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Cit Vs. SaddruddIn Hussain

Cit vs SaddruddIn Hussain

Type Court Judgment Court Rajasthan Decided Jul 11, 2001
~3 min read
https://sooperkanoon.com/case/772196

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Citation
Court
Rajasthan High Court
Decided On
Case Number
D.B. IT Appeal No. 11 of 2001 11 July 2001
Subject
Direct Taxation

Case Summary

AI-generated summary - not the official court judgment text.

Counsels: Sandeep Bhandawat, for the Revenue. In the Rajasthan, Jodhpur High Court Bench Dr. AR. Lakshmanan, CJ. & Bhagwati Prasad J - - Both the assessee as well as the revenue preferred appeals before the Tribunal being aggrieved with the order of the Commissioner (Appeals). The Tribunal vide its present ord...

Key legal issue
Direct Taxation

Parties & Advocates

Appellant / Petitioner

Cit

Advocate Sandeep Bhandawat, <i>for the Revenue.</i>

Respondent

SaddruddIn Hussain

Legal References

Reported In
[2002]120TAXMAN798(Raj)

Excerpt

counsels: sandeep bhandawat, for the revenue. in the rajasthan, jodhpur high court bench dr. ar. lakshmanan, cj. & bhagwati prasad j - - both the assessee as well as the revenue preferred appeals before the tribunal being aggrieved with the order of the commissioner (appeals). the tribunal vide its present order dismissed the revenue's appeal and partly allowed the assessee's appeal and reduced the total additions of rs......the order of the assessing officer. both the assessee as well as the revenue preferred appeals before the tribunal being aggrieved with the order of the commissioner (appeals). the tribunal vide its present order dismissed the revenue's appeal and partly allowed the assessee's appeal and reduced the total additions of rs. 24,13,077 to rs. 2 lakhs and observed that in the assessee's own case, in the immediate preceding year there was a total addition of rs. 1,50,000. the department aggrieved with this order, preferred the present appeal.4. shri sandeep bhandawat, the learned counsel for the department, submits that the tribunal has erred in law in not appreciating the fact that the additions of the disallowances were made by the assessing officer because the assessee had not produced sale vouchers and its sales were not verifiable. he further submitted that expenses were also not supported by authentic vouchers and due to these defects the assessing officer had invoked the provisions of section 145(2).5. this contention, in our opinion, has no merit. the tribunal had appreciated the rival claims of both the parties and accepted the claim of the assessee and reduced the addition to rs. 2 lakhs. the tribunal has reached this conclusion after considering all relevant facts. the tribunal, in our opinion, was justified in reducing the amount to rs. 2 lakhs. with the result, the appeal filed by the revenue was dismissed.6. in our view, no substantial question of law is involved in this appeal.7. accordingly, this appeal fails and is dismissed.

Full Judgment

ORDER

Lakshmanan, CJ

Heard Shri Sandeep Bhandawat for the appellant.

2. This appeal under section 260A of the Income Tax Act, 1961 (hereinafter referred to as the Act) has been filed to set aside the decision of the Tribunal and restoring the order of the assessing authority.

3. The assessee is a wine contractor. During the course of assessment proceedings, the assessee had produced cash book, ledger, purchase vouchers, sale register, etc. The assessing officer had invoked the provisions of section 145(2) of the Act since the assessee had not produced the sale vouchers and made trading addition of Rs. 4,13,077 in the country liquor business by applying the net profit rate of 25 per cent on total outgoing of Rs. 2,06,83,435 determining the net profit at Rs. 51,70,859 as against Rs. 47,57,782 shown by the assessee. Similar order was passed in IMFL business also. The assessee preferred an appeal before the Commissioner (Appeals), who by order dated 25-3-1999 allowed the appeal while confirming the order of the assessing officer. Both the assessee as well as the revenue preferred appeals before the Tribunal being aggrieved with the order of the Commissioner (Appeals). The Tribunal vide its present order dismissed the revenue's appeal and partly allowed the assessee's appeal and reduced the total additions of Rs. 24,13,077 to Rs. 2 lakhs and observed that in the assessee's own case, in the immediate preceding year there was a total addition of Rs. 1,50,000. The department aggrieved with this order, preferred the present appeal.

4. Shri Sandeep Bhandawat, the learned counsel for the department, submits that the Tribunal has erred in law in not appreciating the fact that the additions of the disallowances were made by the assessing officer because the assessee had not produced sale vouchers and its sales were not verifiable. He further submitted that expenses were also not supported by authentic vouchers and due to these defects the assessing officer had invoked the provisions of section 145(2).

5. This contention, in our opinion, has no merit. The Tribunal had appreciated the rival claims of both the parties and accepted the claim of the assessee and reduced the addition to Rs. 2 lakhs. The Tribunal has reached this conclusion after considering all relevant facts. The Tribunal, in our opinion, was justified in reducing the amount to Rs. 2 lakhs. With the result, the appeal filed by the revenue was dismissed.

6. In our view, no substantial question of law is involved in this appeal.

7. Accordingly, this appeal fails and is dismissed.

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