SHALINI GUPTA vs INCOME TAX OFFICER, WARD -46(6) DELHI & ANR.
* IN THE HIGH COURT OF DELHI AT NEW DELHI
Judgement reserved on: 25.08.2023
% Judgement pronounced on: 10.11.2023
+ W.P.(C) 11527/2022 & CM APPL. 34097/2022
GANESH DASS KHANNA ….. Petitioner
versus
INCOME TAX OFFICER AND ANR ….. Respondent
+ W.P.(C) 12481/2022 & CM APPL. 37682/2022
PYTEX IMPEX PRIVATE LIMITED ….. Petitioner
versus
ASSISTANT COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX CIRCLE 19(1), DELHI & ANR. ….. Respondent
+ W.P.(C) 12281/2022 & CM APPL. 36873/2022
M R AUXILIARY SERVICES PRIVATE LIMITED ….. Petitioner
versus
INCOME TAX OFFICER & ANR. ….. Respondent
+ W.P.(C) 12532/2022 & CM APPL. 37947/2022
ARCHNA GAKHAR ….. Petitioner
versus
PRINCIPAL COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX DELHI 10 & ANR. ….. Respondent
+ W.P.(C) 13003/2022 & CM APPL. 39410/2022
AMIT JAIN ….. Petitioner
versus
ASSISTANT COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX CIRCLE 58(1) DELHI ….. Respondent
+ W.P.(C) 13389/2022
SUNIL NOSARIA ….. Petitioner
versus
INCOME TAX OFFICER, WARD 21(1), DELHI ….. Respondent
+ W.P.(C) 13397/2022
RITA SOMANI ….. Petitioner
versus
ASSISTANT COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX AND ANR
….. Respondent
+ W.P.(C) 13464/2022
SAMTA EDUCATIONAL MINORITY TRUST ….. Petitioner
versus
INCOME TAX OFFICER WARD EXEMPTION 2(1) DELHI & ORS. ….. Respondent
+ W.P.(C) 13580/2022
KARTIK INFRATOWN PRIVATE LIMITED ….. Petitioner
versus
ITO, WARD 14(1) NEW DELHI & ORS. ….. Respondents
+ W.P.(C) 13725/2022
ANITA KATHURIA ….. Petitioner
versus
ASSISTANT COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX CIRCLE 28(1), NEW DELHI & ANR. ….. Respondent
+ W.P.(C) 13744/2022
JHAWAR LAL JAIN ….. Petitioner
versus
ACIT CIRCLE 49(1) DELHI & ANR. ….. Respondent
+ W.P.(C) 13843/2022
GEEKEN SEATING COLLECTION PRIVATE LIMITED
….. Petitioner
versus
ASSISTANT COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX & ANR.
….. Respondents
+ W.P.(C) 13903/2022 & CM APPL. 42502/2022
SHIRISH JAIN ….. Petitioner
versus
INCOME TAX OFFICER WARD 70-1, DELHI & ANR.
….. Respondent
+ W.P.(C) 15121/2022 & CM APPL. 46761/2022
SOUTH EAST UP POWER TRANSMISSION COMPANY LIMITED ….. Petitioner
versus
DEPUTY COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX, CENTRAL CIRCLE-19 DELHI & ORS. ….. Respondents
+ W.P.(C) 15316/2022 & CM APPLs. 47577/2022 & 33982/2023
ORRIS INFRASTRUCTURE (P) LTD ….. Petitioner
versus
ASSISTANT COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX, CIRCLE- 19(1) DELHI ….. Respondents
+ W.P.(C) 17065/2022
GURCHARAN KAUR ….. Petitioner
versus
INCOME TAX OFFICER WARD 69(1) NEW DELHI & ORS.
….. Respondents
+ W.P.(C) 17196/2022 & CM APPL. 54652/2022
APOLLO INTERNATIONAL LTD ….. Petitioner
versus
ASSISTANT COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX CIRCLE 1 (1) DELHI ….. Respondent
+ W.P.(C) 17391/2022 & CM APPL. 55372/2022
MAHESH MITTAR JAIN ….. Petitioner
Versus
INCOME TAX OFFICER WARD 71(3) & ORS ….. Respondent
+ W.P.(C) 17438/2022 & CM APPL. 55567/2022
TRISHLA JAIN ….. Petitioner
versus
INCOME TAX OFFICER WARD 45(1), DELHI AND ORS.
….. Respondents
+ W.P.(C) 17448/2022& CM APPL. 55590/2022
SUNTOUCH INFRASOLUTIONS PRIVATE LIMITED
….. Petitioner
versus
ASSISTANT DEPUTY COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX, CIRCLE 22(2), DELHI AND ORS. ….. Respondents
+ W.P.(C) 17579/2022& CM APPL. 56134/2022
RAJENDER PRASAD SHUKLA ….. Petitioner
versus
ASSISTANT COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX, CIRCLE- 58(1), DELHI & ORS. ….. Respondents
+ W.P.(C) 134/2023 & CM APPL. 493/2023
HEMA ….. Petitioner
versus
INCOME TAX OFFICER, WARD 36(1), DELHI & ORS.
….. Respondents
+ W.P.(C) 147/2023 & CM APPL. 548/2023
MANOJ KUMAR ….. Petitioner
versus
INCOME TAX OFFICER, WARD 36(1), DELHI & ORS.
….. Respondents
+ W.P.(C) 237/2023& CM APPL. 898/2023
RAMA JAIN (THROUGH LEGAL HEIR SH. MAHESH MITTAR JAIN) ….. Petitioner
versus
INCOME TAX OFFICER WARD 21(1), DELHI & ANR.
….. Respondents
+ W.P.(C) 478/2023
DASHMESH FIN INVEST COMPANY PRIVATE LIMITED.
….. Petitioner
versus
INCOME TAX OFFICER, WARD 7-1 & ANR. ….. Respondents
+ W.P.(C) 829/2023 & CM APPL. 3176/2023
TARVINDER SINGH JUNEJA ….. Petitioner
versus
ASSISTANT COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX & ANR.
….. Respondents
+ W.P.(C) 838/2023 & CM APPL. 3226/2023
CHANDRA BHUSHAN RAY ….. Petitioner
versus
INCOME TAX OFFICER, WARD-54(1), DELHI & ORS.
….. Respondents
+ W.P.(C) 1623/2023& CM APPL. 6168/2023
DR. VINOD KUMAR UPADHYAYA ….. Petitioner
versus
ASSISTANT COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX CIRCLE 19-1, DELHI & ANR. ….. Respondents
+ W.P.(C) 1724/2023 & CM APPL. 6539/2023
HARDEEP SINGH ….. Petitioner
versus
ASSISTANT COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX CIRCLE 43(1) NEW DELHI & ORS. ….. Respondents
+ W.P.(C) 1749/2023& CM APPL. 6701/2023
ARVINDER KAUR ….. Petitioner
versus
ASSISTANT COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX CIRCLE 43(1) NEW DELHI & ORS. ….. Respondents
+ W.P.(C) 1751/2023
BHOLE NATH FOODS LIMITED ….. Petitioner
versus
DEPUTY COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX, CIRCLE-4-2, DELHI & ANR. ….. Respondents
+ W.P.(C) 1812/2023& CM APPL. 6943/2023
ARVINDER KAUR ….. Petitioner
versus
ASSISTANT COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX CIRCLE 43(1) NEW DELHI & ORS. ….. Respondents
+ W.P.(C) 1886/2023 & CM APPL. 7188/2023
PARNIKA RATHI ….. Petitioner
versus
INCOME TAX OFFICER WARD 30(1), DELHI & ORS.
….. Respondents
+ W.P.(C) 1910/2023& CM APPL. 7262/2023
PUSHPA RATHI ….. Petitioner
versus
INCOME TAX OFFICER WARD 30(1) & ANR. ….. Respondents
+ W.P.(C) 2089/2023 & CM APPL. 7930/2023
DR. BHARAT AGGARWAL ….. Petitioner
versus
ASSISTANT COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX, CIRCLE-52(1), DELHI & ANR. ….. Respondents
+ W.P.(C) 2213/2023& CM APPL. 8420/2023
AMIT SHARMA ….. Petitioner
versus
ASSISTANT COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX, CIRCLE 52-1 & ORS. ….. Respondents
+ W.P.(C) 2227/2023& CM APPL. 8461/2023
TANVEEN KAUR JUNEJA ….. Petitioner
versus
ASSISTANT COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX & ANR.
….. Respondents
+ W.P.(C) 2357/2023& CM APPL. 9006/2023
ANISH SINGLA HUF ….. Petitioner
versus
INCOME TAX OFFICER WARD 43 6 DELHI ….. Respondent
+ W.P.(C) 2722/2023&CM APPL. 10448/2023
SHALINI GUPTA ….. Petitioner
versus
INCOME TAX OFFICER, WARD -46(6) DELHI & ANR.
….. Respondents
+ W.P.(C) 2776/2023 & CM APPL. 10722/2023
BLB LIMITED ….. Petitioner
versus
DEPUTY COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX & ORS.
….. Respondents
+ W.P.(C) 3141/2023&CM APPL. 12166/2023
VICTORIA FOODS PRIVATE LIMITED ….. Petitioner
versus
ASSISTANT COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX CIRCLE 25(1) DELHI ….. Respondent
+ W.P.(C) 3395/2023 & CM APPL. 13143/2023
CHITRANJAN SHAH ….. Petitioner
Versus
INCOME TAX OFFICER, WARD 29(1), DELHI & ORS.
….. Respondents
+ W.P.(C) 3799/2023 & CM APPL. 14814/2023
DEVENDRA KUMAR SAINI ….. Petitioner
versus
INCOME TAX OFFICER WARD 28(1) DELHI AND ANR
….. Respondents
+ W.P.(C) 4130/2023& CM APPL. 15989/2023
YOGESH RUSTOGI ….. Petitioner
versus
INCOME TAX OFFICER & ORS. ….. Respondents
+ W.P.(C) 4878/2023& CM APPL. 18863/2023
SATPAUL GOEL ….. Petitioner
versus
ASSESSMENT UNIT, NATIONAL FACELESS ASSESSMENT CENTRE & ORS. ….. Respondents
+ W.P.(C) 5972/2023&CM APPL. 23464/2023
VMVS TEXTILES PRIVATE LIMITED ….. Petitioner
versus
INCOME TAX OFFICER WARD 26(1) & ANR. ….. Respondents
+ W.P.(C) 6281/2023 & CM APPL. 24645/2023
HARJEET SINGH ARORA ….. Petitioner
Versus
DEPUTY COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX, CIRCLE 4-2 & ORS. ….. Respondents
+ W.P.(C) 6661/2023& CM APPL. 26089/2023
MANJU GUPTA ….. Petitioner
versus
INCOME TAX OFFICER, WARD 30-5, DELHI & ANR.
….. Respondents
+ W.P.(C) 7180/2023 & CM APPL. 27963/2023
ASTHA ARORA ….. Petitioner
versus
INCOME TAX OFFICER WARD 35(1) DELHI & ANR.
….. Respondents
Counsel for the petitioner/assessee: Mr Satyen Sethi with Mr Arta Trana Panda, adv, in W.P.(C) 11527/2022 and W.P.(C) 597/2023; Mr Amol Sinha and M. Kshitiz Garg, Advs in W.P.(C) 12481/2022; Ms Kavita Jha, Mr Vaibhavv Kulkarni and Mr Himanshu Agarwal, Advs.
in W.P.(C) 12281/2022; Mr A.K.Babbar and Mr B.K. Tripathi, Advocate in W.P.(C) 12532/2022; Mr Nitin Gulati and Ms Reena Gandhi, Advs. in W.P.(C) 13003/2022; Mr Salil Kapoor, Ms Ananya Kapoor, Mr Sumit Lalchandani, Mr Vibhu Jain and Mr Tarunn Chanana, Advs. In W.P.(C) 13389/2022, W.P.(C) 13903/2022, W.P.(C) 478/2023, W.P.(C) 1623/2023, W.P.(C) 1751/2023, W.P.(C) 4878/2023, W.P.(C) 6281/2023, W.P.(C) 6661/2023
Mr Manu K. Giri, Adv. in W.P.(C) 13397/2022 and W.P.(C) 17196/2022; Mr Yogesh Jagia, Mr Amit Sood and Mr Hriday Minocha, Advs in W.P.(C) 17065/2022, W.P.(C) 1724/2023, W.P.(C) 1749/2023, W.P.(C) 1812/2023.
Dr Rakesh Gupta, Mr Somil Agarwal and Mr Ansul Mittal, Advs. In W.P.(C) 17391/2022, W.P.(C) 17438/2022, W.P.(C) 237/2023,
W.P.(C) 1885/2023, W.P.(C) 1886/2023, W.P.(C) 1910/2023;
Mr Amol Sinha and Mr Kshitiz Garg, Advs in W.P.(C) 17579/2022, W.P.(C) 134/2023, W.P.(C) 147/2023, W.P.(C) 838/2023
Mr S.Krishnan and Mr K.C. Jain, Advs in W.P.(C) 1270/2023, W.P.(C) 2776/2023; Mr S. Krishnan and Mr. Rakesh Kumar, Advs in W.P.(C) 16473/2022; Mr Kapil Goel, Adv in W.P.(C) 2357/2023; Mrs Anjali Jha Manis, Mr Priyadarshi Manish, Ms Divya Rastogi, Ms Saksham Garg, Advs. in W.P.(C) 829/2023 & 2227/2023; Mr Prashant Shukla, Adv in W.P.(C) 5972/2023.
Mr Nagesh Kumar Behl and Mr Rajesh Kumar Aggarwal, Advs. For petitioner in W.P.(C) 13744/2022.
Mr Prasouk Jain with Mr Rabiya Thakur, Advocates in W.P.(C) 13843/2022.
Mr Ved Jain and Mr Nischay Kantoor, Advs. in W.P.(C) 15121/2022
Counsel for the respondents/revenue: Mr Kunal Sharma, Sr. Standing Counsel with Ms Zehra Khan, Jr. standing Counsel in W.P.(C) 15121/2022 W.P.(C) 17196/2022, W.P.(C) 597/2023, W.P.(C) 1751/2023, W.P.(C) 2089/2023 and W.P.(C) 2213/2023, Mr
Puneet Rai, Sr Standing Counsel, Mr Ashvini Kumar and Ms Madhavi Shukla, Jr. Standing Counsels in W.P.(C) 13903/2022, 15316/2022, ; Mr Gaurav Gupta, Sr. Standing Counsel with Mr Shivenda Singh an Mr Puneett Singhal, Jr. Standing Counsel in W.P.(C) 13003/2022, W.P.(C) 3395/2023 and W.P.(C) 3799/2023; Mr Puneet Rai,Sr,. Standing Counsel, Mr Ashvini Kumar, Jr. Standing Counsel, Ms Madhavi Shukla, Jr. Standing Counsel in W.P.(C) 2357/2023, W.P.(C) 3391/2023, W.P.(C) 5772/2023, W.P.(C) 5972/2023; Mr Manoj Kumar Tyagi, Adv in W.P.(C) 1910/2023; Mr Abhishek Maratha, Sr. Standing Counsel, with Mr Akshat Singh, Jr. Standing Counsel in W.P.(C) 12281/2022, W.P.(C) 12532/2022, W.P.(C) 13397/2022, W.P.(C) 13464/2022, W.P.(C) 13580/2022, W.P.(C) 13725/2022, W.P.(C) 13744/2022, W.P.(C) 13843/2022, W.P.(C) 17579/2022, W.P.(C) 1885/2023, W.P.(C) 1886/2023, W.P.(C) 1910/2023, W.P.(C) 4130/2023 W.P.(C) 4878/2023
Mr Aseem Chawla, Sr. Standing Counsel with Ms Pratishtha Chaudhary and Mr Aditya Gupta in W.P.(C) 13389/2022, W.P.(C) 17065/2022, W.P.(C) 17391/2022, W.P.(C) 17438/2022, W.P.(C) 17488/2022, W.P.(C) 237/2023, W.P.(C) 1623/2023, W.P.(C) 1724/2023, W.P.(C) 1749/2023, W.P.(C) 3141/2023.
Mr Sanjay Kumar, Adv. in W.P.(C) 478/2023, W.P.(C) 838/2023.
Mr Zoheb Hussain, Sr. Standing Counsel and Mr Sanjeev Menon, Jr. Standing Counsel, Advs in W.P.(C) 134/2023, W.P.(C) 147/2023, W.P.(C) 2776/2023, W.P.(C) 6281/2023, W.P.(C) 7180/2023.
Mr Sunil Agarwal, Sr. Standing counsel with Mr Shivansh B.Pandya and Mr Utkarsh Tiwari, Advocates in W.P.(C) 2722/2023.
Mr Vipul Agrawal, Sr. Standing Counsel, Mr Gibran Naushad and Ms. Sakshi Sabharwal in WP(C) 829/2023.
Mr Santosh Kumar Pandey, Adv. for UOI in W.P.(C) 13843/2022.
Mr Kavindra Gill, Senior Panel Counsel for R1/UOI in WP(C) 1886/2023.
Mr Chiranjiv Kumar with Mr Mukesh Sachdeva, Advocates for UOI in WP(C) 17438/2022.
CORAM:
HON’BLE MR JUSTICE RAJIV SHAKDHER
HON’BLE MR JUSTICE GIRISH KATHPALIA
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Prefatory Facts
..2
Submissions made by Counsels:
..25
Analysis and Reasons:
…..36
Conclusion:
..58
RAJIV SHAKDHER, J.:
Prefatory Facts:
1. These are writ petitions concerning Assessment Years (AYs) 2016-17 and 2017-18.
2. A singular but common issue has been raised in these writ petitions, which is whether the notices issued to the petitioners under Section 148 of the Income Tax Act, 1961 [hereafter referred to as the 1961 Act] are sustainable in law having regard to Clauses (a) and (b) of Section 149(1) of the 1961 Act?
2.1. In short, the contention of the petitioners [hereafter referred to collectively as assessee(s), unless the context requires otherwise] is that in cases where the alleged escaped income is below the prescribed monetary threshold of Rs.50 lakhs, the period of limitation as stipulated under Clause (a) of Sub-section (1) of Section 149 of the 1961 Act would be applicable. The period prescribed under the said Clause is three (03) years from the end of the relevant AY.
2.2. Thus, if the extended period of limitation provided under Clause (b) of Sub-section (1) of Section 149 of the Act is to be applied, which is a period beyond three years (03) but not more than ten (10) years, to sustain the notice issued under Section 148 of the Act, jurisdictional conditions stipulated therein would have to be fulfilled.
2.3. One of the conditions prescribed for invoking the extended period of limitation is that the income chargeable to tax, which has escaped assessment, amounts to or is likely to amount to Rs.50 lakhs or more. Concededly, in the above-captioned matters, the income chargeable to tax, which is alleged to have escaped assessment, is below Rs.50 lakhs.
2.4. Therefore, as noticed above, the issue which requires adjudication is: what was the period of limitation available to the respondents [hereafter referred to as revenue] for issuance of notice under Section 148 of the Act?
3. Although the plain language of provisions of Section 149(1)(a) and (b) of the Act provide for limitation for notices to be issued under Section 148 qua the relevant AY, and hence, if applied, would, according to assessees, result in they being declared inefficacious-the revenue contends to the contrary. As per the revenue, the notices are within limitation based on a conjoint reading of the provisions mentioned above with the judgment rendered by the Supreme Court dated 04.05.2022 in Union of India and Ors. vs. Ashish Agarwal1, Instruction No.01 of 2022 dated 11.05.2022 issued by the Central Board of Direct Taxes [hereafter referred to as CBDT] in exercise of powers under Section 119 of the Act and the Taxation and Other Laws (Relaxation and Amendment of Certain Provisions) Act, 2020 [hereafter referred to as TOLA].
3.1. At this juncture, it is relevant to note that TOLA was preceded by an Ordinance issued under Article 123 of the Constitution titled Taxation and Other Laws (Relaxation and Amendment of Certain Provisions) Ordinance, 2020 [hereafter referred to as 2020 Ordinance].
4. Therefore, to appreciate the submissions advanced before us by the assessees, the backdrop in which the 2020 Ordinance was issued, followed by TOLA [which provided for relaxation and amendments in specified statutes and other legislations such as Central Excise Act, 1944, Finance Act (No.2) of 2019 and Goods and Services Act, 2017] would have to be, briefly, set forth.
5. The COVID-19 pandemic, which spread across the world, including in India, made it difficult for the citizenry to comply with, among other things, the timelines prescribed in various statutes applicable to them.
5.1. The 2020 Ordinance, thus, granted an extension of timelines, which were specified, prescribed, or notified in the statutes referred to therein, which fell within the period spanning between 20.03.2020 and 29.06.2020 or such other dates which fell after 29.06.2020 provided these dates were specified by the Central Government by way of a Notification.
5.2. The actions qua which time limits were extended for completion of compliance were referred to in Chapter II Section 3(1)(a) to (c) of the 2020 Ordinance, insofar as the Specified Acts were concerned. The Specified Acts were defined in Section 2(1)(a) of the 2020 Ordinance.
5.3. As far as the above-captioned writ petitions are concerned, we are required to accord attention to only one Specified Act, i.e., the 1961 Act. Reference to the 1961 Act was made in Section 2(1)(a)(ii) of the 2020 Ordinance. Besides this, the 2020 Ordinance made amendments to the 1961 Act and other statutes, which resulted, inter alia, in the extension of time limits in those statutes as well.
5.4. By virtue of the provisions of the 2020 Ordinance, the due date/time limit/limitation for completion of proceedings and compliance referred to in Section 3(1), which fell during the period spanning between 20.03.2020 and 29.06.2020 stood extended to 30.06.2020.
5.5. Likewise, Notification No.35 of 2020 dated 24.06.2020 issued under the 2020 Ordinance extended the end date to 31.03.2021 where the due date/time-limit/limitation under the Specified Acts qua proceedings and compliances referred to in Section 3(1) of the 2020 Ordinance fell within the period spanning between 20.03.2020 to 31.12.2020.
5.6. Besides the Notification dated 24.06.2020, two (02) other notifications were issued under the 2020 Ordinance, which were dated 29.06.2020 and 29.07.2020.
5.7. The first one was Notification No.39 of 2020, dated 29.06.2020, whereby an error which had crept in the Notification dated 24.06.2020 was corrected. The second Notification, i.e., Notification No.56 of 2020 dated 29.07.2020, was issued to amend the first proviso appended to Clause (i), sub-clause (a) and for insertion of a fresh proviso immediately after the second proviso incorporated in the Notification dated 24.06.2020.
6. Continuing with the narrative, the enactment of TOLA, which received the assent of the President of India on 29.09.2020, did not alter the end date for completion of proceedings and/or compliances, the due dates/time limit/limitation for which fell between 20.03.2020 and 31.12.2020. In other words, under TOLA, 31.03.2021 remained the end date for proceedings and compliances referred to in Section 3(1) of the said Act, which, as noticed hereafter, was extended via Notifications.
7. The enactment of Finance Act 2021 [hereafter referred to as FA 2021], which received the assent of the President of India on 28.03.2021 and came into force on 01.04.2021, brought about, among other things, significant changes concerning the provisions relating to reassessment proceedings contained in 1961 Act. Consequently, Sections 147 to 149 and 151 were substituted with new provisions, which were similarly numbered and in addition, two (02) provisions were introduced, i.e., Sections 148A and 151A.
7.1. Notably, Section 148A provided for the procedure that the Assessing Officer [hereafter referred to as AO] had to adhere to before he concluded that the case in issue was fit for issuance of notice under Section 148 of the 1961 Act, i.e., for triggering recommencement proceedings against an assessee.
7.2. The substituted Section 149, as alluded to hereinabove, prescribed the time limits for issuance of notice under Section 148 of the Act.
8. We may also note that under TOLA, two (02) Notifications were issued for an extension of time for filing returns concerning AY 2020-21 and for furnishing audit reports under the relevant provisions of the 1961 Act. These Notifications are 88 of 2020, dated 29.10.2020 and 93 of 2020, dated 31.12.2020.
9. In the interregnum, a press release dated 30.12.2020 was also issued broadly for the same purpose, which, apart from the 1961 Act, referred to other statutes as well. Insofar as the Notification dated 31.12.2020 was concerned, it provided that the end date for limitation would be 31.03.2021 concerning those proceedings, in which the due date for compliance fell between 20.03.2020 and 30.03.2021.
10. The point of inflection, however, came about with the CBDT issuing two (02) Notifications, i.e., Notification No.20 of 2021 dated 31.03.2021 and Notification No.38 of 2021 dated 27.04.2021.
10.1. Insofar as the Notification dated 31.03.2021 was concerned, it shifted the end date prescribed for the expiration of limitation as per the provisions of Section 149 of the 1961 Act, to 30.04.2021, concerning the notices issued under Section 148, the due date for which fell within the period spanning between 20.03.2020 and 31.03.2021.
10.2. Likewise, the Notification dated 27.04.2021 extended the limitation period to 30.06.2021 for notices issued under Section 148 of the 1961 Act, the due date for which fell between 20.03.2020 and 30.04.2021.
10.3. The problematic part of these Notifications was the explanations appended to Part A(a)(ii) [Notification dated 31.03.2021] and Part A(b) [Notification dated 27.04.2021]. These explanations were identical. They, inter alia, provided that the provisions of Sections 148, 149 and 151 of the 1961 Act, as obtaining on 31.03.2021, would apply. In other words, these Notifications sought to bypass the substituted provisions contained in Sections 148, 149 and 151, which were incorporated in the 1961 Act pursuant to FA 2021.
11. Pivoted on the Notifications dated 31.03.2021 and 27.04.2021, the revenue issued notices under the unamended Section 148 of the 1961 Act to the assessees for AYs 2003-04 to 2017-18.
12. This led to challenges being laid via writ actions preferred in several High Courts of the country, including in this Court, wherein a bunch of cases were filed, the lead matter being W.P.(C) No.6176/2021, titled Mon Mohan Kohli vs ACIT & Anr.2.
13. The writ petitioners (in those cases) assailed notices issued between 01.04.2021 and 30.06.2021 on two broad grounds. First, with the coming into force of FA 2021, the old regime could not have been taken recourse to by the revenue. Second, the notices were barred by limitation, as prescribed under the new regime, which was captured in the substituted Section 149 of the 1961 Act.
14. As indicated above, such writ actions were also instituted in other High Courts, including the Allahabad High Court. Several High Courts, including this Court in the Mon Mohan Kohli case, quashed the 148 notices which were pivoted on the explanations referred to hereinabove, contained in the Notifications dated 31.03.2021 and 27.04.2021.
15. The Union of India carried the judgment rendered by the Allahabad High Court in Writ Tax No. 524/2021, titled Ashok Kumar Agarwal vs Union of India, through its Revenue Secretary North Block & Ors. to the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court, via judgment in the Ashish Agrawal case, sustained the notices issued under the unamended Section 148 of the 1961 Act, i.e., the old regime, by directing that the same would be treated as having been issued under Section 148A(b) (i.e., the new regime) for commencement of reassessment proceedings under the 1961 Act.
15.1. A slew of directions were issued by the Supreme Court in the exercise of its powers under Article 142 of the Constitution, not only qua matters vis-à-vis which appeals were preferred by the UOI but also those judgments which had ruled on the same issue but were not, at that point in time, carried in appeal to the Supreme Court.
16. The CBDT, as noticed above, issued the impugned Instruction dated 11.05.2022, purportedly in compliance with the directions in the judgment rendered by the Supreme Court in Ashish Agarwals case.
17. As a follow-up, the revenue via the AOs issued communications/notices, which indicated reassessment proceedings were being triggered under the new regime, which had been brought into effect on 01.04.2021 with the enactment of FA 2021.
17.1. The assessees filed their objections in terms of Section 148A(c) to the communications/notices, which were aligned with the provisions of Section 148A(b) of the 1961 Act.
17.2. Among several objections taken by the assessees, one objection flagged was that the time limit prescribed under Section 149(1)(a) had expired and given the fact that the income chargeable to tax which had allegedly escaped assessment amounted to less than Rs.50 lakhs, the revenue could not take recourse to the extended limitation period provided in clause (b) of sub-section (1) of Section 149 of the 1961 Act.
17.3. Suffice it to say this objection preferred by the assessees was rejected by the AOs while passing the orders under Section 148A(d) of the 1961 Act. Resultantly, consequential notices under Section 148 of the 1961 Act were issued to the assessees. It is this development which has brought the assesses to the Court by way of the above-captioned writ actions.
18. Before we proceed further, we may note that based on the agreement arrived at between the counsel representing both the assesses and revenue, we had indicated that we would allude to the dates and events concerning W.P.(C) 12281/2022, titled, M.R. Auxiliary Services Private Limited vs. ITO & Anr. and W.P.(C) 15121/2022, titled South East UP Power Transmission Company Limited vs. Deputy Commissioner of Income Tax, Central Circle-19, Delhi & Ors. steering clear of the prefatory facts which have already been referred to hereinabove, since the issue which has arisen for consideration is a pure question of law and the judgment rendered by us would operate in rem and cover all assessees.
18.1. We also note that apart from the challenge laid to the notice issued under Section 148 to the concerned assessees, in some writ actions, the challenge is also laid to Instruction dated 11.05.2022.
W.P.(C) 12281/2022 [M.R. Auxiliary case]
19. M.R Auxiliary Services Pvt. Ltd. [hereafter referred to as MRA] had filed its return of income (ROI) concerning AY 2017-18 on 24.10.2017. Via its ROI, MRA had declared a loss amounting to Rs.1,25,303/-.
19.1 On 28.06.2021, MRA was issued a notice under the unamended Section 148 of the 1961 Act.
19.2 Pursuant to the judgment of the Supreme Court in the Ashish Agrawal case, MRA was served with two (02) notices dated 20.05.2022 and 25.06.2022. The allegation levelled against MRA was that Rs.29,86,000/- was deposited in the bank account maintained by it during the period 09.11.2016 and 31.12.2016. It was alleged that the said amounts had been funneled through an entity going by the name Suntech Solar Power Pvt. Ltd., which had received cash deposits amounting to Rs.30,80,508/-, out of which Rs.29,86,000/- was channeled to the bank account of MRA.
19.3. MRA filed a response dated 04.06.2022 to the notice issued under Section 148A(b) of the Act, which was dated 20.05.2022. Amongst other objections, one of the objections that MRA flagged was that the reassessment proceedings triggered against it were time-barred as the limitation qua the AY 2017-18 expired on 31.03.2021. In this context, the attention of the AO was drawn to Clause (a) of Sub-section (1) of Section 149 of the 1961 Act. MRA also highlighted the fact that the AO could not take recourse to the extended period of limitation provided in Clause (b) of Sub-section (1) of Section 149, as the preconditions provided therein, which included that the escaped income should amount to Rs.50 lakhs or more, remained unfulfilled.
19.4. The AO, via order dated 27.07.2022, rejected the said objection raised by MRA, broadly, on the ground that this court, while rendering the judgment in Mon Mohan Kohlis case had only found fault with the non-adherence by the revenue to the procedure prescribed for reopening assessment which came into effect on 01.04.2021, pursuant to FA 2021.
19.5. Furthermore, the AO took the position that the decision of the Supreme Case in Ashish Agrawals case, read with TOLA, will allow the reassessment notices to travel back in time to their original date when such notices were to be issued. The assertion was that the substituted Section 149 would apply from that point onwards. Thus, according to the AO, the time limit would have to be reckoned from when the original notice under Section 148 was issued, i.e., from 28.06.2021. The AO, thus, claimed if the time limit provided under Section 149(1)(a) of the 1961 Act, which is three (03) years, is applied from that date, the reassessment proceedings would sustain and, therefore, the pre-conditions provided in Clause (b) of Sub-section (1) of Section 149 were not applicable.
19.6. Being dissatisfied with the conclusion reached by the AO, MRA lodged its writ action on 23.08.2022. The writ petition came up before the coordinate bench on 25.08.2022, when notice was issued to the revenue. While issuing notice, the coordinate bench directed that although the AO would have the liberty to pass the assessment order, the same would not be given effect to and would be subject to further orders of the court.
W.P.(C) 15121/2022 [South East UP Power Transmission case]
20. On 17.10.2016, South East UP Power Transmission Company Limited [hereafter referred to as South East] filed its ROI for AY 2016-17. Via the ROI, South East declared a loss amounting to Rs.54,87,433/-.
20.1. South Easts ROI was processed, and an intimation was issued to it on 04.12.2016 under Section 143(1) of the 1961 Act.
20.2. On 16.04.2019, Power Finance Corporation Limited lodged a petition against South East under Section 7 of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 [hereafter referred to as 2016 Code].
20.3 On 30.06.2021, South East was issued a notice under the unamended Section 148 of the 1961 Act. Parallelly, an entity going by the name Resurgent Power Venture P. Ltd. [hereafter referred to as RPV] presented a resolution plan to the concerned bench of the National Company Law Tribunal [hereafter referred to as NCLT] on 19.07.2021.
20.4. On 18.11.2021, South East was issued a notice Section 142(1) of the 1961 Act. The said notice was followed by another notice dated 16.02.2022 under the same provision.
20.5. The record discloses that on 18.02.2022, the Resolution Professional [hereafter referred to as RP] appointed by the NCLT responded to the Section 142(1) notices issued by the AO. Via this communication, the RP conveyed to the AO that the Corporate Insolvency Resolution Process [hereafter referred to as CIRP] had been initiated vis-à-vis South East and that moratorium against the recovery of debts as per Section 14 of the 2016 Code was in operation.
20.6. The AO, however, via communication dated 24.02.2022, took the position that notwithstanding the provisions of Section 14 of the 2016 Code, he could continue with the reassessment proceedings. Accordingly, the AO granted a final opportunity to South East to file its response by 02.03.2022.
20.7. The RP, via his response dated 03.03.2022, restated his objection regarding the continuance of reassessment proceedings. However, the RP went on to defend the position of South East on merits, as well.
20.8. Via communication dated 07.03.2022, the AO disposed of the objections preferred by RP on behalf of South East and requested cooperation in the assessment proceedings.
20.9. Not being satisfied, the RP, via communication dated 14.03.2022, reemphasized his objection to the continuation of reassessment proceedings, having regard to the fact that the moratorium was in place.
21. The record discloses that on 15.06.2022, NCLT approved the resolution plan presented by RPV, and consequently, the moratorium came to be lifted.
21.1 On 28.07.2022, the AO passed the order under Section 148A(d) of the 1961 Act, whereby he held that income chargeable to tax amounting to Rs.8,01,500/- had escaped assessment. As a result, the AO also issued a consequential notice dated 29.07.2022 under Section 148 of the 1961 Act.
21.2. We may note that South East also conveyed to the AO via communication dated 22.08.2022 that the aforementioned notice issued under Section 148 should be dropped, considering that NCLT had approved the resolution plan presented by RPV. The said objection was also disposed of by the revenue via an order dated 19.09.2022.
21.3. It is in this background that South East filed its writ action, i.e. W.P.(C) 15121/2022, on 27.10.2022. Via this writ petition, South East has assailed the following notices and order:
(i) Notice dated 30.06.2021 which was treated as a notice used under Section 148A(b) of the 1961 Act.
(ii) Order dated 28.07.2022 passed under Section 148A(d) of the 1961 Act.
(iii) Consequential notice dated 29.07.2022 issued under Section 148 of the 1961 Act.
21.4. Besides this, a challenge was laid to the Instruction dated 11.05.2022.
Submissions made by counsel:
22. Although to adjudicate the legal issue in the above-captioned petitions, we have delved into facts concerning the two (02) writ petitions referred to hereinabove, the assessees, like revenue, were represented by several counsels. To avoid prolixity, we would paraphrase the submissions advanced on behalf of assessees and revenue without specifically adverting to the counsels by name.
Submissions on behalf of the assessees:
23. On behalf of the assessees, the following broad contentions were raised:
(i) Both the orders passed under Section 148A(d) and the consequent notices issued under Section 148 of the 1961 Act have transcended the prescribed limitation, which is three (03) years commencing from the end of the relevant AYs. Since the AYs in issue are 2016-17 and 2017-18, the end date for expiration of limitation for the said AYs would be 31.03.2020 and 31.03.2021. In all cases, the order under Section 148A(d) and the notice under Section 148 has been issued on or after 01.04.2021, i.e., after the expiry of the three (03) year limitation period prescribed under Section 149(1)(a).
(ii) The extended period of limitation provided in Section 149(1)(b) of the 1961 Act can be taken recourse to only if the conditions precedent provided therein are fulfilled. One such condition provided in Clause (b) of Sub-Section (1) of Section 149 is that income chargeable to tax, which allegedly has escaped assessment, amounts to or is likely to amount to Rs 50 lakhs or more. In the above-captioned writ petitions, even according to the revenue, the alleged escaped income is below Rs.50 lakhs. That being the case, the period of limitation for issuing notice under Section 148, which extends to ten (10) years, is not available to the revenue.
(iii) The revenues stand (which is primarily based on the CBDT Instruction dated 11.05.2022) that the directions issued by the Supreme Court in Ashish Agrawals case, when read along with TOLA, will allow the
extended reassessment notices to travel back in time to their original date when such notices were to be issued…. is unsustainable in law for the following reasons:
(a) The law does not support the travel back in time theory propounded by the revenue. Such theory is neither borne out from the decision rendered by the Supreme Court in Ashish Agarwals case nor does it have any roots in the provisions of the 1961 Act as amended by FA 2021. As a matter of fact, TOLA also does not support this theory.
(b) Contrary to the revenues submission, TOLA has created no such legal fiction which would allow the notices issued under Section 148, which were issued in and about May-June 2022, to be treated as having been issued on or before 31.03.2021, to calculate the period of limitation prescribed in Section 149(1)(a) of the 1961 Act. [See Keenara Industries Pvt. Ltd. vs. ITO, Surat 2023 (3) TMI 104 (Gujarat High Court); Rajiv Bansal v. Union of India and Ors 2023 (2) TMI 1081 (Bombay High Court) and Mon Mohan Kohli (Delhi High Court) paras 86 to 89]
(c) The Instruction dated 11.05.2022 issued by the CBDT, which states in paragraph 6.1 that the extended reassessment notices would travel back in time to their original date when such notices were issued, provides no clarity as to what that original date would be.
(d) The fallacy in the revenues stand is that while it wishes to travel back in time by applying the period of limitation available prior to FA 2021 coming into force, it simultaneously seeks to apply the amended provisions. Therefore, if the unamended provisions are applied, the end date for expiration of limitation for AYs 2016-17 and 2017-18 would be 31.03.2023 and 31.03.2024, respectively. In such a situation, TOLA would have no application, contrary to what is contended by revenue, as it applied to compliances and proceedings whose limitation expired between 20.03.2020 and 31.03.2021.
(e) The decision of the Supreme Court rendered in Ashish Agarwals case clearly mandated that post 31.03.2021, the new regime, as encapsulated in FA 2021, would apply. There was no reference in the said judgment to the travel back theory propounded on behalf of the revenue. All that the Supreme Court indicated in the said judgment that Section 148 notices issued between 01.04.2021 and 30.06.2021 would be treated as notices under Section 148A(b), i.e., the new regime. No suggestion was made in the Supreme Court’s decision that the impugned notices issued under Section 148 would be deemed as having been issued before 31.03.2021, as per the unamended provisions. As is evident upon perusal of the judgment of the Supreme Court, its direction to treat Section 148 notices as notices issued under the new regime was to quell the possibility of reassessment proceedings failing, even where they were viable under FA 2021. [See paragraph 8 of the judgment]
(iv). The directions contained in the judgment of the Supreme Court in Ashish Agarwals case, while exercising its powers under Article 142 of the Constitution, were issued keeping the aforesaid object in mind while specifically holding that all defences would be available to the assessees. Thus, notices issued on or before 31.03.2021 will be governed by the old regime, while those issued on or after 01.04.2021 must be aligned with the new regime. Accordingly, all those notices issued between 01.04.2021 and 30.06.2021 stood converted to notices issued under Section 148A(b) of the new regime and were, thus, subject to the amended Section 149 of the 1961 Act.
(v) The revenues stand is flawed as that would result in deferring the application of the amended provisions of Section 149. The revenue, which represents the executive, is not invested with the power to postpone the implementation of Sections 2 to 88 of FA 2021, which included the substituted Sections 147 to 151 of the 1961 Act. TOLA does not delegate any power to the Central Government to postpone the applicability of the new regime enacted by the Legislature.
(vi) The revenues stand is erroneous as it fails to consider that with the enactment of FA 2021, it not only repealed but also substituted the provisions of Section 147 to Section 151. Substitution involves a two-step procedure. In the first instance, the subject provision ceases to exist. The next step brings into existence a new provision. In that sense, the legislative tool of substitution is different from suppression or a mere repeal of the existing provision. [PTC India Ltd. v Central Electricity Regulatory Commission (2010) 4 SCC 603; Government of India v Indian Tobacco Association (2005) 7 SCC 396; Zile Singh v State of Haryana, (2004) 8 SCC 1; Income Tax Officer v Vikram Sujitkumar Bhatia (2023) SCC OnLine SC 370].
(vi)(a) The relevant extract of the Finance Ministers speech and the Memorandum explaining the provisions of Finance Bill 2021 [hereafter referred to as the Memorandum] shed light on the object of bringing about amendments to Sections 147 to 151. The amendments intended to reduce litigation and compliance burden, remove discretion, impart certainty, and promote ease of doing business. It is in this light that for cases where the escapement of income was below Rs.50 lakhs, the limitation period was reduced to three (03) years, whereas for those cases where the escaped amount was Rs. 50 lakhs or more, the revenue was given leeway to enquire into those cases up to ten (10) years.
(vi)(b) The new regime would thus apply to even past AYs, provided notices under Section 148 were issued on or after 01.04.2021. The viability of these notices would have to be tested against the backdrop of the amended Section 149 of the 1961 Act. TOLA, which received the assent of the President on 29.09.2020 and the Notifications issued under it, could not have amended, modified or even excluded the applicability of FA 2021, which was not born on that date; FA 2021 received the assent of the President of India on 31.03.2021.
(vii). The travel back in time theory propounded by the revenue is manifestly arbitrary for the following reason: As per Section 153(2) of the 1961 Act, reassessment proceedings are required to be completed within twelve (12) months from the end of the Financial Year (FY) in which notice under Section 148 is served on the assessee. Thus, if the notice issued under Section 148 is construed to travel back in time, i.e., to 31.03.2020/31.03.2021, the reassessment proceedings ought to have concluded by 31.03.2021/31.03.2022. The portal set up by the revenue, however, discloses that the end date provided for the completion of reassessment proceedings is 31.03.2024. This date has been provided having regard to the fact that the notices were served in FY 2022-23.
(viii). The circulars issued by the CBDT cannot run contrary to the decision of the Supreme Court. Likewise, the delegate cannot act in contravention of the Parent Act. Thus, the circulars/instructions/notifications issued by the Central Government cannot override the Parent Act.
(ix). The rule of strict interpretation applies to taxing statutes. It is not permissible in the context of taxing statutes to cure deficiencies. The Court should look at the plain words of the statute. Thus, if the assessee does not come within the ambit of the charging provision and the words are ambiguous and open to more than one interpretation, the benefit should enure to the assessee. Furthermore, if the law requires something to be done in a particular manner, it ought to be done in that manner or not at all.
(x). At the time of the enactment of FA 2021, it can be safely assumed that the legislature was aware of the state of law, as it existed then, which included the provisions of Section 149, TOLA and the Notifications issued under TOLA. However, despite such a situation obtaining, no provision was made for the extension of time limits under the amended Section 149, as exemplified by Notifications dated 31.03.2021 and 27.04.2021. Upon the enactment of FA 2021, TOLA and the Notifications issued under it were impliedly effaced. The Notifications dated 31.03.2021 and 27.04.2021 do not prescribe any time limit; instead, they merely extend the end dates specified under the repealed provisions of Section 149. Pursuant to the substitution of the old provisions of Section 149 with the enactment of FA 2021, the said Notifications cannot survive. [See Municipal Council Palai v. T. J. Joseph, 1963 SCC OnLine SC 55; Fibre Boards Pvt. Ltd. vs CIT, (2015) 376 ITR 596 (SC) and CIT v. Venkateswara Hatcheries (P.) Ltd, 237 ITR 174 (SC)]
(xi) With the enactment of FA 2021, the erstwhile provisions of Section 149(1) were repealed and were substituted by a new provision. The immediate impact of the substitution was, while the limitation prescribed under Clause (a) of the erstwhile Section 149(1) was reduced from four (04) years to three (03) years, no grandfathering clause was provided. As a result, Clause (a) of the Section 149(1) stood wholly obliterated. In contrast, the limitation prescribed in Clause (b) of the erstwhile Section 149(1) stood enhanced from six (06) years to ten (10) years under the new provision. Significantly, a grandfathering clause has been provided, and accordingly, the limitation is governed by Clause (b) of the erstwhile Section 149(1)(b) till AY 2021-22, subject to fulfilment of the prescribed conditions provided therein.
(xii). Assuming without admitting that the Notifications issued under TOLA can be relied upon, the consequent notices issued under Section 148, pursuant to orders passed under Section 148A(b), would have to be tested against the provisions of Section 149, as amended via FA 2021.
(xiii). Instruction dated 11.05.2022 is bad in law as it seeks to deprive the assessees of defences available to the assessees under the amended Section 149 of the 1961 Act, an aspect which the Supreme Court has recognized in its judgment rendered in Ashish Agrawals case.
Submissions on behalf of the revenue:
24. On behalf of the revenue, the following broad submissions were made:
(i) The contentions raised on behalf of the assessees that the notices issued under Section 148 of the 1961 Act vis-à-vis AYs 2016-17 and 2017-18 are covered by the limitation period prescribed under Clause (a) and not Clause (b) of Sub-Section (1) of Section 149 of the amended 1961 Act is completely misconceived. The coordinate bench of this Court in Touchstone Holdings Pvt. Ltd. v. ITO and Ors. [2023] 451 ITR 196 (Del) and Salil Gulati v. ACIT 2022:DHC:3709-DB has ruled that since the Supreme Court held that notices issued under Section 148 between 01.04.2021 and 30.06.2021 were to be treated as notices issued under Section 148A(b) of the 1961 Act, the said notices stood revived and were, thus, within the limitation period prescribed under the amended Section 149(1)(a) of the 1961 Act.
(ii) The power exercised by the Supreme Court under Article 142 of the Constitution while issuing directions which were the subject matter of the decision rendered in Ashish Agrawals case is non-justiciable. Therefore, the instant writ petitions are not maintainable as this Court has no power to examine the tenability of the directions contained in the aforementioned judgment passed by the Supreme Court. In other words, only the Supreme Court would be competent to clarify, if necessary, the decision rendered under Article 142 of the Constitution.
(iii) De hors the aforesaid contention, it is submitted that a perusal of the judgment rendered in Ashish Agrawals case would show that it approved, among others, the judgment of the coordinate bench in Mon Mohan Kohlis case and while doing so recognized the fact that if corrective measures are not taken, it would result in the failure of reassessment proceedings qua cases in which notices under Section 148 were issued between 01.04.2021 and 30.06.2024. Against this backdrop, the Supreme Court directed that the notices issued under Section 148 should be treated as those issued under Section 148A(b) of the amended 1961 Act.
(iv) Under the amended 1961 Act, the time limit for AY 2016-17 as per Section 149(1)(a) would come to an end on 31.03.2020. The limitation for notices issued between 01.04.2021 to 30.06.2021 stood extended till 30.06.2021, and the said notices were to be treated as notices issued under Section 148(A)(b) of the amended 1961 Act. Therefore, the erstwhile notices issued under Section 148, which had morphed into notices issued under Section 148A(b) of the 1961 Act, would be within the time limit of three (03) years prescribed under Section 149(1)(a) of the amended 1961 Act.
(v) As per the operative directions contained in the Supreme Courts judgment rendered in the Ashish Agarwals case, the Assessing Officer was required to furnish to the assessee information and material relied upon by him within thirty (30) days of pronouncement of the said judgment, to enable the assessee to file a reply within two (02) weeks thereafter. Having regard to this direction, the time spanning between the date when erstwhile notices under Section 148 were issued [which were treated as under Section 148A(b) of the Act by virtue of the fact they were issued between 01.04.2021 and 30.06.2021] and the date when the assessee filed reply would have to be excluded, having regard to the third proviso appended to Section 149 of the amended 1961 Act.
(vi) In the instant cases, there is no assertion that timelines, as provided in the Ashish Agrawal case, have been breached. Thus, the notices issued under Section 148, after passing the order under Section 148(A)(d) of the amended 1961 Act, are within the limitation period prescribed in Section 149(1)(a) of the amended 1961 Act. The criterion that the escaped income should amount to or is likely to amount to Rs. 50 lakhs or more is not applicable in the matters presently before the court.
(vii) Section 3(1) of TOLA, read with the judgment of the coordinate bench of this court rendered in Mon Mohan Kohlis case leaves no manner of doubt that the limitation for issuance of notice under Section 148 of the Act, which was coming to an end on 31.03.2020, qua AY 2016-17 as per the amended provisions of Section 149(1)(a), stood extended till 30.06.2021. Therefore, if this extended period of limitation is kept in mind and the timeframe between the date when the erstwhile notice under Section 148 was issued and when the reply was filed is excluded, in terms of the third proviso appended to Section 149 of the Act, both the order passed under Section 148(A)(d) and the consequent notice issued under Section 148 would be within the limitation prescribed in Section 149(1)(a) of the amended 1961 Act. Given the aforesaid submission, the Instruction dated 11.05.2022 is intra vires the provisions of the 1961 Act and Section 3(1) of TOLA, read with the directions contained in the Ashish Agrawals case.
(viii) Both under the unamended 1961 Act and amended 1961 Act, the issue concerning limitation is inextricably intertwined with two aspects:
(a) First, the rank of the authority granting approval/sanction for triggering reassessment proceedings.
(b) Second, the quantum of income which has escaped assessment.
(ix) The issue concerning limitation is covered in favour of revenue by the decision of the coordinate bench rendered in Touchstone. It must be borne in mind that the 2020 Ordinance morphed into TOLA on 29.09.2020, and the Notification issued under TOLA extended the limitation. For issuance of notice under Section 148, the farthest time limit was extended to 30.06.2021. Therefore, notices issued before the said date are within the time limit prescribed under Section 149(1)(a) of the Act.
(x) The constructive res judicata doctrine applies to Income Tax proceedings for the same AY. In other words, if multiple issues arise in assessment proceedings concerning a particular AY, the assessee must raise all such issues in the proceedings conducted for that AY. If the doctrine of constructive res judicata is not applied to the assessment proceedings for the given AY, the assessee will raise issues piecemeal, resulting in a multiplicity of proceedings and abuse of the process of law. The issue concerning limitation was raised in the batch of cases covered by Mon Mohan Kohlis case. The assessees should have raised the issue relating to the rank of the specified authority and the quantum of the escaped income in those proceedings. [See BSNL v. UOI (2006) 282 ITR 273 (SC) 3JJ, Devilal Modi v. STO AIR 1965 SC 1150; Amalgamated Coalfields Ltd. 2 v. Janapada Sabha AIR 1964 SC 1013 and Amalgamated Coalfields Ltd. 1 v. Janapada Sabha AIR 1961 SC 964].
(xi) The powers to extend the time limit under Section 3(1) of TOLA and the Notifications issued thereunder were not made subject matter of the challenge in the bunch of cases which are covered by the coordinate bench judgment of this Court rendered in Mon Mohan Kohli or the Ashish Agrawals case.
(xii) The amended law is so designed that the show-cause notice issued under Section 148A(b) becomes the reference date for determining limitation under Section 149 of the said Act. [See the third and fourth proviso appended to Section 149, amended by FA 2021].
(xiii) Notices issued under Section 148 of the unamended 1961 Act, having been converted into notices under Section 148A(b), the jurisdictional pre-requisites, as provided under the unamended law, would have no relevance for determining the validity of the notices issued under the amended law.
(xiv) To ascertain whether the instant cases concerning AYs 2016-17 and 2017-18 fall under Clause (a) or Clause (b) of Sub-Section (1) of Section 149 of the amended 1961 Act, one would have to take into account the judgment of Supreme Court in Ashish Agrawals case, the provisions of Section 3(1) of TOLA, the observations made in paragraphs 98 and 99 in Mon Mohan Kohlis case and the provisions of the third and fourth proviso of Section 149(1) of the amended 1961 Act. If all of these factors are considered, it would be evident that the impugned notices are within the limitation prescribed in Section 149(1)(a) of the Act.
(xv) The term travel back in time referred to in Instruction dated 11.05.2022 is nothing but an reiteration of the directions issued in Ashish Agrawals case, the extension of limitation granted by the revenue in the exercise of powers under Section 3(1) of TOLA and the correct application of Section 149(1)(a) of the amended 1961 Act.
Analysis and Reasons:
25. Having heard the learned counsels for the assessees and the revenue, as was pointed out right at the outset, the only issue which arises for our consideration (and that too concerning AY 2016-17 and 2017-18) is whether the impugned order passed under Section 148A(d) and the consequent notice issued under Section 148 of the amended 1961 Act [as obtaining with the enactment of FA 2021], falls foul of the limitation prescribed in Clause (a) of Sub-Section (1) of Section 149?
26. Section 149(1) of the amended 1961 Act mandates that no notice under Section 148 would be issued for the relevant AY if three (03) years have elapsed from the end of the said AY. The AO can take recourse to the extended limitation period if the conditions precedent prescribed in Clause (b) of Sub-Section (1) of Section 149 are fulfilled. In other words, in a case where three (03) years from the end of the relevant AY have elapsed, the AO can issue a notice under Section 148 provided the conditions prescribed in Clause (b) of Section 149 (1) of the amended 1961 Act are fulfilled. The relevant part of the said provision reads as follows:
Time limit for notice.
149. (1) No notice under section 148 shall be issued for the relevant assessment year
(a) if three years have elapsed from the end of the relevant assessment year, unless the case falls under clause (b);
(b) if three years, but not more than ten years, have elapsed from the end of the relevant assessment year unless the Assessing Officer has in his possession books of account or other documents or evidence which reveal that the income chargeable to tax, represented in the form of asset, which has escaped assessment amounts to or is likely to amount to fifty lakh rupees or more for that year:
[Emphasis is ours]
27. A careful perusal of Clause (b) of Section 149 would show that one of the conditions for triggering the extended period, which goes up to ten (10) years in cases where three (03) years have elapsed, is that income chargeable to tax which has escaped assessment amounts to, or is likely to amount to Rs. 50 lakhs or more for the AY in issue.
28. Therefore, after the coming into force of FA 2021, in cases where, for the relevant AY, the alleged escaped income was less than Rs.50 lakhs, notice under Section 148 could only be issued for commencement of reassessment proceedings within the limitation period provided in Clause (a) of Section 149(1) of the amended 1961 Act.
29. Thus, in the ordinary course, the limitation for AY 2016-17 would expire on 31.03.2020; likewise, for AY 2017-18, the end date for the culmination of the limitation period would be 31.03.2021.
30. The revenue seeks to take recourse to the provisions of Section 3(1) of TOLA and the Notifications issued thereunder, from time to time, which, in effect, extended the end date for completion of proceedings and compliances up until 30.06.2021.
30.1 In this regard, we may refer to the last two Notifications. Via Notification dated 31.03.2021, the end date was extended till 30.04.2021. The Notification immediately following the said Notification, i.e., Notification dated 27.04.2021, extended the end date to 30.06.2021. Thus, the span concerning the extension of end dates was spread between 20.03.2020 and 30.06.2021.
31. It is, therefore, the revenues case that the impugned actions, which involved passing of orders under Section 148A(d) and issuance of notices under Section 148 taken between 01.04.2021 (when FA 2021 kicked in) and 30.06.2021 were valid in the eyes of the law, having regard to the following circumstances:
(i) First, the observations made in the judgment of the Supreme Court in Ashish Agrawals case.
(ii) Second, the observations made in paragraphs 98 and 99 by the coordinate bench in Mon Mohan Kohlis case.
(iii) Third, the extension of the time limit, as noticed hereinabove, granted via the subject Notifications by the Central Government in the exercise of powers under Section 3(1) of TOLA.
(iv) Fourth, the third and fourth provisos appended to Section 149 of the 1961 Act, which provide for the exclusion of periods referred to therein, which, if excised, would bring the impugned notices and orders within the limitation prescribed under Section 149(1)(a) of the amended 1961 Act.
(v) Fifth, the issue raised before the Court is no longer res integra, given the judgments rendered by the coordinate bench in Touchstone and Salil Gulati.
32. Therefore, to deal with each of the submissions made on behalf of the revenue, one would, firstly, have to advert to what exactly is the ratio of the judgment rendered by the Supreme Court in Ashish Agrawals case.
32.1 Briefly, the Supreme Court was called upon to grapple with a piquant situation, which was the creation of the revenue, concerning the viability of notices issued on or after 01.04.2021, when FA 2021 had already kicked in. 32.2. The Supreme Court noticed that with the enactment and enforcement of FA 2021, Sections 147 to 149 and Section 151, as they stood on 31.03.2021, had been substituted, bringing about radical and reformative changes in the matters concerning reassessment proceedings. Taking cognizance of this state of affairs, the Supreme Court held that, since the new provisions substituted by FA 2021 were both remedial and benevolent, they would apply to past AYs provided Section 148 notices had been issued on or after 01.04.2021. This was also the view taken by various High Courts; a view which was sustained by the Supreme Court.
32.3. The Supreme Court, however, having regard to the fact that the procedure prescribed under the new regime (which was encapsulated in FA 2021) had not been followed, modified the judgments of the High Courts by issuing specific directions to balance the interests of the assessees and the revenue.
32.4. The Supreme Court was persuaded to modify the judgments, having regard to the fact that if the decisions of various courts, including that of the coordinate bench of this court in Mon Mohan Kohli, were to be sustained as is, it would result in the failure of reassessment proceedings, even if the same were permissible under FA 2021 and as per the substituted provisions incorporated in the statutes, i.e., Sections 147 to 149 and Section 151. In this regard, the following observations made in the Ashish Agrawal judgement, being apposite, are extracted hereafter:
21. Substituted Section 149 is the provision governing the time-limit for issuance of notice under Section 148 of the IT Act. The substituted Section 149 of the IT Act has reduced the permissible time-limit for issuance of such a notice to three years and only in exceptional cases ten years. It also provides further additional safeguards which were absent under the earlier regime pre-Finance Act, 2021.
22. Thus, the new provisions substituted by the Finance Act, 2021 being remedial and benevolent in nature and substituted with a specific aim and object to protect the rights and interest of the assessee as well as and the same being in public interest, the respective High Courts have rightly held that the benefit of new provisions shall be made available even in respect of the proceedings relating to past assessment years, provided Section 148 notice has been issued on or after 1-4-2021. We are in complete agreement with the view taken by the various High Courts in holding so.
23. However, at the same time, the judgments of the several High Courts would result in no reassessment proceedings at all, even if the same are permissible under the Finance Act, 2021 and as per substituted Sections 147 to 151 of the IT Act. The Revenue cannot be made remediless and the object and purpose of reassessment proceedings cannot be frustrated. It is true that due to a bona fide mistake and in view of subsequent extension of time vide various notifications, the Revenue issued the impugned notices under Section 148 after the amendment was enforced w.e.f. 1-4-2021, under the unamended Section 148. In our view the same ought not to have been issued under the unamended Act and ought to have been issued under the substituted provisions of Sections 147 to 151 of the IT Act as per the Finance Act, 2021
[Emphasis is ours]
32.5 With this preface, the Supreme Court passed the following directions, which resulted in modification of the judgments passed by various High Courts:
28. In view of the above and for the reasons stated above, the present appeals are allowed in part. The impugned common judgments and orders [Ashok Kumar Agarwal v. Union of India, 2021 SCC OnLine All 799] passed by the High Court of Judicature at Allahabad in WT No. 524 of 2021 and other allied tax appeals/petitions, is/are hereby modified and substituted as under:
28.1. The impugned Section 148 notices issued to the respective assessees which were issued under unamended Section 148 of the IT Act, which were the subject-matter of writ petitions before the various respective High Courts shall be deemed to have been issued under Section 148-A of the IT Act as substituted by the Finance Act, 2021 and construed or treated to be show-cause notices in terms of Section 148-A(b). The assessing officer shall, within thirty days from today provide to the respective assessees information and material relied upon by the Revenue, so that the assessees can reply to the show-cause notices within two weeks thereafter.
28.2. The requirement of conducting any enquiry, if required, with the prior approval of specified authority under Section 148-A(a) is hereby dispensed with as a one-time measure vis-à-vis those notices which have been issued under Section 148 of the unamended Act from 1-4-2021 till date, including those which have been quashed by the High Courts.
28.3. Even otherwise as observed hereinabove holding any enquiry with the prior approval of specified authority is not mandatory but it is for the assessing officers concerned to hold any enquiry, if required.
28.4. The assessing officers shall thereafter pass orders in terms of Section 148-A(d) in respect of each of the assessees concerned; Thereafter after following the procedure as required under Section 148-A may issue notice under Section 148 (as substituted).
28.5. All defences which may be available to the assessees including those available under Section 149 of the IT Act and all rights and contentions which may be available to the assessees concerned and Revenue under the Finance Act, 2021 and in law shall continue to be available.
29. The present order shall be applicable PAN INDIA and all judgments and orders passed by t