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Home e-Newsletters Index Year 2023 February Day 27 - Monday

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TMI Tax Updates - e-Newsletter
February 27, 2023

Case Laws in this Newsletter:

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



Highlights / Catch Notes

  • GST:

    Right of revenue to claim relief when GST tribunal has not constituted - whenever parties have found the need of urgent orders, the parties have filed petitions before this Court seeking such orders on the ground that since the tribunal is not constituted, the remedy of appeal is not available. The respondent (revenue) has not sought any such relief - The appeal is required to be filed within a period of six months from the date of the order; however, we are not required to examine the question whether an appeal, if so filed, would be maintainable or not. - HC

  • GST:

    Classification of goods - supply of frozen food - Since the applicant is into manufacture of ready to eat and ready to cook food products, the same are covered under explanation 5(b) which is preparations for use, either directly or after processing (such as cooking, dissolving or boiling in water, milk or other liquids), for human consumption. Thus the food products manufactured by the applicant are covered under tariff heading 2106 and hence exigible to GST at 18% - AAR

  • Income Tax:

    Penalty u/s 271 AAB or u/s 271 (1)(c) - concealment on income - as per clause (2) of section 271AAB, no penalty under the provisions of clause (c) of sub-section (1) of section 271 shall be imposed upon the assessee in respect of the undisclosed income referred to in sub-section (1) of Sub Section (1A) of section 271AAB. Accordingly, the AO should have initiated and levied penalty under section 271AAB(1)(c) instead of section 271(1)(c). - HC

  • Income Tax:

    Revision u/s 263 - non service of notice to assessee who was in jail - Any officer of the Government including a PCIT should be conscious that once information was received that a person to whom notice has to be served is in judicial custody, then an appropriate order should be passed requiring service of notice on such person through the Superintendent of the concerned jail. This is the bare minimum requirement in law. - HC

  • Income Tax:

    Ex-parte order - Non compliance of notice issued by the Authorities and non appearance before the Authorities inspite of repeated notices/summons is dis-regard towards the Authorities. Be that as it may, without going into merits, considering the interest of natural justice, one more opportunity is granted to the assessee, and the file is restored back to the ld. CIT (A) for consideration afresh - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Deduction u/s 80P - return of income was not filed within the due date prescribed u/s 139(1) - looking into the totality of facts, we are of the view that claim of deduction u/s 80P of the Act cannot be denied to the assessee only on the basis that the assessee did not file return of income its return of income within due date u/s 139(1) - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Taxation of capital gain - claim of reduced rate of tax @10% was not made in the return of income - the assessee is eligible to be taxed at the reduced rate of 10% in respect of the aforesaid capital gains, even if such claim was not made in the return of income - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Revision u/s 263 - exemption u/s 54F - the exercise aimed at ascertaining the correct income of the assessee has been fulfilled by the Ld. A.O. by exercising his quasi-judicial functions, hence order passed by the assessing officer is neither erroneous nor prejudicial to the interest of revenue, therefore, we quash the order under section 263 passed by ld PCIT. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Supremacy of law - GAAR - in the case in hand the short term capital gain the tax on which is below the threshold set out in Rule 10 U (1) (a) (supra) further the impugned shares were acquired by the assessee on 22.08.2016 which is prior to the cut off date set out in Rule 10 U (1)(d) - Assuming domestic GAAR provision are applicable but for the aforestated facts the treaty benefit cannot be denied to the assessee. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Addition u/s 68 - unexplained cash credit - receipt of cash from 5 different parties as advance towards sale of shops - when the assessee while discharging the initial onus that was cast upon it as regards proving the nature and source of the cash deposits in its books of accounts, had in support of his claim filed with the A.O copies of agreements, viz. sale agreement/cancellation agreement, therefore, there was no justification for the A.O in rejecting the same without placing on record any material disproving the authenticity of the aforesaid claim. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Validity of assessment framed by the AO u/s 153C without issuing notice u/s 143(2) - when no notice under section 143(2) is required for framing the assessment under section 153A then on the similar analogy, the same is not required even for framing the assessment under section 153C of the Income Tax Act as both are in pursuant to search and seizure action under section 132 of the Income Tax Act. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Revision u/s 263 - reduction from provision created for bad and doubtful debts for rural advances - real income theory - This provision for bad and doubtful debts relating to the rural advance, having been allowed as claim for deduction in earlier years, any write back from the same, logically needed to be subjected to tax, since clearly the claim allowed in earlier years was excessive to the extent of the write back done by the assessee. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Unexplained Receipts shown in Form No. 26AS - By putting the onus on the assessee, the AO has grossly erred as the assessee is not responsible to explain the recipients of the receipts shown in Form No. 26AS. AO should have asked the payer, details of the payee to whom payments have been made by the payer on which it could deduct tax at source . - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Writing off towards software capital work-in-progress - It is not a case where the assessee purchased certain plant and machinery or incurred certain capital costs which were capitalised earlier to work-in-progress account, and later on, on abandoning the same, it was claimed as deduction. Rather it is a case of incurring revenue expenditure, which was initially capitalized and now written off because of abandoning the modules, that were no more required in the software development business. In our considered opinion, is eligible for deduction. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Revision u/s 263 - Scope of the notice issued - the Explanation did not expand the scope of section but only explained the scope of section, and therefore, once the specific section has been invoked, it is not necessary to mention any specific Explanation thereto which has been invoked. - AT

  • Customs:

    Levy of penalty u/s 114 of the Customs Act, 1962 - Over-valuation of goods to avail a higher duty drawback - There is no dispute that the goods were over-valued. Therefore, the questions involved in the present appeals, essentially, are whether the letter dated 31.01.2017 was, in fact, sent and, if so, what is the import of the said letter. - Appellant failed to prove its case - HC

  • Customs:

    Seeking return of Demand Drafts - amount paid voluntarily or not during investigation by DRI - According to the petitioner, the said amount was recovered by coercion, without any order determining the said liability or raising any demand - Refund granted - HC

  • Customs:

    Exemption from customs duty - preferential Trade Agreement with Asian Countries - Mere non-mention of the invoice number in the certificate of Origin is not sufficient reason to deny the benefit of Notification No. 46/2011-Cus - The purpose of the Notification is to grant exemption under the preferential Trade Agreement with Asian Countries and from the certificate of country of origin produced by the appellant. It is sufficiently established that the goods have indeed originated in Indonesia and were wholly obtained in Indonesia. - AT

  • Corporate Law:

    Winding up of the appellant company - Undeniably, in cases where the defence against the claim of debt is found to be moonshine or a sham, the petition for winding up would be maintainable on account of inability to pay the debt. However, the facts of the case must clearly establish that there is no plausible defence available to the debtor company. The defence so raised has been solely for the purposes of avoiding repayment of admitted debt and in most cases, to camouflage the inability to do so. - HC

  • Service Tax:

    Levy of service tax - receipt of incentive / discounts - the activity undertaken by the appellant is for the sale and purchase of the vehicle and the incentives are in the nature of trade discounts. The incentives, therefore form part of the sale price of the vehicles and have no correlation with the services to be rendered by the appellant. - AT


Articles


Notifications


News


Case Laws:

  • GST

  • 2023 (2) TMI 1026
  • 2023 (2) TMI 1025
  • 2023 (2) TMI 1024
  • Income Tax

  • 2023 (2) TMI 1023
  • 2023 (2) TMI 1022
  • 2023 (2) TMI 1021
  • 2023 (2) TMI 1020
  • 2023 (2) TMI 1019
  • 2023 (2) TMI 1018
  • 2023 (2) TMI 1017
  • 2023 (2) TMI 1016
  • 2023 (2) TMI 1015
  • 2023 (2) TMI 1014
  • 2023 (2) TMI 1013
  • 2023 (2) TMI 1012
  • 2023 (2) TMI 1011
  • 2023 (2) TMI 1010
  • 2023 (2) TMI 1009
  • 2023 (2) TMI 1008
  • 2023 (2) TMI 1007
  • 2023 (2) TMI 1006
  • 2023 (2) TMI 1005
  • 2023 (2) TMI 1004
  • 2023 (2) TMI 1003
  • 2023 (2) TMI 1002
  • 2023 (2) TMI 1001
  • 2023 (2) TMI 1000
  • 2023 (2) TMI 986
  • Customs

  • 2023 (2) TMI 999
  • 2023 (2) TMI 998
  • 2023 (2) TMI 997
  • 2023 (2) TMI 996
  • Corporate Laws

  • 2023 (2) TMI 995
  • 2023 (2) TMI 994
  • PMLA

  • 2023 (2) TMI 993
  • 2023 (2) TMI 992
  • Service Tax

  • 2023 (2) TMI 991
  • 2023 (2) TMI 990
  • 2023 (2) TMI 989
  • Central Excise

  • 2023 (2) TMI 988
  • CST, VAT & Sales Tax

  • 2023 (2) TMI 987
 

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