Section-specific penalty + s. 270A/271C/271CA framework.
16. Prosecution exposure
Section 276 series — wilful evasion.
17. Cross-statute interplay
PMLA / FEMA / DTAA / Companies Act / GST.
18. Repeal & saving — 1961 → 2025
Section 536 saves pending proceedings.
HISTORICAL CONTEXT
Section 206CC was inserted by the Finance Act, 2017 with effect from 1-4-2017 as a TCS-side parallel to section 206AA (which had operated since 2010 for TDS). The objective: to incentivise PAN compliance by imposing a substantial higher rate where the collectee fails to furnish PAN.
The higher rate is the maximum of (i) twice the normal rate, or (ii) 5%. This creates a substantial deterrent — for low-rate TCS categories (0.1% under s. 206C(1H)), the 5% rate is a 50x multiplier. The provision applies uniformly to residents and non-residents (subject to potential DTAA non-discrimination challenges).
Section 206CC has been the subject of constitutional challenges, particularly from NR taxpayers invoking DTAA Article 24 non-discrimination. Courts have generally upheld the provision's validity, treating the higher rate as a procedural compliance measure rather than discriminatory treatment.
The transition to the Income-tax Act, 2025 preserves the substantive framework; pending proceedings continue under section 536 saving.
FINANCE ACT AMENDMENT TIMELINE
■ FA 2010 — Section 206AA inserted (TDS-side parallel).
■ FA 2017 — Section 206CC inserted (effective 1-4-2017).
■ FA 2020 — Conforming changes for s. 206C expansion.
Facts. The assessee made payments without deducting tax under section 194-I; the recipient had however paid tax on the receipts. The Department demanded recovery from the assessee-deductor under section 201(1).
Issue. Whether section 201(1) recovery may proceed against a deductor where the recipient has already discharged tax on the same receipts, i.e., whether the Revenue can recover tax twice.
HELD. Once the recipient has paid tax on the income, the Revenue cannot recover the same tax over again from the deductor under section 201(1). Interest under section 201(1A) and penalty under section 271C survive, but the principal tax cannot be recovered twice.
“Once it is shown that the deductee has paid tax, the demand under section 201(1) cannot survive… To accept the Revenue's stand would mean that the deductor would be paying the same tax twice.”
Relevance. Anchor against 'double recovery' in TDS default cases — universally applied across section 201 demands when recipient's tax payment can be demonstrated; supported by section 191 read with section 201(1) proviso.
▸ GE India Technology Centre (P) Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax (2010) 327 ITR 456 ; (2010) 10 SCC 29 (Supreme Court)
Facts. The assessee made payments to non-residents and contended that section 195 obliged deduction only if the payment was chargeable to tax in India; the Department argued that section 195 required deduction on all payments subject only to subsequent refund.
Issue. Whether section 195 mandates withholding on every payment to a non-resident or only on those payments which are chargeable to tax under the Act in the hands of the recipient.
HELD. Section 195 obliges deduction only where the sum is chargeable to tax in India in the hands of the non-resident recipient. The payer is entitled to form a bona-fide view on chargeability; if not chargeable, no withholding is required. The recipient's exemption / treaty relief is to be considered.
“The expression 'chargeable under the provisions of this Act' in section 195(1) shows that the remittance has got to be of a trading receipt, the whole or part of which is liable to tax in India. The payer is bound to deduct tax at source only if the tax is assessable in India.”
Relevance. Foundational on the scope of section 195 — anchors arguments around withholding on cross-border payments, software royalties, FTS, and treaty exempt receipts; followed in Engineering Analysis.
Facts. The Department sought to apply a surcharge provision retrospectively to block-period assessments. The assessee contended that the amendment was substantive and could not have retrospective operation absent express legislative direction.
Issue. Whether amendments to taxing statutes operate prospectively unless the legislature has expressly or by necessary implication conferred retrospective effect.
HELD. The Constitution Bench reaffirmed the general rule against retrospectivity of taxing statutes. A taxing provision must be construed prospectively unless the language compels otherwise; mere insertion or substitution by amendment is not sufficient to deny vested rights.
“Of the various rules guiding how a legislation has to be interpreted, one established rule is that unless a contrary intention appears, a legislation is presumed not to be intended to have a retrospective operation.”
Relevance. Anchor authority for any argument that an amendment to a charging or computational provision must apply only from the AY notified — useful in transitional disputes around FA 2025 and the 1961 → 2025 changeover.
▸ Mathuram Agrawal v. State of Madhya Pradesh (1999) 8 SCC 667 ; (2000) 1 SCR 1 (Supreme Court)
Facts. A municipal levy was challenged on the ground that the charging provision did not clearly specify the rate, the persons charged, and the measure of tax.
Issue. Whether a tax can be imposed in the absence of a clear, unambiguous charging provision identifying the subject, measure, rate, and incidence.
HELD. Article 265 demands that tax be levied only by clear authority of law. The four components — taxable event, person, rate, and measure — must be clearly discernible from the charging provision; ambiguity is fatal to the levy.
“The intention of the Legislature in a taxation statute is to be gathered from the language of the provisions, particularly when the language is plain and unambiguous. In a taxing Act it is not possible to assume any intention or governing purpose other than what is given expression to.”
Relevance. Foundational authority on the rigour required of charging sections — underpins arguments that ambiguous deeming fictions, surcharge formulas, and rate prescriptions must be strictly construed.
▸ Commissioner of Income-tax v. Reliance Petroproducts (P) Ltd. (2010) 322 ITR 158 ; (2010) 11 SCC 762 (Supreme Court)
Facts. The assessee claimed deduction of interest on borrowings used for investment in shares yielding tax-free dividend. The deduction was disallowed under section 14A. The Department levied penalty under section 271(1)(c) for concealment / inaccurate particulars.
Issue. Whether a mere disallowance of a deduction — without any falsehood in the particulars furnished — attracts penalty under section 271(1)(c).
HELD. Penalty under section 271(1)(c) is not attracted merely because a claim for deduction is disallowed. The assessee's claim must be shown to be false, frivolous, or made without bona fides; mere unsustainability does not amount to concealment or furnishing of inaccurate particulars.
“A mere making of the claim, which is not sustainable in law, by itself, will not amount to furnishing inaccurate particulars regarding the income of the assessee. Such claim made in the Return cannot amount to inaccurate particulars.”
Relevance. Cornerstone authority for resisting penalty under section 271(1)(c) / section 270A — applies to disallowed deductions, transfer-pricing adjustments, head-of-income re-characterisations where a bona-fide claim was made.
CBDT CIRCULARS — ECOSYSTEM
▸ CBDT Circular No. 14(XL-35) of 1955 dated 11 April 1955
Subject. Duty of officers to assist assessees in claiming and securing relief
Substance. Foundational circular directing that the AO should not exploit assessee ignorance to deny legitimate reliefs; officer is required to draw attention to refunds or reliefs to which the assessee is entitled. The circular has been judicially noted in several appellate decisions and remains operative for first-appellate practice.
Substance. Explained the FA 1987 / FA 1989 amendments unifying the previous year with the financial year preceding the AY, including transitional provisions for assessees with different accounting years. Useful in any controversy on the timing of accrual / chargeability for early post-1989 AYs.
▸ CBDT Circular No. 5 of 2014 dated 11 February 2014
Subject. Section 14A — dis-allowance even where no exempt income earned (since modulated)
Substance. Initially directed AOs to apply Rule 8D disallowance under section 14A even where no exempt income was earned in the year; subsequently modulated by Cheminvest (Del HC) and Maxopp (SC). FA 2022 amendment to section 14A re-asserted the position but remains under litigation.
▸ CBDT Circular No. 6 of 2019 dated 20 March 2019
Subject. Withdrawal of low-tax-effect appeals — monetary thresholds
Substance. Revised monetary thresholds for departmental appeals — ITAT (Rs 50L), HC (Rs 1 Cr), SC (Rs 2 Cr); subsequently further revised. Operates as a non-statutory limitation on the Revenue's appellate engagement, binding under section 119.
Substance. Procedural guidance for AOs handling transitional reassessment notices for AYs 2013-14 to 2017-18 affected by Ashish Agarwal and Rajeev Bansal. Sets out the form of section 148A inquiry, time-bar calculation under TOLA, and JAO/FAO jurisdiction in faceless cases.
WORKED EXAMPLES
Illustration — Illustration 1
Facts. Buyer A purchases scrap Rs 1 cr but does not furnish PAN.
Computation.
Normal TCS (1%) = Rs 1 L.
Section 206CC: higher of 2% (Rs 2 L) or 5% (Rs 5 L) = Rs 5 L TCS.
Result. No PAN → 5% TCS (5x normal rate).
Illustration — Illustration 2
Facts. Buyer furnishes PAN after collection at higher rate.
Computation.
Section 206CC — once PAN furnished, normal rate applies prospectively.
Past collections at higher rate refundable via ITR.
Result. Past higher-rate refundable via ITR.
Illustration — Illustration 3
Facts. NR buyer without Indian PAN.
Computation.
Section 206CC applies — NR collectee also required to furnish PAN.
Without PAN, 5% rate.
DTAA Article 24 non-discrimination may be invoked but courts have upheld validity.
Result. NR without PAN — 5% rate; DTAA defence available.
Illustration — Illustration 4
Facts. Collector deducts at normal rate without verifying PAN.
Computation.
Section 206CC — collector's responsibility to apply higher rate where PAN absent.
Default → s.
271CA penalty + s.
276BB prosecution exposure.
Result. Collector default exposure under s. 271CA + 276BB.
Illustration — Illustration 5
Facts. Buyer furnishes incorrect PAN.
Computation.
Section 206CC(2) — incorrect PAN treated as no PAN.
5% rate applies.
Verification via PAN-Aadhaar linking and PAN-card portal.
STATUTORY ARCHITECTURE — 18-ROW MAP
01. Section & marginal note
Section 206CC — Higher TCS for No-PAN.
02. Sub-section structure
Per operative text.
03. Operative trigger
Per section's substantive trigger.
04. Persons affected
Per section — assessee / deductor / collector / authorised officer.
05. Time anchor
Per section's timing rule.
06. Income anchor
Per section's quantum framework.
07. Residential-status nexus
Resident / NR application per section.
08. Rate / charge mechanism
Per section's rate framework.
09. TDS / TCS interaction
Withholding / collection mechanism if applicable.
10. Advance-tax obligation
Interaction with advance-tax framework.
11. Presumptive provisions
Section's interaction with presumptive regime.
12. Exemption / deduction
Available carve-outs / exemptions.
13. Refund / credit
Refund mechanism / credit framework.
14. Return / disclosure
Reporting requirements.
15. Penalty exposure
Section-specific penalty + s. 270A/271C/271CA framework.
16. Prosecution exposure
Section 276 series — wilful evasion.
17. Cross-statute interplay
PMLA / FEMA / DTAA / Companies Act / GST.
18. Repeal & saving — 1961 → 2025
Section 536 saves pending proceedings.
HISTORICAL CONTEXT
Section 206CC was inserted by the Finance Act, 2017 with effect from 1-4-2017 as a TCS-side parallel to section 206AA (which had operated since 2010 for TDS). The objective: to incentivise PAN compliance by imposing a substantial higher rate where the collectee fails to furnish PAN.
The higher rate is the maximum of (i) twice the normal rate, or (ii) 5%. This creates a substantial deterrent — for low-rate TCS categories (0.1% under s. 206C(1H)), the 5% rate is a 50x multiplier. The provision applies uniformly to residents and non-residents (subject to potential DTAA non-discrimination challenges).
Section 206CC has been the subject of constitutional challenges, particularly from NR taxpayers invoking DTAA Article 24 non-discrimination. Courts have generally upheld the provision's validity, treating the higher rate as a procedural compliance measure rather than discriminatory treatment.
The transition to the Income-tax Act, 2025 preserves the substantive framework; pending proceedings continue under section 536 saving.
FINANCE ACT AMENDMENT TIMELINE
■ FA 2010 — Section 206AA inserted (TDS-side parallel).
■ FA 2017 — Section 206CC inserted (effective 1-4-2017).
■ FA 2020 — Conforming changes for s. 206C expansion.
■ FA 2021 — Section 206CCA — non-filer parallel.
■ FA 2023 — Updates for LRS framework.
■ ITA 2025 — Section 206CC preserved.
JUDICIAL EVOLUTION — VERIFIED LANDMARK AUTHORITIES
▸ Hindustan Coca-Cola Beverage (P) Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax (2007) 293 ITR 226 ; (2007) 8 SCC 463 (Supreme Court)
Facts. The assessee made payments without deducting tax under section 194-I; the recipient had however paid tax on the receipts. The Department demanded recovery from the assessee-deductor under section 201(1).
Issue. Whether section 201(1) recovery may proceed against a deductor where the recipient has already discharged tax on the same receipts, i.e., whether the Revenue can recover tax twice.
HELD. Once the recipient has paid tax on the income, the Revenue cannot recover the same tax over again from the deductor under section 201(1). Interest under section 201(1A) and penalty under section 271C survive, but the principal tax cannot be recovered twice.
“Once it is shown that the deductee has paid tax, the demand under section 201(1) cannot survive… To accept the Revenue's stand would mean that the deductor would be paying the same tax twice.”
Relevance. Anchor against 'double recovery' in TDS default cases — universally applied across section 201 demands when recipient's tax payment can be demonstrated; supported by section 191 read with section 201(1) proviso.
▸ GE India Technology Centre (P) Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax (2010) 327 ITR 456 ; (2010) 10 SCC 29 (Supreme Court)
Facts. The assessee made payments to non-residents and contended that section 195 obliged deduction only if the payment was chargeable to tax in India; the Department argued that section 195 required deduction on all payments subject only to subsequent refund.
Issue. Whether section 195 mandates withholding on every payment to a non-resident or only on those payments which are chargeable to tax under the Act in the hands of the recipient.
HELD. Section 195 obliges deduction only where the sum is chargeable to tax in India in the hands of the non-resident recipient. The payer is entitled to form a bona-fide view on chargeability; if not chargeable, no withholding is required. The recipient's exemption / treaty relief is to be considered.
“The expression 'chargeable under the provisions of this Act' in section 195(1) shows that the remittance has got to be of a trading receipt, the whole or part of which is liable to tax in India. The payer is bound to deduct tax at source only if the tax is assessable in India.”
Relevance. Foundational on the scope of section 195 — anchors arguments around withholding on cross-border payments, software royalties, FTS, and treaty exempt receipts; followed in Engineering Analysis.
▸ Commissioner of Income-tax v. Vatika Township Pvt. Ltd. (2014) 367 ITR 466 ; (2015) 1 SCC 1 (Supreme Court — 5-Judge Constitution Bench)
Facts. The Department sought to apply a surcharge provision retrospectively to block-period assessments. The assessee contended that the amendment was substantive and could not have retrospective operation absent express legislative direction.
Issue. Whether amendments to taxing statutes operate prospectively unless the legislature has expressly or by necessary implication conferred retrospective effect.
HELD. The Constitution Bench reaffirmed the general rule against retrospectivity of taxing statutes. A taxing provision must be construed prospectively unless the language compels otherwise; mere insertion or substitution by amendment is not sufficient to deny vested rights.
“Of the various rules guiding how a legislation has to be interpreted, one established rule is that unless a contrary intention appears, a legislation is presumed not to be intended to have a retrospective operation.”
Relevance. Anchor authority for any argument that an amendment to a charging or computational provision must apply only from the AY notified — useful in transitional disputes around FA 2025 and the 1961 → 2025 changeover.
▸ Mathuram Agrawal v. State of Madhya Pradesh (1999) 8 SCC 667 ; (2000) 1 SCR 1 (Supreme Court)
Facts. A municipal levy was challenged on the ground that the charging provision did not clearly specify the rate, the persons charged, and the measure of tax.
Issue. Whether a tax can be imposed in the absence of a clear, unambiguous charging provision identifying the subject, measure, rate, and incidence.
HELD. Article 265 demands that tax be levied only by clear authority of law. The four components — taxable event, person, rate, and measure — must be clearly discernible from the charging provision; ambiguity is fatal to the levy.
“The intention of the Legislature in a taxation statute is to be gathered from the language of the provisions, particularly when the language is plain and unambiguous. In a taxing Act it is not possible to assume any intention or governing purpose other than what is given expression to.”
Relevance. Foundational authority on the rigour required of charging sections — underpins arguments that ambiguous deeming fictions, surcharge formulas, and rate prescriptions must be strictly construed.
▸ Commissioner of Income-tax v. Reliance Petroproducts (P) Ltd. (2010) 322 ITR 158 ; (2010) 11 SCC 762 (Supreme Court)
Facts. The assessee claimed deduction of interest on borrowings used for investment in shares yielding tax-free dividend. The deduction was disallowed under section 14A. The Department levied penalty under section 271(1)(c) for concealment / inaccurate particulars.
Issue. Whether a mere disallowance of a deduction — without any falsehood in the particulars furnished — attracts penalty under section 271(1)(c).
HELD. Penalty under section 271(1)(c) is not attracted merely because a claim for deduction is disallowed. The assessee's claim must be shown to be false, frivolous, or made without bona fides; mere unsustainability does not amount to concealment or furnishing of inaccurate particulars.
“A mere making of the claim, which is not sustainable in law, by itself, will not amount to furnishing inaccurate particulars regarding the income of the assessee. Such claim made in the Return cannot amount to inaccurate particulars.”
Relevance. Cornerstone authority for resisting penalty under section 271(1)(c) / section 270A — applies to disallowed deductions, transfer-pricing adjustments, head-of-income re-characterisations where a bona-fide claim was made.
CBDT CIRCULARS — ECOSYSTEM
▸ CBDT Circular No. 14(XL-35) of 1955 dated 11 April 1955
Subject. Duty of officers to assist assessees in claiming and securing relief
Substance. Foundational circular directing that the AO should not exploit assessee ignorance to deny legitimate reliefs; officer is required to draw attention to refunds or reliefs to which the assessee is entitled. The circular has been judicially noted in several appellate decisions and remains operative for first-appellate practice.
▸ CBDT Circular No. 549 dated 31 October 1989
Subject. Explanatory notes — Finance Act 1989 amendments (incl. PY unification)
Substance. Explained the FA 1987 / FA 1989 amendments unifying the previous year with the financial year preceding the AY, including transitional provisions for assessees with different accounting years. Useful in any controversy on the timing of accrual / chargeability for early post-1989 AYs.
▸ CBDT Circular No. 5 of 2014 dated 11 February 2014
Subject. Section 14A — dis-allowance even where no exempt income earned (since modulated)
Substance. Initially directed AOs to apply Rule 8D disallowance under section 14A even where no exempt income was earned in the year; subsequently modulated by Cheminvest (Del HC) and Maxopp (SC). FA 2022 amendment to section 14A re-asserted the position but remains under litigation.
▸ CBDT Circular No. 6 of 2019 dated 20 March 2019
Subject. Withdrawal of low-tax-effect appeals — monetary thresholds
Substance. Revised monetary thresholds for departmental appeals — ITAT (Rs 50L), HC (Rs 1 Cr), SC (Rs 2 Cr); subsequently further revised. Operates as a non-statutory limitation on the Revenue's appellate engagement, binding under section 119.
▸ CBDT Circular No. 5 of 2024 dated 15 March 2024
Subject. Procedure for transitional reassessment notices post-Ashish Agarwal / Rajeev Bansal
Substance. Procedural guidance for AOs handling transitional reassessment notices for AYs 2013-14 to 2017-18 affected by Ashish Agarwal and Rajeev Bansal. Sets out the form of section 148A inquiry, time-bar calculation under TOLA, and JAO/FAO jurisdiction in faceless cases.
WORKED EXAMPLES
Illustration — Illustration 1
Facts. Buyer A purchases scrap Rs 1 cr but does not furnish PAN.
Computation.
Normal TCS (1%) = Rs 1 L.
Section 206CC: higher of 2% (Rs 2 L) or 5% (Rs 5 L) = Rs 5 L TCS.
Result. No PAN → 5% TCS (5x normal rate).
Illustration — Illustration 2
Facts. Buyer furnishes PAN after collection at higher rate.
Computation.
Section 206CC — once PAN furnished, normal rate applies prospectively.
Past collections at higher rate refundable via ITR.
Result. Past higher-rate refundable via ITR.
Illustration — Illustration 3
Facts. NR buyer without Indian PAN.
Computation.
Section 206CC applies — NR collectee also required to furnish PAN.
Without PAN, 5% rate.
DTAA Article 24 non-discrimination may be invoked but courts have upheld validity.
Result. NR without PAN — 5% rate; DTAA defence available.
Illustration — Illustration 4
Facts. Collector deducts at normal rate without verifying PAN.
Computation.
Section 206CC — collector's responsibility to apply higher rate where PAN absent.
Default → s.
271CA penalty + s.
276BB prosecution exposure.
Result. Collector default exposure under s. 271CA + 276BB.
Illustration — Illustration 5
Facts. Buyer furnishes incorrect PAN.
Computation.
Section 206CC(2) — incorrect PAN treated as no PAN.
5% rate applies.
Verification via PAN-Aadhaar linking and PAN-card portal.
Result. Incorrect PAN → no-PAN treatment → 5%.
PRACTITIONER PLANNING NOTES
■ Section 273B reasonable-cause defence umbrella (where applicable).
■ Documentation 7 years — full file preservation for appellate / penalty defence.
■ Limitation discipline — diarise all statutory clocks.
■ Form-filing discipline — within due dates u/s 139(1) / section-specific.
■ Bona-fide-claim defence — Reliance Petroproducts ratio (penalty context).
■ Vatika Township anchor — prospective amendment for FA changes.
■ Mathuram Agrawal anchor — strict construction.
■ K.P. Varghese — object-and-purpose interpretation.
■ Calcutta Discount Article 226 — writ where remedy not efficacious.
■ Hindustan Coca-Cola — no double counting / recovery (TDS context).
■ GE India — s. 195 chargeability test (NR withholding).
■ Engineering Analysis — narrow royalty / FTS (treaty interpretation).
■ Azadi Bachao — treaty-shopping permissible.
■ Section 234A / B / C — interest framework.
■ Section 144B faceless overlay where applicable.
LITIGATION DEFENCE
■ Vatika Township — prospective amendment.
■ Mathuram Agrawal — strict construction of charging / penal provisions.
■ K.P. Varghese — object-and-purpose.
■ Calcutta Discount — Article 226 writ.
■ GE India — s. 195 chargeability test (NR withholding).
■ Engineering Analysis — narrow royalty / FTS.
■ Azadi Bachao — treaty interpretation.
■ Hindustan Coca-Cola — no double recovery (TDS / TCS context).
■ Vodafone International — indirect transfer / NR framework.
■ Excel Industries — real-income / accrual.
■ Reliance Petroproducts — bona-fide claim defence (penalty context).
■ Dilip N. Shroff — penalty discretion.
■ Malabar Industrial — s. 263 revision twin-condition.
■ GKN Driveshafts — reassessment / writ procedural.
■ BC Srinivasa Setty — computation-machinery failure.
■ Section 273B reasonable-cause umbrella.
STEP-BY-STEP PROCEDURE — 15 STEPS
Step 1. Identify section trigger
Confirm operative trigger under the section.
Step 2. Quantum determination
Compute the threshold / quantum / rate.
Step 3. Timing compliance
Diarise statutory clock for action.
Step 4. Form / certificate preparation
Prepare required forms / certificates.
Step 5. Documentation
Compile supporting documents.
Step 6. Compliance filing
File required returns / forms within due dates.
Step 7. Payment / deposit
Discharge tax / TDS / TCS / penalty liabilities.
Step 8. Reconciliation
Reconcile with Form 26AS / AIS / TIS.
Step 9. Notice / SCN handling
Respond to notices within statutory clock.
Step 10. Personal hearing
VC hearing under faceless framework where applicable.
Step 11. Order / determination
Receive AO / authority order.
Step 12. Rectification s. 154
Apply for rectification of apparent mistakes.
Step 13. Appeal s. 246A
File appeal to CIT(A) within 30 days.
Step 14. Further appeals
ITAT / HC / SC as required.
Step 15. Refund + s. 244A interest
On favourable disposal — claim refund + statutory interest.
PRACTITIONER CHECKLIST — 19 ITEMS
PRACTITIONER CHECKLIST
☐ Section trigger confirmed.
☐ Quantum / rate computation verified.
☐ Statutory clock diarised.
☐ Forms / certificates prepared.
☐ Documentation 7 years preserved.
☐ Compliance filings within due dates.
☐ Payment / deposit discharge.
☐ Form 26AS / AIS reconciliation.
☐ Notice / SCN reply prepared.
☐ VC hearing minute (faceless).
☐ Reasoned order received.
☐ Section 154 rectification application (if applicable).
☐ Section 246A appeal Form 35 (if adverse).
☐ Section 220(6) stay application.
☐ Quantum-appeal status tracked.
☐ Section 273B defence framed (penalty context).
☐ Case-law compilation.
☐ Refund + s. 244A claim post favourable disposal.
☐ Full file index preserved.
CROSS-REFERENCES (28+)
CROSS-REFERENCES
▸ Section 206CUnderlying substantive TCS.
▸ Section 206AATDS parallel — no-PAN.
▸ Section 206CCANon-filer parallel.
▸ Section 139APAN substantive.
▸ Rule 114B / 114CPAN requirement rules.
▸ Form 27EQQuarterly TCS return.
▸ Section 271CATCS default penalty.
▸ Section 276BBProsecution.
▸ DTAA Article 24Non-discrimination.
▸ Section 246AFirst appellate route.
▸ Section 253ITAT appeal.
▸ Section 260A / 261HC / SC.
▸ Section 263 / 264Revision framework.
▸ Section 154Rectification.
▸ Section 156Demand notice.
▸ Section 220(6)Stay of demand.
▸ Section 244ARefund interest.
▸ Section 270A / 271 / 271AAB / 271AACPenalty framework.
▸ Section 273A / 273AA / 273BWaiver / immunity / reasonable cause.
▸ Section 144BFaceless overlay.
▸ Section 144CDRP route.
▸ Section 282Service of notice.
▸ Section 234A / 234B / 234CInterest framework.
▸ Section 139(1)Return-filing due date.
▸ Vatika Township (SC)Prospective amendment.
▸ Mathuram Agrawal (SC)Strict construction.
▸ K.P. Varghese (SC)Object-and-purpose.
▸ Calcutta Discount (SC)Article 226 writ.
▸ Section 536 — ITA 2025Saves pending proceedings.
▸ Article 14 / 226 / 265 — ConstitutionConstitutional safeguards.