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2025 (1) TMI 502 - AT - Income TaxValidity of Reopening of assessment u/s 147 r.w.s 148 - assessee has earned bogus commodity profits - as argued information received from the investigation wing without any independent application of mind/ tangible material and is on the borrowed satisfaction and therefore bad in law - HELD THAT - We note that the assessee has disclosed a details of commodity profits from transactions done through Kali Commodity Pvt. Ltd. which is inclusive of ₹ 20 lacs as per the arguments presented before us which could not be controverted b y the ld. DR. Thus, the very basis of the reopening fails and therefore, it is adequately clear that the reopening has been made on the basis of information received without any independent verification and application of mind and is a case of in fact borrowed satisfaction, which is not permissible under the Act. The case of the assessee is supported by the decision of Meenakshi Overseas 2017 (5) TMI 1428 - DELHI HIGH COURT . Thus, we are inclined to hold that the reopening of assessment has been made invalidly and is bad in law. Decided in favour of assessee. 1. ISSUES PRESENTED and CONSIDERED The core legal issue considered in this judgment is the validity of the reopening of the assessment under Sections 147 and 148 of the Income Tax Act, 1961. Specifically, the question is whether the reopening was based on independent application of mind by the Assessing Officer (AO) or merely on borrowed satisfaction from information received from the Investigation Wing, without tangible material. 2. ISSUE-WISE DETAILED ANALYSIS Relevant legal framework and precedents: The reopening of an assessment under Section 147 of the Income Tax Act requires the AO to have "reason to believe" that income has escaped assessment. This belief must be based on tangible material and not merely on borrowed satisfaction. Section 148 mandates that reasons for such belief must be recorded before issuing a notice. The case law cited, including G & G Pharm, Meenakshi Overseas, and Signature Hotels (P) Ltd. Vs. ITO, emphasizes the necessity of independent application of mind by the AO. Court's interpretation and reasoning: The Tribunal analyzed whether the AO independently verified the information received from the DDIT Investigation, Kolkata, regarding the alleged bogus commodity profits. The Tribunal found that the reopening was based solely on the information received without any independent verification or application of mind by the AO, thus constituting borrowed satisfaction. Key evidence and findings: The AO received information indicating that the assessee was a beneficiary of accommodation entries in the form of commodity profits amounting to Rs. 20 lacs. However, the assessee had already disclosed commodity profits of Rs. 84,45,684.48, which included the Rs. 20 lacs in question, in their return. This disclosure was not refuted by the Department's Representative (DR). Application of law to facts: The Tribunal applied the principles established in the cited precedents, which require an independent application of mind by the AO. The Tribunal concluded that the AO failed to independently verify the information and merely acted on borrowed satisfaction, rendering the reopening invalid. Treatment of competing arguments: The assessee argued that the reopening was invalid due to lack of independent verification by the AO. The Department contended that the reopening was justified based on the information received. However, the Department failed to provide any further evidence or report from the AO to support their claim, leading the Tribunal to side with the assessee. Conclusions: The Tribunal concluded that the reopening of the assessment was invalid and bad in law due to the lack of independent application of mind by the AO. As a result, the reopening was quashed, and the appeal of the assessee was allowed. 3. SIGNIFICANT HOLDINGS Preserve verbatim quotes of crucial legal reasoning: "...the reopening has been made on the basis of information received without any independent verification and application of mind and is a case of in fact borrowed satisfaction, which is not permissible under the Act." Core principles established: The judgment reinforces the principle that reopening of assessments must be based on the AO's independent application of mind and tangible material, not merely on borrowed satisfaction from external information. Final determinations on each issue: The Tribunal determined that the reopening of the assessment was invalid due to the lack of independent verification by the AO. Consequently, the appeal was allowed, and the reopening was quashed.
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