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Court dismisses appeal on Section 147 reassessment, citing absence of material facts and 'change of opinion.' The court dismissed the appeal, upholding the decision that the reassessment proceedings under Section 147 were not maintainable due to the absence of ...
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Court dismisses appeal on Section 147 reassessment, citing absence of material facts and "change of opinion."
The court dismissed the appeal, upholding the decision that the reassessment proceedings under Section 147 were not maintainable due to the absence of failure to disclose material facts by the respondent and being a case of "change of opinion." The court rejected the argument regarding the extension of the four-year period under the third proviso to Section 147. The appeal was dismissed, and the order was directed to be uploaded on the website and forwarded to the learned counsel through e-mail.
Issues Involved: 1. Validity of the notice under Section 148 of the Income Tax Act, 1961. 2. Allegation of failure to disclose material facts. 3. Concept of "change of opinion" by the Assessing Officer. 4. Applicability of the third proviso to Section 147 of the Act. 5. Consistency in the treatment of the franchise fee in previous assessment years.
Issue-wise Detailed Analysis:
1. Validity of the notice under Section 148 of the Income Tax Act, 1961: The appeal challenges the notice issued under Section 148 of the Income Tax Act on 22.03.2011, which was beyond the four-year period from the end of the relevant assessment year (2004-05). The ITAT dismissed the appellant's contention, stating that the notice was issued after the expiry of four years from the end of the relevant assessment year and that the Revenue failed to show which material facts were not disclosed by the assessee. The ITAT emphasized that no action under Section 147 could be taken unless income chargeable to tax had escaped assessment due to the assessee's failure to disclose all material facts fully and truly.
2. Allegation of failure to disclose material facts: The CIT (Appeals) and ITAT both found that the Assessing Officer did not allege any failure on the part of the respondent to disclose truly and fully all material facts. The respondent had disclosed full details in the return of income, accompanied by audited accounts and a copy of the agreement during the assessment proceedings under Section 143(3). The ITAT observed that there was no failure on the part of the assessee to disclose all material facts fully and truly, and the Revenue failed to discharge the onus of proving such failure.
3. Concept of "change of opinion" by the Assessing Officer: The CIT (Appeals) held that the reassessment was a case of "change of opinion" by the successor Assessing Officer. The original Assessing Officer had already scrutinized the details and formed an opinion that the franchise fee was correctly claimed as a revenue expense. The ITAT concurred, noting that the successor Assessing Officer merely recorded a different opinion without bringing any new facts or material on record.
4. Applicability of the third proviso to Section 147 of the Act: The appellant argued that the four-year period should commence from the date of the decision in the appeal filed by the respondent against the earlier assessment order, relying on the third proviso to Section 147. However, the court clarified that the said proviso does not extend the period for initiating action under Section 147. It merely empowers the Assessing Officer to assess or reassess income not involved in any appeal, reference, or revision, but does not grant any extension of time.
5. Consistency in the treatment of the franchise fee in previous assessment years: The CIT (Appeals) and ITAT noted that the franchise fee claimed by the respondent had been consistently accepted by the Department for the assessment years 2003-04 to 2009-10. The court referred to the Supreme Court's decision in Commissioner of Income Tax v. Excel Industries Limited, emphasizing that a consistent view taken in favor of the assessee in previous years should not be changed without convincing reasons. The court found no material change justifying a different view for the assessment year in question.
Conclusion: The court dismissed the appeal, upholding the ITAT's decision that the reassessment proceedings under Section 147 were not maintainable due to the absence of failure on the part of the respondent to disclose material facts and the case being one of "change of opinion." The court also rejected the appellant's argument regarding the extension of the four-year period under the third proviso to Section 147. The appeal was dismissed, and the order was directed to be uploaded on the website and forwarded to the learned counsel through e-mail.
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