Court orders Rs.30 crores refund, deems Section 220(6) void. Stay application criticism. The court found the writ petition maintainable despite alleged concealment of facts. It clarified that Section 220(6) does not apply when an appeal is ...
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The court found the writ petition maintainable despite alleged concealment of facts. It clarified that Section 220(6) does not apply when an appeal is before the ITAT. The court disagreed with the ITAT, stating that recovery includes adjustments under Section 245. It criticized the ITAT for not deciding the stay application and directed it to hear the appeal promptly. The court ordered the Revenue to refund Rs.30 crores to the petitioner and deemed the order under Section 220(6) null and void.
Issues Involved: 1. Maintainability of the writ petition due to alleged concealment of facts. 2. Applicability of Section 220(6) of the Income Tax Act. 3. Whether adjustment under Section 245 can be regarded as recovery. 4. Validity of the orders passed by the authorities/tribunal regarding stay applications and adjustments. 5. Whether the ITAT should have decided the stay application.
Detailed Analysis:
A. Maintainability of the Writ Petition The Revenue argued that the petitioner concealed the order dated 2nd February 2011 under Section 245 of the Income Tax Act, which should disqualify them from obtaining relief. However, the court found this contention without merit. The writ petition mentioned the adjustment of refunds and included relevant material facts. The court cited the Supreme Court's observations in S.J.S. Business Enterprises (P) Ltd. v. State of Bihar, emphasizing that suppression of a material fact must affect the case's merits. Since the petitioner did not gain any advantage by not filing the order, the writ petition was deemed maintainable.
B. Applicability of Section 220(6) The court noted that the petitioner and Revenue assumed Section 220(6) was applicable, though the petitioner had filed an appeal before the ITAT, not under Section 246A. The court clarified that Section 220(6) applies only when an appeal is filed under Section 246 or 246A, not when an appeal is before the ITAT. Thus, the stay application under Section 220(6) was not maintainable.
C. Adjustment under Section 245 as Recovery The ITAT held that recovery does not include adjustment under Section 245. However, the court disagreed, stating that recovery includes various modes, including adjustments. The term "recovery" in common parlance includes adjustments, and Section 245 permits the Revenue to recover demand by adjusting refunds due for another year. The court emphasized that the appellate authority can stay recovery, including adjustments under Section 245, and any ambiguity should be clarified through appropriate applications.
D. Orders by Authorities/Tribunal on Stay Applications and Adjustments The court found that the ITAT should have decided the stay application instead of directing the Assessing Officer to dispose of the application under Section 220(6). The court also held that the term "recovery" includes adjustment under Section 245 and that the ITAT can stay such adjustments. The court noted that different parameters apply when staying coercive recovery methods versus adjustments under Section 245.
E. ITAT's Role in Deciding the Stay Application The court criticized the ITAT for not deciding the stay application and leaving it to the Assessing Officer. The court directed the ITAT to hear the appeal expeditiously and preferably within four months. The court also directed the Revenue to refund Rs.30 crores to the petitioner, as the conduct of recovering disputed tax on issues already decided against them by earlier orders was unjustified.
Final Directions: The court concluded that: 1. The order dated 2nd February 2011 under Section 220(6) is null and void. 2. The ITAT should have decided the stay application. 3. Recovery includes adjustment under Section 245. 4. The ITAT can stay recovery, including adjustments under Section 245. 5. The Revenue's action in recovering disputed tax on issues already decided against them was unjustified.
The court directed the Revenue to refund Rs.30 crores to the petitioner within one month and instructed the ITAT to hear the appeal expeditiously. The writ petition was disposed of without costs.
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