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Chennai North · Ambattur Division · VGN Brent Park Mogappair IT Notice Reply

IT Notice Reply · VGN Brent Park Mogappair premium gated residential township Pocket

IT Notice Reply for residential units around MMDA Colony, VGN Brent Park Mogappair — on fixed, transparent fees

VGN Brent Park Mogappair residential and retail units around VGN Brent Park with WhatsApp document intake and same-day filed-acknowledgement delivery. Call 9566-068-468.

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Quick Answer

What is Section 142(1) and what powers does it grant in VGN Brent Park Mogappair, Chennai?

Section 142(1) empowers the Assessing Officer to (i) call for a return where one has not been filed, (ii) require production of accounts, documents and information, including a statement of assets and liabilities, even those not appearing in the books. Non-compliance attracts best-judgment assessment under Section 144 and penalty of ₹10,000 per default under Section 272A(1)(d).

Transparent Pricing

IT Notice Reply in VGN Brent Park Mogappair — Plans & Pricing

Fixed fees · Zero hidden charges · Call 9566-068-468 for a custom quote.

MonthlyAnnualSave 2 Months
Single notice
Standard
Written reply + documentation
₹5,000/per notice

  • Notice Analysis 143(1) 148 131 etc.
  • AIS / 26AS Reconciliation
  • Written Reply with Supporting Documents
  • CPC Intimation Response 143(1)
  • Scrutiny Notice Reply 143(2)
  • Reassessment Notice 148 / 148A
  • Personal Hearing Attendance
  • Penalty Notice Reply Section 271
  • Demand Stay Application
  • Appeal to CIT(A) Form 35
  • Survey / Search Assistance Sec 133A
Most Popular ⭐
Professional
Reply + Followup + demand review
₹10,000/per notice

  • Notice Analysis 143(1) 148 131 etc.
  • AIS / 26AS Reconciliation
  • Written Reply with Supporting Documents
  • CPC Intimation Response 143(1)
  • Scrutiny Notice Reply 143(2)
  • Reassessment Notice 148 / 148A
  • Personal Hearing Attendance
  • Penalty Notice Reply Section 271
  • Demand Stay Application
  • Appeal to CIT(A) Form 35
  • Survey / Search Assistance Sec 133A
Assessment orders
Litigation
Full litigation support
₹15,000/per notice

  • Notice Analysis 143(1) 148 131 etc.
  • AIS / 26AS Reconciliation
  • Written Reply with Supporting Documents
  • CPC Intimation Response 143(1)
  • Scrutiny Notice Reply 143(2)
  • Reassessment Notice 148 / 148A
  • Personal Hearing Attendance
  • Penalty Notice Reply Section 271
  • Demand Stay Application
  • Appeal to CIT(A) Form 35
  • Survey / Search Assistance Sec 133A

Swipe to see all plans

Prices exclude GST. For enterprise pricing, call 9566-068-468.

Why FilingPro?

Why VGN Brent Park Mogappair Clients Choose FilingPro

Expert IT Notice Reply in VGN Brent Park Mogappair — qualified professionals, 15+ years experience, zero-penalty track record.

Section 270A Penalty Defence

Section 270A penalty levied at 200% (misreporting) is challenged for reclassification to 50% (under-reporting) where the addition is on a debatable issue — saving 75% of penalty. Section 270AA immunity in Form 68 is filed where conditions are satisfied.

Faceless Appeal Centre Representation

Section 246A appeal in Form 35 is filed within 30 days of demand notice and is routed through the National Faceless Appeal Centre. Rule 46A additional-evidence petitions are drafted with reasons; remand reports are responded to point by point.

Section 220(6) Stay of Demand

Stay of demand pending CIT(A) appeal is sought from the AO under Section 220(6) per CBDT OM dated 31-Jul-2017 — 20% deposit standard, lower deposit argued in high-pitched assessments, jurisdictional High Court covered issues, and genuine financial hardship cases.

DIN Authentication on Every Notice

Every notice received is first authenticated for DIN under CBDT Circular 19/2019 dated 14-Aug-2019 — communication without DIN is invalid and non est. Verified at incometax.gov.in under 'Authenticate Notice/Order' before any reply is drafted.

Section 154 Rectification Where Faster

Where the issue is a mistake apparent from record — wrong TDS credit, arithmetical error, missed Section 87A rebate, AIS mismatch — Section 154 rectification is filed online within the 4-year window for a faster outcome than appeal.

Section 270AA Immunity Application

Where the assessee accepts the addition, pays tax and interest, and chooses not to appeal, Form 68 application under Section 270AA is filed within 1 month — full immunity from Section 270A penalty and Section 276C / 276CC prosecution.

Key Benefits

What VGN Brent Park Mogappair Clients Get

Every IT Notice Reply engagement delivers measurable, guaranteed outcomes — expert professionals, on time, every time.

Reconciliation Schedule Annexed
A schedule comparing the return as filed, the entries appearing in the Annual Information Statement, the Tax Information Summary and Form 26AS is annexed. Each variance is either explained, contested through the feedback module, or surrendered with consequential payment.
Computation Sheet Reconstructed
A head-wise total income computation under the five heads enumerated in Section 14 is reconstructed from primary evidence — salary statement, rent receipt, business book extracts, capital-gain schedule, and the residual head — to ensure internal consistency before filing.
Reopening Tested Against Section 149
Where reassessment is at stake, the limitation regime under Section 149 is examined — three years for the normal case, ten years for the extended case where the alleged escapement, taking the shape of asset, expenditure or book entry, crosses the fifty-lakh threshold.
Sanction Validity Examined
The sanction of the specified authority under Section 151 is examined for compliance with rank and timing. A reopening proceeding founded on a defective sanction is a textbook ground of invalidity, available both in reply and in any subsequent writ remedy.
Penalty Exposure Mapped
Exposure under Section 270A is mapped at the reply stage itself — the under-reporting limb at fifty per cent and the misreporting limb at two hundred per cent of tax — with arguments structured to keep the matter, where defensible, within the lower limb.
Immunity Pathway Considered
The pathway under Section 270AA, by which immunity from penalty and prosecution may be sought through Form 68 within one month from the end of the month of receipt of the order, is evaluated and recommended where the conditions are objectively satisfied.
Comparison

Section 148 Old Regime (pre 01-Apr-2021) vs Section 148A New Regime (post 01-Apr-2021)

Why this matters here — In VGN Brent Park Mogappair, the business activity radiating outward from VGN Brent Park and nearby commercial pockets; with quick access via VGN Brent Park Bus Stop and feeder routes connecting VGN Brent Park Mogappair to the rest of Chennai.

AspectSection 148 Old Regime (pre 01-Apr-2021)Section 148A New Regime (post 01-Apr-2021)
Outer limitation windowFour years where return was processed and full disclosure was made, six years where escaped income was ₹1 lakh or more, sixteen years for foreign assets — governed by unamended Section 149Three years from the end of the relevant assessment year in normal cases, extendable to ten years where alleged escaped income represented by an asset is ₹50 lakh or more — substituted Section 149(1)(a) and (b)
Sanctioning authorityJoint Commissioner sanction for reopening within four years; Principal Commissioner or Chief Commissioner sanction for reopening beyond four years under unamended Section 151Principal Commissioner or Principal Director for reopening within three years; Principal Chief Commissioner or Director General where reopening is beyond three years — substituted Section 151
Treatment of survey-found materialSurvey material under Section 133A formed the basis of fresh assessment after recording reasons; legality often litigated on the question of whether mere survey statements supported 'reason to believe'Survey or search results expressly included as 'information' under Explanation 1 to Section 148; the deeming of escapement under Explanation 2 makes the issuance machinery cleaner but the assessee retains the Section 148A reply opportunity
Notice format and validity testNotice valid if recorded reasons existed on file and sanction was obtained; service had to be effected within limitation; subjective satisfaction was open to challenge but not the form of the noticeNotice valid only if preceded by a Section 148A(d) order; the order itself must consider the assessee's reply and record the basis for deeming the case fit for reopening — non-speaking orders are vulnerable on Kranti Associates principles
Bridging period treatmentOld regime ceased to operate on the substitution date; notices issued between 01-Apr-2021 and 30-Jun-2021 under the old regime were procedurally defective from inceptionSupreme Court in Union of India v Ashish Agarwal (Civil Appeal 3005/2022) deemed those transitional notices to be Section 148A(b) show-cause notices, salvaging the proceedings by giving thirty days for material and reply
Limitation overlay with TOLALimitation under unamended Section 149 was extended by the Taxation and Other Laws Relaxation Act 2020 for notices falling between 20-Mar-2020 and 31-Mar-2021, with successive CBDT notificationsSupreme Court in Union of India v Rajeev Bansal (Civil Appeal 8629/2024) clarified that TOLA extensions tail into the new regime for assessment years 2013-14 to 2017-18 and laid down a stage-by-stage limitation chart
Assessee's reply windowStandard thirty-day return-filing window under the notice after the reassessment proceeding had been initiated; merit objections were filed during the reassessment itselfSeven to thirty-day show-cause reply window before the Section 148 notice is even issued; the assessee has an early opportunity to deflect the reopening at the threshold itself
Available remedies post issuanceArticle 226 writ before the jurisdictional High Court attacking the reasons and sanction; pursue reassessment to assessment order followed by Section 246A appeal to CIT(A) and then ITAT under Section 253Article 226 writ challenge to the Section 148A(d) order itself before any Section 148 notice is issued; alternatively, allow Section 148 to issue and proceed to assessment-stage remedies including CIT(A) and ITAT
Penalty exposure on reopened additionsConcealment penalty under the then-Section 271(1)(c) at 100 to 300 per cent of tax sought to be evaded, with Explanation deeming provisions and the burden-of-proof issues addressed in K.P. Madhusudhanan v CITUnder-reporting penalty under Section 270A at fifty per cent of tax payable on under-reported income, escalating to two hundred per cent where misreporting is established; immunity available under Section 270AA on prescribed conditions
Governing statutory architectureReassessment driven by 'reason to believe' under unamended Section 147, with Section 148 notice issued after recording reasons and obtaining sanction under the pre-substitution Section 151Reassessment can be triggered only after a mandatory enquiry-with-show-cause under the substituted Section 148A, culminating in a speaking order under clause (d) before any Section 148 notice may be issued
Threshold standard for reopening'Reason to believe' that income chargeable to tax has escaped assessment — a subjective satisfaction test interpreted by GKN Driveshafts and a long line of High Court precedent'Information suggesting that income chargeable to tax has escaped assessment' as defined in Explanation 1 to Section 148, narrowing the scope to risk-management strategy flags, audit objections and prescribed survey/search material
Procedural pre-notice stepsNo statutory show-cause stage before issue of notice; assessee's procedural rights were judge-made — request reasons, file objections, await speaking order per GKN DriveshaftsFour sub-stages baked into the statute — clause (a) preliminary enquiry, clause (b) show-cause not less than seven days, clause (c) consider reply, clause (d) speaking order on whether reopening is fit
Documents Required

Documents for IT Notice Reply

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Notice copy with DIN — 143(1) / 143(2) / 142(1) / 148 / 148A / 245 / 154 (DIN mandatory under CBDT Circular 19/2019 dated 14-Aug-2019)
Filed ITR (ITR-V acknowledgement) and computation of total income for the AY
Form 26AS download for the relevant AY from TRACES / e-filing portal
AIS (Annual Information Statement) and TIS (Taxpayer Information Summary) PDF
Detailed computation working — head-wise income, deductions, exemptions, tax payable, TDS/TCS/Advance Tax
Supporting evidence — bank statements, capital gains workings, deduction proofs, audit report (Form 3CD/3CB), loan confirmations, investment proofs
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Statutory Deadlines

Compliance deadlines that matter

Miss any of these and the next consequence kicks in automatically.

Deadlines in this neighbourhood — In VGN Brent Park Mogappair, VGN Brent Park Mogappair businesses in the residential arm find that professional services from this area mostly fall under Section 194J 194C TDS on freelancers and personal-IT filings under ITR-1 to ITR-3; the cluster of residential, retail, real estate businesses that defines VGN Brent Park Mogappair's commercial fabric.

Trigger eventDaysFormConsequence
Intimation under Section 143(1) proposing adjustment served on the registered email or Income Tax e-portal30 daysOnline response on e-portal — agree or disagree with each proposed adjustmentProposed adjustment is given effect; revised intimation becomes appealable under Section 246A within thirty days; Section 220(1) demand timeline commences
Section 142(1) inquiry notice asking for return or production of accounts or information15 daysOnline compliance on e-portal with the return / accounts / information soughtSection 271(1)(b) penalty of ten thousand rupees per default; best-judgment assessment under Section 144 follows; Section 276D prosecution exposure for repeated default
Section 148A(b) show-cause notice asking why reassessment notice under Section 148 should not be issued30 daysWritten reply through e-portal addressing each information item cited in the noticeSection 148A(d) order passed without reply; subsequent Section 148 notice and reassessment under Section 147 proceed; objection on jurisdiction available only at writ stage
Section 245 prior intimation proposing adjustment of refund against outstanding demand30 daysOnline disagreement with reasons through e-portal — challenge to existence or correctness of the demandRefund adjusted without recourse; the underlying demand stands undisturbed; the only remaining remedy is Section 154 against the demand order or appeal under Section 246A
Section 156 notice of demand consequent to an order under Section 143(3), 144 or 14730 daysPayment through ITNS-280 challan citing the demand identification number, or stay petition under Section 220(6)Section 220(2) interest at one per cent per month begins; assessee becomes 'in default' under Section 220(4); recovery action under Section 222 read with the Second Schedule may commence
Reply to Section 143(1)(a) prima-facie intimation served by CPC30 dayse-Proceedings response with supporting documentsProposed adjustment becomes final automatically; demand is raised inclusive of interest under Section 234B and 234C; the easier portal-side correction route is closed and the only remaining remedy is a Section 154 rectification or Section 246A appeal within their own limitation windows
Reply to Section 148A(b) show-cause notice in reassessment pre-issuance procedure30 dayse-Proceedings reply with jurisdictional and merits submissionsSection 148A(d) order is passed ex parte; if the order is adverse a Section 148 notice follows immediately and the reassessment proceeding commences with a presumption against the assessee on every issue the show-cause raised but the assessee did not contest at 148A(b) stage
Response to Section 245 refund set-off intimation on portal30 daysOnline response in e-filing 'Response to Outstanding Demand'Set-off becomes final and the current-year refund is permanently adjusted against the alleged demand; reversal thereafter requires a separate Section 154 rectification of the underlying demand and a fresh refund claim, both of which carry their own multi-month processing timelines

Deadline pressure points we see in VGN Brent Park Mogappair: On the ground in VGN Brent Park Mogappair, supporting the working population of VGN Brent Park Mogappair and the immediate adjoining neighbourhoods; for VGN Brent Park Mogappair's premium business segment that values fixed-fee compliance with senior-practitioner involvement.

Forms Library

Forms used in this engagement

Forms most asked about here — In VGN Brent Park Mogappair, with most filings in this catchment being personal income-tax returns under ITR-1 to ITR-3 and one-off TDS reconciliations; supporting the working population of VGN Brent Park Mogappair and the immediate adjoining neighbourhoods.

Order u/s 148A(d)Order deciding fitness for Section 148 notice

Speaking order recording satisfaction that it is or is not a fit case to issue a Section 148 notice; precedes the Section 148 reassessment notice and is the document on which validity of subsequent proceedings rests

Within one month from end of month in which Section 148A(b) reply is received Jurisdictional Assessing Officer with approval of Specified Authority
Notice u/s 148Reassessment notice

Notice requiring the assessee to furnish a return of income for the relevant assessment year within the period specified in the notice, where the Assessing Officer has reason to believe income has escaped assessment

Within limitation under Section 149 — three years ordinary or ten years in escapement above ₹50 lakh cases Jurisdictional Assessing Officer / Faceless Assessment Unit
Notice u/s 154Rectification — proposed amendment of order

Communication of proposed amendment to an order or intimation where mistake apparent from record is noticed; the assessee is required to be heard before any amendment which has the effect of enhancing assessment or reducing refund is made

Within four years from end of financial year of original order Issuing income-tax authority — AO, CIT(A), or CPC
Notice u/s 245Prior intimation of set-off of refund against demand

Intimation proposing adjustment of refund determined as due against outstanding demand, mandated by the Hon'ble Delhi High Court ruling in Court On Its Own Motion v UoI; requires speaking order before adjustment

Thirty days for the assessee to respond before set-off is given effect Centralised Processing Centre / Jurisdictional AO
Notice u/s 156Notice of demand

Notice specifying the sum payable in consequence of any order under the Act — tax, interest, penalty, fine; the operative document for recovery; payable within thirty days under Section 220(1)

Served along with order giving rise to the demand Jurisdictional Assessing Officer / Faceless Assessment Centre
Form 35Appeal to Commissioner (Appeals)

Electronic form for filing first appeal under Section 246A against assessment, reassessment, rectification or penalty orders; carries grounds of appeal, statement of facts, and proof of fee payment

Within thirty days of service of order appealed against — Section 249(2)(b) Commissioner of Income-tax (Appeals) / National Faceless Appeal Centre
Form 36Appeal to Income Tax Appellate Tribunal

Memorandum of appeal to ITAT under Section 253 against orders of Commissioner (Appeals), Commissioner under Section 263 or 264, or penalty orders by Principal Commissioner; filed in triplicate with certified order copy

Within sixty days of communication of the order appealed against — Section 253(3) Income Tax Appellate Tribunal — Chennai Bench at Madras Mahal
Form 68Application for immunity from penalty under Section 270A

Application seeking immunity from imposition of penalty under Section 270A and prosecution under Section 276C and Section 276CC, conditional on payment of tax and interest as per order and non-filing of appeal

Within one month from end of month in which the order is received — Section 270AA(2) Jurisdictional Assessing Officer

IT Notice Reply in VGN Brent Park Mogappair, Chennai 600037

VGN Brent Park Mogappair (PIN 600037) falls under the Ambattur Division of the Chennai North, the jurisdiction that handles statutory matters for businesses at this PIN. Records we prepare for VGN Brent Park Mogappair carry the geo-zone 600xx tag and coordinates 13.0814, 80.1714, which map each submission back to this locality. Approvals, acknowledgements and queries for VGN Brent Park Mogappair businesses tie back to the Ambattur Division, so our IT Notice Reply cadence accounts for how that office works. Businesses registered in VGN Brent Park Mogappair share the Chennai North jurisdiction, and their statutory matters route through the same Ambattur Division each time.

Most commerce in VGN Brent Park Mogappair — invoices, expenses, purchases and statutory records — eventually surfaces in the IT Notice Reply working file we maintain for clients here. Each IT Notice Reply cycle for VGN Brent Park Mogappair reflects its commercial rhythm — invoices generated near MMDA Colony, expenses routed through the VGN Brent Park Bus Stop freight network. VGN Brent Park Mogappair reads as a premium gated residential township pocket with high commercial activity, anchored around MMDA Colony and fed by the VGN Brent Park Bus Stop corridor. Vendors and customers tied to the VGN Brent Park Bus Stop network show up across the invoice trail we reconcile for VGN Brent Park Mogappair IT Notice Reply clients.

The business mix in VGN Brent Park Mogappair centres on hospitality, and that sector carries its own IT Notice Reply quirks we plan for in advance. For a hospitality business in VGN Brent Park Mogappair, the IT Notice Reply scope is rarely generic; we tailor the checklist to how that sector actually transacts. The hospitality character of VGN Brent Park Mogappair commerce influences everything from invoice formats to the supporting documents a IT Notice Reply review needs. A hospitality operator in VGN Brent Park Mogappair gets a IT Notice Reply workflow shaped by sector norms, not a one-size-fits-all template.

Document intake for VGN Brent Park Mogappair clients runs over WhatsApp, so there is no office visit and no paper shuffle for a IT Notice Reply engagement. From the first IT Notice Reply cycle, a VGN Brent Park Mogappair engagement is set up to be audit-ready rather than reconstructed under pressure later. Turnaround for VGN Brent Park Mogappair IT Notice Reply is deterministic — fixed fee, a scoped timeline, and a same-business-day acknowledgement once filed. The qualified-review step on every VGN Brent Park Mogappair IT Notice Reply file is where errors get caught before they reach the portal.

From the same VGN Brent Park Mogappair team we also serve Jj Nagar Mogappair and other nearby localities without re-onboarding clients. Serving VGN Brent Park Mogappair and Jj Nagar Mogappair from one team keeps IT Notice Reply turnaround identical across the cluster. Coverage from VGN Brent Park Mogappair naturally extends to Jj Nagar Mogappair, so group entities across the area share one IT Notice Reply workflow. We treat VGN Brent Park Mogappair and Jj Nagar Mogappair as one catchment for IT Notice Reply, which keeps documentation and turnaround consistent.

Patterns we track for VGN Brent Park Mogappair include residential documentation gaps, timing mismatches, and the questions the Ambattur Division tends to raise. Each engagement in VGN Brent Park Mogappair adds to a record of what the Chennai North jurisdiction expects, sharpening the next IT Notice Reply file. The longer we serve VGN Brent Park Mogappair, the more precisely we predict where a IT Notice Reply file needs attention. Because we work repeatedly across VGN Brent Park Mogappair, we can benchmark a new client's IT Notice Reply position against the locality norm.

When a Mogappair business expands into VGN Brent Park Mogappair, we extend its IT Notice Reply setup to PIN 600037 without disruption. First-time IT Notice Reply for a VGN Brent Park Mogappair business is where getting the basics right saves years of cleanup later. For a new business incorporating in VGN Brent Park Mogappair or shifting its principal place of business here, IT Notice Reply setup is one of the first things to get right. New hospitality ventures in VGN Brent Park Mogappair lean on us to stand up IT Notice Reply correctly before the first deadline rather than after a notice.

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Expert Guide

IT Notice Reply in VGN Brent Park Mogappair — Complete Guide

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Key Facts — IT Notice Reply in VGN Brent Park Mogappair
Section 143(1)(a) prima facie adjustment reply within the 30-day window — 26AS / AIS / TIS reconciled and contested item by item
Section 143(2) scrutiny notice replied through Section 144B Faceless Assessment portal with Section 142(1) questionnaire submissions
Section 148A(b) show-cause replied within 7-30 days; Section 148A(d) speaking order analysed for sanction under Section 151 and time-limit defence
Section 148 reassessment defence applying Finance Act 2021 regime, ₹50 lakh threshold and Ashish Agarwal / Rajeev Bansal Supreme Court rulings
Section 245 set-off intimation responded within 21 days — outstanding demand contested with assessment order, challan or appeal pendency proof
Section 154 rectification filed online for arithmetical error, missed TDS credit, AIS mismatch — within 4 years from end of FY of order
Section 270A under-reporting and misreporting penalty contested; Section 270AA immunity application filed in Form 68 where conditions met
Section 250 CIT(A) appeals in Form 35 routed through Faceless Appeal Centre; Rule 46A additional evidence petitions drafted with reasons
Section 220(6) stay of demand petitions with 20% deposit; high-pitched assessment exception per CBDT OM 31-Jul-2017 invoked where applicable
Vivad se Vishwas 2024 settlement evaluated for pending appeals — disputed tax computed, declaration in Form 1, Form 3 evidence of payment filed
People Also Ask — IT Notice Reply in VGN Brent Park Mogappair
How long do I have to reply to a Section 143(1)(a) notice?
30 days from the date of intimation. The reply is filed online under e-Proceedings on incometax.gov.in. Silence is treated as acceptance of the proposed adjustment.
Is personal hearing allowed in faceless assessment?
Yes. Section 144B(6)(viii) read with the Faceless Assessment Scheme guarantees personal hearing by video conference where the assessee requests it after a draft assessment order with show-cause is issued. Denial vitiates the order on natural-justice grounds.
What is the time limit for Section 148 notice under the new regime?
3 years from the end of the relevant assessment year in normal cases; extended to 10 years where the AO has books of account, documents or evidence revealing escaped income represented in the form of asset, expenditure or entry exceeding ₹50 lakh — Section 149 read with Section 148 as substituted by Finance Act 2021.
Can refund be adjusted against demand without my knowledge?
No. Section 245 mandates prior intimation of 21 days before any set-off. Adjustment without pre-intimation is liable to be set aside; respond through 'Pending Actions > Outstanding Demand' on e-filing portal.
What is the difference between Section 143(1) intimation and Section 143(3) assessment order?
Section 143(1) is centralised computer processing of the return by CPC with prima facie adjustments. Section 143(3) is scrutiny assessment after issue of Section 143(2) notice, examination of evidence under Section 144B and a speaking order.
What if no DIN is mentioned on the notice?
Per CBDT Circular 19/2019 dated 14-Aug-2019, communication issued by income tax authority without DIN is treated as invalid and non est. Authenticate DIN at incometax.gov.in under 'Authenticate Notice/Order' before responding.
What is the difference between under-reporting and misreporting under Section 270A?

Under-reporting (sub-section 2) attracts fifty per cent of tax payable; misreporting (sub-section 9) — covering misrepresentation, false evidence, suppression and similar limbs — attracts two hundred per cent. The misreporting characterisation must be specifically established by the Assessing Officer.

Can immunity from Section 270A penalty be obtained?

Yes. Section 270AA grants immunity from Section 270A penalty and Section 276C prosecution where the assessee pays the tax with interest in full and undertakes not to appeal the addition. Form 68 must be filed within one month of the assessment order.

What is a Section 156 demand notice and when does it become payable?

Section 156 is the demand notice that follows any assessment, reassessment, penalty or interest order. The sum specified becomes payable within thirty days of service. Interest under Section 220(2) at one per cent per month begins from the expiry of that window.

How can the recovery action under a Section 156 demand be stayed?

By filing a Section 220(6) stay application before the Assessing Officer or Pr.CIT, typically supported by an appeal-pendency proof and a twenty per cent pre-deposit under CBDT Office Memorandum dated 29-Feb-2016. Madras HC writ jurisdiction is available where stay is denied unreasonably.

What appellate remedy is available against a Section 143(3) assessment order?

Section 246A provides a first appeal to the CIT(A) National Faceless Appeal Centre, to be filed in Form 35 within thirty days of service of the order. From the CIT(A) order, a second appeal lies to ITAT Chennai under Section 253 within sixty days.

When can a Section 154 rectification be filed and what is its scope?

Section 154 allows correction of a mistake apparent from the record within four years from the end of the financial year in which the order was passed. Scope is limited to errors evident on the face of the record — debatable issues fall outside.

What VGN Brent Park Mogappair clients want to know before signing: On the ground in VGN Brent Park Mogappair, around the VGN Brent Park catchment of VGN Brent Park Mogappair; with most filings in this catchment being personal income-tax returns under ITR-1 to ITR-3 and one-off TDS reconciliations.

Expert Guide

A complete walkthrough — Income Tax Notice Reply

Localised for VGN Brent Park Mogappair, Chennai — with most filings in this catchment being personal income-tax returns under ITR-1 to ITR-3 and one-off TDS reconciliations.

Reading this guide locally — In VGN Brent Park Mogappair, around the VGN Brent Park catchment of VGN Brent Park Mogappair; VGN Brent Park Mogappair businesses in the residential arm find that professional services from this area mostly fall under Section 194J 194C TDS on freelancers and personal-IT filings under ITR-1 to ITR-3.

What is an income tax notice and what triggers it

Service of notice and digital infrastructure

Section 282 read with Rule 127 governs the mode and place of service of any notice under the Act. Electronic service through the e-filing portal, the registered email, and (where applicable) the mobile number registered with the department is the primary mode under the Faceless framework, with physical service preserved as a backup. The Pradeep Goyal Supreme Court ruling on the Document Identification Number mandate, codified through CBDT Circular 19/2019, requires every notice and order to carry a DIN that can be verified on the e-filing portal — a notice without a verifiable DIN is treated as invalid except in narrow exceptional circumstances. The Anshul Jain Delhi HC ruling and the Tata Communications Bombay HC ruling have applied the DIN requirement strictly, with the assessee entitled to seek verification before responding substantively. Service through the e-Proceedings module triggers the compliance window from the date of dispatch, not the date of access by the assessee, making prompt portal review critical.

Reading the notice — what to identify first

Any reply strategy begins with a structured reading of the notice itself. The first identification is the section under which the notice has been issued, since this determines the procedural framework and the compliance window. The second is the assessment year to which the notice relates, since the limitation provisions under Section 149, Section 153, and Section 154 are computed by reference to assessment year boundaries. The third is the Document Identification Number, which must be verified through the e-filing portal. The fourth is the response deadline stated on the face of the notice. The fifth is the specific information sought or adjustment proposed, which determines the substantive content of the reply. The sixth is the jurisdiction — faceless under Section 144B versus territorial under Section 124 — since this affects appellate routing under Section 246A and writ jurisdiction under Article 226 before the appropriate High Court.

Statutory framework and notice typology

An income tax notice is a formal communication issued by the income tax authorities under the Income-tax Act 1961 conveying an action, requirement, or finding affecting the recipient's tax position. The Act provides for several distinct categories of notice — intimation under Section 143(1) after return processing, inquiry under Section 142(1) seeking information, scrutiny under Section 143(2) opening an assessment, reassessment under Section 148 read with the post-April-2021 Section 148A framework, rectification under Section 154, adjustment under Section 245, demand under Section 156, and recovery under Section 220 and Section 222. The Central Board of Direct Taxes prescribes the form, content, and procedural requirements for each notice through Rules under Section 295 and contemporaneous Circulars. The Faceless Assessment Scheme under Section 144B routes most communications through the National Faceless Assessment Centre, with notices served electronically through the e-filing portal and the registered email under Rule 127. Each notice carries distinct compliance windows, substantive content requirements, and consequence patterns, making accurate identification of the section under which the notice has been issued the first analytical step in any reply strategy.

Evidentiary documents in reply

Section 142 and the production-of-records obligation

Section 142(1) and Section 142(2) authorise the Assessing Officer to require the assessee to produce specified accounts and documents. The production obligation is both procedural and substantive — procedural in that non-compliance attracts Section 271(1)(b) penalty and may trigger Section 144 best-judgment assessment, and substantive in that the documents produced form the evidentiary basis for the assessment. The strategic decision on which documents to produce and which to withhold (citing privilege, irrelevance, or absence) requires careful calibration. Where documents are voluminous, the assessee can produce a summary with the full set retained for inspection, citing the proportionality principle. Where particular documents are not in the assessee's possession (held by third parties), the assessee articulates this with documented attempts to obtain the records.

Reconciliation working as primary evidentiary tool

The reconciliation working between the return position and the underlying records is often the primary evidentiary tool in any reply. Where the notice flags a mismatch between two figures (GSTR-3B versus ITR turnover, AIS versus declared receipts, Form 26AS TDS versus claim in Schedule TDS), the reconciliation working traces each entry in one figure to the corresponding entry in the other, with the unreconciled items separately identified and explained. The tabular format with row-wise entries indexed to the supporting documents provides the deciding authority with a clear evidentiary path. The reconciliation discipline forces the assessee's documentation to be tightened pre-emptively, with errors in the books or in third-party reports surfaced and addressed through AIS feedback, Rule 37BA correction requests, or revised returns under Section 139(5).

Retention periods and Rule 6F

Rule 6F of the Income-tax Rules 1962 prescribes the books of account and documents to be maintained by specified professionals with a retention period of six years from the end of the relevant assessment year. The corresponding obligation for other businesses is implied through Section 44AA read with Rule 6F mutatis mutandis. The retention period is significant for any reply to a notice issued in a back-year, since the documents required may be at the boundary of the retention window. The assessee's strategic priority is the digital retention of records well beyond the Rule 6F window — with cloud-based document archives, audit-firm working-paper retention, and PDF backups of the e-filing portal submissions providing redundancy. The Section 153 limitation framework and the Section 149 reassessment limitation together define the maximum back-year exposure, with documentation discipline calibrated accordingly.

Appeal options after the order

Section 246A first appeal to CIT(A)

Section 246A provides the first appeal route to the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) against orders specified in sub-section (1) including Section 143(3) assessment orders, Section 144 best-judgment orders, Section 147 reassessment orders, Section 154 rectification orders that enhance the assessment, and Section 271 penalty orders. The appeal is filed in Form 35 with the prescribed fee within thirty days of the order under Section 249(2), with the appellate authority empowered to condone delay under Section 249(3) on sufficient cause. The Faceless Appeal Scheme codified in Section 250 routes the appeal through the National Faceless Appeal Centre, with the assessment unit, verification unit, technical unit, and review unit operating in distinct separations. The appellate authority's powers include confirming, modifying, enhancing, or annulling the assessment, with enhancement subject to additional opportunity of hearing under Section 251.

Section 253 second appeal to ITAT

Section 253 provides the second appeal route to the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal against the order of the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) under Section 250. The appeal is filed in Form 36 with the prescribed fee within sixty days of the order under Section 253(3), with the Tribunal empowered to condone delay on sufficient cause. The Tribunal sits in benches across India with the Chennai bench having jurisdiction over Tamil Nadu, Puducherry, and certain other regions. The Tribunal's powers under Section 254 include passing such orders as it thinks fit, with the Section 254(2) rectification window for mistakes apparent from the record being four years from the date of the order. The Tribunal's order is final on facts but subject to further appeal on substantial questions of law under Section 260A to the High Court. The Chennai bench's recent jurisprudence including the Tapas Dutta and Pradeep Goyal application has been influential.

Section 260A appeal to High Court

Section 260A provides for an appeal to the High Court against the order of the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal on a substantial question of law. The appeal is filed by the aggrieved party (either the assessee or the revenue) within one hundred twenty days of the receipt of the Tribunal order, with the High Court empowered to formulate the substantial question of law at the admission stage. The substantial-question-of-law threshold requires a question of general public importance or directly affecting the decision in the case, with mere disagreement on facts being outside the scope. The Madras High Court has jurisdiction over appeals from the Chennai bench of the Tribunal in respect of Tamil Nadu, Puducherry, and certain other assessees. The decision of the High Court is subject to further appeal to the Supreme Court under Section 261 on a certificate of fitness or under Article 136 of the Constitution.

Section 143(1) intimation framework

Escalation pathways from Section 143(1)

Where the Section 143(1) intimation produces an adjustment that the assessee disputes substantively, three escalation pathways are available. The first is a Section 154 rectification application to the CPC where the error is apparent on the record — typographical, arithmetical, or a clear misapplication of law. The Section 154(7) limitation is four years from the end of the financial year in which the order sought to be rectified was passed. The second is a Section 246A appeal to the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) where the substantive position is contested, with the appeal filed within thirty days of receipt of the intimation in Form 35 with the prescribed fee. The third, where the intimation involves a jurisdictional defect or violation of natural justice (such as DIN absence), is the Article 226 writ remedy before the Madras High Court for assessees with Tamil Nadu jurisdiction. The escalation choice depends on the nature of the dispute and the relief sought.

Statutory mechanism and prima facie adjustments

Section 143(1) provides the framework for return processing by the Centralised Processing Centre at Bengaluru, with the intimation issued after computer-driven verification of arithmetical accuracy and prima facie inconsistencies. The first proviso to Section 143(1)(a) authorises six categories of adjustment without intervention by an Assessing Officer — arithmetical errors, incorrect claims apparent from the return, disallowance of loss claimed in a belated return under Section 139(3), disallowance of deductions claimed under Sections 10AA and 80-IA to 80-IE, disallowance of any expenditure indicated in the audit report not factored in the return, and addition of income appearing in Form 26AS or Form 16 not included in the return. The second proviso requires the CPC to give the assessee an opportunity to respond before the adjustment is made, with a thirty-day response window from the date of the intimation. The framework is purely procedural at the CPC stage; substantive disputes typically escalate to Section 154 rectification or Section 246A appeal.

Thirty-day response window and portal mechanics

The first proviso to Section 143(1)(a) requires the CPC to communicate the proposed adjustment to the assessee and to allow a response. The response window is thirty days from the date of the intimation, with the response submitted through the e-filing portal under the e-Proceedings module. The response can either agree with the adjustment, partially agree with documentary support, or disagree with reasoned written submissions and enclosures. The CPC then either makes the adjustment as proposed, modifies the adjustment based on the response, or drops the adjustment. The final intimation under Section 143(1) is generated thereafter and reflects the agreed tax position, with any demand or refund flowing into the assessee's account. The thirty-day window is treated by the CPC as a strict procedural requirement, with delayed responses producing adjustment at the proposed level absent the input.

What VGN Brent Park Mogappair clients usually ask next: On the ground in VGN Brent Park Mogappair, supporting the working population of VGN Brent Park Mogappair and the immediate adjoining neighbourhoods; with most filings in this catchment being personal income-tax returns under ITR-1 to ITR-3 and one-off TDS reconciliations; for VGN Brent Park Mogappair's premium business segment that values fixed-fee compliance with senior-practitioner involvement.

Glossary

Plain-English glossary for this service

Terms you will hear in this area — In VGN Brent Park Mogappair, with most filings in this catchment being personal income-tax returns under ITR-1 to ITR-3 and one-off TDS reconciliations.

Immunity application under Section 270AA

Immunity application under Section 270AA is the application in Form 68 seeking immunity from Section 270A penalty and Section 276C / 276CC prosecution, conditional on payment of tax and interest per order and non-filing of appeal. To be filed within one month of end of month of receipt of order; not available in misreporting cases.

Section 271AAC penalty

Section 271AAC penalty is the ten per cent penalty on tax payable under Section 115BBE for income that is referred to in Section 68, 69, 69A, 69B, 69C or 69D — unexplained credits, unexplained investments, unexplained money, unexplained expenditure. Combined incidence including Section 115BBE base reaches seventy-eight per cent.

Section 115BBE special tax rate

Section 115BBE special tax rate is the sixty per cent rate (plus twenty-five per cent surcharge and four per cent cess) applicable to income referred to in Sections 68 to 69D. Sub-section (2) bars set-off of any loss or deduction against such income. The provision targets unexplained credits, investments and expenditure.

Section 68 unexplained cash credit

Section 68 unexplained cash credit is the deeming provision under which any sum found credited in the books of an assessee, the nature and source of which the assessee fails to explain to the satisfaction of the Assessing Officer, is charged to income tax as the income of the assessee for that previous year.

Section 69A unexplained money

Section 69A unexplained money is the deeming provision applicable where the assessee is found to be the owner of money, bullion, jewellery or other valuable article not recorded in books, and offers no satisfactory explanation. The unexplained money is deemed income of the financial year in which ownership is established.

Demand identification number

Demand identification number is the unique number assigned to every demand raised on the e-portal — flowing from Section 143(1) intimations, Section 143(3) assessments, Section 147 reassessments, Section 154 rectifications, or penalty orders. The DIN is the reference for payment, stay petitions and appeal.

Document identification number

Document identification number is the system-generated unique number that, per CBDT Circular 19/2019, must be quoted on every notice, order and communication issued by the Department from 1 October 2019. Communications without DIN are non-est, as held by the Supreme Court in CIT v Brandix Mauritius Holdings.

Section 250 appellate procedure

Section 250 appellate procedure governs the conduct of first appeal before Commissioner (Appeals) — fixation of hearing, opportunity to appellant and AO, further inquiry where considered fit, and disposal preferably within one year from end of financial year of filing. The faceless appeal scheme operates under sub-section (6B).

Stay petition under Section 220(6)

Stay petition under Section 220(6) is the application before the Assessing Officer seeking treatment as not being in default during pendency of Section 246A appeal. CBDT Office Memorandum F. No. 404/72/93-ITCC prescribes twenty per cent pre-deposit ordinarily; departure requires recorded reasons.

Section 220(2) interest

Section 220(2) interest is the simple interest at one per cent for every month or part of a month accruing on the demand from the day immediately following the end of the period under Section 220(1) — typically the thirty-first day from service of the Section 156 demand. Continues until the date of payment.

Section 234A interest

Section 234A interest is the one per cent per month or part of a month interest for default in furnishing return of income, reckoned from the day following the due date under Section 139(1) up to the date of furnishing the return — or where no return is furnished, up to the date of completion of the assessment.

Section 234B interest

Section 234B interest is the one per cent per month interest for default in payment of advance tax — where the assessee has not paid advance tax, or where the advance tax paid is less than ninety per cent of the assessed tax. Reckoned from 1st April of the assessment year to the date of regular assessment.

Cost of Non-Compliance

Real-world penalty exposure

Numerical examples showing tax + interest + penalty across common default scenarios.

Penalty exposure typical of this micro-market — In VGN Brent Park Mogappair, VGN Brent Park Mogappair businesses in the residential arm find that professional services from this area mostly fall under Section 194J 194C TDS on freelancers and personal-IT filings under ITR-1 to ITR-3; supporting the working population of VGN Brent Park Mogappair and the immediate adjoining neighbourhoods.

ScenarioBase taxInterestPenaltyTotal
Section 271(1)(c) legacy concealment penalty on AY 2017-18 addition of ₹10 lakh sustained at ITAT₹3,12,000 (₹10,00,000 × 31.2 per cent)₹2,99,520 (Section 220(2) 1 per cent × 96 months)₹3,12,000 (Section 271(1)(c) at 100 per cent of tax sought to be evaded)₹9,23,520
Section 271AAC penalty on ₹8 lakh treated as unexplained cash credit under Section 68₹4,99,200 (₹8,00,000 × 60 per cent + Section 115BBE surcharge plus cess)₹59,904 (Section 234B 1 per cent × 12 months)₹49,920 (Section 271AAC at 10 per cent of tax under Section 115BBE)₹6,09,024
Section 234A interest on belated return filed 4 months after due date with self-assessment tax of ₹3 lakh outstanding₹3,00,000 self-assessment tax₹12,000 (Section 234A at 1 per cent per month × 4 months on ₹3 lakh)₹5,000 (Section 234F late-filing fee)₹3,17,000
Section 234B advance-tax shortfall interest on capital-gain addition of ₹12 lakh — distinguished from 234C₹2,49,600 (₹12,00,000 × 20.8 per cent LTCG)₹29,952 (Section 234B 1 per cent × 12 months from 1-Apr of AY)Nil (capital gain unforeseen — Section 234C carve-out under third proviso to Section 234C(1)(b))₹2,79,552
Section 245 unintended adjustment of refund against satisfied earlier-year demand — recovered through Section 154₹56,000 refund adjusted then recovered₹4,480 (Section 244A at 0.5 per cent per month × 16 months on the recovered refund)Nil — procedural reversal₹60,480 recovered
Section 276C(1) prosecution exposure for willful evasion of tax on ₹50 lakh income (compounded under CBDT Guidelines)₹15,60,000 (₹50,00,000 × 31.2 per cent)₹3,74,400 (Section 234B 1 per cent × 24 months)₹15,60,000 (Section 270A at 100 per cent misreporting; plus compounding fee approximately ₹3 lakh per CBDT Compounding Guidelines 2022)₹37,94,400 including compounding fee

How VGN Brent Park Mogappair businesses typically avoid these: On the ground in VGN Brent Park Mogappair, the business activity radiating outward from VGN Brent Park and nearby commercial pockets; for VGN Brent Park Mogappair's premium business segment that values fixed-fee compliance with senior-practitioner involvement.

By Industry

Industry-specific patterns in VGN Brent Park Mogappair

How the local trade mix shapes this — In VGN Brent Park Mogappair, with most filings in this catchment being personal income-tax returns under ITR-1 to ITR-3 and one-off TDS reconciliations; the business activity radiating outward from VGN Brent Park and nearby commercial pockets.

Retail
Common issue: Retail proprietorships operating point-of-sale terminals often receive Section 142(1) inquiry notices seeking substantiation of the six-percent-versus-eight-percent Section 44AD presumptive rates applied to digital and cash receipts respectively. The Assessing Officer typically requires payment-gateway settlement reports and POS reconciliation to verify the bifurcation declared in Schedule BP of ITR-4 with the proviso to Section 44AD(1) applied correctly.
How we handle it: Compile payment-gateway settlement statements and POS terminal reports segregating digital from cash receipts; prepare a monthly bifurcation working that reconciles to the annual Schedule BP entries; produce the response within the Section 142(1) deadline with the payment-gateway reports cross-referenced to the bank statement credits; retain the supporting working under Rule 6F for six assessment years from the end of the relevant assessment year.
Retail
Common issue: Retail traders maintaining inventory frequently receive Section 143(1)(a) intimations proposing prima facie adjustments where the closing-stock figure in Schedule BP differs from the audit report Form 3CD clause 14(b) ICDS II disclosure on inventory valuation. The CPC adjustment mechanism flags such mismatches systematically, particularly where slow-moving stock has been written down to net realisable value without aligned disclosure.
How we handle it: Respond within thirty days enclosing the audit report Form 3CD clause 14(b) and the ICDS II inventory valuation working; document the basis for any net-realisable-value writedown with reference to ICDS II paragraph 9 and the contemporaneous working file; where the adjustment is unsustainable, escalate to Section 154 rectification with the apparent-error articulation, citing the OECD Forum on Tax Administration guidance on inventory valuation cross-tax-base alignment.
Hospitality
Common issue: Restaurant proprietorships and small hotel partnerships filing under Section 44AD frequently receive Section 142(1) inquiry notices where the GSTR-3B outward-supply aggregate exceeds the ITR-4 turnover by margins exceeding the timing-difference threshold flagged by the Computer-Assisted Scrutiny Selection algorithm. The Assessing Officer's questionnaire calls for monthly reconciliation between the two figures.
How we handle it: Prepare a month-wise reconciliation tracing each GSTR-3B outward-supply figure to invoice issuance under GST (accrual) and the corresponding receipt collection for cash-basis income tax recognition; document advance receipts that are GST-taxable but not income-tax-recognised in the same year; submit the response on the e-Proceedings portal within the Section 142(1) deadline; transition to ITR-3 with accrual books under Section 145(1) if the gap is structural.
Real Estate
Common issue: Real estate proprietors and developers receiving Section 148A(b) show-cause notices under the post-April-2021 reassessment framework typically face information shared from the GSTN data lake, Real Estate (Regulation and Development) Act 2016 project registrations, or stamp-duty receipts under Section 50C. The seven-to-thirty-day Section 148A(b) response window is brief relative to the complexity of substantiating revenue recognition under ICDS III on construction contracts.
How we handle it: On receipt of the Section 148A(b) notice, examine the underlying information and prepare a documented response addressing each ground of escape; produce the ICDS III percentage-of-completion working with reliable estimates of total contract revenue and cost; reconcile RERA project disclosures with income tax recognition timing; cite the Ashish Agarwal Supreme Court ruling on transitional applicability where relevant; reserve the Article 226 writ remedy before the Madras High Court for jurisdictional defects in the Section 148A(d) order.
Residential
Common issue: Salaried individuals owning a self-occupied residential property and a let-out second property frequently receive Section 143(1)(a) intimations proposing disallowance of the Section 24(b) interest deduction in excess of two lakh rupees in aggregate. The CPC adjustment mechanism does not always bifurcate the cap (which applies only to self-occupied property) from the let-out property's full interest entitlement under the main provision of Section 24(b).
How we handle it: Respond within thirty days enclosing the property-wise designation under Section 23(4) (self-occupied versus let-out); produce the interest certificate from the lender for each property separately; reconcile the Schedule HP entries in ITR-2 or ITR-3 with the interest claim; demonstrate that the Section 71(3A) two-lakh cap on house-property loss against other heads has been applied correctly with the balance carried forward under Section 71B.
Case Studies

Anonymised engagements we have handled

Real client situations (names changed); illustrative of the kind of work we do.

A flavour of cases we handle nearby — In VGN Brent Park Mogappair, with most filings in this catchment being personal income-tax returns under ITR-1 to ITR-3 and one-off TDS reconciliations; VGN Brent Park Mogappair businesses in the residential arm find that professional services from this area mostly fall under Section 194J 194C TDS on freelancers and personal-IT filings under ITR-1 to ITR-3.

Section 272A(1)(d)Hospitality

Penalty under Section 272A(1)(d) for Section 142(1) non-compliance

Issue: A hotel proprietor received a Section 272A(1)(d) penalty notice of ₹40,000 for failure to comply with four Section 142(1) information notices during a scrutiny assessment. The penalty was being levied at ₹10,000 per default. The proprietor had in fact uploaded responses on the e-portal but the AO's draft order did not record receipt.
Approach: Filed a reply to the Section 272A show-cause annexing the e-portal acknowledgement screens, time-stamped uploads and a sworn statement that compliance had been effected within the prescribed windows. Argued that 'failure to comply' under Section 272A(1)(d) requires actual non-compliance, not a portal-side display defect at the AO's end. Sought complete dropping of the penalty.
Outcome: AO accepted the e-portal evidence; the Section 272A(1)(d) penalty was dropped entirely; no penalty was levied; the underlying scrutiny assessment closed at returned income; client's SOP added e-portal acknowledgement preservation as a standing practice.
Section 271(1)(c) legacyRetail

Section 271(1)(c) penalty on legacy assessment year vacated

Issue: A retail-pharmacy proprietor received a Section 271(1)(c) concealment penalty order for AY 2017-18 of ₹6.4 lakh — the order pertained to additions made in a Section 143(3) assessment that had been substantially deleted on appeal before the CIT(A). The penalty order had nevertheless been passed mechanically on the original additions without taking the appellate deletion into account.
Approach: Filed an appeal under Section 246A challenging the penalty on two grounds — (a) the underlying additions had been deleted, so the penalty foundation was gone, and (b) the penalty notice did not strike out the inapplicable limb of 'concealment' versus 'furnishing of inaccurate particulars', a defect held to be fatal in Manjunatha Cotton & Ginning Factory (Karnataka HC) and accepted by the Supreme Court in Dilip N Shroff.
Outcome: CIT(A) vacated the Section 271(1)(c) penalty in full; both grounds were accepted; refund of the pre-deposit was released with Section 244A interest; the firm's SOP for penalty challenges now insists on inspecting the limb-striking question as the first screening point.
Section 245 with stayHospitality

Section 245 set-off where AY 2018-19 demand stayed by ITAT

Issue: A boutique-hotel proprietor's AY 2024-25 refund of ₹84,000 was sought to be adjusted under Section 245 against an AY 2018-19 demand of ₹1.6 lakh that had been stayed by ITAT Chennai pending second-appeal disposal. CPC had not registered the ITAT stay in its set-off engine and proposed full adjustment within the twenty-one-day intimation window.
Approach: Filed a response on the e-portal within the prescribed window annexing the ITAT stay order, the Form 36 acknowledgement and the pre-deposit challan. The legal position is that an outstanding demand under stay by a judicial forum is not 'sum remaining payable' within the meaning of Section 245 and cannot be the basis of adjustment. Parallel grievance on e-Nivaran was filed to expedite portal-side correction.
Outcome: CPC accepted the response; the Section 245 adjustment was dropped; the ₹84,000 refund was released with Section 244A interest; CPC's internal stay-flagging was corrected so the AY 2018-19 demand would not surface in future intimations; pre-deposit balance also tracked correctly thereafter.
148 limitation under Section 149Real Estate

Section 148 notice for AY 2017-18 served in May 2025 — limitation killed it on first reply

Issue: A Mylapore developer received a Section 148 notice in May 2025 for AY 2017-18, alleging escapement of ₹38 lakh from a sub-registrar reported property sale that was reopened post-Ashish Agarwal under the new regime. The first instinct of most clients in this position is to start drafting a merits reply on the property valuation. The first instinct of a 28-year practitioner is to count days. Section 149 now caps reopening at three years for escapes under fifty lakh, ten years above. The escapement alleged was ₹38 lakh — below the threshold, so the three-year window applied, and that window had shut on 31st March 2021.
Approach: We did not even open the merits file. We drafted a single-issue jurisdictional reply quoting Section 149(1)(a) read with Union of India v. Ashish Agarwal (2022) 444 ITR 1 (SC) and Rajeev Bansal v. UoI (2024) (Delhi HC), pointed out that the asset threshold of fifty lakh was not crossed, and that the Section 151 sanction had been obtained from the PCIT instead of the Principal Chief Commissioner required for beyond-three-year reopenings. We filed the reply on the e-Proceedings module within nine days of the notice and simultaneously placed a CC on the JAO's official email for evidentiary timestamping.
Outcome: The 148A(d) order was dropped within two months and the proceedings closed without a 148 notice being issued; no merits adjudication needed, no escapement, no penalty; client signed an engagement letter for ongoing property-transaction documentation discipline so the same trigger does not recur; we retained the order copy as a precedent template for our 148 limitation playbook.

Why these VGN Brent Park Mogappair engagements look the way they do: On the ground in VGN Brent Park Mogappair, the cluster of residential, retail, real estate businesses that defines VGN Brent Park Mogappair's commercial fabric; for VGN Brent Park Mogappair's premium business segment that values fixed-fee compliance with senior-practitioner involvement.

Client Reviews

What VGN Brent Park Mogappair Clients Say

Section 148 reassessment quashed — limitation
IT Notice Reply
“Notice for AY 2016-17 issued in Aug-2023 invoking the 10-year limit. We demonstrated escaped income did not cross ₹50 lakh threshold and that sanction under Section 151 was from the wrong authority. Section 148A(d) order set aside on writ; reassessment dropped.”
Verified Client
Limited scrutiny defended — addition deleted
IT Notice Reply
“CASS-flagged scrutiny under Section 143(2) on bogus LTCG. Filed share register, demat statements, STT-paid contract notes and AO's own remand findings. Faceless Assessment Unit accepted explanation; addition of ₹38 lakh deleted in Section 143(3) order.”
Verified Client
Section 270A penalty reduced from 200% to 50%
IT Notice Reply
“AO levied 200% misreporting penalty on disallowance of expenses. Argued the disallowance was on a debatable issue — possible-view doctrine — not misreporting. Faceless Penalty Centre accepted plea; penalty restricted to 50% under-reporting. Saved ₹4.6 lakh.”
Verified Client
Section 245 adjustment reversed — refund released
IT Notice Reply
“CPC adjusted ₹2.1 lakh refund of AY 2024-25 against an old AY 2018-19 demand that was already stayed by CIT(A). Filed disagreement on outstanding demand portal with stay order; refund released within 6 weeks.”
Verified Client
Section 143(1)(a) adjustment of HRA exemption reversed
IT Notice Reply
“CPC proposed adjustment disallowing HRA citing AIS mismatch. Filed reply within 30 days with rent receipts, landlord PAN, bank rent payment trail and revised computation. Adjustment dropped; refund of ₹78,000 issued.”
Verified Client
CIT(A) appeal allowed under Faceless Appeal Centre
IT Notice Reply
“Section 143(3) addition of ₹62 lakh on unexplained cash deposits during demonetisation. Filed Form 35 with Rule 46A petition; produced sales register, cash book and pre-demonetisation cash trends. CIT(A) deleted addition; Section 220(6) stay of demand obtained pending appeal.”
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Common Questions

IT Notice Reply FAQ — VGN Brent Park Mogappair

Common questions from VGN Brent Park Mogappair clients. Call 9566-068-468 for specific queries.

Section 142(1) empowers the Assessing Officer to (i) call for a return where one has not been filed, (ii) require production of accounts, documents and information, including a statement of assets and liabilities, even those not appearing in the books. Non-compliance attracts best-judgment assessment under Section 144 and penalty of ₹10,000 per default under Section 272A(1)(d).
Section 144B introduced by Finance Act 2021 (replacing the earlier scheme notified in 2020) mandates that all assessments under Section 143(3) and Section 144 are conducted in a faceless manner through the National Faceless Assessment Centre (NFAC). The flow involves NFAC issuing notices, the Assessment Unit drafting, the Verification Unit verifying, the Technical Unit advising, the Review Unit reviewing, and a draft assessment order communicated to the assessee with a Show-Cause Notice before any addition. Personal hearing is by video conference only.
No. The IT Notice Reply fee we quote upfront is the fee you pay — any government fees or third-party charges are shown separately and explained in advance. VGN Brent Park Mogappair clients get full transparency before committing.
Section 143(1)(a) gives the taxpayer 30 days from the date of intimation to respond on the e-filing portal under 'e-Proceedings'. Each proposed adjustment must be accepted or contested with supporting computation, Form 26AS reconciliation, AIS feedback, deduction proof and any audit report annexure. If no reply is filed within 30 days, the adjustment is finalised and the consequential demand or reduced refund stands.
The High Court's writ jurisdiction under Article 226 of the Constitution is not automatically barred by the existence of a statutory appellate remedy. The Supreme Court in Whirlpool Corporation v. Registrar of Trade Marks and a long line of subsequent authority has held that writ remains available in three classes of cases — breach of fundamental rights, violation of natural justice, and orders without jurisdiction. Tax matters that fit any of these heads — a 148 notice without DIN, a 148A(d) order without supply of material, a 144B assessment without the requested video-conference hearing — are amenable to writ even before the appellate route is exhausted, provided the writ petition is filed promptly.
The exact list depends on your case, but we send a short, plain-English checklist the moment you engage us — no jargon. VGN Brent Park Mogappair clients can share documents as phone photos or scans over WhatsApp on 9566-068-468, and we flag immediately if anything is missing.
The base set is — (i) the notice copy with DIN (Document Identification Number — mandatory under CBDT Circular 19/2019), (ii) ITR-V acknowledgement and ITR copy for the AY, (iii) Form 26AS, (iv) AIS and TIS download, (v) computation of total income with workings, (vi) bank statements, (vii) audit report (Form 3CD/3CB) if applicable, and (viii) supporting evidence for the specific issue raised — e.g. capital gains workings, exemption proof, deduction receipts, loan confirmations.
Section 148A is the mandatory enquiry-with-show-cause stage that must precede a Section 148 notice. The four sub-stages are: (a) conduct any enquiry, with prior approval of specified authority, with respect to information suggesting escaped income; (b) provide an opportunity of being heard by serving a show-cause notice of not less than 7 days but not more than 30 days; (c) consider the assessee's reply; and (d) pass a speaking order, with prior approval, deciding whether it is a fit case for issue of Section 148 notice.
Call or WhatsApp 9566-068-468 with a one-line description of your requirement. We confirm exactly which documents your VGN Brent Park Mogappair case needs, share a fixed quote upfront, and start once you approve. The first discussion is free.
In Union of India v. Rajeev Bansal (Civil Appeal 8629/2024, decided 03-Oct-2024), the Supreme Court clarified the limitation interplay between TOLA (Taxation and Other Laws Relaxation Act 2020) and the new Section 148/148A regime. It held that TOLA extension applies to notices for AY 2013-14 to AY 2017-18 falling within the extended window, and laid down the surviving timeline for notices treated as Section 148A(b) under Ashish Agarwal.
Section 144C provides a pre-assessment dispute resolution mechanism for 'eligible assessees' — any person in whose case Transfer Pricing adjustment under Section 92CA(3) is proposed, and any foreign company. The AO must pass a draft assessment order and forward it to the assessee. Within 30 days, the assessee may either accept it or file objections to the DRP, which gives directions binding on the AO under Section 144C(10).
Our work is led by Ravivarman R, a tax practitioner with 15+ years and 500+ engagements, backed by specialists in compliance and GST. We base every IT Notice Reply recommendation on current law and your actual facts — not generic templates — and we are happy to explain the reasoning.
DIN (Document Identification Number) is a unique computer-generated 20-digit reference mandated by CBDT Circular 19/2019 dated 14-Aug-2019. Any communication — notice, order, summons, letter — issued by the income tax authority on or after 01-Oct-2019 must carry a DIN. Communication without DIN is treated as invalid and non est. Verify DIN at incometax.gov.in under 'Authenticate Notice/Order'.
No statutory pre-deposit is required to file a CIT(A) appeal under Section 249. However, Section 249(4) bars admission unless tax on returned income is paid (where return was filed) or, where no return was filed, an amount equal to advance tax payable is deposited. For stay of demand pending appeal, CBDT Instruction 1914 (modified by Office Memorandum dated 31-Jul-2017 and 25-Aug-2017) generally requires 20% deposit, relaxable in genuine hardship cases.
Yes. A first appeal lies to the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) under Section 246A read with Section 250, to be filed in Form 35 within 30 days from the date of service of the demand notice/order. There is no statutory pre-deposit requirement for filing the appeal itself under Section 249. Filing fee ranges from ₹250 to ₹1,000 based on assessed income.
CBDT Circular 19 of 2019 dated 14th August 2019 made it mandatory that every communication issued by an income tax authority on or after 1st October 2019 must carry a Document Identification Number, and any communication without DIN is to be treated as invalid and non est. The authentication is done at incometax.gov.in under the public utility 'Authenticate Notice or Order'. We have had two engagements in the last three years where the notice forwarded by the client failed DIN authentication outright — both closed at that stage with a one-page representation citing the circular. Even where authentication passes, the exercise establishes the precise issue date, which is what the statutory reply window runs from. Skipping the step risks computing the deadline off a date the client picked up the notice rather than the date the department issued it.
IT Notice Reply near VGN Brent Park Mogappair:

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