By CA Surekha S Ahuja
A Study in Statutory Interpretation, Judicial Discipline and the Limits of Administrative Power
In December 2025, the Centralised Processing Centre (CPC) undertook a system-driven, suo-motu rectification exercise under section 154 for Assessment Year 2024-25, withdrawing the rebate under section 87A earlier granted on short-term capital gains chargeable under section 111A, and raising consequential demands.
What distinguishes this episode from routine computational adjustments is not merely its scale, but its juridical implications. The exercise raises fundamental questions concerning:
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the true scope of section 154,
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the interpretation of section 87A as it stood for AY 2024-25, and
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the constitutional hierarchy between statute, circular and judicial precedent.
This editorial examines the issue as a matter of law and jurisdiction, not as an operational inconvenience.
Section 87A (AY 2024-25): Plain Language and Legislative Design
Section 87A, as applicable to AY 2024-25, grants a rebate of income-tax where the total income of an individual does not exceed ₹7,00,000 under section 115BAC(1A).
The provision contains a specific and conscious exclusion only in respect of:
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long-term capital gains chargeable under section 112A.
Equally significant is what the provision does not exclude:
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short-term capital gains chargeable under section 111A.
This legislative distinction is deliberate. Parliament, while carving out an exclusion for one category of capital gains, chose not to do so for another. The statutory language leaves no scope for implication.
The interpretative maxim expressio unius est exclusio alterius therefore applies with precision:
the express exclusion of one category necessarily implies the inclusion of others.
For AY 2024-25, STCG under section 111A formed part of “total income” eligible for rebate under section 87A.
Finance Act, 2025: Prospective Restriction and Legislative Consciousness
The Finance Act, 2025 introduced an explicit restriction denying rebate under section 87A against tax payable on income chargeable under section 111A.
The legal consequences are unmistakable:
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The amendment is prospective, by both language and legislative intent.
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It amounts to a legislative recognition that the pre-amended provision did not contain such a bar.
It is a settled principle of tax jurisprudence that:
a substantive amendment withdrawing or curtailing a statutory benefit cannot operate retrospectively unless the statute expressly so provides.
The December 2025 CPC action, in substance, seeks to achieve retrospectivity through administrative rectification—a method unknown to the Act.
Judicial Position: The Law Is No Longer Res Integra
The controversy stands conclusively addressed by the Ahmedabad Bench of the Tribunal in:
Jayshreeben Jayantibhai Palsana v. ITO
(177 taxmann.com 411)
The Tribunal held, in unequivocal terms, that:
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rebate under section 87A is allowable on STCG taxable under section 111A,
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the absence of a statutory exclusion is determinative,
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CBDT circulars cannot override the Act, and
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the subsequent amendment reinforces the prospective nature of the restriction.
The decision rests on statutory interpretation, not on equity or administrative discretion.
Unless displaced by a jurisdictional High Court, the ruling is binding on departmental authorities and cannot be neutralised through rectification proceedings.
CBDT Circular No. 13/2025: Its Place in the Legal Hierarchy
CBDT Circular No. 13/2025 appears to have informed the December 2025 rectification drive.
While circulars are binding on tax authorities for administrative uniformity, the law is settled that:
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a circular cannot impose a tax burden not authorised by statute, and
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a circular cannot prevail over judicial interpretation.
Where a circular conflicts with the Act as judicially interpreted, the statute and the courts must prevail. Administrative guidance cannot become a substitute for legislative amendment.
Section 154: Rectification or Re-adjudication
Section 154 permits rectification only of:
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mistakes apparent from the record, and
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errors that are patent, obvious and incapable of two views.
In the present case:
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the issue involves interpretation of substantive law,
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a binding Tribunal decision exists, and
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the matter is neither clerical nor arithmetical.
The withdrawal of rebate under section 154, therefore, represents not rectification but re-adjudication, a function wholly alien to the provision.
Rectification cannot be employed as an instrument for retrospective policy enforcement.
The Correct Pre-Appeal Discipline
Given that the impugned action is administrative and algorithmic, the appropriate legal response before invoking appellate jurisdiction lies in a graduated approach:
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Assessee-initiated rectification, to place on record that no mistake apparent from record exists and that the CPC action itself is jurisdictionally flawed.
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Administrative grievance, to ensure supervisory and human review where the system continues to apply a legally unsustainable adjustment.
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Appeal, only as a statutory safeguard where correction mechanisms fail.
This sequence preserves judicial economy and respects the architecture of the Act.
The December 2025 suo-motu section 154 exercise by CPC for AY 2024-25:
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disregards the plain text of section 87A,
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overlooks binding judicial precedent,
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seeks to apply a prospective amendment retrospectively, and
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stretches the concept of rectification beyond its statutory limits.
In tax law:
What Parliament has not excluded cannot be excluded by administrative interpretation.
What is prospectively amended cannot be retrospectively withdrawn.
What is judicially settled cannot be reopened through section 154.
For AY 2024-25, rebate under section 87A on STCG chargeable under section 111A remains legally admissible, and demands raised to the contrary are unsustainable in law.
This episode underscores a broader institutional lesson:
Automation may enhance efficiency, but it cannot dilute legality.


