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Bombay High Court Quashes Reassessment Under Section 148 for AY 2013-14: Reopening Held Invalid Due to Lack of Fresh Material and Prior Adjudication Under Section 263

Bombay High Court Quashes Reassessment Under Section 148 for AY 2013-14: Reopening Held Invalid Due to Lack of Fresh Material and Prior Adjudication Under Section 263

Bombay High Court Quashes Reassessment Under Section 148 for AY 2013-14: Reopening Held Invalid Due to Lack of Fresh Material and Prior Adjudication Under Section 263

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Court’s Decision:

The High Court quashed the reassessment notice issued under Section 148 of the Income Tax Act, 1961, for the assessment year 2013-14. The court ruled that the reopening of assessment was legally flawed as it was initiated beyond the four-year limitation period without fulfilling the necessary conditions under the Act. The decision was based on the fact that the reassessment notice did not contain any new material evidence but relied on issues that were already adjudicated under Section 263 proceedings.

Facts:

  1. Original Filing & Assessment:
    • The petitioner was engaged in the real estate business and filed his income tax return for AY 2013-14 on September 27, 2013, declaring an income of Rs. 54,91,960.
    • The Assessing Officer (AO) passed an assessment order under Section 143(3) on December 31, 2015, accepting the return as filed.
  2. Revisional Proceedings Under Section 263:
    • On November 29, 2017, the Commissioner of Income Tax (CIT) issued a notice under Section 263, questioning:
      • Non-disclosure of sales transactions related to six flats amounting to Rs. 2,74,94,950.
      • Non-disclosure of house property income.
      • Interest payments that were allegedly disallowable.
    • The CIT found the original assessment order to be erroneous and prejudicial to revenue, and on March 16, 2018, an order was passed under Section 263, setting aside the original assessment and directing fresh scrutiny.
    • In compliance, the AO passed a fresh assessment order on December 14, 2018, under Section 143(3) read with Section 263.
  3. Reassessment Proceedings Under Section 148:
    • On March 25, 2021, the AO issued a reassessment notice under Section 148, reopening the case for AY 2013-14.
    • The petitioner objected, arguing that the reassessment was unlawful since:
      • The issues raised in the reopening were already examined under Section 263.
      • There was no fresh material evidence justifying reassessment.
    • The objections were rejected on March 11, 2022, leading to the High Court challenge.

Issues Before the Court:

  1. Was the reassessment valid under Section 148 when the assessment had already been revised under Section 263?
  2. Could the AO reopen an assessment beyond four years when the petitioner had fully disclosed all material facts?
  3. Did the reassessment constitute a mere change of opinion, which is impermissible under the law?

Petitioner’s Arguments:

Respondent’s Arguments:

Analysis of the Law:

  1. Section 147 & Section 148:
    • Section 147 allows reopening if the AO has reason to believe that income has escaped assessment.
    • The first proviso prohibits reopening beyond four years unless there was a failure to disclose all material facts.
  2. Section 263’s Impact on Reassessment:
    • If an assessment has already been revised under Section 263, reopening under Section 147 on the same grounds is impermissible.
    • The third proviso to Section 147 bars reassessment on matters already decided under Section 263.
  3. Judicial Precedents Against Reassessment Without Fresh Material:
    • Kelvinator of India Ltd.Reassessment cannot be a review.
    • PCIT v. State Bank of IndiaReopening is barred when issues were already adjudicated.
    • Samet Estates (P.) Ltd. v. CITReopening was quashed on similar grounds.

Court’s Reasoning:

Conclusion:

Implications of the Judgment:

  1. Strengthens taxpayer protection against arbitrary reassessments.
  2. Prevents revenue authorities from reopening assessments without fresh material.
  3. Clarifies that reassessment cannot be used as a review mechanism.
  4. Upholds the third proviso to Section 147, restricting reassessment after Section 263 proceedings.

Also Read – Delhi High Court Enhances Compensation for Injured Appellant in Motor Accident Case: “Housewives Should Be Classified as Skilled Workers, Functional Disability Assessment Upheld”

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