JUDGEMENT
SEN, J. -
(1.) THE following two questions of law have been referred to this Court by the Tribunal under s. 256(2) of the IT Act, 1961 ('the Act') :
"1. Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances of the case, there was any evidence before the Tribunal to hold that the sum of Rs. 95,000 representing the aggregate of the opining balance in the accounts of various creditors represented the assessee's own money and that the said money was available to the assessee to be reintroduced in the business in the names of other persons? 2. If the answer to question No. 1 is in the negative, whether on the facts and in the circumstances of the case, the Tribunal was right in holding that the unexplained cash credits made during the year could not be assessed as the income of assessee?"
(2.) THE assessment year involved in this reference is the asst. yr. 1963-64, for which the accounting period is ended on 31st March, 1963.
The ITO found that there were loans aggregating to Rs. 1,10,000 in the books of the assessee in the names of five parties. The ITO made enquiries about these loans and he did not accept the
genuineness of these entries for Rs. 1,10,000 and added the said sum of Rs. 1,10,000 as income
from other sources. Before the AAC, it was argued on behalf of the assessee that an opening
balance of hundi loans totalling Rs. 95,000 was shown in the beginning of the year and at no stage
the peak credit had exceeded that amount. It was argued that even if it was presumed that the
hundi loans shown were not genuine, that should be taxed only in the year when this amount first
appeared and not for the instant assessment year. The AAC found force in the argument and held
that no fresh credit had appeared in this year and he deleted the sum of Rs. 1,10,000 from the
assessment. He further observed that the ITO should have verified whether any action was
possible in the year when the loans were originally introduced.
(3.) THE Revenue went in appeal before the Tribunal. It was contended that there was no clear agreement on the part of the assessee to be assessed on the basis of peak credit and in view of
that the AAC was wrong in acting upon the submission of the assessee. It was also contended that
the interest on these loans had been impliedly disallowed by the ITO and there was no challenge to
this position before the AAC. On behalf of the assessee, it was submitted that the assessee stood
by the commitment to be assessed on the basis of peak credit but that this was due to the paucity
of evidence in the possession of the assessee to prove the genuineness of the hundi loans in
question. It was explained that non-filing of any appeal against the disallowance of interest was
due to some disapprehension on the part of the assessee.;
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