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Home e-Newsletters Index Year 2023 April Day 15 - Saturday

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TMI Tax Updates - e-Newsletter
April 15, 2023

Case Laws in this Newsletter:

GST Income Tax Customs Insolvency & Bankruptcy Service Tax Central Excise Indian Laws



Articles


News


Notifications


Circulars / Instructions / Orders


Highlights / Catch Notes

    GST

  • Validity of assessment order - Demand of GST - To calculate and assess the non-payment of tax, it is essential that the relevant evidence is carried out by the department in respect of the taxable supplies made by the assessee and non-payment of tax which is required to be done at the time of supply as specified under section 13 of the Act. - Without any corroborative material, merely on the basis of discrepancies found in the scrutiny of returns or discrepancies found during the inspection is not enough to assess the tax. - HC

  • Classification of supply - rate of IGST - supply of Mattress to Hostel students of Government Schools, Educational Institutions of Government of Karnataka, Department of Social Welfare - supply of Mattress to any Hostel of Educational Institutions - There is no exemption or concessional rate of IGST based on end use of Mattresses. - liable to IGST / GST @ 18% - AAR

  • Income Tax

  • Disallowance of Employee Stock Option Plan (ESOP) cost claimed as expenditure - No reasons are forthcoming for invoking the provisions under section 17(2)(vi)(c) of the Act against the repeated contentions of the assessee that for the reasons stated in their written submissions, such an expenditure has to be allowed in the hands of the employer. Reasons are the life blood for any judicial/quasi-judicial order without which it would be difficult for the appellate authority to sustain or overrule the findings reached by the authorities. - AT

  • Income taxable in India - PE in India - Tax authorities below failed to appreciate the distinction between the existence of a business connection and the income accruing or arising out of such business connection, which is clear and explicit. It is established that assessee had no business connection or dependent agent PE or construction PE in India. The attribution of profit from off-shores supplies made to PGCIL to the alleged business connection or PE and application of Section 44BBB is not sustainable. - AT

  • Unexplained deposits in bank account - Amount deposited in the bank account was out of sale of various items as held by the assessee as stock in trade and since the deposits in the bank account were out of sale of stock therefore the stock of the assessee has depleted and the cash has come in respect of stock, such sales had been disclosed in the trading account against the purchase which had not been doubted, neither the opening and closing stock had been doubted. - Additions deleted - AT

  • Addition under the head of Vehicle Running Expenses and Repairs & Maintenance - "exaggerated expense' or "not reasonable expense". - The onus is on the Revenue to establish that the expenses claimed by the assessee has been booked twice in the books of accounts. However, the Revenue has not brought in any evidence - the claim of the assessee on account of vehicle running expenses on account of repairs & maintenance expense deserves to be allowed. - AT

  • TDS u/s 194A - processing charges (upfront fee) paid for taking loan from bank - Since, the assessee could not justify the payments without deduction of tax with necessary evidence and also fails to obtain the certificate from the Auditor to the effect what was quantified under relevant Form No.3CD, includes processing fees paid to banks of which provisions of Section 194A has no application. - AT

  • Rectification of mistake u/s 154 - the income tax proceeding are not adversarial it is not material as to who committed the mistake, the fact that a mistake has been committed and the same has to be rectified. - Thus as the interest awarded under Land Acquisition Act is not taxable as held by the Hon'ble Supreme Court, the department cannot demand to pay the tax on the same by way of invoking section 263 - AT

  • TP Adjustment - intra/group services in the nature of management services - DRP ignored the evidences filed by the assessee demonstrating receipt of management services by merely stating that the assessee failed the benefit test. - Adjustment made by the TPO by determining the arm’s length price of the management services at nil is unsustainable. - AT

  • TP Adjustment - Addition towards interest on receivables - though the assessee was required to maintain the T.P. Study and file the same before the TPO to show that the assessee’s transactions with it’s A.E. were at Arms Length however, nothing has been brought to our notice that the assessee has brought any comparable instance. - additions confirmed - AT

  • Additions based on entries in the Diary - Presumption u/s 292C - without substantiating the content of the noting in the diary, the value adopted by way of decoding by the authorities below based on assumption, presumption and guess work is illegal and against the law. Since, the diary jottings have not been corroborated from any relevant material documentary evidence and hence, the jottings in the diary by no stretch of imagination can be accepted as an evidence or conclusive proof of ‘renovation expenditure in multiple of 00/100 by the assessee for the purpose of presumption u/s 292C of the Act against the assessee - AT

  • Customs

  • Release of warehoused goods seized by the DRI - The appellant having accepted the order-in-original holding him guilty of violation of the terms and conditions of the advance license and the provisions of the Act and the goods having detained and kept in the custody of the warehouse from 2002, a vested right accrues in favour of CWC to recover the rent payable to them and therefore the demand made on the appellant by CWC, atleast up to the date when the provision was amended is valid and proper and the said amount already paid by the appellant need not be returned or refunded to the appellant. - HC

  • Exemption from duty - import of helicopters - Actual user condition - Although, the requirements of Condition No.104 of the Exemption Notification are unambiguous but the explanation inserted by way of amendment of Condition No.104 of the Exemption Notification amply clarifies that the exemption condition would be satisfied if the aircraft imported is used for non-scheduled (passenger) services or non-scheduled (charter) services. - HC

  • Revocation of the Customs Broker license - There is no evidence brought out that there is any overt involvement of the Customs Broker in the fraud committed by the exporter. There is no basis to allege that the appellant has violated the relevant Regulations of CBLR, 2018. - AT

  • Rejection of value and its re-determination of the duty - retraction of statements - The only thing which goes in favour of Revenue is that the Managing Director of the appellant had given statements which, he retracted later. If the statements and the retraction are both considered, nothing survives in this demand. If neither is considered also, nothing survives. - AT

  • Revocation of Customs Broker License - Since, the employee of Team Logistics is not an employee of the Customs Broker, the Appellant cannot be held responsible for the misdeclaration if any, on the part of employee of Team Logistics or the Importer. Thus, the allegation in the Notice that the Appellant failed to exercise proper control over his employees, is not proved and hence the allegation in the Notice about the contravention of Rule 13 ( 12) by the Customs Broker is not sustainable. - AT

  • Prohibited goods - areca nuts - So far as the prohibition under the notification issued by the DGFT is concerned, it is based on the CIF value, i.e., the transaction value including the cost, freight and transit insurance. It is not based on the assessable value under the Customs Act. Therefore, so long as the CIF value is as per the DGFT Notification, import of the goods is not prohibited. Therefore, the areca nuts which were imported were not prohibited because the CIF value was not below the threshold. - AT

  • Indian Laws

  • Dishonour of Cheque - validity of notice issued - as in the notice which was issued after the bouncing of the cheque, there was no demand of the amount of the bounced cheque, in this background, the findings returned by learned Trial Court that the notice was no notice in the eyes of law, as is envisaged under the provisions of the Negotiable Instruments Act, were also correct findings. - HC


Case Laws:

  • GST

  • 2023 (4) TMI 545
  • 2023 (4) TMI 544
  • 2023 (4) TMI 543
  • 2023 (4) TMI 542
  • 2023 (4) TMI 541
  • 2023 (4) TMI 540
  • 2023 (4) TMI 539
  • Income Tax

  • 2023 (4) TMI 538
  • 2023 (4) TMI 537
  • 2023 (4) TMI 536
  • 2023 (4) TMI 535
  • 2023 (4) TMI 534
  • 2023 (4) TMI 533
  • 2023 (4) TMI 532
  • 2023 (4) TMI 531
  • 2023 (4) TMI 530
  • 2023 (4) TMI 529
  • 2023 (4) TMI 528
  • 2023 (4) TMI 527
  • 2023 (4) TMI 526
  • 2023 (4) TMI 525
  • 2023 (4) TMI 524
  • 2023 (4) TMI 523
  • 2023 (4) TMI 522
  • 2023 (4) TMI 521
  • 2023 (4) TMI 520
  • 2023 (4) TMI 519
  • 2023 (4) TMI 518
  • 2023 (4) TMI 517
  • 2023 (4) TMI 498
  • Customs

  • 2023 (4) TMI 516
  • 2023 (4) TMI 515
  • 2023 (4) TMI 514
  • 2023 (4) TMI 513
  • 2023 (4) TMI 512
  • 2023 (4) TMI 511
  • 2023 (4) TMI 510
  • 2023 (4) TMI 509
  • Insolvency & Bankruptcy

  • 2023 (4) TMI 508
  • 2023 (4) TMI 507
  • Service Tax

  • 2023 (4) TMI 506
  • 2023 (4) TMI 505
  • 2023 (4) TMI 504
  • Central Excise

  • 2023 (4) TMI 503
  • 2023 (4) TMI 502
  • Indian Laws

  • 2023 (4) TMI 501
  • 2023 (4) TMI 500
  • 2023 (4) TMI 499
 

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