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Home e-Newsletters Index Year 2023 November Day 10 - Friday

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TMI Tax Updates - e-Newsletter
November 10, 2023

Case Laws in this Newsletter:

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



Highlights / Catch Notes

  • GST:

    Release of cash seized from the Petitioner - More than 6 months have passed from the date of seizure - Admittedly, there is no requisition under section 132(A) of the Income Tax Act, though, it was the case of the State that intimation was sent to the Income Tax Department. Even otherwise, the petitioner has not shown the cash as stock in trade - GST authorities directed to return the Cash - HC

  • GST:

    Validity of third notice issued u/s 73 of the GST Act, 2017 - the petitioner has a remedy to file reply to the show cause notice before the respondent authorities - Officers have the authority of law to issue such show cause notice according to the provisions of Section 73 of the GST Act, 2017. Hence, no exceptional case is made out for interference. - Petition dismissed - HC

  • Income Tax:

    Additions beyond the scope of limited scrutiny assessment - Conversions of Limited Scrutiny to Extensive Scrutiny - no steps has been taken to convert the limited scrutiny into complete scrutiny wherein the AO could have had the jurisdiction to verify other details. - the Ld.AO has overstepped his jurisdiction by making an addition in the hands of the assessee by disallowing the deduction claimed u/s. 54F. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Accrual of income - Taxability of income - interest income generated on the funds received from Gol - ownership of Interest earned - Since the entire amounts received as interest stands deposited in the consolidated fund of India, we hold that no addition is called for in the hands of the assessee. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Revision u/s 263 - there was no error in the order of the AO vis-à-vis the issue of the assessee having not deducted tax at source on any alleged granules work payment made to its related parties warranting disallowance of expenses @ 30% - PCIT surely was misguided by the incorrect words used by the Tax Auditor in the Tax Audit Report - Revision order set aside - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Seeking a lower deduction of tax certificate (“LDC”) - LDC was grated for TDS @ 0.5% instead of @ 0.01% as sought - The reasons furnished by the Respondent No. 1 qua the Application i.e., as to why the Petitioners’ request that TDS should not be deducted at a rate of 0.01% (zero point zero one per cent), hinges on broad generalizations in relation to the propriety of projected estimations of revenue and tax liability, and accordingly has been has been issued mechanically reflecting non-application of mind. - Directions issued to consider the case of the assessee - HC

  • Income Tax:

    TDS u/s 192 or 194J - payment to the consultant-doctors and retainer-doctors - Whether there was employer- employee relation between both the parties? - Certain clauses in contract with retainers which gave the erroneous impression to the Ld. AO of creating an employer-employee relationship has been explained by the assessee that they do not create such a relationship. The explanation of the assessee has unanimously been accepted by various judicial pronouncements. - TDS was rightly deducted u/s 194J - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Revision u/s 263 - it is amicably realized that all these information, which were never submitted before the revenue authorities, are crucial in deciding the issues in hand, at the same time these needs further examination, analysis and verification of its veracity to arrive at the conclusion that whether they support the contentions raised by assessee or not - Revision proceedings sustained - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Benefit exemption from income tax - insurance business - the assessee is entitle to claim exemption under section 10(15) towards interest income from tax free bonds, under section 10(34) towards dividend income and under section 10(23AAB) towards surplus of Participating Pension Business. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    TDS u/s 195 - India-UAE DTAA - payments made to Dubai Leading Technologies - It is business transaction and not in the nature of Fee for Technical Services (FTS) - there is no obligation to deduct tax at source under section 195 of the Act as the impugned payments are not chargeable to tax in India - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Applicability of Higher Rate of Tax u/s 115BBE - the amount surrendered during survey was duly reflected in the books of account and the source it was declared/explained as business activity with due payment of Tax liability and the authorities below failed to prove the contrary to disprove source of income other than Business income - To be taxed at Normal Provision of tax rates - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Provision for obsolete stock - The provision for obsolete stock is allowable but it requires to be satisfied that the value of obsolete items of inventory is valued on the cost or market price, whichever is less - Further, there cannot be double deduction in one assessment year when the provision is made and another time when it was actually written off in its books of accounts of assessee. - AT

  • Customs:

    Refund of Anti Dumping Duty - refund application filed without challenging the assessment order - it is undisputed fact by the revenue also that the ADD paid by the appellant was not at all leviable at the relevant time - In absence of any final assessment order in respect of payment of Anti Dumping Duty and particularly in the fact that the Anti Dumping Duty was not leviable at the relevant time - appellant is legally entitled for the refund claim - AT

  • Customs:

    Revocation of benefit under the Merchandise Exports from India Scheme [MEIS] with retrospective effect - Notably, given that the entire MEIS scheme faced scrutiny at the WTO - singling out FIBCs from export incentives retrospectively, while retaining benefits for other products, especially those under Chapters 61 to 63, exhibits arbitrariness and discrimination. In our considered opinion, no valid justification has been brought forth, for such selective retrospective withdrawal of benefits. - HC

  • Customs:

    Condonation of delay in filing the Cross Objections - The department has, therefore, failed to furnish any satisfactory explanation for condoning the enormous delay in filing the Cross Objections - The Delay Condonation Application, therefore, deserves to be rejected and is rejected. - AT

  • Customs:

    Revocation of Customs Broker license - mis-declaration was not known to the appellants CB, and when they had specifically sought for examination of the goods under First Check basis - there exists no such evidence and on the contrary the declaration made in the bill of entry corresponds to the value declared in the commercial invoice. - AT

  • Indian Laws:

    Dishonour of Cheque - non-joinder of the Company as accused, which otherwise is treated as principal offender being drawer of the cheque, the Director of the Company joined as sole accused representing the company as well as authorised signatory, would not served the provisions of Section 141 of the Act. - HC

  • IBC:

    Initiation of CIRP - Present is a fit case to admit when inspite of several promises and acknowledgement, the Corporate Debtor failed to pay the outstanding debt. The Corporate Debtor also has not complied with the order of the Adjudicating Authority directing for depositing the amount equivalent to Indian Rupee in the Court, instead it cited certain regulatory procedure in obtaining the permission for remitting the amount, which order was also not complied by the Corporate Debtor - the Adjudicating Authority ought to have admitted Section 9 Application. - AT

  • Central Excise:

    Valuation - inclusion of after sale service charges, reimbursed by the appellants to their dealers - It is beyond imagination as to how these amounts constitute flow of additional consideration unless it is evidenced either that the appellants are allowing the dealers to collect the margin payable, by the appellant to the dealers, from ultimate customers or that the additional amounts charged by the dealers from ultimate customers is actually flowing back to the appellants. - AT

  • Central Excise:

    Recovery/reversal of credit - Export of Goods - Credit was availed under Rule 16 on returned Goods - The view taken by the authorities below is that reversal of the credit availed under Rule 16 is a pre-condition for removal of the said goods and therefore, the appellant has to reverse the credit. It is also alleged that when the goods were not originally meant for export, it cannot be later exported when the goods are brought back to the factory under Rule 16 - the said view of the Commissioner (Appeals) cannot be endorsed upon. - AT

  • Central Excise:

    Recovery of CENVAT Credit - allegation of payment of duty by the supplier on exempted goods - the goods cannot be said to be exempt inasmuch as the notification relied upon in the appeal of Revenue is a non-tariff notification which does not have the effect of section 5A of Central Excise Act, 1944 and is merely procedural and conditional - It is also settled law that it is not open to the central excise authorities having jurisdiction over the buyer to determine leviability to duty of a seller in another jurisdiction. - AT

  • Central Excise:

    From careful reading of Section 66 D(f) of the Finance Act, 1994, there is no ambiguity that the statute does not envisage levy of service tax on any process amounting to manufacture or production of goods - the payment of service tax by the appellant on the job charges collected on Die Casting of Components from Aluminium Metal was totally unwarranted and against the spirit of the law as quoted above. - AT


Articles


Notifications


Circulars / Instructions / Orders


News


Case Laws:

  • GST

  • 2023 (11) TMI 401
  • 2023 (11) TMI 400
  • 2023 (11) TMI 399
  • Income Tax

  • 2023 (11) TMI 405
  • 2023 (11) TMI 403
  • 2023 (11) TMI 402
  • 2023 (11) TMI 398
  • 2023 (11) TMI 397
  • 2023 (11) TMI 396
  • 2023 (11) TMI 395
  • 2023 (11) TMI 394
  • 2023 (11) TMI 393
  • 2023 (11) TMI 392
  • 2023 (11) TMI 391
  • 2023 (11) TMI 390
  • 2023 (11) TMI 389
  • 2023 (11) TMI 388
  • 2023 (11) TMI 387
  • 2023 (11) TMI 386
  • 2023 (11) TMI 385
  • 2023 (11) TMI 384
  • Customs

  • 2023 (11) TMI 404
  • 2023 (11) TMI 383
  • 2023 (11) TMI 382
  • 2023 (11) TMI 381
  • 2023 (11) TMI 380
  • 2023 (11) TMI 379
  • 2023 (11) TMI 378
  • Insolvency & Bankruptcy

  • 2023 (11) TMI 377
  • 2023 (11) TMI 376
  • 2023 (11) TMI 375
  • PMLA

  • 2023 (11) TMI 374
  • Service Tax

  • 2023 (11) TMI 373
  • 2023 (11) TMI 372
  • 2023 (11) TMI 371
  • Central Excise

  • 2023 (11) TMI 370
  • 2023 (11) TMI 369
  • 2023 (11) TMI 368
  • 2023 (11) TMI 367
  • 2023 (11) TMI 366
  • 2023 (11) TMI 365
  • 2023 (11) TMI 364
  • 2023 (11) TMI 363
  • Indian Laws

  • 2023 (11) TMI 362
  • 2023 (11) TMI 361
  • 2023 (11) TMI 360
 

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