Swastik Oil Mills Ltd. Vs. H. B.
Munshi, Deputy Commissioner of Sales Tax, Bombay [1967] INSC 282 (29 November
1967)
29/11/1967 BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA BHARGAVA,
VISHISHTHA SHAH, J.C.
RAMASWAMI, V.
CITATION: 1968 AIR 843 1968 SCR (2) 492
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1972 SC 38 (8,11) D 1976 SC1115 (10,13) R
1976 SC1545 (17) R 1976 SC2136 (12,14)
ACT:
Revisional powers-suo motu exercise
of-limitations-if further inquiry to gather additional material permissible.
Bombay Sales Tax Act, 5 of 1946, Act 3 of
1953, s. 31, Act 51 of 1959, ss. 57, 77(1) (a), 77(3)-Scope of.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant was registered as a dealer
under the various Sales Tax Acts in force in Bombay from time to time i.e. Bombay
Acts 5 of 1946, 3 of 1953 and 51 of 1959. In the course of its assessments to
sales tax for the periods from 1st April, 1948 to 31st March, 1950, and from
1st April 1950 to 31st March, 1951, the appellant claimed exemption from tax,
inter alia, in respect of certain despatches of goods from its head office in
Bombay to its branches in other States. The Sales Tax Officer rejected these
claims but, in appeal, the Assistant Collector accepted the claim in respect of
the despatches to various branches though he rejected all other claims for
exemption. He also directed a refund of the excess 'tax collected from the
appellants.
While revision petitions filed by the
appellant against these orders were pending, a notice was issued to him on
January 7, 1963 by the Deputy Commissioner of Sales Tax in Form XXIV under s.
31 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1953, intimating the appellant that he proposed
to revise suo motu the orders passed by the Assistant Collector in so far as he
had allowed deduction in respect of the entire goods despatched to the
appellants' branches outside Maharashtra because, in so doing, he had
overlooked certain provisions of law which were specified in the notice. Tile
appellant filed a petition under Art. 226 of the Institution seeking to quash
the notice dated 7th January, 1963 but his petition was dismissed by the High
Court.
In the appeal to this Court it was contended
on behalf of the appellant, inter alia (i) that in exercise of the revisional
powers, the Deputy Commissioner, whether acting under the Sales Tax Act of
1946, or of 1953, or of 1959, could only proceed to take action on the basis of
the material already present on the record and was not entitled to act on
conjecture or to institute any enquiry so as to include additional material nor
to judge the correctness of the order sought to be revised; (ii) that the
notice in question was issued on 7th January, 1963, when the Act of 1959 had
already come into force and the Act of 1953 had been repealed; so that any
revisional jurisdiction could only be exercised by the Deputy Commissioner
under the Act of 1959 and not under the Act of 1953-, as the power under s. 57
of the Act of 1959 could only be exercised within five years from the date of
the order sought to be revised; the notice issued by the Deputy Commissioner
was time barred;
and (iii) that the proceedings to be
instituted were barred by time, because limitation of a reasonable time; within
which the revisional Powers are to be exercised must be implied in the statute
itself.
493
HELD : The proceedings initiated by the
Deputy Commissioner of Sales Tax against the appellant were not incompetent and
the High Court was right in refusing the writ sought by the appellant.
(i) Whenever a power is conferred on an
authority to revise an order, it is entitled to examine the correctness,
legality and propriety of the order and to pass such suitable orders as it may
thinkfit in the circumstances of the particular case. The proceedings for
revision, if started suo motu, must not be based on a mere conjecture and there
should be some ground for invoking the revisional powers. Once these powers are
invoked, the actual interference must be based on sufficient grounds and, if it
is considered necessary that some additional enquiry should be made to arrive
at a proper and just decision, there can be no bar to the revising authority
holding or directing a further enquiry and thereafter admitting additional
material. [496 A-C] The State of Kerala v. K. M. Cheria Ahdulla and Company,
[1965] 1 S.C.R. 601, explained and followed.
State of Andhra Pradesh v. T. G. Lakshmnaiah
Setty & Sons, 12 S.T.C. 663; disapproves.
In the present case,. the notice issued by
the Deputy Commissioner, on the face of it, disclosed the reasons which led him
to take proceedings for exercising his revisional powers suo motu, and it could
not be said on those facts that he was acting merely on conjecture. There was
no reason to think that, when proceeding with his inquiry, he would not keep
within the limitations indicated by this Court in K. M. Cheria Abdullas case.
(ii) The effect of s. 77(1) (a) of the Act of
1959 is to continue in force the Act of 1953 as well as: the Act of 1946 to the
extent to which they were in force when the Act of 1959 came into force for the
purposes of levy, assessment, reassessment and collection of sales-tax. Furthermore,
by virtue of s. 7(e) of the Bombay General Clauses Act, 1904, which was made
applicable to the repeal of the Act of 1953 by s. 77(3) of the 1959 Act, any
legal proceeding in respect of levy, imposition or recovery of tax is to
continue and any fresh investigation, legal proceeding or remedy could be
instituted as if there had been no repeal by the Act of 1959. Consequently, the
repeal of the Act of 1953 did not in any way affect the power of the Deputy
Commissioner to institute proceedings for revision suo motu against the
appellate order of the Assistant Collector which had been Passed in exercise of
his power under the Act of 1946. [499 C-500 B] Although the Deputy
Commissioner, in seeking to exercise revisional powers should have proceeded under
s. 22 of the Act of 1946 and not under s. 31 of the 1953 Act, this fact was
immaterial as the provisions of the two Sections were similar. [500 D-E] (iii)
Section 22 of the Act of 1946 and s. 31 of the Act of 1953 do not lay down any
period of limitation for the exercise of the power of revision by a Deputy
Commissioner suo motu and no such limitation could be read in the two Acts.
[500 G] The State of Orissa v. Debaki Debi and Others, 15 S.T.C.
153. Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay City
1 v. Narsee Nagsee & Co., 31 I.T.R. 164, Manordas Kalidas v. V. V. Tatke,
11 S.T.C, 87. Disesar House v. State of Bombay, 9 S.T.C. 654, distinguished.
494 Maharaj Kumar Kamal Singh v. C.I.T.,
Bihar and Orissa, 35 I.T.R. 1, referred to.
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal
No. 637 of 1967.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated
January 27, 1966 of the Bombay High Court in Misc. Application No. 112 of 1963.
S. T. Desai, G. L. Sanghi, B. Datta and O. C.
Mathur, for the appellant.
R. M. Hazarnavis, S. P. Nayar, and R. H.
Dhebar, for the respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Bhargava, J. The Swastik Oil Mills Ltd., appellant, carries on business of
manufacturing vegetable oils, soaps and other products and selling them in
India as well as exporting them outside India. It was registered as a dealer
under the various Sales Tax Acts in force in Bombay. The first of these Acts
was the Bombay Sales Tax Act 5 of 1946, which was replaced by th -Bombay Sales
Tax Act 3 of 1953. The third and the latest -Act now in force in Bombay is the
Bombay Sales Tax Act 51 of 1959. ,'The appellant was assessed to sales tax on
its turnover for the periods from 1st April, 1948 to 31st March, 1950, and from
1st April, 1950 to 31st March, 1951 on the basis of Returns of turnover
submitted by it. In these Returns, the appellant claimed exemption from tax in
respect of the turnover representing the despatches or transfer of goods from
its Head Office Bombay, to its various Depots or Branches in other States in
India, and also exemption in respect of sales which were alleged to have taken
place in the course of inter-State trade after 26th January, 1950. The Sales
Tax Officer in his order of assessment dated 2nd January, 1954 rejected both
these claims. The appellant went up in appeal before the Assistant Collector of
Sales Tax, who, in his appellate order dated 29th October, 1956, accepted the
claim of the appellant in respect of the despatches to its various Depots or
Branches in other States in India, but disallowed the claim in respect of the
alleged inter-State sales. As a result of partially allowing the claim of the
appellant, the Assistant Collector reduced the tax imposed by a sum of Rs.
19,240-15-6 for the period between 1st April,
1948 to 31st March, 1950, and Rs. 97,208/for the second period between 1st
April, 1950 to 31st March, 1951, and directed refund of these amounts to the
appellant. The revisions filed by the appellant against the rejection of its
claim in respect of inter-State sales were still pending, when, on 7th January,
1963, a notice was issued by the Deputy Commissioner of Sales Tax, Bombay City
Division, in Form XXIV under 495 section 31 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1953,
intimating the appellant that he proposed to revise suo motu the appellate orders
passed by the Assistant Collector of Sales Tax insofar as he had allowed
deduction, in respect of the entire goods despatched to its Branches in other
States outside Maharashtra, because, in so doing, he had overlooked the
provisions contained in proviso (b) to sub-clause (ii) of Rule 1 under
sub-section (3) of section 6 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 as amended by
the Bombay Sales Tax Amendment Act 48 of 1949. On receipt of this notice, the
appellant put in appearance before the Deputy Commissioner, who is the
respondent in this appeal, and raised several objections against the proposed revision
proceedings, making a request that the proceedings be dropped. Since the
respondent did not accept this request, the appellant filed a petition under
Article 226 of the Constitution in the High Court of Bombay challenging the
notice dated 7th January, 1963, with the prayer that the notice be quashed and
the respondent be restrained from taking any action against the appellant in
pursuance thereof. The petition was dismissed by the High Court and, now, on
certificate granted by that Court, the appellant has come up in this appeal to
this Court.
In this appeal, Mr. S. T. Desai, appearing on
behalf of the appellant, urged the same objections against the notice which
were the basis of the prayer for writ in the High Court, and we proceed to deal
with them in the order in which he has put them forward before us in his
submissions.
The first point urged by learned counsel was
that, in exercise of the revisional powers, the Deputy Commissioner of Sales
Tax, whether acting under the Sales Tax Act of 1946, or of 1953, or of 1959,
could only proceed to take action on the basis of the material already present
on the record and was not entitled to act on conjecture or to institute any
enquiry so as to include additional material in order to judge the correctness
of the order sought to be revised. In support of this proposition, learned
counsel referred us to a decision of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in State of
Andhra Pradesh v. T. G. Lakshmaiah Setty & Sons.(1). In that case, the
Deputy Commissioner, in exercising the revisional jurisdiction, was found by
the High Court to have based his assessment on guess-work, and the Court held
that "this conjecture could not be a _justification for seeking to revise
the order of the assessing authority. If the Deputy Commissioner could, on the
material before him, find data for revising the assessment, it was open to him
to do so. It must be made clear that he has no jurisdiction to travel beyond
the record that is available to the assessing authority and the basis should be
found on the record already in existence." We are unable to accept this
principle laid down, by that High Court as (1) 12 S.T.C. 663.
496 correct. Whenever a power is conferred on
an authority to revise an order, the authority is entitled to examine the
correctness, legality and propriety of the order and to pass such suitable
orders as the authority may think fit in the circumstances of the particular
case before it. When exercising such powers, there is no reason why the
authority should not be entitled to hold an enquiry or direct an enquiry to be
held and, for that purpose, admit additional material. The proceedings for
revision, if started suo motu, must not, of course, be based on a mere
conjecture and there should be some ground for invoking the revisional powers.
Once those powers are invoked, the actual interference must be based on
sufficient grounds and, if it is considered necessary that some additional enquiry
should be made to arrive at a proper and just decision, there can be no bar to
the revising authority holding a further enquiry or directing such an enquiry
to be held by some other appropriate authority. This principle has been clearly
recognised by this Court in The State of Kerala v.
K. M. Cheria Abdulla and Company(1). In that
case, subsection (2) of s. 12 of the Madras General Sales Tax Act, 1939, which
came up for interpretation, empowered the Deputy Commissioner, suo motu or
under certain circumstances on an application, to call for and examine the
record of any order passed or proceeding recorded under the provisions of that
Act by any officer subordinate to him, for the purpose of satisfying himself as
to the legality or propriety of such order, or as to the regularity of such
proceeding, and to pass such order with respect thereto as he thought fit.
This Court held :"There is no doubt that
the revising authority may only call for the record of the order or the
proceeding, and the record alone may be scrutinised for ascertaining the
legality or propriety of an order or regularity of the proceeding. But there is
nothing in the Act that for passing an order in exercise of his revisional
jurisdiction, if the revising authority is satisfied that the subordinate
officer has committed an illegality or impropriety in the order or irregularity
in the proceeding, be cannot make or direct any further enquiry." It was
further held "It is, therefore, not right baldly to propound that, in passing
an order in the exercise of his revisional jurisdiction, the' Deputy
Commissioner must, in all cases, be restricted to the record maintained by the
officer subordinate to him, and can never make enquiry outside that
record." (1) [1965] 1 S.C.R. 601.
497 While thus explaining the scope of the
revisional power, the Court also indicated the limitations within which such
power can be exercised, holding :" It would not invest the revising
authority with power to launch upon enquiries at large so as either to trench
upon the powers which are expressly reserved by the Act or by the Rules to
other authorities or to ignore the limitations inherent in the exercise of
those powers. For instance, the power to reassess escaped turnover is primarily
vested by rule 17 in the assessing officer and is to be exercised subject to
certain limitations, and the revising authority will not be competent to make
an enquiry for reassessing a taxpayer.
Similarly, the power to make a best judgment
assessment is vested by section 9 (2) (b) in the assessing authority and has to
be exercised in the manner provided. It would not be open to the revising
authority to assume that power." (p. 887).
In the present case, the notice issued by the
Deputy Commissioner of Sales Tax, on the face of it, discloses the reasons
which led him to take proceedings for exercising his revisional powers suo
motu, and it cannot be said on those facts that he was acting merely on
conjecture. The Deputy Commissioner has not yet proceeded further under the
notice to make the assessment. We have no doubt that, when the Deputy
Commissioner does make an enquiry, if any, for the purpose of exercising his
revisional powers, he will keep within the limitations indicated by this Court
in the case cited above. The notice cannot be quashed or the proceedings
restrained merely on the ground that the Deputy Commissioner may have to hold
some enquiries in order to properly exercise his revisional jurisdiction. Mr.
Desai on behalf of the appellant emphasised the circumstance that in s. 12(2)
of the Madras General Sales Tax Act, which was considered by this Court, the
Deputy Commissioner's power was expressed by stating that he may pass such
order as he, thinks fit, while no such words occur in the corresponding
provisions in the Bombay Sales Tax Acts with which we are concerned, but we do
not think that this circumstance makes any difference. A revising authority
necessarily has the power to make such order as, in the opinion of that
authority, the case calls for when the authority is satisfied that it is an
appropriate case for interference in exercise of revisional powers. In fact, in
S. 12(2) of the Madras General Sales Tax Act, the Deputy Commissioner, when
exercising his powers, was to call for the record of the order or proceeding
before passing any order which he thought fit, so that there was an expression
used which could have been interpreted as limiting his powers to the
examination of the record only without holding any further 498 enquiry, and,
yet, this Court held that the, Deputy Commissioner could not be restricted to
the record and was empowered to make an enquiry outside that record. In the
provisions relating to revisions in the three Bombay Sales Tax Acts, there are
no such words indicating any limitation;
and that would be an additional reason for
holding that there can be no bar to an appropriate enquiry being held by the
Deputy Commissioner when seeking to exercise his revisional powers suo motu.
The next point urged by learned counsel was
that the notice in question was issued on the 7th January, 1963, when the Act
of 1959 had already come into force and the Act of 1953 had been repealed, so
that if any revisional jurisdiction could be exercised by the Deputy
Commissioner, it could only be under the Act of 1959 and not under the Act of
1953. On this basis, advantage was sought to be taken of the circumstance that,
under the Act of 1959, the revisional powers conferred by s. 57 can be
exercised within five years from the date of the order sought to be revised and,
at the relevant time in 1963, could only be exercised within two years from the
date of that order. The order sought to be revised was passed on 29th October,
1956, so that the notice to exercise revisional powers was being issued more
than 6 years after that order had been passed. It appears to us that this
submission is adequately met by the provisions contained in s. 77 of the Act of
1959. The Act of 1953 was repealed by s. 76 of the Act of 1959 and then s. 77
lays down :
"(1) Notwithstanding the repeal by s. 76
of any of the laws referred to therein,(a) those laws (including any earlier
law continued in force under any provisions thereof), and all rules,
regulations, orders, notifications, forms and notices issued under those laws
and in force immediately before the appointed day shall, subject to the
provisions of s. 42 continue to have effect for the purposes of the levy,
assessment, reassessment, collection, refund or set-off of any tax, or the
granting of a draw-back in respect thereof, or the imposition of any penalty,
which levy, assessment, reassessment, collection, refund, setoff, draw-back or
penalty relates to any period before the appointed day, or for any other
purpose whatsoever connected with or incidental to any of the purposes aforesaid;
499 (3) Without prejudice to the provisions
contained in the foregoing sub-sections and section thereto, section 7 of the
Bombay General Clauses Act, 1904, shall apply in relation to the repeal of any
of the laws referred to in section 76 as if the law so repealed had been an
enactment within the meaning of section 7 of that Act." (We have only
quoted the portions of s. 77 with which we are concerned).
The effect of s. 77 (1)(a) is to continue in
force the Bombay Sales Tax Act of 1953 as well as the Bombay Sales Tax Act of
1946 to the extent to which they were in force when this Act of 1959 came into
force for the purposes mentioned in that clause. These purposes included levy,
assessment, reassessment and collection of sales-tax, so that the proceedings
against the appellant, which had been initiated under the Act of 1946,
continued to be governed by the provisions of that Act. Section 7 of the Bombay
General Clauses Act 1 of 1904, which was made applicable 'by s.
77(3) to the repeal of the Act of 1953,
includes the following provisions : " Where this Act, or any Bombay Act,
or Maharashtra Act, made after the commencement of this Act, repeals any
enactment hitherto made or hereafter to be made, then, unless a different
intention appears, the repeal shall not(c) affect any right, privilege,
obligation or liability acquired, accrued or incurred under any enactment so
repealed; or (e) affect any investigation, legal proceeding or remedy in
respect of any such right, privilege, obligation, liability, penalty,
forfeiture or punishment as aforesaid, and any such investigation, legal
proceeding or remedy may be instituted, continued or enforced, and any such
penalty, forfeiture or punishment may be imposed, as if the repealing Act had
not been passed." Very clearly, the repeal of the Act of 1953 by the Act
of 1959 did not affect the rights and liabilities of the assessee to tax under
the Act of 1953 or the Act of 1946 in respect of the turnover which became
liable to sales-tax under the Act of 1946. The effect of clause (e) of s. 7 of
the Bombay General Clauses Act 500 further is that any legal proceeding in
respect of levy, imposition or recovery of that tax is to continue and any
fresh investigation, legal proceeding or remedy could be instituted as if there
had been no repeal by the Act of 1959. Consequently, the repeal of the Act of
1953 did not in any way affect the power of the Deputy Commissioner to
institute proceedings for revision suo motu against the appellate order of the
Assistant Collector which had been passed in exercise of his powers under the
Act of 1946. It is true, as urged by Mr. Desai in the alternative, that, in
fact, the proceedings should have been taken not under S. 31 of the Act of
1953, but under S. 22 of the Act of 1946.
This is so, because when the Act of 1946 was
repealed by the Act of 1953, similar provisions were made in the Act of 1953 to
continue in force the provisions of the Act of 1946 in respect of rights and
liabilities which may have accrued or have been incurred under the Act of 1946.
Section 48(2) and S. 49(1) clearly contained provisions indicating that, in
respect of a liability to tax under the Act of 1946, the rights and liabilities
of the assessee had to be determined in accordance with the provisions of the
Act of 1946 and all legal proceedings or remedies in respect thereof had also
to be taken under the same Act. Consequently, the Deputy Commissioner, in
seeking to exercise revisional powers against the order of the Assistant
Collector passed under the Act of 1946, had to proceed under S. 22 of the Act
of 1946. That, however, is not at all material, because the provisions of S. 22
of the Act of 1946 are quite similar to those of s. 31 of the Act of 1953. The
mere incorrect mention of S. 31 of the Act of 1953 in the notice is immaterial.
The Deputy Commissioner has the jurisdiction and power to revise the order
under S. 22 of the Act of 1946 and, consequently the proceedings initiated by
him are not without jurisdiction.
The last submission made by Mr. Desai was that,
if it be held that the revisional powers are sought to be exercised under the
Act of 1946, it should be held that the proceedings sought to be instituted are
barred by time, because limitation of a reasonable time, within which the
revisional powers are to be exercised, must be implied in the statute itself.
Section 22 of the Act of 1946 and s. 31 of the Act of 1953 do not lay down any
limitation for exercise of the power of revision by a Deputy Commissioner sue
motu, and we are not prepared to accept that any such limitation must be
necessarily read in the two Acts. In support of his proposition that such a
limitation must be read by us, Mr. Desai referred to the decision of this Court
in the State of Orissa v. Debaki Debi and Others(1). That case, however, has no
relevance at all, because, in the Orissa Sales Tax Act, there was a proviso in
general terms laying down that no order "assessing the (1) 15 S.T.C. 153.
501 amount of tax shall be passed after the
lapse of 36 months from the expiry of the period", and it was held that
this provision was, in substance, not a real proviso to the section in which it
was placed, but was, in fact, a period of limitation prescribed for all orders
of assessment made under any other provision of the Act. In the Bombay Sales
Tax Acts of 1946 and 1953, there is no such general provision prescribing a
period of limitation for making an assessment and, even though the effect of
the order of the Dy. Commissioner passed in revision may be to bring about an
assessment to tax of turnover which was set aside by the Assistant Collector in
appeal., such an assessment does not come under any provision relating to
limitation.
The decision of the Bombay High Court in
Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay City 1 v. Narsee Nagsee & Co. (1) is
also similarly inapplicable. In that case, section 11 of the Business Profits
Tax Act, 1947, which had no limitation prescribed for an order of assessment,
was held to be governed by the 4 years' period of limitation which was
prescribed under s. 14 for issue of a notice for reassessment. The decision in
that case turned on the fact that, if proceeding for reassessment could not be
started after the expiry of four years from the end of the chargeable
accounting period concerned, it would be totally unreasonable to hold that the
first assessment of tax can be made after the expiry of that period. The case
before us relates to exercise of revisional powers and does not deal with the
question of the first assessment to be made when the Return is initially filed
by an assessee. In fact, when a revisional power is to be exercised, we think
that the only limitations, to which that power is subject, are those indicated
by this Court in K. M. Cheria Abdulla & Co's(2) case. These limitations are
that the revising authority should not trench upon the powers which are
expressly reserved by the Acts or by the Rules to other authority and should
not ignore the limitations inherent in the exercise of those powers. In the
present case, the Deputy Commissioner, when seeking to exercise his revisional
powers, is clearly not encroaching upon the powers reserved to other
authorities. Under the Act of 1946, the first assessment is made by the
Sales-Tax Officer under S. 11. If information comes into his possession that
any turnover in respect of sales or supplies of any goods chargeable to tax has
escaped assessment in any year or has been underassessed or assessed at a lower
rate or any deductions have been wrongly made therefrom, proceedings can be
taken afresh under S. 11A. On the face of it, if a first assessment order is
made under s. 11 and any turnover escapes assessment, the appropriate
provision, under which action is to be taken for assessing that turnover to
tax, is S. 11A.
There is, however, no provision under which
the power now sought to be exercised by (1) 31 I.T.R. 164.
(2) [1965] 1 S.C.R. 601.
502 the Deputy Commissioner in the case
before us could have been exercised by any other authority. In this case, as we
have indicated earlier, the first assessment of tax was made by the Sales Tax
Officer, and the turnover now in question was assessed to tax by him. Having
once assessedthat turnover to tax, he could .not initiate a fresh proceeding in
respect of it under s. 11A. The ,assessment made by him was set aside in appeal
by the Assistant Collector and it is this order of the Assistant Collector
which is sought to be revised by the Deputy Commissioner. This is, therefore,
not a case where the powers are being exercised for the purpose of assessing or
reassessing an escaped turnover. The case is one where the revisional powers
are sought to be exercised to correct what appears to be an incorrect order
passed in appeal by the Assistant Collector, and, for such a purpose,
proceedings could not possibly have been taken under s. 11A. In exercising his
revisional powers, therefore, the Deputy Commissioner is not encroaching upon
the jurisdiction of any other authority specially entrusted with taking such
proceedings.
In this connection, Mr. Desai relied on a
decision of the Bombay High Court in Manordas Kalidas v. V. V. Tatke(1).
The decision in that case also related to
this very Act of 1946, but the point to be kept in view is that in that case,
the revisional power was sought to be exercised in respect of the original
assessment order passed by the Sales Tax Officer under S. 11 of the Act. It was
in these circumstances that the Bombay High Court, after referring to its two
decisions in Bisesar House v. State of Bombay (2 and Commr. of Income-tax v.
Narsee Nagsee & Co. held :,,In neither of those two cases, revisional
powers were sought to be exercised, but the principle of those cases must, in
our judgment, apply for the same reasons to the exercise of revisional
jurisdiction, and that jurisdiction must be exercised w ithin a reasonable
period, and the yard-stick of reasonableness will be the period prescribed for
re-assessment." It appears that in view of the fact that proceedings for
reassessment could have been taken under s. 11A in that case and, instead, revisional
powers were sought to be exercised, that Court held that the exercise of such
revisional powers must be, governed by the same limitation which applied to the
exercise of power of reassessment. In fact, the correct principle that should
have been applied in that case is the principle mentioned by us earlier laid
down in K. M. Cheria Abdulla & Co.(4). The revision should have been held
to be incompetent on the ground that the power (1) 11 S.T.C. 87. (2) 9 S.T.C.
654.
(3) 31 I.T. R. 164. (4) [1965] 1 S.C.R. 601.
503 was sought to be exercised for assessment
of escaped turnover which had not 'been assessed at all at the initial stage of
-assessment under s. 11 and proceedings under s.
11A could have been competently initiated for
bringing that turnover to tax. Instead, the Court equated the proceeding in
revision with the proceeding for reassessment and applied the 4-year period of
limitation which was prescribed only for reassessment and not for exercise of
revisional power.
In our opinion, the ultimate decision in that
case was perfectly correct, but we are unable to affirm the vie,%, that the
revisional power is governed by any period of limitation laid down in s. 11A
for proceedings for reassessment of escaped turn over.
Reference, in this connection, was also made
to a decision of this Court in Maharaj Kumar Kamal Singh v. Commissioner of
Income-tax, Bihar and Orissa(1), in which the Court dealt with a case of an
assessee whose income to the extent of Rs. 93,604/representing interest on
arrears of rent was omitted to be brought to assessment by the Income-tax
Officer.
Subsequently, in another case, the Privy
Council held that interest on arrears of rent payable in respect of
agricultural land was not agricultural income and, consequently, the Income-tax
Officer initiated reassessment proceedings under s. 34(1) (b) of the Income-tax
Act. The circumstance relied upon by learned counsel for the appellant was that
the omission by the Income-tax Officer to bring to assessment that interest was
part of an order made by him after his initial assessment order had been set
aside by the Appellate Assistant Commissioner who directed a fresh assessment,
allowing the appeal against that order. In that case, it was held that the
escaped income could be brought to tax under s. 34 of the Income Tax Act; and,
on the basis of this decision, it was urged that, similarly, in the present
case, the turnover now sought to be brought to tax in exercise of revisional
powers could be re-assessed under s. 11A. This argument ignores the
circumstance that, in that case, the last order, under which the income from
interest had been exempted from tax, was an order made by the Income Tax
Officer himself, though after the assessment proceedings had been remanded to
him by the Appellate Assistant Commissioner. Since the income had escaped
assessment under an order passed by the Income-tax Officer himself, he could
competently take proceedings under section
34. In the case before us, the turnover of
the assessee now sought to be taxed in the revisional proceedings did not
escape liability to tax under the orders of the Sales-tax Officer and, on the
other hand, was actually taxed by him, which imposition of tax was set aside in
appeal.
Consequently, the Sales Tax Officer could not
possibly take proceedings under s. II A in respect of that turnover.
(1) 35 I.T.R. 1.
504 For these reasons, we hold that the
proceedings initiated by the Deputy Commissioner of Sales Tax against the
appellant are not incompetent and the High Court was right in refusing the writ
sought by the appellant. The appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
R.K.P.S. Appeal dismissed.
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