📌 Case Name & Citation (2025)
Civil Appeal No. 5200 of 2025 – The Correspondence, RBANMS Educational Institution v. B. Gunashekar & Another
2025 INSC 490 | Judgment delivered: 16 April 2025 (Supreme Court of India)
This is the key ruling where the Supreme Court directed courts and registration authorities to report certain cash transactions to the Income Tax Department.
📌 Background of the Case
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The case began as a civil suit involving a property dispute; one side claimed they had paid consideration (money) partly in cash.
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Along with deciding the legal issues in the civil dispute, the Supreme Court took the opportunity to address broader concerns about high-value cash transactions and compliance with tax laws.
📌 Core Legal Issue Before the Court
The Supreme Court was interpreting:
🔹 Section 269ST of the Income Tax Act, 1961
This provision prohibits receipt of cash exceeding ₹2,00,000 in a single transaction or in related transactions, unless done through authorised banking channels (e.g., cheque, bank transfer).
🔹 Penalties under Section 271DA
If someone receives more than ₹2,00,000 in cash in violation of Section 269ST, they can be penalised an amount equal to the cash received.
This regime was introduced to curb black money and promote digital transactions.
📌 What the Supreme Court Held
🧑⚖️ Main Directives (Paragraph from Judgment)
Based on the official judgment text:
A. Whenever a suit is filed claiming that ₹2,00,000 or more was paid in cash toward a transaction, the court must immediately inform the jurisdictional Income Tax Department so they can investigate compliance with Section 269ST.
B. If such information is received by the Income Tax Department, they must take appropriate steps following due process.
C. If a document presented for registration (like a property sale deed) shows cash payment of ₹2,00,000 or more, the Sub-Registrar must inform the Income Tax authorities.
D. If the Income Tax authority learns that such cash was paid through other means and the registering authority failed to report it, the Income Tax authority should notify the Chief Secretary of the State/UT for disciplinary action.
📌 Why the Court Did This
The Supreme Court explained:
✔ Large undocumented cash transactions raise a red flag for tax evasion and black money – cash above ₹2 lakh should be traceable or transparent under the Income Tax laws.
✔ Courts and registration offices often handle property disputes and deeds, where cash components are common but not always reported to tax authorities.
✔ Without reporting, many large cash deals escape scrutiny and violate Section 269ST.
✔ The judiciary must help enforcement by feeding information to the Income Tax Department, who have statutory jurisdiction to investigate.
📌 Practical Effects of the Judgment
📍 1. Courts Must Report
If a civil suit claims that ₹2 lakh or more was paid in cash, the court cannot just decide the dispute — it must alert the Income Tax Department so it can verify:
✔ Was the cash actually received?
✔ Was it declared for tax?
✔ Was the mode of payment lawful?
📍 2. Sub-Registrars Must Report
When a property document presented for registration shows cash component exceeding ₹2 lakh, the Sub-Registrar of Assurances must immediately notify the Income Tax Department.
📍 3. Income Tax Department Must Act
After receiving the report, tax authorities must examine the transaction lawfully — such as issuing notices, launching scrutiny, or initiating proceedings under Sections 269ST/271DA — but following due process.
📍 4. Officials Face Accountability
If courts or registry officials fail to report such cash deals, the judgment says the Chief Secretary of the State/UT may initiate disciplinary action against the defaulting officers.
📌 Why This Is Considered a Landmark Ruling
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The Supreme Court has essentially bridged civil procedure law with tax enforcement — courts can’t ignore statutory cash transaction limits.
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Even without direct statutory wording compelling courts to report cash transactions, the Court imposed this obligation to curb tax evasion and black money.
📌 In Simple Terms
👉 If a court (trial court, High Court, or Supreme Court) in India sees a lawsuit where someone says, “I paid ₹2,00,000 or more in cash,” the court now must inform the Income Tax Department.
👉 Likewise, if you go to register a property and the deal includes cash of ₹2 lakh or more, the registrar must report it.
👉 This does not immediately mean tax will be collected; it means the matter will be examined under the Income Tax Act as per law.