Allowability of Expense and Burden of Proof On Assessee

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Allowability of Expense And Burden of Proof

on Assessee
In the case of Pr. CIT versus Chawla Interbild Construction Company Private Limited (2019)
412 ITR 152 (Bom.), the hon’ble Bombay High Court has reiterated an important principle
regarding burden of proof which lay on the assessee to prove the genuineness of the transaction.
The Court has held that the assessing officer cannot compel the assessee to produce the payee if
the assessee is unable to do so.

It is a matter of experience that the revenue authorities seek detailed information for the claims
of expenses made by an assessee, while scrutinising the return of income. Often these
transactions have been incurred at least two years before the date when the scrutiny proceedings
commence. The assessee has no option but to place reliance upon the documents in its possession
to prove the genuineness of the transaction under scrutiny. Often these documents are in the
nature of bills, details of payment made, details of TDS deducted, PAN number of the payee and
his address. However, the assessing officers often insist the assessee to produce the payee for the
purpose of recording his statement or making direct inquiry.

In some cases, the assessee is not in a position to produce the payee for the reason that either he
is not having a continuing relationship with such payee and therefore the payee refuses to
cooperate or sometimes the payee is not traceable since he has left his place of business. In such
situations, the Assessing Officer ignore the plethora of documentary evidence produced by the
assessee during assessment to prove the genuineness of transactions and confirm the addition
only on the ground that the payee was either not traceable or did not appear before him during
the course of assessment proceedings to confirm the transaction.

In an earlier decision rendered by the Mumbai High Court in CIT v. U M Shah 90 ITR 396
(Bom.) the Bombay High Court held that if in response to the summons issued by the Assessing
Officer, the creditor did not appear, no adverse inference can be drawn against the assessee.
Reiterating a similar position very recently the Bombay High Court in the case of Pr. CIT v.
Chawla Interbild Construction Company Private Limited (Supra) held that the respondent
assessee had done everything to produce necessary evidence which would indicate that the
payments have been made to the parties concerned. The details furnished by the assessee were
sufficient for the Assessing Officer to take further steps if he still doubted the genuineness of the
payments to examine whether or not the payment was genuine. Further, the Assessing Officer
did not carry out the necessary enquiries on the basis of the PANs which were available with him
to find out the genuineness of the parties. The Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) as well as
the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal correctly held that it is not possible for the assessee to
compel the appearance of the parties before the Assessing Officer.

A similar view was earlier taken by Calcutta High Court in the case of CIT v. Carbo Industrial
Holdings Ltd. (2000) 244 ITR 422 (Calcutta) where in the brokers who had carried out the share
transaction did not respond to the summons issued by the Assessing Officer. The hon’ble High
Court held that the assessee cannot be faulted with where a third party is not cooperating with the
department.

The assessee do have an obligation to prove the genuineness of an expense. However, having
furnished all possible documentary evidence in his possession, he is not expected to conclusively
prove such transaction to the hilt until the Assessing Officer is satisfied. Merely because the
payee did not appear before the Assessing Officer or did not respond to the summon issued by
the Assessing Officer does not render otherwise good documentary evidence into a bad one. The
fact remains that such documentary evidence remains unrebutted and reflect the best what an
assessee can do in a given situation. Therefore, the courts have held that the burden on the
assessee stood discharged once he has submitted all possible evidence in his control which are
sufficient for AO to make inquiries if he doubts the genuineness of transaction on the basis of
such documentary evidence.

In a very early decision of Allahbad HC in the case of Nathu Ram Premchand v. CIT (1963) 49
ITR 561 (All.), the Hon’ble High Court held that the power given to AO under S.131 for issuing
summons is an enabling power and must be used by an AO where the assessee makes a request
to the AO to use it and collect details from the payee directly.

Word of caution here. Such cases are usually decided on the facts of each case and hence the
quality of documentary evidence led in support of the genuineness of transactions carries a very
high weightage. As compared to it, if assessing officer is able to arrive at a conclusion that the
payee was either non-existent and such transactions and documentary evidence are fictitious then
the assessing officer would be within its right to disallow the expenditure. In such cases the
assessee cannot take shelter of this decision to argue that the expense is genuine.

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