In a noteworthy decision that challenges the fear surrounding cash in property transactions, the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT) Mumbai has ruled in favour of a woman who accepted ₹13.24 lakh in cash as part of a property sale—and still won her tax case.

At a time when most property buyers and sellers avoid cash altogether due to strict scrutiny, this ruling explains exactly how cash can be legally defended when it forms part of a documented real estate deal.


The Background: A Property Sale With a Cash Component

The assessee sold a plot of land for ₹69.40 lakh.
Out of this, ₹13.24 lakh was received in cash, and she deposited the cash into her bank account.

The problems began when:

  • Her Income Tax Return (ITR) was treated as invalid due to non-verification of the ITR-V form.
  • The Assessing Officer argued that the ₹13.24 lakh cash deposit was unexplained income under the Income Tax Act.

This meant she faced a potential 60%+ tax penalty under anti-abuse provisions.


The Turning Point: Registered Sale Deed Mentioned the Cash

The case took a decisive turn because:

✔️ The cash amount was explicitly mentioned in the registered sale deed.
✔️ The buyer and seller had mutually agreed to this payment structure.
✔️ The department did not challenge the authenticity of the sale deed.

The ITAT observed that when a registered document clearly records a cash component, and the transaction itself is not disputed, the cash cannot be presumed to be unaccounted income.


The ITAT’s Ruling: ‘Documented Cash Is Not Unexplained’

The ITAT held:

  • The cash was part of a genuine property transaction.
  • The Assessing Officer should not treat it as unexplained merely because the ITR was held invalid.
  • The source of cash was clearly identifiable and backed by evidence.

As a result, the addition of ₹13.24 lakh was completely deleted.


What This Means For Homebuyers & Sellers

This ruling does not legalize unaccounted cash in real estate.
But it clarifies a key principle:

Cash is not illegal — unaccounted cash is.

Cash becomes problematic only when:

  • It is not recorded in the agreement
  • It cannot be traced to a legitimate source
  • It does not match bank deposits
  • It is deliberately kept off the books

In this case, the seller followed the correct process:

✔️ Recorded the cash in the registered sale deed
✔️ Deposited the cash exactly as received
✔️ Showed the capital gains computation
✔️ Ensured her documents matched the transaction

This documentation protected her during scrutiny.


Why This Case Matters

Real estate deals in India, especially in smaller towns, often involve partial cash payments—though increasingly rare due to:

  • fear of tax raids
  • Section 69 and 69A additions
  • Benami law concerns
  • 60% penalty under 115BBE
  • banking system flagging high cash deposits

This ruling reassures taxpayers that not all cash is suspicious—only that which cannot be explained.

It also sends a message to tax authorities:
Verify documents before making harsh additions.

Also Read: In A First: Homebuyer Gets Cash Back That She Paid To Developer

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