Addition under Section 69 for cash deposits up to ₹2.5 Lakhs during demonetization deleted per CBDT Instruction 3/2017
Issue
Section 69 Addition: Whether the Assessing Officer (AO) was justified in making an addition of ₹2 Lakhs under Section 69 for cash deposits made during the demonetization period, despite CBDT Instruction No. 3/2017 which directed no verification for deposits up to ₹2.5 Lakhs.
Credit for Self-Assessment Tax: Whether the matter regarding the non-credit of self-assessment tax of ₹21,700 requires remand for verification.
Facts
Business Profile: The assessee was engaged in a small-scale gold ornament business and offered income to tax under the presumptive taxation scheme of Section 44AD.
The Addition: During the demonetization period (AY 2017-18), the assessee deposited cash into their bank account. The AO accepted the source for ₹50,000 but treated the remaining ₹2 Lakhs as unexplained money under Section 69.
Assessee’s Plea: The assessee contended that the cash deposits were genuine sale proceeds from the gold business, which had already been offered to tax under Section 44AD.
CBDT Instruction: The assessee relied on CBDT Instruction No. 3/2017 dated 21-02-2017, which provided a Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) for verifying cash deposits. The instruction directed that for small depositors, cash deposits up to ₹2.5 Lakhs should generally be accepted without further verification.
Tax Credit Issue: The assessee also claimed that self-assessment tax of ₹21,700 deposited on 29-06-2017 was not given credit by the AO.
Decision
Addition Deleted (Sec 69): The Tribunal/Court held that the addition of ₹2 Lakhs was uncalled for. Relying on CBDT Instruction No. 3/2017, which set a threshold of ₹2.5 Lakhs for non-verification of cash deposits during demonetization, the tax authorities should not have scrutinized this small amount, especially when the income was offered under Section 44AD. The addition was deleted in favor of the assessee.
Remand (Tax Credit): Regarding the claim of unpaid tax credit, the Tribunal held that this is a factual matter requiring verification. The issue was remanded back to the AO to verify the payment of ₹21,700 and grant credit accordingly.
Key Takeaways
Safe Harbor of ₹2.5 Lakhs: CBDT Instruction No. 3/2017 acts as a binding circular for Revenue authorities. Cash deposits up to ₹2.5 Lakhs made during the demonetization period are generally immune from deep scrutiny or additions under Section 69, particularly for small taxpayers.
Presumptive Taxation Support: When a small business declares income under Section 44AD, cash deposits that reasonably align with the turnover (and fall within the SOP limits) should typically be accepted as business receipts rather than unexplained investments.
Rectification of Tax Credit: Courts routinely remand matters where the AO has failed to give credit for taxes paid (TDS/Self-Assessment) despite proof of payment, instructing the AO to verify and rectify the demand.
and Manish Borad, Accountant Member
[Assessment year 2017-18]