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2024 (6) TMI 824

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....wn. 2. The factual position is as under : The petitioner had filed its return of income for the accounting year 2017-18, on 17/10/2017 declaring a loss of Rs. 4,29,14,072/-. An intimation as provided by Section 143(1)(d) of the IT Act was given to the petitioner on 25/05/2018, in respect of the assessment made under Section 143(3) of the IT Act. 3. The Assessing Officer, claiming reason to believe, that the income of the petitioner had escaped assessment, the case of the petitioner was reopened under Section 147 of the IT Act and after obtaining sanction for issuance of notice under Section 151 of the IT Act of the appropriate authority, as indicated therein, a notice under Section 148 of the IT was issued to the petitioner on 31/03/2021 (pg.137). By a communication dated 06/04/2021 the petitioner asked for the reasons recorded before issuing of notice, which was supplied by the Assessing Officer on 21/04/2021 (pg. 139). In response to a grievance resolution application seeking copy of the approval for issuance of notice, the respondents by the communication dated 17/05/2021 intimated to the petitioner that since the approval for reopening of the case of the petitioner on ....

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....er Vs. Lakhmani Mewal Das [1976] 103 ITR 437 (SC) (ii) Shri Dnyaneshwar Maharaj Sansthan Alandi Dewachi Vs. The Income Tax Officer Exemption Ward 1 (1), Pune and others [Writ Petition No. 3309/2022, decided on 11/03/2024] (iii) Digil Electronics Pvt. Ltd. Andheri West Vs. Assistant Commissioner of Income Tax-13 (2) (2), Mumbai and others [Writ Petition No. 1798/2022, decided on 08/03/2023] 7. Mr. Parchure, learned counsel for the respondent nos. 1 to 3 contends, that the case was reopened, on the basis of information uploaded by the ADIT (Inv) - III, Nagpur on the insight portal of the Income Tax Department, which was designated under the category "High Risk Transaction" for the financial year 2016-17 as suspicious transaction report (STR), which transactions were to the tune of Rs. 34,42,99,351/- being credits in the bank accounts maintained by the petitioner/assessee with the Kotak Mahindra Bank and as the return submitted by the assessee of NIL after showing current year loss of Rs. 4,29,14,072/- was not corroborating with the information available on record, the Assessing Officer has sufficient reason to form a belief that the income had escaped assessment ....

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....so placed upon Shrikant Phulchand Bhakkad (HUF) Vs. Joint Commissioner of Income Tax (2022) 287 Taxman 440 in which even after scrutiny of assessment for limited purpose, the assessment was allowed to be reopened as there was prima facie some material to show that income had escaped assessment. Reliance is also placed upon Chhagan Chandrakant Bhujbal Vs. Income-tax Officer (2022) 440 ITR 359 in which it has been held that the petitioner having participated in assessment proceeding could not have approached this Court invoking its extraordinary jurisdiction under Article 226 of the Constitution of India. 8. Insofar as the objection regarding maintainability of the petition is concerned, the same has already been considered by this Court in its order dated 09/06/2023, which has turned down the said objection. 9. Insofar as the merit of the matter is concerned, as indicated above, it is not in dispute that the petitioner, who is a corporate entity, engaged in trading of modular furniture, had filed its return of income for the assessment year 2017-18 on 17/10/2017 declaring loss of Rs. 4,29,14,072/-. An intimation order under Section 143(1) of the IT Act was passed dated 25/05/2....

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.... to believe, has to be on the basis of information, which has subsequently been gathered or for that matter has to be in terms of Clause - c of Explanation -2 to then existing Section 147 of the IT Act. The reason for this, is obvious, that a reassessment cannot be permitted, merely on the basis of change of opinion as that would denude the entire action of accepting the assessment of any finality, only on the basis of change of the Assessing Officer. Thus, information and that too credible, which would permit the Assessing Officer to have reason to believe that the income chargeable to tax has escaped assessment is the very basis, for reopening of the assessment. 11. At the cost of repetition, in this context, it is necessary to note, that the loss claimed by the petitioner was already disclosed in its return filed for the assessment year 2017-18, as is indicated, from the intimation under Section 143 (1) of the IT Act, dated 25/05/2018, accepting the return (Item No. 18/pg. 128). It is also necessary to note, that in the order dated 19/12/2021 (pg. 161) itself, the respondents, have categorically stated that in the AIR transaction details it is found that the assessee/petition....