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section 254

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Third Proviso to Section 254(2A) of Income Tax Act is Arbitrary & Unconstitutional

Income Tax : The three-judge bench of Supreme Court of India in the case of Deputy Commissioner of Income Tax v. M/S Pepsi Foods Ltd struck dow...

June 7, 2021 4491 Views 0 comment Print

Prosecution – made more simpler for revenue

Income Tax : A perusal of this order reveals that the Tribunal has recorded a finding that it is empowered by Section 254 of the Act to stay pr...

October 31, 2015 3091 Views 0 comment Print


Latest News


Provide Shorter Time For Rectification Of Mistake by Tribunal

Income Tax : The existing provisions of Section 254(2) provide for a time-limit of four years from the date of the order of the Appellate Tribu...

January 19, 2016 1339 Views 1 comment Print


Latest Judiciary


ITAT Quashes Assessment Orders as Section 153 Limitation Expired Despite TOLA Extension

Income Tax : The ITAT Hyderabad held that the assessment orders were time-barred under Section 153 despite the DRP process. Both assessments we...

June 23, 2026 240 Views 0 comment Print

Sales Tax Subsidy Linked to Capital Investment is Capital Receipt: ITAT Mumbai

Income Tax : The ITAT Mumbai held that sales tax and similar State Government incentives were capital receipts because the schemes were intende...

June 22, 2026 255 Views 0 comment Print

Estimated Section 14A Disallowance Could Not Be Added to Book Profits

Income Tax : Tribunal held that the estimated disallowance under Section 14A should be restricted and should not form part of book profits, fol...

June 20, 2026 117 Views 0 comment Print

Sales Tax Subsidy Non-Taxable as It Was Meant for Industrial Development: ITAT Ahmedabad

Income Tax : The ITAT held that sales tax subsidy granted under industrial incentive schemes constituted a capital receipt because its purpose ...

June 19, 2026 207 Views 0 comment Print

ITAT Criticises AO’s Inaction as Remand Reports & Upholds Section 54 Denial

Income Tax : The ITAT Delhi held that the assessee could not claim deduction under Section 54 for the first time before the Tribunal when it ha...

June 18, 2026 198 Views 0 comment Print


ITAT has no power to grant stay beyond 365 Days

February 26, 2014 3664 Views 0 comment Print

Recently Delhi High Court has held in the case of CIT Vs. s Maruti Suzuki (India) Limited (WP (Civil) no. 5003/2013 dated : 21.02.2014 that ITAT has no power to grant stay beyond 365 days in light of third proviso to Sec. 254(2A) inserted by Finance Act, 2008. High Court further held that Courts must respect legislative mandate.

Tribunal has power to grant unlimited stay of demand

January 17, 2013 1390 Views 0 comment Print

Tribunal has power to extend the period of stay beyond 365 days u/s.254(2A), third proviso, even if the delay in disposing off the appeal is not attributable to the assessee, there may be several other reasons for not disposing of the appeal by the ITAT.

Decision on debatable point of law or fact cannot be corrected by rectification u/s. 254(2)

January 13, 2013 2072 Views 0 comment Print

A bare look at section 254(2) of the Act, which deals with rectification, makes it amply clear that a ‘mistake apparent from the record’ is rectifiable. In order to attract the application of section 254(2), a mistake must exist and the same must be apparent from the record. The power to rectify the mistake, however, does not cover cases where a revision or review of the order is intended.

Assessee not allowed to raise same issue again in the guise of rectification before ITAT

January 11, 2013 1104 Views 0 comment Print

On going through the order passed by the Tribunal, it is found that the Tribunal passed the order, after marshalling at the facts considering the submissions made before it and applying its mind to the decisions cited before it. There is no mistake in the order of the Tribunal of the nature as envisaged under section 254(2). Permitting the assessee to raise the same issues over again in the guise of rectification will amount to recalling the appellate order in its entirety and rehearing it afresh, which is not within the scope and ambit of section 254(2).

Power to rectify a mistake u/s. 254(2) cannot be used for recalling entire order

December 31, 2012 606 Views 0 comment Print

The words used in s. 254(2) are ‘shall make such amendment, if the mistake is brought to its notice’. Clearly, if there is a mistake, then an amendment is required to be carried out in the original order to correct that particular mistake. The provision does not indicate that the Tribunal can recall the entire order and pass a fresh decision.

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