Documentary Evidence Overrides Non-Appearance: Share Capital Additions Deleted for Satisfying the “Triple Test” of Section 68
1. The Dispute: Documentary Proof vs. Investigative Suspicion
The Assessing Officer (AO) made an addition under Section 68, treating share capital and premium from nine corporate subscribers as “unexplained cash credits.” The AO dismissed the assessee’s documentation as mere “paper compliance” primarily because the directors of the subscribing companies did not personally appear for questioning.
Revenue’s Stand: The lack of personal attendance by directors suggests the entities are shell companies and the transactions are not genuine.
Assessee’s Stand: The company provided a “voluminous paper book” containing PANs, bank statements, ITR acknowledgments, and audited balance sheets for all subscribers, proving the Identity, Creditworthiness, and Genuineness of the transactions.
2. Legal Analysis: The Shifting Burden of Proof
The Court clarified the mechanics of Section 68, focusing on when the burden of proof shifts from the taxpayer to the Tax Department.
I. The Triple Test of Section 68
To satisfy the requirements of Section 68, the assessee must prove three specific elements regarding the credit:
Identity: Who provided the money? (Proven via PAN, CIN, and incorporation records).
Creditworthiness: Does the subscriber have the financial capacity? (Proven via Audited Financial Statements showing sufficient net worth/funds).
Genuineness: Is it a real business transaction? (Proven via Bank Statements showing the banking flow).
II. The “Personal Appearance” Fallacy
The Court established a critical principle regarding the AO’s investigative powers:
Initial Statutory Onus: Once the assessee provides a banking trail and audited documents, the initial onus is discharged.
The Burden Shifts: After the onus is discharged, the burden shifts to the Revenue to bring contrary evidence to impeach the documents.
Investigative Failure: If the AO suspects the documents, they must use powers under Section 131 (Summons) to compel attendance. If the AO fails to utilize these tools, the Revenue cannot penalize the assessee for the “non-appearance” of third parties. Personal appearance is not a statutory substitute for documented financial traceability.
3. Final Verdict: Deletion Upheld
The Court found that the AO could not merely “brush aside” audited balance sheets without bringing on record evidence to prove they were false.
Verdict: There was no perversity in the Tribunal’s findings; the addition was correctly deleted.
Outcome: The share capital and premium were accepted as genuine business investments.
Key Takeaways for Corporates
Paperwork is King: Maintain a complete “Investor Docket” for every allotment, including the subscriber’s latest audited balance sheet and ITR acknowledgment.
Banking Flow: Ensure all transactions are conducted through banking channels; cash-based share capital is almost impossible to defend under Section 68.
AO’s Duty: Remind the authorities that if they doubt the identity of a corporate subscriber, they have the power to seek verification directly from the subscriber’s Jurisdictional Assessing Officer.
IA NO. GA 2 OF 2025†
| i. | Whether the Learned ITAT has committed substantial error in law in deleting the addition of Rs 7,26,50,000/- on account of unaccounted cash credit of share capital and premium, ignoring the facts that the assessee failed to prove the identity of the alleged shareholders, their creditworthiness and also the genuineness of the whole transaction? |
| ii. | Whether the Learned ITAT has committed substantial error in law in coming to the conclusion that the assessee had discharged the initial onus which lay upon him in terms of section 68 of the Income Tax Act, 1961? |
| iii. | Whether the Learned ITAT has committed substantial error in law in appreciating the facts in proper prospective while concluding in favor of the assessee? |
| iv. | Whether the Learned ITAT has committed substantial error in law in not following the judicial Principles laid down in the matter of Pr. CIT (Central) v. BST Infratech Ltd. (Calcutta)/?.?.?.?./67/2024 dated 23.04.2024] which is an earlier decision of Hon’ble High Court having a Precedence value. |
| v. | Whether the Learned ITAT has committed substantial error in law in giving the verdict in favor of the assessee where the matter of unaccounted cash credit of share capital and premium under section 68 of the Act is involved which attracts the Exceptional Clause as stated in para 3.1h of Board’s Circular dated 5/2024 dated 15/03/2024? |
| vi. | Whether the Learned Tribunal has committed substantial error in law by not considering the principles laid down in the Doctrine of “source of source” and Doctrine of “origin of origin” while passing the impugned order? |