Smt. Rebti Devi vs Ram Dutt & Anr.

In this landmark judgment, the Supreme Court of India clarifies the retrospective application of the Benami Transactions (Prohibition) Act, 1988. The Court upholds the principles established in R. Rajagopala Reddy vs. Padmini Chandrasekharan (1995), confirming that pleas of benami raised in suits filed before 19th May, 1988, remain adjudicable in pending proceedings. The decision meticulously distinguishes Nand Kishore Mehra vs. Sushila Mehra (1995), emphasizing that it addresses exceptions under the Act for transactions involving wives or unmarried daughters, rather than contradicting prior jurisprudence. This ruling provides critical guidance on the Act’s transitional provisions, ensuring legal certainty for pending benami disputes while affirming the statutory framework’s integrity. For tax professionals, this underscores the importance of timing in benami claims and the nuanced interplay between procedural and substantive law in Indian taxation and property disputes.

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Assistant Commissioner Of Income Tax vs Kisco Casting (P) Ltd.

In this landmark ITAT Chandigarh ruling, the Tribunal bifurcated the issues of reassessment validity and substantive addition under Section 68. It validated reassessment initiated via Investigation Wing intelligence on accommodation entries, emphasizing that factual reports (not mere interpretations) can found ‘reason to believe’ under Section 147 if the AO applies independent mind. However, on merits, the Tribunal robustly upheld the assessee’s discharge of burden under Section 68 for share application money, citing exhaustive documentation proving the ‘three pillars’—identity, genuineness, and creditworthiness of subscribers. The decision reinforces that where an assessee provides concrete evidence, the onus shifts to the Revenue to disprove it, and failure to investigate subscribers cannot justify addition. The appeal was partly allowed: reassessment upheld but addition deleted.

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Bimal Kishore Paliwal & Ors. vs Commissioner Of Wealth Tax

In a pivotal ruling on wealth tax valuation methodology, the Supreme Court clarified the discretionary nature of Section 7(2)(a) of the Wealth Tax Act, 1957. The case involved valuation of a cinema building owned by a partnership firm. The assessees argued that for a running business, the income capitalisation method under Section 7(2)(a) was compulsory. The Revenue contended the WTO had discretion to use the land and building method under Section 7(1). The Court, interpreting Section 7 holistically, held that Section 7(2)(a) is an enabling provision, granting the WTO the option—not the obligation—to value business assets as a whole based on balance sheets. The WTO’s reference to a Valuation Officer under Section 7(3) constituted a valid exercise of discretion to adopt the land and building method. This judgment reinforces the Assessing Officer’s flexibility in selecting appropriate valuation methods based on facts, ensuring the Act’s provisions are applied harmoniously without mandating a one-size-fits-all approach.

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C.K. Jidheesh vs The Union Of India & Ors.

In this landmark service tax judgment, the Supreme Court definitively settled that photographic processing businesses constitute pure service contracts under the Finance Act 1994. The Court upheld the constitutional validity of taxing gross receipts (excluding only unexposed film costs), rejecting arguments for bifurcation between goods and services components. This decision reinforces the binding precedent of Rainbow Colour Lab and affirms that post-46th Amendment considerations don’t apply to service tax on photographic services. The judgment provides crucial clarity for the photography industry and establishes that service tax applies comprehensively to the entire value of photographic services rendered.

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Commissioner Of Income Tax vs Moon Mills Ltd.

In this landmark judgment, the Supreme Court of India delineated the critical distinction between commercial accounting principles under section 13 of the Income Tax Act 1922 and the statutory fiction created for taxation under section 10(2)(vii). The Revenue appealed against the exclusion of insurance compensation for fire-destroyed capital assets from the assessment year 1949-50, arguing accrual under mercantile accounting. The Court upheld the assessee’s position, ruling that the deeming provision under the fourth proviso to section 10(2)(vii) is a self-contained fiction that taxes compensation as profit only in the year of actual receipt, not accrual. This decision reinforces the principle that statutory fictions cannot be expanded by importing accounting concepts unless expressly provided, safeguarding taxpayers from premature taxation on notional income.

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PREMIER BREWERIES LTD. vs COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX

In Premier Breweries Ltd. vs. CIT, the Supreme Court upheld the High Court’s denial of deductions under Section 37 of the Income Tax Act, 1961 for commission payments claimed by the assessee for agent services in liquor procurement. The Court rejected the assessee’s challenges to the High Court’s procedural handling of a reference under Section 256(2), including reframing questions and setting aside the Tribunal’s order, deeming these formal errors that did not affect the substantive outcome. Critically, the Supreme Court affirmed that the High Court validly exercised its jurisdiction by drawing legal inferences from undisputed primary facts—such as agreements and payments—to conclude the assessee failed to prove the expenses were wholly and exclusively for business purposes. This decision reinforces the principle that reference jurisdiction allows courts to address questions of law based on factual records without requiring perversity findings, emphasizing the revenue’s discretion to scrutinize deductions under Section 37 irrespective of contractual payments.

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Commissioner Of Income Tax vs R.D. Aggarwal & Co. & Anr.

In this landmark Supreme Court judgment on international taxation, the Court clarified the scope of ‘business connection’ under Section 42(1) of the Indian Income Tax Act 1922. The case involved a resident firm in Amritsar acting as a commission agent for non-resident exporters, procuring orders from Indian merchants. The Revenue sought to tax the firm as a statutory agent, alleging a business connection. The Court held that merely procuring orders—which were offers subject to acceptance by the non-residents outside India—without any operational role in sales, payments, or deliveries within India, did not constitute a ‘business connection.’ The decision underscores that a business connection requires a real, intimate, and continuous relationship where activities in India contribute to the non-resident’s income, distinguishing between mere facilitation and integral business operations. This ruling provides critical guidance for determining tax liability of agents in cross-border transactions, emphasizing substance over form.

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Income Tax Officer vs M.C. Ponnoose & Ors.

In this landmark judgment, the Supreme Court of India decisively ruled on the limits of retrospective delegation of authority in tax recovery matters. The Court invalidated a Kerala Government notification that retrospectively empowered a Tahsildar as a Tax Recovery Officer under the Income Tax Act 1961. The ruling reinforces fundamental principles of administrative law: retrospective operation of subordinate legislation or executive actions is impermissible without express statutory authorization. The Court meticulously dissected the statutory framework, emphasizing that the legal fiction created by the Finance Act 1963 did not extend to conferring retrospective notification powers. This judgment serves as a critical precedent for tax authorities and legal practitioners, underscoring that recovery actions must be grounded in valid, prospectively operative authorizations, thereby protecting assessees from arbitrary retrospective impositions.

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