Under the Income Tax Act, 1961, if a taxpayer or the Income Tax Department is dissatisfied with an order passed by the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT), the following remedies are available:
1. Appeal to the High Court [Section 260A]
- Applicability:
- Can be filed if a “substantial question of law”arises from the ITAT’s order.
- No appeal on purely factual disputes(unless perverse findings).
- Who Can File?
- Assessee or the Income Tax Department.
- Time Limit:
- 120 daysfrom the date of the ITAT’s order.
- Delay can be condoned if sufficient cause is shown.
- Procedure:
- File a Memorandum of Appeal(with grounds) before the jurisdictional High Court.
- The High Court must admit the appealonly if a substantial question of law exists.
- Key Points:
- The High Court can confirm, modify, or set asidethe ITAT’s order.
- Example of a “substantial question of law”:
- Misinterpretation of a tax provision.
- Violation of legal principles (e.g., natural justice).
2. Appeal to the Supreme Court [Section 261 + Article 136]
- Applicability:
- Against a High Court’s order(if further appeal is needed).
- Only in cases of national importance, conflicting judgments, or gross injustice.
- Two Routes:
- Appeal under Section 261:
- If the High Court certifiesthe case as fit for appeal.
- Special Leave Petition (SLP) under Article 136:
- Direct appeal to the Supreme Court(discretionary remedy).
- Appeal under Section 261:
- Time Limit:
- 90 daysfrom the High Court’s order (for SLP).
3. Writ Petition (Article 226/227 of the Constitution)
- When to Use?
- If the ITAT’s order is patently illegal, arbitrary, or violates natural justice.
- Example: ITAT refuses to admit an appeal without valid reasons.
- Jurisdiction:
- Filed before the High Court(if ITAT’s order is challenged).
- Supreme Court(under Article 32 for fundamental rights violations).
- Key Points:
- No alternative remedyshould be effective (e.g., if appeal is time-barred).
- Rarely granted unless there is a clear jurisdictional error.
4. Rectification of Mistake [Section 254(2)]
- Applicability:
- If ITAT’s order contains an apparent mistake of fact or law.
- Time Limit:
- 4 yearsfrom the date of the order.
- Procedure:
- File a Miscellaneous Application (MA)before the ITAT.
- Example:
- ITAT overlooked a Supreme Court judgment while deciding the case.
5. Comparison of Remedies
REMEDY | APPLICABILITY | TIME LIMIT | KEY CONDITION |
High Court Appeal | Substantial question of law | 120 days | Legal issue (not factual) |
Supreme Court Appeal | High Court’s order | 90 days (SLP) | National importance/conflict |
Writ Petition | Jurisdictional error, violation of rights | No strict limit | No alternative remedy available |
Rectification (MA) | Mistake apparent from record | 4 years | Must be a clear error |
6. Key Considerations
- Facts vs. Law:
- High Court only entertains legal issues, not factual disputes.
- Alternative Remedies:
- Writ petitions are last resorts(if appeal is not possible).
- Departmental Appeals:
- The Income Tax Department must follow monetary limits(e.g., Rs. 1 crore tax effect for High Court appeals).