February 2026

S. N. Arora-Sapra vs Income Tax Officer

In a significant ruling on reassessment validity, the Delhi ITAT quashed proceedings against the assessee for AYs 2006-07 and 2007-08, holding that the AO acted mechanically without independent verification. The AO relied on Investigation Wing information alleging unexplained cash deposits and investments but recorded factually incorrect reasons (overstating deposits by ~Rs. 1.6 crore) and failed to examine bank statements or property documents. The Tribunal, citing precedents like Pr. CIT vs. RMG Polyvinyl (I) Ltd., ruled that unverified information is not ‘tangible material’ and reassessment requires AO’s application of mind to specific facts. All additions were deleted without merit adjudication, reinforcing that reassessment cannot be based on suspicion or erroneous data.

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D.V. Satyanarayana & Ors. vs Tax Recovery Officer & Ors.

In this landmark tax recovery judgment, the Karnataka High Court definitively settles that a prospective purchaser under an agreement to sell cannot challenge an auction sale of attached property under Income Tax recovery rules. The Court rigorously interprets Rule 16 of the Second Schedule to the Income Tax Act, establishing that any dealing with attached property by a defaulter—including execution of sale agreements—is void. This creates an impenetrable barrier for third parties claiming affected interests under Rule 61. The decision reinforces the supremacy of tax recovery mechanisms over private contractual arrangements, ensuring that Revenue interests remain paramount during attachment proceedings. Legal practitioners must advise clients that purchasing property subject to tax attachment carries substantial risk, as such agreements confer no legally recognizable interest.

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Bain Capital Advisors (India) Private Limited vs ACIT

In this landmark transfer pricing dispute, the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT) Mumbai bench ruled in favor of Bain Capital Advisors (India) Pvt. Ltd., overturning the adjustments made by the Transfer Pricing Officer (TPO) and upheld by the Dispute Resolution Panel (DRP). The core issue revolved around the selection of comparable companies for benchmarking the arm’s length price of international transactions involving investment advisory services. The Tribunal meticulously examined the functional comparability of the disputed entities, applying established judicial precedents. It held that the TPO/DRP erroneously included Motilal Oswal Private Equity Advisors and Ladderup Corporate Advisory as comparables due to significant functional disparities, while wrongly excluding Cyber Media Research Ltd., which was deemed functionally appropriate. This decision reinforces the critical importance of precise functional analysis in transfer pricing and underscores the Tribunal’s role in ensuring consistency with prior rulings, providing clarity for multinational enterprises in the financial services sector.

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Navayuga Infotech Pvt Ltd vs Dy. Cit

In this landmark ITAT ruling, the bench clarified critical aspects of Section 10A deduction for software exporters. It upheld the CIT(A)’s parity principle, mandating that foreign exchange expenditure be deducted from both export and total turnover, dismissing the Revenue’s appeal. For the assessee, it allowed the ground on foreign travel expenses, ruling that costs for software development and employee maintenance are not excludable ‘technical services.’ However, it firmly rejected the assessee’s claim on interest/forex income, reinforcing the strict ‘derived from’ nexus required for Section 10A, following apex court precedent. The decision balances export promotion intent with legislative precision, impacting deduction computations for IT/ITES sectors.

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ITO vs Sabre Travel Technologies Pvt. Ltd.

In this landmark ITAT ruling, the Tribunal meticulously addressed key transfer pricing and corporate tax disputes for AY 2011-12. On the transfer pricing front, it reinforced the principle of functional comparability by excluding non-comparable companies and provided critical guidance on working capital adjustments, emphasizing that adjustments must reflect actual economic realities and not be arbitrarily restricted. The decision underscores the importance of consistent application of judicial precedents in ALP determinations. On corporate tax, it affirmed the uniform treatment of expenses in Section 10A deductions, aligning with Supreme Court jurisprudence. This judgment serves as a vital reference for multinational enterprises on benchmarking and compliance strategies in India’s transfer pricing regime.

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Income Tax Officer vs Sabre Travel Technologies Pvt. Ltd.

In this Transfer Pricing dispute, the Bangalore ITAT partially allowed the assessee’s appeal regarding ALP determination for software development services. The Tribunal excluded several comparable companies cited by the TPO, citing lack of functional comparability. However, it remanded the working capital adjustment issue back to the TPO/AO for fresh analysis, emphasizing proper methodology alignment with judicial precedents. The Tribunal upheld the assessee’s position on Section 10A deduction computation, requiring symmetrical treatment of expenses in export and total turnover. The lease rental disallowance matter was also remanded for factual re-examination. This judgment reinforces the importance of precise comparability analysis in transfer pricing and adherence to established judicial principles in computational matters.

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Prism Cement Ltd. vs DCIT

In this landmark judgment, the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT) Mumbai Bench addressed critical issues under Section 14A of the Income Tax Act 1961. The tribunal reinforced the mandatory requirement for Assessing Officers to record objective satisfaction before applying Rule 8D for disallowance of expenses related to exempt income. It upheld that such disallowance cannot exceed the exempt income earned and clarified that Section 14A disallowances are not applicable in computing book profit under the Minimum Alternate Tax (MAT) provisions of Section 115JB. The decision underscores judicial safeguards against arbitrary disallowances and aligns with principles of fairness and statutory interpretation, providing clarity for taxpayers and practitioners on compliance and appellate strategies.

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Anglo French Textiles Co. Ltd. vs Commissioner Income Tax

In a landmark ruling on the taxation of non-residents, the Madras High Court established that a foreign company with a regular purchasing agency in British India has a ‘business connection’ under s. 42(1) of the Income Tax Act 1922, even when sales occur entirely outside British India. The Court affirmed that systematic purchasing operations through an established agent constitute business activities sufficient to attribute profits under s. 42(3), rejecting technical arguments that only sales generate taxable profits. This decision clarified that value-adding operations in India create taxable nexus, expanding revenue authority over foreign entities with sustained Indian operations.

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