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TMI Tax Updates - e-Newsletter
August 21, 2021

Case Laws in this Newsletter:

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



Articles


News


Notifications


Highlights / Catch Notes

    GST

  • Classification of goods - rate of tax - Composite supply or mixed supply - The mixed supply of Instant mix flour of Gota/Methi Gota with Chutney powder/Kadi Chutney powder shall be treated as supply of Instant Gota Mix Flour/Instant Methi Gota Mix Flour respectively (falling under HSN 2106 90) on which the GST liability will be 18%(9% CGST + 9% SGST). - AAR

  • Validity of Advance ruling - Obtaining ruling by suppression of facts - Investigation proceedings were pending - the Advance Ruling cannot be used as a mechanism to nullify and frustrate the inquiry proceedings already initiated vide section 70(1) of CGST Act. - The said, Advance Ruling declared as void ab-initio in terms of Section 104 of CGST Act. - AAR

  • Levy of GST - amount collected from the employees towards canteen charges - GST, at the hands on the applicant, is not leviable on the amount representing the employees portion of canteen charges, which is collected by the applicant and paid to the Canteen service provider. - AAR

  • Income Tax

  • Revision u/s 263 by CIT - AO has not brought to tax the waived principle amounts of loans / borrowings - Unclaimed balances out of deposits received from customers which were transferred to profit and loss account were assessable as income. Thus, the order of the Assessing Officer on account of incorrect application of the law, can be said to be erroneous - HC

  • Gain on sale of land - Addition u/s 28(iv) - excess area of land received in partition - co-ownership in land - asset was shown in the balance sheet as capital asset but not stock in trade - the excess area of land received was not taxable u/s 28(iv) of the Act and there is no loss of revenue- AT

  • Revision u/s 263 - receipt of on-money - incriminating material found in search or not? - PCIT should himself have conducted the enquiry or causing to make such enquiries have passed the order under Section 263. In the present case, despite the material available on record, no further enquiry were made by the PCIT and had simply relied upon the finding recorded by the CIT Appeal in the hands of co-owners. - the order passed by the PCIT under Section 263 was without any jurisdiction - AT

  • Addition applying the provisions of section 50C - Once the assessee has raised the objection against the adoption of deemed full value consideration in terms of section 50C of the Income Tax Act, the Assessing Officer is duty bound to refer the matter to the DDO for determination of the fair market value of the property in terms of section 50C(2) of the Income Tax Act. Since, the Assessing Officer has not taken any step to determine the fair market value, matter restored back - AT

  • Validity of the reopening of proceedings under section 147 - Assessee contended that, assessment was framed on the basis of mere internal office note, without recording reasons as envisaged u/s 148 of the Act and according to the assessee there is no nexus between the alleged reasons and the assessment framed - non adherence to the principles of natural justice - the reasons supplied to the assessee are not the same and verbatim. - AT

  • Addition u/s 56(2)(vii)(b) - valuation of land purchased by assessee - deemed gift under section 56(2)(vii)(b)(ii) - Assessee submitted that, actual deed could not be materialised and no transaction of land taken place - actually no transaction has been materialised for which it could be assumed that deemed gift is assessable in the hands of the assessee. In view of the above discussion, we allow this appeal and delete the addition done by the Assessing Officer with the aid of section 56(2)(vii)(b) (ii) - AT

  • Revision u/s 263 - belated employee’s contribution to PF and ESIC funds - AO did not follow the CBDT circular but followed the HC decision - The CIT in exercise the powers vested u/s 263 of the Act cannot do something, what the Assessing Officer himself cannot do. Thus, the very premises on which revision was sought to be made by ld. PCIT had failed, and resultant order has no legs to stand. - AT

  • Addition u/s 40A(3) - assessee had made cash payments exceeding ₹ 20,000/- - CIT-A deleted the addition - AO is right in his rem to reopen the assessment based on the Revenue’s audit report. - CIT(A) has simply brushed aside the issue by stating that all those payments were made during bank holidays which falls under exceptions mentioned in Rule 6DD of the IT Rules, 1962 without giving a clear cut finding on that regard - Additions confirmed - AT

  • Disallowance of payment of professional fee to the directors - allegation of paying excessive remuneration to the directors - services provided by the directors towards professional physical fitness programme - Assessee has pointed that in the subsequent assessment year the professional fee paid to the directors has been allowed by the Assessing Officer in scrutiny assessment proceedings on same set of documents. It is not the case of Revenue that the professional fees paid to the directors is in excess of the market rate - Claim allowed - AT

  • Customs

  • Smuggling - gold bars of foreign origin - Though a prayer for condonation of delay could have been made before the Tribunal. In any event, if it appears that the respondent having lost out on time to avail the statutory remedy, seeks to bypass the same and file a writ petition, the Courts would not entertain such a petition and will come to the conclusion that the reason for bypassing the statutory appellate remedy is because the appeal cannot be maintained at that point of time. - HC

  • Refund of terminal excise duty - deemed export or not - supplies of goods by DTA unit to EOU unit - once the supply of goods fall within the category of deemed export, the unit would be entitled to refund of TED - HC

  • Indian Laws

  • Dishonor of Cheque - permission to deposit interim compensation - the trial Court committed an error without passing any order directing the respondent/accused to deposit the amount in the Court or rejecting the application. - It may be by oversight or an error, but once the order was passed by allowing or rejecting the application, the same Magistrate has no power to recall any order passed on the same application as per the provisions of Section 362 of Cr.P.C - HC

  • Dishonor of Cheque - The fact is that the bank account as well as cheque book belongs to the father of the applicant and the applicant had access to the same. In absence of any challenge to signatures of the applicant on the disputed cheque, this Court is of the considered opinion that at present it cannot be said that the applicant is not liable to be prosecuted under Section 138 of the N.I.Act. In the light of misleading stand taken by the applicant as well as in the light of the fact that prima facie, the applicant has issued the cheque of his father under own signatures, it is clear that he has also tried to cheat the respondent. - HC

  • IBC

  • Initiation of CIRP - Personal Guarantors to Corporate Debtors failed to make repayment of guarantee undertaken - existence of debt and dispute or not - an application for insolvency for resolution against the personal guarantor is not maintainable unless that CIRP/liquidation is ongoing against the Corporate Debtor. - Tri

  • Service Tax

  • Refund of CENVAT Credit - input services - nexus with the out put service - the department is not permitted to question the eligibility of CENVAT credit at the time of claiming refund. Further, in view of the clarification given by the tax research unit of CBEC vide their letter dated 16.3.2012, the amended Rule 5 of CENVAT Credit Rules, does not require correlation between the output service exported and the input service used in such output service exported. - AT

  • CENVAT Credit - passenger lift - The lift is essential for providing the output service and therefore, the appellant has fulfilled both the conditions to avail the credit, hence the denial of credit is not sustainable, simply because the lifts are fitted into the building does not have an impact on treatment of lifts as capital goods because even after fitting into the building, lift is a lift and covered under Chapter 84 and cannot be considered as input just to deny the benefit of CENVAT credit. - AT

  • Refund of Service Tax - input service - The reasons attributed by the Adjudicating Authority cannot be sustained since there is no doubt that these services were not used in the factory of production but in any other place or premises of production or manufacture of the said goods, for their export. - the appellant satisfies the conditions of N/N. 41/2012 - AT

  • Refund of CENVAT credit - nexus of input services with the output services - In view of the clarification given by the tax research unit of CBEC vide their letter, the amended Rule 5 of CENVAT Credit Rules, does not require correlation between the output service exported and the input service used in such output service exported. - AT

  • Commercial or industrial construction service - services rendered to Government bodies and other entities - benefit exemption has been denied for the reason that the services have been rendered in the factory area - Scope of 'Factory' - the premises where the post-production processes take place towards making the produce commercially viable would qualify as a factory - the oil fields of ONGC, where only extraction of crude oil takes places, would not qualify as a ‘factory’. - The Commissioner committed an illegality in denying the benefit of the Notification dated 20.06.2012 at Serial No. 13(d) to the appellant for ETPs constructed for ONGC and the STPs constructed for NBCC - AT

  • Central Excise

  • Refund of accumulated balance of unutilized credit of Education Cess and Secondary and Higher Education Cess - In view of the decision of the Tribunal, refund can be granted of the cesses viz. Education Cess and Higher Education Cess which could not be transitioned into GST. - The findings in the impugned order regarding time-bar is beyond the show-cause notice as well as Order-in- Original and the same is not sustainable in law - AT

  • Since Appellant were paying the duty utilizing the CENVAT Credit they cannot be charged for contravention of the provisions of Rule 4, 8(1), 8(3) & 8(3A) of the Central Excise Rules, 2002 for which the penalty has been imposed under Rule 25 of Central Excise Rules, 2002, equivalent to the demand of duty. In view of Hon’ble High Court order since we conclude that payment of duty by utilizing the CENVAT Credit was proper mode of payment of duty during the period of default, the penalty imposed on the Appellant needs to be set aside. - AT


Case Laws:

  • GST

  • 2021 (8) TMI 839
  • 2021 (8) TMI 838
  • 2021 (8) TMI 837
  • 2021 (8) TMI 836
  • 2021 (8) TMI 832
  • Income Tax

  • 2021 (8) TMI 835
  • 2021 (8) TMI 834
  • 2021 (8) TMI 833
  • 2021 (8) TMI 829
  • 2021 (8) TMI 824
  • 2021 (8) TMI 817
  • 2021 (8) TMI 816
  • 2021 (8) TMI 815
  • 2021 (8) TMI 808
  • 2021 (8) TMI 807
  • 2021 (8) TMI 805
  • 2021 (8) TMI 804
  • 2021 (8) TMI 802
  • 2021 (8) TMI 800
  • 2021 (8) TMI 794
  • 2021 (8) TMI 793
  • 2021 (8) TMI 792
  • 2021 (8) TMI 791
  • 2021 (8) TMI 790
  • 2021 (8) TMI 789
  • 2021 (8) TMI 788
  • 2021 (8) TMI 787
  • Benami Property

  • 2021 (8) TMI 820
  • Customs

  • 2021 (8) TMI 831
  • 2021 (8) TMI 822
  • Insolvency & Bankruptcy

  • 2021 (8) TMI 812
  • 2021 (8) TMI 798
  • 2021 (8) TMI 797
  • Service Tax

  • 2021 (8) TMI 830
  • 2021 (8) TMI 814
  • 2021 (8) TMI 811
  • 2021 (8) TMI 810
  • 2021 (8) TMI 809
  • 2021 (8) TMI 806
  • 2021 (8) TMI 803
  • 2021 (8) TMI 801
  • 2021 (8) TMI 796
  • Central Excise

  • 2021 (8) TMI 828
  • 2021 (8) TMI 819
  • 2021 (8) TMI 818
  • 2021 (8) TMI 813
  • 2021 (8) TMI 799
  • 2021 (8) TMI 795
  • Indian Laws

  • 2021 (8) TMI 827
  • 2021 (8) TMI 826
  • 2021 (8) TMI 825
  • 2021 (8) TMI 823
  • 2021 (8) TMI 821
 

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