Professional’s Death Forms Valid Condonation Ground, and Section 151 Approval Flaw Striking at Root of Matter Cannot Be Blocked by Limitation
Professional’s Death Forms Valid Condonation Ground, and Section 151 Approval Flaw Striking at Root of Matter Cannot Be Blocked by Limitation
Issue
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Primary Issue (Condonation of Delay): Whether the death of an assessee’s authorized representative in a digital/faceless tax environment constitutes a force majeure event amounting to “sufficient cause” under Section 5 of the Limitation Act, 1963, to condone a 430-day delay in filing an appeal.
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Secondary Issue (Jurisdictional Validity): Whether a fatal jurisdictional defect regarding the sanction for issuing a reassessment notice under Section 151 can be bypassed or shielded by technical grounds of limitation.
Facts
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Assessment & Addition: The assessee, an individual, was subjected to reassessment under Section 147 for the Assessment Year (AY) 2017-18. The Assessing Officer (AO) passed an ex-parte order making a tax addition under Sections 50C/56(2) on the grounds that a property purchase price was lower than its stamp duty value.
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Communication Vacuum: The assessee’s authorized representative (AR), who managed all tax matters and exclusively held the credentials/access to the faceless tax portal, passed away. Being digitally illiterate, the assessee was left in a communication vacuum, unaware of the online proceedings.
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Dismissal In Limine: Consequently, the appeal before the National Faceless Appeal Centre (NFAC) was filed with a 430-day delay. The NFAC dismissed the appeal in limine (at the threshold) solely due to the delay, without examining the merits of the addition.
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Tribunal Order: The ITAT (Tribunal) affirmed the NFAC’s dismissal and refused to condone the delay, noting that the assessee had failed to produce a physical death certificate of the AR before them to substantiate the “sufficient cause.”
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Jurisdictional Challenge: The assessee appealed to the High Court, presenting the AR’s death certificate. The assessee also raised a core jurisdictional objection: the Section 148 notice was issued beyond 3 years for an alleged escaped income of under ₹50 lakhs, and it carried the approval of the Principal Commissioner of Income Tax (PCIT) instead of the statutory mandate of the Principal Chief Commissioner of Income Tax (PCCIT).
Decision
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Death of AR is Force Majeure: The High Court held that in a digital and faceless assessment environment, the death of an authorized representative who controls access to the portal constitutes a clear force majeure event for a digitally illiterate taxpayer.
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Improper Exercise of Discretion by Tribunal: The Tribunal failed to exercise its discretion in a just and proper manner by refusing to condone the delay caused by a professional’s death and by ignoring a patent jurisdictional nullity. Upon submission of the death certificate, the 430-day delay was officially condoned.
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Jurisdiction Defeats Limitation: The Court ruled that the jurisdictional defect raised under Section 151 strikes at the very root of the matter. If a reassessment approval is granted by an authority not specified under the statute, the entire proceeding is a nullity. A structural error of this magnitude cannot be shielded or bypassed using the law of limitation.
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Matter Remanded: The High Court set aside the lower orders and remanded the matter back to the Tribunal for a fresh adjudication on merits, with a specific directive to decide the jurisdictional validity of the assessment under Section 151 as a preliminary issue. The matter was decided in favor of the assessee by way of remand.
Key Takeaways
1. Digital Illiteracy and Faceless Realities Acknowledged
The ruling recognizes the practical challenges of the faceless regime. When an intermediary professional holding portal credentials passes away, the resulting communication gap is a legitimate external constraint (force majeure) that justifies a delay in filing appeals.
2. Jurisdictional Validity is Always a Preliminary Issue
Legal objections concerning structural jurisdictions (such as faulty or unauthorized sanctions under Section 151) must be addressed first. A court or tribunal cannot escape evaluating a invalid tax notice by hiding behind technical timelines or limitation periods.
3. Wrong Sanctioning Authority Nullifies Reassessment
Under Section 151, obtaining approval from the exact rank of officer mandated by the statute is a non-negotiable legal prerequisite. Sourcing permission from a lower or alternate authority (e.g., PCIT instead of PCCIT where statutory conditions apply) invalidates the entire chain of reassessment proceedings from inception.
IA NO. GA 1 OF 2026†
| a. | Whether the act of the Tribunal in dismissing an appeal solely on the grounds of delay, without considering the merits of a jurisdictional challenge, constitutes a “perverse” exercise of discretion? |
| b. | Whether the death of an authorized representative and the transition of files in a faceless regime constitute “sufficient cause” within the meaning of Section 5 of the Limitation Act? |
| c. | Whether the underlying assessment is a jurisdictional nullity for failing to obtain mandatory approval from the Principal Chief Commissioner (PCCIT) under Section 151, given the escaped income was below Rs. 50 lakhs and the notice were issued beyond three years? |
| I. | The delay of 430 days in filing the appeal is hereby condoned. |
| II. | The impugned order of the ITAT dated November 21, 2025, is set aside. |
| III. | The matter is remanded to the ITAT, Kolkata Bench, for a fresh adjudication on its merits. |
| IV. | The Tribunal is specifically directed to decide the Jurisdictional Validity of the assessment under Section 151 as a preliminary issue. |
| V. | The Tribunal shall endeavour to dispose of the appeal expeditiously, preferably within six months, after providing a fair opportunity of hearing to both parties. |

