Taxmann's FAQs on Tax Audit

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CHAPTER 1 : APPLICABILITY OF TAX AUDIT UNDER SECTION 44AB OF THE INCOME TAX ACT, 1961 1

CHAPTER 2 : QUALIFICATIONS & DISQUALIFICATIONS OF A TAX AUDITOR 7

CHAPTER 3 : LIMIT ON THE NUMBER OF TAX AUDIT ASSIGNMENTS 15

CHAPTER 4 : FORMALITIES TO BE COMPLIED WITH BY A TAX AUDITOR PRIOR TO ACCEPTANCE OF TAX AUDIT ASSIGNMENT 28

CHAPTER 5 : FINANCIAL STATEMENTS OF A NON-CORPORATE ASSESSEE FOLLOWING THE ACCRUAL BASIS OF ACCOUNTING 42

CHAPTER 6 : FINANCIAL STATEMENTS OF A NON-CORPORATE ASSESSEE FOLLOWING THE CASH BASIS OF ACCOUNTING 52

CHAPTER 7 : FINANCIAL STATEMENTS OF NCEs WHERE CASH BASIS ADOPTED FOR ONE BUSINESS & ACCRUAL BASIS FOR ANOTHER 61

CHAPTER 8 : TAX AUDIT REPORTS

CHAPTER 9 : APPLICABILITY OF STANDARDS ON AUDITING TO TAX AUDIT OF NON-CORPORATE ENTITIES

CHAPTER 10 : APPLICABILITY OF STANDARDS ON AUDITING TO TAX AUDIT OF CORPORATES/OTHER ENTITIES SUBJECTED TO STATUTORY AUDIT

CHAPTER 11 : FORM NO. 3CA

CHAPTER 12 : FORM NO. 3CB

CHAPTER 13 : FORM NO. 3CD

CHAPTER 14 : GENERATION OF UDINs FOR TAX AUDIT REPORTS

CHAPTER 15 : LIABILITIES OF TAX AUDITOR

CHAPTER 16 : REVISION OF TAX AUDIT REPORT

CHAPTER 17 : CLAUSE 1: NAME OF THE ASSESSEE

CHAPTER 18 : CLAUSE 2: ADDRESS

CHAPTER 19 : CLAUSE 3: PERMANENT ACCOUNT NUMBER OR AADHAAR NUMBER

CHAPTER 20 : CLAUSE 4: REGISTRATIONS UNDER INDIRECT TAX LAWS

CHAPTER 21 : CLAUSE 5: STATUS

CHAPTER 22 : CLAUSE 6: PREVIOUS YEAR

CHAPTER 23 : CLAUSE 7: ASSESSMENT YEAR

CHAPTER 24 : CLAUSE 8: CLAUSE OF SECTION 44AB UNDER WHICH TAX AUDIT IS CONDUCTED

CHAPTER 25 : CLAUSE 8A: WHETHER ASSESSEE HAS OPTED FOR SECTION 115BA/115BAA/115BAB/115BAC/115BAD/115BAE? 130

CHAPTER 26 : CLAUSE 9: DETAILS REGARDING PARTNERS OR MEMBERS OF FIRMS/LLPs 134

CHAPTER 27 : CLAUSE 10: NATURE OF BUSINESS OR PROFESSION 142

CHAPTER 28 : CLAUSE 11: BOOKS OF ACCOUNT 151

CHAPTER 29 : CLAUSE 12: PRESUMPTIVELY ASSESSABLE INCOME

CHAPTER 30 : CLAUSE 13: METHOD OF ACCOUNTING AND ICDS 169

CHAPTER 31 : CLAUSE 14: METHOD OF STOCK VALUATION 180

CHAPTER 32 : CLAUSE 15: CONVERSION OF CAPITAL ASSET INTO STOCKIN-TRADE 185

CHAPTER 33 : CLAUSE 16: AMOUNTS NOT CREDITED TO PROFIT AND LOSS ACCOUNT 193

CHAPTER 34 : CLAUSE 17: PROPERTY TRANSFERRED AT LESS THAN SDV 210

CHAPTER 35 : CLAUSE 18: DEPRECIATION ALLOWABLE 223

CHAPTER 36 : CLAUSE 19: AMOUNTS DEDUCTIBLE UNDER SECTIONS 33AB TO 35E 246

CHAPTER 37 : CLAUSE 20: BONUS & EMPLOYEES’ CONTRIBUTION TO PF/ ESIC 253

CHAPTER 38 : CLAUSE 21: AMOUNTS INADMISSIBLE UNDER SECTIONS 37(1), 40(a), 40(b), 40(ba), 40A(3), 40A(7), 40A(9), 14A AND 36(1)(iii) 262

CHAPTER 39 : CLAUSE 22: AMOUNTS INADMISSIBLE UNDER SECTION 43B(h) OF THE ACT & UNDER SECTION 23 OF MSMED ACT 329

CHAPTER 40 : CLAUSE 23: PAYMENTS TO RELATED PERSONS 381

CHAPTER 41 : CLAUSE 24: DEEMED PROFITS UNDER SECTION 32AC/32AD/ 33AB/33ABA/33AC 387

CHAPTER 42 : CLAUSE 25: DEEMED PROFITS UNDER SECTION 41 389

CHAPTER 43 : CLAUSE 26: SUMS COVERED BY SECTION 43B 398

CHAPTER 44 : CLAUSE 27: CENVAT & PRIOR PERIOD ITEMS 406

CHAPTER 45 : CLAUSE 29A: AMOUNT TAXABLE UNDER SECTION 56(2)(ix) 410

CHAPTER 46 : CLAUSE 29B: GIFTS OR DEEMED GIFTS CHARGEABLE UNDER SECTION 56(x) 414

CHAPTER 47 : CLAUSE 30: HUNDI BORROWINGS 428

CHAPTER 48 : CLAUSE 30A: SECONDARY TRANSFER PRICING ADJUSTMENTS 435

CHAPTER 49 : CLAUSE 30B: THINCAP ADJUSTMENTS 441

CHAPTER 50 : CLAUSE 30C: GAAR (GENERAL ANTI AVOIDANCE RULES) 449

CHAPTER 51 : CLAUSE 31: ACCEPTANCE OR REPAYMENT OF LOAN/DEPOSIT/ SPECIFIED SUM ABOVE ` 20,000 LIMIT IN SECTION 269SS/ SECTION 269T & MODE OF RECEIPT/PAYMENT ABOVE ` 2,00,000 LIMIT IN SECTION 269ST 455

CHAPTER 52 : CLAUSE 32: UNABSORBED LOSS/DEPRECIATION 468

CHAPTER 53 : CLAUSE 33: CHAPTER VI-A DEDUCTIONS 478

CHAPTER 54 : CLAUSE 34: COMPLIANCE WITH TDS/TCS PROVISIONS 483

CHAPTER 55 : CLAUSE 35: QUANTITATIVE DETAILS 494

CHAPTER 56 : CLAUSE 36A: DEEMED DIVIDEND UNDER SECTION 2(22)(e) 502

CHAPTER 57 : CLAUSE 36B: DEEMED DIVIDEND UNDER SECTION 2(22)(f) 511

CHAPTER 58 : CLAUSE 37: COST AUDIT REPORT 515

CHAPTER 59 : CLAUSE 40: ACCOUNTING RATIOS 519

CHAPTER 60 : CLAUSE 41: DEMANDS RAISED & REFUNDS ISSUED UNDER LAWS OTHER THAN IT ACT & WT ACT 526

CHAPTER 61 : CLAUSE 42: FURNISHING OF FORM NOS. 61, 61A & 61B 530

CHAPTER 62 : CLAUSE 43: FURNISHING OF COUNTRY BY COUNTRY REPORTING U/S 286 534

CHAPTER 63 : CLAUSE 44: BREAK-UP OF TOTAL EXPENDITURE INCURRED BY ASSESSEE ACCORDING TO GST REGISTRATION STATUS OF PAYEES 537

CHAPTER 64 : SAMPLE ENGAGEMENT LETTER FOR TAX AUDIT – IN CASE OF AN ENTITY LIABLE TO STATUTORY AUDIT UNDER ANY OTHER LAW AND WHERE REPORTING WILL BE IN FORM 3CA-3CD 547

CHAPTER 65 : SAMPLE AUDIT ENGAGEMENT LETTER FOR TAX AUDIT –IN CASE OF AN ENTITY NOT LIABLE TO STATUTORY AUDIT UNDER ANY OTHER LAW AND WHERE REPORTING WILL BE IN FORM 3CB-3CD 555

APPENDIX : RELEVANT SECTIONS OF INCOME-TAX ACT, 1961 565

CLAUSE 22: AMOUNTS INADMISSIBLE UNDER

SECTION 43B(h) OF THE ACT & UNDER SECTION 23 OF MSMED ACT

What are the reporting requirements of Clause 22 of Form No. 3CD?

The reporting requirements of Clause 22 of Form No. 3CD

39.1

Sub-clause (i) of Clause 22 : Amount of interest inadmissible under section 23 of the MSMED Act

Sub-clause (i) of Clause 22 requires reporting of the aggregate amount of interest inadmissible under section 23 of the MSMED Act of interest payable under Section 16 of MSMED Act in respect of delayed payments to Udyam-Registered MSE suppliers of goods or services or capital goods

Sub-clause (ii): Total amount required to be paid to a micro or small enterprise, as referred to in Section 15 of the MSMED Act, during the previous year

Sub-clause (ii) should not be read and interpreted on a standalone basis. It should be interpreted in the light of sub-clause (iii) which clearly begins with “Of the amount referred to in (ii) above”.

The above view is reinforced by the e-filing utility .In the e-filing utility, one cannot fill up Clause 22(ii). One needs to fill up Clauses 22(iii)(a) and (b).

The total of Clauses 22(iii)(a) and (b) gets auto filled in Clause 22(ii).

Sub-clause (iii): Break-up of amount reported in sub-clause (ii) according to status of payment

Sub-clause (iii) appears to require reporting of the total of amounts payable to identified Udyam-registered MSEs outstanding as of the balance sheet date in respect of (a) amounts debited to P&L account and (b) amounts not debited to P&L which are reported as allowable deductions in other clauses of Form No. 3CD.

Amounts payable to identified Udyam-registered MSEs outstanding as of the balance sheet date in respect of capital expenditure (non-deductible) is to be ignored for sub-clause Sub-clause (iii) purposes. Fully deductible capital expenditure will be part of (b) above.

From amounts (a)+(b) as above , one must reduce the expenditure not otherwise disallowable under other provisions such as Section 40(A)(3), Section 40(a), Section 37(1) etc.

The break of the net amount arrived at as above is reportable in Clause 22(iii) (a) and (b). This is because Section 43B(h) comes into play only when this expenditure is not otherwise disallowable under other provisions such as Section 40(A)(3), Section 40(a), Section 37(1) etc.

In sub-clause (iii), the tax auditor is required the break up of the net amount so arrived according to their payment statuses as under: (a) paid up to time given under section 15 of the MSMED Act; (b) not paid up to time given under section 15 of the MSMED Act and inadmissible for the previous year

The total of sub-clause (iii)(a) and (b) gets auto-filled by the e-filing utility in Clause 22(ii)

Opinion on inadmissibility/disallowability of amounts reported

Clause 22(iii)(b) requires the tax auditor to form an opinion on the disallowability of such payments under Section 43B(h). Section 43B(h) comes into play only when a deduction in respect of the amount payable to MSEs is otherwise allowable under the Income Tax Act.

Whether Clause 22 requires any details of status of payments during the current year of pre-existing liabilities due to MSE Suppliers which were not allowable in the preceding year due to non-payment? 39.2

This Clause does not require any details of status of payments during the current year of pre-existing liabilities due to MSE Suppliers which were not allowable in the preceding year due to non-payment so such payments can be claimed as deduction during the current year . These details are required in the amended Clause 26(A) of Form No. 3CD.

What are the Definitions of the terms “Micro Enterprise” and “Small Enterprise”? 39.3

In Explanation 4 below section 43B, clauses (e) and (g) have been substituted to de ne the expression “micro enterprise” and “small enterprise” respectively as under: ‘(e) “micro enterprise” shall have the meaning assigned to it in clause (h) of section 2 of the Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises Development Act, 2006 (‘MSMED Act’); (g) “small enterprise” shall have the meaning assigned to it in clause (m) of section 2 of the Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises Development Act, 2006.’

CLAUSE 22: AMOUNTS INADMISSIBLE U/S 43B(h) Para 39.3

As clauses (e) and (g) of Explanation 4 to section 43B make applicable the de nitions of “micro” and “small” enterprises in the MSMED Act to section 43B(h), it is necessary to examine the de nitions in MSMED Act.

Section 2(h) of MSMED Act de nes “micro enterprise” to mean an enterprise classi ed as such under sub-section (1) of section 7.

Section 2(m) of MSMED Act de nes “small enterprise” to mean an enterprise classi ed as such under sub-section (1) of section 7.

Sub-section (1) of section 7 of MSMED Act provides that the Central Government may, for the purposes of this Act, by noti cation (in the Of cial Gazette), classify any class or classes of manufacturing or service enterprises, whether proprietorship, Hindu undivided family, association of persons, co-operative society, partnership rm, company or undertaking, by whatever name called, into:

(

a) Micro Enterprises

(b) Small Enterprises

(

c) Medium Enterprises

Sub-section (9) of section 7 of MSMED Act provides that the Central Government may, while classifying any class or classes of enterprises under sub-section (1), vary, from time to time, the criterion of investment and also consider criteria or standards in respect of employment or turnover of the enterprises and include in such classi cation the micro or tiny enterprises or the village enterprises, as part of small enterprises.

Classi cation of enterprises based on composite criteria of investment and turnover.

The Central Government has issued Noti cation No. SO 2119(E), dated 26-6-2020 (hereinafter referred to ‘the Noti cation’), under sections 7(1) read section 7(9) of the MSMED Act. Para 3(1) of the said Noti cation provides that a composite criterion of investment and turnover shall apply for classi cation of an enterprise as micro, small or medium. Para 1 of the Noti cation provides for classi cation of enterprises based on the composite criteria. Para 1 provides that an enterprise shall be classi ed as a micro, small or medium enterprise on the basis of the following criteria, namely:—

a micro enterprise, where the investment in plant and machinery or equipment does not exceed 2.5 crore rupees and turnover does not exceed ten crore rupees;

a small enterprise, where the investment in plant and machinery or equipment does not exceed 25 crore rupees and turnover does not exceed 100 crore rupees; and

a medium enterprise, where the investment in plant and machinery or equipment does not exceed 250 crore rupees and turnover does not exceed 500 crore rupees.

Analysis of classi cation of MSMEs based on composite criteria

Para 3 of the Noti cation clari es as under:

A composite criterion of investment and turnover shall apply for classification of an enterprise as micro, small or medium.

If an enterprise crosses the ceiling limits specified for its present category in either of the two criteria of investment or turnover, it will cease to exist in that category and be placed in the next higher category but no enterprise shall be placed in the lower category unless it goes below the ceiling limits specified for its present category in both the criteria of investment as well as turnover.

All units with Goods and Services Tax Identification Number (GSTIN) listed against the same Permanent Account Number (PAN) shall be collectively treated as one enterprise and the turnover and investment figures for all of such entities shall be seen together and only the aggregate values will be considered for deciding the category as micro, small or medium enterprise.

Paras 8(5) and 8(6) of the Noti cation provide as under:

In case of an upward change in terms of investment in plant and machinery or equipment or turnover or both, and consequent re-classification, an enterprise shall continue to avail of all non-tax benefits of the category (micro or small or medium) it was in before the re-classification, for a period of three years from the date of such upward change. [Para 8(5)]

In case of reverse-graduation of an enterprise, whether as a result of re-classification or due to actual changes in investment in plant and machinery or equipment or turnover or both, and whether the enterprise is registered under the Act or not, the enterprise will continue in its present category till the closure of the financial year and it will be given the benefit of the changed status only with effect from 1st April of the financial year following the year in which such change took place. [Para 8(6)]

Turnover is reckoned on net turnover basis i.e. turnover of goods and services less exports of goods and services.

Para 5 of the Noti cation deals with Calculation of turnover as under:

(1) Exports of goods or services or both, shall be excluded while calculating the turnover of any enterprise whether micro, small or medium, for the purposes of classification.

(2) Information as regards turnover and exports turnover for an enterprise shall be linked to the Income-tax Act or the Central Goods and Services Tax Act (CGST Act) and the GSTIN.

(3) The turnover related figures of such enterprise which do not have PAN will be considered on self-declaration basis for a period up to 31st March, 2021 and thereafter, PAN and GSTIN shall be mandatory. The exemption from the requirement of having GSTIN shall be as per the provisions of the Central Goods and Services Tax Act, 2017 (12 of 2017).

Investment in plant and machinery or equipment is reckoned on a net investment basis, i.e. depreciated cost as per Income-tax return of plant and machinery or equipment less cost of pollution control, R&D and industrial safety devices.

Para 4 of the noti cation deals with the calculation of investment in plant and machinery or equipment and provides as under:

The calculation of investment in plant and machinery or equipment will be linked to the Income Tax Return (ITR) of the previous years filed under the Income-tax Act, 1961.

In case of a new enterprise, where no prior ITR is available, the investment will be based on self-declaration of the promoter of the enterprise and such relaxation shall end after the 31st March of the financial year in which it files its first ITR.

The expression “plant and machinery or equipment” of the enterprise shall have the same meaning as assigned to the plant and machinery in the Income-tax Rules, 1962, framed under the Income-tax Act, 1961 and shall include all tangible assets (other than land and building, furniture and fittings).

The purchase (invoice) value of a plant and machinery or equipment, whether purchased first-hand or second-hand, shall be taken into account, excluding Goods and Services Tax (GST), on the self-disclosure basis if the enterprise is a new one without any ITR.

The cost of certain items specified in the Explanation I to sub-section (1) of section 7 of the Act shall be excluded from calculating the investment amount in plant and machinery.

Whether unregistered MSE suppliers also to be considered for Section 43B(h) purposes? Or are only the Udyam-Registered MSE Suppliers to be considered? 39.4

Udyam Registration (UR) is mandatory for availing all the schemes/bene ts [FAQ 4 on MSME Samadhaan Portal]. One cannot conclude by just reading Para 1 only of Noti cation 2119 whether an enterprise is a Micro or Small enterprise. The Noti cation has to be read as a whole. The Meemansa Rule of cited by Supreme Court approvingly in U.P. Bhoodan Yagna Samiti v. Braj Kishore (1988) 4 SCC 274 as under :

When you have to draw a conclusion from a piece of writing, you have to read it from beginning to end. Without doing this, it is dif cult to understand the purpose. If there is any innovation (apoorvata/navyata) or something new, it should be noted. Then, one must notice the result of such innovation. Then, nd what is intended to be conveyed and in what context.

We interpret Noti cation 2119 by taking note of the entire Noti cation and innovations introduced by it as under:

Para 2: Becoming a micro, small or medium enterprise

Online Filing of UR on self-declaration basis [Para 2(1)]

Para 6: Registration process PAN & Aadhaar Compulsory

GSTIN Compulsory unless exempted from GST Registration under CGST Act

Features of Udyam Portal

PAN & GST linked details on investment & turnover taken automatically from Govt data bases.

The online system is fully integrated with Income Tax and GSTIN systems.

Para 4:Calculation of investment in PME

Investment=WDV as per ITR less cost of pollution control, R&D and industrial safety devices [OM, dated 6-8-2020 and Item 20 of Udyam Registration Form,]

Calculation linked to ITRs filed of previous years

Para 5:Calculation of turnover

Export of goods or services or both to be excluded

Information on turnover and exports shall be linked to ITR or GSTIN

Para 4:Calculation of investment in PME

Investment=WDV as per ITR less cost of pollution control, R&D and industrial safety devices [OM, dated 6-8-2020 and Item 20 of Udyam Registration Form,]

Calculation linked to ITRs filed of previous years

Para 5: Calculation of turnover

Export of goods or services or both to be excluded

Information on turnover and exports shall be linked to ITR or GSTIN

When one takes due note of the Noti cation as a whole, the position emerges that to claim bene ts as a Micro or Small Enterprise, Udyam Registration is mandatory. It is not mandatory for a micro or small enterprise to le Udyam Registration in terms of section 8 of the MSMED Act. Only Medium Manufacturing Enterprises are mandatorily required to le Udyam Registration failing which penalty is imposable under Section 27 of that Act. Nevertheless, micro or small enterprises have to le Udyam Registration to avail bene ts under the MSMED Act as that alone is evidence of their status as micro or small enterprises. When law provides a simple online ling process without any ling fee and on self-declaration basis for availing bene ts, there is no excuse for not ling it. It is noteworthy that Para 2 of the Noti cation providing for Udyam Registration is titled “Becoming micro, small or medium enterprise”

For a buyer-entity to write to/email all its trade creditors and obtain their Udyam Registration Numbers is a big enough task. Imagine every buyer-entity having to obtain nancials, ITRs and GSTRs of each and every trade creditor and classifying them as micro or small enterprise. It will be well nigh impossible to do so. Clearly, there is a set procedure under the MSMED Act and the Noti cation to validate the classi cation of enterprises through Udyam Registration and to automatically update details of Investment and Turnover from ITRs and GSTRs led by them. Therefore, Udyam Registration provides the only acceptable evidence of the micro enterprise or small enterprise status of the supplier-entity. Therefore, only a Udyam-registered

335

CLAUSE 22: AMOUNTS INADMISSIBLE U/S 43B(h) Para 39.4

micro or small enterprise must be considered for section 43B(h) purposes. This conclusion can also be reached in another manner by interpreting the word “supplier” in section 15 of the MSMED Act.

It cannot be argued that since section 43B refers to only section 15 of the MSMED Act and does not refer to the de nition of “Supplier” in section 2(n) of the MSMED Act, section 43B(h) will also apply to amounts due to an unregistered micro or small enterprise(i.e. micro or small enterprise not having Udyam Registration). The argument cannot be accepted for several reasons. Firstly, the term “appointed day” used in section 15 is de ned in section 2(b) of the MSMED Act. If that de nition is to be ignored on the ground that it is not referred to in section 43B, then section 43B(h) will be rendered nugatory in all cases where there is no written agreement between the buyer and the Supplier regarding the due date of payment. That section 15 of the MSMED Act is to be interpreted in the light of the de nition in section 2(b) of the said Act is clear from the following extracts from the Explanatory Memorandum to the Finance Bill, 2023.

“Promoting timely payments to Micro and Small Enterprises

1. Section 43B of the Act provides for certain deductions to be allowed only on actual payment. Further, the proviso of this section allows deduction on accrual basis, if the amount is paid by due date of furnishing of the return of income.

2. In order to promote timely payments to micro and small enterprises, it is proposed to include payments made to such enterprises within the ambit of section 43B of the Act. Accordingly, it is proposed to insert a new clause (h) in section 43B of the Act to provide that any sum payable by the assessee to a micro or small enterprise beyond the time limit speci ed in section 15 of the Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises Development (MSMED) Act, 2006 shall be allowed as deduction only on actual payment. However, it is also proposed that the proviso to section 43B of the Act shall not apply to such payments.

3. Section 15 of the MSMED Act mandates payments to micro and small enterprises within the time as per the written agreement, which cannot be more than 45 days. If there is no such written agreement, the section mandates that the payment shall be made within 15 days. Thus, the proposed amendment to section 43B of the Act will allow the payment as a deduction only on payment basis. It can be allowed on accrual basis only if the payment is within the time mandated under section 15 of the MSMED Act.”

To the same effect is CBDT’s Circular No.1/2024, dated 23-1-2024, which clari es as under:

21. Promoting timely payments to Micro and

Small Enterprises

21.1 Section 43B of the Act provides for certain deductions to be allowed only on actual payment. Further, the proviso of this section allows deduction on accrual basis, if the amount is paid by due date of furnishing of the return of income.

21.2 In order to promote timely payments to micro and small enterprises, payments made to such enterprises have been included within the ambit of section 43B of the Act vide Finance Act, 2023. A new clause (h) has been inserted in section 43B of the Act to provide that any sum payable by the assessee to a micro or small enterprise

beyond the time limit speci ed in section 15 of the Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises Development (MSMED) Act, 2006 shall be allowed as deduction only on actual payment. However, it has also been provided that the proviso to section 43B of the Act shall not apply to such payments.

21.3 Section 15 of the MSMED Act mandates payments to micro and small enterprises within the time as per the written agreement, which cannot be more than 45 days. If there is no such written agreement, the section mandates that the payment shall be made within 15 days. Thus, this amendment to section 43B of the Act allows the payment as deduction only on payment basis. It can be allowed on accrual basis only if the payment is within the time mandated under section 15 of the MSMED Act.

Applicability: This amendment takes effect from 1st April, 2024 and will accordingly apply in relation to the assessment year 2024-25 and subsequent assessment years.

Therefore, the intent of section 43B(h) is that section 15 should be interpreted for section 43B(h) purposes in the light of de nitions given in section 2 of the MSMED Act.

What are the requirements of Section 15 of the MSMED Act?

39.5

Section 15 of the MSMED Act reads as under: “Liability of buyer to make payment.

15. Where any supplier supplies any goods or renders any services to any buyer, the buyer shall make payment therefor on or before the date agreed upon between him and the supplier in writing or, where there is no agreement in this behalf, before the appointed day:

Provided that in no case the period agreed upon between the supplier and the buyer in writing shall exceed forty- ve days from the day of acceptance or the day of deemed acceptance.”

Paraphrasing section 15 of the MSMED Act, the following position emerges:

(

a) Where any supplier supplies any goods or renders any services to any buyer, the buyer shall make payment for the same on or before the date agreed upon between him and the supplier in writing;

(

b) In no case, the period agreed upon between the supplier and the buyer in writing shall exceed forty-five days from the day of acceptance or deemed acceptance; and

(

c) Where there is no written agreement regarding the credit period, the buyer shall make payment before the appointed day

It may be noted that where the credit period is agreed in writing, payment is to be made on or before the agreed due date, which shall in no case exceed 45 days. If the credit period is not agreed upon in writing, the supplier will be paid before the appointed day.

Though section 43B(h) refers to “the time limit speci ed in section 15 of the Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises Development Act, 2006”, it does not de ne crucial terms used in section 15 of MSMED Act which are necessary to give force and life to section 15 as well as section 43B(h). The crucial terms on which sections 15 and

CLAUSE 22: AMOUNTS INADMISSIBLE U/S 43B(h) Para 39.5

43B(h) hinge are “the appointed day”, “the day of acceptance or deemed acceptance”, “supplier”, “goods”, “service” and “buyer”. These terms are, however, de ned in section 2 of the MSMED Act.

The “appointed day” is relevant only if the buyer and the seller have not agreed to any due date for payment in writing. As per section 2(b) of the MSMED Act, “appointed day” means the day following immediately after the expiry of the period of fteen days from the day of acceptance or the day of deemed acceptance of any goods or any services by a buyer from a supplier.

The term “Supplier” is de ned in section 2(n) of the MSMED Act. Only a “supplier” as de ned in section 2(n) of the MSMED Act can avail of the rights under Chapter V of MSMED Act such as right to timely payment under section 15, right to interest on delayed payment under section 16, Right to le plaint with MSEFC for recovery of dues from buyer etc. Section 2(n) de nes “supplier” to mean a micro or small enterprise which has led a memorandum with authority referred to in section 8(1) (i.e. Udyam Registration). The term “supplier” also includes:

(a) National Small Industries Corporation;

(

b) Small Industries Development Corporation of a State or a Union territory; and

(

c) Any company, co-operative society, trust or body registered or constituted under any law and engaged in selling goods produced by micro or small enterprises and rendering services which are provided by such enterprises. The following points are noteworthy:

(

(

a) “The day of acceptance” means the day of the actual delivery of goods or the rendering of services;

b) Where any objection is made in writing by the buyer regarding the acceptance of goods or services within fifteen days from the day of the delivery of goods or the rendering of services, “the day of acceptance” means the day on which the supplier removes such objection;

(

c) “The day of deemed acceptance” means where no objection is made in writing by the buyer regarding the acceptance of goods or services within fifteen days from the day of the delivery of goods or the rendering of services, the day of the actual delivery of goods or the rendering of services.

Illustration of provisions of Section 15 of MSMED Act

Illustration 1: No. credit period in writing and no objection in writing from buyer:

Date of order 3-1-2024

Date of Supply 3-2-2024

Credit Period Nil

Whether any Objection in writing raised by buyer No

Date of deemed acceptance 3-2-2024

Appointed Day (day following immediately after the expiry of 15 days from the date of delivery) 19-2-2024

Payment to be made before appointed day On or before 18-2-2024

Illustration 2: Credit period of 60 days in writing and no objection in writing from Buyer as regards Goods or services:

Date of order 3-1-2024

Date of Supply 3-2-2024

Credit Period 60 days

Due date of payment as per agreement 3-4-2024

Whether any Objection in writing raised by buyer No

Due date of payment as per section 15/section 43B(h) On or before 19-3-2024

Illustration 3: No credit period but written objection raised by buyer within 15 days of supply:

Date of order 3-1-2024

Date of Supply 3-2-2024

Credit Period Nil

Date of objection in writing 15-2-2024

Date of removal of objection 20-2-2024

Appointed day (day following immediately after expiry of 15 days from the date of removal of objection) 7-3-2024

Payment to be made on or before 6-3-2024

If the objection is made after 15 days from the date of supply, it will not be considered. In this case, the appointed date will be 19-2-2004, i.e., the day following immediately after the expiry of 15 days from the date of actual delivery of goods. Accordingly, the due date of payment will be 18-2-2024.

Illustration 4: Credit period of 60 days along with written objection from buyer within 15 days:

Date of order 3-1-2024

Date of Supply 3-2-2024

Credit Period 60 days

Due date for payment as per agreement 3-4-2024

Date of objection in writing 18-2-2024

Date of removal of objection 20-2-2024

Payment to be made on or before due date 5-4-2024

If the objection is made after 15 days from the date of supply, it will not be considered. Accordingly, the payment due date as per section 15 will be 19-3-2024.

What are the requirements of Section 16 of the MSMED Act as regards Interest on delayed payments (Section 16 of MSMED Act) 39.6

Section 16 of the MSMED Act provides that where any buyer fails to make payment of the amount to the supplier, as required under section 15 the buyer shall be liable to pay compound interest with monthly rests to the supplier on that amount from the appointed day or, as the case may be, from the date immediately following the date agreed upon, at three times the bank rate notified by the Reserve Bank. The current bank rate is 5.75% (as per the RBI’s website). So, the Interest rate under Section 16 works at 17.25% p.a.

The above provisions apply notwithstanding anything contained in any agreement between the buyer and the supplier or in any law for the time being in force.

Section 17 of the MSMED Act deals with the Recovery of the amount due. Section 17 provides that “For any goods supplied or services rendered by the supplier, the buyer shall be liable to pay the amount with interest thereof as provided under section 16”.

Section 23 of the MSMED Act states that interest payable or paid by the buyer, under or in accordance with the provisions of this Act, shall not be allowed as a deduction for the purposes of the computation of income under the Income-tax Act, 1961.

Section 22(v) of the MSMED Act seeks to make the disallowance provisions in section 23 effective by requiring disclosure in the audited annual accounts of ‘the amount of further interest remaining due and payable even in the succeeding years, until such date when the interest dues as above are actually paid to the small enterprise, for the purpose of disallowance as a deductible expenditure under section 23’.

What are the two tax consequences that arise to an assessee when he delays payment to micro or small enterprise?

39.7

Two tax consequences ow to buyer-entity when it fails to make payment to a Udyam-registered Micro/Small Enterprise within the time allowed under Section 15 of the MSMED Act:

(1) Disallowance of amount payable under Section 43B(h)

(2) Interest liability under Section 16 of MSMED Act on the amount payable till it is paid and disallowance of such interest under Section 23 of the same in computing taxable income under the Income-tax Act.

Though both the above tax consequences arise out of the same default (delayed payment to Udyam-registered MSE supplier), there are the following differences between the two:

(1) Year from which applicable: Section 43B(h) applies from the assessment year 2024-25. Disallowance of interest on delayed payment under section 16, read with section 23 of the MSMED Act, is applicable from the date the MSMED Act came into force on 2nd October 2006.

Rs. 1,395/-

FAQS ON TAX AUDIT – BASED ON

VIEWS IN GUIDANCE NOTE ON TAX AUDIT [REVISED 2025 EDITION]

AUTHOR : Taxmann's Editorial Board

PUBLISHER : Taxmann Publications

DATE OF PUBLICATION : September 2025

EDITION : 2025 Edition

ISBN NO : 9789371260732

NO. OF PAGES : 580

BINDING TYPE : PAPERBACK

DESCRIPTION

FAQs on Tax Audit is a practitioner-oriented, clause-wise handbook on tax audit under Section 44AB. It distils the ICAI's Guidance Note on Tax Audit (Revised 2025) into focused Q&As, mapping every reporting requirement in Forms 3CA/3CB/3CD to practical procedures, documentation, and e-filing steps. The coverage is form-linked and clause-wise, with 'how-to-fill' guidance, specimen language, checklists, and cross-references to Standards on Auditing and the Guidance Note. This book is intended for the following audience:

• Chartered Accountants

• Audit Partners, Managers & Articled Assistants

• CFOs/Finance Heads, Controllers & Tax Leads

• Internal Auditors & Compliance Teams

• Academics & Learners

The Present Publication is the 2025 Edition, updated till 30th August 2025. This book is edited by Taxmann's Editorial Board, with the following noteworthy features:

• [Alignment with 2025 Guidance Note] It mirrors the structure and positions of the revised Guidance Note; it includes SA-700-style responsibility paragraphs within 3CA/3CB observations

• [Limit on Number of Tax Audits] Old (2008) regime vs new (2025) regime; effective dates; revised TARs treatment

• [UDIN] What to generate, mandatory key fields for 44AB, per-assignment rule, and when separate UDINs (e.g., Form 29B) are needed

• [Clause-wise, Utility-first] Crisp walkthroughs for Clauses 11, 32(e), 34(a)/(b), 42, 43 and 44 with exactly what to 'Select/Add Details' and what to retain in workpapers

• [Ready-to-use] Specimen engagement letters for 3CA-3CD and 3CB-3CD; GN-based positions and targeted case-law notes

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