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2025 (4) TMI 1127 - AT - Income TaxAddition of 2% of the expenditure incurred in cash - cash withdrawals has been treated as unexplained expenditure and added the same u/s 68 - HELD THAT - We note that the assessee is acting on behalf of the jute mills as Kachcha Arahtiya on commission basis. The assessee has been engaged in this business for the past several years and continuously following the same system of accounting as well i.e. receiving payments from jute mills and passing the same to cultivators/jute growers and the revenue has accepted the income of the assessee in all the assessment years in the summary proceedings u/s 143(1) of the Act. There are no pending proceedings against the assessee in any other assessment year where the case of the assessee has been reopened on the basis of any scrutiny proceedings for current assessment year. CIT(A) has simply confirmed the addition partly @ 2% of total expenditure incurred in cash without any reasoning. CIT(A) has partly confirmed the addition on surmises and presumption without any basis and therefore the appellate order cannot be sustained. Accordingly we set aside the order of the ld. CIT(A) and accordingly direct the Assessing Officer to delete the impugned addition. Decided against revenue.
1. ISSUES PRESENTED and CONSIDERED
The core legal questions considered by the Tribunal in these cross-appeals are: (a) Whether the Assessing Officer was justified in treating the entire cash withdrawals of Rs. 4,66,71,960/- as unexplained expenditure and adding the same under section 68 of the Income Tax Act, 1961, on the ground of lack of proper records and unexplained source? (b) Whether the partial confirmation of addition of Rs. 9,33,440/- (2% of expenditure incurred in cash) by the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) [CIT(A)] was sustainable, given the nature of business and the explanation provided by the assessee regarding cash payments to jute producers? (c) Whether the revenue's appeal challenging the partial deletion of addition by the CIT(A) should be allowed or dismissed in light of the findings on the above issues? 2. ISSUE-WISE DETAILED ANALYSIS Issue (a): Justification for treating entire cash withdrawals as unexplained expenditure under section 68 The relevant legal framework involves section 68 of the Income Tax Act, which deals with unexplained cash credits, allowing the Assessing Officer to add such unexplained amounts to the income of the assessee. The Assessing Officer initiated limited scrutiny on the ground of huge cash withdrawals and issued notices including a questionnaire. The assessee, engaged as a commission agent (Kachcha Arahtiya) in the jute trade, submitted that the cash withdrawals were payments made on behalf of clients to jute growers, with the money received from jute mill agents through banking channels. The Assessing Officer, however, treated the entire cash withdrawal as unexplained expenditure due to lack of proper records and inability to produce details of recipients of cash payments. The CIT(A) partly allowed the appeal, holding that the source of money was explained as received from jute mill agents through banking channels, but the assessee failed to substantiate the expenditure incurred in cash payments to the producers. The CIT(A) therefore confirmed 2% of the cash expenditure as disallowance. The Tribunal noted that the assessee had been consistently following the same system of accounting for several years, with income accepted in summary proceedings under section 143(1) in previous years, and no pending scrutiny proceedings in other years. The Tribunal found that the CIT(A)'s confirmation of 2% addition was based on surmises and presumption without adequate reasoning or basis. The Tribunal emphasized the business expediency for cash payments due to the absence of banking facilities with remote area jute producers, which the assessee had explained. Applying the law to the facts, the Tribunal concluded that the entire cash withdrawal could not be treated as unexplained expenditure under section 68, especially when the source was explained and consistent with the nature of business. The partial addition confirmed by the CIT(A) lacked sufficient justification. Issue (b): Sustainability of partial addition of 2% of cash expenditure by CIT(A) The CIT(A) relied on the assessee's inability to furnish addresses or details of the recipients of cash payments, stating that the payments did not exceed the limits prescribed under section 40A(3) regarding cash payments exceeding Rs. 10,000 to a single party on a single day. The CIT(A) held that disallowing 2% of expenditure incurred in cash was justifiable considering the failure to substantiate the expenditure. The Tribunal, however, scrutinized this approach and found that the CIT(A) failed to provide any cogent reasoning or evidence to support the 2% disallowance. The Tribunal observed that the assessee's explanation regarding the mode of payment was credible given the business context and practical constraints faced by the producers. The Tribunal rejected the CIT(A)'s reliance on mere presumption and surmise to confirm the addition. The Tribunal directed deletion of the 2% addition, holding that without any concrete material or legal basis, such disallowance cannot be sustained. Issue (c): Revenue's appeal challenging the partial deletion of addition The revenue challenged the appellate order partly allowing the appeal of the assessee and deleting 98% of the addition. Since the Tribunal had already decided in favor of the assessee by deleting the entire addition, the revenue's appeal was rendered infructuous and was accordingly dismissed. 3. SIGNIFICANT HOLDINGS The Tribunal held: "The assessee acted as 'Kachcha Arahtiya' and traded in jute on commission basis, receiving money from 'Jute Mill Agents or Pucca Arahitya' through banking channels and making payments to producers in cash due to business expediency and lack of banking facilities with producers. The source of cash withdrawn was explained and consistent with the nature of business." "The CIT(A)'s confirmation of 2% addition on cash expenditure was based on surmises and presumption without any basis and therefore cannot be sustained." "The entire cash withdrawal cannot be treated as unexplained expenditure under section 68 when the source is adequately explained and consistent with the business operations." "The revenue's appeal challenging the deletion of addition is dismissed as infructuous." Core principles established include the requirement for the Assessing Officer and appellate authorities to base additions on concrete evidence rather than presumptions, especially where the assessee has explained the source of funds consistent with the nature of business and accounting practices followed over years. The judgment also underscores the practical considerations in cash payments in rural or remote business contexts where banking facilities may be lacking. Final determinations: (i) The addition of Rs. 4,66,71,960/- as unexplained expenditure under section 68 was deleted. (ii) The partial addition of Rs. 9,33,440/- (2%) confirmed by CIT(A) was set aside and deleted. (iii) The revenue's appeal was dismissed.
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