IMPORTANT INCOME TAX CASE LAWS 14.11.2025
| Section | Case Law Title | Brief Summary | Citation | Relevant Act |
| 35 (Notification) | Income Tax Notification No. 04/2025 | CBDT approved Hari Shankar Singhania Elastomer & Tyre Research Institute for ‘Scientific Research’ purposes under section 35(1)(iia) for AYs 2022-23 to 2026-27. | NOTIFICATION NO. 04/2025, DATED 11-11-2025 | Income-tax Act, 1961 |
| 2(9) | Lal Mohammad Molla v. Initiating Officer, BPU | Where the appellant failed to prove the source of consideration for two property purchases (one involving unproved agricultural income cash and the other unexplained cash routed through a bank), both transactions qualified as ‘benami’ under section 2(9)(D), justifying the attachment orders. | Click Here | Prohibition of Benami Property Transactions Act, 1988 |
| 2(47) | Deputy Commissioner of Income-tax v. Raja Rao Parachuri | No ‘transfer’ under section 2(47)(v) occurred in A.Y. 2013-14 regarding a Joint Development Agreement (JDA), as the JDA was unregistered and crucial statutory approvals were obtained by the developer only in A.Y. 2014-15. | Click Here | Income-tax Act, 1961 |
| 11 | Bible Fellowship Centre Wagholi v. Income Tax Officer | The delay in furnishing Form No. 10B (for claiming application of income) is directory in nature, and the claim for application of income under section 11(1)(a) should be allowed. | Click Here | Income-tax Act, 1961 |
| 11 | Bible Fellowship Centre Wagholi v. Income Tax Officer | Delay in filing Form No. 9A (for deemed application of income) should be condoned in the interest of justice if filed belatedly but before the conclusion of appellate proceedings. | Click Here | Income-tax Act, 1961 |
| 11 | International Resources for Fairer Trade v. Union of India | Delay in filing and verifying Form No. 10B was condoned due to a genuine dependence on the CA and a history of timely filings in prior years. | Click Here | Income-tax Act, 1961 |
| 36(1)(iii) | DCIT v. Bright Build tech (P.) Ltd. | Disallowance under section 36(1)(iii) for interest-free advances was deleted because the advances were made out of commercial expediency and the assessee ultimately offered excess interest income against the notional interest expenditure claimed. | Click Here | Income-tax Act, 1961 |
| 50B | Sterling Farm Research and Services (P.) Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax | The exercise of revisionary power under section 263 was justified where the original assessment order, treating the sale of a division as a slump sale, failed to examine whether the transaction should be taxed under section 50B or section 50 (short-term capital gains). | Click Here | Income-tax Act, 1961 |
| 69A | Deputy Commissioner of Income-tax v. Niru Dhiren Shah | Addition under section 69A (unexplained money) based only on a WhatsApp chat and an Excel sheet with rough value workings, without any corroborative evidence of receiving extra cash, was based on conjecture and deleted. | Click Here | Income-tax Act, 1961 |
| 144C | American megatrends International India (P.) Ltd. v. Assessment Unit Income-tax Department Ministry of Finance Government of India, New Delhi | Where the assessee filed DRP objections timely but failed to furnish a copy to the Assessing Officer (AO), the final assessment order passed by the AO (who hadn’t received them) was set aside and the matter remanded for a fresh order after the DRP considers the objections. | Click Here | Income-tax Act, 1961 |
| 148A | Income-tax Officer v. Onir Infraspace (P.) Ltd. | Supreme Court dismissed the SLP, upholding that the AO’s notice under section 148A(b), issued solely for verification of the source and creditworthiness of loans to a newly incorporated company, was not in accordance with section 148A and thus failed. | Click Here | Income-tax Act, 1961 |
| 153 | Principal Commissioner of Income-tax v. Believe Constructions (P.) Ltd. | The competent authority’s approval for multiple draft assessment orders through a single consolidated letter with generic directions (not referencing seized material or records) was not valid approval. | Click Here | Income-tax Act, 1961 |
| 199 | Naik Naik and Co. v. Commissioner of Income-Tax-Appeal | A law firm receiving payments net of TDS can be allowed credit for TDS when offering the entire gross receipts to tax, even if the deduction does not appear in Form No. 26AS. | Click Here | Income-tax Act, 1961 |
| 220 | Karnal Coop. Sugar Mills Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax | When the original demand was set aside and a refund was paid, the original notice under section 156 became infructuous, and interest liability only commenced from the expiry of one month following the fresh notice under section 156 issued after the Tribunal’s order. | Click Here | Income-tax Act, 1961 |
| 234B & 234C | Naik Naik and Co. v. Commissioner of Income-Tax-Appeal | Where the tax liability was fully met through TDS, there was no default in advance tax payment, and therefore, interest under sections 234B and 234C would not be applicable. | Click Here | Income-tax Act, 1961 |
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