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October 2016

[2016] 73 taxmann.com 68 (Mum-Trib)(SMC) Smt. Manasi Mahendra Pitkar v. ACIT ITA No. 4223 & 4224/Mum/2015 A.Y.: 2011-12, Dated: 12.08.2016

By C. N. Vaze
Shailesh Kamdar
Jagdish T. Punjabi
Bhadresh Doshi, Chartered Accountants
Reading Time 4 mins
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S. 68 – The
bank pass book or bank statement cannot be construed to be a book maintained by
the assessee for any previous year as understood for the purposes of section
68.

FACTS: 

These were two appeals preferred by
husband and wife.  In both the appeals,
the common dispute was that the cash deposits made in the joint bank account to
the extent of Rs. 27,36,500 were treated as unexplained cash credits within the
meaning of section 68 of the Act. Substantive addition was made in the case of
Mahindra Chintaman Pitkar, the husband, and protective addition was made in the
case of Manasi Mahendra Pitkar, wife. The Tribunal in its order dealt with the
appeal in the case of husband as the lead appeal.

The assessee, an individual was employed
with Municipal Corporation of Greater Mumbai. The Assessing Officer (AO)
noticed that during the year under consideration cash aggregating to Rs.
29,53,500 was deposited in the joint bank account of the assessee and his wife
with Thane Janata Sahakari Bank. 

On being asked the assessee explained
that the amounts were received from his father, father-in-law, son and various
other relatives & friends and that these amounts were used by him for
treatment of his wife who was bedridden and was suffering from the disease of
multiple sclerosis which required costly medical treatment.  It was explained that expenditure of Rs. 30
lakh a year was required to be incurred for medical treatment of his wife and
since the assessee was a salaried employee with limited resources he had
received amounts from family members, relatives and friends for the medical
treatment of his wife.

The AO added the sum of Rs. 29,53,500 to
the total income of the assessee on a substantive basis and also made similar
addition on protective basis in the case of his wife.

Aggrieved, the assessee preferred an
appeal to CIT(A) who gave relief to the extent of Rs. 2,70,000 with respect to
withdrawals found in the bank account of assessee’s father and confirmed the
addition of Rs 27,36,500 as unexplained cash credit under section 68 of the
Act.

Aggrieved, the assessee preferred an
appeal to the Tribunal.

HELD:

In the course of hearing
before the Tribunal, affidavit of the assessee narrating the factual position
about the disease of his wife and the utilization of funds for the medial
treatment was filed and the documents in support of the facts narrated in the
affidavit were also filed. The Tribunal considered the ratio of the judgment of
Bombay High Court in the case of Bhaichand N. Gandhi (1983) 141 ITR 67
(Bom).  It noted that the assessee did
not maintain any books of account and section 68 of the Act had to fail because
as per the judgment of the Hon’ Bombay High Court in the case of Shri Bhaichand
N. Gandhi (supra), the bank pass book or bank statement cannot be construed to
be a book maintained by the assessee for any previous year as understood for
the purposes of section 68 of the Act. 
It held that on this account itself the addition deserves to be deleted.

The Tribunal also observed
that the circumstances in which the cash deposits were made and the purpose for
which such monies were utilized was emerging from record and no material was
found by the AO to disprove the same.  It
noted that the assessee could not produce any formal corroborative evidence of
having received respective amounts from friends, relatives, however, it
observed that section 68 is a rule of evidence, and, the AO is expected to
consider the explanation rendered in the context of the circumstances of each
case.

The Tribunal held that the
addition is unsustainable in view of the ratio of the Bombay High Court in the
case of Shri Bhaichand N. Gandhi (supra). 

The order of CIT(A) was set
aside and the AO was directed to delete the addition of Rs. 27,36,500 made
under section 68 of the Act.

Since the substantive
addition in the case of the husband was deleted, the Tribunal held that the
protective addition in the hands of the wife was also unsustainable.

The appeals filed by the
assessee were allowed.

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