Reassessment Notice Issued Beyond Ten-Year Limit Is Time-Barred and Liable to Be Quashed
Issue
Whether a reassessment notice issued under Section 148 on March 31, 2024, for the Assessment Year 2013-14, is legally sustainable or if it must be quashed as time-barred for exceeding the absolute statutory limitation period of 10 years when calculated backward from the relevant assessment year of issuance.
Facts
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The Assessing Officer issued a reassessment notice under Section 148 of the Income-tax Act, 1961, to the assessee.
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The impugned notice was dated and issued on March 31, 2024.
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The Tax Department issued this notice specifically targeting the Assessment Year 2013-14 to reopen an alleged income escaping assessment.
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The financial date of issuance (March 31, 2024) falls within the financial year 2023-24, making the corresponding relevant assessment year 2024-25.
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Aggrieved by the retroactive action, the assessee filed a writ petition before the High Court challenging the legal validity of the notice on the grounds of limitation.
Decision
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Held, yes: For a notice issued on March 31, 2024, the governing baseline for counting limitation boundaries backward is the relevant Assessment Year 2024-25.
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Held, yes: Counting backward from the Assessment Year 2024-25, the maximum permissible 10-year statutory window for reassessment completely expires long before reaching the targeted Assessment Year 2013-14.
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Held, yes: Because the notice for Assessment Year 2013-14 was issued clearly beyond this absolute 10-year outer boundary, it violates the time limits prescribed under Section 149.
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Held, yes: Consequently, the impugned Section 148 notice is held to be entirely time-barred and is ordered to be quashed, ruling in favor of the assessee.
Key Takeaways
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The Absolute 10-Year Outer Cap: The Tax Department possesses no residual power to reopen assessments or issue notices under Section 148 if the targeted assessment year sits more than 10 years backward from the assessment year in which the notice is being issued.
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Baseline Calculation Rules: Limitation periods are calculated using the assessment year belonging to the date of the notice’s actual issuance as the starting point, not the old year that the Revenue intends to audit.
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Writ Jurisdiction is Appropriate for Limitation: When a reassessment notice is visibly and mathematically time-barred on its face, an assessee is justified in approaching the High Court via a writ petition to get the unlawful proceedings quashed immediately.
CM APPL. No. 39793 OF 2024

