Facts of the Case
The writ petition filed by Alankit Insurance Brokers Limited
formed part of a large batch of matters before the Delhi High Court arising
from search and seizure operations conducted by the Income Tax Department.
Pursuant to the search, the Department issued notices under Sections 153A and
153C of the Income-tax Act, 1961 seeking assessment or reassessment for
multiple assessment years, including years extending beyond the normal
statutory block period. The petitioner challenged these notices on the ground that
they were issued without satisfying the mandatory statutory conditions
governing extended search assessments.
Issues Involved
- Whether
reassessment notices issued pursuant to a search for years beyond the
permissible statutory period were legally sustainable.
- Whether
the extended ten-year period under the Fourth Proviso to Section 153A
could be invoked without establishing escaped income of ₹50 lakh or more
represented in the form of an asset.
- Whether
completed assessments could be reopened absent fulfillment of
jurisdictional requirements.
- Whether
the satisfaction recorded by the Assessing Officer was adequate to justify
initiation of proceedings.
Petitioner’s Arguments
- The
impugned notices pertained to assessment years falling outside the legally
permissible time limits.
- The
statutory threshold of escaped income of ₹50 lakh or more, represented in
the form of an asset, had not been satisfied.
- The
satisfaction recorded by the Assessing Officer lacked credible material
demonstrating compliance with the Fourth Proviso to Section 153A.
- Reopening
concluded assessments beyond limitation violated the principle of
finality.
Respondent’s Arguments
- Search
assessment provisions constitute a special regime independent of ordinary
reassessment provisions.
- The
statute permits reopening for up to ten years subject to fulfillment of
prescribed conditions.
- At
the stage of issuing notice, the determination of escaped income is
necessarily tentative and precise quantification is not required.
- Finality
of earlier assessments does not bar proceedings triggered by a valid
search.
Court Order / FINDINGS
- Invocation
of the extended ten-year period is permissible only where escaped income
represented in the form of an asset amounts to or is likely to amount to
at least ₹50 lakh.
- The
Assessing Officer must record reasons demonstrating satisfaction of this
jurisdictional threshold.
- Notices
issued for assessment years beyond the permissible statutory period
without satisfying these conditions are without jurisdiction.
- Although
search assessment provisions override ordinary reassessment provisions,
they remain subject to statutory safeguards and limitations.
Important Clarification
- The
₹50-lakh threshold under the Fourth Proviso to Section 153A is a mandatory
jurisdictional condition for invoking the extended period.
- Satisfaction
must be apparent from the record at the time of issuance of notice.
- Completed
assessments do not enjoy absolute immunity from search-based proceedings,
but such proceedings must strictly conform to statutory limits.
- Search
provisions operate as a special code but cannot be used to circumvent
legislative safeguards.
Link to download the order – https://www.mytaxexpert.co.in/uploads/1772263537_ALANKITINSURANCEBROKERSLIMITEDVsDY.COMMISSIONEROFINCOMETAXCENTRALCIRCLE28DELHI.pdf
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