Friday 3 February 2023

Decoding of Section 145 - Analysis of Scope of Method of Accounting under Income Tax Act, 1961

Section 145 of the Income Tax Act, 1961 provides the method of accounting by the assessee. Section 145(1) provides that income chargeable under the head “Profits and gains of business or profession” or “Income from other sources” shall subject to the provisions of section 145(2), be computed in accordance with either cash or mercantile system of accounting regularly employed by the assessee.

Section 145(2) gives powers to the Central Government to notify in the Official Gazette from time to time income computation and disclosure standards to be followed by any class of assessees or in respect of any class of income.

Text of section 145

[1][145. Method of Accounting

(1) Income chargeable under the head “Profits and gains of business or profession” or “Income from other sources” shall, subject to sub-section (2), is computed in accordance with either cash or mercantile system of accounting regularly employed by the assessee.

(2) The Central Government may notify income in the Official Gazette from time to time [2][income computation and disclosure standards to be followed by any class of assessees or in respect of any class of income.

(3) Where the Assessing Officer is not satisfied about the correctness or completeness of the accounts of the assessee, or where the method of accounting provided in sub-section (1) [3][has not been regularly followed by the assessee, or income has not been computed in accordance with the standards notified under sub-section (2), the Assessing Officer may make an assessment in the manner provided in section 144.

KEY NOTE

1.   Substituted by the Finance Act, 1995, with effect from 01.04.1997.

2.   Substituted for “accounting standards” by the Finance (No. 2) Act, 2014, with effect from 01.04.2015.

3.   Substituted for the words “or accounting standards” as notified under sub-section (2), have not been regularly followed by the assessee” by the Finance (No. 2) Act, 2014, with effect from 01.04.2015.

 

What is Method of Accounting

To maintain a similar process of recording income, expenses, assets and liabilities of every business certain standards are designed, known as the methods of accounting.

Methods of Accounting Recognized

Income under head ‘Business or Profession’ and Income under head ‘Other Sources’ is to be calculated on basis of Cash or Mercantile basis of accounting regularly employed by the assessee. [Section 145(1)]

Prior to 01.04.1997:

Upto 31.03.1997, the Central Government has allowed to follow either the cash or mercantile or the hybrid systems.

After 01.04.1997:

Since the hybrid system does not reflect the correct income, the said section has been amended vide Finance Act 1995 with effect from 01.04.1997. Consequent to amendment brought vide Finance Act, 1995 with effect from 01.04.1997, section 145 recognizes only two methods of accounting to compute income chargeable under the head “Profit & Gains of Business or Profession or Income from other sources”. Accordingly, the amendment is applicable from the Assessment Year 1997-98 onwards.

As said above, upto 31.03.1997, the Central Government has allowed to follow either the cash or mercantile or the hybrid systems. Consequent to amendment brought vide Finance Act, 1995 with effect from 01.04.1997, section 145 recognizes only two methods of accounting to compute income chargeable under the head “Profit & Gains of Business or Profession or Income from other sources”.

Apex Court's Observation on recognized methods

The Hon'ble Supreme Court in CIT v. A. Krishna Swamy Mudaliar (1964) 53 ITR 122 observed that in some cases recognized systems, say cash as well as mercantile system may not give a clear picture of the true profits earned and certainly not of taxable profits.

The section enacts that for the purposes of section 28 (profits of business, profession or vocation) and section 56 (income from other sources), income, profits and gains must be computed in accordance with the method of accounting regularly employed by the assessee.

What are Books of Account?

According to P. Ramanatha Aiyar's Concise Law Dictionary, unbound sheets of paper in whatever quantity, though filled up with one continuous account are not books of account. The books of account signify a collection of sheets of paper bound together with the intention that such binding shall be permanent and the papers used shall be collectively in one volume.

According to section 2(12A) of the Income Tax Act, 1961, books or books of account, include ledgers, day-books, cash books, account-books and other books, whether kept in the written form or as printouts of data.

However, section 145 does not specify any set of accounts to be maintained by an assessee. Also, rule 6F of Income Tax Rules, 1962 prescribes certain set of books only for professionals and not for other assessees or businesses or traders.

 

Choice and Change in the Method of Accounting

v  An assessee may select Cash or Mercantile System of Accounting. The choice of method of accounting lies with the assessee but, he must show that, he has regularly followed the method of accounting chosen.

v  An assessee may change the method of accounting for bona fide and justifiable reasons and then the changed method should be followed consistently.

v  CBDT has notified Income Computation and Disclosure Standards (ICDS) vide Notification No. 32/2015, dated 31.03.2015 applicable from the Assessment Year 2016-17 which are to be followed for the computation of Profits and Gains of Business or Profession and Income from Other Sources and not for the purpose of maintenance of books of accounts of the assessee.

Section 145 is couched in mandatory terms and the department is bound to accept the assessee's choice of method regularly employed, except for the situation wherein the Assessing Officer is permitted to intervene in case it is found that the income, profits and gains cannot be arrived at by the method employed by the assessee. The position of law is further well settled that a regular method adopted by an assessee cannot be rejected merely because it gives benefit to an assessee in certain years. [CIT v. Advance Construction Co. (P) Ltd. (2005) 275 ITR 30 : 143 Taxman 61 (Guj)]

The assessee’s regular method cannot be rejected as being improper merely because it gives him benefit  in certain years.—[CIT v. K. Dodabasappa (1964) 54 ITR 221 (Mys)]

Assessee has the choice on method, but such method should be shown as regularly followed

The choice of the method of accounting lies with the assessee; but the assessee must show that he has followed the method regularly for his own purposes. - [CIT v. McMillan & Co. (1958) 33 ITR 182 (SC)]

Section 145(1) provides that Income under the head “Profits & Gains from Business & Profession” or Income from Other Sources shall be either cash or mercantile system of accounting to be regularly employed by the assessee paying taxes. However, some assessee follows the combined method of accounting. cash and mercantile method of accounting. This method is normally not allowed. They have to either use cash or mercantile method.

The method of accounting can affect the computation of income only under the heads of business or profession (Section 28) and income from other sources (Section 56). The provisions of this section do not apply to salaries (Section 15), income from house property (Section 22) and capital gains (Section 45). Although dividend income is taxable as income from other sources (Section 56(2)(i) by reason of the provisions of section 8, it is taxable as the income of the year in which it is declared, irrespective of the method of accounting employed by shareholder.

Section 145(1) :

S. No.

Heads of Income

System of Accounting

1.

Profits and gains of business or profession (PGBP)

It can be computed on the basis of either

“Cash or Mercantile” system of accounting at the option of the assessee.

2.

Income from other sources

3.

Salaries

Method of accounting plays no role.

These incomes are taxable as per specific rules applicable

4.

House Property

5.

Capital Gains

 

Section 145(2) deals with the provisions related to the accounting standards which are provided by Central Government from time to time in the official gazette. In this sub-section, the Central Government has been empowered to notify ICDS i.e. “Income Computation and Disclosure Standards” to be followed by the assessee. This is applicable only to those who are following mercantile system of accounting. Individuals and Hindu undivided households are excluded from getting their accounts credited under section 44AB. The notification of ICDS must be published in the Official Gazette from time to time.

The central government recently released the 10 new ICDS which will be applicable from 2017-2018 Assessment year. ICDS will not be applicable for maintenance of books of account but shall be relevant for computation of total income and disclosure of information in the return.

The 10 ICDS are as follows: -

ICDS    DEALS WITH

I           Disclosure of Accounting Policy

II          Valuation of Inventories

III        Construction Contracts

IV        Revenue Recognition

V         Tangible Fixed Assets

VI        Effects of changes in Foreign Exchange Rates

VII       Government Grants

VIII      Securities

IX        Borrowing Costs

X         Provisions, Contingent Liabilities & Contingent Assets

 

Section 145(3) - According to this clause, the following three circumstances Assessing Officer may (or may not) take up the case and complete the assessment in the manner provided in section 144 i.e. Best Judgement Assessment:

(i)     If assessing officer is not pleased with the completeness or correctness of the Books of Accounts and documents of the assessee;

(ii)    If assessee did not follow the correct accounting procedure on a daily basis;

(iii)  ICDS notified by Central Government under section 145(2) may have not been followed by the assessee for computation of income.

If there are any discrepancies in the books of accounts, the Assessing Officer has the power to reject it. These are as follows:

§  If the method of accounting is improperly followed.

§  If the accounts were not produced for authentication.

§  If no records are produced.

§  If the accounts were defective.

§  If stock register was not maintained.

If the assessing officer rejected the books of account because he was not satisfied with the accuracy of the accounts which were produced by the assessee, then the Assessing Officer must make the best decision possible, taking into account all of the factors set out in Section 145 of the Income Tax Act of 1961.

Only two systems of accounting recognised now

Sub-section (1) of section 145 now recognizes only these two - cash or merchantile - systems of accounting. Besides these two well known systems of accountancy, there are several variations prevalent in the business community keeping in view the nature of particular transaction and commercial expediency. Even the Supreme Court felt in CIT v. A. Krishnaswami Mudaliar (1964) 53 ITR 122 that in some cases these methods may not give a clear picture of the true profits earned and certainly not of taxable profits.

(1) Cash system

The cash system of accounting is that in which the receipts are accounted for as and when actually received and the debits are made when actual disbursement is made.

Broadly, the cash system of accounting is that in which the receipts are accounted for as and when actually received and the debits are made when actual disbursement is made.

Time of recording a transaction in books of accounts is when there is inflow or outflow of cash. In simple words, cash coming in is called as cash inflow and cash going out is called as cash outflow.

For example, Mr. “X” sells 100 fans for Rs. 1000 each to Mr. “Y” on 15.05.2022 and Mr. “Y” pays the amount at that very moment. Therefore, there is an inflow of Rs. 1,00,000 in the account of Mr. “X” and is recorded on the same day, i.e. the time when cash is received.

Benefits of Cash system

§  It is a simple method of accounting.

§  This method is not recognized by the Companies Act.

§  The income statement under this method depicts lower income

§  The matching concept is not applicable.

§  There are outflows and inflows of cash.

§  The degree of accuracy in the cash method is very low.

 

Cash system – Advance payment – Advance received from clients cannot be taxed as income in year of receipt itself

Allowing the appeal of the assessee the Tribunal held that : assessee-law firm, following cash system of accounting, received certain advance payments from its clients for making payment of fees to Senior Advocates to appear on behalf of them before High Courts and Supreme Court, since said amount was received by assessee in fiduciary capacity to discharge certain obligations while representing case of its clients before various courts, same could not be brought to tax as assessee's income in year of receipt itself. (Related Assessment year : 2010-11) - [Associated Law Advisers. v. ITO (2017) 167 ITD 695 (ITAT Delhi)]

Cash system may even cover cases where no proper accounts are kept

It was found that the assessee has not kept proper accounts. The Hon'ble Gauhati High Court held that it could not, therefore, be presumed that the assessee has followed mercantile system of accounting.—[N.R. Sirker v. CIT (1978) 111 ITR 281 (Gau.)]

The cash system will cover cases where accounts are not maintained on the mercantile basis. - [CIT v. Bijoy Kumar Das (1972) 84 ITR 351 (Orissa)]

Under the cash system, it is only actual cash receipts and actual cash payments that are recorded. - [Morvi Industries Ltd. v. CIT (1971) 82 ITR 835 (SC)]

It was held that where the accounts are kept on cash basis, receipt of money or money's worth and not the accrual of the right to receive, is the determining factor. It was held that if commercial assets are received by a trader maintaining accounts on cash basis in satisfaction of an obligation, income which is embedded in the value of assets is deemed to be received: the receipt of income is not deferred till the asset is realized in terms of cash or money. - [Raja Mohan Raja Bahadur v. CIT (1967) 66 ITR 378 (SC)]

The cash system of accounting does not necessarily mean that income is assessable only when it is reduced to cash; where payment is received in kind, it is income even though it remains in kind and is not converted into cash. The cash system of accounting does not require that it will not be treated as income so long as it is in kind.—[Seth Kishorilal Babu lal v. CIT (1963) 49 ITR 502 (All.)]

It was held that the fact that certain moneys were drawn in cash from  time to time did not necessarily lead to the inference that the accounts were kept on cash basis. - [CIT v. K.R.M.T.T. Thiagaraja Chetty & Co. (1953) 24 ITR 525 (SC)]

It was held that where a property is purchased in the Court sale, the profits will be deemed to have arisen on the date of confirmation of sale. - [Raja Raghunandan Prasad Singh v. CIT (1933) 1 ITR 113 (SC)]

(2) Mercantile System

In the mercantile method of accounting, transactions in the books of accounts are recorded at the time when the income or expenses accrue. It does not depend on whether cash is received or not.

For example , Mr. “A” sells 100 fans for Rs. 1000 each to Mr. “B” on 15.04.2018. Mr “B” will make the payment of these 100 fans on 15.07.2018. But, in the account of Mr. “A”, this transaction is recorded on 15.04.2018 itself despite cash inflow being later.

Benefits of Mercantile System

§  This is a complex method of accounting.

§  This method is recognized by the Companies Act.

§  The income statement under this method depicts higher income.

§  Matching Concept is applicable.

§  There is a concept of revenue earned and expenses incurred.

§  The degree of accuracy is high

All the assessees following the mercantile system of accounting are required to follow the Accounting Standards notified by the Central Government. The main features of these Accounting Standards are as under :—

(i)     Significant policies adopted in the preparation and presentation of financial statements shall be disclosed at one place and shall form part of the finanacial statements.

(ii)   Any change in the accounting policy affecting the financial effect on the current year and subsequent years or in subsequent year and the impact of the adjustments resulting therefrom, should be stated in the financial statement of the year in which such change takes place.

(iii)  Accounting policies adopted should represent a true and fair view of the state of affairs and the major consideration in this respect shall be :

(a) provision should be made for all known liabilities and losses, wherever necessary, on the basis of estimate in the light of available information;

(b) the accounting standard should be governed by substance and not merely by legal form; and

(c) the financial statements should disclose all material items which might influence the decision of the user.

(iv)   If any fundamental accounting assumptions relating to a going concern, consistency and accrual are not followed, the fact should be disclosed.

(v)   The prior period items should be separately disclosed in the profit and loss account with their nature and amount.

(vi)  Extraordinary items of the enterprise should be disclosed in the profit and loss account separately so that their effect on the operating results of the previous year can be perceived.

(vii) A change in accounting policy shall be made only if it is required by statute or it will result in more appropriate presumptions of financial statements.

(viii) Any change in accounting policy which has a material effect on the financial statements of the period in which such change occurs or if it has effect for the subsequent period, shall be disclosed, indicating its impact.

(ix) A change in an accounting estimate that has a material effect in the previous year or the subsequent year shall be disclosed.

(x)   If a question arises as to whether a change is a change in accounting policy or a change in accounting estimate, such a question shall be referred to the Board for decision.

The mercantile system cannot be used for provisional, contingent or notional payments. The mercantile system implies passing of entries on the date of transaction and that is the date on which rights accrue or liabilities are incurred irrespective of the date of payment. In the mercantile system, bad debts are allowable when they become irrecoverable.

Valuation of Closing Stock

 

S. No.

Situations

Valuation of Stock

1.

Stock existing in the business

Cost or market price, whichever is less

2.

Stock acquired by inheritance, gift or will

Market price on the last day of the previous year

3.

Capital asset converted into stock in trade

Market price of such conversion

4.

Stock withdrawn from business

Withdrawn at price at which it was recorded in books

5.

When a firm is dissolved, and

(a) business of firm is discontinued

(b) business of the firm is continued by the reconstituted firm

At market price same mode of valuation as regularly adopted by the firm

Difference between Cash Method of Accounting and Mercantile method of Accounting

 

S. No.

Cash Method of Accounting

Mercantile method of Accounting

(i)

It is a simple method of accounting

It is a complex method of accounting

(ii)

This method is not recognised as per the Companies Act

This method is recognised as per the Companies Act

(iii)

The income statement derived from this accounting method depicts lower income

The income statement derived from this accounting method depicts comparatively higher income

(iv)

No matching concept is applicable

Matching concept is applicable

(v)

Cash is received, Cash is paid

Revenue is earned, Expense is incurred

(vi)

The degree of accuracy is low

The degree of accuracy is comparatively high

Income Computation and Disclosure Standards (ICDS) [Section 145(2)]

For the mercantile system of accounting, the Central Government may prescribe certain standards for computation of income and its disclosure with respect to a class of income or assessees. Accordingly, the Central Government, vide Notification No. S.O. 3078(E), dated 29.09.2016 notified “Income Computation and Disclosure Standards” which apply to all kinds of assessees except Individuals and HUFs who are not required to get their accounts audited under the provisions of section 44AD of the Act. The said Notification will be applicable from the Assessment Year 2017-18 and subsequent assessment years.

ACCOUNTING STANDARDS NOTIFIED UNDER SECTION 145(2)

Standard

Description

ICDS-I

Accounting Policies

ICDS-II

Valuation of Inventory

ICDS-III

Construction Contracts

ICDS-IV

Revenue Recognition

ICDS-V

Tangible Fixed Assets

ICDS-VI

Effects of changes in foreign exchange rates

ICDS-VII

Government Grants

ICDS-VIII

Securities

ICDS-IX

Borrowing Costs

ICDS-X

Provisions, Contingent Liabilities and Contingent Assets

Constitutional Validity of ICDS

It was held that in order to preserve its constitutionality, section 145(2) of the Income Tax Act, 1961 has to be read down to restrict power of the Central Government to notify ICDS that does not seek to override binding judicial precedents or provisions of the Act. The power to enact a validation law is an essential legislative power that can be exercised, in the context of the Act, only by the Parliament and not by the executive. If section 145(2) of the Act as amended is not so read down it would be ultra vires, the Act and Article 141, read with Articles 144 and 265 of the Constitution. [Chamber of Tax Consultants v. Union of India (2017) 87 taxmann.com 92 (Del.)]

The ICDS is not meant to overrule the provisions of the Act, the Rules thereunder and the judicial precedents applicable thereto as they stand. The Hon’ble Delhi High Court, to certain extent has been struck, namely, ICDS-I, II, III, IV, VI, VII, VIII by stating that ultra vires to the Income Tax Act, 1961.

The Central Government may change the provisions related to the accounting standards in the Official Gazette from time to time. These accounting standards must be followed by all the assessees irrespective of the income slab he or she falls in.

Aim of notified standards – Transparency in financial statements

The accounting standards laid down in the notification are not materially different from the principles of the mercantile system of accounting except that these are aimed at making the financial statements more transparent and require certain vital information to be disclosed in the financial statements.

Assessees following the mercantile system of accounting are required to follow the Accounting Standards notified by the Central Government

All the assessees following the mercantile system of accounting are required to follow the Accounting Standards notified by the Central Government. The main features of these Accounting Standards are as under:—

(i)    Significant policies adopted in the preparation and presentation of financial statements shall be disclosed at one place and shall form part of the finanacial statements.

(ii) Any change in the accounting policy affecting the financial effect on the current year and subsequent years or in subsequent year and the impact of the adjustments resulting therefrom, should be stated in the financial statement of the year in which such change takes place.

(iii) Accounting policies adopted should represent a true and fair view of the state of affairs and the major consideration in this respect shall be : (a) provision should be made for all known liabilities and losses, wherever necessary, on the basis of estimate in the light of available information; (b) the accounting standard should be governed by substance and not merely by legal form; and (c) the financial statements should disclose all material items which might influence the decision of the user.

(iv) If any fundamental accounting assumptions relating to a going concern, consistency and accrual are not followed, the fact should be disclosed.

(v) The prior period items should be separately disclosed in the profit and loss account with their nature and amount.

(vi) Extraordinary items of the enterprise should be disclosed in the profit and loss account separately so that their effect on the operating results of the previous year can be perceived.

(vii) A change in accounting policy shall be made only if it is required by statute or it will result in more appropriate presumptions of financial statements.

(viii) Any change in accounting policy which has a material effect on the financial statements of the period in which such change occurs or if it has effect for the subsequent period, shall be disclosed, indicating its impact.

(ix) A change in an accounting estimate that has a material effect in the previous year or the subsequent year shall be disclosed.

(x) If a question arises as to whether a change is a change in accounting policy or a change in accounting estimate, such a question shall be referred to the Board for decision.

Accounting standard – Advance received in current year for service to be rendered in subsequent year – Income accrued in subsequent year

Accounting standard provides that income accrues only if the corresponding service has to be rendered during the same relevant year. In an event where amount received in advance for a service is to be performed in subsequent year, the advance could not be taken as income in the year of receipt. (Related Assessment year : 1992-98) - [CIT v. Dinesh Kumar Goel (2011) 331 ITR 10 : 239 CTR 46 : 197 Taxman 375 : 50 DTR 254 (Del.)]

 

CBDT’s clarifications on revised ICDS - Circular no. 10/2017 dated 24.03.2017

Background:

The Central Government had notified 10 Income Computation and Disclosure Standards (‘ICDS”) vide Notification No. 32 of 2015 dated 31.03.2015.

The notified ICDS were applicable to all assessees following mercantile system of accounting for computation of income chargeable under the head ‘profits and gains from business or profession’ and ‘income from other sources’ from Assessment year 2016-17 onwards

Subsequent to notification of the ICDS, owing to various implementation issues, a number of representations were received which were examined by an Expert Committee. In response to the same, the Committee recommended a two-fold approach for the smooth implementation of ICDS viz. amendment to the provisions of ICDS in respect of certain issues and issuance of clarifications by way of FAQs for the rest of issues.

Accordingly, the Ministry of Finance deferred the applicability of ICDS by one year (Press Release dated 06.07.2016) for considering the recommendations of Expert Committee and making suitable changes to tax audit forms. As such, the ICDS is now applicable from Assessment year 2017-18 onwards.

The CBDT, further, through its Notification no. 86/2016 rescinded the ICDS issued vide notification no. 32 /2015 on 29.09.2016 and issued revised ICDS (after making certain significant changes) vide Notification no. 87/2016, also making suitable changes to tax audit forms vide Notification no. 88/2016.

In furtherance to the revised ICDS notified, on the recommendations of the expert committee, CBDT issued certain clarifications vide circular no. 10/2017 dated 23.03.2017.

 

Section 145 of the Income-tax Act, 1961 - system of accounting - method of accounting - Clarifications on Income Computation and Disclosure Standards (ICDS) Notified under section 145(2) of said Act

Circular No. 10/2017 [F. NO.133/23/2016-TPL], Dated 23.03.2017

Sub-section (1) of section 145 of the Income-tax Act, 1961 ('the Act') provides that the income chargeable under the head "Profits and gains of business or profession" or "Income from other sources" shall, subject to the provisions of sub-section (2), be computed in accordance with either cash or mercantile system of accounting regularly employed by the assessee. Sub-section (2) of section 145 provides that the Central Government may notify Income Computation and Disclosure Standards (ICDS) for any class of assessees or for any class of income. Accordingly, the Central Government notified 10 ICDS vide Notification No. S.O.892(E) dated 31st March, 2015 with effect from assessment year 2016-17.

After notification of ICDS, it has been brought to the notice of the Central Board of Direct Taxes ('the Board') by the stakeholders that certain provisions of ICDS may require amendment/clarification for proper implementation. The matter was referred to an expert committee. The Committee after duly consulting the stakeholders in this regard has recommended a two-fold approach for the smooth implementation of ICDS i.e. amendment to the provisions of ICDS in respect of certain issues and issuance of clarifications by way of FAQs for the rest of issues. Accordingly, vide Notification no. 87 dated 29th September, 2016 Central Government notified amended ICDS with effect from the assessment year 2017-18.

Further, the issues which require further clarification has been considered by Board and following clarifications are issued:

Question 1 : Preamble of ICDS-I states that this ICDS is applicable for computation of income chargeable under the head “Profits and gains of business or profession” or “Income from other sources” and not for the purposes of maintenance of books of account. However, Para 1 of ICDS-I states that it deals with significant accounting policies. Accounting policies are applied for maintenance of books of account and preparing financial statements. What is the interplay between ICDS-I and maintenance of books of account?

Answer : As stated in the Preamble, ICDS is not meant for maintenance of books of account or preparing financial statements. Persons are required to maintain books of account and prepare financial statements as per accounting policies applicable to them. For example, companies are required to maintain books of account and prepare financial statements as per requirements of Companies Act, 2013. The accounting policies mentioned in ICDS-I being fundamental in nature shall be applicable for computing income under the heads “Profits and gains of business or profession” or “Income from other sources”.

Question 2 : Certain ICDS provisions are inconsistent with judicial precedents. Whether these judicial precedents would prevail over ICDS?

The ICDS have been notified after due deliberation and after examining judicial views for bringing certainty on the issues covered by it. Certain judicial pronouncements were pronounced in the absence of authoritative guidance on these issues under the Act for computing Income under the head “Profits and gains of business or profession” or Income from other sources. Since certainty is now provided by notifying ICDS under section 145(2), the provisions of ICDS shall be applicable to the transactional issues dealt therein in relation to assessment year 2017-18 and subsequent assessment years.

Question 3 : Does ICDS apply to non-corporate taxpayers who are not required to maintain books of account and/or those who are covered by presumptive scheme of taxation like sections 44AD, 44AE, 44ADA, 44B, 44BB, 44BBA, etc. of the Act?

Answer : ICDS is applicable to specified persons having income chargeable under the head ‘Profits and gains of business or profession’ or ‘Income from other sources’. Therefore, the relevant provisions of ICDS shall also apply to the persons computing income under the relevant presumptive taxation scheme. For example, for computing presumptive income of a partnership firm under section 44AD of the Act, the provisions of ICDS on Construction Contract or Revenue recognition shall apply for determining the receipts or turnover, as the case may be.

Question 4 : If there is conflict between ICDS and other specific provisions of the Income-tax rules, 1962 ('the Rules') governing taxation of income like rules 9A, 9B etc. of the Rules, which provisions shall prevail?

Answer : ICDS provides general principles for computation of income. In case of conflict, if any, between the provisions of Rules and ICDS, the provisions of Rules, which deal with specific circumstances, shall prevail.

Question 5 : ICDS is framed on the basis of accounting standards notified by Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA) vide Notification No. GSR 739(E) dated 7 December, 2006 under section 211(3C), of erstwhile Companies Act, 1956. However, MCA has notified in February, 2015 a new set of standards called 'Indian Accounting Standards' (Ind-AS). How will ICDS apply to companies which adopted Ind-AS?

Answer : ICDS shall apply for computation of taxable income under the head " Profit and gains of business or profession" or "Income from other sources" under the Income-tax Act. This is irrespective of the accounting standards adopted by companies i.e. either Accounting Standards or Ind-AS.

Question 6 : Whether ICDS shall apply to computation of Minimum Alternate Tax (MAT) under section 115JB of the Act or Alternate Minimum Tax (AMT) under section 115JC of the Act?

Answer : MAT under section 115JB of the Act is computed on ‘book profit’ that is net profit as shown in the Profit and Loss Account prepared under the Companies Act subject to certain specified adjustments. Since, the provisions of ICDS are applicable for computation of income under the regular provisions of the Act, the provisions of ICDS shall not apply for computation of MAT.

AMT under section 115JC of the Act is computed on adjusted total income which is derived by making specified adjustments to total income computed as per the regular provisions of the Act. Hence, the provisions of ICDS shall apply for computation of AMT.

Question 7 : Whether the provisions of ICDS shall apply to Banks, Non-banking financial institutions, Insurance companies, Power sector, etc.?

Answer : The general provisions of ICDS shall apply to all persons unless there are sector specific provisions contained in the ICDS or the Act. For example, ICDS VIII contains specific provisions for banks and certain financial institutions and Schedule I of the Act contains specific provisions for Insurance business.

Question 8 : Para 4(H) of ICDS-I provides that Market to Market ( MTM) loss or an expected loss shall not be recognized unless the recognition is in accordance with the provisions of any other ICDS. Whether similar consideration applies to recognition of MTM gain or expected incomes?

Answer : Same principle as contained in ICDS-I relating to MTM losses or an expected loss shall apply mutatis mutandis to MTM gains or an expected profit.

Question 9 : ICDS-I provides that an accounting policy shall not be changed without 'reasonable cause'. The term 'reasonable cause' is not defined. What shall constitute 'reasonable cause'?

Answer : Under the Act, ‘reasonable cause’ is an existing concept and has evolved well over a period of time conferring desired flexibility to the tax-payer in deserving cases.

Question 10 : Which ICDS would govern derivative instruments?

Answer : ICDS -VI (subject to para 3 of ICDS-VIII) provides guidance on accounting for derivative contracts such as forward contracts and other similar contracts. For derivatives, not within the scope of ICDS-VI, provisions of ICDS-I would apply.

Question 11 : Whether the recognition of retention money, receipt of which is contingent on the satisfaction of certain performance criterion is to be recognized as revenue on billing?

Answer : Retention money, being part of overall contract revenue, shall be recognised as revenue subject to reasonable certainty of its ultimate collection condition contained in para 9 of ICDS-III on Construction contracts.

Question 12 : Since there is no specific scope exclusion for real estate developers and Build -Operate- Transfer (BOT) projects from ICDS-IV on Revenue Recognition, please clarify whether ICDS-III and ICDS-IV should be applied by real estate developers and BOT operators. Also, whether ICDS is applicable for leases.

Answer : At present there is no specific ICDS notified for real estate developers, BOT projects and leases. Therefore, relevant provisions of the Act and ICDS shall apply to these transactions as may be applicable.

Question 13 : The condition of reasonable certainty of ultimate collection is not laid down for taxation of interest, royalty and dividend. Whether the taxpayer is obliged to account for such income even when the collection thereof is uncertain?

Answer : As a principle, interest accrues on time basis and royalty accrues on the basis of contractual terms. Subsequent non-recovery in either cases can be claimed as deduction in view of amendment to Section 36 (1) (vii). Further, the provision of the Act (e.g. Section 43D) shall prevail over the provisions of ICDS.

Question 14 : Whether ICDS is applicable to revenues which are liable to tax on gross basis like interest, royalty and fees for technical services for non-residents under section 115A of the Act.

Answer : Yes, the provisions of ICDS shall also apply for computation of these incomes on gross basis for arriving at the amount chargeable to tax.

Question 15 : Para 8 of ICDS-V states expenditure incurred on commissioning of project, including expenditure incurred on test runs and experimental production shall be capitalized. It also states that expenditure incurred after the plant has begun commercial production i.e., production intended for sale or captive consumption shall be treated as revenue expenditure. What shall be the treatment of expense incurred after the conduct of test runs and experimental production but before commencement of commercial production?

Answer : As clarified in Para 8 of ICDS-V, the expenditure incurred till the plant has begun commercial production, that is, production intended for sale or captive consumption, shall be treated as capital expenditure.

Question 16 : What is the taxability of opening balance as on 1st day of April, 2016 of Foreign Currency Translation Reserve (FCTR) relating to non-integral foreign operation, if any, recognised as per Accounting Standards (AS) 11?

Answer : FCTR balance as on 1 April 2016 pertaining to exchange differences on monetary items for non-integral operations, shall be recognised in the previous year relevant for assessment year 2017-18 to the extent not recognised in the income computation in the past.

Question 17 : For subsidy received prior to 1st day of April 2016 but not recognised in the books pending satisfaction of related conditions and achieving reasonable certainty of receipt, how shall the same be recognised under ICDS on or after 1st day of April 2016?

Answer : Para 4 of ICDS-VII read with Para 5 to Para 9 of ICDS-VII provides for timing of recognition of government grant. The transitional provision in Para 13 of ICDS-VII provides that a government grant which meets the recognition criteria on or after 1st day of April, 2016 shall be recognised in accordance with ICDS-VII. All government grants actually received prior to 1st day of April 2016 shall be deemed to have been recognised on its receipt in accordance with Para 4(2) of ICDS-VII and accordingly will be outside the transitional provision and therefore the government grants received on or after 1st day of April, 2016 and for which recognition criteria provided in Para 5 to Para 9 of ICDS-VII is also satisfied thereafter, the same shall be recognised as per the provisions of ICDS-VII. The grants received prior to 1st day of April, 2016 shall continue to be recognised as per the law prevailing prior to that date.

For example, if out of total subsidy entitlement of 10 Crore an amount of 6 Crore is recognised in the books of account till 31st day of March, 2016 and recognition of balance 4 Crore is deferred pending satisfaction of related conditions and/or achieving reasonable certainty of receipt. The balance amount of 4 Crore will be taxed in the year in which related conditions are met and reasonable certainty is received. If these conditions are met over two years, the amount of 4 Crore shall be taxed over the period of two years. The amount of 6 Crore for which recognition criteria were met prior to 1st day of April, 2016 shall not be taxable post 1st day of April, 2016.

But if the subsidy is already received prior to 1st day of April, 2016, Para 13 of ICDS-VII shall not apply even if some of the related conditions are met on or after 1 April, 2016. This is in view of Para 4(2) of ICDS-VII which provides that Government grant shall not be postponed beyond the date of actual receipt. Such grants shall continue to be governed by the provisions of law applicable prior to 1st day of April, 2016.

Question 18 : If the taxpayer sells a security on the 30th day of April, 2017. The interest payment dates are December and June. The actual date of receipt of interest is on the 30th day of June, 2017 but the interest on accrual basis has been accounted as income on the 31st day of March, 2017. Whether the taxpayer shall be permitted to claim deduction of such interest i.e. offered to tax but not received while computing the capital gain?

Answer : Yes, the amount already taxed as interest income on accrual basis shall be taken into account for computation of income arising from such sale.

Question 19 : Para 9 of ICDS-VIII on securities requires securities held as stock-in-trade shall be valued at actual cost initially recognised or net realisable value (NRV) at the end of that previous year, whichever is lower. Para 10 of Part-A of ICDS-VIII requires the said exercise to be carried out category wise. How the same shall be computed?

Answer : For subsequent measurement of securities held as stock-in-trade, the securities are first aggregated category wise. The aggregate cost and NRV of each category of security are compared and the lower of the two is to be taken as carrying value as per ICDS-VIII. This is illustrated below -

Security

Category

Cost

NRV

Lower of cost or NRV

ICDS Value

 

A

Share

100

75

75

 

B

Share

120

150

120

 

C

Share

140

120

120

 

D

Share

200

190

190

 

 

Total

560

535

555

535

 

 

 

 

 

 

E

Debt Security

150

160

150

 

F

Debt Security

105

90

90

 

G

Debt Security

125

135

125

 

H

Debt Security

220

230

220

 

 

Total

600

615

585

600

Securities Total

1160

1150

1090

1135

Question 20 : There arc specific provisions in the Act read with Rules under which a portion of borrowing cost may get disallowed under sections like 14A, 43B, 40(a)(1), 40(a)(ia), 40A(2)(b), etc of the Act. Whether borrowing costs to be capitalized under ICDS-IX should exclude portion of borrowing costs which gets disallowed under such specific provisions?

Answer : Since specific provisions of the Act override the provisions of ICDS, it is clarified that borrowing costs to be considered for capitalization under ICDS-IX shall exclude those borrowing costs which are disallowed under specific provisions of the Act. Capitalization of borrowing cost shall apply for that portion of the borrowing cost which is otherwise allowable as deduction under the Act.

Question 21 : Whether bill discounting charges and other similar charges would fall under the definition of borrowing cost?

Answer : The definition of borrowing cost is an inclusive definition. Bill discounting charges and other similar charges are covered as borrowing cost.

Question 22 : How to allocate borrowing costs relating to general borrowing as computed in accordance with formula provided under Para 6 of ICDS-IX to different qualifying assets?

Answer : The capitalization of general borrowing cost under ICDS-IX shall be done on asset-by-asset basis.

Question 23 : What is the impact of Para 20 of ICDS-X containing transitional provisions?

Answer : Para 20 of ICDS X provides that all the provisions or assets and related income shall be recognised for the previous year commencing on or after 1st day of April, 2016 in accordance with the provisions of this standard after taking into account the amount recognised, if any, for the same for any previous year ending on or before 31st day of March, 2016.

The intent of transitional provision is that there is neither 'double taxation' of income due to application of ICDS nor there should be escape of any income due to application of ICDS from a particular date. This is explained as under -

Provision required as per ICDS on 31 March 2017 for items brought forward from 31st day of March 2016 ... (A)

INR 3 Crores

 

Provisions as per ICDS for FY 2016-17 ... (B)

INR 5 Crores

 

Total gross provision .. .(C) = (A) + (B)

INR 8 Crores

 

Less: Provision already recognised for computation of taxable income in F Y 2016-17or earlier... (D)

INR 2 Crores

Net provisions as per ICDS in FY 2016-17 to be recognised as per transition provision... (E) = (C) -(D)

INR 6 Crores

 

 

Question 24: Expenditure on most post-retirement benefits like provident fund, gratuity, etc. are covered by specific provisions. There are other post-retirement benefits offered by companies like medical benefits. Such benefits are covered by AS-15 for which no parallel ICDS has been notified. Whether provision for these liabilities are excluded from scope of ICDS X?

Answer : It is clarified that provisioning for employee benefit which are otherwise covered by AS 15 shall continue to be governed by specific provisions of the Act and are not dealt with by ICDS-X.

Question 25 : ICDS-I requires disclosure of significant accounting policies and other ICDS requires specific disclosures. Where is the taxpayer required to make such disclosures specified in ICDS?

Answer : Net effect on the income due to application of ICDS is to be disclosed in the Return of income. The disclosures required under ICDS shall be made in the tax audit report in Form 3CD. However, there shall not be any separate disclosure requirements for persons who are not liable to tax audit.

Rejection of Books of Accounts [Section 145(3)]

Section 145 of the Income Tax Act, 1961, lays down that income chargeable under the head “Profit and gains of business or profession” or “Income from other sources” shall, subject to the accounting standards notified by the Central Government in the Official Gazette, be computed in accordance with either cash or mercantile system of accounting regularly employed by the assessee. Sub-section (3) of section 145 lays down that where the Assessing Officer is not satisfied about the correctness or completeness of the accounts of the assessee, or where the method of accounting namely cash or mercantile systems or accounting standards as notified by the Central Government, have not been regularly followed by the assessee, the Assessing Officer may make an assessment in the manner provided in section 144 of the Act.

Relevant Legal Provisions

Detection of deficiencies in accounts is primarily work of investigation. The Assessing Officer needs to make proper inquiries in respect of the business dealings of the assessee to find out the correctness of data supplied by the assessee. Once deficiencies are noted in respect of such data and the assessee is not able to explain them satisfactorily, legal provisions are available for rejection of books in such cases. These provisions are contained in sections 144 and 145 of the Income Tax Act.

Assessing Officer may proceed under Section 145(3) under any of the following circumstances

(a) Where the Assessing Officer is not satisfied about the correctness or completeness of the accounts of the assessee; or

(b) Where method of accounting provided in (cash or mercantile) has not been regularly followed by the assessee; or

(c) Where Accounting Standards as notified by the Central Government have not been regularly followed by the assessee.  In other words, income has not been computed by the standards notified

Ø  the Assessing Officer may make an assessment in the manner provided in section 144. Section 144 provides for best judgment method of assessment by Assessing Officer. Thus it is clear that before the Assessing Officer goes for best judgment he is to reject the books of accounts maintained by the assessee.

Assessing Officer’s Power to Reject Accounts

It is the duty of the Assessing Officer to consider whether or not the books disclose the true state of accounts and the correct income can be deduced therefrom. The officer is not bound to accept the system of accounting regularly employed by the assessee, the correctness of which had not been questioned in the past. There is no estoppel in these matters, and the officer is not bound by the method followed in the earlier years.

But it is also pertinent here to mention that the Assessing Officer must refer to the inherent defect in the system followed by the assessee, demonstrate that the defect has led to clear mis-statement of its income and record a clear finding that the system of accounting followed by the assessee is such that correct profits cannot be deduced from the books of account maintained by the assessee.

In this regard, a factual finding by the Assessing Officer that part of the receipts or expenses have either not been accounted or wrongly accounted in the books would constitute a clear evidence of such nature.

If the Assessing Officer is not satisfied with the book result i.e. gross profit shown by the assessee, he may reject the books under section 145(3) and estimate gross profit ratio. But before doing that he has to give a clear finding that there are defects in books of accounts and hence books of accounts are not acceptable. Such instances may be:

(a)   Purchase, sales, direct expenses, valuation of stock etc. shown in the books are not correct.

(b) Accounts written are not full and complete and do not reflect the actual receipts on sales.

(c) Actual quantity of finished product produced by the assessee appear to be more than what it has shown in the accounts books.

(d) The assessee had made any sale of finished product which has not been reflected in the accounts books.

(e) The finished product has been sold by the assessee at a price higher than what is declared in the accounts books.

(f) Assessee is not maintaining any stock register and adopting closing stock without any supporting documents to enable verification.

(g) The Central Government had notified a particular accounting standards for a specific trade to be followed by the assessee and the assessee has not followed it.

(h) The rate of Gross Profit declared by the assessee is low as compared to other assessees in the same line of business or with reference to assessee's margins in earlier years.

The Assessing Officer can reject the books of accounts concerning the following discrepancies:—

(a) Improper Accounting Method

(b) No production of accounts for verification

(c) Failure to produce records

(d) Defective accounts

(e) Non-maintenance of stock register

After rejecting the books of accounts due dissatisfaction with the correctness of the accounts produced by the assessee, the Assessing Officer must pass the best judgement which is complying all the considerations of section 145 of the Income Tax Act, 1961.

A clear finding is necessary before invoking the Section 145(3) of the Act

Hon'ble Supreme Court and the various High Courts in number of cases have held that before invoking the provisions of section 145(3) of the Act [earlier section 145(1) and 145(2)]. The Assessing Officer has to bring on record material on the basis of which he has arrived at the conclusion with regard to correctness or completeness of the accounts of the assessee or the method of accounting employed by it.

Non-maintenance of stock register would amount to defect in accounts

A number of High Courts have held that the keeping of stock register is of great importance because it is a means of verifying the assessee's accounts by having a quantitative tally. In any case, after taking into account the absence of a stock registered coupled with other materials, it is felt that correct profits and gains cannot be deducted from the accounts, resort to the provisions of section 145(3) can be taken.

However, non-maintenance of stock register on day-to-day basis by itself should not lead to inference that it is not possible to deduce the true income of the assessee from the accounts maintained by assessee, nor can the accounts be said to be defective or incomplete for this reason alone. If the assessee is dealing in such items where maintenance of stock register is not possible i.e. keeping in mind the quantity, size, varieties, processes involved in production etc. it cannot be treated as defect for application of section 145(3) of the Act.

“Followed consistently”

It was held that the accounting method followed by an assessee continuously for a given period of time has to be presumed to be correct till the Assessing Officer comes to know the reasons to be given that system does not reflect correct picture and true profits. - [Woodward Governor India (P) Ltd. (2009) 312 ITR 254 : 179 Taxman 326 (SC)]

Books of account cannot be rejected while the assessee is following consistently one method

It was held that the Assessing Officer rejected the books of account of the assessee rejecting the contention of the assessee that they had been consistently following the Project Completion method i.e., the method of booking of the revenue on completion of the flat when full payment has been made to it by the persons concerned and possession was delivered to him. The Commissioner (Appeals) accepted the plea of the assessee and set aside the order of the Assessing Officer. The Tribunal confirmed the same. The High Court held that the assessee had been consistently following one of the recognized methods of accounting i.e., Project Completion method. In the absence of any prohibition or restriction under the Act for doing so, it could not be held that the approach of the Commissioner (Appeals) and the Tribunal was erroneously or illegal. -  [CIT v. Principal Officer, Hill View Infrastructure (P) Ltd. (2015) 10 TMI 2059 (P&H)]

Non-production of accounts for verification

The rejection of books of accounts is justified under section 145 and the Best Judgment assessment under section 144 where the assessee had not produced relevant records.

Power to be exercised judicially

When the Assessing Officer does not accept the assessee’s method of accounting then he has to resort to the provisions of section 145 to 145(2) [now 145(3)] for computation of income by adopting such other basis as determined by him. The power to reject the books of accounts by the Assessing Officer is to be exercised judicially. The Assessing Officer is to bring on record material on the basis of which he has arrived at the conclusion with regard to correctness or completeness of the accounts of the assessee or the method of accounting employed by it.

It was held that the Assessing Officer’s powers under the section are not arbitrary and he must exercise his discretion and judgment judicially. - [Karnataka State Forest Industries Corporation Ltd. v. CIT (1993) 201 ITR 674 (Karn.)]

Opportunity to the assessee

The Assessing Officer has to give an opportunity to the assessee to contradict the materials upon which the Assessing Officer wants to reject the books of accounts.

No presumption

The Assessing Officer should not presume any material as valid for rejecting the books of account. He must scrutinise it in every aspect and then reject it.

Defective accounts

The Assessing Officer is having power to examine the books of accounts submitted by the assessee and also other supporting materials. If the account is found defective, then the Assessing Officer may reject the books of account and initiate action according to the provisions of the Act.

Justification for rejection

In rejecting the books of accounts of the assessee there shall be justification for the same.

Power of the Assessing Officer to estimate profits

Comparison of gross and net margin shown by an assessee is a normal exercise during the course of assessment proceedings. While lower gross profit shown by the assessee as compared to the preceding years is a matter for investigation, mere existence of low margin cannot be a ground for addition. While the initial burden is on the assessee to justify the margin shown by it in its books of account, once the Assessing Officer rejects the contention of the assessee, burden is on him to justify his rejection of the assessee's margins and basis for estimation of a new gross margin.

Once the books of account of the assessee are rejected, profit has to be estimated by proper material available and nevertheless he is not entitled to make a pure guess and make an assessment concerning any evidence or any material at all.

The primary requirement before the Assessing Officer arrives at the stage of estimation of profits, is to demonstrate the unreliability of the books and consequently, the profit margin shown by the assessee. If the books are found to be correct and no flaw has been detected, it would be incorrect on the part of the Officer to reject the margin computed on the basis of such accounts. The flaw in the accounts drawn by the assessee can be for a variety of reasons - detection of non-recording of sales, booking of fictitious purchases, booking of fictitious expenses, evidence of inflation in expenses, adoption of wrong method of accounting to reduce taxable profits etc. These deficiencies, coupled with a low gross margin shown by the assessee provide the perfect platform for rejection of the books maintained by the assessee and estimate a reasonable profit margin based on margins of similar other assessees.

Comparing gross profit of earlier years

If there is a heavy loss suddenly in the business of the assessee, it is his duty to explain the fall, if so happens and to substantiate the reasons. Even if, thereafter, the Assessing Officer considers the material placed before him by the assessee to be unreliable keeping in view the comparative statement of accounts of the earlier years, he cannot proceed to changes in the accounts purely due to guessing work. He can do only if he relates to some evidence or material on the records.

If the profit shown by the assessee in his return is not accepted, it is for the taxing authorities to prove that the assessee made more profits. The rejection of books of accounts under section 145(3) cannot be sustained merely on the fact that the gross profit of the assessee is low during the relevant period as compared to the book results of other years. Similarly, the system of accounting adopted by the assessee cannot be rejected merely on the ground that the gross profits disclosed by his books were low as compared with those of others in the same line of business.

Estimate of turnover

The estimate of turnover and fixation of gross profit rate are two import parameters which affect the assessment. If these are fixed or calculated in such a way that they adversely affect the assessee's case, then he is entitled to know the basis and to be given an opportunity to rebut the same.

 

Low gross profit, whether book results can be rejected

In the business of definite finding that the case falls within the ambit of section 145(3), the rejection of books of accounts cannot be sustained merely on the fact that the gross profit of the assessee is low during the relevant period as compared to book results of other years. Similarly, the system of accounting adopted by the assessee cannot be rejected merely on the ground that the gross profits disclosed by his books were low as compared unfavourably with those of others in the same line of business

Peak credit

No reliance can be placed on rejected account books for working out Peak credit. An assessee's business income is estimated after rejecting the books of account produced by the assessee; it is not reasonable on the part of the Income Tax Officer to work out the Peak credit on the basis of such books of accounts.

No reliance can be placed on rejected account books for working out Peak credit

It was held that where assessee's business income is estimated after rejecting the account books produced by the assessee, it is not reasonable on the part of the ITO to work out the Peak credit on the basis of such accounted books. - [CIT v. KMN Naidu (1996) 221 ITR 451 (Mad.)]

Reference to Valuation Officer

The Assessing Officer may, for the purposes of assessment or reassessment, make a reference to a Valuation Officer to estimate the value, including fair market value, of any asset, property or investment and submit a copy of the report to him only after rejecting the books of accounts.

Section 142A(1) of the Act provides that the Assessing Officer may, for the purposes of assessment or reassessment, make a reference to a Valuation Officer to estimate the value, including fair market value, of any asset, property or investment and submit a copy of report to him.

Mandatory Rejection of Books of Accounts under Section 145(3) Before Reference Under Section 142A to D.V.O.

Section 142A was inserted by the Finance (No. 2) Act, 2004 with retrospective effect from 15.11.1972, to confer power on the Assessing Officer to refer the matter to the Valuation Officer, which earlier had not been conferred. Earlier, there was a provision being section 55A to ascertain the fair market value of a capital asset for the purposes of Chapter IV of the Income Tax Act. The Supreme Court after considering the scope and ambit of section 55A in the case of Smt. Amiya Bala Paul v. CIT (2003) 263 ITR 407 held that it would not apply to proceedings under section 69B. Apparently, section 142A has been introduced to overcome such situations.

Assessee produced complete books of account and no sales were found outside books of account and, in subsequent assessment years, Assessing Officer had passed order in respect of same business activities of assessee, which gave rise to net profit of 2.53 per cent and 2.99 per cent, additions to income of assessee as per trading account prepared by Assessing Officer at gross profit rate of 51.8 per cent was not justified

Assessee was receiving goods throughout year from different warehouses, through bills or challans.  Lump-sum payments were made to different suppliers throughout year. All records, i.e., books of account, sales and purchase vouchers had been fully produced by assessee. Assessee had declared net profit rate of 1.16 per cent - However, as per trading account prepared by Assessing Officer, gross profit rate came to 51.8 per cent and accordingly, it made additions to income of assessee. On appeal, Commissioner (Appeals), partly allowed appeal filed by assessee. On further appeal, Tribunal dismissed appeal filed by revenue - It was found that Assessing Officer prepared month wise trading account and found negative stock in books of account of assessee. Although, Assessing Officer had not found any unrecorded purchases, but had, in his own way, prepared trading account for enhancing gross profit. No sales were found outside books of account - In subsequent assessment years, Assessing Officer had passed order under section 143(3) in respect of same business activities of assessee, which gave rise to net profit of 2.53 per cent and 2.99 per cent. Therefore, Tribunal had righty dismissed appeal filed by revenue. [In favour of assessee] (Related Assessment year : 2009-10) – [PCIT v. Smart Value Products and Services Ltd. (2022) 448 ITR 145 138 taxmann.com 508 (HP)]

SLP dismissed against High Court ruling that where assessee-contractor, undertaking construction work for a project in Iraq, had entered into a supplementary agreement with contractor for deferred payment of contract dues in view of war prevailing between Iraq and Iran, departure from mercantile method to completed contract method of accounting for said contract was justified in contemporary period

Method of accounting - Change of (Completed contract method) - Assessee-sub-contractor, engaged in business of construction, had undertaken a project in Iraq as sub-contractor of a company, namely IRCON, and claimed to have completed a portion of construction work but had not received full consideration. During year, he entered into a supplementary agreement with IRCON for deferred payment of contract dues in view of war conditions between Iraq and Iran and resorted to completed contract accounting method. Assessing Officer was of view that departure from mercantile system of accounting to completed contract method would not reflect a fair and reasonable picture of profit earned from year to year and, therefore, added difference between amount of certified bills and expense to assessee’s total income.  High Court by impugned order held that assessee was justified in resorting to completed contract system for contract work under execution in Iraq in contemporary period and consequently, bills certified as relating to work completed could not be recognized as receipts and brought to tax for assessment year under consideration. SLP filed by revenue against impugned High Court order was to be dismissed. [In favour of assessee] (Related Assessment year : 1986-87) – [CIT v. Bhageeratha Engineering Ltd. (2022) 289 Taxman 10 : 142 taxmann.com 156 (SC)]

SLP dismissed against High Court ruling that since production of oil recorded by assessee in its books of account was completely inconsistent with pattern of power consumed, Tribunal was justified in rejecting said books of account

Rejection of accounts (Power consumption) - Books of account of assessee who was engaged in oil extraction from different oil seeds were rejected by Tribunal for reason that average production from use of power consumption widely fluctuated from month to month and was completely inconsistent with pattern of power consumed. High Court dismissed appeal preferred by assessee against said decision by observing that no substantial question of law arose as questions proposed were factual. Since appeal was dismissed by High Court by a reasoned order, there was no reason to interfere with same, and, thus, Special Leave Petition against said decision was to be dismissed. [In favour of revenue] (Related Assessment year : 2005-06) - [Rajmoti Industries v. Joint Commissioner of Income-tax (2022) 286 Taxman 635 : 138 taxmann.com 200 (SC)]

Assessee was engaged in business of construction and development of property and it had been following project completion method which had been accepted by department in assessment year 2014-15, principle of consistency should be followed; Assessing Officer was not justified in adopting percentage completion method for Assessment year 2015-16

Assessee was engaged in business of development of property. It had been following project completion method which had been accepted by department in assessment year 2014-15. Assessing Officer while completing assessment for assessment year 2015-16 held that assessee was a mere contractor and it ought to have adopted percentage completion method as per AS-7. Commissioner (Appeals) taking note of factual position that assessee had been consistently following project completion method which had been accepted by department reversed order passed by Assessing Officer. Tribunal following principle of consistency dismissed appeal filed by revenue. It was noted that AS-7 also recognized position that in case of construction contracts, assessee could follow either project completion method or percentage completion method. There was no error in order passed by Tribunal nor any substantial question of law arose for consideration. [In favour of assessee] (Related Assessment year : 2015-16) – [PCIT v. Salarpuria Simplex Dwelling LLP (2022) 289 Taxman 264 : 143 taxmann.com 35 (Cal.)]

Assessee, engaged in business of trading and manufacturing of diamonds, made purchases from certain tainted dealers, in view of report of Task Force for Diamond Sector constituted by Ministry of Commerce and Industry, profit element embedded in value of disputed purchases for diamond manufacturers was to be estimated in range of 1.5 per cent to 4.5 per cent

Unexplained expenditure (Bogus purchases) - Assessee was engaged in business of trading and manufacturing of diamonds. Assessee made purchases from certain tainted dealers. Assessing Officer concluded that assessee made purchases from grey market to save indirect taxes and, thus, incidental profit element which was embedded in value of said purchases was to be brought to tax. He, thus, estimated profit element embedded in value of disputed purchases at 5 per cent. Commissioner (Appeals) reduced same to 3 per cent. It was noted that report of Task Force for Diamond Sector constituted by Ministry of Commerce and Industry recommended that net profit prevailing in diamond industry engaged in business of trading would be in range of 1 per cent to 3 per cent and those engaged in business of manufacturing would be in range of 1.5 per cent to 4.5 per cent. Since Tribunal had consistently taken stand by estimating profit element on basis of reliance placed on report of Task Force, Commissioner (Appeals) was duly justified in estimating profit percentage of 3 per cent. [In favour of revenue] (Related Assessment years : 2010-11, 2011-12 and 2013-14) – [Oopal Diamond v. ACIT (2022) 197 ITD 827 : 144 taxmann.com 184 (ITAT Mumbai)]

Tribunal and Commissioner (Appeals) had returned concurrent findings of fact and deleted addition made by Assessing Officer on account of difference in receipts shown in financial statements of assessee and credit entries appearing in bank account of assessee and no material had been placed by revenue on record to contradict aforesaid concurrent finding of facts, same could not be interfered with

Rejection of accounts (Concurrent findings of fact) - Assessee, engaged in business of equity trading, derivatives trading and real estate investment, filed Income-tax Returns declaring an income of Rs. 42.43 crores. On scrutiny, assessment order was passed making an addition of Rs. 10.21 crores on ground that there was difference between funds received and source of income as per books of account which was not disclosed by assessee in its return. Assessing Officer rejected books of account declared by assessee on ground that they were not reliable. Commissioner (Appeals) allowed appeal of assessee, holding that addition was not sustainable in view of documentary evidences already available on record. It was further held that Assessing Officer failed to make any sincere effort regarding aforesaid addition and same was made only on basis of doubt, suspicion, conjecture or surmises without affording proper opportunity of being heard to assessee which was in violation of principles of natural justice. Tribunal concurred with findings in order of Commissioner (Appeals). On appeal, it was found that Tribunal and Commissioner (Appeals) had returned concurrent findings of fact and deleted addition made by Assessing Officer on account of difference in receipts shown in financial statements of assessee and credit entries appearing in bank account of assessee. Further, revenue had not placed any material on record to contradict aforesaid concurrent finding of facts returned by Tribunal and Commissioner (Appeals). Therefore, said concurrent findings could not be interfered with. [In favour of assessee][PCIT v. Conwood Medipharma (P) Ltd. (2022) 145 taxmann.com 549 (Del.)]

Assessing Officer rejected books of account of assessee, a wholesale trader, as parties to whom assessee made sales were untraceable and estimated gross profit at rate of 2 per cent on basis of invoices of sales and purchases filed by assessee, there was no infirmity in order of Assessing Officer

Rejection of accounts (Gross profit rate) - Assessee, a wholesale trader, disclosed gross profit at rate of 0.13 per cent. Assessing Officer issued notices to twenty sundry debtors of assessee, however nineteen of parties did not respond and only sundry debtor who did respond to Assessing Officer denied any transaction with assessee. Thereafter Assessing Officer rejected account books of assessee and after perusing invoices of sales and purchases filed by assessee found that assessee had made gross profit in range of 2 per cent to 3 per cent and determined gross profit at lower rate of 2 per cent on gross sales. Both Commissioner (Appeals) and Tribunal upheld rate of gross profit at 2 per cent. Tribunal rejected submission of assessee for deduction of statutory taxes, i.e., CST by holding that while estimating gross profit all expenditure had been accounted for and this included expenditure towards taxes. No substantial questions of law arose for consideration. [In favour of revenue] (Related Assessment year : 2013-14) – [Narender Kumar Anand v. PCIT (2022) 145 taxmann.com 213 (Del.)]

If books of account are rejected and section 145(3) applied for determining net profit from business carried on by assessee, Assessing Officer is free to make additions under section 68 towards unexplained cash credit

Cash credit (Scope of provisions) - In respect of ground No. 4 regarding unexplained cash credit, the ld. AR vehemently argued that once the Assessing Officer applied section 145(3) the same books cannot be relied by the Assessing Officer for making other additions whereas the Assessing Officer has made addition u/s 68 for unexplained cash credit in regard to fixed deposits received from the customers and in respect of his case he has relied on the judgment which has been cited (supra), the contention of the assessee is not acceptable. On going through the order of the assessment we observe that the Assessing Officer has rejected the books of account for determination of the net profit only from the business carried out by the assessee . The other additions cannot be made towards the disallowance of expenses under the profits and gains of business or profession as we have decided supra by relying on the judgments of two Honb'le High Courts but for addition under other heads under section 68 towards unexplained cash credit which is not addition towards computation of business profit can be made by Assessing Officer and our view is supported by the judgment of Hon’ble Supreme Court in the case of Basir Ahmed Sisodia v. ITO (2020) 424 ITR 1 : 271 Taxman 247 : 116 taxmann.com 375 (SC), Kale Khan Mohammad Hanif v. CIT (1963) 50 ITR 1 (SC) and in the case of CIT v. Devi Prasad Vishwanath (1969) 72 ITR 194 (SC).

During the course of hearing, it was brought to the notice of both the parties that these above decisions were not cited by both the parties but it has brought into the notice of both parties that recent judgment of Hon'ble Supreme Court in the case of Basir Ahmed Sisodia (cited Supra) but the ld.AR stated that first two judgments of Hon'ble Supreme Court is very old judgment, therefore, it cannot be accepted and in the case of Basir Ahmed Sisodia he stated that it is not directly related to the additions made, therefore, recent judgment of Hon'ble Supreme Court in the case of Basir Ahmed Sisodia is not applicable because it relates to penalty. We reject the entire arguments of the ld. AR on the issue of no further addition can be made after rejecting the books of accounts under section 68 towards unexplained cash credit. The ld. AR also relied on the judgment of hon’ble jurisdictional High Court and other High Courts also , on perusal of the same we did not find any reference of the judgement of the Hon’ble Supreme Court cited by us supra, therefore, it appears that before the Hon’ble High Courts the judgement of Hon’ble Supreme Court on the very same issue was not cited by both the parties, therefore, judgement of the Hon’ble High Court will not be applicable in the case of the assessee, accordingly, considering the above judgments of Hon’ble Supreme Court, we hold that if the books of accounts are rejected and applied section145(3) for determining net profit from the business carried on by the assessee, the Assessing Officer is free to make additions under section 68 towards unexplained cash credit. Accordingly, this legal ground raised by the assessee is rejected. [In favour of revenue] (Related Assessment year : 2018-19) – [Smt. Lizy George v. ACIT (2022) 144 taxmann.com 52 (ITAT Bangalore)]

Books of account cannot be rejected merely for Non-Issuance of Sale Memos

In the present case, mere non-issuance of production of sale memos could not have been a ground to reject the entire books of account particularly since it pertained to sale of country liquor to tribal populations. Also the ITAT appears to have overlooked the fact that the books of account of the Assessee were not rejected by the Excise Department and that the ITAT itself had accepted them for the subsequent Assessment year 2001-02. Although the Assessing Officer accepted the fact that there was nothing wrong with the Assessee’s books of accounts, only on the ground that sales memos were not filed, the books of accounts were rejected by the Assessing Officer. When the matter went in an appeal to the CIT(A) it was noted by him in Para 1.3 of the order dismissing the appeals that “it is true that the Assessing Officer had not pointed out any specific omission or commission nor cited any specific instance of irregularity in the books of accounts” and that the only reason for rejection was that “element of inflation in purchases or incorrectness of purchase could not be ruled out”. However, it was again surmised that “there was also possibility of suppression of sale price”. It is therefore plain that both the Assessing Officer and CIT(A) proceeded on surmises and conjectures with no supporting material to justify the rejection of the Assessee’s books of accounts. The ITAT having accepted the Assessee’s accounts for the subsequent Assessment year 2001-02 for some reason did not accept them as far as the Assessment year in question was concerned. Where the issue is of sale of country liquor to tribal populations to expect the Assessees to issue sales memos is not even realistic. Importantly, since the books of account of the Assessees in the present appeals have been accepted by the Excise Department, and for the subsequent year Assessment year 2001-02 by the ITAT, there was no reason to resort to surmises and conjectures and ‘best judgment assessment’ to reject the Assessee’s books of account for the Assessment year in question. (Related Related Assessment year : 2001-02) – [Cresent Co. v. CIT - Date of Judgement : 02.02.2022 (Ori.)]

 

Assessee-trader explained substantial fall in GP rate due to fall in price of cardamom by almost half rate at end of year as compared to beginning of year, and there was exceptional circumstances of increase in turnover by 130 times, there would be no rational basis for estimating GP rate by Assessing Officer even though he had rejected books of account - Once profits have arisen in accounting year out of transfer of capital asset, it would be sufficient to attract liability under section 45

Section 145 of the Income-tax Act, 1961 - Method of accounting - Estimation of income (GP rate) - The assessee had shown GP rate of 0.38 per cent and while sale was substantially increased during the year. Once books of account are rejected, Assessing Officer has to estimate profits based on his judgment and either past year results or comparative profits declared in similar line of trade in same commodity would be a guiding factor. Assessee, engaged in trading of cardamom and other goods, filed return of income. Assessing Officer rejected books of account and stating that he had failed to give evidence regarding payment of duties and taxes and had claimed loss and passed impugned ex parte order and estimated GP rate of 0.69 per cent on declared sales of Rs. 1.57 crores and, thus, made addition of Rs. 49,56,217 to the total income. However, there was an exceptional circumstances as assessee’s turnover increased by almost 130 times and, thus, past year results were not reflective of state of affairs of current affairs, and past year results could not be made a guiding factor. There was nothing on record in terms of comparative profits declared in similar line of trade in commodities. Assessee had explained substantial fall in GP rate due to fall in prices of cardamom by almost half at end of year as compared to beginning of year. Though there was certain speculative losses, same did not affect declared trading results. In instant case, there would be no rational basis for estimating gross profit rate by Assessing Officer even if books of account were rejected. Trading addition made by Assessing Officer estimating higher GP rate was to be deleted. [In favour of assessee] (Related Assessment year : 2012-13) - [Sanjay Agarwal v. ITO (2021) 131 taxmann.com 331 (ITAT Jaipur)]

There was difference between assessees books of account and accounts as per TDS certificate, on said difference, only embedded portion of profits was to be taken into consideration and addition was to be made thereon; there was no justification in making addition of entire turnover to income of assessee

The assessee a proprietorship firm running the business of civil contractor filed its return of income on 28.10.2013 declaring income at Rs. 22,02,250/-. During the course of assessment proceedings, it was found by the Ld. Assessing Officer that as per the ITS details the gross receipts of the assessee is Rs. 12,43,51,107/-, whereas as per the profit and loss account the same is Rs. 11,93,79,537/-. The assessee was asked to reconcile the difference in receipts amounting to Rs. 49,71,570/-. Since, no plausible explanation in this regard was provided by the assessee, the said amount of Rs. 49,71,570/- has been determined as the undisclosed income of the assessee and added to the total income of the assessee.

It is a settled proposition of law that in case of difference between assessee's books of account and accounts as per TDS certificate, then on said difference, only embedded portion of profits was to be taken into consideration and addition was to be made thereon. Total sale does not represent profit of assessee and only net profit rate has to be adopted and once net profit is adopted, it cannot be said that there was perversity of approach. There are number of judicial pronouncements by which the principle to this effect has been laid down that the total sale cannot represent as the profit of the assessee. Therefore, there was no justification in making addition of entire turnover to income of assessee. Having regard to the peculiar facts and circumstances of the case, we find it justified to restrict the addition at 5% of the net profit on the gross receipt of Rs. 11,93,79,537/-. The Ld. Assessing Officer is directed to grant relief to the assessee as on the above terms. [Partly in favour of assessee] (Related Assessment year : 2013-14) – [Sohan Lal Aggarwal v. ITO (2021) 130 taxmann.com 380 (ITAT Delhi)]

Assessee third party administrator of insurance company could change accounting method from invoice completion method to proportionate completion method

Proportionate completion method) - Revenue from service transactions is usually recognized when service is performed; such revenue is to be recognized either by proportionate completion method or completed service contract method. Assessee was engaged in business as third party administrator of insurance companies. Till 31.03.2007, assessee used to recognize revenue immediately on raising of invoice even though service under contract was not completed; thus, assessee had earlier adopted invoice method. Since assessee was involved in execution of more than one act of rendering service in entire year, it adopted proportionate completion method. Assessee was covered by Accounting Standard-9 as it did not deal with revenue of insurance companies arising from insurance contracts. Since financial service rendered by assessee resulted in revenue which, in turn, had to be taken into account having regard to incidence of costs relating to service, Accounting Standard-9 would apply. Since revenue had accepted change in method of accounting in subsequent assessment years, there was no justification on part of Assessing Officer to reject same and to determine income on estimated basis. [In favour of assessee] (Related Assessment year : 2009-10) – [CIT, Bangalore v. Medi Assist (India) TPA (P) Ltd.) : (2020) 429 ITR 586 : (2021) 125 taxmann.com 77 (Karn.)]

Construction business – Percentage completion method – Brokerage expenditure – Allowable in the year when the expenditure is incurred

Dismissing the appeal of the revenue the Court held that, when the assessee follows percentage completion method, brokerage expenditure is allowable in the year when the expenditure is incurred. (Related Assessment year : 2008-09) - [CIT v. DLF Home Developers Ltd. (2019) 411 ITR 378 (Del.)]

Accrual – Surcharge receivable from customers on delay in payment of electricity bill taxable on receipt basis and not accrual basis

The assessee accounted for and offered the surcharge income on receipt basis. The Assessing Officer sought to tax the same on accrual basis, irrespective of collection. Dismissing the appeal of the revenue the Court held that, that where the assessee, owing to uncertainty in collection, offered the surcharge income on receipt basis and the same was accepted in the earlier years, the addition made in the instant assessment year was also to be deleted and the income is to be taxed on receipt basis. (Related Assessment year : 2005-06) - [PCIT v. Dakshin Haryana Bijli Vitran Nigam Ltd. (2019) 307 CTR 709 : 175 DTR 429 (P&H)]

Low gross profit – Books of account cannot be rejected without pointing out any defects – CIT(A) cannot enhance and reject the books of account which was not the subject-matter of assessment

Tribunal held that rejection of books of account in preceding year could not be a reason for rejection of books of account for year under consideration - Further, where there were no material defect found in books of account then same could not have been rejected on reason that assessee had declared less gross profit for year under consideration or day-to-day moment of material was not reflected in stock register

Tribunal also held that CIT(A) cannot enhance and reject the books of account which was not the subject-matter of assessment. CIT(A) can exercise its power to enhance income under section 251 only on issue which is subject matter of assessment. Thus where aspect of not accepting book results of assessee was never taken up by Assessing Officer in scrutiny assessments of assessee, it was not open to Commissioner (Appeals) to raise same and enhance assessment under section 251 by rejecting books of account. - [In favour of assessee] (Related Assessment years : 2012-13 to 2014-15) - [Zuberi Engineering Company v. DCIT (2019) 175 ITD 557 : 69 ITR 261 (ITAT Jaipur)]

Valuation of stock – Tribunal taking only market rate one day later for determining valuation of stock-in-trade is held to be not consistent with law – Tribunal was directed to reconsider valuation of closing stock on the basis of principles established by law

Allowing the appeal of the assessee the Court held that : Tribunal taking only market rate one day later for determining valuation of stock-in-trade is held to be not consistent with law. Tribunal was directed to reconsider valuation of closing stock on the basis of principles established by law. Cost or market rate whichever is less. (Related Assessment year : 2010-11) - [Shri Ram Kutir Khandsari Udyog (P) Ltd. v. CIT (2018) 404 ITR 185 (All.)]

Valuation of stock – Opening and closing stock to be valued on same basis

Dismissing the appeal of the revenue, the Court held that : the findings of the Commissioner (Appeals) were based upon sound principles and an appraisal of not merely the bank stock statement but also the RG-I registers and Form 3CB duly audited by the assessee’s auditors and accepted by the Excise Department. The appreciation of evidence was in no way unreasonable and the findings were in accordance with law. The Tribunal did not commit any error in affirming the order of the Commissioner (Appeals). (Related Assessment year : 1999-2000) - [PCIT v. Basti Sugar Mills Co. Ltd. (2018) 400 ITR 436 (Del.)]

Real income – Lease rental – Interest and loan recovery – Guidance Note issued by the ICAI carries great weight – An assessee can only be taxed on “real income”—Lease rental is allowable

Dismissing the appeal of the revenue, the Court held that : an assessee can only be taxed on “real income”. The bifurcation of lease rental is not an artificial calculation. Lease equalization is an essential step in the accounting process to ensure that real income from the transaction in the form of revenue receipts only is captured for the purposes of income-tax. The Guidance Note issued by the ICAI carries great weight. The method of accounting prescribed in such a Guidance Note, in order to compute real income and offering the same for taxation, cannot be disregarded by the Assessing Officer unless such action falls within the scope and ambit of section 145(3) of the Income Tax Act. Lease rental is allowable. (Related Assessment years : 1996-97 to 2000-01) - [CIT v. Virtual Soft Systems Ltd. (2018) 302 CTR 65 : 165 DTR 121 (SC)]

Valuation of stock – Not maintaining the stock register – Consistent method was followed rejection of books of account was held to be not valid

The assessee for the past 30 years, had been consistently was valuing the stock-in-trade at cost for the purpose of statutory balance sheet, and for the income-tax return, valuation was at the lower of cost or market value. That practice was accepted by the Department in earlier years. Preparation of the balance sheet in accordance with the statutory provision would not disentitle the assessee in submitting income-tax return on the real taxable income in accordance with a method of account adopted by the assessee consistently and regularly. The High Court held that this could not be discarded by the departmental authorities on the ground that assessee was maintaining balance sheet in the statutory form on the basis of the cost of the investments. There is no question of following two different methods for valuing its stock-in-trade (investments) because the Bank was required to prepare balance sheet in the prescribed form and it had no option to charge it. For the purpose of income tax as stated earlier, what is to be taxed is the real income which is to be deduced on the basis of the accounting system regularly maintained by the assessee and that was done by the assessee in the present case. - [CIT v Unique Builders & Developers (2018) 300 CTR 455 : (2017) 160 DTR 313 (Raj.)]

Transfer pricing – Arm's length price – Method of accounting – TPO has no jurisdiction to comment on the method of accounting followed by an assessee

Dismissing the appeal of the revenue, the Tribunal held that, only role assigned to TPO is to find out as to whether international transaction is at arm's length or not and he is not supposed to take decision about accounting policy to be followed by assessee, nor he should comment upon as to how to compute income if an assessee follows a particular method of accounting. (Related Assessment year : 2002-03) - [DCIT v. Hazaria Cryogenic Engineering & Construction Management (P) Ltd. (2018) 168 ITD 344 (ITAT Mumbai)]

Mere fact that books of account were not supported by vouchers of payments received from patients, same could not be a ground to reject assessee’s books of account and to make addition on estimate basis

Assessee was a practising doctor who had been running a nursing home. A survey under section 133A was conducted at nursing home of assessee in course of which various account books and registers were examined and also seized, which included OPD register, Indoor Patient register and certain other loose papers. Subsequently, assessee filed his return declaring certain taxable income. Assessing Officer found that there were some discrepancies between entries recorded in books of account of assessee and registers and documents seized during survey. He further noted that books of account were not supported by vouchers of payments received from patients. He thus rejected assessee’s books of account and made certain addition to assessee's income on estimation basis. Tribunal granted partial relief to assessee. It was noted that allegation of discrepancies made in assessment order was wholly vague inasmuch as Assessing Officer had not recorded nature and extent of discrepancy. Besides, assessee had also produced his cash book, ledger as also bank passbook and no specific discrepancy had been pointed out in those books of account. In aforesaid circumstances, mere absence of vouchers did not give rise to any presumption that there was any non-disclosure of income inasmuch as there was no evidence to doubt correctness of entries made in OPD register as also Indoor Patient register. Therefore, impugned addition was to be deleted. [In favour of assessee] (Related Assessment year :  2003-04) - [Dr. Prabhu Dayal Yadav v. CIT (2018) 253 Taxman 191 : 162 DTR 12 : 89 taxmann.com 126 (All.)]

 

Rejection of books – Assessing Officer has to specify defects, noncompliance of accounting standards

Assessee followed method of accounting same as earlier years and the lower authorities never questioned its books of account. Assessing Officer rejected books of account in impugned year and made a disallowance under provisions of the Act. Tribunal observed that there was no change in profit after recasting. Assessing Officer did not point out any specific defect in maintenance of books of account and did not identify accounting standard has to be followed by the Assessee. Held rejection books of account by Assessing Officer was not proper. (Related Assessment year : 2008-09) - [Google India (P) Ltd. v. Jt. DIT (2018) 194 TTJ 385 (ITAT Bangalor)]

Bogus purchases – If books of account are not rejected, no addition can be made on presumptions – Merely returning of notices under Section 133 (6) sent to those suppliers could not be sufficient to make additions under Section 69C

Allowing the appeal of the assessee the Tribunal held that : If the Assessing Officer has not rejected the books of accounts and has only doubted the genuineness of the suppliers but not the genuineness of the purchases and if the payments are made by account payee cheques, section 69C is not attracted. section 69C cannot be applied where all purchase and sales transactions are part of regular books of accounts. The basic precondition for invoking section 69C is that the expenditure incurred by the assessee should be out of books of accounts. Merely returning of notices under section 133(6) sent to those suppliers could not be sufficient to make additions under section 69C. (Related Assessment years : 2010-11 and 2011-12) -  [Fancy Wear v. ITO (2018) 194 TTJ 125 : (2017) 167 ITD 621 : 87 taxmann.com 183 (ITAT Mumbai)]

 

Unexplained expenditure (Section 69C) – Bogus purcahses – Estimation of profits embedded in purchases at 12.5% is reasonable when the assessee failed to prove the purchases to be genuine and also failed to produce the selling parties during the course of the assessment proceedings

On appeal the Tribunal held that the purchases existed in the books of account of the assessee and the onus was on the assessee to prove that the purchases were genuine. Under these circumstances, the possibility of the assessee buying the material actually from the grey market at lower rates and obtaining corresponding bills from the parties to reconcile the quantitative records and books of account could not be ruled out. Hence the profits estimated by the CIT(A) at 12.5% was reasonable. (Related Assessment year : 2007-08) - [(ITO v. Prankit Exports (2018) 62 ITR 243 (ITAT Mumbai)]

Civil contractor – Purchases – No defect was found in the books of account – No disallowance can be made

It was that the assessee had done major works for the Government departments and they confirmed the authenticity of the work. The assessee continuously declared a net profit in the range of 1.71 per cent. to 4.65 per cent. and the disallowance made by the Assessing Officer if accepted would increase the net profit to the tune of 25.15 per cent. which was abnormal. The suppliers of these goods had no permanent place for carrying on the business. There were no defects in the books of account of the assessee. The disallowance confirmed by the CIT(A) of Rs. 15 lakhs was to be reduced to Rs. 5 lakhs. (Related Assessment year : 2011-12) - [DCIT v. IHR Associates (2018) 61 ITR 70 (ITAT Chandigarh)]

If Assessing Officer accepted books of accounts in preceding and subsequent years – Rejection of books based on hypothetical calculations was not justified

The nature of business was same in the current year and books of accounts were accepted by the Assessing Officer in preceding as well as subsequent assessment years and hence Tribunal was of the opinion that Assessing Officer should have brought on record some concrete material to reject the books of accounts following the rule of consistency. The Tribunal observed that Assessing Officer had rejected the books of accounts because it showed variation in gross profit margins. It was further observed that assessee had submitted all the bills and supporting evidence alongwith computation of raw materials which were recorded in books of accounts. The Assessing Officer was not able to point out any specific instance of round tripping of material purchased from different parties. Hence, Tribunal was convinced that Assessing Officer had rejected the books of accounts without verifying the books of accounts and provide any just reasons for the same. Tribunal was of the belief that hypothetical calculations were made by Assessing Officer on basis of entries in books of accounts for making additions against the assessee without any jurisdiction. The Assessing Officer had also not pointed out whether assessee had violated any accounting standards prescribed for maintenance of books of accounts. In the end, the Tribunal concluded that CIT(A) was correct on appreciation of facts and materials on records and correctly did not agree with the findings of the Assessing Officer and hence there was no justification of Assessing Officer to reject the books of accounts under section 145(3) of the Act. Thereby the department appeal was dismissed. (Related Assessment year : 2008-09) - [DCIT v. Prakul Luthra v. (2018) 53 CCH 607 (ITAT Delhi)]

Where the books of account is rejected and income is estimated, separate addition under sections 40A(3), 68 or peak credit cannot be made

Allowing the appeal of the assessee the Tribunal held that : when the books of account is rejected there is no justification for the authorities below to make addition of Rs. 6,92,25,000/- under section 40A(3) of the Act and addition of Rs. 7,12,15,150/- under section 68 of the Act. In view of the above discussion, we set aside the orders of the authorities below and delete both  these additions. (Related Assessment year : 2013-14) - [Deepak Mittal v. ACIT – Date of Judgement : 23.03.2018 (ITAT Delhi)]

Day to day stock register is not maintained – Applying the gross profit rate on basis of past history was held to be justified

As the assessee was not maintaining the day-to-day stock register and there were various specific defects in the books of account, the Assessing Officer rejected assessee's books of account and applied gross profit rate of 23 per cent to estimate income.

Held that as the assessee was not maintaining day-to-day stock register and the Assessing Officer pointed out specific defects in books of account, he was justified in rejecting books of account; however in view of past history of the assessee, gross profit rate should be applied at 11.5 per cent instead of 23 per cent as applied by the Assessing Officer. The application of gross profit rate of 11.5 per cent. on the basis of the past history of the assessee was also rightly confirmed. [In favour of assessee] - [CIT v. Sita Ram Sopra (2017) 399 ITR 463 (Raj.)]

Books of account are genuine hence rejection of books of account was held to be not justified

Unless books of account had been found not genuine and reasons for rejecting books of account were just and proper, no trading addition could be made by rejecting books of account. Dismissing the appeal of the revenue the Court held that : Books of account are genuine, hence rejection of books of account was held to be not justified. [In favour of assessee] - [CIT v. Shiv Agrevo Ltd. (2017) 398 ITR 608 : (2018) 99 taxmann.com 402 (Raj.)]

There was no evidence on record indicating incorrect entries in books of account hence rejection of books of account was held to be not valid

During assessment proceedings, the Assessing Officer noted that average cost of purchase of saleable land came to Rs. 364 per square yard whereas the assessee had sold plots for Rs. 400 per sq. yard which included a sum of Rs. 165 per sq. yard as development charges and, therefore, in effect selling price of the land was only Rs. 235 per sq. yard. The Assessing Officer held that this position did not reflect true and correct picture of the books of account as selling of plot at a loss in real estate was absurd and not acceptable. He rejected books of account and estimated income by making addition on account of suppression of sale of plots. Held that books of account of the assessee were duly audited and Assessing Officer had not brought any evidence on record to indicate that the assessee had charged any money over and above the price recorded in the books for sale of any of the plots, including those of land, which were sold below the average cost of purchase, from any of the persons who purchased those plots. Therefore, the Assessing Officer was not justified in rejecting books of account and estimating income on ground of suppression of sales. [In favour of assessee] - [CIT v. Pink City Developers (2017) 398 ITR 153 : (2018) 99 taxmann.com 422 (Raj.)]

Nothing on record to show satisfaction of Assessing Officer that books incorrect, incomplete or unreliable hence best assessment is held to be not justified

The assessee, a public limited company, was engaged in the business of civil construction and related services. The assessing Officer had made addition to, income returned by the assessee by estimating gross profit. The Commissioner (Appeals) held that the addition could not be made in hands of assessee merely based on the perception of the Assessing Officer that the assessee had declared low profit margin for certain projects when books of account had not been rejected. The Tribunal dismissed the appeal of the revenue by holding that profits of an assessee could not be estimated without rejecting the books of account. On appeal:

Held : The Tribunal has expressed its considered opinion that only when an assessee is not maintaining books of account properly and the correct income cannot be estimated on the basis of the books of account, then only the books of account can be rejected. The Tribunal has gone on to hold that the Assessing Officer can estimate profit only thereafter. It is also seen that the assessee is doing civil construction work for residential projects, many projects for the Government, Government related agencies and some for Non-Government Organizations (NGOs) across the country. Considering this spectrum, there can be certainly low profit margins in projects for Government and Government related agencies. So can be the case for NGOs. It becomes obvious that there is no legal position which is debatable. Equally, no settled position of law has been misapplied by the authorities in answering the material questions either. Dismissing the appeal of the revenue, the Court held that : the addition made to the income of the assessee on estimate basis by the Assessing Officer under section 144 for certain projects had been done without scrutiny and without rejecting its books of account. There was nothing on record to show that the Assessing Officer came to the conclusion that the books of account maintained by the assessee were incorrect, incomplete, unreliable and consequently had rejected them. Therefore, no substantial question of law arises in the instant appeal. There is no merit whatsoever in the appeal filed by the revenue as the addition of income on estimate basis for certain projects (as admitted/conceded by the revenue before Tribunal) without scrutiny and without rejecting the books of account of assessee. Equally, no substantial question of law arises. [In favour of assessee] (Related Assessment year : 2012-13) - [PCIT v. Marg Ltd. (2017) 396 ITR 580 : 249 Taxman 521 : 84 taxmann.com 52 (Mad.)]

Rejection of accounts When inconsistency in input/output ratio in various months and higher wastage in comparison to sister concern, had been duly explained by assessee, they could not be basis for rejection of books of account – Deletion of additions was held to be justified

The Assessing Officer rejected the assessee’s books of account on account of inconsistency in input/output ratio, higher wastage in comparison of assessee's sister concern ‘B’. He rejected assessee’s explanation that input/output ratio would depend on number of factors depending on the quality of the goods produced, quality of furnaces and machines used, temperature required, tolerable fluctuations and the quality of raw material used; and that input/output ratio in case of its sister concern was higher as said concern was manufacturing stoneware crockery while assessee was manufacturing bone china crockery in which wastage was more than stoneware crockery.

Held that inconsistency in the input/output ratio in various months and higher wastage in comparison to sister concern, the reasons for which had been duly explained by the assessee, could not be the basis for rejection of books of account. The yield and gross profit rate declared by the assessee could also not be the basis for rejection of books of account since ‘B’ was manufacturing maximum of stoneware crockery. The Assessing Officer had not pointed out any specific defects in the purchase, sales, opening stock and closing stock of the assessee and had not brought on record any cogent material to prove that the assessee had sold the under-production out of the books of account. Therefore, the Assessing Officer was not justified in rejecting the books of account by invoking the provisions of section 145(3). [In favour of assessee] - [CIT v. Ceramic Industries (2017) 396 ITR 50 : 88 taxmann.com 520 (Raj.)]

Method of accounting consistently followed and accepted by Revenue in earlier years cannot be rejected

Considering the fact that the assessee has followed the method which is consistent therefore this Court is of the opinion that the view taken by the tribunal and CIT(A) is not correct in rejecting the project completion method which was followed consistently by the assessee and instead applying the work-inprogress method. Since the issue involved in this appeal is identical to the decision cited by the learned Counsel for the assessee while adopting such reasons, we allow this appeal and accordingly answer the issue raised in this appeal in favour of the assessee and against the department. [In favour of assessee] (Related Assessment year 2001-02) - [Manjusha Estate (P) Ltd. v. ITO (2017) 393 ITR 644 : 88 taxmann.com 699 (Guj.)]

Gross Profit rate could not be computed with reference to returns of subsequent assessment years

Allowing the appeal of the assessee the Court held that : the gross profit rate was computed with reference to the returns of the subsequent assessment years i.e. 1989-90 to 1991-92. Thus, there was no positive evidence before the CIT(A) to assess the gross profit rate. The returns of the subsequent years i.e. 1989-90 to 1991-92 could not have been taken into account for computing the gross profit rate in respect of Assessment Year 1986-87. Thus, the finding with regard to gross profit rate was based on surmises and conjectures and thereby order passed by lower authorities were quashed. [In favour of assessee] (Related Assessment year : 1986-87) - [Nek Ram Sharma & Co. v. CIT (2017) 298 CTR 486 : 158 DTR 58 (J&K)]

Merely because the gross profit is low cannot be the ground to reject the books of account

During relevant year assessee declared Gross profit at 48.39 per cent. Assessing Officer after rejecting books of account, estimated Gross profit at 53.32 per cent by considering only overall Gross Profit Ratio declared in earlier years for same project. Assessing Officer had not properly appreciated whether or not expenditure might have increased and/or might be for some or other reason profit might have decreased. Tribunal found that for year under consideration income of assessee had increased. Tribunal held that there was justification in decrease in gross profit and, Assessing Officer was not justified in estimating Gross Profit ratio at 53.32 per cent. Order of Tribunal was justified. [In favour of assessee] (Related Assessment year : 2007-08) - [PCIT v. Purshottam B. Pitroda (2017) 248 Taxman 118 : 82 taxmann.com 18 (Guj.)]

 

Unexplained expenditure (Section 69C) – Bogus purchases – Purchases of paddy recorded and matched with report of Agricultural Marketing Committee (AMC) – No disallowance on ground that failed to maintain proper books of account

The Assessing Officer held that the assessee has not maintained proper gate passes for recording purchases of paddy, accordingly disallowed 5 per cent of purchases. CIT(A), deleted the addition. On appeal the Tribunal held that : the assessee had reconciled quantity of paddy purchases from the order passed by agricultural marketing committee (AMC) and its books of account and same were matched with AMC reports. Since, revenue failed to controvert finding of facts therefore; addition cannot be sustained as bogus purchase of paddy. (Related Assessment year : 2009-10) - [ACIT v. Sri Ramalingeswara Rice & Oil Mill (2017) 162 ITD 696 (ITAT Visakha)]

Estimation of income on the basis of material on record and on the basis of statement is a question of fact

Dismissing the appeal the Court held that : estimated income of the assessee was arrived at on the basis of the material on record and on various statements made by the employees and directors during the search and survey proceedings. The High Court further observed that subsequent retraction of statements was not found acceptable by the authorities and therefore, the findings of the authorities below do not give rise to any substantial question of law. (Related Assessment years : 2006-07, 2007-08) - [Punjab Sind Dairy v. DCIT (2017) 146 DTR 21 (Bom.)]

Assessee had kept self-made vouchers in support of major expenditure and books of account maintained by him did not give true and correct profit from business, Assessing Officer was justified in rejecting said books of account and estimating net profit of 8 per cent of gross receipts

Assessee was engaged in business of execution of civil works contract - He filed his return of income for relevant assessment year declaring certain taxable income - In course of assessment, Assessing Officer noted that assessee had kept self-made vouchers in support of major expenditure and, accordingly, opined that books of account maintained by assessee were not amenable for verification - He thus rejected books of account under provisions of section 145(3) and estimated net profit of 8 per cent on gross contract receipts net of all deductions. Since assessee failed to controvert findings of Assessing Officer with any positive evidence to come to conclusion that books of account maintained by him gave a true and correct profit from business, Assessing Officer was right in rejecting books of account. As regards rate of profit, since assessee had disclosed 6.73 per cent to 7.44 per cent net profit in earlier period, impugned estimation made by Assessing Officer was justified. Even otherwise, since nature of business carried on by assessee was squarely fit into specified business referred to in provisions of section 44AD, estimation of net profit at rate of 8 per cent of gross receipts specified in said section was rightly adopted. [In favour of revenue] (Related Assessment year : 2009-10) - [G. Raja Gopala Rao v. DCIT, Visakhapatnam (2017) 163 ITD 46 : 78 taxmann.com 61 (ITAT Visakhapatnam)]

Admission of addition of income – Rejection of books of account was held to be justified – Gross profit could be telescoped to addition made on excess stock

In the course of survey, the Assessing Officer did not verify all the vouchers and books of account and arrived at the excess stock for which the assessee admitted that inventory was taken correctly. The managing partner admitted the additional income of Rs. 30 lakhs in the course of survey, but the assessee offered only an income of Rs. 6,467 in the return of income. The Assessing Officer rejected books of account and estimated income by applying gross profit rate. Held that there was reasonable cause for rejection of books of account and estimating the gross profit. In the result, appeal of assessee is partly allowed. (Related Assessment year : 2007-08) – [Mamatha Silk Centre v. ITO, Suryapet (2017) : 88 taxmann.com 776 : 54 ITR(T) 561 (Hyderabad]

Suppliers shown by assessee were either not traceable or some of those were not found to be genuine, books of account of assessee were rightly rejected

Rejection of accounts (Suppliers, non-traceable) - The assessee-company was engaged in manufacturing of fertilisers. The Assessing Officer made an addition of fertilizer subsidy received on the ground that the assessee was not found to have been engaged in the manufacturing of fertilizers, which was based on findings of a survey in the case of certain companies. The assessee did not produce books of account for verification. The Assessing Officer rejected the books of accounts. The Commissioner (Appeals) upheld the order of the Assessing Officer. The Assessing Officer was directed to estimate the net profit of the assessee at 10%. The Tribunal found that the Commissioner (Appeals) passed speaking order based on the evidence. Held that the assessee could not show us as to why the purchases shown by the assessee be accepted when the supplier shown by the assessee-company were either not traceable or some were found to be not genuine when survey was conducted at the premises and the purchases remained verifiable. In view of the same, the action of the Commissioner (Appeals) in rejecting the books of the assessee under section 145(3) was to be upheld. [In favour of revenue] (Related Assessment year : 2000-01) - - [ITO v. Brij Fertilizers Ltd. (2017) 83 taxmann.com 60 : (2016) 48 ITR(T) 125 : 5 TMI 1176 (ITAT Agra)]

Bogus Purchases – Books of account of assessee not rejectedDisallowance of purchases not proper

Dismissing the appeal of the revenue the Tribunal held that : it was held that merely because the suppliers had not appeared before the Assessing Officer or CIT(A), it could not be concluded that the purchases were not made by the assessee. This is the case where books of account of the assessee had not been rejected and the Assessing Officer had not brought on record anything which may prove that the evidences submitted by the assessee was bogus. Relying on the Bombay High Court decision in the case of Nikunj Exim Enterprises (P) Ltd. 372 ITR 619, the Hon'ble Tribunal deleted the addition of disallowing the purchases made by the assessee. (Related Assessment year : 2011-12) - [ACIT v. Skylark Builders SSJC (Ghatkopar) (2017) 58 ITR 77 (SN) (ITAT Mumbai)]

Unexplained expenditure – Bogus purchases – Additions to be made to make profit comparable with that of preceding year

The assessee was a Government electrical contractor. The Assessing Officer had information that certain hawala dealers were involved in issuing bogus invoices to allow a trader to claim tax credits and the assessee was one of such beneficiaries. The assessee submitted copies of purchase bills and also stated that payment had been made through cheques. However, it could not produce the parties from whom the material was procured. The Assessing Officer rejected the books of account and made additions to the tune of unproved entire purchases made under section 69C. On appeal, the Commissioner (Appeals) restricted the disallowance to 12.5 per cent of the net profit ratio.

Held that the Commissioner (Appeals) after considering the replies of the assessee held that if the sales were there purchases had to be there, hence, the inference that could be drawn was that the assessee had made purchases in the open market but had obtained bills from the hawala operators, but there was no one-to-one correlation with the material so purchased to have been completely used in the execution of work contracts. The revenue had accepted the profit rate of 10.43 percent earned by the assessee in the preceding year while in the instant year the net profit rate was 9.22 per cent. On facts the interest of justice would be best served if the additions to the extent were made to the income of the assessee to make the profit comparable with that of the preceding year of 10.43 per cent. [In favour of assessee] (Related Assessment year : 2010-11) - [Arun Shimpi v. ITO (2017) 53 ITR (Trib) 151 : 88 taxmann.com 651 (ITAT Mumbai)]

Books rejection under section 145 does not automatically lead to penalty-proceedings, absent independent findings

Allahabad High Court upholds ITAT order and deletes penalty under section 271(1)(c) levied on assessee- company (engaged in business of electrical items) during Assessment year 2009-10, rules that rejection of books of account under section 145 does not automatically lead either to necessary additions to the assessed income or to penalty proceedings under section 271(1)(c); During the relevant Assessment year, after rejecting books of accounts under section 145, Assessing Officer imposed penalty treating assessee’s acceptance of net profit rate  (subsequent to incriminating materials revealed during the survey operation)  as 'non-voluntary'; States that, finding incriminating documents in the survey proceedings which led assessee to offer net profit rate does not discharge the statutory requirement to justify penalty imposed under section 271(1)(c), remarks that, neither the assessing officer gave any reason how the books of account etc. impounded during the survey brought out the fact of concealment of income nor he established how such books of account etc. rendered the regular books of account maintained by the assessee unworthy of acceptance ; Clarifies that mere offering of income to tax by assessee, is not decisive of the issue whether penalty had been validly imposed, further remarks that, The penalty order does not disclose any independent or other reasoning to prove the allegation of concealment of income and/or furnishing of inaccurate particulars of income.”; Relies on Gujarat High Court ruling in Manu Engineering Works. [In favour of assessee] (Related Assessment year : 2009-10) – [Dee Control And Electric (P) Ltd. [TS-642-HC-2017(ALL)] – Date of Judgement : 19.12.2017 (All.)]

Unexplained expenditure (Section 69C) – Bogus purchases – If the assessee has not discharged the onus of producing the documentation and the suppliers, the Assessing Officer is entitled to estimate the gross profit

Information was received by Assessing Officer from DGIT (Inv.), Mumbai that there were some parties who were engaged in hawala transactions and were involved in issuing bogus bills for sale of material without delivery of goods, and that assessee was beneficiary of hawala/accommodation entries from 28 entry providers. Assessing Officer reopened assessment and assessee was asked to produce parties and also file documents to substantiate its claim of purchase etc. Assessee did not submit documentary evidence to show that there was movement of goods and notices issued to 28 parties were returned unserved. Thus, he concluded purchases were not genuine purchases and further, Assessing Officer made gross profit additions at rate of 12.5 per cent over total purchases. On facts, there was tangible material which clearly indicated assessee to be beneficiary of bogus purchase entries from 28 bogus entry providers and, thus, reopening was justified. Further since directors of 28 entities had admitted of issuing only invoices for sake of entry without delivery of goods Assessing Officer was justified in treating it as bogus purchases. Ends of justice will be met if GP ratio of 12.5 per cent on alleged bogus purchases was added to income of assessee against which credit for declared GP ratio on alleged bogus purchases be granted by Assessing Officer after verification. On facts, GP ratio of 12.5% as applied in CIT v. Simit P Sheth (2013) 356 ITR 451 (Guj.) is fair, reasonable and rational after giving credit for the GP already declared. [Partly in favour of assessee] (Related Assessment year : 2009-10) - [Ratnagiri Stainless (P) Ltd. v. ITO (2017) 164 ITD 136 : 80 taxmann.com 265 (ITAT Mumbai)]

The Assessing Officer examined the books of account and other supporting materials produced by the assessee. The Assessing Officer found that the purchases could be said to be vouched as they were made from Government undertakings or/and other distilleries, the sales version has totally manipulated. The assessee did not maintain brand wise and size wise quantitative details of various bottles/pouches. Even registers were not maintained. The assessee admitted the defects. The Assessing Officer rejected the books of account. The Commissioner (Appeals), while granting partial relief, upheld the rejection of books of account. The Tribunal also upheld the order.  The High Court held that admittedly the books of account had been found to be defective even on the admission of the assessee. The books of account were rightly rejected for the reasons assigned by the three authorities. - [Chaturbhuj Major Kumar and others v. CIT and another (2016) 7 TMI 1230 (Raj.)]

Non-production of parties cannot be a ground for disallowance of all purchases when sales made out of such purchases were not disputed or questioned and resultant profit on such sales had been accepted in toto by Assessing Officer

Non-production of parties cannot be a ground of disallowance of all the purchases for the following reasons: (i) The parties from whom purchases are made could not always be in the control of the assessee specially when they are unrelated parties. (ii) Non-production of the parties from whom the assessee purchased materials cannot lead to the conclusion that the purchases are not genuine. Where sales made out of such purchases were not disputed or questioned and the resultant profit on such sales had been accepted in toto by the Assessing Officer, Assessing Officer was not justified in disallowing such purchases as bogus purchases only on ground of non-production of parties.

It was held that in the absence of purchases there could not be sales worth of Rs. 4.03 crores. Not only this, the Assessing Officer also accepted the opening and closing stock as shown by the assessee in the books of account which were never rejected by him. The Assessing Officer had not doubted the sales. If the Assessing Officer's version was accepted then the gross profit works out 83% which was unbelievable. Non-production of parties could not be a ground for disallowance of all the purchases because the parties from purchases were made could not always be in the control of the assessee especially when they were unrelated parties. The Tribunal held that there was no justification for making the addition of Rs. 3.07 crores on account bogus purchases. [In favour of assessee] (Related Assessment year : 2009-10) - [Ganesh Dass Piara Lal Jain v. ITO, Ambala (2017) 82 taxmann.com 354 : (2016) 49 ITR(T) 36 : 7 TMI 686 (ITAT Chandigarh)]

Assessing Officer finding certain discrepancies in books of account maintained by assessee rejected books of account as not reliable but could not pinpoint any specific item in working results for a specified addition in assessment as disallowable item of expenditure, etc., only addition made on account of undervaluation of work in progress could not be sufficient to reject books of account of assessee

The Assessing Officer finding certain discrepancies in the books of account maintained by the assessee rejected the books of account as not reliable and made addition being 5 per cent of the net turnover considering the same as suppression of gross profit. On appeal, the Commissioner (Appeals) deleted addition except the addition made on account of undervaluation of work-in-progress in the closing stock holding that none of the grounds taken by the Assessing Officer for rejecting the books of account was valid. The Tribunal upheld order of the Commissioner (Appeals).

Held that the Assessing Officer had fully accepted the purchase, sales, consumption, shortage, etc., of the assessee-company and he could not pinpoint any specific item in the working results for a specific addition in the assessment as disallowable item of expenditure, etc. Therefore, the Tribunal was justified in holding that the book results were rejected by the Assessing Officer on insignificant grounds. [In favour of assessee] - [PCIT v. Garden Silk Mills Ltd. (2016) 388 ITR 237 : 7 TMI 915 : (2017) 81 taxmann.com 128 (Guj.)]

The Assessing Officer rejected the books of account of the assessee under section 145 of the Act on the ground that the assessee had failed to produce any bills or vouchers in respect of various cash payments made by the assessee and there were mistakes and discrepancies in the books of account. The Assessing Officer applied the net profit @ 3% and computed the income. The Commissioner (Appeals) confirmed the order of Assessing Officer. The Tribunal held that the books of account were duly audited and no effects had been pointed out regarding the sales, purchase or profit. The purported defects were confined to cash book which had no nexus with the trading results. Instances of irregularities in cash payment could not warrant ipso facto rejecting books of account. - [Samwon Precision Mould Manufacturing (India) (P) Ltd. v. ITO (2016) 4 TMI 1094 (ITAT Delhi)]

Where assessee’s yield from trading of rice was commensurate to industrial gross profit, ad hoc addition made was unjustified

Assessee-company was engaged in processing and trading in rice, pulses and food products. Subsequent to search, a notice was issued to assessee under section 153A. Assessing Officer after considering materials on record, made addition which included 1 per cent of sale of rice shown in books of account as quality wise day-to-day stock of rice traded by assessee was not reflected. The Tribunal found that the assessee’s books of account were regularly maintained, audited and no discrepancies whatsoever had been indicated by the Assessing Officer in any material terms. All the books of account were found and seized and there was no quantitative tally in the account books. Therefore, the conclusion of the Assessing Officer in this behalf reject the books was purely based on surmises and conjectures, the ad hoc addition of 1% of sales had been made which was again guess work based again on conjectures. The High Court held that the Assessing Officer's narrow basis for rejecting the books of account and addition of 1% of sales and bringing it to tax was legally untenable. [In favour of assessee] (Related Assessment years : 2002-03 to 2007-08) - [CIT v. Kohinoor Foods Ltd. (2015) 373 ITR 682 : 61 taxmann.com 84 : 5 TMI 82 (Del.)]

Rejection of accounts – Civil contractor – Estimate of income – Estimate should be based on past history and comparative cases – No evidence to justify additions – Addition was held to be not justified

The assessee carried on business as a civil contractor. It declared a net profit at the rate of 5.38 per cent. The Assessing Officer invoked the provisions of section 145. He disallowed expenses amounting to Rs. 1,17,75,202 and determined the net profit at 13.7 per cent. The Commissioner (Appeals) sustained an ad hoc addition of Rs. 10 lakhs. The Tribunal reduced the addition to Rs. 5 lakhs and deleted the addition of Rs. 1.12 crores. On appeal to the High Court: Held, that in three out of the past five assessment years, i.e., 2004-05, 2005-06, 2006-07, the Tribunal had applied the rate of 5 per cent. For the Assessment Year in question though the contract receipts had sharply increased from Rs. 10.60 crores to Rs. 12.32 crores, the net profit had increased from 5.02 per cent. to 5.38 per cent. or 5.78 per cent. with the addition of Rs. 5 lakhs. The Assessing Officer had merely disallowed 20 per cent. or 10 per cent., as the case may be, out of the various expenses, which was not proper and he had to bring on record justifiable basis or evidence for making an addition. As the Assessing Officer had failed to bring on record any comparable case so as to justify any estimation/addition, the addition had been rightly deleted by the Commissioner (Appeals) as well as the Tribunal. (Related Assessment year : 2009-10) - [CIT v. Gupta, K.N. Construction Co. (2015) 371 ITR 325 (Raj.)]

Assessing Officer disallowed expenses and estimated income on basis of estimation made in proceeding year, however, it failed to bring on record any comparable case so as to justify higher net profit rate and disallowance of expenses, addition made was to be deleted

Estimation of income (GP Rate) - Assessee - a partnership firm, was engaged in business of civil contractor and had furnished his income-tax return along with audit report and other information. Assessee declared a net profit of 5.38 per cent, subjected to interest and remuneration to partners. A perusal of order revealed that net profit rate in immediate preceding year was 5.02 per cent. Assessing Officer invoked provisions of section 145 and disallowed expenses amounted to Rs. 1.17 crores and determined net profit at 13.7 per cent - Commissioner (Appeals) sustained an ad hoc addition of Rs 10 lakhs.

It was held that where the provisions of section 145(3) are invoked one has to consider either the past history of the assessee or history of similarly situated other businesses or trades. Out of the past five assessment years, the Tribunal had applied the rate of 5%. For the assessment year in question though the contract receipts had sharply increased from Rs. 10.60 crores to Rs. 12.32 crores the net profit had increased from 5.02% to 5.38% or 5.78% with the addition of Rs. 5 lakhs. The Assessing Officer had merely disallowed 20% or 10%, as the case may be, out the various expenses, was not proper and he had to bring on record justifiable basis or evidence for making an addition. As the Assessing Officer had failed to bring on record any comparable case so as to justify any estimation, addition, the addition had been rightly deleted by the Commissioner (Appeals) as well as the Tribunal. [In favour of assessee] (Related Assessment year : 2009-10) - [CIT v. Gupta K.N. Construction Co. (2015) 371 ITR 325 : 59 taxmann.com 293 : 5 TMI 315 (Raj.)]

Bogus purchase – Where assessee recorded bogus purchases and, moreover, values of opening stock/closing stock were not open for verification, authorities below were justified in rejecting books of account and making addition to assessee’s income by adopting higher GP rate

The assessee was engaged in business of precious and semi-precious stones. The assessee purchased some goods from a party 'L' which was found to be non-genuine. It was also found that the assessee was not maintaining stock register at all and the entire valuation of the opening as well as closing of the stock was on mere estimation. The Assessing Officer thus, prima facie, came to the conclusion that the books of account were to be rejected and a higher GP rate was to be applied. The CIT(A) and Tribunal confirmed the order of Assessing Officer. The High Court held that insofar as the issue on trading addition is concerned, all the three authorities i.e. the Tribunal, Commissioner (Appeal) as well as Assessing Officer, have categorically arrived at a conclusion that provisions of section 145(3) are applicable and what should be a reasonable profit on account of the trading transactions, is a finding of fact. The assessee has introduced and recorded bogus purchases and values of opening stock/closing stock were not open for verification in the books of account, thus the motive was to reduce its profits. The assessee has not been able to dispel this finding of fact recorded by all the three authorities who in consonance, have come to the aforesaid conclusion. Consequently, the instant appeal, being devoid of merit, stands dismissed in limine. (Related Assessment year : 2008-09) - [Vimal Singhvi v. ACIT (2015) 370 ITR 275 : 273 CTR 322 : 230 Taxman 73 : 113 DTR 157 : 55 taxmann.com 309 (Raj.)]

Estimation of Profit – Question pertaining to net profit rate on estimation basis is a question of fact

The assessee had shown “nil” income but the Assessing Officer has completed assessment on the positive income of Rs.19,49,07,850/-; and Rs. 5,16,04,798/- respectively. Being aggrieved, the assessee filed appeals before the first appellate authority who allowed the relief to the assessee on various grounds. Not being satisfied, the department filed the second appeal before the Tribunal, who vide its impugned order set aside the order of the CIT(A) and remanded the matter back to the Assessing Officer for fresh adjudication on all the issues except one where the addition pertaining to N.P. rate was deleted in each Assessment Year under consideration. The only ground taken by the appellant-Department related to the addition of Rs. 4,07,22,749/-; and Rs. 61,16,188/- respectively for the assessment years under consideration, made by the Assessing Officer on estimate basis by applying the net profit rate of 1% on total transport/service charges etc. The same was deleted by the Tribunal vide its impugned order. Being aggrieved, the department filed the present appeal. The High Court observed that the department has filed both the appeals against the additions, which were deleted/restricted by the Tribunal pertaining to N.P. rate, which were made on estimate basis. High Court stated that estimation was a question of fact as per the ratio laid down in the case of Commissioner of Customs (Import) v. Stoneman Marble Industries (2011) 2 SCC 758. Since there was no question of law involved, both the appeals were dismissed at the admission stage. (Related Assessment years : 2005-06, 2006-07) - [CIT v. U.P. Co-operative Federation Ltd. (2014) 222 Taxman 179 (Mag.) : 42 taxmann.com 470 (All.)]

 

Profit being low cannot be a ground for rejection of books of accounts

The assessee-company was engaged in the manufacture and sale of sugar. The assessee conducted its business through commission agents and made necessary entries in books of account only on receipt of sale consideration. The Assessing Officer rejected the books of accounts on the ground that the assessee had shown a low sale/profit amount. The CIT(A) upheld the Assessment Order however the Tribunal deleted the same. The High Court observed that the books of account were properly audited, checked and no specific error was detected and that the sales were fully verifiable since the copies of challans, mandi tax vouchers, transport bills, etc. were also made available to the Assessing Officer. The High Court following other decisions on the subject held that profit being low by itself cannot be a ground for rejection of the books of account and thereby dismissed the departmental appeal. [DCIT v. Hanuman Sugar (Khandsari) Mills (P) Ltd. (2014) 221 Taxman 156 (All.)]

Method of accounting – Advance/token money received during an earlier year – to be considered as income only in the year in which work was performed

The assessee, a proprietor was in the business of sale of rights. The Assessing Officer disallowed an amount of Rs. 10 lakhs shown in 'current liabilities' which was an advance received for purchase of negative rights which was to be adjusted on signing a formal agreement, on the ground that the assessee was following cash system of accounting. The CIT(A) confirmed the order of the Assessing Officer. On appeal by the assessee, the Tribunal observed that the amount of advance could not partake the character of income and was to be returned by the assessee. Accordingly, the Tribunal allowing the appeal held that if advance received was considered as income of the assessee in the year of receipt, the Assessing Officer was to verify whether the work was completed in the year under consideration, and thus remanded the matter back to the file of the Assessing Officer. (Related Assessment year : 2008-09) -  [Robin Nanabhai Bhatt v. ACIT (2014) 29 ITR 531 (ITAT Mumbai)]

Estimation of profits – Depreciation is not allowable on estimated net profit

The term net profit by its very name is an all inclusive one or in a nutshell it is the profit which has been arrived at after netting off of income over the expenditure, meaning thereby that whatever expenses or notional expenses were due are to be deducted from the income of the firm or the company prior to deriving the final figure, i.e., profit. When net profit of civil construction business is computed on estimate basis after rejecting books of account, then no separate deduction including depreciation has to be allowed. [In favour of revenue] (Related Assessment years 1994-1995 to 2003-2004) - [CIT v. Sahu Construction (P) Ltd. (2014) 362 ITR 609 : 222 Taxman 167 : 42 taxmann.com 419 (All.)]

Non-maintenance of stock register – Rejection was held to be not justified

The assessee is engaged in manufacturing and trading of bed sheets, cotton clothes, general clothes and quilts. During the year under consideration, he had shown gross profits of Rs. 8,28,531 and a total turnover of Rs. 1,11,55,235 while giving GP rate at 7.43%. The Assessing Officer proceeded to complete the assessment while taking the total income at Rs. 17,42,360/- as against the returned income of Rs. 2,30,830. The Assessing Officer observed that the assessee has not maintained the stock register and quantified and qualified details of the goods could not be verified and sales were also not verifiable. The Assessing Officer rejected the books of accounts and invoked the provisions of section 145(3) of the Act, estimated the gross profit per cent on the estimated turnover of Rs. 1.20 Crs., resulting into the trading addition of Rs. 1,91,439. Court held that when the CIT(A) has deleted the addition in the trading result on the relevant consideration and finding was affirmed by Tribunal,no substantial question of law arises. (Related Assessment Year 2005-06) - [CIT v. Babulal Agarwal (2014) 97 DTR 284 (Raj.)]

There was fall in GP rate, stock register were not maintained and other discrepancies were not properly explained, addition on account of estimation of GP rate was justified - Rejection of books of account – Finding of fact and no question of law arises

Assessee during the relevant year assesses Gross Profit rate was 4.73% as against 8.14% in the immediately preceding year and assessee failed to produce stock register of production and sale of mustard cake. Assessing Officer rejected the trading results by applying GP rate @ 6% invoking the provisions of section 145(3). Both CIT(A) and Tribunal sustained the addition. On further appeal in High Court, High Court held contentions of lower authorities as findings of fact and held that all the authorities had categorically pointed out that assessee did not maintain stock register and further specific finding of lower authorities could not alter the position by the contrary observation of the Chartered Accountant in its Audit Report cannot be said to be correct. Further Assessing Officer had pointed out several deficiencies while making the assessment coupled with the fact for which there was no appeal explanation. Rejection of books of account after invoking provisions of section 145(3) was clearly a finding of fact and no substantial question of law arises out of the order of the Tribunal. In view of the aforesaid, there is no perversity or illegality in the order of the Tribunal. It is essentially a finding of fact and no question of law, mush less substantial question of law, which can be said to arise out of the order of the Tribunal. [In favour of revenue] - [Mukesh Oil Mills (P) Ltd. v. ITAT (2014) 264 CTR 196 : 49 taxmann.com 410 (Raj.)]

Explanation of the assessee

If the explanation given by the assessee is not satisfactory according to the Assessing Officer, then he can reject the books of account. The Tribunal confirmed the rejection of books of account under section 145(3) holding that the discrepancies pointed out by the Assessing Officer, while rejecting the book results have not been satisfactorily explained by the assessee. The Assessing Officer has observed that although the quantity of cotton seed, mustard and ground nut crushed during the previous year were shown separately but the yield of oil and oil cakes have been given in consolidated form at 13.02% and 83.91% respectively. Further the sales of oil and oil cakes have been shown in the manufacturing account in consolidated form although there was a wide variation in the market price of these products. It is also true that there is always a wide variation in the percentage of yield of oil and sale rates of oil and oil cakes in the market. However, the assessee has preferred to put up a consolidated account of difference types of oil seeds for the reasons best known to him. The assessee was asked by the Assessing Officer to rework the yield of oil and oil cakes separately from different types of oil, oil seeds crushed by him. The assessee was also asked to explain the reasons for mixing up the cotton, mustard and ground nut oil seeds in the same category when there was vast variation in market price of these types of oil seeds and other products. When Assessing Officer asked the assessee to give the explanation, the assessee stated that there was not much difference in the market price of both these oils and, therefore, he has made the sales of Khal and oil of both these varieties jointly. It is opined that the Assessing Officer has correctly rejected the above explanation of the assessee stating that assessee's statement in this behalf if not correct, therefore, under no circumstances is acceptable. Unless the yield of oil obtained on the crushing of three types of oil seeds is separately given, the manufacturing results cannot be appreciated in their proper prospective. There were sufficient reasons to hold that the books of account maintained by the assessee are unreliable, incorrect and incomplete. Therefore, the books of account of the assessee have correctly been rejected under section 145(3). The Commissioner (Appeals) has correctly upheld the action of the Assessing Officer in rejecting the books of account. - [Pawan Kumar v. ITO (2012) 11 TMI 3 (ITAT Chandigarh)]

Assessee’s books of account do not meet the test of deduction of true and correct profits therefrom in the absence of proper stock records

In the case of Champa Lal Choudhary v. DCIT, the ITAT confirmed the rejection of books of account holding that the addition(s) being agitated would need to be examined, firstly, from the standpoint of the validity or otherwise of the invocation of section 145(3) of the Act and the concomitant rejection of assessee's book results, and then on the merits of the addition on quantum. The revenue's action in invoking section 145(3) is confirmed. This is principally for the reason that the assessee’s books of account do not meet the test of deduction of true and correct profits therefrom in the absence of proper stock records, only whereupon they can be considered as correct and complete. The assessee's case is that each piece of stone bears different characterstics and composition and, therefore, it is not possible to maintain the stock register quality-wise. Firstly, therefore, it admits to its books of account as not bearing the quality-wise details of the goods purchased and sold and, thus, in stock at any given point of time and, therefore, not complete. The same may yield or reflect its quantity but then that by itself is of little moment or value in the absence of any indication as to its value which is an essential ingredient in  determining the cost of the goods sold and, thus, trading profit, and which, in turn, is necessary to work out the net profit. The value of the stock-in-trade as at the year end or the year of account, thus, becomes an independent variable, which cannot even be approximated with reference to the books of account as maintained. It is not the assessee's case that stock is valued at the average (weighted) cost of purchase, and which, though not a precise measure, even out the profits when applied from year to year, so that it may be considered as a viable alternative, employed bona fide. The same, even otherwise, does not offer itself as an acceptable alternative in the facts and circumstances of the case. This as the average method would yield approximate and reasonably correct results only when the conditions for its application exist. That is, the prices of the various stone pieces vary over a given, small range, with a low co-efficient of standard variation. When the individual prices (or data points) vary considerably, which is admitted, employment of such a method would yield irregular and misleading results. Two stones of the same weight may have largely different values or say value per unit (weight), where their weight differs. Further, how would the stock-in-trade as at the year end be valued? The same is to be at the actual cost of acquisition or production, and which again requires cost of bought out goods/raw material, i.e., not only  would its characterstics and/or composition be required to be assessed for the purpose, but also its cost ascertained with reference to the acquisition cost, identifying the relevant purchase bills, which do not bear any such details in respect of such characterstics or composition? - [Champa Lal Choudhary v. DCIT (2012) 54 SOT 398 : 7 TMI 761 (ITAT Jaipur)]

Assessing Officer cannot refer the matter to the DVO under section 142A without rejecting the books of accounts under section 145(3) of the Act

An assessing authority cannot  refer any matter to Departmental Valuation Officer without books of account being rejected. In the present case, we find that the Tribunal decided the matter rightly in favour of the assessee inasmuch as the Tribunal came to the conclusion that the assessing authority could not have referred the matter to the Departmental Valuation Officer (DVO) without the books of account being rejected. In the present case, a categorical finding is recorded by the Tribunal that the books were never rejected. This aspect has not been considered by the High Court. In the circumstances, reliance placed on the report of the DVO was misconceived. For the above reasons, the impugned judgment of the High Court is set aside and the order passed by the Tribunal stands restored to the file. Accordingly, the assessee succeeds. - [Sargam Cinema v. CIT (2010) 328 ITR 513 : 241 CTR 179 : 197 Taxman 203 : (2009) 10 TMI 569 (SC)]

Merely because the customs authorities have taken market value of exported goods for purpose of customs duty could not be a ground to make additions in case of assessee unless there was any material to show that the assessee had in fact received more amount than what was shown in invoices/bills

The assessee, a non-resident company, derived income mainly from export of manganese ore. Sometime in the year 1958, the customs authorities initiated proceedings against the respondent/assessee on the ground that the exports of manganese ore effected by the assessee were less than the market price which was in contravention of the customs Act. In the assessment proceedings, the Assessing Officer made additions on the basis of the amount computed by the authorities under the Customs Act for payment of the customs duty:

Held that it was not in dispute that the Assessing Officer has made additions only on the basis of the market price determined by the customs authorities under the Customs Act. Admittedly, there was no evidence on recorded to show that the assessee had recovered any amount in excess of the invoice issued.

The fact that the customs authorities have taken the market value of the exported goods for the purpose of customs duty could not be a ground to make additions in the case of the assessee unless there was any material to show that the assessee had in fact received more amount than what was shown in the invoices/bills. Therefore, the addition was not justified. [In favour of assessee] (Related Assessment year : 1953-54) - [CIT v. Central Provinces Manganese Ore Co. Ltd. (2008) 296 ITR 217 (Bom.)]

Rejections of books of account simply on lower G.P. rate in comparison to earlier years or with other assessees placed in similar circumstances would not suffice and will not stand the test of appeal

Though the fall in G.P. rate definitely provides a ground to the Assessing Officer for invocation of the provisions of section 145(3) yet it is not a sufficient condition. The Assessing Officer is required to analyse various other parameters which have the effect on the gross profit rate of the assessee for the relevant period, before drawing any conclusion on the merit of such claim. The fall in G.P. rate might be a symptom of malice with which the assessee's account would be suffering. However, it is the duty of the Assessing Officer to pin point the malice and bring it out in the assessment order by marshelling the facts encompassing the same. In the case of low gross profit rate, there could be inflated purchases or unrecorded sales besides manipulation in the valuation of closing stock. Therefore, the Courts expect that the Assessing Officer shall bring on record specific defects in the books of account of the assessee before invoking the provisions of section 145(3). The rejections of books of account simply on lower G.P. rate in comparison to earlier years or with other assessees placed in similar circumstances would not suffice and will not stand the test of appeal.

Where the assessee is unable to reconcile the quantities handled by it as between purchases and sales, subject to adjustment as between opening and closing stocks or where no quantity accounts are kept, the accounts are to be taken as unproved, so that the income returned may well be rejected and income estimated, if the gross profit declared is low. But where quantities in purchases and sales are different in character of the stock, such reconciliation is not possible in CIT v. Saatal Kattha and Chemicals (P) Ltd. (2008) 296 ITR 197 (MP), where the assessee was purchasing timber on the basis of length, girth and weight, but converted them into logs and sold the same in different sizes. The High Court found, that the inference of shortage in the facts of the case was not a sound basis. All the same, the High Court found, that a reasonable addition sustained by the Tribunal, which reduced the additions made “capriciously” by the Assessing Officer, was held justified.

In a case, where accounts were rejected on the ground that purchases of raw materials were vouched only by internal debit vouchers, it was found that assessee had explained, that it was not possible to get third party vouchers for purchase of raw materials from sundry dealers in respect of a contract work in State of Assam in a disturbed situation. It was in this context, that the High Court in Madnani Construction Corporation (P) Ltd. v. CIT held, that the Tribunal was not justified in merely confirming the addition without considering assessee's case for acceptance of return. - [Madnani Construction Corporation (P) Ltd. v. CIT (2008) 296 ITR 45 (Gau.)]

It was pointed out, that the pre-condition for estimating business income of the assessee, where an assessee keeps accounts is that the assessee's books should have been found to be unreliable or otherwise not capable of proving the assessee's income. Without this first step, the fact that the gross profit is low cannot by itself be a ground for taking a view that it is open to the Assessing Officer to make good the alleged deficiency in gross profit.—[ITO v. Girish M Mehta (2008) 296 ITR (AT) 125 (ITAT Rajkot)]

 

Rejection of books of accounts under Section 145 justified and the best judgement assessment under Section 144

It was held that the rejection of books of accounts under section 145 justified and the best judgement assessment under section 144 of the Act. The facts of this case were that the assessee was dealing in precious and semiprecious stones. The Assessing Officer noticed certain defects in books of account of the assessee, viz., that it had not maintained any quantitative details/ stock register for the goods traded in by it; that there was no evidence/ document or record to verify the basis of the closing stock valuation shown by it; that GP rate declared by the assessee at 13.49 per cent during the Assessment Year did not match the result declared by the assessee itself in the previous assessment years; and that the gross profit declared by it was much below the rate declared voluntarily by another assessees engaged in similar business. Thereafter, the Assessing Officer rejected the books of account of the assessee and resorted to best judgment assessment under section 144 and estimated the gross profit rate at 40 per cent. The Assessing Officer, further held that the assessee had shown bogus purchases for reducing the gross profits. On appeal, the Commissioner (Appeals), though reduced the quantum of the gross profit, estimated by the Assessing Officer, yet upheld most of his impugned findings. On further appeal, the Tribunal had also given further relief to the assessee. On appeal to the Supreme Court : the assessee himself who is to blame as he did not submit proper accounts. There was no arbitrariness in the instant case on the part of the authorities. Thus, there was no force in the instant appeal and the same was to be dismissed accordingly. - [Kachwala Gems v. JCIT, Jaipur (2007) 288 ITR 10 (SC)]

Assessing Officer, on finding that assessee had not maintained and kept any quantitative details/stock register for goods traded in by it; that there was no evidence on record or document to verify basis of valuation of closing stock shown by assessee; and that GP rate declared by assessee during assessment year did not match result declared by assessee itself in previous assessment years, rejected assessee’s books of account and resorted to best judgment assessment under section 144 - Since cogent reasons had been given by Assessing Officer for doing so, there was no reason to take a different view

The assessee was dealing in precious and semi-precious stones. The Assessing Officer noticed certain defects in books of account of the assessee. The assessee had not maintained any quantitative details/stock register for the goods trade in by it. There was no evidence/document to verify the basis of closing stock valuation shown by it. The gross profit rate declared by the assessee at 13.49% during the Assessment Year did not match the result declared by the assessee itself in the previous assessment years and that the gross profit declared by it was much below the rate declared voluntarily by another assessee engaged in similar business. Therefore, the Assessing Officer rejected the books of account of the assessee and resorted to best judgment assessment under section 144 and estimated the gross profit at 40%. The Assessing Officer further held that the assessee had shown bogus purchases for reducing the gross profits. On appeal, the Commissioner (Appeals) though reduced the quantum of the gross profit, estimated by the Assessing Officer,yet upheld most of his impugned findings. On further appeal, the Tribunal had also given further relief to the assessee. The Supreme Court, on appeal, held that the assessee himself who is to blame as he did not submit proper accounts. There was no arbitrariness in the instant case on the part of the authorities. Thus there was no force in the instant appeal and the same is liable. - [Kachwala Gems v. JCIT, Jaipur (2007) 288 ITR 10 : 158 Taxman 71 : (2006) 206 CTR 585 : 12 TMI 83 (SC)]

Books of Account mean those books of account whose main object is to provide credible data and information to file the tax returns

The term ‘books of account’ would mean those books of account whose main object is to provide credible data and information to file the tax returns. The credible accounting record provides the best foundation for filing return of both direct and indirect taxes. - [Brij Lal Goyal v. ACIT (2004) 88 ITD 413 (ITAT Delhi)]

In the context of Sales Tax legislation, it has been held that where the relevant statute mandates the dealer to maintain stock books in respect of raw materials as well as products obtained at every stage of production and the dealer does not maintain the stock of books, it leads to the conclusion that the account books are not reliable or that particulars are not properly verifiable. If the account books are rejected, the turnover has to be determined to the best of the judgement of the assessing authority concerned. In such circumstances, it cannot be said that a defect in non-maintenance of stock register is only technical and so the turnover disclosed in account books should be accepted. - [CST v. Girija Shankar Awanish Kumar (1997) 104 STC 130 (SC)]

Rejection of books of accounts was justified under section 145 and the Best Judgment assessment under section 144 where the assessee had not produced relevant records relating to its day-to-day manufacture of ‘bidis’ including the quantity of ‘bidis’ manufactured daily, the figures of ‘bidi’ leaves consumed per day in each factory and the records relating to the daily collection of CHAAT and MAPARI bidis the Tribunal has been held correct in holding that the Income Tax Officer was not satisfied about the fitness of correctness of the accounts of the assessee

Assessee-company was a manufacturer of bidis. Its workmen were paid on basis of work done. ITO found that on checking bidis production, sub-standard bidis called ‘Chhat bidis’ were sorted out and kept separately and each worker was to give 10 extra bidis known as ‘Mapari bidis’ for which he was not given any wages. For relevant assessment year assessee showed gross profit at rate of 13.6 per cent while other manufacturers were showing it at rate of 23.8 per cent to 25.5 per cent. ITO held that book results could not be relied upon because assessee had not produced day-to-day registers showing quantity of bidis manufactured and bidi leaves consumed in each factory and it was not possible to correlate weight of bidi leaves issued to workers and bidis produced - He also observed that there was absence of record as to total collection of Chhat and Mapari bidis and record relating to production of Chhat and Mapari bidis had also not been maintained. He rejected book results and worked out production an income of assessee by applying proviso to section 145(2). He added Rs. 3,20,000 under head 'Suppressed production of Mapari bidis' and Rs. 1,64,000 as 'suppressed production of chhat bidis’. On appeal, Tribunal added Rs. 1 lakh for excess consumption of bidi leaves and reduced addition in respect of Chhat bidis to Rs. 1,23,210 and of Mapari bidis to Rs. 1,72,494. As assessee failed to produce day-to-day record for consumption of leaves, production of bidis and record of daily collection of chhat and Mapari bidis, ITO was justified in applying provisions of section 145(2). Tribunal’s conclusion in directing addition of Rs. 1 lakh for excess consumption of bidi leaves was erroneous in law as it was not based on any material on record. Additions made by Tribunal on account of estimated value of suppressed production of chhat and Mapari bidis were in accordance with law save and except that assessee was entitled to get credit for sale proceeds of Chhat bidis disclosed by assessee in his books of account. (Related Assessment year : 1964-65) - [Bastiram Narayandas Maheshri v. CIT (1994) 210 ITR 438 : 117 CTR 198 : 74 Taxman 454 : (1993) 12 TMI 31 (Bom.)]

Assessing Officer noticed various defects in account books of assessee and concluded that account books maintained by assessee were neither correct nor complete - It was found that no stock registers were maintained nor sales were found verifiable in absence of cash memos - Vouchers of expenses were also not forthcoming and income returned was ridiculously low as compared to exorbitant turnover - Assessing Officer proceeded to make assessment on best judgment - Tribunal upheld action of Assessing Officer of rejecting book result - Order of Tribunal gave no rise to any question of law

The Assessing Officer in the instant case noticed various defects in the account books of the assessee on which he came to the conclusion that the account books maintained by the assessee were neither correct nor complete. It was found that purchases and corresponding sales were not at all verifiable. No vouchers for the expenses and the cash memos were kept. No stock register was maintained. The assessee could not furnish the periodical retail sale price of the liquor. On enquiries, the Assessing Officer was informed by the District Excise Officer that the liquor contractors were free to fix the sale price of liquor and there was no control over the selling price. A clear finding was recorded that the profit and loss account furnished by the assessee did not depict correct and real profit earned during the year. On these findings the Assessing Officer rejected the account books invoking the provisions of section 145(2) and proceeded to make assessment on best judgment. On appeal, the Commissioner (Appeals) affirmed the action of the Assessing Officer. On second appeal, the Tribunal also upheld the action by dismissing the second appeal filed by the assessee. On an application for reference under section 256(2):

Held : In the instant case, the account books were rejected because admittedly no stock register was maintained nor the sales were found verifiable in absence of the cash memos. The vouchers of expenses were also not forthcoming and the income returned was ridiculously low as compared to the exorbitant turnover and the extent of the business carried on by the assessee. It was difficult to catalogue the various types of defects in the account books of an assessee which might render rejection of account books on the ground that the accounts were not complete or correct from which the correct profits could not be deduced Whether presence or absence of stock register is material or not, would depend upon the type of the business. It is true that absence of stock register or cash memos in a given situation might not per se lead to an inference that accounts were false or incomplete. However, where a stock register, cash memos, etc., coupled with other factors like vouchers in support of the expenses and purchases made are not forthcoming and the profits are low, it may give rise to a legitimate inference that all is not well with the books and the same cannot be relied upon to assess the income, profits or gains of an assessee. In such a situation the authorities would be justified to reject the account books under section 145(2) and to make the assessment in the manner contemplated in those provisions. Taking all these aspects and the material into consideration, the Tribunal had found as a fact that the claim of the assessee for acceptance of the account books was not sustainable. On the findings of the fact recorded by the Tribunal, its order did not give rise to any question of law. [In favour of revenue] - [Awadhesh Pratap Singh Abdul Rehman & Bros v. CIT (1994) 210 ITR 406 : 1991 CTR 1 76 Taxman 106 (1993) 12 TMI 28 (All.)]

Disclosure of low rate of gross profit combined with further circumstances, viz., absence of quantitative tally justified rejection of book results of assessee – Therefore, impugned additions made by ITO were correct

The assessee was a wholesale dealer in solid spices for the relevant assessment year – Gross profit rate disclosed was 6-7 per cent. The ITO found that although the books of account were maintained, no day-to-day stock analysis was found. He also cited a comparable case of a dealer who, had dealt in powder spices as well as in solid spices and had shown 22.2 per cent gross profit for solid spices. The ITO, basing his judgment on the said case, rejected the book version of the profit of the assessee and applied a flat rate of 10 per cent and added a sum of Rs. 31,056.

On appeal, the Deputy Commissioner (Appeals) deleted the addition. On revenue’s appeal, the Tribunal held that the ITO, on the basis of the case cited, had come to the conclusion that the profit shown by the assessee was low. Therefore, the Tribunal confirmed the addition. On reference:

Held : It was seen from the Tribunal’s order that it was quite conscious of the position that the assessee was not confronted with the comparable case relied upon by the ITO, yet it found that the estimate that the ITO had made could not be said to have been guided by such a comparable case. The Assessing Officer mentioned that particular case merely in passing but, while estimating the profit rate, he applied altogether a different standard going by the facts of the assessee’s case. Therefore, it could not be said that the particular case was used against the assessee merely because of a reference in the order of the case. The reference was for the limited purpose of showing that the low rate of gross profit disclosed, combined with the further circumstances, viz., absence of quantitative tally, justified the rejection of the book results and the resort to an estimate. Even without said particular comparable instance, the results of the trading could be rejected since the assessee’s books of account were such that no proper profit was deducible therefrom.

Further, the assessee merely rested at contending against the Assessing Officer’s failure to disclose the comparable case before completion of the assessment but even when the case came to the knowledge of the assessee, and the assessee was in appeal before the Deputy Commissioner (Appeals), no attempt was made to challenge the comparable case and to show the general trend in the market. There are certain trades, specially in the retail market, where stock tally may be impracticable and the assessee can reasonably advance the plea that the accounts have been maintained in the best manner possible in the special circumstances of the case. But such was not the case with the assessee. The assessee dealt in wholesale spices. Failure to maintain stock accounts was a substantial defect in the accounts justifying an inference that the accounts were maintained in a manner from which the true and correct profits were not deducible.

Therefore, the Tribunal was right in holding that the estimate and the addition made on such estimate was quite reasonable and fair. Moreover, the Tribunal’s finding that the assessee’s rate of gross profit was below the market rate which was ten per cent was a finding of fact which the assessee had not challenged. In such circumstances, the impugned order passed by the Tribunal could not be interfered with. [In favour of revenue] (Related Assessment year : 1982-83) – [Amiya Kumar Roy and Brothers v. CIT (1994) 206 ITR 306 : (1993) 3 TMI 26 (Cal.)]

Section 145 imposes duty on Assessing Officer to adopt any computation for proper determination of assessee’s true income

The ITO recalculated the value of the opening and closing stocks declared by the assessee by adding overhead expenditure. Supreme Court upheld the action of the ITO, holding that “valuation of the stock-in-trade at cost or market value, whichever is the lower, is a matter entirely within the discretion of the assessee. But whichever method he adopts, it should disclose a true picture of his profits and gains. If, on the other hand, he adopts a system which does not disclose the true state of affairs for the determination of tax, even if it is ideally suited for other purposes of his business, such as the creation of a reserve, declaration of dividends, planning and the like, it is the duty of the Assessing Officer to adopt any such computation as he deems appropriate for the proper determination of the true income of the assessee. This is not only a right but a duty that is placed on the officer, in terms of the first proviso to section 145, which concerns a correct and complete account but which, in the opinion of the officer, does not disclose the true and proper income.” - [In favour of revenue] – [CIT v. British Paints India Ltd. [TS-5-SC-1990]- Date of Judgement : 12.12.1990 (SC)]

Assessee-firm was not maintaining its day-to-day stock register and, farther, distinctive number either or purchases or sales were not famished to ITO - While arriving at its profits for relevant assessment years, assessee debited sales tax payments in profit and loss account and sales tax received from customers was included in sale price - Proviso to section 145(1) was applicable - To find out real gross profit, sales tax amount debited in profit and loss account had to be deducted and then what remained as balance was gross profit

The assessee-firm was not maintaining any day-to-day stock account. It did not furnish any distinctive numbers either of purchases or sales to the ITO. The assessee had debited the sales tax payment in the profit and loss account and not in the trading account; sales tax received from the customers was included in the sales price. While completing assessment for the relevant assessment year, the ITO held that the sales tax paid by the assessee should be debited in the trading account instead of profit and loss account. He, therefore, estimated the profits on net sales by applying the proviso to section 145(1) since in his view the assessee's accounts were not amenable to check. However, on appeal the Tribunal held that the gross profit rate should be applied on gross turnover including the amount of sales tax. On reference:

Held : There is no element of profit on the amount of sales tax and, hence, the application of gross profit on the amount of sales tax did not arise; rather the surplus or deficit of the sales tax collection and sales tax paid should be taken as income or expenditure separately. The sales tax paid or collected cannot form part of the gross profit, as the same is collected as the agent of the Government. There is no justification in law, for exclusion of the sales tax amount as part of the profit of the business. The gross profit is not cost plus profit plus sales tax but cost plus profit alone, and the sales tax amount has to be excluded in order to find out the real gross profit. In the instant case, the gross profits in the trading account were artificially inflated by debiting the Central and State sales tax in the profit and loss account. Hence, to find out the real gross profit, the actual amount of Central and State sales tax debited in the profit and loss account both from the turnover as well as gross profit shown had to be deducted. The application of gross profit on the amount of sales tax collections or the sales tax paid, in law, was not correct and the same should be taken as income or expenditure. Further, the sales tax amount realised by the assessee formed part of its trading or business receipts. Thus, to find out the real gross profits the sales tax received from the customers was to be deducted and then what remained as the balance was the gross profit. Further, the proviso to section 145(1) was applicable in the instant case, and the ITO was justified in applying the aforesaid proviso. - [CIT v. Pareck Brothers (1987) 167 ITR 344 : 63 CTR 371 : 32 Taxman 278 : 3 TMI 79 (Patna)]

Rejection of accounts in earlier year(s) cannot justify rejection for current year

It is a well settled position of law that while making the assessment, the account books for that year have alone to be considered, as each Assessment Year is independent. There is no scope of presumption that merely because for some reason the account books in earlier years were rejected, these stood condemned forever. - [Ram Avtar Ashok Kumar v. CST (1980) 45 STC 366 (All.)]

Stock register not verifiable at the time of survey – produced at the assessment stage

Where at the time of survey, a stock register was not found at the business premises, that circumstances may create a suspicion about the genuineness of the stock register when it is produced during the assessment proceedings. But the assessing authority has to scrutinize the stock reigister so produced and it is only in case he finds it spurious that a conclusion can be drawn that the  assessee had not maintained its accounts properly. - [Delhi Iron Syndicate (P) Ltd. v. CIT (1979) Tax LR 775 (All.)]

Comparative GP rate of earlier years

The rate of gross profit in a particular year depends on many factors namely the general market conditions based on demand and supply position, the rise or fall in market rates, specially abrupt ones, the capital position viz-aviz the turnover achieved and many others. It is for the assessee to explain the fall, if so happens and to substantiate the reasons. Even if, thereafter, the Assessing Officer considers the material placed before him by the assessee to be unreliable, keeping in view the comparative statement of accounts of the earlier years, he cannot proceed to make an arbitrary addition and base his conclusion purely on guess work. He can do so only if he relates to some evidence or material on the record. The Courts have held that if the profit shown by the assessee in his return is not accepted, it is for the taxing authorities to prove that the assessee made more profits.—[International Forest Company v. CIT (1975) 101 ITR 721 (J & K)]

It was held that where none of the three situations as provided in subsection (3) of section 145 (discussed above) exists, a method of accounting regularly followed by the assessee must be accepted.—[Md. Umer v. CIT (1975) 101 ITR 525 (Pat.)]

Further, once the books are properly rejected, the income has to be estimated and in making the estimate of such income, the best record alongwith other things will become the relevant material. - [Vrajlal Manilal & Company v. CIT (1973) 92 ITR 287 (MP)]

There can be different methods of accounting for a different source of income

Assessee leased out its factory premises to ‘J N’ on annual lease rent. It was following cash system of accounting in respect of income from lease money. Since lease rent under consideration was not realized in relevant assessment year, assessee did not offer same for taxation in said assessment year. Tribunal found that in respect of loan advanced to ‘J N’ assessee was following mercantile system of accounting and, therefore, assessee was not justified in not offering for assessment rent which had accrued in its favour.  Merely because assessee followed mercantile system in respect of his money - lending business, it could not be compelled to adopt same in respect of income from lease money. Therefore, rent due from ‘J N’ could not be included in total income of assessee. – (Related Assessment years : 1940-41 to 1946-47) - [JK Bankers v. CIT (1974) 94 ITR 107 (All.)]

It was held that there was material to support the Appellate Tribunals sustaining addition made on the ground that (i) the assessee's business was on wholesale basis and in the absence of tally of quantities in respect of major items of the trading account, the fall in margin of profits could not be satisfactorily explained; and (ii) the fall was all the more difficult to explain in view of the fact that the assessee had a substantial import quota which could have been given him a handsome margin of profit. The Supreme Court, however, made it clear in the concluding portion of its judgment that it was not concerned with the correctness of the conclusion but was concerned only with the question whether there was any material in support of the Tribunal’s findings in the case of Bhundiram Dalichand v. CIT (1971) 81 ITR 609 (Bombay).

Under the cash system, it is only actual cash receipts and actual cash payments that are recorded. The cash system will cover cases where accounts are not maintained on the mercantile basis. The cash system of accounting also includes receipt of kind as revenue receipt of the year in which kind is received. Under the mercantile system, credit entries are made in respect of the amounts due immediately they become legally due and before they are actually received. Similarly, the expenditure items for which legal liability has been incurred are immediately debited even before the amounts in question are actually disbursed. Where accounts are kept on mercantile basis, the profits or gains are credited though they are not actually realized and the entries thus made really show nothing more than an accrual or arising of the said profits at the material time. - [Morvi Industries Ltd. v. CIT (1971) 10 TMI 5 (SC)]

Rejection of books of accounts under section 145 justified in the absence of quantitative tally of purchases and sales besides unexplained lowness of gross profit

Section 145 of the Income-tax Act, 1961 [Corresponding to section 13 of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922] - The assessee carried ton business of dealing in handloom cloth, primarily retail in nature. The cloth shop was located in the wholesale area of the Poona bazaar. The assessee produced two sets of accounts both closed and adjusted for its head office as well as its branch at Bombay. Balance-sheets were also drawn up. The Income-tax Officer noticed in the balance-sheet of the head office an excess of assets of Rs. 4,268 over the liabilities. The assessee had not maintained any quantitative stock record for the goods dealt with by it. In the head office the assessee had shown sales of Rs. 7,34,038 and a gross profit of 7-8 per cent as against sales of Rs. 5,83,805 and gross profits of 8 per cent for the immediately preceding year. It was contended that the business was wholesale as the shop was situated in the wholesale market. But this contention was not accepted by the Income-tax Officer as on going through the sales it was found that the sales to the extent of Rs. 5,00,301 were cash and rest of the sales were credit and on scrutiny of the cash memos it was found that the business was retail with the consumers. It was further noticed that the credit sales included sales to consumers. Thus, out of the total sales of Rs. 7 lakhs and odd, sales to the extent of about Rs. 6 lakhs were retail. On further going through the credit sales the Income-tax Officer found that the assessee had charged profit of 8 per cent to 10 per cent on the cost. He noticed, however, that the profit was subject to deduction of transport charges of about 2 per cent. The Income-tax Officer came to the conclusion that the assessee's margin of profit on the retail business must be substantial. The ITO accordingly, rejected the books of account produced by assessee and held that having regard to retail nature of business, gross profit earned should be 10 per cent on sales. The AAC as well as the Tribunal upheld the ITO’s order substantially. On reference :

Held : It was clear from the orders passed by the authorities below that whilst exercising the powers available to them under the proviso to section 13 they had without stating in so many words exercised the powers upon the footing that they had made a finding in their orders that the method of accounting employed by the assessee was such that the profits made by the assessee could not be properly deduced therefrom. These authorities were aware that without making such a finding the powers available under the proviso could not be exercised. The law in that connection is clear. It is true that in words such a finding was not recorded in the orders made by these authorities. Still, it could not be said that these orders had not the effect of impliedly recording a finding that these authorities in fact, found that the method of accounting adopted by the assessee was such that therefrom profits made by the assessee could not properly be deduced.

In the instant case, the material of all the surrounding circumstances and facts as found by the ITO and the AAC induced them to hold that in the absence of the quantitative tally regarding the sales and purchases made by the assessee, it was necessary to exercise powers available under the proviso to section 13 of 1922 Act. Consequently, power so exercised by them was justified. The order passed by them was to be accordingly affirmed. [In favour of revenue] (Related Assessment year : 1958-59) - [Dhondiram Dalichand v. CIT (1971) 81 ITR 609 : (1970) (4) TMI 52 (Bom.)]

 

When an assessee produces before the Assessing Officer all relevant registers, it is not open to the revenue to pick and choose some of the registers which are in its favour.

The Assessing Officer, the Appellate Authority and the High Court only relied upon the entries in the Sale Contract Register and the Daily Yarn Production Register for the purpose of ascertaining the unexplained shortage of yarn, though they differed in the matter of giving allowances for the count deviation, etc. The Assessing Officer, in his order relating to the assessment year 1940, gives reasons for discarding the books and records of the assessee in regard to quantitative particulars. But the Appellate Authority and the High Court did not expressly reject the said documents, and indeed they relied upon the entries in the Sale Contract Register as well as those in the Daily Yarn Production Register. For the subsequent years, even the Assessing Officer did not reject the registers. Nor did the Appellate Authority or the High Court reject the said registers. The assessee filed before the authorities concerned all its registers reflecting the process of the manufacture at the various stages. It was the duty of the authorities to definitely come to one conclusion or the other in regard to the reliability of every one of the relevant accounts filed by the assessee. In the absence of any such finding, it was not open to them to pick and choose some of the registers which were more favourable to the revenue. In choosing the Sale Contract Register, where only nominal weight was given, and ignoring the actuals register, they had accepted notional figures in preference to the actuals without holding that the actuals were not true figures. In accepting the figures in the Daily Yarn Production Register they had not considered the reasons given by the assessee why inflated figures were shown therein. They could accept the assessee's explanations or reject them or they could check the entries therein with reference to the other registers. But they had done none of these things. They had also not considered the explanation offered by the assessee why the weights in the Sale Contract Register would necessarily be less than the weights given in the Actual Cloth Production Register. Being tribunals of fact, it was their duty to consider all the accounts, having regard to the arguments advanced and the explanations given by the parties, and come to their own conclusion. But as they had not done so, we think that this is a fit case to give them another opportunity to do so. The High Court remanded the matter to the Assessing Officer and directed him to give opportunity to the appellant-company to produce materials with reference to the three points mentioned in its judgment. In the aforesaid circumstances, we think that the scope of the enquiry before the Assessing Officer should not be limited in the manner suggested by the High Court. The Assessing Officer is directed to consider afresh the entire material that has already been placed before him, and such other material, such as registers which have been maintained but are admittedly not produced, and other relevant evidence as may be brought before him, and come to a conclusion in regard to the question of unaccounted yarn in the light of the directions given by this court and those given by the High Court in other matters. The Assessing Officer shall not in any case increase the tax liability on this point over and above that he has initially assessed. In the result, Civil Appeals Nos. 183 to 187 of 1964 are allowed with costs, one set. - [Indore Malwa United Mills Ltd. v. State of Madhya Pradesh (1966) 60 ITR 41 (SC)]

Rejection of books of accounts under section 145 justified in the absence of quantitative tally of purchases and sales besides unexplained lowness of gross profit rate

Section 145 of the Income-tax Act, 1961 [Corresponding to section 13 of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922] - The assessee filed a return showing an income of Rs. 78,350 for the assessment year 1954-55. The ITO in his assessment order, did not accept the trading accounts on the ground that the profits disclosed in comparison with the earlier years were too low and there were no day-to-day stock details for the purpose of verification and there was small withdrawals for personal expenditure in the partners’ accounts, and accordingly made addition.

On appeal the AAC deleted the addition of Rs. 75,000, but as the closing stock of certain goods was under valued to the tune of Rs. 4,490, he only allowed a deduction of Rs. 70,510. On revenue's appeal, the Tribunal upheld the addition made in assessees income. On reference, the High Court upheld the order of the Tribunal. On appeal to the Supreme Court :

Held : Regarding the finding of the Appellate Tribunal that the income, profits and gains could not properly be deduced from the method of accounting employed by the assessee reasons given by the Tribunal was that the assessee was doing business in the main on wholesale basis and there, should have been no difficulty in tallying quantities in respect of major items of trading account. That certainly was a relevant consideration. In the absence of such a tally, the next reason given was that the fall in the margin was all the more difficult to explain in view of the fact that the assessee also had a quota of imports worth about Rs. 8,00,000 which would have given them a handsome margin of profit. That again was a relevant fact and it was well-known that imported goods fetch a very handsome margin of profit. Accordingly, there was material in support of the impugned finding of the Appellate Tribunal. In view of aforesaid, the instant appeal was dismissed and order of the High Court upholding the Tribunal's order was affirmed. [In favour of revenue] (Related Assessment year : 1954-55) - [Chhabildas Tirbhuvandas Shah v. CIT (1966) 59 ITR 733 : (1964) 9 TMI 8 (SC)]

Irrespective of method of accounting followed (i.e. either cash or mercantile), assessee has to take into account the value of stock/inventory at the beginning and end of the year

Assessee-firm which adopted cash system of accounting, filed a voluntary return declaring certain amount earned by exploitation of film. In computation of profits of business, assessee did not take credit for value of unexpired exploitation rights at end of previous year. However, in course of assessment, ITO estimated value of rights for unexpired period of exploitation to which firm was entitled and computed net profits accordingly. AAC as well as Tribunal upheld ITO’s order substantially. High Court however held that assessee having adopted cash system of accounting, and Tribunal having assigned no reasons for discarding that system in computation of profits, Tribunal was in error in making assessment on basis of mercantile system of accounting. On facts, there was no warrant in instant case for assuming that revenue authorities and Tribunal had sought to displace method of accountancy adopted by assessee and, by applying proviso to section 13 of 1922 Act they made computation upon basis and in manner in which in their opinion profits would be properly deduced. Therefore, High Court was in error in holding that because assessee had maintained his accounts on cash system it was not open to ITO to add to receipts from business value of stock in trade at end of year for purpose of properly deducing profits of business for year in question. (Related Assessment year : 1949-50) - [CIT v. A. Krishnaswami Mudaliar (1964) 53 ITR 122 (SC)]

It was observed that the mercantile system brings into credit what is due immediately it becomes legally due and before it is actually received; and it brings into debit expenditure the amount for which a legal liability has been incurred before it is actually disbursed. The mercantile system, thus, treats profits or gains as arising or accruing at the date of the transaction, notwithstanding the fact that they are not received or deemed to be received. It may, however, be noted that the right or liability must be legally enforceable and must have ripened. [In favour of the revenue] - [CIT v. A. Gajapathy Naidu (1964) 53 ITR 114 (SC)]

 

The expression 'in the opinion of the Income-tax Officer' in the proviso to section 13 of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 does not confer a mere discretionary power ; in the context it imposes a statutory duty on the Income-tax Officer to examine in every case the method of accounting employed by the assessee and to see whether or not it has been regularly employed and to determine whether the income, profits and gains of the assessee could properly be deduced therefrom

Section 145 of the Income-tax Act, 1961 [Corresponding to section 13 of the Indian income-tax Act, 1922] - The appellant-assessee was a 'resident and ordinarily resident' in India and carried on extensive trade in Colombo in grains, fodder, gram and other food-stuffs for cattle and poultry. For the assessment year 1943-44, the assessee showed a profit of 3.5 per cent. For the two previous assessment years the appellant's gross profits were 9 per cent and 8 per cent respectively. The ITO, by his order, rejected the accounts and estimated the gross profit by adding back certain amount to the returned income, which was confirmed by the AAC. On second appeal, the Tribunal after pointing out various defects, rejected the account books but accepted the appellant's turnover and computed the profits at 15 per cent on grains imported from India and 12½ per cent on grains purchased in Ceylon. It held that correct profit for the year under assessment could not be deduced from the books produced by the appellant. The excess profits tax for the chargeable accounting periods was decided on the basis of the income-tax assessment for the year 1943-44. The reference application was rejected by the Tribunal as well as by the High Court. On appeal to the Supreme Court :

Held : The power to compute profits under the proviso to section 13 arises only where no method of accounting has been regularly employed by the assessee and where the method employed is such that the income, profits and gains cannot properly be deduced therefrom. It means that the method adopted by the assessee must prima facie prevail where it is regularly employed, though the ITO can resort to the proviso if the method is such that true profits cannot be correctly determined therefrom. In other words, even if the assessee has regularly employed a method of accounting it can be discarded under the proviso if the method does not show correct profits of the year.

In the instant case the Tribunal held that correct profits could not be deduced from the books produced by the assessee and therefore the proviso to section 13 of 1922 Act applied. The reasons it gave were (1) that vouchers for several purchases made in Colombo had not been produced and for purchases no vouchers were forthcoming and without the vouchers, the entries in the account books could not be verified; (2) there was no quantitative tally for the grains and for other materials purchased by the appellant, which were ground into powder, turned into fodder, packed in different sizes and then sold. It was not possible, according to the Tribunal, to accept the books of account, where the turnover was as large as about seventeen lakhs of rupees, without a quantitative tally; (3) a fairly big sum of money was alleged to have been paid towards purchasing of licenses for export from India; and Rs 19,000 worth of purchases were made in Tuticorin when only a small sum of money in cash was shown in the assessee’s account; (4) several outsiders' cheques had been entered in the accounts of the assessee without any proof as to why those cheques were paid to the assessee; and (5) a fairly big sum of money had been invested in India in the purchase of property without money being received form Colombo. After giving this finding the Tribunal accepted the turnover as shown in the appellant's books. In making the computation of profits, the Tribunal took into consideration the following matters: that the export of food grains from India was prohibited except under a licence, that there was an acute shortage of cattle fodder in Ceylon and the appellant had to resort to dubious means in order to obtain grains, the during a substantial portion of the year of accounting there was no price control in Colombo, that as the appellant was a manufacturer of forage by mixing several kinds of grains and powdering them and sold them in packets of various weights, the appellant must have made higher profits than persons who deal in grain only. Keeping all this in view the Tribunal was of the opinion that the rate of 15 per cent adopted in regard to imported grains was not too high but in the case of local purchases it was, and therefore reduced the rate of profit in the latter case to 12½ per cent. It was on this material that the Tribunal adopted the figure of profit as estimated by the ITO and the order to support this opinion further, the Tribunal remarked that in certain cases which had come to its notice the rate of profits “went up to 20 per cent”.

In the instant case the keeping of a stock register was of great importance because that was a means of verifying the assessee’s accounts by having a “quantitative tally”. If, after taking into account all the materials including the want of a stock register, it was found that from the method of accounting the correct profits of the business were not deducible, the operation of the proviso to section 13 would be attracted. Even if the ITO accepted the assessee’s method of accounting, was not bound by the figure of profits shown in the accounts. It was for the authorities to consider the material which was placed before them and, if, after taking into account in any case the absence of a stock register coupled with other materials they were of the opinion that correct profits and gains could not be deduced, then they would be justified in applying the proviso to section 13. Therefore, when the Tribunal applied the proviso to section 13 because of the various blemishes which were pointed out by the ITO and accepted by the Tribunal, it could not be said that there was any error in the order of the Tribunal justifying the interference by the Supreme Court under article 136. The appeals were dismissed accordingly. [In favour of the revenue] (Related Assessment years : 1943-44, 1944-45 and 1946-47) - [S.N. Namasivayam Chettiar v. CIT (1960) 38 ITR 579 (SC)]

Estimates after rejection of books of account

Once the books of account of assessee are rejected, then, profit has to be estimated on the basis of proper material available. An Assessing Officer is not flattered by technical rules of evidence and pleadings, and he is entitled to act on material which may not be accepted as evidence in Court of law. Neverthless, the Assessing Officer is not entitled to make a pure guess and make an assessment with reference to any evidence or any material at all. There must be something more than mere suspicion to support an assessment under section 143(3) of the Act. The rule of law on this subject has been fairly and rightly stated by the Lahore High Court in the case of Sheth Gurmukh Singh v. CIT (1944) 12 ITR 393 (Lahore) and the Supreme Court in the case of Dhakeswari Cotton Mills Ltd. v. CIT.

Section 143 of the Income-tax Act, 1961 [Corresponding to section 23(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922] - Though ITO is not fettered by technical rules of evidence and pleadings and he is entitled to act on material which may not be accepted as evidence on account of law, but in making assessment under section 23(3) of 1922 Act he is not entitled to make a pure guess and make an assessment without reference to any evidence or any material at all. Where, on request of Tribunal, departmental representative had produced certain material, Tribunal should have given an opportunity to assessee to rebut such material and should have also taken into account material produced by assessee on issue in question. [Case remanded back]. (Related Assessment year : 1944-45) – [Dhakeswari Cotton Mills Ltd. v. CIT (1954) 26 ITR 775 (SC)]

There is no stock register only cautions the Assessing Officer against the falsity of the returns made by the assessee. He cannot show that merely because there is no stock register the accounts books must be false

Section 145 of the Income-tax Act, 1961 [Corresponding to section 13 of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922] On examining the accounts of four branches of the business of the assessee-firm, the ITO found that with regard to two branches no stock register had been maintained and the profit declared was low. He, therefore, made additions to the book versions by way of extra profits. In the course of his order the ITO also observed that the expense ratio for these two branches was usually high compared to the expense ratio obtaining at one of its branch. Assessee’s appeal was dismissed by the AAC. On second appeal, the Tribunal upheld the decision of the ITO. On reference :

Held : In all cases which fall under section 13 there must be material before the ITO to lead him to the conclusion that the method employed is defective or that the case requires reconsideration and a new computation must be made. The mere fact that the profits are low is not material upon which finding under section 13 can be based, because the assessee may be incompetent or his method of business may be uneconomic. Also merely because there is no stock register the account books cannot be said to be false.

In the instant case, two consideration were responsible for the additions. Firstly, the income-tax authorities and the Tribunal took the view that the profits disclosed by the firm were low. Secondly, they were influenced by the fact that no stock register had been maintained. The assessee had maintained regular accounts of its purchase and sales and these account books were accepted as correct, for the ITO did not anywhere say that he rejected these account books. He did not say that the absence of the stock register was such a serious defect in the method of accounting employed by the assessee that in his opinion he could not determine the correct statement of profit and losses. He also did not adopt any basis and computed the true profit taxable in a manner which he could determine under the proviso.

The statute gives the ITO the power to determine his own basis, but there must be a basis. He must not act in a wholly arbitrary manner. There was, therefore, no definite finding by the ITO that the case fell within the proviso to section 13, for he did not say that the method of accounting employed by the assessee was such that in his opinion “the income, profits and gains could not properly be deducted therefrom. Secondly, even if such a finding were to be implied from his order it could not be said that there was material before him which would enable him to come to this finding. The fact that the profits appeared to him to be insufficient and the fact that there was no stock register maintained by the assessee were not material upon which such a finding could be given. The ITO must discover evidence or material aliunde before he can give such a finding. Thirdly, in increasing the taxable income he did not adopt any method or basis. Therefore, in the instant case, no addition could be made to the book version of business profit”. [In favour of the assessee] (Related Assessment year : 1950-51) - [Pandit Brothers v. CIT (1954) 26 ITR 159 : 3 TMI 70 (P &H)]

Estimates after rejection of books of account - If after taking action under section 23(3) read with section 23(2) of 1922 Act, ITO is not satisfied with correctness of return and unable to accept assessee’s account books as correct or genuine, section 13 of 1922 Act would come into play and proviso of this section would enable him to compute income of assessee upon such basis and in such manner as he may determine

Section 145 read with section 143 of the Income-tax Act, 1961 [Corresponding to section 13, read with section 23 of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922] - Once the books of account of assessee are rejected, then, profit has to be estimated on the basis of proper material available. An Assessing Officer is not flattered by technical rules of evidence and pleadings, and he is entitled to act on material which may not be accepted as evidence in Court of law. Neverthless, the Assessing Officer is not entitled to make a pure guess and make an assessment with reference to any evidence or any material at all. There must be something more than mere suspicion to support an assessment under section 143(3) of the Act. The rule of law on this subject has been fairly and rightly stated by the Lahore High Court in the case of Sheth Gurmukh Singh v. CIT (1944) 12 ITR 393.(Lahore). (Related Assessment years : 1934-35 to 1936-37.


 

 

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