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2006 (2) TMI 59 - HC - Income TaxRecalling and rectification of decision passed by the tribunal (ITAT ) are limited to mistakes apparent on record - ITAT can t rectify its order on the ground that it didn t consider the decision of other bench or the matter is debatable
Issues:
Validity of order passed by the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal under section 254 of the Income-tax Act, 1961. Analysis: The petitioner challenged the validity of an order passed by the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal under section 254 of the Income-tax Act, 1961. The Tribunal had recalled its previous order and posted the appeal for rehearing after noticing certain grounds. The Tribunal recalled the order based on two distinct grounds. Firstly, it failed to consider a decision by a three-member Bench of the Tribunal at Allahabad, which allowed examination of the validity of a search in an appeal under the Income-tax Act. Secondly, the Tribunal found the issue of framing an assessment under section 158BC based on estimation to be debatable. However, the petitioner argued that these grounds were insufficient for a recall order as per section 254(2) of the Income-tax Act, which only permits rectification of apparent mistakes, not a review. The court agreed that the power of the Tribunal is limited to correcting mistakes apparent from the record, not a total substitution of the order. The court cited previous decisions emphasizing the distinction between rectification of mistakes and a fresh disposal of the appeal. The court highlighted that the power of the Tribunal under section 254(2) is restricted to rectifying mistakes apparent from the record, not a review. Recalling the entire order would imply passing a fresh order, which is not the legislative intent. The order passed under section 254(1) is the effective order for the appeal, and any amendment under section 254(2) merges with the original order. The court emphasized that recalling an order necessitates a rehearing and readjudication of the entire subject matter, which is not permissible under section 254(2). The court found the Tribunal unjustified in recalling the order and setting the matter for a fresh hearing based on debatable points or missed previous decisions. In conclusion, the court allowed the petition, quashed the order of recall passed by the Tribunal, and permitted the parties to seek redress against the original order as legally permissible. The court emphasized that the reasons provided by the Tribunal for the recall were insufficient under section 254(2) of the Income-tax Act, and the appeal should not have been set for a de novo hearing based on those grounds.
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