Reassessment notice issued beyond three years is void if sanctioned by the incorrect tax authority.
Issue
Whether a reassessment notice issued under Section 148 after the expiry of three years from the end of the relevant assessment year is legally valid when the mandatory administrative sanction under Section 151 was granted by the Principal Commissioner instead of the higher-ranking authorities specified by law.
Facts
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The Notice: The tax department initiated reassessment proceedings against the assessee for the assessment year 2019-20 by issuing a notice under Section 148 on April 12, 2023.
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The Timeline: The date of issuance (April 12, 2023) fell beyond the standard period of three years from the end of the relevant assessment year.
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The Sanction: Prior to issuing the notice, the department obtained administrative approval and sanction under Section 151 from the Principal Commissioner.
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The Authority’s Finding: The Principal Commissioner explicitly recorded in the order that the time limit for the case fell under the extended window of Section 149(1)(b), meaning more than three years but less than ten years had elapsed.
Decision
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Higher Authority Required: The High Court held that when a Section 148 notice is issued beyond three years from the end of the relevant assessment year, Section 151 mandates that sanction must be obtained from higher-tier officials: the Principal Chief Commissioner, Principal Director General, Chief Commissioner, or Director General.
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Incorrect Sanctioning Tier: Since the approval in this case was granted by the Principal Commissioner (who is only authorized to grant sanctions for cases under three years), the statutory requirement was not met.
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Proceedings Quashed: The court ruled that the sanction was not in accordance with the law, rendering the Section 148 notice and all subsequent reassessment proceedings entirely without jurisdiction.
Key Takeaways
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Jurisdiction Rests on Proper Sanction: Obtaining a tax reassessment approval from the wrong administrative tier is a fatal jurisdictional defect that cannot be cured or overlooked as a minor procedural error.
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Time Determines the Approving Level: Under Section 151, the older a tax case gets, the higher the administrative rank required to greenlight a reopening. For cases older than three years, a Principal Commissioner’s approval carries no legal validity.
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Strict Statutory Interpretation: Limitation windows and administrative checks exist to protect taxpayers from arbitrary long-term scrutiny; courts will strictly enforce the exact hierarchy laid down by the legislature.
[Assessment year 2019-20]

