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Home e-Newsletters Index Year 2022 September Day 30 - Friday

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TMI Tax Updates - e-Newsletter
September 30, 2022

Case Laws in this Newsletter:

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



Highlights / Catch Notes

  • Income Tax:

    Assessment u/s 153C - Satisfaction Note for issue of notice u/s 153C - the recovery of the annual report and the share certificate of the Petitioner from premises of Minda Group cannot be considered to be incriminating documents. After all, the Minda Group was not a third party but the issuing authority of the share certificates. I - HC

  • Income Tax:

    Rectification of mistake u/s 154 - Income deemed to accrue or arise in India - The order of rejection of the application u/s 154 issued by the Centralised Processing Centre (CPC), Bangalore are quashed. Consequently, the order passed by the Assessing Officer computed the tax liability as per the intimation u/s 143 (1) and the assessment stands restored to the file of the AO - HC

  • Income Tax:

    Recovery of the amounts from the company and its directors - Liability of directors - Section 179(1), in itself, grants the Directors the liberty to prove that the non-recovery cannot be attributed to gross neglect, misfeasance or breach of duty on their part in relation to the affairs of the company. In the present case, the replies filed by the petitioners to the show cause notices prior to passing of the impugned orders merely contain a bald assumption to this effect. - Recovery confirmed - HC

  • Income Tax:

    Penalty u/s 271(1)(b) - assessee has made no response to the questionnaire - there was no wisdom in the assessment order in respect of alleged non-compliance - when the AO has framed the assessment order u/s 143(3) r.w.s. 153A of the Act and assessment order has not been passed u/s 144 of the Act, therefore the penalty u/s 271(1)(b) of the Act, for non-compliance should not be levied. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Rectification of mistake u/s 154 - enhancing the tax liability of the assessee u/s.115BBE - the impugned addition whether to be made u/s.69A is highly debatable in view of the submissions made by the assessee denying ownership of the document found in the course of search. When the taxability of the addition under a specific section is a point of contention / debatable, the tax levied on the said addition cannot be said to be not debatable. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Disallowance being 10% of expenditure - Disallowance of expenditure @ 10% of the expenditure in the instant case appears to be on the higher side since it gives a profit rate of 37.78% which is not possible in the line of business. Considering the fact that the assessee has already declared profit rate of 9.29%, the disallowance on lumpsum basis in the instant case, in our opinion, meet the ends of justice. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Addition made merely on the basis of declaration made in ITR - typographical error - there is neither any allegation that the amount has been received by the assessee or credited in her bank account nor any material has been brought on record in this regard. Merely because the assessee could not explain the balance amount as mention in her computation of income and return, the same was added to the total income of the assessee by stating the same as income from other sources. - AT

  • Income Tax:

    Validity of reopening assessment u/s 147 - the reopening of assessment made by the AO on irrelevant facts and on a mere reason to suspect cannot survive. We hold that the reopening of assessment for the impugned assessment year is invalid. Hence, the subsequent action taken by the Assessing Officer in pursuance thereof resulting in the impugned assessment order is also invalid. - AT

  • Customs:

    Maintainability of suit for permanent injunction - restraining infringement of trademark, copyright, trade dress etc. against unknown Defendants - None of the goods bearing the impugned mark in the said container no. ECNU4006477, have been allowed to enter India. Accordingly, the injunction is also not required to be passed in view of the statement made in the written statement by the customs authorities. The Plaintiffs are free to take action in accordance with law, either in India, or in other foreign jurisdictions. - HC

  • Customs:

    Determination of method by which the iron (Fe) content in the iron ore - there is a reason for the Revenue to do so inasmuch as when the legislature has found it appropriate that the goods are required to be classified on dry weight basis, it has been accordingly categorically provided for in the relevant schedule under the Tariff Act. This is clear from the fact that the iron ore as categorized under 2601 and the sub headings thereunder, there is no mention whatsoever of any “dry weight” as being canvassed on behalf of the Revenue. - HC

  • Customs:

    Refund alongwith interest claim - classification of coils and spares and accessories - Once the CESTAT has categorically held that coils would fall under tariff heading 8503, it follows on all counts that accessories to the coil should also be treated under the same head, also eligible for duty refund. - HC

  • Customs:

    Valuation - The final assessment of the bills of entry, whereby a variance is brought about in the valuation of the subject goods, which is adverse to the interests of the petitioner, would have to be communicated to the affected party - Admittedly, in this case, the valuation of the subject goods, which forms part of 95 bills of entry, has been enhanced. The basis for enhancement of valuation, apparently, was not communicated to the petitioner. - HC

  • Customs:

    Benefit of the exemption - import of the Helicopters into India - This demand is entirely beyond the allegations made in the show cause notice and has, therefore, to be set aside. Thus, the Commissioner could not have confirmed the aforesaid demand since the appellant had not been put to notice on this allegation in the show cause notice. - AT

  • PMLA:

    Money Laundering - While the Appellate Tribunal is correct in holding that the provisional attachment order and the order of the adjudicating authority confirming attachment suffered from fundamental flaws, thus being without jurisdiction, it fell short of declaring such orders as illegal; it further fell in error in relegating the appellant to the forum of Special Court to seek release of the attached property as it amounts to abdicating its authority and allowing an illegality to continue. - HC

  • PMLA:

    Money Laundering - Validity of look out circular - No action under PMLA can be resorted to unless there is a substratum of a scheduled offence for the same, which substratum should legally exist in the form of a subsisting (not quashed) criminal complaint/inquiry or if it did exist the accused has since been discharged or acquitted by a Court of competent jurisdiction. - HC

  • Central Excise:

    Clandestine removal - Ingots - demands of duty made on account of alleged production based on the number of heats and alleged clandestine removal based on parallel invoices - There is no evidence of any variation of the capacity of the furnace during that period. There are sufficient reason to trust the private records maintained by the appellant itself and hold that the demand on this count is reasonable and needs to be upheld. - AT

  • VAT:

    Jurisdiction - delegation of power to an Officer not below the rank of Deputy Commissioner (CT) and to conduct the enquiry - Section 64 (4) of the TNVAT Act - it does not empower the Commissioner to delegate the power and to pass orders to any lower authority and the Commissioner himself will have to pass orders. - HC


Articles


Notifications


Circulars / Instructions / Orders


News


Case Laws:

  • GST

  • 2022 (9) TMI 1333
  • Income Tax

  • 2022 (9) TMI 1322
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1332
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1331
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1330
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1329
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1328
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1321
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1320
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1319
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1318
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1317
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1316
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1315
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1314
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1313
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1312
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1327
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1326
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1311
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1310
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1309
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1325
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1324
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1308
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1323
  • Customs

  • 2022 (9) TMI 1307
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1306
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1300
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1305
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1304
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1303
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1302
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1301
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1270
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1299
  • Corporate Laws

  • 2022 (9) TMI 1298
  • Insolvency & Bankruptcy

  • 2022 (9) TMI 1297
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1296
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1295
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1294
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1291
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1290
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1289
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1288
  • PMLA

  • 2022 (9) TMI 1287
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1286
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1271
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1272
  • Service Tax

  • 2022 (9) TMI 1285
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1284
  • Central Excise

  • 2022 (9) TMI 1293
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1283
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1282
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1281
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1280
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1279
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1278
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1277
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1276
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1275
  • CST, VAT & Sales Tax

  • 2022 (9) TMI 1274
  • 2022 (9) TMI 1273
  • Indian Laws

  • 2022 (9) TMI 1292
 

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