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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
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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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1998 (6) TMI 571

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.... disallowed to the extent of diversion of funds interest-free to sister concerns. The CIT(A), in principle, agreed with the findings of the Assessing Officer but restricted the addition to only Rs. 2,74,430 on the ground that the amount debited to the P&L a/c is only this amount. 3. Before us, the learned counsel for the assessee pleaded that the assessee has no unsecured loans towards the year end, i.e., 31st March, 1994, and so, no disallowance out of the interest paid is called for. It is also argued that the aggregate advances to the above three sister concerns have come down from Rs. 36,30,411 as on 31st March, 1993, to Rs. 13,07,057 on 31st March, 1994. 4. We agree with the findings of the CIT(A). We find that the above mentioned interest-free advances were made in the earlier years when the share capital of the assessee was only Rs. 15,00,000. The shareholders' funds of Rs. 2,15,93,870 as on 31st March, 1994, represent mainly the accretion by way of capital gains on the sale of a flat during the year of account relevant for the assessment year 1994-95. As the advances were made in the earlier years and as in those two years they were made only out of borrowed funds,....

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....p; Multiplied     By cost inflation index of 1993-94     Divided     By cost inflation index of 1981-82     (Since property purchased before 1-4-1981)     Fair market value as per valuation report dated 26-2-1994 of Roshan H. Nanavati Rs. 78,87,750   Cost inflation index of 1993-94 244     Rs. 78,87,750 x 244     100 1,92,46,110   Long-term capital gains on sale of immovable property 1,87,09,390     It may be observed that the assessee opted for the fair market value of the property as on 1st April, 1981, as permitted under section 55 of the Income-tax Act. The fair market value as on 1st April, 1981, returned by the assessee was supported by a valuation report from an approved valuer, Roshan Nanavati, who valued the property at the rate of Rs. 1,250 per sq. ft. at Rs. 78,87,758 (inclusive of garages, etc.). The Assessing Officer held that the sale instances cited by the said approved valuer were not really comparable as they related to different localities and he worked out the fair market value as....

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....to refer the valuation of any capital asset to the Valuation Officer with a view to ascertaining the market value of such asset. References under this section will lie only after 31st December, 1972, as the provisions of section 2 of the Amending Act will come into force w.e.f. 1st January, 1973. Under the new provision, an ITO may refer the valuation of any capital asset to a Valuation Officer in a case where the assessee has got the assets valued by a registered valuer and the ITO is of opinion that the value as estimated by the registered valuer (i.e., a person registered as a valuer under section 34AB of the WT Act) is less than the fair market value of the asset. Other cases in which a reference may be made to the Valuation Officer would be where the ITO is of opinion that the fair market value of the asset exceeds the value of the asset as claimed by more than 15 per cent of the value claimed or by more than Rs. 25,000, whichever is less or where, having regard to the nature of the asset and other relevant circumstances, the ITO considers it necessary to do so. It will be seen that in case where the assessee has opted for substitution of the cost of acquisition of an asset....

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....ision of the Hon'ble Punjab & Haryana High Court in the case of Raj Paul Oswal v. CIT cited (supra) by the learned counsel for the assessee was given in the context of section 16A of the WT Act and the language of this section is totally different from that of section 55A of the Income-tax Act. Under section 16A of the Wealth-tax Act, specified circumstances are laid down under which a reference has to be made to the Valuation Officer and it is because of the specification of the circumstances, the Hon'ble High Court held that a reference is mandatory when those circumstances are specified. Such is not the case under section 55A of the Income-tax Act. The provisions of section 55A are attracted only when the Assessing Officer is of the opinion that the fair market value of the assets exceeds the value of the assets as claimed by the assessee and not in a reverse case such as the present one where the assessee claimed that the value as on 1st April, 1981, exceeds the fair market value determined by the Assessing Officer. So, on the plain language of the section, the provisions of sections 55A(a) and (b)(i ) are not attracted and that is also made clear by the Board's Circular No. 96....