Introduction
The Delhi High Courtās judgment in Pr. Commissioner of Income Tax & Anr. vs. Silver Line & Anr. (2016) 383 ITR 0455 (Delhi) stands as a cornerstone in Indian tax jurisprudence, reinforcing the mandatory and jurisdictional nature of notice issuance under Section 143(2) of the Income Tax Act, 1961. This case commentary dissects the High Courtās reasoning, which upheld the ITATās decision that reassessment proceedings under Sections 147/148 are void ab initio if the Assessing Officer (AO) fails to issue a Section 143(2) notice. The judgment clarifies the interplay between procedural compliance and taxpayer rights, particularly in the context of reassessment, and limits the scope of Section 292BB as a curative provision for service defects, not issuance failures. For tax professionals and litigants, this decision underscores that procedural jurisdiction cannot be waived or cured by subsequent participation.
Facts of the Case
The Assessee, Silver Line, a firm trading in silver, gold jewellery, and precious stones, filed returns for Assessment Years (AYs) 2005-06 to 2008-09. For AY 2005-06, the return was filed on 20th September 2005 and processed under Section 143(1). Similar processing occurred for AYs 2006-07 and 2008-09, while AY 2007-08 underwent scrutiny under Section 143(3).
In May 2010, the Director of Income Tax (Investigation), Jaipur, provided information alleging bogus purchases by the Assessee. Based on this, the AO recorded reasons to believe income had escaped assessment and issued a notice under Section 148 on 28th March 2011 for AY 2005-06. The Assessee responded on 1st April 2011, requesting that its original return be treated as the return in response to the Section 148 notice, and sought reasons for reopening. The AO then issued a notice under Section 142(1) on 14th November 2011, but notably, no notice under Section 143(2) was ever issued. The reassessment order was finalized on 28th December 2011, making an addition of Rs. 7,05,600. Similar reassessment orders were passed for AYs 2006-07, 2007-08, and 2008-09.
The CIT(A) upheld the reopening but deleted the additions on merits. The Revenue appealed to the ITAT, where the Assessee raised an additional groundānon-issuance of Section 143(2) notice. The ITAT ruled in favor of the Assessee, leading to the Revenueās appeal under Section 260A before the Delhi High Court.
Reasoning of the High Court
The Delhi High Courtās reasoning is a meticulous analysis of procedural jurisdiction, statutory interpretation, and the limits of curative provisions. The Court addressed four key arguments raised by the Revenue and systematically rejected each.
1. Section 292BB Does Not Cure Non-Issuance of Notice
The Revenue argued that under Section 292BB, the Assessee was precluded from raising the objection regarding non-issuance of Section 143(2) notice because it had participated in the reassessment proceedings. The High Court categorically rejected this, holding that Section 292BB is a rule of evidence that creates a presumption of service of notice, not a validation of non-issuance. The Court relied on the Allahabad High Courtās decision in CIT v. Parikalpana Estate Development (P.) Ltd. (2012) 79 DTR 246 (All.), which held that Section 292BB āhas nothing to do with the mandatory requirement of giving a notice and especially a notice under Section 143(2) of the Act which is a notice giving jurisdiction to the AO to frame an assessment.ā The Delhi High Court further distinguished between failure to āissueā and failure to āserveā a notice, citing its own decision in Pr. CIT v. Shri Jai Shiv Shankar Traders Pvt. Ltd. (2015). Since the AO in this case never issued a Section 143(2) notice at all, Section 292BB was irrelevant.
2. Prospective Application of Section 292BB
The Revenueās argument also failed for AYs 2005-06, 2006-07, and 2007-08 because Section 292BB was introduced with effect from 1st April 2008. The Court noted that for these three AYs, the provision could not be invoked at all. This aligns with the Allahabad High Courtās ruling in CIT v. Mohammad Khaleeq (2015) 229 Taxman 566 (All.) and the Delhi High Courtās own decision in CIT v. Kuber Tobacco Producers P. Ltd. (2010), both holding that Section 292BB is prospective. For AY 2008-09, even if the provision applied, it could not cure the fundamental jurisdictional defect of non-issuance.
3. Mandatory Nature of Section 143(2) Notice in Reassessment
The Revenue contended that since the Assessee failed to file a fresh return pursuant to the Section 148 notice (instead requesting that the original return be treated as such), the AO was not obligated to issue a Section 143(2) notice. The Court dismissed this, emphasizing that the requirement under Section 143(2) is mandatory and jurisdictional. The Assesseeās request to treat the original return as the return in response to the Section 148 notice did not obviate the need for a Section 143(2) notice. The Court held that the issuance of a notice under Section 142(1) does not substitute for the mandatory Section 143(2) notice, which confers jurisdiction on the AO to proceed with the assessment. This reasoning is consistent with the principle that procedural safeguards in tax law are not mere formalities but essential to ensure fairness.
4. Pure Question of Law Can Be Raised for First Time
The Revenue argued that the Assessee should not have been permitted to raise the ground of non-issuance of Section 143(2) notice for the first time before the ITAT. The High Court rejected this, holding that the issue was a pure question of law, not requiring any new facts. Relying on the Supreme Courtās decision in National Thermal Power Co. Ltd. v. CIT (1998) 229 ITR 383 (SC) and the Delhi High Courtās decision in Gedore Tools (P) Ltd. v. CIT (1999) 238 ITR 268 (Del), the Court held that such a legal ground could be raised at any stage of appellate proceedings. The Assesseeās participation in the reassessment proceedings did not waive this jurisdictional defect.
Conclusion of the Court
The Delhi High Court dismissed all eight appeals by the Revenue, affirming the ITATās order. The Court held that the failure to issue a notice under Section 143(2) of the Act is fatal to reassessment proceedings under Sections 147/148. The judgment reinforces that procedural compliance is not optionalāit is the bedrock of valid assessment. The Courtās decision protects taxpayers from arbitrary reassessments and ensures that the AO cannot bypass mandatory procedural steps, even if the taxpayer cooperates.
