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Home e-Newsletters Index Year 2021 October Day 11 - Monday

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TMI Tax Updates - e-Newsletter
October 11, 2021

Case Laws in this Newsletter:

GST Income Tax Customs Corporate Laws Insolvency & Bankruptcy Service Tax Central Excise CST, VAT & Sales Tax Indian Laws



Articles


News


Notifications


Circulars / Instructions / Orders


Highlights / Catch Notes

    Income Tax

  • Reopening of assessment u/s 147 - power to review v/s power to reassess - Only material relied upon by the assessing officer, in this case, is the material supplied by the assessees themselves along with their return - A mere change in opinion cannot be a reason to reopen. This decision holds that there is a conceptual difference between power to review and power to reassess and that the assessing officer has no power to simply review - HC

  • Income in the hands of HUF or members - amount in the name of joint members of HUF - The assessee declaring his income by filing a revised income and offering to tax the amount utilized for the purpose of construction cannot be permitted to contend that the amount in the joint names of two members of the HUF cannot be considered to be the income of the HUF - HC

  • Addition u/s 68 - unexplained cash credit in the nature of unsecured loan received from three entities - tribunal deleted the addition - All the ingredients contemplated under Section 68 have been duly satisfied on the aspect of identity of the creditors, genuineness of the transactions and their creditworthiness - revenue appeal dismissed - HC

  • Rectification u/s 154 - incorrect carry forward of loss - We reserve liberty to the assessee to file an application under Section 119(2)(b) of the Act before the competent authority seeking for condonation of delay in filing returns and thereafter to seek for carry forward of loss to the subsequent assessment year which were incurred during the assessment year 2004-05. If such an application is filed by the assessee within a period of two weeks from the date of receipt of certified copy of the order, the same shall be considered by the competent authority in accordance with law - HC

  • Penalty order u/s 271AAA - disclosure of additions income pursuant to search u/s 132 - In the present case the assessee has disclosed the entire source of income and manner of undisclosed income earned - assessee has also paid the taxes and the details - The assessee has admitted the undisclosed income and voluntarily declared the same under section 132 (4) of the Act on the basis of accounting records consisting of its income from all the sources. It means that the assessee has complied with all the conditions mentioned in section 271AAA(2) - No penalty - AT

  • Revision u/s 263 - Explanation-2 to section 263 of the Act does not give a uncontrolled & unbridled power to the revisional Commissioner to reopen a completed assessment to conduct further enquiries to verify and find out whether order passed is in fact erroneous or not. The facts explained on behalf of the assessee gives an infallible impression that the course adopted by the assessee in treating the gains as capital gains chargeable under section 45 of the Act and endorsed by the A.O. to be plausible. - AT

  • Penalty u/s 271D - Default u/s 269SS - cash loan(s) availed form its Managing Director in current account - day-to-day emergency expenses - AO directed to examine that no unexplained funds are introduced in the business of the assessee Company as loan from the Managing Director and if it found that the source of fund obtained from the Managing Director of the assessee Company is explained then delete the penalty levied invoking the provisions of section 271D. - AT

  • Nature of expenditure - The expenditure is not capital in nature, because the assessee has not acquired any technical know-how or asset, but what was received from service provider was technology support services and professional services for managing day-to-day business affairs of the assessee. Therefore, said expenditure cannot be considered as capital in nature - AT

  • Assessment passed u/s.153A - Presumption in case of seized documents - Assessee’s son was also covered under the search in the same premises and the document found from the said premises has been categorically owned by his son who has given his explanation, then instead of drawing any inference in his assessment u/s.153A, no presumption has been made in the case of the assessee. Thus, once this document does not belong to the assessee nor there is any mention of any name of the seized document, presumption u/s. 132(4A) and Section 292C cannot be made against the assessee. - AT

  • Reopening of assessment u/s 147 - Addition on different ground - the Assessing Officer has accepted the objections of the assessee, and has not assessed or reassessed the income, which was the basis of the notice. - it would not be open to the Assessing Officer to assess income under some other issue independently - AT

  • Customs

  • Classification of the goods described in the Bills of Entry - eNodeB BTS/Micro Cell BTS/Femto Cells BTS/Pico Cells BTS - The goods deserve to be classified under CTH 8517 61 00 as contended by Reliance Jio and not under CTH 8517 62 90 as contended by the Department. - AT

  • Re-classification of imported goods - cut and polished diamonds - While the impugned goods may not be ‘rough diamonds’ as mined and may have undergone working before its import, the reports do not conclusively establish that these were ‘cut and polished diamonds’ on which duty liability was to be fastened - Coupled with the inadequate evidence of the goods conclusively being ‘cut and polished diamonds’, this strikes at the very foundation of the proceedings initiated against the appellant and the culmination thereof. - AT

  • Indian Laws

  • Dishonor of Cheque - on the basis of compromise deed relief granted to accused - violation of terms of settlement agreement - In the event that the compromise deed is found to be void ab initio on account of coercion, the very basis for quashing of the first complaint is removed since the settlement agreement is deemed to have never existed and hence it had no effect on the liability subsisting under the first complaint. The appellants may then approach the competent court for reinstatement of the original complaint and the trial can proceed on that basis. - SC

  • IBC

  • Seeking the ‘Expression of Interest’ be considered - Approval of Resolution Plan - Section 30(6) of IBC - The legislative intent of the statute together with the fact that in the instant case the Resolution Plan was accepted by 100% of voting share in the CoC Meeting dated 21.06.2021 and having regard to the fact that the Appellant had never participated in the EoI, we are of the view that any reliefs granted in contra to the timelines would be ultra vires to the scope and objective of the Code - AT

  • Central Excise

  • CENVAT Credit - input services - services availed for setting up of Coal Handling Plant - The services used for setting up of the factory even after 01.04.2011 would be eligible for credit. The Ld. Commissioner has allowed credit on certain invoices assuming the same to be pure services and disallowed the credit on remaining portion by considering the same to be in the nature of civil portion. - CENVAT Credit availed by the appellant for setting up of CHP, which is used for evacuation of coal by rapid loading process, cannot be legally denied - AT

  • Valuation - inclusion of amortised cost of patterns - The appellants have amortised the full value of patterns supplied to them by their client. It is neither legal nor proper to ask the appellants to continue the amortisation while clearing the additional castings using the same patterns whose value has been already amortised. It is not the case of the department that the appellants have received new set of patterns whose value remains to be amortised. - AT

  • VAT

  • Refund of sales tax - The right to seek the refund having been crystalised on September 30, 2011 and in any case as the order rejecting refund is passed on September 20, 2012, it was expected that the petitioner approaches this Court as early as possible and without undue delay. - if there has been unreasonable delay the court ought not ordinarily to lend its aid to a party by the extraordinary remedy of mandamus. - petition dismissed - HC


Case Laws:

  • GST

  • 2021 (10) TMI 430
  • 2021 (10) TMI 429
  • 2021 (10) TMI 428
  • Income Tax

  • 2021 (10) TMI 427
  • 2021 (10) TMI 426
  • 2021 (10) TMI 425
  • 2021 (10) TMI 424
  • 2021 (10) TMI 423
  • 2021 (10) TMI 422
  • 2021 (10) TMI 421
  • 2021 (10) TMI 420
  • 2021 (10) TMI 419
  • 2021 (10) TMI 418
  • 2021 (10) TMI 417
  • 2021 (10) TMI 416
  • 2021 (10) TMI 415
  • 2021 (10) TMI 414
  • 2021 (10) TMI 413
  • 2021 (10) TMI 412
  • 2021 (10) TMI 411
  • 2021 (10) TMI 410
  • 2021 (10) TMI 409
  • 2021 (10) TMI 408
  • 2021 (10) TMI 407
  • 2021 (10) TMI 406
  • 2021 (10) TMI 405
  • 2021 (10) TMI 404
  • 2021 (10) TMI 403
  • 2021 (10) TMI 402
  • 2021 (10) TMI 401
  • 2021 (10) TMI 400
  • 2021 (10) TMI 399
  • 2021 (10) TMI 398
  • 2021 (10) TMI 397
  • 2021 (10) TMI 396
  • 2021 (10) TMI 395
  • 2021 (10) TMI 394
  • 2021 (10) TMI 393
  • 2021 (10) TMI 375
  • Customs

  • 2021 (10) TMI 392
  • 2021 (10) TMI 391
  • Corporate Laws

  • 2021 (10) TMI 390
  • 2021 (10) TMI 386
  • Insolvency & Bankruptcy

  • 2021 (10) TMI 389
  • 2021 (10) TMI 388
  • 2021 (10) TMI 387
  • Service Tax

  • 2021 (10) TMI 385
  • Central Excise

  • 2021 (10) TMI 384
  • 2021 (10) TMI 383
  • 2021 (10) TMI 382
  • 2021 (10) TMI 381
  • 2021 (10) TMI 380
  • CST, VAT & Sales Tax

  • 2021 (10) TMI 379
  • Indian Laws

  • 2021 (10) TMI 378
  • 2021 (10) TMI 377
  • 2021 (10) TMI 376
 

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