Reported:
48 Unexplained investment: S. 69 of I. T. Act, 1961:
  Assessee explained source of disputed jewellery and also offered 20% thereof
  to buy peace: AO rejected explanation and made full addition: Tribunal
  accepted the explanation but retained the offered 20%: Not justified: No
  addition can be sustained: 
Sonia Magu Vs. CIT; 185 Taxman 402(Del):
In a search and seizure operation, certain  jewellery was recovered from the assessee. The assessee explained the source of the said jewellery. Notwithstanding the
  explanation, she also offered 20% of the disputed jewellery and was ready to
  pay tax thereupon in order to buy peace and to avoid litigation. The Assessing
  Officer did not accept the explanation and the offer and accordingly added the
  full value of jewellery as undisclosed income. The Commissioner (Appeals)
  accepted that the assessee had satisfactorily explained the source of
  purchase/acquisition of the disputed jewellery. However, he gave only partial
  relief to the assessee in view of the voluntary offer of the assessee whereby
  20% of the disputed jewellery amount was offered to tax and retained the
  addition of the 20% amount. The Tribunal upheld the decision of the
  Commissioner (Appeals) on the ground that it was the amount offered by the
  assessee herself. 
On appeal filed by the assessee, the Delhi High Court
  allowed the assessee’s claim and held as under: 
“i) The assessee maintained her stand that she had been
    accounting for the entire jewellery including the source thereof.
    Notwithstanding the same, only with a desire to buy peace and to avoid
    litigation, she had offered 20% of the excess jewellery. That offer was,
    thus, conditional. She would have paid the tax on the aforesaid amount, had
    the Assessing Officer accepted the offer, thereby giving a quietus to the
    matter. Instead, the Assessing Officer ignored that offer and proceeded to
    deal with the matter on merits and fastened the liability of much higher
    amount upon the assessee. In those circumstances, the assessee was
    constrained to take up the matter in detail. She maintained her stand that
    she had proper explanation for the purchase of the aforesaid jewellery. Her
    stand was vindicated inasmuch as the Commissioner (Appeals) accepted her
    explanation in respect of the entire jewellery. Once the assessee was able
    to duly explain the source of purchase of the entire disputed jewellery, the
    Commissioner (Appeals) committed an error in falling back on the conditional
    offer made by the assessee before the Assessing Officer along with the
    return in Form 2B. 
ii) From the language of the offer made, it was clear
    that it was an offer without prejudice and was not in the nature of
    ‘admission on the basis of which she could be fastened with the liability
    which otherwise did not exceed’. Provision of section 23 of the Indian
    Evidence Act would clearly be applicable to such a case. That apart, it is
    trite law that the principle of estoppel has no application in the Act. 
iii) The matter can be looked into from another angle as
    well. Once the assessee has given a satisfactory explanation regarding the
    purchase/acquisition of the disputed jewellery, the necessary consequence
    would be that there was no unexplained asset in the hands of the assessee.
    In such a situation, it is neither proper nor legally permissible for the
    revenue to still fasten the assessee with the liability of tax. It would be
    a clear ground of illegal extraction of tax from the assessee. Therefore,
    the addition as an unexplained investment in jewellery was to be deleted and
    the appeals were to be allowed.”