ITAT Mumbai ruled that an assessee who temporarily holds cash is not its owner, leading to the deletion of Section 69A additions for unexplained money.
The ITAT ruled that unaccounted receipts from known business debtors can’t be taxed as unexplained money under Section 69A, granting relief to an assessee.
Learn about the ITAT Mumbai’s ruling in the P&G case, which found that reimbursement for ESOP and ISOP plans is a deductible business expense, not a capital or contingent expense.
ITAT Mumbai rules that the AO’s view on CSR expenditure being allowable under Section 80G is plausible, setting aside a Section 263 revision due to the debatable nature of the issue.
ITAT Mumbai deletes a ₹1.69 crore addition under Section 69A against Parth Ajit Pawar. The ruling emphasizes that a third-party statement without cross-examination and corroborating evidence is not valid for making additions.
ITAT Bangalore rules that a trust’s 12AB registration application cannot be rejected for a curable technical error in the section code, directing the CIT(E) to reconsider the application on its merits.
ITAT Bangalore mandates that the CIT(E) must provide taxpayers a fair hearing and apply independent judgment, not just rely on subordinate reports, when assessing Section 12AB and 80G applications.
ITAT Mumbai rules that fiduciary journal transfers without cash flow cannot be taxed as unexplained cash credits under Section 68, supporting taxpayers in similar situations.
ITAT Bangalore confirms penalty deletion under Section 271(1)(c) against Manipal Hospitals, ruling that a mere disallowance of a claim, like interest expenditure reclassification, does not constitute furnishing inaccurate particulars of income.
ITAT Bangalore allows appeal of Mysore Brindavan Sky Trust, ordering fresh consideration of its 12AB registration after CIT(E) incorrectly concluded no activities by the trust.