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Home e-Newsletters Index Year 2022 March Day 25 - Friday

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TMI Tax Updates - e-Newsletter
March 25, 2022

Case Laws in this Newsletter:

GST Income Tax Benami Property Customs Corporate Laws Insolvency & Bankruptcy PMLA Service Tax Central Excise CST, VAT & Sales Tax Indian Laws



Highlights / Catch Notes

  • GST:

    Interest payable on delayed payment of taxes - section 50 read with section 75(12) of JGST Act - The Respondents have failed to follow the procedure prescribed in law before issuing Summary of the Order in Form GST DRC-07 holding the petitioner liable to pay interest under section 50(1) of the Act due to late filing of GSTR-3B and not depositing the due interest on its own. As such, writ petition succeeds only on the point of failure to follow the principles of natural justice and the procedure prescribed in law - HC

  • Income Tax:

    Set off of refunds against tax remaining payable / outstanding demand - The respondents are not empowered to adjust the refund amount automatically without complying the provisions of Section 245 of the Act. Adjustment made against the refund due to the petitioner for the relevant year therefore have to be set aside. Accordingly, they are set aside. - HC

  • Income Tax:

    Prosecution for commission of offence u/s 276B r/w 278B - Sanction u/s 279(1) - TDS deducted but not deposited in time - The amount has already been deposited with interest and there is no reason why the criminal proceeding shall proceed and the criminal proceeding was launched after receiving the said amount with interest, had it been a case that the case was immediately instituted and thereafter the TDS amount has been deposited with interest, the matter would have been different. As such the continuation of the proceedings will amount to an abuse of the process of the Court. - HC

  • Income Tax:

    Eligibility to file settlement application - benefit of extension of time to file application for settlement - Admittedly, in this case, application for settlement under Section 245C(1) of the Act was filed on 17th March, 2021 while the Settlement Commission had ceased to operate w.e.f. 1st February, 2021 in view of the aforesaid Finance Act, 2021 amending the provisions of the Act. - So far as challenged to the legality and validity of the order of the aforesaid order of Central Board of Direct Taxes dated 28th September, 2021, on the ground of discrimination in exercise of power under Section 119 (2) (b) of the Income Tax Act, 1961 is concerned, we hold the said order of the Board as constitutionally valid and legal and is perfectly within the power conferred upon it - HC

  • Income Tax:

    Reopening of assessment u/s 147 - The argument that the objections have not been considered may not hold water as the annexure does deal with the crux of the objections but it may be too early a stage in the proceedings to express any opinion on this aspect of the mater. As rightly pointed out by learned Revenue Counsel, reassessment notice under Section 148 of IT Act i.e, impugned notice if carried to its logical end, in the facts and circumstances of the case, will clearly neutralize all these arguments and the writ petitioner assessee bank will not be aggrieved in any manner. - HC

  • Income Tax:

    Disallowance of Incubation Expenses - The two streams of income were shown as ‘other income’ and therefore, the same were non-operational income - As per statutory mandate, the expenditure expanded by the assessee to earn such an income would be an allowable deduction u/s 57(iii). - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Disallowance of expenses u/s.40(a)(ia) - Non deduction of TDS u/s 195 - at the time of payment made by the assessee to non-residents, there was an ambiguity in the definition of royalty and because of this the assessee could not deduct TDS as per provisions of section 195 - Although, the definition has been amended by the Finance Act, 2012, with retrospective effect, but because there was an ambiguity in the definition, the assessee cannot do impossible things by foreseeing an amendment to the definition of royalty and deduct TDS on payment made to non-residents. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Disallowance of Professional fees paid to non-residents - Non deduction of TDS u/s 195 - the assessee cannot be expected to deduct TDS on payment made to non-residents on the basis of subsequent amendment to the law with retrospective effect from earlier date, because the assessee cannot foresee the amendment and deduct TDS and hence, we are of the considered view that the AO was erred in disallowing the payment made to non-residents u/s. 40(a)(i) of the Act, for failure to deduct TDS u/s. 195 of the Act. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Addition u/s 69D - Hundies - The documents were in English and the transactions were not between three parties. They were bilateral. The transactions were on the lines of a promissory note. The documents had waived the notice of dishonor and no grace period was granted. This was also indicative of the transaction not being a hundi transaction. Section 69D was not applicable. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Disallowance of expenditure while processing the return u/s 143(1) by the CPC - the CPC has erred in disallowing the assessee’s claim of expenditure while processing the return of income u/s. 143(1) - Revenue cannot in unilateral proceedings disallow expenditure without affording an opportunity to the assessee. What cannot be done u/s. 154 on the ground of debatability ,cannot be done u/s. 143(1) of the Act to the assessee’s claim on which two views are possible A debatable issue cannot be a subject matter of adjustment u/s. 143(1) of the Act. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Income accrued In India - 'Royalty' or 'Fees for Technical Services' under Section 9(l)(vi) and 9(l)(vii) - the payment made by SCB to assessee- company does not fall within the realm of ‘fees for technical services’ as contained in Sec. 9(1)(vii), albeit the assessee has only provided a standard facility for data processing without any human intervention. - the said payment is not taxable in India as ‘fees for technical services’ in terms of Sec. 9(1)(vii) of the Act. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Exempted capital gain wrongly shown in the belated return as taxable - just because the assessee inadvertently or by ignorance has shown the exempt income as exigible to tax, the AO/CPC ought not to have treated the same as taxable income and thereby taxed the exempt income because Article 265 of the Constitution, title reads " Taxes not to be imposed saved by authority of law'' and the Article reads 'No tax shall be levied or collected except by authority of law'. Here in this case the Parliament has exempted this compensation (for acquiring land) from taxation as per Section 96 of RFCTLARR Act. So the CPC/AO ought not to have taxed the same at the first place. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Capital Gain - Transfer of capital asset u/s 2(47) - year of assessment - since the property was actually transferred in A.Y. 2013-14 the computation of short-term capital gain holding the transfer took place in the A.Y. 2012-13 is not sustainable. In the present facts and circumstance of the case the deed since not registered in A.Y. 2012-13 it has no effect in law for the purpose of invocation of the provision of Section 53A of the Act. There is no profit or gain arose as there was no transfer in the year under consideration. - Additions deleted - AT

  • Customs:

    Demand of duty - denial of benefit of DFIA license - Once the licence is made transferable, the same are traded by the parties through brokers, which is permitted under the DGFT Policy and Foreign Trade Policy. There was no reasons to disbelief the licences issued by the Competent Authority/DGFT. Thus, the same were duly reflected on the website of the DGFT. It is not the case of the Department that the licences itself were forged/fabricated. It is an admitted fact that the licences were genuinely issued by the DGFT after due diligence and were valid at the time of imports made by the appellants. - AT

  • Customs:

    Revocation of Customs Broker/ CHA License - The plea of the appellant that suspension of her license is disproportionate punishment. It is held that not merely the negligence on the part of the appellant but the concealment of relevant facts as is unjustly enrich his client on the expenses of Government exchequer. Not only this, the appellant is a person already found involved in illegal offence as grave of smuggling narcotics drugs, the revocation of licence of the appellant in view of the duty as has been cased upon the Customs Broker and the way the Customs Broker is appointed is held to be proportionate to the violation committed by the appellant. - Appeal rejected - AT

  • Customs:

    Rejection of claim for duty free benefits - import of Vital Wheat Gluten - As per Board Circular No. 46 of 2007 and DGFT Circular 50 of 2008, no correlation is required for technical characteristics/quality and technical specification between imported goods and export goods unless item is specified under Para 4.55.3 of HBP (New Para 4.30 of FTP). Neither Wheat Flour nor Wheat Gluten Flour is a specified item under Para 4.30 of FTP. - In this case, it is evident from the DFIA that the Exporter has used both Wheat Gluten as well as Wheat Gluten Flour in the Export goods i.e. Biscuits. - Benefit of exemption / DFIA allowed - AT

  • DGFT:

    Amendment in Para 2.54 of Handbook of Procedures, 2015-2020 - The timelines for installation and operationalisation of Radiation Portal Monitors and Container Scanners in the designated sea ports - Public Notice

  • DGFT:

    Amendment in Policy condition of Sl. No. 55 & 57, Chapter 10 Schedule-2, ITC(HS) Export Policy, 2018 - Export of Rice (Basmati and Non-Basmati) - Notification

  • DGFT:

    Amendment in Export Policy and insertion of Policy Condition under Chapter 29 and 38 of ITC (HS), 2018 - Export Policy of Hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs) - Notification

  • IBC:

    Corporate insolvency resolution process (CIRP) - claims filed under a CIRP by "decree holder" - Once admitted as a creditor, the efforts must be to preserve and maximise the assets of a corporate debtor. The resolution professional cannot look behind the decree. In the resolution process, he must acknowledge and admit the decree as an admitted claim, unless such decree has been set aside. - The distinction of decree holders as creditors from "financial creditors" and "operational creditors", as seen aforesaid is intelligible and take forward the purpose of the IBC. The same cannot be stated to be discriminatory or arbitrary. - HC

  • IBC:

    Approval of the resolution plan - ascertaining the liquidation value of the Corporate Debtor - The Appellant did not raise any objection regarding assessment of the liquidation value before the Adjudicating Authority - there is no organic error in the calculation of liquidation value of the corporate debtor and, therefore, the payment proposed in the successful resolution plan keeping the liquidation value so arrived at cannot be found fault with. - The Resolution Plan was approved by the CoC in its commercial wisdom and later by the Adjudicating Authority. - AT

  • IBC:

    Seeking extension of CIRP period - The members of CoC and the Resolution Professional are responsible for the loss of time prescribed under the Code, which is valuable and limited for completion of CIRP - In order to facilitate such resolution, Suo moto exclusion is granted of the time consumed in pursuing this application, i.e., from 1st March 2022 till the date of this Order. In default, the CoC shall resort to the next step as provided under IBC, without consuming any further time on pursuing the existing conditional plans, since any further delay in taking necessary steps will result in further deterioration of the already eroded asset value. - Tri

  • SEBI:

    Change in control of Sponsor and/or Manager of Alternative Investment Fund involving scheme of arrangement under Companies Act, 2013 - Circular

  • Service Tax:

    Scope of contractual agreement - Reimbursement of Service Tax and Environmental Compensation Cess - Arbitral Tribunal’s interpretation of Clause 37(i) of the GCC to the extent it includes reimbursement of Service Tax levied in connection with contracts / arrangements between CEC and third parties, is fundamentally flawed and vitiates the impugned award by patent illegality - there is merit in the petitioner’s contention that the award of reimbursement of Service Tax is contrary to the express terms of Clause 37(i) of the GCC. - HC

  • Central Excise:

    CENVAT Credit - availment of fraudulent credit without receipt of goods - It is on the record that neither the department have produced evidence beyond doubt that the alleged inputs were not received in the unit and it was only a paper transaction nor able to prove that any other raw material was received and used by the appellant for production of their final product. - Credit allowed - AT


Articles


Notifications


Circulars / Instructions / Orders


News


Case Laws:

  • GST

  • 2022 (3) TMI 1048
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1047
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1046
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1045
  • Income Tax

  • 2022 (3) TMI 1044
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1043
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1042
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1041
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1040
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1039
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1038
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1037
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1036
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1035
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1034
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1033
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1032
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1031
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1030
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1029
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1028
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1027
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1026
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1025
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1024
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1023
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1022
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1021
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1020
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1019
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1018
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1017
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1016
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1015
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1014
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1013
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1012
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1011
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1010
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1009
  • Benami Property

  • 2022 (3) TMI 1008
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1007
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1006
  • Customs

  • 2022 (3) TMI 1005
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1004
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1003
  • 2022 (3) TMI 1002
  • Corporate Laws

  • 2022 (3) TMI 1000
  • Insolvency & Bankruptcy

  • 2022 (3) TMI 1001
  • 2022 (3) TMI 999
  • 2022 (3) TMI 998
  • 2022 (3) TMI 997
  • 2022 (3) TMI 996
  • 2022 (3) TMI 995
  • 2022 (3) TMI 994
  • 2022 (3) TMI 993
  • 2022 (3) TMI 992
  • 2022 (3) TMI 991
  • 2022 (3) TMI 990
  • 2022 (3) TMI 989
  • 2022 (3) TMI 988
  • PMLA

  • 2022 (3) TMI 987
  • Service Tax

  • 2022 (3) TMI 986
  • 2022 (3) TMI 985
  • 2022 (3) TMI 984
  • Central Excise

  • 2022 (3) TMI 983
  • CST, VAT & Sales Tax

  • 2022 (3) TMI 982
  • 2022 (3) TMI 981
  • Indian Laws

  • 2022 (3) TMI 980
  • 2022 (3) TMI 979
 

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