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2019 (2) TMI 783 - AT - Income Tax


Issues Involved:
1. Addition on account of bogus creditors.
2. Addition on account of not disclosing unsecured loan.
3. Disallowance under section 40A(3) of the Act.
4. Addition on account of undisclosed profit.

Detailed Analysis:

1. Addition on account of bogus creditors:

The assessee filed appeals for the assessment years 2000-01 to 2004-05 against the orders of the CIT(A), which upheld the assessment orders adding amounts as bogus creditors. The Assessing Officer (AO) had made additions based on discrepancies found between the creditors' balances as per the assessee's books and the creditors' confirmations. The AO issued letters under section 133(6) to various creditors, many of which returned unserved. The AO concluded that the assessee overstated the credit payable and claimed bogus credits, making additions for each assessment year.

Upon appeal, the Tribunal noted that the assessee's books were audited and not rejected by the AO. The Tribunal found that the AO did not provide valid reasons for rejecting the assessee's explanation regarding the discrepancies due to goods or payments in transit. The Tribunal emphasized that the AO failed to provide evidence to prove the differences were due to unaccounted money. The Tribunal held that merely working out the differences in sundry creditors was insufficient without tangible proof. The Tribunal also referred to Section 41(1) of the Act, noting that the conditions for treating cessation of liability as income were not met as the liabilities were carried forward and not written back in the profit and loss account. Citing precedents, the Tribunal concluded that the addition on account of bogus creditors was unjustified and deleted the additions for all assessment years.

2. Addition on account of not disclosing unsecured loan:

For the assessment year 2000-01, the AO added ?2,66,000/- as an unsecured loan not disclosed by the assessee. The AO presumed that the loan was extended out of unaccounted cash. The CIT(A) upheld this addition.

Upon appeal, the Tribunal noted that the said amount did not appear in the assessee's books. The Tribunal found that the AO failed to provide evidence to establish that the amount was unaccounted money of the assessee. The Tribunal, therefore, deleted the addition of ?2,66,000/-.

3. Disallowance under section 40A(3) of the Act:

For the assessment year 2003-04, the AO disallowed ?5,95,107/- under section 40A(3) of the Act, stating that the assessee made cash purchases exceeding ?20,000/-. The AO did not accept the assessee's claim for exemption under Rule 6DD(J), arguing that gur/jaggery is not an agricultural product.

The Tribunal, considering the nature of the assessee's business and the rural context, noted that transactions in cash were common. The Tribunal emphasized that the assessee's books were audited and not rejected by the AO, and there was no evidence of tax evasion. The Tribunal held that the disallowance was unjustified and deleted the addition of ?5,95,107/-.

4. Addition on account of undisclosed profit:

For the assessment year 2003-04, the AO added ?44,120/- as undisclosed profit, based on the assessee's statement that the commission was ?4 per tin of 'gur'. The AO noted a discrepancy between the disclosed gross profit and the expected profit based on the commission rate.

The Tribunal found that the addition was based on conjectures and not supported by evidence. The Tribunal noted that the assessee's accounts were audited and not rejected by the AO. The Tribunal held that estimating additional profit without tangible evidence was untenable and deleted the addition of ?44,120/-.

Conclusion:

The Tribunal allowed the appeals for all assessment years, deleting the additions made by the AO on account of bogus creditors, undisclosed unsecured loans, disallowance under section 40A(3), and undisclosed profit.

 

 

 

 

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