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Home e-Newsletters Index Year 2024 November Day 16 - Saturday

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TMI Tax Updates - e-Newsletter
November 16, 2024

Case Laws in this Newsletter:

Income Tax Insolvency & Bankruptcy PMLA Service Tax Central Excise CST, VAT & Sales Tax



Articles


News


Notifications


Circulars / Instructions / Orders


Highlights / Catch Notes

    Income Tax

  • Company name change deemed a curable defect, but penalty order issued beyond time limit quashed.

    Assessment against an entity that had ceased to exist prior to the initiation of proceedings. The effect of a change in name was considered a curable defect u/s 292B, as decided in Sky Light Hospitality LLP, wherein the Supreme Court held that the wrong name given in the notice was merely a clerical error that could be corrected. Since there was no change in the entity, only a change in the company's name, the Show Cause Notice and Penalty Order issued in the name of M/s. Infovision Information Services Pvt. Ltd. were not fatal defects and could be cured. The penalty order imposed beyond the limitation period was addressed. The survey was conducted in January 2008 to verify TDS deduction and deposit, and the AO passed the order on 30.03.2011, referring the penalty proceedings. The last date for passing the penalty order was 30.09.2011, as per Section 275(1)(c). However, the penalty order was passed on 29.07.2013, beyond the limitation period. The ITAT correctly deleted the penalty levied by the AO on the ground that the penalty order dated 29.07.2013 was passed after the lapse of six months from the end of the month in which the penalty proceedings were initiated, as required by Section 275(1)(c). The decision was in favor.

  • Pandemic cited for incorrect advance tax estimation; Interest waiver plea remanded.

    The High Court quashed the order denying waiver of interest charged u/s 234C, holding that the Chief Commissioner of Income Tax failed to consider the petitioner's primary submission attributing the inability to correctly estimate income/profits for paying advance tax to the COVID-19 pandemic. The court observed that the impugned order did not address the petitioner's contentions based on cited decisions or the statutory provisions and scheme of the Income Tax Act relied upon. Consequently, the matter was remanded to the Chief Commissioner for fresh consideration of the waiver application on merits, considering the petitioner's submissions and legal position.

  • Share premium received on issue of shares below fair market value: Assessee's choice of valuation method binding.

    The High Court held that u/r 11UA(2) of the Income Tax Rules, 1962, the assessee has the option to choose between the Net Asset Value method or the Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) method for computing the fair market value for the applicability of Section 56(2)(viib) of the Income Tax Act. Once the assessee exercises this option, the Assessing Officer cannot question the applicability or computation of the fair market value using the chosen method, even during regular assessment proceedings. The Assessing Officer cannot reopen the assessment merely because the valuation under one method is lower than the other method chosen by the assessee, as this does not constitute an escapement of income. The court opined that the Assessing Officer cannot assume jurisdiction to reopen the assessment to verify the veracity and computation under the DCF method on the ground that the assessee did not fulfill the projected growth in subsequent years, as no assessee can accurately predict future growth at the time of making projections.

  • Tax assessment order wrongly cited; clarification accepted. Petition challenging it dismissed.

    The High Court dismissed the petition challenging the assessment order u/s 144C of the Income Tax Act. The Assessing Officer clarified that the impugned order was passed u/s 143(3) and not Section 144C, rectifying the systemic error reflecting it as an order u/s 144C. The petitioner's contention that the order was passed u/s 144C was incorrect, and the challenge based on this assumption was unsustainable after the Assessing Officer's clarification. Consequently, the High Court found no merit in the petition and dismissed it with costs.

  • Homebuyer compensated by builder for delayed property handover.

    Compensation received by assessee from builder for non-delivery of property within stipulated time is a capital receipt not chargeable to income tax. Assessee had applied for cancellation of allotment which was accepted by builder, who calculated compensation considering 12% interest per annum. Assessee had taken housing loan for investment in property and repaid interest to bank. Compensation received for cancellation of allotment due to non-handover within time is not taxable in assessee's hands.

  • Flat Purchase: Stamp Duty vs. Sale Consideration Discrepancy Scrutinized.

    Addition u/s 56(2)(b)(vii) relates to the amount in excess of stamp duty value from the sale consideration being added to the total income of the assessee under the head income from other sources. The assessee agreed to pay a lump-sum consideration for a flat along with a car parking space as per the allotment letter issued by the builder. The allotment letter was accepted, and conditions were fulfilled except for an amount pending on the date of registration. The Tribunal considered the allotment letter as an agreement to sell and examined the applicability of the first and second provisos to section 56(2)(vii)(b). The first proviso requires the consideration or part thereof to be paid by a mode other than cash on or before the date of agreement. The second proviso relates to the stamp duty value on the date of agreement. The assessee was directed to furnish evidence of payment of consideration or part thereof by a mode other than cash on or before the date of the allotment letter to prove the applicability of the provisos. The appeal was allowed for statistical purposes to provide an opportunity to the assessee to substantiate the case.

  • Tax deducted but not deposited: Assessee not liable for recovery.

    The assessee claimed that the deductor had deducted tax but failed to deposit it with the Central Government, leading to a mismatch between tax credits claimed and allowed. The High Court held that the assessee cannot be proceeded against for recovery of tax dues when the deductor had deducted the tax but not paid it to the Central Government. The Tribunal found that the CIT(A) should have sought a remand report or remitted the issue to the AO to verify the genuineness of the assessee's claim. If the claim is found genuine upon verification, the assessee is not liable to pay the demanded tax, and the judgments relied upon by the assessee would apply. The Tribunal allowed the assessee's appeal for statistical purposes, directing further verification of the claim.

  • Office premises sale treated as long-term capital gain; eligible for 54F exemption.

    Capital gains on sale of office premises determined as long-term capital gains (LTCG) eligible for exemption u/s 54F. The date of allotment when the right to own the flat accrued through the letter of allotment issued by the builder, creating a contractual right in personam in favor of the assessee, is considered the relevant date for determining the nature of the capital asset. The assessee made payments as required under the allotment letter, subsequently registering the agreement to sell. Based on these facts, the sale is treated as a long-term capital asset, entitling the assessee to claim deduction u/s 54F, subject to fulfilling requisite conditions. The addition made by the lower authorities is deleted, and the assessee's claim for LTCG is restored. The Assessing Officer is directed to examine the applicability of Section 54F and allow the claim accordingly.

  • Cash deposits from retail business without books allowed; no addition u/s 68.

    Section 68 addition for cash deposits cannot be made where assessee filed return u/s 44AD and did not maintain books of accounts, as provisions of section 68 apply only when books are maintained. AO erred in invoking section 68 despite accepting return under 44AD without finding transactions as non-genuine. Telescoping benefit of withdrawals from same account should be given. Addition deleted as unjustified when assessee engaged in retail business, registered under relevant Act, and furnished bank statements showing deposits and withdrawals of nearly equal amounts without adverse findings by authorities.

  • Software solutions provider's transfer pricing adjustments, disallowances reconsidered - comparables scrutinized, economic adjustments allowed.

    The assessee, a software solution provider, contested various transfer pricing adjustments and disallowances. Key points: Certain comparables were directed to be excluded due to functional differences, size incomparability, and segmental data differences. Economic/working capital adjustment was allowed following precedents. Disallowance u/s 14A read with Rule 8D was partly remitted for re-verification of interest-free funds and nexus with exempt income. Computation of deduction u/s 10A regarding exclusion of foreign currency expenditure and non-exclusion of delayed foreign remittances was restored for re-examination. The levy of interest u/s 234D was remitted for re-verification of refund status.

  • Customs

  • Customs port Chhara in Gujarat added for import/export operations.

    This notification amends the previous Notification No. 62/1994-Customs (N.T.) dated 21st November 1994 issued by the Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs, Ministry of Finance. It exercises the powers conferred by clause (a) of sub-section (1) of section 7 of the Customs Act, 1962. The amendment adds the customs port of Chhara in the state of Gujarat to the list of ports appointed for unloading imported goods and loading export goods or any class of such goods.

  • Revised tariff values for edible oils, brass, areca nut, gold & silver imports effective Nov 15.

    This notification from the Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs (CBIC) under the Ministry of Finance revises the tariff values for the import of certain goods like edible oils, brass scrap, areca nut, gold, and silver. Table 1 specifies the tariff values per metric ton for various edible oils like crude palm oil, RBD palm oil, crude palmolein, RBD palmolein, crude soyabean oil, and brass scrap. Table 2 lists the tariff values for gold in various forms like bars, coins, and findings, as well as silver in forms like bars, coins, and semi-manufactured items. Table 3 mentions the tariff value for areca nuts. The revised tariff values are effective from November 15, 2024. This enables the CBIC to periodically update the tariff rates based on global commodity prices to facilitate proper valuation and revenue collection.

  • Jajpur designated as Inland Container Depot for loading/unloading goods in Odisha.

    This notification from the Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs amends the previous Notification No. 12/97-Customs (N.T.) dated 2nd April 1997. It exercises powers u/s 7 of the Customs Act, 1962. For the state of Odisha, in the table under serial number 6B, a new item (iv) 'Jajpur' is inserted in column (3) with the corresponding entry in column (4) permitting unloading of imported goods and loading of export goods or any class of such goods at Jajpur. This notification effectively designates Jajpur as an Inland Container Depot for loading and unloading of goods in Odisha.

  • Epichlorohydrin imports from China, Korea & Thailand face anti-dumping duty for 5 yrs to protect domestic industry from dumping, price undercutting.

    Anti-dumping duty imposed on imports of Epichlorohydrin from China, Korea and Thailand for 5 years based on DGTR findings of dumping, material retardation of domestic industry establishment, and undercutting of domestic prices by landed import prices. Duty rates specified for producers in subject countries ranging from nil to $557/MT. Residual rates for non-specified producers $216-327/MT. Duty payable in Indian currency based on notification exchange rates. Levied to remove injury to domestic industry.

  • Customs rules amended: Pimpri's Inland Container Depot deauthorized for loading/unloading goods in Maharashtra.

    This notification amends the previous Notification No. 12/97-Customs (NT) dated 2nd April 1997 by exercising powers u/s 7(1)(aa) of the Customs Act, 1962. It omits the entry for Pimpri from the list of Inland Container Depots authorized for loading and unloading of goods in the state of Maharashtra. The amendment is issued by the Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs, Ministry of Finance.

  • IBC

  • Registrar's role ministerial, can't adjudicate maintainability of insolvency petition filed under IBC.

    The High Court analyzed the distinction between ministerial and adjudicatory functions in the context of filing a petition u/s 95 of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016. The court held that the Registrar of NCLT, while receiving and registering the petition, performs a ministerial function and does not have the authority to adjudicate on the maintainability or merits of the petition. The adjudicatory stage commences after the resolution professional submits a report to the NCLT. The court clarified that the automatic moratorium resulting from filing a Section 95 petition does not amount to abuse of process. The Registrar cannot reject the petition by examining its maintainability, as such adjudication falls within the domain of the NCLT at the appropriate stage. The High Court set aside the Single Judge's order allowing the writ petition.

  • Operational creditor's Section 9 appeal dismissed over pre-existing copyright NOC dispute.

    The Appellate Tribunal dismissed the appeal filed by the Operational Creditor u/s 9 of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016. The application was initially rejected by the NCLT on the grounds of a pre-existing dispute regarding the issuance of a No Objection Certificate (NOC) by the Operational Creditor to the Corporate Debtor for registering the copyright of a TVC. The Terms and Conditions stipulated that the Operational Creditor would provide the necessary NOC for IP registration, which it failed to do despite repeated demands from the Corporate Debtor. The dispute was genuine, supported by evidence, and arose before the issuance of the Section 8 notice, qualifying as a "pre-existing dispute" - a valid ground for rejecting the Section 9 application. The Appellate Tribunal upheld the NCLT's order, finding no merit in the appeal.

  • Firm admits unpaid operational debt, cash crunch cited; pre-existing disputes unsubstantiated. CIRP rightly initiated u/s 9 IBC.

    The Corporate Debtor admitted outstanding operational debt owed to the Operational Creditor, citing adverse cash flow as the reason for non-payment, without attributing any dispute. The admitted debt exceeded the prescribed threshold limit. The Corporate Debtor's contentions regarding partial admission of debt and existence of pre-existing disputes were found unsubstantiated. The Adjudicating Authority rightly initiated Corporate Insolvency Resolution Process (CIRP) u/s 9 of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC), as all requisite conditions were fulfilled - the operational debt was due and payable, exceeded the threshold, and no real pre-existing dispute existed. The Appellate Tribunal dismissed the appeal, upholding the Adjudicating Authority's order admitting the Section 9 application and initiating CIRP against the Corporate Debtor.

  • Revival of Corporate Debtor halted by power utility's insistence on pre-CIRP dues; Supreme Court decision followed.

    Successful Resolution Applicant paid pre-CIRP electricity dues under protest to Respondent for restoring Corporate Debtor's electricity connection to revive operations per Resolution Plan. Payment related to Corporate Debtor's revival and Insolvency Resolution Process, hence refund claim falls u/s 60(5)(c) of IBC. Supreme Court's decision followed that power distribution company cannot insist on pre-CIRP arrears for restoring electricity. Respondent benefited from non-filing of claim, received higher amount than entitled under Resolution Plan. NCLT had directed restoration of approvals/licenses. Matter pertains to Respondent's non-compliance and insistence on extinguished pre-CIRP dues, covered u/s 60(5)(c). Impugned order set aside, appeal allowed.

  • PMLA

  • Money laundering accused granted bail considering constitutional rights, prolonged incarceration, and delayed trial.

    The court granted regular bail to the accused in a money laundering case, considering the prolonged incarceration, the likelihood of delay in trial, and the constitutional right to liberty and fair trial. The court relied on Supreme Court precedents that held Section 45 of the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA) cannot override Article 21's fundamental right to life and personal liberty. While Section 45 imposes additional conditions for bail, it does not create an absolute prohibition. When trial is delayed for reasons not attributable to the accused, prolonged incarceration would violate the right to speedy trial. The court balanced the stringent provisions of PMLA against the constitutional mandate, concluding that using Section 45 as a tool for indefinite incarceration is impermissible. Considering the circumstances, including the main accused being out on bail and the trial's stagnation, the court granted regular bail to the applicant, subject to furnishing personal bond and surety.

  • Service Tax

  • Vehicle dealer's discounts, incentives from manufacturers & booking cancellation fees are not taxable services.

    The appellant, a vehicle dealer, purchases vehicles from manufacturers like Maruti Suzuki and Renault, and subsequently sells them to customers. The discount/incentive received from manufacturers based on yearly sales performance is not a service, but a discount on the sale value of vehicles, hence not liable to service tax. This issue is settled by various judgments. Booking cancellation charges received by the appellant are not consideration for service but compensation, as held in Divine Autotech case and clarified in Circular No. 178/10/2022-GST. Therefore, service tax is not leviable on discounts/incentives from manufacturers or booking cancellation charges.

  • Govt undertaking wins tax battle over reimbursements for medical, dog squad & event costs.

    The tribunal held that the amounts received by the appellant for reimbursement of medical expenses, dog squad maintenance costs, and expenses incurred for celebrating Republic Day and Independence Day were not in the nature of consideration for any services provided. These were mere reimbursements of expenses and not taxable under service tax. The issue was covered by a previous decision of the Hyderabad Bench, which held that reimbursement expenses should not be added to the gross value for calculating service tax payable. Regarding the extended period of limitation, the tribunal found merit in the appellant's argument that the confirmed demand was time-barred, as the appellant, being a reputed government undertaking, could not be said to have any intention to evade service tax payment. Consequently, the appeal filed by the appellant was allowed on merits and also on the ground of limitation.

  • Imported software sale taxability: When goods, not service.

    Service tax liability on sale of imported tally software was disputed. Appellant was a distributor marketing and installing the software on behalf of the seller holding intellectual property rights, with only the product being transferred. Demand of duty by invoking extended period of limitation from 16.05.2008 to 30.09.2008 was held unsustainable as penalty u/s 78 was dropped by the Appellate authority on grounds of absence of guilty mind, and this finding was not challenged by the revenue. The imported and sold software was an import and sale of goods, not exigible to service tax as per Supreme Court's judgment in Tata Consultancy Services case. Regarding upgradation of software, as per Quick Heal Technologies Ltd case, once lumpsum was charged for sale of CD and sales tax paid, revenue cannot levy service tax again on the entire sale consideration on grounds of providing updates. Once appellant paid VAT on sale of goods, service tax cannot be demanded on such sale.

  • Central Excise

  • Dry date processing saga: Exemption upheld, penalty quashed.

    Classification of an end product derived from processing dry dates under the Central Excise Tariff, whether it qualifies as "manufacture" under the Central Excise Act, and the implications for Small Scale Industry (SSI) exemption and penalty. The key points are: The end product, sold as "dry dates cut" or "dry dates chura," underwent processes like washing, deseeding, cutting, drying, sieving, and packing. The appellant contended it should be classified under sub-heading 08041030 as dry dates, while the department argued for sub-heading 20089999 as prepared fruit. Applying the General Rules for Interpretation (GIR), the product aligns with the specific description under Chapter 8 for dry dates rather than the general Chapter 20 for prepared fruits. The processes did not result in a new product distinct from dry dates. Therefore, the end product is correctly classified under Chapter 8, attracting nil duty rate. Consequently, the denial of SSI exemption and imposition of penalty u/s 11AC were improper, as no duty is confirmed. The Tribunal's order was set aside, and the appeal was allowed.


Case Laws:

  • Income Tax

  • 2024 (11) TMI 704
  • 2024 (11) TMI 703
  • 2024 (11) TMI 702
  • 2024 (11) TMI 701
  • 2024 (11) TMI 700
  • 2024 (11) TMI 699
  • 2024 (11) TMI 698
  • 2024 (11) TMI 697
  • 2024 (11) TMI 696
  • 2024 (11) TMI 695
  • 2024 (11) TMI 694
  • 2024 (11) TMI 693
  • 2024 (11) TMI 692
  • 2024 (11) TMI 691
  • 2024 (11) TMI 690
  • 2024 (11) TMI 689
  • 2024 (11) TMI 688
  • 2024 (11) TMI 687
  • 2024 (11) TMI 686
  • 2024 (11) TMI 685
  • 2024 (11) TMI 684
  • 2024 (11) TMI 683
  • 2024 (11) TMI 682
  • 2024 (11) TMI 681
  • 2024 (11) TMI 680
  • 2024 (11) TMI 679
  • 2024 (11) TMI 678
  • 2024 (11) TMI 677
  • Insolvency & Bankruptcy

  • 2024 (11) TMI 676
  • 2024 (11) TMI 675
  • 2024 (11) TMI 674
  • 2024 (11) TMI 673
  • 2024 (11) TMI 672
  • 2024 (11) TMI 671
  • PMLA

  • 2024 (11) TMI 670
  • Service Tax

  • 2024 (11) TMI 669
  • 2024 (11) TMI 668
  • 2024 (11) TMI 667
  • 2024 (11) TMI 666
  • 2024 (11) TMI 665
  • Central Excise

  • 2024 (11) TMI 664
  • 2024 (11) TMI 663
  • CST, VAT & Sales Tax

  • 2024 (11) TMI 662
 

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