AO Directed to Treat Section 148 Return as Filed Under Section 139 to Grant Full Refund of Excess Prepaid Taxes
Issue
Whether an Assessing Officer (AO) can restrict the benefit of prepaid taxes (TDS and Advance Tax) solely to the extent of the outstanding tax demand, and deny the refund of the balance amount, on the technical ground that the return of income was filed belatedly in response to a notice under Section 148 and not under Section 139, where the delay was due to a bona fide pending application before the Authority for Advance Ruling (AAR).
Facts
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Background: The assessee, a widow, faced income tax proceedings emerging from the sale of a house property originally owned by her late husband.
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Reason for Delay: The assessee did not initially file a regular return of income under Section 139 because she was awaiting a decision from the Authority for Advance Ruling (AAR) concerning the taxability of the transaction.
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Reassessment Notice: Following the initiation of reassessment proceedings, she filed her return of income specifically in response to a notice issued under Section 148.
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Prepaid Taxes Claimed: In this return, she claimed credit and a subsequent refund for prepaid taxes (combining Advance Tax and TDS) amounting to approximately Rs. 16.58 crores against the tax liability arising from the property sale.
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Partial Relief by AO: The Assessing Officer adjusted the prepaid taxes to wipe out the outstanding tax demand of about Rs. 12.16 crores.
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Denial of Refund: However, the AO refused to grant the balance refund of approximately Rs. 5.16 crores, arguing that full credit/refund mechanics are restricted because the return was filed under Section 148 (reassessment) rather than Section 139 (regular filing).
Decision
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Bona Fide Intent Acknowledged: The High Court/Tribunal observed that the assessee had a legitimate, genuine reason for not filing the return under Section 139, as she had actively filed an application before the AAR to adjudicate the exact transaction creating the tax liability.
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Technical Objections Dismissed: The revenue department cannot exploit procedural timelines to withhold legitimate refunds of excess taxes already sitting in the government’s treasury (Advance Tax/TDS).
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Deeming Fiction Directed: The AO was explicitly directed to treat the return filed by the assessee in response to the Section 148 notice as a regular return filed under Section 139.
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Full Refund Allowed: Consequently, the AO was directed to give complete benefit of the prepaid taxes, process the excess amount as a valid refund, and pass a fresh assessment order. The issue was decided in favour of the assessee.
Key Takeaways
1. Reassessment Cannot Subvert Substantive Justice
The purpose of reopening an assessment under Section 148 is to ensure income does not escape tax, not to act as a mechanism for the government to permanently retain excess prepaid taxes or withhold valid refunds.
2. Pending Legal Remedies Shield Against Technical Defaults
Awaiting an adjudication from a statutory authority like the AAR constitutes a bona fide cause for delaying a tax return. The department cannot penalize an assessee for such structural delays by stripping them of their right to a refund.
3. Prepaid Taxes Do Not Change Character
Advance Tax and TDS represent money belonging to the citizen held in trust by the state. Once the ultimate tax liability is computed and satisfied, any surplus must be refunded, irrespective of whether the final assessment happens via Section 139 or Section 148.
CM APPL. Nos. 49974 of 2024 and 80548 of 2025
W.P. (C) NOs. 11971 of 2023 and 8815 of 2024

