[Kvaverner John Brown Engg. (India) P. Ltd. v.
ACIT, (2008) 305 ITR 103 (SC)]
During the relevant assessment years, the
appellant claimed deduction u/s.80-0 in respect of qualifying income brought
into India in convertible foreign exchange. In its return, the appellant
indicated the qualifying income as the gross figure. By way of adjustment
u/s.143(1)(a), the Income-tax Officer restricted the qualifying income to the
net figure. In other words, the assessee claimed the gross income earned in
foreign exchange as the qualifying income, whereas the Income-tax Officer
granted deduction by restricting the claim of the assessee to the net income.
On December 17, 1997, whether the eligible income
should be taken at the gross figure or net figure, was the question for
interpretation. There were several conflicting decisions on this point.
Therefore, according to the appellant, S. 143(1)(a) was not applicable and
consequently the appellant was not liable to pay the additional tax
u/s.143(1A).
The Supreme Court observed that the only point
raised by the appellant was that it was not liable to pay additional tax, as
S. 143(1)(a), as it stood during the relevant year, was not applicable to the
facts of this case, because a moot point had arisen which could not have been
a matter for adjustment under that Section and which point needed
consideration and determination only under regular assessment vide S. 143(3)
of the 1961 Act. The Supreme Court held that for the A.Ys. 1996-97 and 1997-98
with which it was concerned, one of the main conditions stipulated by way of
the first proviso to S. 143(1)(a), as it stood during the relevant time,
referred to prima facie adjustments. The first proviso permitted the
Department to make adjustments in the income or loss declared in the return in
cases of mathematical errors or in case where any loss carried forward or
deduction or allowance which on the basis of information available in return
was prima facie admissible, but which was not claimed in the return or
in cases where any loss carried forward or deduction or allowance claimed in
the return which on the basis of information available in the return, was
prima facie inadmissible. In the present case, therefore, when there were
conflicting judgments on interpretation of S. 80-0, the Supreme Court was of
the view that prima facie adjustments contemplated u/s.143(1)(a) were
not applicable and therefore the appellant was not liable to pay additional
tax u/s.143(1A) of the Act.