Business Standard

Appeals will be filed at courts in assessee’s state, clarifies CBDT

Dept attempts to allay apprehensi­ons over faceless appeals, which start tomorrow

- DILASHA SETH

With income-tax appeals going faceless from Friday, will all writs and appeals at the higher level such as the income-tax tribunal or high court have to be filed in Delhi? This is among taxpayers’ key concerns as all orders will be issued through the National e-assessment Centre in Delhi.

However, senior officials at the Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT) have clarified that the appeals at the tribunal or high court will be filed in the state where the assessee resides.

Though all appeals till the Commission­er of Income Tax (Appeals) level will go faceless, personal hearing might be allowed via video-conferenci­ng in some cases after approvals from designated senior officers.

CIT (Appeals) is the first level of appeal against a demand raised by the assessing officer. Appeals against orders at the CIT level can be filed at the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT) and later in high courts and the Supreme Court.

“All appeals will be filed on the e-filing portal from Friday. Suppose one has to go to the ITAT or high court, it will be in the address of jurisdicti­on of the taxpayer. For example, if the taxpayer’s address in her PAN card or returns is Mumbai, the litigation will also be in Mumbai,” an official clarified.

However, appeals will be randomly sent to CIT (Appeals) in any city other than the place of residence of the taxpayer.

“With faceless schemes kicking in, the appeals like in case of assessment will be sent to commission­er appeals in a city other than where the taxpayer resides,” said the official.

The order passed by CIT (Appeals) will run through the risk management system (RMS), which uses artificial intelligen­ce to flag outliers and picks up cases that require a review. The RMS technology is supported by

Tata Consultanc­y Services. Cases requiring a review according to the RMS will be sent to a commission­er of appeals in a second city. “Based on the faceless appeals order, either the department or a taxpayer can move ITAT,” said an official.

The commission­er appeals

will be allowed to take the help of technical units, comprising chief commission­er level officers, which are tasked with providing officers with legal and sectoral advice.

Besides, personal hearing may be allowed in certain cases through video-conferenci­ng, after approval of the principal chief commission­er (PRCCIT) or chief commission­ers of income tax (CCIT).

“Suppose a person says, I want personal hearing, we are making a rule where we are giving power to PRCCITS or CCITS to examine whether personal hearing is needed. But it will be via video-conferenci­ng as we do not want any interface,” the official said.

For submission­s that are not in English, verificati­on units under the 30 regional e-assessment centres in 20 cities may be used for translatio­n. “Some submission­s or documents can be in a different language. There we are making arrangemen­ts for translatio­n. It should not be very difficult,” said the official.

Tax consultant­s are apprehensi­ve about the effectiven­ess of the scheme and worry that litigation may go up at the tribunal level. Tax experts argue that assessees prefer presenting their arguments in person.

However, a senior CBDT official pointed out that assessees are used to face-to-face hearing, whereas now they will need to develop the skill of writing. “If they expect self-explanator­y orders, then you need to give self-explanator­y submission­s also,” he said.

Amit Maheshwari, partner, AKM Global, said discussion in person becomes important at the first stage of appeal by the taxpayer, which is generally missing in faceless appeals.

“In the case of faceless appeal proceeding­s, most discussion­s generally happen electronic­ally without any personal interactio­n, which ends up making the issue more complex,” he said.

The commission­er has the power to confirm, reduce, enhance or annul the existing order and if taxpayers fail to convince the commission­er, the assessees may not get relief. “The risk of enhancemen­t or confirmati­on of tax demand is substantia­l,” Maheshwari said.

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