Faceless assessment and faceless appeal have changed the way income tax proceedings are conducted in India. Notices are issued online, replies are uploaded through the income tax portal, and personal interaction with the department has reduced significantly. This has brought transparency, but it has also created practical difficulties for many individual taxpayers, especially salaried employees who may not be fully comfortable with online tax proceedings.
The recent ITAT Mumbai decision in Sankathaprasad Shyamraj Rajbhar Vs ITO is therefore highly relevant. The Tribunal restored the matter to CIT(A) because the additions against a salaried employee were confirmed without proper verification and without giving effective opportunity to substantiate the claims.
The case involved a salaried MTNL employee whose assessment was completed under section 147 read with section 144. The additions/disallowances related to HRA exemption, interest income, bank credit claimed as provident fund withdrawal, and salary-related receipts such as gratuity, leave encashment and allowances.
For professional assistance in income tax notices, reassessment and demand matters, taxpayers may refer to our service pages on Faceless Assessment & Appeal, ITR Filing & CPC Notice Reply, and Response to Outstanding Tax Demand.
Background of the Case
The assessee was a salaried employee working as a mechanic with MTNL. The employer had deducted TDS, and the assessee had filed his return of income. During assessment proceedings, the Assessing Officer noted certain issues relating to HRA claim, interest income, bank credit and salary-related components.
The assessee submitted that rent was paid in cash to the landlord, but landlord PAN and other documents were not fully provided before the AO. The assessee also explained before CIT(A) that the bank credit of ₹1,00,000 was from provident fund withdrawal and that some details could not be submitted because he was not well-versed with online faceless proceedings.
However, the CIT(A) confirmed the additions mainly because supporting documentary evidence was not furnished.
ITAT Mumbai’s View
The ITAT Mumbai observed that the assessment order and CIT(A)’s order had proceeded mainly because documents were not furnished. At the same time, the Tribunal considered that the assessee was a salaried person and had faced difficulty in effectively presenting his case in faceless proceedings.
The Tribunal held that principles of natural justice require that a litigant should be given fair and reasonable opportunity to substantiate his claims, especially when additions relate to routine salary components, statutory exemptions and identifiable receipts such as provident fund withdrawals.
The ITAT therefore set aside the CIT(A)’s order and restored the matter for fresh adjudication. The assessee was directed to cooperate and file supporting evidence for HRA, PF withdrawal, interest income and eligible deductions.
Key Principle Emerging from the Decision
The decision does not give automatic relief to the taxpayer. It does not say that HRA exemption or PF withdrawal claim must be accepted without evidence. What it says is more balanced and practical:
If the explanation is plausible and the items are capable of verification, the authority should not reject the claim mechanically only because documents were not filed earlier.
This is particularly important in faceless proceedings, where many taxpayers miss online notices, fail to upload documents correctly, or do not understand how to file additional evidence.
| Particulars | Details |
|---|---|
| Case Name | Sankathaprasad Shyamraj Rajbhar Vs ITO |
| Forum | ITAT Mumbai |
| Appeal No. | ITA No. 1574/Mum/2026, as reflected in ITAT official search result |
| Assessment Year | AY 2017-18 |
| Order Pronounced | 20.04.2026, as per reproduced order |
| Assessee | Salaried employee, mechanic with MTNL |
| Main Provisions | Section 147 read with section 144, Section 10(13A), Section 192, Rule 29 of ITAT Rules |
| Main Issues | HRA exemption, PF withdrawal, interest income, salary components, non-filing of documents in faceless proceedings |
| Final Result | Matter restored to CIT(A) for fresh adjudication |
| Core Principle | Documentary deficiency in faceless proceedings should not override fair opportunity and natural justice |
Why Salaried Taxpayers Should Take This Case Seriously
Many salaried taxpayers believe that once Form 16 is issued and TDS is deducted, there can be no further income tax issue. This is not always correct. The department may still ask for documents relating to HRA, bank credits, interest income, Form 26AS, AIS/TIS mismatch, deductions and exemptions.
A salaried taxpayer receiving notice should immediately compile:
- Form 16 and salary slips;
- Form 26AS, AIS and TIS;
- bank statements;
- HRA calculation and rent proof;
- landlord PAN, where applicable;
- PF withdrawal proof;
- interest certificates;
- proof of gratuity or leave encashment;
- earlier replies filed on portal;
- assessment order and demand notice.
For structured support, taxpayers may use our Income Tax Notice and Demand Response Service.
Practical Lessons from the Judgment
1. Faceless proceedings must still follow natural justice
The digital nature of proceedings does not remove the taxpayer’s right to fair opportunity.
2. CIT(A) should examine evidence on merits
If the assessee gives a plausible explanation, the appellate authority should verify the claim rather than simply confirm the addition.
3. Additional evidence should be filed properly
If documents were not filed before the AO, the taxpayer should file them before CIT(A) with proper explanation and Rule 46A compliance.
4. HRA claims must be supported by documents
HRA exemption under section 10(13A) requires rent payment proof, rent receipts, rent agreement and landlord PAN where annual rent exceeds ₹1,00,000.
5. PF withdrawal and salary components should be reconciled
PF withdrawal, gratuity, leave encashment and other employer-related receipts should be supported by employer records, EPFO statements or bank trail.
6. Do not ignore online notices
Non-response may result in best judgment assessment under section 144.
Professional Takeaway
The ITAT Mumbai decision in Sankathaprasad Shyamraj Rajbhar Vs ITO is a useful precedent for salaried taxpayers facing additions due to non-filing of documents in faceless proceedings. It supports the proposition that tax authorities should give fair opportunity and verify evidence where the claim is genuine, identifiable and capable of verification.
However, the ruling should not be misunderstood as a relaxation from documentation. The best defence in any income tax proceeding remains timely response, proper evidence, structured written submission and correct legal presentation.
Taxpayers facing reassessment, faceless assessment, HRA disallowance, unexplained bank credit addition or income tax demand should take timely professional advice and prepare a complete documentary file.
For assistance in such matters, you may visit Faceless Assessment & Appeal, ITR Filing & CPC Notice Reply, and Response to Outstanding Tax Demand.
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