High Court affirms deletion of gift addition, allows new evidence; Dismisses appeal on foreign travel expenses The High Court upheld the Commissioner's decision to delete the addition of a gift received by the assessee, as the additional evidence provided by the ...
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High Court affirms deletion of gift addition, allows new evidence; Dismisses appeal on foreign travel expenses
The High Court upheld the Commissioner's decision to delete the addition of a gift received by the assessee, as the additional evidence provided by the assessee established the creditworthiness of the donor. The Court found no error in admitting the evidence without giving the department an opportunity to rebut it, noting that the Assessing Officer could have requested such an opportunity if needed. Regarding the disallowance of foreign traveling expenses, the High Court dismissed the Income Tax Appeal, stating that the issue was fact-based with no legal question involved.
Issues: 1. Admission of additional evidence without giving opportunity of rebuttal to the department. 2. Disallowance of foreign traveling expenses.
Issue 1: Admission of additional evidence without giving opportunity of rebuttal to the department
The first issue in this case pertains to a gift of &8377; 3.18 Crores received by the assessee from his brother during the relevant assessment year. The Assessing Officer added this amount as income, as he did not accept the assessee's claim of receiving a gift. However, before the Commissioner (Appeals), the assessee produced additional evidence that established the creditworthiness of the brother to provide such a substantial gift. The Commissioner (Appeals) thoroughly examined the evidence and concluded that the brother had the means to give the gift, and the gift's source, genuineness, and creditworthiness were all established. Consequently, the Commissioner deleted the addition. The Revenue contended before the Tribunal that the additional evidence was admitted without allowing the department an opportunity to rebut it. The Tribunal upheld the Commissioner's decision, providing separate reasons. The High Court, after considering the arguments, found no error in the Tribunal's decision. It noted that the Assessing Officer could have requested an opportunity to rebut the evidence if needed, as the documents provided were either from the department or in the form of bank statements.
Issue 2: Disallowance of foreign traveling expenses
The second issue concerns the disallowance of foreign traveling expenses. The Tribunal had restricted the disallowance to &8377; 1,00,000 despite the assessee only submitting evidence of &8377; 3,89,304 out of total expenses of &8377; 11,78,881. The Revenue questioned the Tribunal's decision on this matter. However, the High Court determined that this issue was purely fact-based, and no legal question arose from it. Therefore, the High Court dismissed the Income Tax Appeal.
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