Description
Taxmann Law Relating to Under-reporting and Misreporting of Income 2nd edition2025 by D.C. Agrawal and Ajay Kumar Agrawal
This book comprehensively examines the legal framework for penalties on inaccurate income disclosures under the Indian Income Tax regime. It provides the readers with a thorough understanding of the historical and current provisions governing penalties, particularly focusing on Section 270A (covering assessment year 2017-18 onwards). It explains how under-reported and misreported income is dealt with, outlines important legal principles, clarifies essential definitions (such as 'facts,' ‘books of account,' 'evidence'), and provides sample replies to penalty notices.
This book is intended for the following audience:
Tax Practitioners & Chartered Accountants – A resource for preparing effective submissions/defence in penalty proceedings
Lawyers & Advocates – A reference for drafting arguments, understanding legislative intent, and citing relevant judgments on penalty matters
Corporate Finance Professionals – Guidance on ensuring compliant reporting of income, minimising legal risks in corporate transactions, and preventing unwarranted penalties
Students & Academicians – Helpful for the advanced study of taxation law, particularly penalty provisions, and for developing practical insights into assessment and appellate processes
The Present Publication is the 2nd Edition | 2025, updated till 30th March 2025. This book is authored by D.C. Agrawal and Ajay Kumar Agrawal, with the following noteworthy features:
[Complete Coverage of Penalty Provisions]
Detailed commentary on old penalty provisions under Section 271(1)(c) and their historical evolution
Thorough analysis of the 'under-reporting' and 'misreporting' concepts introduced under Section 270A
Discussion of related provisions such as Sections 270AA, 271AAC, 271AAB, 273B, and 274
[Practical Draft Responses] Over 30 chapters are devoted to model submissions and responses to penalty notices. These help readers draft defences suited to their specific factual scenarios
[Illustrative Case Studies & Examples] Landmark judicial rulings are distilled into easily understandable lessons, indicating how courts interpret under-reporting, misreporting, and the burden of proof
[Guidance on Burden of Proof & Evidence] Comprehensive explanations of the burden of proof under penal provisions, along with a clear delineation of how the Indian Evidence Act principles apply in tax cases
[Clarification on Mens Rea] Dedicated chapters dissect the concept of 'mens rea' (guilty mind) in the context of new penalty provisions and how it may or may not be relevant under Section 270A
[Latest Amendments & Circulars] Incorporates amendments brought in by the Finance Act 2025, along with relevant CBDT circulars/notifications that clarify or modify penalty procedures
[Authored by Veteran Experts] Mr D.C. Agrawal (Advocate, former IRS officer, and retired ITAT Accountant Member) and Mr Ajay Kumar Agrawal (FCA, over thirty years in corporate consultancy and litigation) combine extensive domain knowledge and practical experience
The coverage of the book is as follows:
Historical Perspective
How penal provisions for concealment of income evolved from Section 271(1)(c) to the newly introduced Section 270A regime
Principles of Penalty
Examination of fundamental rules such as strict interpretation of penal statutes, the difference between civil and criminal liability, and how 'penalty proceedings' differ from 'assessment proceedings'
Under-reporting vs. Misreporting
Clear demarcation between the two concepts, backed by definitions, examples, and judicial interpretation
Draft Submissions
More than thirty chapters are dedicated to likely scenarios—such as disallowances under Section 14A, additions on account of bogus purchases, transactions below stamp duty valuation, or not declaring interest on refunds—and how an assessee could respond to penalty notices
Special Focus on Section 270AA
Explains conditions and procedure for obtaining immunity from penalty and prosecution
FAQs
A closing chapter compiles frequently asked questions to address practical doubts, including references to recent rulings under the new penalty regime
The structure of the book is as follows:
Two-part Format
Part I (Chapters 1–12) – Detailed exposition of the penalty law, discussing definitions, interpretative principles, the burden of proof, and the scope of Section 270A, plus the interplay with older penalty provisions
Part II (Chapters 13–48) – Multiple chapters supplying draft responses, step-by-step submissions, and arguments for various common (and uncommon) tax-addition scenarios—ranging from the disallowance of expenditure, capital gains misreporting, to differences in book profits
Logical Flow & Cross-References
Each chapter builds on the preceding discussions, with ample cross-references to sections, rules, and landmark judgments
Appendices and notes help readers quickly locate relevant forms, statutory language, or case precedents
Practice-Oriented Approach – The text consistently moves from theoretical exposition to how these principles operate in disputes, providing sample contentions that a professional could adapt to their case