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Assessment of Other Person Under the Black Money Act – Third-Party Section 10 Notices, Beneficial Owner Disputes, Trustees, Nominees and Legal Representative Defence – N D Savla & Associates
Black Money Act — Third-Party Proceedings

Assessment of Other Person Under the Black Money Act –
Third-Party Section 10 Notices, Beneficial Owner Disputes, Trustees, Nominees & Legal Representative Defence

Assessment of other person is a specialised Section 10 proceeding where the Black Money Act reaches beyond the primary suspect. The AO can serve a Section 10 notice on any person believed to hold or benefit from undisclosed foreign assets — trustees, nominees, legal representatives, family members, and corporate beneficiaries face the same 120% total exposure as the primary assessee.

What Is Assessment of Other Person Under the Black Money Act?

Assessment of other person refers to Section 10 proceedings against any person other than the primary investigated taxpayer. When information points to foreign assets beneficially owned by a third party, the AO can issue a separate Section 10 notice to that third party — opening an entirely distinct assessment proceeding. The broad statutory language of Section 10(1) — "any person" — mirrors Section 153C of the Income-tax Act and enables the AO to chase beneficial owners behind nominee holdings along the entire ownership chain.

Third-party assessment differs from primary assessment in origin and evidence. It starts from information gathered during another person's investigation — FATCA data, CRS exchange, search materials, or bank records naming the third party as beneficial owner. Defending this requires proof of non-benefit, not just disclosure — a fundamentally different evidentiary task. N D Savla & Associates defends third-party assessment proceedings across all categories — connecting with our Assessment under the Black Money Act, Income Tax Notice, Expatriate Taxation, and Tax Health Check services.

30%
Tax on undisclosed foreign assets — Section 10
300%
Penalty on the tax — Section 41
120%
Total exposure on asset value — applies equally to third parties
Receiving a Section 10 notice does not mean liability. A third party who receives a notice is presumed to be the beneficial owner — but the presumption is rebuttable. A complete defence demonstrating no control, no benefit, and no funding of the foreign asset has successfully defended nominees, trustees, and family members in multiple cases. Early engagement and evidence preservation from the day the notice arrives determine the outcome more than any other factor.

Scenarios Where Other-Person Assessment Arises

Third-party assessment arises across multiple real-world scenarios. Each carries distinct legal and evidentiary challenges. Recognising the scenario pattern drives the defence strategy from day one.

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Search Cases — Documents Naming Third Parties

Search and seizure operations under Section 132 reveal documents naming nominees or trustees. The AO opens a separate Section 10 proceeding against each named third party found in the search materials.

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Nominee Holdings — Offshore Accounts

When an overseas bank account is held in a nominee's name but actually belongs to someone else, both the beneficial owner and the nominee can receive separate Section 10 notices.

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Foreign Trust Structures — Settlor, Trustee, Beneficiary

Settlors, trustees, and beneficiaries can all potentially face Section 10 notices. Discretionary trust beneficiaries with no vested interest have the strongest defences. Revocable trusts collapse attribution back to the settlor.

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Legal Representatives of Deceased Assessees

Section 74 allows proceedings to continue against legal heirs and representatives. Section 72(c) creates a retrospective trap — pre-2015 assets are deemed acquired in the year the AO first issues notice.

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Family Members in Joint Foreign Holdings

Family members named in joint offshore accounts or joint property must independently prove their own source of funds — banking history, tax-return trail, and remittance records.

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Corporate Beneficiaries and Shareholders

The AO may pierce the corporate veil when substance is weak. Treaty-shopping allegations can layer transfer-pricing concerns. Proving economic substance — real management, decisions, benefit flow — is the central corporate defence.

The Section 10 Process for Other Persons — From Primary Case to Third-Party Notice

Third-party Section 10 proceedings follow a specific sequence distinct from primary assessment. The process starts with information flowing from a linked primary investigation. Understanding the chain from primary to third-party is essential for every defence strategy.

From Primary Case to Third-Party Notice — Visual Walkthrough

Primary Case
Investigation into Person A — search under Section 132, FATCA/CRS data exchange, foreign tax authority information, or whistleblower report triggers the primary Black Money Act investigation.
Information Linkage
Documents reveal foreign asset linked to Person B — bank records, trust deed, corporate filing, or email trail names Person B as account holder, trustee, nominee, or signatory. Person A's records point the AO toward the third party.
Reason to Believe
AO records reason to believe Person B is the beneficial owner — this foundational record drives the entire third-party proceeding. Challenging the adequacy of this reason-to-believe record is often the most powerful early defence tool.
Section 10 Notice
Separate Section 10(1) notice served on Person B — requiring documents and explanation of the ownership relationship. The notice must specify the correct Assessment Year. The 2024 Vikas Marda ITAT ruling means an AY error on this notice is fatal to the entire proceeding.
Defence Begins
Third-party defence engagement — audit the notice for AY validity and jurisdictional defects, challenge the reason-to-believe record, preserve all objections in writing, build the beneficial-ownership rebuttal with source-of-funds evidence, and coordinate with the primary assessee's position to prevent contradictions.
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The first check after any notice receipt — Assessment Year validity. Recent ITAT rulings, including the 2024 Kolkata Bench Vikas Marda decision, have held that incorrect AY specification on a Section 10 notice is fatal — the entire proceeding falls. AY validity sits ahead of every substantive defence in our notice review checklist. An AO correcting the AY starts the two-year Section 11 clock fresh, so catching the error early and pressing it promptly is decisive.

Defending Against Third-Party Assessment — Scenario-Specific Strategy Matrix

Third-party defence requires tailored strategy for each scenario. Rebutting beneficial ownership is the common thread — but the evidence required differs significantly across nominee, trustee, heir, family, and corporate cases. The table below maps each scenario to its primary defence and the critical evidence it requires.

Third-Party Scenario Primary Defence Strategy Critical Evidence Required
Nominee holding foreign bank account Prove no beneficial interest or control — the account belongs to the actual owner, not the nominee Source-of-funds trail, account opening instructions, fund movement records, communications establishing nominee-only role
Trustee of foreign trust Prove fiduciary-only role — no personal benefit, all actions taken in accordance with trust deed Trust deed, trustee board minutes, distribution records, correspondence with settlor and beneficiaries
Legal representative of deceased assessee Cap liability at value of inherited assets; disclose the inheritance properly; challenge Section 72(c) retrospective application where possible Death certificate, succession certificate or probate, asset valuation at date of death, prior ITR filings of deceased
Family member in joint foreign holding Prove independent source of funds — own income funded the holding independently of the primary assessee Banking history, income-tax return trail, foreign remittance records, evidence of independent financial means
Beneficiary of discretionary foreign trust Prove no vested interest until distribution — discretionary trust beneficiaries have no fixed entitlement before a distribution is declared Trust deed discretion clauses, distribution history, evidence that no distributions were made to the beneficiary in the relevant year
Shareholder of foreign company Rely on separate legal entity doctrine — the company, not the shareholder, holds the assets Incorporation documents, dividend flow records, management board composition, arm's-length proof of company operations
Employee using corporate foreign card Prove corporate use only — all expenses were business expenses reimbursed by the employer Expense policy, prior approvals, reimbursement records, employer statements, FEMA and banking compliance records
Procedural defences come first: Before any scenario-specific substantive defence is argued, our team audits every third-party notice for incorrect Assessment Year, Section 11 time-bar, officer jurisdiction, and adequacy of the reason-to-believe record. A procedural knockout collapses the entire proceeding without the merits ever being argued. The 2024 Vikas Marda ruling — quashing notices for AY errors — has made the procedural audit the first and most important step in every third-party case, as confirmed in our Income Tax Notice practice.

Special Concerns — NRIs, Legal Heirs and Corporate Structures

Certain third-party categories face particularly difficult assessment scenarios. NRIs, legal heirs, and corporate beneficiaries encounter unique complications that demand tailored defence thinking from day one.

2019 Retrospective Amendment

NRIs Who Were Formerly Indian Residents

High cross-border risk

The 2019 amendment extended the Black Money Act retrospectively to NRIs who were residents at the time of asset acquisition — operating from 1 July 2015. A person who became NRI after acquiring foreign assets as a resident can still face a Section 10 notice. NRI clients with complex residency histories face the highest cross-border exposure.

Our Expatriate Taxation team handles every cross-border NRI case in coordination with the 15CA-15CB Filing record trail — which often establishes the remittance history that proves independent funding and rebuts the beneficial ownership presumption on the Indian-resident period.

Sections 72(c) and 74 — Retrospective Trap

Legal Heirs and the Section 72(c) Problem

Decades-old assets can be caught

Legal representatives face a unique retrospective trap. Section 72(c) deems pre-2015 foreign assets to have been acquired in the year the AO first issues notice — potentially bringing decades-old inherited assets into the current-year tax net. Section 74 allows the full Section 10 proceeding to continue against the legal representative — but caps personal liability at the value of assets actually inherited.

Heirs often receive notices for assets they never personally created or knew about. Our Reassessment Defence team builds complete succession evidence — death certificates, probate, succession certificates, and asset valuation records — as the first step in every legal heir defence engagement.

Corporate Veil + Treaty Scrutiny

Corporate Vehicles and Treaty-Shopping Allegations

Multi-regime exposure

Corporate structures with foreign subsidiaries or holding entities face beneficial-ownership scrutiny from multiple directions. The AO may pierce the corporate veil when economic substance is weak — real management, decision-making, and benefit flow must be demonstrable. Treaty-shopping allegations can layer transfer-pricing concerns on top of the Black Money Act proceeding.

Our Reassessment Defence and International Transfer Pricing teams coordinate on every complex corporate structure case — ensuring that the substance documentation for the Black Money Act proceeding is consistent with the arm's-length positions taken in transfer-pricing filings.

Appeal Rights and Parallel Proceedings for Other Persons

Third parties enjoy identical appeal rights to primary assessees — the full four-tier appellate ladder under the Black Money Act. No order against an other person becomes final until every appellate remedy concludes. Additionally, third-party assessees often face multiple parallel proceedings that must be coordinated as a unified defence.

First Appeal
Section 15
30 days from demand notice

Commissioner (Appeals)

First appeal to the Commissioner (Appeals) within 30 days of the demand notice — same timeline and process as for the primary assessee. The Commissioner can confirm, reduce, enhance, or annul. The first appeal is typically the strongest opportunity for factual resolution, especially where beneficial ownership is clearly rebuttable on the documents.

Second Appeal
Section 17
60 days from CIT(A) order

Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT)

ITAT is the final fact-finding authority — it reconsiders every factual and legal finding. The Kolkata Bench's 2024 Vikas Marda ruling has directly shaped third-party assessment jurisprudence by quashing AY-error notices. Cross-objections by the Department under Section 17(2) are possible and are anticipated in every appeal preparation.

Third Appeal
Section 19
120 days from ITAT order

High Court — Substantial Questions of Law

High Court appeals proceed on substantial questions of law only. Facts determined by ITAT are final unless perverse. Legal questions in other-person cases — the scope of "any person" under Section 10(1), the beneficial owner standard, and the retrospective operation of the 2019 amendment — have reached High Courts.

Supreme Court
Article 136
90 days from High Court order

Supreme Court — Special Leave Petition

Supreme Court SLPs address fundamental questions of law or constitutional significance. Rulings on the scope of Section 10(1) "any person" and the 2019 retrospective amendment have constitutional dimensions that can reach the highest court. See our Assessment under the Black Money Act page for the complete appellate strategy framework.

Coordinating with the primary assessee's position: Third-party defence must align with the primary assessee's position without compromising the third party's independence. Contradictions between primary and third-party positions weaken both defences — and the AO exploits every inconsistency during hearings. Our Tax Health Check team pre-empts coordination issues during early case planning through a unified evidence and argument matrix before any response is filed.

Our Assessment of Other Person Defence Services at N D Savla & Associates

We provide end-to-end defence for assessment of other person under the Black Money Act 2015 — for nominees, trustees, legal heirs, family members, corporate beneficiaries, cross-border NRIs, and every other third-party category receiving Section 10 notices.

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Notice Audit, AY Validity Check and Procedural Preliminary Objections

On receiving any third-party Section 10 notice, we immediately audit it for Assessment Year validity, officer jurisdiction, adequacy of the reason-to-believe record, and Section 11 time-bar compliance. An AY error on the notice — under the Vikas Marda 2024 standard — is filed as a preliminary objection immediately before any substantive response. All jurisdictional objections are preserved in writing in the first response to the AO, forming the backbone of the appellate record. This audit-first approach is conducted before any document production or hearing response is made. Our Income Tax Notice team performs this audit within hours of receiving the engagement instruction — because a procedural knockout opportunity missed at the first response stage cannot be recovered later.
02

Beneficial Ownership Rebuttal — Nominee, Trustee, Family and Corporate Defence

We build the complete beneficial ownership rebuttal for each scenario — nominee dossiers with source-of-funds trails and account instruction records, trustee representation with trust deed and fiduciary-role evidence, family-member defence with independent income and remittance documentation, and corporate-structure defence with economic substance evidence. For discretionary trust beneficiaries, we prepare the no-vested-entitlement defence using trust deed discretion clauses and distribution history. For trustees, we prepare the fiduciary-only role documentation showing no personal benefit. Our Expatriate Taxation team handles all cross-border evidence collection and treaty analysis where the asset or the party is in a foreign jurisdiction.
03

NRI Retrospective Defence, Legal Heir Succession Mapping and Section 72(c) Analysis

For NRI clients affected by the 2019 retrospective amendment, we map the complete residency history against asset acquisition dates — establishing whether Indian residency applied at the relevant time and what treaty protections apply. We coordinate with the 15CA-15CB Filing record trail to establish the remittance history that rebuts the beneficial ownership presumption. For legal heirs, we build complete succession evidence — death certificate, succession certificate, probate, asset valuation, and the prior income tax record of the deceased — and analyse the Section 72(c) retrospective trap to challenge the deemed-acquisition year where the legal position supports it. Our Reassessment Defence team coordinates every inherited-asset engagement.
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Coordinated Cross-Regime Defence and Appellate Representation

Third-party assessees facing simultaneous Black Money Act, Income-tax Act, PMLA, and FEMA proceedings require a consolidated defence strategy. Evidence produced in one forum influences every other — and contradictions between parallel positions are exploited by the AO and enforcement agencies. We coordinate the complete cross-regime defence through our Expatriate Taxation team for cross-border scenarios and our Assessment under the Black Money Act practice for primary-to-third-party position alignment. We represent third-party assessees at every appellate stage — Commissioner (Appeals), ITAT, High Court, and Supreme Court — with the same depth of preparation as primary assessee cases, because the 120% exposure is identical.

Complete Defence for Assessment of Other Person — Nominees, Trustees, Legal Heirs, Family Members and Corporate Beneficiaries.

Section 10 notice audit  ·  AY validity & jurisdictional check  ·  Beneficial ownership rebuttal  ·  Nominee defence  ·  Trustee representation  ·  Legal heir succession mapping  ·  NRI retrospective defence  ·  Cross-regime coordination  ·  Appellate representation

+91 98190 00511  |  +91 91670 58000  |  +91 98190 00445  |  nainitsavla@savlagroup.in

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F.A.Q.

Assessment of other person is a Section 10 proceeding against any person other than the primary investigated taxpayer. Specifically, the AO can issue a Section 10 notice to a nominee, trustee, legal heir, or family member believed to hold undisclosed foreign assets. Additionally, the third party faces identical 30% tax plus 300% Section 41 penalty exposure. Furthermore, parallel prosecution under Sections 49 and 50 also applies. Moreover, our Assessment under the Black Money Act page covers the broader Section 10 framework.

Yes. Section 10(1) explicitly allows the AO to serve notice on ‘any person’. Specifically, if you are a nominee, trustee, legal representative, or family member linked to a foreign asset, you can receive a notice even if you are not the original investigation target. Additionally, the beneficial owner doctrine drives most such third-party assessment notices. Furthermore, receiving a notice does not mean liability — a strong defence can rebut the presumption. Therefore, immediate engagement with an Income Tax Notice specialist is essential.

Nominees can successfully defend themselves by proving no beneficial interest. Specifically, you must produce records showing the source of funds, account instructions, and actual fund flow. Additionally, banking records, email instructions, and trust deeds form the evidentiary backbone. Furthermore, our team builds complete nominee-rebuttal dossiers for every case. Moreover, our Expatriate Taxation team handles cross-border nominee scenarios routinely. Therefore, early evidence preservation is the single biggest success factor.

Beneficial ownership is a fact-sensitive doctrine about who actually controls and benefits from an asset. Specifically, the AO presumes that the person enjoying benefits and exercising control is the beneficial owner — regardless of legal title. Additionally, the third party must produce contrary evidence to rebut the presumption. Furthermore, documentary proof of funding source, control, and benefit flow drives the determination. Therefore, clear transactional records form the core of every beneficial owner defence.

Legal heirs can face Section 10 notices for inherited foreign assets. Specifically, Section 74 allows proceedings to continue against the legal representative. Additionally, Section 72(c) creates a retrospective trap — pre-2015 assets are deemed acquired in the year of AO detection. Furthermore, heirs’ personal liability is capped at the value of assets inherited. Moreover, our team builds complete succession evidence for every Reassessment Defence engagement involving inherited assets.

Yes, trustees can receive Section 10 notices — but strong defences exist. Specifically, trustees can prove their fiduciary-only role and demonstrate no personal benefit. Additionally, discretionary trust beneficiaries with no vested entitlement often succeed in distinguishing themselves from beneficial owners. Furthermore, the trust deed, trustee minutes, and distribution history become critical evidence. Moreover, revocable trusts typically collapse back to the settlor — shielding trustees further. Therefore, trust-deed analysis is the first step in every trustee defence.

Third parties enjoy the full four-tier appellate ladder identical to primary assessees. Specifically, first appeal to Commissioner (Appeals) under Section 15 within 30 days of demand notice. Additionally, second appeal to ITAT under Section 17 on broader fact-finding. Furthermore, High Court appeals proceed under Section 19 on substantial questions of law. Moreover, Supreme Court appeals reach via Article 136 of the Constitution. Therefore, the appeal process mirrors that covered in our Assessment under the Black Money Act page.