Reopening of Assessment Invalid: Income Already Taxed on Substantive Basis in Another Assessment Year
Issue:
Whether an Assessing Officer (AO) can validly reopen an assessment under Sections 147 and 148 of the Income-tax Act, 1961, for an earlier assessment year (e.g., AY 2008-09) on the ground of unexplained moneys (Section 69A), when the same alleged escaped income has already been added on a substantive basis in an assessment order for a later assessment year (e.g., AY 2011-12) and the current reopening is not on a protective basis.
Facts:
The Assessing Officer (AO) reopened the assessment of the assessee for assessment year (AY) 2008-09. This reopening was based on information derived from the assessment for AY 2011-12, where certain cash sales allegedly relating to AY 2008-09 were considered and added as income. It was crucial that this sum had already been added on a substantive basis in the assessment order for AY 2011-12, long before the impugned notice for reopening AY 2008-09 was issued. Furthermore, the current impugned reopening proceedings for AY 2008-09 were not initiated on a protective basis. The facts and issue for assessment year 2009-10 were identical.
Decision:
Yes, the court held that since the same figure had already been added on a substantive basis in assessment year 2011-12, and the present impugned proceedings were not on a protective basis, on this short point itself, there could not have been any “reason to believe” that income had escaped assessment for assessment year 2008-09. Therefore, the impugned notice under Section 148 for AY 2008-09 was hereby quashed and set aside. Furthermore, since the facts and issue for assessment year 2009-10 were identical, adopting the same reasoning, the reopening notice under Section 148 for assessment year 2009-10 was also set aside. The decision was in favor of the assessee.
Key Takeaways:
- “Reason to Believe” for Reopening (Section 147): The fundamental condition for reopening an assessment is that the AO must have “reason to believe” that income has escaped assessment. If the income has already been taxed on a substantive basis in another year, this fundamental condition is not met.
- No Double Taxation of Same Income: The tax machinery aims to tax income once. If a particular sum has already been brought to tax as income in one assessment year on a substantive basis, it generally cannot be taxed again in another assessment year.
- Substantive vs. Protective Assessment:
- Substantive Assessment: The year in which the income is actually taxable, or the year in which the department definitively chooses to tax it.
- Protective Assessment: When there is doubt about the year in which income is taxable or in whose hands it is taxable, the department may initiate protective assessments in multiple years/hands to ensure the income is taxed at least once. However, this case explicitly states the reopening was not on a protective basis.
- Consequence of Lack of Reason to Believe: The absence of a valid “reason to believe” renders the reassessment proceedings and the Section 148 notice invalid and liable to be quashed.
- Judicial Consistency: The court applied the same reasoning to AY 2009-10, demonstrating judicial consistency when facts and issues are identical.
- Favor of Assessee: The outcome is highly beneficial to the assessee, as the reopening notices for both assessment years are quashed, preventing further litigation on income already taxed.