Commission Income on Alleged Bogus Transactions to be Taxed Only @1% of Correct Turnover; Telescoping Benefit Allowed
ITAT Allows Telescoping Benefit as Revenue Failed to Prove Entire Circular Transactions Were Income; Entire Accommodation Entry Turnover Not Taxable: ITAT Reaffirms Real Income Theory; ITAT Restricts Addition to 1% Commission on Alleged Bogus Transactions; Suspicion Cannot Replace Tax Computation Principles: ITAT Deletes Excess Addition on Bogus Turnover.
The Mumbai Bench of the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal in the case of Empower India Limited Vs ACIT examined whether the entire value of alleged bogus turnover and accommodation entries could be taxed as income. The Revenue alleged that the assessee was involved in circular transactions, accommodation entries, artificial turnover generation, and non-genuine investment routing through layered entities. The Tribunal held that in such cases, only the real income element embedded in the transactions can be taxed, and not the entire turnover, since entry operators generally earn only commission income. Rejecting the Revenue’s approach of taxing the gross transaction amount, the ITAT upheld estimation of commission income at 1% of the relevant turnover relating to external beneficiaries and suspicious transactions. The Tribunal also reaffirmed the “real income” theory and allowed telescoping benefit by permitting adjustment of already disclosed income against estimated commission additions to avoid double taxation. The ruling reinforces that suspicion alone cannot justify taxing entire transaction values.
Background of the Dispute
The assessee-company was alleged to be engaged in:
- circular transactions,
- accommodation entries,
- non-genuine investment routing, and
- artificial turnover generation.
The Revenue authorities attempted to treat substantial transaction values as unexplained or bogus income.
According to the Department:
- the transactions lacked commercial substance,
- several dealings were merely paper entries, and
- the assessee had facilitated accommodation transactions through layered entities.
Consequently, additions were proposed on the basis of the gross value of transactions.
Core Legal Issue
The principal controversy before the Tribunal was:
Whether:
1. the entire alleged bogus turnover should be taxed; or
2. only the commission/profit element embedded in such transactions could be assessed as income.
A second issue also arose:
Whether:
income already disclosed by the assessee in books and return of income could be telescoped against estimated commission additions.
ITAT’s Observations
The Tribunal carefully examined the nature of accommodation entry operations and noted that:
- persons engaged in such activities generally earn only commission income;
- the entire routed amount does not belong to the entry provider;
- taxation must focus on “real income” and not artificial transaction values.
The ITAT observed that merely because transactions are doubtful or non-genuine, it does not automatically justify taxing the entire turnover in the hands of the intermediary entity.
Entire Turnover Cannot Be Treated as Income
The Tribunal held that where an assessee merely facilitates accommodation entries or circular transactions:
- the turnover itself does not represent real income;
- only the probable commission earned from facilitating such entries can be taxed.
The Bench rejected the Revenue’s approach of assessing the whole transaction amount as undisclosed income.
This principle is consistent with several earlier judicial precedents where courts have repeatedly held that:
entry operators earn commission and not ownership over the entire routed funds.
Estimation of Commission Income @1%
After examining the facts, the Tribunal upheld estimation of commission income at:
1% of the relevant turnover.
The estimation was applied on:
- bogus turnover involving outside parties; and
- certain questionable investment transactions.
However, the Tribunal also distinguished between:
- purely internal circular transactions; and
- transactions involving external beneficiaries.
The Bench observed that intra-group rotational entries may not always justify the same treatment as transactions involving outside accommodation beneficiaries.
Concept of “Real Income” Reaffirmed
A major strength of the ruling lies in its reaffirmation of the “real income theory.”
The Tribunal effectively recognized that:
- tax law seeks to tax actual income,
- not artificial accounting movement,
- nor inflated gross transaction values lacking beneficial ownership.
This becomes particularly important in modern investigations involving:
- layered entities,
- penny stock allegations,
- accommodation entry operations,
- circular trading structures,
- shell company allegations, and
- suspicious banking trails.
Telescoping Benefit Allowed
One of the most important reliefs granted by the Tribunal was:
telescoping of estimated commission income against already disclosed income.
The Tribunal held that where:
- income has already been disclosed in books or return; and
- the same financial stream forms part of the alleged bogus transaction structure,
the Revenue cannot again make overlapping additions without granting adjustment.
Accordingly, the Bench permitted set-off/telescoping against returned income to avoid double taxation of the same financial element.
Why This Ruling Is Significant
The judgment is important because tax authorities frequently attempt to:
- tax entire transaction values;
- make multiple overlapping additions;
- ignore the distinction between turnover and profit;
- disregard the principle of beneficial ownership.
The ruling reinforces that:
suspicion cannot replace computation principles.
Even in alleged bogus transaction cases:
- only real income is taxable;
- reasonable estimation is necessary;
- and duplication of additions must be avoided.
Broader Legal Principle Emerging
The broader jurisprudential message emerging from the decision is:
Taxation under the Income-tax Act is ultimately concerned with real taxable profits and not gross movement of funds unsupported by actual income accrual.
The Tribunal thus balanced:
- anti-abuse enforcement, and
- fundamental taxation principles.
Practical Takeaway for Taxpayers
This ruling may assist assessees facing additions involving:
- accommodation entry allegations,
- circular trading,
- bogus share transactions,
- alleged shell company operations,
- penny stock investigations,
- and layered banking structures.
The decision strengthens the argument that:
1. only commission/profit element can be taxed;
2. estimation must be reasonable;
3. turnover itself is not income; and
4. telescoping/set-off relief must be granted where overlapping taxation arises.


