New Delhi:The Delhi High Court on Friday granted three more weeks to businessman Robert Vadra to respond to the notices issued to him by the Income Tax (I-T) Department under the black money law.
The high court said the I-T Department can continue with the assessment proceedings, but no final order shall be passed by it.
A bench of Justices Rajiv Shakdher and Talwant Singh issued notice to the I-T Department and asked it to file within four weeks its response to Vadra's petition challenging notices issued to him on December 4, 2018, and December 18, 2019, under Section 10 (1) of the Black Money Act, 2015.
The court listed the matter for further hearing on August 10.
Read:|Court defers hearing in Robert Vadra case
Vadra, the son-in-law of Congress chief Sonia Gandhi, sought to declare as illegal and unconstitutional the 2018 and 2019 notices as well as a show-cause notice issued to him on May 7 this year as well as May 17 and May 22 letters being violative of Article 14, 19 and 21 of the Constitution.
Section 10 (1) of the Black Money (Undisclosed Foreign Income and Assets) Act, 2015 provides that the assessment officer, on receipt of information from an income-tax authority or any other authority, may serve a notice on any person requiring him on a specified date to produce such accounts or documents for this Act.
The provision also empowers the officer to conclude the assessment ex-parte where the person to whom notice is served fails to comply with it.
Section 11 of the Act provides the time limit for completion of assessment as two years from the end of the financial year in which the notice under section 10(1) was issued.
Vadra alleged in his plea that the conduct of the authorities in issuing five communications to him is reflective of their mala fide attempt to pursue a political vendetta against him, his wife Priyanka Gandhi Vadra who is the General Secretary of Indian National Congress and his in-laws.
Read:|Court to hear petition in Robert Vadra's money laundering case
The Additional Commissioner of Income Tax, Central Range-VII has issued a notice to Vadra on December 8, 2018, under the Black Money Act alleging that he acquired beneficial interest or ownership in 2010 in the property at 12 Ellerton House, Bryanston Square in London, though its legal ownership was transferred in the name of Skylite Investment FZE, a company incorporated in the UAE.
The petition said it has been alleged by the department that from the analysis of certain e-mails that elaborate renovation works in the London property were being undertaken by arms dealer Sanjay Bhandari's nephew Sumit Chadha under Vadra's constant monitoring, instructions or directions and close supervision; therefore, the property was beneficially owned by the petitioner and was for his use and benefit.