S. C. Prashar, Income-Tax Officer,
Market Ward, Bombay and Vs. Vasantsen Dwarkadas & Ors [1962] INSC 368 (12
December 1962)
DAS, S.K.
KAPUR, J.L.
SARKAR, A.K.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
CITATION: 1963 AIR 1356 1964 SCR (1) 29
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1963 SC1394 (2,9,10) F 1963 SC1399 (13) F
1963 SC1401 (3,7) R 1964 SC1742 (9) R 1965 SC 342 (20,25) D 1965 SC1267 (9) OPN
1967 SC1552 (5) E 1968 SC 139 (4) RF 1969 SC 340 (1) D 1971 SC 147 (15) F 1971
SC1256 (18) RF 1972 SC 83 (11) R 1973 SC2585 (13)
ACT:
Income Tax-Escaped income-Re-assessment-Validity
of notice Statute providing for saving of notices-Retrospective
operation-Indian Income-tax (Amendment) Act, 1948 (48 of 1948), s. 8-Indian
Income-tax (Amendment) Act, 1953 (25 of 1953 s. 31-Finance Act 1956 (18 of
1956), s. 18-Indian Income-tax (Amendment) Act, 1959 (9 of 1959), s. 2,
4-Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 (11 of 1922), s. 34, as amended.
HEADNOTE:
The first respondent's father, D, and another
were partners doing business in the name of P.L. since 1935. D died in 1946 but
the firm was continued with the first respondent as a partner. In 1941 another
firm in the name of V. D. was started by the first respondent and two others,
and for the assessment year 1942-43 the firm made a return of its income and
also claimed registration. The Income-tax Officer, being of the view that the
firm belonged really to D refused registration and added the income of the firm
to the individual income of D. In 1943-44 the Income-tax Officer came to a
different conclusion and held that the firm V.D. was a branch of the firm P.L.
For the subsequent years of assessment 1942-43 to 1948-49 also the firm V.D.
applied for registration bat was refused, and for those several years appeals
were filed before the Appellate Tribunal. An appeal was filed by the firm P.L.
against its assessment in respect of excess profits tax. There was also an
appeal against the assessment for the year 1942-43 by the first respondent as
the heir and legal representative of his father against the decision that the
income of the firm V.D. should be included in the income of his father. All
these appeals were heard together and decided by the Appellate Tribunal by its
order dated August 14, 1931. In that order the Tribunal gave a finding that the
business of the firm V.D. really belonged to the firm P.L. This decision was
confirmed by the High Court on reference on October 8, 1953. In order to give
effect to the finding of the Tribunal the Income-tax Officer issued a notice on
April 30, 1954, to the firm P.L. under s.
34 of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, that
the income for the year ending 30 March 31, 1943, had been under-assessed, and
that he proposed to reassess the income. The respondents challenged the
validity of the notice on the grounds (1) that the Income-tax Officer had no
jurisdiction to issue a notice after the expiry of the limit of time fixed by
sub-s. (1) of s. 34, (2) that the second proviso to sub-s. 3) of s. 34 on which
the Income-tax Officer relied did not apply to the case, and in any case, it
was bad on the ground that it violated Art. 14 of the Constitution of India,
and (3) that there was no provision in the Act under which the Appellate
Tribunal could give a finding in the appeals filed by the firm V.D. or in the
appeal filed by the first respondent himself that the income in question
represented the income of the firm P.L. The validity of the notice was sought
to be sustained on the grounds that, in any case, it could not be challenged by
reason of the amendments made in s. 34 of the Indian Income. tax Act, by the
provisions of s. 31 of the Indian Income-tax 'Amendment) Act, 1953, s. 18 of
the Finance Act, 1956, and s. 4 of the Indian Income-tax (Amendment) Act, 1959.
Held, (per Sarkar, Hidayatullah and Raghubar
Dayal, JJ., Das and Kapur, JJ., dissenting), that the notice dated April 30,
1954, was valid and its validity could not be called in question in any Court
or Tribunal in view of the provisions in s. 4 of the Indian Income-tax
(Amendment) Act, 1959.
Per Das and Kapur, JJ.-(1) The second proviso
to s. 34 (3) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, as amended by the Amending Act
of 1933, was hit by Art. 14 of the Constitution of India and was invalid.
(2) The Income-tax Officer had no
jurisdiction to issue the notice on April 30, 1954, and could not rely on the
second proviso to sub-s. (3) of s. 34 because the time limit fixed by sub-S.
(1) of s. 34 had expired long before the said proviso came into effect and the
proviso did not revive a remedy which had been lost before April 1, 1952.
(3) Section 31 of the Indian Income-tax
(Amendment) Act, 1953, did not validate the notice dated April 30, 1954.
(4) The notices to which s. 4 of the Indian
Income-tax (Amendment) Act, 1959, were applicable and which were validated were
those that were issued between the date of the amendment of the Finance Act,
1956, and that of the Amending Act of 1959. It is not the effect of s. 4 to
abrogate and supersede the time limit provided by s. 34 (1) (a) for all the
past years.
31 Per Das, J.-The evidence did not show that
the notice dated April 30, 1954, was issued under s. 34 (1) (Amendment) Act,
1959, was not applicable.
Per Kapur, J.-The principle of the law of
limitation was applicable to s. 34 of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, that if
the period prescribed for taking action had already expired, subsequent change
in the law did not make it so retrospective in its effect as to revive the
power of an Income-tax Officer to take action under the new law.
Per Sarkar,J.-The second proviso to s. 34 (3)
as amended in 1953, in so far as it affected persons other than the assessee
was void as violating Art. 14 of the Constitution, and could not be relied on
in support of the notice in the present case.
Per Hidayatullah and Raghubar Dayal, JJ.-(1)
The different periods indicated under s. 34 cannot be treated as periods of
limitation, in the sense that the expiry of the periods grants prescriptive
title to defaulting tax-payers or a vested right arises in the assessee. The
liability to the State is independent of any consideration of time and, in the
absence of any provision restricting action by a time limit, it can be enforced
at any time.
(2) Under the Indian Income-tax and Business
Profits Tax (Amendment) Act, 1948, which came into force on March 30, 1948, the
Income-tax Officer could take action retrospectively in all cases in which the
assessment years ended within eight years of the date of his action and in
which there was an escapement of an assessment for the reasons indicated in cl.
(a) o s. 34 (1), as amended.
(3) The Income-tax (Amendment) Act, 1953,
enabled action at any time if there was a finding or direction of the character
indicated in the second proviso to sub-s. (3) of s. 34, and s. 31 of the
Amendment Act applied the 'amended s. 34 to all assessments commenced after
September 8, 1948, and saved all notices issued and assessments made in respect
of any year prior to April 1, 1948, whether the notices were issued or the
assessments made before or after April 1, 1952.
(4) The second proviso to s. 34 (3), as
amended in 1953, was not discriminatory and did not offend Art. 14 of the
Constitution.
(5) The notice issued against the firm P. L.
was validly issued under the amended second proviso to s. 34 (3).
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal
No. 705 of 1957.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated
October 5, 1955 of the Bombay High Court in Appeal No. 1 of 1955.
K.N. Rajagopal Sastri and P.D. Menon, for the
appellants.
N. A. Palkhivala, J.B. Dadachanji, O. C.
Mathur, and Ravinder Narain, for respondents Nos. 1 and 2.
N. A. Palkhivala, D. N. Mukherjee and B.N.
Ghosh, for the intervener.
1962. December 12. The following judgments
were delivered.
S. K. Das, J., J. L. Kapur, J., and A.K.
Sarkar, J., delivered separate judgments. The judgment of M. Hidayatullah and
Raghubar Dayal, JJ., was delivered by Hidayatullah, J.
S. K. DAS, J. This appeal has been brought to
this court on a certificate of fitness granted by the High Court of Bombay. The
appellants are the Union of India and the Income-tax Officer, Market Ward,
Bombay. By this appeal the appellants challenge the correctness of the judgment
and order of the High Court of Bombay dated October 5, 1955, by which the High
Court affirmed the judgment and order of a learned single judge of the same
court dated December 7, 1954, on a petition filed by the respondents under Art.
226 of the Constitution.
The relevant facts are these. The firm of
Purshottam Laxmidas was started on October 28, 1935. This firm had two
partners, Dwarkadas Vussonji and Parmanand Odhavji.
Dwarkadas died on April 1, 1946, leaving a
son, Vasantsen.
Another firm by the name of Vasantsen
Dwarkadas was 33 started on January 28, 1941, and in that firm there were three
partners, Vasantsen, Narandas Shivji and Nanalal Odhavji. This firm was
dissolved on October 24, 1946. The firm of Vasantsen Dwarkadas filed a return
of its income for the assessment year 1942-1943 and also claimed registration
as a firm. The Income-tax authorities refused registration and came to the
conclusion that the firm of Vasantsen Dwarkadas belonged really to Dwarkadas,
father of Vasantsen; therefore they added the income of the firm to the income
of Dwarkadas. In subsequent assessment years the firm of Vasantsen Dwarkadas
again applied for registration, but registration was again refused. For the
assessment years 1942-1943 to 1948-1949 several appeals were filed before the
Income-tax Appellate Tribunal by the firm Vasantsen Dwarkadas both against the
quantum of income assessed and against the refusal of the Income-tax Officer to
register the firm of Vasantsen Dwarkadas. An appeal was also filed by the firm
of Purshottam Laxmidas against its assessment in respect of excess profits tax,
and there was also an appeal for the assessment year 1942-1943 by Vasantsen as
the heir and legal representative of his father against the decision of the
Income-tax authorities that the income of the firm Vasantsen Dwarkadas should
be included in the income of Dwarkadas. It appears that after the decision in
Vasantsen's case in the assessment year 1942-1943, the Income-tax Officer gave
a finding that the firm of Vasantsen Dwarkadas was only a branch of the firm of
Purshottam Laxmidas and therefore the Income-tax Officer added the income of Vasantsen
Dwarkadas to the income of the firm Purshottam Laxmidas. This question also
came up before the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal in the appeals filed by
Purshottam Laxmidas in respect of the assessments made against it. By a
consolidated order dated August 14, 1951, the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal
disposed of all the aforesaid appeals, and it came to the conclusion that the
business done 34 in the name of Vasantsen Dwarkadas was really the business of
the firm Purshottam Laxmidas. With regard to the appeal filed by Vasantsen as
heir and legal representative of his father for the assessment year 1942-1944,
the Tribunal expressed the view that the income of Vasantsen Dwarkadas should
be deleted from the assessment of Dwarkadas. It said :
"We are therefore of opinion that the
addition of Rs. 62,3721/-to Dwarkadas's income or the modification directed by
the Appellate Assistant Commissioner should be deleted from Dwarkadas's income.
If the Income-tax Officer can include the same in the income of Purshottam
Laxmidas, he is of course at liberty to do so. He can then apportion the income
of Purshottam Laxmidas amongst the partners thereof as provided in s. 23 (5) of
the Act." The Commissioner of Income-tax questioned the correctness of the
aforesaid finding of the Tribunal, but on a reference to the High Court the
latter upheld the order of the Tribunal.
The reference was decided on October 8, 1953.
On April 30, 1954, the Income-tax Officer
concerned who is the appellant before us served on the firm Purshottam Laxmidas
a notice under s. 34 of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922. This notice was in
these terms :
"Whereas I have reason to believe that
your income assessable to income-tax for the year ending 31st March 1943 has
been under-assessed I therefore, propose to re-assess to income allowance that
has been under assessed :
I hereby require you to deliver to me within
35 days of the receipt of this notice a return in the attached form of your
total income 35 and total world income assessable for the year ending 31st of
March, 1943.
This notice is being issued after obtaining
the necessary satisfaction of the Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay City,
Bombay." The notice was followed by some correspondence between the firm
Purshottam Laxmidas and the Income-tax Officer. The result of the
correspondence was that the Income-tax Officer informed the firm that its
income was to be re-assessed in order to give effect to the finding of the
Appellate Tribunal in its order dated August 14, 1951 that the business of Vasantsen
Dwarkadas was really the business of the firm Purshottam Laxmidas.
On July 9, 1954, Vasantsen as the first
petitioner and the firm of Purshottam Laxmidas as second petitioner filed a
petition in the High Court under Art. 226 of the Constitution and asked for the
issue of a writ quashing the notice dated April 30, 1954, and a writ of
mandamus restraining the Union of India and the Income-tax Officer concerned
from taking any steps or proceedings in pursuance of the said notice. Their
main contentions were (1) that the Income-tax Officer had no jurisdiction to
issue the notice after the expiry of the limit of time fixed by sub-s. (1) of
s. 34, (2) that the second proviso to sub-s. (3) of s. 34 on which the
Income-tax Officer relied did not apply to the case, (3) that there was no
provision in the Act under which the Appellate Tribunal could give a finding in
the appeals filed by the firm of Vasantsen Dwarkadas or in the appeal filed by
Vasantsen himself, that the income in question represented the income of the
firm Purshottam Laxmidas and (4) lastly, that that the second proviso to sub-s.
(3) of s. 34 was bad on the ground that it violated Art. 14 of the
Constitution.
Desai, J., who heard the petition in the
first instance came to the conclusion that the notice was 36 bad and without
jurisdiction because, to use his own words, the Income-tax Officer in issuing
the notice on April 30, 1954, which was clearly more than eight years from the
close of the assessment year 1942-1943 was obviously in error in thinking that
the second proviso to sub-s. (3) of s. 34 applied to the case. The learned
judge held that the proviso did not apply to orders of assessment which had
become final before the date when it came into force. It may be here stated
that the second proviso to sub-s. (3) of s. 34 was amended by Act XXV of 1953
and by s. 1 (2) of the Amending Act of 1953 the amended proviso came into force
on April 1, 1952. Desai, J., further held that the proviso in question did not
violate Art. 14 of the Constitution in so far as assessees who were parties to
the proceedings before the Appellate Tribunal were concerned ; but the proviso
was bad in so far as it affected persons other than assessees.
He held however that the petitioners before
him were parties to the proceedings before the appellate Tribunal and therefore
fell within the category of assessees. In view however of his finding that
second proviso to sub-s. (3) of s. 34 did not apply to the case, his final
conclusion was that the notice was without jurisdiction.
The matter was then taken in appeal and the
appeal was heard by Chagla, C. J., and Tendolkar J. The appellate court
affirmed the finding of Desai, J., that the notice under s. 34 was issued out
of time and was therefore invalid. It further held that the second proviso to
sub-s. (3) of s. 34 did not apply to the case. On the question as to whether
the second proviso violated Arts. 14 of the Constitution it came to the
conclusion that no valid distinction could be drawn between persons with regard
to whom a finding or direction is given by the appellate Tribunal and persons
with regard to whom no such direction or finding is given.
The appellate court expressed the view that
both fell in the same 37 category and there was no difficulty in having a uniform
provision of law with regard to them. The appellate court further expressed the
view that for the assessment year 1942-1943 the assessee before the Tribunal
was Vasantsen Dwarkadas as representing his father ; in that appeal the firm of
Purshottam Laxmidas was not before the Tribunal and therefore the firm was no
better than a stranger who was in some way associated with the assessee. The
appellate court held in the result that the second proviso to sub-s. (3) of s.
34 offended against Art. 14.
I have stated earlier that the appeal has
been brought to this Court from the decision of the appellate court on a
certificate of fitness granted by the High Court. In the original statement of
the case filed on behalf of the appellants, the principal question raised was
that relating to the second proviso to sub-s. (3) of s. 34 which I shall
presently read. The appellants were however allowed by us to file a
supplementary statement of the case in which two other points have been urged.
One of these points is that the validity of the notice dated April 30, 1954,
cannot be challenged by reason of the provisions of s. 31 of the Amending Act,
1953 (XXV of 1953). The second point is that the validity of the notice cannot
be challenged also because of the provisions of s. 4 of the Indian Income-tax
(Amendment) Act, 1959 (1 of 1959).
Therefore, three substantial questions fall
for decision in this appeal. The first question is whether the second proviso
to sub-s. (3) of s. 34 is constitutionally valid and applies to the case. The
second is, can the validity of the notice dated April 30, 1954, be challenged
in view of the provisions of s. 31 of the Amending Act of 1953. The third
question is the effect of the provisions of the Indian Income-tax (Amendment)
Act, 1959 (1 of 1959). I shall now deal with these questions one by one.
38 First as to the second proviso to sub-s.
(3) of s. 34. S. 34 of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, has undergone many
amendments. It is not necessary to refer to the section as it stood prior to
1939. The section as it stood in 1939 empowered the Income-tax Officer to
assess or reassess income which had escaped assessment or had been under assessed
or had been assessed at too low a rate or had been the subject of excessive
relief under the Act. The section made a distinction between two classes of
cases; one in which the Income-tax Officer had reason to believe that the
assessee had concealed the particulars of his income or had deliberately
furnished inaccurate particulars thereof and in this class of cases the
Income-tax Officer could take action as laid down in the section at any time
within eight years;
in all other cases the Income-tax Officer
could take action within four years of the end of the relevant assessment year.
The section was almost completely recast by the Income-tax and Business Profits
Tax (Amendment) Act, 1948 (Act XLVIII of 1948). For the purpose of this case
all that I need state is that the two time limits of eight years and four years
were continued in respect of two classes of cases mentioned in clauses (a) and
(b) of sub-s. (1) of s. 34;
clause (a) related to cases of omission or
failure on the part of an assessee to make a return of his income or to
disclose fully and truly all material facts necessary for his assessment, and
cl. (b) related to cases where the Income-tax Officer had in consequence of
information in his possession reason to believe that income, profits or gains
chargeable to income-tax had escaped assessment etc. The time limit of eight
years applied to cases under cl. (a) and the time limit of four years applied
to cases under cl. (b).
By s. 18 of the Finance Act, 1956, more
changes were introduced with effect from April 1, 1956. The time limit of eight
years was omitted from sub-s. (1) as regards cases falling under cl. (a) but a
proviso to sub-s. (1) of s. 34 which was substituted for the original proviso
39 said inter alia that the Income-tax Officer shall not issue a notice under
cl. (a) of sub-s. (1) for any year if eight years have elapsed after the expiry
of that year unless the income, profits or gain chargeable to income-tax which
have escaped assessment or have been under-assessed or assessed at too low a
rate or have been made the subject of excessive relief under the Act etc.
amount to or are likely to amount to Rs. 1,00,000/or more in the aggregate for
that year etc. Certain other safeguards were also introduced in the sub-section
with which we are not concerned. Put shortly, the time limit of eight years
continued in respect of cl. (a) cases if the amount was less than Rs.
1,00,000/-.
Now, I come to sub-s. (3) and the second
proviso thereto.
Prior to 1956 sub-s. (3) provided that every
assessment or re-assessment should be completed within eight years from the end
of the relevant assessment year in those cases where the assessee had failed to
make a return or failed to disclose fully and truly all material facts
necessary for his assessment. In 1956 the time limit was removed and the
assessment or re-assessment in such cases might be completed at any time. In
all other cases the period of limitation was still four years, as it was before
1956, for completion of assessment under s. 23 or of assessment or
re-assessment, under s. 23 read with s.34. The second proviso, after its
amendment in 1953, constituted an exception to sub-s. (1) as well as sub-s.
(3). The periods of limitation laid down in sub-s. (1) for initiating
proceedings and in sub-s. (3) for making an order of assessment or
re-assessment were subject to the exception mentioned in the second proviso. I
may now read that proviso" Provided further that nothing contained in this
section limiting the time within which any action may be taken or any order,
assessment or re-assessment may be made, shall 40 apply to a re-assessment made
under section 27 or to an assessment or re-assessment made on the assessee or
any person in consequence of or to give effect to any finding or direction
contained in an order under section 31, section 33, section 33A, section 33-B,
section 66 or section 66A." I have stated earlier that the second proviso
as amended was inserted by the Income-tax (Amendment) Act, 1953 (XXV of 1953),
with effect from April 1, 1952.
Now, I proceed to discuss the first question
as to whether this proviso applies in the present case. The question has two faces
: (1) whether the proviso is constitutionally valid and (2) if it is
constitutionally valid, does it apply to a case where the time limit fixed by
sub-s. (1) of s. 34 had expired some time before April 1, 1952, the date on
which the proviso came into effect ? With regard to the first facet, Chagla,
C.J., has pointed out, rightly in my opinion, that the persons with regard to
whom a finding or direction is given and persons with regard to whom no finding
or direction is given belong really to the same category, namely, the category
of persons who are liable to pay tax and have failed to pay it for one reason
or another.
Admittedly, persons who are liable to pay tax
and have not paid it could not be proceeded against after the period of
limitation, unless a finding or direction with regard to them was given by some
tribunal under the various sections mentioned in the proviso; therefore out of
the large category of people who were liable to pay tax but failed to pay it, a
certain number is selected for action by the proviso and with regard to that
small number the right of limitation given to them is taken away. The real
question is, is there any rational basis for distinguishing between persons who
are liable to pay tax and have failed to pay it and with 41 regard to whom a
finding or direction is given, and persons who are liable to pay tax and have
failed to pay it and with regard to whom no finding or direction is given. I am
in agreement with the view expressed by the learned Chief justice that no
rational basis has been made out for the distinction between the two classes of
people referred to above, who really fall in the same category and with regard
to whom there was no difficulty in having a uniform provision of law. I am
further in agreement with the view of the learned Chief justice that the
principle laid down by this court in Suraj Mall Mohta & Co. v. A.V.
Visvanatha Sastri and another (1) applies. In that case sub-s. (4) of s. 5 of
the Taxation on Income (Investigation Commission) Act, was challenged and this
Court pointed out that there was nothing uncommon either in properties or in
characteristics between persons who were discovered as evaders of income-tax
during an investigation conducted under s. 5 (1) and those who were discovered
by the Income-tax Officer to have evaded payment of income-tax. Both these
kinds of persons really belonged to the same category and therefore required
equal treatment. This Court pointed out that s. 34 of the Indian Income-tax Act
and sub-s. (4) of s.
5 of the impugned Act dealt with persons who
had similar characteristics and properties and therefore a different treatment
of some out of the same class offended the equal protection clause embodied in
Art. 14 of the Constitution.
It seems to me that the position is the same
here. Whether persons who evade tax are discovered by means of a finding given
by a tribunal or they are discovered by any other method, they really belong to
the same category and therefore require equal treatment. The second proviso to
sub-s. (3) of s. 34 which came into effect from April 1, 1952, patently
introduced an unequal treatment in respect of some out of the same class of
persons. Those whose liability to pay tax was discovered by one method could be
proceeded against at any time and (1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 448.
42 no limitation would apply in their case,
and in the case of others the limitation laid down by sub-s. (1) of s. 34 would
apply. This in my opinion is unequal treatment which is not based on any rational
ground. Desai, J., put the matter on a somewhat narrower ground. He held that
so far as assessees were concerned, there might be a rational ground for
distinction because the appeal proceedings etc. might take a long time and the
assessee being a party to the appeal could not complain of such delay,
therefore, assessees did not occupy the same position as strangers.
But the learned judge field that there was no
rational distinction so far as strangers were concerned and there was no reason
why they should be deprived of the benefit of the time limit prescribed by
sub.s. (1). He therefore held that the proviso, so far as it affected persons
other than assessees not parties to the proceedings enumerated in it, must be
held to be ultra vires the legislature. Even on this narrow ground it seems to
me that the respondents are entitled to succeed. The finding which the
Appellate Tribunal gave in its consolidated order dated August 14, 1951, was a
finding given in the appeal filed by Vasantsen as heir and legal representative
of his father for the assessment year 1942-43. In that appeal the firm
Purshottam Laxmidas was not even a party, though Purshottam Laxmidas was a
party to certain other appeals before the Appellate Tribunal. I have some
difficulty in appreciating how the firm Purshottam Laxmidas can be treated as
an assessee within the meaning of the second proviso to sub-s. (3) of s. 34 for
the assessment year 1942-1943. If the firm cannot be so treated, then even on
the narrow ground stated by Desai, J., the proviso would be of no help to the
present appellants.
I now take up the second facet of the same
question. On this aspect of the case both the learned single judge (Desai,J.)
and the appellate court (Chagla, c. J., and Tendolkar, J.) were agreed. The 43
relevant assessment year was 1942-1943 and it ended on March 31,1943. The
period of four years therefrom would end on March 31,1947, and the period of
eight years would end on March 31,1951. Now the second proviso to sub-s. (3)
came into effect, as I have stated earlier, on April 1, 1952. In other words,
the time limit fixed by sub-s. (i) had expired some time before the amended
second proviso came into effect. Desai, J., has rightly pointed out that it is
a firmly established principle of income-tax law that once a final assessment
is arrived at and the assessment is complete, it cannot be re-opened except in
the circumstances detailed in ss.34 and 35 of the Act and within the time
limited by those sections. Is there anything in the proviso in question which
would give it a retrospective effect beyond April 1, 1952? In my opinion there
is none., The second proviso came into force on April 1, 1952, and before that
date the period of eight years from March 31, 1943, had already expired. The
legislation which provided that from April 1, 1952, there would be no
limitation in respect of certain cases could not revive a remedy which was
already lost to the Income-tax Officer. It seems to me that the proposition of
law is settled beyond any doubt that although limitation is a procedural law
and although it is open to the legislature to extend the period of limitation,
an important right accrues to a party when the remedy against him is barred by
the existing law of limitation, and a vested right cannot be affected except by
express terms used by the statute or the clearest implication following there from.
Some reliance was placed on the decision of the Calcutta High Court in
Income-tax Officer v. Calcutta Discount Co., Ltd., (1) which later came to this
Court on a different point. I am of the opinion that the decision is of no help
to the present appellants. It was said in that decision that the plain effect
of the substitution of new s. 34 with effect from March 30, 1948, was that from
that date the Income-tax Act was to be read as including the (1) [1953] 23
I.T.R. 471.
44 new section as a part thereof, the further
effect of the express language of the section was that so far as cases coming
within cl. (a) of sub-s. (1) were concerned, all assessment years ending within
eight years from March 30, 1948, and from subsequent dates, were within its
purview.
the learned Chief justice of the Calcutta
High Court took particular care in that decision to point out that what was not
within the purview of the section was an assessment which ended-before eight
years from March 30, 1948. That decision therefore does not in any way assist
the present appellants.
On behalf of the appellants, some distinction
was sought to be drawn between a right and the remedy thereof and it was
contended that the liability of an assessee to pay the tax owing to the State
was always there from the commencement of the assessment year and s. 34 of the
Act dealt merely with the machinery of assessment. It was argued that a case
under s. 34 was not analogous to a time barred claim to recover money from one
individual by another. In my opinion such a distinction is entirely out of
place so far as s. 34 is concerned. The learned Chief justice has rightly
pointed out that under s. 34 the Income-tax Officer has the right to issue a
notice within the period of limitation fixed by subs. (1); in another sense, it
may be said that the remedy of the Income-tax Officer to bring to tax escaped
income is available to him under s. 34 provided he avails himself of the remedy
within the period of limitation. No distinction can be drawn, so far as s. 34
is concerned, between the right of the Income-tax Officer and the remedy
available to him. If the remedy is lost, the right is also lost and if the
right is lost, much more so is the remedy.
Therefore, I am clearly of the view that on
April 30, 1954, the Income-tax Officer had no jurisdiction to issue the notice
which he did on the 45 firm Purshottam Laxmidas under the second proviso to
sub-s. (3) of s. 34, because the time limit fixed by sub-s. (1) of s. 34 had
expired long before the said proviso came into effect and the proviso does not
in express terms or by necessary implication revive a remedy which had been
lost before April 1, 1952.
This disposes of the first question argued
before us. I proceed now to the second question, namely, the effect of s. 31 of
the Indian Income-tax (Amendment) Act, 1953 (XXV of 1953). I may first set out
the section :
"For the removal of doubts it is hereby
declared that the provisions of sub-sections (1), (2) and (3) of section 34 of
the principal Act shall apply and shall be deemed always to have applied to any
assessment or reassessment for any year ending before the first day of April,
1948, in any case where proceedings in respect of such assessment or
re-assessment were commenced under the said sub-sections after the 8th day of
September, 1948 and any notice issued in accordance with sub-section (1) or any
assessment completed in pursuance of such notice within the time specified in
sub-section (3), whether before or after the commencement of the Indian
Income-tax (Amendment) Act, 1953, shall, notwithstanding any judgment or order
of any court, Appellate Tribunal or Income-tax authority to the contrary, be
deemed to have been validly issued or completed, as the case may be, and no
such notice, assessment or reassessment shall be called in question on the
ground merely that the provisions of section 34 did not apply or purport to
apply in respect of an assessment or re-assessment for any year prior to the
1st day of April, 1948." 46 It will be noticed that the section is in two
parts : the first part is declaratory of the law and says that sub-ss.
(1), (2) and (3) of s. 34 shall apply and
shall be deemed always to have applied to any assessment or re-assessment for
any year ending before April 1, 1948, in any case where proceedings in respect
of such assessment etc. were commenced under the said sub-sections after
September 8, 1948, and any notice issued in accordance with sub.s. (1) or any
assessment completed in pursuance of such notice within the time specified in
sub-s. (3), whether before or after the commencement of the Amending Act of
1953, shall be deemed to have been validly issued etc.; the second part says
inter alia that no such notice shall be called in question on the ground merely
that the provisions of s. 34 did not apply or purport to apply in respect of an
assessment prior to April 1, 1948. It should be noticed here that the Amending
Act of 1948 (Act XLVIII of 1948) completely recast s. 34; and sub-s. (2) of s.
1 of that Act which came into force on September 8, 1948 provided that ss.
3 to 12 of the Amending Act should be deemed
to have come into force on March 30, 1948. The amendment of s. 34 was made by s.
8 of the Amending Act ; therefore, s. 34 as amended by the Amending Act of 1948
operated retrospectively from March 30, 1948. In the Calcutta Discount Co. Ltd.
v.
Income-tax Officer (1), Bose, J., held that
s. 34 although described as a machinery section did not relate to procedure
pure and simple but affected the protection given to an assessee and,
therefore, the amended section had no application to the assessments for
1942-1943, 1943-1944 and 1944-1945. This view of Bose.J., was not accepted by
the Appellate Court in Income-tax Officer v. Calcutta Discount Co. Ltd. (2),
where the learned Chief justice of the Calcutta High Court rightly pointed out
that s. 34 as it spoke from March 30, 1948, took in all assessment years ending
within eight years from March 30, 1948, and subsequent dates, but (1) [1952] 21
I.T.R. 579.
(2) [1953] 23 I.T.R. 471.
47 did not take in an assessment year which
ended before eight years from March 30, 1948. It is worthy of note that the
Bill which became Act XXV of 1953 was introduced after the judgment of Bose,
J., and before the judgment of the learned Chief Justice. There were really two
separate and distinct questions one was whether s. 34 as amended in 1948
applied to assessment years prior to 1948-1919 and the second question was
whether, on the footing that amended s. 34 did apply to assessment years prior
to 1948-1949, any action could be taken under the amended section in respect of
those assessments which had become time-barred before the amended section came
into effect. Bose, J., answered the first question in the negative and
necessarily the second question also in the negative. The learned Chief Justice
answered the first question in the affirmative, but took pains to point out
that an assessment made before eight years from March 30, 1948, was not within
the purview of s. 34.
I am of the opinion that in its true scope
and effect., s. 31 of the Amending Act of 1953 puts beyond any doubt that the
view expressed by the learned Chief justice in Income-tax Officer v. Calcutta
Discount Co. Ltd. (1), is the correct view and amended s. 34 applies to
assessment years prior to 1948-1949, but it does not say that an assessment
which had become final and in respect of which reassessment proceedings had
become time-barred before the amended section came into force could be
re-opened. This appears to me to be clear from the first part of s. 31. That
part says that sub-ss. (1), (2) and (3) of s. 34 shall apply and be deemed
always to have applied to any assessment etc. for any year ending before April
1, 1948 in any case where proceedings in respect of such assessment etc. were
commenced under the said sub-sections after September 8, 1948, and any notice
issued in accordance with sub-s. (1) shall be deemed to be valid (1) [1953] 23 I.T.R.
471.
48 etc. The section does not say that the
periods of limitation laid down in sub-ss. (1) and (3) are being done away with
; on the contrary, the first part of the section says that the proceedings must
have been commenced after September 8, 1948 (the date on which the Amending Act
of 1948 came into force) under the said sub-sections and the notice must have
been issued in accordance with sub-s. (1).
The Income-tax Officer can commence
proceedings under the said sub-sections or issue a notice in accordance with
subs. (1) only when he obeys the injunction as to time laid down therein; then
only he can be said to have commenced proceedings or issued a notice in
accordance with the subsections. If he has done that and commenced proceedings
after September 8, 1948, then the second part of the section says that the
notice or the assessment shall not be called in question on the ground merely
that the provisions of s. 34 did not apply or purport to apply in respect of
any year prior to April 1, 1948. These lines underlined in the second part of
the section also bring out its true scope and effect. If there has been
compliance with provisions of the sub-sections including the time limits fixed
therein, then the notice issued or assessment made is not liable to challenge
on the mere ground that amended s. 34 does not apply in respect of a year prior
to 1948-1949. In other words, s. 31 of the Amending Act of 1953 nullifies the
effect of the decision of Bose, J. in Calcutta Discount Co. Ltd. v. Income tax
Officer, (1) and gives effect to the decision of the learned Chief Justice of
the Calcutta High Court. The section does not abrogate the periods of
limitation laid down in the relevant sub-sections of s. 34;
if it did, it would be in conflict with s. 34
and the ground taken would be such conflict and not merely the ground that the
provisions of s. 34 did not apply to any year prior to 1948-1949.
My conclusion, therefore, is that s. 31 of
the Amending Act of 1953 does not validate the notice (1) [1952] 21 I.T.R. 579.
49 issued in the present case--a notice
issued on April 30, 1954 long before which date the assessment had become final
and in respect of which reassessment proceedings had become time-barred. The
short answer to the argument based on s. 31 is that the notice in the present
case was not issued in accordance with sub-s. (1) of s. 34, and the first part
of s. 31 requires that the notice must be so issued before the second part
thereof can give any protection to it.
I now proceed to consider the Amending Act of
1959. The Indian Income-tax (Amendment) Act, 1959 (1 of 1959) received the
assent of the President on March 12, 1959. The relevant provisions with which
we arc concerned are contained in ss. 2 and 4 of the amending Act. By s. 2 of
the amending Act, a new sub-section, namely, sub-s. (4) was inserted in s. 34.
This sub-section said :
"S. 34 (4). A notice under clause (a) of
subsection (1) may be issued at any time notwithstanding that at the time of
the issue of the notice the period of eight years specified in that sub-section
before its amendment by clause(a) of section 18 of the Finance Act, 1956 (18 of
1956), had expired in respect of the year to which the notice relates." S.
4 of the amending Act contained provisions regarding the saving of notices,
assessments etc., in certain cases only and read as follows :
"No notice issued under clause (a) of
sub-section (1) of section 34 of the principal Act at any time before the
commencement of this Act and no assessment, re-assessment or settlement made or
other proceedings taken in consequence of such notice shall be called in
question in any court, tribunal or other authority merely on the 50 ground that
at the time the notice was issued or at the time the assessment or re-assessment
was made, the time within which such notice should have been issued or the
assessment or re-assessment should have been made under that section as in
force before its amendment by clause (a) of section 18 of the Finance Act, 1956
(18 of 1956), had expired." The main point argued before us on behalf of
the appellants is that s. 4 of the amending Act of 1959 saves the notice which
the Income-tax Officer issued in the present case on April 30, 1954. I may here
state one initial difficulty which faces the appellants. S. 4 of the amending
Act of 1959 refers to a notice issued under cl. (a) of sub-s. (1) of s. 34;
therefore, in order to get the benefit of the section the appellants must
establish that the notice dated April 80, 1954 was a notice issued under cl.
(a) of sub-s. (1) of s. 34. In an earlier part of this judgment I had set out
in full the notice which the Income-tax Officer had issued on April 30, 1954,
That notice said inter alia that the Income-tax Officer had reason to believe
that the income of the firm Purshottam Laxmidas assessable to income-tax for
the year ending March 31, 1943 had been under-assessed and therefore the
Income-tax Officer proposed to re-assess the income. It is at least doubtful
that the notice, if one were to go by the words used in the first part thereof,
would make it a notice under cl. (a) of sub-s. (1) of s. 34 unless the
satisfaction of the Commissioner referred to in the last part makes it one. I
have said earlier that cl. (a) of sub-s. (1) of s. 34 related to those cases in
which there was an omission or failure on the part of the assessee to make a
return of his income under s. 22 for any year or to disclose fully and truly
all material facts necessary for his assessment for that year. When the
Calcutta Discount Company's case (1) came to us, we had explained what was
meant by non-disclosure of (1) [1961] 2 S.C.R, 241.
51 material facts and pointed out the
distinction between primary facts and inferences there from. (see Calcutta
Discount Company Limited v. Income-tax Officer, Companies District, (1)). There
is nothing in the record to show that in the present case there was an omission
or failure on the part of the assessee to make a return of his income under s. 22
for the year 1942-1943; nor is there any avertment on behalf of the appellants
that the assessee failed to disclose fully and truly all material facts
necessary for his assessment for that year in the sense explained above.
I have said earlier that there was some
correspondence between the Income-tax Officer concerned and the firm of
Purshottam Laxmidas with regard to the notice issued on April 30, 1954. The
firm wanted to know the reason why the notice had been issued. In reply to the
letter from the firm, the Income-tax Officer said (see Ex. C) :
"The income of the concern of Vasantsen
Dwarkadas was originally included in the hands of Dwarkadas Vassonji; Dwarkadas
Vassonji was also a partner in the registered firm of Messrs Purshottam
Laxmidas. The Appellate Tribunal by its consolidated order dated 14-81951 (I.
T. Nos. 7836 to 7851 of 1951/52 and E.P.T.A. Nos. 13 to 17 of 1950/51) has come
to the finding that the concern of Vasantsen Dwarkadas is the branch of Messrs
Purshottam Laxmidas. The income of the firm has therefore to be
reassessed." The aforesaid reply does not make out any case that the
notice was issued under cl. (a) of sub-s. (1) of s. 34. When we allowed the
appellants to file a supplementary statement of the case urging new points, we
also granted time to the respondents to file a supplementary statement of case,
if any, on their behalf. The respondents filed a supplementary statement of
their case and said therein that the notice (1) [1961] 2 S.C.R. 241.
52 dated April 30, 1954 was not and could not
be issued under cl. (a) of sub-s. (1) of s. 31 but was and could only be issued
under cl. (b) or sub-s. (1) of s. 34. Therefore, it seems to me that the
appellants have not established without any doubt that the notice in this case
was issued under cl.
(a) of sub-s. (1) of s. 34, so as to give them
the protection of s. 4 of the Amending Act of 1959. The point taken is indeed a
point of law, namely, whether the appellants are entitled to the benefit of s.
4 of the Amending Act of 1959. But the applicability of s. 4 depends on certain
facts and those facts must first be found. It is true that in the judgment of
the High Court there is a reference to eight years' period of limitation but
none of the parties raised any question as to whether the notice dated April
30, 1954 was issued under cl. (a) or cl. (b) of sub-s. (1) of s. 34. The
parties joined issue only on the question whether the second proviso to sub-s.
(3) of s. 34 applied or not. The necessary facts were not investigated and no
finding was given as to whether the notice came within cl. (a) or cl. (b) of
sub-s. (1) of s. 34.
I am of the opinion that this is enough to
dispose of the claim put forward by the appellants that the notice dated April
30, 1954, is saved by s. 4 of the Amending Act of 1959. No foundation on facts
having been laid for the claim, it must be rejected.
The matter was however argued before us at
great length on the supposition that the notice dated April 30, 1954 was a
notice issued under cl. (a) of sub-s. (1) of s. 34. 1 am of the opinion that
even on that supposition the appellants are not entitled to succeed. It is
manifest that sub-s. (4) of s. 34 does not help the appellants. That
sub-section is clearly prospective and is intended to authorise action after
the coming into force of the 1959 amendment; therefore, sub-s. (4) of s. 34
cannot validate a notice issued in 1954. Now the question is, what about 53 s.
4 of the Amending Act of 1959? It has been very strenuously argued before us
that section by reason of the unambiguous language used therein saves the
notice. It is pointed out that the section in its first part refers inter alia
to a notice issued under cl. (a) of sub-s. (1) of s. 34 at any time before the
commencement of the 1959 Act and in its second part says that no such notice
shall be called in question in any court etc. merely on the ground that at the
time the notice was issued, the time within which such notice should have been
issued under s. 34 as in force before its amendment by s. 18 of the Finance
Act, 1956 had expired. The argument is that the language of the section is such
that it clearly saves the notice issued on April 30, 1954 because (1) it fulfills
the requirement of the first part of the section in as much as the notice was
issued before the commencement of the 1959 Act and (2) the second part of the
section says that the notice cannot be called in question on the ground that it
was issued after the expiry of the time mentioned in sub-s. (1) of s. 34 as it
stood before the amendment made in 1956.
At first sight the argument appears almost
irresistible.
But on a careful consideration I have come to
the conclusion that it is not correct. It is necessary here to refer to the
circumstances under which the amending Act of 1959 was enacted. Prior to the
amendment of sub-s. (1) of s. 34 by the Finance Act, 1956, in cases falling
under cl. (a) a notice had to be served within eight years from the end of the
relevant assessment year. This time limit was removed by s. 18 of the Finance
Act, 1956. In Debi Dutta v. T. Bellan (1), the Calcutta High Court held that
action under the amended section could not be taken if prior to the amendment
coming into force (that is, April 1, 1956) the period for serving the notice
bad already expired. This was the difficulty which the Legislature had to meet
and it wanted to (1) A.I.R. 1959 Cal. 567.
54 supersede the view expressed by the
Calcutta High Court. It is indeed true that the Statement of Objects and
Reasons for introducing a particular piece of legislation cannot be used for
interpreting the legislation if the words used therein are clear enough. But
the Statement of Objects and Reasons can be referred to for the purpose of
ascertaining the circumstances which led to the legislation in order to find
out what was the mischief which the legislation aimed at. The decision of the
Calcutta High Court to which I have earlier made a reference was adverted to in
the Statement of Objects and Reasons. It seems to me that sub-s. (4) of s. 34
was enacted to supersede the view expressed in the Calcutta decision aforesaid,
so that after the coming into force of sub.s. (4) in 1959 a notice under cl.
(a) of sub-s. (1) could be issued at any time notwithstanding that at the time
of the issue of the notice the period of eight years specified in the
sub-section before its amendment by s. 18 of the Finance Act, 1956 had expired.
It further appears to me that both sub-s. (4) of s. 34 and s. 4 of the Amending
Act of 1959 are meant to deal with only those cases where action is taken under
s. 34 as amended in 1956, but where the eight years' time limit had already
expired and the original assessment (if any) had become final prior to the
amendment of s. 34 in 1956. Whereas sub-s. (4) of s. 34 is intended to
authorise action in such cases after the coming into force of the Amending Act
of 1959, s. 4 is intended to save and validate action taken in such cases
between 1956 when s. 34 was amended by the Finance Act, 1956 and 1959 when the
Amending Act was passed. In my view, s. 4 of the Amending Act of 1959 has no
bearing on a notice issued under s. 34 prior to 1956. 1 do not accept as
correct the decision of the Bombay High Court in Onkarmal Meghraj v.
Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay-1 (1). That decision implies that s. 4 of
the Amending Act of 1959 in effect abrogates and supersedes the statutory time
limits for action under (1) [1960] 38 I.T.R. 369.
55 s. 34 (1) (a) in all the past years ever
since s. 34 (1) (a) was put on the Statute Book. It seems to me that on the
contrary, the provisions of s. 34 (4) and s. 4 of the Amending Act clearly
indicate that the only effect of s. 34 (4) is to authorise action, and the only
effect of s. 4 of the Amending Act is to validate action, under s. 34 as
amended in 1956 in cases where action under s. 34 has already become time
barred prior to its amendment in 1956.
They have no bearing on notices issued or on
assessments made under s. 34 prior to 1956. If the intention was to abrogate
altogether all provisions regarding limitation in s. 34 right from 1922, then
s. 4 would have been differently worded and would not have said that it saved
notices etc. in certain cases only; on the view canvassed for by the
department, s. 4 would save notices issued in all cases before 1959
irrespective of any question of limitation.
Moreover, if the view taken of s. 4 of the
Amending Act of 1959 is that it abrogates and supersedes all past provisions
regarding limitation, then the section would be in conflict with the provisions
of s. 34. On the principle of harmonious construction the attempt should be to
avoid such conflict rather than create it. The last part of s. 4 shows in my
opinion its true intent, namely that what is intended is to validate post-1956
action, that is, action taken under s. 34 as amended by s. 18 of the Finance
Act, 1956. I cannot read s. 4 as abrogating all periods of limitation and as
validating notices issued prior to 1956, even though such a notice was not
property issued under cl. (a) of sub-s. (1) of s. 34. If the intention was that
any and every notice issued under cl. (a) of sub-s. (1) of s. 34 at any time
before the commencement of the 1959 Act could be validated, then the section
should not have said" notice issued under clause (a) of sub-s. (1) of s.
34." The very fact that the section talks of a 56 notice issued under cl.
(a) of sub-S. (1) of s. 34 means that it is a notice issued in compliance with
the provisions of cl. (a) of sub-s. (1) of s. 34 as amended in 1956 when the
time limit was removed. When a notice is issued under cl. (a) of sub-s. (1) of
s. 34 as amended in 1956; it cannot be called in question merely on the ground
such as was upheld by the Calcutta High Court is Debi Dutta v. T. Bellan (1)
that the time limit had already expired before the issue of the notice; this
seems to me to be the true meaning of s. 4 when the first of the section which
talks of a notice issued under cl. (a) of sub-s. (1) of s. 34 is contrasted
with the second part which says that such a notice shall not be called in
question on the ground that the time limit had already expired before the date
on which the notice was issued. If the intention was to abrogate the time limit
for all notices issued before 1959, there was no sense in saying that the
notice should issue under cl. (a) of sub-s. (1) of s. 34 and at the same time
it would not be called in question on the ground that the time limit had
expired before the date of its issue; the section then would have simply said
that notwithstanding any time limit in cl. (a) of sub-s. (1) of s. 34, all
notices issued before 1959 would be valid. I do not think s. 4 of the Amending
Act 1959 was intended to abrogate all periods of limitation for action under
cl. (a) of sub-s. (1) of s. 34 for all past years.
The time limit of eight years was removed in
1956 in respect of those cases where the amount was not likely to be less than
Rs. 1,00,000/-. The present case is one where the amount is less than Rs.
1,00,000/and the limitation of eight years applied in 1954. All that s. 4
states is that if a notice has been issued under cl. (a) of sub-s. (1) of s. 34
at any time before the commencement of the 1959 Act, the notice shall not be
called in question merely on the ground that at the time it was issued (1)
A.I.R. 1955 Cal. 567.
57 the time limit as in force before the
amendment made in 1956 had expired, in other words, s. 4 validates action taken
between 1956 when s. 34 was amended and 1959 when the Amending Act was passed.
It does not affect notices issued prior to 1956 nor does it abrogate all
periods of limitation.
For all these reasons I have come to the same
conclusion as my learned brother Kapur, J., that the appeal must be dismissed
with costs.
KAPUR, J. -This is an appeal against the
judgment and order of the High Court of Bombay confirming the order passed by
S.T. Desai,. J., in Writ Petition No. 266 of 1954 under Art. 226 of the
Constitution whereby Desai,J., issued a writ of prohibition restraining the
appellants from taking any further steps in pursuance of the notice dated
April, 30, 1954, issued under s. 34 of the Income-tax Act, hereinafter called "the
Act" or from assessing or reassessing the firm known as Purshottam
Laxmidas in respect of the assessment year 1942-43. The Appellant before us is
the Income-tax Officer and the respondents are the firm and partners of the
firm above noted.
Dwarkadas Vussanji and Parmanand Odhavji
carried on business in partnership in the name and style of Purshottam Laxmidas
from October 28, 1935, till April 1, 1946, when Dwarkadas Vussenji died.
Thereafter Vasantsen Dwarkadas, the son of Dwarkadas Vussonji, and Parmanand Odhavji
respondent No. 3 continued the business under the same name i.e. Purshottam
Laxmidas. That firm was registered under the Indian Income-tax Act.
On January 28, 1941, another firm under the
name of Vasantsen Dwarkadas was started, its partners were Vasantsen Dwarkadas
respondent No. 1, Narandas Shivji and Nanalal Odhavji.This 58 firm was
dissolved on October 24, 1946. For the assessment year 1942-43 firm Vasantsen
Dwarkadas filed a voluntary return of income and also applied for registration
under s. 26 of the Act. The registration was refused on the ground that the
firm was not a genuine firm but really belonged to Dwarkadas Vussonji, the
principal partner in the firm Purshottam Laxmidas.The Income-tax Officer added
the income of the firm Vasantsen Dwarkadas for the assessment year 1942-43 to
the individual income of Dwarkadas Vussonji, in the subsequent assessment year
i.e. 1943-44. In the subsequent years also the firm Vasantsen Dwarkadas applied
for registration but registration was refused on the ground that it was not a
genuine firm. Appeals were taken in usual course to the Income-tax Appellate
Tribunal by firm Vasantsen Dwarkadas both against the quantum of its assessed
income and against the refusal of registration. This was for the years of assessment
1942-43 to 1948-49. These appeals filed by firm Vasantsen Dwarkadas and the
appeal filed by Vasantsen Dwarkadas as representing the estate of his father
Dwarkadas Vussonji and the appeals filed by the firm Purshottam Laxmidas in
regard to the Excess Profits Tax were all heard together and decided by the
Income-tax Appellate Tribunal by its order made on August 14, 1951. In that
order the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal gave a finding that Dwarkadas Vussonji
was not the sole proprietor of the business of firm Vasantsen Dwarkadas but
that the business of that firm belonged to the firm Purshottam Laxmidas. At the
instance of the Commissioner of Income the Appellate Tribunal stated a case to
the High Court and the question referred was answered in favour of the assessee
i.e. On April 30, 1954, the Income-tax Officer issued a notice to the firm
Purshottam Laxmidas under s, 34 of the Act the relevant portion of which 59 was
in the following terms:"Whereas I have reason to believe that your income
assessable to income tax for the year ending 31st March 1943 has been
under-assessed I therefore, propose to reassess to the income allowance that
has been under-assessed." It is the validity of this notice which has to
be determined.
As the decision of the case depends upon the
interpretation of the various legislative changes made in s. 34 it may be
convenient at this stage to mention those amendments relating to the periods
during which action could be taken by the Income-tax Officer in regard to
escaped incomes.
Under s. 34(1) of the Act as it stood in
1939, after the Income-tax Amendment Act, 1939, Act 7 of 1939, hereinafter
referred to as "the Amending Act of 1939", the period for taking
action was eight years for cases of omission or failure on the part of the
assessee to furnish accurate particulars and four years in any other case of
escapement of income-tax. This section was amended by s. 8 of the Income-tax
and Business Profits Tax (Amendment) Act, Act 48 of 1948, hereinafter referred
to as "'the Amending Act of 1948". The period in the two cases still
remained the same but certain safeguards in favour of the assessees were
provided. A further amendment was made in s. 34, this time in the second
proviso to sub-s. (3) of s. 34 by Income-tax Amendment Act, 1953 (Act 25 of
1953), hereinafter referred to as the Amending Act 1953." That Act also
made provision for saving of notices and assessments in certain cases. By s. 18
of the Finance Act of 1956, s. 34(1) was again amended. By Income tax (Amendment)
Act, 1959 (Act 9 of 1959) hereinafter referred to as the Amending Act of
1959" s. 34 was further amended, this time by addition of sub-s. (4) to
that section and provision 60 was also made for the validation of certain
notices and assessment in certain cases. These various changes will be
discussed in detail at appropriate places.
The Amending Act of 1953 received the assent
of the President on May 24, 1953, but came into force retrospectively as from
April 1, 1952. By that Act the second proviso to s. 34(3) of the Act was
amended.
A notice under s. 34(1)(a) was issued to
respondent No. 2 which has been set out above. Thereupon Vasantsen Dwarkadas
filed a petition under Art. 226 of the Constitution in the Bombay High Court
being Misc. Application No. 266-X of 1954 challenging its legality. S. T.
Desai, J., who heard the petition in the first instance held that the Amending
Act of 1953 which became operative as from April 1, 1952, had no retrospective
effect so as to enable the Income-tax Officer to reopen the assessment of the
firm Purshottam Laxmidas for the assessment year 1942-43 which had become
time-barred before April 1, 1952, and therefore the Income-tax Officer's action
was barred and without jurisdiction; that the second proviso to s. 34(3) of the
Act " or so far as it affects persons other than assessees not parties to
the proceedings" was ultra vires of the Constitution being in violation
of' Art. 14 of the Constitution; that on the facts and circumstances of the
case the present respondents could not be regarded as strangers to the
proceedings in which the findings were given by the Tribunal. The Appeal Court
confirmed the decision of Desai, J., and further held that the firm Purshottam
Laxmidas against whom the impugned action was taken was a stranger to the
appeal filed by Vasantsen Dwarkadas. Against this judgment and order the
Income-tax Officer has brought the present appeal.
The appellant in this court filed a
supplemental Statement of Case in which he sought to challenge 61 the
correctness of the judgment of the High court on two additional grounds: (1)
that s. 31 of the Amending Act of 1953 had been overlooked and (2) that s.2 of
the Amending Act of 1959 had the effect of removing the bar of eight years'
period in regard to notices under s. 34(1)(a) and s. 4 of that Act (Amending
Act of 1959) validated all notices including the impugned notice. The
respondents filed their supplemental Statement of Case on October 5, 1960.
Before taking up the construction of ss. 2
and 4 of the Amending Act of 1959, it will be helpful to examine the
circumstances in which the Amending Act was enacted. After the Amending Act of
1948 for the purposes of taking action in respect of escaped incomes a period
of eight years was applicable to all escaped incomes under s. 34(1)(a) of the
Act, the two conditions requisite for taking action under s. 34(1)(a) being (1)
notice within eight years of assessment year and (2) Income-tax Commissioner's
previous sanction.
By s. 18 of the Finance Act of 1956 the words
"eight years" were removed from sub-s. (1) of s. 34 and were inserted
in the proviso which was substituted in place of the old proviso to s. 34(1)
which took effect from April 1, 1956.
Then came the Calcutta case Debi Dutta Moody
v. T. Bellan, (1), which held that notices which were time barred when the
Amending Act of 1956 came into force remained time barred in spite of the new
enactment. In that case the notice when issued was within time but when served
it was barred by time.
The two provisions of the Amending Act of
1959 which have to be construed are ss. 2 and 4. By s. 2 anew sub-section subs.
(4) was added to s. 34 of the Act. It provides :"(4) A notice under clause
(a) of sub-section (1) may be issued at any time notwithstanding that at the
time of the issue of the notice the period of eight years specified in that (1)
A.I.R. 1959 Cal, 567, 62 sub-section before its amendment by clause (a) of
section 18 of the Finance Act, 1956 (18 of 1956), had expired in respect of the
year to which the notice relates.
Section 4 of that Act provides for saving and
validation of notices, assessments etc., in certain cases. The relevant portion
of the section applicable to notices issued tinder s. 34 (1) (a) of the Act is
as follows :"No notice issued under clause (a) of sub-s. (1) of s. 34 of
the principal Act at any time before the commencement of this Act shall be
called in question in any court merely on the ground that at the time the
notice was issued the time within which such notice should have been issued
...... under that section as in force before its amendment by cl. (a) of s. 18
of the Finance Act, 1956 (18 of 1956) had expired." The new proviso which
was substituted in place of the old proviso to s. 34 (1) by s. 18 of the
Finance Act, 1956, may conveniently be given here. It reads as follows:-"Provided
that the Income-tax Officer shall not issue a notice under clause (a) of subsection
(1):
(i)for any year prior to the year ending on
the 31st day of March 1941;
(ii) for any year, if eight years have elapsed
after the expiry of that year, unless the income, profits or gains chargeable
to income-tax which have 63 escaped assessment or have been under-assessed or
assessed at too low a rate or have been made the subject of excessive relief
under this Act or the loss or depreciation allowance which has been computed in
excess, amount to or are likely to amount to, one lakh of rupees or more in the
aggregate, either for that year or for that year and any other year or years
after which or after each of which eight years have elapsed not being a year or
years ending before the 31st day of March 1941;
(iii) for any year, unless he has recorded
his reasons for doing so and in any case falling under clause (ii) unless the
Central Board of Revenue and in any other case the Commissioner is satisfied on
such reasons recorded that it is a fit case for the issue of such notice."
The appellant contended that as a consequence of the new sub-section 4 of s. 34
of the Act (i.e. s. 2 of the Amending Act of 1959) the impugned notice became a
valid notice notwithstanding the fact that at the time of the issuing of the
notice the period of eight years specified in s. 34 (1) (a) before its
amendment by s. 18 of the Finance Act of 1956 had expired. This contention is
not well-founded. Subsection (4) is prospective and therefore operates as from
March 12, 1959, and it does not affect notices issued previous to that date.
That is the effect of the words tea notice under cl. (a) of sub-s. (1) may be
issued at any time." In the context these words refer to notices issued
after the coming into force of the Amending Act of 1959 and not to notices
already issued.
The appellant next contended that the effect
of s. 4 of the Amending Act of 1959 is that it abrogates 64 and supersedes that
statutory period prescribed for notices under a 34 (1) (a) for all past years
whether the notices were issued before or after the amendment by the Finance
Act of 1956. This contention is also not well-founded.. This section applies to
notices under cl. (a) of sub-section (1) s. of 34. The notice issued in the
present case does not mention the clause under which the notice was issued and
there is nothing to indicate that it was under cl. (a). The respondents in
their supplemental Statement specifically raised the point that the notice was
not under cl. (a) and could only be under cl. (b). The language of that section
shows (1) that it applies to all notices under s. 34 (1) (a) issued at any time
before the Amending Act, 1959, i.e. March 12, 1959, and(2) its effect is that
notices issued before the Amending Act 1959 cannot be challenged merely on the
ground that at the time the notices were issued they were barred under s. 34
(1) (a) of the Act as it was before its amendment by s. 18 of the Finance Act,
1956. Now the legislature has not said that the notices shall not be challenged
on the ground that a period of eight years under s. 34 (1) (a) as in force
after the Amending Act 1948 had elapsed. It has deliberately used the words
"'as in force before its amendment by the Finance Act 1956". These
words indicate that the legislature intended to give full effect to the
amendment made by the Finance Act of 1956 in s. 34 (1) (a) removing the bar of
the lapse of eight years' period in cases of certain incomes. The notices to
which s. 4 applies and which are validated are those that were issued between
the periods mentioned in that Act i.e. before the Amending Act, 1959, and after
the Finance Act, 1956, in spite of the expiry of the eight years' period before
the amendment by the Finance Act, of 1956. Thus whereas sub-s. (4) of s. 34
applies to and authorises the taking of action after the coming into force of
the Amending Act of 1959, s. 4 of that Act validates action taken after the
amendment by the Finance 65 Act of 1956. It is not the effect, of s. 4 to
abrogate and supersede the time limit provided by s. 34 (1) (a) of the Act in
all the past years. All it does is that it validates those notices which were
issued within the two limits above mentioned.
In this connection Mr. Palkhivala submitted
that it is necessary to see why the Amending Act of 1959 was enacted.
According to his submission the reason for
and the intention of the enactment was to nullify the effect of the judgment of
the Calcutta High Court in Debi Dutta Moody's (1) case.
In that case a notice issued under s. 34 (1)
(a) to the assessee before April 1, 1956, when the Finance Act of 1956 became
operative was served a day later, i.e. April 2, and it was contended in the
High Court that the period of eight years having by then elapsed the notice was
invalid. It was held that in construing the retrospective operation of the
statute the nature of the right affected must be-considered and where there is
a vested right an amendment is perspective so as not to affect a vested right ;
that at the time when the amendment by the Finance Act of 1956 became operative
the right to proceed had already become barred under the Act of 1948 and that
it could not be revived as a result of the amendment of 1956 unless there was
an express provision to the contrary. It was the effect of that decision which
was sought to be nullified by the Amending Act of 1959. In construing an
enactment and determining its true scope it is permissible to have regard to
all such factors as can legitimately be taken into account to ascertain the
intention of the legislature such as the history of the Act, the reason which
led to its being passed, the mischief which had to be cured as well as the cure
as also the other provision; of the statute. That is the rule in Heydon's (2)
case which was accepted in R. M. D. Chamarbaugwalla v. The Union of India(3).
Taking this principle into account it appears that the object (1) A.I.R. 1959
Cal. 567. (2) (1584) 3 Co. Rep. 7a: 76 E.R. 637.
(3) [1957] S.C.R. 930, 936.
66 of the amendment was to validate certain
notice after the amendment and after the lapse of eight years from the end of
the assessment year and also to nullify the effect of the Calcutta judgment
above mentioned.
Mr. Rajagopal Sastri relied next on the
amendment to s. 34 (3) of the Act by the amending Act of 1953 which came into
effect as from April 1, 1952. By s. 18 of that Act the second proviso to sub-s.
(3) of s. 34 was amended whereby certain changes were made in regard to the
period of time for taking action in consequence of or to give effect to any
finding or direction contained in an order under the various sections therein
mentioned one of them being an order of the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal. The
proviso as amended reads as follows :"Provided further that nothing
contained in this section limiting the time within which any action may be
taken or any order, assessment or reassessment may be made shall apply to a
reassessment made under section 27 or to an assessment or reassessment made on
the assessee or any person in consequence of or to give effect to any finding
or direction contained in an order under section 31, section 33, section 33A,
section 33B, section 66 or section 66 A".
It was contended that because action was
taken against the respondent in consequence of an order of the Income-tax
Appellate Tribunal there was no time limit and therefore the impugned notice
was not hit by the period of eight years.
It was further argued that for the purpose of
validating certain notices and assessments, s. 31 of the Amending Act of 1953
was enacted the relevant portion of which is as follows "Validity of
certain notices and assessments.
For the removal of doubts it is hereby
declared 67 that the provisions of sub-sections (1), (2) and (3)of section 34
of the principal Act (the Indian Income-tax Act, (1922) shall apply and shall
be deemed always to have applied to any assessment or reassessment for any year
ending before the 1st day of April 1948, in any case where proceedings in
respect of such assessment or reassessment were commenced under the said
sub-sections after the 8th day of September 1948 and any notice issued in
accordance with sub-section (1) ............ ...... ...............
whether before or after the commencement of
the Indian Income-tax (Amendment) Act, 1953, shall, notwithstanding any
judgment or order of any Court, Appellate Tribunal or Income-tax authority to
the contrary, be deemed to have been validity issued ............ and no such
notice shall be called in question on the ground merely that the provisions of
section 34 did not apply or purport to apply in respect of an assessment or
reassessment for any year prior to the 1st day of April 1948." This
section, so it was argued, validated the impugned notice even though the period
of limitation expired on March 31, 1951.
I shall first deal with the argument based on
s. 31 of the Amending Act of 1953. By s. 8 of the Amending Act of 1948 a new s.
34 (1) was substituted for the old s. 34 (1) with effect from March 30, 1948.
Bose, J.. of the Calcutta High Court in a petition under Art. 226 of the
Constitution reported as Calcutta Discount Co. v. Income-tax Officer (1), held
that a notice served under the substituted s. 34 (1) for any assessment year
prior to the coming into force of the Amending Act of 1948 was invalid as the
Income-tax Officer had (1) [1952] 21 I.T.R. 579.
68 no jurisdiction to proceed with the
reassessment on the ground that s. 34 (1) as amended in 1948 had no application
to assessments for the years prior to 1948 even though the period of eight
years had not elapsed. It was also held that the Amending Act of 1948 was
expressly made retrospective as from March 30, 1948, it had no further retrospectively
and therefore the notice issued under s. 34 (1) were without jurisdiction.
Against that judgment which was dated March 26, 1952, an appeal was taken which
was decided on March 25, 1953, and is reported as Income-tax Officer, Companies
District I, Calcutta v. Calcutta Discount Co. Ltd., (1). But in the meanwhile
i.e. the period between the two judgments a bill was introduced in 1952 to
amend s. 34 so as to nullify the effect of the judgment of Bose, J., in the
Calcutta case. This resulted in the enactment of the Amending Act of 1953 which
received the assent of the President on May 24, 1953, but was given
retrospective effect as from April 1, 1952.
Section 31 of the Amending Act of 1953 can be
divided into two parts. The first part beginning with the words "it is
hereby declared" to the words " were commenced under the said
sub-section after the 8th day of September 1948" is merely declaratory. It
declares the section to be applicable to assessments for any year ending before
April 1, 1948 in any case where proceedings in respect of such assessment or
re-assessment "were commenced" under sub-ss.
1, 2 and 3 of s. 34 after September 8, 1948.
According to the appellant the effect of the first part of the section was to
apply the provisions of s. 34(1), (2) and (3) to every proceeding for
assessment or reassessment whenever commenced after September 8, 1918 even
though reassessment proceedings in regard to them had become time barred. The
contention on behalf of the respondents, on the other hand, was that the use of
the words "were commenced" (1) [1953] 23 I.T.R. 471.
69 under sub-ss. (1), (2) and (3) of s. 34
prescribes the limits for the retrospective application of those subsections
and that period was between September 8, 1948 and April 1952 when the Amending
Act of 1953 became operative.
The contention of the respondents' counsel is
well founded.
Section 31 does not make sub-ss. (1), (2) and
(3) of s. 34 applicable to any and every assessment or re-assessment whenever
commenced after September 8, 1948. The use of the words ""were
commenced", limits the retrospectively to the period between September 8,
1948, and April 1, 1952. This part of s. 31 therefore is of no assistance to
making the Amending Act of 1953 applicable to the present case in which the
notice was given on April 30, 1954.
The second part of s. 31 deals with the
validity of notices.
It firstly provides that any notice issued
"in accordance with" s. 34 (1) whether issued before or after April
1, 1952, shall, notwithstanding, any judgment or order of any court to the
contrary, be deemed to be validly issued and secondly that such notice shall
not be challenged merely on the ground that provisions of s. 34 do not apply or
purport to apply in respect of an assessment for any year prior to April 1,
1948. In this second part of s. 31 the important words are "in accordance
with" which mean and imply that the notice issued was in conformity with
sub-s. (1) of s. 34 which would include all formalities and limitations therein
mentioned. Consequently it has to be a notice within eight years' period . As
the impugned notice was issued beyond that period, it cannot be called a notice
""in accordance with" and therefore the deeming provision as to
validity is not applicable to the present case. Further the words
notwithstanding any judgment etc. are indicative of the purpose of this
provision to be this that if the notice was in conformity with s. 34 (1) it
will be valid notwithstanding any judgment etc. That this was the 70 purpose
and meaning of this second part is further made clear by the provisions against
such notice being challenged on the ground of its being in respect of an
assessment or reassessment for any year prior to April 1, 1948. Thus these
words only nullified the effect of the judgment of Bose, J., in Calcutta
Discount Co's. (1) case, and did not validate time barred notices.
Moreover in the present case the notice is
not being impugned on the ground of s. 34 being inapplicable in respect of the
assessment year 1942-43. On the contrary the plea raised against the validity
of the notice is that the provisions as to eight years in s. 34(1) are
applicable; in other words the attack on the legality of the notice is that it
is barred by the provisions of s. 34 (1). This part of s. 31 also does not
validate the notice issued to respondent No. I after a lapse of eight years
from the assessment year.
In my opinion therefore neither the first
part nor the second part of s. 31 is applicable to the facts of the present
case.
I shall next consider the appellant's
argument based on the second proviso to s. 34 (3) as amended by s. 18 of the
Amending Act of 1953. The assessment year in the present case is 1942-43 and
therefore the eight years' period under the Act expired on March 31, 1951, and
order of the Appellate Tribunal was August 14, 1951 i. e. after the lapse of 8
years. It was contended by the appellant that as a result of this proviso the
limitation as to time within which any action could be taken in regard to any
assessment or reassessment was removed if assessment or reassessment was made
in consequence of or to give effect to a finding or direction contained inter
alia in the order of an Income-tax Appellate Tribunal under s. 33. In the
present case, so it was contended by the appellant, there was a finding by the
Appellate Tribunal in the order dated August 14, 1951, to the (1) [1952] 21
I.T.R. 579.
71 effect that the business in the name of
firm Vasantsen Dwarkadas belonged to firm Purshottam Laxmidas and that if the
Income-tax Officer could include that income in the income of Purshottam
Laxmidas he was at liberty to do so.
This order, it was submitted, removed by
virtue of the second proviso to sub-s. (3) of s. 34 the bar of the period of
eight years under sub-s. (1) (a) of s. 34 of the Act.
The correctness of this contention will
depend on whether the language of the second proviso is retroactive in its
operation and revives barred rights or barred actions or removes the bar of
eight years under s. 34 (1) (a) of the Act. There is nothing in the words used
in the proviso which gives it retroactive operation expressly or by necessary
intendment but it was argued that any enlargement of time for taking action
under s. 34 of the Act revives the liability of an assessee to be taxed
notwithstanding the expiry of the period during which action could be taken by
the Income-tax Officer. It was also submitted that the eight years' period in
s. 34 (1) (a) was not a period of limitation but just created a fetter on the
exercise of the power of the Income-tax Officer and when that fetter was removed
the ability to exercise the power was revived.
The first argument above brings us to the
general principles of the law of limitation whether a change in the period of
limitation takes away the existing finality of the immunity against actions
which had already been barred by the lapse of the period of limitation. The
Statute of Limitation has been termed a statute of 'repose, peace and justice'
and its intention was stated by Sir Richard Couch in Hurrinath Chatterji v.
Mohunt Mothoor Mohun Goswami (1) as follows :"The intention of the law of
limitation is, not to give a right whether there is not one but to interpose a
bar after a certain period to a suit to enforce an existing right." (1)
(1893) L.R. 20 I.A. 183, 192.
72 In Kr. Kr. Kr. Ramanathan Chettiar v. N.
M.Kandappa Goundan (1), it was held that if a right to sue had become barred by
the provisions of the Limitation Act in force on the date of the coming into
force of a new Act then such barred rights cannot be revived by the application
of the new enactment and it cannot be said that because the remedies are barred
but the rights are not extinguished such rights can be revived by mere change
in the period of limitation and become enforceable in a court of law. This
decision has the support of the observations of the Privy Council in cases
which were decided on general principles applicable to limitation and were not
based on any statutory provision such as s. 28 of the Limitation Act of 1908 by
which as a result of lapse of the period of limitation the rights are
extinguished. In Appasami Odayar v. Subramanya Odayar (2), it was observed :"By
sect. 1, clause 13, of Act XIV of 1859, a suit for a share of the family
property not brought within twelve years from the date of the last participation
in the profits of it would be barred. This Act continued in force until the 1st
July, 1871, when Act IX of 1871 came into force. Consequently, if there was no
participation of profits between 1837 and 1871 the suit would be barred, and
the later Acts for limitation of suits need not be referred to. If they altered
the law they would not revive the right of suit." Later in Mohesh Narain
Moonshi v. Taruck Nath Moitra (3), the same principle was stated by Lord Shand
in the following words :--"It is clear that, on the 1st day of April 1873,
the plaintiff's suit was barred by limitation under the Act of 1871, and the
Act of 1877 (1) I.L.R. 1951 Mad. 581.
(2) (1888) L.R. 15 I.A. 167,169.
(3) (1892) L.R. 20 I.A. 30,38.
73 could not revive the Plaintiff's right so
barreda point which was indeed decided,in regard to the Limitation Acts of 1859
and 1871 in the case of Appasami Odayar v. Subramanya Odyar(1) In Khunni Lal v.
Govind Krishna Narain Mr. Ameer Ali said :"No suit could be brought, even
if the enactments referred to above had permitted it, to enforce the right
after the lapse of twelve years "'from the time the cause of action
arose" (s. 12, Act XIV of 1859). Nothing in Art. 142 of Act IX of 1871 or
of Art. 141 of Act XV 1877 could lead to the revival of a right that had
already become barred." The same principle has been applied by the Privy
Council in the Case of decree 'in Sachindra Nath ,Boy v. Maharaj Bahadur Singh
(3). There the question was which of the two Limitation Acts, Act 25 of 1877 or
Act 9 of 1908 applied to a decree obtained on August 26, 1905. It was held that
the former applied and therefore the decree became unenforceable according to
the law as it stood before the Limitation Act of 1908. Lord Atkinson observed
at p. 345 :"There is no provision in this latter Act" (Act 9 of 1908)
"so retrospective in its effect as to revive and make effective a judgment
or decree which before that date had become unenforceable by lapse of
time." In Delhi Cloth & General Mills Co. Ltd. v. Income-tax
Commissioner, Delhi (6), it was held that no appeal lay against the decision
of, a High Court if it was given before appeals to the Privy Council were
provided for. In that connection Lord Blanesburgh observed at p. 425 :
(1) (1888) L.R. 15 I.A. 167,169.
(2) (1911) L.R. 38 I.A. 87, 102.
(3) (1921) L.R. 48 I.A. 335.
(4) (1927) L.R. 54 I.A. 421, 425.
74 "Their Lordships can have no doubt
that provisions which, if applied retrospectively, would deprive of their
existing finality orders which, when the statute came into force, were final,
are provisions which touch existing rights." In all these cases the Privy
Council proceeded on the principle that if the right of action hid become
barred according to the law of limitation in force, subsequent enlargement of
the period of time 'does not revive the remedy to enforce the rights already
barred. The same principle, in my opinion, would apply to the periods specified
in s. 34 of the Act and if the period prescribed for taking action had already
expired, subsequent change in the law does not, make it so retrospective in its
effect as to revive the power of an Income-tax Officer to take action under the
new law It is one of the canons of construction of statute of limitation that
in the absence of express words or necessary intendment no change in, the
period of limitation can revive the right to sue which has become barred nor
can it impair the immunity from any action which had become final after the
lapse of a specified period of time.
The Calcutta High Court in Nepal Chandra Roy
v. Niroda Sundari Ghose (1), held that the right of the judgment debtor to make
an application for setting aside an ex parte decree could not be revived by a
change in the law if the right to apply had already become barred before the
new law came into force. Similarly in Mohamed Mehdi Faya v. Sakunabai (2), it
was held that a remedy which had become barred under the old Limitation Act
would not be revived by the passing of a new Limitation Act. This was a case
where the right to sue for restitution of conjugal rights was held to be
barred.
The Bombay High Court in Dhondi Shitvaji
Rajivade v. Lakhman Mhaskuji Khaire (3), (1) I.L.R. 39 Cal. 506.
(2) I.L.R. 37 Bom. 393.
(3) A.I.R. 1930 Bom. 55.
75 held that where the mortgagor's right to
sue, for redemption of the mortgage was barred subsequent acknowledgement would
not extend the period of limitation as the acknowledgement ought to have been
made in writing within 60 years from the date; of the mortgage. The court also
held that the remedy and right of the mortgagor having been extinguished
nothing contained in the subsequent Limitation Act would affect the operation
of the previous enactment. In this connection the court referred to s. 6 of the
General Clauses Act, 1897.
The Madras High Court in two cases applied
this principle in K. Simrathmul v. Additional Income-tax Officer, Ootacamund
(1), to proviso (ii) of s. 34(3). The Punjab High Court in Pran Nath v. Commissioner
of Income-tax Punjab (2), at P.
600 also applied this principle to the same
provision. But it appears that in a later judgment, Commissioner of Incometax
v. R. B. L. Ishar Das (3), a contrary view was taken but it does not appear
that the previous judgment was brought to the notice of the court nor does it
appear that the attention of the learned judges was drawn to the principles
laid down in the decisions of the Privy Council. The Official Liquidator of the
Benaras Bank Ltd. v. Sri Prakasha(4), relied on by Mr. Rajagopal Sastri did not
decide the question that subsequent change in the law can revive barred rights.
It proceeded on the construction of the amended s. 235 of the Indian Companies
Act. He also relied on two judgments of the Patna High Court : Baleswar Prasad
v. Latafat (5), and Jagdish v. Saligram (6).In the former it was held that the
law of limitation which governs an action is the law which prevails on the date
when the action is brought and therefore acknowledgement made on a pronote
executed in 1934 would be governed by the law in force at the time the suit was
brought. In the latter also it was held that the law relating to
acknowledgement under s. 20 was the one which was (1) [1959] 36 I.T.R. 41, 45.
(2) [1960] 38 I.T.R. 595, 600.
(3) [1962] 44. I.T.R. 629.
(4) I.L.R. [1946] All. 461.
(5) (1944) I.L.R. 24 Pat. 249.
(6) (1945) I.L.R. 24 Pat. 391.
76 in force at the time of the bringing of
suit. But it is significant to note that S. K. Das, J., (now a judge of this
Court) did not agree with that view but did not disagree with the decision as
the matter had been previously decided in the judgment above referred to.
He expressly said :
"I would personally have come to a
different conclusion if the matter were not covered by the aforesaid decisions
of this Court." Another argument raised on behalf of the appellant was
that the eight years' period prescribed in s. 34 is not a rule of limitation
but merely a fetter on the power of the Income tax Officer to take action and
the removal of the fetter revives the power of the Officer. This really is not
a different argument but the same argument of revival of a right to sue which
has been discussed above. Change in the law as to the period in which a suit
can be brought to recover a debt or action can be taken by the Income-tax
Officer to commence an assessment or reassessment does not impair the rights
already acquired by the bar of limitation or revive the power of the Income-tax
Officer which has already become incapable of being exercised by laspe of time.
The two stand on the same footing and have the same effect i. e. provide
immunity and place a bar on any attack on the rights of the defendant or the
assessee as the case may be.
The next question raised is the
constitutionality of the second proviso to s. 34 (3) of the Act. For that
purpose it is necessary to restate some of the salient facts of the present
case. The firm, Vasantsen Dwarkadas of which the partners were Vasantsen
respondent No. 1, Narandas Shivji and Nanalal Odhavji filed a voluntary return
for the assessment year 1942-43 and also applied for registration of the firm
which was refused on the ground that the firm 77 was not a genuine firm but
belonged to Dwarkadas Vussonji , the father of respondent No. 1, who was the
principal partner in the firm Purshottam Laxmidas and the Income-tax Officer
therefore added the income of firm Vasantsen Dwarkadas to the individual income
of Dwarkadas Vussonji.
This happened in regard to the assessment for
the subsequent year also. Appeals were filed for that year and subsequent years
by the firm Vasantsen Dwarkadas both against the quantum of the assessed income
and refusal of the Income-tax Officer to register the firm. These appeals and
the Excess Profits Tax appeal of firm Purshottam Laxmidas for the year 1942-43
were all consolidated and decided by the order of the Incometax Appellate
Tribunal dated August 14, 1951. At that stage Dwarkadas being dead, Vasantsen
Dwarkadas respondent No. 1 was substituted in place of his father in the appeal
of Purshottam Laxmidas. The order in the appeal of firm Vasantsen Dwarkadas
against the firm Purshottam Laxmidas was not an order to which firm Purshottam
Laxmidas as such was a party and consequently any finding given in regard to
the income of firm Vasantsen Dwarkadas being the income of the firm Purshottam
Laxmidas was an order passed against a third party who was not heard in those
proceedings. It was contended on behalf of respondents that the second proviso
to s. 34 (3) is unconstitutional because it infringes Art. 14 of the
Constitution in so far as it deprives such third party of the immunity given
against assessment or reassessment by the period of eight years mentioned in s.
34 (1) (a) and it results in prejudging the merits of the third party's case
before he is even heard and that there is no reasonable basis for
distinguishing such third party from any other person escaping income-tax. The
words used in the section are "assessment or reassessment made on the
assessee in consequence of or to give effect to any finding contained in an
order." Any person there mentioned must mean a person other 78 than the
assessee. The consequences of giving effect to the second proviso to s. 34 (3)
are that the protection, of the time limit given by the proviso to sub-s. (1)
of s. 34 will disappear qua those falling within the proviso and would be
available to other assessees who fall within s. 34 (1) (a) of the Act. It was
submitted that assessees who fall under this category cannot form a different
class based 'on any real and substantial distinction ; and that there is no
nexus between the classification and the object sought to be achieved and
therefore Art. 14 is violated. Reliance was placed on the judgment of this
Court in Surajmal Mohta v. A. V. Viswanatha Sastri (1); Shree Meenakshi Mills
Ltd. Madurai v. Shree A. V. Visvanatha Sastri (2) and M. Ct. Muthiah v. The
Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras (3).
It was argued that there was no reasonable
basis for classification in this case because there was nothing peculiar in
properties of characteristics of persons with regard to whom a finding or a
direction is given under the proviso and then action is taken against them
under s. 34 (3) and those who have evaded tax and in regard to whom no such direction
is given and fall under s. 34 (1) (a). Both of them have common qualities,
common characteristics and common peculiarities and traits. There is little to
distinguish one from the other and in support counsel relied on the
observations of Mehr Chand Mahajan, C. J., in Surajmal Mlohta's (1), case where
it was observed that there was no difference in characteristics between persons
who were discovered as substantial evaders of income during investigation
conducted under s. 5 (1) of Taxation on Income (Investigation Commission) Act
(Act 30 of 1947) and those who are discovered by the Income-tax Officer to have
evaded payment of income-tax. The question of classification was again raised
in Shree Meenakshi Mills' (2) case. In that case the Court had to decide
whether persons (1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 448, 461.
(2) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 787.
(3) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 1247 79 who came within
the scope of s. 5 (1) of Act 30 of 1947 and those who came within s. 34 of the
Income tax Act as amended by the-Income-tax (Amendment) Act 1954 (Act 33 of
1954) formed distinct classes. It was held that after the coming into force of
the amended s. 34 which operates in the same field as s. 5 (1) of Act 30 of
1947 both classes were included within the ambit of amended s. 34 and the two sections
overlapped., Therefore according to the two cases abovementioned if there are
no particular qualities and elements which distinguish one set of evaders of
income-tax, from another and both have evaded income-tax their cases fall under
s. 34 (1) before and after 1948 or before and after 1953. From the mere fact
that in regard to one a direction is given or an order is made within the
second provise to s.
34 (3) and in regard to another it is not
given, no reasonable basis for classification arises as their essential
characteristics are the same. But it was argued that in A. Phangal Kunju
Musaliar v. M. Venkatachalam Potti (1), such classification was made. In that
case a native of Quilon within the Travancore State was given a notice under s.
5 (1) of the Travancore Act XIV of 1124, a provision corresponding to s. 5 (1)
of the Indian Act 30 of 1947 for investigation but before the report could be
made the Constitution of India became applicable to Travancore, State. The
assesee filed a petition in the Travancore High Court for a writ of prohibition
prohibiting the Commission from holding an inquiry in regard to evasion and
then the matter was brought in appeal to this Court. It was held that s. 5 (1)
of Travancore Act is not discriminatory and violative of rights under Art. 14
when read in juxtaposition with s. 47 of the Travancore Income-tax Act
corresponding to s. 34 of the Indian Income-tax Act. Section 47 of the
Travancore Income-tax Act was directed only against persons concerning whom
definite information came into the possession of the Income-tax Officer in
consequence of which that (1) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 1196.
80 officer discovered the escaped income and
such clan was a definite class and it was not confined to those who had escaped
from assessment of income-tax made during the war period i.e. 1939 to 1946. On
the other hand s. 5 (1) of the Travancore Act sought to reach that class of
persons which was comprised only of those about whom there was no definite
information and no discovery of any item or items of income which escaped
taxation but against whom the Government had only a prima facie reason to
believe that they had evaded payment of tax of substantial amounts. Further
action under the latter Act was limited to evasion of payment of tax made
during war period. Section 5 (1) of the Travancore Act therefore was not
discriminatory in comparison with s, 47 (1) of the Travancore Income-tax Act.
The reason for holding that there was a definite characteristic which
distinguished that class i.e. those who had escaped income to a substantial
degree during the war period and those failing under s. 34 of the Income-tax
Act was that in the case of the former the Government had reason to believe
that they had evaded payment of tax to a substantial degree and that it was
limited to evasion of payment of taxation on income made during the war period.
In the case of 'those falling under s. 47 (1) of the Travancore Income-tax Act
there had to be definite information in the possession of the Income-tax Officer
in consequence of which the Income tax Officer discovered that the income had
escaped assessment. The two classes were distinct and therefore Musaliar's (1),
case cannot apply to the facts of the present case. Later in N. Ct. Muthiah v.
The Commissioner of Income-tax Madras (3), 'this court pointed out that if the
provision of s. 34 (1) of the Act as it stood before its amendment by the
Amending Act of 1948 had been the only provision to be considered the rule in
Musaliar's (1) case would have applied but the position was materially affected
by reason of the two amendments made in s. 34 (1), by (1) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 1196.
(2) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 1247.
81 Amending Act 1948 and the other by the
Income-tax (Amendment) Act, Act 33 of 1954. In that case it was contended and
it was so held that s. 5 (1) of Act 30 of 1947 was ultra vires of the
Constitution as it was discriminatory and violative of Art. 14 by reason of the
two amendments above referred to. The submission of the respondents that there
is no reasonable basis for classification between those who have escaped
assessment under s. 34 (1) (a) and those third parties who have escaped
income-tax but with regard to whom a direction or an order is made under
proviso (ii) to s. 34 (3) is well founded and therefore the provision is
unconstitutional and hit by Art. 14.
Lastly it was argued that the second proviso
contemplates a valid finding or direction and that it cannot be given against a
non-assessee at all. It was also submitted that such a finding must be necessary
but there is little substance in this submission. Whether a finding is
necessary or not must depend on the circumstances of each case and it cannot be
said as a matter of law that finding is or is not necessary.
For the reasons given above, the appeal must
be dismissed with costs. In any case the appellant had undertaken to pay the
costs of the respondents irrespective of the result of the appeal and he must
pay the costs of the respondents.
SARKAR, J.-This appeal arises out of a
petition under Art.
226 of the Constitution for the issue of
writs restraining the revenue authorities from making an assessment under a
notice dated April 30, 1954, served under s. 34 (1) (a) of the Income-tax Act,
1922, on Purshottam Laxmidas, the respondent firm, in respect of the assessment
year 1942-43.
It is contended that the notice had been
issued after the period prescribed for it by the section 82 had expired and
was, therefore, invalid. This, it may be conceded, is so but it seems to me
that the notice was none the less made valid by a subsequent enactment, namely,
s. 4 of Act 1 of 1959 to which I will later refer.
Purshottam Laxmidas is the assessee. It had
two partners, Dwarkadas and Parmanand. Vasantsen is the son of Dwarkadas.
It appears that in 1941 another business was
started in the name of Vasantsen Dwarkadas. Vasantsen claimed it to have been
an independent partnership business carried on by him with two other persons.
For the year 1942-43, this business had filed a return of income of its own and
had applied for registration as a firm under the Income-tax Act. The Income-tax
Officer rejected these claims by the business of Vasantsen Dwarkadas and added
its income for the year to the income of Dwarkadas taking the view that it was
a business solely belonging to him. Vasantsen Dwarkadas (the alleged firm)
appealed from this decision. There was also an appeal against the assessment on
Dwarkadas individually for the year 1942-43. In 1943-44, the Income-tax Officer
came to a different conclusion and held that Vasantsen Dwarkadas was a branch
of Purshottam Laxmidas. The alleged firm of Vasantsen Dwarkadas repeated its
aforesaid contention in several years from 1943-44 onwards and went up in
appeals against its rejection.
In 1951, various appeals concerning the
parties named above came up before the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal. These
appeals consisted of the said appeals by the alleged firm of Vasantsen
Dwarkadas, Appeals by Vasantsen as the son and heir of Dwarkadas who had died
in 1946 in respect of assessments on him for 1942-43 and 1943-44, and appeals
by the firm of Purshottam Laxmidas in respect of assessments on it for various
years under the Excess Profits Tax Act.
These appeals were disposed' of by a 83
common judgment passed by the Tribunal on August 14, 1951.
The appeals by the firm of Vasantsen
Dwarkadas were all dismissed as it was held that it was not a partnership
between the persons alleged. In the appeals by Purshottam Laxmidas, it was held
that the business of Vasantsen Dwarkadas was one of its branches. In the
appeals against the assessment on Dwarakadas, it was held that the income of
the business of Vasantsen Dwarkadas had wrongly been added to his income for
the assessment year 1942-43 and the addition should be deleted. It was also said
referring to the income of Vasantsen Dwarkadas in respect of the assessment
year 1942-43, that ,If the Income-tax Officer can include this sum in the
income of Purshottam Laxmidas he is of course at liberty to do so " It is
because of this observation that the impugned notice was served on the
respondent firm of Purshottam Laxmidas. It was, thereupon that the firm of
Purshottam Laxmidas and Vasantsen, the latter representing his father's estate,
moved the High Court at Bombay under Art. 226 for the reliefs earlier
mentioned. The respondents to the petition were the appellants, the Income-tax
Officer, Bombay and the Union of India. Parmanand, the other partner in
Purshottam Laxmidas, was also made a respondent to the petition but he does not
seem to have taken any interest in the proceedings at all.
When the matter was heard in the High Court,
the Act of 1959 had not been passed. The revenue authorities relied on the
second proviso to s. 34 (3) of the Income-tax Act as amended by Act 25 of 1953
for the validity of the notice. The High Court did not accept this contention
and issued the writs as prayed. The revenue authorities have now come up in
appeal which is being opposed by the respondents, Purshottam Laxmidas and
Vasantsen. As I think that the appeal should be allowed because of s. 4of Act 1
of 1959, which provision the High Court had no occasion to consider, it would
be to no purpose 84 to discuss the reasons on which the High Court based itself
or the second proviso to sub-s. (3) of s. 34.
I think I ought to refer at this stage to s.
34 of the Income-tax Act. That section authorises assessment and reassessment
in respect of past years where for one or other of the reasons mentioned in it,
income has not been assessed to the full amount of tax payable on it. A general
idea of some of the provisions of s. 34 may now be given. Subsection (1) of
this section provides that before making the assessment a notice has to be
served on the assessees concerned asking for a return of the income of the year
in which it escaped assessment and this within a certain number of years from
the end of that year. Then sub-s. (3) of this section provides that the order
of assessment pursuant to the notice has to be made within a certain number of
years from the end of the year in which the income was first assessable. These
are two conditions which have to be satisfied before assessment under s. 34 can
be made. In the present case, we are concerned with the first of these
conditions only, that is, whether the notice had been issued within the time
provided for it for no order of assessment was ever made. I ought to have said
that the second proviso to sub-s. (3) of s. 34 as amended in 1953 enlarged in
certain cases the time for issuing the notice and also for making the order of
assessment. That is why the High Court had to deal with this proviso in this
case.
Now, s. 34(1) has been amended on a number of
occasions. A reference to some of the amendments would be useful. The first
amendment to which I desire to draw attention is that made by the Income-tax
(Amendment) Act, 1939. Under that amendment where the revenue authorities
thought that the assessee had concealed his income or deliberately furnished
inadequate particulars, they could issue the notice within eight years of the
year in which the income is supposed to have escaped assessment 86 and in other
cases, within four years of that year.
Sub-section (1) of s. 34 was next amended by
the Income-tax and Business Profits Tax (Amendment) Act, 1948. This Act was
passed on September 8, 1948, but s. 8 which substituted a new section for the
existing s. 34, was brought into operation retrospectively from March 30, 1948.
The new subsection (1) was divided into two clauses. Clause (a) dealt with
cases of omission on the part of an assessee to make a return or his failure to
disclose fully his income for any year as a result of which income escaped
assessment. Clause (b) dealt with cases where there was no such omission but
the Income-tax Officer in consequence of information in his possession believed
that income of any year had escaped assessment. It was provided that in a case
coming under cl.
(a) the notice might be issued within eight
years and in a case coming under cl. (b) within four years of the end of the
year in which the income escaped assessment. There was a proviso to this
sub-section which said that the Income-tax Officer could not issue the notice
unless he recorded his reasons for doing so and the Commissioner of Income-tax,
a superior revenue officer, was satisfied on the reasons so recorded that it
was a fit case for the issue of the notice.
Then came the amendment by s. 18 of the
Finance Act, 1956, passed on April 27, 1956, but brought into force
retrospectively from April 1, 1956. As a result of this amendment it was
provided in a case coming under cl. (a) of s. 34(1) the clause with which this
case is concerned--That (1) no notice should issue for a year prior to the year
ending on March 31, 1941, (2) nor for any year if eight years had elapsed after
the expiry of that year unless the income which had escaped assessment was
likely to amount to Rs. 1,00,000/or more and (3) nor unless 86 the Income-tax
Officer had recorded the reasons for issuing the notice and where the amount of
the escaped income was Rs. 1,00,000/or more, the Board of Revenue, and in other
cases the Commissioner, was satisfied on such reasons that the case was a fit
one for the issue of the notice.
It seems to me that the 1956 amendment made
two real changes. First, it removed altogether the prescription of time for the
issue of a notice in a case where the escaped income was likely to be Rs.
1,00,000/or more. Under the 1948 amendment no notice for a year from the end of
which eight years had expired could be issued at all. As the amending Act of
1948 came into force on March 30, 1948, no notice could be issued under it for
any year prior to the year ending on March 31, 1941. Therefore the provision in
the 1956 amendment that no notice could issue for any year prior to the year
ending on March 31, 1941, made no real alteration in the law. The other change
was that in cases involving escaped income of Rs. 1,00,000/or more, the
approval of the Board of Revenue to the issue of the notice was made necessary.
This alteration in the law has no bearing on the quest ion that I propose to
discuss.
Now the present is not a case where the
revenue authorities contend that the income which escaped assessment was likely
to be Rs. 1,00,000/or more. The notice, it may be remembered, was issued on April
30, 1954, in respect of the year 1942-43. It was a notice therefore which was
invalid both under the 1948 and 1956 amendments of s. 34 (1).
I will now refer to the Act of 1959 which I
have earlier mentioned. That is the Income-tax (Amendment) Act, 1959.
It was passed on March 12, 1959. Section 2 of
this Act introduced a new 87 sub-section in s. 34, namely, sub-s. (4). That
sub-section was in these terms :
Sub-s. 4 "A notice under Cl. (a) of
sub-s. (1) may be issued at any time notwithstanding that at the time of the
issue of the notice the period of eight years specified in that subsection
before its amendment by clause (a) of section 18 of the Finance Act, 1956, had
expired in respect of the year to which the notice relates." Section 4 of
this amending Act on which I propose to rest my judgment in this case runs as
follows :S. 4. "'No notice issued under cl. (a) of subs. (1) of s. 34 of
the principal Act at any time before the commencement of this Act and no
assessment, re-assessment or settlement made or other proceeding taken in
consequence of such notice shall be called in question in any court, tribunal
or other authority merely on the ground that at the time the notice was issued
or 'at the time the assessment or reassessment was made, the time within which
such notice should have been issued or the assessment or re-assessment should
have been made under that section as in force before its amendment by cl. (a)
of s. 18 of the Finance Act, 1956, had expired." Quite clearly the new sub-s.
(4) of s. 34 cannot apply to the notice with which we are concerned for the
sub-section by its own terms deals only with notices issued after the 1959 Act
came into force and the notice in this case was issued before that date.
Now, s. 4 of the 1959 Act prevents a notice
issued under s. 34 (1) (a) of the principal Act being held to be invalid on the
ground that it was issued 88 after the time within which it should have been
issued under that section as it stood before it was amended by the Finance Act
of 1956. In other words, s. 4 validates a notice issued under s. 34 (1) (a)
even though it was invalid for the reason that it was issued after the expiry
of the eight years prescribed for it under the 1948 amendment, that being the
section as it stood before the 1956 amendment.
The first requirement then of the
applicability of s. 4 is that there must be a notice issued under s. 34 (i) (a)
of the principal Act. I do not think that it was seriously contended at the bar
that the notice in the present case has not been issued under cl. (a) of s. 34
(1). I feel no doubt that it was so issued. The provision that we have to
consider for this purpose is s. 31 (1) (a) as it stood as a result of the 1948
amendment for that was the section in force on the date the notice was issued.
The notice would have been one issued under cl. (a) of that section as so
amended if it was a case where income had escaped assessment because of the
failure of Purshottam Laxmidas to disclose fully its income for the year
1942-43. There can be no doubt on the facts of this case that Purshottam
Laxmidas had failed to disclose fully its income for the year 1942-43.
On the facts found, the income of the
business of Vasantsen Dwarkadas was the income of Purshottam Laxmidas.
Therefore Purshottam Laxmidas should have disclosed in its return for 1942-43
the income made by it on the business done in the name of Vasantsen Dwarkadas.
What happened was that the income of Vasantsen Dwarkadas for 1942-43 was shown
as the income of its own as an independent firm and this was done by Vasantsen.
Obviously, Vasantsen, his father Dwarkadas and Parmanand, the latter's partner
in Purshottam Laxmidas, were all acting together. It would perhaps be more
correct to say that things had been left to Dwarkadas 89 and Vasantsen to
manage. They had three-fourth interest in the business, while Parmanand had
only one-fourth Furthermore, Parmanand has taken no interest in the present
proceedings. It would follow from all this that if Vasantsen Dwarkadas's income
had been shown separately, it could not have been included in the return filed
by Purshottam Laxmidas. Therefore, it is a case in which Purshottam Laxmidas's
income for 1942-43 escaped assessment because of its failure to disclose its
income fully. That is why I think it beyond doubt that the notice in the
present case had been issued under cl. (a) of s. 34 (1). It is none the less so
because it was issued in consequence of the direction of the Tribunal that the
Income-tax Officer was at liberty if he could in law do so, to include the
income of Vacantsen Dwarkadas for 1942-43 in the income of Purshottam Laxmidas.
The order could not have enabled a notice to issue. The notice had to be issued
under a statutory provision. That provision was s. 34 (1) (a).
The next requirement of s. 4 of the Act of
1959 is that the notice must have been issued at any time before the
commencement of that Act. The present notice which had been issued in 1954 had
clearly been so issued. When the section uses the word "at any time",
I suppose it means at any time;
it does not thereby say that the notice must
be issued at any time before the 1959 Act but after a certain other point of
time. The other limit is not to be found in the section at all; all that it
requires is that the notice must be issued before the 1959 Act.
It is however contended that the proper
construction of s. 4 is that the notice must have been issued after the Finance
Act of 1956 came into force and amended s. 34. I find nothing in s. 4 on which
to rest this construction. Mr. Palkhivala appearing for the respondent, said
that the words "under that section as in force before its amendment by cl.
(a) of 90 s. 18 of the Finance Act, 1956" led to this construction.
I do not see why and I am not able to deal
with this contention more fully for I do not see the reason on which it is
based. To my mind, all that these words mean is that the section to be
considered is the section as it stood before it was amended by the ]Finance
Act, 1956, that is to say, the section as it stood as a result of the amending
Act of 1948, for that was the section which was in force immediately before the
amendment affected by the Finance Act, 1956.
Then it was said that if the notice
contemplated was not one issued after the Finance Act, 1956, then under s. 34
(1) (a) all years without any limitation could be brought to assessment. If
that is the result of the words used in s. 4, the words must have that effect.
That would be no reason to say that s. 4 applies only to notices issued after
the 1956 Act came into force. No doubt the words " at any time" would
comprehend a notice whenever issued before the commencement of the 1959 Act.
But the section protects such notice only against the invalidity caused by s.
34 (1) as it stood after the 1948 amendment, that is, against the invalidity
caused by reason of the notice having been issued after the expiry of the time
prescribed for it in the section as it then stood. Section 4 does riot protect
the notice from invalidity otherwise attaching to it. Now it will be remembered
that the 1939 amendment of s. 34 also prescribed a period of time for the issue
of the notice.
That prescription had to be obeyed whenever
applicable.
Section 4 provided for no immunity against a
breach of that prescription. So, though s. 4 of the 1959 Act freed a notice
from the bar of limitation in respect of it imposed by the 1948 amendment, it
did not altogether do away with all prescriptions of time. Inspite of s. 4, a
notice contemplated by it would be subject to the prescription of time as to
its issue under the 1939 Act and may be, under s.
34 as it stood 91 before the 1939 amendment.
If the notice was issued after the 1956, amendment it would also be subject to
the prescription as to time provided by that amendment.
Then it was said that if s. 4 applied to a
notice issued more than eight years after the year in which the income escaped
assessment but before the 1956 amendment came into force in a case where the
escaped income of the year was less than Rs. 1,00,000/-, the position. would be
curious. A notice issued in a similar case after the 1956 amendment would be
bad under s. 34 as it then stood and s. 4 could not save it for it saved
notices only from the effect of the 1948 amendment. The position then would be
that in a case involving the same amount of escaped income for the same year, a
notice issued before 1956 amendment and invalid under the 1948 amendment would
be validated and a more recent notice equally invalid under both the earlier
and present laws would remain invalid. Assume that the position is somewhat
curious or incongruous. But that seems to me to be the result of the words
used. For all we know that might have been intended. However strange, if at
all, the result may be, I do not think the Courts can alter the plain meaning
of the language of the statute only on the ground of incongruity if there is
nothing in the words which would justify the alteration. As I have said
earlier, in this case there is nothing to justify the alteration of the plain
meaning. Consider this. In a case where the escaped income is Rs. 1,00,000/or
over, no incongruity as in the case of escaped income below Rs. 1,00,600/arises.
In such a case the 1956 amendment removes the bar of limitation altogether and
what had not been previously barred cannot become at all barred. So no question
of more recent notices becoming barred and earlier notices made valid arises:
If on the ground of the alleged incongruity notices issued before 1956 in cases
of escaped income of less than 92 Rs. 1,00,000/have to be left out of the scope
of s. 4 of the Act of 1959, I suppose we must hold that such notices in cases
of escaped income of Rs. 1,00,000/or over must also be left out of the scope of
s. 4, for clearly the section cannot be read as treating the notices in these
two cases differently. But in the latter kind of cases, there is no
incongruity. It would indeed be absurd to hold that notices issued before 1956
in cases where the escaped income was Rs. 1,00,000/or over were excluded from
s. 4, for in such cases notices may be clearly issued after the 1959 Act under
sub-s. (4) of s. 34 introduced by that Act. Sub-section (4) of s. 34 was
enacted by the Act of 1959 which also enacted s. 4. If a year's escaped income
could be brought to tax by a notice issued after the 1959 Act under sub-s. (4),
it could not be that it was intended that the same income could not be brought
to tax by a notice earlier issued and prima facie made valid by s. 4. There
would be no reason to make a distinction between the two cases. If a
distinction could not be made between the two cases, and in one case notices
issued before 1956 were covered by s. 4, s. 4 must apply to all notices issued
before the 1956 amendment came into force.
I may, before I conclude, as well say that for
the reasons mentioned in the judgment in the case of Commissioner of Income-tax
v. Sardar Lakhmir Singh (C. As. Nos. 214-215 of 1958), that I shall presently
read today, I think that the second proviso to s. 34 (3) of the Income-tax Act
is invalid and cannot therefore support the notice.
The result is that I think that the present
notice was validated by s. 4 of the Income-tax (Amendment) Act of 1959.
The appeal will, therefore, be allowed. As
the certificate under which the appeal was admitted so provides by consent of
parties, the appellant will pay the costs of Respondents Nos. 1 and 2, of this
appeal. The orders of the Courts below are set aside.
93 HIDAYATULLAH, J.-In this judgment we shall
deal also with C. As. 214, 215 and 509 all of 1958 and C. A. 585 of 1960. The
appellant is the Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay. In Civil Appeal Nos. 214
and 215 of 1958 the Commissioner of Income-tax., Bihar, and in C. A. No. 509 of
1958 the Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras, are the appellants. In Civil Appeal
No. 585 of 1960 the Income-tax Officer, Ahmednagar, and the Union of India are
the appellants.
These appeals are directed against divers
respondents to whom reference will be made later. This appeal and C. A. No. 585
of 1960 are appeals against the orders of the Bombay High Court in the exercise
of the power conferred by Articles 226 and 227 of the Constitution, the
remaining arise out of regular proceedings for assessment under the Income-tax
Act, culminating in references to the High Court under s. 66, Income-tax Act,
and orders passed therein. In all these appeals assessments made or notices
issued, under s. 34 of the Income-tax Act were successfully called in question
by the respondents and orders appropriate to the nature of the proceedings were
passed by the High Court concerned, either declaring the assessments illegal or
quashing the notice by a writ. In these cases, however commenced, the validity
of the assessments or the notices under s. 34 was questioned on the ground of
'limitation'.
The High Courts held that the notices or
assessments with which they were dealing were out of time. The Bombay High
Court further held that the 2nd proviso to s. 34 (3) of the Income-tax Act was
ultra vires Article 14 of the Constitution and thus void. The High Courts
certified the respective cases as fit for appeal to this Court and these
appeals have been filed.
We have had the benefit of reading the
judgments just delivered by our learned brethren Das and Kapur, JJ., who have
ordered the dismissal of all the appeals. We have the misfortune to differ 94
from them as we are of opinion that these appeals must succeed. The point of
law which arises in these appeals is common though it arises in different
settings. We are concerned with s. 34 of the Indian Income-tax Act as it stood
between 1939 and 1959. This section has been the subject of repeated amendments
in 1939, 1948, 1953, 1956 and 1959. It has, while enabling the bringing to tax,
income, profits and gains which escape assessment, always provided a period or
periods of time for such action though after 1956 it has done away with the
restriction of time in certain classes of cases. We are not concerned with the
state of law prior to the Amending Act of 1939 or the amendments made later
than the Act of 1959. During the intervening twenty years, the Indian
Legislature and Parliament have not only amended s. 34 but have passed at
intervals validating laws and these cases involve the interpretation and
application of the section as amended from time to time and the determination
of the effect of the validating, provisions with a view to seeing whether any
impugned notice or assessment is saved by any validating provision. In our
opinion, the provisions taken all-in-all are sufficient to uphold the validity
of the divers notices issued in these cases and the assessments, if any, made
as a consequence.
If the notices and the assessments are held
to be in time and thus valid, there is nothing in these appeals besides the
constitutionality of the second proviso to s. 34 (3) which was raised
successfully in the appeals from Bombay.
If the constitutionality is also upheld then
these several judgments and orders must be reversed and that indeed is our
opinion. We shall now give the facts of this appeal.
In this case there was a firm of two partners
(i) Dwarkadas Vussonji and (ii) Parmanand Odhavji, bearing the name
"Purshottam Laxmidas." This firm did business from October 28, 1935,
to April 1, 1946. On the latter date Dwarka das died. A new 95 partnership firm
bearing the same name came into being with Vasantsen Dwarkadas the son of the
deceased partner. This firm was registered. Another firm by name
"Vasantsen Dwarkadas" was started on January 28, 1941, and it was
dissolved on October 24, 1946. Its partners were : (i) Vasantsen Dwarkadas (ii)
Naraindas Shivji and (iii) Nanalal Odhavji.
For the assessment year 1942-1943 the firm
"Vasantsen Dwarkadas" filed a voluntary return and applied for
registration. This registration was refused on the ground that the firm was not
genuine. The income of the firm relative to that assessment year was added to
the personal income of Dwarkadas Vussonji in the assessment year 1943-44.
This also happened in subsequent years. A
number of appeals were heard together and disposed of by the Income-tax
Appellate Tribunal by its order on August 14, 1951. These appeals were filed by
the firm "Vasantsen Dwarkadas" for the assessment years 1942-43 to
1948-49, by Vasantsen Dwarkadas representing the estate of his father and by
the firm Purshottam Laxmidas" concerning excess profits. The Tribunal held
that not Dwarkadas Vussonji alone but the firm "Purshottam Laxmidas"
owned the firm "Vasantsen Dwarkadas." A case was stated but the High
Court upheld this conclusion on October 8, 1953. A notice was then issued under
s. 34 of the Income-tax Act to the firm "Purshottam Laxmidas" on
April 30, 1954, that it had been under-assessed in the relevant year. This
notice was challenged before the Bombay High Court by a petition under Article
226 of the Constitution. The first contention was that the notice was out of
time and the second was that the 2nd proviso to s. 34 (3) was ultra vires
Article 14 of the Constitution in so far as it applied to persons other than
the assessees. Both the points were accepted by the learned single judge who
heard the petition. He, however, held that the firm 96 "Purshottam
Laxmidas" could not be called "'a stranger" to the assessment
proceedings. A Divisional Bench of the High Court upheld the conclusions of the
learned single judge but held further that the said firm was "a
stranger" to the proceedings before the Tribunal. The validity of the
notice was sought to be established under s. 34 as amended in 1948 and also by
invoking s. 31 of the Indian Income-tax (Amendment) Act 1953, Act XXV of 1933.
In this Court by a supplemental statement the amendments made by the Finance
Act of 1956 (18 of 1956) and by the Indian Income-tax (Amendment) Act, 1959 (1
of 1959) were also brought to our notice. The amount involved in this case was
Rs. 62,732.
In the companion appeals the full facts of
which will be given in-this judgment later the position was this. In Civil
Appeal No. 585 of 1960, notices were issued to the respondent on February 18,
1957, in respect of the assessment years 1944-45,1945-46 and 194647, as a
result of a direction by the Appellate Assistant Commissioner. The notices were
quashed by the Bombay High Court following the decision just mentioned. The
amounts involved were Rs. 14,000; 14000 and 38,000. In Civil Appeal No. 509 of
1958 the notice was issued in 1949 to a lady whose husband had remitted Rs.
9,180 to her from Bangkok in the year relative to the assessment year 1942-43.
She had omitted to file a return. In Civil Appeal Nos. 214 and 215 of 1958 the
assessment years were 1946-47 and 1947-48. The assessment of the respondent as
individual was made on November 17, 1953, as a result of a direction by the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner on March 20, 1953. These assessments were held
barred under s. 34 (3) as it stood before the Amending Act of 1953. The amounts
involved were Rs. 28,284 (1946-47) and Rs. 21,141 (1947-48).
The above are the relevant facts of the five
appeals with which we are dealing. We shall deal 97 with each appeal separately
later. For the present it is sufficient to note the dates of the assessment
years involved,, the date of the direction (if any) issued by a superior
officer or Tribunal and the date of the issue or service of the notices and
date of the assessment, if any, in each case. This will serve to determine
under what amendment or amendments the matter falls to be considered.
We shall revert to these dates after
analysing s. 34 with reference to the amendments made from time to time.
In determining the effect of the provisions
of the amending Acts and the validating enactments contained in some of them,
it is altogether more satisfactory to start with the Income-tax Act (hereafter
the Principal Act) as amended in 1939, and then to proceed chronologically.
Each case then falls for consideration in its appropriate period. Section 34
before its amendment in 1939 provided for a period of one year for bringing to
tax income, profits or gains escaping assessment in any year. In 1939, the
whole section was substituted by another. The material portion of it read as
follows:-"34 (1) If in consequence of definite information which has come
into his possession the Income-tax Officer discovers that income, profits or
gains chargeable to income-tax have escaped assessment in any year, or have
been under-assessed, or have been assessed at too low a rate, or have been the
subject of excessive relief under this Act the Income-tax Officer may, in any
case in which he has reason to believe that the assessee has concealed the
particulars of his income or deliberately furnished inaccurate particulars
thereof, at any time within eight years and in any other case at any time
within four years of the end of that year, serve on the person liable to pay
tax on such income, profits or gains............ a notice......... and may 98
proceed to assess or re-assess such income, profits or gains, and the
provisions of this Act shall, so far as may be, apply accordingly as if the
notice were a notice issued under that sub-section." x x x x x x It will
be noticed that the Income-tax Officer was to proceed on definite information
that there was an escapement of assessment before he took action. The section
provided two periods in which action could be taken-(1) an eight year period
and (ii) a four year period. The first was to apply to cases in which the
Income-tax Officer had reason to believe (a) that the assessee had concealed
the particulars of his income or (b) furnished inaccurate particulars thereof.
The second was to apply in all other cases. The terminus a quo in either case
was the end of the assessment year and the terminus ad quem the service of the
notice.
The section remained in force till March 30,
1948, when the Income-tax and Business Profits Tax (Amendment) Act 1948 (passed
on September 8, 1948) substituted a new section in place of the old. That
section in so far as it is material to our purpose read:-"34. (1) If(a)
the Income-tax Officer has reason to believe that by reason of the omission or
failure on the part of an assessee to make a return of his income under section
22 for any year or to disclose fully and truly all material facts necessary for
his. assessment for that year, income, profits or gains chargeable to
income-tax have escaped assessment for that year, or have been under-assessed.,
or assessed at too low a rate, or have been made the subject of excessive
relief under the Act, or excessive loss or depreciation allowance has been
computed, or 99 (b) notwithstanding that there has been no omission or failure
as mentioned in clause (a) on the part of the assessee, the Income-tax Officer
has in consequence of information in his possession reason to believe that
income, profits or gains chargeable to income-tax have escaped assessment for
any year, or have been under-assessed, or assessed at too low a rate, or have
been made the subject of excessive relief under this Act, or that excessive
loss or depreciation allowance has been computed, he may in cases falling under
clause (a) at any time within eight years and in cases falling under clause (b)
at any time within four years of the end of that year, serve on the assessee
or, if the assessee is a company, on the principal officer thereof, a notice
containing all or any of the requirements which may be included in a notice
under subsection (2) of section 22 and may proceed to assess or reassess such
income, profits or gains or re-compute the loss or depreciation allowance; and
the provisions of this Act shall, so far as may be, apply accordingly as if the
notice were a notice issued under that sub-section:
Provided that :(i) the Income-tax Officer
shall not issue a notice under this sub-section, unless he has recorded his
reasons for doing so and the Commissioner is satisfied on such reasons recorded
that it is a fit case for the issue of such notice;
x x x x Explanation.-Production before the
Income-tax Officer of account-books or other evidence from which material facts
could with due diligence have been discovered by the Income-tax Officer will
not necessarily amount 100 to disclosure within the meaning of this section.
(2) x x x x (3) No order of assessment under
section 23 to which clause (c) of sub-section (1) of section 28 a Plies or of
assessment or reassessment in cases falling within clause (a) of sub-section
(1) of this section shall be made after the expiry of eight years, and no order
of assessment or reassessment in any other case shall be made after the expiry
of four years, from the end of the year in which the income, profits or gains
were first assessable :
Provided that where a notice under
sub-section (1) has been issued within the time therein limited, the assessment
or re-assessment to be made in pursuance of such notice may be made before the
expiry of one year from the date of the service of the notice even if such
period exceeds the period of eight years or four years, as the case may be :
Provided further that nothing contained in
this sub-section shall apply to a reassessment made under section 27 or in
pursuance of an order under section 31, section 33, section 33A, section 33B,
section 66 or section 66A." This new section created different conditions
precedent to action in the two kinds of cases to which the periods of 8 and 4
years were applicable.
8 years: Income-tax Officer should have
reasons to believe that escapement was due to omission or failure on the part
of the assessee101 (i) to make a return of his income for the year;
or (ii) to disclose fully and truly all
material facts necessary for his assessment. The explanation made it clear that
the disclosure must be positive.
4 years: This comprised all other cases in
which there was no omission or failure on the part of the assessee but the
Income-tax Officer was in possession of information which led him to believe
that there was an escapement of assessment.
In both cases the Income-tax Officer had to
record his reasons in writing and the Commissioner had to satisfy himself that
the reasons were good.
The section as enacted by the Amending Act of
1948 was amended again in 1953 by the Indian Income-tax (Amendment) Act, 1953
which in the absence of special provision in any section came into force from
the 1st day of April, 1952.
Section 18 of Amending Act amended the second
proviso to sub-section (3) which has been quoted above and it read :"Provided
further that nothing in this section limiting the time within which any action
may be taken, or any order, assessment or reassessment may be made, shall apply
to a reassessment made under section 27 or to an assessment or reassessment
made on the assessee or any person in consequence of or to give effect to any
finding or direction contained in an order under section 31, section 33,
section 33A, section 33B, section 66 or section 66A." 102 The Act also
enacted a provision for the validity of certain notices and assessments. This
was section 31 which read :"31. For the removal of doubts it is hereby
declared that the provisions of sub-section (1), (2) and (3) of section 34 of
the principal Act shall apply and shall be deemed always have applied to any
assessment or reassessment for any year ending before the 1st day of April,
1948, in any case where proceedings in respect of such assessment or
re-assessment were commenced under the said sub-sections after the 8th day of
September, 1948, and any notice issued in accordance with subsection (1) or any
assessment completed in pursuance of such notice within the time specified in
subsection (3), whether before or after the commencement of the Indian Income-tax
(Amendment) Act, 1953 shall, notwithstanding any judgment or order of any
court, Appellate Tribunal or Income-tax authority to the contrary, be deemed to
have been validly issued or completed as the case may be, and no such notice,
assessment or reassessment shall be called in question on the ground merely
that the provisions of section 34 did not apply or purport to apply in respect
of an assessment or re-assessment for any year prior to the 1st day of April,
1948." The effect of these provisions will have to be seen in cases in
which notices and assessments took place after the 1st day of April, 1952,
particularly as a result of a direction such as is mentioned in the second
proviso to sub-section (3) of s. 34 as amended by this Act.
By the Finance Act 1956, the section was
again amended from the 1st day of April, 1956. The most significant changes
were the omission of 103 the time-limit of eight years in sub-section (1) in
respect of cases falling under clause (a) and the substitution of certain
provisos to sub-section (1). The section as amended in so far as material to
our purpose is reproduced:
"34. (1) If(a) The Income-tax Officer
has reason to believe that by reason of the omission or failure on the part of
an assessee to make a return of his income under section 22 for any year or to
disclose fully and truly all material facts necessary for his assessment for
that year, income, profits or gains chargeable to income-tax have escaped
assessment for that year, or have been under-assessed, or assessed at too low a
rate, or have been made the subject of excessive relief under the Act, or
excessive depreciation allowance has been computed, or (b) notwithstanding that
there has been no omission or failure as mentioned in clause (a) on the part of
the assessee, the Income-tax Officer has in consequence of information in his
possession reason to believe that income, profits or gains chargeable to
income-tax have escaped assessment for any year, or have been under-assessed,
or assessed at too low a rate, or have been made the subject of excessive
relief under this Act, or that excessive loss or depreciation allowance has
been computed, he may in cases falling under clause (a) at any time x x x and
in cases falling under (b) at any time within four years of the end of that
year, serve on the assessee, or, if the assessee is a company, on the principal
officer thereof, a notice containing all or any of the requirements which may
be included in a notice under sub-section (2) of section 22 and may proceed to
assess or re-assess such income, profits or 104 gains or re-compute the loss or
depreciation allowance; and the provisions of this Act shall, so far as may be
apply accordingly as if the notice were a notice issued under that sub-section:
Provided that the Income-tax Officer shall
not issue a notice under clause (a) of sub-section (1)(i) for any year prior to
the year ending on March 31, 1941;
(ii) for any year, if eight years have
elapsed after the expiry of that year unless the income, profits or gains
chargeable to income-tax which have escaped assessment or have been under
assessed or assessed at too low a rate or have been made the subject of
excessive relief under this Act, or the loss or depreciation allowance which
has been computed in excess, amount to, or are likely to amount to, one lakh of
rupees or more in the aggregate. either for that year, or for that year and any
other year or years after which or after each of which eight years have
elapsed, not being a year or years ending before March 31, 1941;
(iii) for any year, unless he has recorded
his reasons for doing so, and, in any case falling under clause (ii), unless
the Central Board of Revenue,. and, in any other case, the Commissioner, is
satisfied on such reasons recorded that it is a fit case for the issue of such
notice :
Proviso ...... (omitted) Proviso ......
(omitted) Explanation.-Production before the Income-tax Officer of
account-books or other evidence from 105 which material facts could with due
diligence have been discovered by the Income-tax Officer will not necessarily
amount to disclosure within the meaning of this section.
That this section was to operate on back
period does not admit of any doubt. No clearer language could be used for the
purpose. The first proviso to sub-section (1) makes this abundantly clear by
allowing notices to be issued 'at any time' for any year later than the year
ending on March 31, 1941, and then limiting action to eight years from the end
of the year in cases coming in clause (a) involving less than rupees one lakh.
Though the section came into force on April 1, 1956, it covered in this way
years going right back to 1941, of course, subject to the conditions indicated
there.
For those cases in which there was no default
on the part of the assessee the period continued to be four years as before.
The deletion of the time limit of eight years, allowing action to be taken at
any time in cases involving more than rupees one lakh and limiting time to
eight years in all cases coming within clause (a) led to some controversy as to
whether the issuance of a notice under the section as amended by the Amending
Act of 1956 but served beyond eight years as laid down in the 1948 Amendment,
and the reopening of cases right back to 1941 which were subject to a time
limit under the 1948 Amendment which time had expired, was legal. The Calcutta
High Court in Debi Dutta Moody v. T. Bellan (1) held that notices which were
not served within the time limited for action under the 1948 amendment could
not be validly served after the 1956 amendment which removed the time limit in
certain cases. In that case a notice was issued before but served after April
1, 1956, when the 1956 amendment came into force.
(1) A.I.R. 1959 Cal. 567.
106 This led to the passing of an Ordinance
and later the Indian Income-tax (Amendment) Act, 1959. This Amending Act added
sub-section (4) to s. 34 which read:-"(4) A notice under cl. (a.) of
sub-s. (1) may be issued at any time notwithstanding that at the time of the
issue of the notice the period of eight years specified in that sub-section
before its amendment by clause (a) of section 18 of the Finance Act, 1956 had
expired in respect of the year to which the notice relates." It also
enacted by s. 4 as follows :"No notice issued under cl. (a) of sub-s. (1)
of s. 34 of the principal Act at any time before the commencement of this 'Act
and no assessment, re-assessment or settlement made or other proceeding taken
in consequence of such notice shall be called in question in any court,
tribunal or other authority merely on the ground that at the time the notice
was issued or at the time the assessment or reassessment was made, the time
within which such notice should have been issued or the assessment or
re-assessment should have been made under that section as in force before its
amendment by cl. (a) of s. 18 of the Finance Act, 1956, had expired."
These repeated amendments, in so far as relevant to the present cases, were in
two directions. It will be remembered that by the Amendment of 1939 two periods
in which action could be taken were created: an eight-year period applying to
the concealment or deliberate furnishing of inaccurate particulars by the
assessee and a four-year period applying to all other cases. The 1948 Amendment
did not make any change in these two periods but stated that the eight-year
period applied also to a 107 failure to furnish a return. All other provisions
substantially remained the same. In a case in which the return was not made, it
would have been a question which of the two periods in the section as amended
in 1939 would have applied. The 1948 Amendment said the action could be taken
within eight years. Another question thus arose, namely, whether the four-year
period as provided by the 1939 Amendment which had expired applied or the eight
year period as provided by the 1948 Amendment. The answer to this question
depended on the further question whether the 1948 Amendment was retrospective
in its operation.
The Amending Act of 1948 was passed on
September 8, 1948, and came into force from March 30, 1948. In some cases it has
been held that its retrospectively cannot be carried further than March, 30,
1948. That is true in one sense but not in the sense how its provisions were to
work in relation to the assessees. The section was meant to enable the issue of
notices with a view to re-assessing income which had escaped assessment and
allowed the re-assessment of income for back years. It was meant to operate
retrospectively for eight years in some cases and four years in others. In our
opinion it had retrospective operation in respect of back years according to
its own provisions. It the 1948 Amendment could be treated as enabling the
Income-tax Officer to take action at any point of time in respect of back
assessment years within eight years of March 30, 1948, then such cases were
within his power to tax. We have such a case here in C.A. No. 509 of 1958 where
the notice was issued in 1948 to the lady whose husband had remitted Rs.
9,180 to her from Bangkok in the year
relative to the assessment year 1942-43. That lady was assessable in respect of
this sum under s. 4 (2) of the Income-tax Act.
She did not file a return. If the case stood
governed by the 1939 Amendment the 108 period applicable would have been four
years if she had not concealed the particulars of the income. She had of course
not deliberately furnished inaccurate particulars thereof.
If the case was governed by the 1948
Amendment she would come within the eight-year rule because she had failed to
furnish a return. Now, we do not think that we can treat the different periods
indicated under s. 34 as periods of limitation, the expiry of which grant
prescriptive title to defaulting tax-payers. It may be said that an assessment
once made is final and conclusive except for the provisions of ss. 34 and 35
but it is quite a different matter to say that a "vested right"
arises in the assessee. On the expiry of the period the assessments, if any,
may also become final and conclusive but only so long as the law is not altered
retrospectively. Under the scheme of the Income-tax Act a liability to pay tax
is incurred when according to the Finance Act in force the amount of income,
profits or gains is above the exempted amount. That liability to the State is
independent of any consideration of time and, in the absence of any provision
restricting action by a time limit, it can be enforced at any time. What the
law does is to prevent harassment of assessees to the end of time by
prescribing a limit of time for its own officers to take action. This limit of
time is binding upon the officers, but the liability under the charging section
can only be said to be unenforceable after the expiry of the period under the
law as it stands. In other words, though the liability to pay tax remains it
cannot be enforced by. the officers administering the tax laws. If the
disability is removed or according to a new law a new time limit is created
retrospectively, there is no reason why the liability should not be treated as
still enforceable. The law does not deal with concluded claims or their revival
but with the enforcement of a liability to the State which though existing
remained to be enforced. This aspect was admirably summed up by 109
Chakravartti, C.J., (Sarkar, J., concurring) in Income-tax Officer v. Calcutta
Discount Co. Ltd. (1) as follows :"The plain effect of the substitution of
the new Section 34 with effect from the 30th March, 1948, is that from that
date the Income-tax Act is to be read as including the new section as a part
thereof and if it is to be so read, the further effect of the express language
of the section is that so far as cases coming within clause (a) of sub-section
(1) are concerned, all assessment years ending within eight years from the 30th
March, 1948, and from subsequent dates, are within its purview and it will
apply to them, provided the notice contemplated is given within such eight
years. What is not within the purview of the section is an assessment year
which ended before eight years from the 30th March, 1948." We entirely
agree with these observations and in our opinion after the passing of the 1948
Amendment which came into force on March 30, 1948, the Income-tax Officer could
take action in all cases in which the assessment years ended within eight years
of the date of his action and in which there was an escapement of-an assessment
for the reasons indicated in cause (a) of the section as amended. In other
words, action could be taken retrospectively in the cases indicated by
Chakravartti, C..J. If there be any doubt about the powers of the Income-tax Officer
the validating section passed in 1953 (S. 31) quite clearly indicates that
section 34 as amended in 1948 was to be read in this manner.
We come now to the next amendment in 1956. It
created a change of a far-reaching character by removing the limit of time for
action where the sum likely to be taxed amounted to rupees one lakh or (1)
[1953] 23 I.T. R. 471, 482.
110 more either for a single year or for a
group of years going back to the year ending on March 31, 1941. These cases
were governed by the eight-year rule under the 1948 amendment.
In other words, the eight-year period was
retained for cases involving less than one lakh of rupees and the limit of time
was removed for those cases in which the amount involved was one lakh rupees or
more. We are not concerned at this moment with the sanctions necessary before
action could be taken. That is a separate matter. If no sanction was obtained
then the notice would be bad for that reason but not on the ground of a limit
of time. What we have said above about the amendment of 1948 applies mutatis
mutandis also to the amendment of 1956. That provision was also to operate
retrospectively as has been stated by us earlier.
There is good reason to think that this is
the correct view because when the Calcutta High Court in the Debi Dutta Moody's
(1) case held that the 1956 amendment was not applicable to the cases,
Parliament passed the 1959 Act nullifying that decision. By the same Act,
Parliament gave power to issue a notice at any time in all these cases in which
the eight-year period under the principal Act as it stood prior to the 1956
Amendment had expired. The words "at any time" mean what they say.
There is no special meaning to be attributed to them. "'Any time"
thus meant action to be taken without any limit of time. A similar result was
reached in certain cases under the 1953 Amendment of the second proviso to
sub-section (3) of section 34. It provided : nothing in the section limiting
the time within which any action may be taken shall apply to an assessment or
re-assessment made on the assessee or any person in consequence of or to give
effect to any finding or direction contained in an order under section already
mentioned. This proviso was challenged under Article 14 of the Constitution but
that is a different matter. If the section is constitutionally enacted then it
also means (1) A.I.R. 1959 Cal. 567.
111 what it says. It is hardly possible to
imagine clearer language than the one used. It says that the limit of time
mentioned in section 34 is removed in certain cases, that is to say, action can
be taken at any time in these cases. In our judgment, each case of a notice
must be judged according to the law existing on the date the notice was issued
or served, as the law may require. So long as the notice where the notice is in
question, and the assessment, where the assessment is in question, are within
the time limited by the law, as it exists when the respective actions are
taken, the actions cannot be questioned provided the law is clearly retrospective.
The only case in which no further action can be taken is one in which action
was not taken under the old law within the period prescribed by that law and
which is not also within the period mentioned in the new law if its operation
is retrospective. All other cases are covered by the law in force at the time
action is taken. It is from these viewpoints that these appeals, in our
opinion, should be judged.
We shall now take up first this appeal and
later in this judgment the other appeals separately and deal with the special
points raised in them. In this appeal the assessment year in question was
1942-43. We have already described how the firm "Purshottam Laxmidas"
was held to own the firm "Vasantsen Dwarkadas". The final order in
the case was made by the High Court on October 8, 1953. By that date the period
of time prescribed by s. 34 of the principal Act as amended in 1948 had
expired. But s. 34 of the principal Act was amended by the Indian Income-tax
(Amendment) Act, 1953, from April 1, 1952. The action in the case was taken on
April 30, 1954, after the amendment. The second proviso to sub-section (3) of
s. 34 was by then amended to provide that nothing in the section limiting the
time within which action might be taken, was to apply to an assessment or reassessment
made 112 on any person in consequence of or to give effect to any finding or
direction contained in an order under s. 66. of course, if the law as it stood
prior to this amendment applied the time for action would have expired in 1951,
and any action on April 30, 1954, would have been clearly out of time. But the
Income-tax Officer derived his jurisdiction from the second proviso and that
made S. 34 applicable without the limit of time. There was also s. 31 of the
Amending Act of 1953, which made s. 34 of the principal Act (which meant the
Income-tax Act as amended till that date including the amendments made by the
Amending Act of 1953 in the second proviso to s. 34(3) ), applicable to any
assessment or re-assessment for any year ending before April 1, 1948, where
proceedings were commenced after September 8, 1948.
It also saved all notices issued or
assessments made, whether before or after the commencement of the Amending Act
of 1953 (1-4-1952) from the attack that the provisions of s.
34 (as amended up to 1-4-1952) did not apply
to an assessment or re-assessment for any year prior to April 1, 1948.
The effect of the amendment of the year 1953
on this case may be stated shortly thus : The assessment year being 194243, the
notice under s. 34 had to issue in 1951 at the latest. After that year notice
could not issue unless the limit of time was increased or removed. But the fact
that the notice could not be issued after 1951 did not clothe the assessee with
a right not to pay the tax if it became legally claimable again. If the law
conferred a power on the income-tax Officer to deal with such a case, the
assessee would again be exposed to proceedings, provided it said in clear terms
that the law was retrospective. This is what the law did in precise and clear
terms. In 1953 an Act was passed amending s. 34 which enabled action at any
time if there 113 was a finding or direction of the character indicated in the
second proviso to sub-s. (3) of s. 34. Section 31 also made this position clear
by applying the amended s. 34 to all assessments commenced after September 8,
1948, and saved all notices issued and assessments made in respect of any year
prior to April 1, 1948, whether the notices were issued or the assessments were
made before or after April 1,1952.
The Department in this case had relied on the
Amending Act of 1953 before the High Court. Though the High Court considered
the case from the angle of the second proviso to sub-s. (3) of s. 34 and also
struck it down as unconstitutional it did not take into consideration s. 31.
It was argued before us that we cannot take
s. 31 into account if it was not referred to by the High Court. But a Court is
required to take judicial notice of statutes and if s. 31 of the Act of 1953
said that sub-ss. (1), (2) and (3) of s. 34 of the principal Act (including of
course the amendments as made by the 1953 Act) shall apply and shall be deemed
always to have applied to any assessment or reassessment for any year ending
before April, 1948, it is the duty of Courts and Tribunal to read s. 34 in that
manner and in no other. In our opinion it was not open to the High Court to
read s. 34 without s. 31 which contained a legislative construction and made s.
34 retrospective. This omission has vitiated the High Court's reasoning.
To-day we are faced with the provisions of
the Indian Income-tax (Amendment) Act, 1959. These provisions have already been
set out by us. Section 4 of the Amending Act of 1959 precludes Courts and
Tribunals from calling in question notices and assessments made even though
'the time within which that action was taken was more than that prescribed by
the principal Act as amended in 1948.
114 Mr. Palkhivala raised five propositions
in connection with the 1959 Act which were applied mutatis mutandis to the
Amending Acts of 1953 and 1956 by other learned counsel.
These five propositions were intended to show
that all amendments in the time limit by the various amending Acts were meant
to operate on assessment years following the commencement of the Acts and not
on back assessment years which continued to be governed by the old provisions.
He also contended that even if an assessment year was within the time indicated
in the new law, the new law could not take note of it, if under the old law
that assessment year was out of time. He also contended that the validating
sections operate on the assessment years between the Act as amended by the last
preceding amendment and the validating section. Thus according to him s. 4 of
the Amending Act of 1959 operated to validate action taken after the 1956
amendment and sub-s. (4) introduced in s. 34 operated from the date of
introduction. Mr. Palkhivala tried to support these contentions by a textual
interpretation of the sections, the history of legislation on the subject of
income, profits and gains escaping assessment, and the marginal notes to the
sections. What lie argued in relation to the 1959 Act was applied with suitable
adaptations in the interpretation of the amendments of 1948, 1953 and 1956.
To begin with we do not accept the contention
of Mr. Palkhivala that s. 4 of the 1959 Act is retrospective only up to 1956.
That section is of course retrospective up to that year but it operates on
notices issued even earlier than the Act of 1956 or in other words in respect
of assessment years prior to March 31, 1956. There is good reason to think that
it covers all the period between 1941 and 1959. Since it is conceded that it
does cover the period 1956-1959, all that we have to consider is whether it
covers the period 1941-1956. For this purpose, we shall analyse the section
into its component parts.
115 The section first says: "No notice
issued under clause (a) of sub-section (1) of section 34 of the Principal Act
at any time before the commencement of this Act and no assessment,
re-assessment............ made......... in consequence of such notice".
This means that it is speaking of all notices issued earlier than the enactment
of the 1959 Act and assessments made as consequence. The section sets no limit
to the time but says "at any time". By the words (clause (a) of
sub-s. (1) of s. 34 of the principal Act" and by defining "principal
Act" to mean the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, the Act refers to the
Income-tax Act as amended till then. The section then says that such a notice
or assessment made in consequence, shall not be called in question on the
ground that the time prescribed for action under the section as it stood before
the amendment of 1956 had expired. This clearly shows that it meant to operate
on cases which would be governed by the 1948 Amendment even though the time
limit prescribed by the 1948 amendment had expired and that the notices and the
assessments made as a consequence were to be saved.
Now the changes made by the 1956 amendment
were two: (a) the eight year limit was to operate in all cases falling in
clause (a) of sub-s. (1) under the 1948 amendment but under the 1956 amendment
it was not to apply to cases involving Rs. one lakh or more. This power could
not be exercised for any year prior to the year ending on March 31, 1941 and
(b) the satisfaction of the Board had to be obtained before the Income-tax
Officer could take action.
By the validating section 4 of the 1959 Act,
any notice issued before 1959 could not be challenged even if under the 1948
Act they would be out of time. The Amending Act cured not a defect arising
under the 1956 amendment but one arising under the 1948 amendment. It is
impossible to say, as contended, that the last words of s. 4 of the 116 Amending
Act of 1959 limit retrospectively only up to 1956, even though the words are
"at any time before the commencement of this Act." Further, by sub-s.
(4) added to s. 34, the Amending Act gave power to issue fresh notices which
under the 1948 amendment would have been barred. The sub-section reads :"A
notice under clause (a) of sub-section (1) may be issued at any time
notwithstanding that at the time of the issue of the notice the period of eight
years specified in that subsection before its amendment by clause (a) of
section 18 of the Finance Act, 1956 (18 of 1956), had expired in respect of the
year to which the notice relates." The last words definitely refer to an
year which would be governed by the 1948 amendment.
This is a law made in 1959 and it speaks of
notices not complying with the time limit as prescribed by the 1948 Act.
To test whether the retrospectively goes back
only to 1956 we can look at the matter this way. The time limit in clause (a)
of s. 34 (1) for all cases was eight years under the 1948 amendment. The years
on which the 1948 amendment which came. into force on 30-3-1948 operated
admittedly included the year 31-3-1948 to 31-3-1949 as the first year and so on
till the 31-3-1956 to 31-3-1957. The 1956 amendment came into force on
1-4-1956. Working backward from 1959 for eight years we come to 1951. The years
19511952 to 1955-56 admittedly were governed by the 1948 Act and were still
within the eight-year period under the 1948 amendment (if it applied) till
31-3-1960 to 31-3-1961. The years 1956-59 were within time because there was
either no limit or a limit of eight years which would give room for action till
1964-1967. Where was the need for the 117 validating provisions or the addition
of sub-s. (4) of s. 34 in 1959 ? Action under the 1948 amendment could be taken
till the year of assessment 1951-52 and all intervening assessment years till
the year ending March, 31 1956.
Similarly action under the 1956 amendment
could be taken till 19651968 in respect of years 1956-57, 1957-58 and 1958
59. This is true of all cases under the
eight-years limit whether provided by the 1948 amendment or the 1956 amendment.
The validating section was hardly needed and sub-s. (4) added to s. 34 not at
all. It is, therefore, quite clear that the construction suggested for the
respondent cannot be accepted and the two provisions in the 1959 Act mean what
they say.
It will, however, be noticed that though the
time limit was removed there was no validation in respect of want of sanction
by the Board of Revenue in cases above rupees one lakh. In cases started
between 1956-1959 the Commissioner's sanction in cases below rupees one lakh
and the Board's sanction in cases above rupee, one lakh was needed. But the
Commissioner's sanction was needed even under the 1948 amendment. So all cases
in which there was Commissioner's sanction would be validated unless the case
required the Board's sanction. Such cases would be those above rupees one lakh
and in view of the removal of the time limit by s. 34 (4) it was possible to
issue fresh notice after obtaining the sanction. In this way the continuity of
the law was obtained. It had earlier been achieved in 1953 when there was a
changeover from the 1939 amendment to the 1948 amendment. What we have said
here repels an identical argument on the 1953 amendment.
Where the language of an enactment is clear
there is hardly any need to go to the marginal note or the history of the law
before the amendment. Even if the history be examined one thing is quite 118
clear. It is that at intervals the Indian Legislature and Parliament have been
at pains to save notices issued to, and assessments made on, defaulting
tax-payers and have enabled fresh action to be taken and saved notices and
assessment out of time.
The provisions made in 1959 were not present
before the High Court. The High Court decided this case in 1956 but we must
take notice of them and give effect to s. 4 thereof. In any case, the
provisions of s. 34, as amended by the Amending Act of 1953 read with s. 31 of that
Act, were sufficient to save notice issued against the firm of "Purshottam
Laxmidas" unless the amendment to the second proviso to s. (3) of s. 34
was unconstitutional. We are of opinion that the proviso was not
unconstitutional and we shall give our reasons in a latter part of this
judgment. That is a matter which can be dealt with separately.
In our judgment notice against the firm of
"Purshottam Laxmidas" was validly issued under the amended second
proviso to s. 34 (3) and its validity cannot be called in question in any Court
or Tribunal in view of the provisions of s. 4 of the Amending Act of 1959. We
would therefore, allow Civil Appeal No. 705 of 1957.
C. A. No. 509 of 1958.
We have already referred to this appeal by
the Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras. The respondent is a lady whose husband
resided in Bangkok between September 1940 and July 1947. In the year relative
to the assessment year 1942-43 he remitted through his agent in India a sum of
Rs. 9,180 for payment to the respondent. The respondent did not submit a return
of this sum which was deemed to be her income under s. 4 (2) of the Income-tax
Act. In the year 1949, a notice was served on her under s. 34 of the Income tax
Act as amended by the Amending 119 Act of 1948. The question was whether the
amendment of 1948 applied to the notice. The Tribunal held that it did but the
High Court of Madras took the contrary view, According to the High Court the
period of four years was applicable to her case under the Income-tax Act as
amended in 1939 and that period expired on 31-3-1947 and the 1948 amendment did
not revive the right to take action which had died. The Amending Act of 1953
(Act 25 of 1953) had come into force by the time the High Court decided the
case (22-2-1956) and s. 31 of that Act was brought to the notice of the High
Court.
The High Court however held that the validity
of the notice had to be tested with reference to the law existing on July
25,1949, when the notice was issued and the Act of 1953 could not be taken into
account.
We have already shown why the decision of the
High Court cannot be sustained. The action was taken after the 1948 amendment
by which income, profits and gains which had escaped assessment by reason of
the omission or failure of the assessee to make a return of the income could be
brought to tax after serving a notice within eight years from the end of the
relevant year. Here the notice in 1949 was within eight years from 1942-43 and
was validly issued.
Even if an omission or failure to make a
return was governed by the four-year period under the 1939 Amendment, the
assessee did not get immunity except if no fresh power to bring to tax such
special income was created. Such a power to tax was brought into being by the
1948 Amendment and the notice being within the fresh eight-year period was
validly issued. In our judgment the order of the High Court cannot be upheld.
We would, therefore, allow the appeal.
C.A. No. 585 of 1960.
The assessee in this appeal (Jagannath
Fakirchand) is the manager of a Hindu undivided family.
120 He was assessed as karta for the
assessment year 194445, 1945-46 and 1946-47. These assessments were completed
in 1949 and 1950. Later those cases were remanded by the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner. In respect of the assessment year 1945-46 a notice under s. 34
(1) was also issued but it was withdrawn. Some of these cases are still pending
but we are not concerned with them.
The assessee filed a suit against one
Jagannath Ram Kishan for rendition of accounts as a munim. Jagannath Ram Kishan
claimed to be a partner. The suit was dismissed as it was not proved that
Jagannath Ram Kishan was a munim. Jagannath Ram Kishan died and his widow
Kalavati was substituted as legal representative. The Income-tax Officer issued
notices under s. 34 (1) to Kalavati for the assessment year 1944-45, 1945-46
and 1946-47. In the appeals arising therefrom the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner held that there was a partnership between Jagannath Ramkishan and
the assessee which lasted till August 26, 1945, and directed the Incometax
Officer to assess the partnership. Notices under s. 34 were then issued on
February 18, 1957, to the partnership and also to Jagannath Fakirchand.
Jagannath Fakirchand filed a petition under Article 226/227 in the High Court
contending that the notices were out of time and the second proviso to s. 34
(3) was unconstitutional. The Bombay High Court following its decision in the
previous case, accepted both the contentions. The sums involved in these cases
were Rs. 14,000; 14,000 and 30,800 for the three years respectively.
The assessment in this case was the result of
a direction and the second proviso to s. 34 (3) as amended in 1953 and s. 31 of
the Amending Act of 1953 governed this case. The notice is also further saved by
the provisions of the Amending Act of 1959 as it was issued after 1956
(February 18, 1957). It was 121 not contended before us that these provisions
do not apply to a notice given after April 1, 1956. In fact the contention was
that the provisions of the 1959 Act enable notices to be sent out at any time
after 1956 and validate all notices so sent. In view of what we have held in
this appeal, Civil Appeal No. 585 of 1960 must be allowed. We would, therefore,
allow this appeal. We may mention here that in this case also the second
proviso to s. 34 (3) as amended in 19'03 was declared unconstitutional. In our
opinion that decision cannot be upheld. We shall give our reasons presently.
C.A. Nos. 214 and 215 of 1958.
These appeals arise out of the judgment of
the High Court on a reference on the question:
"Whether having regard to the return
dated the 7th March, 1951, by Sardar Lakhmi Singh in his individual capacity
and to the provisions of section 34 (3), the assessment made on him on the 27th
November, 1953, is validly made?" The assessments are for the years
1946-47 and 1947-48.
Lakhmir Singh was the son of one Nechal Singh
and the two used to be assessed as a Hindu undivided family. From the
assessment year 1944-45 two separate returns were filed and claimed under s.
25A of the Income-tax Act was made. This claim was rejected but there was an
assessment of Lakhmir Singh as an individual out of abundant caution. In the
appeal against the assessment of the Hindu undivided family it was held that
they were separate and on October 15, 1962, the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal
directed fresh assessments.
For the assessment year 1946-47 three returns
were filed.
Lakhmir Singh's return was voluntary and was
filed on March 15, 1951. Another return 122 was filed by Nechal Singh. A third
return under protest was filed on March 9, 1951, by Nechal Singh on behalf of
the Hindu undivided family, showing income "'nil". On March 15, 1951,
the Hindu undivided family was assessed by the Incometax Officer by grossing up
the income as disclosed in the returns filed by Lakhmir Singh and Nechal Singh
as 'individuals.' The voluntary return of Lakhmir Singh as individual remained
on file. There was an appeal by the Hindu undivided family and the assessment
was set aside by the Appellate Assistant commissioner on March 20, 1953, who
directed assessment of Lakhmir Sigh as an individual. This was done on November
17, 1953, on the voluntary return already filed by him. On appeal by Lakhmir
Singh it was contended that the assessment was barred under the unamended
second proviso to s. 34 (3) which provided a period of four years. The appeals
were dismissed as it was held that there was no limitation for an assessment
under s. 31 (3) in view of the new proviso. The High Court held on reference
that the Amending Act of 1953 did not apply and the assessments were barred
under the unamended s. 34 (3) as the amendment came into force on April 1,
1952, after the assessment was barred already. The 1947-48 assessment was also
held barred for the same reason. No reference was made to s. 31 of the Amending
Act of 1953.
The Department contended before us that the
assessment was valid under s. 31 of the Act 25 of 1953 and that the amended
proviso applied. Section 31 applied the amended s. 34(1), (2) and (3) of the
Income-tax Act to assessments and reassessments for any year ending before 1st
day of April, 1948, in which the proceedings were commenced after September 8,
1948. It was contended by the assessee before us that the section cannot apply
because (a) it was not relied upon before the High Court and (b) that there was
nothing to show that the proceedings 123 commenced after September 8, 1948.
We shall first consider whether the questions
referred to the High Court embraced the application of s. 31 of the Amending
Act of 1953. These questions in the two references were :
Whether having regard to the return dated
March 7, 1961, by Sardar Lakhmir Singh in his individual capacity and to the
provisions of section 34(3), the assessment made on him on the November 27,
1953, is validly made ? and Whether having regard to the return dated 14-1-1952
by Sardar Lakhmir Singh in his individual capacity and to the provisions of
section 34(3) the assessment made on him on 27-11-53 is validly made ? In both
the questions emphasis is placed upon the date of the assessment and the date
of the return.' The return for the year 1946-47 was filed on March 15, 1951,
and that for the year 1947-48 on January 14, 1952. The assessment in either
case was made on November 27, 1953. The returns were filed after September 8,
1948, and the assessments were made after the amendment of the second proviso
to section 34(3) by removing the limit of four years in it. It must be noted
that the returns filed by Lakhmir Singh were voluntary returns. Till that time
the Department had refused to recognise the 'individual' status claimed by
Lakhmir Singh and Nechal Singh under s. 25A of the Principal Act. These
assessees had also filed tinder protest returns for the Hindu undivided family.
The questions as framed refer to the
provisions of S. 34(3) of the Income-tax Act. They also mentioned two sets of
dates: namely, the dates of the returns (7-3-1951 and 14-11952) and the date of
the 124 assessment (17-11-1953). Now we know that before the first day of
April, 1952, there was a four-year limit for assessments or re-assessments
under sub-s. 3 of s. 34 but thereafter that limit was removed by the proviso
added by s. 18 of the Amending Act of 1953 and by s. 31 of the same Act
assessments made before or after the commencement of the Amending Act of 1953
(1-4-1952) were declared valid if proceedings commenced after September 8,
1948. The question as framed cannot be answered without reference to s. 31 and
even if parties did not bring it to the notice of High Court it was the duty of
the High Court to look into the validating provisions of s. 13. If the High
Court did not we know of no rule or decision of this Court which prevents us
from looking into a validating provision which existed at the time of the High
Court's decision and was overlooked by it and which by itself furnished the
answer to the question propounded for the opinion of the High Court. No
decision of this Court lays down that in determining the true answer to a
question referred under s. 66, this Court is confined only to those sections to
which the Tribunal or the High Court referred. Indeed, there are many cases
which say the contrary: see Kusumben Mahadevia v. Commissioner of Income-tax
Zoraster & CO. V. Commissioner of Income-tax and the recent case of Scindia
Steam Navigation Co. v. Commissioner of Income-tax (3). We must, therefore,
look into s. 31 to determine these appeals.
It remains only to consider now whether the
proceedings commenced after September 8, 1948. The application of s. 31 depends
on this circumstance. Here the facts are plain and admit of no doubt whatever
and the complaint that there is no finding is of no avail. The voluntary
returns were filed in 1951 and 1952, twenty-nine and thirty-nine months after
the datum line mentioned in s. 31. These returns were filed with returns for
the Hindu un(1) [1960] 3 S.C.R. 417.
(2) [1961] 1 S.C.R. 210, (3) [1961] 42 I.T.R.
589.
125 divided family which were, filed under
protest. A return tan be voluntary only if no action has been taken by the
Department. The Department, till the success of the appeal by the Hindu
undivided family ignored the returns filed as individuals. There could not have
been and there were in fact no proceedings against Lakhmir Singh in his
capacity as an individual till he himself filed his returns in 1951 and 1952.
In our opinion it is futile to contend that these admitted facts required a
finding or that the foundation for the application of s. 31 of the Act of 1953
was not laid down in these appeals. In our judgment the High Court was not
right in the answer it gave to the two questions which ought to have been
answered against the assessee. We would, therefore, allow these two appeals. It
may be pointed out that in these appeals also the question of the
constitutionality of the second proviso to s. 34 (3) was raised but the High
Court refrained to give its decision.
Before dealing with this question we wish to
say a few words about the well-known principle that subsequent changes in the period
of limitation do not take away an immunity which has been reached under the law
as it was previously. In this sense statutes of limitation have been
picturesquely described as "'statutes of repose". We were referred to
many cases in which this general principle has been firmly established. We do
not refer to these cases because in our opinion it is somewhat inapt to
describe s. 34 with its many amendments and validating sections as a
"section of repose".
Under that section there is no repose till the
tax is paid or the tax cannot be collected. What the law does by prescribing
certain periods of time for action is to create a bar against its own officers
administering the law. It tries to trim between recovery of tax and the
possibility of harassment to an innocent person and fixes a duration for action
from these two points of views. These periods 126 are occasionally readjusted
to cover some cases which would otherwise be left out and hence these
amendments. An assessment can be said to become final and conclusive if no
action can touch it but where the language of the statute clearly reopens
closed transactions there can be no finality. We would not raise these
prescribed periods to the level of those periods of limitation which confer not
only immunity but also give titles by the passage of time.
The attack on the second proviso to sub-s.
(3) of s. 34 is threefold. It is contended that (a) it deprives a party of the
ordinary period of limitation (b) it results in the prejudging of the merits of
a case before the party is heard and (c) there is discrimination between a
stranger to the proceedings in which a finding or direction is given and other
persons about whom there is no finding or direction.
It is said that the latter are protected by
"a rule of limitation" but not the former. The finding also is characterised
as without authority of law and thus inoperative on the ground that a finding
in respect of other years or other persons is not possible under the Income-tax
Act. In support of the plea of discrimination reliance is placed on Surajmal
Mohota v. A. V. Vishwanath Sastri (1), Shri Meenakshi Mills Ltd. Madurai v.
A.V. Vishwanath Sastri (2 ) and M. C. Muthiah v. Commissioner of Income-tax
(3). The other side relies on A. Thangal Kunju Musaliar v. M.Venkitachalam
Potti (4).
Before dealing with the contentions raised we
find it necessary to say a few words about the manner in which the problem of
discrimination should be approached. One must first find out the object of the
impugned provision and compare it with the topic of legislation and then try to
discover if there is a connection between the two and a reasonable basis for
making a difference between different classes of persons affected by the law,
in keeping with the topic (1) [1955] 1 S. C. R. 448.
(3) [1955] 1 S. C. R. 787.
(2) [1955] 2 S. C. R. 1247.
(4) [1955] 2 S. C. R. 1196.
127 of legislation and the object of the
enactment. A difference which is aimless, arbitrary or unreasonable and which
is unconnected with the object in view must remain a discrimination and
incapable of being upheld. In all cases in which laws were struck down under
Article 14 this was the approach. It is hardly necessary to refer to the
previous cases because each provision to be tested, must be tested in its own
setting and no two cases can be alike.
We are dealing here with a distinct class of
persons, namely, those whose tax liability has not been discharged for one
reason or another. Some escape payment of tax not because they have omitted or
failed to make a true disclosure but because in spite of their full and true
disclosure some portion of the income escapes assessment.
For such persons there is a smaller period
for assessing the escaped income. But those who are guilty of an omission or
failure or who give incorrect particulars or conceal the particulars of their
income must stand exposed to action for a longer time. The difference between
these two cases is understandable. Those who are deliberately in default
generally cover up their action and it takes longer to detect them and open
proceedings against them. They cannot be allowed to say that theirs is a case
on par with a man who acts innocently. The section also draws a distinction
between two more classes one above rupees one lakh and the other below it. In
the former there is no limit of time except that the income-tax officer cannot
go beyond the year ending on the March 31, 1941, arid that he must take the
sanction of the Board of Revenue. In the other cases the Income-tax Officer can
take action within eight years and must obtain the sanction of his
Commissioner. These two distinctions have never been challenged as
discriminatory.
What is challenged is the provision that if
in the assessment proceedings against A there is a finding or direction against
B, proceedings can be started 128 against B at any time while the time limit
for action otherwise is either four years or eight years. But it must be
remembered that the law is dealing with the subject of tax evasion. No uniform
system applicable to all kinds of defaulters can be made. The methods of tax
evaders are both ingenious and varied. One such method is to confuse the issue
by mixing up incomes, profits and gains of several parties so that the income
of A may appear to be the income of B or of A B. There is of course always the
chance that it may not be discovered to be the income of either A or B or A B.
The cases with which we have dealt are admirable examples of such actions.
Whether the firm "Vasantsen Dwarkadas" belonged to its three
partners, or to Dwarkadas alone or to the firm "Purshottam Laxmidas";
whether Jagannath Ramkishan was a munim of Jagannath Fakirchand or his partner;
whether Lakhmir Singh or Nechal Singh from a Hindu undivided family or were
seperate are questions the answers to which may not be known till some Court or
Tribunal finds the true facts and there is no reason why a law should not be
framed in such a way as to give more time for action. If A keeps his money with
B and this fact is discovered in the assessment proceedings against B and a
finding to that effect is given, a situation arises in which the law thinks
that A should be brought to book even though, if action against him were
commenced in the ordinary way,-it would have been out of time. The finding does
not hurt A. He need not be heard before the finding is given because he is
heard in his own proceedings and the finding given earlier does not bind him.
All that happens is that he is faced with an
inquiry which he would have avoided if the true facts had not been discovered.
He would have faced an inquiry if the matter had been discovered earlier
independently of the finding within a shorter period. He now faces the same
enquiry but without the limit of time. He need not compare himself with others but
only with himself. The different 129 treatment arises under different
circumstances and they serve the object which is to bring to tax the tax
evader.
In this connection, reference may be made to
the decision in A. Thangal Kunju Musaliar v. M. Venkitachalam Potti (1) where
two classess of tax evaders contemplated by s. 47 of the Travancore Income Tax
Act XXIII of 1121, which corresponded to s. 34 (1) of the Income-tax Act as it
stood before the amendment of 1948, and by s. 5 (1) of the Travancore Taxation
on Income (Investigation Commission) Act XIV of 11 24, were held to be
different classes and not falling within the same category on the ground that
action against the former class could be taken on the basis of definite
information coming into possession of the Income-tax Officer that income had
escaped, while, in the case of the latter, the Government could refer the cases
to the Commission on finding prima facie reason to believe that they had evaded
payment of tax to a substantial amount. The persons who came under s. 34 (1)
(a) of the Income-tax Act after the amendment of 1948 are those in respect of
whose income the Income-tax Officer has reason to believe that due to certain
conduct on their part their income has escaped assessment, while action can be
taken against the persons contemplated by the second proviso to sub-s. (3)
against those persons alone with respect to whose escaped income some authority
had given a finding or directions. These latter persons would therefore
correspond to the persons contemplated by s. 47 of the Travancore Income-tax
Act, while the other tax evaders contemplated by s. 34 (1) as amended in 1948
would correspond to persons contemplated by s. 5 (1) of the Investigation
Commission Act. We see no reason to hold that the second proviso to s. 34 (3)
offends Article 14.
In the result, as we have already said, we
would allow all these appeals. We would also grant costs of the appellants both
here and in the High (1) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 1196.
130 Court in C. A. No. 585 of 1960 and C. As.
No#. 214 and 215 of 1958 but in view of the undertaking given in the High Court
by the Department the appellants in C. A. No. 705 of 1957 shall bear the costs
of the first and second respondents in this Court and also in C. A. No. 509 of
1958 we would make a similar order in view of the order of the, High Court
granting the certificate.
By COURT : In accordance with the opinion
"of the majority, the appeal is allowed. The appellants will pay costs of
respondents 1 and 2 as per consent of the parties referred to in the
certificate, granted by the High Court.
Appeal allowed.
Back