Court directs fresh order on stay application, accepts property undertaking, continues bank notices. Protecting revenue's interest. The court set aside the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals)'s order dismissing the petitioner's stay application and directed a fresh reasoned order ...
Cases where this provision is explicitly mentioned in the judgment/order text; may not be exhaustive. To view the complete list of cases mentioning this section, Click here.
Provisions expressly mentioned in the judgment/order text.
Court directs fresh order on stay application, accepts property undertaking, continues bank notices. Protecting revenue's interest.
The court set aside the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals)'s order dismissing the petitioner's stay application and directed a fresh reasoned order within two weeks. The petitioner's undertaking regarding an immovable property was accepted, while notices to the petitioner's bankers and property attachment under Section 281B of the Act would continue. The court emphasized protecting the revenue's interest and disposed of the petition without costs.
Issues: Challenge to order of Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) on stay application & notices under section 226(3) of Income Tax Act, 1961.
Analysis: The petition under Article 226 challenges the order dated 11.05.2012 by the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) on a stay application filed by the petitioners for Assessment Years 2004-05 to 2007-08. The petition also seeks a stay on notices under section 226(3) of the Income Tax Act attaching the petitioner's bank accounts. The Assessing Officer passed assessment orders raising a demand of Rs.6.33 crores. The petitioner moved an application for stay before the Assessing Officer, which was rejected. Pending appeal disposal, notices were issued to the petitioner's bankers attaching funds for tax liability. The petitioner filed a writ petition challenging these notices. The CIT(A) dismissed the petitioner's stay application on 11.05.2012.
The petitioner argued that the CIT(A) did not consider their submissions, including jurisdiction issues and financial hardship. They cited a CBDT Circular and previous court directions. The respondent argued against granting stay, pointing out the petitioner's lack of evidence on financial hardship and high assessments due to hawala transactions. The court noted that the CIT(A) did not consider all submissions and failed to provide reasons for the interim payment requirement. The court referred to parameters for granting stay and found the CIT(A) ignored these. The petitioner had not submitted financial particulars, but the court emphasized the relevance of the balance sheet.
The court set aside the impugned order and directed the CIT(A) to pass a fresh reasoned order on the stay application within two weeks. The petitioner's undertaking regarding an immovable property was accepted. The notices to the petitioner's bankers would continue, and property attachment under Section 281B of the Act would also continue. The court emphasized the need to protect the revenue's interest and disposed of the petition without costs.
Full Summary is available for active users!
Note: It is a system-generated summary and is for quick reference only.