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Home e-Newsletters Index Year 2022 October Day 31 - Monday

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TMI Tax Updates - e-Newsletter
October 31, 2022

Case Laws in this Newsletter:

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



Highlights / Catch Notes

  • GST:

    Restoration of GST Registration of the Petitioner - Having regard to the material on record and specific assertion on the part of the petitioner that it was not possible for him to seek revocation of the cancellation order on account of the covid 19 pandemic and till disposal of the appeal by respondent No.1-Appellate Authority, the said explanation offered by the petitioner in not seeking revocation of the cancellation within a stipulated period of 30 days under Section 30 of the CGST Act is to be held as valid and proper - HC

  • GST:

    Validity of assessment orders - allegation that the dealers, from whom the petitioner has purchased the goods, are not existing/fictitious - Since this material forms part of the impugned order, we are of the view that the assessing authority ought to have furnished the said material enabling the petitioner to make a representation or produce any material contra to the same, to substantiate his plea. Non-furnishing of the same, would be violation of principles of natural justice. - HC

  • GST:

    Validity of show cause notice - Levy of Interest - jurisdiction or authority of law under Section 50 of the KGST Act, to levy interest - The petitioner has been merely called upon to show cause as to why the amounts, penalty, interest etc., has detailed in the audit report should not be levied upon him. The said SCN also provides an opportunity for personal hearing to the petitioner and who also be entitled to produce pleadings and documents in support of his claim along with the reply to the show cause notice. - petitioner directed to submit his reply/response to the aforesaid SCN - HC

  • GST:

    Jurisdiction for issuance of SCN - assessment in relation to the petitioner-assessee is assigned to Central Taxation Authority - the petitioner instead of challenging the show cause notice at this stage should workout its remedy. At present, only show cause notice has been issued. The petitioner may raise various grounds, except the issue of jurisdiction, which has been raised in the writ petition and the same are required to be considered by the authority. - HC

  • Income Tax:

    TP adjustment - ITAT decided that the transaction pertaining to receipt of administrative services to comparable uncontrolled price (‘CUP’) method - all the three authorities below have given concurrent findings of fact that the Appellant had failed to furnish evidence to demonstrate that administrative services were actually rendered by the AE and the assessee had received such services - Decided against the assessee - HC

  • Income Tax:

    TP adjustments - Period of limitation for proceedings before the DRP - As to acquiescence of the petitioner, reject the submission of the respondents for the reason that once an order is established to be beyond limitation, mere co-operation of the party in the proceedings would not extend the same. In fact, even as on 29.01.2020 when the petitioner had written to the DRP, limitation had long expired and thus there is no merit in this submission of the respondents. - HC

  • Income Tax:

    Reopening of assessment u/s 147 - Eligibility of reasons to believe - there is nothing new and it is, in fact, the very note filed by the assessee as well as material that was available on record that has been invoked by the Assessing Officer to reopen the assessment. The counter filed by the Department makes a lukewarm attempt to defend the impugned proceedings by stating that only a 'half page note' had been filed by the assessee which would not suffice. - This defence is only stated to be rejected. - HC

  • Income Tax:

    Addition u/s 68 - Deeming fiction applies in the hands of the person in whose book’s sums are credited. There it ends, such deeming fiction cannot travel to other assessee for satisfying ingredients of section 68 of the Act as held by ld. CIT [A] in this case. This addition needs to be tested u/s 68 in the hands of the assessee irrespective of the fact whether the sum is added in the hands of other assessee or not or beneficiaries are different. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Revision u/s 263 by CIT - As per CIT there is violation of section 40A(3) not considered by AO - if all such vouchers reflecting cash payment to a single party/creditor in a day are aggregated , then the total cash payment in a day to a particular party/creditor is exceeding Rs. 20,000/- - Assessing Officer has not considered the issue in proper perspective and there is no estoppels against law. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Allowability of a claim of expenditure u/s. 37(1) - deduction of commission expenses - A.O had failed to give any justifiable reason as regards declining of the assessee’s claim for deduction of commission expenses that were paid to the aforementioned parties. - claim of deduction allowed - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Revision u/s 263 by CIT - there is a huge difference in invoice value and the duty paid as per the Annexure-15 and the ITS data available -reconciliation should have been sought by Ld. AO during the course of assessment proceedings. Non-seeking of such reconciliation, which apparently should have been sought, in our view, indicates non-application of mind to the given set of facts by Ld. AO during the course of assessment proceedings. - Revision order sustained - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Unexplained expenditure u/s. 69C - CIT(A) held that the AO was not justified in assuming that the assessee had made unaccounted purchases solitary on the basis that the customs authorities had enhanced the value of goods imported for the purpose of payment of custom, duty. In the absence of any evidence/material on record that the assessee has paid anything extra over and above the transaction value shown in import invoices, no addition on account of unexplained expenditure on purchases can be made - Order of CIT(A) sustained - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Revision u/s 263 - Validity of order passed by the AO as per the direction of the Settlement Commission u/s.254D(4) - The order passed by the ld. AO u/s.143(3) r.w.s. 245D(4) of the Act could not be construed as an order passed by a subordinate authority in view of the fact that the Settlement Commission order has been passed by the Officers in the rank of the Chief Commissioner. - The revision order is void ab initio - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Disallowance of interest u/s 36(1)(iii) - Merely because the advances were given from assessee’s cash credit account, a simplistic presumption cannot be drawn that advances were from borrowed funds given that the cash credit account is likely to have credits/deposits from assessee’s business operations and/or other bank accounts. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Unexplained cash deposited in the bank - ITAT accepted the contention of assessee that the assessee was withdrawing the cash from Bank and keeping it at home and subsequently when the demonetization scheme was announced, the assessee deposited the amount left over with him in the Bank account. - AT

  • Customs:

    Levy of penalty on vessel operators - petitioners had not filed Export General Manifest (EGM) in respect of certain specified shipping bills - the request of the petitioner for access to the ICEGATE system is rejected for the reason as stated by the customs authorities. The system is a conglomeration of materials from various sources and is meant for effective functioning of the Department and smooth management of the transactions. No one operator can be provided with access to the entirety of the system. - HC

  • Customs:

    Demand of customs duty - CIRP proceedings under IBC were concluded - Taking into consideration the fact of the completion of the resolution process of the respondent by the NCLT and undisputed fact that the appellant has not lodged any claim in the capacity of the Operational Creditor before the Resolution Professional, this appeal is required to be disposed of as having become infructuous and abated - HC

  • Customs:

    Hawala transactions - valuation of imported goods - The offence committed by the appellant has not been rebutted by the appellant in many words. Moreover, the under valuation has been clearly established on the basis of the statements given by various persons, which were never retracted. The transaction of the deferential value due to under valuation made by hawala has also been proved by the Revenue - there are no reason to interfere in the impugned order - AT

  • Customs:

    Levy of penalty on steamer agent - Undeclared consignment - iolation of conditions / instructions contained in the Board Circular - Revenue has not whispered anywhere if it was the duty of the Steamer Agent to seek clearance of any goods since it is the importer who is required to fulfil any obligations ‘at the time of clearance of goods’ - The penalty under Section 112(a) of the Customs Act, 1962, as levied and confirmed on the appellant, is not sustainable - AT

  • Customs:

    Rejection of the declared value by the original authority - The prices which were declared in the Bill of Entry were a fraction of the price of the Zhiyun brand goods imported by the same importer from the same overseas supplier and they were of the same models - the imported goods were correctly confiscated under section 111 and consequently, penalty was correctly imposed under Section 112 by the original authority. - AT

  • IBC:

    Initiation of CIRP - corporate guarantor or not - In a contract of guarantee, there are three different entities i.e. i) ‘surety’ ii) ‘principal debtor’ and iii) ‘creditor’. In the case in hand, the said letter of comfort cannot be termed as letter of contract of guarantee because it is neither signed by the creditor nor by the borrower and to the contrary, the sanction letter dated 22.08.2017 is signed by all the three i.e. creditor, borrower and guarantor. - Tri

  • Service Tax:

    Sabka Vishwas (Legacy Dispute Resolution) Scheme, 2019 - SVLDRS - adjustment of amount deposited under protect - The issues with regard to the liability of the respondent towards duty and interest were at large and the amounts were already deposited when the scheme came into force. The circular issued by the Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs relied upon by the respondent also clearly shows that the department was liable to adjust the entire amount deposited by the assessee under protest prior to the adjudication of the liability either towards Central Excise Duty or towards the interest. - HC

  • Central Excise:

    Reversal of CENVAT Credit - removal of capital goods as such - power plant - Rule 3(5A) of Cenvat Credit Rules, 2004 - The sale of goods or transfer of ownership of the goods from the seller to the buyer, is not the criteria to cast duty liability on the manufacturer/seller of excisable goods. What is important is the physical removal of excisable goods from the factory of the manufacturer. - Both the appellants were not required to reverse the cenvat credit on sale of capital goods, as part of running power plant - AT


Articles


Notifications


Circulars / Instructions / Orders


News


Case Laws:

  • GST

  • 2022 (10) TMI 1067
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1066
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1065
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1064
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1063
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1062
  • Income Tax

  • 2022 (10) TMI 1061
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1060
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1059
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1058
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1057
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1056
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1055
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1054
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1053
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1052
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1051
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1050
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1049
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1048
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1047
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1046
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1045
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1044
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1043
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1042
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1041
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1040
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1039
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1038
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1037
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1036
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1035
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1034
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1033
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1032
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1031
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1030
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1029
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1028
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1027
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1026
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1025
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1024
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1023
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1002
  • Customs

  • 2022 (10) TMI 1022
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1021
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1020
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1019
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1018
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1017
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1016
  • Corporate Laws

  • 2022 (10) TMI 1015
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1014
  • Insolvency & Bankruptcy

  • 2022 (10) TMI 1013
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1012
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1003
  • Service Tax

  • 2022 (10) TMI 1011
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1010
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1009
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1008
  • Central Excise

  • 2022 (10) TMI 1007
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1006
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1005
  • 2022 (10) TMI 1004
 

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