Under the Income Tax Act, 1961, taxpayers have several remedies against orders passed by the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) [CIT(A)] or revision orders by the Commissioner of Income Tax (CIT) under Sections 263/264. Here’s a structured overview:
1. Appeal to the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT) [Section 253]
- Applicability: An appeal lies before the ITAT against:
- Orders of CIT(A) under Sections 250, 271, 271A, etc.
- Revision orders under Section 263(CIT’s revision for revenue’s interest) or Section 264 (revision for assessee’s relief).
- Time Limit: 60 days from the date of communication of the order.
- Procedure: File Form 36with supporting documents (e.g., assessment order, grounds of appeal).
- Key Points:
- ITAT is the final fact-finding authority.
- No new evidence can be submitted unless the Tribunal directs.
- Monetary limits apply for departmental appeals (e.g., Rs. 60 lakh tax effect for ITAT appeals).
2. Appeal to the High Court [Section 260A]
- Applicability: Only if a substantial question of lawarises from ITAT’s order.
- Time Limit: 120 days from ITAT’s order.
- Procedure: File a memorandum of appeal with the High Court.
- Key Points:
- High Court may admit the appeal if the question is novel or impacts revenue/assessee significantly.
- Examples include disputes over legal interpretations (e.g., applicability of a tax exemption).
3. Appeal to the Supreme Court [Section 261]
- Applicability: Against High Court’s order, with leave of the High Court or via Special Leave Petition (SLP)under Article 136 of the Constitution.
- Scope: Limited to cases involving national importance or conflicting judgments.
4. Writ Jurisdiction (Article 226/227 of the Constitution)
- Applicability: If the order violates natural justiceor is patently illegal.
- Example: CIT(A) denies a hearing, or CIT exceeds revisionary powers under Section 263/264.
- Key Points:
- Direct approach to High Court, bypassing ITAT.
- Used when no alternative remedyis effective (e.g., jurisdictional errors).
5. Revision by CIT Under Section 264
- For Assessees: If CIT(A)’s order is erroneous but not prejudicial to revenue, the assessee can apply for revision within 1 yearof the order.
- CIT can grant relief but cannot enhance liability.
- No appeal against CIT’s order; only writ petitions are viable.
6. Key Differences Between Appeals and Revisions
ASPECT | APPEAL (CIT(A)/ITAT) | REVISION (CIT) |
Initiated by | Assessee/Revenue | Assessee (Section 264) or CIT (Section 263) |
Scope | Factual & legal issues | Correct errors prejudicial to revenue (263) or grant relief (264) |
Further Appeal | ITAT → High Court → Supreme Court | Only writ petitions (for Section 264) |
Time Limit | 30–60 days (appeals) | 1 year (revision) |
7. Practical Considerations
- Appeals vs. Revisions: Appeals are generally preferred over revisions due to structured judicial scrutiny.
- Doctrine of Merger: If an order is appealed, CIT cannot revise it under Section 263 (as held in ITAT quashes CIT’s revision order).
- Delay Condonation: Possible for appeals/revisions with “sufficient cause”