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2014 (11) TMI 1016 - AT - Income Tax


  1. 2024 (3) TMI 710 - AT
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  17. 2021 (2) TMI 1014 - AT
  18. 2020 (11) TMI 521 - AT
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  37. 2018 (6) TMI 1051 - AT
  38. 2018 (6) TMI 229 - AT
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  40. 2018 (5) TMI 131 - AT
  41. 2018 (3) TMI 2034 - AT
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  44. 2017 (11) TMI 861 - AT
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  47. 2017 (11) TMI 1347 - AT
  48. 2017 (10) TMI 584 - AT
  49. 2017 (9) TMI 1581 - AT
  50. 2018 (4) TMI 1217 - AT
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  60. 2017 (1) TMI 1698 - AT
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  79. 2016 (1) TMI 893 - AT
  80. 2015 (7) TMI 362 - AT
  81. 2015 (6) TMI 944 - AT
  82. 2015 (3) TMI 1116 - AT
Issues involved:
1. Addition of &8377; 4,98,80,892/- under section 69C of the Income Tax Act.
2. Genuineness of purchases made by the assessee from certain parties.
3. Disallowance of claimed purchases by the Assessing Officer.
4. Rejection of appeal by the Ld. CIT(A) and confirmation of addition.
5. Lack of verification by the authorities regarding payments and work done.
6. Justification of purchases by the assessee.

Analysis:

1. The appeal was against the addition of &8377; 4,98,80,892/- under section 69C of the Income Tax Act, where the assessee contended that the purchases were genuine, but the Assessing Officer treated them as not genuine due to suppliers being blacklisted by the Sales tax department.

2. The assessee, a partnership firm engaged in civil contracts, faced scrutiny as the AO observed discrepancies in purchases. The AO found many suppliers blacklisted and canceled by the Sales tax department, leading to suspicion of genuineness. The assessee failed to produce suppliers but claimed purchases were made through account payee cheques.

3. The AO, after receiving no satisfactory response, treated the purchases as bogus, adding the amount to the total income. The Ld. CIT(A) upheld this decision, stating the assessee failed to substantiate purchases without delivery challans and rejected financial ratio analysis.

4. The Ld. CIT(A) dismissed the appeal, emphasizing the lack of evidence correlating purchases with project use. The assessee's argument of work completion and payment receipt from the Municipal Corporation was not accepted, leading to the confirmation of the addition.

5. The Tribunal noted the AO's lack of further investigation despite payment proofs. It criticized the reliance on suspicion and failure to verify work with the Municipal Corporation. The Tribunal disagreed with the CIT(A)'s approach and emphasized the importance of verifying payments and work done.

6. The Tribunal found the purchases supported by proper invoices and payment evidence, refuting the Hawala trader suspicion. It highlighted the lack of cash receipts from suppliers and directed the AO to delete the addition, noting the profitability ratio analysis and legitimate nature of purchases.

This detailed analysis covers the issues raised in the legal judgment comprehensively, outlining the arguments presented by the parties involved and the reasoning behind the final decision.

 

 

 

 

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