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HomeJayanta Ghosh vs Income Tax Officer on 28 April, 2026

Jayanta Ghosh vs Income Tax Officer on 28 April, 2026

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Calcutta High Court

Jayanta Ghosh vs Income Tax Officer on 28 April, 2026

Author: Rajarshi Bharadwaj

Bench: Rajarshi Bharadwaj

                     IN THE HIGH COURT AT CALCUTTA
                    SPECIAL JURISDICTION (INCOME TAX)
                              ORIGINAL SIDE


                             ITAT 48 OF 2026

                           IA NO: GA 1 OF 2026


                         JAYANTA GHOSH
                               VS
              INCOME TAX OFFICER, MANIKTALA AND OTHERS


BEFORE:

THE HON'BLE JUSTICE RAJARSHI BHARADWAJ
              AND
THE HON'BLE JUSTICE UDAY KUMAR


For the Appellant        : Ms. Sruti Datta, Ld. Adv.


For the Respondents      : Mr. Tarak Nath Jaiswal, Ld. Adv.

Mr. Madhu Jana, Ld. Adv.

Mr. Wahed Reja, Ld. Adv.

SPONSORED
Hearing concluded on     : 21.04.2026

Judgment on              : 28.04.2026


Uday Kumar, J:-


                         ADMISSION OF THE APPEAL


1. The present appeal, preferred by the assessee under Section 260A of the

Income Tax Act, 1961, is directed against the order of the Income Tax

Appellate Tribunal (ITAT), “SMC” Bench, Kolkata, dated November 21,

2025, by which the learned Tribunal dismissed the appeal in limine on
2 ITAT 48 OF 2026

the grounds of limitation, refusing to condone a delay of 430 days,

without considering the merits of the assessment.

2. We have taken this matter appeared for the hearing on admission of this

appeal. The primary issue is the summary dismissal of the appeal by the

Tribunal, affirming an ex-parte order of a National Faceless Appeal

Centre (NFAC), on the grounds of limitation (a delay of 430 days) without

addressing the underlying jurisdictional challenge.

THE FACTUAL BACKGROUND

3. The facts leading to this appeal may be briefly summarized. The

appellant is an individual assessee. The reassessment proceeding

against him was initiated under Section 147 of the Act for the

Assessment Year 2017-2018. The Assessing Officer (AO) passed an ex-

parte order making an addition of Rs. 13,76,200/- by invoking Section

50C (or Section 56(2)), alleging that the purchase price of an immovable

property at Rajarhat was lower than its stamp duty value. This

assessment deprived him of a fair opportunity to contest the valuation

on facts. Aggrieved thereby, the assessee preferred an appeal before the

National Faceless Appeal Centre (NFAC). However, the appeal was

dismissed in limine due to a delay of 430 days. This dismissal was

subsequently affirmed by the learned Tribunal through the impugned

order, primarily on the ground that the appellant had failed to produce

documentary evidence, specifically a death certificate, to substantiate

his claim of “sufficient cause.”In our view, such dismissal in itself is a

substantial question of law.

3 ITAT 48 OF 2026

4. Accordingly, the appeal is admitted on the following Substantial

Questions of Law that require our adjudication:

a. Whether the act of the Tribunal in dismissing an appeal solely

on the grounds of delay, without considering the merits of a

jurisdictional challenge, constitutes a “perverse” exercise of

discretion?

b. Whether the death of an authorized representative and the

transition of files in a faceless regime constitute “sufficient

cause” within the meaning of Section 5 of the Limitation Act?

c. Whether the underlying assessment is a jurisdictional nullity

for failing to obtain mandatory approval from the Principal

Chief Commissioner (PCCIT) under Section 151, given the

escaped income was below Rs. 50 lakhs and the notice were

issued beyond three years?

SUBMISSIONS ON BEHALF OF THE APPELLANT

5. Ms. Sruti Datta, learned counsel appearing for the appellant, argued

that the appellant was a victim of circumstances beyond his control. It

was submitted that his erstwhile authorized representative, Shri Ratan

Kumar Ghosh, who was handling the tax matters and possessed all

relevant files, suffered from a terminal illness and passed away on July

23, 2024. He contended that in the current Faceless Assessment regime,

a taxpayer is entirely dependent on the digital portal managed by their

professional. The death of the professional created a communication

vacuum, leading to the delay. Furthermore, on the merits, she raised a
4 ITAT 48 OF 2026

fundamental jurisdictional objection, contending that the notice under

Section 148 was issued with the approval of the Principal Commissioner

(PCIT) instead of the Principal Chief Commissioner (PCCIT), as required

under the amended Section 151 for cases exceeding three years where

the escaped income is below Rs. 50 Lakhs.

SUBMISSIONS ON BEHALF OF THE RESPONDENT (REVENUE)

6. Per contra, Mr. Tarak Nath Jaiswal, learned Counsel for the Revenue,

submitted that the Tribunal’s order is well-founded. He argued that the

law of limitation is a statute of repose and cannot be bypassed without

cogent evidence. He points out that the appellant failed to produce any

death certificate or evidence of representation before the lower

authorities. He further submits that since the appeal was never

admitted on merits due to the time-bar, the question of examining the

validity of the approval under Section 151 does not arise at this stage.

DISCUSSION ON LAW AND MERITS

7. We have considered the rival submissions. The primary issue is whether

a procedural threshold can be used to validate an order that is

potentially void ab initio. The Hon’ble Supreme Court in Collector, Land

Acquisition vs. MST Katiji (1987) 167 ITR 471 (SC) has unequivocally held

that the judiciary should adopt a “liberal approach” toward condonation

of delay to ensure substantial justice. It was observed that technicalities

should not be allowed to result in a miscarriage of justice, as a litigant

does not stand to benefit from a delayed filing.

5 ITAT 48 OF 2026

8. Furthermore, in the recent decision of Inder Singh vs. State of Madhya

Pradesh [2025 Live Law (SC) 339], the Apex Court reiterated that a

flexible view is mandatory when a limitation ground undermines the

merits of the case. In a digital environment, the death of an authorised

representative is a “force majeure” event for an assessee who lacks

digital literacy. In the present case, the “sufficient cause” was the death

of the counsel, a fact that goes to the heart of the right to legal

representation.

9. More importantly, the jurisdictional defect raised by the appellant

regarding Section 151 strikes at the very root of the matter. If the

approval for reassessment was granted by an authority not “specified”

under the statute, as held by this Court in Subhra Basu vs. Union of

India, WPA 18828 of 2022 (Cal HC), the entire proceeding is a nullity. A

jurisdictional error of such magnitude cannot be shielded by the law of

limitation.

CONCLUSION AND FINAL DIRECTIONS

10. Therefore, we find that the learned Tribunal adopted an overly rigid and

hyper-technical approach. By refusing to condone the delay caused by a

professional’s death and failing to address a patent jurisdictional nullity,

the Tribunal has failed to exercise its discretion in a just and proper

manner. To shut the doors of justice at the threshold is improper when

the very legality of the tax demand is in question.

6 ITAT 48 OF 2026

11. Consequently, we pass the following order:

I. The delay of 430 days in filing the appeal is hereby condoned.

II. The impugned order of the ITAT dated November 21, 2025, is

set aside.

III. The matter is remanded to the ITAT, Kolkata Bench, for a fresh

adjudication on its merits.

IV. The Tribunal is specifically directed to decide the Jurisdictional

Validity of the assessment under Section 151 as a preliminary

issue.

V. The Tribunal shall endeavour to dispose of the appeal

expeditiously, preferably within six months, after providing a

fair opportunity of hearing to both parties.

12. The appeal is allowed by way of remand.

13. IA No. GA 1 of 2026 is also disposed of accordingly.

14. Ordered accordingly.



             I AGREE


    (RAJARSHI BHARADWAJ, J.)                                (UDAY KUMAR, J.)
 



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