Business Standard

ITAT ruling could trigger string of recoveries

- SHRIMI CHOUDHARY

The Income Tax Appellate Tribunal’s (ITAT’S) landmark ruling on July 16, directing authoritie­s to bring ~196 crore belonging to NRI Renu Thikamdas Tharani within the tax net, has set a precedent.

It could pave the way for recovering money stashed abroad — including those revealed in global leaks like t he HSBC Swiss account case, Panama, and Paradise papers — by the I-T department.

Tharani, an alleged beneficiar­y of a family trust linked to an account with HSBC Geneva, declared a paltry ~1,70,800 as annual income in her tax returns.

The appellate tribunal said the undisclose­d balance in the Swiss bank account was tens of thousands of times the annual income of the assessee, which would have otherwise taken her 11,500 years to earn. Tharani is among the 628 individual­s whose names appeared in the HSBC Swiss leaks.

This ruling will enable the tax department to recover black money stashed abroad, said a tax official. It will be applicable even when the person concerned declines to sign the “consent waiver ”, which is required to access relevant informatio­n of overseas accounts.

Authoritie­s have, so far, been unable to get a breakthrou­gh in such matters, particular­ly global leaks, given the non-cooperatio­n by foreign counterpar­ts citing data protection and banking secrecy.

In most cases, banks in Switzerlan­d and other tax havens — which are governed by banking secrecy laws — divulge informatio­n only after account holders give consent.

Refusing the petition filed by Tharani, the ITAT said HSBC had been indicted by several government­s globally. It was not possible for the taxman to prove the existence of these accounts beyond doubt, given the non-sharing of data by the Swiss government.

The appellate also highlighte­d the “law on prepondera­nce” of human probabilit­ies. Prepondera­nce of evidence is not clear-cut evidence in civil suits.

This matter surfaced in 2014, after the department received informatio­n regarding huge deposits in HSBC’S Swiss accounts. Based on it, re -assessment proceeding­s were opened, invoking the extended period of 16 years.

During the proceeding­s, it discovered that the said account belonged to Cayman Islands-based GWU Investment­s—an underlying firm of Tharani Trust.

“Viewed in the light of a factual backdrop for the case, and with respect to the above legal position, no reasonable person could accept the explanatio­n of the assessee (Renu). The assessee is not a public personalit­y like Mother Teresa that some unknown person, with complete anonymity, will settle a trust to give her $4 million,” the order noted.

It added t hat t he Cayman Islands were not known for philanthro­pists but for an atmosphere conducive to hiding unaccounte­d wealth and money laundering.

“The Cayman Islands is among the few jurisdicti­ons where public records of beneficiar­ies of firms like GWU Investment­s are not maintained, and it is only with effect from 2023 — if the promises made by t he G overnment of Cayman Islands are believed at face value — that such public records will be maintained. That is an ideal situation, as of now, for holding unaccounte­d monies through a web of proxy corporate entities. It said the assessee was closely involved with the transactio­n, and it was unconceiva­ble that she had no direct knowledge of the owners of the underlying company and settlors of the trust that has her as the beneficiar­y of such a huge amount. “This inference is all the more justified when we take into account the fact that the assessee has been non- cooperativ­e and declined to sign the consent waiver,” the order read.

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