Commissioner Of Income Tax vs Madhur Housing And Development Company

In Commissioner of Income Tax vs. Madhur Housing and Development Company, the Supreme Court of India (Justices Rohinton Fali Nariman and Sanjay Kishan Kaul) disposed of multiple civil appeals and special leave petitions concerning the interpretation of Section 2(22)(e) of the Income Tax Act, 1961, which deals with deemed dividends. The Court upheld the Delhi High Court’s detailed judgment (ITA No. 462 of 2009 dated 11.05.2011), agreeing with its construction of the statutory provision without adding further commentary. This decision reinforces the High Court’s legal interpretation, providing clarity on the application of deemed dividend provisions under Indian tax law.

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Sadhu Ram vs Commissioner Of Income Tax

In Sadhu Ram vs. CIT, the Supreme Court addressed a critical jurisdictional issue under the Income Tax Act, 1961, regarding penalty imposition under section 271(1)(c). The Court upheld the High Court’s decision that the Inspecting Assistant Commissioner’s jurisdiction is anchored to the date of the Income Tax Officer’s order, not the penalty imposition date. This ruling reinforces legal stability by affirming that validly exercised jurisdiction remains unaffected by subsequent legislative amendments, as established in CIT vs. Dhadi Sahu. The decision underscores the importance of procedural clarity in tax penalties, favoring the Revenue’s position and dismissing the appeal without costs.

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Commissioner Of Income Tax vs Gujarat Mineral Development Corporation

SENIOR LEGAL RESEARCH ANALYSIS: In this landmark Supreme Court judgment, the revenue’s challenge to deductions claimed by Gujarat Mineral Development Corporation under Sections 80J/84 was summarily dismissed. The Court demonstrated judicial economy by relying on binding precedent (Elecon Engineering) rather than re-examining settled legal principles. This reinforces the stability of tax jurisprudence regarding industrial deductions and establishes that once the Supreme Court has interpreted specific deduction provisions, subsequent similar cases must follow that interpretation. The decision protects assessees from repetitive litigation on identical legal issues.

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Jitu Builders (P) Ltd. vs Additional Commissioner Of Income Tax

In Jitu Builders (P) Ltd. vs. Additional CIT, the ITAT Ahmedabad allowed the assessee’s appeal, deleting a penalty of Rs. 15,00,000 under section 271D for accepting a cash loan in violation of section 269SS. The Tribunal held that the assessee demonstrated reasonable cause under section 273B, as the loan was for bona fide business purposes (land purchase negotiations), was duly recorded, and lacked mala fide intent. This decision underscores that penalties for technical defaults may be waived if the taxpayer proves genuine business exigency and compliance with substantive law.

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DCIT vs Indian Oi l Petronas Pvt. Limi ted

In this landmark judgment, the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal, Kolkata, dismissed the Revenue’s appeal, affirming that sales tax subsidies under industrial promotion schemes are capital receipts when aimed at establishing new units. The Tribunal reinforced the principle that fresh claims can be raised in appellate proceedings without revised returns, provided no new evidence is introduced. This decision provides clarity on the tax treatment of government incentives, emphasizing the ‘purpose test’ over the method of calculation, and strengthens appellate authorities’ powers to adjudicate on merit, ensuring justice in tax disputes.

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Commissioner Of Gift Tax vs Smt. Ansuya Sarabhai (Decd.) & Ors.

In this landmark Gift-tax ruling, the Supreme Court clarified that a unilateral surrender of life-interest in property, which merely accelerates the vested rights of beneficiaries without creating new interests, does not constitute a taxable ‘transaction’ under the Gift-tax Act, 1958. The Court upheld the concurrent findings of the Tribunal and High Court that such bona fide acceleration of existing interests falls outside the ambit of gift taxation.

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Commissioner Of Income Tax vs Moser Baer India Ltd.

In Commissioner of Income Tax vs. Moser Baer India Ltd., the Supreme Court resolved a key penalty dispute under s. 271(1)(c) of the Income Tax Act. It affirmed that penalty is inapplicable to unabsorbed depreciation adjustments causing loss, aligning with established jurisprudence. However, it remanded the concealment penalty issue to the Tribunal for de novo adjudication, highlighting procedural gaps in prior rulings. This judgment reinforces the principle that penalty provisions require scrupulous factual and legal scrutiny, particularly in loss scenarios.

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Commiioner Of Income Tax vs Faquir Chand (Huf)

In this landmark ruling, the Supreme Court of India definitively settled that revenue generated from the overseas licensing of telecasting rights for television serials qualifies for tax deduction under Section 80HHC of the Income Tax Act, 1961. The judgment reinforces the principle of judicial precedent, affirming the assessee’s position by directly applying its prior decision in CIT vs. B. Suresh. This provides crucial clarity for media and entertainment businesses, confirming that such intellectual property exports are incentivized under the Act’s export promotion framework.

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