Highlights how authorities routinely invoke Section 74 without evidence of fraud and explains courts’ stance that such notices are jurisdictionally invalid. Emphasizes the need for proper scrutiny and adherence to statutory safeguards.
The JCIT granted approval despite receiving only draft orders and no supporting evidence, demonstrating a mechanical process. The Tribunal held that such superficial approval violates judicial standards, leading to the quashing of all assessments.
The draft guidelines introduce uniform reporting formats, detailed documentation rules, and structured valuation processes to enhance clarity and reliability in insolvency valuations.
Tribunal partially allowed Rs. 46.75 lakh cash deposit claim, accepting Rs. 11 lakh while remitting Rs. 35.75 lakh for verification, highlighting the importance of documentary proof for deposits during demonetization.
Observing that the tender had been cancelled and no proof of bid-rigging was provided, the Commission concluded that no competition concern arose and dismissed the information under Section 26(2).
The Tribunal found that sanction must come from the Principal Chief Commissioner when reopening is beyond the three-year period prescribed by the amended law. Because the approval was taken from the Pr. CIT, the reassessment lacked jurisdiction and was invalidated.
High Court held that rewards under GST informer schemes are purely discretionary and cannot be claimed through mandamus. Informers have no right to challenge assessment or appellate orders.
The Court ruled that cotton seed oil cake remains exempt when used as cattle feed, even if sold through traders. Taxability depends on end use, not the supply route.
This title highlights the tool’s key benefit- fixing CGST-SGST imbalance through intelligent IGST utilisation. The tool ensures optimal credit use, prevents cash outflow, and delivers portal-ready matrices for seamless GSTR-3B filing.
The judgment confirmed that Section 11(2) of the EPF Act creates a first charge that overrides SARFAESI’s priority clause. Thus, provident fund contributions, interest, penalties, and damages must be paid before clearing secured creditors’ dues.