"I.T.A. No. 2180/Del/2023 & CO No.116/Del/2023 1 IN THE INCOME TAX APPELLATE TRIBUNAL DELHI BENCH “A” NEW DELHI BEFORE SHRI CHALLA NAGENDRA PRASAD, JUDICIAL MEMBER AND SHRI S RIFAUR RAHMAN, ACCOUNTANT MEMBER आ.अ.सं/.I.T.A No.2180/Del/2023 िनधा रणवष /Assessment Year: 2019-20 DCIT, CENTRAL CIRCLE-17, ROOM NO.244, 2ND FLOOR, ARA CENTRE, E-2, JHANDEWALAN, NEW DELHI. बनाम Vs. AL AMMAR FROZEN FOODS EXPORTS PVT. LTD., 8358, FF, MODEL BASTI SADAR BAZAR, NEAR PAHARGANJ, NEW DELHI. अपीलाथ Appellant यथ /Respondent & Cross Objection No. 116/Del/2023 (In I.T.A No.2180/Del/2023) िनधा रणवष /Assessment Year: 2019-20 AL AMMAR FROZEN FOODS EXPORTS PVT. LTD., 8358, FF, MODEL BASTI SADAR BAZAR, NEAR PAHARGANJ, NEW DELHI. Vs. DCIT, CENTRAL CIRCLE-17, ROOM NO.244, 2ND FLOOR, ARA CENTRE, E-2, JHANDEWALAN, NEW DELHI. अपीलाथ\u0012 Appellant \u0014\u0015यथ\u0012/Respondent Assessee by Ms. Ananya Kapoor, Adv. & Shri Utkarsa Gupta, Adv. Revenue by Shri Ajay Kumar Arora, Sr. DR सुनवाईक\u0014तारीख/ Date of hearing: 27.05.2025 उ\u0019ोषणाक\u0014तारीख/Pronouncement on 18.06.2025 आदेश /O R D E R PER C.N. PRASAD, J.M. The appeal and Cross Objection are filed by the Revenue and Assessee respectively against the order of the Ld. Commissioner of I.T.A. No. 2180/Del/2023 & CO No.116/Del/2023 2 Income Tax (Appeals)-NFAC, Delhi dated 26/05/2023 for the AY 2019-20. The Revenue in its appeal challenged the order of the Ld. CIT(Appeals) in deleting the disallowance made on account of claim for deduction u/s 80IB of the Act. The assessee filed cross objection in support of the order of the Ld. CIT(Appeals). 2. Brief facts are that the assessee company in the present case filed its return of income on 21.10.2019 under 139(1) of the Income Tax Act, 1961 declaring an income of Rs.2,12,79,140/-. The Assessee Company also declared book profit of Rs.3,64,50,576/- under Section 115JB of the Act and paid tax amounting to Rs.75,04,008/-. Pursuant to filing of the return, it was realised that the Assessee Company has inadvertently omitted to claim the deduction under Section 80IB(11A) of the Act. The Assessee Company revised its return of income under Section 139(5) of the Act on 29.09.2020. However, due to a software error while generating the XML, the brought forward business losses and unabsorbed depreciation of Rs.6,93,916/- and Rs.2,31,15,712/- respectively were not adjusted in this revised return. Hence, in order to rectify the aforesaid error, the Assessee Company filed a second revised return dated 10.11.2020 under Section 139(5) of the Act which included both the deduction under Section 80IB(11A) of the Act as well as the correct I.T.A. No. 2180/Del/2023 & CO No.116/Del/2023 3 adjustment of carried forward losses and depreciation. It is pertinent to note that the aforementioned revised returns were filed within the extended timeline provided by CBDT Circular dated 30.09.2020, which allowed filing of revised returns for AY 2019-20 up to 30.11.2020 under Section 139(5) of the Act. 3. On 26.11.2020, the CPC issued an intimation under Section 143(1) of the Act proposing the following two adjustments under Section 143(1)(a): a. Disallowance of deduction under Section 80IB(11A) for not filing Form 10CCB and corresponding Schedule 80IB or Form 10 CCB has not been e-filed within the due date. b. Disallowance of Rs.1,58,398/- towards employee contributions to PF/ESI deposited beyond the due date under relevant laws. 4. The assessee filed detailed reply on 19.12.2020. In so far as deductions u/s 80IB is concerned it was stated that for AY 2019-20 as per section 80IB(7) r.w.s. 80IB(11A) of the Act it was sufficient to file Form 10CCB along with the return and there was no requirement to submit the same before the due date u/s 44AB of the Act. Assessee submitted that the requirement for advance filing was introduced only in the Finance Act, 2020 effective from AY 2020-21. Assessee submitted that in its case Form 10CCB stood duly filed I.T.A. No. 2180/Del/2023 & CO No.116/Del/2023 4 along with the revised return and the revised return was also filed within time allowed by the statute. The Assessee with respect to second adjustment it was stated that PF & ESI contribution was deposited before the due date of filing the return and therefore is allowable u/s 36(1)(va) r.w.s. 43B of the Act and placed reliance on the decision of the Delhi High Court in the case of CIT Vs. AIMIL Limited. 5. However, the CPC issued an intimation u/s 143(1) of the Act on 12.01.2021 disallowing the deduction claimed u/s 80IB of the Act and the contributions towards PF & ESI in respect of employees u/s 36(1)(va) of the Act. The assessee filed an appeal before the Ld. CIT(Appeals) challenging the intimation u/s 143(1) and the disallowances made therein and the Ld. CIT(A) by order dated 26.05.2023 upheld the claim made by the assessee in respect of deduction u/s 80IB(11A) of the Act. Against this order of the Ld. CIT(A) the Revenue is in appeal before us. 6. Ld. DR strongly supported the orders of the Assessing Officer in denying deduction u/s 80IB of the Act while processing the return u/s 143(1) of the Act. I.T.A. No. 2180/Del/2023 & CO No.116/Del/2023 5 7. The Ld. Counsel for the assessee, on the other hand, strongly placed reliance on the order of the Ld. CIT(Appeals). The Ld. Counsel for the assessee also made the following submissions: “Revised Return vis-a-vis Original Return 9. It is humbly submitted that the Assessee Company filed its return of income on 21.10.2019 under Section 139(1) of the Act i.e., within the due date of filing of return of income where the Assessee Company inadvertently omitted to claim the deduction under Section 80IB of the Act. However, the same was claimed in a revised return filed under Section 139(5) of the Act. 10. In view of the aforesaid, it is the case of the Assessee Company that a revised return which has been filed validly ought to be considered as having been filed originally. The aforesaid position of law is supported by the decision rendered by the Hon’ble Allahabad High Court in the case of Dhampur Sugar Mills Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax [(1973) 90 ITR 236 (All.)] and the Hon’ble Gujarat High Court in the case of PCIT-1 v. Babubhai Ramanbhai Patel [(2017) 249 Taxman 470 (Guj.)], It is vehemently argued that once a revised return is filed, the original return must be taken to have been withdrawn and substituted by a fresh return for the purpose of assessment. 11. Thus, in a case where the return has been revised within time along with the correct claim under Section 80IB of the Act the same ought to have been considered for correctly determining the tax liability and the CPC ought not to have taken such hyper technical approach and disallowed the claim of the Assessee Company merely because the Assessee Company failed to file its claim under Section 801B of the Act along with the return of income especially when the same was revised return was within the prescribed time period. 12. In this regard, it is further submitted that the courts have consistently held that requirement of filing the I.T.A. No. 2180/Del/2023 & CO No.116/Del/2023 6 auditor’s report is a directory requirement and hence would stand satisfied if the accountant's report is furnished during the course of the assessment. Reliance in this regard is placed on the decision of the Hon’ble Allahabad High Court in the case of PCIT v. Surya Merchants Ltd. [(2016) 387 ITR 105 (All.)]. In our case, the factual position is on a much better footing as the auditor’s report has been filed along with the revised return itself. 13. It is humbly submitted that in the aforesaid decision, the Hon’ble High Court observed that the requirement of sub-section (7) of section 80IA of the Act, which is made applicable to section 80IB of the Act in view of the provisions of sub section (13) of section 80IB of the Act, that the audit report should be furnished along with the return of income is a directory requirement and would stand satisfied if the audit report is furnished during the course of the assessment proceedings. The aforesaid position of law has also been affirmed by the jurisdictional High Court i.e., the High Court of Delhi in the case of CIT v. Web Commerce (India) (P.) Ltd. [(2009) 318 ITR 135 (Del.)]. • Directory v. Mandatory provisions 14. With regards to aforementioned argument, reference is made to Section 80IA(7) of the Act; as applicable to impugned assessment year 2019-20 that the legislature had stipulated such compliance as “the assessee furnishes, along with his return of income” whereas the Revenue’s stand seeking to evoke 44AB of the Act herein, came by way of substitution vide Finance Act, 2020 w.e.f. 01.04.2020 only. 15. The aforesaid shows that the provisions as existing prior to Finance Act, 2020 only required the Assessee Company to file its Audit Report along with the Return of Income, which the Assessee Company has done. Thus, in light of the aforesaid rulings of various High Courts including the Hon’ble Delhi High Court, the claim of the Assessee Company ought to be allowed. I.T.A. No. 2180/Del/2023 & CO No.116/Del/2023 7 • Allowability of claim in view of Section 80A(5) and 80AC of the Act 16. It is humbly submitted that controversy at hand rests on the issue whether a valid return of income was filed by the Assessee Company. Admittedly, the Assessee Company had claimed deduction under Section 80IB of the Act by way of a revised return filed under Section 139(5) of the Act. Now, upon a bare perusal of the provisions of Section 80A(5) and Section 80AC of the Act, it is submitted that the Assessee Company is entitled to the deduction and fulfils the relevant conditions. Section 80A(5) of the Act prescribes that deduction under the Chapter can only if claimed in a return of income was filed. Further, Section 80AC of the Act stipulates that certain claims of deductions will be allowable only if the returns of income are filed within the due dates specified under Section 139(1) of the Act. 17. Now, what is required to observed and appreciated that while Section 80A(5) of the Act mandates that claim has to be made in return of income, it does not mandate whether the same has to be made in the original return or revised return. It is important to note that Section 80A(5) only uses the word return of income and does not restrict it to a particular return. Hence, in our respectful submission, a valid revised return under Section 139(5) is a return of income and hence the Assessee Company fulfils this condition as well. 18. The above arguments are supported by the decision of the Hon'ble Kerala High Court in the case of Chirakkal Service Co-Operative Bank Ltd. Kannur v. CIT [(2016) 384 ITR 490 (Ker.)] wherein the Hon'ble High Court categorically noted that, for the purposes of Section 80A(5) of the Act, even a return filed in response to notice u/s 142(1) of the Act was a valid return and any claim made therein, therefore, was allowable. Further reliance is also placed on the decision of Randheja Dudh Utpadak Sahakari Mandli Ltd. v. Income-tax Officer [(2024) 165 taxmann.com 180 (Ahmedabad -Trib.)] to buttress the aforementioned submissions. I.T.A. No. 2180/Del/2023 & CO No.116/Del/2023 8 19. In the same tone and tenor while Section 80AC lays down that claim will be allowable only if return is filed within the time limit, the same fails to lay down that the claim has to be necessarily made in the original return only. The only condition prescribed is that the return under Section 139(1) should be filed within time, which has been done in our case. Even the heading of the Section states “Deduction not to be allowed unless return furnished”. Hence, the Section only mandates furnishing of the return, however, it nowhere mandates that the claim should be made in the return only. For this reliance is placed on the following decisions- a. Parmeshwar Cold Storage (P.) Ltd. v. - ACIT [2011] 16 taxmann.com 88 (Ahd. - Trib.) b. DIC Fine Chemicals (P.) Ltd. v. DCTT [2019] 107 taxmann.com 213 (Kolkata - Trib.) c. DCIT v. Kamdhenu Builders and Developers [ITA No. 7010/Mum/2010 (Mumbai - Trib.)] • Scope of Section 143(1) of the Act 20. With regards to the case at hand, it is further submitted that the variations sought to be made in the intimation issued under Section 143(1)(a)(i) and (ii) of the Act are beyond the scope of the said provisions. It is humbly submitted that the additions/disallowances which can be made in under Section 143(1) of the Act are very restricted in nature wherein the additions are restricted only to the nature which are arithmetical or apparent from the face of record. 21. It is humbly submitted that both the issues on which the additions have been made are contentious and debatable and require detailed examination. Hence, the additions which have been made are illegal, bad in law and without jurisdiction and therefore, the additions are liable to be quashed on this ground alone. • Non applicability of decision of Supreme Court in PCIT v. Wipro Limited I.T.A. No. 2180/Del/2023 & CO No.116/Del/2023 9 22. With regards to the issue at hand reference is also made to the decision of the Supreme Court in Principal Commissioner of Income Tax - III & Anr. v. Wipro Limited [(2022) 446 ITR 1 (SC)] which is not applicable herein. 23. The aforementioned decision has been distinguished by the Hon’ble jurisdictional High Court in the case of Shree Bhavani Power Projects (P.) Ltd. v. Income-tax Officer [(2024) 165 taxmann.com 733 (Del.)] wherein the Hon’ble High Court has noted that Wipro Limited was a decision which was rendered in the context of Section 10B(8) that .stands placed in Chapter III of the Act and which makes provisions with respect to exempt income. High Court took cognizance of the fact that Section 80-IA is placed in Chapter VIA and the same deals with ‘Deductions’ and thus, the High Court held that exemption and deduction provisions cannot be interpreted with similitude. 24. Further, in the following judicial precedents, the Hon’ble Courts have distinguished the decision of the Hon’ble Apex Court in the case of Wipro Ltd. (Supra). The finding of the relevant decisions is reproduced below: • International Tractors Ltd v. DCIT [(2021) 435 ITR 85 (Del.)] (Copy at Page 1 to 9 of the CLC]: Hon’ble Delhi High Court allowed the deduction under section 80JJAA of the Act, despite the fact that in this case the assessee filed claim of deduction during the assessment proceedings (along with Form 10DA). Hon’ble Court also held that where the claim under Section 80JJAA of the Act was otherwise sustainable in law, the same should be allowed. The relevant extract of the same is reproduced below: “16. In any event, we are of the view that, if a claim is otherwise sustainable in law, then the appellate authorities are empowered to entertain the same. This view finds reflection in a judgment of the coordinate bench of this Court in titled CIT v. Aspentech India (P.) Ltd. [ITAppeal No. 1233 of 2011, dated 28-11-2011] \" I.T.A. No. 2180/Del/2023 & CO No.116/Del/2023 10 • Canadian Specialty Vinyls v. ITO (TTA No. 7612/Del/2019): This Hon’ble Bench has distinguished the decision of the Hon’ble Apex Court in t Wipro Ltd. (supra) and held as under (Copy at Page 71 to 80 of the CLC): “also, as per the judgement of the Hon’ble Supreme Court in the case of G.M. Knitting Industries Pvt. Ltd. (supra), which was followed by the coordinate Bench of the ITAT, Pune in the case of Krushi Vibhag Karmchari Vrund Sahakari Pat Sanstha (supra), the assessee is very well entitled to claim deduction u/s 80IC of the Act. Therefore, we reach a logical conclusion that the assessee is entitled to set deduction u/s. 8QIC of the Act, as the claiming such deduction, which is part of Chapter VI-A of the Act, in the return of income filed within prescribed time limit is not mandatory but directory. Therefore ground no. 3 & 4 of assessee are allowed and Assessing Officer is directed to allow claim of assessee u/s 801C of the Act.” • Akuntha Projects (P.) Ltd. v. Deputy Director-CPC [2024] 162 taxmann.com 861 (Ahmedabad ITAT)] (Copy at Page 57 to 62 of the CLC): In this case the Hon’ble Ahmedabad Bench of the Tribunal held that where claim of deduction under section 80JJAA of the Act had been rejected by CPC for reason that assessee failed to file Form 1ODA within prescribed time under Statute, however, requisite audit report was available with Assessing Officer before assessment order was framed, claim of deduction could not have been denied. • Tarasafe International (P.) Ltd. v. Deputy Director of Income-tax, CPC [2024] 168 taxmann.com 514 (Kolkata- Trib.) (Copy at Page 63 to 64 of the CLC): In this case the Hon’ble Kolkata Bench of the Tribunal allowed the assessee's appeal, granting a deduction under section 80JJAA despite the late filing of Form 10DA, based on the Supreme Court's decision in CIT v. G. M. Knitting Industries Pvt. Ltd. I.T.A. No. 2180/Del/2023 & CO No.116/Del/2023 11 25. To the same effect in the following decisions, the Hon’ble Courts have upheld the claim of the Assessee’s relating to deductions claimed. • CIT v. G. M. Knitting Industries (P.) Ltd. [(2016) 71 taxmann.com 35 (SC)] • Association of Indian Panelboard Manufacturer v. Deputy Commissioner of Income Tax [(2023) 157 Taxmann.com 550 (Guj.)] • CIT v. Panama Chemical Works [(2007) 165 Taxman 135 (MP)] • Kumaon Exports Pvt. Ltd. v. DCIT [ITA No. 39/Del/2024)] • Aprameya Engineering Ltd. v. ITO [(2024) 164 taxmann.com 740 (Ahmedabad- Trib.)] • Jeans Knit (P.) Ltd. v. DCIT [(2022) 138 taxmann.com 480 (Bangalore-Trib.)] • Krushi Vibhag Karmchari Vrund Sahakari Pat Sanstha Maryadit v. Income-tax Officer [(2023) 147 taxmann.com 449 (Nagpur-Trib.)] • Captain Steel India Ltd. v. Deputy Commissioner of Income-tax [(2024) 166 taxmann.com 351 (Kolkata-Trib.)] 26. Hence, in light of the above, it is prayed that the Department Appeal is liable to be dismissed and the Cross Objection preferred by the Assessee Company ought to allowed in view of the grounds taken there under.” 8. Heard rival submissions, perused the orders of the authorities below and the decisions relied on. We find that the issue is squarely covered by the decision of the Hon’ble Jurisdictional High Court in I.T.A. No. 2180/Del/2023 & CO No.116/Del/2023 12 the case of Shri Bawani Power Projects Pvt. Ltd. Vs. ITO in WP(c) 8972 & 8980/2019 dated 14.08.2024, wherein the Jurisdictional High Court after considering the decisions of the Hon’ble Supreme Court in the case of Wipro Limited also the decision of the Hon’ble Supreme Court in the case of G.M. Knitting, held that the assessee was entitled to claim deductions even where the audit report had not been filed with the return but was otherwise submitted before the assessment was completed. While holding so the Hon’ble Jurisdictional High Court held as under: “1. These two writ petitions W.P.(C) 8972/2019 and W.P.(C) 8980/2019 pertaining to Assessment Years1 2014-15 and 2013-14 respectively impugn the reassessment action initiated in terms of notices issued under Section 148 of the Income Tax Act, 19612, both dated 26 March 2019. The principal question which stands posited for our consideration is whether a failure on the part of the petitioner to electronically upload Form 10CCB along with its Return of Income and as per the time frames contemplated under Section 139 would constitute a valid ground for the reassessment action being initiated or for the respondents asserting that income liable to tax had escaped assessment. 2. While the petitioners contend that a digital filing of the Audit Report along with the Return of Income was merely procedural and directory and that the statutory prescriptions had been substantially complied with, the respondents on the other hand would urge us to hold that the statutory prescriptions comprised in Section 80-IA(7) are mandatory and the actions initiated under Section 148 thus justified. 3. Since the reasons which ultimately weighed upon the respondents for invoking Section 148 are common to both I.T.A. No. 2180/Del/2023 & CO No.116/Del/2023 13 the writ petitions, we, for the sake of brevity, take note of the reasons assigned while disposing of the objections preferred and as they stand recorded for AY 2013-14. Those reasons are extracted herein below: \"Sub: Assessment proceedings for AY 2013-14 - disposal of objections raised - regarding Please refer to your letter dated 07.05.2019 thereby filing objections to the reopening of assessment proceedings for the above said assessment year. 2. The following objections have been raised :- i) In terms of first proviso to section 147, the assessment u/s 148 call be reopened upto four years relating to cases completed as a scrutiny assessment u/s 143(3) from the end of the assessment year unless there is a reason of the failure on the part of the assessee to disclose fully and truly all material facts necessary for the assessment. ii) In terms of third proviso to section 147, the income in respect of matters which are subject matter of appeal cannot be reassessed. In support of the first objection, the assessee has relied upon various case laws. 3. The objections raised have been considered and are disposed off as under. i) The assessment u/s 143(3) of the Act for the year under consideration was made on 29.02.2016. Rule 12 of IT Rules,1962 made effective from 01.04.2013 makes it mandatory that a report of audit specified under sub- clause (iv), (v). (vi) or (via) of clause (23C) of section 10, section 10A, section 10M, clause (b) of subsection (1) of section 12A, section 44AB, section 440A, section 50B, section 80-1A, section 80-1B, section 80-le, section .80- 10, section 80JJM, section 80LA, section 92E, section 115JB or section 115W1/ or to give a notice under clause (a) of subsection (2) of section 11 of the Act, the I.T.A. No. 2180/Del/2023 & CO No.116/Del/2023 14 assessee shall furnish the same electronically. The assessee failed to furnish the report u/s 80lA electronically. During the course of assessment proceedings, the assessee failed to point out this discrepancy and thus there is non- disclosure of true and complete particulars. ii) As regards the third proviso to section 147, it is stated that the same is with respect to the relevant assessment year for which the matter is subjected to appeal and cannot be applied to other years. Each assessment year is a different assessment year and thus third proviso to section 147 is not applicable to be instant assessment year. The various case laws relied upon by the assessee are not applicable to the year under consideration in view of the insertion/ amendment to Rule 12 of I.T. Rules, 1962 w.e.f. 01.04.2013. In view of the above, the objections raised by the assessee stands disposed off.\" 4. For the purposes of examining the challenge which stands raised, we deem it apposite to take note of the following salient facts as obtaining in W.P.(C) 8980/2019. The petitioner is stated to have submitted a Return of Income for AY 2013-14 on 30 September 2013 claiming deductions as per Section 80-IA(4)(iv)(a) of the Act. It is the case of the writ petitioner that a tax audit report in Form 3CA under Section 44AB was filed electronically on 30 September 2013 along with the Return of Income and the Audit Report in Form 10CCB was filed manually before the Assessing Officer3 on 12 February 2016. The AO concluded the assessment in terms of Section 143(3), allowing the deductions claimed by virtue of Section 80-IA and which becomes evident from a perusal of the assessment order dated 29 February 2016. It is thereafter that the impugned notice under Section 148 came to be issued. 5. As is manifest from the reasons assigned for invocation of Section 148, we find that the respondents have taken the stand that Rule 12 of the Income Tax Rules, 19624, and I.T.A. No. 2180/Del/2023 & CO No.116/Del/2023 15 which came to be amended by the Income Tax (Seventh Amendment) Rules, 20135 w.e.f. 01 April 2013 introduced the requirement of an online submission of the Audit Report in Form 10CCB. The respondents assert that the petitioner had failed to point out the failure to digitally submit the report and this would constitute a non- disclosure of true and complete particulars. It is on the aforesaid basis that they called upon the petitioner to show cause why action under Section 148 should not be initiated. The aforesaid reasoning was reiterated in the order disposing of the objections which had come to be preferred by the petitioners. It is the aforesaid view AO 1962 Rules 2013 Amendment which is assailed by way of the present writ petitions. 6. Appearing for the writ petitioner, Mr. Sethi, learned counsel, contended that undisputedly in AYs 2013-14 and 2014-15, Form 10CCB and which were referable to Section 80-IA(7), were manually submitted before the AO on 12 February 2016 and 28 October 2016 respectively and thus prior to the finalization of the assessment proceedings. Mr. Sethi submitted this in light of the undisputed fact of the assessment orders for AYs 2013-14 and 2014-15 under Section 143(3) having been framed on 29 February 2016 and 04 November 2016 respectively. 7. Mr. Sethi contended that High Courts across the country have taken the consistent position that the filing of an audit report is a procedural requirement and would not detract from the right of an assessee to claim deductions which are otherwise permissible in terms of Section 80-IA. In order to buttress the aforesaid submission Mr. Sethi drew our attention to the following pertinent observations as rendered by this Court in Commissioner of Income Tax vs. Contimeters Electricals (P.) Ltd.6: \"3. According to the Commissioner of Income-tax, since no Audit Report, duly verified and signed in the prescribed Form No. 10CCB under rule 18BBB had been furnished along with the return, the condition for claiming deduction had not been satisfied and, therefore, the action of the Assessing Officer in I.T.A. No. 2180/Del/2023 & CO No.116/Del/2023 16 allowing rebate under section 80-IA was erroneous and prejudicial to the interest of the Revenue. xxxx xxxx xxxx 5. Being aggrieved by the said order, the assessee preferred an appeal before the Tribunal which was allowed by the Tribunal by virtue of the impugned order. The Tribunal took the view that the provisions of section 80-IA(7) with regard to filing of the Audit Report along with the return were not mandatory and 2008 SCC OnLine Del 1458 were merely directory. In coming to such conclusion, the Tribunal referred to the decision of the Gujarat High Court in CIT v. Gujarat Oil and Allied Industries [1993] 201 ITR 325. In that decision, the provisions of section 80J(6A) were considered. The wording of section 80J(6A) is similar to that of section 80-IA(7) which is in issue in the present appeal. The Gujarat High Court took the view that the word \"shall\" which occurs in section 80J(6A) be read as \"may\" and that the requirement of filing of an Audit Report along with the return was only to be taken as directory in nature. The Gujarat High Court took the view that in case the Audit Report is submitted at any time before the framing of the assessment, there would be substantial compliance with the provisions of section 80J(6A). 6. The Tribunal also relied on the decision of the Madras High Court in CIT v. A. N. Arunachalam [1994] 208 ITR 481, which, again, while considering the provisions of section 80J(6A), took the same view as that of the Gujarat High s 7. We notice that there are other decisions of other courts taking the same view. The decisions being, CIT v. Shivanand Electronics [1994] 209 ITR 63 (Bom) ; Zenith Processing Mills v. CIT [1996] 219 ITR 721 (Guj) and CIT v. Jayant Patel [2001] 248 ITR 199 (Mad) and CIT v. Mahalaxmi Rice Factory [2007] 294 ITR 631 (P&H). I.T.A. No. 2180/Del/2023 & CO No.116/Del/2023 17 8. In view of this long line of decisions of various High Courts in considering the provisions of section 80J(6A) which are similar to the provisions of section 80-IA(7), we feel that the Tribunal has arrived at the correct conclusion that the requirement of filing the Audit Report along with the return is not mandatory but directory and that if the Audit Report is filed at any time before the framing of the assessment, the requirement of section 80-IA(7) would be met.\" 8. Mr. Sethi also drew our attention to the statutory scheme as it existed originally and as it underwent amendments over time. Learned counsel pointed out that Section 80-IA(7) as existing in AYs 2013-14 and 2014-15 read as under: \"(7) The deduction under sub-section (1) from profits and gains derived from an undertaking shall not be admissible unless the accounts of the undertaking for the previous year relevant to the assessment year for which the deduction is claimed have been audited by an accountant, as defined in the Explanation below sub- section 92 of section 288, and the assessee furnishes, along with his return of income, the report of such audit in the prescribed form duly signed and verified by such accountant.\" 9. Our attention was then drawn to amendments which came to be introduced in the 1962 Rules by the 2013 Amendment and in terms of which Rule 12 came to be recast to read as follows: \"(2) The return of income required to be furnished in Form SAHAJ (ITR-1) or Form No. ITR-2 or Form No. ITR-3 or Form SUGAM (ITR-4S) or Form No. ITR-4 or Form No. ITR-5 or Form No. ITR-6 or Form No. ITR-7 shall not be accompanied by a statement showing the computation of the tax payable on the basis of the return, or proof of the tax, if any, claimed to have been deducted or collected at source or the advance tax or tax on self- assessment, if any, claimed to have been paid or any I.T.A. No. 2180/Del/2023 & CO No.116/Del/2023 18 document or copy of any account or form or report of audit required to be attached with the return of income under any of the provisions of the Act: [Provided that where an assessee is required to furnish a report of audit specified under sub-clause (iv), (v), (vi) or (via) of clause (23C) of section 10, section 10A, section 10AA, clause (b) of sub-section (1) of section 12A, section 444B, section 44DA, section 50B, section 80-IA, section 80-IB, section 80-IC, section 80-ID, section 80JJAA, section 80LA, section 92E, section 115JB or section115VW or to give a notice under clause (a) of sub-section (2) of section 11 of the Act, he shall furnish the same electronically.]\" 10. As is manifest from the aforesaid, it was the Proviso inserted in Rule 12(2) which for the first time introduced the requirement of an Audit Report contemplated under Section 80-IA being furnished electronically. We note that although the aforesaid requirement was introduced by virtue of the 2013 Amendment, Section 80-IA(7) as it stood at that time only spoke of the Audit Report being furnished in the prescribed form along with the Return of Income and being duly verified by an accountant of the assessee. 11. By virtue of Finance Act, 2020 sub-section (7), of Section 80-IA came to be amended and now reads as under: \"(7) The deduction under sub-section (1) from profits and gains derived from an undertaking shall not be admissible unless the accounts of the undertaking for the previous year relevant to the assessment year for which the deduction is claimed have been audited by an accountant, as defined in the Explanation below sub- section (2) of Section 288, before the specified date referred to in section 44AB and the assessee furnishes by that date the report of such audit in the prescribed form duly signed and verified by such accountant.\" I.T.A. No. 2180/Del/2023 & CO No.116/Del/2023 19 12. The rationale underlying the amendment made to sub- section (7) of Section 80-IA was sought to be explained by Mr. Sethi who drew our attention to the following extracts from the Memorandum explaining the provisions of the Finance Bill, 2020: \"Further, to enable pre-filing of returns in case of persons having income from business or profession, it is required that the tax Audit Report may be furnished by the said assessees at least one month prior to the due date of ling of return of income. This requires amendments in all the sections of the Act which mandates filing of Audit Report along with the return of income or by the due date of filing of return of income. Thus, provisions of section 10, section 10A, section 12A,section 32AB, section 33AB, section 33ABA, section 35D, section 35E, section 44AB, section 44DA, section 5OB, section 80-IA, section 80-IB, section 80JJAA, section 92F, section 115JB, section 115JC and section 115VW of the Act are proposed to be amended accordingly.\" 13. According to learned counsel, it was the aforesaid rationale which informed the amendments ultimately made in sub-section (7). Mr. Sethi sought to highlight the fact that the requirement of the Audit Report being liable to be furnished before the specified date referred to in Section 44AB was a prescription which came to be incorporated for the first time by virtue of Finance Act, 2020. It was his submission that the provision as it stands now is distinct from the statutory obligations which were otherwise imposed upon an assessee in terms of that provision as it stood prior to the amendments ushered in by way of Finance Act, 2020, and which had only spoken of the Audit Report being furnished along with a Return of Income. According to learned counsel, the amendments so introduced are still liable to be viewed as being merely directory and the requirements of Section 80-IA(7) would be deemed to have been fulfilled as long as the Audit Report is submitted before the AO prior to conclusion of assessment proceedings. I.T.A. No. 2180/Del/2023 & CO No.116/Del/2023 20 14. Mr. Sethi then contended that Rule 12(2) as it came to exist on the statute book after the 2013 Amendment cannot possibly be interpreted so as to eclipse the directory character of Section 80-IA (7). It was submitted that a failure to electronically upload the Audit Report would in any case be liable to be viewed as a mere procedural irregularity and the same cannot possibly be equated with an illegality. 15. Questioning the action for reassessment, Mr. Sethi submitted that the reasons assigned in support of the decision to reopen assessment would clearly indicate that the respondents nowhere allege that there was a failure on the part of the petitioner to fully and truly disclose all material particulars. It becomes pertinent to note that the aforesaid submission proceeds on the basis of the First Proviso to Section 147 as it stood prior to the amendments introduced in that provision by virtue of Finance Act, 2021 and which came into effect from 01 April 2021. Mr. Sethi contended that since the original assessment had been made in accordance with Section 143(3), the respondents would have no authority to reopen an assessment concluded in accordance therewith unless it be found that there was a failure on the part of the assessee to make a complete and candid disclosure of all facts. In any case, according to Mr. Sethi, a failure to electronically submit the Audit Report would not be liable to constitute a justifiable reason for reopening assessment bearing in mind the legal position as enunciated by this Court in The Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India vs. Deputy Commissioner of Income Tax & Ors.7 16. It becomes pertinent to note that in Associated Chambers, we were called upon to examine whether reassessment would be justified in a case where an assessee had erred in digitally uploading Form 10 in accordance with the requirements of Section 11(2)(a) and (c) of the Act read along with Rule 17(3) of the 1962 Rules. While dealing with the aforesaid issue, we had observed as follows: I.T.A. No. 2180/Del/2023 & CO No.116/Del/2023 21 \"27. More fundamentally, we note that the action for reassessment is not founded on income liable to tax having escaped assessment. The respondents also do not question the acceptance of the accumulations in terms of Section 11(2) in the assessment order dated 01 December 2018. The entire action for reassessment is founded solely on Form 10 having been submitted after 17 October 2016 and which was the due date in terms of Section 139(1). 28. In our considered opinion, an action for reassessment would have to be based on the formation of an opinion that income chargeable to tax has escaped assessment. That primordial condition would clearly not be satisfied on the mere allegation of a delayed digital filing of Form 10.\" 17. Controverting the afore-noted submissions Mr. Agarwal, learned counsel appearing for the respondent, contended that Rule 12 as it came to exist in its amended avatar and post the 2013 Amendment, in unequivocal terms required an assessee seeking to claim deductions in terms of Section 80-IA to furnish the Audit Report electronically. According to Mr. Agarwal, this position would hold good even when one were to view the provisions of Section 80-IA(7) as it stood at the relevant time and prior to amendments which came to be introduced by virtue of Finance Act, 2020. This, according to Mr. Agarwal, is evident from that provision using the expression \"...and the assessee furnishes along with his return of income, the report of such audit in the 2024 : DHC : 5727 - DB prescribed form...\". 18. The bulwark of the submissions of Mr. Agarwal, however, was the decision of the Supreme Court in Principal Commissioner of Income Tax - III & Anr. vs. Wipro Limited8. According to Mr. Agarwal, Wipro Limited is a decision which clearly demolishes the contention which is advanced on behalf of the writ petitioners as the Supreme Court has clearly held that where the statute requires the filing of a form to coincide with the furnishing of a Return of Income, it is liable to be viewed I.T.A. No. 2180/Del/2023 & CO No.116/Del/2023 22 as a mandatory pre-condition for any benefit being claimed by an assessee. According to Mr. Agarwal, the decision of the Supreme Court, though rendered in the context of Section 10B(8) of the Act, would clearly lay to rest the controversy which arises. It was also Mr. Agarwal's submission that the earlier precedents rendered in the context of Section 80-IA, including that of our Court in Contimeters Electricals, rested upon the decision of the Supreme Court in Commissioner of Income Tax vs. G.M. Knitting Industries (P) Ltd.9 and which has been explained by the Supreme Court in its later decision in Wipro Limited. Mr. Agarwal laid stress upon the following passages appearing in Wipro Limited: \"38. On a plain reading of Section 10B(8) of the IT Act as it is, i.e., \"where the assessee, before the due date for furnishing the return of income under sub-section (1) of section 139, furnishes to the Assessing Officer a declaration in writing that the provisions of Section 10B may not be made applicable to him, the provisions of Section 10B shall not apply to him for any of the relevant assessment years\", we note that the wording of the Section 10B(8) is very clear and unambiguous. For claiming the benefit under Section 10B(8), the twin conditions of furnishing the declaration to the assessing officer in writing and that the same must be furnished before the due date of filing the return of income under sub-section 2022 SCC OnLine SC 831 2015 SCC OnLine SC 1015 (1) of section 139 of the IT Act are required to be fulfilled and/or satisfied. In our view, both the conditions to be satisfied are mandatory. It cannot be said that one of the conditions would be mandatory and the other would be directory, where the words used for furnishing the declaration to the assessing officer and to be furnished before the due date of filing the original return of income under subsection (1) of section 139 are same/similar. It cannot be disputed that in a taxing statute the provisions are to be read as they are and they are to be literally construed, more particularly in a case of exemption sought by an assessee. I.T.A. No. 2180/Del/2023 & CO No.116/Del/2023 23 39. In such a situation, filing a revised return under section 139(5) of the IT Act claiming carrying forward of losses subsequently would not help the assessee. In the present case, the assessee filed its original return under section 139(1) and not under section 139(3). Therefore, the Revenue is right in submitting that the revised return filed by the assessee under section 139(5) can only substitute its original return under Section 139(1) and cannot transform it into a return under Section 139(3), in order to avail the benefit of carrying forward or set- off of any loss under Section 80 of the IT Act. The assessee can file a revised return in a case where there is an omission or a wrong statement. But a revised return of income, under Section 139(5) cannot be filed, to withdraw the claim and subsequently claiming the carried forward or setoff of any loss. Filing a revised return under Section 139(5) of the IT Act and taking a contrary stand and/or claiming the exemption, which was specifically not claimed earlier while filing the original return of income is not permissible. By filing the revised return of income, the assessee cannot be permitted to substitute the original return of income filed under section 139(1) of the IT Act. Therefore, claiming benefit under section 10B(8) and furnishing the declaration as required under section 10B(8) in the revised return of income which was much after the due date of filing the original return of income under section 139(1) of the IT Act, cannot mean that the assessee has complied with the condition of furnishing the declaration before the due date of filing the original return of income under section 139(1) of the Act. As observed hereinabove, for claiming the benefit under section 10B(8), both the conditions of furnishing the declaration and to file the same before the due date of filing the original return of income are mandatory in nature. I.T.A. No. 2180/Del/2023 & CO No.116/Del/2023 24 40. Even the submission on behalf of the assessee that it was not necessary to exercise the option under section 10B(8) of the IT Act and even without filing the revised return of income, the assessee could have submitted the declaration in writing to the assessing officer during the assessment proceedings has no substance and the same cannot be accepted. Even the submission made on behalf of the assessee that filing of the declaration subsequently and may be during the assessment proceedings would have made no difference also has no substance. The significance of filing a declaration under section 10B(8) can be said to be co-terminus with filing of a return under section 139(1), as a check has been put in place by virtue of section 10B(5) to verify the correctness of claim of deduction at the time of filing the return. If an assessee claims an exemption under the Act by virtue of Section 10B, then the correctness of claim has already been verified under section 10B(5). Therefore, if the claim is withdrawn post the date of filing of return, the accountant's report under section 10B(5) would become falsified and would stand to be nullified. 41. Now so far as the reliance placed upon the decision of this Court in the case of G.M. Knitting Industries Pvt. Ltd. (supra), relied upon by the learned counsel appearing on behalf of the assessee is concerned, Section 10B(8) is an exemption provision which cannot be compared with claiming an additional depreciation under section 32(1)(ii-a) of the Act. As per the settled position of law, an assessee claiming exemption has to strictly and literally comply with the exemption provisions. Therefore, the said decision shall not be applicable to the facts of the case on hand, while considering the exemption provisions. Even otherwise, Chapter III and Chapter VIA of the Act operate in different realms and principles of Chapter III, which deals with \"incomes which do not form a part of total income\", cannot be equated with mechanism provided for deductions in Chapter VIA, which deals with \"deductions to be made in computing total income\". Therefore, none of the I.T.A. No. 2180/Del/2023 & CO No.116/Del/2023 25 decisions which are relied upon on behalf of the assessee on interpretation of Chapter VIA shall be applicable while considering the claim under Section 10B(8) of the IT Act. 42. Even the submission on behalf of the assessee that the assessee had a substantive statutory right under Section 10B(8) to opt out of Section 10B which cannot be nullified by construing the purely procedural time requirement regarding the filing of the declaration under Section 10B(8) as being mandatory also has no substance. As observed hereinabove, the exemption provisions are to be strictly and literally complied with and the same cannot be construed as procedural requirement. 43. So far as the submission on behalf of the assessee that against the decision of the Delhi High Court in the case of Moser Baer (supra), a special leave petition has been dismissed as withdrawn and the revenue cannot be permitted to take a contrary view is concerned, it is to be noted that the special leave petition against the decision of the Delhi High Court in the case of Moser Baer (supra) has been dismissed as withdrawn due to there being low tax effect and the question of law has specifically been kept open. Therefore, withdrawal of the special leave petition against the decision of the Delhi High Court in the case of Moser Baer (supra) cannot be held against the revenue. 44. In view of the above discussion and for the reasons stated above, we are of the opinion that the High Court has committed a grave error in observing and holding that the requirement of furnishing a declaration under Section 10B(8) of the IT Act is mandatory, but the time limit within which the declaration is to be filed is not mandatory but is directory. The same is erroneous and contrary to the unambiguous language contained in Section 10B(8) of the IT Act. We hold that for claiming the benefit under Section 10B(8) of the IT Act, the twin conditions of furnishing a declaration before the assessing officer and that too before the due date of filing the original I.T.A. No. 2180/Del/2023 & CO No.116/Del/2023 26 return of income under section 139(1) are to be satisfied and both are mandatorily to be complied with. Accordingly, the question of law is answered in favour of the Revenue and against the assessee. The orders passed by the High Court as well as ITAT taking a contrary view are hereby set aside and it is held that the assessee shall not be entitled to the benefit under Section 10B(8) of the IT Act on non-compliance of the twin conditions as provided under Section 10B(8) of the IT Act, as observed hereinabove. The present Appeal is accordingly Allowed. However, in the facts and circumstances of the case, there shall be no order as to costs.\" It is the aforenoted rival submissions which fall for determination. 19. We at the outset note that although Mr. Agarwal urged us to dismiss these writ petitions consequent to a failure on the part of the writ petitioners to meet the twin conditions of submitting Form 10CCB electronically and along with its Return of Income, the reasons recorded by the respondents seeking to reopen the concluded assessments speaks only of a failure to digitally file the Audit Reports in Form 10CCB. However, we propose to examine and answer the question which stands posited on both scores. 20. However, and before proceeding to rule on the statutory requirements of Section 80-IA(7), we note that the reasons assigned in the impugned orders nowhere allude to escapement of income which is a pre-condition for the purposes of invoking Section 148. As is manifest from a reading of the reasons which came to be recorded, the only allegation levelled against the petitioner is of its failure to digitally upload the Audit Reports. In our considered opinion, the same clearly does not qualify or meet the prescription of the First Proviso to Section 147 as it existed at the relevant time and which read as under: \"Provided that where an assessment under sub-section (3) of section 143 or this section has been made for I.T.A. No. 2180/Del/2023 & CO No.116/Del/2023 27 the relevant assessment year, no action shall be taken under this section after the expiry of four years from the end of the relevant assessment year, unless any income chargeable to tax has escaped assessment for such assessment year by reason of the failure on the part of the assessee to make a return under section 139 or in response to a notice issued under sub-section (1) of section 142 or section 148 or to disclose fully and truly all material facts necessary for his assessment, for that assessment year:\" 21. Undisputedly, the petitioner had been assessed for AYs 2013-14 and 2014-15 in terms of Section 143(3). The Proviso thus clearly required the respondents to establish that income liable to tax had escaped assessment on account of a failure of the petitioner to make a full and true disclosure of all material facts. In our opinion a failure to digitally upload a Form cannot lead one to conclude that the assessee had failed to make a full and true disclosure. In any event, the respondents have woefully failed to establish or assert how that folly, if it may be so termed, resulted in escapement of income. The Section 148 action would thus and following the view taken by us in Associated Chambers be liable to be struck down on this short ground alone. 22. We also bear in mind that the reassessment actions for AYs 2013- 14 and 2014-15 were commenced with the issuance of notices under Section 148 on 26 March 2019. An action to reopen assessment prior to the amendments introduced by virtue of Finance Act, 2021 could have at best been initiated within a period of four years and subject to a maximum of six years in terms of the provisions of Section 149 as it existed at the relevant time. The reassessment action, insofar as AY 2013-14 is concerned, being beyond the maximum window of six years would thus falter and fail on this score additionally. 23. That takes us to the principal question and concerning the legal requirements flowing from Section 80-IA read along with Rule 12. We find that insofar as the I.T.A. No. 2180/Del/2023 & CO No.116/Del/2023 28 directory nature of Section 80-IA(7) is concerned, the same stands conclusively answered by this Court in Contimeters Electricals, and the aforesaid position having been followed consistently by various other High Courts. We thus find no justification to tread down a different path or deviate from a position in law which has clearly held the field for some time. 24. Analysed independently, we note that Section 80- IA(7) as it existed prior to its amendment in terms of Finance Act, 2020, only placed a requirement of the assessee furnishing the Audit Report along with his Return of Income in the prescribed form. Discernibly, Section 80-IA(7) as it stands in its present form uses the expression \"...before the specified date referred to in section 44AB and the assessee furnishes by that date...\". Thus, it is only by virtue of Finance Act, 2020 that Section 80-IA(7) now embodies a stipulation for the Audit Report being furnished before the specified date referred to in Section 44AB. 25. The requirement of the said report being furnished electronically, however, came to be introduced for the first time in 2013 and which is when Rule 12 came to be amended. However, at this point in time, the requirement of an electronic submission of Form 10CCB stood confined to Rule 12 since Section 80- IA(7) had not been amended in the manner noted above. 26. Viewed in that light, in our considered opinion, as long as that Audit Report was duly furnished to the AO and was available to be scrutinized and examined by that authority during the assessment proceedings, the provisions of Section 80-IA(7), as it stood prior to the amendments introduced in 2020, would be recognized to have been substantially fulfilled. In any event, a failure to digitally file that report cannot be countenanced to be fatal to the claim that may be laid in terms of Section 80-IA(7). 27. We note that the various decisions which speak of the electronic submission of the Audit Report being directory and procedural were all rendered prior to the I.T.A. No. 2180/Del/2023 & CO No.116/Del/2023 29 amendments introduced by Finance Act, 2020. These writ petitions too are concerned with actions initiated prior to the passing of Finance Act, 2020 and the amendments consequently made in Section 80-IA (7). The present decision is thus not liable to be read as an exposition on the legal position which would prevail post 2020 or the likely impact in light of the inclusion of the phrase \"...before the specified date referred to in section 44AB...\". We thus leave that question open to be examined in an appropriate case. 28. That only leaves us to evaluate the argument of Mr. Agarwal which rested on the decision of the Supreme Court in Wipro Limited. It must, and at the outset, be noted that Wipro Limited was a decision which was rendered in the context of Section 10B(8) that stands placed in Chapter III of the Act and which makes provisions with respect to exempt income. This is manifest from the Chapter Heading itself and which is titled \"Incomes which do not form part of Total Income\". Regard must be had to the fact that Section 80-IA on the other hand is placed in Chapter VIA, and which deals with \"Deductions in respect of certain payments\" that an assessee may factor in while computing total income. Thus, we at a foundational plane, find ourselves unable to either place Sections 10B and 80-IA on an even pedestal nor hold that exemption and deduction provisions must be interpreted with similitude. 29. We also bear in mind the indubitable fact that Section 10B(8) is clearly couched in terms more imperative than Section 80-IA(7). This becomes manifest from a reading of that provision and which requires the assessee to furnish a declaration before the AO that it chooses not to be assessed in accordance with that provision and the said declaration being liable to be furnished before the due date for furnishing of a Return of Income under Section 139(1). This requirement has always existed in Section 10B from inception and since its insertion by virtue of Finance Act, 1988. This is a significant distinguishing feature bearing in mind the indisputable position of the Audit Report being tied to the specified date contemplated in Section 44AB was a I.T.A. No. 2180/Del/2023 & CO No.116/Del/2023 30 stipulation which came to be introduced for the first time and with sufficient certitude by virtue of Finance Act, 2020. 30. We note that in G.M. Knitting, the Supreme Court had in unequivocal terms while construing the furnishing of an Audit Report in Form 10CCB approved the consistent position taken by various High Courts holding that the assessee was entitled to claim deductions even where the Audit Report had not been filed with the return but was otherwise submitted before the assessment was completed. This becomes evident from a reading of the following passages of that decision: \"1. It would be suffice to reproduce para 2 of the impugned order [CIT v. G.M. Knitting Industries (P) Ltd., Income Tax Appeal No. 2336 of 2010, order dated 24-6-2011 (Bom)] whereby action of the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal was held to be justified in allowing additional depreciation as claimed by the respondent assessee herein: \"Additional depreciation is denied to the assessee on the ground that the assessee has failed to furnish Form 3-AA along with the return of income. Admittedly, Form 3-AA was submitted during the course of assessment proceedings and it is not in dispute that the assessee is entitled to the additional depreciation. In these circumstances, in the light of the judgment of this Court in CIT v. Shivanand Electronics [CIT v. Shivanand Electronics, 1993 SCC OnLine Bom 625 : (1994) 209 ITR 63] , we see no merit in this appeal. The appeal is accordingly dismissed with no order as to costs.\" 2. We concur with the aforesaid view of the High Court and hold that even if Form 3-AA was not filed along with return of income but the same was filed during the assessment proceedings and before the final order of the assessment was made that would I.T.A. No. 2180/Del/2023 & CO No.116/Del/2023 31 amount to sufficient compliance. These appeals are, accordingly, dismissed.\" 31. One of the reasons which appears to have weighed upon the Supreme Court while rendering its decision in Wipro Limited was of Section 10B being an exemption provision. This is evident from the Supreme Court significantly observing that Section 10B(8) being an exemption provision not being liable to be compared with Section 32(1)(ii-a) and which was concerned with a claim for additional depreciation. Regard must also be had to the fact that Section 10B(1) is essentially concerned with the grant of exemptions to newly established hundred per cent export-oriented undertakings and the deduction of profits and gains derived by such an enterprise. Sub-section (8) thereof enables an assessee to opt out of the exemption provisions contained therein subject to a requisite declaration being submitted. Since such a declaration would have an immediate and indelible bearing on the assessment of the Return of Income itself, it would clearly be liable to be viewed as a mandatory requirement warranting such a declaration being made at the outset itself and the statutory prescriptions made in that regard being liable to be strictly adhered to. 32. The aforesaid position may be contrasted with Section 80-IA(7), and which is principally concerned with deductions that may be claimed and the Audit Report being made available for examination by the AO. In these writ petitions, we are in any case concerned solely with whether a failure to digitally upload the Audit Report could be said to be destructive. It is for the aforenoted reasons that we are inclined to hold that Wipro Limited is distinguishable and that it would be the principles enunciated in G.M. Knitting which would govern the present matters. 33. Accordingly, and for all the aforesaid reasons, we allow the instant writ petitions. We thus quash the impugned notices issued under Section 148 of the Act dated 26 March 2019 and the consequent initiation of reassessment proceedings for AYs 2013-14 and 2014-15.” I.T.A. No. 2180/Del/2023 & CO No.116/Del/2023 32 9. Ratio of the decision of the Hon’ble High Court squarely apply to the facts of the case. Further we find that the Ld. CIT(Appeals) following the decision of the Mumbai Tribunal in the case of Kamdhenu Builders and Developers in ITA No.7010/Mum/2010 directed the Assessing Officer to verify whether the audit report in Form 10CCB was filed by the assessee with revised return, if so then directed to allow the claim for deduction u/s 80IB of the Act. Therefore, we see no infirmity in the order passed by the Ld. CIT(Appeals). Thus, the same is upheld. Grounds raised by the Revenue are rejected. 10. Coming to the cross objection filed by the assessee since the cross objection is filed is in support of the order of the Ld. CIT(Appeals) the same is infructuous as we have upheld the order of the Ld. CIT(A) rejecting the grounds raised by the Revenue. 11. In the result, appeal of the Revenue is dismissed and cross objection filed by the assessee is dismissed as infructuous. Order pronounced in the open court on 18/06/2025 Sd/- Sd/- (S RIFAUR RAHMAN) (C.N. PRASAD) ACCOUNTANT MEMBER JUDICIAL MEMBER Dated: 18/06/2025 I.T.A. No. 2180/Del/2023 & CO No.116/Del/2023 33 *Kavita Arora, Sr. P.S. Copy forwarded to: 1. Appellant 2. Respondent 3. CIT 4. CIT(Appeals) 5. DR: ITAT ASSISTANT REGISTRAR ITAT, NEW DELHI "