ITAT remands the case, holding the ex-parte order invalid for ignoring facts and the TDS-based addition.
Meetu Kumari | Apr 9, 2026 |
Ex-Parte CIT(A) Order Quashed; ITAT Remands Rs 29.95 Lakh Addition
For the 2020-21 assessment year, an individual taxpayer reported an income of Rs. 2,864,940. During scrutiny, the Assessing Officer (AO) spotted a TDS credit of Rs 799,523. Using a simple 10% maths rule, the AO assumed the gross receipts must be Rs. 7,995,230. Even after backing out a Rs 50 lakh security deposit, the AO tagged the remaining Rs 29,95,230 as “unexplained income” and tacked it onto the tax bill.
Issue Raised: Is a tax addition sustainable if it’s based solely on a TDS calculation, and can the CIT(A) dismiss an appeal ex parte without looking at the facts already provided?
Tribunal’s Decision: The Tribunal took a dim view of how this was handled. While the taxpayer didn’t show up for the CIT(A) hearings, the Tribunal ruled that the CIT(A) still had a legal duty to look at the “Statement of Facts” already filed. Dismissing the case without reviewing that evidence was a breach of natural justice.
On the merits, the Tribunal noted that TDS doesn’t always equal taxable income. You can’t just extrapolate numbers without checking if the income actually accrued or if there were offsetting expenses. Because the AO failed to look at the matching expenditure or verify if the TDS credit was even claimed correctly, the case was sent back to the AO for a fresh, proper look.
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