ITO vs Nitin Murlidhar Agrawal

Case Commentary: ITAT Nagpur Upholds CIT(A) Order, Quashes Reassessment & Addition Under Section 68

In a significant ruling that underscores the paramount importance of jurisdictional propriety and evidentiary standards in tax proceedings, the Nagpur Bench of the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT) has dismissed the Revenue’s appeal in the case of ITO vs. Nitin Murlidhar Agrawal (ITA No.152/Nag./2024). The Tribunal upheld the order of the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) [CIT(A)], which had deleted a substantial addition of ₹3.98 crores made under Section 68 of the Income Tax Act, 1961, for the Assessment Year (AY) 2012-13. This Case Commentary analyzes the Tribunal’s reasoning, which provides crucial guidance on the validity of reassessment proceedings and the scope of inquiry under Section 68.

Facts of the Case

The assessee, an individual, had filed his original return for AY 2012-13, which was scrutinized and concluded under Section 143(3) by an Assessment Order dated 31.12.2014. Subsequently, based on information from the DDIT, Kolkata, alleging the assessee was a beneficiary of funds from certain shell companies, the Assessing Officer (AO) initiated reassessment proceedings by issuing a notice under Section 148.

During reassessment, the AO focused on an unsecured loan of ₹3.98 crores received by the assessee from M/s Priority Exports Pvt. Ltd. Disregarding the documentary evidence submitted—including loan confirmations, audited financials, bank statements, and Income Tax Returns of the lender—the AO made an addition under Section 68. The AO’s primary contention was that Priority Exports was a shell/pass-through entity with meagre income and that the ultimate source of funds remained unexplained.

The assessee successfully challenged this before the CIT(A), who deleted the addition. The CIT(A) also allowed an additional ground raised by the assessee challenging the very validity of the reassessment proceedings. Aggrieved, the Revenue appealed to the ITAT.

Tribunal’s Reasoning and Key Holdings

The ITAT dismissed the Revenue’s appeal, affirming the CIT(A)’s order on both jurisdictional and substantive grounds. Its reasoning provides a masterclass in procedural and legal principles governing reassessment and cash credits.

1. Jurisdictional Flaws Vitiated the Reassessment Proceedings

The Tribunal gave primacy to the assessee’s challenge to the validity of the reassessment itself, identifying fatal flaws:
* Pecuniary Jurisdiction Defect: The notice under Section 148 was issued by an Assistant Commissioner. However, the resultant Assessment Order was passed by an Income Tax Officer. Relying on CBDT Instruction No. 1/2011, the Tribunal held that the ITO lacked the pecuniary jurisdiction to finalize an assessment for such a high-value amount, rendering the entire reassessment proceeding void ab initio.
Factually Incorrect & Borrowed Satisfaction: The ITAT scrutinized the “Reasons for Re-opening” recorded by the AO. It found that the reasons listed seven specific entities allegedly connected to the assessee. Crucially, the assessee had never* transacted with any of these seven entities. The actual lender, Priority Exports Pvt. Ltd., was introduced only later during proceedings. The Tribunal held that reopening based on factually incorrect information is impermissible and does not confer valid jurisdiction. It further ruled that the AO had merely parroted information from the DDIT, Kolkata, without independently applying his mind to correlate it with the assessee’s records, constituting impermissible “borrowed satisfaction.”
* Mechanical Sanction under Section 151: The Tribunal observed that the sanction from the Principal CIT under Section 151 to issue the notice was granted mechanically, without due application of mind to the flawed reasons, further vitiating the proceeding.

2. Assessee Discharged the Onus Under Section 68 for AY 2012-13

On the merits of the Section 68 addition, the ITAT provided a clear analysis of the law as applicable for AY 2012-13:
Tripartite Test Satisfied: The Tribunal held that the assessee had satisfactorily discharged the initial onus under Section 68 by proving the identity (corporate details, ITR), creditworthiness (audited balance sheet showing sufficient capital and reserves to advance the loan), and genuineness* (loan confirmation, bank trail, and subsequent repayment) of Priority Exports Pvt. Ltd.
* “Source of Source” Inquiry Not Permissible (Pre-Amendment): This is a pivotal aspect of the ruling. The Revenue argued that Priority Exports was a shell entity and that the source of its funds needed explanation. The ITAT categorically rejected this, citing settled law. It held that for AY 2012-13, the AO’s inquiry was limited to the immediate creditor (Priority Exports). Investigating the “source of the source” was beyond the AO’s mandate at the time. The Tribunal noted that the law was amended (via the Finance Act, 2022) to explicitly allow such an inquiry, but that amendment is effective only from AY 2023-24 and is prospective.
Shell Entity Characterization Insufficient: The Tribunal referenced the case law cited by the Revenue (DCIT vs. Leena Power Tech Engineers Pvt. Ltd.*) but distinguished it. It emphasized that mere characterization as a shell entity, without disproving the specific evidence provided by the assessee regarding the loan transaction, is not sufficient to make an addition under Section 68 when the initial onus stands discharged.

Conclusion

The ITAT, Nagpur’s order is a robust reaffirmation of the rule of law in tax administration. It sends a clear message that the High Court-mandated safeguards for initiating reassessment—correct facts, independent application of mind, and proper jurisdiction—are not mere technicalities but essential conditions precedent. On the substantive front, the ruling provides crucial clarity on the scope of Section 68, reinforcing that the burden on the assessee is to explain the immediate credit, not the upstream source, for years prior to the 2022 amendment. This decision serves as a vital precedent for taxpayers challenging reassessments based on defective jurisdiction or unsustainable additions under Section 68.

Frequently Asked Questions

What was the core legal issue regarding the reassessment proceedings in this case?
The core issue was that the reassessment was initiated based on “Reasons for Re-opening” that contained factually incorrect information (listing entities unconnected to the assessee). The ITAT held that a reopening founded on such incorrect facts is invalid, as it fails to establish the necessary “reason to believe” that income has escaped assessment.
Why did the ITAT rule that the Assessing Officer could not investigate the source of funds of Priority Exports Pvt. Ltd.?
For Assessment Year 2012-13, the law under Section 68, as interpreted by various High Courts, required the assessee to explain only the nature and source of the credit received by him. Investigating the source of the lender’s funds (the “source of the source”) was not permitted. The law was amended in 2022 to allow this, but that change applies only from AY 2023-24 onward.
What is “borrowed satisfaction” and why is it invalid?
“Borrowed satisfaction” occurs when an Assessing Officer initiates reassessment by mechanically reproducing information received from another investigation wing (like the DDIT in this case) without independently applying his mind to verify and correlate that information with the specific assessee’s records. The ITAT ruled that the jurisdictional AO must form his own “reason to believe,” which was absent here.
What is the significance of the finding on “pecuniary jurisdiction”?
The finding that the Income Tax Officer who passed the final Assessment Order lacked the monetary authority (as per CBDT instructions) to assess such a high-value case rendered the entire assessment proceeding null and void (void ab initio). This underscores that jurisdictional limits are mandatory and their breach fatally flaws the proceeding.
Does this judgment mean loans from companies with low income cannot be added under Section 68?
Not exactly. The judgment reinforces that low income alone does not disprove creditworthiness if the lender’s audited balance sheet shows sufficient net worth/capital from which a loan could be advanced. The assessee must provide evidence (like audited financials) to prove creditworthiness. The AO must then rebut that specific evidence, not merely label the entity a “shell company.”

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