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Dcit Central Circle-2(2) Chennai, ... vs Thangamani Perumal Gounder, ... on 4 August, 2025

- 27 - ITA Nos.628 & 629/Chny/2025 and proved when some liability is to be fastened in respect of such transactions. This decision was rendered with reference to section 34 of the Indian Evidence Act. Though the technical rules of Evidence Act are not strictly applicable to Income Tax proceedings, the legal principle laid down by the Hon'ble Supreme Court in these cases that independent corroborative evidence is required in respect of entries in regular books of account when a liability is sought to be fastened based on such entries would be broadly applicable to income tax proceedings also in cases where tax liability is sought to be fastened on an assessee based on entries found in the notebooks/loose sheets seized from a third party. When the tax liability was sought to be fastened on the assessee based on the said seized material from thirty party, before making addition in the assessment orders for AYs 2015-16 and 2016-17, the Assessing Officer was duty bound to prove the correctness of the entries in the seized material with independent corroborative evidence and admittedly no such corroborative evidence has been brought on record and relied upon by the AO in the assessment orders.
Income Tax Appellate Tribunal - Chennai Cites 37 - Cited by 0 - Full Document

Navtej Singh Johar vs Union Of India Ministry Of Law And ... on 6 September, 2018

16.3. RIGHT TO HEALTH The right to health, and access to healthcare are also crucial facets of the right to life guaranteed under Article 21 of the Constitution.46 LGBT persons being a sexual minority have been subjected to societal prejudice, discrimination and 46 Common Cause (A Registered Society) v. Union of India & Anr., (2018) 5 SCC 1, at paragraph 304; C.E.S.C. Limited & Ors. v. Subhash Chandra Bose & Ors., (1992) 1 SCC 441, at paragraph 32; Union of India v. Mool Chand Khairati Ram Trust, (2018) SCC OnLine SC 675, at paragraph 66; and, Centre for Public Interest Litigation v. Union of India & Ors., (2013) 16 SCC 279, at paragraph 25 36 violence on account of their sexual orientation. Since Section 377 criminalises “carnal intercourse against the order of nature” it compels LGBT persons to lead closeted lives. As a consequence, LGBT persons are seriously disadvantaged and prejudiced when it comes to access to health-care facilities. This results in serious health issues, including depression and suicidal tendencies amongst members of this community.47 LGBT persons, and more specifically the MSM, and transgender persons are at a higher risk of contracting HIV as they lack safe spaces to engage in safe-sex practices. They are inhibited from seeking medical help for testing, treatment and supportive care on account of the threat of being ‘exposed’ and the resultant prosecution.48 Higher rates of prevalence of HIV-AIDS in MSM, who are in turn married to other people of the opposite sex, coupled with the difficulty in detection and 47 M.V. Lee Badgett, The Economic Cost of Stigma and the Exclusion of LGBT People: A Case Study of India, World Bank Group (2014) available at http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/527261468035379692/The-economic- cost-of-stigma-and-the-exclusion-of-LGBT-people-a-case-study-of-India (Last accessed on August 11, 2018) 48 Govindasamy Agoramoorthy and Minna J Hsu, India’s homosexual discrimination and health consequences, 41(4) Rev Saude Publica (2007), at pp. 567-660 available at http://www.scielo.br/pdf/rsp/v41n4/6380.pdf 37 treatment, makes them highly susceptible to contraction and further transmission of the virus.
Supreme Court of India Cites 153 - Cited by 923 - Full Document
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