ACIT VS. EPSON INDIA PVT. LTD (KARNATAKA HIGH COURT)
W P NO.12913/2017, DATED: 17-01-2018
Summarised Judgement ( Scroll for Complete
Judgement)
Introduction:
This writ petition has
been filed by the petitioner Assistant Commissioner of Income Tax,
Circle-2(1)(2), Bengaluru, challenging the interim stay order passed by the
Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (‘ITAT’) vide Annexure-F dated 10-03-2017 in the
stay application filed in the Income Tax Appeal by the respondent assessee M/s.
Epson India Private Limited.
Observation
of PCIT:
The Division Bench of
the ITAT finding that the assessee had a good prima facie case in the pending
appeal before it granted stay against the recovery of the demand from the
respondent-assessee which, as per the impugned order was to an extent of
Rs.22.17 Crores, against which the assessee had already paid a sum of Rs.3.32
Crores.
Before granting stay,
the learned Tribunal further directed the assessee to deposit Rs.2.00 Crores
and balance demand was stayed for a period of 90 days, directing that the
appeal itself to be fixed for hearing on 17-04-2017.
The ground assigned by
the petitioner-Income Tax Department before this Court under Articles 226/227
of the Constitution of India is that the DRP (Dispute Resolution Panel)
consisting of three Commissioners of the Income Tax Department categorically
recorded a finding in the impugned order that the expenditure incurred by the
respondent-assessee towards AMP (Advertisement, Marketing and Promotion) was
for promotion of Brand owned by the Associated Enterprises, a Foreign Company
and therefore, certain AMP adjustments were required to be made to determine
the Arm Length Price (ALP) in the hands of the respondent-assessee in their
declared income and the said findings resulted in the impugned demand against
the respondent-assessee to an extent of Rs.22.17 Crores.
Observation
of Court:
The issues raised in
the present writ petition have larger implications and connotations rather than
deciding one case in peculiar facts. It is the unnecessary dogged approach of
the Revenue to multiply the litigations in the Constitutional Courts, in turn
wasting the precious public hours of time and unholy desire to become a
litigant in the Constitutional Courts at Government costs, though there may be
absolutely no justification for doing so.
The efforts of the
Revenue to prove their point that they had a good case on merits before the
Constitutional Courts rather than respecting the orders passed by the
statutorily created Tribunals not only shows lack of judicial discipline and
hierarchical discipline which they should maintain, but treating the
constitutional remedies as a vested right with them.
The
public functionaries and public officials cannot be allowed to spend Government
money and public time much less public time of the Constitutional Courts just
for the sake of proving their such fictional desires.
First raising
unsustainable, illegal and high pitched demands and then seeking to coercively
recover the same even showing scant regard to the orders passed by highest
Tribunal under the Act and for that invoking the writ jurisdiction to seek
support to their such effort is nothing but an utterly irresponsible and unfair
behaviour.
Turning back to the
facts of case, one can very clearly see that the entire demand raised by the
authorities below prima facie was not even sustainable when once the
controversy was apparently covered by the decision of the Delhi High Court and
also the Bench of the Tribunal itself at Bengaluru, in favour of assessee.
Judgement
of Court:
Therefore, the grant of
absolute stay against the recovery would have been more appropriate in the
circumstances, rather than calling upon the assessee to deposit a further sum
of Rs.2.00 Crores.
Irrespective
of the policy decisions taken at the highest levels of Government in the form
of National Litigation Policy and CBDT Instructions restricting these
authorities not to invoke superior courts’ even regular appellate jurisdiction
with the small stakes and petitions not involving larger and important
questions of law which require interpretation by the constitutional courts, the
individual officers at their own lower level continue to defeat these avowed policies,
as is reflected in the present case.
Therefore, in the
considered opinion of this Court, the present writ petition deserves to be
dismissed with exemplary costs on the officials involved in filing of this writ
petition. The costs are quantified at
Rs.50,000/- to be paid by each of the Principal Commissioner of Income Tax.
Citation: Stay of demand: Pr CIT & ACIT directed to pay personal costs for
filing frivolous writ petition to challenge ITAT stay order. Raising
unsustainable, illegal and high pitched demands and enforcing coercive recovery
and challenging stay orders shows utterly irresponsible and unfair behaviour.
Thereafter, seeking adjournments by the Dept of the hearing in the ITAT adds
insult to the injury. Irresponsible and uncoordinated manner of the Dept
strongly deprecated.
=============================================================
Complete Judgement
Karnataka
High Court
Assistant
Commissioner Of Income ... vs M/S. Epson India Pvt. Ltd., on 9 January, 2018
BEFORE
THE
HON'BLE Dr.JUSTICE VINEET KOTHARI
WRIT
PETITION No.12913/2017 (T-IT)
BETWEEN:
ASSISTANT
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX
CIRCLE-2(1)(2)
ROOM
NO.218, 2ND FLOOR
BMTC
DEPOT, 6TH FLOOR
BANGALORE-560
095.
...PETITIONER
(BY
SRI.ARAVIND K.V., ADV.)
AND:
M/S
EPSON INDIA PVT. LTD.
12TH
FLOOR, THE MILLENIA TOWER A
NO.1,
MURPHY ROAD, ULSOOR
BANGALORE-560
008.
PAN
NO.AAACE7858F.
...RESPONDENT
(BY
SRI.T.SURYANARAYANA, ADV.)
THIS
W.P. IS FILED UNDER ARTICLES 226 & 227 OF
THE
CONSTITUTION OF INDIA, PRAYING TO QUASH THE
ORDER
DTD.10-03-2017 PASSED BY THE INCOME-TAX
APPELLATE TRIBUNAL, BANGALORE BENCH-C,
BANGALORE
VIDE ANNEXURE-F AND ETC.
THIS
W.P. COMING ON FOR ORDERS THIS DAY, THE
COURT
MADE THE FOLLOWING:-
Date
of Order 09-01-2018 W.P.No.12913/2017
Assistant
Commissioner of Income Tax V/S M/s. Epson India Pvt. Ltd.
2/18
ORDER
Mr.K.V.Aravind, Adv.
for Petitioner-Income Tax Department Mr.T.Suryanarayana, Adv. for
Respondent-Assessee This writ petition has been filed by the petitioner-
Assistant Commissioner of Income Tax, Circle-2(1)(2), Bengaluru, challenging
the interim stay order passed by the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal ('ITAT')
vide Annexure-F dated 10-03-2017 in the stay application filed in the Income
Tax Appeal by the respondent- assessee M/s. Epson India Private Limited.
2. The Division Bench
of the ITAT finding that the assessee had a good prima facie case in the
pending appeal before it granted stay against the recovery of the demand from
the respondent-assessee which, as per the impugned order was to an extent of
Rs.22.17 Crores, against which the assessee had already paid a sum of Rs.3.32
Crores. Before granting stay, the learned Date of Order 09-01-2018
W.P.No.12913/2017 Assistant Commissioner of Income Tax V/S M/s. Epson India
Pvt. Ltd. Tribunal further directed the assessee to deposit Rs.2.00 Crores and
balance demand was stayed for a period of 90 days, directing that the appeal
itself to be fixed for hearing on 17-04-2017.
3. The ground assigned
by the petitioner-Income Tax Department before this Court under Articles
226/227 of the Constitution of India is that the DRP (Dispute Resolution Panel)
consisting of three Commissioners of the Income Tax Department categorically
recorded a finding in the impugned order that the expenditure incurred by the
respondent-assessee towards AMP (Advertisement, Marketing and Promotion) was
for promotion of Brand owned by the Associated Enterprises, a Foreign Company
and therefore, certain AMP adjustments were required to be made to determine
the Arm Length Price (ALP) in the hands of the respondent-assessee in their
declared income and the said findings resulted in the impugned demand Date of
Order 09-01-2018 W.P.No.12913/2017 Assistant Commissioner of Income Tax V/S
M/s. Epson India Pvt. Ltd. against the respondent-assessee to an extent of
Rs.22.17 Crores.
4. The
respondent-assessee was required to file a regular appeal against the said
order before the ITAT which undoubtedly has a power to grant interim relief
also and after considering the averments made in the stay application filed by
the respondent-assessee and after hearing Departmental counsel also, the ITAT
in its wisdom and exercise of its discretion has granted the aforesaid interim
order on 10-03-2017. The Revenue has preferred this writ petition before this
Court as aforesaid on 22-03-2017.
5. This court called
upon the Chief Commissioner of Income Tax to file an Affidavit before this
Court as to why the Revenue has chosen to challenge the said interim order
passed by the ITAT before this Court by invoking its extraordinary jurisdiction
under Articles Date of Order 09-01-2018 W.P.No.12913/2017 Assistant
Commissioner of Income Tax V/S M/s. Epson India Pvt. Ltd. 226/227 of the
Constitution of India by way of present writ petition, as prima facie it
appeared that the interim order passed by the learned Tribunal was in fair
exercise of its discretion and apparently no good reason was found for the
Revenue to challenge the said order before this Court.
6. In pursuance of the
directions of this Court dated 02-01-2018, instead of the Chief Commissioner of
Income Tax, a lower authority the Principal Commissioner, one Mr.Yogesh Pande
Son of B.D.Pande, working as Principal Commissioner of Income Tax (2),
Bengaluru, other than the Principal Commissioner who approved the sanction of
filing of the present writ petition through the Assistant Commissioner of
Income Tax has filed an Affidavit before this Court today. While no order
sanctioning or approving the action of filing of the present writ petition has
been produced before this Court along with the said Affidavit, the said
Principal Date of Order 09-01-2018 W.P.No.12913/2017 Assistant Commissioner of
Income Tax V/S M/s. Epson India Pvt. Ltd. Commissioner of Income Tax has stated
in his Affidavit dated 08-01-2018 that the Revenue Department relying upon the
decision of the Hon'ble Supreme Court in the case of ASSISTANT COLLECTOR OF
CENTRAL EXCISE, CHANDAN NAGAR, WEST BENGAL v/s DUNLOP INDIA LTD. AND OTHERS
reported in (1985) 1 SCC 260 has chosen to file this writ petition on the
ground that the ITAT in its impugned order dated 10-03-2017, without properly
appreciating the orders passed by the TPO, Assessing Officer and the DRP
proceeded to stay the demand, subject to payment of Rs.2.00 Crores in addition
to Rs.3.32 Crores paid against the outstanding demand of Rs.22.17 Crores,
though it was contended by the Revenue before the ITAT that the entire demand
was collectable by the Revenue. It was further contended that no prima facie case
has been made out by the assessee and no financial difficulty has been
expressed by the assessee. Therefore, no hardship is likely to be caused, if
the Date of Order 09-01-2018 W.P.No.12913/2017 Assistant Commissioner of Income
Tax V/S M/s. Epson India Pvt. Ltd. entire demand is directed to be paid. This
is so stated in paragraph 6 of the Affidavit of the Principal Commissioner.
7. On the other hand,
learned counsel for the respondent-assessee has submitted before this Court
that the impugned interim order passed by the ITAT is not only absolutely
justified and sustainable order which was passed upon a fair and objective
consideration of the relevant facts and therefore does not call for any
challenge to the same before this Court under the extraordinary jurisdiction
under Articles 226/227 of the Constitution of India.
8. He has further
submitted that on merits of the case also since the impugned orders before the
ITAT were not sustainable and the matter was covered in favour of assessee by
the decision of the Delhi High Court in the case of CIT v/s CANON INDIA PVT.
LTD.
Date of Order
09-01-2018 W.P.No.12913/2017 Assistant Commissioner of Income Tax V/S M/s.
Epson India Pvt. Ltd. reported in 374 ITR 118 and a similar view was already
taken by the Bengaluru Bench of the ITAT also in the case of M/s. ESSILOR INDIA
PRIVATE LIMITED v/s DCIT as referred in paragraph 11.1 of their stay
application, in fact the entire demand of Rs.22.17 Crores raised in the
impugned orders by the authorities below deserved to be set aside.
9. He submitted that
the interim order granted by the ITAT in fact protected interest of the Revenue
more and caused prejudice to the assessee by directing it to pay a further sum
of Rs.2.00 Crores in addition to a sum of Rs.3.32 Crores already paid by it and
particularly when the appeal itself was fixed for hearing on 07-04-2017 i.e.,
shortly after the date of impugned order dated 10-03-2017 and there was
absolutely no reason for the Revenue to assail the said interim order before
this Court by filing this petition on 22-03-2017.
Date of Order
09-01-2018 W.P.No.12913/2017 Assistant Commissioner of Income Tax V/S M/s.
Epson India Pvt. Ltd.
10. He has further
produced before this Court the subsequent orders passed by the ITAT on
02-06-2017 and 13-10-2017 extending the said interim order for further periods
and has pointed that when the said appeal was fixed before the ITAT on
22-11-2017 and 11-12-2017, the Departmental Representative appearing on behalf
of the Revenue sought time and adjournment to argue the said appeal before the
ITAT and now hearing of the said appeal is fixed before the ITAT on 11-01-2018.
He has also submitted before the Court that the recent decision of the Hon'ble
Supreme Court relied upon by the learned counsel for the Revenue in the case of
Assistant Collector of Central Excise V/S Dunlop India is not applicable to the
present case in as much as the ratio of the said decision is to lay down
certain guidelines for the Constitutional Courts while considering the matters
for grant of interim orders, particularly in the cases of indirect taxation,
where the Hon'ble Supreme Court said that Date of Order 09-01-2018
W.P.No.12913/2017 Assistant Commissioner of Income Tax V/S M/s. Epson India
Pvt. Ltd. furnishing of Bank Guarantees to protect the interest of the Revenue
is not sufficient as Governments cannot run on such Bank Guarantees, which fact
situation or legal position is not even available in the facts of the present
case and therefore the Revenue cannot justify its action in filing the present
writ petition before this Court assailing the aforesaid interlocutory order
passed by the ITAT.
11. I have heard the
learned counsel for the parties at some length and perused the material on
record.
12. The issues raised
in the present writ petition have larger implications and connotations rather
than deciding one case in peculiar facts. It is the unnecessary dogged approach
of the Revenue to multiply the litigations in the Constitutional Courts, in
turn wasting the precious public hours of time and unholy desire to become a
litigant in the Constitutional Date of Order 09-01-2018 W.P.No.12913/2017
Assistant Commissioner of Income Tax V/S M/s. Epson India Pvt. Ltd. Courts at
Government costs, though there may be absolutely no justification for doing so.
The efforts of the Revenue to prove their point that they had a good case on
merits before the Constitutional Courts rather than respecting the orders
passed by the statutorily created Tribunals not only shows lack of judicial
discipline and hierarchical discipline which they should maintain, but treating
the constitutional remedies as a vested right with them. The public
functionaries and public officials cannot be allowed to spend Government money
and public time much less public time of the Constitutional Courts just for the
sake of proving their such fictional desires. First raising unsustainable,
illegal and high pitched demands and then seeking to coercively recover the
same even showing scant regard to the orders passed by highest Tribunal under
the Act and for that invoking the writ jurisdiction to seek support to their
such effort is nothing but an utterly irresponsible and unfair behaviour. It is
the lack of Date of Order 09-01-2018 W.P.No.12913/2017 Assistant Commissioner
of Income Tax V/S M/s. Epson India Pvt. Ltd. such discipline with the
Government Officials which turns Government Departments as a major litigant in
the Constitutional Courts, in turn depriving the Constitutional Courts to
devote their time for looking into the causes of poor people, which deserve
their time and attention of the court more than such Government Departments.
13. Turning back to the
facts of the present case, one can very clearly see that the entire demand
raised by the authorities below prima facie was not even sustainable when once
the controversy was apparently covered by the decision of the Delhi High Court
and also the Bench of the Tribunal itself at Bengaluru, in favour of assessee.
Therefore, the grant of absolute stay against the recovery would have been more
appropriate in the circumstances, rather than calling upon the assessee to
deposit a further sum of Rs.2.00 Crores. The ITAT, perhaps to serve the
interest of the Revenue Date of Order 09-01-2018 W.P.No.12913/2017 Assistant
Commissioner of Income Tax V/S M/s. Epson India Pvt. Ltd. leaned to some extent
in favour of Revenue for the time being subject to the final decision of the
appeal itself and chose to pass this order, which brought to the kitty of
Revenue more than a sum of Rs.5.00 Crores against a prima facie unsustainable
demand of Rs.22.17 Crores, still the Revenue did not feel satisfied and instead
of pursuing hearing of the appeal before the ITAT, chose to file the present
writ petition before this Court which is absolutely misconceived remedy availed
by them. Were these officials trying to prove their superior wisdom over the
wisdom of Tribunal and already rendered precedent or overawe the Tribunal by
the intervention of the higher constitutional courts, even on a misconceived
petition?
14. In these
circumstances, the reliance placed by the learned counsel for the
petitioner-Revenue on the decision of the Hon'ble Supreme Court in the case of
ASSISTANT COLLECTOR OF CENTRAL EXCISE v/s Date of Order 09-01-2018
W.P.No.12913/2017 Assistant Commissioner of Income Tax V/S M/s. Epson India
Pvt. Ltd. DUNLOP INDIA LIMITED is also equally without any merit. The Hon'ble
Supreme Court while dealing with the case of Central Excise, an indirect
taxation in which the incidence of tax is admittedly passed on by the assessee
to the customers as against the direct taxes, like Income Tax in the present
matter, where the demand is raised against the assessee and is required to be
paid by them, was laying down certain guidelines for the Constitutional Courts
while exercising writ jurisdiction under Articles 226/227 of the Constitution
of India. The blanket interim orders in such indirect tax matters causes
prejudice to the public interest and therefore should not be so granted
blindly. The directions of Constitutional Courts to the assessees to furnish
Bank Guarantees, which is nothing more than a piece of paper under which the
Bank stands guarantee for the default of the assessee, the Governments cannot
be expected to meet the public expenses out of their general funds and the
Hon'ble Supreme Court Date of Order 09-01-2018 W.P.No.12913/2017 Assistant
Commissioner of Income Tax V/S M/s. Epson India Pvt. Ltd. expressed their
concern about the public revenue of the public bodies like Municipal
Corporation which have to incur huge day to day expenses for the public
services rendered by them was laying down their guidelines.
15. The said guidelines
laid down by the Hon'ble Supreme Court in Dunlop India case are not at all
attracted in the circumstances, in which the ITAT has passed the interim order,
nor does it fortify the stand of petitioner-Revenue for having chosen to file
this writ petition before this Court against the said interim order of
Tribunal. The Income Tax Department can neither be compared with the Municipal
Corporation nor do they deal with the indirect taxation. Therefore, both the
basic parameters on which the observations of Hon'ble Supreme Court in DUNLOP
case is relied upon by the learned counsel for the petitioner-revenue before
this Court justifying the filing of the present writ petition are not
applicable. It further shows a non-application of Date of Order 09-01-2018 W.P.No.12913/2017
Assistant Commissioner of Income Tax V/S M/s. Epson India Pvt. Ltd. mind on the
part of the Principal Commissioner, while sanctioning the filing of this writ
petition before this Court.
16. Seeking
adjournments from the ITAT on the dates fixed by it for hearing the appeal
itself which was apparently covered in favour of the respondent-assessee by the
Departmental counsel adds insult to the injury. The irresponsible and
uncoordinated manner in which authorities of the petitioner-Income Tax Department
have displayed their dealing of the serious matters like invoking the
constitutional remedy has prompted this Court to take up this matter to
deprecate strongly such tendency on the part of the Revenue authorities and
other Government Departments, who choose to avail constitutional remedies for
not so good reasons at all, wasting the public money and court's time taken
even to hear and reject such frivolous writ petitions.
Date of Order
09-01-2018 W.P.No.12913/2017 Assistant Commissioner of Income Tax V/S M/s.
Epson India Pvt. Ltd.
17. Irrespective of the
policy decisions taken at the highest levels of Government in the form of
National Litigation Policy and CBDT Instructions restricting these authorities
not to invoke superior courts' even regular appellate jurisdiction with the
small stakes and petitions not involving larger and important questions of law
which require interpretation by the constitutional courts, the individual
officers at their own lower level continue to defeat these avowed policies, as
is reflected in the present case.
18. Therefore, in the
considered opinion of this Court, the present writ petition deserves to be
dismissed with exemplary costs on the officials involved in filing of this writ
petition. The costs are quantified at Rs.50,000/- to be paid by each of the
Principal Commissioner of Income Tax-2, Bengaluru Mr.Yogesh Pande, who has
filed the response Affidavit justifying the filing of this writ petition, the
Principal Commissioner who Date of Order 09-01-2018 W.P.No.12913/2017 Assistant
Commissioner of Income Tax V/S M/s. Epson India Pvt. Ltd. sanctioned filing of
this writ petition and the Assistant Commissioner of Income Tax, Circle-2
(1)(2), Bengaluru Ms.Preeth Ganapathy, who has filed this writ petition and the
said costs will be paid by these officials from their personal resources and
not from the Government fund within a period of two months from today to the
Legal Services Authority of the State, to be utilized for the cause of poor
litigants.
Sd/-
No comments:
Post a Comment