आयकर अपील
य अधकरण,
,,
, इंदौर यायपीठ,
,,
, इंदौर
IN THE INCOME TAX APPELLATE TRIBUNAL
INDORE BENCH, INDORE
BEFORE MS. SUCHITRA KAMBLE, JUDICIAL MEMBER
AND
SHRI B.M. BIYANI, ACCOUNTANT MEMBER
(Conducted through Virtual Court)
ITA No.74/Ind/2019
Assessment Year: 2014-15
Shri Abhishek Gupta,
303, Sangeeta Apartment
66, Bhagwandeen Nagar,
Indore
बनाम
/Vs.
ITO –Ward-5(5)
Indore
(Appellant / Assessee) (Respondent/ Revenue)
PAN: AGAPG4006E
Assessee by Shri Shubhash Jain, AR
Revenue by Shri R. S. Ambedkar /
Shri Aditya Shukla, Sr. DR
Date of Hearing 17.05.2022 / 21.07.2022
Date of Pronouncement 17.08.2022
आदेश
/
/ /
/ O R D E R
O R D E RO R D E R
O R D E R
Per B.M. Biyani, A.M.:
1. This appeal filed by the assessee is directed against the order dated
29.11.2018 of learned Commissioner of Income-Tax (Appeals)-II, Indore [“Ld.
CIT(A)”] in Appeal No. IT-10421/16-17/530, which in turn arises out of the
order of assessment dated 22.12.2016 passed by the learned ITO, Ward-5(5),
Indore [“Ld. AO”] u/s 143(3) of the Income-tax Act, 1961 [“the Act”] for the
Assessment-Year 2014-15.
Shri Abhishek Gupta
ITA No.74/Ind/2019
Assessment year 2014-15
Page 2 of 27
2. The assessee has raised following grounds:
“1. On the basis of fact & records, learned CIT (Appeal) has
erred in confirming the action of AO regarding taxed to the
exempted long terms capital gain Rs. 6458168/- under
section 10(38) of the income Tax Act as other source of
Income u/s 68 of the Act.
2, On the facts
& circumstances of the case and in Law
Learned CIT(A) erred in confirming the addition after
ignoring to the various documents
& evidence related to
exempted long term capital gain treated as other source of
Income.
3. On the fact and circumstances of the case the Learned CIT
(A) erred in framing the order after observing as the
statement of Appellant recorded during the Assessment
Proceedings. And he denied of dealed of Shares of M/s
Turbo Tech Engineers Ltd. Thus whole Appeal Order has
been framed on warm facts. Hence bad in Law.
4. On the facts
& in the circumstances of the case the
Learned CIT(A) erred in not accepting the fact that the
Assessment for the Assessment Year 2014-15 has been
finalized after keeping in view of general information of
Investigation Wing instead of specific of the assessee.
5. On the facts & in the circumstances of the case Learned
CIT(A) erred in not appreciating the facts that the Assessee
earned long term Capital Gain on Transfer in Single Scrip
of M/s Turbo Tech Engineers Ltd.
6. That on the fact and in the circumstances of the case, the
learned CIT (A) has erred in confirming the action of AO
regarding addition of the Notional Commission calculated
on such Share Transaction without any evidence to whom
paid.
7. That the appellant reserves its right to add to amend to
alter or to modify any of above grounds and to pursue any
other or further grounds as may be required.”
3. The assessee-individual filed his return of income on 31.07.2014, a
copy of which is placed in the Paper-Book, declaring a total income of Rs.
2,33,320/- from tuition, laptop work and interest. In the return, the assessee
Shri Abhishek Gupta
ITA No.74/Ind/2019
Assessment year 2014-15
Page 3 of 27
also declared a long-term capital gain of Rs. 64,58,168/- earned from sale of
equity shares of Turbotech Engineering Ltd., exempted u/s 10(38) of the act.
The assessee claimed to have purchased 35,000 shares of Turbotech
Engineering Ltd. for Rs. 1,77,192/-, sold the same for Rs. 66,35,360/- and
thereby earned a whopping capital gain of Rs. 64,58,168/-. Apprehending
the capital gain as suspicious, the case was selected for scrutiny under CASS
and the statutory notices u/s 143(2) and 142(1) were issued from time to
time. During assessment-proceeding, the Ld. AO asked the assessee to prove
the capital gain, in response to which the assessee made a detailed
submission. Observing that the assessee has made an unrealistic non-
taxable capital gain of Rs. 64,58,168/- on a very small investment of just Rs.
1,77,192/- and that too within a short period of just 17 months by indulging
in the transactions of what is called “penny stock”, the Ld. AO completed
assessment u/s 143(3) by order dated 22.12.2016 after making a total
addition of Rs. 65,87,330/- on two counts, viz. (i) Ld. AO treated the capital
gain of Rs. 64,58,168/- as bogus receipt u/s 68 of the Act, and also (ii) Ld.
AO added a sum of Rs. 1,29,162/- on account of estimated brokerage-cost
incurred by assessee out of undisclosed sources for arranging bogus capital
gain. Aggrieved by the order of assessment, the assesse filed appeal to Ld.
CIT(A). The Ld. CIT(A), however, dismissed appeal and did not grant any
relief. Now, the assessee has assailed the order of Ld. CIT(A) in this appeal
filed before us.
4. During hearing, the Ld. AR did not press Ground No. 3. Therefore, with
the consent of both sides, Ground No. 3 is treated as withdrawn and does not
call for adjudication by us. Ground No. 7 is also general and does not require
any adjudication. We, therefore, proceed to decide other Grounds.
5. By means of various effective Grounds, the assessee has challenged the
twin-additions made by Ld. AO, viz. (i) addition of Rs. 64,58,168/- in respect
of bogus capital gain, and (ii) addition of Rs. 1,29,162/- on account of
estimated brokerage cost incurred by assessee out of unexplained sources.
Shri Abhishek Gupta
ITA No.74/Ind/2019
Assessment year 2014-15
Page 4 of 27
6. Before proceeding further, we may note down the undisputed facts of
the impugned transactions of capital gain, as culled out from the
assessment-order, the order of Ld. CIT(A) and the material held in the Paper-
Books submitted by parties so that the issues can be better understood in
subsequent paragraphs:
(i) Purchase - The assessee purchased 35,000 shares of Turbotech
Engineering Ltd. for a sum of Rs. 1,77,192/- on 04.04.2012 through
M/s Pragati Shares and Stock Services, a SEBI-registered member of
The Inter-Connected Exchange, Mumbai. The Contract-Note of
purchase is placed in the Paper-Book, which demonstrates that the
assessee has paid brokerage, service-tax and STT on purchase. The
purchase is made through stock-exchange and the Order No., Trade
No., Settlement No. and Trade-timings are duly mentioned in the
Contract-Note. The purchase consideration was paid in cash which is a
fact noted by Ld. AO on Page No. 4 of the assessment-order and also
admitted by Ld. AR during hearing.
(ii) Holding – Although the assessee purchased shares on 04.04.2012,
they were credited in his Demat A/c on 08.10.2013 i.e. after a period of
about 17 months and just before the sale on 10.10.2013 / 17.10.2013.
A copy of the Demat A/c is placed in the Paper-Book.
(iii) Sale - The shares were sold for a sum of Rs. 66,35,360/- on
10.10.2013 / 17.10.2013 through M/s Indo Thai Securities Ltd., a
SEBI-registered member of Bombay Stock Exchange, Mumbai. The
Contract-Notes of sales are placed in the Paper-Book, which
demonstrate that the assessee has paid brokerage, service-tax and STT
on sales. The sales is made through stock-exchange and the Order No.,
Trade No., Settlement No. and Trade-timings are duly mentioned in the
Contract-Notes. The sale-consideration is received through banking
channel and the same is credited in the Bank A/c of assessee. A copy
of Bank Statement is also placed in the Paper-Book.
Shri Abhishek Gupta
ITA No.74/Ind/2019
Assessment year 2014-15
Page 5 of 27
7. During assessment-proceeding, the Ld. AO made following
observations:
(i) The assessee has earned capital gain from the transactions of shares of
Turbotech Engineering Ltd., which falls within the category of a “Penny
stock” as per the information available with the Income-tax
Department and this scrip has been used by persons to provide /
obtain exempted capital gain u/s 10(38) of the act.
(ii) The income-tax department has conducted various searches/surveys/
enquiries on the members of stock-exchanges which have resulted into
the unearthing of syndicates of various players involved in providing
bogus accommodation entries of capital gain. Those players work as
syndicate and manipulate market prices of “penny-stocks” in order to
provide exempted capital gain to the interest persons in lieu of
unaccounted cash, with the objective to covert black money into white
without payment of income-tax. Ld. AO has narrated the modus
operandi applied by them for providing such bogus capital gain.
(iii) Ld. AO examined the financials of Turbotech Engineering Ltd. and
observed that the market capitalization of the company is very small
and the P&L A/c shows that the company had no business during last
5 years. He further observed that the company had suffered losses
during the period. He observed that the weak financials demonstrate
that the company is having neither fundamentals nor potential.
(iv) Ld. AO analysed the stock-market data of the share of Turbotech
Engineering Ltd. and observed that the market price is unrealistic and
not related to the financial results of the company. Ld. AO observed
that the price of share was very low till January, 2011 which then
continuously increased. Thereafter, the price again fell down and came
to initial stage. Ld. AO, thus, observed that the market price of the
share was artificially and intentionally rigged by about 3644% when
Shri Abhishek Gupta
ITA No.74/Ind/2019
Assessment year 2014-15
Page 6 of 27
there was no related-growth in the company with an objective to
provide accommodation entry.
(v) Ld. AO issued a summon u/s 131, followed by reminders, to the
assessee to afford an opportunity to the assessee as also to ascertain
the truth of the transactions undertaken by assessee. But the assessee
did not appear. Ld. AO, therefore, concluded that the assessee did not
have knowledge of the financials and credentials of Turbotech
Engineering Ltd., whose prices have registered a whopping increase of
3644% in just one year.
(vi) Ld. AO also gathered data of the persons who purchased shares from
the assessee through the stock-exchange and issued notices u/s
133(6) to those persons. In the notices, Ld. AO called upon those
persons to submit the relevant details. However, none of them
responded.
8. Based on above observations, the Ld. AO inferred that the capital gain
declared by the assessee is not genuine and the same has been arranged by
the assessee so as to claim benefit of section 10(38). Therefore, the Ld. AO
assessee issued show-cause notice dated 02.12.2016 to the assessee, the
contents of which are extracted below:
"आपके वारा
कये गये
यवहार के सबध म वभाग वारा आयकर अधनयम,
1961 क धारा 132 के तहत ई टॉक ए$सचज के 'ोकस) एवं कई नधा)+रतय के
,ठकान पर सच) एवं धारा 133 ए के तहत क गई सव
.
काय)वाह/ के दौरान अवेषण
वभाग को इस 5कार के द तावेज/सा6य हाथ लगे या पाए गये िजनके अवलोकन
करने पर पाया गया
क, कई :सं;डके टस वारा तैयार
कये गये >लेटफाम) पर कई
@खला;डय वारा LTCG से संबंधत बोगस इंB/याँ (Bogus Entries) टॉक ए$सचज
के माDयम से मेय
ु
>लेट (Manipulation of stock Market) करके पेनी टॉक बायस)
क Bे;डंग के माDयम से लोगो को बोगस द/घ)-काल/न प
ू
ंजीगत लाभ, बोगस अIप-
काल/न प
ू
ंजीगत लाभ, बोगस द/घ)-काल/न हान एवं बोगस अIप-काल/न प
ू
ंजीगत हान
से सबंधत बोगस इंB/याँ (Bogus Entries) उपलKध करवाई गई, िजसमे वLतीय
यवहार दो पा,ट)य के मDय
कये गये एवं एक पाटM वारा अपनी लेखा प
ु
तक के
Shri Abhishek Gupta
ITA No.74/Ind/2019
Assessment year 2014-15
Page 7 of 27
माDयम से इं,Bयाँ अय पाटM को द/ गई, िजनमे से अधकतर
यवहार नगद म
कये
गये है िजससे खर/द/ लागत एवं एक निNचत दर पर कमीशन/'ोकरेज के साथ
भ
ु
गतान
कया गया ।
इस 5कार आपके वारा जो
यवहार के गये है वह एक सोची समझी योजना के
तहत
कये गये है िजह वभागीय काय)वाह/ के तहत दज) बयान म उ$त कं पनय के
5ाधक
ृ
त अधकार//नदेशक वारा वीकार
कया गया है
क हमारे वारा व:भन
वेन
फस+रज को ए$मोडेशन इंB/याँ (These accommodation entries are taken
by various beneficiaries) उपलKध करवाई जाती रह/ है । इस 5कार उपरो$त
तSय के आधार पर :सT होता है
क आपके वारा जो द/घ)काल/न प
ू
ंजीगत लाभ से
सबंधत बोगत इंB/याँ (Bogus Entries) 5ा>त करके द/घ)-काल/न प
ू
ंजीगत लाभ
अपनी आयकर ववरणी म दशा)या गया तथा उस आय पर धारा 10(38) के तहत छ
ू
ट
का दावा कर कर म
ु
$त रखा गया जो यायोचत नह/ं है $य
क आपके वारा
कए
गये
यवहार वा तवक होते तो वचाराधीन वष) के अलावा अय वषV म भी उ$त
ि Wप
्
म एवं इसके अलावा अय ि Wप म भी नय:मत Yप से नवेश
कया गया
होता, ले
कन आपके वारा ऐसा नह/ं
कया गया है, इससे वतः ह/ प\ट होता है
क,
आपके वारा
कये गये
यवहार बोगस है एवं इन
यवहार को बोगस मानते ह
ु
ए
आपक आय म जोड़ा जाना 5 तावत है । "
9. Responding to above notice, the assessee filed a detailed reply, the
contents of which is noted by Ld. AO in Para No. 8 of the assessment-order.
However, the Ld. AO was not satisfied with the submissions of assessee and
relying upon following decisions favouring Revenue, the Ld. AO made twin-
additions as mentioned in the beginning:
(a) M/s Sumati Dayal Vs. CIT (1995) 214 ITR 801 (SC)
(b) Shammin Varmani, ITA No. 4906/Mum/2011
(c) Ziauddin A. Siddique ITA No. 4699 and 4700/Mum/2011
10. During first appellate proceeding, the assessee submitted a detailed
reply to Ld. CIT(A) reiterating almost same submissions as made before Ld.
AO but with the support of some more judicial precedents. However, the
assessee did not find any favour from the Ld. CIT(A) who confirmed firstly the
addition of Rs. 64,58,168/- by concluding as under:
Shri Abhishek Gupta
ITA No.74/Ind/2019
Assessment year 2014-15
Page 8 of 27
“4.6 Hence, it is clear from the above facts, judicial decisions so
discussed above and circumstances that it was a sham
transaction which cannot stand the test of human probability
and therefore, the addition so made by the AO is hereby
confirmed and accordingly, these grounds of appeal are
dismissed.”
Secondly, the Ld. CIT(A) also confirmed the addition of Rs. 1,29,162/- by
holding as under:
“During the year under consideration, the appellant had made
some expenses in the form of brokerage. The said expenses were
incurred by the appellant in respect of transactions of shares
with a penny stock company. Hence, the AO had rightly added
the said amount to the appellant’s income. The addition so made
by the AO is hereby confirmed and accordingly, this ground of
appeal is hereby dismissed.”
The Ld. CIT(A) has also relied upon following decisions in arriving at above
conclusions:
(a) CIT Vs. Durga Prasad More (1971) 82 ITR 540 (SC)
(b) M/s Sumati Dayal Vs. CIT (1995) 214 ITR 801 (SC)
(c) Sanjay Bimal Chand Jain L/H Shantidevi Bimal Chand Jain Vs.
PCIT, ITA No. 18/2017 (Bombay High Court)
(d) Chandan Gupta Vs. CIT (2015) 54 taxmann.com 10 (P&H)
(e) Balbir Chand Maini Vs. CIT (2011) taxmann.com 276 (P&H)
(f) Usha Chandresh Shah Vs. ITO (2014-TIOL-1459-ITAT-MUM)
(g) Ratnakar M Pujari Vs. ITO (2016-TIOL-1746-ITAT-Mum)
11. Before us, the Ld. AR made a very lengthy submission. Ld. AR drew
our attention to the various documents placed in the Paper-Book to explain
that the transactions undertaken by assessee are very much genuine. The
Ld. AR raised several contentions, which we precisely summarize below:
(i) The purchase and sale transactions are adequately supported by the
documents in the form of Contract-Notes, Demat A/c and Bank
Statement. The lower authorities have not found even iota of deficiency
in any of these documents.
Shri Abhishek Gupta
ITA No.74/Ind/2019
Assessment year 2014-15
Page 9 of 27
(ii) The purchase and sale transactions were done in a recognized stock-
exchange through the members of stock-exchanges who are registered
by SEBI. Nothing adverse is found by lower authorities with regard to
those members.
(iii) The Contract-Notes include Trade Nos., Contract Nos., Settlement Nos.
and Trade Timings and there is no dispute over those details.
(iv) Contract-Notes clearly evident that the assessee has paid statutory
levies such as Service-tax and STT, which have certainly gone to the
pocket of exchequer.
(v) The delivery of shares had been taken and given, which is very much
evident from the Demat A/c held with State Bank of India. Therefore,
the genuineness of purchase and sale cannot be doubted.
(vi) The searches/surveys/enquiries conducted by department were
actions against those persons upon whom they were conducted. The
assessee is not related in any way with those searches/surveys/
enquiries. Further, the findings made in those actions were general
and not of the assessee. The Investigation-Report of Investigation Wing,
Kolkata of Income-tax Department dated 27.04.2015 [“Investigation-
Report”], being relied upon by the authorities, is a general report. It
does not include assessee’s name. The Investigation-Report does not
make any allegation qua the assessee.
(vii) Regarding whopping increase in the prices of share purchased and sold
by assessee, stock market does not have a predictable behavior. The
prices of any share can go up or down and it depends on several
factors and not simply the financials of the company. In any case, the
assessee is a small-level person and did not have any control over the
prices of stocks.
(viii) The revenue does not have any evidence to dislodge the transactions of
assessee. Revenue is simply relying upon the conjectures, surmises,
Shri Abhishek Gupta
ITA No.74/Ind/2019
Assessment year 2014-15
Page 10 of 27
generalized modus operandi and preponderance of human probabilities
as against the specific evidences placed by the assessee on record.
Therefore, the approach of revenue is faulty and not valid.
(ix) This is not the solitary transaction done by assessee. In fact, the
assessee has also purchased and held other shares too, which is
evident from the Statement of Affairs placed in the Paper-Book. Even
the details of those other shares were also supplied to the Ld. AO
during assessment-proceeding and those details are also noted by Ld.
AO at Page No. 24 to 26 of the assessment-order.
(x) Ld. AR has filed copies of several decisions in favour of assessee in the
Paper-Book but during the course of hearing, the Ld. AR referred to
and relied upon the following decisions:
(a) ITAT Indore in Govind Hari Narayan Agarwal HUF, ITA No.
60/Ind/2019, order dated 28.06.2021
(b) ITAT Kolkata in Rachna Agarwal Vs. ITO, Ward-28(4), Kolkata,
order dated 08.04.2022
(c) Hon’ble Delhi High Court in PCIT Vs. Smt. Krishna Devi – ITA
No. 125, 130 and 131 of 2020, decision dated 15.01.2021
12. Per contra, Ld. DR placed heavy reliance on the observations and
reasoning given by lower authorities and argued that the transactions done
by assessee are only paper-transactions and the capital gain declared by the
assessee is not a real profit but a bogus income arranged by assessee.
According to Ld. DR, the assessee has arranged bogus capital gain to claim
the benefit of section 10(38). During his arguments, the Ld. DR emphasized
following vital aspects:
(i) During assessment-proceeding, the Ld. AO summoned the assessee by
issuing summon u/s 131. But the assessee did not appear before Ld.
AO. The attitude of assessee is thus indicative that the assessee does
Shri Abhishek Gupta
ITA No.74/Ind/2019
Assessment year 2014-15
Page 11 of 27
not want the department to cull out truth. Non-compliance of statutory
summon issued u/s 131, must lead to the conclusion against the
assessee.
(ii) The assessee has purchased shares of a company which had neither
financials nor potential. The assessee has not produced any advice-
letter of the broker or competent person who had advised to invest
hard-earned money in the game of such a weak company.
(iii) It is true that the assessee has also made investment in other shares
but that that investment is very nominal. Further those shares held by
assessee are not “penny stocks” and the department is also not raising
any doubt on those shares. But the share of Turbotech Engineering
Ltd., with which we are concerned, is a “penny stock”.
13. In rejoinder, the Ld. AR attempted to rebut the points emphasized by
Ld. DR by drawing our attention to Page No. 117 of the Paper-Book where an
affidavit dated 28.09.2016 filed before Ld. AO, is placed. Ld. AR submitted
that in response to the summon issued by Ld. AO u/s 131, the assessee
appeared but on the fixed date of hearing, the Ld. AO was not in office due to
involvement in carrying out survey and the office of AO informed that new
notice of hearing would be issued. Ld. AR submitted that the assessee has,
however, filed the aforesaid affidavit to Ld. AO but the Ld. AO has ignored the
affidavit. Referring to Point No. 4 of the affidavit, Ld. AR also pointed that the
assessee has clearly averred in the affidavit that he purchased shares due to
several messages being received on the mobile phones of family-members
about good returns.
14. In response, the Ld. DR continued his insistence that the assessee has
made non-compliance of the summon issued by Ld. AO u/s 131. Ld. DR
contested that the affidavit nowhere contains any averment of the assessee to
the effect that it was filed in compliance to the summon u/s 131 or that the
Ld. AO was not available on the date of hearing fixed by summon and his
office conveyed to fix a new date of hearing. Ld. DR submitted that had there
Shri Abhishek Gupta
ITA No.74/Ind/2019
Assessment year 2014-15
Page 12 of 27
been any such fact, the assessee would have certainly averred. Ld. DR
further raised a serious doubt in the claim of assessee that the advice to
purchase shares of Turbotech Engineering Ltd. was actually received on the
mobiles phones, more interestingly the mobile-phones of family members,
and the assessee was impressed to invest hard-earned money based on such
messages. According to Ld. DR, this claim of assessee is not appealing.
15. We have considered rival submissions, perused the material held on
record and also considered various judicial decisions cited before us. At the
outset, we observe that there are different decisions by Hon’ble Courts on
both sides, some in favour of assessee and some in favour of revenue. While
the Ld. AR places reliance on the decisions in assessee’s favour, the revenue
relies upon the decisions in its favour. On a careful analysis we observe that
in some decisions, the additions were made in the proceeding of section
153A/153C but the same were deleted there being no incriminating evidence.
In some cases, the additions were deleted on the ground that the shares
transacted by the assessee were not appearing in the Investigation-Report
prepared by Investigation Wing, Kolkata of income-tax department. In some
cases, the additions have been deleted because the assessee has not claimed
any benefit of exemption u/s 10(38) or set-off of losses but the assessee has
offered the profit from alleged transactions as normal income and paid
legitimate tax. Yet in some cases, the additions have been deleted or
confirmed on the basis of off-market transactions or transactions done in
cash. In some cases, the additions have been deleted or confirmed accepting
/ not accepting the absence of cross-examination, non-compliances of
notices by the assessee or preponderance of probability, human behavior,
etc. Hence every decision has its own set of facts, circumstances, analysis
and angles of thought and there cannot be a universal conclusion. However,
in all fairness, we would like to discuss the decisions relied upon by the
assessee:
(a) ITAT Indore in Govind Hari Narayan Agarwal HUF, ITA No.
60/Ind/2019, order dated 28.06.2021:
Shri Abhishek Gupta
ITA No.74/Ind/2019
Assessment year 2014-15
Page 13 of 27
This decision is directly related to the shares of Turbotech Engineering
Ltd., as involved in present appeal, and therefore the Ld. AR, as it
seems, has relied upon. We extract below the relevant paragraphs of
decision:
“21. Further we observe that in the case of Govind Harinarayan
Agrawal HUF, Manish Govind Agrawal HUF alleged issue of gain
from share is from sale of equity shares of Turbotech. Similar
type of issue of the alleged bogus of Long Term Capital Gain from
sale of shares of Turbotech came up before the Co-ordinate Bench
held in the case of Swati Luthra wherein the Co-ordinate Bench
has decided in favour of the assessee allowing both the grounds
raised on merits as well as legal observing as follows:-
12. We have heard the rival submissions and perused the
orders of the lower authorities and materials available on
record. We find that the transactions of the assessee of
purchase of shares of M/s Esteem Bio and M/s Turbotech.,
holding of the shares for more than one year and the sale
of shares through a registered share broker in a recognized
Stock Exchange and payment of Securities Transaction Tax
thereon, all were supported by documentary evidences
which were placed before the lower authorities. The
Revenue could not point out any specific defect with
regards to the documents so submitted by assessee. In our
considered view, effect of a transaction which is supported
by documentary evidences cannot be brushed aside on
suspicion or probabilities without pointing out any defect
therein.
13. In the instant case, the Assessing Officer himself
observed that the movement in price of shares of M/s
Esteem Bio and M/s Turbotech were without any backing of
financial performance of the said companies. In our
considered view, the above factor at best was a pointer or
cause for careful scrutiny of the transaction by the
Assessing Officer but from it cannot be concluded that
transactions were sham. It is a matter of common
knowledge that prices of shares in the share market
depends upon innumerable factors and perception of the
investor and not alone on the financial performance of the
company. Further, we also find from record that Ld. AO
also didn't confront copies of statements recorded by
Investigation Wing, Kolkata of Sh, Nikhil Jain, Sh. Sanjay
Vora, Sh. Rakesh Somani, Sh. Anil Kumar Khemka and Sh.
Bidyoot Sarkar to the appellant during assessment
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Assessment year 2014-15
Page 14 of 27
proceedings and merely extracted copies of their statement
in the assessment order only. The Ld. AO has not
confronted any material to the assessee nor provided any
adequate opportunity to the assessee to defend her case.
Since the statements were not confronted to the assessee,
she was deprived of her right to cross examine the
witnesses. Also whatever they have stated in their
statement is no gospel truth and cannot be applied blindly
to all the persons who have brought the scrips in the entire
country. Thus, under these circumstances, at least some
inquiry should have done from these persons, whether they
have provided any entry to the assessee, if the request for
cross examination was not possible at that stage. Cross
examination of a person in whose basis any adverse
inference is drawn, then it cannot be primary evidence or
material to nail the assessee and simply based on the
statement no addition can be made. This has been held so
by various courts, and also by Hon'ble Apex Court in the
case of M/s Andaman Tiimber Industries vs. CCE (SC)
reported in 127 DTR 241 has held as follows:”
“23. We therefore in the light of above judgments which are
squarely applicable in the issues raised in the instant appeals
are of the considered view that the claim of Long Term Capital
Gain made by the respective assessee(s) deserves to be allowed as
they have entered into the transactions of purchase and sales
duly supported by the documents which have not found to be
incorrect. The conditions provided u/s 10(38) of the Act have been
fulfilled by the assessee(s) namely Shivnarayan Sharma, Sapan
Shaw, Prayank Jain, Govind Harinarayan Agrawal (HUF) and
Manish Govind Agrawal (HUF) as they have sold the equity shares
held in Demat account and transactions performed on a
recognised stock exchange through registered broker at the price
appearing on the exchange portal and at the point of time of sale
of equity shares, companies were not marked as shell companies
by SEBI and nor the trading of these scrips were suspended. The
assessee also deserves to succeed on the legal ground as no
opportunity was awarded to cross examination the third person
which were allegedly found to be providing accommodation
entries and therefore no addition was called for in the hands of
the assessee without providing opportunity of cross examination
in view of the ratio laid down by Hon'ble Apex Court in the case
of Andaman Timber Industries vs. CCE 281 CTR 241 (SC) that "not
allowing the assessee to cross examine the witnesses by the
adjudicating authority though the statements of those witnesses
were made the basis of the impugned order is a serious flaw
which makes the order nullity inasmuch as it amounted to
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ITA No.74/Ind/2019
Assessment year 2014-15
Page 15 of 27
violation of principles of natural justice because of which the
assessee was adversely affected".
Analysis:
The underlined portion clearly indicates that the ITAT has decided in
favour of assessee mainly on two reasoning, (i) Ld. AO has not
confronted the assessee on the copies of statements recorded by
Investigation Wing, Kolkata. The Ld. AO has not confronted any
material to the assessee nor provided adequate opportunity to the
assessee to defend her case, and (ii) The companies were not marked
as shell companies by SEBI nor the trading of these scrips were
suspended. Regarding the first reasoning of conforntation / cross-
examination, we observe that the recent decision of Hon’ble Kolkata
High Court in Swati Bajaj (which we shall discuss little later) is
against assessee. Furthermore, in the present-case, it is the claim of
revenue that the Ld. AO provided an opportunity to the assessee by
issuing a summon u/s 131 but the assessee did not avail. Regarding
the second reasoning of suspension of operations by SEBI, the
Investigation-Report prepared by Investigation-Wing, Kolkata of
Income-tax Department (which we shall discuss little later), clearly
mentions that the SEBI has suspended operations of Turbotech
Engineering Ltd. Thus, both of the points considered in this decision
for giving relief to the assessee, are not existing in the present appeal
before us. Hence this decision is not applicable.
(b) ITAT Kolkata in Smt. Rachna Agarwal Vs. ITO, Ward-28(4), order
dated 08.04.2022:
Ld. AR has relied upon this decision which is a very recent one in
favour of assessee. We extract below the relevant paragraphs:
“20. We therefore note that since the purchase and sale
transactions are supported and evidenced by confirmations,
Contract Notes, Demat statements and bank statements etc., the
same could not be treated as bogus simply on the basis of some
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Assessment year 2014-15
Page 16 of 27
report of the Investigation Wing and/or the orders of SEBI in case
of entirely different scrip. Moreover it was submitted before us by
Ld AR that the Ld. CIT(A) was not justified in taking an adverse
view against the assessee on the ground of abnormal price rise of
the shares. The Ld AR referred to the following judgments in
support of this contention wherein under similar facts of the
case it was held that the AO was not justified in refusing to allow
the benefit under section 10(38) of the Act and to assess the sale
proceeds of shares as undisclosed income of the assessee under
section 68 of the Act. We note that in order to create a tax
liability in a case of this nature, the AO has to prove and
establish the cash trail and the allegations, particularly in
respect of the appellant, which is yet to be proved in the instant
case. Similar view has been pronounced by Hon’ble Delhi High
Court in the case of Pr. CIT vs Jatin Investment (P) Ltd. (2017 (2)
TMI 342 - DELHI HIGH COURT) wherein it was observed "A
transaction cannot be treated as fraudulent if the appellant has
furnished the documentary proof and proved the identity of the
purchaser and no discrepancy is found. The AO has to exercise
his powers u/s 131 & 133(6) of the Act to verify the genuineness
of the claim and cannot proceed on surmises. In the case of CIT
vs. Lavanya Land Pvt Ltd (Income Tax Appeal No. 72 of 2014,
Income Tax Appeal No. 114, 122, 124, 225, 226, 423, 425, 426 of
2014) the Hon’ble Bombay High Court ruled that the allegations
made by the authorities have to be supported by actual cash
passing hands or actually has changed hands. We find that in
this case the AO and the Ld CIT(A) has not brought any such
findings on record.”
Analysis:
The underlined portion clearly indicates that the decision proceeded on
the premise that the department has treated the transactions done by
assessee as bogus on the basis of Investigation-Report of the
Investigation-Wing and/or the orders of SEBI in case of an entirely
different scrip and not the scrip transacted by the assessee. This point
makes the decision non-applicable because in the present appeal the
assessee has transacted in the scrip of Turbotech Engineering Ltd.
which is clearly figured in the Investigation-Report of Investigation-
Wing (we shall discuss the Report little later). Regarding other legal
aspects considered in favour of assessee, we observe that Hon’ble ITAT
Kolkata has rendered this decision on 08.04.2022 but subsequently
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Assessment year 2014-15
Page 17 of 27
the Hon’ble High Court of Kolkata has held in favour of revenue in a
recent decision dated 14.06.2022 in the case of Swati Bajaj (we shall
discuss this decision little later). Therefore, we have to follow the
decision of Hon’ble High Court of Kolkata which is a higher forum than
the Kolkata Bench of ITAT. Hence the assessee does not get benefit of
this decision too.
(c) PCIT Vs. Smt. Krishna Devi – ITA No. 125, 130 and 131 of 2020,
decision dated 15.01.2021 (Delhi High Court):
This decision has already been taken note of in the recent decision of
Hon’ble Kolkata High Court in Para No. 21 in Swati Bajaj (we shall
discuss a little later). The Hon’ble Kolkata High Court has finally ruled
in favour of revenue. Hence the assessee does not have any benefit of
this decision too.
Thus, all decisions relied upon by Ld. AR do not support the assessee’s case.
16. Now comes the turn of the decision of Hon’ble High Court of Kolkata
in PCIT Vs. Swati Bajaj, ITA No. 06/2022, dated 14.06.2022 decided
recently in favour of Revenue. The decision is much detailed; has considered
various legal precedents of the Hon’ble Supreme Court and other Courts; has
taken into account the Investigation-Report dated 28.04.2015 prepared by
Investigation-Wing of Income-tax Department; and considered the issues of
cross-examination, human probability etc. Some relevant paragraphs of the
decision are extracted below:
“69. Thus, the legal principle which can be culled out from the above
decision is that to prove the allegations, against the assessee, can be
inferred by a logical process of reasoning from the totality of the
attending facts and circumstances surrounding the
allegations/charges made and levelled and when direct evidence is not
available, it is the duty of the Court to take note of the immediate and
proximate facts and circumstances surrounding the events on which
the charges/allegations are founded so as to reach a reasonable
conclusion and the test would be what inferential process that a
reasonable/prudent man would apply to arrive at a conclusion. Further
proximity and time and prior meeting of minds is also a very important
factor especially when the income tax department has been able to
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Assessment year 2014-15
Page 18 of 27
point out that there has been a unnatural rise in the price of the scrips
of very little known companies. Furthermore, in all the cases, there
were minimum of two brokers who have been involved in the
transaction. It would be very difficult to gather direct proof of the
meeting of minds of those brokers or sub-brokers or middlemen or entry
operators and therefore, the test to be applied is the test of
preponderance of probabilities to ascertain as to whether there has
been violation of the provisions of the Income Tax Act. In such a
circumstance, the conclusion has to be gathered from various
circumstances like the volume from trade, period of persistence in
trading in the particular scrips, particulars of buy and sell orders and
the volume thereof and proximity of time between the two which are
relevant factors. Therefore, in our considered view the methodology
adopted by the department cannot be faulted.
70. It was argued by Mr. Bagaria that in the decision in Balram Garg,
the decision in K.R. Ajmera has been overruled. To examine the
correctness of the said submission, we have carefully gone through the
findings rendered by the Hon'ble Supreme Court in paragraph 47 of the
judgment in Balram Garg which reads as follows:
“Lastly, we have given our anxious consideration to the
judgments relied upon by the learned counsel of the Respondent
viz. SEBI vs. Kishore R. Ajmera [(2016) 6 SCC 368] and Dushyant
N. Dalal vs. SEBI [(2017) 9 SCC 660]. Suffice it to hold that these
cases are distinguishable on the facts of the present case, as the
former is not a case of insider trading but that of
Fradulent/Manipualtive Trade Practices; and the latter case
relates to Interest Penalty rather than the subject matter at
hand. Reliance placed on the case of Kishore R. Ajmera (supra) to
show that presumption can be drawn on the basis of immediate
and relevant facts is contrary to law already settled by this
Court in the case of Chintalapati Srinivasa Raju (supra) where it
is held that "a reasonable expectation to be in the know of things
can only be based on reasonable inference drawn from
foundational facts." It has further been held that merely because
a person was related to the connected person cannot be itself be
a foundational fact to draw an inference.”
71. On a careful reading of the above paragraph will show that the
argument by placing reliance on the case of K.R. Ajmera to show that
presumption can be drawn on the basis of immediate and relevant
facts was contrary to the law already settled by the Hon'ble Supreme
Court in Chintalapati S. Raju. Therefore, it would be incorrect to
submit that the decision in K.R. Ajmera has been overruled. This
position becomes clearer as the decision in K.R. Ajmera was referred to
in Chintalapati S. Raju as could be seen in paragraph 30 of the said
judgment. Therefore, we hold that the law laid down in K.R. Ajmera
continues to be good law.
72. In the light of the above discussion, the only conclusion that can be
arrived at is that the opinion can be formed and the decision can be
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Assessment year 2014-15
Page 19 of 27
taken by taking note of the surrounding circumstances which had been
elaborated upon in K.R. Ajmera.
73. It is very rare and difficult to get direct information or evidence
with regard to the prior meeting of minds of the persons involved in the
manipulative activities of price rigging and insider trading. We can
draw a parallel in cases of adulteration of food stuff, more than often
action is initiated under the relevant Act after the adulteration takes
place, the users of adulterated products get affected etc. Therefore, a
holistic approach is required to be made and the test of preponderance
of probabilities have to be applied and while doing so, we cannot loose
sight of the fact that the shares of very little known companies with in-
significant business had a steep rise in the share prices within the
period of little over a year. The Income Tax department was not privy
to such peculiar trading activities as they appear to have been done
through the various stock exchanges and it is only when the assessees
made claim for a LTCG/STCL, the investigation commenced. As pointed
out the investigation did not commence from the assessee but had
commenced from the companies and the persons who were involved in
the trading of the shares of these companies which are all classified as
penny stocks companies. Therefore, the argument of the assessee that
the copy of the investigation report has not been furnished, the persons
from whom statements have been recorded have not been produced for
cross examination are all contention which has to necessarily fail for
several reasons which we have set out in the proceedings. To reiterate,
the assessee we not named in the report and when the assessee makes
the claim for exemption the onus of proof is on the assessee to prove
the genuinity. Unfortunately, the assessees have been harping upon the
transactions done by them and by relying upon the documents in their
hands to contend that the transactions done were genuine.
Unfortunately, the test of genuinity needs to be established otherwise,
the assessees are lawfully bound to prove the huge LTCG claims to be
genuine. In other words if there is information and data available of
unreasonable rise in the price of the shares of these penny stock
companies over a short period of time of little more than one year, the
genuinity of such steep rise in the prices of shares needs to be
established and the onus is on the assessee to do so as mandated
in Section 68 of the Act. Thus, the assessees cannot be permitted to
contend that the assessments were based on surmises and conjectures
or presumptions or assumptions. The assessee does not and cannot
dispute the fact that the shares of the companies which they have
dealt with were insignificant in value prior to their trading. If such is
the situation, it is the assessee who has to establish that the price rise
was genuine and consequently they are entitled to claim LTCG on their
transaction. Until and unless the initial burden cast upon the assessee
is discharged, the onus does not shift to the revenue to prove
otherwise. It is incorrect to argue that the assessees have been called
upon to prove the negative in fact, it is the assessees duty to establish
that the rise of the price of shares within a short period of time was a
genuine move that those penny stocks companies had credit worthiness
and coupled with genuinity and identity. The assesses cannot be heard
to say that their claim has to be examined only based upon the
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ITA No.74/Ind/2019
Assessment year 2014-15
Page 20 of 27
documents produced by them namely bank details, the purchase/sell
documents, the details of the D-Mat Account etc. The assesses have lost
sight of an important fact that when a claim is made for LTCG or
STCL, the onus is on the assessee to prove that credit worthiness of the
companies whose shares the assessee has dealt with, the genuineness
of the price rise which is undoubtedly alarming that to within a short
span of time. The revenue had placed heavy reliance on the decision in
McDowell to show that the claim of the assessee is not case of tax
planning to be one of the tax avoidance by indulging in dubious
methods. Mr. Bagaria had argued the rule in McDowell was considered
in Azadi Bachao Andolan and Vodafone International and it is in the
manner explained in these decisions the rule in McDowell needs to be
applied. From paragraph 138 onwards the Hon'ble Supreme Court
considered in detail as to why McDowell and what it says and what it
does not say. The argument of Mr. Bagaria would primarily rests on as
to what would mean by a sham transaction as a legal one and it is
pointed out that all the parties thereto must have a common intention
that the acts or documents are not to create the legal rights and
obligations which they give the appearance of creating. Further by
referring to the decision in Vodafone International, it is submitted that
the revenue cannot start with the question as to whether the
transaction was a tax deferment/avoidance but the revenue should
apply the "look at" test to ascertain its true legal nature and that
genuine strategic planning had not been abandoned. Further the
revenue has to establish on the basis of facts and circumstances
surrounding the transactions that the impugned transaction is a sham
or tax avoidance. In this regard Mr. Bagaria ITAT NO. 06 OF 2022 AND
ETC. BATCH also referred to the decision in the case of Hill Country
Properties Limited Versus Goman Agro Farms Private Limited 90 and
also the decision in IRC Versus Duke of Westminster 91 .
74. In our considered view we need not travel thus far and wide to
examine as to how and what is said and what is not said in McDowell
Mr. Soumen Bhattacharya referred to the decision for the simple
reason, to point out that tax planning may be legitimate provided it is
within the frame work of law as colourable devices cannot be part of
tax planning which cannot be encouraged. Therefore what we are
required to see is whether the claim made by the assesees before us are
legitimate and whether there was any colourable devices adopted in
the process and these colourable devices may or may not be directly
but indirectly attributable to the assessee. Therefore, we need not
labour much to examine as to how rule in McDowell needs to be applied
as we are required to examine the factual scenario from the cases on
hand which appear to be quite unique not probably drawn the
attention of the courts and the tribunal earlier.
75. While it may be true that M/s. Swati Bajaj, Mr. Girish Tigwani or
other assessees who are before us could have been regular investors,
investors could or could not have been privy to the information or
modus adopted. In our considered view, what is important is that it is
the assessee who has to prove the claim to be genuine in terms
of Section 68 of the Act. Therefore, the assessee cannot escape from the
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Assessment year 2014-15
Page 21 of 27
burden cast upon him and unfortunately in these cases the burden is
heavy as the facts establish that the shares which were traded by the
assessees had phenomenal and fanciful rise in price in a short span of
time and more importantly after a period of 17 to 22 months,
thereafter has been a steep fall which has led to huge claims of STCL.
Therefore, unless and until the assessee discharges such burden of
proof, the addition made by the assessing officer cannot be faulted.
76. It was argued that unless there are foundational facts,
circumstantial evidence cannot be relied on. This argument does not
merit acceptance as wealth of information and facts were on record
which is the outcome of the investigation on the companies, stock
brokers, entry operators etc. Based on those foundational facts the
department has adopted the concept of "working backward" leading to
the assessees. While at that relevant stage the sounding
circumstances, the normal human conduct of a prudent investor, the
probabilities that may spill over, were all taken into consideration to
negative the claim for exception made by the assessee. Therefore, the
department was fully justified in taking note of the prevailing
circumstances to decide against the assessees.”
It was thought fit to provide an opportunity to both sides to place their
arguments in the light of decision and we did so. In response, the Ld. AR filed
a Written-Submission dated 17.05.2022 and also made oral submission
during hearing. It is observed that the Ld. AR has re-iterated original
submissions. But, however, made one newer submission to distinguish the
applicability of the decision. Ld. AR submitted that the 84 scrips dealt in the
judgement / Investigation-Report do not include “Turbotech Engineering
Ltd.” transacted by the assessee and therefore the decision is not applicable.
Contrary to this, Ld. DR has filed a letter dated 19.07.2022 accompanied by
the Investigation-Report which is dated 27.04.015 and titled as
“Investigation Report in the case of Project Bogus LTCG / STCL
Through BSE Listed Penny Stocks” released by Directorate of Income-
tax (Investigation), Kolkata. Ld. DR has pointed out that the name of
“Turbotech Engineering Ltd.” is appearing in this Investigation-Report and
the share is identified as “Penny stock”. We gainfully reproduce the relevant
paragraphs of the Report:
Page No. 2 of the Forwarding-Letter embodied in the Report:
“We identified the following BSE listed penny stocks which have
been used for generating bogus LTCG:
Shri Abhishek Gupta
ITA No.74/Ind/2019
Assessment year 2014-15
Page 22 of 27
SL No Script
Code
Script
Name
Full Name of
Penny Stock
Amount of
Total Value
62 504358 Turbo
Tech
Turbotech
Engineering
Ltd.
8319513048
Page No. 12 / 14 of the Report
“4. Project Basis Enquiry of the scam.
Various enquiries have been conducted by the Directorate of
Investigation, Kolkata, on a project basis, which has resulted
into the unearthing of a huge syndicate of Entry Operators,
share brokers and money launderers, involved in providing
bogus accommodation of Long Term Capital Gain, Short term
capital loss. It has come to light that large scale manipulation
has been/is being done In market price of shares of certain
companies listed on the Bombay Stock Exchange by certain
persons working as a syndicate in order to provide entries of
tax exempt bogus Long Term Capital Gains to large number of
persons in lieu of unaccounted cash. The basic objective of
this racket is to convert black money into white without
payment of Income Tax. The unaccounted cash of such
persons [beneficiaries] is utilized to purchase shares of such
companies at a very high artificially inflated market price.
This practice is generally called Accommodation Entry Scam,
as the activities of such persons are carried out with prime
objective of accommodating unaccounted cash of beneficiaries
into their regular books of accounts without paying any tax on
the same. Some of the listed companies, directly or indirectly
owned by operators and whose share prices have been
apparently manipulated by the syndicate of operators, which
have come to adverse notice of the Income Tax Department,
are as under:
SL No Script
Code
Script Name Full Name of Penny Stock
62 504358 Turbo Tech Turbotech Engineering Ltd.
Page No. 29 / 33 of the Report:
“Brief Discussion on all listed Penny Stocks (Scripts) used in
Bogus LTCG Scam.
As discussed in previous chapter we have searched surveyed
some 32 share Broking Entities and more than 20 Entry
operators. Out of the investigations of such high magnitude, we
have unearthed and identified some 84 odd companies which are
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Assessment year 2014-15
Page 23 of 27
listed on Bombay Stock Exchange and are being used for
providing bogus accommodation entry of Long Term Capital
Gain/Short Term Capital Loss. List of such identified penny
stocks, whose share prices have been apparently manipulated by
the syndicate of operators, are as under:
SL
No
Script
Code
Script
Name
Full Name of
Penny Stock
Amount of
Total Value
SEBI
Action
62 504358 Turbo
Tech
Turbotech
Engineering
Ltd.
8319513048 Suspended
Thus, we find merit in the claim of Ld. DR that the Investigation-Report
includes the scrip of “Turbotech Engineering Ltd.” transacted by the
assessee. Therefore, the applicability of the decision of Hon’ble Kolkata High
Court could not be distinguished on this basis.
17. Reverting back, we shall now concentrate upon the crucial facts of the
present appeal. On a careful consideration of the material available before us,
we observe some of the glaring fallacies in the transactions declared by the
assessee:
(i) The assessee has dealt in the scrip of Turbotech Engineering Ltd. As
discussed above, the revenue has analysed the scrip of Turbotech
Engineering Ltd. in its Investigation-Report. Further, SEBI has also
“suspended” operations in this scrip, which is clearly mentioned in the
last Column of the Table on Page No. 33 of the Investigation-Report
reproduced above. This is the first and most important factor to
demonstrate that the scrip falls in what is called as “penny stock”.
(ii) The assessee has purchased shares for Rs. 1,77,192/- in cash on
04.04.2012 and not through banking channel. This raises a very
strong doubt in so far as the assessee has made purchases from a
Bombay-based broker. The prevalent trend in the stock-market is to
pay / receive through banking channel. How can assessee venture to
pay a sum of Rs. 1,77,192/- in cash to a Bombay-based broker?
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Assessment year 2014-15
Page 24 of 27
(iii) On a careful perusal of Demat A/c, the Bench observed that the shares
were credited in the Demat A/c of assessee on 08.10.2013 i.e. after a
period of about 17 months from the date of purchase and just before
the date of sale on 10.10.2013 / 17.10.2013. Therefore, the Bench
raised a query as to where the shares had gone during the intervening
period of 17 months from the date of purchase till the date of sale. In
response, the Ld. DR replied that the share were held in the Pool A/c of
broker. This makes the doubt even more stronger. As observed earlier
the shares are claimed to have been purchased in cash on 04.04.2012.
Now, in a situation where the assessee claims to have made purchase
in cash, how is this believable that the assessee shall keep those
shares in the Pool A/c of the broker and get in his own custody after
17 months?
(iv) On a careful perusal of the affidavit filed on page No. 117 / 118 of the
Paper-Book, we observe that the assessee has made averments in two
points, viz. Point No. 4 and Point No. 4. While in Point No. 4, the
assessee is claiming to have purchased shares on the basis of
messages of good-return received on the “mobiles of family members”.
But in Point No. 9, the assessee has re-averred that he had purchased
and sold shares on the basis of message received on his “own mobile”.
Thus, there is a clear contraction in the averments of the assessee in
the same affidavit. Even otherwise, the Ld. DR has expressed dis-
satisfaction over this submission of assessee.
(v) Lastly, under the scheme of section 10(38) of the Income-tax Act, 1961
capital gain on transfer of shares, after holding for more than 12
months, is exempted u/s 10(38). The assessee has declared to have
earned a whopping capital gain of Rs. 64,58,168/- on the basis of a
meagre investment of Rs. 1,77,192/- and the relevant shares are
claimed to have been purchased in cash and held in the pool account
of broker for about 17 months. Thus, the assessee is not only declaring
hefty gain but also claiming exemption u/s 10(38) in a period nearing
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Assessment year 2014-15
Page 25 of 27
12 months, which is in consonance with the modus operandi observed
by the Investigation Wing in the Investigation-Report. Had the assessee
not claimed any exemption or other benefit, but declared the income as
normal income or business income and paid legitimate tax at normal
rate, perhaps there would not have been suspicion or question-mark
on the income declared by the assessee but this is not so in the
present case.
18. The various factors, noted in the preceding paragraph, lead us to
conclude that the transactions claimed to have been done by the assessee
are surrounded by a thick cloud of glaring fallacies which demonstrate that
the impugned transactions are not genuine.
19. We also observe that the Hon’ble Chennai Bench of ITAT has also
decided a case in Sudha Eashwar Vs. ITO, ITA No. 2342/Chny/2019,
order dated 02.01.2020 on similar facts. The crucial facts of the case are
such that the scrip involved was Turbotech Engineering Ltd.; the assessee
purchased in cash on 22.11.2011; got transferred in her own demat A/c after
about 1 and half year; subsequently sold and declared a hefty capital gain.
On these facts which are analogous to the facts in present appeal, the
Hon’ble Co-ordinate Bench upheld the action of revenue in holding the
capital gain as bogus. We respectfully agree with the decision of Hon’ble Co-
ordinate Bench which is very much applicable to present appeal before us.
20. In view of foregoing discussions at length, we do not find any infirmity
in the action of lower authorities in rejecting the capital gain of Rs.
64,58,168/- declared by the assessee and treating the same as undisclosed
income u/s 68. Hence we confirm the addition made by lower authorities.
This issue of assessee, therefore, fails.
21. Other issue raised by the assessee is with regard to the addition of Rs.
1,29,162/-. Ld. AO has made this addition on the premise that the assessee
must have certainly incurred expenditure @ 2% of Rs. 64,58,168/- in paying
commission / charges to the persons engaged for arranging bogus capital
Shri Abhishek Gupta
ITA No.74/Ind/2019
Assessment year 2014-15
Page 26 of 27
gain. We observe that the amount added by Ld. AO is reasonable and it does
not call for any interference by us. Hence no relief is warranted to the
assessee in that respect. The addition made by Ld. AO is therefore upheld.
This issue of assessee also fails.
22. Thus, both of the additions made by Ld. AO are hereby upheld and the
issues raised by the assessee fail. However, at this stage we would like to
make a note of caution, which though is a known aspect, that every case has
its own facts and evidences. This decision is confined to its own set of facts
and nothing general should be carried on the basis of this decision.
23. Before parting, we would like to place on record the commendable
representation made by counsels of both sides on behalf of the respective
parties. Both of the counsels have devoted full time and attempted well to put
forward the facts and their respective contentions.
24. In the result, this appeal of assessee is dismissed.
Order pronounced as per Rule 34 of I.T.A.T., Rules, 1963 on
17.08.2022.
Sd/- Sd/-
(SUCHITRA KAMBLE) (B.M. BIYANI)
JUDICIAL MEMBER ACCOUNTANT MEMBER
Indore
,दनांक /Dated : 17.08.2022
Patel/Sr. PS
Copies to: (1) The appellant
(2) The respondent
(3) CIT
(4) CIT(A)
(5) Departmental Representative
(6) Guard File
By order
UE COPY
Sr. Private Secretary
Income Tax Appellate Tribunal
Indore Bench, Indore
Shri Abhishek Gupta
ITA No.74/Ind/2019
Assessment year 2014-15
Page 27 of 27
Fit for publication
Sd/- Sd/-
(JM) (AM)
1. Date of taking dictation
2. Date of typing & draft order placed before the
Dictating Member
3. Date on which the approved draft comes to the
Sr. P.S./P.S.
4. Date on which the fair order is placed before the
Dictating Member for pronouncement
5. Date on which the file goes to the Bench Clerk
6. Date on which the file goes to the Head Clerk
7. Date on which the file goes to the Assistant
Registrar for signature on the order
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