Bhagwan Dass Jain Vs. Union of India
[1981] INSC 28 (11 February 1981)
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J) VENKATARAMIAH, E.S.
(J) SEN, A.P. (J)
CITATION: 1981 AIR 907 1981 SCR (2) 808 1981
SCC (2) 135 1981 SCALE (1)276
CITATOR INFO :
R 1989 SC1949 (8) R 1990 SC 85 (23) R 1990
SC1637 (46) E&D 1990 SC1664 (6) RF 1991 SC1676 (31)
ACT:
Income-tax Act, 1961, S. 23(2)(1) &
Constitution of India 1950, Seventh Schedule List I, Entry 82 and List II,
Entry 49-Income-Income from house property-Self-occupied property-Whether
amounts to income-Legislative practice- Interpretation of entries in Lists.
Words and Phrases-'Income'-Meaning
of-Constitution of India, 1950, Seventh Schedule List I, Entry 82.
HEADNOTE:
Section 22 to 27 of the Income-tax Act, 1961
relate to the levy and computation of tax on income from house property.
Section 23(2)(i) states that where the property consists of a house in the
occupation of the owner for the purposes of his residence, the annual value of
such house shall first be determined in the same manner as if the property had
been let and further be reduced to one half of the amount so determined or one
thousand eight hundred rupees whichever is less. Where the property consists of
more than one house in the occupation of the owner for the purposes of his own
residence. Section 23(2)(ii) provides that the provisions of clause (i) shall
apply only in respect of one of such houses which the assessee may at his
option specify in that behalf.
The petitioner, an assessee under the Act,
contended before the High Court in a petition under Article 226 of the
Constitution, that inclusion of any amount under section 23(2) of the Act in
his income was unconstitutional as there could be no income at all in such a
case accruing to him in a true sense of that term and that the liability that
was sought to be imposed under the Act in respect of his residential house was
in its pith and substance a tax on building falling under Entry 49 of List II
of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution and hence Parliament could not
impose the said liability under a law made in exercise of its legislative power
under Entry 82 of List I of the Seventh Schedule which authorised it only to
levy 'taxes on income other than agricultural income'. The High Court rejected
the plea and dismissed the Writ Petition.
In the Special Leave Petition to this Court
it was contended on behalf of the petitioner that as he was not deriving any
monetary benefit by residing in his own house, no tax could be levied on him,
on the ground that he is deriving income from that house, and that the word
'income' only means realisation of monetary benefit and that in the absence of
any such realisation, the inclusion of any amount by way of notional income
under section 23(2) of the Act in the chargeable income was impermissible as it
was outside the scope of Entry 82 of List I of the Seventh Schedule to the
Constitution.
HELD : 1. The tax levied under the Income-tax
Act is on the income (though computed in an artificial way) from house property
and not on house property. Entry 49 of List II of the Seventh Schedule to the
Constitution is not, therefore, attracted. The levy in question squarely falls
under Entry 82 of List I of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution.
[816 C-D]
2. The expression 'income' means 'a thing
that comes in'. Income is also defined as the gain derived from land capital or
labour or any two or more of them. Even in its ordinary economic sense, the
expression 'income' include not merely what is received or what comes in by exploiting
the use of a property but also what one saves by using it oneself. That which
can be converted into income can be reasonably regarded as giving rise to
income.
[812 B, 816 B] 3.(i) The Government of India
Act, 1935 was enacted when the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 was in force.
Section 9 of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 provided for levy of income tax on
the basis of the bona fide annual value of the property even when it was in the
occupation of the assessee for the purposes of his own residence. While
enacting Entry 54 of List I of the Seventh Schedule to the Government of India
Act, 1935 the British Parliament must have had in its view the Indian
Income-tax Act, 1922 which was probably the only law relating to tax on incomes
in force in British India. Similarly the Constituent Assembly while enacting
Entry 82 of List I of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution must have
understood that the word 'income' used in that Entry would in any event include
within its scope all items which came within the definition of income and were
subjected to charge in the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 which was in force at
the time the Constitution was adopted. [815 D-F] (ii) The Constitution makers
had the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 in their view is borne out from Article
270(1) of the Constitution which provides for collection of taxes on income by
the Government of India and distribution thereof between the Union and the
States. Article 366(i) which defines 'agricultural income' as defined for the
purposes of the enactments relating to Indian Income-tax and Article 366(29)
which defines 'tax on income' as including a tax in the nature of excess
profits tax. In the circumstances it would not be wrong to construe the word
income in Entry 82 as including all items which were taxable under the
contemporaneous law relating to tax on incomes which was in force at the time
when the Constitution was enacted. [815 G- 816 A]
4. This Court in Navinchandra Mafatlal v.
Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay City 1955 SCR 829, held that the word
'income' in Entry 82 is capable of a wider meaning than what was given to it in
the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 or the English Act of 1918. [814 H]
5. In Australia the annual value of the tax
payers' residence owned by himself or used rent free is taken for consideration
for purposes of levy of income tax. In England too in the case of a residence
of the assessee, computation of income is on the basis of presumed income. [815
A] Resch v. The Federal Commissioner of Taxation, 66 C.L.R. 198 at p. 224 and
Governors of the Rotunda Hospital Dublin v. Coman (7 T.C. 517 at 586 587)
Simon's Income tax (second Edn.) Vol. I p. 502 referred to.
6. It is well-settled that the entries in the
Lists in the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution should not be read in a
narrow or restricted sense and each and every subject mentioned in the entries
should be read as including within its scope all ancillary and subsidiary
matters which can fairly and reasonably be comprehended in it. Words in the
Constitution conferring legislative power should receive a liberal construction
and should be interpreted in their widest amplitude. [811 H-812 B]
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Special Leave
Petition No. 8720 of 1979.
From the Judgment and Order dated 27-10-79 of
the Madhya Pradesh High Court in M.P. No. 636/78.
Shiv Dayal, Mrs. Bagga and Mr. S. Bagga for
the Petitioner.
The Order of the Court was delivered by
VENKATARAMIAH, J.-The short question which arises for consideration in this
petition for special leave to appeal filed under Article 136 of the
Constitution is whether it is open to the Income-tax Officer while computing
the liability of an assessee to tax under the Income-tax Act, 1961 (hereinafter
referred to as 'the Act') to include in the income of the assessee any amount
calculated in accordance with section 23(2) of the Act in respect of a house in
the occupation of the assessee for the purposes of his own residence. The
petitioner who is an assessee under the Act contended before the High Court of
Madhya Pradesh in a petition filed under Article 226 of the Constitution that
inclusion of any amount under section 23(2) of the Act in his income was
unconstitutional as there could be no income at all in such a case accruing to
him in the true sense of that term, the liability that was sought to be imposed
under the Act in respect of his residential house was, therefore, in its pith
and substance a tax on building falling under Entry 49 of List II of the
Seventh Schedule to the Constitution and hence Parliament could not impose the
said liability under a law made in exercise of its legislative power under
Entry 82 of List I of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution which authorised
it only to levy taxes on income other than agricultural income. The High Court rejected
the plea of the petitioner and dismissed the writ petition. The petitioner has
now applied to this Court for special leave to appeal against the decision of
the High Court.
When the petition came up for hearing on
February 5, 1981 before us, we did not find that there was any ground to grant
special leave to appeal but since the case was argued with some persistence, we
decided to give reasons for rejecting the prayer of the petitioner which we
proceed to give hereunder :
811 Section 4 of the Act lays down that where
any Central Act enacts that income-tax shall be charged for any assessment year
at any rate or rates, income-tax at that rate or those rates shall be charged
for that year in accordance with, and subject to the provisions of the Act in
respect of the total income of the previous year or previous years, as the case
may be, of every person. Section 14 of the Act mentions 'income from house
property' as one of the heads of income liable to charge. Sections 22 to 27 of
the Act relate specifically to the levy and computation of tax on income from
house property. Section 22 provides that the annual value of property
consisting of any buildings or lands appurtenant thereto of which the assessee
is the owner, other than such portions of such property as he may occupy for
the purposes of any business or profession carried on by him the profits of
which are chargeable to income-tax, shall be chargeable to income-tax under the
head "income from house property". Section 23(2)(i) of the Act states
that where the property consists of a house in the occupation of the owner for
the purposes of his own residence, the annual value of such house shall first
be determined in the same manner as if the property had been let and further be
reduced by one-half of the amount so determined or one thousand and eight
hundred rupees, whichever is less. Section 23(2) (ii) of the Act provides that
where the property consists of more than one house in the occupation of the
owner for the purposes of his own residence, the provisions of clause (i) of
section 23(2) shall apply only in respect of one of such houses, which the
assessee may, at his option, specify in that behalf. There are some other
ancillary and incidental provisions in the Act dealing with the computation of
the annual value of such property with which we are not concerned in the
present petition.
The argument urged on behalf of the
petitioner is that as the petitioner is not deriving any monetary benefit by
residing in his own house, no tax can be levied on him on the ground that he is
deriving income from that house. It is contended that the word 'income' only
means realisation of monetary benefit and that in the absence of any such
realisation by the assessee, the inclusion of any amount by way of notional
income under section 23(2) of the Act in the chargeable income was
impermissible, as it was outside the scope of Entry 82 of List I of the Seventh
Schedule to the Constitution.
Entry 82 of List I of the Seventh Schedule to
the Constitution empowers Parliament to levy 'taxes on income other than
agricultural income'. Now it is well-settled that the entries in the list in
the 812 Seventh Schedule to the Constitution should not be read in a narrow or
restricted sense and each and every subject mentioned in the entries should be
read as including within its scope all ancillary and subsidiary matters which
can fairly and reasonably be comprehended in it. Words in the Constitution
conferring legislative power should receive a liberal construction and should
be interpreted in their widest amplitude.
The expression 'income' according to Oxford
Dictionary means 'a thing that comes in'. Income may also be defined as the
gain derived from land, capital or labour or any two or more of them.
In Resch v. The Federal Commissioner of
Taxation Dixon, J. of the High Court of Australia observed :
"The subject of the income tax has not
been regarded as income in the restricted sense which contrasts gains of the
nature of income with capital gains, or actual receipts with increases of
assets or wealth. The subject has rather been regarded as the substantial gains
of persons or enterprises considered over intervals of time and ascertained or
estimated by standards appearing sufficiently just, but nevertheless practical
and sometimes concerned with avoidance or evasion more than with accuracy or
precision of estimation. To include the annual value of the taxpayer's
residence owned by himself or used rent free and to fix it at five. percent of
the capital value has not been considered to introduce a new subject
[Hardinge's Case (1917) 23 C.L.R. 119]. To treat part of the undistributed
profits earned during the current year as part of the assessable income of the
shareholder imports no new subject [Cornell's case (1920) 29 C.L.R. 39 cf.
Kellow-Falkiner Pty. Ltd. v. Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1928) 34 A.L.R.
276], nor does it to substitute, in the case of a foreign- controlled business,
for taxable income ordinarily calculated a percentage of gross receipts fixed
by the discretionary judgment of the Commissioner [British Imperial Oil Cases
(1925) 35 C.L.R. 422; (1926) 38 C.L.R. 153]. (emphasis supplied) In Simon's
Income Tax (Second Edition) Volume I, page 502 dealing with the question of
computation of income under Schedule 'A' to the English Income-tax Act, which
related to tax on the income attributable to property, it is stated as
follows:- 813 "It is now clear however, that (1) income tax is but one tax
imposed by the Income Tax Acts;
(2) income tax is a tax upon income; and (3)
Sched. A is but one of five Schedules which provide varying methods of
estimating the measure of that income from different sources for the purposes
of charge to tax.
The theory behind Sched. A is that the
possession of an interest in property gives rise to income, a theory which is
not always borne out in fact. That there may be no income in fact is
disregarded when the assessment is made. The actual or hypothetical income has
to be measured by some standard for the purposes of taxation and the standard
prescribed is the annual value. This principle has been subject to adverse
comment, but once the theory is appreciated, the method may be understood and
any confusion of thought, created by the words of the charging section,
dispelled. The use to which land is put does not (apart from the excepted
concerns mentioned in the proviso to para. 1 of Sched. A above) prevent it from
being assessed under Sched. A; but if a trade which is not one of those
excepted concerns is carried on property which is owned by the trader and is
assessed under Sched. A, an allowance for the annual value is made in computing
the profits of the trade". (emphasis supplied) In the Governors of the
Rotunda Hospital, Dublin v.
Coman which was a case arising from Ireland,
Lord Atkinson observed thus :
"It would, I think, be well to bear in
mind that, to use Lord Macnaghten's words in his celebrated judgment in the
London County Council v. The Attorney General (4 T.C. 265) (1901 A.C. 35),
"Income Tax....
"is a tax on income". When the
amount of the income to be taxed under the Act of 1842 and the Acts amending it
comes to be measured, different standards are selected, and the words
"profits or gains" are used in reference to all the Schedules in the
Act of 1842 to describe the income, the subject of charge. The standard
selected as a measure of the amount of the income to be taxed under Schedule A
in respect of lands, tenements, hereditaments and heritages capable of
occupation is the annual value. If the owner of such pro- 814 perties as these
should be himself in occupation of them, it by no means follows that he will,
in fact, derive from them an income equal to this annual value;
but, as he has the use and enjoyment of the
properties, it is, for the purposes of the Statute, presumed that he does
derive from them an income equal in amount to this annual value, and the tax is
accordingly, under Schedule A, assessed upon this presumed income".
(emphasis supplied).
In Navinchandra Mafatlal v. The Commissioner
of Income- tax, Bombay City(1) while justifying the levy of income tax on
capital gains under section 12-B of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 enacted by
the Central Legislature in exercise of the power conferred under Entry No. 54
of List I of the Seventh Schedule to the Government of India Act, 1935
corresponding to Entry 82 of List I of the Seventh Schedule to the
Constitution, Das, J. (as he then was) having observed at page 837 thus :
"What, then, is the ordinary, natural
and grammatical meaning of the word "income"? According to the
dictionary it means "a thing that comes in". (See Oxford Dictionary,
Vol. V, page 162; Stroud, Vol. II, pages 14-16). In the United States of
America and in Australia both of which also are English speaking countries the
word "income" is understood in a wide sense so as to include a
capital gain. Reference may be made to Eisner v. Macomber (1920) 252 U.S. 189;
64 L.Ed. 521, Merchants' Loan & Trust Co. v. Smietanka (1925) 255 U.S. 509;
65 L.Ed. 751, and United States v. Stewart (1940) 311 U.S. 60; 85 L. Ed. 40,
and Resch. v. Federal Commissioner of Taxation (1942) 66 C.L.R. 198.
In each of these cases very wide meaning was
ascribed to the word "income" as its natural meaning" proceeded
to hold at page 838 :
"As already observed, the word should be
given its widest connotation in view of the fact that it occurs in a
legislative head conferring legislative power".
In the above case this Court held that the
word "income" in Entry No. 54 of List I of the Seventh Schedule to
the Government of India Act, 1935 should be given a meaning wider than the
connotation given to it in the English Income-tax Act, 1918 under which income
attributable to property was chargeable under Schedule 'A' thereof.
815 Now coming to the specific question of
the charge arising under section 23(2) of the Act it is already seen that in
Australia the annual value of the tax payer's residence owned by himself or
used rent free is taken for consideration for purposes of levy of income tax.
In England too in the case of a residence of the assessee, computation of
income is made on the basis of presumed income. In D. M. Vakil v. Commissioner
of Income-tax which was a case arising under the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922,
the High Court of Bombay held that under section 9 of that Act the tax was
payable by an assessee in respect of the bona fide annual value of the property
irrespective of the question whether he received that value or not. The High
Court of Gujarat has also taken the same view in Sakarlal Balabhai v. Income
Tax Officer, Special Investigation Circle IV, Ahmedabad & Anr.
There is one other circumstance which
persuades us to take the view that computation of income for purposes of levy
of income tax in accordance with section 23(2) of the Act is justifiable under
Entry 82 of List I of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution. It is to be
borne in mind that the Government of India Act, 1935 was enacted when the
Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 was in force. Section 9 of the Indian Income-tax
Act, 1922 provided for levy of income tax on the basis of the bona fide annual
value of the property even when it was in the occupation of the assessee for
the purposes of his own residence. While enacting entry 54 of list I of the
Seventh Schedule to the Government of India Act, 1935, the British Parliament
must have had in its view the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 which was probably
the only law relating to tax on incomes in force in British India then.
Similarly the Constituent Assembly while enacting Entry 82 of List I of the
Seventh Schedule to the Constitution must have understood that the word
'income' used in that Entry would in any event include within its scope all
items which came within the definition of income and were subjected to charge
in the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 which was in force at the time the
Constitution was adopted. That the Constitution makers had the Indian Income-
tax Act, 1922 in their view is borne out from Article 270(1) of the
Constitution which provides for collection of taxes on income by the Government
of India and distribution thereof between the Union and the States, Article
366(1) which defines 'agricultural income' as agricultural income as defined
for the purposes of the enactments relating to Indian Income-tax and Article
366(29) which defines 'tax on income' as including a tax in the nature of an
excess profits tax. In the circumstances it 816 would not be wrong to construe
the word 'income' in Entry 82 as including all items which were taxable under
the contemporaneous law relating to tax on incomes which was in force at the
time when the Constitution was enacted when as observed by this Court in the
case of Navinchandra Mafatlal (supra) the word 'income' in Entry 82 is capable
of a wider meaning than what was given to it in the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922
or the English Act of 1918.
Even in its ordinary economic sense, the
expression 'income' includes not merely what is received or what comes in by
exploiting the use of a property but also what one saves by using it oneself.
That which can be converted into income can be reasonably regarded as giving
rise to income.
The tax levied under the Act is on the income
(though computed in an artificial way) from house property in the above sense
and not on house property. Entry 49 of List II of the Seventh Schedule to the
Constitution is not, therefore, attracted. The levy in question squarely falls
under Entry 82 of List I of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution.
Hence we do not find any merit in the
contentions urged on behalf of the petitioner.
For the foregoing reasons, the leave prayed
for is refused and the petition is dismissed.
N.V.K. Petition dismissed.
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