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Home e-Newsletters Index Year 2023 June Day 12 - Monday

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TMI Tax Updates - e-Newsletter
June 12, 2023

Case Laws in this Newsletter:

GST Income Tax Customs Insolvency & Bankruptcy Service Tax Central Excise



Highlights / Catch Notes

  • GST:

    Maintainability of writ petition - Condonation of delay in filing of appeal before Commissioner (appeals) - The claim of Input Tax Credit and the computation thereon ought to have been agitated before the appellate authority. Having not availed the statutory remedies available, the petitioner cannot seek to approach this Court under Article 226 of the Constitution of India to challenge an assessment order especially with respect to the computation of the turn over and the determination of the taxable turnover and the tax payable, as arrived at by the Assessing Officer. - HC

  • GST:

    Refund of GST - Export of goods - allegation of use of fake invoices to claim refund - Since the present is a case of an allegation of raising fake invoices and the matter is under investigation, we are not inclined to issue a direction for refund but to direct the competent authority to decide petitioner’s refund application in accordance with law keeping in view the mandate of Section 54 of the CGST Act and provisions contained in Rule 96 of the CGST Rules and all relevant considerations within a period of 60 days. - HC

  • GST:

    Levy of penalty equal to 200% - Detention of consignments - quantity of the boxes were lesser than the quantity shown in the document - levying penalty on the entire consignment is not proper - appellate authority directed to recalculate to take note of the order and recalculate the penalty in respect of shortage in quantity and over than quantity penalty shall be levied at 200% - remaining penalty to be refunded - HC

  • Income Tax:

    Calculation of Net winnings from online games during the previous year, for the purposes of section 115BBJ - New Rule 132 inserted - TDS Form 16, certificate amended - various TDS Returns / statements amended - Income-tax (Fifth Amendment) Rules, 2023 - Notification

  • Income Tax:

    Rejection of books of accounts - best judgement assessment - only objection raised by the AO is non-filing of the tax audit report - CIT- A deleting the addition - Assessee stated that it has produced books of account along with vouchers and when the AO has not considered the books of account and vouchers but rejected the books of account of the assessee the same were produced before the ld. CIT(A) and therefore, there is no violation of Rule 46A of the Income Tax Rules. - Order of CIT(A) sustained - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Ex-parte order passed by CIT-A -NFAC - submission of assessee that the notices issued by CIT (A) NFAC through mail went to Spam for which he was not able to see the notices issued and remained unrepresented - Considering the totality of the facts of the case and in the interest of justice, matter restored back before CIT(A) - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Unexplained cash credit u/s 68 - supporting evidences to substantiate the source of cash found from the possession - Assessee has shown a taxable income of Rs. 2.30 crores during the year. Before us, the ld. CIT-DR for the revenue failed to bring any contrary fact against the availability of cash in hand for preceeding assessment years at various specified branches from where the cash was transported. - Additions deleted - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Cessation of liability u/s 41(1) - Notice issued u/s 133(6) could not be served upon the creditors - while the assessee has continued to declare the trading liability in its books of account, no benefit can be said to have been obtained in respect of such trading liability by way of remission or cessation thereof and thus the requirement of Section 41(1) are not satisfied - The additions made u/s 41(1) set aside and reversed. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Penalty levied u/s 270A - misreporting of income - Since AO failed to bring the addition/disallowance he made in quantum assessment, under the ken of (a) to (f) of the sub-section(9) of section 270A of the Act, the penalty levied for misreporting @ 200% cannot be sustained because it is trite law that penalty provisions have to be strictly interpreted. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Disallowance of paddy purchase - purchases from Societies and Samathies - A bogus purchase implies no purchase, while verification w.r.t. s. 40A(3) necessarily implies a seller and a purchaser, i.e., a payer and payee, both of whom coalesce into one in case of a bogus claim. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Unexplained cash deposits - Genuiness of Agricultre income - Sale of mango and chikoo and miscellaneous vegetable - from number of trees the estimation of yields of fruits could be easily got estimated. No such exercise was conducted before making any enhancement. - In absence of adverse evidence against furnishing by assessee, Ld. CIT(A) was not justified in making enhancement - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Method of valuation of shares - Addition u/s 56(2)(viib) - The lower authorities have not examined the basis on which the valuation is done and from the perusal of facts, no details in this regard have been called for by the lower authorities. The valuation report is rejected based on the objective satisfaction and not based on detailed examination. - Additions deleted - AT

  • Customs:

    Right to speedy trial - Allegation of corruption on the ASI / Policer officer posted at Railway - Abetment in evasion of duty - Inordinate delay in filing the PR/final report - The petitioners claim for right to speedy trial cannot be entertained of this case as there are sufficient materials against the present petitioner in the P.R. there are no justification to entertain the present petitioner to quash the criminal proceeding. - HC

  • Customs:

    Advance authorisation Scheme - supply of valves - deemed exports - manufacturing activity carried out or not - Even in the writ affidavit, the petitioner has maintained that it has been procuring indigenously procured items for the process of manufacture. One approach is to state that even without such procurement and additions to the imported valves, the processes of testing of the valves prior to final supply would suffice to satisfy the definition of manufacture under Clause 9.36 of the Exim Policy. - HC

  • Customs:

    Classification of imported goods - Non-Texturised Polyster Lining Fabric - the Department proposed to classify the goods under the CTH 5407 only on the basis of end use. End use of a product cannot be a criteria for classification. However, as held by the Hon’ble Supreme court in the case of Indian Aluminium Cables vs UOI, end use alone cannot determine the classification. The other parameters such as the nature of cloth, nature of coating etc are required to be ascertained to classify the fabrics. - AT

  • Customs:

    Classification of goods - import of PU coated leather cloths - test report of CLRI mentions the goods as ‘flock fabric’ - Circular dated 06.10.1998 - The said circular prescribed End use Certificate may be obtained in such circumstances in respect of imports were made under Notification No. 11/97-Cus. The said order points out that this circular can be applied prospectively and not retrospectively - Benefit of exemption allowed - AT

  • IBC:

    Application for intervention filed by an unfortunate financial creditor - As on today, both CIRPs are on hold. This is despite the fact that the order passed in favour of the proposed intervenor in his own application under Section 7 IBC, by the NCLAT has attained finality and there is no impediment for the CIPR initiated by the proposed intervenor to proceed further - It is understandable that if the CIRP initiated by the respondent in the above civil appeal is on track. If it is not on track, at least the other CIPR should be allowed to proceed. The Corporate Debtor cannot be allowed to have benefit of the best of both the worlds. - SC

  • IBC:

    CIRP - Confinement of CIRP to one project - absence of any Project financing being brought in by the Promotor - absence of any Project Wise Accounts - whether the Adjudicating Authority was justified in initially admitting the Section 7 Application against the Corporate Debtor and thereafter confining it to a single Project Dreamz Sumadhur Project only? - Order of NCLT sustained - AT

  • Service Tax:

    Nature of activity - Renting of Immovable Property Service or not? - It is sharing of profit of the business of the hotel and not a consideration paid for renting of the Hotel Building. If the business is at a loss or suppose the hotel has to be closed down (for eg., in a situation like lockdown during COVID-19) there may not be any income for the hotel. The appellant then does not get any consideration. - Demand set aside - AT

  • Service Tax:

    Classification of services - Contract for carrying out not only site grading but also construction of Roads, Boundary wall, Drains lines and associated works for crude oil terminal of Bina Refinery Project - The appellant’s activity is not covered by the definition of “site formation and clearance, excavation and earth moving and demolition service. The majority of work relates to civil work in the nature for construction of road, boundary wall and drainage lines. The essential character of this composite work is reflected as that of construction service. - AT

  • Central Excise:

    Valuation - interconnected units - These two entities charged higher price on the third parties on which no excise duty was paid. Therefore this is not a case where Revenue neutrality will arise. It is a clear case that Appellant was avoiding Excise Duty payment by charging higher price for the supplies made by their interconnected units. - the fact of suppression is also well established - Demand confirmed - AT

  • Central Excise:

    Valuation - inclusion of amount of subsidy - Subsidy under the promotion policy does not reduce the selling price - The amount of subsidy under the promotion policy is not an additional consideration - Section 9 of the Rajasthan VAT Act, 2003 would have no application to the facts of the present case - AT


Articles


Notifications


Circulars / Instructions / Orders


Case Laws:

  • GST

  • 2023 (6) TMI 447
  • 2023 (6) TMI 446
  • 2023 (6) TMI 445
  • 2023 (6) TMI 444
  • Income Tax

  • 2023 (6) TMI 443
  • 2023 (6) TMI 442
  • 2023 (6) TMI 441
  • 2023 (6) TMI 440
  • 2023 (6) TMI 439
  • 2023 (6) TMI 438
  • 2023 (6) TMI 437
  • 2023 (6) TMI 436
  • 2023 (6) TMI 435
  • 2023 (6) TMI 434
  • 2023 (6) TMI 433
  • 2023 (6) TMI 432
  • 2023 (6) TMI 431
  • 2023 (6) TMI 430
  • 2023 (6) TMI 429
  • 2023 (6) TMI 428
  • 2023 (6) TMI 427
  • 2023 (6) TMI 426
  • Customs

  • 2023 (6) TMI 425
  • 2023 (6) TMI 424
  • 2023 (6) TMI 423
  • 2023 (6) TMI 422
  • 2023 (6) TMI 421
  • 2023 (6) TMI 420
  • 2023 (6) TMI 419
  • Insolvency & Bankruptcy

  • 2023 (6) TMI 418
  • 2023 (6) TMI 417
  • 2023 (6) TMI 416
  • 2023 (6) TMI 415
  • 2023 (6) TMI 408
  • Service Tax

  • 2023 (6) TMI 414
  • 2023 (6) TMI 413
  • 2023 (6) TMI 412
  • Central Excise

  • 2023 (6) TMI 411
  • 2023 (6) TMI 410
  • 2023 (6) TMI 409
 

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