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<h1>Tribunal Upholds Assessee's Position, Dismisses Revenue's Appeal</h1> <h3>The DCIT, Circle-1 (1) (2), Ahmedabad Versus Shri Sanjay Chimanlal Agrawal And (Vice-Versa)</h3> The DCIT, Circle-1 (1) (2), Ahmedabad Versus Shri Sanjay Chimanlal Agrawal And (Vice-Versa) - TMI Issues Involved:1. Deletion of addition made under Section 68 of the IT Act.2. Validity of reassessment proceedings under Section 143(3) read with Section 147 of the IT Act.Issue-wise Detailed Analysis:1. Deletion of addition made under Section 68 of the IT Act:The Revenue appealed against the CIT(A)'s order, which deleted the addition of Rs. 1,96,04,023 made under Section 68 of the IT Act. The Assessing Officer (AO) had added this amount as unexplained cash credit, suspecting that the assessee used penny stocks to claim bogus Long-Term Capital Gains (LTCG). The AO observed that the assessee held shares of M/s Suryanagari Finlease Ltd., a penny stock, and manipulated its price to book LTCG. The AO noted the company's negligible income and the unnatural rise and fall in its share price, concluding that the assessee's unaccounted funds were routed through these transactions.In contrast, the CIT(A) found that the assessee had held shares since 1994, purchased through the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE), and sold them through proper banking channels. The CIT(A) emphasized that the AO did not provide material evidence to prove that the assessee introduced unaccounted funds or that the transactions were bogus. The CIT(A) cited judicial precedents, including the Gujarat High Court's rulings, which held that genuine transactions supported by contract notes, DMAT accounts, and bank statements should not be treated as unexplained cash credits.The Tribunal upheld the CIT(A)'s decision, noting that the AO failed to present evidence of collusion or bogus transactions. The Tribunal referred to various judicial pronouncements, including the Delhi High Court's decision in PCIT vs. Smt. Krishna Devi, which emphasized that suspicion alone cannot justify treating genuine transactions as bogus without material evidence.2. Validity of reassessment proceedings under Section 143(3) read with Section 147 of the IT Act:The assessee contested the reassessment proceedings initiated under Section 148, arguing that the AO did not properly consider judicial pronouncements and the assessee's contentions. The reassessment was based on information from the investigation wing, indicating that the assessee claimed exempt LTCG from penny stocks, specifically M/s Surabhi Chemicals & Investments, identified as a penny stock in a search operation.The Tribunal examined the reassessment process and found that the AO did not provide adequate evidence to substantiate the claim that the assessee's transactions were bogus. The Tribunal noted that the AO did not doubt the purchase of shares from BSE and failed to show how the assessee introduced unaccounted funds. The Tribunal concluded that the reassessment proceedings were not justified based on mere suspicion and assumptions without concrete evidence.Conclusion:The Tribunal dismissed the Revenue's appeal and allowed the assessee's cross-objection, affirming the CIT(A)'s deletion of the addition made under Section 68 and questioning the validity of the reassessment proceedings. The Tribunal emphasized the importance of material evidence over suspicion in tax assessments and upheld the genuineness of the assessee's transactions based on the presented documents and judicial precedents.