IN THE HIGH COURT OF PUNJAB AND HARYANA AT CHANDIGARH. I.T.A. No.131 of 2007 Date of decision: 7.12.2010 Commissioner of Income Tax -----Appellant. Vs. M/s Ametak Auto Ltd. -----Respondent CORAM:- HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE ADARSH KUMAR GOEL HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE AJAY KUMAR MITTAL Present:- Ms. Urvashi Dhugga, Standing Counsel for the appellant. Mr. Lokesh Sinhal, Advocate for the respondent. --- ADARSH KUMAR GOEL, J. 1. This appeal has been preferred by the revenue under Section 260-A of the Income Tax Act, 1961 (for short, “the Act”) against the order of the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal, New Delhi dated 16.6.2006 in I.T.A. No.519/DEL/02 for the assessment year 1998-99 proposing to raise following substantial question of law:- “On the facts and circumstances of the case, whether the Hon’ble ITAT was right in upholding the order of Ld. CIT(A) deleting the addition of Rs.2,09,37,000/- made by the Assessing Officer u/s 68 of the Income Tax Act, 1961, even though the assessee had not discharged its burden of proving the identity, genuineness and crediworthiness of the creditors.” 2. The assessee is a private limited company. During assessment, the Assessing Officer found that the assessee had I.T.A. No.131 of 2007 made cash credit entries of huge amount of unsecured loans, genuineness of which was doubtful. Accordingly, the assessee was called upon to prove the identity, creditworthiness and genuineness of the transactions and after consideration of the explanation of the assessee, addition was made, treating the deposits as income of the assessee. It was held that the assessee failed to discharge the burden under Section 68 of the Act about the nature and sources of deposits. The relevant observations are:- “...... In spite of providing repeated opportunities as is clear from the order-sheet, the assessee has failed to file confirmation/explanation/justification/ produced any thing well supported any corroborative evidence in respect of unsecured loans of Rs.2,09,37,000/- (2,12,00,000 minus 2,63,000/-. The depositors as per list filed and placed on records are not assessed to Income tax and the assessee company also could not prove their identification, creditworthiness and genuineness of transaction. Under these circumstances, a sum of Rs.2,09,37,000/- is treated the assessee’s income earned from undisclosed sources and is added in the income of the assessee.” 3. On appeal of the assessee, the CIT(A) deleted the addition with the following observations:- “13. Ground No.4 is regarding aggregate addition of Rs.2,09,37,000/- being the amount of public deposit accepted u/s 58A of the Companies Act. I agree with the submissions of the Ld. Counsel quoted above that 2 I.T.A. No.131 of 2007 all the deposits have since been repaid by account payee cheques which are evidenced by the receipts issued by the bankers of the depositors, as such the identification, creditworthiness and genuineness of the depositors are automatically proved. Moreover, the requirements of the provisions of Section 58A of the Companies Act were complied with and accepted by them. Accordingly, in view of the explanation given by the Ld. Counsel in the rejoinder quoted above, the addition made by the AO is hereby deleted. “ 4. Appeal of the revenue against the order of CIT(A) has been dismissed by the Tribunal. The relevant finding is as under:- “8....... The assessee, as is evident from our discussion from the earlier paragraph, could not submit confirmation from each of the creditors. Certainly in our view, seeking a confirmation from each and every individual creditor was not an easy task. Nevertheless, it also cannot be disregarded that the credits in question certainly fall within the scope of the provisions of section 68 of the Act. Section 68 of the Act authorizes an Assessing Officer to verify the nature and source of the credits appearing in the books of account of the assessee and in case the assessee does not furnish an explanation or furnishes an explanation which is not to the satisfaction of the Assessing Officer, the credits in question can be assessed as income in the hands of the assessee. The parameters to explain the nature and source of a credit are regarding the identity, creditworthiness of the creditor and the genuineness. However, the 3 I.T.A. No.131 of 2007 abovesaid conventional parameters have to (?) forms whereby it had received deposits for Rs.2,63,000/- which have been accepted as explained. The fact that the Assessing Officer was satisfied about the nature and source of the credit on the basis of the application forms in the case of three creditors itself shows an inconsistency in his approach. If according to him, the vetting of the application form was enough to discharge the onus cast on the assessee under sec.68 of the Act, he ought not to have made any addition. It is starkly evident that if the Assessing Officer was satisfied that the assessee had discharged the onus cast under section 68 on the basis of the application forms of three depositors, nothing prevented him from being satisfied with the rest of the deposits also. This is for the reason that there is no denying the fact that the entire deposits in question have been received by the assessee on the basis of the application forms submitted by the depositors. 10. Further it is clear from the assessee’s communication to the lower authorities that only three application forms were submitted merely to illustrate the manner in which the transaction has been carried out. Moreover, for none of the deposits had the Assessing Officer taken any unexplained. Therefore, considering the overall gamut of facts and circumstances of the issue, we are inclined to affirm the conclusion of the CIT(Appeals) in deleting the addition made by the Assessing Officer. 12. The plea of the revenue that the order of the CIT (Appeals) is non-speaking, we do not find any justifiable reasons to interfere on this count. We find 4 I.T.A. No.131 of 2007 that the CIT(Appeals), after getting the submissions and the material from the assessee, sent the same to the Assessing Officer and called for a remand report. The Assessing Officer duly submitted his report. Even at this stage, it was open for the Assessing Officer to have conducted further inquiries. But no such opportunity has been utilized. Nevertheless, the CIT(Appeals), after having considered the rival submissions has made the decision to delete the addition. While it may show an absence of a detailed discussion on the part of the CIT(Appeals) in concluding the issue, nevertheless the CIT(Appeals) has, in extensor referred to the submissions of the assessee as also the remand report of the Assessing Officer in this regard. Therefore, merely because the order of the CIT(Appeals) in brief, cannot be a reason to interpret it as a non-speaking order...” 5. We have heard learned counsel for the parties. 6. Learned counsel for the revenue submitted that in absence of satisfactory explanation, the Assessing Officer was justified in treating the amount of cash deposits as income of the assessee and the CIT(A) as well as the Tribunal erred in holding that the assessee had given sufficient explanation only on account of the fact that the deposits had been accepted in accordance with Section 58A of the Companies Act, 1956. Mere fact that procedure under Section 58A of the Companies Act was followed, was not conclusive of genuineness of the deposits made. 5 I.T.A. No.131 of 2007 7. Section 68 of the Act is intended to check undisclosed income being shown as deposits, so that real income does not escape assessment. Whenever cash deposits are found in the account books, burden is placed on the assessee to explain nature and source thereof and if no explanation is furnished or the explanation furnished is not satisfactory, the amount credited can be charged as income of the assessee. Mere fact that procedure under Section 58A of the Companies Act was followed, cannot be conclusive of genuineness of the deposits. The statutory procedure under the Companies Act is merely intended to safeguard the interest of the depositor and the company is required to act in accordance with the guidelines issued by the Central Government in consultation with the Reserve Bank of India. Inspite of such guidelines having been followed, the Assessing Authority can go into the genuineness or otherwise of the deposit made. In the present case, the Assessing Officer gave due opportunity to the assessee to prove identity and creditworthiness of the depositors as well as the genuineness of the transaction. It was not difficult for the assessee to prove identity and status of the depositors. No effort was made by the assessee to discharge the burden statutorily placed on it in that regard. No doubt, the assessee furnished the list of depositors with their addresses but mere furnishing of the said material was not enough to discharge the burden. The assessee could have produced documents taken from the depositors at the time 6 I.T.A. No.131 of 2007 deposit, which could establish their identity and status and also inspire confidence about the genuineness of the depositors. This having not been done, as held by the Assessing Officer, the CIT (A) could either give further opportunity or drawn adverse inference against the assessee for withholding material available with it. While deleting the addition, only ground which the CIT(A) has mentioned is that the deposits were as per Section 58A of the Companies Act, which in our view could not be conclusive. The Tribunal also failed to appreciate the patent error in the view taken by the CIT(A). Question of law as to perversity of finding of the CIT(A) and the Tribunal does arise for consideration and has to be answered in favour of the revenue. 8. Accordingly, the appeal is allowed to the extent of the issue raised and discussed hereinabove. The orders of the CIT (A) and the Tribunal are set aside and the matter is remanded to CIT(A) for fresh decision in accordance with law. 9. The assessee may appear before the CIT(A) for further proceedings on 9.2.2011. (ADARSH KUMAR GOEL) JUDGE December 07, 2010 (AJAY KUMAR MITTAL) ashwani JUDGE 7