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Issues Involved:
1. Violation of principles of natural justice. 2. Rejection of books of account under section 145(3) and assessment under section 144. 3. Estimation of unaccounted purchases and profit rate. 4. Credit for TDS. Detailed Analysis: 1. Violation of Principles of Natural Justice: The assessee contended that the assessment order was passed in violation of the principles of natural justice. The argument was that the Assessing Officer (AO) did not provide sufficient opportunities for the assessee to present its case. The Tribunal did not find substantial merit in this argument and did not provide relief on this ground. 2. Rejection of Books of Account under Section 145(3) and Assessment under Section 144: The AO rejected the books of account under section 145(3) on multiple grounds, including unaccounted purchases, capitalization of interest, debiting interest and bank charges to party accounts, interest-free advances, discrepancies in quantitative details, and valuation of closing stock not in accordance with section 145A. - Unaccounted Purchases: The AO alleged unaccounted purchases from M/s. Golden Tensil amounting to Rs. 5,07,19,567 and corresponding sales outside books. The Tribunal found that the credits in the account of M/s. Golden Tensil were on account of receipt of cheques and not purchases. The Tribunal accepted the assessee's explanation that these were accommodation bills for raising finance and not actual purchases. Consequently, there was no basis for unaccounted sales, and the addition made by the AO was deleted. - Capitalization of Interest: The AO objected to the capitalization of interest on loans for plant and machinery. The Tribunal upheld the assessee's treatment of capitalizing interest till the asset was put to use, aligning with accepted accounting principles and section 36(1)(iii) proviso applicable from the subsequent assessment year. - Debiting Interest and Bank Charges to Party Accounts: The Tribunal found that debiting interest and bank charges to party accounts instead of expense accounts was not a defect, as these charges were borne by the parties and not claimed as expenses by the assessee. - Interest-Free Advances: The AO noted interest-free advances to two parties. The Tribunal held that even if borrowed funds were used, only corresponding interest disallowance could be made, not rejection of books. The assessee had sufficient interest-free funds, negating the need for disallowance. - Discrepancies in Quantitative Details and Valuation of Closing Stock: The Tribunal accepted the assessee's explanation of typographical errors in the Tax Audit Report and compliance with section 145A for stock valuation. Non-enclosure of purchase, sales, and stock details with the balance sheet was not considered a defect in the books. The Tribunal concluded that the rejection of books under section 145(3) was not justified. However, due to non-cooperation in verification of expenses, a disallowance of Rs. 5 lakhs out of Freight and Repairs was upheld. 3. Estimation of Unaccounted Purchases and Profit Rate: The AO estimated a 20% profit on unaccounted purchases, which the CIT(A) reduced to 12.5%. The Tribunal found no basis for unaccounted purchases and consequently no unaccounted sales, deleting the addition made by the AO. The Tribunal also found no justification for estimating profit at 12.5% on disclosed turnover, as the main basis for invoking section 145(3) did not survive. The Tribunal accepted the book results with a minor disallowance of Rs. 5 lakhs for non-cooperation in expense verification. 4. Credit for TDS: The AO denied credit for TDS of Rs. 4,06,952 on the ground that the TDS certificate was issued by M/s. Ketan Construction Ltd., while sales invoices were in the name of P.T. Sumber Mitra Jaya. The CIT(A) allowed the credit, noting that the income related to the TDS certificate was accounted for in the assessee's books. The Tribunal upheld the CIT(A)'s decision, finding no reason to interfere. Conclusion: The appeal of the assessee was partly allowed, deleting the addition for unaccounted purchases and rejecting the invocation of section 145(3), with a minor disallowance for non-cooperation. The appeal of the revenue was dismissed, upholding the CIT(A)'s decision on TDS credit.
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