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Issues:
1. Rectification order under section 154 of the Income-tax Act, 1961. 2. Applicability of section 44AF for computing profits and gains. 3. Non-filing of audit report under section 44AF(5). 4. Assessment without conducting scrutiny. 5. Legal mistake apparent from records. 6. Decision based on precedent set by the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal, Delhi Bench. Issue 1: Rectification order under section 154 of the Income-tax Act, 1961: The appeal was filed against the order dated 20-6-2008 passed by the Commissioner of Income-tax (Appeals) for the assessment year 2004-05. The Assessing Officer had passed a rectification order under section 154 of the Income-tax Act, 1961, determining the total income of the assessee. The appellant contended that the rectification order was void ab initio as the Assessing Officer did not put the case for scrutiny before using section 154. The tribunal found that the Assessing Officer wrongly applied section 154 without conducting scrutiny, leading to an incorrect determination of total business income. The tribunal accepted the appeal, canceling the impugned order. Issue 2: Applicability of section 44AF for computing profits and gains: The Assessing Officer invoked section 44AF of the Income-tax Act, 1961, as the assessee's net profit was less than 5% of the gross receipts. The tribunal noted that section 44AF applies to cases where gross receipts do not exceed Rs. 40 lakhs, and profit should be more than 5% of turnover. The appellant had not filed an audit report under section 44AF(5) and declared lower business income than the deemed 5% of gross receipts. The tribunal found the Assessing Officer's determination of total business income at 5% of turnover to be correct due to the legal mistake apparent from the records. Issue 3: Non-filing of audit report under section 44AF(5): The appellant failed to file the audit report along with the return of income, as mandated by section 44AF(5) of the Income-tax Act, 1961. This non-compliance was highlighted as a factor contributing to the incorrect declaration of business income. The tribunal upheld the Assessing Officer's decision based on this non-filing of the audit report, which was essential when declaring profit below 5% of turnover under section 44AF. Issue 4: Assessment without conducting scrutiny: The appellant argued that the Assessing Officer did not scrutinize the case before passing the rectification order under section 154. The tribunal agreed that the failure to conduct a proper scrutiny led to the incorrect application of section 154, resulting in an erroneous determination of total business income. This lack of scrutiny was a crucial factor in the tribunal's decision to accept the appellant's appeal. Issue 5: Legal mistake apparent from records: The tribunal found that there was a legal mistake apparent from the records, specifically regarding the incorrect declaration of business income by the appellant. This mistake was evident due to the failure to file the audit report under section 44AF(5) and the declaration of profit lower than 5% of turnover. The tribunal concluded that the legal mistake justified the Assessing Officer's rectification order under section 154. Issue 6: Decision based on precedent set by the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal, Delhi Bench: The appellant cited a decision by the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal, Delhi Bench, in a similar case to support their appeal. The tribunal reviewed the cited decision and found that the facts of the present case aligned with the precedent. Relying on this precedent, the tribunal concluded that the Assessing Officer and the first appellate authority had wrongly applied section 154 without proper scrutiny. The tribunal canceled the impugned order and allowed the appeal in favor of the assessee.
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