The Maharashtra AAR allowed withdrawal of an advance ruling application seeking clarity on whether GST should be charged at 12% or 18%. Since the application was voluntarily withdrawn, no decision was given on the applicable GST rate.
The application raised questions on GST rates, invoicing of washed coal transactions, and Compensation Cess on coal rejects. The Authority disposed of the matter after allowing voluntary and unconditional withdrawal of the application.
The ITAT held that an assessee can contest a Section 143(1) adjustment in an appeal against the assessment order if the adjustment is retained therein. The case emphasizes that multiple statutory remedies may coexist.
The Tribunal held that when the importer itself was exonerated on the ground that the classification dispute was interpretational, Customs Brokers acting on the importer’s instructions could not be penalized for abetment. The penalties under Sections 112(a) and 114AA were therefore deleted.
The Tribunal held that denial of effective cross-examination in proceedings founded on statements and investigation reports caused serious prejudice to the Customs Broker. Since the revocation proceedings lacked procedural fairness, the impugned order was set aside.
The Tribunal found that the first payment due under the approved resolution plan remained entirely unpaid despite repeated opportunities. The inability or unwillingness to honour financial commitments under the plan led to liquidation of the Corporate Debtor.
The case examined whether insolvency proceedings against a guarantor could continue after resolution plans for principal borrowers were approved. The Tribunal ruled that the guarantee remained enforceable as no actual discharge of liability had occurred.
CESTAT Chennai: Appeal Cannot Be Dismissed for Non-Compliance of Pre-Deposit When Mandatory Deposit Was Already Made; Matter Remanded on Merits
The document explains the framework of the Wealth-tax Act, 1957, including taxable persons, chargeable assets, exemptions, valuation rules, and clubbing provisions before its abolition. The key takeaway is that wealth tax was imposed on specified net wealth exceeding prescribed limits, with detailed rules governing asset inclusion, exemptions, and compliance requirements.
The Court held that, for assessment year 2009-10, filing the audit report along with the return was directory and not mandatory. Deduction under Section 80IA could not be denied when the report was furnished during assessment proceedings.