Facts
The assessee's appeals relate to the assessment year 2014-15, stemming from the CIT(A)'s order that enhanced the addition made by the Assessing Officer concerning unsecured loans treated as unexplained cash credits. The assessee had also attempted to withdraw their appeal before the CIT(A).
Held
The Tribunal held that the CIT(A) exceeded his jurisdiction in enhancing the assessment by adding a new source of income not considered by the Assessing Officer. The Tribunal upheld the Assessing Officer's addition of Rs. 80 lakhs but deleted the enhancement made by the CIT(A).
Key Issues
Validity of CIT(A)'s enhancement beyond the scope considered by the Assessing Officer and the correctness of additions under Section 68 and consequential penalties.
Sections Cited
143(3), 271(1)(c), 68, 251(1)(a), 31
AI-generated summary — verify with the full judgment below
Income Tax Appellate Tribunal, DELHI BENCH: ‘F NEW DELHI
Before: SHRI SATBEER SINGH GODARA & SHRI NAVEEN CHANDRA
ORDER PER SATBEER SINGH GODARA, JM These assessee’s twin appeals & 5544/Del/2019 for assessment year 2014-15, arise against the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals)-23 [in short, the “CIT(A)”], New Delhi’s common order dated 11.01.2019 passed in case nos. 442/16-17 and 441/16-17, involving proceedings under section 143(3) and 271(1)(c) of the Income-tax Act, 1961 (hereinafter referred to as ‘the Act’), respectively.
Cases called twice. None appears at the assessee’s behest. It is accordingly proceeded ex-parte.
We now advert to the assessee’s “quantum” appeal 1. The CIT(A) has grossly erred in law and on facts in making an enhancement of Rs. 3,60,00,000/-against me addition of Rs. 80,00,000/. The CIT(A) has made an enhancement without having regard to the facts and circumstances of the case.
That CIT(A) has grossly erred in law and on fact in making an enhancement in an non -maintainable appeal.
That CIT(A) hasgrossly erred in law and on facts in dismissing the application for withdrawal of appeal when appellant specifically aver that he has no substantial reason for condonation of delay.
That the CIT(A) has exceeded his jurisdiction by treating this appeal as admitted, when the same is barred by time limitation and there is no request by appellant for condonation of delay rather assessee has filed that there is no sufficient cause of delay.
That the notice u/s 251(2) and enhancement made by CIT(A) are illegal, bad in law and without jurisdiction.
That the CIT(A) did not consider submission on record and acted against the principal of natural justice.
Without prejudice CIT(A) has grossly erred in law and on facts in making an enhancement at Rs.4,40,00,000/- when the appellant has discharged its onus of proving identity and creditworthiness of unsecured creditor and genuineness of transaction before the Assessing Officer.
Without prejudice, the CIT(A) has grossly erred in law and on facts in passing direction U/s 150(1) of the Act when he himself confirmed/enhanced addition mad by an A.O.
Without prejudice CIT(A) has grossly erred in law and on fact in confirming an addition of Rs.80,00,000/- when the appellant has discharged its onus of proving identity and creditworthiness of unsecured creditor and genuineness of the transaction before the Assessing officer.
That the evidence filed and materials available on record have not been properly construed and judiciously interpreted, hence the addition/disallowance made is uncalled for.
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That the observations made by the CIT(A) are illegal bad in law and contrary to the record. No proper opportunity was given by CIT(A) and his observations in regard are baseless and contrary to the principles of natural justice.
That the addition /disallowance made are illegal, unjust and bad in law and are based on mere surmises and conjunctures and the same cannot be justified by any material on record.
That interest U/s 234A and 234B of the Income Tax Act, 1961 has been wrongly and illegally charged and has been wrongly worked out.
The Appellant craves leave to add, amend, alter and/or delete any of the above grounds of appeal
at or before the time of hearing.
1. 1. 1. 3. The Revenue vehemently argues that both the learned lower authorities; be it the Assessing Officer’s section 143(3) assessment framed on 30.12.2016 or the CIT(A)’s section 251(1)(c) enhancement herein; ought to be upheld since having rightly treated the assessee’s unsecured loans of Rs.80 lakhs and Rs.9,25,00,000/-; respectively, as unexplained cash credits liable to be assessed under section 68 of the Act.
4. We have given our thoughtful consideration to the assessee’s pleadings all along and perused the relevant case records. There does not appear to be much a dispute between the parties that the learned assessing authority had added the assessee’s unsecured loans of Rs.40 lakhs each coming from M/s. Karkish Vyapar Pvt. Ltd. and M/s. SRA Capital Pvt. Ltd.; aggregating to Rs.80 lakhs in the assessment order. He also came across the assessee’s entire
3 | P a g e unsecured loans received from 12 parties; including the twin entities hereinabove, involving varying sums which were also sought to be verified regarding identity, genuineness and creditworthiness thereof by way of section 133(6) process. There is again no issue that some of them confirmed the same along with the supportive evidence as well. Be that as it may, the learned Assessing Officer added only Rs.80 lakhs in the assessee’s hands as an unexplained cash credits under section 68 of the Act.
The assessee thus instituted its lower appeal on 02.02.2017. The same got listed for hearing wherein the learned CIT(A) set into motion his section 251(1)(a) “enhancement” jurisdiction for adding its entire unsecured loans/cash credits amounting to Rs.9,25,00,000/- (supra). He also directed for remand proceedings/report from the field authority(ies) wherein it emerged that all the corresponding creditor parties were mere entry provider/namelenders. The Revenue fairly admits that the assessee in the meantime had tried to get multiple adjournments. It rather filed an affidavit dated 24th December, 2018 [page 30 in the CIT(A)’s order] that its lower appeal suffered from three days’ delay in filing the appeal which could not be explained, and therefore, it strangely
4 | P a g e sought dismissal thereof for this precise reason. It emerges from a perusal of the lower appellate discussion that the assessee’s endeavour either to withdraw the appeal or get it dismissed for non- condonation of delay; as the case may be, could hardly cut ice in the lower appellate proceedings as the CIT(A) quoted CIT v. Rai Bahadur Hardutroy Motilal Chamaria [(1967) 66 ITR 443 (SC)] that once the appeal is filed, it could not be allowed to be withdrawn at its choice. He accordingly went on to add section 68 unexplained cash credits of Rs.9,25,00,000/- by way of enhancement in the lower appellate proceedings. This is what leaves the assessee aggrieved who has filed the instant appeal before the tribunal.
We have given our thoughtful consideration to the assessee’s and the Revenue’s respective pleadings. The first and foremost issue which arises for our apt adjudication is that of validity of the learned CIT(A)’s enhancement action in question. The Revenue could hardly dispute that the hon’ble apex court’s above referred decision rather goes in assessee’s favour and against the department that given the fact that there was nothing in the assessment order to show that the taxability or non-taxability of 5 | P a g e the impugned alleged cash credits; such an enhancement is not sustainable in law; reading as under: “The respondent (hereinafter called the assessee) is an individual carrying on business in Jute, Cloth and Films, The assessment year is 1952-53, the corresponding accounting year being the, calendar year 1951 for all business except Katihar Cloth Importing Co. and the Jute Mills for which the accounting year is financial year ending March 31, 1952. During the year of account the assessee claimed that he had borrowed three sums of Rs. 2,50,000, 1,50,000 and Rs. 30,000 from three parties from, Nepal, Khara- Bahadur Nepali, Jiwanmal Santockchand and Sohanlal Subhkaran respectively. The Income-tax Officer added these amounts to the total income of the assessee on the ground that the assessee had inflated the purchase of raw jute. The Income-tax Officer was not satisfied that these three loans were genuine loans but considered that they represented secret profits made by the assessee by inflating the purchase of raw jute. The Income-tax Officer noted that die assessee had withdrawn at Calcutta on March 31, 1952, a sum of Rs. 5,30,000 from a Calcutta bank and had sent a sum of Rs. 5,95,000 to his Forbesganj branch on the same day to enable that branch to make payments including the repayment of Rs. 2,50,000 to Sri Kharag Bahadur one of the alleged creditors noted above. The Income-tax Officer discussed the impossibility of the amount having reached Forbesganj branch in Bihar on the very same day in order to enable discharge of the creditors there on March 31, 1952. In regard to this amount of Rs. 5,85,000 the Income-tax Officer observed as follows "On 31-3-1952 the Calcutta Office has withdrawn Rs. 5,30,000 from the Bank and has sent Rs. 5,95,000 to Forbesganj How the cash has reached Forbesganj (in remote corner in North Bihar) on the same day to enable the branch to make payments (including the sum of Rs. 2,50,000 to Kharag Bahadur) is something difficult to understand even in these days of fast travel. Lloyds Bank in Calcutta would not have obliged the assessee by paying out cash before 10 A.M. on 31-3-1952 and the only available train leaves in the night. The journey including the ferry trip o ver the broad ganges takes over 24 hours. Hence the entries in the book cannot be taken to 'be genuine." The assessee took the matter in appeal to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner and contended that the Income-tax Officer should not have added the three items of Rs. 2,50,000, Rs. 1,50,000 and 'Rs. 30,000 to the total assessable income. The Appellate Assistant Commissioner did not agree with this contention and confirmed the addition of Rs. 4,30,000. At the same time, the Appellate Assistant Commissioner noticed the fact of the alleged transfer of Rs. 5,85,000 from Calcutta to Forbesganj on March 31, 1952 and its credit in the accounts books of the latter branch on the same date. The Appellate Assistant Commissioner considered that the amount of Rs. 5,85,000 should also be included in the total income of the assessee, but before doing so lie gave the assessee a deduction of Rs. 1,80,000 being the amount withdrawn earlier from the accounts of the two creditors, namely, 6 | P a g e Jiwanmal Santokchand and Sohanlal Subhkaran and added the balance of Rs. 4,05,000. This addition by the Appellate Assistant Commissioner amounted to an enhancement of the income which the Income-tax Officer had assessed. The assessee took the matter in further appeal to the Appellate Tribunal which held that the Appellate Assistant Commissioner was justified in coining to the conclusion that the cash credits in the accounts were not explained satisfactorily and some of the payments made at Forbesganj branch on March 31, 1952 were not made from the remittance from Calcutta but from secret funds. The Appellate Tribunal pointed out that out of the payments claimed to have been made at Forbesganj payments to Kharag Bahadur Nepali amounting to Rs. 2,50,000 must also be excluded because it had been held by the Income-tax Office and the Appellate Assistant Commissioner that the loan was not genuine; and since the loan. was not genuine it was not logical to say that it required repayment from secret funds. The Appellate 'tribunal accordingly reduced the enhancement to Rs. 1,55,000. In doing so the Appellate Tribunal re- jected the contention of the, assessee ,hat the Appellate Assistant commissioner had no authority to enhance the income on the ground that it was not the subject-matter of the assessment made by the Income-tax Officer. The Appellate Tribunal took the view that the subject-matter in respect of which the enhancement was made was, in fact, considered by the Income Tax Officer and accordingly the Appellate Assistant Commissioner had jurisdiction to make the enhancement. At the instance of the assessee the Appellate Tribunal referred the following question of law for the opinion of the High Court under s. 66 ( 1) of the Income-tax Act, 1922 (hereinafter called the 'Act') : "Whether on the facts and in the circumstances of the case the Appellate Assistant Commissioner was within his authority in enhancing the assessment of the assessee by Rs. 1,55,000 for the assessment year 1952-53 ?" By its judgment dated March 26, 1964, the High Court answered the question in the negative and in favour of the assessee. Section 31 of the Act is to the following effect "31. (1) The Appellate Assistant Commissioner shall fix a day and place for the hearing of the appeal, and may from time to time adjourn the hearing. (2) The Appellate Assistant Commissioner may, before disposing of any appeal, make such further inquiry as lie thinks fit, or cause further inquiry to be made by the Income-tax Officer...... (3) In disposing of an appeal the Appellate Assistant Commissioner may, in the case of an order of assessment,- (a) confirm, reduce, enhance or annul the assessment, or (b) set aside the assessment and direct the Income-tax Officer to make a fresh assessment after making such further inquiry as the Income-tax Officer thinks fit or the Appellate Assistant Commissioner may direct', and 7 | P a g e the Income-tax Officer shall thereupon proceed to make such fresh assessment and determine where necessary the amount of tax payable on the basis of such fresh assessment........ In Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay v. Shapiorji Pallonji Alistry(1) it was held by this Court that in an appeal filed by the assessee the Appellate Assistant Commissioner has no power to enhance the assessment by discovering new sources of income not mentioned in the return of the assessee or considered by the Income-tax Officer in the order appealed against. In that case, the assesee had received sum of Rs. 40,000. In the proceedings for the assessment year 1946-47, this came to the notice of the Income-tax Officer. Since the receipt fell within the accounting year relative to the assessment year 1947-48, the Income-tax Officer did not assess the amount, making a note, "The question will however be considered again at the time of 1947-48 assessment." In the return for the assessment year 1947-48, this amount was not shown by the assessee. The Income-tax Officer also overlooked the note at the end of his order in the previous year's assessment, with the result that this item was omitted from the assessment order. The assessee appealed to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner against his assessment for the year 1947 - 48. While the appeal was pending, the Income-tax Officer wrote a letter to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner requesting him to assess the amount of Rs. 40,000. The Appellate Assistant Commissioner, after issuing notice, assessed the amount and included it in the original assessment. The question which was debated before this Court was whether in an appeal filed by an assessee, the Appellate Assistant Commissioner can find a new source of income not considered by the Income-tax Officer and assess it under his powers granted by s. 31 of the Income-tax Act. It was held by this Court that the powers of enhancement conferred on the Appellate Assistant Commissioner under s. 31 only extended to matters considered by the Income-tax Officer and if a new source has to be considered then the power of remand may be exercised and the Income-tax Officer should be required to deal with that new source of income. At page 895 of the Report, Hidayatullah, J. speaking for the Court stated as follows : "The only question is whether in enhancing the assessment for any year lie can travel outside the record, that is to say, the return made by the assessee and the assessment order passed by the Income-tax Officer with a view to finding out new sources of income, not disclosed in either. It is contended by the Commissioner of Income-tax that the word 'assessment' here means the ultimate would it which an assessee must pay, regard being had to the charging section and his total income. In this view, it is said that the words 'enhance the assessment' are not confined to the assessment reached through a particular process but the amount which ought to have been computed if the true total income had been found. There is no doubt that this view is also possible. On the other hand, it must not be overlooked that there are other provisions like sections 34 and 33B, which enable escaped income from new sources to be brought to tax after following a special procedure. The assessee contends that the powers of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner extend to matters considered by the Income-tax Officer, and if a new source is to be considered, then the power of remand should be 8 | P a g e exercised. By the exercise of the power to assess fresh sources of income, the assessee is deprived of a finding by two tri- bunals and one right of appeal. The question is whether we should accept the interpretation suggested by the Commissioner in preference to the one, which has held the field for nearly 37 years. In view of the provisions of sections 34 and 33B by which escaped income can be brought to tax, there is reason to think that the view expressed uniformly about the limits of the powers of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner to enhance the assessment has been accepted by the legislature as the true exposition of the words of the section." Reference may be made, in this connection, to the decision in Narrondas Manordass, Bombay v. Commissioner of Income- tax, Central, Bombay(1) in which the scope of the power of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner under s. 31(3) was considered by the Bombay High Court. In that case, the assessee carried on business at Rajkot and at Bombay, the accounting years at Rajkot and Bombay being different. With regard to the profits of Rajkot, the Income-tax Officer assessed them proportionately at R.,. 1,17,643. He also found that there were remittances to the extent of Rs. 4,00,000 from Rajkot to Bombay, but in view of the concession allowed by the Part B States Taxation Concession Order he did not include this amount in the assessable income. The assessee appealed with respect to the sum of Rs. 1,17,643 contending that the Rajkot business had no profits at all but only loss. The Appellate Assistant Commissioner thereupon set aside the assessment and remanded the matter to the Income-tax Officer for reassessment after enquiring into tile matters contained in the second report. It was held by the Bombay High Court that the power conferred upon the Appellate Assistant Commissioner was not confined to the matter of Rs. 1,17,643 in respect of which the assessee had appealed, but he had power to revise the whole process of assessment once an appeal had been preferred, and the order remanding the case was not invalid in law. The decision of this case was approved by this Court in The Commissioner of Income-tax v. M/s Mc-Millan & Co. (2 ) The question to be considered in that case was whether it was open to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner in exercise of his powers under s. 31(3) of the Act to reject the method of accounting followed by the assessee and accepted by the Income-tax Officer, under the proviso to s. 13 of the Act, and compute the income, profits or gains of the assessee under Rule 33 of the Rules. It was held by this Court that the question must be answered in the affirmative and there was nothing in s. 31 read with the provisions of s. 13 of the Act which prevented the Appellate Assistant Commissioner, in an appeal preferred by the assessee from exercising the powers which the Income-tax Officer could exercise under the proviso to s. 13 of the Act and to enhance the taxable income of the assessee. At page 701 of the Report, S. K. Das, J. quoted with approval the following passage from the judgment of Chagla, C.J. in Narronadas's case(1) "It is clear that the Appellate Assistant Commissioner has been constituted a revising authority against the decisions of the Income- tax Officer; a revising authority not in the narrow sense of revising what is the subject- matter of the appeal, not in the sense of revising those matters about which the assessee makes a grievance, but a revising authority in the sense 9 | P a g e that once the appeal is before him he ran revise not only the ultimate computation arrived at by the Income-tax Officer but he can revise every process which led to the ultimate computation or assessment. In other words, what he can revise is not merely the ultimate amount which is liable to tax, but he is entitled to revise the various decisions given by the Income- tax Officer in the course of the assessment and also the various incomes or deductions which came in for consideration of the Income-tax Officer." It is necessary to bear in mind, in this connection, that it is the assessee who has a right conferred under s. 31 to prefer an appeal against the order of assessment made by the Income-tax Officer. If the assessee does not choose to appeal, the order of assessment becomes final subject to any power of revision that the Commissioner may have under s. 33B of the Act. Therefore, it would be wholly erroneous to compare the powers of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner with the powers possessed by a court of appeal, under the Civil Procedure Code. The Appellate Assistant Commissioner is not an ordinary court of appeal. It is impossible to talk- of a court of appeal when only one party to the original decision is entitled to appeal and not the other party, and in view of this peculiar position the statute has conferred very wide powers upon the Appellate Assistant Commissioner once an appeal is preferred to him by the assessee. It is necessary also to emphasise that the statute provides that once an assessment comes before the Appellate Assistant Commissioner, his competence is not restricted to examining those aspects of the assessment which are complained of by the assessee; his competence ranges over the whole assessment and it is open to him to correct the Income-tax Officer not only with regard to a matter raised by the assessee but also with regard to a matter which has been considered by the (1) 31 I. T.R.909 Income-tax Officer and determined in the course of the assessment. It is also well-established that an assessee having once filed an appeal cannot withdraw it. In other words, the Assessee having filed an appeal and brought the machinery of the Act into working, cannot prevent the Appellate Assistant Commissioner from ascertaining and settling the, real sum to be assessed, by intimation of his withdrawal of the appeal. Even if the assessee refuses to appeal at the hearing, the Appellate Assistant Commissioner can proceed with the enquiry and if he finds that there, has be-en an under-assessment, he can enhance the assessment Commissioner of Income-tax, Punjab v. Nawab Shah Nawaz Khan(1). In this context reference may be made to the decision of the Court of Appeal in The King v. Income Tax Special Commissioners(2) in which the taxpayer sought to withdraw a notice, of appeal which had been given on his behalf against an additional assessment under Sch. D. The Commissioners of Inland Revenue were not satisfied that the assessment was adequate The Special Commissioners then proposed to proceed with the hearing of the appeal in the ordinary way. At that stage the taxpayer sought a writ of prohibition to prohibit the Special Commissioners from hearing the appeal. It was held by the Court of Appeal that notice of appeal having once been given, the Commissioners were bound to proceed in accordance with the Income Tax Acts and determine the true amount of the assessment. At page 493 of the Report Lord Wright observed as follows :
10 | P a g e "………..in making the assessment and in dealing with the appeals, the Commissioners are exercising statutory authority and a statutory duty which they are bound to carry out. They are not in the position of judges deciding an issue between two particular parties. Their obligation is wider than that. It is to exercise their judgment on such material as comes before them and to obtain any material which they think- is necessary and which they ought to have, and on that material to make the assessment or the estimate which the law requires them to make. They are not deciding a case interparties; they are assessing or estimating the amount on which, in the interests of the country at large, the tax- payer ought to be taxed." The principle that emerges as a result of the authorities of this Court is that the Appellate Assistant Commissioner has no jurisdiction, under s. 31(3) of the Act, to assess a source of income which has not been processed by the Income- tax Officer and which is not disclosed either in the returns filed by the assessee or in the assessment order, and therefore. the Appellate Assistant Commissioner cannot travel beyond the subject- matter of the assessment. In other words, the power of enhancement under s. 31 (3) of the Act is restricted to the subject-matter of assessment or the sources of income which have been considered expressly or by clear implication by the Income-tax Officer from the point of view of the taxability of die assessee. It was argued by Mr. Vishwanath lyer on behalf of the appellant that by applying the principle to the present case, the Appellate Assistant Commissioner had jurisdiction to enhance the quantum of income of the assessee. It was pointed out that the fact of alleged transfer of Rs. 5,85,000 to Forbesganj branch was noted by the Income-tax Officer and also the fact that it did not reach Forbesganj on the same day. So, it was argued that in the appeal the Appellate Assistant Commissioner had jurisdiction to deal with the question of the taxability of the amount of Rs. 5,85,000 and to hold that it was taxable as undisclosed profits in the hands of the assessee. We are unable to accept the argument put forward on behalf of the appellant as correct. It is true that the Income-tax Officer has referred to the remittance of Rs. 5,85,000 from the Calcutta branch, but the Income-tax Officer considered the despatch of this amount only with a view to test the Genuineness of the entries relating to Rs. 4,30,000 in the books of the Forbesganj branch. It is manifest that the Income-tax Officer did not consider the remittance of Rs. 5,85,000 in the process of assessment from the point of view of its taxability. It is also manifest that the Appellate Assistant Commissioner has considered the, amount of remit- tance of Rs. 5,85,000 from a different aspect, namely, the point of view of its taxability. But since the Income-tax Officer has not applied his mind to the question of the taxability or nontaxability of the amount of Rs. 5,85,000, the Appellate Assistant Commissioner had no jurisdiction, in the circumstances of the present case, to enhance the taxable income of the assessee on the basis of this amount of Rs. 5,85,000 or of any portion thereof. As we have already stated. it is not open to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner to travel outside the record, i.e., the return made by the assessee or the assessment order of the Income- tax Officer with a view to find out new sources of income and the power of enhancement under s. 31(3) of the Act is restricted to the sources of income which have been the subject-matter of consideration by the Income-tax Officer from the point of view of taxability. In this context "consideration" does not mean "incidental" 11 | P a g e or "collateral" examination of any matter by the Income-tax Officer in the process of assessment. There must be something in the assessment order to show that the Income-tax Officer applied Ms mind to the particular subject- matter or the particular source of income with a view to its taxability or to its non-taxability and not to any incidental connection. In the present case it is manifest that the Income-tax Officer has not considered the entry of Rs. 5,85,000 from the point of view of its taxability and therefore the Appellate Assistant Commissioner had no jurisdiction, in an appeal unders. 31 of the Act, to enhance the assessment. For these reasons we hold that the High Court rightly answered the question in favour of the assessee and this appeal must be dismissed with costs.”
We further notice that various other judicial precedents CIT Vs. Shapoorji Pallonji Mistry (1962) 44 ITR 891 (SC); CIT Vs. Sardari Lal & Co. (2001) 251 ITR 864 (Del.) and CIT Vs. Union Tyres (1999) 240 ITR 556 (Del.) have settled the very issue in assessee’s favour and against the department that such a new item or head of income could not form a subject matter of CIT(A) enhancement jurisdiction. We thus reverse the learned CIT(A)’s action taking recourse to his impugned enhancement in very terms.
That being the case, the next issue before us is that of the assessee’s grievance raised against section 68 addition of Rs.80 lakhs made in the assessment order (supra). We are of the considered view that given the fact that it had sought to withdraw its lower appeal, we thus uphold the Assessing Officer’s action to this extent in very terms. The assessee’s quantum appeal is partly allowed therefore. 12 | P a g e
The assessee’s latter appeal involves the consequential section 271(1)(c) penalty proceedings qua the foregoing section 68 unexplained cash credits. Suffice to say, the same has no legs to stand to the extent of the foregoing enhancement addition getting deleted in the preceding paragraphs. So far as its correctness regarding the remaining unexplained cash credits addition of Rs.80 lakhs is concerned, we are of the considered view that such an issue of section 68 unexplained cash credits addition is indeed a very much subjective one requiring the corresponding voluminous evidences of identity, genuineness and creditworthiness thereof which may or may not be ultimately accepted in the taxpayer’s favour.
Faced with this situation, we hereby quote CIT Vs. Reliance Petro products, (2010) 322 ITR 158 (SC) to reject the Revenue’s vehement contentions supporting the impugned penalty and conclude that both the learned lower authorities have erred in law and on facts in invoking the same in the assessee’s hands herein. This penalty appeal is hereby accepted in very terms.
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To sum up, these assessee’s twin appeals & 5544/Del/2019 are partly allowed in the foregoing terms. A copy of this common order be placed in the respective case files. Order pronounced in the open court on 11th February, 2026 Sd/- Sd/- (NAVEEN CHANDRA) (SATBEER SINGH GODARA) ACCOUNTANT MEMBER JUDICIAL MEMBER Dated: 9th March, 2026. RK/- Copy forwarded to: 1. Appellant 2. Respondent 3. CIT 4. CIT(A) 5. DR Asst. Registrar, ITAT, New Delhi
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