Business > TEST BANK > DT QUESTION BANK BY CA AARISH KHAN MAY_NOV 2020 (All)

DT QUESTION BANK BY CA AARISH KHAN MAY_NOV 2020

Document Content and Description Below

PREFACE It gives me an immense pleasure to present this compilation of all questions of ICAI at one place for all my dearest students. I have done this just to ensure that a student’s time is n... ot wasted in searching questions from the ICAI study material for their practice. It has all the questions along with the solutions of study material relevant for May/ Nov 2020 attempt students of New Course as well as old course. The students do not have to refer any other material for their practice after doing this material. It is comprehensive in every sense. A student shall endeavour to read this booklet at least twice before exams to have firm grip on this mammoth subject. God Bless you all. CA Aarish Khan. INDEX CHAPTER NO CHAPTER NAME 1 Basic Concepts 2 Residence & Scope of Total Income 3 Income which do not Form Part of Total Income 4 Salaries 5 Income from House Property 6 Profits & Gains from Business or Profession 7 Capital Gains 8 Income from Other Sources 9 Clubbing 10 Set off & Carry Forward of Losses 11 Deductions under Chapter VIA 12 Assessment of Various Entities 13 Taxation of Trust 14 Tax Planning , Evasion & Avoidance 15 TDS, TCS & Advance Tax 16 Income Tax Authorities 17 Assessment procedure 18 Appeals & Revision 19 Settlement Commission 20 Penalties 21 Offences & Prosecution 22 Liability in Special Cases 23 Miscellaneous 24 Transfer Pricing 25 Non Resident Taxation 26 Double Taxation Relief 27 Advance Ruling 28 Equalisation Levy 29 Application & Interpretation of Tax Treaties 30 Fundamentals of Base Erosion & Profit Shifting 31 Overview of Model Tax Convention 32 Past Exam Revision Test Papers 33 Past New Course Suggested 34 Past Mock Test Paper CA AARISH KHAN.EXERCISE Question 1 Mr. Bhargava, a leading advocate on corporate law, decided to reduce his practice and to accept briefs only for paying his taxes and making charities with the fees received on such briefs. In a particular case, he agreed to appear to defend one company in the Supreme Court on the condition that he would be provided with Rs. 5 lacs for a public charitable trust that he would create. He defended the company and was paid the sum by the company. He created a trust of that sum by executing a trust deed. Decide whether the amount received by Mr. Bhargava is assessable in his hands as income from profession. Answer In the instant case, the trust was created by Mr. Bhargava himself out of his professional income. The client did not create the trust. The client did not impose any obligation in the nature of a trust binding on Mr. Bhargava. Thus, there is no diversion of the money to the trust before it became professional income in the hands of Mr. Bhargava. This case is one of application of professional income and not of diversion of income by overriding title. Therefore, the amount received by Mr. Bhargava is chargeable to tax under the head “Profits and gains of business or profession”. Question 2 XYZ Ltd. took over the running business of a sole-proprietor by a sale deed. As per the sale deed, XYZ Ltd. undertook to pay overriding charges of Rs. 15,000 p.a. to the wife of the sole-proprietor in addition to the sale consideration. The sale deed also specifically mentioned that the amount was charged on the net profits of XYZ Ltd., who had accepted that obligation as a condition of purchase of the going concern. Is the payment of overriding charges by XYZ Ltd. to the wife of the sole-proprietor in the nature of diversion of income or application of income? Discuss. Answer This issue came up for consideration before the Allahabad High Court in Jit & Pal X-Rays (P.) Ltd. v. CIT (2004) 267 ITR 370 (All). The Allahabad High Court observed that the overriding charge which had been created in favour of the wife of the sole-proprietor was an integral part of the sale deed by which the going concern was transferred to the assessee. The obligation, therefore, was attached to the very source of income i.e. the going concern transferred to the assessee by the sale deed. The sale deed also specifically mentioned that the amount in question was charged on the net profits of the assesseecompany and the assessee-company had accepted that obligation as a condition of purchase of the going concern. Hence, it is clearly a case of diversion of income by an overriding charge and not a mere application of income. Question 3 MKG Agency is a partnership firm consisting of father and three major sons. The partnership deed provided that after the death of father, the business shall be continued by the sons, subject to the condition that the firm shall pay 20% of the profits to the mother. Father died in March, 2019. In the previous year 2019-20, the reconstituted firm paid Rs. 1 lakh (equivalent to 20% of the profits) to the mother and claimed the amount as deduction from its income. Examine the correctness of the claim of the firm. Basic Concepts AJ Education NeXt 1.2 Answer The issue raised in the problem is based on the concept of diversion of income by overriding title, which is well recognised in the income-tax law. In the instant case, the amount of Rs. 1 lakh, being 20% of profits of the firm, paid to the mother gets diverted at source by the charge created in her favour as per the terms of the partnership deed. Such income does not reach the assessee-firm. Rather, such income stands diverted to the other person as such other person has a better title on such income than the title of the assessee. The firm might have received the said amount but it so received for and on behalf of the mother, who possesses the overriding title. Therefore, the amount paid to the mother should be excluded from the income of the firm. This view has been confirmed in CIT vs. Nariman B. Bharucha & Sons (1981) 130 ITR 863 (Bom). Question 4 Anand was the Karta of HUF. He died leaving behind his major son Prem, his widow, his grandmother and brother’s wife. Can the HUF retain its status as such or the surviving persons would become co-owners? Answer In the case of Gowli Buddanna v. CIT (1966) 60 ITR 293 (SC), the Supreme Court has made it clear that there need not be more than one male member to form a HUF as a taxable entity under the Income-tax Act, 1961. The expression “Hindu Undivided family” in the Act is used in the sense in which it is understood under the personal law of the Hindus. Under the Hindu system of law, a joint family may consist of a single male member and the widows of the deceased male members and the Income-tax Act, 1961 does not mandate that it should consist of at least two male members. Therefore, property of a joint Hindu family does not cease to belong to the family merely because the family is represented by a single co-parcener who possesses the right which an owner of property may posses. Therefore, the HUF would retain its status as such. Question 5 Mr. C borrowed on Hundi, a sum of Rs. 25,000 by way of bearer cheque on 11-09-2019 and repaid the same with interest amounting to Rs. 30,000 by account payee cheque on 12- 10-2019. The Assessing Officer (AO) wants to treat the amount borrowed as income during the previous year. Is the action of AO valid? Answer Section 69D provides that where any amount is borrowed on a hundi or any amount due thereon is repaid otherwise than by way of an account-payee cheque drawn on a bank, the amount so borrowed or repaid shall be deemed to be the income of the person borrowing or repaying the amount for the previous year in which the amount was so borrowed or repaid, as the case may be. In this case, Mr. C has borrowed Rs. 25,000 on Hundi by way of bearer cheque. Therefore, it shall be deemed to be income of Mr. C for the previous year 2019-20. Since the repayment of the same along with interest was made by way of account payee cheque, the same would not be hit by the provisions of section 69D. Therefore, the action of the Assessing Officer treating the amount borrowed as income during the previous year is valid in law. Basic Concepts AJ Education NeXt 1.3 Question 6 The Assessing Officer found, during the course of assessment of a firm, that it had paid rent in respect of its business premises amounting to Rs. 60,000, which was not debited in the books of account for the year ending 31.3.2020. The firm did not explain the source for payment of rent. The Assessing Officer proposes to make an addition of Rs. 60,000 in the hands of the firm for the assessment year 202-21. The firm claims that even if the addition is made, the sum of Rs. 60,000 should be allowed as deduction while computing its business income since it has been expended for purposes of its business. Examine the claim of the firm. Answer The claim of the firm for deduction of the sum of Rs. 60,000 in computing its business income is not tenable. The action of the Assessing Officer in making the addition of Rs. 60,000, being the payment of rent not debited in the books of account (for which the firm failed to explain the source of payment) is correct in law since the same is an unexplained expenditure under section 69C. The proviso to section 69C states that such unexplained expenditure, which is deemed to be the income of the assessee, shall not be allowed as a deduction under any head of income. Therefore, the claim of the firm is not tenable. ADDITIONAL ILLUSTRATIONS FOR PRACTICE: Illustration 1 Mr. X has a total income of Rs. 12,00,000 comprising of his salary income and interest on fixed deposit. Compute his tax liability. Solution Computation of Tax liability Tax liability = Rs. 1,12,500 + 30% of Rs. 2,00,000 = Rs. 1,72,500 Alternatively: Tax liability : First Rs. 2,50,000 - Nil Next Rs. 2,50,000 – Rs. 5,00,000 - @ 5% of Rs. 2,50,000 = Rs. 12,500 Next Rs. 5,00,000 – Rs. 10,00,000 - @ 20% of Rs. 5,00,000 = Rs. 1,00,000 Balance i.e. Rs. 12,00,000 minus Rs. 10,00,000 - @ 30% of Rs. 2,00,000 = Rs. 60,000 = Rs. 1,72,500 Illustration 2 Compute the tax liability of Mr. A (aged 42), having total income of Rs. 51 lakhs for the Assessment Year 2020-21. Assume that his total income comprises of “Salary income”, “Income under the head house property” and “Interest from Saving Bank Account”. [Show More]

Last updated: 1 year ago

Preview 1 out of 506 pages

Reviews( 0 )

$25.00

Add to cart

Instant download

Can't find what you want? Try our AI powered Search

OR

GET ASSIGNMENT HELP
65
0

Document information


Connected school, study & course


About the document


Uploaded On

Sep 18, 2022

Number of pages

506

Written in

Seller


seller-icon
Jackie09

Member since 2 years

21 Documents Sold


Additional information

This document has been written for:

Uploaded

Sep 18, 2022

Downloads

 0

Views

 65

Document Keyword Tags

Recommended For You


$25.00
What is Browsegrades

In Browsegrades, a student can earn by offering help to other student. Students can help other students with materials by upploading their notes and earn money.

We are here to help

We're available through e-mail, Twitter, Facebook, and live chat.
 FAQ
 Questions? Leave a message!

Follow us on
 Twitter

Copyright © Browsegrades · High quality services·