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1990 (3) TMI 50 - HC - Income Tax

Issues:
Challenge to notice under section 148 of the Income-tax Act for assessment year 1962-63 based on lack of reason to believe income escaped assessment. Allegation of fully disclosing all relevant facts during original assessment. Invocation of section 52 of the Act for taxing alleged capital gains. Contention of understatement of consideration to invoke section 52. Comparison with legal precedents like K. P. Varghese case and CIT v. Shivakami Co. (P.) Ltd. Interpretation of conditions for initiating proceedings under section 148. Dispute over applicability of section 52 for assessing capital gains. Examination of recorded reasons for issuing notice. Jurisdictional aspect of the impugned notice under section 148.

Analysis:
The judgment involves a challenge to a notice issued under section 148 of the Income-tax Act for the assessment year 1962-63. The petitioner contested the notice on the grounds that there was no valid reason to believe that any income had escaped assessment and that all relevant facts were fully disclosed during the original assessment. The petitioner argued against the invocation of section 52 of the Act for taxing alleged capital gains, emphasizing the need for understatement of consideration to apply this provision. Legal precedents such as the K. P. Varghese case and CIT v. Shivakami Co. (P.) Ltd. were cited to support the petitioner's position.

The court considered the conditions for initiating proceedings under section 148, emphasizing the requirement of an omission or failure to disclose material facts leading to income escapement. The dispute centered on the applicability of section 52 for assessing capital gains and the necessity of establishing understatement of consideration. The court examined the recorded reasons for issuing the impugned notice and the jurisdictional aspect of invoking section 148.

The judgment highlighted the principle that the writ court would not interfere unless the impugned orders were perverse or beyond jurisdiction. The court emphasized that the decision-making process would be scrutinized rather than the merits of the recorded reasons. Ultimately, the court found no merit in the writ petition and discharged the rule, vacating all interim orders without costs. The court upheld the issuance of the impugned notice as a bona fide belief based on fulfilling conditions for escaping proper assessment, indicating no inherent defect warranting interference by the writ court.

 

 

 

 

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