29. [2019] 197 TTJ 161 (Mumbai – Trib.) DCIT (IT) vs.
Hemant Mansukhlal Pandya ITA No.: 4679
& 4680/Mum/2016 A.Y: 2006-07
& 2007-08 Dated: 16th
November, 2018
Section 69
r.w.s.5 & 6 –Where additions were made to income of assessee, who was a
non-resident since 25 years, since, no material was brought on record to show
that funds were diverted by assessee from India to source deposits found in
foreign bank account, impugned additions were unjustified.
FACTS
The assessee
was a non-resident individual living in Japan on a business visa since 1990. He
had been a director in a company in Japan and had got permanent residency certificate
from Japan since 2001. The assessing officer had made addition towards amount
found credited in HSBC Bank account, Geneva on the ground that the assessee had
failed to explain and prove that deposit was not having any connection to
income derived in India and not sourced from India. The Assessing Officer had
made additions on the basis of a document called ‘base note’ received from
French Government, as per which the assessee was maintaining a bank account in
HSBC Bank, Geneva. Except this, the Assessing Officer had not conducted any
independent enquiry or applied his mind before coming to the conclusion that
whether the information contained in base note was verified or authenticated.
Aggrieved by
the assessment order, the assessee preferred an appeal to the CIT(A). The
CIT(A) deleted the addition of income as made by the Assessing Officer. Being
aggrieved by the CIT(A) order, the Revenue filed an appeal before the Tribunal.
HELD
The Tribunal
held that the Assessing Officer was not justified in placing the onus of
proving a negative that the deposits in foreign bank account were not sourced
from India on the assessee. The onus of proving that an amount falls within the
taxing ambit was on the department and it was incorrect to place the onus of proving
negative on the assessee. No material was brought on record to show that the
funds were diverted by the assessee from India to source the deposits found in
foreign bank account. Therefore, it is viewed that when the Assessing Officer
found that the assessee was a non-resident Indian, was incorrect in making
addition towards deposits found in foreign bank account maintained with HSBC
Bank, Geneva without establishing the fact that the said deposit was sourced
out of income derived in India. Hence, the findings of the CIT(A) were upheld
and the appeal filed by the revenue was dismissed.