TDS Credit Cannot Be Denied Merely Because ITR Was Not Filed: Mumbai ITAT’s Important Ruling in Manoj Kumar Soman Case
A recent ruling of the Mumbai Bench of the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal has again highlighted an important principle of fairness in income tax proceedings: when the Income Tax Department taxes receipts appearing in Form 26AS, it should also consider the corresponding TDS credit attached to those receipts.
The decision in Manoj Kumar Soman v. Circle (3)(1), ITA No. 1583/Mum/2026, AY 2011-12, is particularly relevant for taxpayers who have received income tax notices because of non-filing of ITR, Form 26AS mismatch, reassessment proceedings or demand arising due to non-grant of TDS credit. The order arose from an appeal against the NFAC order dated 19 December 2025, and the ITAT restored the limited issue of TDS credit to the Assessing Officer for verification and grant of eligible credit as per law.
Taxpayers facing demand because of Form 26AS mismatch, denial of TDS credit, or reassessment proceedings may need proper support for income tax demand notice response, ITR filing and ITR filing in Dwarka Delhi.
Background of the Case
In this case, the taxpayer had not filed his regular income tax return for Assessment Year 2011-12. The Income Tax Department initiated reassessment proceedings under section 147 on the basis of information available through AIR / Form 26AS and departmental records. The information showed certain receipts in the taxpayer’s name.
Since the assessee did not file a return in response to notice under section 148 and did not properly comply with assessment proceedings, the Assessing Officer completed the assessment ex parte. The receipts reflected in Form 26AS were treated as taxable income.
The difficulty arose at the stage of tax computation. Although the Department taxed the receipts appearing in Form 26AS, the corresponding TDS already deducted on those receipts was not granted as credit. This resulted in a higher tax demand.
The assessee challenged the matter before the CIT(A) / NFAC, but the appeal was dismissed due to non-compliance during appellate proceedings. Thereafter, the assessee approached the Mumbai ITAT.
Main Issue Before the ITAT
The key question before the Tribunal was simple but very important:
If income reflected in Form 26AS is taxed by the Department, can the corresponding TDS credit be denied only because the taxpayer did not file the original return of income?
The taxpayer’s stand was that once the Department itself relied upon Form 26AS for taxing the receipts, it could not ignore the TDS appearing against the same income. Denial of such credit would create an unfair situation where the income is taxed, but the tax already deducted and deposited against that income is not adjusted.
The Revenue’s stand was largely based on non-filing of return and non-compliance by the assessee during reassessment and appellate proceedings.
Legal Position Under Section 199
The legal basis for allowing credit of TDS comes from section 199 of the Income-tax Act, 1961. Section 199 provides that tax deducted and paid to the Central Government shall be treated as payment of tax on behalf of the person from whose income the deduction was made.
In practical terms, this means that where tax has been deducted from a taxpayer’s income and deposited with the Government, the taxpayer should normally receive credit for that TDS, subject to verification and proper correlation with the income assessed.
This principle becomes highly relevant in cases of:
- Form 26AS mismatch
- AIS mismatch
- Non-filing of ITR
- Reassessment under section 147
- Demand due to non-grant of TDS credit
- Ex parte assessment
- TDS credit not reflected in computation
- Rectification under section 154
- Income tax appeal against demand
For taxpayers, consultants and businesses, proper reconciliation of TDS records and timely TDS filing and compliance is essential to avoid future disputes.
Rule 37BA: TDS Credit Should Follow the Income
Rule 37BA of the Income-tax Rules deals with the manner of granting credit for tax deducted at source. Broadly, it provides that TDS credit is to be given to the person to whom payment has been made or credit has been given, based on information furnished by the deductor. It also provides that TDS credit should be allowed for the assessment year in which the corresponding income is assessable.
Therefore, the basic principle may be understood in simple words:
TDS credit should follow the income.
If income is assessed in a particular year and in the hands of a particular taxpayer, then the TDS relating to that income should also be considered in that assessment year and in that taxpayer’s case, subject to verification.
Importance of Form 26AS, AIS and TIS
Form 26AS is an important tax credit statement available to the taxpayer. It shows information relating to TDS, TCS and other tax-related details reported against the taxpayer’s PAN. The Income Tax Department provides online access to Form 26AS through the e-filing portal.
In recent years, the Department has also introduced AIS and TIS, which provide broader information regarding income, transactions and tax deductions. Therefore, before filing an ITR or replying to an income tax notice, taxpayers should carefully reconcile:
- Form 26AS
- AIS
- TIS
- TDS certificates
- Bank statements
- Books of accounts
- Assessment order
- Demand computation
Many income tax demands arise not because tax is actually payable, but because of mismatch between income reported, tax deducted and tax credit granted. Proper reconciliation can often reduce or remove such demand.
Taxpayers in Delhi NCR requiring professional support may refer to income tax services in Dwarka or connect with CA services in Dwarka for practical handling of notice, rectification and appeal matters.
What the Mumbai ITAT Held
The Mumbai ITAT observed that the assessment had been completed on the basis of receipts appearing in Form 26AS. The Tribunal also noted that tax had been deducted at source on those receipts, but credit for such TDS was not granted while computing the demand.
The Tribunal held that if the Department has taxed the income reflected in Form 26AS, the corresponding TDS credit cannot be denied merely on technical grounds. However, the Tribunal did not grant the credit blindly. Instead, it restored the matter to the Assessing Officer for verification of Form 26AS and departmental records.
The ITAT directed the Assessing Officer to verify the assessee’s claim and grant eligible TDS credit in accordance with law, after giving the assessee a reasonable opportunity of being heard.
This approach is balanced. It protects the taxpayer from unfair denial of credit, while also allowing the Department to verify whether the TDS actually relates to the income assessed.
Case Hierarchy and Procedural Journey
The case moved through the normal income tax litigation hierarchy.
1. Assessment by the Assessing Officer
The case was reopened under section 147 based on information available through AIR / Form 26AS. The assessee did not file the return in response to notice under section 148. The Assessing Officer completed the assessment ex parte and taxed receipts appearing in Form 26AS, but did not allow corresponding TDS credit.
2. Appeal Before CIT(A) / NFAC
The assessee filed appeal before the CIT(A). The appeal was handled by NFAC, Delhi. Since the assessee did not properly comply with appellate notices, the CIT(A) confirmed the assessment order.
3. Appeal Before ITAT Mumbai
The assessee then approached the Mumbai ITAT. The Tribunal allowed the appeal for statistical purposes and restored the limited issue of TDS credit to the Assessing Officer for verification and grant of eligible credit.
This decision is an ITAT ruling. It is not a Supreme Court or High Court judgment. Therefore, it may not have binding force across India in the same manner as a Supreme Court or jurisdictional High Court decision. However, it has strong persuasive value in similar cases, particularly where the Department taxes Form 26AS receipts but denies the related TDS credit.
Why This Ruling Is Important for Taxpayers
This ruling is important because many taxpayers receive notices after the Department finds receipts in Form 26AS, AIS or SFT records. In several cases, taxpayers may not have filed ITR due to lack of awareness, old data, inactive income source, small professional receipts, pension-related receipts, interest income, rent, commission, consultancy income or other personal reasons.
In such cases, the Department may tax the income based on available information. But if TDS has already been deducted from the same income and deposited with the Government, denial of TDS credit may result in excessive demand.
The Mumbai ITAT ruling supports the view that tax computation should be fair and complete. The Department cannot use Form 26AS only for taxing income and ignore the TDS part of the same record.
This ruling can be useful in cases involving:
- TDS credit denied in reassessment
- Income taxed from Form 26AS but TDS not allowed
- Demand raised after non-filing of ITR
- Old assessment year demand due to TDS mismatch
- Ex parte assessment under income tax law
- Appeal against denial of TDS credit
- Rectification application under section 154
- Demand visible on income tax portal despite TDS deduction
For such matters, timely assistance for income tax demand notice response can help in preparing the right submission with Form 26AS, AIS, TDS certificates and supporting records.
Does This Mean ITR Filing Is Optional?
No. This ruling should not be misunderstood.
The Mumbai ITAT has not said that filing of ITR is unnecessary. The relief was granted only on the limited issue of TDS credit, and even that was subject to verification by the Assessing Officer.
Non-filing of ITR can still create serious consequences, including:
- Notice under section 148
- Best judgment or ex parte assessment
- Interest liability
- Penalty exposure
- Loss or delay of refund
- Difficulty in claiming deductions or exemptions
- Higher compliance burden
- Demand and litigation
- Difficulty in explaining source of income later
Therefore, taxpayers should file their ITR correctly and within time wherever applicable. For individuals, professionals, freelancers, NRIs and business owners, timely income tax return filing remains the safest approach.
Practical Example
Suppose a taxpayer receives professional fees of ₹10,00,000. The payer deducts TDS of ₹1,00,000 and reports it correctly in the TDS return. The amount appears in Form 26AS.
If the taxpayer does not file ITR and later the Department taxes ₹10,00,000 based on Form 26AS, then the TDS of ₹1,00,000 should also be verified and allowed as credit. Otherwise, the taxpayer would be taxed on the income without adjustment of tax already deducted and paid to the Government.
This is the practical logic behind the ITAT ruling.
Relevance for Professionals, Freelancers and Consultants
The decision is especially relevant for professionals, freelancers and consultants because their income is often subject to TDS. Many professionals receive fees after deduction of tax, but later face mismatch issues due to non-filing, incorrect ITR, wrong head of income, mismatch between AIS and books, or TDS not properly claimed.
Before responding to any notice, the taxpayer should check whether the Department has taxed gross receipts but ignored the TDS credit. If yes, a proper reply, rectification application or appeal may be required.
For professional assistance in Delhi NCR, taxpayers may connect with CA Alok Kumar for income tax notice handling, ITR filing, TDS reconciliation and tax demand resolution.
Relevance for NRIs and Foreign Remittance Matters
The ruling also has practical relevance for NRIs. In many NRI cases, tax may be deducted on interest income, rent, property sale consideration, professional receipts or other taxable income in India. Later, while applying for remittance or handling tax compliance, mismatch between Form 26AS, AIS, ITR and bank records may create difficulty.
Where foreign remittance is involved, proper documentation of tax payment, TDS credit and income disclosure becomes very important. In suitable cases, NRIs may also require professional support for Form 145 and Form 146 foreign remittance CA certificate.
What Taxpayers Should Do If TDS Credit Is Denied
If your TDS credit has been denied or income tax demand has been raised, the following steps may help:
- Download Form 26AS from the income tax portal.
- Download AIS and TIS.
- Compare the income taxed in the assessment order with the receipts appearing in Form 26AS.
- Check whether TDS against those receipts has been allowed in the demand computation.
- Collect TDS certificates from deductors.
- Match TDS entries with bank receipts and invoices, wherever applicable.
- Check whether the demand can be corrected through rectification under section 154.
- If rectification is not possible or limitation is involved, examine appeal or other legal remedy.
- File a clear submission explaining that the income and TDS relate to the same transaction.
- Preserve evidence of tax deduction and deposit by the deductor.
The remedy will depend on the facts of each case. In some cases, rectification may be sufficient. In others, appeal or response to reassessment proceedings may be required.
Key Learning from the ITAT Ruling
The Mumbai ITAT decision gives an important message: tax proceedings should not be one-sided. If the Department relies on Form 26AS to tax income, it should also verify and allow the TDS credit reflected in the same tax record.
At the same time, taxpayers should understand that relief is not automatic. The taxpayer must establish that the TDS belongs to him, relates to the same income, and has been deposited with the Government. The Assessing Officer is entitled to verify these facts.
Conclusion
The ruling in Manoj Kumar Soman v. Circle (3)(1), ITA No. 1583/Mum/2026 is a useful taxpayer-friendly decision on TDS credit. It supports the principle that once income appearing in Form 26AS is taxed, the corresponding TDS credit should also be considered, even if the taxpayer had not filed the original return, subject to verification.
However, this decision should not be treated as a licence to ignore ITR filing. The better course is always to file the return correctly, reconcile Form 26AS and AIS, claim proper TDS credit, and respond to any income tax notice within time.
For professional assistance in ITR filing in Dwarka Delhi, income tax demand notice response, TDS filing and compliance, reassessment proceedings and tax demand resolution, taxpayers may consult CA Alok Kumar.
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