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Home e-Newsletters Index Year 2021 August Day 23 - Monday

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TMI Tax Updates - e-Newsletter
August 23, 2021

Case Laws in this Newsletter:

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



Highlights / Catch Notes

  • GST:

    Levy of GST - leasing of tank containers taken form a supplier - lessor located outside India and the tank containers do not reach India - Finance lease - The terms of the agreement clearly indicate that the property in goods passes to the applicant only when he exercises the option failing which the property has to be returned back to the lessor at a specific deposed indicated by him. Therefore during the period of lease the transaction remains a service and the moment the option to purchase the goods is exercised by the applicant it becomes the transaction of sale. Hence the transaction made by the applicant does not fall under Entry 1 (c) of Schedule II to the CGST Act. - Liable to GST - AAR

  • GST:

    Refund of input tax credit along with Interest - Pursuant to the interim order dated 06.04.2021, the respondent no. 4 credited the principal amount in the electronic credit ledger of the petitioner only on 08.04.2021 and filed affidavit to this effect. - this Court disposes of the present writ petition enabling the petitioner to file appropriate petition before the respondent no.4 for the purposes of lodging a claim of statutory interest for the period from issuance of Form GST PMT-03 (annexure-6) till its credit vide order dated 08.04.2021. - the petitioner cannot be made to suffer on account of laches on the part of the respondents. - HC

  • GST:

    Maintainability of petition - fair opportunity of hearing and sufficient time was not provided - order passed in ex-parte - violation of principles of natural justice - Order quashed and set aside - Attachment of bank accounts vacated. - Matter restored back. - HC

  • Income Tax:

    Validity of reopening of assessment u/s 147 - if the assessing officer has cause or justification to know or suppose that income has escaped assessment, it can be said that he has reason to believe that an income has escaped assessment. In such a case, the High Court would not be clothed with the jurisdiction to examine the reasons which weighed in the mind of the assessing officer to issue the notice - this is not the appropriate stage for the purpose of examining the reasons - HC

  • Income Tax:

    Nature of receipt against termination of lease agreement - taxable under the head income from other sources or income from house property or not taxable as capital receipt - Appellant has submitted that it is a capital receipt but the appellant itself has shown it as revenue receipt and claimed standard deduction. - Additions confirmed - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Addition u/s 68 - anonymous donations u/s 115BBC - the action of the A.O. to treat the deposits under reference as anonymous donations u/s 115BBC is completely unlawful since all the loan creditors had opening balances and had also filed copies of ITRs, Thus, by no stretch of imagination could the AO treat these loans as anonymous donation u/s 115BBC. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Deemed dividend - unsecured loans - Group companies - since the two concerns are closely related to each other and the transactions are not at arm’s length. It is within their exclusive knowledge as to why they have treated the same as ICDs and argued before CIT(A) Jammu in the case of GI Power Corporation Ltd., as loan. Therefore, the argument of the ld. Counsel that provisions of section 2(22)(e) are not applicable does not hold good. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Rectification u/s 254 - Penalty u/s 271(1)(c) was deleted - Without prejudice to the above, assuming the findings of the ITAT is not correct than it would not amount to a mistake apparent from record which could be rectified under the provision of section 254(2) of the Act. If the decision of the ITAT is wrong than the aggrieved parties can approach to the Higher Judicial forum i.e. Jurisdictional High Court. But such findings cannot be rectified on the reasoning that there is a mistake apparent from the record. If we do so it would amount to review its own order by the ITAT which is not permissible. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Bogus purchases - estimation of profit - It could be safely concluded that assessee could have made purchases only from grey market in order to have savings from VAT and incidental profit element thereon. It would be just and fair to bring to tax only the profit element embedded in the value of such disputed purchases in as much as the ld. CIT(A) accepted the fact that the goods made by the assessee from the aforesaid suppliers had been actually consumed by it in the projects. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Bogus purchases - information that was received by the A.O from the DGIT(Inv.) - now when the assessee had not only substantiated the authenticity of the purchases claimed to have been made from the aforementioned parties on the basis of supporting documentary evidence which had not been dislodged by the lower authorities, but had also got the confirmations from the respective parties alongwith their “affidavits”, therefore, there could have been no justification in the absence of any material proving to the contrary to doubt the genuineness of the purchases claimed by the assessee to have been made from the aforementioned parties. - Additions deleted - AT

  • IBC:

    Contempt Jurisdiction - ‘Aggrieved’ person - It is for the Tribunal to find out whether its order has been disobeyed in a ‘wilful’ manner and the mental element is to be adjudged by the ‘Tribunal’ indicating the state of mind of the ‘contemnor’ - When the ‘Tribunal’ has the requisite power under the Section 425 of the Companies Act, 2013 to punish a person/contemnor, then, the Tribunal is to exercise its power and to adjudicate the Contempt Petition on its file, of course, on merits - AT

  • Service Tax:

    Reverse charge mechanism - wrongly availed credit and utilized the credit - the appellants were not liable to pay service tax under reverse charge mechanism prior to introduction of Section 66A in the Finance Act, 1994. - Although, there was no liability to pay the tax as per law, the appellants have discharged the tax liability as a service recipient and availed credit. So the situation is revenue neutral also. - AT

  • Central Excise:

    Delay in proceeding with SCN - SCN was issued in 2006 - Order in Writ petition was passed in 2010 - Reply to SCN was filed in 2010 - A corrigendum was issued in 2016, PH was fixed and extensive reply was filed in 2017 - matter was kept pending in the call book as a policy decision - Directions issued to decide the matter not later than 6-12-2021 - HC

  • Central Excise:

    CENVAT Credit - input services - The Department did not file any appeal against this order dated 17.11.2017 of the Tribunal and so the order passed by the Tribunal attained finality. The Commissioner was, therefore, required to examine only this limited issue on remand, but as the order would indicate, the Commissioner denied CENVAT credit observing that the work was basically of development of a civil structure of mining area by way of construction of decline/ramp and the same would merit classification as ‘construction services’, which services had been excluded under rule 2(l)(A) of the Credit Rules w.e.f. 01.04.2011. The Commissioner, therefore, in regard to the subsequent two show cause notices also went beyond the remand order. - AT


Articles


Notifications


Case Laws:

  • GST

  • 2021 (8) TMI 892
  • 2021 (8) TMI 891
  • 2021 (8) TMI 890
  • 2021 (8) TMI 889
  • 2021 (8) TMI 882
  • 2021 (8) TMI 881
  • 2021 (8) TMI 879
  • 2021 (8) TMI 877
  • 2021 (8) TMI 876
  • 2021 (8) TMI 843
  • 2021 (8) TMI 842
  • Income Tax

  • 2021 (8) TMI 886
  • 2021 (8) TMI 885
  • 2021 (8) TMI 884
  • 2021 (8) TMI 883
  • 2021 (8) TMI 874
  • 2021 (8) TMI 873
  • 2021 (8) TMI 871
  • 2021 (8) TMI 870
  • 2021 (8) TMI 869
  • 2021 (8) TMI 868
  • 2021 (8) TMI 865
  • 2021 (8) TMI 864
  • 2021 (8) TMI 863
  • 2021 (8) TMI 862
  • 2021 (8) TMI 861
  • 2021 (8) TMI 860
  • 2021 (8) TMI 859
  • 2021 (8) TMI 858
  • 2021 (8) TMI 855
  • 2021 (8) TMI 854
  • 2021 (8) TMI 853
  • 2021 (8) TMI 852
  • 2021 (8) TMI 851
  • 2021 (8) TMI 849
  • 2021 (8) TMI 846
  • 2021 (8) TMI 845
  • 2021 (8) TMI 844
  • 2021 (8) TMI 841
  • Customs

  • 2021 (8) TMI 878
  • Corporate Laws

  • 2021 (8) TMI 848
  • 2021 (8) TMI 840
  • Insolvency & Bankruptcy

  • 2021 (8) TMI 867
  • 2021 (8) TMI 857
  • 2021 (8) TMI 856
  • 2021 (8) TMI 850
  • 2021 (8) TMI 847
  • Service Tax

  • 2021 (8) TMI 875
  • 2021 (8) TMI 866
  • Central Excise

  • 2021 (8) TMI 888
  • 2021 (8) TMI 872
  • CST, VAT & Sales Tax

  • 2021 (8) TMI 887
  • 2021 (8) TMI 880
 

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