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Tax Updates - TMI e-Newsletters

Home e-Newsletters Index Year 2020 October Day 28 - Wednesday

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TMI Tax Updates - e-Newsletter
October 28, 2020

Case Laws in this Newsletter:

GST Income Tax Customs Corporate Laws Insolvency & Bankruptcy Service Tax Central Excise



Highlights / Catch Notes

  • GST:

    Reopening of portal for filing of Form GST TRAN-1 - transitional credit. - applicability of time limitation provided under the retrospective amendment to Section 140(1) of the CGST Act and MGST Act read with Rule 117 of the CGST Rules and MGST Rules - directory in nature or mandatory? - Authorities directed to decide the application after providing an opportunity of hearing to the petitioner - HC

  • GST:

    Profiteering - purchase of flat - Since, no penalty provisions were in existence between the period w.e.f. 01.07.2017 to 31.12.2018 when the Respondent had violated the provisions of Section 171 (1) of the CGST Act, 2017, the penalty prescribed under Section 171 (3A) cannot be imposed on the Respondent retrospectively. - NAPA

  • GST:

    Profiteering - Till the State Consumer Welfare Funds become operational and necessary details of the State CWFs are made available to the petitioner, the petitioner is directed to deposit the entire amount with the Centre Consumer Welfare Funds. - HC

  • Income Tax:

    Exemption u/s 10B - Renewal of100% EOU several times - Tribunal has held that though it was termed “a renewal”, the benefit was applied to a new unit. And the Ministry has been well aware of that. Within the given window of the extended period, the Assessee claimed the exemption for the first time in AY 2002-03. - HC

  • Income Tax:

    Assessment against amalgamating company - Validity of reopening of assessment u/s 147 - Notice u/s.148 was issued in the name of HLCL (non-existent entity) and accordingly, reassessment order framed thereon deserves to be quashed as void ab initio. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Bogus sundry creditors - Assessee has provided details of the creditors, which should have been examined by both the authorities below but they did not do so for proving the genuineness of the creditors. As per our considered opinion, the assessee discharged his liability as cast upon him and now the duty shifted on the revenue authorities for the verification of the genuineness of the creditors, which are lack in this case. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Genuineness of Commission paid to relative against sale of land - Merely payment through banking channels is not sufficient to establish the genuineness of the particular transaction. There has to be some specific material on record, 3rd party confirmation and most important that the facts should convey the basic need for why the commission was paid. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    TP Adjustment - Mark up on purchase of fixed assets - assessee has filed the reasons for charging 5% as markup that is for taking care of administration and fright cost. It is not submitted before us any document relating to prices i.e. whether it is FOB or C & IF prices. Since the AE has supplied the assets on cost to cost with a markup of 5% and the Customs has accepted the transaction as reasonable we do not see any reason to disturb the transaction. - addition made by the TPO deleted - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Loss in F&O transaction investigation wing has carried on survey operation under section 133A in the premises of brokers and certain clients - Since the transaction was made through banking channel and settlement was already made for this transaction, that means the transaction must be completed subsequent to the completion of this transaction. So the broker cannot make modification after closure of the trading for the particular day. No factual submission coming from revenue and the addition was made by the assessing officer based on presumptions without any cogent material against the assessee - AT

  • Central Excise:

    CENVAT Credit - additional duty of customs paid - In fact, Hindustan Zinc had paid additional duty of customs by availing the benefit under serial number 122A/123 of the Customs Notification dated March 17, 2012. It is because of this misreading of rule 3(1) of the CENVAT Credit Rules that led the Commissioner to commit an error - The Commissioner, therefore, committed an illegality in denying the benefit of CENVAT credit to Hindustan Zinc. - AT


Articles


Notifications


News


Case Laws:

  • GST

  • 2020 (10) TMI 1056
  • 2020 (10) TMI 1055
  • 2020 (10) TMI 1054
  • 2020 (10) TMI 1031
  • Income Tax

  • 2020 (10) TMI 1053
  • 2020 (10) TMI 1052
  • 2020 (10) TMI 1051
  • 2020 (10) TMI 1050
  • 2020 (10) TMI 1049
  • 2020 (10) TMI 1048
  • 2020 (10) TMI 1047
  • 2020 (10) TMI 1046
  • 2020 (10) TMI 1045
  • 2020 (10) TMI 1044
  • 2020 (10) TMI 1043
  • 2020 (10) TMI 1042
  • 2020 (10) TMI 1041
  • Customs

  • 2020 (10) TMI 1040
  • Corporate Laws

  • 2020 (10) TMI 1039
  • 2020 (10) TMI 1038
  • Insolvency & Bankruptcy

  • 2020 (10) TMI 1037
  • 2020 (10) TMI 1036
  • Service Tax

  • 2020 (10) TMI 1035
  • 2020 (10) TMI 1034
  • 2020 (10) TMI 1033
  • Central Excise

  • 2020 (10) TMI 1032
 

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