Home Case Index All Cases Income Tax Income Tax + AT Income Tax - 1989 (8) TMI AT This
Issues Involved:
1. Jurisdiction of the Commissioner of Income-tax (CIT) under Section 263 of the Income-tax Act. 2. Applicability of the Bombay High Court decision in CIT v. P. Muncherji & Co. 3. Merits of the assessment for the year 1984-85. 4. Timeliness of the appeal for the assessment year 1985-86. Issue-Wise Detailed Analysis: 1. Jurisdiction of the Commissioner of Income-tax (CIT) under Section 263 of the Income-tax Act: The appeals were filed against the orders passed under Section 263 of the Income-tax Act by the Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay City III, for the assessment years 1983-84, 1984-85, and 1985-86. The primary contention was whether the CIT had jurisdiction to pass these orders. The assessee argued that the CIT had no jurisdiction to pass orders under Section 263 because the original assessment order had merged with the appellate order of the CIT(A). The Departmental Representative countered this argument by citing amendments to Section 263 introduced by the Finance Acts of 1988 and 1989, which provided that the CIT's powers under Section 263 extend to matters not considered and decided in the appeal. The Tribunal concluded that the amendments applied to orders passed or likely to be passed after 1-6-1988. Therefore, for the assessment year 1983-84, the CIT could not invoke the amended provisions, and the order of the CIT was not competent. However, for the assessment year 1984-85, the CIT had jurisdiction as the appellate order had not been passed when the CIT initiated and completed proceedings under Section 263. 2. Applicability of the Bombay High Court decision in CIT v. P. Muncherji & Co.: For the assessment year 1983-84, the Tribunal held that the Bombay High Court's decision in CIT v. P. Muncherji & Co. was applicable. The High Court had held that once the assessment order is the subject matter of an appeal, the order of the first appellate authority merges with that of the ITO, and the CIT cannot revise such an order under Section 263. Since the CIT(A) had passed the order before the CIT initiated proceedings under Section 263, the Tribunal concluded that the CIT was not competent to revise the order for the assessment year 1983-84. For the assessment year 1984-85, the Tribunal found that the facts were different as the CIT(A) had not passed an order when the CIT issued the notice under Section 263. Therefore, the principle of merger did not apply, and the CIT had jurisdiction to revise the order. 3. Merits of the assessment for the year 1984-85: On the merits, the Tribunal considered whether the order was erroneous and prejudicial to the interest of the Revenue. The assessee argued that the ITO had made a full inquiry into the admissibility of the expenditure on selling commission and gratuity payments. However, the Departmental Representative contended that there was no evidence of such an inquiry for the assessment year 1984-85. The Tribunal agreed with the Departmental Representative, noting that the absence of proper inquiry by the ITO could cause prejudice to the Revenue. The Tribunal upheld the CIT's order for the assessment year 1984-85, concluding that the CIT was justified in proceeding under Section 263 due to the lack of proper inquiry into certain claims for deduction. 4. Timeliness of the appeal for the assessment year 1985-86: The appeal for the assessment year 1985-86 was dismissed as time-barred. The appeal should have been filed by 30-5-1988 but was filed on 3-5-1989, resulting in a delay of nearly 11 months. The Tribunal found the explanation provided by the assessee's Chartered Accountant for the delay to be inadequate. The Tribunal noted that the assessee, being a limited company with access to professional advice, should have filed the appeal in time, especially since the CIT had passed a consolidated order for the assessment years 1984-85 and 1985-86. The Tribunal refused to entertain the appeal due to the lack of a proper explanation for the delay and dismissed it as time-barred. Conclusion: The appeal for the assessment year 1983-84 was allowed, while the appeals for the assessment years 1984-85 and 1985-86 were dismissed.
|