No penalty for foreign asset disclosure technicality if cured in Section 153A return before notice
Issue
Whether a penalty for concealment of income under Section 271(1)(c) is sustainable when foreign assets were disclosed in the original returns and books, but allegedly not in the “prescribed format,” and this technical defect was cured in a return filed under Section 153A before the issuance of the penalty notice.
Facts
Acquisition & Disclosure: The assessee acquired foreign assets during Assessment Years 2012-13 and 2013-14. The acquisition was disclosed in the returns filed for those years at the time of acquisition.
Books of Account: The acquisition of these assets was clearly reflected in the books of account produced by the assessee.
Search Proceedings: A search/requisition presumably occurred, leading to proceedings under Section 153A.
Section 153A Return: The assessee filed a return under Section 153A, which also disclosed the foreign assets. This return was filed before any penalty notice was issued.
Penalty Imposition: The Assessing Officer initiated penalty proceedings and imposed a penalty of Rs. 10 lakhs, contending that the disclosure was not made in the “prescribed format.”
Tribunal’s Stand: The Tribunal deleted the penalty, holding that there was no failure to disclose.
Decision
Substantial Compliance: The Tribunal held that since the disclosure was made in the original returns at the time of acquisition and reflected in the books of account, there was no intent to conceal.
Cure via Section 153A: The disclosure was reiterated in the return filed under Section 153A. The Tribunal treated the return under Section 153A as a return under Section 139(1), effectively curing any prior technical defect.
Timing of Notice: The “technical glitch” regarding the format was remedied by the assessee before the Department issued the penalty notice.
No Concealment: Penalty under Section 271(1)(c) requires concealment of income or furnishing inaccurate particulars. A technical error in the format of disclosure, which is subsequently corrected before detection/notice, does not amount to concealment.
Conclusion: The penalty of Rs. 10 lakhs was deleted as unwarranted.
Key Takeaways
Technical Glitches vs. Concealment: A mere failure to disclose foreign assets in a specific “prescribed format” (like a specific schedule) does not attract concealment penalty if the asset was disclosed in the return’s main body or books of account.
Effect of Section 153A Return: A return filed under Section 153A is treated as a valid return under Section 139(1). Full disclosure in this return, prior to a penalty notice, demonstrates bona fide conduct.
Preventative Remediation: Rectifying a reporting error voluntarily (or in a subsequent statutory return) before the tax authority issues a specific show-cause notice for that error is a strong defense against penalties.