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Issues:
Provisional assessment under section 20 of the Karnataka Agricultural Income-tax Act, 1957 - Application of rule 9(c) for valuation of coffee points - Scope of assessing authority's power in making provisional assessment - Compliance with principles laid down by the Supreme Court and previous court decisions. Analysis: The petitioner, a coffee grower, challenged a provisional assessment made by the assessing authority for the assessment year 1988-89. The assessing authority proposed to apply rule 9(c) of the Rules for valuation of coffee points as the petitioner had not disclosed a specific basis for the rate used. The petitioner objected, arguing that the assessing authority exceeded the scope of section 20 by rejecting the basis of the return and applying its own rates. The Government Pleader contended that the assessing authority had the power to consider the propriety of the basis used by the petitioner. The court analyzed the scope of section 20, emphasizing that the assessing authority must proceed in a summary manner for provisional assessment, and it is optional for the authority to make such an assessment. Referring to the Supreme Court's decision in Jaipur Udyog Ltd. v. CIT, the court highlighted that the assessing authority cannot reject or ignore the claims made by the assessee in the return while making a provisional assessment. The court further cited Salar Jung Sugar Mills Ltd. v. State of Mysore, stating that the assessing authority can only call upon the assessee to pay tax provisionally on the admitted taxable income. Regarding the application of rule 9(c), the court noted that certain jurisdictional facts must be established before its application, such as the absence of a regular accounting method or the inability to estimate income using the employed method. The court held that the assessing authority cannot apply a different rate for points than those declared by the petitioner in the return while acting under section 20. Consequently, the court set aside the provisional assessment order and granted liberty to the assessing authority to recompute based on the court's observations. The court allowed the writ petition, making the rule absolute and leaving other questions open for future consideration.
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