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Appellate Tribunal lacks power to recall orders under Income-Tax Act; judgment favors Assessee The Court held that the Appellate Tribunal did not have the authority to recall an order under Section 254(2) of the Income-Tax Act. It emphasized that ...
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Provisions expressly mentioned in the judgment/order text.
Appellate Tribunal lacks power to recall orders under Income-Tax Act; judgment favors Assessee
The Court held that the Appellate Tribunal did not have the authority to recall an order under Section 254(2) of the Income-Tax Act. It emphasized that the power to amend an order is limited to rectifying mistakes evident from the record, not to review or re-hear the entire appeal. The judgment favored the Assessee, setting aside the Tribunal's decision and directing it to consider rectification applications based on mistakes in the original order. The Court allowed both appeals, overturning the impugned orders.
Issues: 1. Interpretation of Section 254(2) of the Income-Tax Act regarding the power of the Appellate Tribunal to recall an order.
Analysis: The judgment involves two appeals arising from the Tribunal's decision on the assessment year 2006-07 for a partnership firm engaged in the jewelry business. The Assessing Officer computed the total income, leading to appeals to the Commissioner of Income-Tax (Appeals) and eventually to the Tribunal. The Tribunal allowed the appeal in part, prompting the Revenue to file a Miscellaneous Petition for recalling the order due to irregularities. The Tribunal recalled the order entirely, dismissing the assessee's application for rectification. The main issue was whether the Tribunal had the authority to recall an order under Section 254(2) of the Act.
The Court examined Section 254 of the Income-Tax Act, emphasizing that the Tribunal can pass orders as it deems fit and rectify mistakes apparent from the record under sub-section (2). The power to amend an order is limited to rectifying mistakes evident from the record, not to review or re-hear the entire appeal. The judgment referenced a Delhi High Court case to support this interpretation, highlighting that the order under Section 254(1) is the final order in the appeal, and any amendments under Section 254(2) merge with the original order. Recalling an order necessitates rehearing the entire appeal, which is not the legislative intent. The Court set aside the Tribunal's decision, emphasizing that the power to recall an order is not granted under Section 254(2).
Consequently, the Court allowed both appeals, setting aside the impugned orders. The substantial question of law was answered in favor of the Assessee, directing the Tribunal to consider applications for rectification and pass appropriate orders based on the rectification of mistakes in the original order.
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