Hukumchand Mills Ltd. Vs. The State of
Madhya Bharat & ANR [1964] INSC 41 (20 February 1964)
20/02/1964 WANCHOO, K.N.
WANCHOO, K.N.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ) GUPTA, K.C. DAS
SHAH, J.C.
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
CITATION: 1964 AIR 1329 1964 SCR (6) 857
CITATOR INFO:
D 1972 SC 182 (15,17) R 1976 SC2581 (12) F
1977 SC 854 (18) R 1977 SC1146 (8) R 1983 SC 537 (5)
ACT:
Industrial Tax-Assessment under the Tax
Rules-AmendmentValidity-Assessment under the old law if validated by the
Validating Act-Validating Act if, hit by Art. 14-Indore Industrial Tax 858
Rules, 1927: rr. 17, 18-Finance Act No. 25 of 1950-Madhya Bharat Taxes on
Income (Validation) Act No. 38 of 1954 Constitution of India, Art. 14.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant, a Cotton Mill in Indore in
Holkar State was taxed in respect of profits, gains and income under the Indore
Industrial Tax Rules, 1927 by the then Ruler of Indore. The Holkar State merged
into the State of Madhya Bharat which acceded to India. The Rajpramukh of the
new State promulgated an Ordinance No. 1 of 1948 to provide for peace and good
Government of the State. This Ordinance was superseded by Act 1 of 1948.
Thereafter on December 28, 1949, me Government issued a Notification under r.
18 of the Tax Rules purporting to make rules under r. 17 thereof.
These rules made certain amendments in the
Tax Rules. The State of Madhya Bharat became one of the Part B States on
January 26, 1950. From April 1, 1950, Finance Act No. 25 of 1950 came into
force and applied to Madhya Bharat also.
According to its provision, the Tax Rules
came to be repealed from after the accounting year ending on March 31, 1949 and
assessments could only be made under the Tax Rules upto the end of the
accounting period ending on or before March 31, 1949. It further provided that
even the assessments for the years previous to the accounting year ending on
March 31, 1949 could only be made by the corresponding authorities under the
Income-tax Act, and that appeals would lie to the corresponding authorities
under the Income-tax Act; no levy and assessment could be made by the
authorities under the repealed law and no appeal would lie to the authorities
or Court under that law. This provision as to the authorities competent to make
assessments was lost sight of with the result that assessments were made for
the years in dispute which were all before the accounting year ending on March
31, 1949 by the authorities under the Tax Rules, as they were before their
repeal. When this mistake was discovered, Parliament passed the Madhya Bharat
Taxes on Income (Validation) Act, No. 38 of 1954. The appellant then challenged
the validity of the assessments under the Tax Rules, on the grounds: (1) that
the amendments of the Tax Rules on December 28, 1949 were invalid as such
amendments could not be made under r. 17 of the Tax Rules, as was purported to
be done; (2) even if the amendments were good, they could not have retroactive
effect and could not take away the vested right of appeal; (3) as after the
Finance Act, 1950, assessments were made by the old officers appointed tinder
the Tax Rules and not by the corresponding officers under the Income-tax Act,
the assessments were invalid and the Validating Act could not validate them
because, (i) the Validating Act itself was discriminatory and was hit by Art.
14, and (ii) because in any case it did not apply to the present assessments.
The High Court repelled all these contentions and dismissed the writ petition.
On appeal by certificate this Court, Held: (i) The amendments which were made in
the Tax Rules on December 28, 1948, could be justified on the basis of Act 1 of
1948. All that s. 5 of Act 1 of 1948 requires is the publication of the 859
regulation made there under and their being made by Government, and that has
been complied with in this case.
There is no other formality required for
making regulations and therefore, even though there was a mistake in the
opening part of the Notification of December 28, 1949, the amendments made in
the Tax Rules can be upheld under s. 5 of Act 1 of 1948 as regulations.
(ii) Even a vested right of appeal can be
taken away by express legislation or by legislation which, though it may not
expressly repeal the vested right of appeal, has the effect of such repeal by
necessary implication. Though the right of second appeal on facts is taken away
by the new rule 13 inserted in the Tax Rules, such right is taken away by
legislation by necessary intendment. Therefore, the right of second appeal
after the amendment must be confined in all cases by necessary intendment to
questions of law only.
(iii) The Validating Act is not hit by Art.
14. The present cases are with reference to years 1940-48, that is before the
accounting year ending on March 31, 1949. The assessments in these cases were
carried on by the old officers under the old law and the Validating Act
specifically validates such assessments. In these circumstances it cannot be
said that these assessments have not been validated by the Validating Act.
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal
No. 316 of 1962.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated
January 2, 1959 of the Madhya Pradesh High Court (Indore Bench) at Indore in
Civil Misc. Case No. 20 of 1955.
M. C. Setalvad, G. S. Pathak, B. Dutta, J. B.
Dadachanji, O. C. Mathur and Ravinder Narain, for the appellant.
B. Sen and I. N. Shroff, for the respondents.
February 20, 1964. The Judgment of the Court
was delivered by WANCHOO, J.-This is an appeal by special leave against the
judgment of the Madhya Pradesh High Court. It raises the question of the
validity of certain provisions of the Indore Industrial Tax Rules, 1947,
(hereinafter referred to as the Tax Rules) and assessments made there under for
the years 1940 to 1948. The appellant is a cotton mill and in 1927 a tax was
imposed on cotton mills in Indore in Holkar State by the then Ruler in respect
of profits, gains and income of such mills. This was done under the Tax Rules
promulgated by the Ruler of Indore. The procedure under 860 the Tax Rules
provided for a board of assessing officers.
The orders of the board were open to appeal
to the Member in-charge of Commerce and Industry Department. There after a
second appeal was provided to the Government. Rule 17 of the Tax Rules further
provided that the power of making rules was vested in the Government and such
power shall.
except on the first occasion of exercise
thereof, be subject to the condition of previous publication. Rule 18 provided
that Rules made under r. 17 shall be published in the State Gazette and
thereafter shall have the force of law. Rule 19 provided that the Member
in-charge of Commerce and Industry Department shall have power to make
subsidiary rules not inconsistent with the Tax Rules. On May 28, 1948, the
Holkar State merged to form the State of Madhya Bharat. On July 19, 1948, the
State of Madhya Bharat acceded to India.
Ordinance No. 1 of 1948 was promulgated by
the Rajpramukh of the new State of Madhya Bharat to provide for the peace and
good government of the State. This Ordinance was superseded by Act 1 of 1948
which came into force on December 13, 1948.
Section 4 of the Act provided for the
continuance of the existing laws of any covenanting States or of any State
which merged in the State of Madhya Bharat until repealed or amended under the
provisions of the Act. Section 5 of the Act provided that the Government may by
notification published in the Government Gazette make regulations for the peace
and good government of all the territories which had already been included in
the new State or which may be included in it under the provisions of s. 3 of
the Act.
Such regulations were to have the force of
law unless they were repugnant to any Act or law or Ordinance made by the
Rajpramukh, in which case to the extent of their repugnancy they would be void.
Further it was provided that such regulations may repeal or amend any law
already in force in any State before its administration was taken over or
before it was, as the case may be, merged in the new State.
Finally the section provided that the right
of the Rajpramukh to make Ordinances for the peace and good government of the
new State or of the States which may become merged in the said State would
remain unaffectedIn view of the merger of the Holkar State into the State of
Madhya Bharat, some of the provisions of the Tax Rules 861 had to be changed to
bring them into line with the new setup. Consequently, on December 28, 1949,
the Government of Madhya Bharat issued a notification under r. 18 of the Tax
Rules purporting to make rules under r. 17 thereof. These rules made certain
amendments in the Tax Rules. It is not necessary to refer to all the amendments
as we are concerned here only with three amendments. The first amendment was
that instead of the board making the assessment. the assessment was to be made
by an assessing officer. The second amendment was that the appeal from the
assessing officer was to be heard by an officer appointed from time to time by
the Minister in-charge of the Finance Department in place of the Member
in-charge of Commerce and Industry Department. The third amendment was with
respect to second appeals. The amendment provided that instead of the
Government hearing second appeals which under the old provision lay both on
facts and law, second appeals thereafter were to be heard on a point of law by
the High Court.
Then came the Constitution of India on
January 26, 1950 and the State of Madhya Bharat became one of Part B States. In
the Finance Act No, 25 of 1950, which came into force from April 1, 1950 and
applied to Madhya Bharat also, a provision was made that any law relating to
income-tax or super-tax or tax on profits of business in any part B State shall
cease to have elect except for the purpose of levy, assessment and collection
of income-tax and super-tax in respect of any period not included in the
previous year for the purpose of assessment under the Indian Income Tax Act,
No. XI of 1922 for the year ending on March 31, 1951 or for any subsequent year
or, as the case may be, the levy, assessment and collection of the tax on profits
of business for any chargeable accounting period ending on or before March 31,
1949. The effect of this was that the Tax Rules came to be repealed from after
the accounting year ending on March 31, 1949. and assessment could only be made
under the Tax Rules upto the end of the accounting period ending on or before
March 31, 1949. A further provision was also made in the Finance Act, 1950,
that any reference in any such law to an officer, authority, tribunal or court
shall be construed as a reference to the corresponding officer, authority,
tribunal or courtappointed or constituted under the Income Tax Act. The result
of this provision was that even the assessments 862 for the years previous to
the accounting year ending on March 31, 1949 could only be made by the
corresponding authorities under the Income Tax Act, and the appeals would be to
the corresponding authorities under the Income Tax Act; no levy and assessment
could be made by the authorities under the repealed law and no appeal would lie
to the authorities or court under that law. It seems however that this
provision of the Finance Act as to the authorities competent to make
assessments was lost sight of with the result that assessments were made for
the years in dispute in the present appeal which are all before the accounting
year ending on March 31, 1949, by the authorities under the Tax Rules, as they
were before their repeal. Consequently when this mistake was discovered,
Parliament passed the Madhya Bharat Taxes on Income (Validation) Act, No. 38 of
1954 (hereinafter referred to as the Validating Act), s. 3 of which provided
that " notwithstanding anything contained in the first proviso to
sub-section (1) of section 13 of the Finance Act, all proceedings taken,
assessments made and other acts and things done (including orders made) by or
before any officer, authority, tribunal or court acting or purporting to act
under the relevant Madhya Bharat law in connection with the levy, assessment
and collection of any tax due, under any such law in respect of the relevant
period shall be deemed always to have been valid and shall not be called in
question on the ground only that such proceedings were not taken, assessments
were not made or acts or things were not done by or before the corresponding officer,
authority, tribunal or court referred to in the said proviso." Section 4
of the Validating Act further provided that "if immediately before the
commencement of this Act, any proceedings of the nature referred to in section
3 are pending before any officer, authority, tribunal or court acting or
purporting to act under the relevant Madhya Bharat law, such proceedings may,
notwithstanding anything contained in the first proviso to subsection (1) of
section 13 of the Finance Act, be continued and completed in accordance with
the provisions of the relevant Madhya Bharat law, and the provisions of the
said proviso shall not apply, and shall be deemed never to have applied, in
relation to any such proceedings." What had happened in the present case
and in some other cases relating to laws which corresponded to the Indian
Income-tax 863 Act was that the authorities under the Tax Rules made
assessments in spite of the provisions in the Finance Act by which such
assessments should thereafter have been made by the corresponding authorities
under the Indian Income-Tax Act, state and that is why the Validating Act had
to be passed.
The appellant challenged the validity of the
assessments made against it under the Tax Rules by a writ petition filed in the
Madhya Bharat High Court in 1955, on the following grounds:(1) The amendments
of the Tax Rules on December 28, 1949 were invalid as such amendments could not
be made under r. 17 of the Tax Rules, as was purported to be done.
(2) Even if the amendments made on December
28, 1949 were good, they could not have retroactive effect and could not take
away the vested right of appeal.
(3) As after the Finance Act, 1950,
assessments were made by the old officers appointed under the Tax Rules and not
by the corresponding officers under the Indian Income Tax Act, the assessments
were invalid and the Validating Act could not validate them (firstly) because
the Validating Act itself was discriminatory and was hit by Art. 14 and
(secondly) because in any case it did not apply to the present assessments.
The High Court repelled all the contentions
raised on behalf of the appellant and dismissed the writ petition. Thereupon
the appellant applied to the High Court for a certificate of fitness, which was
granted; and that is how the appeal has come up before us. We propose to deal
with the points raised in the order in which they have been set out above.
Re. (1):
The first question is about the validity of
the amendments made in the Tax Rules on December 28, 1949. It is true that the
notification by which amendments were made purports to have been published
under r. 18 of the Tax Rules read with r. 17. The argument on behalf of the
appellant 864 is that r. 17 of the Tax Rules must be treated on a par with
provisions in a statute which provide for framing of rules, and these rules are
subordinate legislation made for carrying out the purposes of the statute, and
the power to frame such rules does not include the power to modify the parent
law under which the rules have to be framed. We do not think it necessary for
present purposes to consider this argument, for we are of opinion that the
amendments which were made in the Tax Rules on December 28, 1949 can be
justified on the basis of Act 1 of 1948, which was passed on December 13, 1948
by the Rajpramukh. That Act, as already indicated, provided by s. 5 that the
Government, by notification published in the Government gazette, may make
regulations for the peace and good government of all the territories which had
been included in the State of Madhya Bharat or which may be included in it
under the provisions of s. 3 of the Act. It also provided for the repeal or
amendment by regulation of any law already in force in any State before its
administration was taken over or before it was. as the case may be, merged in
the United States. The Government had therefore the power to amend the Tax
Rules under s. 5(1) read with s. 5 (3) of Act 1 of 1948. The notification of
December 28, 1949 by which the amendments were made was published in the
gazette of the Madhya Bharat State and the amendments were made by the
Government. It is true that in the opening part of the notification it is said
that the amendments were made under r. 17 of the Tax Rules;
but that in our opinion would not conclude
the matter, for if the Government had the power to make amendments under Act 1
of 1948, the amendments in the Rules could be justified under that power in
spite of the wrong words used in the opening part of the notification of
December 28, 1949. It is well settled that merely a wrong reference to the
power under which certain actions are taken by Government would not per se
vitiate the actions done if they can be justified under some other power under
which the Government could lawfully do these acts. It is quite clear that the
Government had the power under s. 5 (1) and (3) of Act 1 of 1948 to amend the
Tax Rules, for that was a law in force in one of the merged States. The only
mistake that the Government made was that in the opening port of the notification
s. 5 of the Act was not referred to and the noti865 fication did not specify
that the Government was making a regulation under Act 1 of 1948. But that in
our opinion would make no difference to the validity of the amendments if the
amendments could be validly made under s. 5 of Act J of 1948. It is not
disputed that the amendments could be validly made under s. 5 of Act 1 of 1948.
We are therefore of opinion that the mere mistake in the opening part of the
notification in reciting the wrong source of power does not affect the validity
of the amendments made. It is urged that the Government knew that it could only
make regulations under s. 5 and it had made regulations under s. 5 of Act 1 of
1948 in certain cases. Even if that be so, there can in our opinion be no doubt
about the validity of the amendments made if the Government had power to make
them, even though there was a mistake in the opening part of the notification
publishing the amendments. All that s. 5 of Act 1 of 1948 requires is the, publication
of the regulation made thereunder and its being made by Government; and that
has been complied with in this case. There is no other formality required for
making a regulation and we are them fore of opinion that even though there was
a mistake in the opening part of the notification of December 28, 1949, the
amendments made in the Tax Rules can be upheld under s. 5 of Act 1 of 1948 as a
regulation. We therefore reject the contention under this head.
Re. (2):
Then it is urged that even if the amendments
to the Tax Rules are good, they could not affect vested rights of appeal
provided under the old law before the amendments and therefore insofar as the
amendments affect this vested right, they are of no effect. Now it is well
settled that even a vested right of appeal can be taken away by express
legislation or by legislation which, though it may not expressly repeal the
vested right of appeal, has the effect of such repeal by necesary implication.
We have already pointed out that in view of the coming into existence of the
new State of Madhya Bharat, amendments to the Tax Rules had become necessary in
order to bring them into line with the structure of the now State. The three
main amendments made in the Tax Rules have already been set' out by us.' Learned
counsel for the 134-159 S.C.-55 866 appellant does not attack two of them,
namely, those relating to the assessment officer and the first appeal provided
by the amendments. The attack is on the amendment of r. 13 of the Tax Rules
providing for a second appeal. Under the old Rules, a second appeal lay to the
Government both on fact and law; under the new law, it lay to the High Court
only on a question of law. The quarrel is not with the forum of the second
appeal; what is urged is that the new rule does not allow a second appeal on a
question of fact while the old rule did. That is undoubtedly so. But considering
the set up in which the amendments had to be made, it seems to us that even if
the new rule cannot be read as an express provision taking away the right of
second appeal on facts, it must in the circumstances be held that it does take
away that right by necessary intendment. The new rule provided for a second
appeal like the old rule but confined it to a question of law. The necessary
implication of the new rule therefore was that though a second appeal will continue
to lie as before its scope was cut down only to questions of law. We are
therefore of opinion that though the right of second appeal on facts is taken
away by the new rule 13 inserted in the Tax Rules, such right is taken away by
legislation by necessary intendment. In the circumstances we are of opinion
that the right of second appeal after the amendment must be confined in all
cases by necessary intendment to questions of law only. The contention under
this head also fails.
Re. (3):
Coming now to the last point with respect to
the Validating Act, we have not been able to understand how the Validating Act
can be said to be discriminatory in nature. A Validating Act is passed only
when certain things have been done which require validation. This is exactly
what the present Validating Act has done and we fail to see on what grounds it
can be said to be discriminatory. Even when the Finance Act of 1950 was passed
it would have been open to Parliament to leave the old assessments to be
carried on under the old procedure and by officers appointed under the old law
and such action could not be called discriminatory.
for the simple reason that the old
assessments 867 stand on a different footing from new assessments after the new
law comes into force. It is true that Parliament provided otherwise in this
case and the Finance Act of 1950 said that the old assessments would be carried
on by the corresponding officers under the Indian Income Tax Act, By mistake
however that provision was overlooked and the old assessments were made by the
old officers under the old law.
All that Parliament did by the Validating Act
was to allow the old assessments to be made under the procedure provided under
the old law and we can see no discrimination in the Validating Act on account
of this fact. We are therefore of opinion that the Validating Act is not hit by
Art. 14.
Further we have not been able to understand
how the validation is of no effect so far as the present cases are concerned.
The present cases are with reference to years 1940-48, that is before the
accounting year ending on March 31, 1949. The assessments in these cases were
carried on by the old officers under the old law and the Validating Act
specifically validates such assessments. In these Circumstances we have not
been able to understand how it can be said that these assessments have not been
validated by the Validating Act. The contention under this head must therefore
also fail.
The appeal fails and is hereby dismissed with
costs.
Appeal dismissed.
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