Department Cannot Adjust Existing Refunds Against a Disputed Demand While a Stay Application and Appeal Remain Pending
Issue
Whether the Income Tax Department is legally permitted under Section 245 to adjust a tax refund due to an assessee for one year (AY 2021-22) against a disputed outstanding tax demand of a subsequent year (AY 2023-24), while an appeal before the CIT(A) and a stay application under Section 220(6) regarding that demand are actively pending.
Facts
-
The Refund: The assessee was legitimately owed a tax refund by the department for the Assessment Year (AY) 2021-22.
-
The Demand: A separate tax demand was raised against the assessee for the Assessment Year (AY) 2023-24.
-
Pending Actions: The assessee aggressively contested this demand by filing a regular appeal before the Commissioner of Income-tax (Appeals) [CIT(A)]. Simultaneously, a formal Stay Application under Section 220(6) was filed and remained pending for disposal before the Assessing Officer (AO).
-
The Adjustment: Ignoring the pending stay plea and appeal, the revenue department invoked Section 245 to unilaterally adjust and swallow the AY 2021-22 refund money to satisfy the disputed AY 2023-24 demand.
-
Legal Challenge: The assessee challenged this coercive recovery mechanism before the higher appellate forum/High Court, seeking a release of the locked-up refund.
Decision
-
Coercive Recovery Quashed: The Court/Tribunal held that the department cannot bypass judicial decorum. When a statutory stay application under Section 220(6) and a quantum appeal are pending, the underlying tax demand remains highly contested and vulnerable to reversal.
-
Arbitrary Exercise of Section 245: Section 245 is a discretionary tool that requires quasi-judicial fairness. Adjusting refunds against a demand that is currently under a stay review process constitutes an invalid and high-handed recovery tactic.
-
Refund Ordered with Interest: The adjustment executed by the department was officially quashed. The department was directed to immediately release the full refund due for AY 2021-22 to the assessee, along with statutory interest computed under Section 244A. The issue was decided in favour of the assessee.
Key Takeaways
1. Section 245 is Not an Automatic Extraction Tool
The power to set off refunds against outstanding tax due under Section 245 is not mechanical. The department must apply its mind and cannot aggressively collect a tax liability that is actively being disputed and awaiting a stay order.
2. Supremacy of Pending Stay Applications
Filing a stay application under Section 220(6) creates a procedural checkpoint. Until the Assessing Officer explicitly rejects or disposes of that stay application, the department must hold its recovery actions in abeyance, including recovery via refund adjustments.
3. Financial Indemnity Through Section 244A Interest
When the tax department wrongfully retains or misappropriates an undisputed refund to offset a disputed demand, they are liable to compensate the taxpayer by paying statutory interest under Section 244A from the date the refund became due until its actual release.
| (i) | Whether the Department can adjust a refund against the disputed demand when a Stay Application and Appeal are pending. |
| (ii) | Whether such adjustment violates the principles of natural justice and statutory safeguard under the income Tax Act. |
| (iii) | The Learned counsel for the petitioner submits that the refund for Assessment Year 2021-22 has been determined and has become due to the petitioner. Without issuing any notice or affording any opportunity of hearing the respondents adjusted the said refund against the demand for Assessment Year 2023-24. It is further contended that for Assessment Year 2023-24 a Stay Application is pending before the Assessing Officer under Section 220(6) and an Appeal is also pending before the CITA, therefore, the demand for Assessment year 2023-24 is not final and cannot be enforced. |
| (i) | Danieli India Ltd. v. Asstt. CIT, Central [W.P.O. No. 2294 of 2022, dated 1-9-2023]/2023 (9) TMI 1726 –CALCUTTA HIGH COURT. |
“Considering the facts and circumstances of this case which appears from record and submission of the parties and decision in the case of Graphite India Ltd. (supra), this writ petition being WPO 2294 of 2022 is disposed of by holding that the action of the assessing officer recovering amount in excess of 20% of the demand arising out of relevant assessment orders against which Appeals are pending before CIT (Appeals) by way of adjustment from the admitted refund relating to other assessment years are arbitrary and not sustainable in law. Accordingly, the respondent Income Tax Authority concerned is directed to refund the amount in excess of 20% which has been recovered from the refund of assessment years 2010-11 and 2017-18 for recovery of the demand arising out of the assessment orders relating to assessment years 2011-12, 2012-13 and 2013-14 against which appeals are pending before the CIT (Appeals), within a period of four weeks from the date of communication of this order subject to verification of the actual amount recovered and for this purpose respondent Income Tax Authority concerned shall afford an opportunity of hearing to the petitioner if required for clarification in support of such claim.
With these observations and directions, this writ petition stands disposed of.”
| (ii) | Gaurav Enterprises v. UOI [WPO No. 700 of 2025, dated 1-12-2025]/2025(12) TMI 624 – CALCUTTA HIGH COURT. |
“15. As recorded hereinabove, the assertion of the revenue authorities is that unless the petitioner puts in a sum equivalent to 20% of the disputed demand, recovery of the entire outstanding demand is permissible. It has not been demonstrated before this Court to any degree of satisfaction that any such situation as mentioned in paragraph 4B of the Office Memorandum dated February 29, 2016 as amended by the officer memorandum dated July 31, 2017 exists in the case at hand. In such view of the matter, this Court is inclined to pass the same order as passed by the Co-ordinate Bench of this Court in the case of Danieli India Limited (supra) while relying on M/s. Graphite India Limited (supra).
16. Accordingly, the respondent Income Tax authorities are directed to refund to the petitioner the amount dated April 17, 2021 issued pursuant to the assessment order dated April 17, 2021 against which an appeal is pending), from the amounts refundable to the petitioner in respect of assessment years 2020-21 to 2023-24 within a period of eight weeks from the date of communication of this order upon due verification of the actual amount recovered thus far. The respondent Income Tax authorities shall be free to afford an opportunity of hearing to the petitioner for the purpose of any clarification in respect of the petitioner’s claim as regards the amount recovered.
17. it is submitted that the appeal that has been preferred before the CIT (Appeals) under Section 246A of the Income Tax Act, 1961 has been pending since 2021. In such view of the matter, the appellate authority being the respondent no. 6 herein is requested to expedite the hearing of the appeal and dispose of the same as early as possible.”

