April 2025

Assistant Commissioner Of Income Tax vs M/S U.P. Asbestos Ltd.

In a significant ruling on stock valuation, the Lucknow ITAT dismissed the Revenue’s appeal, upholding CIT(A)’s deletion of Rs. 2.92 crore addition for excise duty on closing stock. The Tribunal authoritatively held that under Section 145A of the Income-tax Act, only excise duty ‘actually incurred’ must be included in closing stock valuation. For manufactured goods lying in stock (not cleared), excise duty liability accrues but does not crystallize until removal; thus, it is not ‘incurred’ and need not be added. The decision reinforces the principle that tax adjustments under Section 145A must align with actual liability incurrence, not mere accrual, and respects the accounting matching principle. This provides clarity for manufacturers on handling excise duty in inventory valuation.

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Ippili Srinivasa Rao vs ITO

In Ippili Srinivasa Rao vs. ITO, the Visakhapatnam ITAT allowed the assessee’s appeal, holding that CPC’s adjustment u/s 143(1) disallowing employees’ PF/ESI contribution was invalid as it involved a debatable issue. On substantive grounds, the Tribunal ruled that such contributions are deductible if paid before the due date for filing the return of income u/s 139(1), aligning with section 43B(b) and overriding strictures of section 36(1)(va). This decision reinforces that summary processing u/s 143(1) cannot adjudicate contentious matters and affirms a taxpayer-friendly stance on timing of PF/ESI payments.

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Bhartiya Kisan Sangh Sewa Niketan vs Commissioner of incometax

In a significant ruling on charitable trust registration, the Delhi ITAT allowed the appeal of Bhartiya Kisan Sangh Sewa Niketan, directing CIT(Exemptions) to grant registration under section 12A. The Tribunal held that the society’s objectives of protecting farmers’ interests constitute ‘charitable purpose’ as ‘general public utility’ under section 2(15) of the Income Tax Act. Critically, it reinforced the legal principle that at the registration stage, authorities must examine only the objects of the trust, not the application of income, which is assessed separately. The decision clarifies that benefiting a substantial section of the public (here, farmers comprising 60-70% of population) meets the ‘general public utility’ test, following Supreme Court jurisprudence.

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Jayaram Paper Mill Ltd. vs Commissioner Of Income Tax & Anr.

In Jayaram Paper Mills Ltd. vs. CIT, the Madras High Court upheld the validity of a reassessment notice under section 148, emphasizing the transformative impact of Explanation 2 to section 147 post-1988 amendment. The Court ruled that the deeming fiction under Explanation 2 deems understatement of income or excessive claims as ‘income escaping assessment’, even if all primary facts were disclosed in the original return. This decision narrows the scope for challenging reassessment notices based on full disclosure, shifting focus to whether the Assessing Officer had ‘reason to believe’ escapement under the expanded statutory fiction. The judgment reinforces the Revenue’s authority to reopen assessments where income is allegedly understated, independent of the assessee’s disclosure obligations.

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Deputy Commissioner Of Income Tax (International Taxation) vs Bank Of Bahrain “,” Kuwait

This Special Bench ITAT judgment addresses key tax issues for a non-resident bank: (1) Interest on Government securities accrues only on coupon dates, not daily, overriding book entries for tax purposes. (2) Broken period interest is deductible for securities held as trading assets, not capital investments. (3) Guarantee commission must be recognized over the guarantee period, not fully in the year of receipt. The decision reinforces principles of accrual-based taxation and the distinction between trading and investment assets in banking.

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Navinchandra Mafatlal vs Commissioner Of Income Tax

In this landmark judgment, the Supreme Court of India decisively upheld the constitutional validity of taxing capital gains under the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922. The Court rejected narrow interpretations of ‘income’ based on historical English practice, instead adopting a broad, natural meaning that includes profits from capital asset sales. This ruling established a foundational principle for Indian tax law: legislative powers in constitutional entries are to be interpreted liberally, ensuring that ‘income’ encompasses capital gains, thereby validating the Central Legislature’s authority to enact such provisions. The decision has enduring significance for tax policy and constitutional interpretation.

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PRADEEP KUMAR AGGARWAL vs ITO

In a significant ruling on bogus purchase allegations, the Delhi ITAT (SMC) deleted an addition of Rs. 20,72,820/- made u/s 69C, holding that the AO failed to prove the purchases were non-genuine. The Tribunal relied on multiple precedents where identical additions based on the same Investigation Wing information were deleted. Key legal principles reaffirmed: (i) third-party statements cannot be relied upon without cross-examination; (ii) assessee’s documentary evidence (bills, payments, VAT registrations) shifts the onus to the Revenue; (iii) doubt alone cannot justify addition; (iv) consistency in judicial decisions must be followed. The decision underscores the high evidentiary threshold required to treat purchases as bogus, especially when the assessee provides a complete transaction trail.

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Jayaram Paper Mills Ltd. vs Commissioner Of Income Tax “,” Anr.

In Jayaram Paper Mills Ltd. vs. CIT, the Madras High Court upheld the validity of a reassessment notice under section 148 of the Income Tax Act, 1961, for AY 2004-05. The petitioner, a paper manufacturing and financing company, had filed a return showing income from money-lending after setting off brought forward losses. The Revenue alleged that the assessee claimed expenditure unconnected to interest income and wrongly set off business losses against income from other sources, contravening section 72. The Court, through Justice V. Ramasubramanian, dismissed the writ petition, ruling that the Assessing Officer had ‘reason to believe’ income escaped assessment based on prima facie material, as expanded under Explanation 2 to section 147. The decision reinforces that reassessment is valid if there is tangible evidence of non-disclosure or under-assessment, and judicial review is confined to the existence of belief, not its correctness. This judgment clarifies the application of post-amendment section 147, emphasizing the deeming fiction for escapement in cases of excessive deductions or under-assessment.

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