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Issues Involved:
1. Legality of the order under Sections 143(3)/147. 2. Validity of action under Section 147 read with Section 148. 3. Addition of Rs. 3,61,800 on account of gross profit rate. 4. Disallowance of various expenses. 5. Addition of Rs. 1,63,500 on account of unexplained cash credits and interest thereon. Issue-wise Detailed Analysis: 1. Legality of the order under Sections 143(3)/147: The assessee argued that the order under Sections 143(3)/147 was invalid as the return filed in response to the notice under Section 148 was beyond the permissible time limit, making it a non-est return. The Tribunal found that the return filed on 20th April 2000 was indeed beyond the statutory time limit. However, the Tribunal held that the assessment should be deemed to be framed under Section 144 due to the non-compliance with the statutory notice under Section 148. The Tribunal referred to Section 292B to address the technical flaw of non-mentioning Section 144 and concluded that the assessment was valid. 2. Validity of action under Section 147 read with Section 148: The assessee contended that the action under Section 147 was based on a change of opinion without any fresh material and was merely to cover the lapse of not issuing a notice under Section 143(2) within the statutory period. The Tribunal found that the AO initiated proceedings under Section 147 based on new facts discovered during a survey conducted under Section 133A, where the assessee had surrendered Rs. 1,00,000. The Tribunal held that the AO's action was justified and there was no change of opinion. It also clarified that the AO could issue a notice under Section 148 even when the time limit for issuing a notice under Section 143(2) was available, provided there was an escapement of income. 3. Addition of Rs. 3,61,800 on account of gross profit rate: The AO applied a gross profit rate of 2.30% on estimated sales, leading to an addition of Rs. 3,61,800. The assessee argued that the provisions of Section 145 were not invoked and that the lower gross profit rate was due to increased turnover and falling steel prices. The Tribunal found that the assessee did not maintain day-to-day stock records and quantitative details, thereby justifying the application of Section 145. However, considering the reasons for the fall in the gross profit rate, the Tribunal deleted the addition of Rs. 3,61,800. 4. Disallowance of various expenses: The AO disallowed certain expenses related to telephone, scooter, car depreciation, shop, and advertisement. The Tribunal upheld the CIT(A)'s order, which had already considered the reasonableness of these disallowances, and declined to interfere further. 5. Addition of Rs. 1,63,500 on account of unexplained cash credits and interest thereon: The AO added Rs. 1,63,500 as unexplained cash credits received as gifts by the partners and disallowed the interest on these credits. The assessee argued that the gifts were genuine, received through bank drafts from an NRI donor, and supported by bank certificates and the donor's income tax return. The Tribunal found that the assessee had discharged the initial onus of proving the genuineness of the gifts. It held that the addition should have been considered in the hands of the individual partners who received the gifts, not the firm. Consequently, the Tribunal deleted the addition of Rs. 1,63,500. Conclusion: The appeal of the assessee was allowed in part, deleting the additions of Rs. 3,61,800 and Rs. 1,63,500, while the appeal of the Revenue was dismissed.
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