Invalidation of Rectification Order Withdrawing Section 11 Exemption (Section 154)
Facts
The Assessee: A charitable trust registered under the Income-tax Act.
The Filing: For AY 2021-22, the trust filed its return claiming exemption under Section 11. Due to technical issues on the income tax portal, its Form 10B (Audit Report) was refiled on 19-2-2022 after an initial attempt on 11-1-2022.
The Intimation: The CPC initially issued a communication proposing to deny the exemption because Form 10B was not filed one month prior to the due date. The trust provided an explanation regarding the portal glitches.
The Acceptance: After considering the explanation, the CPC processed the return under Section 143(1), accepting the returned income and allowing the Section 11 exemption.
The Rectification: Subsequently, the CPC issued a rectification order under Section 154, reversing its earlier stance and withdrawing the exemption on the grounds that Form 10B was filed belatedly.
Procedural Lapse: The CPC passed this rectification order without issuing a prior notice to the Assessee as required under Section 154(3).
Decision
The Tribunal ruled in favor of the Assessee, setting aside the rectification order based on the following legal reasoning:
No Power of Review under Section 154: Section 154 is strictly for correcting “mistakes apparent from the record.” It is not a tool for the Assessing Officer to review or change a conscious decision already made. Since the CPC had already called for an explanation regarding the filing date and subsequently accepted it in the 143(1) intimation, it could not later “review” that decision under the guise of rectification.
Debatable Issue: A mistake apparent from the record must be an obvious and patent error. Whether a delay in filing Form 10B due to technical portal issues should result in a loss of exemption is a “debatable issue” and requires a long process of reasoning; therefore, it falls outside the scope of Section 154.
Violation of Natural Justice: Section 154(3) mandates that if an amendment has the effect of increasing an assessment or reducing a refund, the Assessee must be given notice and a reasonable opportunity of being heard. The CPC’s failure to issue this notice rendered the rectification order legally unsustainable.
Key Takeaways
Section 143(1) Finality: Once the CPC or an AO accepts an explanation during the processing of a return and passes an intimation order, they cannot use Section 154 to perform a “U-turn” on that specific issue.
Technical Glitches as Defense: Taxpayers can successfully defend delays in statutory filings (like Form 10B or Form 10) by documenting and proving technical hardships on the official portal, especially when the Department has initially accepted such explanations.
Procedural Safeguards: Any rectification that adversely affects a taxpayer without a prior show-cause notice is void ab initio. Tax professionals should always check for the service of notice under Section 154(3) when challenging adverse rectification orders.
Scope of Rectification: This ruling reinforces the principle that Section 154 is not an alternative to Section 147 (Reassessment) or Section 263 (Revision). If the Revenue wishes to contest a previously accepted position, it must use the appropriate statutory pathways rather than a simple rectification.
and Vikram Singh Yadav, Accountant Member
[Assessment year 2021-22]
| “1. | That the Ld. CIT(A) erred in law and on facts in confirming the disallowance of exemption under section 11 of The Income Tax Act, 1961. |
| 2. | The CIT(A) erred in holding that there was alleged delay in filing Form 10B, ignoring that the return filing due date stood extended to 15.03.2022 by CBDT Circular No. 01/2022 |
| 3. | That the Ld. CIT(A) ought to have held that Form 10B was in fact uploaded within the extended time and due to the technical glitches of the new portal (Launch date 07.06.2021) cannot deprive a charitable trust of substantive exemption. |
| 4. | Without prejudice to the above, the Ld. CIT(A) erred in holding that delay in uploading Form 10B is fatal, contrary to settled law that such requirement is directory and procedural, and delay (if any) is condonable. |
| 5. | The Ld. CIT(A) ought to have held that the rectification u/s 154 denying the Trust exemption itself was without jurisdiction, and not a “mistake apparent from record”. |
| 6. | Your Appellant prays that the Deputy Commissioner of Income Tax, CPC, (DCIT) be directed to grant the exemption under Section 11 of The Income Tax ACT, 1961 and cancel the demand accordingly. “ |
| 1. | The due date of furnishing of Report of Audit under any provision of the Act for the Previous Year 2020-21, which was 30th September 2021, in the case of assessees referred in clause (a) of Explanation 2 to subsection (1) of section 139 of the Act, as extended to 31 st October 2021 and 15 January 2022 by Circular No.9/2021 dated 20.05.2021 and Circular No.17/2021 dated 09.09.2021 respectively, is hereby further extended to 15h February, 2022; |
| 2. | The due date of furnishing of Report of Audit under any provision of the Act for the Previous Year 2020-21, which was 31st October, 2021, in the case of assessees referred in clause (aa) of Explanation 2 to subsection (1) of section 139 of the Act, is hereby extended to 15th February, 2022; |
| 3. | The due date of furnishing of Report from an Accountant by persons entering into international transaction or specified domestic transaction under section 92E of the Act for the Previous Year 2020-21, which was 31st October 2021, as extended to 30h November 2021 and 31st January 2022 by Circular No.9/2021 dated 20.05.2021 and Circular No.17/2021 dated 09.09.2021 respectively, is hereby further extended to 15h February, 2022; |
| 4. | The due date of furnishing of Return of Income for the Assessment Year 2021-22, which was 31st October 2021 under sub-section (1) of section 139 of the Act, as extended to 30th November 2021 and 15th February 2022 by Circular No.9/2021 dated 20.05.2021 and Circular No.17/2021 dated 09.09.2021 respectively, is hereby further extended to 15h March, 2022; |
| 5. | The due date of furnishing of Return of Income for the Assessment Year 2021-22, which was 30th November 2021 under sub-section (1) of section 139 of the Act, as extended to 31st December 2021 and 28th February 2022 by Circular No. 9/2021 dated 20.05.2021 and Circular No.17/2021 dated 09.09.2021 respectively, is hereby further extended to 15th March, 2022. |
| Amount in INR | |||||
| SI No. | Schedule | Error Description | In Income Tax Return | As computed | Variance |
| 1. | Part B-TI/part A-General Information | The rust or Institution registered u/s 12A/12AA/12AB has not Efiled the Audit Report in Form 10B one month prior to the due date for furnishing return u/s.139(1). Hence the exemption claimed in Sr. no.2 [exemption claimed u/s.11(1)(d) and Sr. no.4i to 4viii of Part B-TI is not allowable in accordance with the provisions of Section-12A(1)(b) of the Income tax Act. | 3,29,425 | 0 | 3,29,425 |