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Issues Involved:
1. Whether the Tribunal was justified in directing the Income-tax Officer to accept the auditor's report in Form No. 10B and process the assessee's claim for exemption u/s 11 of the Income-tax Act afresh. Summary: Issue 1: Tribunal's Direction to Accept Auditor's Report and Process Exemption Claim u/s 11: In this reference u/s 256(1) of the Income-tax Act, 1961, for the assessment year 1982-83, the key issue was whether the Tribunal was justified in setting aside the orders of the Commissioner of Income-tax (Appeals) and the Income-tax Officer, and directing the Income-tax Officer to accept the auditor's report in Form No. 10B and process the assessee's claim for exemption u/s 11 afresh. The assessee filed a return without the auditor's certificate in Form No. 10B. The Income-tax Officer denied exemption u/s 11 due to the absence of this certificate. The Commissioner of Income-tax (Appeals) upheld this decision, stating that the trust did not fulfill the conditions laid down in section 12A(b). The Tribunal, however, argued that the filing of the auditor's report in Form No. 10B along with the return was not mandatory but directory. It set aside the lower authorities' orders and directed the Income-tax Officer to accept the auditor's report and process the exemption claim afresh. The High Court referenced several cases to support the view that procedural requirements should be treated as directory if the defect can be rectified before the assessment is completed. It emphasized that procedural laws are meant to advance justice and should not be construed to defeat the rights of parties. The Court concluded that the direction for the audit report to accompany the return is not mandatory. The omission can be rectified by filing the report at a later stage before the assessment is completed. The appellate authority has the power to accept the audit report and direct the Assessing Officer to redo the assessment. Thus, the High Court affirmed the Tribunal's decision, answering the question in the affirmative and in favor of the assessee, with no order as to costs.
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