August 2025

Bharti Airtel Ltd. vs Assistant Commissioner Of Income Tax*

In a significant ruling for the telecom sector, the Mumbai ITAT held that annual/quarterly DOT licence fees constitute revenue expenditure deductible under section 37(1) of the Income Tax Act, not capital expenditure requiring amortization under section 35ABB. The Tribunal emphasized that the fee is specific to each year, does not confer enduring benefit, and is essential for ongoing business operations. This decision clarifies the distinction between capital outlays for licence acquisition and recurring operational payments, providing relief to telecom companies by allowing immediate deduction of such fees.

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Income Tax Officer & Ors. vs Urban Improvement Trust & Ors.

In this landmark Supreme Court judgment, the Court definitively interpreted the scope of ‘local authority’ under Section 10(20) of Income Tax Act post-2002 amendment. The Revenue successfully challenged High Court rulings that granted exemption to Urban Improvement Trust. The Court established that the amended Section 10(20) provides an exhaustive definition, and Urban Improvement Trusts constituted under state improvement acts do not qualify as Municipal Committees entitled to control municipal funds. This judgment clarifies that deletion of Section 10(20A) intentionally removed tax exemption for urban development authorities, restricting benefits only to constitutionally recognized local self-government institutions.

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Commissioner Of Income Tax vs Nandlal Agarwal & Anr.

In this landmark Supreme Court judgment on Hindu Undivided Family taxation, the Court clarified the critical distinction between guardianship arrangements and the legal status of inherited property. The Revenue successfully argued that two minor brothers who inherited their father’s rice mill business remained members of a joint Hindu family for tax purposes, despite having separate court-appointed guardians. The Court established that guardianship orders directing separate accounting for minors do not constitute partition of joint family property. This decision reinforces the principle that under Mitakshara law, inherited property retains its joint family character until formal partition, and tax assessment must reflect this HUF status under Section 40 of the 1922 Act. The judgment has significant implications for succession planning and tax treatment of minor coparceners in family businesses.

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Mohammad Ali Khan & Ors. vs Commissioner Of Wealth Tax

In this landmark wealth tax exemption case, the Supreme Court delivered a definitive interpretation of section 5(1)(iii) of the Wealth Tax Act 1957 concerning former rulers’ official residences. The Court rejected the assessee’s claim for full exemption of Khas Bagh Palace, ruling that exemption under the Merged States (Taxation Concessions) Order applies only to portions actually occupied by the ruler, not entire buildings generating rental income. This judgment reinforces strict construction principles for taxation statutes and clarifies that exemption provisions cannot be expanded to include commercial lettings within declared official residences.

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E.M. Muthappa Chettiar vs Income Tax Officer & Ors.

In this landmark judgment, the Supreme Court of India reinforced the procedural robustness of tax assessment under the Excess Profits Tax Act, 1940. The Court decisively ruled that disputes over a firm’s dissolution date, pending in civil court, do not invalidate tax assessments completed in good faith based on the factual position at the time. Crucially, it affirmed that for excess profits tax, the ‘business’ itself is the taxable unit, not the legal entity of the firm. This principle ensures continuity in tax liability despite changes in partnership status. The judgment also clarified that service of notice on a managing partner binds all partners, and such partners are ‘assessees’ subject to recovery proceedings under the Income Tax Act, even without personal demand notices. This ruling provides critical precedent for tax authorities in assessing and recovering taxes from partnership businesses amidst internal disputes.

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P. Jayappan vs S.K. Perumal, Income Tax Officer

In a landmark ruling on the interplay between tax reassessment and criminal prosecution, the Supreme Court decisively held that pending reassessment proceedings do not constitute a legal bar to the initiation of criminal prosecution for tax evasion offences under sections 276C and 277 of the Income Tax Act, 1961, and related offences under the Indian Penal Code. The Court emphasized the independence of criminal proceedings, requiring courts to evaluate evidence separately, while allowing for procedural adjustments like adjournments if assessment outcomes are imminent. This judgment clarifies that the mere possibility of a favourable outcome in reassessment does not render prosecution premature, reinforcing the Department’s authority to pursue criminal action concurrently with civil proceedings, subject to the discretionary powers of the CIT under section 279 and the criminal courts under the CrPC.

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Commissioner Of Central Excise vs Gujarat Carbon & Industries Ltd.

In a significant ruling on service tax jurisprudence, the Supreme Court dismissed the Revenue’s appeals, upholding CESTAT’s view that service tax cannot be demanded from service recipients (availers) for periods prior to 2003. The Court clarified that assessment under section 73 of the Finance Act 1994 is contingent on the assessee’s liability to file returns under section 70. Since service receivers were not mandated to file returns until section 71A was inserted in 2003, any show-cause notices or demands for the 1997-1998 period were invalid. The Court rejected the Revenue’s argument based on retrospective validation under the Finance Act 2000, emphasizing that statutory provisions must be interpreted as they stood during the relevant time. This decision reinforces the principle that tax liability must be grounded in clear statutory authority and protects assessees from retrospective impositions without explicit legislative mandate.

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G.E. Power India Ltd. vs ACIT

In this comprehensive judgment, the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal, Mumbai, adjudicated multiple tax disputes for G.E. Power India Ltd. across assessment years 2002-03 and 2008-09. Key rulings include: upholding the non-deductibility of VRS expenses added back to profit; confirming that provisions for doubtful debts do not constitute unascertained liabilities under MAT provisions; allowing deductions under section 80HHC from book profit, supported by Supreme Court authority; permitting set-off of amalgamation-related losses under section 72A; allowing club subscription fees as legitimate business expenditure; and rejecting disallowance of unpaid service tax under section 43B where amounts were not received. The decision reinforces principles of factual accuracy, statutory interpretation, and adherence to binding precedents, favoring the assessee on most substantive legal issues while dismissing procedural challenges.

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