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Home e-Newsletters Index Year 2023 June Day 23 - Friday

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TMI Tax Updates - e-Newsletter
June 23, 2023

Case Laws in this Newsletter:

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



Highlights / Catch Notes

  • GST:

    Seeking information from the Advocates relating to their clients - Evasion of GST - It is a settled legal position that a communication is privileged if it is made to a legal advisor by a client after the commission of a crime and with a view to his defence, but it is not privileged if it is made before the commission of the crime or wrong and for the purpose of being guided or assisted in furthering or committing it. Thus, Section 126 of the Evidence Act is designed to abort the attempt to intrude privacy of the close preserve of the fund of information conveyed by the client closeted in confidence. - HC

  • GST:

    Can an appeal be filed beyond the time period prescribed u/s 107 (4) of the CGST Act, 2017? - The Central Goods and Services Tax Act is a special statute and a self-contained code by itself. Section 107 has an inbuilt mechanism and has impliedly excluded the application of the Limitation Act. It is trite, that the Limitation Act will apply only if it is extended to the special statute. It is also rudimentary that the provisions of a fiscal statute have to be strictly construed and interpreted - HC

  • GST:

    Refund of amount deposited wrongly - GST was deposited with different / wrong registration number (GSTIN) - It is a settled law that no one cannot be made to suffer for the fault of another. Since this deposit of GST was not reflected in the account of the petitioner, therefore, a show cause notice was issued and the petitioner had to pay the GST to the department with interest again in order to avoid the cancellation of GSTIN - Refund / return allowed - HC

  • GST:

    Determination of Tax - Prescribed procedure u/s 75 of CGST Act - Violation of principles of natural justice (audi alterem partem) - Seeing as the petitioners have specifically requested for an opportunity of personal hearing, it was incumbent upon the officer to have fix the matter for hearing, heard the petitioners and thereafter determined the tax payable. - HC

  • GST:

    Refund of penalty amount deposited in view of the subsequent decision of High Court - Detention of goods alongwith vehicle - levy of penalty - expired E-way bill - Scope of the decision in the case of PUSHPA DEVI JAIN [2023 (3) TMI 1375 - CALCUTTA HIGH COURT] - Although, the application of a judgment is prospective unless specifically made applicable retrospectively but the judgment and order of the Hon’ble Division Bench is available before me at the time of adjudicating the writ petition. The ratio Puspha Devi therefor, becomes applicable. - Refund allowed - HC

  • GST:

    Determination of tax - Procedure prescribed u/s 75(4) of CGST not followed - Validity of assessment order - violation of principles of natural justice - requirement of providing opportunity of personal hearing - the 1st respondent herein passed the impugned order not only in violation of mandatory provisions under sub-section (4) of Section 75 of the Act, 2017, but also in violation of the principles of natural justice. Therefore, the impugned order is liable to be set aside. - HC

  • Income Tax:

    Reopening of assessment - act of giving only 12 hours to file reply to the show cause notice by the respondents - When the show cause notice-cum-draft assessment order is issued to the petitioner, reasonable/adequate opportunity was required to be given to him. In the present case, adequate opportunity was not given to the petitioner and therefore only on this ground the petition deserves to be allowed. - AO may initiate any action from the stage from where it has been left - HC

  • Income Tax:

    Grant of credit for tax deducted at source u/s 195 and surcharge - Tribunal was right in holding that the advances which are once held to be not income, could not have been subjected to tax at source u/s 195 of the Act. - Tribunal was right in concluding that the refund or grant of credit of such tax deducted at source, could not be denied. - HC

  • Income Tax:

    Fees for Technical Services [FTS] - Receipt of Cost-to-cost reimbursements on account of secondment of employees - seconded personnel are employees of EY India firms - cost to cost reimbursement on account of secondment of employees cannot be treated as FTS - The income has been taxed as salary in their respective hands - Therefore, the very same amount could not, in law, be subjected twice - AT

  • Income Tax:

    TDS u/s 195 - Withholding Tax - Purchases for copyrighted articles - Royalty - The amounts paid by resident Indian end-users/distributors to non-resident computer software manufacturers/suppliers, as consideration for the resale/use of the computer software through EULAs/distribution agreements, is not the payment of royalty for the use of copyright in the computer software, and that the same does not give rise to any income taxable in India - No TDS liability - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Exemption u/s 11 - Condonation of delay in filing the audit report in Form 10B - non filing of Audit Report along with return of income is a procedural omission and cannot be an impediment in law in claiming the exemption, we allow this appeal condoning the delay in filing the Audit Report in Form No. 10B. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Revision u/s 263 - LTCG on sale of properties - property had been sold in piecemeal in 14 transactions - stock-in-trade or capital asset - Whether to accept the transactions as being taxable under the Long Term Capital Gain or to reject them and tax them under the head income from business would have been duly considered by the AO at the time of assessment proceedings and the conclusion arrived at by the AO was definitely one of the plausible views - Revision order quashed - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Reopening of assessment u/s 147 - objections regarding reason to believe raised first time at appellate stage - If reasons recorded upon being challenged at any stage of proceedings falls to withstand the test of judicial scrutiny, in that eventuality, upon such recorded reasons no valid notice can be issued and any assessment framed consequent thereto even taking shelter of ‘no objection’ from the assessee could save the assessment from being held to be declared void-ab-initio and the objection of Revenue was rejected. - AT

  • Customs:

    Valuation of imported goods - Higher values available on contemporaneous imports NIDB/DGOV data on similar good - The valuation of similar goods depends on factors such as country of origin, quantity of the goods imported, produced by the same person who produced the goods being valued, quality of the goods i.e. characteristics, composition & like component material. Moreover, the NIDB data is not exhaustive in nature as it only depicts the value at which the goods are assessed but not whether such assessed value is proposed value by the importer or enhanced value buy the proper officer - the enhancement of value has been done arbitrarily. - AT

  • Customs:

    Levy of Anti-Dumping Duty - Time gap between end of the provisional ADD and levy of Final ADD - upon a harmonious conjoint reading of Customs Rules read with Section 9 of the Customs Tariff Act, 1975 the duty for the intervening period, when the provisional duty had lapsed could not be collected retroactively. - SC

  • Customs:

    Rejection of application for rectification of mistake - Applicability of extended period of limitation - Tribunal did not consider the issue sought to rectified - Maybe, such a question was not raised by the appellant in the memo of appeal presented before the Tribunal in specific terms but, indisputably, this question remains a jurisdictional question because without existence of the elements specified in the said Proviso to Section 28(1), the show cause notice in question, as issued on 26.09.2006 in relation to the imports made from November, 2001 to April, 2003, could not have been maintained. - Matter restored back before the tribunal - SC

  • Customs:

    Debit of Education Cess and Secondary Higher Education cess through MEIS/SEIS scrips - The issue involved herein is no more res judicata and in view of clause 11 of the Board’s circular dated 10.1.2020, which permits the payment made through debit in duty credit scrips for past cases, there is no justification for insisting in cash payment towards education cess and secondary & higher education cess and accordingly the issue is decided in favour of the appellant herein. - AT

  • Customs:

    Jurisdiction of the Bench to Hear the application of Rectification of Mistake - recall of the entire order - an application for rectification of a mistake u/s129B (2) of the Customs Act shall be heard by a Bench consisting of the Members who heard the appeal giving rise to the application, unless the President directs otherwise. - Once an application for rectification of mistake had also been filed by the appellant, it was the bounden duty of the office to have listed the application before the same Bench - AT

  • Customs:

    Classification of goods intended to be imported - Menthol Scented Sweet Supari - Flavoured and coated Illaichi - There cannot be a situation where same product is subjected to levy of basic customs duty under one CTH and levy of IGST under another CTH of the Customs Tariff Act, 1975. - The product namely Menthol Scented Sweet Supari merits classification under CTH 2106 90 30 - Flavoured and coated Illaichi merits classification under CTH 2106 90 99, of the First Schedule to the Customs Tariff Act, 1975. - AAR

  • Customs:

    Classification of goods proposed to be imported and benefit of exemption from Customs Duty (BCD or CVD) - Nokia 7210 SAS products - performing functions such as reception, conversion and transmission of data - The notification does not distinguish routers based on intended use or capability. It does not bar the routers used by telecom network and support service providers. - Benefit of exemption available to routers - AAR

  • Direct Taxes:

    Benami transaction - burden of proof - principle of preponderance of probability that although the suit property was purchased in name of Wife but the consideration money was paid or provided by her husband (deceased) - whether the transaction i.e. the purchase of suit property under registered deed of sale by Wife of the deceased is benami transaction? - Dispute raised by the son to claim 1/3 share in the property - HELD No - HC

  • Indian Laws:

    Dishonour of Cheque - vicarious liability of director -Proceedings against its Director in absence of the company being joined as party respondent accused in the original complaint - there cannot be any iota of doubt for maintaining prosecution under Section 141 of the Act, the company must be joined as an accused. The other categories of offenders can only be brought in the dragnet on the touchstone of vicarious liability as the same has been stipulated in the provision itself. - HC

  • Indian Laws:

    Dishonour of Cheque - compounding of offences - amicable settlement arrived inter-se parties - whether this Court can quash the judgments of conviction and order of sentence recorded by the courts below on the basis of amicable settlement arrived inter-se parties while exercising power under Section 482 of CRPC or not? - Held Yes - HC

  • Service Tax:

    Extended Period of Limitation - Suppression etc. cannot be imputed against the appellant merely because they failed to pay the tax on time. It is settled legal position that mere allegation of suppression is not sufficient, it has to be established through some evidence as mere omission to give some information will not always be termed as suppression with intention to evade tax, something more needs to be brought on record by the department. - AT

  • Service Tax:

    Job Work - manufacture of medicines - Exemption to taxable service of production of goods on and for behalf of a client - benefit denied on the ground that Excise Duty has neither been paid by the appellant (job worker) nor by the client (principal) - As the appellant is the manufacturer of the pharmaceutical goods, demand of Service Tax is not sustainable - AT

  • Service Tax:

    Nature of activity - Bariatric surgery - To be classified as cosmetic surgery or plastic surgery - Bariatric surgery performed by the appellant on patients suffering from morbid obesity coupled with life-taking diseases like Type-II diabetes and Hypertension, arthritis, lipid disorder or obstructed sleep apnea or disease of a like nature, cannot not be subjected to service tax under section 65(105)(zzzzk) of the Finance Act. - AT

  • VAT:

    Cancellation of the permission to pay tax on compounded basis - shifting of business premises - On applying the principle of noscitur a sociis, to determine the scope and ambit of sub clause (iv) of Section 8(f), it can be safely stated that the shifting of a place of business can be cited as a valid and sufficient reason for cancelling a permission already granted only if such shifting is without the knowledge of the Assessing Officer and thereby had an element of suppression of relevant information or failure to furnish relevant information. - HC


Articles


Notifications


Circulars / Instructions / Orders


News


Case Laws:

  • GST

  • 2023 (6) TMI 945
  • 2023 (6) TMI 944
  • 2023 (6) TMI 943
  • 2023 (6) TMI 942
  • 2023 (6) TMI 941
  • 2023 (6) TMI 940
  • 2023 (6) TMI 939
  • 2023 (6) TMI 938
  • 2023 (6) TMI 937
  • 2023 (6) TMI 936
  • Income Tax

  • 2023 (6) TMI 935
  • 2023 (6) TMI 934
  • 2023 (6) TMI 933
  • 2023 (6) TMI 932
  • 2023 (6) TMI 931
  • 2023 (6) TMI 930
  • 2023 (6) TMI 929
  • 2023 (6) TMI 928
  • 2023 (6) TMI 927
  • 2023 (6) TMI 926
  • 2023 (6) TMI 925
  • 2023 (6) TMI 924
  • 2023 (6) TMI 923
  • 2023 (6) TMI 922
  • 2023 (6) TMI 921
  • 2023 (6) TMI 920
  • 2023 (6) TMI 919
  • 2023 (6) TMI 918
  • 2023 (6) TMI 917
  • 2023 (6) TMI 916
  • 2023 (6) TMI 915
  • Benami Property

  • 2023 (6) TMI 914
  • Customs

  • 2023 (6) TMI 913
  • 2023 (6) TMI 912
  • 2023 (6) TMI 911
  • 2023 (6) TMI 910
  • 2023 (6) TMI 909
  • 2023 (6) TMI 908
  • 2023 (6) TMI 907
  • 2023 (6) TMI 906
  • 2023 (6) TMI 905
  • 2023 (6) TMI 904
  • Corporate Laws

  • 2023 (6) TMI 903
  • Insolvency & Bankruptcy

  • 2023 (6) TMI 902
  • Service Tax

  • 2023 (6) TMI 901
  • 2023 (6) TMI 900
  • 2023 (6) TMI 899
  • 2023 (6) TMI 898
  • Central Excise

  • 2023 (6) TMI 897
  • CST, VAT & Sales Tax

  • 2023 (6) TMI 896
  • 2023 (6) TMI 895
  • Indian Laws

  • 2023 (6) TMI 894
  • 2023 (6) TMI 893
  • 2023 (6) TMI 892
 

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