section 93 of the Finance Act, 1994. - HC

  • Central Excise:

    CENVAT Credit - input services - Goods Transport Agency (GTA) services - outward transportation - The ‘place of removal’ is the premises of the buyer, not the factory gate of the seller, as the finished goods are cleared by the appellant on ‘FOR destination basis’ - the appellant is entitled to cenvat credit on the GTA services for outward transportation of the goods sold on FOR destination basis - AT

  • Central Excise:

    CENVAT Credit - allegation of non-receipt of inputs - Specific invoices are already mentioned in the given columns of these registers. It is otherwise apparent from the copies of the documents as annexed along with the written synopsis. - It is deemed appropriate that the Adjudicating Authority has to give a clear finding to the effect what precisely is still missing for want of RG 23 A Part I register - Matter restored back - AT

  • VAT:

    Validity of fresh assessment orders - HC quashed the assessment order invoking the writ jurisdiction - othing has been observed by the High Court on the merits of the fresh assessment orders. If the fresh assessment orders would have gone against the State, in that case the State would have been the aggrieved party - The judgment and orders passed by the High Court quashing and setting aside the fresh assessment orders in the writ petitions under Article 226 of the Constitution of India are unsustainable - SC


Articles


Notifications


Circulars / Instructions / Orders


News


Case Laws:

  • GST

  • 2022 (1) TMI 152
  • 2022 (1) TMI 151
  • 2022 (1) TMI 150
  • 2022 (1) TMI 149
  • 2022 (1) TMI 148
  • Income Tax

  • 2022 (1) TMI 147
  • 2022 (1) TMI 146
  • 2022 (1) TMI 145
  • 2022 (1) TMI 144
  • 2022 (1) TMI 143
  • 2022 (1) TMI 142
  • 2022 (1) TMI 141
  • 2022 (1) TMI 140
  • 2022 (1) TMI 139
  • 2022 (1) TMI 138
  • Customs

  • 2022 (1) TMI 137
  • 2022 (1) TMI 136
  • 2022 (1) TMI 135
  • Corporate Laws

  • 2022 (1) TMI 134
  • Insolvency & Bankruptcy

  • 2022 (1) TMI 127
  • Service Tax

  • 2022 (1) TMI 133
  • 2022 (1) TMI 132
  • 2022 (1) TMI 131
  • Central Excise

  • 2022 (1) TMI 130
  • 2022 (1) TMI 129
  • CST, VAT & Sales Tax

  • 2022 (1) TMI 128
 

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