by IANS |
New Delhi, Nov 21 (IANS) The Supreme Court on Tuesday adjourned hearing till November 28 in pleas filed by Congress leaders Rahul Gandhi, Sonia Gandhi, Priyanka Gandhi Vadra, Aam Aadmi Party (AAP), and several charitable trusts against the transfer of their tax assessment from faceless assessment to the central circle.
The bench comprising Justices Khanna and S.N.V. Bhatti adjourned the hearing till November 28
On October 3, while referring to pleas filed by Congress leaders Rahul Gandhi, Sonia Gandhi, and Priyanka Gandhi Vadra against the transfers, the apex court said that the central assessments may be required if there were cross-transactions between individuals.
Senior Advocate Arvind Datar, who was appearing for the Gandhi family and trusts associated with them, said that because of a search in fugitive arms dealer Sanjay Bhandari's case, the I-T authorities have tagged all these as supplementary cases because of Robert Vadra, Priyanka Gandhi's husband.
The Gandhis have said that they had nothing to do with the Bhandari group’s cases and there has been no instance of search or seizure in their cases.
Bhandari is wanted in India on charges of corruption and money laundering. He has been allegedly linked to Robert Vadra over a London-based flat. Robert Vadra has, however, denied any business dealings with Bhandari.
Justice Khanna also questioned Senior Advocate Abhishek Manu Singhvi appearing for the AAP as to why there was a five-month delay in filing of the writ petitions.
The court also observed that there must be some justification for removing faceless assessment, and the bench was only concerned with the legal issue and not the politics.
Earlier on May 26, the Delhi High Court had dismissed petitions by AAP, the Gandhi family, and the five trusts challenging the orders of the I-T Department to transfer their tax assessment from the faceless assessment to the central circle.
The High Court bench ruled that there was no fundamental legal right to be assessed under the faceless assessment scheme.
The faceless assessment scheme removes physical contact between the taxpayer and the taxman by using artificial intelligence and machine learning to randomly select tax cases.