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Home e-Newsletters Index Year 2020 March Day 9 - Monday

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TMI Tax Updates - e-Newsletter
March 9, 2020

Case Laws in this Newsletter:

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



TMI SMS


Highlights / Catch Notes

  • GST:

    Profiteering - stay the operation of the impugned order granted subject to the petitioner depositing in this Court, in the name of Registrar General, 10% of the amount of profiteering assessed by the NAA - HC

  • GST:

    Manual filing of revised FORM GST TRAN-1 and the resultant FORM GST TRAN-2 - The review petitioner shall be permitted either to manually or electronically upload the revised form GST Tran-1 and Tran-2, expeditiously and without all delay, at any rate, on any day on or before 28.2.2020. - HC

  • Income Tax:

    Forms or modes of investment or deposits by a charitable or religious trust or institution - Rule 17C of the Income-tax Rules, 1962 as amended

  • Income Tax:

    Assessment u/s 153C - The satisfaction note by the Assessing Officer clearly states that the documents so seized belonged to the other person – the assessee and not the searched person. Thus, the High Court is justified in observing that the requirement of Section 153C has been fulfilled. - SC

  • Income Tax:

    Deduction u/s 80IA - whether assessee fulfilled the condition of sub-Section (4)(i)(b) of Section 80IA? - partnership firm was converted into a company - For the assessment year under consideration, the activity undertaken by the assessee is only maintaining and operating or developing, maintaining and operating the infrastructure facility, inasmuch as, the construction of the road was completed on 27.3.2000 and the same was inaugurated on 1.4.2000, where after toll tax was being collected by the assessee-Company. - benefit of exemption u/s 80IA available to assessee company - SC

  • Income Tax:

    Addition u/s 40(a)(ii) - Allowable deduction in the year of its payment - Education Cess and Higher and Secondary Education Cess - Even, though, “cess” may be collected as a part of income tax, that does not render such “cess”, either rate or tax, which cannot be deducted in terms of the provisions in Section 40(a)(ii). The mode of collection, is really not determinative in such matters. - HC

  • Income Tax:

    Exemption u/s 10 (23C) (v) - liberty is given to the Department to proceed against the trustees and committee members dealing with administration and the monies of the temple for the mismanagement and misappropriation leading to loss of public monies and the Government revenue, if any. - HC

  • Income Tax:

    Allowance of bad debts on account of inter corporate debt and advances - it is not necessary, rather there is no requirement under the Act that the bad debt has to accrue out of income under the same head i.e 'income from business or profession' to be eligible for deduction. This is not a requirement of law. - HC

  • Income Tax:

    Addition u/s 68 - whether an assessee who has taken a loan is bound to produce the source of source? - Held No - The appellant having proved the identity and credit worthiness of the party as well as the genuineness of the transaction had discharged its burden and it was for the revenue to conduct an enquiry and to prove that the transaction in question was not genuine and the identity of the creditor was not established and it had no credit worthiness. - HC

  • Income Tax:

    Addition u/s 68 - allegation that bogus share application money received from various paper companies - Addition made by the AO based on the statement of alleged entry provider which was recorded by the Investigation Wing, Mumbai was not found sustainable when the assessee produced all the documentary evidences to discharge its onus to prove the transaction - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Claim of deduction u/s 80IB(10) - CIT(A) granted relief to the assessee appreciating the assessee‟s explanation relating to some glitches in the software. The said para of CIT(A)‟s order does not have reasons for accepting patent discrepancies appeared in the Profit and Loss Accounts and statement of accounts, dates in the audit reports, etc. No reason is given for the anti-dated Form No.10CCB. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Disallowance of the professional fees on patent - revenue or capital expenditure - The fact that a trade mark after registration could be separately assigned, and not as a part of the good will of the business only, does not also make the expenditure for registration a capital expenditure. That is only an additional and incidental facility given to the owner of the trade mark. It adds nothing to the trade mark itself - AT

  • Income Tax:

    TP Adjustment - Determination of Arms Length Price (ALP) - Once a particular expenditure itself is disallowed, there can be no question of including it in the Operating expenses for calculating the profit margin in the process of determination of the ALP. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Revision u/s 263 - undisclosed receipts - The vital discrepancies were not pointed out by the Assessing Officer at the time of assessment proceedings. Pr. CIT after making proper enquiry pointed out that that the assessee company had understated its revenue from operations - assessment order was erroneous in so far as it was prejudicial to the interests of revenue. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Disallowance on account of provision for future loss being unascertained liability - in fixed price contracts, the assessee having credited all its revenue, as per the contract, has to provide for all the foreseeable expenses which it is bound to incur as per the contract. Accounting Stand ard AS 7 provides for such an eventuality. - Order of CIT(A) allowing the claim confirmed. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    R&D expenses incurred for partnership firm - Since the assessee is holding 97.5% of share in the partnership firm, SPI it becomes the duty of the assessee to promote the business of the partnership firm in the capacity of the majority stake holders. Incidentally, the revenue authorities have not brought anything on record which could suggest that the expenditures have not been incurred for the purposes of business. Be it assessee's business or the business of the partnership firm where the assessee is a majority stake holder. In our understanding of the law an expenditure is allowable if it is incurred for the purposes of the business of the assessee - claim of expenditure allowed - AT

  • Customs:

    Whether the petitioners have supplied goods to the SEZ Unit, Gujarat or not, can only be looked into after petitioners file a reply to the Department in respect of the letters issued to the petitioners. It is purely question of fact and can be looked into by the competent authority - HC

  • Customs:

    Valuation of goods imported by adidas India - inclusion of sponsorship and endorsement expenses - The show cause notice has only made reference to rule 10(1)(e) of the 2007 Rules for adding the payments made for promotion and expenditure to the price actually paid for determining the transaction value. It has been found that the conditions provided for in rule 10(1)(e) are not satisfied and, therefore, no addition could have been made to the price actually paid by adidas India to adidas Germany for determination of the transaction value of the goods that were imported. - AT

  • Customs:

    Classification of imported goods - Scodix S 75 Digital Inkjet Printer - large format printers which satisfy the conditions of connectability as given in HSN Explanatory Notes are to be classified under tariff heading 84433250 as “Inkjet Printers”. So the conclusion arrived by the authorities below that the goods are not Digital Inkjet Printers or that the goods are not capable of being connected to ADP or net work and therefore is not classifiable under 84433250 is against the clarification given by the Board. - AT

  • Indian Laws:

    Termination of Chanda Deepak Kochhar from the Bank - ICICI is a private body. It is not an instrumentality of the State. It receives no public funding. Service conditions of the Petitioner are not governed by any statute. The dispute raised in this Petition arises from a contract of personal service. The termination of the Petitioner is in the realm of contractual relationship. - For the contractual remedies, the Petitioner will have to approach the appropriate forum and not writ jurisdiction. - HC

  • Service Tax:

    Scope of the term "Wrongly" - Rule 14 of CCR, 2014 - Demand of Interest and penalty - availment of CENVAT and utilization thereof - it is unusual for ‘utilization’ to be qualified with ‘ineligibility’ on its own as ‘utilization’ is solely for the purpose of discharge of tax/duty liability which, even if not warranted, does not, by any stretch of usage, behove description as ‘wrongly.’ Such transfer of epithet, borne out of drafting frailty, can only reasonably mean ‘utilization’ after having been wrongly taken and, therefore, ineligible. - AT

  • Service Tax:

    Recovery of service tax - construction of a railway siding track works - scope of the term railways - The ‘constructions’ excluded from taxability under both the entries in section 65(105) of Finance Act, 1994 are, plainly, unqualified. The legislative intent, therefore, cannot be circumscribed by encroachment, or restrictive interpretation, ventured upon by tax authority. - AT

  • Service Tax:

    Refund of erroneously paid service tax - during the relevant period, the activity was not subject to service tax - the assessee was justified in filing the refund claim as the self-assessment cannot be considered as an assessment made by an officer under Section 73 against which an appeal or challenge lies. - AT

  • Central Excise:

    Reversing of lapsed cenvat credit - Rule 11(3) of CCR, 2004 - stipulation of lapsing is included in Clause (ii) and not in Clause (i). These two clauses are separated by hyphen and use of the word ‘or’. Secondly in the Rule 11(3) (i) it is the option given to the manufacturer or producer for obtaining exemption. In category (ii) there is no such option but a reference is made for final product which has been exempted absolutely under Section 5A of the Act. Therefore, these two categories being distinct, the placement of stipulation cannot be considered as a mere draftsman error. - HC

  • Central Excise:

    Valuation - goods supplied on principal to principal basis - job-work or not - erely because the goods manufactured by M/s. Inova bear the brand name of M/s. Roca, the Department has viewed the transaction as a manufacture done by a job worker on behalf of the principal manufacturer. - hen the transaction is on principal to principal basis, the allegation that the assessee is manufacturing as a job worker for the principal manufacturer cannot sustain. - AT

  • Central Excise:

    Maintainability of Application for Settlement application - co-applicant - Since he is not the main applicant in the present case, he will not be debarred from approaching the Settlement Commission. Had he been the main applicant in this case to whom a duty demand has been issued in the form of a SCN, he would have been barred from approaching the Commission as he was penalised earlier in the settlement of another case relating to him where a SCN was issued to him demanding duty - Commission

  • VAT:

    Maintainability of appeal - Failure to make pre-deposit - in appropriate cases, the First Appellate Authority is expected to exercise its discretion judiciously and it should not insist for pre-deposit, if otherwise the appellant is able to make out a strong prima facie case in his favour. - HC

  • VAT:

    Refusal to issue Form C - Respondents have sought to withhold furnishing of Form-C till the Petitioners resumes payment of installments as undertaken. Prima facie, we find merit in the contention of the Respondents that in such circumstances inherent powers exist in the authority upon noticing an abuse to prevent further abuse. - HC


Notifications


News


Case Laws:

  • GST

  • 2020 (3) TMI 358
  • 2020 (3) TMI 357
  • 2020 (3) TMI 356
  • 2020 (3) TMI 355
  • 2020 (3) TMI 354
  • 2020 (3) TMI 353
  • 2020 (3) TMI 352
  • 2020 (3) TMI 351
  • 2020 (3) TMI 350
  • Income Tax

  • 2020 (3) TMI 362
  • 2020 (3) TMI 361
  • 2020 (3) TMI 360
  • 2020 (3) TMI 349
  • 2020 (3) TMI 348
  • 2020 (3) TMI 347
  • 2020 (3) TMI 346
  • 2020 (3) TMI 345
  • 2020 (3) TMI 344
  • 2020 (3) TMI 343
  • 2020 (3) TMI 342
  • 2020 (3) TMI 341
  • 2020 (3) TMI 340
  • 2020 (3) TMI 339
  • 2020 (3) TMI 338
  • 2020 (3) TMI 337
  • 2020 (3) TMI 336
  • 2020 (3) TMI 335
  • 2020 (3) TMI 334
  • 2020 (3) TMI 333
  • 2020 (3) TMI 332
  • 2020 (3) TMI 331
  • 2020 (3) TMI 330
  • 2020 (3) TMI 329
  • 2020 (3) TMI 328
  • 2020 (3) TMI 327
  • 2020 (3) TMI 298
  • Customs

  • 2020 (3) TMI 359
  • 2020 (3) TMI 326
  • 2020 (3) TMI 325
  • 2020 (3) TMI 324
  • 2020 (3) TMI 323
  • 2020 (3) TMI 322
  • Service Tax

  • 2020 (3) TMI 321
  • 2020 (3) TMI 320
  • 2020 (3) TMI 319
  • 2020 (3) TMI 318
  • 2020 (3) TMI 317
  • 2020 (3) TMI 316
  • 2020 (3) TMI 315
  • 2020 (3) TMI 314
  • 2020 (3) TMI 313
  • Central Excise

  • 2020 (3) TMI 312
  • 2020 (3) TMI 311
  • 2020 (3) TMI 310
  • 2020 (3) TMI 309
  • 2020 (3) TMI 308
  • 2020 (3) TMI 307
  • 2020 (3) TMI 306
  • CST, VAT & Sales Tax

  • 2020 (3) TMI 305
  • 2020 (3) TMI 304
  • 2020 (3) TMI 303
  • Indian Laws

  • 2020 (3) TMI 302
  • 2020 (3) TMI 301
  • 2020 (3) TMI 300
  • 2020 (3) TMI 299
 

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