Penalty under Section 271D must be kept in abeyance pending appeal of the quantum assessment.

By | May 29, 2026

Penalty under Section 271D must be kept in abeyance pending appeal of the quantum assessment.

Issue

Whether a penalty order passed under Section 271D and the consequential notice of demand under Section 156 can be enforced, or if they should be kept in abeyance, when the core quantum assessment order passed under Section 147 is currently pending adjudication in an appeal before the Commissioner (Appeals).

Facts

  • The Revenue initiated income-escaping assessment proceedings against the assessee and passed a final assessment order under Section 147.

  • Aggrieved by the additions made in the assessment order, the assessee preferred a statutory appeal before the Commissioner (Appeals) [CIT(A)].

  • While the quantum appeal was still pending disposal before the CIT(A), the penalizing authority proceeded to pass a penalty order under Section 271D for the alleged failure to comply with the cash transaction provisions of Section 269SS.

  • Consequent to the penalty order, the Revenue issued a formal notice of demand under Section 156 to enforce the recovery of the penalty amount.

  • The assessee challenged the penalty enforcement, arguing that the penalty proceedings should wait for the final determination of the underlying tax liability in the pending quantum appeal.

Decision

  • Held, that the penalty order passed under Section 271D and the consequential demand notice issued under Section 156 are liable to be set aside.

  • Held, that since the foundational assessment order under Section 147 is sub-judice before the appellate authority, enforcing a derivative penalty is premature.

  • Held, that the penalty proceedings under Section 271D must be kept in absolute abeyance until a final decision is rendered in the quantum appeal filed by the assessee before the CIT(A).

  • Held, that the matter is decided in favor of the assessee by deferring the penalty enforcement.

Key Takeaways

  • Interdependence of Penalty and Quantum: Penalty proceedings under Section 271D, while technically distinct, are inherently tied to the validity of the underlying transactions evaluated during the quantum assessment.

  • No Premature Recovery: The Revenue cannot rush to recover penalty amounts via Section 156 demand notices while the primary assessment order that triggered the penalty is being actively contested before the CIT(A).

  • Keeping in Abeyance as standard relief: Deferring or keeping penalty proceedings in abeyance prevents multiplicity of legal proceedings and avoids financial hardship to the assessee before their final tax liability is conclusively crystallized.

HIGH COURT OF BOMBAY
Hiraman Ramchandra Rithe
v.
Union of India*
Nitin B. Suryawanshi and VAISHALI PATIL JADHAV, JJ.
WRIT PETITION NO. 4950 OF 2026
MAY  5, 2026
Raviraj R. Chandak, Adv. for the Petitioner. Alok Sharma and Akshay Kulkarni, Advs. for the Respondent.
JUDGMENT
Nitin B. Suryawanshi, J.- Rule. Rule made returnable forthwith. Heard finally by the consent of the parties.
2. By this petition, the Petitioner is challenging the order dated 20.02.2026 under Section 271-D and notice of demand under Section 156 dated 20.02.2026. The learned advocate for the Petitioner has placed reliance on the decision rendered by the Coordinate Bench of this Court at Principal Seat in Sanjay Ratra v. Assessment Unit, ITO [Writ Petition (L) No. 42864 of 2025 dated 03.02.2026], which according to him squarely covers the issue raised in this petition.
3. Learned advocate for the Respondents / Income Tax Department has strenuously opposed the petition stating that the Petitioner has alternate efficacious remedy and therefore the petition may not be entertained on that ground. The learned advocate for the Union of India has supported the impugned order.
4. This Court while allowing Sanjay Ratra (supra) has followed the decisions in R.B. Shreeram Durgaprasad v. CIT  (Bombay) and Kellogg India (P.) Ltd. v. National Faceless Assessment Centre, Delhi and Maharashtra State Electricity Transmission Company Ltd. v. Assessment Unit, Income Tax Department, National Faceless Assessment Centre. We find that the issue raised in the present petition is squarely covered by the same decision. Hence, the petition deserves to be allowed.
5. In the result, Writ Petition succeeds. The impugned penalty order dated 20.02.2026 (Exhibit-C) is hereby quashed and set aside.
We direct that the penalty proceedings shall be kept in abeyance till a decision is rendered in the Appeal filed by the Petitioner before the CIT(A). Only once those proceedings are concluded, and are in favour of the Revenue, the Revenue can then continue with the penalty proceedings, and take it to its logical conclusion. If the Petitioner succeeds before the CIT(A), the question of continuing with the penalty proceedings will not arise. In other words, the continuation of the penalty proceedings will entirely depend on the outcome of the Appeal filed by the Petitioner before the CIT(A)against the Assessment Order passed under Section 147 of the IT Act.
6. Rule is made absolute in the above terms.