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Section 131 Summons: Rights, Response, and Strategy

Notice at a Glance

Parameter Details
Notice type Summons — to appear before AO or produce documents
Who can issue it? AO, Commissioner, and other specified authorities
What it requires Personal appearance, production of books, or both
Can assessee send a representative? Yes — an authorised representative (CA, advocate) can appear
Is it compulsory? Yes — non-compliance is contempt-like; carries penalty and prosecution risk
Penalty for non-compliance Section 272A(1)(c) — ₹10,000 per summons
Section 131(1A) — distinct purpose Investigation summons — issued when income concealment is suspected
Constitutional protection Right against self-incrimination (Article 20(3)) applies — cannot compel self-incriminatory documentary testimony beyond what exists
IT Act 2025 equivalent Section 246(1A) [for 131(1A)]

Section 131 vs Section 133(6) — The Critical Difference

Many practitioners and taxpayers confuse Section 131 with Section 133(6). Understanding the difference is essential to crafting the right response.

Section 133(6) is a written request for information or documents — it does not require the person to physically appear before the AO. It is less coercive and typically used for third-party verification.

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