IMPORTANT INCOME TAX CASE LAWS 23.09.25

By | September 24, 2025
Last Updated on: September 25, 2025

IMPORTANT INCOME TAX CASE LAWS 23.09.25

 

SECTION CASE LAW / CIRCULAR TITLE Brief Summary CITATION RELEVANT ACT
Interest Waiver CBDT waives interest on demand for disallowance of Sec. 87A rebate The CBDT has waived interest u/s 220(2) on tax demands arising from the incorrect allowance of the Sec. 87A rebate, provided the demand is paid by 31-12-2025. Circular No. 13/2025 Income-tax Act, 1961
2(22) & 263 Kesar Buildcon (P.) Ltd. v. PCIT Deemed dividend can only be taxed in the shareholder’s hands, not the recipient concern. Also, an order can’t be revised u/s 263 for an issue that was outside the scope of limited scrutiny. Click Here Income-tax Act, 1961
10(23C) & 13 CIT (Exemptions) v. Hamdard Laboratories (India) Exemption u/s 10(23C) was upheld based on the rule of consistency. Providing property to trustees as part of long-term employment isn’t an “undue benefit” u/s 13. Click Here Income-tax Act, 1961
14A & 36(1)(iii) DCIT v. Hero Cycles Ltd. Disallowance u/s 14A was deleted as the assessee’s own funds exceeded investments. Interest disallowance u/s 36(1)(iii) was deleted as advances to subsidiaries were for commercial expediency. Click Here Income-tax Act, 1961
36(1)(va), 80G, 92C, 115JB Lowe’s Services India (P.) Ltd. v. DCIT The AO was directed to delete a duplicate disallowance of employee’s PF. CSR spending was allowed as an 80G deduction. No separate addition for receivables is needed if working capital adjustment is given in TP. MAT adjustments must first be in the draft order. Click Here Income-tax Act, 1961
37(1) Arvind Kumar v. PCIT Where the genuineness of an expense is doubted but not its source, the disallowance should be made under section 37(1) and not section 69C. Click Here Income-tax Act, 1961
40A(2) & 40A(3) Sonone Surgical & Ophthalmic Hospital v. ITO Cash payments for partners’ remuneration (within limits) and employees’ salaries were allowed, as their genuineness wasn’t doubted and no single payment was proven to exceed the prescribed cash limit. Click Here Income-tax Act, 1961
68 DCIT v. Naresh Laxminarayan Grover Short-term capital gains from genuine, delivery-based share transactions on a recognized exchange cannot be treated as unexplained cash credit u/s 68 without contrary evidence. Click Here Income-tax Act, 1961
68 & 151 DCIT v. Rudra Buildwell Homes (P.) Ltd. An addition u/s 68 for an unsecured loan was deleted as the three conditions (identity, genuineness, creditworthiness) were met. Reopening after 3 years requires sanction from higher authorities u/s 151(ii). Click Here Income-tax Act, 1961
69A Muthusamy Mudaliar Prakasam v. ACIT Cash deposits made by a jeweller during demonetization were held to be explained based on a plausible cash flow statement and the inherent nature of the business. Click Here Income-tax Act, 1961
119 VRG Electronics (P.) Ltd. v. PCIT The rejection of an application to condone a delay in filing Form 10-IC without considering the assessee’s explanation was deemed unreasoned and remanded for fresh consideration. Click Here Income-tax Act, 1961
149 Prolife Industries Ltd. v. ITO A notice for reassessment u/s 148 was quashed as it was time-barred, having been issued after the surviving time limit calculated under the TOLA, 2020 provisions. Click Here Income-tax Act, 1961; TOLA, 2020
153B H. Srinivas Reddy v. ACIT An assessment order was held to be time-barred because the postal evidence showed it was dispatched after the statutory limitation date had expired. Click Here Income-tax Act, 1961
201 Vedanta Ltd. v. DCIT (IT) Orders treating an assessee as ‘in default’ for non-deduction of TDS on non-resident payments were set aside as they were passed beyond the limitation period of six years. Click Here Income-tax Act, 1961

 

For more:- Read  IMPORTANT INCOME TAX CASE LAW 21.09.2025