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Home e-Newsletters Index Year 2022 August Day 12 - Friday

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TMI Tax Updates - e-Newsletter
August 12, 2022

Case Laws in this Newsletter:

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



Articles


News


Notifications


Highlights / Catch Notes

    GST

  • Constitutional Validity of 2nd proviso to Section 16(2) of the CGST Act, 2017 - Availabiltiy of ITC subject to payment to debtors within 180 days - whether the provision is ultra vires and dehors the provisions of the India Contract Act, 1872 Act? - It will be open for the petitioner to raise all contentions in respect of the show cause notice. It is clarified, while issuing rule as above in respect of the first prayer, that the authority shall proceed with the adjudication proceedings pursuant to the show cause notice - HC

  • Seeking grant of bail - Conspiracy - Illegal and fraudulent availment of fake Input Tax Credit - It is pertinent to observe that Section 70 of CGST Act provides for recording of statements with regard to the proceedings under the Act. This section nowhere specifically says that such statements can be used against the maker of such statements during the trial. The complainant has not pointed out any legal provision which makes it impossible for the maker of the statement under Section 70 of CGST Act to retract the same - The complainant department has not given any specific reason why the accused was not summoned after 22.06.2022. - Bail allowed - DSC

  • Income Tax

  • Prosecution u/s 276-CC (ii) - evasion of tax - 72 days delay in filing return - considering discrepancy and considering that not only the notice issued to the petitioner before granting prosecution sanction, even the complaint filed by the Department alleges delay in filing return, while eliciting prosecution under Section 276-CC (ii) of the Act of 1961, this Court is of the view that the cognizance, which has been taken for evasion of tax is ex-facie erroneous and deserves to be quashed and set aside. - HC

  • Addition u/s 68 - Unexplained share application money - onus to prove - Where the assessee shows that entries regarding cash credit in a third party’s account are genuine and the sums were in fact received from the third party as loans or deposits, he has discharged the onus. In that case it is for the third party to explain the source of the moneys, and they cannot be charged as the assessee’s income in the absence of any material to indicate that they belong to the assessee. - AT

  • Rejection of book result u/s 145(3) - estimation of income - Deduction of depreciation from the estimated income - Depreciation should be allowable being statutory allowance where Assessing Officer has rejected the books of account and estimated the income of the assessee. However, the profit declared by the assessee in the return of income cannot be further reduced on account of partner's remuneration, interest on partner's capital and the depreciation. - AT

  • Addition u/s 68 - unexplained cash deposits - What is relevant is the source for the funds deposited in the bank account and assessee has proved that it has sufficient unutilised funds in the books. The availability of funds in the cash book supports the cash deposits in the bank. Therefore, Assessing Officer cannot go beyond the mandate unless he has contrary evidence. - AT

  • Disallowance u/s.40A(3) - expenses towards air ticket and hotel expenses in cash in excess of prescribed limit u/s.40A(3) - there is merit in arguments of the assessee that it has acted only as agent for his customers and has booked air ticket on behalf of its customers, because it is general practice in this kind of industry that tour operators will collect money from its customers and in turn, make cash payments for booking air ticket, because airlines generally does not accept cheque payments, other than cash payment or on line payment. Therefore, this fact needs to be verified from the Assessing Officer to ascertain fact with regard to arguments of the assessee that it has made cash payment to airlines on behalf of its customers as their agent and thus, same needs to be outside scope of section 40A(3). - AT

  • Addition u/s 56/68 - Unexplained credit in capital account - advances received by assessee for sale of the property against MOU - We notice that the AO has not expressed the view that the assessee has not discharged the initial onus placed upon it. The independent enquiry has been made by AO and the intended buyer has also confirmed the transaction and MOU. Hence, the registration or otherwise of MOU may not be relevant here, when the parties to the MOU have confirmed the execution of said agreement. - AT

  • Allowable business expenses u/s 37(1) - site encroachment charges, land owners’ payment etc. - Merely because the evictees did not have PAN or not assessed to tax, the same would not jeopardize the claim of the assessee. M/s SVC responded to notice u/s 133(6) and confirmed the payments. There is nothing adverse on record except for mere allegation that the transaction appeared to be collusive one and the bona-fides of the transactions were doubtful. There is no concrete material to substantiate this conclusion. - The claim was allowable as business expenditure. - AT

  • Nature of expenses - AO incorrectly applied matching principle for making disallowance, as he over looked the same line of business of the asessee where sales of vehicles are shown. In view of this, expenditure incurred by the assessee on setting up of a new line of assembly for manufacturing of commercial vehicle when assessee is already engaging in business of manufacturing commercial vehicle cannot be said to be capital expenditure. - Allowed as revenue expenditure - AT

  • TP Adjustment - determination of Arm’s Length Price (ALP) - The products are unique and not comparable to others. The terms and conditions and the economic circumstances under which the Assessee sells extruders parts and elements to AE are materially different from the comparable uncontrolled transactions. We are therefore of the view that the question of adopting the profit margins at the entity level based on the submissions made by the Assessee before the CIT(A) cannot be accepted. - AT

  • Customs

  • Criminal Conspiracy - Proceedings against the Superintendent of Customs, EOU (petitioner) - wrongful loss to the Government of India - The sanction given under Section 19(1)(c) for the offence punishable under Section 13 (2) read with Section 13 (1)(d) of the Prevention of Corruption Act, cannot be called as an invalid sanction in the eye of law. - HC

  • Corporate Law

  • Validity of summon order - Winding up of the company - Dishonor of Cheque - Section 138 of NI Act - in terms of Section 279(1) of the Companies Act, 2013, a suit or other legal proceedings can be commenced, or if pending on the date of the winding up order may be proceeded with by or against the company with the leave of the Tribunal and subject to such terms as the Tribunal may impose. - HC

  • Indian Laws

  • Dishonor of Cheque - cheques in question have not even been issued by the petitioner company - misuse of letter heads of the petitioner company - The petitioner company has sufficiently shown that they had no role in the case at hand and cannot thus be held liable for dishonour of a cheque which was not even issued by them or on their behalf in the first place. In these circumstances, where there are no ingredients made out against the petitioner-company, continuation of proceedings against them will be an abuse of the process of law. - HC

  • IBC

  • CIRP - Recovery proceedings initiated by the bank under SARFAESI Act - Respondent No. 1 certainly has the right to proceed against the collateral securities for recovery of its dues, which are independent of the resolution plan approved by the NCLT. If the resolution plan approved by the Adjudicating Authority is contravened by the concerned corporate debtor, any person other than the corporate debtor, whose interests are prejudicially affected, may make an application to the Adjudicating Authority for an order for liquidation. Where a resolution applicant succeeds as a corporate debtor, but fails to comply with its assurance in terms of the resolution plan, then subsequent step to be taken has been specified in Section 33(3) of the IBC - HC

  • Effect of interim moratorium - Dishonor of Cheque - ongoing CIRP proceedings - this court would have to interpret the terms “all the debts” and “any legal action or proceedings pending in respect of any debt” as occur in Section 96 of the Code, to mean that it would cover all such debts including any debt not pertaining to a corporate debtor for whom the accused in such a complaint under Section 138 stood as a personal guarantor to, even in his capacity as a Director of such corporate debtor - unless the wordings of a statute are “unworkable” or wholly impractical, nothing extra can be read into a statute or taken away therefrom. - Till a decision is taken by the Adjudicating Authority in terms of Sections 100 and 101 of the Code, on the application filed by the petitioner under Section 94(1) thereof, the proceedings before the learned trial court under Section 138 of the Act, would remain stayed - HC

  • Service Tax

  • Extended period of limitation - The assessee has not disclosed the value of taxable service for the period 10.9.2004 to 31.7.2007 in their ST 3 Returns filed to the department. Only when the department issued a show cause notice, the responded bank remitted the amount of tax. Hence, merely because they were exonerated under Section 80 of the Act from payment of penalty for reasonable cause for non payment the same yardstick cannot be taken by the bank to contend that the extended period of limitation as prescribed under proviso to section 73 of the Act is available. - HC

  • Central Excise

  • CENVAT Credit - Works Contract Services - Input Services - The expression “modernisation, renovation or repairs of a factory” was appearing in the definition of ‘input service’ both before and after 01.07.2012. It has not been denied by the department that the Coke Oven Project of the appellants was towards modernization and renovation of their existing plant/factory. - Appellants have correctly taken credit of service tax paid/borne in respect of all services - AT


Case Laws:

  • GST

  • 2022 (8) TMI 464
  • 2022 (8) TMI 463
  • 2022 (8) TMI 462
  • 2022 (8) TMI 461
  • Income Tax

  • 2022 (8) TMI 486
  • 2022 (8) TMI 485
  • 2022 (8) TMI 484
  • 2022 (8) TMI 483
  • 2022 (8) TMI 482
  • 2022 (8) TMI 481
  • 2022 (8) TMI 460
  • 2022 (8) TMI 459
  • 2022 (8) TMI 458
  • 2022 (8) TMI 457
  • 2022 (8) TMI 456
  • 2022 (8) TMI 455
  • 2022 (8) TMI 454
  • 2022 (8) TMI 453
  • 2022 (8) TMI 452
  • 2022 (8) TMI 451
  • 2022 (8) TMI 450
  • 2022 (8) TMI 449
  • 2022 (8) TMI 448
  • 2022 (8) TMI 447
  • 2022 (8) TMI 446
  • 2022 (8) TMI 445
  • 2022 (8) TMI 444
  • 2022 (8) TMI 443
  • 2022 (8) TMI 442
  • 2022 (8) TMI 441
  • 2022 (8) TMI 440
  • 2022 (8) TMI 439
  • 2022 (8) TMI 438
  • 2022 (8) TMI 437
  • 2022 (8) TMI 436
  • 2022 (8) TMI 435
  • 2022 (8) TMI 434
  • 2022 (8) TMI 433
  • 2022 (8) TMI 432
  • Customs

  • 2022 (8) TMI 480
  • Corporate Laws

  • 2022 (8) TMI 479
  • Insolvency & Bankruptcy

  • 2022 (8) TMI 478
  • 2022 (8) TMI 477
  • 2022 (8) TMI 476
  • 2022 (8) TMI 475
  • 2022 (8) TMI 474
  • 2022 (8) TMI 473
  • Service Tax

  • 2022 (8) TMI 472
  • 2022 (8) TMI 471
  • 2022 (8) TMI 470
  • Central Excise

  • 2022 (8) TMI 469
  • 2022 (8) TMI 468
  • 2022 (8) TMI 467
  • Indian Laws

  • 2022 (8) TMI 466
  • 2022 (8) TMI 465
 

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