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2014 (1) TMI 1314 - AT - Income Tax


Issues:
1. Disallowance of payment of commission/brokerage
2. Disallowance of expenditure towards advertisement, consultancy, and audit fees
3. Addition under the head 'capital gain'
4. Disallowance of interest and penalty imposed
5. Penalty appeal against the disallowance of interest

Analysis:

Issue 1: Disallowance of payment of commission/brokerage
The appellant contested the disallowance of Rs.11,00,240 for payment of commission/brokerage, arguing it was sales promotion expenditure. However, the respondent contended that tax deduction was mandatory for such payments under section 40(a)(ia). The Tribunal upheld the disallowance, stating the payment was indeed commission/brokerage to middlemen, necessitating tax deduction, which was not done by the assessee.

Issue 2: Disallowance of expenditure towards advertisement, consultancy, and audit fees
The appellant challenged the disallowance of Rs.9,51,163 for these expenses, asserting no tax deduction was required. The Tribunal disagreed, ruling that tax deduction was mandatory for such payments under section 40(a)(ia), affirming the CIT(A)'s decision.

Issue 3: Addition under the head 'capital gain'
Regarding the addition of Rs.7,48,350 under 'capital gain,' the appellant argued no property transfer occurred, attributing the change to asset revaluation. The Tribunal noted the assessing officer's oversight in not considering the definition of 'transfer' under section 2(47) of the Income-tax Act. The matter was remitted to the assessing officer for reevaluation in light of the statutory definition.

Issue 4: Disallowance of interest and penalty imposed
The appellant contested the disallowance of interest, emphasizing the compensatory nature of penal interest paid to banks. The Tribunal directed the assessing officer to verify the genuineness of the payments with the banks, highlighting that penal interest is not a penalty but compensation for delayed repayment. The issue was remitted for further examination.

Issue 5: Penalty appeal against the disallowance of interest
The penalty appeal was linked to the interest disallowance, pending reconsideration by the assessing officer. The Tribunal ruled that any penalty should be decided after resolving the quantum addition issue. Consequently, the penalty decision was deferred until the quantum assessment was finalized.

In conclusion, the Tribunal partially allowed the appeal in ITA No.76/Coch/2013 and allowed the appeal in ITA No.77/Coch/2013 for statistical purposes, emphasizing the need for thorough assessment and adherence to tax deduction requirements as per the Income-tax Act.

 

 

 

 

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