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Home e-Newsletters Index Year 2022 March Day 4 - Friday

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TMI Tax Updates - e-Newsletter
March 4, 2022

Case Laws in this Newsletter:

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



Articles


News


Highlights / Catch Notes

    GST

  • Jurisdiction of Proper Officer to invoke section 74 of the CGST/OGST Act - input tax credit - During the course of hearing, the Petitioner admitted that though he had adjusted its tax liability against input tax credit available in the electronic credit ledger, he has not paid interest against such delayed adjustment/payment - the disputed facts arising in the matter are required to be adjudicated by the Proper Officer. The Petitioner is at liberty to file his Show Cause reply and raise objections including jurisdictional issue. - HC

  • Seeking grant of Bail - issuing invoices only without actual supply of goods with the motive to earn benefits by fraudulent means - The respondent has already made necessary recoveries and seizures of documents, including electronic records from the petitioners. It is not the case of the respondent that some more recoveries are to be affected from the petitioners. - Petitioners are ordered to be released on bail - HC

  • Income Tax

  • Power to transfer cases u/s 127 - transfer from Bhopal to Hyderabad - the ground of ostensible variance between the reason assigned for transfer in the show-cause notice and the impugned order of transfer does not actually exist in substance and essentiality. The simple reason being that petitioner knew that the case is being transferred for consolidating the records of the principal contractors and the sub-contractor (petitioner) at one place (Hyderabad). The principle of audi alteram partem thus stands complied with by implication. - The principles of natural justice cannot be applied mechanically. - HC

  • Tax recovery proceedings - Right over property mortgaged - It has come to the knowledge of the Tax Recovery Officer that the defaulter has mortgaged the subject property with the petitioner-Bank and the same was registered on 04.04.2013. Thus, the first respondent-Tax Recovery Officer formed an opinion that the attachment date precedes the mortgage date and hence the mortgage of the subject property and transfer of the subject property is void under the provisions of the Income Tax Act. - the petitioner-Bank in the present case, is at liberty to approach the first respondent-Tax Recovery Officer by filing an appropriate application under Schedule II, Rule 11 of the Income Tax Act. - HC

  • Levy of penalty u/s. 271D - violation of the provisions of Section 269SS - The entire case of the Revenue rests on interpreting the entries in a diary found during search as relating to cash receipts from customers, on the basis of one of the entry having CHQ mentioned against it matching with a bank entry the same day. Treating this entry to be representative of the rest of the entries, the Revenue held that the entries related to business receipts in lacs and in the absence of CHQ mentioned against the entry it was presumed to be receipts in cash. - the same is not sufficient to strictly establish the violation of section 269SS of the Act, of the assessee having received amounts in cash exceeding ₹ 20,000/- from a person on account of sale of flats, so as to attract levy of penalty u/s 271D of the Act. - AT

  • Disallowance u/s 40A(3) - Payment of expenditure in Cash exceeding ₹ 20,000 - whether payment would fall under Rule 6DD(k) of I.T. Rules? - we find force in the contention of the assessee that the alleged amount was not paid in cash by the assessee but was paid by the driver acting as an agent of the assessee. - the disallowance made by the AO is not sustainable - AT

  • Income accrued or deemend to accrue in India - Fees for technical services' under Article 12(5)(a) of the India-Netherlands tax treaty - as providing of access to CRS, Property Management Services and Other services could neither be held to be technical services, nor the same in terms of our aforesaid observations could have been characterised as "ancillary and subsidiary" services under Article 12(5)(a), hence the consideration received by the assessee for rendering the said services/facility could not be held as FTS in its hands. - AT

  • Addition u/s 94A - transactions with persons located in notified jurisdictional area - We note with the able assistance of both the parties that the CIT(A) has nowhere dealt with the Assessing Officer’s detailed discussion holding the impugned “CCDs” to be a sham transaction whilst deleting the additions in issue made u/s 94A of the Act. - The assessee’s plea before us is that this entire “sham transactions” issue has become redundant once the CIT(A) holds section 94A itself as not applicable. Be that as it may, we deem it appropriate that the CIT(A) needs to examine and adjudicate the above stated “sham transactions” issue. - AT

  • Interest u/s244A - refund of “any amount” arises to the appellant out of advance/TDS/tax paid - the assessee is not entitled for interest on interest, in case there is delay in refund payable to the assessee. - AT

  • Reassessment order u/s 147 - the AO does not enjoy the power of review. Therefore in the present case it is clear that the action of the present AO tantamount to review the action of the earlier AO who has accepted the valuation of stock in his scrutiny assessment u/s 143(3) of the Act. Therefore, the present AO lacks jurisdiction u/s 147 of the Act to reopen the completed assessment u/s 143(3) of the Act merely on “change of opinion”. - AT

  • Addition u/s 40(a)(ia) - Non deduction of TDS - amount paid to NPCI as charges towards using of ATM of other banks - the assessee is not liable for TDS, and hence, the provisions of section 40(a)(ia) of the Act does not have application in respect of payments made to NPCI - AT

  • Non considering the revised return filed by the assessee for rectifying the mistake in claim of depreciation - In this case, the original return was not filed under Sub-Sec.(1) or Sub-Sec.(4) and thus, the belated return filed by the assessee is an invalid return. Therefore, the AO is not bound to consider invalid return. Hence, we are of the considered view that there is no error in the reasons given by the AO in not considering the revised return filed by the assessee for rectifying the mistake in claim of depreciation. - AT

  • Disallowance on account of payment of commission for obtaining supply order from government agencies - The assessee has submitted complete details including PANs of the agents to whom the commission was paid, the supporting vouchers and account confirmations to the Ld. AO and also filed the copies of the same in the Paper-Book. The assessee has also deducted TDS wherever applicable. The assessee has also submitted a detailed note on various tasks done by the commission agents and those tasks are clearly narrated by Ld. CIT(A) also in his order. - Claim allowed - AT

  • Addition u/s 69A - large cash deposit on the bank account during the year - if a house wife deposited up to ₹ 2.50 lacs in her bank account (and in case of senior citizens aged above 70 years the upper limit of ₹ 5 lacs) during demonetization period then the same should not be scrutinized and has to be accepted. - AT

  • Disallowance of deduction u/s 80P in respect of storage income derived from CAP storage - There is no specific definition of “godown” and “warehouse” prescribed in Income-tax Act, 1961. - At this stage, we also note that the section 80P is a beneficial provision and the purpose is to incentivize the warehousing activity of co-operative societies. Therefore, the interpretation of section 80P must be liberal so as to advance the avowed objective. Taking into account all these aspects, we are persuaded to conclude that the income from letting of CAP storage derived by the assessee is eligible for deduction u/s 80P and there is no justification in denying the same to the assessee. Therefore, we delete the disallowance made by lower authorities. - AT

  • Penalty levied u/s 271(1)(c) - deduction of LTCG u/s 54F - The assessee acted in bona fide belief and made the claim is not acceptable due to any reason and was disallowed the same cannot be subject to levy of penalty under section 271(1)(c) . - AT

  • Customs

  • Jurisdiction - proper officers - power of DRI officers to issue SCN or not - If the Finance Bill becomes the Act, DRI officers will be at par with Customs officers under the Customs Act by virtue of the substitution of section 3 and their various actions such as searches, seizures, arrests may not become void because of non-entrustment of those functions by the Government under Section 6. However, there is no proposal to amend section 28 and hence SCNs can be issued even after this Bill becomes the Act only by ‘the proper officer’, i.e., the officer who has done the assessment in the first place. In fact, this specific legal position as held by the Supreme Court in Canon India is likely to be reaffirmed by insertion of section 110AA in the Act. - AT

  • Corporate Law

  • Territorial Jurisdiction of Delhi High Court - LLP is registered in Hyderabad - It is evident from the facts of the present case that there is no principal or subordinate office of the LLP in the State of Delhi and neither are the books of accounts kept in Delhi, therefore, there is no cause of action in respect of the present suit, which is arising within the territorial limits of the Courts in Delhi. Furthermore, the parties by agreement cannot give jurisdiction to a Court, which otherwise does not have such jurisdiction - the Courts in Delhi lack the territorial jurisdiction to try and entertain the present suit. - HC

  • Indian Laws

  • Reduction of compliances and end-to-end automation of procedure relating to import of certain goods at concessional rate of duty - News

  • Bribery - illegal gratification - evidence on record/document to show that the applicant was aware of the source of the money or not - The present applicant, a Chartered Accountant, is stated to be a resident of Delhi, having deep roots in society. Besides, it was submitted by the learned Senior Counsel appearing for the applicant that the applicant is ready and willing to surrender his Passport. The same, in the opinion of this Court, alongwith appropriate conditions, can secure the applicant’s presence during the trial and allay any apprehension regarding him being a flight risk - this Court is inclined to release the present applicant on bail during the pendency of the trial. - HC

  • IBC

  • Initiation of CIRP - fraudulent or malicious initiation of proceedings - Since, some collusion seems to be apparently existing to thwart the claim of the Corporate Debtor and other related issues. Impugned order dated 04th June, 2020 has not dealt with this IA and has dismissed on the ground that BMW India Pvt. Ltd/R2 in the IA No.300 of 2018 is not a party in the main petition no.167 of 2017. Although IBC is a summary proceeding but if large business houses with multiple business arms are allowed to disrupt on its whims & fancies small business firm then how IBC can promote entrepreneurship which is also its objective. - AT

  • CIRP - discrimination of Related Party Financial or Operational Creditor - IBC treats related parties as a separate category for specified purposes, excluding from the CoC under Section 21 and disqualifying them from being Resolution Applicants under Section 29A. However, the IBC does not treat Related Party as a separate class for any other purpose. Therefore, a rationale nexus must exist for any classification between the object sought to achieve the classification and sub-classification - the Related Party financial or operational creditor cannot be discriminated against under the Resolution Plan, denying their right to get payments under the resolution Plan only on being a Related Party. It is also made clear that by getting only payment under the Resolution Plan, related party creditors could in no way sabotage the CIRP. - AT

  • PMLA

  • Money Laundering - Fraud by Additional Director of the company with the help of forged documents - commission of scheduled offence - The case of VMT Mills can be better explained with the following illustration. 'A' is an honest public servant. 'B', a dishonest public servant, opens a bank account in the name of 'A' and parks the bribe monies received by him in that account. Can 'A' be prosecuted along with 'B' under the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988 ? The answer is an obvious 'No'. - HC

  • Service Tax

  • Sabkas Vishwas (Legacy Dispute Resolution) Scheme, 2019 - amnesty scheme - The prayers made in this writ petition cannot be granted for consideration of the case of the petitioner for paying the service tax under the Scheme as the Court cannot make operational the SVLDRS, 2019, especially when the petitioner has approached this Court belatedly after 1 year and 3 months from the last date of payment of determined amount of tax under the SVLDRS, 2019. - HC

  • Condonation of delay of 4-5 years in filing appeal - There are no justification for a delay of 4-5 years in filing this appeal after it has been issued and served. However, in order not to deprive the appellant of an opportunity of appeal, we condone the delay on payment of a cost of ₹ 1,00,000/- which must be paid by the appellant to the PM CARE Fund within a period of one month from the date of this order - AT

  • Refund of service tax paid - unjust enrichment - Commissioner (Appeals) has upheld the order of original authority rejecting the refund claim on the ground of unjust enrichment stating that it is an admitted position that the refund amount due was not reflected in the books of account of HPCL as claims receivable. This implies that the duty paid was shown as current expenditure and formed part of the Profit and Loss account of the assessee. Thus if the claimant himself has treated the refund amount due as expenditure and not as "claims receivable", the claimant cannot said to have passed the test of unjust enrichment. - Appeal of the assesee dismissed - AT

  • Central Excise

  • CENVAT Credit - issue of only invoices without supply of any excisable goods - manufacturing capacity in place or not - The tribunal has not given any reasons as to why the decision dated 25th October, 2019 would apply to the case on hand. Therefore, if we are called upon the adjudicate the correctness of the order, we would have to examine as to whether the Commissioner of Central Excise has rendered a proper finding in the order in original - Matter restored before CESTAT - HC

  • Refund of amount deposited during Audit - The payment made by the appellant at the time of audit, in absence of any SCN for the same, cannot be held to be the payment against the demand raised by the Department without even going into the merits of the nature of demand - In light of the above discussed mandate of section 11A of CEA and the absence of the requisite SCN the amount got deposited at the instance of audit team is liable to be refunded to the appellant. Whenever an amount is to be refunded in terms of section 11AA, 11BB, 11DD and 11AB of the Excise Act, an interest at the rate which varies from 6% to 18% has to be granted. - AT

  • Levy of penalty on Director u/r 26 of CER - involvement of the director of the appellants in clandestine activities or not - here are not much reasoning has been assigned by the said order, to show that Director was having mens rea or direct involvement for invocation of Rule 26 - Since the impugned order fails to establish the ingredient of “mens rea” on the part of the Appellant 2 who was otherwise performing their duties as employee of the company, the penalties imposed on the Director, cannot be upheld. - AT

  • CENVAT Credit - bogus transaction - fake invoices - The only reasonable step which he can take is to ensure that the supplier is trustworthy, the inputs are in fact received and that the documents, prima facie, appear to be genuine. The fact that the assessee made payment by cheque was held to be a proof of his bona fides - Credit cannot be denied - AT


Case Laws:

  • GST

  • 2022 (3) TMI 166
  • 2022 (3) TMI 165
  • 2022 (3) TMI 164
  • Income Tax

  • 2022 (3) TMI 163
  • 2022 (3) TMI 162
  • 2022 (3) TMI 161
  • 2022 (3) TMI 160
  • 2022 (3) TMI 159
  • 2022 (3) TMI 158
  • 2022 (3) TMI 157
  • 2022 (3) TMI 156
  • 2022 (3) TMI 155
  • 2022 (3) TMI 154
  • 2022 (3) TMI 153
  • 2022 (3) TMI 152
  • 2022 (3) TMI 151
  • 2022 (3) TMI 150
  • 2022 (3) TMI 149
  • 2022 (3) TMI 148
  • 2022 (3) TMI 147
  • 2022 (3) TMI 146
  • 2022 (3) TMI 145
  • 2022 (3) TMI 144
  • 2022 (3) TMI 143
  • 2022 (3) TMI 142
  • 2022 (3) TMI 141
  • 2022 (3) TMI 140
  • 2022 (3) TMI 139
  • 2022 (3) TMI 138
  • 2022 (3) TMI 137
  • 2022 (3) TMI 136
  • 2022 (3) TMI 135
  • 2022 (3) TMI 134
  • 2022 (3) TMI 133
  • 2022 (3) TMI 132
  • 2022 (3) TMI 131
  • 2022 (3) TMI 130
  • 2022 (3) TMI 129
  • 2022 (3) TMI 128
  • 2022 (3) TMI 127
  • 2022 (3) TMI 126
  • 2022 (3) TMI 125
  • 2022 (3) TMI 124
  • 2022 (3) TMI 123
  • 2022 (3) TMI 122
  • Customs

  • 2022 (3) TMI 121
  • 2022 (3) TMI 120
  • 2022 (3) TMI 94
  • Corporate Laws

  • 2022 (3) TMI 119
  • 2022 (3) TMI 118
  • Insolvency & Bankruptcy

  • 2022 (3) TMI 117
  • 2022 (3) TMI 116
  • 2022 (3) TMI 115
  • 2022 (3) TMI 114
  • 2022 (3) TMI 113
  • PMLA

  • 2022 (3) TMI 112
  • 2022 (3) TMI 111
  • Service Tax

  • 2022 (3) TMI 110
  • 2022 (3) TMI 109
  • 2022 (3) TMI 108
  • 2022 (3) TMI 107
  • 2022 (3) TMI 106
  • 2022 (3) TMI 105
  • Central Excise

  • 2022 (3) TMI 104
  • 2022 (3) TMI 103
  • 2022 (3) TMI 102
  • 2022 (3) TMI 101
  • 2022 (3) TMI 100
  • 2022 (3) TMI 99
  • CST, VAT & Sales Tax

  • 2022 (3) TMI 98
  • 2022 (3) TMI 97
  • Indian Laws

  • 2022 (3) TMI 96
  • 2022 (3) TMI 95
 

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