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Home e-Newsletters Index Year 2023 October Day 9 - Monday

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TMI Tax Updates - e-Newsletter
October 9, 2023

Case Laws in this Newsletter:

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



Highlights / Catch Notes

  • GST:

    Exemption from GST - demand of GST on premium paid by the petitioner to YEIDA for allotment of Institutional Plot to set up a Hospital - The exemption made available to the petitioner by virtue of the original Notification issued u/s 11 read with order of the Authority for Advance Ruling, is unconditional. - Letter issued by the YEIDA to deposit GST is invalid - Quashed - HC

  • GST:

    Seeking stay and revocation on recovery proceedings - U/s 80 of the CGST Act, there is power vested in the Commissioner to grant upto 12 installments for the payment of arrears of tax. If the petitioner wants to deposit the tax in installments, the petitioner may approach the Commissioner - HC

  • GST:

    Revocation of cancellation of GST registration of petitioner - Unfortunately, the petitioner's cancellation was on 11.05.2023, had it been prior to 31.12.2022 then the petitioner would have come within the time prescribed under the said notification. But the consideration for extension was pending during that period, hence this Court is of the considered that the petitioner is entitled to the benefit. - HC

  • GST:

    Recommendations of 52nd GST Council Meeting

  • Income Tax:

    Constitutionality of Explanation to Section 10AA (1) - Exemption to SEZ unit - As principle of legitimate expectation is not applicable to the case of the petitioner and Explanation after Sub-section (1) of Section 10AA of the Income Tax Act, 1961, inserted by amendment with prospective from 1st April, 2018, applicable in respect of the assessment year 2018-19 and subsequent years is constitutional and is a valid piece of legislation and is not arbitrary, discriminatory and is not violative of Articles 14, 19 & 265 of the Constitution of India. - HC

  • Income Tax:

    Validity of prosecution proceedings against the complainant / service provider along-with the accused person who deducted the TDS - TDS was deducted but not deposited by the deductor with the income tax authority - The accused persons flatly refused to pay the said TDS amount to the complainant. - The ingredients required to constitute the offences alleged u/s 406/420/120B is clearly absent in the present case. - Proceedings against the complainant quashed - HC

  • Income Tax:

    Time limit for completion of assessment u/s 153A - The clause has been inserted with effect from 01.04.2021 and hence operates prospectively only, being a substantive provision. The benefit of the exclusion under that clause thus, would not be available to the revenue in the present assessments. The impugned orders of assessment passed on 28.01.2022 in respect of AYs 11-12, 12-13 and 19-20 are hence held to be barred by limitation qua these three assessment years and are set aside. The writ petitions challenging those notices, orders of assessment and penalties are allowed. - HC

  • Income Tax:

    Reopening of assessment - reasons to believe - The officer merely refers to the financials, Form 3CD, profit and loss account, computation statement and the details furnished during original scrutiny. Thus, there is no new or tangible information that has come to the notice of the authority to justify re-assessment as all relevant information was well available with the original authority. - Further, Profit and Loss Account and the Balance Sheet are not the books of account - HC

  • Income Tax:

    Proper authority / Jurisdiction to launch Prosecution Proceedings - It is the contention of the Revenue that the Deputy Director of Income Tax is a senior officer and the Assistant Director of Income Tax is a junior officer and both were doing the same duties, the said contention cannot be taken into consideration as in the present case, the sanction is accorded to the Deputy Director of Income Tax for initiating prosecution and not to the Assistant Director of Income Tax. - Proceedings quashed - HC

  • Income Tax:

    Disallowance u/s 40(a)(ia) with regard to the non-deduction of tax at source in respect of payments made towards labour payment - Once the recipient has disclosed the payment in his return of income, the assessee is not liable for TDS. - Just because the recipient / contractor filed his return of income for the AYs 2013-14 and 2014-15 belatedly, it is not correct to disallow the payment made by the assessee. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Relief u/s. 90 / 90A - foreign tax credit - the assessee has paid foreign tax credit in USA and has filed his return of income U/s. 139(4) - we consider it deemed to be fit that the CBDT Notification can be applied retrospectively which is being a beneficial provision to the assessee. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Nature of income - Forfeiture of security deposit - termination of certain lease agreement - from assessee’s point of view, there is no extinguishment of any right. The impugned amount was received as security deposit and a part of the same has been forfeited by the assessee. The security deposit has changed its character upon forfeiture and the same is clearly an income of the assessee - Amount is taxable as Income from House Property - AT

  • Customs:

    Misdeclaration of export goods - Iron Oxide - goods are Iron Oxide Dry Powder, or Iron Ore? - the Joint Deputy CRCL’s letter not taken into cognizance as the Adjudicating Authority has failed to provide the same to the appellant and therefore has grossly violating the principals of natural justice following the principle of the natural justice. At the same time since the initially two reports clearly holds that export consignments are made of the Iron Oxide. - There is no mis-declaration in the export consignments - AT

  • Customs:

    Revocation of Customs Broker License - irrespective of the appellants not informing the Customs about the non production of export goods, the above independent system of checks and data base would have brought to the fore, the export fraud committed by the exporter ABCCPL - the appellants have not caused any violation or in any way connected with the export fraud committed by the exporter ABCCPL and other connected persons. - Order of revocation set aside - Penalty of Rs. 20000 imposed - AT

  • Customs:

    Suspension of Customs Broker License - Since, this alleged offence was also well within the knowledge of the department, suspension of the license, if any, warranted could have been initiated along with the other offence where their License was suspended. The action of the department in waiting for more than four years and suspending the License immediately after setting aside the earlier revocation order, cannot be sustained in the eye of the law. - AT

  • Corporate Law:

    Oppression and mismanagement - Determination of minimum shareholding for filing complain / petition against the company - The ‘onus’, to establish ‘Membership’ is on the Petitioner, and it is up to him to prove, that he is a Member, of a Company, ‘on the day’ of filing of petition. When he is not a Member of Company, he cannot allege ‘Oppression’, to invoke, Section 241 of the Companies Act, 2013, against the Company, as opined, by this ‘Tribunal’ - AT

  • Indian Laws:

    Dishonour of Cheque - insufficient of funds - the presumption u/s 139 - the accused admitted the issuance of cheque, signature of cheque and thereby, he has to disprove the cheque and his liability but he failed to prove the same. Thereby, the aforesaid case law will squarely applicable to the present facts of the case. - HC

  • IBC:

    Initiation of CIRP - pre-existing dispute or not - While admitting that the civil suit was filed subsequent to the issue of notice under Section 8 of IBC, it has been contended that there is no need in every case for a civil suit or an arbitration to be pending before Section 8 notice and that a dispute as understood by the IBC is not limited to a pending suit or an arbitration but includes a real dispute as to payment between the parties. - AT

  • IBC:

    Approval of Resolution Plan - Dues of Income Tax liability - reliefs from Income Tax liabilities have not been granted as prayed by the Successful Resolution Applicant. The claim which was submitted in the proceeding and the Successful Resolution Applicant has very well dealt with claim submitted by the Income Tax Department of Rs.3334.29 Crores. Even if the claim for the AY 2012-13 of Income Tax Department cannot be said to be extinguished, Appellant being an Operational Creditor, the liquidation value of the Income Tax Department is NIL. The payment of Rs.10 Lakhs cannot be said to be violative of provisions of Section 30(2)(e). - AT

  • IBC:

    Rejection of Resolution Plan - validity of the plan - no case has made by CRP to establish any procedural or material irregularity committed by the RP/CoC in rejecting their EoI and that the challenges raised by the CRP clearly fall within the domain of commercial wisdom of the CoC which is non-justiceable. - AT

  • Service Tax:

    Levy of Service Tax - collection of fees in discharge of sovereign functions - Instead of depositing the money to the Government, it is kept by the assessee - The same is the consideration received by the appellant for providing the Consultancy Service - this money cannot be equated with fee collected for discharging sovereign function. - Demand of service tax with penalty confirmed - AT

  • Central Excise:

    Clandestine Removal - Availment of credit of countervailing duty paid by the respondents - The Revenue has miserably failed to produce corroborative evidence on records so as to substantiate the charges of non- receipts of imported goods and substitution of the same with kabadi scrap and availment of the wrong Cenvat Credit. - AT


Articles


Notifications


News


Case Laws:

  • GST

  • 2023 (10) TMI 286
  • 2023 (10) TMI 285
  • 2023 (10) TMI 284
  • 2023 (10) TMI 283
  • 2023 (10) TMI 282
  • Income Tax

  • 2023 (10) TMI 281
  • 2023 (10) TMI 280
  • 2023 (10) TMI 279
  • 2023 (10) TMI 278
  • 2023 (10) TMI 277
  • 2023 (10) TMI 276
  • 2023 (10) TMI 275
  • 2023 (10) TMI 274
  • 2023 (10) TMI 273
  • 2023 (10) TMI 272
  • 2023 (10) TMI 271
  • 2023 (10) TMI 270
  • 2023 (10) TMI 269
  • 2023 (10) TMI 268
  • 2023 (10) TMI 267
  • 2023 (10) TMI 266
  • 2023 (10) TMI 265
  • 2023 (10) TMI 264
  • 2023 (10) TMI 263
  • 2023 (10) TMI 262
  • 2023 (10) TMI 261
  • 2023 (10) TMI 260
  • 2023 (10) TMI 259
  • 2023 (10) TMI 258
  • 2023 (10) TMI 257
  • 2023 (10) TMI 256
  • 2023 (10) TMI 255
  • 2023 (10) TMI 254
  • 2023 (10) TMI 253
  • 2023 (10) TMI 252
  • 2023 (10) TMI 251
  • Customs

  • 2023 (10) TMI 250
  • 2023 (10) TMI 249
  • 2023 (10) TMI 248
  • 2023 (10) TMI 247
  • 2023 (10) TMI 246
  • 2023 (10) TMI 245
  • 2023 (10) TMI 244
  • 2023 (10) TMI 243
  • Corporate Laws

  • 2023 (10) TMI 242
  • 2023 (10) TMI 241
  • 2023 (10) TMI 240
  • Insolvency & Bankruptcy

  • 2023 (10) TMI 239
  • 2023 (10) TMI 238
  • 2023 (10) TMI 237
  • 2023 (10) TMI 236
  • 2023 (10) TMI 235
  • 2023 (10) TMI 234
  • Service Tax

  • 2023 (10) TMI 233
  • 2023 (10) TMI 232
  • 2023 (10) TMI 231
  • 2023 (10) TMI 230
  • 2023 (10) TMI 229
  • 2023 (10) TMI 228
  • 2023 (10) TMI 227
  • 2023 (10) TMI 226
  • 2023 (10) TMI 225
  • Central Excise

  • 2023 (10) TMI 224
  • 2023 (10) TMI 223
  • 2023 (10) TMI 222
  • 2023 (10) TMI 221
  • Indian Laws

  • 2023 (10) TMI 220
  • 2023 (10) TMI 219
 

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