Black Money Act · Panaji, Goa
Robust defence against penalties for non-disclosure of foreign income and assets in Goa under the Black Money Act — the 3-times-tax penalty under Section 41 and the ₹10 lakh penalties under Sections 42 and 43 — plus the very real prosecution risk these provisions carry.
Overview
The Black Money Act's penalties are deliberately severe. Section 41 imposes a penalty equal to three times the tax on undisclosed foreign income or assets, on top of the 30% tax. Separately, Sections 42 and 43 levy a flat ₹10 lakh penalty where a resident fails to file a return, or fails to disclose or furnishes inaccurate particulars of foreign assets in the return — for each such year.
Beyond penalties, non-disclosure can attract prosecution and rigorous imprisonment. We contest the penalties on merits and procedure, argue reasonable cause, use the small-value exceptions where they apply, and manage the prosecution risk — closely tied to the underlying assessment and any appeal.
What's covered
Defence of every Black Money Act penalty and prosecution.
Get a fixed-fee quote →Contesting the three-times-tax penalty on income and assets.
Defending the ₹10 lakh penalties for return and disclosure defaults.
Arguing reasonable cause and the absence of mens rea.
Applying the exemptions for low-value foreign assets where available.
Managing and defending the risk of prosecution and imprisonment.
Appealing penalty orders through the CIT(A), ITAT and courts.
Our process
We examine the section invoked and the order.
We marshal reasonable cause, facts and exceptions.
We reply and argue before the authority.
We appeal the penalty and manage prosecution risk.
Frequently asked questions
Where tax is computed under Section 10 on undisclosed foreign income or an undisclosed foreign asset, Section 41 levies a penalty equal to three times that tax, in addition to the tax itself. This makes the total exposure very heavy, so a strong defence on the underlying assessment is essential.
Section 42 imposes a ₹10 lakh penalty on a resident who holds a foreign asset or has foreign income and fails to furnish the income tax return, while Section 43 imposes a ₹10 lakh penalty for failing to disclose, or furnishing inaccurate particulars of, foreign assets in the return — for each relevant year. We defend both.
Yes. Low-value foreign assets below a prescribed threshold are exempted from the Section 42 and 43 penalties, and reasonable cause can be a defence. We check whether your case falls within an exception and argue it where it does.
Yes. The Black Money Act provides for prosecution and rigorous imprisonment for failure to furnish the return of foreign assets and for wilful attempts to evade tax. The terms are serious, so the penalty and prosecution exposure must be managed together, which we do.
If a default was due to a genuine, reasonable cause rather than deliberate concealment, that can be a defence to penalty. We document the circumstances — such as a bona fide belief, reliance on advice, or absence of intent — to establish reasonable cause.
Yes. Penalty orders under the Black Money Act can be appealed to the Commissioner (Appeals) and onward to the ITAT, High Court and Supreme Court, just like assessment orders. We prepare and argue these penalty appeals.
Book a free consultation and share the penalty notice or order. We build the defence, apply any exceptions, respond and represent you, and manage the prosecution risk, on a transparent fee.
Related services
Book a free consultation with a qualified Chartered Accountant in Goa. We'll contest the penalty, apply any exceptions and manage prosecution risk — no obligation.