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Tribunal quashes Income Tax revision order for assessment year 2014-15 due to lack of jurisdiction The Tribunal quashed the revision order passed under section 263 of the Income Tax Act, upholding the assessment order for the assessment year 2014-15. ...
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Tribunal quashes Income Tax revision order for assessment year 2014-15 due to lack of jurisdiction
The Tribunal quashed the revision order passed under section 263 of the Income Tax Act, upholding the assessment order for the assessment year 2014-15. The Principal Commissioner of Income Tax did not identify any specific issues overlooked by the Assessing Officer, leading to the lack of jurisdiction in the revision order. The Tribunal also found discrepancies in the revision order concerning the computation of capital gains and exemption under section 54, ultimately ruling in favor of the assessee and rejecting the revision order as prejudicial to the interest of Revenue.
Issues: 1. Validity of assessment order under section 263 of the Income Tax Act, 1961. 2. Computation of capital gains and exemption under section 54 of the Act. 3. Verification of details filed by the assessee.
Analysis: 1. The appeal was against the order of the Principal Commissioner of Income Tax, Chennai, under section 263 of the Income Tax Act, directing the Assessing Officer to redo the assessment concerning capital gains and exemption under section 54 of the Act for the assessment year 2014-15. The appellant argued that the specific issue in question was already considered by the Assessing Officer in the initial assessment. The Tribunal noted that the PCIT did not point out any specific issue not considered by the Assessing Officer, and the revision order lacked jurisdiction, leading to the quashing of the revision order and upholding of the assessment order.
2. The Assessing Officer initially assessed a long term capital loss claimed by the assessee, which was later revised to NIL after discrepancies were found in the computation of indexed cost of improvement related to the sale of a property. The PCIT observed that the property was a new building and disallowed the exemption under section 54, leading to short term capital gain tax liability. The assessee argued that the issue was discussed during the assessment proceedings, and the revision order lacked specific findings on errors in the assessment order. The Tribunal found that the PCIT did not dispute the indexed cost of improvement or the exemption claimed under section 54, and as such, quashed the revision order and upheld the assessment order.
3. The PCIT directed the Assessing Officer to redo the assessment after verifying the computation of capital gains and exemption claimed under section 54. The Tribunal noted that the PCIT did not provide specific findings on what needed verification or how the assessment order prejudiced revenue. As the Assessing Officer had already addressed the computation discrepancies, the revision order was deemed erroneous and prejudicial to the interest of Revenue. Consequently, the Tribunal allowed the appeal filed by the assessee, quashing the revision order passed under section 263 of the Act and sustaining the assessment order.
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