Monday, March 2, 2026

Compliance Calendar March 2026

By Sandeep Ahuja & Co Team

March is not just another month — it is the financial year closure month, where tax positions, GST reconciliations, payroll closures, ROC filings, and advance tax converge.

This calendar is structured in the Casahuja.com professional tracker format — practical, compliance-driven, and team-executable.

CORE MONTHLY DEADLINES – March 2026
Due DateCompliance / Return / ActionRelevant Period / DetailsApplicable Law / FormTracker / Status
March 2 (Mon)TDS on Property / Rent / Contractor / Virtual Digital Asset (Govt deductors)January 2026 transactionsIncome-tax Rule 30, Forms 26QB / 26QC / 26QD / 26QE☐ Pending ☐ Filed ☐ Verified
March 7 (Sat)TDS / TCS Deposit (Non-Govt Deductors)February 2026Income-tax Rule 30☐ Pending ☐ Filed ☐ Verified
March 10 (Tue)Professional Tax (Salary PT – Haryana & applicable states)February 2026 SalaryState Professional Tax Acts☐ Pending ☐ Filed ☐ Verified
March 11 (Wed)GSTR-1 (Monthly Filers)February 2026 Outward SuppliesCGST Sec 37☐ Pending ☐ Filed ☐ Verified
March 13 (Fri)GSTR-1 (QRMP), GSTR-5 (NRTP), GSTR-6 (ISD)February 2026GST Rules 59(5), 61☐ Pending ☐ Filed ☐ Verified
March 15 (Sun)EPF & ESI ContributionsFebruary 2026 WagesEPF Act 1952, ESI Act 1948☐ Pending ☐ Filed ☐ Verified
March 15 (Sun)Final Advance Tax Installment (100%)FY 2025–26Income-tax Sec 211☐ Pending ☐ Paid ☐ Verified
March 15 (Sun)Form 13 – Lower / Nil TDS ApplicationFY 2025–26 / 2026–27Income-tax Sec 197☐ Applied ☐ Approved ☐ Pending
March 20 (Fri)GSTR-3B + GSTR-5A (OIDAR)February 2026CGST Sec 39☐ Pending ☐ Filed ☐ Verified
March 22 (Sun)GST CMP-08 (Composition)Q4 FY 2025–26CGST Sec 10☐ Pending ☐ Filed ☐ Verified
March 25 (Wed)GST Tax Payment (QRMP – if applicable)March 2026GST Rule 86B☐ Pending ☐ Paid ☐ Verified
March 30 (Sun)TDS on Property etc. (Govt Deductors)February 2026Income-tax Rule 30☐ Pending ☐ Filed ☐ Verified
March 31 (Mon)CMP-02 (Composition Scheme Opt-in)FY 2026–27CGST Sec 10(3)☐ Opted ☐ Not Applicable

YEAR-END & ANNUAL MANDATES (Critical Closures – FY 2025–26)
Due DateCompliance / ActionDetails / ApplicabilityLaw / FormTracker
March 31 (Mon)Updated Return u/s 139(8A)AY 2021–22 – Final OpportunityIncome-tax Sec 139(8A)☐ Filed ☐ Not Applicable
March 31 (Mon)MSME-1 Half-Yearly ReturnOct 2025–Mar 2026 dues to MSMEsMSMED Act 2006☐ Filed ☐ Pending
March 31 (Mon)DPT-3 (Loans/Deposits Return)FY 2025–26 reportingCompanies Act Sec 73, Rule 16☐ Filed ☐ Pending
March 31 (Mon)Annual Secretarial Compliance Report (Listed Cos)FY 2025–26SEBI LODR Reg 24(c)☐ Filed ☐ Not Applicable

LABOUR & PAYROLL COMPLIANCES
Due DateComplianceDetailsLaw / FormTracker
March 15 (Sun)Gratuity Fund ContributionFor applicable establishmentsPayment of Gratuity Act☐ Paid ☐ Not Applicable
March 31 (Mon)Statutory Bonus (if applicable)FY 2025–26Payment of Bonus Act 1965☐ Paid ☐ Pending
March 31 (Mon)Statutory Registers UpdateWages / Attendance / Muster RollLabour Codes 2020☐ Updated ☐ Audited

ROC / MCA & CORPORATE FILINGS
Due DateComplianceDetailsForm / RuleTracker
March 31 (Mon)ADT-1 (Auditor Appointment – if vacancy)During FY 2025–26Companies Act Sec 139(1)☐ Filed ☐ N/A
March 31 (Mon)INC-22A (ACTIVE) – if applicableBeneficial Ownership / StatusRule 25A☐ Filed ☐ N/A

CRITICAL YEAR-END ACTIONS (Not Just Filing – Strategic Closure)

ActionPractical FocusReferenceTracker
26AS / AIS / TDS ReconciliationMatch credits before ITR seasonIncome-tax Portal☐ Completed ☐ Pending
GSTR-9 / 9C / ITC-04 PreparationBooks vs GSTR-2A/2B reconciliationCGST Sec 44☐ Started ☐ Ongoing
Stock & Expense ClosurePhysical verification + ITC validationGST Audit Prep☐ Done ☐ Pending
Payroll ReconciliationTDS vs Books vs Form 24QIncome-tax☐ Verified ☐ Pending
Provisioning ReviewExpenses, MSME dues, related party balancesCompanies Act / Tax☐ Reviewed ☐ Pending

High-Risk Areas in March

  • Final advance tax miscalculation → Interest u/s 234B & 234C (1% per month)

  • GST interest @ 18% p.a. on delayed payment

  • MSME reporting mismatches → ROC penalty exposure

  • ITC reversal oversight during year-end closure

  • Books vs GST turnover mismatch → Future notices

Strategic View

March is not just about compliance. It determines:

  • Your audit smoothness

  • Your interest cost exposure

  • Your working capital accuracy

  • Your notice risk for next 3 years

A structured compliance tracker in March reduces 70% of litigation exposure in future. 

Sunday, March 1, 2026

Guidance Note Partner Remuneration & Interest Deductibility-Transition from the I Tax Act, 1961 to the I Tax Act, 2025

By CA Surekha S Ahuja 

Drafting Safeguards | Litigation Prevention | Strategic Tax Optimisation

Executive Overview

With effect from 1 April 2026, the Income-tax Act, 2025 replaces the Income-tax Act, 1961.

While the legislative structure has been simplified and sections renumbered, the substantive framework governing deductibility of partner remuneration and interest remains materially unchanged.

However, partnership taxation is uniquely document-driven.

A valid deduction under statute becomes disallowable if the partnership deed fails to authorise it properly.

The transition year (FY 2025–26) and deeds executed around March 2026 require heightened drafting precision.

This note provides:

• Legal continuity analysis
• Drafting standards
• Amendment advisories
• Transitional computation guidance
• Risk mapping
• Strategic tax planning considerations

Statutory Position – Continuity of Principle

A. Under the Income-tax Act, 1961 (Applicable up to 31 March 2026)

Section 40(b) permits deduction of:

  • Interest on capital/loans to partners (maximum 12% simple interest per annum)

  • Remuneration to working partners within prescribed limits

  • Only if authorised by the partnership deed

  • Only for period after execution of deed

  • Subject to book profit-based ceiling

Remuneration ceiling:

  • On loss or first ₹3,00,000 → ₹1,50,000 or 90% (whichever higher)

  • On balance → 60%

This is a restrictive provision overriding general deduction rules.

B. Under the Income-tax Act, 2025 (From 1 April 2026)

The new Act re-enacts the same deductibility policy under the business deduction framework (renumbered provision).

There is:

  • No change in 12% interest ceiling

  • No change in remuneration percentage limits

  • No dilution of deed authorisation requirement

  • Continuation of “working partner” condition

  • Express inclusion of LLP within “firm” definition

Therefore:

The legislative intent reflects continuity, not reform, in partnership deduction principles.

The Real Risk – Drafting, Not Law

The statute continues.
The vulnerability lies in deed wording.

Risk Classification

Deed LanguageRisk LevelAdvisory Position
“As per Section 40(b) as amended from time to time”LowGenerally safe
“As per Section 40(b) of Income-tax Act, 1961”ModerateAmendment advisable
Fixed remuneration without statutory linkageHighPotential disallowance
No reference to book profitHighComputation dispute risk

Tax authorities interpret deduction provisions strictly.
Reliance on implied statutory continuity may invite avoidable litigation.

The Transition Year – Technical Application

Where deed execution straddles repeal date:

  • Income up to 31 March 2026 → governed by 1961 Act

  • Income from 1 April 2026 → governed by 2025 Act

Computation should be:

  • Period-wise documented

  • Statute-linked

  • Audit defensible

Failure to document bifurcation may result in technical queries.

The Gold Standard Drafting Clause

Recommended Clause – Future-Proof and Transition-Safe

The partners shall be entitled to interest on capital and loans at a rate not exceeding the maximum permissible under the Income-tax law applicable for the relevant previous year, including Section 40(b) of the Income-tax Act, 1961 for periods prior to its repeal and the corresponding provisions of the Income-tax Act, 2025 or any statutory modification, re-enactment or replacement thereof, as amended from time to time.

Remuneration to working partners shall be computed strictly within limits prescribed under the applicable Income-tax law and shall relate only to the period subsequent to execution of this deed. Book profit shall have the meaning assigned under the applicable Income-tax statute.

This clause:

  • Covers both Acts seamlessly

  • Captures successor legislation

  • Links payments to statutory ceiling

  • Prevents literal restrictive interpretation

  • Avoids need for repeated amendment

When Amendment Is Necessary

Amendment is recommended if:

  • Deed rigidly refers only to 1961 Act

  • No “as amended” or successor wording

  • Remuneration clause vague

  • Working partner not defined

  • Interest rate cap not mentioned

Execution requirements:

  • Supplementary deed

  • Proper stamping under State Stamp Act

  • Registration where applicable

  • Prospective effect

Preferably complete before 31 March 2026.

Tax Planning Dimension

A. Profit Allocation Strategy

Firms are taxed at 30% plus surcharge.

Remuneration to partners shifts taxation to individual hands.

Optimisation requires:

  • Use of statutory ceiling fully where beneficial

  • Avoiding excess payment beyond allowable limits

  • Aligning remuneration with partner tax profiles

B. Interest Structuring

  • Clear distinction between capital and loan

  • Maintain ledger discipline

  • Avoid retrospective classification

C. High Profit Firms

For firms with book profits above ₹10–15 lakh:

  • Remuneration ceiling becomes substantial

  • Even technical disallowance may create significant tax impact

  • Preventive amendment is economically prudent

Common Disallowance Triggers

  • Payment prior to deed execution

  • Interest exceeding 12%

  • Remuneration not linked to statutory formula

  • No working partner evidence

  • Retrospective deed modification

  • Deed silent on profit basis

Professional Action Framework

Before 31 March 2026:

  1. Review all partnership and LLP deeds

  2. Categorise risk level

  3. Amend where necessary

  4. Update drafting templates

  5. Maintain computation documentation

  6. Educate clients proactively

After transition:

  • Monitor CBDT clarification on renumbered provisions

  • Align tax audit reporting references

  • Maintain documentation trail

Strategic Conclusion

The shift from the Income-tax Act, 1961 to the Income-tax Act, 2025 does not alter partnership deductibility philosophy.

But partnership taxation remains deed-centric.

Substantive compliance without documentary alignment is insufficient.

Firms that proactively review and refine their deeds before the repeal date will:

  • Preserve deductions

  • Avoid litigation

  • Optimise tax outflow

  • Demonstrate governance discipline

In partnership taxation:

Documentation is deduction.
Drafting is defence.
Proactivity is tax strategy.



Friday, February 27, 2026

Section 80JJAA: The Ultimate Strategic Guide to India’s Most Powerful Job Creation Tax Incentive

By CA Surekha S Ahuja

For labour-intensive businesses, Section 80JJAA is not merely a deduction — it is a structured three-year wage subsidy embedded within the Income-tax Act.

Manufacturers, PLI beneficiaries, exporters, EPC contractors, logistics operators, manpower companies and scaling mid-caps can unlock substantial recurring tax savings by aligning hiring strategy with statutory mechanics.

This is a complete, professional-grade, blog-ready master analysis covering law, computation, jurisprudence, risk management, and future reform impact.

Legislative Framework & Policy Intent

Section 80JJAA was comprehensively restructured by the Finance Act, 2016 to promote formal employment generation linked with EPF coverage.

Core Benefit

Deduction = 30% of “Additional Employee Cost” (AEC)
Available for 3 consecutive assessment years, starting from the year of employment.

Key structural features:

  • No monetary cap

  • No sunset (as of AY 2026-27)

  • Available under old regime and concessional corporate regime

  • Renewable annually via incremental hiring

The objective: incentivize formal payroll expansion in labour-intensive sectors.

2. The Three-Layer Eligibility Test

Section 80JJAA eligibility rests on three pillars:

A. Eligible Assessee

  • Resident Indian entity

  • Engaged in business (PGBP income)

  • Subject to tax audit

  • EPF-registered establishment

  • Not formed by reconstruction or splitting

Available to companies, LLPs, firms and proprietors.

B. Eligible Business

Originally manufacturing-focused, now effectively applicable to any eligible business generating formal employment.

Restrictions:

  • No claim for transferred undertakings

  • No artificial splitting

  • No recycled workforce

Greenfield or capacity-expansion projects are ideal candidates.

C. Eligible Employees

To qualify as “additional employees”, ALL conditions must be satisfied:

  1. Employed during the previous year

  2. Not managerial or supervisory

  3. Monthly emoluments ≤ ₹25,000

  4. Employed for ≥ 240 days (150 days for apparel, footwear, leather industries)

  5. Covered under EPF

  6. Increase in total employee strength by at least 10%

  7. Paid through banking channels

Excluded:

  • Apprentices

  • Contract labour

  • Rehired former employees

  • High-wage employees

Understanding “Emoluments” — The Technical Core

Included:

  • Basic salary

  • DA

  • HRA

  • Allowances

Excluded:

  • Employer PF contribution

  • ESI

  • Gratuity

  • Reimbursements

  • Most performance bonuses (conservative view)

This restrictive definition makes the claim computationally clean and defensible.

Computation Framework – Step-by-Step

Formula

AEC = A – B

Where:

A = Total emoluments to new eligible employees in current PY
B = Emoluments of employees employed in preceding year

Deduction = 30% × AEC
Allowed for 3 assessment years.

Illustration – Mid-Cap Manufacturer

Prior Year:

  • 200 employees

  • Total wage base ₹10 Cr

Current Year:

  • 50 new hires @ ₹20,000/month

  • Annual wage cost = ₹1.2 Cr

AEC = ₹1.2 Cr
Deduction = ₹36 Lakh annually
3-Year Total = ₹1.08 Cr

At 25% tax rate → ₹27 Lakh annual tax saving.

Effective annual wage subsidy ≈ 7.5%.

Strategic Timing & Hiring Optimization

The 240-Day Rule

Hiring before September ensures 240-day compliance.

Workforce Ramp Strategy

  • Q2/Q3 hiring most efficient

  • Maintain attrition below 15%

  • Convert contract workers gradually

  • Keep workmen under ₹25k cap

Tax modeling must align with HR planning.

Filing Compliance – Form 10DA

Mandatory:

  • Audit report under Rule 19AB

  • CA certification

  • Filed electronically

  • Filed before due date under Section 139(1)

However, jurisprudence has reduced procedural rigidity.

Judicial Landscape – Substance Over Form

Recent decisions have significantly strengthened taxpayer position.

Supreme Court Position

In CIT v. G.M. Knitting Industries Pvt. Ltd., the Supreme Court held that audit reports can be filed before completion of assessment — not necessarily with the original return.

Principle: Substantial compliance prevails.

ITAT Trend

  • Aakash Bhardwaj v. DCIT – Delayed Form 10DA allowed via revised return.

  • Analytix Business Solutions Pvt. Ltd. v. DCIT – 29-day delay condoned.

  • Jubilant FoodWorks Ltd. v. DCIT – Filing before CPC processing sufficient.

Litigation Takeaway

  • 80AC technical objections weakened

  • High success rate at ITAT

  • Focus now on payroll substance, not procedural lapses

Risk Triggers & Defensive Planning

AO Red Flags

  • Claim exceeds 20% of PBT

  • Sudden 30% workforce jump

  • EPF mismatches

  • High attrition

  • Late Form filing

Defensive File Should Include

  • Payroll master register

  • EPF challans

  • Attendance records

  • Bank salary proofs

  • Reconciliation workings

Substantive compliance neutralizes penalty exposure.

Labour Codes – The Structural Multiplier (FY 2026–27 Onwards)

Upcoming labour reforms are expected to:

  • Harmonize wage definitions

  • Expand worker classification clarity

  • Mandate digital wage payments

  • Simplify compliance structure

Impact:

  • Reduced litigation on workman classification

  • Easier 10% incremental compliance

  • Higher adoption in seasonal industries

Projected 20–25% growth in 80JJAA claims post-implementation.

DTC 2026 Outlook

Policy signals suggest:

  • Retention of 30% incentive

  • Possible turnover thresholds

  • AI-driven payroll verification

  • Anti-abuse filters

  • Potential sunset around 2030

Corporates should maximize hiring during FY26–FY28 window.

Sectoral Benchmarks

SectorWorkforce IncreaseTypical Claim
Textiles18–22%₹2–5 Cr
Auto Ancillary12–15%₹3–8 Cr
FMCG10–15%₹1–3 Cr
Electronics (PLI)25–40%₹10 Cr+
Manpower20–30%₹5–15 Cr

Strategic Conclusion

Section 80JJAA is:

  • A structured employment incentive

  • A three-year tax multiplier

  • A formalization accelerator

  • A PLI compliance enhancer

  • A defensible deduction post-ITAT jurisprudence

Businesses that integrate HR expansion with tax modeling can transform payroll growth into recurring tax shields.

This is not a passive compliance provision.
It is a strategic fiscal lever.



Agriculture Under GST Is Not a Blanket Exemption

 By CA Surekha S Ahuja

A Forensic, Definition-Driven Decode of the ICAI Handbook — Technical Fault Lines, Strategic Levers & Litigation-Ready Insights

“In GST on agriculture, exemption is not inherited from the soil — it is earned through statutory precision.”

The Handbook on Applicability of GST on Agricultural Sector issued by the Institute of Chartered Accountants of India (ICAI) dismantles a widespread assumption: that agriculture as a sector enjoys broad immunity from GST. The law does not exempt “agriculture.” It exempts certain supplies, by certain persons, under strictly defined conditions.

Miss one limb of the definition — status, source, process, packaging, or usage — and the exemption collapses. What follows is a deeply analytical, litigation-conscious decode designed for farmers, millers, traders, exporters, CFOs, and tax professionals.

The Architecture of Exemption — Where the Law Draws the Line

1. “Agriculturist” — The Status Gate That Filters Everything

Under the CGST Act, an agriculturist must be:

  • An Individual or HUF

  • Engaged in cultivation of land

  • Using own labour, family labour, or supervised hired labour

  • Supplying produce from own cultivation

Not covered: Firms, LLPs, companies, AOPs — even if they cultivate land.

Strategic Impact
Many agri ventures formalize into companies for funding or scale — inadvertently forfeiting agriculturist exemption. The moment the supplier’s status changes, the GST analysis must be reset.

2. “Agricultural Produce” — The Essential Character Doctrine

The exemption hinges on whether the goods retain their agricultural identity at the time of supply.

Qualifying characteristics:

  • Plant or animal origin (excluding horses)

  • Only minimal processing

  • Processing normally undertaken by cultivator

  • No change in essential characteristics

  • Marketable in primary market

Permissible minimal processing:

  • Cleaning

  • Drying

  • Sorting

  • Grading

The decisive question is not whether the commodity originated in agriculture — but whether it still legally remains agricultural produce.

Once essential character changes, the exemption dissolves.

The Fault Lines — Where Exemption Quietly Breaks

A. Processing Gradient — From Soil to Shelf

Agricultural supply operates on a spectrum:

Cultivation → Conditioning → Primary market → Value addition → Branded retail

Exemption generally survives in the first two stages.
Beyond that, transformation invites taxability.

Professional Insight
Processing that enhances shelf life, consumer appeal, or branding frequently crosses the statutory line.

B. Packaging & Labelling — The Silent Tax Trigger

Fresh produce may be exempt.
However, pre-packed and labelled commodities, subject to evolving notification thresholds, often attract GST.

What increases market value may simultaneously create tax exposure.

A branding strategy must therefore be accompanied by a GST impact simulation.

C. Leasing of Agricultural Land — Substance Over Form

Lease or rent of land for agriculture or nursery use is exempt.

But if actual use shifts to:

  • Warehousing

  • Industrial activity

  • Commercial storage

GST at 18% applies.

Revenue authorities examine factual use — not lease deed wording. Documentation must align with ground reality.

Reverse Charge — The Invisible Compliance Engine

Under reverse charge notifications, certain procurements from unregistered farmers (such as cotton to mills, paddy to rice mills, jute to factories) shift tax liability to the recipient.

Key Principle:

Supplier exemption does not mean transaction exemption. It may only shift the tax burden.

If the recipient’s outward supply is exempt, ITC utilization may be restricted — compressing working capital.

RCM transforms an apparently simple agricultural chain into a compliance-intensive structure.

ITC — Where Arithmetic Meets Risk

Rule 42: Common Credit Reversal

If a business deals in both taxable and exempt supplies:

Reversal Ratio = Exempt Turnover ÷ Total Turnover

Applied monthly; annual true-up required.

Even modest exempt turnover can materially dilute credit efficiency.

Rule 43: Capital Goods Allocation

Capital goods ITC is amortized over 60 months.

A change in output composition, business model, or disposal event can trigger proportionate reversal — with interest exposure.

GST on agriculture is not merely classification. It is credit engineering.

Exports — Strategic Registration vs Passive Exemption

Exports are zero-rated.

However:

  • Unregistered agriculturist → No ITC refund

  • Voluntary registration → LUT route + refund eligibility

If input taxes (fertilizer, packaging, logistics, storage) form a significant cost component, voluntary registration may enhance margins despite compliance load.

Exemption is not always economically superior to registration.

Storage & Ancillary Services — Conditional Relief

Storage/warehousing exemption applies only when goods qualify as agricultural produce under definition.

If essential character has changed, storage becomes taxable.

The classification of goods stored becomes a litigation hotspot.

The Professional Decision Framework

Before advising exemption, test sequentially:

  1. Is the supplier an Individual/HUF?

  2. Is the produce from own cultivation?

  3. Has processing remained farmer-typical and minimal?

  4. Has essential character changed?

  5. Does packaging create taxability?

  6. Does RCM apply on procurement?

  7. Is there mixed turnover requiring ITC reversal?

  8. Is voluntary registration economically optimal?

Exemption must survive each filter.

Risk Matrix — Where Litigation Emerges

Risk ZoneTriggerExposure
Status RiskCompany/Firm supplierRegistration & forward charge
Processing RiskTransformation beyond minimal5%–18% GST
Packaging RiskPre-packed & labelledTaxability shift
Leasing RiskNon-agri use18% GST
RCM RiskUnregistered farmer supplyRecipient liability
ITC RiskMixed suppliesReversal + interest

Strategic Advisory Philosophy

Agricultural GST planning is not about avoiding tax.
It is about:

  • Structuring supply chains intelligently

  • Preserving defensible exemption

  • Modeling ITC efficiency

  • Aligning packaging strategy with tax exposure

  • Maintaining audit-ready documentation

The most dangerous word in GST on agriculture is “assumed.”

The Closure — A Precision-Based Perspective

“In agriculture under GST, soil is not the test — statute is.”

Exemption is fragile because it is conditional.
It is conditional because it is definition-bound.
And it is definition-bound because GST is transaction-centric, not sector-centric.

The true professional question is never:

“Is this agricultural?”

It is:

“Does this supply, by this person, at this stage of processing, in this packaging, satisfy every statutory limb?”

Only when the answer is an unequivocal yes does exemption endure scrutiny.

Anything less is exposure waiting to be quantified.



THE DEFINITIVE MASTER GUIDANCE NOTE WAIVER / REDUCTION OF INTEREST UNDER SECTION 220(2A)

 By CA Surekha S Ahuja

PART I – STATUTORY ARCHITECTURE & LEGAL NATURE

1. Structural Scheme

The statutory chain operates as follows:

  • Section 156 – Notice of Demand

  • Section 220(1) – 30 days to pay

  • Section 220(2) – Interest on default

  • Section 220(2A) – Waiver / reduction of interest

  • Section 220(3) – Instalments

  • Section 222 – Recovery proceedings

  • Section 254 – Powers of ITAT

  • Section 264 – Revision

  • Section 159 – Legal representative liability

  • Section 282 – Valid service of notice

Appeals from assessment orders lie before the
Income Tax Appellate Tribunal

2. Nature of Interest under Section 220(2)

Interest is:

• Statutory
• Compensatory
• Automatic upon default

However, it is not punitive. If it becomes oppressive or disproportionate, Section 220(2A) operates as statutory equity.

The Supreme Court in
B.M. Malani
(2008) 306 ITR 196 (SC) laid down:

  • “Genuine hardship” must receive liberal construction

  • Authority must apply mind objectively

  • Reasons must be recorded

  • Discretion is quasi-judicial

  • Mechanical rejection is impermissible

This is the governing precedent.

PART II – CONSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK

Section 220(2A) is not mere discretion — it is controlled discretion.

Administrative orders must satisfy:

• Article 14 – Non-arbitrariness
• Doctrine of proportionality
• Doctrine of fairness
• Legitimate expectation
• Speaking order requirement

Any rejection ignoring evidence becomes vulnerable under Article 226.

PART III – THE THREE STATUTORY CONDITIONS (DEEP ANALYSIS)

Section 220(2A) requires satisfaction of:

Condition 1: Genuine Hardship

Hardship ≠ insolvency.
Hardship = disproportionate financial burden.

Courts have interpreted hardship liberally. It includes:

• Interest exceeding principal
• Medical emergency
• Business collapse risk
• Retirement / no income
• Estate limitation (legal heir cases)
• Litigation-induced accumulation

Quantification is mandatory.

Condition 2: Circumstances Beyond Control

Examples:

• Appeal pending for years
• Departmental delay
• Financial crisis
• Death of assessee
• Invalid service of notice
• Economic downturn
• Illness

Must show causal link between circumstance and non-payment.

Condition 3: Cooperation

Demonstrate:

• Response to notices
• No concealment
• Attendance in hearings
• Filing of appeals
• Partial payments

Even litigation does not negate cooperation.

PART IV – BURDEN OF PROOF MATRIX
Statutory ConditionBurdenEvidence RequiredCommon Mistake
HardshipAssesseeIncome-expense chart, net worth, bank statementsEmotional pleading without data
Beyond controlAssesseeChronology, orders, medical proofVague explanation
CooperationAssesseeCopies of replies, appeal recordsNot documenting past conduct

Failure to document = high rejection risk.

PART V – SERVICE DEFECT AS JURISDICTIONAL DEFENCE

Interest arises only upon valid service under Section 282.

If notice:

• Sent to wrong address
• Not digitally authenticated
• Served after death
• Not served at all

Then:

Default may not legally arise.

This becomes a strong foundational defence.

Always demand proof of service.

PART VI – SCENARIO ANALYSIS (ALL POSSIBLE SITUATIONS)

1. Interest Exceeds Principal

Invoke proportionality.
Argue interest has become punitive.

Strong waiver ground.

2. ITAT Appeal Dismissed for Non-Deposit

Appeals lie before
Income Tax Appellate Tribunal

Income-tax Act does not mandate fixed pre-deposit.

If dismissed:

• File MA under Section 254(2) (within 6 months)
• Challenge arbitrary dismissal
• Continue waiver route

3. Legal Heir Liability (Section 159)

Liability limited to estate inherited.

If estate small and interest large → strong waiver ground.

Document estate valuation.

4. Departmental Delay in Recovery

If department slept over recovery for years:

Argue:

• Accrual partly attributable to inaction
• State cannot benefit from its own delay

Relevant under proportionality.

5. Medical / Retirement Hardship

Provide:

• Medical records
• Pension details
• Cash flow analysis

Hardship must be objectively demonstrated.

6. Business Collapse Risk

Provide:

• Balance sheets
• Cash flow
• GST turnover
• Employee salary obligations

Show systemic impact.

7. Long Pending Litigation

If interest accumulated due to appellate delay:

Argue:

• Bona fide litigation
• No wilful default
• Interest multiplied due to time factor

Strong equitable case.

PART VII – LIMITATION & DELAY STRATEGY

Section 220(2A) prescribes no fixed limitation.

However:

Courts apply “reasonable time” principle.

Best practice:

✔ File within 3–6 months of knowledge
✔ Attach affidavit explaining delay
✔ Show continuing hardship

Unexplained delay weakens equity.

PART VIII – HEARING STRATEGY (PRACTICAL INSIGHT)

At personal hearing:

DO:

• Present structured note
• Provide numerical analysis
• Offer partial payment if strategic
• Emphasise cooperation

DO NOT:

• Argue emotionally
• Blame department aggressively
• Conceal financial facts

Tone must be professional, reasoned, constitutional.

PART IX – REJECTION ATTACK FRAMEWORK

If waiver rejected, examine whether order:

  1. Merely reproduces statutory language

  2. Fails to discuss documents

  3. Ignores hardship evidence

  4. Ignores proportionality

  5. Omits reasons

  6. Shows non-application of mind

Such orders are challengeable before High Court under Article 226.

High Courts including:

Bombay High Court
Delhi High Court
Madras High Court
Gujarat High Court
Karnataka High Court

have interfered where discretion exercised mechanically.

PART X – RECOVERY DEFENCE ARCHITECTURE

Under Section 222, department may:

• Attach bank accounts
• Issue garnishee notices
• Attach property

Immediate actions:

✔ File stay petition
✔ Inform about pending waiver
✔ Offer instalment plan
✔ Seek speaking order

Never ignore recovery notice.

PART XI – RISK STRATIFICATION MATRIX
ScenarioWaiver ProbabilityLitigation RiskStrategy
Interest > PrincipalHighLowProportionality
Medical hardshipHighLowEvidence heavy
Legal heir small estateVery HighLowEstate limitation
Long litigation delayMedium-HighMediumCooperation emphasis
No evidence hardshipLowHighWeak case
Unexplained long delayLowHighRisky

PART XII – ONE TIME SETTLEMENT POSITION

Income-tax Act does not provide permanent OTS scheme like banks.

Relief may arise via:

• Section 220(2A) waiver
• Section 220(3) instalments
• CBDT circulars (case-specific)
• Legislative settlement schemes (when notified)

No automatic OTS exists currently unless scheme notified.

PART XIII – DOCUMENT CHECKLIST

✔ Demand notice
✔ Proof of service
✔ Interest computation
✔ Chronology table
✔ Financial statements (3 years)
✔ Bank statements
✔ Net worth
✔ Medical / estate documents
✔ Appeal records
✔ Affidavit explaining delay

Documentation quality often determines outcome.

PART XIV – REALISTIC POSITION ON “100% SUCCESS”

Section 220(2A) is discretionary.

Absolute certainty does not exist.

However, success probability becomes significantly high when:

✔ Jurisdictional defect present
✔ Hardship quantified
✔ Delay explained
✔ Cooperation demonstrated
✔ Proportionality invoked
✔ Application legally structured
✔ Principal payment willingness shown

Strong preparation converts discretion into legally defensible entitlement.

CONCLUSION

Section 220(2A) is a powerful statutory equity provision.

When invoked with:

• Constitutional framing
• Evidence-backed hardship
• Structured legal argument
• Proportionality doctrine
• Procedural vigilance

Rejection becomes legally vulnerable.




Wednesday, February 25, 2026

GST vs Income Tax in Agriculture

 By CA Surekha Ahuja

Why “Tax-Free” Agriculture Is One of India’s Most Audited, Litigated & Penalised Sectors

The Great Agricultural Tax Illusion

Agriculture in India is widely believed to be “outside tax”.
That belief is only half true—and dangerously incomplete.

Under the Income-tax Act, agricultural income enjoys a near-absolute statutory exemption. Under GST, however, agriculture survives only within a narrow, evidence-driven corridor, guarded by supervision tests, end-use verification, system reconciliations, and strict documentation standards.

This asymmetry has quietly turned agriculture into a high-risk audit sector, particularly for rice millers, agri-processors, land lessors, contract farmers, and exporters.

The ICAI Handbook on GST Applicability to the Agricultural Sector (Jan 2026) crystallises what field audits already reveal:

Most GST disputes in agriculture do not arise from evasion.
They arise from applying Income-tax logic to GST law.

This article examines agriculture purely from an agri-audit and enforcement perspective—how defaults arise, how officers frame demands, and how penalties and litigation can be avoided before notices are issued.

The Structural Conflict That Creates Litigation

DimensionIncome Tax ActGST Law
Nature of reliefAbsolute exemptionConditional exemption
Primary testSource of incomeActivity, supervision, end-use
Evidence requiredMinimalExtensive & continuous
Officer discretionLimitedHigh
Penalty exposureRareAutomatic & severe

Agri-Audit Insight
What is automatically exempt under Income Tax becomes exempt only if conclusively proven under GST—every year, every month, every transaction.

Rice Milling & Agri Processing - The Largest Silent Default Zone

Rice milling is not agriculture. It is an industrial manufacturing activity.
This position is settled across audits, adjudication, and appellate practice.

  • Rice packed above 25 kg → Exempt output

  • Rice bran, broken rice, consumer packs → Taxable outputs

  • Governing law → Rule 42 / Rule 43 ITC reversal

Ownership of agricultural land, family involvement, or personal supervision has no legal relevance once activity crosses cultivation.

GST registration becomes mandatory on turnover breach, regardless of agricultural lineage.

Where Rice Mills Commonly Fail

  • Exempt rice sold alongside taxable by-products

  • Common packing material ITC not segregated

  • Provisional ITC claimed monthly and never reversed

  • GSTR-9 reconciliation delayed or cosmetic

  • ITC claimed as expense under Income-tax and retained under GST

How Officers Build the Case

  • Wrong availment of common credit

  • Suppression of exempt-linked ITC

  • Interest under section 50(3) treated as automatic

  • Penalty proceedings under sections 73 or 74

Critical Caution
Rice mills rarely lose on tax rate.
They lose on input attribution discipline.

Audit-Safe Architecture

  • ERP-level segregation of packing inputs

  • Lot-wise input–output mapping

  • Monthly Rule-42 workings preserved

  • Timely GSTR-9 Table 6B reconciliation

Agriculturist Exemption — Supervision Is the Only Shield

GST exempts only those agriculturists who personally supervise cultivation under section 23(1)(a).

The ICAI aligns with the Supreme Court’s classical test in Raja Benoy Kumar Sahas Roy:

Cultivation through hired labour qualifies only where personal supervision exists.

Enforcement Position

As clarified by the Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs, exemption survives only when:

  • Produce is self-cultivated

  • Supervision by owner or family is demonstrable

  • Processing is limited to cleaning, drying, sorting

Registration becomes compulsory where:

  • Mechanised harvesting occurs without supervision

  • Commercial dryers, hullers, or mills are used

  • Trading of third-party produce is undertaken

Audit Red Flags

  • Mechanised operations with no supervision evidence

  • Contract farming through corporate entities

  • Mixing own produce with purchased produce

  • Agricultural land records masking commercial activity

Most Common Litigation Fallacy

“The land is agricultural, therefore the activity is exempt.”

Audit Reality
GST evaluates what you did, not what the land is called.

Non-Negotiable Defence

Every agriculturist claiming GST exemption must maintain:

  • Labour attendance and wage registers

  • Supervision timestamps

  • Geo-tagged field photographs

  • Crop-cycle activity logs

Absence of this evidence converts exemption into taxable supply with retrospective exposure.

Agricultural Land Leasing - Where Income-Tax Logic Causes Maximum Damage

Under Income Tax, lease rent from agricultural land remains exempt.
Under GST, exemption applies only if the land is actually used for cultivation by the lessee.

The exemption follows end-use, not ownership.

Audit Trigger Indicators

  • Warehousing, cold storage, or construction on leased land

  • Lessee is trader or processor

  • Lease deed silent on agricultural-use restriction

  • No cultivation or supervision evidence

Hidden Penalty Exposure

Where commercial use is established and the lessee is unregistered:

  • The lessor faces penalty exposure under section 122(1)

  • Ignorance or reliance on revenue records offers no defence

Audit-Safe Leasing Architecture

  • Crop-specific exclusive use clause

  • Right to inspect and terminate on deviation

  • Quarterly geo-tagged usage certification

  • Revenue and stamp documentation alignment

Agricultural Exports -Refund Rejection Is the New Litigation

Export of agricultural goods is rarely disputed.
Refund claims are.

Authorities treat agri-export refunds as a systems-matching exercise, not an exemption debate.

Audit Preference in Practice

  • LUT route where supervision and exemption are unquestionable

  • IGST-paid route where processing exists or ITC exceeds 20 percent

Strategic Insight
Paying IGST often converts a risky exemption dispute into a clean refund verification.

Most Common Refund Rejection Triggers

  • GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B mismatch

  • Shipping Bill not linked with EGM

  • LUT expired mid-year

  • ITC claimed on exempt outputs

  • Improper merchant export endorsements

Refund Survival Protocol

  • ICEGATE pre-validation before GSTR-1

  • Continuous LUT monitoring

  • Avoid inverted duty claims on exempt supplies

  • Invoice–shipping bill–EGM correlation file

How GST Officers Actually Build Agricultural Cases

AreaOfficer FocusDefault RiskPreventive Shield
CultivationSupervision proofForced registrationCultivator logbook
ProcessingITC reversalInterest & penaltyERP segregation
Land leasingEnd-use18% GST & penaltyLease controls
ExportsSystem mismatchRefund denialICEGATE sync

Field Pattern
Cases rarely start with intent.
They start with absence of evidence.

Why Penalties Escalate Rapidly in Agriculture

Once GST exemption collapses:

  • Tax becomes retrospective

  • Interest is automatic

  • Penalty exposure multiplies

  • Registration is back-dated

  • Refunds and credits get blocked for years

Agri-Audit Reality
Agriculture carries lower tax rates but higher penalty ratios because failures are evidentiary, not interpretational.

The Preventive Architecture Every Agri Client Needs

Non-Negotiable Controls

  • Cultivator supervision log

  • ERP-based input segregation

  • GST-aware lease drafting

  • Periodic agri-GST internal audits

  • Refund pre-validation checklist

Strategic Advisory Insight
A properly structured voluntary GST registration often:

  • reduces net tax cost,

  • improves buyer credibility, and

  • eliminates retrospective shock demands.

Final Professional Verdict

Agriculture is not outside GST.
It is inside GST—with conditions.

Under GST:

  • Supervision creates exemption

  • Documentation sustains exemption

  • Assumptions destroy exemption