| PBPT Act, 1988 |
Section 2(9) |
Smt. Santosh Miglani v. Initiating Officer |
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Handing over demonetized cash for bank deposit and subsequent retransfer through banking channels constitutes a benami transaction; cash is considered ‘property’ under the Act. |
| PBPT Act, 1988 |
Section 24 |
Smt. Santosh Miglani v. Initiating Officer |
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Where the appellant already paid PMGKY tax and made required bond deposits out of the benami cash, the bank account attachment must be restricted to the balance amount only. |
| Income-Tax Act, 1961 |
Section 4 |
Deputy Commissioner of Income-tax v. JSW Steel Ltd. |
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Gains arising from the prepayment of Sales Tax deferrals are capital receipts. Following the rule of consistency, the AO cannot treat them as revenue receipts if allowed in earlier years. |
| Income-Tax Act, 1961 |
Section 12AB |
Jamia Osman Bin Affan Education Society v. Income-tax Officer, Exemption |
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A cancellation of Section 12AB registration based on an assessment order alleging Section 13(1)(b) violations cannot survive once the underlying additions and denial of exemption are deleted. |
| Income-Tax Act, 1961 |
Section 13 |
Jamia Osman Bin Affan Education Society v. Income-tax Officer, Exemption |
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Denial of exemption under Section 11 is unjustified merely because certain beneficiaries of a school building construction/auto distribution belong to a specific religious community, provided the society is substantially engaged in charitable activities. |
| Income-Tax Act, 1961 |
Section 14A |
Deputy Commissioner of Income-tax v. JSW Steel Ltd. |
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No disallowance of interest expenditure is warranted under Section 14A if the assessee’s interest-free funds are substantially higher than the investments yielding exempt income; disallowance restricted to 0.5% of investments. |
| Income-Tax Act, 1961 |
Section 28(iv) |
Deputy Commissioner of Income-tax v. JSW Steel Ltd. |
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Writing back project creditors as provisions no longer required cannot be treated as taxable business income under Section 28(iv) if similar additions were consistently deleted in previous years. |
| Income-Tax Act, 1961 |
Section 36(1)(vii) |
Asian Paints Ltd. v. Deputy Commissioner of Income-tax |
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If the AO raised a specific query during assessment and accepted the explanation regarding a provision for doubtful debts, the PCIT cannot invoke revisionary proceedings under Section 263 alleging lack of thorough examination. |
| Income-Tax Act, 1961 |
Section 36(1)(viia) |
Indian Bank v. Assistant Commissioner of Income-tax |
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The statutory option to claim deduction for bad/doubtful debts under the proviso to Section 36(1)(viia) is the exclusive prerogative of the bank. The AO cannot override this lawful election. |
| Income-Tax Act, 1961 |
Section 37(1) |
Asian Paints Ltd. v. Deputy Commissioner of Income-tax |
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Festival and pooja expenses (sweets, dry fruits) distributed to business associates and employees are incurred wholly and exclusively for business and are allowable under Section 37(1). |
| Income-Tax Act, 1961 |
Section 37(1) |
Asian Paints Ltd. v. Deputy Commissioner of Income-tax |
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PCIT cannot invoke Section 263 on mere apprehension of full GST compliance when the assessee provides valid documentary evidence demonstrating the reversal of a denied GST credit component. |
| Income-Tax Act, 1961 |
Section 43B |
Asian Paints Ltd. v. Deputy Commissioner of Income-tax |
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Disputed sales tax, excise duty, property maintenance, and GST paid under protest satisfy Section 43B conditions and cannot be dismissed by the Pr. Commissioner as contingent liabilities. |
| Income-Tax Act, 1961 |
Section 48 |
Assistant Commissioner of Income-tax v. Bina Batlivala |
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Full payment and possession handed over under an agreement to sell establishes the holding period. Registration charges form part of the acquisition cost eligible for indexation, but Interest-Bearing Maintenance Security does not. |
| Income-Tax Act, 1961 |
Section 54EC |
Asian Paints Ltd. v. Deputy Commissioner of Income-tax |
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Section 54EC references long-term capital assets, not gains. Therefore, investing capital gains from the sale of a depreciable flat into specified bonds is permissible. |
| Income-Tax Act, 1961 |
Section 68 |
Principal Commissioner of Income-tax-2 v. Bharathi Cement Corporation (P.) Ltd. |
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A Tribunal order remanding a share premium dispute for factual verification of cash flows (rather than relying on surrounding probabilities) is procedural and raises no substantial question of law. |
| Income-Tax Act, 1961 |
Section 68 |
Deep Vijaykumar Trivedi v. Deputy Commissioner of Income-tax |
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Reopening an assessment based on a draft complaint found during a third-party survey is invalid if the assessee has no connection with the parties and statements reveal no cash transactions. |
| Income-Tax Act, 1961 |
Section 69 |
Sagar Mukesh Sheth v. Income-tax Officer |
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Reassessment based solely on a vague, loose paper chit found during a third-party search without names, figures, or a live link to the assessee is legally unsustainable. |
| Income-Tax Act, 1961 |
Section 69 |
Harpreet Kaur v. Income-tax Officer |
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Additions cannot be sustained solely on a DVO valuation or portal info without evidence of unaccounted payments, especially when a joint housing loan and co-owner’s investment are declared and accepted. |
| Income-Tax Act, 1961 |
Section 69A |
Deep Vijaykumar Trivedi v. Deputy Commissioner of Income-tax, Circle 3(1)(1) |
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Reassessment notices based on digital data found on a third party’s mobile device, built on conjectures and surmises without an established cash link, deserve to be quashed. |
| Income-Tax Act, 1961 |
Section 80-IA |
ACIT v. Navayuga Engineering Company Ltd. |
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A constituent member of a JV/Consortium executing infrastructure projects as per a delineated role is entitled to the deduction if the JV itself does not claim it. |
| Income-Tax Act, 1961 |
Section 80-IA |
ACIT v. Navayuga Engineering Company Ltd. |
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An infrastructure company executing irrigation projects with complete financial/operational risks acts as a developer, not a mere works contractor; hence, the Section 80-IA(13) bar does not apply. |
| Income-Tax Act, 1961 |
Section 80-IA |
Deputy Commissioner of Income-tax v. JSW Steel Ltd. |
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Deductions for a Rail System and Water Supply System allowed in previous years by the Tribunal carry forward to the relevant assessment years based on consistency rules. |
| Income-Tax Act, 1961 |
Section 80-IA |
Deputy Commissioner of Income-tax v. JSW Steel Ltd. |
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No infirmity was found in the CIT(A) order allowing a Section 80-IA deduction on income earned from the sale of Certified Emission Reductions (CERs), matching past precedents. |
| Income-Tax Act, 1961 |
Section 92C |
Deputy Commissioner of Income-tax v. JSW Steel Ltd. |
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No TP adjustment is warranted if interest rates charged on loans to AEs (LIBOR plus 350/500 bps) are higher than the arm’s length rates accepted in prior years. |
| Income-Tax Act, 1961 |
Section 92C |
Deputy Commissioner of Income-tax v. JSW Steel Ltd. |
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Restriction of corporate guarantee commission to 0.35 percent upheld, following established Tribunal orders for the assessee’s own case in earlier years. |
| Income-Tax Act, 1961 |
Section 115BBD |
Asian Paints Ltd. v. Deputy Commissioner of Income-tax |
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Foreign subsidiary dividends claimed as deductions under Section 80M do not form part of the total taxable income, making them exempt from Section 115BBD taxation. |