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In an ‘unabated assessment order’, no addition u_s 153A can be made unless there is some incriminating material w.r.t. the addition made by the AO

Date 13 May 2023
Written By
Section 153A: Reassessments Need Incriminating Evidence; Bogus Purchases, Loans Insufficient Without It.
Under Section 153A of the Income Tax Act, assessments for six years preceding a search can be reassessed, but completed assessments (unabated) cannot be altered unless incriminating material is found during the search. This principle ensures that additions or changes to such assessments require evidence of undisclosed income or assets. Without incriminating evidence, allegations like bogus purchases or unsecured loans cannot justify reassessment under Section 153A. This was reaffirmed in a recent case involving the Deputy Commissioner of Income Tax and a private company, emphasizing the necessity of incriminating material for reassessment in completed cases. - (AI Summary)

The provisions of sec.153A of the Act provide for issuing of notice u/s 153A of the Act for 6 assessment years immediately preceding the year of search and thereafter, the AO shall assess or reassess the total income for the above said 6 years. This section further provides that all pending assessment or reassessment pending as on the date of search shall abate. Hence the assessments of the assessment years falling within the period of above said 6 years which are not pending, i.e., which have attained finality shall not abate. Assessments of such assessment years are called “unabated/completed/finalized” assessments. The question earlier was whether the AO is entitled to interfere with such kinds of unabated/completed/finalized assessments or not without there being any incriminating material found during the course of search.

It is now a settled principle now that in respect of non-abated assessments, the assessment will be made on the basis of books of account or other documents not produced in the course of original assessment but found in the course of search and undisclosed income or undisclosed property discovered in the course of search. However, in case of completed assessments, the assessment u/s. 153A has to be made on the basis of incriminating material only, i.e., undisclosed income / property/ books of accounts/documents. Where nothing incriminating is found in the course of search relating to any of the assessment years covered u/s.153A of the Act, the assessment for such A.Ys. cannot be disturbed and the completed assessment has only to be reiterated.

Important point is that there must be “incriminating material” to support the allegations like bogus purchases, job works, subcontract works, labour expenses, addition of unsecured loans and interest disallowance, etc. Incase these allegations are without any incriminating material or the incriminating material is without substance not being contrary to and/or not disclosed during regular assessment proceedings, then 153A cannot be resorted to.

The proposition was again reiterated in the case of THE DCIT, CENTRAL CIRCLE 5 (1) , MUMBAI VERSUS M/S. SAKET INFRA PROJECTS PVT LTD. - 2023 (5) TMI 539 - ITAT MUMBAI

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