Income Tax Department prescribes guidelines for Verification of Suspicious Bank Accounts
After the demonetisation, the banks are instructed to levy charges on
cash transactions above a specific limit. Further, RBI has made it
mandatory to investigate unusual cash transactions. This is because many malpractices were noticed when cash deposits of Rs. 500 and Rs and one thousand notes were made during the demonetisation period. A circular was
passed by the Finance Ministry describing the standard operating
procedure for assessing officers to be followed while handling such
cases. There are specific cases when a verification warrant may be
issued for your transaction:
Who can be put under scrutiny
There can be many scenarios that call for scrutiny. Some of the scenarios are mentioned below:
- Cash deposited from earlier income or savings
Individuals
who deposit cash above Rs.2.5 lakh and senior citizens who deposit cash
above Rs.5 lakh may be scrutinised. Any amount within the specified
limit will be excluded from scrutiny considering that the money is from
household savings, cash withdrawals, earlier income, and so on.
In
the case of individuals without business income, deposits above the
mentioned limits will be verified by the assessing officers. Businesses
whose accounts show total savings that are more than the
closing cash balance as of 31 March 2016 (AY 2016-17) will be
investigated.
Bank accounts suspected of being misused
for money laundering, tax evasion or entry operations in shell
companies will be thoroughly investigated.
Cash from
tax-exempt receipts Any excess money out of receipts exempt from
the tax should be in line with the income tax returns filed earlier by
the same person. In a case where it is otherwise, the assessing officer
may call for relevant information.
Cash is withdrawn from a bank
account. Cash deposits that don't match the individual's bank statements
call for suspicion even if he says the money was removed from the bank
account. The assessing officer may seek a copy of the bank statement to
explain the cash deposits and withdrawals out of the bank account.
Cash
received from identifiable persons In the case of money received from
identifiable persons (with PAN), the assessing officer will not call for
further information from the taxpayer. Instead, the assessing officer
will seek input from the assessing officer of such an identifiable person. In the case of a gift, the assessing officer
would verify whether the same is taxable in the recipient's hands under section 56(2) of the income tax law.
- Cash received from
unidentified people In the case of receipts from unidentifiable persons
(without PAN), the assessing officer will verify whether the cash
receipts are in line with the normal practices of the taxpayer's business. Suppose cash transactions are not in line with normal business practices. In that case, the assessing officer may ask you to submit documents,
such as monthly sales summary and stock registers, for verification. In
the case of other unidentifiable persons, the assessing officer will
verify whether the cash transactions are in line with the normal
business practices in accordance with the earlier return of income. The
assessing officer may seek monthly sales summary,
relevant stock register entries, bank statements etc., to pinpoint
instances of backdating or fictitious sales. To identify
cases of backdating of sales, an AO may look into:
An abnormal increase in the percentage of cash sales during the period of November-December 2016 or earlier periods.
Multiple deposits of demonetised currency late in December 2016.
Non-availability of stocks or attempts to inflate stocks.
Transfer of bank accounts that are not used previously.
The exact process will be used for the verification of donations and other cash receipts.
Cash
disclosed or disclosed under PMGKY If the taxpayer announces
money under Pradhan Mantri Garib Kalyan Yojana (PMGKY), the suspected
cash transactions can be verified with disclosures made under PMGKY.
How does the e-verification process work
The online verification has been enabled on the e-filing portal, which
will be synchronised with the internal verification portal of the
income tax department. The features of the portal are listed below:
People under scrutiny can submit explanations online through
their login on the e-filing portal. They do not need to visit the income
tax office, and PAN holders can view this information using the 'Cash
Transactions 2016' under the 'Compliances' section.
An SMS and
email will be sent to all persons under scrutiny, directing them to
submit online responses on the e-filing portal. Such persons who are not
registered should register immediately under the 'Register yourself' link.
Registered taxpayers must update their email addresses, and mobile numbers
on the portal are accurate to receive communication from the department.
Individuals can check the guides and FAQs section of the IT department's website to submit their responses.
Low-risk cases can be closed centrally, while the other cases will be assigned to AOs for verification.
AOs
will view all submissions and ask to submit further verification proofs
online. The supporting documents must be submitted online.
If the documents and proofs submitted online are satisfactory, the AO will close the verification online.
What to do if you are stuck in the process
If you have any questions or queries during the process, you can
find guidance by referring to the 'Help' section of the e-filing
portal. You can also refer to the FAQs to find a solution for your
queries. Alternatively, you can refer to a document titled 'Cash
Transactions 2016 User Guide'. You can also learn from the 'User Guide
on Verification of Cash Transactions on ITBA-AIMS module', a guidelines
document AOs abide by during verification.
Closure and Approval
Assessing officers have the liberty to close a person's records after
verification with due permission from the concerned authorities. The
relevant source for tier-1 cities is Additional/Joint CIT heading the
range for transactions below 10 lakh. For other cities, the AO needs
to refer to the Pr. CIT.
Non-compliance and Penalty
In the case of non-compliance, the AO can view the ITS profile of the
PAN holders, exercise powers under Section 133(6) with the approval of
the prescribing authority, survey action under Section 133A, and more.
On the other hand, the AO can consider initiating penal proceedings
under section 269SS or 269T of the Act.
For more information on this, visit TAXAJ
Posted by Aashima
Team TaxaJ
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