The Bombay High Court has quashed reassessment proceedings holding that reopening of assessment beyond four years without failure on the part of the assessee to disclose material facts is impermissible in law.
The Bench of Justice B. P. Colabawalla and Justice Firdosh P. Pooniwalla held that the reassessment was initiated solely on the basis of material already available on record, with no new tangible material. The original assessment had specifically considered and allowed the deduction under Section 35AD. The reopening was clearly based on a mere change of opinion, which is not permissible under law.
The case arose from a writ petition filed by Gstaad Hotels Pvt. Ltd. challenging a reassessment notice issued under Section 148 of the Income Tax Act for Assessment Year 2014–15, along with subsequent orders rejecting its objections.
The petitioner had constructed a hotel and claimed a deduction of over ₹639 crore under Section 35AD of the Income Tax Act, which allows deductions for specified businesses. During the original scrutiny assessment under Section 143(3), the Assessing Officer had examined the claim in detail and expressly allowed the deduction.
However, nearly four years later—and just before the expiry of six years—the Revenue issued a notice seeking to reopen the assessment. The basis of reopening was that a portion of the deduction, amounting to approximately ₹293 crore relating to pre-operative expenses, was allegedly revenue in nature and should not have been allowed under Section 35AD, but instead under Section 72 with limited carry-forward benefits.
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The petitioner contended that the reassessment was invalid on multiple grounds: All material facts were fully and truly disclosed during the original assessment proceedings. The issue of deduction under Section 35AD had already been examined and allowed. There was no new tangible material available with the Assessing Officer. The reopening was merely based on a change of opinion and an audit objection.
The petitioner argued that the reassessment sought only to reclassify the nature of loss—from indefinite carry forward under Section 35AD read with Section 73A to restricted carry forward under Section 72—without any actual escapement of income.
The department defended the reassessment, stating that the claim involved incorrect classification of expenditure and resulted in excess carry-forward of losses. It was also admitted that the reopening was triggered by an audit objection raised by the revenue audit party.
The Court emphasized that since the reassessment was initiated beyond four years from the end of the relevant assessment year, the first proviso to Section 147 would apply. Under this proviso, reassessment is allowed only if there is a failure by the assessee to fully and truly disclose material facts.
In the present case, the Court found no such failure. It noted that the reasons recorded by the Assessing Officer contained only a bald assertion of non-disclosure without specifying any actual lapse on the part of the assessee.
The Court reiterated that such vague allegations cannot justify reopening of a concluded assessment, especially when the issue had already been examined during the original proceedings.
Holding the reassessment proceedings to be legally unsustainable, the Court quashed the notice issued under Section 148 dated March 30, 2021 and orders rejecting objections dated February 9 and February 18, 2022.
Case Details
Case Title: GSTAAD Hotels Pvt Ltd Versus Assistant Commissioner of Income Tax, Circle 2(1),(1), Mumbai
Citation: JURISHOUR-998-HC-2026(Ker)Â
Case No.: Writ Petition No. 3613 Of 2022
Date: 24/04/2026
Counsel For Petitioner: Nishit Gandhi, Advocates
Counsel For Respondent: Abhishek Mishra, Advocates
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