Delhi
High Court:-Pr. Commissioner of Income Tax – 1 Versus
M/s
Agroha Fincap Ltd.
ITA
No. 60/2024 |
Judgment
dated: 23 December 2025
CORE
ISSUE:-Whether the appeal filed by the Revenue before the High Court was
maintainable despite low tax effect, in light of the CBDT monetary-limit
circulars, and whether the case fell within the exception relating to organised
tax evasion / accommodation entries, and further, whether the reassessment
proceedings were rightly quashed by the Tribunal on account of invalid approval
under section 151 of the Income-tax Act, 1961.
FACTS:-The
assessee was subjected to reassessment proceedings under section 147 of the
Income-tax Act, 1961. The reassessment was initiated after obtaining approval
under section 151 of the Act. The assessee challenged the validity of the
reassessment before the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal on multiple grounds,
including the jurisdictional ground that the approval granted under section 151
was mechanical, non-speaking and without application of mind, rendering the
reassessment void ab initio.
During
the course of hearing before the Tribunal, the assessee pressed only the legal
ground relating to defective approval under section 151, and did not advance
submissions on other grounds. The Tribunal accepted the said contention and
quashed the entire reassessment proceedings, holding that the statutory
approval was invalid and the proceedings were without jurisdiction.
Aggrieved,
the Revenue preferred an appeal before the High Court. The assessee raised a
preliminary objection that the appeal itself was not maintainable on account of
low tax effect, relying upon CBDT circulars prescribing monetary limits for
filing appeals before the High Court.
After
the appeal was decided, the assessee filed a review petition, contending that
the issue of low tax effect had not been adjudicated and that the matter ought
to have been remanded to the Tribunal for adjudication of other grounds.
CBDT
CIRCULARS – MONETARY LIMIT AND EXCEPTIONS
1.
CBDT Circular No. 3/2018 dated 11.07.2018-This circular prescribed a monetary
limit of Rs. 50 lakhs for filing appeals before the High Court. It
categorically provided that the instructions would apply retrospectively to
pending appeals, and appeals below the threshold were required to be withdrawn
or not pressed.
2.
CBDT Circular No. 17/2019 dated 08.08.2019-This circular enhanced the monetary
limit for filing appeals before the High Court to Rs. 1 crore and superseded
Circular No. 3/2018. The binding nature of the circular and its applicability
to pending matters was reiterated.
3.
CBDT Circular dated 15.03.2024-This circular consolidated earlier instructions
and clarified that appeals shall not be filed without regard to tax effect,
except in cases falling under specifically carved out exceptions.
4.
CBDT Circular No. 09/2024 dated 17.09.2025-This circular reiterated and refined
the exceptions. Paragraph 3.1(h) expressly provided that monetary limits shall
not apply to:
“Cases
involving organised tax evasion including cases of accommodation entries, bogus
capital gain or loss through penny stocks and similar arrangements.”
HIGH COURT FINDINGS
(a)
On Maintainability of Appeal Despite Low Tax Effect-The Hon’ble Delhi High
Court held that the earlier circular dated 11.07.2018 stood replaced by the
circular dated 08.08.2019, which was further superseded by the circular dated
15.03.2024. The governing circular clearly permitted filing of appeals without
regard to tax effect in cases falling under enumerated exceptions.
Upon
examination of the assessment records and appellate orders, the Court found
that the consistent case of the Revenue before the Assessing Officer as well as
before the Commissioner (Appeals) was that the assessee had received
accommodation entries.
The
Court therefore held that the appeal squarely fell within exception (h)
relating to organised tax evasion / accommodation entries and was maintainable
notwithstanding the low tax effect.
(b)
On Applicability of the Exception-The Court rejected the argument that the
exception introduced under the later circular could not apply to an appeal
filed earlier. It was held that the decisive factor is the nature of the case,
not the date of issuance of the circular. Once the case falls within the
exception, the monetary limit ceases to be relevant.
(c)
On Validity of Reassessment and Section 151 Approval-The Court noted that the
Tribunal had quashed the reassessment solely on the ground that the approval
under section 151 was defective, mechanical and without application of mind.
This being a jurisdictional issue, the Tribunal was justified in allowing the
appeal on that ground alone.
(d)
On Prayer for Remand to Tribunal-The Court relied upon the express findings of
the Tribunal that the assessee had pressed only the ground relating to section
151 approval, and no submissions were made on other grounds. In such
circumstances, the Court held that the assessee could not seek remand for
adjudication of grounds which were consciously not argued.
(e)
On Scope of Review Jurisdiction-The Court reiterated that review jurisdiction
is limited to correction of errors apparent on the face of record and cannot be
used to re-argue the appeal or seek a fresh adjudication. No such error was
found to exist.
RELIANCE
PLACED-The assessee had relied upon the following judicial precedents while
contesting maintainability on low tax effect:
Director
of Income Tax v. SRMB Dairy Farming Pvt. Ltd.
CIT
v. V.M. Salgaonkar & Brothers Pvt. Ltd.
PCIT
v. IPL Loan Trust
PCIT
v. JB Technologies Pvt. Ltd.
The
Court, however, distinguished these decisions on facts, holding that the
present case clearly fell within the statutory exception.
OUTCOME-The
Hon’ble Delhi High Court held that: The Revenue’s appeal was maintainable
despite low tax effect, as it fell within the CBDT exception relating to
accommodation entries.
The
Tribunal was justified in quashing the reassessment on the ground of invalid
approval under section 151.
The
assessee, having pressed only one ground before the Tribunal, was not entitled
to seek remand on other grounds.
No
error apparent on record existed warranting review.
Accordingly,
the review petition was dismissed.
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