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2023 (10) TMI 1505 - AT - Income Tax
Addition u/s 68 - bogus Long Term Capital Gain/Short Term Capital Loss - HELD THAT - AO had added the sale consideration merely on the general statement of Shri Vipul V. Bhatt without contrary disproving these documents. Mr. Vipul V. Bhatt had retracted his statement by way of affidavit. The assessee also submitted that they were not provided any copy of information and the statement relied upon by the assessing officer. We have also perused the balance sheet of the assessee showing that assessee was a regular investor in the shares. As per balance sheet as on 31.03.2014 the assessee has made investment in 26 different scrips as per statement of investment which demonstrate that assessee had not made investment in only one scrip but assessee was regular investor. Apart from the fact that assessee was a regular investor in many scrips even for this particular scrip also it seems that this scrip was listed in stock exchange at the time of purchase as well as at the time of sale and also it continues to be listed in the stock exchange till date. Nothing has been brought on record that SEBI or any other agency has banned the trading or any adverse finding has been given against the scrip. AO has not even conducted any enquiry from either the broker of the assessee Hornic Investment Pvt. Ltd. or from the exit provider. Simply relying upon the information from the Investigation Wing of some of the brokers who have provided accommodation entry in this scrip cannot be the sole reason of adverse inference unless AO himself carries out any enquiry or there is some other information or material on record that this scrip was banned or debarred in trading of the shares. As perused the judicial pronouncements relied upon by the ld. Counsel and observe that on similar facts and identical issue in respect of shares of Sunrise Asian Ltd. have decided the issue in favour of the assessee.
1. ISSUES PRESENTED and CONSIDERED
The core legal issues considered in this judgment are:
- Whether the addition of Rs. 1,99,34,702/- as unexplained credit under Section 68 of the Income Tax Act, representing the sale proceeds of shares of Sunrise Asian Limited, was justified.
- Whether the addition of Rs. 5,74,041/- as unexplained expenditure under Section 68, purportedly paid as commission for procuring the Long Term Capital Gain (LTCG) entry, was justified.
2. ISSUE-WISE DETAILED ANALYSIS
Issue 1: Addition of Rs. 1,99,34,702/- as Unexplained Credit
- Relevant legal framework and precedents: Section 68 of the Income Tax Act deals with unexplained credits. The burden of proof lies with the assessee to explain the nature and source of the credits. The court considered various precedents where similar issues were adjudicated, such as the cases of Mr. Arun S. Tripathi, Anjana Sandeep Rathi, and Dipesh Ramesh Vardhan.
- Court's interpretation and reasoning: The Tribunal found that the assessee had provided substantial documentary evidence to support the genuineness of the transactions, including demat account statements, share certificates, and bank statements. The court noted that the Assessing Officer (AO) relied heavily on the statement of Shri Vipul V. Bhatt, which was later retracted, and did not conduct independent inquiries to substantiate the claim of bogus transactions.
- Key evidence and findings: The assessee submitted evidence of share transactions through recognized stock exchanges, payment of Securities Transaction Tax (STT), and receipt of sale proceeds through banking channels. The Tribunal emphasized the lack of contrary evidence from the AO to disprove these documents.
- Application of law to facts: The Tribunal applied the principle that the burden of proof shifts to the revenue once the assessee provides prima facie evidence of the genuineness of the transactions. The AO failed to discharge this burden.
- Treatment of competing arguments: The Tribunal considered the Department's reliance on the investigation report and the statement of Shri Vipul V. Bhatt but found it insufficient to override the documentary evidence provided by the assessee.
- Conclusions: The Tribunal concluded that the addition of Rs. 1,99,34,702/- was not justified as the assessee had adequately demonstrated the genuineness of the transactions.
Issue 2: Addition of Rs. 5,74,041/- as Unexplained Expenditure
- Relevant legal framework and precedents: Similar to the first issue, Section 68 of the Income Tax Act applies. The Tribunal referred to the same set of precedents and principles regarding the burden of proof and the necessity of evidence.
- Court's interpretation and reasoning: The Tribunal noted that the AO did not provide concrete evidence to substantiate the claim that the assessee paid a commission for obtaining bogus LTCG entries. The reliance on the retracted statement of Shri Vipul V. Bhatt was deemed inadequate.
- Key evidence and findings: The Tribunal found that there was no evidence of any commission payment by the assessee, and the AO did not conduct further inquiries to establish this claim.
- Application of law to facts: The Tribunal applied the principle that mere suspicion or conjecture cannot replace substantive evidence. The AO's failure to provide such evidence meant that the addition could not be sustained.
- Treatment of competing arguments: The Tribunal dismissed the Department's argument due to the lack of corroborative evidence and the failure to provide the assessee with an opportunity to cross-examine the witness whose statement was used against them.
- Conclusions: The Tribunal concluded that the addition of Rs. 5,74,041/- was unjustified as the Department failed to prove the alleged commission payment.
3. SIGNIFICANT HOLDINGS
- Preserve verbatim quotes of crucial legal reasoning: "The whole basis of making the addition is third party statement without there being any tangible material. It is trite law that additions merely on the basis of suspicious, conjectures or surmises could not be sustained in the eyes of law."
- Core principles established: The judgment reinforced the principle that the burden of proof lies initially with the assessee to substantiate the nature and source of credits. Once this is done, the burden shifts to the revenue to disprove the evidence provided by the assessee. Mere suspicion or reliance on retracted statements without further inquiry is insufficient to justify additions under Section 68.
- Final determinations on each issue: The Tribunal allowed the appeal of the assessee, setting aside the additions made by the AO for both the alleged unexplained credit and unexplained expenditure.