Pune ITAT ruled against adding the perquisite value of rent-free accommodation, finding that the amount was already included and taxed as part of the directors’ disclosed salary.
Hyderabad ITAT set aside a CIT(A) order, deleting an addition for cash deposits during the demonetisation period because the Assessing Officer (AO) ignored 28 debtor confirmations and audited accounts. The Tribunal held that an addition under Section 68 is invalid without rejecting the genuine books of account or verifying the provided evidence of business receipts.
The Tribunal ruled that the assessee had sufficient interest-free funds (own capital and unsecured loans) to cover the advances given, thus breaking the presumed nexus with interest-bearing funds. This decision reinforces the principle that disallowance is impermissible when the taxpayer possesses adequate non-interest-bearing capital for making advances.
The Supreme Court set aside an arbitral award delivered nearly four years after hearings ended, holding that such unexplained delay violates fairness and public policy. A fresh arbitration was ordered before a new tribunal.
SC clarified that under Section 23(2) of RTE Act, teachers appointed before March 2015 could obtain TET qualification within four years of 2017 amendment. Since appellants did so, their termination after six years was unjustified.
SC reaffirmed that disqualification of bids must strictly follow tender terms, holding that Mandi Parishad acted beyond its powers by rejecting a technical bid based on an unstated requirement for DM-issued solvency proof.
Supreme Court ruled police cannot summon advocates regarding client criminal matters, upholding attorney-client privilege under Section 132 (BSA). Prior SP approval is now mandatory.
SC clarified that Delhi’s mixed-use policy cannot be exploited for unrestricted business expansion. Only ground floors approved as shops can operate commercially; upper floors require prior conversion approval. Judgment safeguards planned urban development under MPD-2021.
The Tribunal rejected the Revenue’s appeal against deletion of a ₹63.84 lakh addition under Section 68, observing that the assessee had already declared the same transactions as sales in audited accounts. Citing CIT v. Vishal Exports Overseas Ltd., it held that taxing such income again would lead to double taxation. The order reinforces that genuine recorded transactions cannot be recharacterized as unexplained cash credits.
ITAT Pune held that interest credited on fixed deposits in assessee’s name remains taxable, even if underlying development agreement was later cancelled, as assessee retained ownership of account and TDS was deducted under her PAN.