| Income-tax Act, 1961 |
Section 10(46) |
Notification No. 73/2026 |
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CBDT grants income tax exemption to Mussoorie Dehradun Development Authority (MDDA) on specified incomes (grants, leases, bank interest, etc.) retrospectively for AYs 2022-23 and 2023-24. |
| Income-tax Act, 1961 |
Section 80G(5) |
Circular No. 06/2026 |
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CBDT condones the delay in filing Form No. 10AB for renewal of 80G approval where applications were submitted electronically between Oct 1, 2025, and Mar 31, 2026. |
| Income-tax Act, 1961 |
Section 2(14) |
Mrs. Sherlyn Dias v. Income-tax Officer |
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Consideration received under a Development Agreement for transferring development rights in immovable property is taxable under “Capital Gains”, not “Income from Other Sources”. |
| Income-tax Act, 1961 |
Section 2(15) & 13(1)(b) |
Visa Dishawal Bania Caste Trust v. CIT (Exemptions) |
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Cancellation of registration under section 13(1)(b) was held unsustainable for a trust established in 1910, as the provision does not apply to trusts created before the commencement of the 1961 Act. |
| Income-tax Act, 1961 |
Section 9(1)(v) |
Barclays Bank PLC v. Additional CIT |
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Interest received by a non-resident bank’s Indian branch from overseas placements is not taxable under section 9(1)(v)(c) unless it is established that the funds were used for business in India. |
| Income-tax Act, 1961 |
Section 9 |
Barclays Bank PLC v. Additional CIT |
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Interest received by Indian branches of a UK bank from Nostro accounts or overseas Head Office branches represents self-payment and does not constitute taxable income. |
| Income-tax Act, 1961 |
Section 11 & 13 |
A.P. Vulnerability Reduction Fund Trust v. Assistant Director of IT |
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Exemption under section 11 is allowable where interest income was spent on disaster mitigation equipment aligning with trust objects; no section 13 violation is triggered without proof of misuse. |
| Income-tax Act, 1961 |
Section 11(3)(d) |
D.L. Shah Trust for Applied Science… v. Income-tax Officer |
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Shifting accumulated section 11(2) funds to other section 12AA trusts under labels like “project charges” triggers section 11(3)(d) deemed income; nomenclature does not change the statutory restriction. |
| Income-tax Act, 1961 |
Section 14A |
Barclays Bank PLC v. Additional CIT |
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No section 14A disallowance is warranted if an assessee possesses interest-free funds far exceeding the investments that generated exempt income under section 10(15)(4A). |
| Income-tax Act, 1961 |
Section 14A |
Barclays Bank PLC v. Additional CIT |
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Section 14A expenditure disallowance cannot be applied to interest expenses related to FCNR(B) deposits if the corresponding interest income was fully taxed and never claimed as exempt. |
| Income-tax Act, 1961 |
Section 32 |
Deputy CIT v. Coca-Cola India (P.) Ltd. |
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Assessee is entitled to depreciation on business assets (coolers) retained under its ownership and control even if they are structurally interlinked with bottlers’ operations. |
| Income-tax Act, 1961 |
Section 36(1) |
Barclays Bank PLC v. Additional CIT |
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A write-back of provisions for bad debts cannot be taxed again if the amount had already been subjected to tax in an earlier year; fact-checking is mandatory. |
| Income-tax Act, 1961 |
Section 37(1) |
Barclays Bank PLC v. Additional CIT |
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Interest paid to the RBI for a shortfall in maintaining mandatory CRR/SLR is compensatory in nature, does not constitute a statutory penalty under section 37(1), and is deductible. |
| Income-tax Act, 1961 |
Section 37(1) |
Deputy CIT v. Coca-Cola India (P.) Ltd. |
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Service charges paid for bottler plant quality audits cannot be disallowed if the expenditure has a direct business nexus and identical costs were allowed in preceding years. |
| Income-tax Act, 1961 |
Section 37(1) |
Deputy CIT v. Coca-Cola India (P.) Ltd. |
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Marketing and sales promotion expenses cannot be disallowed under section 37(1) merely because a third-party brand owner or bottler derives an incidental benefit. |
| Income-tax Act, 1961 |
Section 37(1) |
Deputy CIT v. Coca-Cola India (P.) Ltd. |
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Marketing support charges, rebates, and discounts given to bottlers to scale concentrate sales are legitimate, commercially expedient expenditures deductible under section 37. |
| Income-tax Act, 1961 |
Section 37(1) |
Barclays Bank PLC v. Additional CIT |
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Year-end revaluation losses on outstanding forex contracts calculated under FEDAI guidelines and consistent accounting practices are business losses, not speculative or contingent. |
| Income-tax Act, 1961 |
Section 37(1) |
Barclays Bank PLC v. Additional CIT |
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Club entrance and subscription fees paid by a company on behalf of its employees constitute allowable revenue business expenditure under section 37(1). |
| Income-tax Act, 1961 |
Section 37(1) |
Barclays Bank PLC v. Additional CIT |
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Broken period interest paid while purchasing securities as stock-in-trade to fulfill statutory SLR requirements is deductible as revenue expenditure. |
| Income-tax Act, 1961 |
Section 68 |
Anil Madaan v. Income-tax Officer |
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For an unorganized footwear business, entire demonetization cash deposits cannot be treated as unexplained cash credit; an ad-hoc lumpsum addition of ₹2 lakhs was deemed sufficient. |
| Income-tax Act, 1961 |
Section 69 |
Income-tax Officer v. Priya Barbana Farrokh Irani |
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Residential property investments backed by a complete banking money trail showing remittances from a non-resident husband cannot be treated as unexplained investments under section 69. |
| Income-tax Act, 1961 |
Section 80-IB & 80-IA |
J. Creations v. Assistant CIT |
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Deductions claimed under Heading ‘C’ (like 80-IB) must be reduced by amounts allowed under section 80-IA to ensure total deductions do not exceed eligible business profits. |
| Income-tax Act, 1961 |
Section 92C |
Deputy CIT v. Coca-Cola India (P.) Ltd. |
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A Transfer Pricing Officer’s (TPO) adjustment on AMP (Advertising, Marketing, and Promotion) expenses without applying any legally recognized method to determine the ALP is invalid. |
| Income-tax Act, 1961 |
Section 115BBE |
Anil Madaan v. Income-tax Officer |
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The amended rigorous provisions of section 115BBE apply only to transactions on or after April 1, 2017; prior demonetization deposits must be evaluated under normal tax rates. |
| Income-tax Act, 1961 |
Section 143(2) & 147 |
Global Cricket Corporation Pte. Ltd. v. Additional Director of IT |
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Reopening an assessment under section 147 and issuing a draft order under section 144C(1) without serving the mandatory section 143(2) notice invalidates the entire jurisdiction. |
| Income-tax Act, 1961 |
Section 144C |
Global Cricket Corporation Pte. Ltd. v. Additional Director of IT |
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Issuing demand notices (u/s 156) and initiating penalty proceedings alongside a draft assessment order invalidates it, as the AO effectively passed a final order in the guise of a draft. |
| Income-tax Act, 1961 |
Section 151 & 148 |
Vishesh Developers (P.) Ltd. v. Assistant CIT |
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A section 148 notice issued beyond 3 years from the end of the AY is invalid if the statutory approval was obtained from the Principal Commissioner instead of the specified authority u/s 151. |
| Income-tax Act, 1961 |
Section 234B & 234D |
Barclays Bank PLC v. Additional CIT |
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Section 234B interest cannot be levied by treating a processed refund as a shortfall in advance tax, as such recovery falls exclusively under section 234D (which wasn’t active then). |
| Income-tax Act, 1961 |
Section 264 |
Bhikhabhai Maneklal Patel v. Office of Principal CIT |
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Rejecting a section 264 revision application mechanically without granting an explicitly requested personal hearing violates natural justice; the matter must be remanded. |