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Home e-Newsletters Index Year 2023 November Day 29 - Wednesday

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TMI Tax Updates - e-Newsletter
November 29, 2023

Case Laws in this Newsletter:

GST Income Tax Customs PMLA Service Tax Central Excise CST, VAT & Sales Tax Indian Laws



Highlights / Catch Notes

  • GST:

    Refund of accumulated Input Tax Credit (ITC) - Turnover of Zero-rated supplies - mistake in submission of documents through common portal while filing applications in form GST RFD -01 - GST officer observed that, Shipping bills were not signed by appropriate authorities or obtained sanctioned from higher official as such those shipping bills cannot be accepted as “valid proof of export - Matter restored back to reconsider the matter afresh - HC

  • GST:

    Refund of unutilized Input Tax Credit (ITC) - zero-rated supply - Clubbing of invoices - The clubbing or taking into account of this particular bill was without authority of law. Even if a portion of the claim was rejected, the simultaneous recovery was impermissible. - HC

  • Income Tax:

    Compounding of offences - period of limitation - Validity of period of 12 months from the date of launching of prosecution - the CBDT is not empowered to fix the time limit for filing the application for compounding of offences, which is contrary to the provisions of Section 279(2) of the IT Act - HC

  • Income Tax:

    Validity of Reopening of assessment - not charging interest @ 12% on the loans advances - Only because the assessee company did not charge the advance made to the other loans and advances, such Assessing Officer even otherwise could not have made the notional addition on the basis of the income accrued in the regular course of assessment and such on the basis of the principle of real income. - Notice for reopening quashed - HC

  • Income Tax:

    Exemption u/s 11 - charging of guarantee fees for services by the assessee trust - the impugned findings returned by the Ld. CIT(A) that “since the assessee is charging guarantee fee on substantial scale, it is not carrying out any charitable activities, hence not entitled for benefit of section 11 & 12 of the Act”, are not sustainable, hence set aside. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Appealable Orders before the Appellate Tribunal - As an order passed by a Commissioner u/s 119(2)(b) of the Act does not find any mention in the list of orders that are appealable before the Appellate Tribunal, therefore, we are constrained to observe that the present appeal filed by the assessee is not maintainable before us. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Validity of reopening of assessment - ‘reason to believe’ v/s 'reason to suspect' - allegation of issue of shares on premium to paper companies - Since AO has not carried out even the preliminary enquiry after taking note of assessee collecting share capital with premium, the AO cannot be said to be possessing the requisite reason to believe, escapement of income. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Income taxable in India - Royalty receipts - benefit of DTAA - non-resident corporate entity - the amount received by the assessee towards reimbursement of cost of software is not taxable as royalty income under the treaty provisions. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Setoff / adjustment of interest expenditure with interest received from partnership firm - There is direct link with the loan creditors and the capital introduced in the partnership firm. Therefore, it establishes that the funds borrowed by the assessee is directly introduced in the partnership firm. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Treatment to income surrendered during survey on account of excess stock - business income or unexplained stock u/s 69B r.w.s.115BBE - the value of article/stock of the impugned investment was being fully disclosed in the books of account, being regularized by way of surrender of business income as accepted by the AO, would certainly not fall in the mischief of section 69B. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Exemption u/s 11 - rejection of registration u/s 12AA as applicant trust has been formed to implement the CSR activities and not amenable to public charity - in the present case the Ld. CIT(E) has neither pointed out any defect in the objects of the trust nor doubted the activities carried out to achieve these objects, and therefore, the application for registration cannot be rejected - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Unexplained investment for purchase of land - Assessee contended that the investment has been made by him out of the disclosure made by the partnership firm which has already suffered to tax - Revenue could not prove the contrary - Additions deleted - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Addition u/s. 69A - income surrendered during survey - undisclosed business income or income from other sources - What has been found during survey is excess stock of the business of the assessee. The assesses case, in fact, we find on a better footing since the assessee has disclosed investment made by way of purchases for the excess stock not only in its business books of accounts but also in the VAT return filed to the VAT authorities. - CIT(A) has rightly treated the same as being derived from the undisclosed business income - AT

  • Customs:

    Refund of the value of the goods that were seized and confiscated - Auction of goods by the Customs Department - the order of seizure were set aside - petitioner claims for a refund of the complete value of the goods and not the value as per the auction - Petitioner directed to pursue the matter first to decide the correct value that is to be claimed - HC

  • Customs:

    Levy of ADD - import of horizonal plastic injection moulding machines in the guise of “parts and components” - The process involved for completion of the manufactured goods since, have taken place post importation of the goods in question, the provisions of Rule 2(a) of GIR shall not be applicable for change in classification of the imported goods and to bring such goods under the purview of Rule 9A ibid, for the purpose of levy of ADD thereon. - AT

  • Indian Laws:

    Dishonour of Cheque - Oreder of conviction and sentence of accused - insufficient funds - Neither at the time of handing over the cheques nor at the time of seizure nor at the time when the payments became due under the cheque, the petitioner had the sufficient amount in his account. It is not the defence of the petitioner that he wanted to make arrangement with his bank so as to honour the cheques. - Revision petition dismissed - HC

  • Service Tax:

    Extended period of limitation - In this era of self-assessment, the facts would not have been revealed had investigations into the appellants’ activities not been initiated by the officers of DGCEI. The issue relating to the suppression of facts is dependent on the facts of each case. This being so the extended period for issue of SCN has rightly been invoked under the proviso to sub-section (1) of section 73 of FA 1994. - AT

  • Service Tax:

    Refund of service tax paid - SEZ Units - Failure to fulfill the conditions of exemption notification - the exemption notifications issued under the Finance Act, 1994 are redundant because service tax was already exempted by the Parliament by section 26 of the SEZ Act. Any conditions in such notifications are also, therefore, irrelevant and need not be fulfilled - AT

  • Central Excise:

    Recovery of CENVAT Credit wrongly availed - allegation of non-receipt of material - it is a settled law that where there are tangible documentary evidence in favour of the assesse and even there are overall statements of third party contradicting the documentary evidence, such tangible documentary evidence must be given primacy over the overall statements. - AT

  • Central Excise:

    Invocation of Extended period of Limitation - Even if there was any additional duty payable by the appellant, the same would be admissible as CENVAT credit to its own Raigarh unit. Such CENVAT credit would have been utilized by the Raigarh unit for payment of central excise duty at its end. Therefore, the entire exercise of demanding any further excise duty would be revenue neutral. - Demand set aside - AT

  • VAT:

    Recovery of tax dues of the partnership firm from the retired Partner - it is apparent that the Department could not have proceeded against the appellant for realisation of the tax dues of the firm for the assessment year falling after the date of retirement - HC


Articles


Notifications


Circulars / Instructions / Orders


News


Case Laws:

  • GST

  • 2023 (11) TMI 1113
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1112
  • Income Tax

  • 2023 (11) TMI 1114
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1111
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1110
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1109
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1108
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1107
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1106
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1105
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1104
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1103
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1102
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1101
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1100
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1099
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1098
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1097
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1096
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1095
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1094
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1093
  • Customs

  • 2023 (11) TMI 1092
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1091
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1090
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1089
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1088
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1087
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1065
  • PMLA

  • 2023 (11) TMI 1086
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1085
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1084
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1083
  • Service Tax

  • 2023 (11) TMI 1082
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1081
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1080
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1079
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1078
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1077
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1076
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1075
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1074
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1073
  • Central Excise

  • 2023 (11) TMI 1072
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1071
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1070
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1069
  • 2023 (11) TMI 1068
  • CST, VAT & Sales Tax

  • 2023 (11) TMI 1067
  • Indian Laws

  • 2023 (11) TMI 1066
 

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