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April 2009

Interest : Waiver or reduction : S. 220(2A) of Income-tax Act, 1961 : A.Ys. 1993-94 to 1995-96 : Conditions need not co-exist : Those are alternatives : No reasoning given : Order refusing waiver set aside for fresh disposal.

By K. B. Bhujle, Advocate
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Interest : Waiver or reduction : S. 220(2A) of


Income-tax Act, 1961 : A.Ys. 1993-94 to 1995-96 : Conditions need not co-exist
: Those are alternatives : No reasoning given : Order refusing waiver set
aside for fresh disposal.

[M. V. Amar Shetty v. Chief CIT, 309 ITR 93 (Kar.)]

For the A.Ys. 1993-94 to 1995-96 the assessee had made an
application u/s.220(2A) of the Income-tax Act, 1961 for waiver of interest
levied u/s.220(2) of the Act. The Chief Commissioner rejected the assessee’s
request on the ground that the assessee had not fulfilled condition (iii) of
S. 220(2A). Assessee’s writ petition challenging the rejection was dismissed
by the single judge of the Karnataka High Court.

The Division Bench of the Karnataka High Court allowed the
assessee’s appeal, set aside the rejection order of the Chief Commissioner and
held as under :

“(i) S. 220(2A) of the Income-tax Act, 1961, prescribes two
grounds by reason of which a reduction or waiver of the amount of interest
paid or payable by an assessee can be sought, viz., (i) payment of such
amount has caused or would cause genuine hardship to the assessee; and (ii)
default in the payment of the amount on which interest has been paid or was
payable U/ss.(2) was due to circumstances beyond the control of the assessee.
Since the word ‘and’ is absent after clause (i) of Ss.(2A) of S. 220 and the
word ‘and’ is inserted after clause (ii) of Ss.(2A) of S. 220, the two
circumstances are mutually exclusive and it is only when a situation where
clause (ii) occurs that the condition under clause (iii) is not applicable to
a case falling under clause (i) of Ss.(2A) of S. 220. All the three conditions
laid down in subsection (2A) of S. 220 need not co-exist before interest can
be waived under the said provision.

(ii) In the order refusing relief U/ss.(2A) of S. 220,
however, while there was a passing reference to ill health of the assessee
there was no application of mind on clause (i) and clause (ii) of Ss.(2A) of
S. 220. The order merely stated that the assessee had not satisfied any of the
conditions and in particular had not co-operated with the Department in filing
of the returns, nor in the assessment proceedings/payment of tax demand,
therefore the assessee’s petition was rejected. There was no reasoning with
regard to the genuine hardship of the assessee or on the fact that the default
in the payment of the amount was due to circumstances beyond the control of
the assessee.”

The order of the Single Judge was set aside and the
authorities were directed to consider the request made by the assessee for
waiver of interest.

 


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