Categories
Blog Updates

Solid Waste Management Services to Govt. Entity Exempt from GST | AAR

solid waste management GST exemption

Case Details: Tiffot (P.) Ltd., In re [2025] 180 taxmann.com 826 (AAR-KERALA)

Judiciary and Counsel Details

  • Jomy Jacob & Mansur M.I., Member
  • Lijose Panikulangara, CA for the Applicant.

Facts of the Case

The applicant, a private company, submitted that it provided comprehensive solid waste management services to a public limited company wholly owned and controlled by the Government of Kerala. The services included collection, storage, segregation, compaction, baling, and transport of non-recyclable plastic for cement kiln co-processing, with disposal. All costs, including manpower, logistics, and fuel, were maintained by the applicant; quantity records were maintained, and periodic reports were submitted along with disposal certificates. It was contended that such services are eligible for exemption. The matter was accordingly placed before the Authority for Advance Ruling (AAR).

AAR Held

The AAR held that the services provided by the applicant constitute solid waste management under Entry 6 of the Twelfth Schedule. As the recipient qualifies as a Governmental Authority performing municipal functions under Article 243W, the supplies are exempt under Entry 3B of Notification No. 12 of 2017, dated 28-06-2017, as amended by Notification No. 13 of 2023, dated 19-10-2023. The Authority noted that the applicant carried out all operational responsibilities, maintained records, and submitted reports under government oversight, confirming that exemption conditions were satisfied. Thus exemption claim was allowed, and any alternative claim was rejected as void ab initio.

List of Cases Referred to

The post Solid Waste Management Services to Govt. Entity Exempt from GST | AAR appeared first on Taxmann Blog.

source

Categories
Blog Updates

SEBI and IEPFA to Hold 4th Niveshak Shivir in Jaipur on 6 Dec 2025

SEBI IEPFA Niveshak Shivir

PR No.78/2025, Dated: 02.12.2025

The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI), in collaboration with the Investor Education and Protection Fund Authority (IEPFA), has announced the organisation of the fourth ‘Niveshak Shivir’.

The initiative forms part of the ongoing nationwide effort to assist investors in recovering unclaimed assets and strengthening financial awareness.

1. Event Details

  • Date  December 06, 2025
  • Time 10:00 AM to 4:00 PM
  • Venue  Swarn Mahal, Vaishali Nagar, Jaipur
  • Partners  Market Infrastructure Institutions (MIIs) and Registrar and Transfer Agents (RTAs)

2. Purpose of the Niveshak Shivir

The Shivir is designed to help shareholders and investors resolve issues related to unclaimed securities and incomplete records. Key services available at the event include:

2.1 Transfer of Unpaid Dividends

Facilitating processes for shareholders to reclaim unpaid or unclaimed dividend amounts transferred to the IEPF.

2.2 KYC and Nomination Updates

Assisting investors in updating mandatory KYC information and registering nominees to ensure seamless future transactions.

2.3 Resolution of Pending IEPFA Claims

Providing on-the-spot verification, guidance, and processing support for claims relating to:

  • Unclaimed shares
  • Unpaid dividends
  • Other investor entitlements transferred to the IEPF

3. Support from MIIs and RTAs

The initiative is supported by key Market Infrastructure Institutions and prominent Registrar and Transfer Agents, who will be present to:

  • Verify documents
  • Facilitate real-time corrections
  • Speed up claim resolution
  • Provide investor education and assistance

4. Objective and Significance

The Niveshak Shivir aims to:

  • Improve investor access to claim settlement mechanisms
  • Reduce pendency of IEPF claims
  • Promote investor awareness and financial empowerment
  • Strengthen ecosystem-wide investor protection efforts
Click Here To Read The Full Press Release

The post SEBI and IEPFA to Hold 4th Niveshak Shivir in Jaipur on 6 Dec 2025 appeared first on Taxmann Blog.

source

Categories
Blog Updates

CGST SCN Based on Income-Tax Search Valid if Independently Scrutinised | HC

CGST SCN income-tax search

Case Details: J M Jain vs. Union of India [2025] 180 taxmann.com 864 (Delhi)

Judiciary and Counsel Details

  • Prathiba M. Singh & Shail Jain, JJ.
  • J.K. MittalMs Vandana MittalMukesh ChoudharyMohitLalitendra, Advs. for the Petitioner.
  • Brijesh YadavAvinash ShuklaPriyatam BhardwajShagan Vaswani, Advs., Dipak RajAnurag Ojha, SSC for the Respondent.

Facts of the Case

The petitioner submitted that the Income-tax Department conducted a search at its premises for the relevant period and recovered computer servers, audit books, statutory records, digital devices, and employee communications, followed by recording of statements. It was stated that these materials were later shared with the GST authorities, who thereafter issued a show cause notice (SCN) alleging concealed commission income and GST evasion for FY 2019-20 to 2021-22. It was contended that the SCN was vague and baseless, relied solely on income-tax material without independent GST inquiry. The matter was accordingly placed before the High Court.

High Court Held

The High Court held that documents and statements obtained during an income-tax search may be utilised by the GST authorities for scrutiny, but any presumption arising therefrom under Section 292C of the Income-tax Act, 1961 is rebuttable and cannot, by itself, form the basis of a final assessment under Section 74 of the CGST Act. The Court observed that the SCN in question was accompanied by relied-upon documents, business analysis, special audit findings, statement summaries, and GST computation, and therefore could not be considered vague or lacking particulars. The Court concluded that the challenge was premature, as the petitioner must first reply to the SCN and participate in adjudication, where all objections may be raised.

List of Cases Referred to

The post CGST SCN Based on Income-Tax Search Valid if Independently Scrutinised | HC appeared first on Taxmann Blog.

source

Categories
Blog Updates

Trust Providing Financial Aid to Students Eligible for Section 80G Even if Students Study Abroad | ITAT

Trust Eligible for Sec. 80G

Case Details: R. Mangaldas Charitable Trust vs. Commissioner of Income-tax (Exemptions) [2025] 180 taxmann.com 190 (Mumbai-Trib.)

Judiciary and Counsel Details

  • Rahul Chaudhary, Judicial Member & Vikram Singh Yadav, Accountant Member
  • Niraj Seth for the Appellant.
  • Umashankar Prasad, CIT-DR for the Respondent.

Facts of the Case

The assessee-trust moved an application in Form 10AB under section 80G(5)(iii), seeking approval under section 80G. The Commissioner (Exemptions) observed that, as per one of the objects of the Trust Deed, the assessee intended to provide financial assistance to students for prosecuting studies in India or abroad.

He thus held that the assessee intended to apply funds outside India and that such financial assistance for studies abroad would result in the application of income outside India. Thus, there would be a violation of the provisions of section 11, and such income would, in effect, be includible in total income. He accordingly rejected the assessee’s application for registration under section 80G.

ITAT Held

On appeal, the Tribunal held that the object clause in the trust deed referred to by the Commissioner (Exemptions) provided for financial assistance for studies in India or abroad. Thus, it didn’t specifically refer to studies abroad. The assessee submitted that such financial assistance would be given in India in Indian Rupees to Indian students for their studies in India or abroad. In the past, it had not provided any financial assistance in foreign currency, nor did it intend to remit any. The assessee also passed a resolution to this effect in the meeting of its trustees and submitted a certified copy thereof along with an affidavit.

Therefore, the assessee has sufficiently explained and substantiated that it intends to provide financial assistance to students for studies in India or abroad, whereby such financial assistance shall be provided in India in Indian rupees. In such a scenario, the application of income will be for educational purposes in India as soon as the assessee releases the funds, which will undoubtedly happen there. The fact that financial assistance so provided will be utilised by students for studies abroad cannot be read and understood as providing financial assistance outside of India.

Thus, there was no justifiable legal and factual basis to deny registration to the assessee-trust.

List of Cases Reviewed

List of Cases Referred to

The post Trust Providing Financial Aid to Students Eligible for Section 80G Even if Students Study Abroad | ITAT appeared first on Taxmann Blog.

source

Categories
Blog Updates

RBI Bars Pak/Bangladesh Citizens from Carrying Indian Notes to Nepal and Bhutan

amendment in Nepal Bhutan currency restriction

Notification No. FEMA 6 (R)/(4)/2025-RB; Dated: 28-11-2025

RBI has issued Foreign Exchange Management (Export and Import of Currency) (Amendment) Regulations, 2025, substituting Regulation 8 of the Principal Regulations (2015).

Under the earlier Regulation 8, a person could take or send Indian currency to Nepal or Bhutan only up to Rs. 100 denomination, with a limited proviso permitting travellers to carry Rs. 200/Rs. 500 notes of the Mahatma Gandhi (New) Series up to Rs. 25,000.

Further, the regulation did not expressly impose any citizenship-based restriction. The amended Regulation 8, now statutorily permits persons (other than citizens of Pakistan and Bangladesh) to both take Indian currency to, and bring Indian currency from, Nepal and Bhutan, including notes above Rs. 100 up to an overall limit of Rs. 25,000.

However, individuals travelling from India to Nepal or Bhutan, or travelling to India from Nepal or Bhutan, may carry Indian currency notes of denominations above Rs. 100 up to a consolidated limit of Rs. 25,000.

The amended norms are as follows:

1. Carriage of Indian Currency to Nepal/Bhutan

A person not being a citizen of Pakistan or Bangladesh may:

(a) Take or send Indian currency notes to Nepal or Bhutan (excluding denominations above Rs. 100).

(b) However, individuals travelling from India may carry Indian currency notes of denominations above Rs. 100 up to Rs. 25,000.

2. Bringing Indian Currency from Nepal/Bhutan into India

A person not being a citizen of Pakistan or Bangladesh may:

(a) Bring into India Indian currency notes from Nepal or Bhutan (excluding denominations above Rs. 100).

(b) Individuals travelling to India may carry Indian currency notes of denominations above Rs. 100 up to Rs. 25,000.

3. Movement of Nepalese/Bhutanese Currency

Any person may:

(a) Take out of India to Nepal/Bhutan, or

(b) Bring into India from Nepal/Bhutan

currency notes of Nepal or Bhutan without restriction.

Click Here To Read The Full Notification

The post RBI Bars Pak/Bangladesh Citizens from Carrying Indian Notes to Nepal and Bhutan appeared first on Taxmann Blog.

source

Categories
Blog Updates

Weekly Round-up on Tax and Corporate Laws | 24th November to 29th November 2025

Tax and Corporate Laws; Weekly Round up 2025This weekly newsletter analytically summarises the key stories reported at taxmann.com during the previous week from Nov 24th to Nov 29th 2025, namely:

  1. OECD releases “2025 update to Model Tax Convention”;
  2. Judicial officers with seven years’ combined experience as an advocate or judge are eligible for District Judge appointment under Article 233: SC;
  3. SEBI amends minimum qualification norms for Research Analysts and Investment Advisers revising degree and certification requirements;
  4. Refund of unutilised Cess ITC on coal for export admissible as export goods not liable to Cess: HC;
  5. ITC on GST under RCM for industrial land lease used for battery cell factory construction not admissible: AAR;
  6. Refund of wrongly paid IGST directed as limitation not bars refund where liability discharged as CGST+SGST: HC; and
  7. Accounting treatment of manufacturing, warranty, and royalty costs in measuring inventory under Ind AS 2.

1. OECD releases “2025 update to Model Tax Convention”

The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) has released the ‘2025 Update to the OECD Model Tax Convention’. This update was approved by the Committee on Fiscal Affairs on 13 October 2025 and by the OECD Council on 18 November 2025.

The following are the key changes to the OECD Model Tax Convention included in the 2025 Update:

a) Dispute Resolution (Article 25)

OECD amends Article 25 and its Commentary to clarify the relationship between the Model Convention and the General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS). A new paragraph 6 is added, which clarifies that, for purposes of GATS Article XXII(3), a measure will fall within a tax treaty’s scope only if Article 24 applies to it.

Any dispute between treaty partners over whether a measure falls within the scope of the treaty must be resolved under the Mutual Agreement Procedure (MAP) under Article 25(3) or by such other procedure mutually agreed. This amendment prevents overlapping or contradictory dispute-settlement routes between the tax treaty and WTO’s GATS, thereby reinforcing the primacy of MAP for tax-related jurisdictional disputes.

b) An individual’s home could constitute a “place of business”

Recognising rising remote-work models, Commentary to Article 5 (Permanent Establishment) is amended to clarify the circumstances in which an individual’s home could constitute a “place of business” of the enterprise for which the individual works. The OECD notes that these clarifications are an evolution of established principles but have been refined to provide modern certainty.

c) Optional alternative PE rule for extractible natural resources

The Commentary to Article 5 now includes an optional alternative provision addressing activities relating to exploration and exploitation of natural resources. This provision introduces a lower PE threshold that is crossed once a non-resident enterprise operates in a source State for a bilaterally agreed period.

d) Transfer pricing and interest limitation

The Commentary on Article 9 has been revised to address queries arising from Working Party 6’s review of transfer pricing rules for financial transactions (as detailed in Chapter X of the Transfer Pricing Guidelines). These updates clarify the operation of Article 9, particularly in relation to domestic interest-deductibility rules, including those recommended under the BEPS Action 4 final report. Corresponding amendments have also been made to the Commentaries on Articles 7 and 24.

e) Update to Article 25 Commentary on Amount B

The Commentary on Article 25 has been modified to incorporate references to the tax-certainty framework and double-taxation relief outlined in the Amount B report. These revisions aim to ensure that all dispute-resolution mechanisms remain optional for jurisdictions that choose not to adopt Amount B.

f) Exchange of Information (Article 26)

Two major changes are introduced in Article 26 Commentary:

  • Information received under exchange-of-information provisions may be used for tax matters relating to persons other than those for whom the information was originally obtained.

Agreed interpretative guidance has been incorporated on taxpayer access to exchanged information and the disclosure of reflective, non-taxpayer-specific information generated from or based on exchanged data.

Read the News

Taxmann.com | Research | Subscribe Now!

 2. Judicial officers with seven years’ combined experience as an advocate or judge are eligible for District Judge appointment under Article 233: SC

The Supreme Court, in the matter of Rejanish K.V. vs. K. Deepa [2025] 179 taxmann.com 369 (SC), ruled that a judicial officer, who has a combined experience of seven years as an advocate or a judge, is eligible to apply for direct appointment as a District Judge under Article 233 of the Constitution. The eligibility for appointment as a District Judge/Additional District Judge is to be determined as on the date of the application.

Article 233 of the Constitution read as follows –

Article 233(1) states that

Appointments of persons to be, and the posting and promotion of, district judges in any State shall be made by the Governor of the State in consultation with the High Court exercising jurisdiction in relation to such State.”

Article 233(2) states that

A person not already in the service of the Union or of the State shall only be eligible to be appointed a district judge if he has been for not less than seven years an advocate or a pleader and is recommended by the High Court for appointment.”

Questions placed before the Supreme Court

The following questions were placed before the Supreme Court for consideration –

a) Whether a judicial officer who has already completed seven years in the Bar, being recruited for subordinate judicial services, would be entitled to appointment as an Additional District Judge against the Bar vacancy?
b) Whether the eligibility for appointment as a District Judge is to be seen only at the time of appointment, or at the time of application, or both?
c) Whether there is any eligibility prescribed for a person already in the judicial service of the Union or State under Article 233(2) for being appointed as a District Judge?
d) Whether a person who has been a Civil Judge for a period of seven years or has been an Advocate and Civil Judge for a combined period of seven years would be eligible for appointment as a District Judge under Article 233 of the Constitution?

Supreme Court Observations –

Referring to Article 233 of the Constitution, the Supreme Court applied the rule of literal interpretation to analyse the provision. The Court stated that Article 233(1) provides for appointments of persons as district judges in a State, as well as for posting and promotions thereof.

Whereas, a plain reading of Article 233(2) reveals that for appointment of a person to the post of district judge, two streams are provided, (a) a person not already in service of the Union or of the State, and (b) an advocate or a pleader if he has been an advocate or a pleader for not less than seven years.

The Supreme Court noted that Article 233 of the Constitution is a self-contained provision governing the appointment of district judges. A combined reading of clauses (1) and (2) of Article 233 of the Constitution would, therefore, reveal that the Constitution under clause (2) of Article 233 does not provide a qualification for an in-service candidate for direct recruitment. It only provides qualification for advocates/pleaders who are desirous of competing for the post of District Judge.

Further, the Supreme Court noted that the phrase ‘a person not already in service of Union or of State’ in clause (2) of Article 233 has to be read as ‘other than a person already in service of Union or of State’ or ‘except person already in service of Union or of State’ so as to avoid rendering first part of clause (2) of Article 233 being rendered redundant.

Supreme Court Ruling –

The Supreme Court held the following

  • Judicial Officers who have already completed 7 years in the Bar before they were recruited in the subordinate judicial service would be entitled to be appointed as District Judge/Additional District Judge in the selection process for the post of District Judges in the direct recruitment process.
  • The eligibility for appointment as a District Judge/Additional District Judge is to be seen at the time of application.
  • There is no eligibility prescribed under Article 233(2) of the Constitution for a person already in judicial service of the Union or of the State to be appointed as a District Judge. However, in order to provide a level playing field, a candidate applying as an in-service candidate should have seven years’ combined experience as a Judicial Officer and an advocate.
  • A person who has been a Civil Judge for a period of seven years or has been an Advocate and Civil Judge for a combined period of seven years or more than seven years would be eligible for appointment as District Judge under Article 233 of the Constitution of India.

The minimum age for being considered and appointed as a District Judge/Additional District Judge for both advocates and Judicial Officers would be 35 years of age as on the date of application.

Read the Ruling

Taxmann's GST Bare Act combo

3. SEBI amends minimum qualification norms for Research Analysts and Investment Advisers revising degree and certification requirements

On November 25, 2025, the SEBI notified two parallel amendments to the SEBI (Research Analysts) (Second Amendment) Regulations, 2025 and the SEBI (Investment Advisers) (Second Amendment) Regulations, 2025. These amendments revise the qualification and certification regime under Regulation 7 of their respective principal regulations — the SEBI (Research Analysts) Regulations, 2014 and the SEBI (Investment Advisers) Regulations, 2013.

3.1 Part A — Research Analysts (RA)

Earlier Framework under Regulation 7

Regulation 7 deals with ‘Qualification and Certification Requirements’. Under the earlier framework, an individual research analyst, a principal officer of a non-individual research analyst, employees acting as research analysts and partners engaged in research services were required to meet specified minimum qualifications.

These included either a professional qualification or a graduate or postgraduate degree or diploma in finance, accountancy, business management, commerce, economics, capital markets, banking, insurance, actuarial science or other financial services from a recognised Indian or foreign university.

Alternatively, eligibility could be obtained by completing a one-year Post Graduate Program in the Securities Market (Research Analysis) from NISM or by holding the CFA Charter from the CFA Institute.

Revised Qualification Requirements (Substituted Regulation 7(1))

The revised Regulation 7(1) requires a graduate degree or an equivalent educational qualification from a university or institution recognised by the Central Government or any State Government, or a recognised foreign university, institution, or association or a CFA Charter from the CFA Institute and relevant certification from NISM or from any other organisation or institution accredited by NISM

Alternatively, a Post Graduate Program in the Securities Market (Research Analysis) from the NISM or any other program of NISM as specified by the Board.

Associated Personnel (Now covered within 7(1) itself)

The amendment expands the scope of Regulation 7(1) by inserting the phrase “or persons associated with research services”, thereby bringing client-facing and research-support personnel within the same qualification requirement. Such associated individuals must hold at least a graduate degree, as required for the research analyst.

Certification Requirements (Regulation 7(3))

The substituted Regulation 7(3) now governs all certification norms, as the earlier Regulation 7(2) has been omitted. Every research analyst, principal officer, partner, employee acting as analyst and person associated with research services must obtain a fresh NISM certification before the expiry of the validity of the existing certification or within three years from the date of registration certificate, as the case may be, to ensure continuity in compliance with certification requirements.

3.2 Part B — Investment Advisers (IA)

Earlier Framework under Regulation 7

Regulation 7 deals with ‘Qualification and Certification Requirements’. Under the earlier framework, an individual investment adviser or a principal officer of a non-individual investment adviser were required to hold a professional qualification or a graduate degree or postgraduate degree or a two-year postgraduate diploma in finance, accountancy, business management, commerce, economics, capital markets, banking, insurance, actuarial science or other specified financial services from a recognised Indian or foreign university.

Eligibility could also be met by completing a one-year Post Graduate Program in the Securities Market (Investment Advisory) from NISM or by obtaining the CFA Charter from the CFA Institute.

Further, persons associated with investment advice were required to hold at least a graduate degree in any discipline from a recognised foreign university or institution. Transitional relaxations were available for advisers registered at the time the regulations commenced.

Revised Qualification Requirements (Amended Regulation 7(1))

The amended Regulation 7(1) aligns closely with the RA amendment and now inserts the phrase “or persons associated with investment advice” into the opening line. An individual IA, principal officer or person associated with investment advice must hold a graduate degree or any equivalent qualification from a recognised Indian or foreign university. The provision also recognises the CFA Charter from the CFA Institute, coupled with the relevant NISM certification.

Further, a Post Graduate Program in the Securities Market (Investment Advisory) from NISM, a Post Graduate Program in Financial Planning from NISM, or any other program of NISM as specified by the Board is also treated as an eligible qualification.

Revised Certification Requirements (Regulation 7(2))

All individual IAs, principal officers, partners engaged in advisory functions, and persons associated with investment advice must obtain a fresh NISM certification before the expiry of the existing certification or within three years from the date of registration certificate, as the case may be, to ensure continuity in compliance with certification requirements.

3. Conclusion

The amendments streamline and modernise the qualification framework for both Research Analysts and Investment Advisers by shifting to a clearer, degree-based eligibility structure and bringing associated personnel directly within the same standards. Overall, the changes improve consistency, raise the baseline of academic qualification and strengthen regulatory discipline in research and advisory activities.

Read the Notification for Research analyst

Read the Notification for Investment Advisors

Taxmann's Law & Practice Relating to SEBI

4. Refund of unutilised Cess ITC on coal for export admissible as export goods not liable to Cess: HC

The High Court held that refund of unutilised Cess Input Tax Credit (ITC) on coal was admissible since the exported goods were not liable to Cess, resulting in accumulation of such credit. This was held in Atul Ltd. vs. Assistant Commissioner, CGST and Central Excise Division VIII [2025].

Facts of the case

The petitioner, a manufacturer-exporter made zero-rated supplies, including exports and SEZ sales, and procured coal for captive power generation, on which Compensation Cess was paid and ITC was availed. It was submitted a claim for refund of accumulated unutilised Cess credit attributable to zero-rated supplies made with payment of IGST, contending that exported goods were not leviable to Cess. The jurisdictional officer under CGST issued a show-cause notice proposing rejection of the refund, subsequent adjudication and first appeal also rejected the claim. The matter was accordingly placed before the High Court.

High Court Held

The High Court held that the jurisdictional officer under CGST and the Department of Revenue misinterpreted the circulars. It was observed that since exports were subject to IGST and the final goods were not liable to Compensation Cess, the Cess ITC on coal remained unutilised. The Court concluded that, considering Section 54(3) of the CGST Act, Section 16(3) of the IGST Act, and Section 11(2) of the GST (Compensation to States) Act together, the petitioner could claim a refund of the unused Cess credit on coal used to manufacture exported goods. It also ruled that the proviso to Section 11(2) did not apply and therefore set aside the earlier orders, allowing the refund.

Read the Ruling

Taxmann.com | Learning— Workshop | Search & Seizure Under the Income-tax Act – Law | Procedure | Block Assessments (w.e.f. 01-09-2024)

5. ITC on GST under RCM for industrial land lease used for battery cell factory construction not admissible: AAR

The AAR held that Input Tax Credit (ITC) on GST paid under Reverse Charge Mechanism (RCM) on industrial land lease for setting up the battery cell facility was not admissible as the lease services were tied to construction of immovable property. This was held in Agratas Energy Storage Solutions (P.) Ltd., In re [2025].

Facts of the case

The applicant, a GST-registered entity, took a 50-year industrial lease from the Government for setting up a battery cell manufacturing facility. The lease mandated industrial use of the land and commencement of production within three years, with annual rent at 6% of market price subject to five-year escalations. The applicant paid GST on lease rentals under reverse charge and sought an advance ruling on the admissibility of input tax credit (ITC) on such lease payments. It was contended that ITC should be available on recurring rent and for portions of land not immediately used in construction. The matter was accordingly placed before the Authority for Advance Ruling (AAR).

AAR Held

The AAR held that ITC on GST paid on lease rentals of land used for industrial construction is blocked, including recurring rent and amounts attributable to repair, renovation, or vacant areas, as all such services are linked to the construction of immovable property. Exemption for upfront premiums does not extend to recurring lease rentals, and credits cannot be claimed on portions of land held vacant for environmental compliance, as they form part of the industrial facility. Consequently, the applicant is not entitled to ITC on GST paid on lease rentals for any portion of the industrial land during the lease period.

Read the Ruling

Introducing Taxmann.com | Premium

6. Refund of wrongly paid IGST directed as limitation not bars refund where liability discharged as CGST+SGST: HC

The High Court held that refund of wrongly paid IGST could not be denied since the petitioner had already discharged the correct liability as CGST+SGST, and retention of IGST lacked authority of law. This was held in Merck Life Science (P.) Ltd. vs. Union of India [2025].

Facts of the case

The petitioner, provided intermediary services to foreign entities and initially discharged IGST, treating the supplies as inter-state/export transactions. Subsequently, the petitioner reassessed the same transactions as intra-State and discharged CGST and SGST liability. It was contended that the refund could not be denied as the liability for the transactions had been duly discharged under CGST and SGST, and that constitutional and legal principles prevented retention of tax without authority of law. The matter was accordingly placed before the High Court.

High Court Held

The High Court held that the constitutional mandate under Article 265 of the Constitution of India prohibits the collection or retention of tax without authority of law, and that principles of restitution and prevention of unjust enrichment required a refund of the IGST to the petitioner. The Court observed that limitation provisions under the IGST Act, operate as directory in such circumstances where liability has been discharged through CGST and SGST, and cannot bar the refund. The impugned orders were set aside, and the matter was remitted to the jurisdictional officer.

Read the Ruling

Taxmann.AI—Coming Soon

7. Accounting treatment of manufacturing, warranty, and royalty costs in measuring inventory under Ind AS 2

Ind AS 2, Inventories lays down the fundamental principle that inventories must be measured at the lower of cost and net realisable value, with cost comprising all expenditures incurred in bringing the inventory to its present location and condition. This includes costs of purchase, costs of conversion, and other directly attributable costs. At the same time, the standard also specifies categories of expenses that cannot be included in inventory valuation, such as abnormal wastage, post-production storage costs, administrative overheads unrelated to bringing the inventory to its present condition, and selling or distribution expenses. The distinction between directly attributable production costs and post-sale or revenue-linked obligations is therefore essential when determining what forms part of inventory cost.

In applying these principles, consider a manufacturing company producing a new line of smart air purifiers. During the pre-dispatch quality review, certain defects were identified, requiring Rs. 10 lakh of replacement components and Rs. 2 lakh of additional labour to rectify 1,000 affected units before they were transferred to finished goods. The company also estimated post-sale warranty obligations of Rs. 5 lakh based on past experience of repairs expected over a two-year warranty period. Alongside this, two royalty arrangements were in place, namely a 3 per cent sales-linked royalty payable to an investor and a 2 per cent production-linked royalty payable to a technical know-how provider, amounting to Rs. 6 lakh and Rs. 4 lakh, respectively, for the current cycle.

Evaluating these costs under Ind AS 2, the rectification expenditure incurred before dispatch is necessary to make the goods fit for sale and therefore forms part of the cost of conversion. It directly contributes to bringing the inventory to its present condition. In contrast, the warranty provision relates to future after-sale service obligations and does not enhance the condition of the inventory before sale, making it a period cost to be expensed as incurred. The same principle guides the royalty assessment, wherein the sales-based royalty arises only upon sale and is not a production cost. In contrast, the production-linked technical know-how royalty is directly attributable to manufacturing and therefore qualifies to be included in inventory cost.

In conclusion, only those costs that support the manufacturing process or bring the goods to a saleable condition, such as pre-dispatch rectification and production-based royalties, may be capitalised into inventory. Obligations that arise after sale or depend on revenue, such as warranty provisions and sales-linked royalties, must be recognised as expenses in the period in which they arise, consistent with the exclusions set out in Ind AS 2.

Read the Story

Taxmann's Indian Accounting Standards & Corporate Accounting Practices

The post Weekly Round-up on Tax and Corporate Laws | 24th November to 29th November 2025 appeared first on Taxmann Blog.

source

Categories
Blog Updates

No Section 69 Addition When Property Investment Explained from Foreign Salary Savings | ITAT

foreign salary savings

Case Details: Rajnish Kasturchand Ostwal vs. Income-tax Officer, International Taxation [2025] 180 taxmann.com 628 (Mumbai-Trib.)

Judiciary and Counsel Details

  • Amit Shukla, Judicial Member & Girish Agrawal, Accountant Member
  • Fenil Bhat for the Appellant.
  • Satya Pal Kumar, CIT DR for the Respondent.

Facts of the Case

Assessee, a non-resident Indian, had been living and working in Dubai since 2001 and returned to India in 2021. During the relevant year, the assessee made a payment of Rs. 2 crores towards the purchase of a residential property in India, and the balance consideration was paid in succeeding years.

Since no return of income had been filed in India and information regarding an investment in property was received, a notice under section 148 was issued. Assessing Officer (AO) made an addition of Rs. 2 crores under section 69 on the allegation that investment in a residential property during the relevant year was unexplained, questioning “credentials” of the foreign employer or “authenticity” of the foreign bank statements.

The matter reached before the Tribunal.

ITAT Held

The Tribunal held that the assessee had produced a complete trail of funds, including bank statements, authorised dealer certificates issued by remittance service providers showing remittance to India, and corresponding inward credits in the NRE account from which the investment in the property was made.

It was further noted that the assessee had furnished additional evidence and clarified each component of the fund trail. Under Section 5(2), a non-resident is taxable in India only with respect to income that is received or deemed to be received in India or accrues or arises or is deemed to accrue or arise in India.

Thus, what is not taxable under Section 5(2) cannot be brought to tax indirectly through a deeming fiction under Section 69. Since the assessee had furnished a complete, satisfactory and credible explanation supported by independent evidence, the addition made under Section 69 was wholly unsustainable.

The post No Section 69 Addition When Property Investment Explained from Foreign Salary Savings | ITAT appeared first on Taxmann Blog.

source

Categories
Blog Updates

[Launch Alert] Taxmann.AI – AI Built on a Legacy of Trust

Taxmann.AI

Taxmann introduces Taxmann.AI, a trusted, practitioner-focused platform that brings together six decades of verified content with the speed and structure of AI—giving legal and tax professionals faster research, smarter drafting, and secure, source-backed precision.

Table of Contents

  1. What You Can Do with Taxmann.AI
  2. Your Work. Your Data. Always Protected.
  3. Join the Future of Legal Intelligence

For over sixty years, Taxmann has been a cornerstone for India’s legal and tax professionals, providing content that is not just accurate but also accountable. We’ve built a legacy of trust across books, journals, and digital platforms, delivering information professionals rely on daily. Today, we are thrilled to announce a new chapter in this legacy:

Taxmann.AI—an intelligent platform designed to support legal and tax professionals with faster research, smarter drafting, and tools grounded in six decades of trusted content.

AI That Thinks Like a Professional. Because It Was Built for One.

Taxmann.AI merges the depth of Taxmann’s verified legal database with the speed and responsiveness of artificial intelligence. In a world where speed means nothing without trust, Taxmann.AI stands apart. It doesn’t just respond; it understands, structures, and supports your journey, ensuring every output is verified, structured, and source-backed.

Taxmann.AI | Brochure

1. What You Can Do with Taxmann.AI

Taxmann.AI is built around you and the way you work, designed to support your entire workflow.

  • ASK – Ask your tax or legal questions in natural language and receive citation-backed answers sourced from verified acts, rules, circulars, notifications, case laws, treaties, commentaries, books, tariffs and articles—all in seconds.

With the latest enhancements, Ask-Bot now goes beyond simply answering:

  1. Improve Prompt refines vague or incomplete queries into structured, legally precise questions to ensure the best possible output.
  2. Rewrite lets you refine the response by adding instructions—ask for deeper analysis, jurisdiction-specific rulings, or an alternative perspective without starting over.
  3. Concise Mode gives you short, to-the-point answers when you need quick clarity during discussions or reviews.

It’s your personal legal research partner—accurate, structured, iterative, and fully aligned with the way professionals think.

  • DRAFT (Coming Soon) – Turn notices into structured replies with legal backing, format control, and confidence. Simply upload or input a notice, and the platform will validate key procedural details, identify factual and legal issues, and generate a well-structured, editable reply. DRAFT-Bot is grounded in law and built for real-world use.
  • TOOLS (Coming Soon) – Beyond Ask and Draft, Taxmann.AI is equipped with intelligent features that complete your workflow.
  • Library – Save and reuse research.
  • Summariser – Simplify complex rulings.
  • MS Word Plugin – Works directly within your documents.

2. Your Work. Your Data. Always Protected.

We understand the paramount importance of privacy and confidentiality in legal and tax practices. That’s why, with Taxmann.AI:

  • Your data is fully encrypted.
  • Your work is never shared or used for model training.
  • Your workspace remains private—always.
  • Every query, document, and draft is handled with strict confidentiality.

Taxmann.AI uses enterprise-grade encryption, internal access controls, and isolated environments to ensure your work stays secure and professionally protected.

3. Join the Future of Legal Intelligence

Everything is built on Taxmann’s verified content ecosystem—the same one you’ve trusted for years. We’re excited to bring you a platform that combines trust, structure, and intelligence—all built for the way professionals actually work. 

Ready to experience AI that carries a legacy of trust?

[Join the Waitlist] | [Download the Brochure]

The post [Launch Alert] Taxmann.AI – AI Built on a Legacy of Trust appeared first on Taxmann Blog.

source

Categories
Blog Updates

Non-Shareholder Director Cannot Invoke Section 241-242 | NCLT Dismisses Petition

non-shareholder director

Case Details: Ramaswamy Ramanujam vs. Evenforce Technologies (P.) Ltd. - [2025] 180 taxmann.com 513 (NCLT-Beng.)

Judiciary and Counsel Details

  • Sunil Kumar Aggarwal, Judicial Member & Radhakrishna Sreepada, Technical Member
  • Rohith R. Kamath for the Petitioner.
  • Uday Shankar for the Respondent.

Facts of the Case

In the instant case, the petitioner was offered the post of director of marketing by respondent no. 2 in the respondent no. 1 company. The petitioner joined as director of marketing in the respondent no. 1 company and was formally inducted as a director on the board of directors of the respondent no. 1 company. The respondents no. 3 and 4 communicated the memorandum of understanding (MOU) to the petitioner, and the petitioner thereafter responded to them.

The petitioner filed a petition under section 241-242 of the Companies Act, 2013, seeking relief, including to declare that the petitioner is the ‘shareholder’ of the respondent no. 1 company holding 800 shares and directing the respondents to rectify the register of members to include the name of the petitioner as ‘shareholder’ of respondent no. 1.

The respondents filed counter/reply to the application contending that the petitioner did not have the right to apply under section 241 on account of not satisfying the minimum threshold as mandated in section 244; which clearly provides that, in the case of a company which has share capital, not less than any member holding one tenth of the share capital of the company can approach this Tribunal.

It was noted that the shareholding pattern mentioned by the petitioner in the petition showed that he was not a shareholder as of the date of filing.

NCLT Held

The NCLT held that, since the petitioner had no shares allotted to him under section 56 read with section 2(55), he was not a member entitled to invoke the provisions of sections 241-242 and, therefore, the petition was not maintainable in the absence of shareholding.

List of Cases Referred to

The post Non-Shareholder Director Cannot Invoke Section 241-242 | NCLT Dismisses Petition appeared first on Taxmann Blog.

source

Categories
Blog Updates

Customer Acquisition Cost Is Revenue Expenditure – Not Capital | ITAT

customer acquisition cost

Case Details: Tata Teleservices Ltd. vs. Assistant Commissioner of Income-tax [2025] 180 taxmann.com 125 (Delhi-Trib.)

Judiciary and Counsel Details

  • Satbeer Singh Godara, Judicial Member & Avdhesh Kumar Mishra, Accountant Member
  • Ms Ananya KapoorSalil KapoorShivam Yadav, Advs. for the Appellant.
  • Dayainder Singh Sidhu, CIT-DR for the Respondent.

Facts of the Case

The assessee claimed customer acquisition cost as revenue expenditure. The customer acquisition cost had been incurred for porting charges, data entry charges for customer details, subsidy on handsets (i.e., compensation paid to distributors for the loss on the sale of handsets to customers at a price lower than the cost price of making the handsets), etc.

The Assessing Officer (AO) treated the customer acquisition cost as capital expenditure and disallowed it. On appeal, the CIT(A) upheld the disallowance. The matter reached the Delhi Tribunal.

ITAT Held

The Tribunal held that the customer acquisition cost in the cases relied upon by the Authorities was one-time, whereas in the instant case, it was a routine, regularly incurred year after year. Thus, the case law relied upon by the Authorities became irrelevant here.

Further, the genuineness of this expenditure is not in dispute. The issue in dispute here is the allowability of the customer acquisition cost as revenue/capital expenditure.

Revenue expenditure is allowed in the year of accrual or incurrence. Capital expenditure is allowed as deferred expenditure over the years through depreciation. It is a case of assessed loss.

The nature of the customer acquisition cost was porting charges and data entry charges for customer details, and subsidy/compensation paid to distributors for the loss on the sale of handsets to customers at a price lower than the cost price of making the handsets. The porting and data entry charges are treated as revenue expenditure, as they are not of an enduring nature.

For the handset, there are two components: one recovered from customers and the other subsidised by the assessee. The AO, on the one hand, has treated the subsidy/compensation on handsets as capital expenditure and, on the other hand, has accepted the subsidised sale price of handsets recovered from customers, disclosing it as revenue receipts in the Profit & Loss Account. Such contradictory findings weaken the case for revenue.

Thus, the disallowance of the Customer acquisition cost was not justified, as it was in the nature of revenue expenditure.

List of Cases Reviewed

  • SKS Micro Finance Ltd. in ITA No. 1222/Hyd/2011, dated 21.06.2013 [Para 8] Distinguished

List of Cases Referred to

The post Customer Acquisition Cost Is Revenue Expenditure – Not Capital | ITAT appeared first on Taxmann Blog.

source