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2025 (3) TMI 1162 - AT - Income Tax


1. ISSUES PRESENTED and CONSIDERED

The core legal issues considered in this judgment are:

  • Whether the assessment order passed under Section 143(3) read with Section 144B of the Income Tax Act, 1961, is invalid and bad in law.
  • Whether the appellate order passed under Section 250 of the Act violated principles of natural justice.
  • Whether the disallowance of the provision for claim payout amounting to Rs. 682,09,65,697/- was justified.
  • Whether the provision for claim payout created during the relevant previous year was an allowable deduction in the hands of the Assessee.
  • Whether the CIT(A) erred in allowing certain deductions and deletions from the assessed income.

2. ISSUE-WISE DETAILED ANALYSIS

Issue: Validity of the Assessment and Appellate Orders

  • Relevant legal framework and precedents: The assessment order was challenged under Section 143(3) read with Section 144B of the Act, while the appellate order was challenged under Section 250 of the Act. The principles of natural justice were also invoked.
  • Court's interpretation and reasoning: The Tribunal did not find merit in the arguments regarding the invalidity of the assessment order or the violation of natural justice in the appellate order, as these grounds were rendered infructuous by the resolution of the substantive issue regarding the provision for claim payout.
  • Conclusions: The grounds challenging the validity of the orders were dismissed as not pressed.

Issue: Disallowance of Provision for Claim Payout

  • Relevant legal framework and precedents: The provision for claim payout was evaluated under accrual accounting principles, considering the Trust Deed and the Scheme guidelines. The Tribunal referenced previous decisions in similar cases, such as Credit Guarantee Fund for Micro and Small Enterprises v. ITO.
  • Court's interpretation and reasoning: The Tribunal found that the provision for claim payout was based on an actuarial valuation report and was not ad-hoc. The provision was deemed an ascertained liability rather than a contingent one, as it was based on a systematic evaluation of expected defaults and liabilities.
  • Key evidence and findings: The Tribunal noted that similar provisions had been accepted in other assessment years and for other trusts managed by the same trustee. The actual claim payouts closely matched the provisions, further supporting their validity.
  • Application of law to facts: The Tribunal applied the principle of consistency, noting that the Revenue had accepted similar provisions in other cases. The Tribunal also emphasized the systematic approach used in the actuarial valuation.
  • Treatment of competing arguments: The Revenue's argument that the provision was contingent was rejected. The Tribunal found that the CIT(A)'s allowance of deductions on a payment basis was inconsistent with the accrual accounting method followed by the Assessee.
  • Conclusions: The Tribunal allowed the deduction for the provision for claim payout, overturning the CIT(A)'s finding that it was ad-hoc.

3. SIGNIFICANT HOLDINGS

  • Verbatim quotes of crucial legal reasoning: The Tribunal stated, "The moment Guarantee Fee is received the corresponding liability to pay the guarantee amount in case of a Claim Pay Out as per the terms of the Scheme and the applicable agreement gets triggered."
  • Core principles established: The Tribunal reinforced the principle that provisions based on systematic actuarial evaluations are allowable deductions and should not be treated as contingent liabilities.
  • Final determinations on each issue: The Tribunal allowed the Assessee's appeal regarding the provision for claim payout and dismissed the Revenue's appeal challenging the deductions allowed by the CIT(A).

 

 

 

 

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