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Assumption of Jurisdiction u/s. 147 in Case Of Returned Income

November 6, 2008 799 Views 0 comment Print

JAGAN LAMPS LTD. v. ITO The accepting of returned income is not an assessment; hence, it will be incorrect to say that the provisions of section 147 cannot be substituted for verification of correctness of entire information contained in the return of income.

Taxability of Income Received By a Resident Cine Artist from Her Performance in Canada

November 6, 2008 1184 Views 0 comment Print

Pooja Bhatt v. DCIT Income derived by the assessee-artist from the exercise of her activity in Canada is taxable only in source country i.e., Canada as per the scheme of taxation contained in the Indo-Canada Treaty; by using the expression “may be taxed in the other State” in Article 18(1) of the said Treaty, the contracting parties permitted only the other State i.e. State of income source and by implication, the State of residence was precluded from taxing such income.

Applicability Of Section 2(22)(e) Of It Act, 1961 Qua Amount Received by an Assessee-Director From His Company

November 6, 2008 2961 Views 0 comment Print

Sunil Sethi v. DCIT- Where there was documentary evidence on record to substantiate the explanation of the assessee that the amount was given for the business purposes of the company, the same could not be considered to be deemed dividend in the hands of the assessee and the provisions of section 2(22)(e) were not applicable.

Tribunal Have To Follow the Principles of Natural Justice

November 3, 2008 1319 Views 0 comment Print

CIT vs. Raval Tiles (Bombay High Court) Where the Tribunal did not pass an order on the appeal despite considerable delay and instead fixed the matter repeatedly for ‘clarifications’ and thereafter closed the matter for orders on the basis of written submissions and without hearing the assessee, HELD the procedure followed by the Tribunal was not in compliance with the principles of natural justice.

Section 14A Applicable To Dividend Earned by an Assessee Engaged In the Trading Of Shares and Securities

November 3, 2008 1827 Views 0 comment Print

M/s. Daga Capital Management Pvt. Ltd. Vs ITO, Mumbai (ITAT MUMBAI)] The words in relation to in s. 14A mean a dominant and immediate connection between the expenditure and the exempt income. To determine whether there is such a connection, one has to see the object with which the expenditure is incurred. If the expenditure is incurred mainly to earn taxable income and the tax-free income is incidental, there is no such connection and s. 14A does not apply. The onus is on the AO to establish that there is a dominant and immediate connection between the expenditure and the exempt income;

ITAT Special Bench Judgment On Section 14A of the Income Tax Act, 1961

November 3, 2008 718 Views 0 comment Print

CIT vs. Sarabhai Holdings (Supreme Court) – Income Tax – Penalty – law permits the contracting parties to lawfully change their stipulations – What is material in the tax jurisprudence is the evasion of tax, not the beneficial lawful adjustment therefor . In the commercial world, the parties are always free to vary the terms of contract and, therefore, the assessee and the vendee had no legal impediment in modifying the terms of their contract. Merely because by Resolution the assessee agreed to defer the payment of interest, would not mean that it tried to evade tax.

Calculators For Wealth Tax, Home Loan Interest And Home Loan Interest Benefit, Ratio, IRR, MIRR, Financial, EMI, PT, ESIC, PF, World Time & Others

October 31, 2008 6123 Views 0 comment Print

Easy to Calculate and Understand. Specify the Circumstances when we can Claim Benefit of HRA as well as Interest on Housing Loan.Specify the Procedure for Valuation of Properties, Calculation of Gross Maintainable Rent (GMR) & Calculation of Net Maintainable Rent (NMR).

Supreme Court on Avoidance of Payment of Tax

October 29, 2008 535 Views 0 comment Print

CIT v. Sarabhai Holdings Pvt. Ltd. . We agree with the High Court’s finding that the law permits the contracting parties to lawfully change their stipulations by mutual agreement and, therefore, the assessee and the vendee had no legal impediment in modifying the terms of their contract. We also agree with the further finding of the High Court that the Resolution could not be given any retrospective effect so as to facilitate evasion of tax liability that had already arisen for the Assessment Year 1979-80. We further agree with the High Court’s finding that it being a valid stipulation, changed the mode of payment from the date of the Resolution and, therefore, under the changed mode of payment adopted under the Resolution dt. 30.6.1978, no interest was to accrue during the Accounting period from 1.7.1978 up to 30.6.1979 and, therefore, the reasoning of the Tribunal on that count appeared to be correct as regards the Assessment Year 1980-81 is concerned.

Rule 8 D, r.w.s.14A is unjust, arbitrary and ultravires

October 27, 2008 1122 Views 0 comment Print

In this regard paragraph (25) of Circular No. 14 of 2001, is relevant. The aforesaid Circular No.14 provides Explanatory Notes on the provisions of Finance Act, 2001, relating to direct taxes, which is printed in 252 I.T.R. (St) 65. Paragraph (25) of the aforesaid Circular is to be found on page 86 thereof. For the sake of ready reference, the aforesaid paragraph (25) is reproduced as follows:

Larger SC Bench Reverses Law on Penalty & Circulars

October 24, 2008 837 Views 0 comment Print

In a crucial judgment on the scope of penalty provisions in tax and other civil liability laws, the Supreme Court has significantly broadened their scope (Union of India v. Dharmendra Textile Processors, CA Nos. 10289 – 10303 of 2003, decided on September 29, 2008, per Pasayat J.). The judgment of the three-judge Bench on a reference from a Division Bench overrules the important decision in Dilip Shroff v. JCIT. The following is an argument that it has done so unsatisfactorily.

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