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AI Drafter

Generate professional replies to Show Cause Notices, assessment orders, audit objections, and other legal communications using TaxTMI's AI Drafter.

Step 1 – Issue Identification & Review

The AI analyses your query, notice, order, or uploaded documents and identifies the key issues involved.

• Review the issues identified by the AI
• Add, edit, remove, or refine issues as required


Step 2 – Draft Generation

Once you approve the issues, the AI performs issue-wise legal research and prepares a structured draft response.

• Relevant statutory provisions
• Judicial precedents and Supreme Court, High Court and other citations
• Issue-wise legal analysis
• Practical arguments and supporting content
• Professionally structured draft ready for further review.

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2015 (7) TMI 921

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....issioner of Income Tax(Central) (Commissioner). This resulted in the pending proceeding of the Petitioner for Assessment Years 2007-08 to 20014-15 being restored to the Assessing officer. 4. On 23rd March, 2015, the Petitioner filed an application before the Commission under Section 245C(1) of the Act, seeking to settle its pending assessments for the Assessment Years 2007-08 to 2014-15. In its application, the Petitioner disclosed an additional income, aggregating to Rs. 13.64Crores for the Assessment Years 2007-08 to 2014-15 which was not disclosed before the Assessing Officer. The additional income tax payable along with interest thereon on the additional declared income was Rs. 2.77Crores. The Petitioner in its application for settlement had explained that it had fulfilled the requirement of paying the tax on the declared additional income by having paid an amount of Rs. 77lakhs into the treasury and adjusting an amount of Rs. 2.37Crores out of the refund due to the petitioner. 5. On 31st March, 2015, the Commission passed an order under Section 245D(1) of the Act. In its order dated 31 March 2015 the Commission held that the application for settlement is in respect of pe....

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.... the interest demanded under Section 234B of the Act. 9. The Commission without awaiting the fate of the rectification application dated 9May 2015 or itself deciding on the correctness of the Commissioner's report or the rectification application, by an order dated 12th May, 2015, dismissed the Petitioner's application for settlement. This on the basis of the report of the Commissioner that no refund was due to the Petitioner for the Assessment Years 2010-11, 2011-12 and 2012-13. Consequently, the Petitioner would not be entitled to claim adjustment of the refund due against additional tax payable on the further disclosure of income tax. In the result, the Petitioner's application for settlement was dismissed as invalid. 10. Consequent to the above, on 22nd June, 2015, the Petitioner received a communication from the Assessing Officer, disposing off the Petitioner's application for rectification dated 18th June, 2015 interalia holding as under: " .... .... .... .... As far as your rectification application is concerned, it may be noted that your contention regarding wrong charge of interest u/s. 234B has been looked into and prima facie your claim that the ....

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.... claim for refund for Assessment Year 2012-13 is correct. Thus the entire exercise of the Commission in not applying its mind to the report of the Commissioner makes the decision making process vulnerable. In the above circumstances it is submitted that the order of the Commission dated 12 May 2015 be set aside and the application be restored to the Commission for fresh disposal. 13. As against the above, Mr. Tejveer Singh, learned Counsel appearing for the Respondent support the impugned order on the following ground: (a) The condition precedent for an application for settlement application being entertained by the Commission in terms of Section 245C of the Act is that the Petitioner must pay the tax and interest on the additional amount of income tax disclosed in the application. According to him, there is no provision for adjustment of refund payable to the Petitioner against demand of tax and interest to be paid by the Petitioner while approaching the Commission for settlement; and (b) Restoring the application to the Commission for fresh disposal would run contrary to the statutory provision viz. Section 245K (2) of the Act. In terms of the above Section where an a....

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....provided in the Act and also being conscious of the fact that in writ jurisdiction we are more concerned with examining the decision making process, we shall examine the challenge in the present petition. The issue for examination is whether the dismissal of the Petitioner's application for settlement at the stage of Section 245(2D) of the Act merely on the ground of the Commissioner's report dated 5 may 2015 was justified particularly when on the face of it the assertion of the Commissioner required some investigation. 16. The Petitioner made an application for settlement on 23 March 2015 for the Assessment year 2007-08 to 2014-15. The petitioner appears to have prima facie satisfied the condition precedent for a valid application for Settlement. This is evident from the order of the Commission dated 31st March, 2015 under Section 245D(1) of the Act - wherein it is recorded that the Petitioner had disclosed its additional income which is above the threshold limit and has also paid the additional tax and interest thereon. This acceptance of the application was on the basis that the Petitioner sought to fulfill requirement of payment of tax by adjusting refund due to it f....

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.... have led the Commission to make some enquiry into it and not accept the Commissioner's report as unimpeachable. This is particularly so as a rejection at a stage when the petitioner has made full and true disclosure in the spirit of settlement, without proper examination does cause prejudice to the petitioner. A rejection of the application on dubious/suspicious ground made out in the report should not be allowed by the Commission without some enquiry to satisfy itself about the stand of the Commissioner. The circumstances surrounding the Commissioner report viz. of equal amount of interest demand to refund granted by the Intimation, not annexing the Intimation to the report and the Intimation itself being served upon the petitioner after over one year of its purported issue and after the Commissioner's report also raise questions about its authenticity. Thus an unjustified rejection without proper enquiry into the stand of the Revenue would cause prejudice to the assessee as all the information made available during the settlement proceedings would be capable of use by the Assessing officer to the prejudice of the applicant in regular assessment proceedings. Therefore non....