Reassessment notice issued with sanction from an incorrect, lower authority under Section 151 is invalid and void.
Reassessment notice issued with sanction from an incorrect, lower authority under Section 151 is invalid and void.
Issue
Whether a reassessment notice issued under Section 148 for the Assessment Year (AY) 2016-17 is legally sustainable when the mandatory administrative sanction was obtained from the Principal Commissioner of Income Tax (PCIT) under Section 151(i) instead of the higher authorities specified under Section 151(ii), given that more than three years had elapsed from the end of the relevant assessment year.
Facts
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The Timeline: The case involves the Assessment Year (AY) 2016-17. The Revenue initiated reassessment proceedings well after three years had elapsed from the end of that relevant assessment year.
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The Sanction Obtained: To issue the reopening notice under Section 148, the Assessing Officer (AO) applied for and obtained administrative approval/sanction from the Principal Commissioner of Income Tax (PCIT).
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The Legal Mandate: Under the amended provisions of Section 151 of the Income-tax Act, if a case is reopened within three years from the end of the relevant AY, the PCIT is the competent sanctioning authority under clause (i). However, if the reopening occurs after the expiry of three years, clause (ii) mandates that the sanction must come from a higher tier of management: the Principal Chief Commissioner, Principal Director General, Chief Commissioner, or Director General.
Decision
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On Competency of Sanctioning Authority: Decided in favor of the assessee. Since more than three years had passed since the end of AY 2016-17, the power to grant a reopening sanction rested solely with the higher authorities designated under Section 151(ii).
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On Validity of Notice and Reassessment: Obtaining a sanction from the PCIT instead of the higher-ranking authorities listed under Section 151(ii) constitutes a fundamental jurisdictional defect. A sanction by an incorrect or lower authority cannot be cured. Consequently, the Section 148 notice was declared invalid in law, and the entire subsequent reassessment order built upon that notice was quashed.
Key Takeaways
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Strict Construction of Statutory Sanctions: The provisions governing administrative sanctions for reopening assessments are defensive shields for taxpayers. The tax department must strictly comply with the specific hierarchy of authorities mapped out by the legislature.
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Jurisdictional Defects are Fatal: A failure to secure approval from the exact authority specified by law is not a mere procedural error that can be overlooked under saving sections like Section 292B; it is a fatal jurisdictional flaw that invalidates the entire proceeding from inception.
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Time-Triggered Approval Levels: The law purposely mandates a higher level of administrative scrutiny (Chief Commissioner/Director General level) for older cases (beyond 3 years) to prevent arbitrary or routine harassment by lower-ranking tax officials.
and BRAJESH KUMAR SINGH, Accountant Member
[Assessment year 2016-17]
| “1. | That the CIT(A) has erred in remanding back the matter to the AO without adjudicating the legal grounds of appeal. |
| 2. | That the CIT(A) has erred in not appreciating that the reasons recorded are bad in law, since, information is In respect of fraudulent export while the assessee was not involved in any export activities and as such, there is wrong assumption of facts. |
| 3. | That the CIT(A) has erred in not appreciating that the reasons recorded are bad in law in view of the fact that the reasons state about an enquiry having been received from Directorate of Revenue Intelligence (Headquarters). That mere enquiry cannot be termed as reason for belief of escapement of income which tantamount to borrowed satisfaction. |
| 4. | That the CIT(A) has erred in not appreciating that the notice issued U/S 148 issued on 11.07.2022 is bad in law since the approval has been obtained from PCIT-1, Delhi while the same had to be obtained from principle Chief Commissioner as the notice has been issued after the lapse of 3 years in view of the provisions of section 151.That the subsequent order passed u/s 148A(d) is also bad in law as the same has also been passed by without taking approval of appropriate authority. |
| 5. | That the CIT(A) has erred in not appreciating that the order u/s 148A(d) is bad in law since notice u/s 148A(b) was neither received by the appellant on email nor physically at the registered address. |
| 6. | That the CIT(A) has erred in not appreciating that the Ld. AO has erred in sending the notice u/s 133(6) to M/s HR Impex in Karnataka having PAN: AAHFS5014L while the assessee was involved in business transactions with M/s HR Impex in Panipat having PAN BPMPS1079D. |
| 7. | That the CIT(A) has erred in not appreciating that the addition made by the AO on account of transactions entered into with HR Impex in Panipat (AAHFS5014L) by sending notice u/s 133(6) to incorrect party without considering the replies of the assessee in which the assessee had duly mentioned the PAN and address of the party. |
| 8. | That the appellant craves leave to add, amend and alter the grounds of appeal.” |
| Regime | Time limits | Specified outhority |
| Section 151(2)of the old regime | Before expiry of four years from the end of the relevant assessment year | Joint Commissioner |
| Section 151(l)of the old regime | After expiry of four years from the end of the relevant assessment year | Principal Chief Commissioner or Chiof Commissioner or Principal Commissioner or Commissineer |
| Section 151(i)of the new regime | Three years or less than three years from the end of the relevant assessment year | Principal Commissioner or Principal Director or Commiosioner or Director |
| Section 151(ii)of the new regime | More than three years have elapsed from the end of the relevant assessment year | Principal Chief Commissioner or Principal Director General or Chief Commissioner or Director General |
| (i) | If income escaping assessment was less than Rupees one lakh: (a) a reassessment notice could be issued under section 148 within four years after obtaining the approval of the Joint Commissioner; and (b) no notice could be issued after the expiry of four years; and |
| (ii) | If income escaping was more than Rupees one lakh: (a) a reassessment notice could be issued within four years after obtaining the approval of the Joint Commissioner; and (b) after four years but within six years after obtaining the approval of the Principal Chief Commissioner or Chief Commissioner or Principal Commissioner or Commissioner. |
| (i) | If income escaping assessment is less than Rupees fifty lakhs: (a) a reassessment notice could be issued within three years after obtaining the prior approval of the Principal Commissioner, or Principal Director or Commissioner or Director; and (b) no notice could be issued after the expiry of three years; and |
| (ii) | If income escaping assessment is more than Rupees fifty lakhs: (a) a reassessment notice could be, issued within three years after obtaining the prior approval of the Principal Commissioner, or Principal Director or Commissioner or Director; and (b) after three years after obtaining the prior approval of the Principal Chief Commissioner or Principal Director General or Chief Commissioner or Director General.” |

