The tribunal refused to admit a fresh legal challenge to reassessment raised for the first time. However, it remanded the revenue-difference addition for fresh adjudication due to natural justice concerns.
The case addressed whether an authority can reject registration before completion of parallel statutory processes. The Tribunal held that hurried rejection was unjustified and directed de novo adjudication.
The Finance Bill, 2026 clarifies that section 144C timelines govern final assessment orders. Sections 153 and 153B apply only up to the draft order stage, ending years of controversy.
The amendment clarifies how the sixty-day period under transfer pricing law must be calculated. It removes ambiguity that had led to annulment of assessments despite timely action by the TPO.
Payments made pursuant to allotment confer valuable property rights. Their relinquishment through an agreement to sell amounts to a statutory transfer, entitling the assessee to compute gains or losses under capital gains.
The amendments modify shipping tax provisions to fully integrate inland vessels into the tonnage tax regime. Regulatory references, certification norms, and compliance requirements are aligned with inland waterways law.
Furnishing incorrect crypto-asset information without rectification can attract a fixed penalty. The amendment strengthens accountability and data accuracy.
The Finance Bill, 2026 introduces a clear definition of “commodity derivative” in the Income-tax Act, 2025. This aligns the new law with existing tax provisions and removes ambiguity.
The Finance Bill, 2026 defines authorised person by linking it to FEMA provisions. This brings clarity on who is responsible for tax compliance in payments to non-residents.
The Finance Bill corrects an inadvertent drafting error in spouse income provisions. This clarification improves accuracy in applying clubbing rules.