ITAT: Assessee Proved Loans, Revenue Relied Only on Hearsay:

ITAT: Assessee Proved Loans, Revenue Relied Only on Hearsay

Tribunal upholds deletion of 5.90 crore cash credit addition; holds no incriminating evidence to disbelieve Filatax India’s genuine transactions.

ITAT: Deletion of 5.90 Cr Bogus Loan Addition Upheld

authorMeetu KumaridateJul 11, 2025
Last update on Jul 11, 2025
ITAT: Assessee Proved Loans; Revenue Relied Only on Hearsay The assessee, involved in manufacturing polyester chips, yarn, and fabrics, filed its return showing a net loss of Rs. 49.70 crore for AY 2013-14. After a search conducted on the assessee's premises, proceedings were reopened based on claims of accommodation entries from shell companies linked to the assessee. The Assessing Officer added Rs. 5.90 crore as unexplained cash credits under Section 68, disallowed Rs. 1 crore in interest under Section 37(1), and included Rs. 7.00-7.87 lakh as unexplained expenditure under Section 69 C, citing WhatsApp chats, statements, and financial reviews of lender companies. The assessee challenged these additions, providing detailed documentation such as confirmations, bank statements, audited financials, ITRs, responses to Section 133(6) notices, and affidavits retracting adverse statements made during the search. The CIT(A) deleted the additions, noting that the assessee proved the identity, creditworthiness, and genuineness of the transactions, and that no incriminating material linked the loans to cash exchanges or fake entries. The Revenue appealed this decision to the ITAT.
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Main Issue: Were the additions for unsecured loans, interest disallowance, and suspected commission expenses justified without direct evidence, considering the assessee had demonstrated the identity, creditworthiness, and genuineness under Section 68?
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ITAT's Ruling: The ITAT dismissed the Revenue's appeal and upheld the CIT(A)'s decision of removal of all additions. The Tribunal observed that the assessee provided complete documentation, including lender financials, confirmations, and banking records. It was observed that no direct incriminating evidence was found during the search or assessment. The Tribunal stated that relying on third-party WhatsApp chats and general statements without cross-examination could not override the primary evidence. It also ruled that the disallowance of interest and alleged expenditure under Section 69C lacked legal basis due to the absence of proven falsehood in the books of account. To Read Full Judgment, Download PDF Attached Below

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Meetu Kumari

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Meetu Kumari is an Experienced Advocate and Content Writer with 4+ years of demonstrated history of working in the law practice industry. Skilled in Developing Content, Researching, and Drafting. Strong professional with a Bachelor of Science (B.Sc.) focused on Law from Gujarat National Law University.
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