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Home e-Newsletters Index Year 2022 August Day 6 - Saturday

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TMI Tax Updates - e-Newsletter
August 6, 2022

Case Laws in this Newsletter:

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



Articles


News


Notifications


Circulars / Instructions / Orders


Highlights / Catch Notes

    GST

  • Service of summons - can summons be issued to the concerned person - Revenue submitted that, if summons are served on the Petitioner’s employee for furnishing information or to seek his presence before the concerned officer and if a request is made that the employee summoned would be represented through an authorised agent, such request will be considered and in case such a request is declined, reasons for the same will be furnished. - Petition disposed off - HC

  • Income Tax

  • Assessee in Default for non deduction of TDS - period of limitation - There is no doubt in the mind of Bench that the impugned order of assessment passed was without jurisdiction as the same was passed beyond the limitation period of two years and accordingly the ground no. 1 as raised stands allowed in favour of the assessee declaring assessment order to be void ab initio requiring no further determination of issues. - AT

  • Addition of deemed dividend u/s 2(22)(e) - the loan obtained being not gratuitous in nature, do not fall within the mischief of Section 2(22)(e) of the Act. We thus opine that the action of the Assessing Officer runs counter to the mandate of Section 2(22)(e) of the Act on this score alone- AT

  • Capital gain - Nature of land sold - capital asset or agricultural land - It is salutary principle of interpretation of law that a provision of law must be understood in its plain meaning and the effect should be given to each and every word employed therein. Therefore, the language employed in the Act and the Notification cannot be stretched to include the word 'aerial'. As per the Certificate of the Tahasildar produced before the Assessing Officer and PWD Engineer's Certificate produced before the CIT(A), the distance between the lands in question and BBMP is more than 8 kms. - HC

  • Rectification u/s 154 - return filled treated as inconsistent and defective u/s. 139(9) - We find the order of CIT(A) in confirming the order of AO in treating the return of income as invalid, made the assessee remediless and there is no option to claim exemption u/s. 11 - we find force in the arguments of the ld. AR that the assessee shall get an opportunity to file details of investments/deposits before the AO. - AT

  • Deduction u/s 80IB - The methodology adopted by the assessee for apportionment of common head office expenses and selling expenses has consistently been followed year-on-year basis which has been held to be reasonable and scientific. It is thus noted that the issue in hand before us is no longer res integra considering the decisions in assessee’s own case. - AT

  • Capitalization of the amount of interest disallowed u/s 36(1)(iii) - Here the assessee is claiming that if interest corresponding to investment in mutual funds is not allowed as revenue expenditure, then same should be treated as cost of acquisition of the said mutual fund. We are of the opinion that the issue of claim of the interest amount as cost of acquisition will arise at the time of the sale of the said mutual funds and therefore issue is premature at this stage - AT

  • Revision u/s 263 - deduction /exemption u/s 10(24) - Assessee is not a business entity and does not work for profit. It is an association for the welfare of certain category of persons who writes in the film industry and other audio visual media and its objective is to protect the interest of its members though there is income generated not for profit but for the purpose of the welfare of the association and its members. PCIT has failed to establish that it is a business entity - Revision order quashed - AT

  • Customs

  • Valuation of imported consignments - retraction of relied statements - In the instant case, it is not established that the computer in question was in regular use by the appellant in the course of his business. No certificate whatsoever, as required under the provisions of Section 138C (2) was obtained. It is settled proposition of law that if a certain act is to be done by a certain authority, in a particular manner, the same should be done in the manner in which it is ordained. There are no short cuts in investigation. - the rejection of declared value, on the basis of value declared to insurer, is not legal, proper and justified. - AT

  • IBC

  • Scope of IBC - dishonor of cheque - compounding of offences - Recovery of the dues - Section 65(1) of the Code does not expressly mention ‘Debt Recovery Action’ under ‘for any purpose other than resolution of insolvency..’, keeping in view the factual occurrence of the events of this particular matter, we hold that the ‘intent’ may not be a ‘malafide intent’, but is nevertheless a fundamental attempt to obtain an edge/ advantage / an upper hand in ‘recovering their dues’. - ‘A Recovery Proceeding’ of this nature does fall within the scope and ambit of the words ‘for any purpose other than Resolution’, as defined under Section 65 (1) of the Code - AT

  • Appointment of IRP - the provisions of law empower the CoC contemplated under Section 22 of the I&B Code, 2016 either to continue the IRP as RP or replace the IRP. When the provisions are unambiguous and authorises the CoC to act in accordance with law the same cannot be interfered with by the Tribunals unless and until it is arbitrary, illegal and irrational and dehors the provisions of the Code and the Rules. - this Tribunal comes to an irresistible and inescapable conclusion that the Appellant has made a prima-facie case to be interfered with the order passed by the Adjudicating Authority. - AT

  • Revocation of liquidation process enabling the Corporate Debtor to revive and reconstruct by implementing the scheme sanctioned - The order of the Adjudicating Authority dated 10.01.2020 to which the Appellant is a party has not challenged the said order dated 10.01.2020 and the same has attained finality. Therefore, the Appellant is estopped from challenging the said order in this Appeal. The filing of the present Appeal is an abuse of process of law and wasting the precious time of this Tribunal - this Tribunal comes to an irresistible and inescapable conclusion that the Appeal is frivolous and vexatious and the same is liable to be dismissed. - AT

  • Preferential Transactions or not - documents being “Transaction Audit Report” and “Forensic Audit Report” were not provided to the Appellants - whether the impugned transactions fall within the ambit of Sections 43, 45 or 66 of the Code? - the Respondent/Liquidator made the application before the Adjudicating Authority after having sufficient evidence/material to establish the case of the Appellants beyond reasonable doubt. The basis for the application before the Adjudicating Authority is the report of the auditor and the observations and conclusions arrived at by the auditor. - NCLT rightly admitted the claim - AT

  • Initiation of CIRP - The Adjudicating Authority (NCLT’s) couched with the powers to be exercisable as enshrined in the I&B Code, 2016. For the purpose of entertaining Sections 7, 9 or 10, of the I&B Code, the Adjudicating Authority has to see whether debt is payable on the part of the Corporate Debtor and committed default. In such cases, the Adjudicating Authority invariably admit the application under the above provisions of law. - This Tribunal is of the view that in the present case, the debt and default has been proved and the Adjudicating Authority rightly admitted the Application under Section 7. - AT

  • Central Excise

  • CENVAT Credit - The Ld. Commissioner made a fundamental error while observing that payments have not been made to the original supplier (OEMs) but to the Contractor against the separate set of commercial invoices - In any case, whether or not the payment has been made against the excise invoices issued by the OEM or the commercial invoice issued by the Contractor who has procured the goods on behalf of the Appellant for use in the power plant is completely irrelevant. - AT

  • VAT

  • Interstate sate - consignment transfer/stock transfer - Declaration in Form F by bogus dealer - It may be true that once a statutory declaration is furnished, the recipient of such declaration cannot be held responsible for any incorrectness of the details filled in by the dealer issuing such declaration. However, the same cannot be understood to mean that a declaration in "Form F" or for that matter any declaration form of a dealer found to be non-existent/fictitious, which is nothing but a fraud played on the State, must also be extended the benefit of a valid declaration. - Demand confirmed - HC


Case Laws:

  • GST

  • 2022 (8) TMI 252
  • 2022 (8) TMI 251
  • Income Tax

  • 2022 (8) TMI 250
  • 2022 (8) TMI 249
  • 2022 (8) TMI 248
  • 2022 (8) TMI 247
  • 2022 (8) TMI 246
  • 2022 (8) TMI 245
  • 2022 (8) TMI 244
  • 2022 (8) TMI 243
  • 2022 (8) TMI 242
  • 2022 (8) TMI 241
  • 2022 (8) TMI 221
  • 2022 (8) TMI 220
  • 2022 (8) TMI 219
  • 2022 (8) TMI 218
  • 2022 (8) TMI 217
  • Customs

  • 2022 (8) TMI 240
  • 2022 (8) TMI 239
  • 2022 (8) TMI 238
  • 2022 (8) TMI 237
  • Insolvency & Bankruptcy

  • 2022 (8) TMI 236
  • 2022 (8) TMI 235
  • 2022 (8) TMI 234
  • 2022 (8) TMI 233
  • 2022 (8) TMI 232
  • 2022 (8) TMI 231
  • 2022 (8) TMI 230
  • Central Excise

  • 2022 (8) TMI 229
  • 2022 (8) TMI 228
  • 2022 (8) TMI 227
  • 2022 (8) TMI 226
  • 2022 (8) TMI 225
  • CST, VAT & Sales Tax

  • 2022 (8) TMI 224
  • 2022 (8) TMI 223
  • Indian Laws

  • 2022 (8) TMI 222
 

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