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Reassessment Proceedings

Mumbai ITAT Voids ₹13.55 Cr Tax Addition, Cites Faceless Regime Violations and ‘Dumb Documents’ - 2025-11-01

Subject : Tax Law - Tax Litigation & Procedure

Mumbai ITAT Voids ₹13.55 Cr Tax Addition, Cites Faceless Regime Violations and ‘Dumb Documents’

Supreme Today News Desk

Mumbai ITAT Voids ₹13.55 Cr Tax Addition, Cites Faceless Regime Violations and ‘Dumb Documents’

Mumbai, India – In a significant ruling with wide-ranging implications for tax litigation, the Mumbai Bench of the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT) has quashed reassessment proceedings and deleted a substantial tax addition of ₹13.55 crore, citing a cascade of fundamental procedural violations by the Income Tax Department. The Tribunal’s comprehensive order in the case of EI Resorts & Clubs Pvt Ltd Vs DCIT underscores the critical importance of adhering to mandatory procedural safeguards, including the faceless assessment regime and the Document Identification Number (DIN) circular, while also reaffirming established principles on the evidentiary value of uncorroborated documents.

The Tribunal found the entire reassessment exercise to be void ab initio, resting its decision on multiple independent legal grounds: the issuance of a reassessment notice by a jurisdictional officer instead of a faceless one, the use of an invalid manual DIN on the assessment order, and a fundamentally defective notice. On merits, the ITAT dismantled the tax addition, labelling the primary evidence—unverified Excel sheets and retracted statements—as insufficient to justify the multi-crore demand.

Background: The Search and the Excel Sheets

The case originated from a search and survey operation conducted on the Sakseria Group of Companies in October 2021. During the search, authorities seized Excel sheets from a laptop belonging to Mr. Tarun Sekseria (TNS), a director in the group. The department alleged that these sheets detailed unaccounted cash investments made by the assessee, EI Resorts & Clubs Pvt Ltd, for land acquisitions. The Assessing Officer (AO) relied almost exclusively on these Excel sheets and statements recorded from TNS and his father, Mr. Nandkumar Seksaria (NKS), to make additions of ₹13.55 crore under Sections 69A/69B of the Income Tax Act, 1961, for unexplained investments.

The assessee vehemently contested the additions, arguing that the Excel sheets were merely "dumb documents" with no evidentiary value. They contended that the sheets were not prepared by the company but by a third-party land aggregator as a Management Information System (MIS) report, containing estimated costs and projected profits rather than records of actual cash transactions. Crucially, both TNS and NKS later retracted their initial statements, explaining the context and nature of the documents. The Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) [CIT(A)] provided partial relief by reducing the addition to ₹2.58 crore but upheld the underlying principle of the assessment. Both the assessee and the Revenue appealed to the ITAT.

The Tribunal's Findings: A House of Cards on Merits

The ITAT conducted a meticulous review of the evidence and found the department’s case to be built on a foundation of conjecture and suspicion rather than credible proof.

1. Uncorroborated Retracted Statements: The Tribunal noted that the entire case hinged on the initial statement of TNS, which was subsequently contradicted by his father, NKS, the key person in charge of the group. NKS clarified that the Excel sheets were MIS reports prepared by the land aggregator. More importantly, both individuals formally retracted their statements during the assessment proceedings.

The ITAT held that once statements are retracted with cogent reasons, the onus shifts to the department to corroborate its claims with independent evidence. The order states, “The Assessing Officer cannot act as a mere forwarding agent of the report or view expressed by the Investigation Wing... An addition resting purely on suspicion and unsupported inference is antithetical to the settled principles of evidentiary assessment and the doctrine of fair adjudication.” The AO's failure to conduct any cross-examination or bring any third-party verification to the record proved fatal to the department's case.

2. The ‘Dumb Document’ Principle: The Tribunal classified the seized Excel sheets as "dumb documents," incapable of independent evidentiary value. It observed that these were unauthenticated, third-party documents not forming part of the assessee’s official books of account. Citing the Supreme Court's landmark ruling in the "Birla–Sahara Diaries" case ( Common Cause v. Union of India ), the ITAT reinforced that uncorroborated third-party records found during a search have no evidentiary value.

The order elaborates, "The mere discovery of excel sheet which are not even prepared by the directors of the assessee company and remain uncorroborated by any external evidence, cannot, by itself, form the sole basis for an addition."

Jurisdictional Flaws Render Proceedings Void Ab Initio

Beyond the merits, the ITAT identified multiple grave procedural and jurisdictional errors that rendered the entire reassessment exercise a nullity in the eyes of law.

1. Violation of the Faceless Assessment Scheme: The most critical legal flaw was the issuance of the reassessment notice under Section 148 by the Jurisdictional Assessing Officer (JAO) instead of the Faceless Assessing Officer (FAO). The Tribunal relied on the binding precedent set by the Bombay High Court in Hexaware Technologies Ltd. v. ACIT , which established that under the scheme notified via Section 151A, the jurisdiction for such actions is exclusively vested with the faceless unit.

The ITAT declared that any notice issued outside this statutory framework is coram non judice (before a judge or court lacking the authority to hear the case) and void at inception. The Tribunal noted that this position has been consistently upheld by the Bombay High Court and affirmed by the Supreme Court’s dismissal of a Special Leave Petition in a similar matter ( Deepanjan Roy v. ADIT ).

2. Invalid Document Identification Number (DIN): The assessment orders were found to have manually written DINs, with the official DIN intimation letter being generated after the date of the order. This was a direct violation of CBDT Circular No. 19/2019, which mandates that any communication issued without a computer-generated DIN is "invalid and shall be deemed to have never been issued."

Following the Bombay High Court’s decision in Ashok Commercial Enterprises v. ACIT , the ITAT held that this breach was not a mere procedural irregularity but a substantive flaw that goes to the root of jurisdiction, rendering the orders non-est. “The sanctity of the CBDT’s procedural safeguards cannot be reduced to a mere formality; they are, in essence, the bedrock of institutional integrity in the era of faceless administration,” the order stated.

3. Fundamentally Defective Notice: The Tribunal also found the notice under Section 148 to be defective because it was issued on the erroneous premise that a search had been conducted on the assessee company itself, a fact the AO later conceded was incorrect. Citing the full bench decision of the Bombay High Court in Mohd. Farhan A. Sheik , the Tribunal held that such a fundamental error in the notice vitiates the entire proceedings.

Legal Implications for Tax Practitioners

This landmark ITAT ruling serves as a powerful reminder for both taxpayers and the Revenue about the non-negotiable nature of procedural law in tax administration.

  • Jurisdictional Discipline is Paramount: The decision firmly establishes that the procedural framework for faceless assessments is a jurisdictional imperative. Any deviation, such as a notice issued by a non-designated officer, will invalidate the entire proceeding.

  • The Power of ‘Dumb Documents’ is Limited: Tax professionals can draw strength from the Tribunal's clear stance on the limited evidentiary value of unverified, uncorroborated loose papers and digital files. The ruling reinforces that suspicion, however strong, cannot replace legally admissible proof.

  • DIN Compliance is Mandatory: The ITAT’s strict interpretation of the CBDT circular on DINs highlights its critical role in ensuring transparency and accountability. Practitioners must diligently check for valid, pre-generated DINs on all communications from the department, as its absence can be a ground for quashing an order.

By allowing the assessee's appeals in full and dismissing the Revenue's, the Mumbai ITAT has delivered a decisive judgment that not only provides relief to the taxpayer but also sets a clear precedent on the standards of evidence and procedural integrity expected from the tax authorities in the modern, faceless era.

#TaxLitigation #ITAT #FacelessAssessment

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