Kantilal C. Shah vs Assistant Commissioner Of Income Tax

In this block assessment appeal, the Ahmedabad ITAT upheld additions of Rs. 7,10,700 made by the Assessing Officer based on a statement recorded under section 132(4) during a search. The assessee’s retraction, filed months later via an affidavit, was rejected as vague, delayed, and lacking evidentiary support. The Tribunal emphasized that retractions must be backed by concrete evidence to invalidate voluntary admissions. Key issues included the specificity of the statement regarding marriage expenses, investments, and on-money payments, and the failure to prove coercion or factual inaccuracies. The decision reinforces the evidentiary value of section 132(4) statements in block assessments when retractions are unconvincing.

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WHIRLPOOL OF INDIA LTD. vs ASSISTANT COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX

The Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT), Delhi Bench, allowed the appeal of Whirlpool of India Ltd. for AY 2017-18, primarily on the issue of transfer pricing adjustments on Advertisement, Marketing and Sales Promotion (AMP) expenses. The Tribunal held that AMP expenses incurred by the assessee do not constitute an international transaction under section 92B, following the Delhi High Court’s decision in the assessee’s own case for AY 2008-09, which was upheld by the Supreme Court. The Bright Line Test for making protective adjustments was also rejected in light of the Sony Ericsson decision. Other issues, including disallowance of daughter marriage fund expenditure, foreign tax credit, and an additional ground regarding warranty expenditure, were remitted to the Assessing Officer for verification and fresh adjudication. The appeal was allowed with consequential relief.

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Dilip Patel vs The Principal Commissioner of Income Tax (Central)

The Gujarat High Court quashed revision notices under Section 263 of the Income Tax Act, 1961, issued by the Principal Commissioner against assessment orders passed under Section 153C. The Court held that the Assessing Officer had made thorough inquiries, considered the incriminating material (MoU), and relied on the DVO’s valuation report to make a plausible addition. The Commissioner’s attempt to revise the order on grounds that the Assessing Officer ignored the MoU and failed to initiate penalty proceedings was unsustainable. The Court emphasized that revisional powers cannot be used to substitute a plausible view with another, and the Assessing Officer had no jurisdiction to initiate penalty under Section 271D at the relevant time. The petitions were allowed.

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DCIT vs Mani Square Ltd.

In this landmark judgment, the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal, Kolkata, decisively ruled on the invalidity of reassessment notices issued under section 148 to a company that had ceased to exist due to amalgamation. The Tribunal reinforced established legal doctrine that amalgamation extinguishes the identity of the transferor company, making any proceedings initiated against it null and void. It clarified that such defects are jurisdictional, beyond the curative scope of section 292B, and emphasized the necessity for tax authorities to correctly identify legal entities. This decision underscores the critical importance of procedural integrity in tax reassessments, protecting taxpayers from actions based on erroneous jurisdictional assumptions.

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Commiioner Of Income Tax vs Southern Petrochemical Industries Corporation Ltd.

In this landmark judgment, the Madras High Court reinforced key principles in Indian tax jurisprudence regarding business expenditure and depreciation. The Court decisively ruled that expenses incurred for issuing debentures and collecting fixed deposits are revenue in nature, fully deductible under Section 37(1) of the Income Tax Act, as they facilitate business operations rather than create enduring assets. Simultaneously, it affirmed that standby machinery qualifies for depreciation under Section 32 even when not actively used during the assessment year, provided it is held ready for business exigencies. This decision provides crucial clarity for corporations on deductibility of financing costs and asset utilization norms, aligning with judicial precedents that emphasize substance over form in tax treatment.

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Godavari Sugar Mills Ltd. vs Commissioner Of Income Tax

In Godavari Sugar Mills Ltd. vs. CIT, the Bombay High Court addressed key tax issues for a sugar manufacturing assessee. The Court upheld the Tribunal’s valuation of sugarcane and allocation of donations based on binding precedents. Crucially, it ruled on the computation of extra shift depreciation for seasonal factories, holding that the Income Tax Rules 1962 prescribe a uniform formula using 300 days as the benchmark for proportionality, applicable equally to seasonal and non-seasonal concerns. This decision reinforces strict statutory interpretation over equitable adjustments, aligning with jurisprudence from other High Courts and clarifying that special provisions for normal depreciation do not extend to extra shift allowances.

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STREAM INTERNATIONAL SERVICES COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX (P.) LTD. vs ASSISTANT

In this significant transfer pricing and income classification case, the Mumbai ITAT partially allowed the assessee’s appeal for AY 2007-08. Key holdings: rental income is taxable under ‘Income from Other Sources’ following precedent; section 14A disallowance for exempt dividend income is limited to 5% of such income, as Rule 8D applies prospectively; and a major transfer pricing adjustment of ~Rs. 6.4 crore was set aside due to inclusion of non-comparable companies, with the matter restored for fresh ALP determination. The Tribunal meticulously excluded 15 comparables based on fraud, functional disparities, and other filters, reinforcing principles of comparability and consistency in transfer pricing jurisprudence. Other issues on TDS credit and interest u/s 234B were directed for consequential action.

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Geo Sea Foods vs Income Tax Officer

In this landmark ITAT Cochin Bench decision, the Tribunal upheld the CIT(A)’s jurisdiction to enhance assessment by disallowing a substantial purchase tax provision of Rs. 15.81 lakhs claimed by a sea food exporter. The Tribunal established that appellate authorities can examine items forming part of an integrated business unit already considered by the ITO. Crucially, the Tribunal denied the deduction, ruling that no legal liability existed for purchase tax on export-oriented purchases of prawns, following the Supreme Court’s ratio in Sterling Foods that processed sea food retains its original character for export exemption purposes under the CST Act. This decision reinforces the principle that tax deductions require crystallized legal liabilities, not merely disputed provisions.

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