Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
GURBAKSH SINGH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA & OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT27/01/1976
BENCH:
UNTWALIA, N.L.
BENCH:
UNTWALIA, N.L.
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
GUPTA, A.C.
CITATION:
1976 AIR 1115 1976 SCR (3) 247
1976 SCC (2) 181
CITATOR INFO :
F 1977 SC 540 (14)
ACT:
Bengal Finance (Sales Tax) Act, 1941 as extended to the
Union Territory of Delhi-Sections 11, 11A and 20 Scope of.
HEADNOTE:
Section 11 of the Bengal Finance (Sales Tax) Act, 1941
as extended to the Union Territory of Delhi provides for
assessment of tax. Section 11A provides for assessment or
reassessment in case of escaped or under-assessment. Section
20 provides for appeals and revision.
In 1959 the assessee was assessed by the Sales Tax
officer for the assessment year 1955-56. The appellate
authority remanded the matter holding that the assessment
for the first two quarters was invalid having been made out
of time. The Sales Tax officer passed a fresh assessment
order in respect of the third and fourth quarter of the
assessment year. In July, 1960, the Commissioner under s.
20(3) revised the appellate order holding that no part of
the assessment was barred by limitation and directed fresh
assessment. Appellant’s challenge to the order of tho
Commissioner and the assessment order by the assessing
authority was unsuccessful in the High Court.
On appeal to this Court, it was contended: (1) that the
revisional authority must exercise his powers within the
period of four years prescribed under s. 11(2) (a) whether
the order was a final order of assessment by him or a remand
order for fresh assessment by the assessing authority; (ii)
while exercising the power of revision the Commissioner
cannot ignore the period of limitation of three years
provided in s. 11A; (iii) even when the Commissioner was
exercising the revisional power under s. 20(3), his power is
subject to the periods of limitation provided because. in
ss. 11 11A and 20, the authority mentioned is the
Commissioner and (iv) the Revisional authority in the
exercise of his power suo moto must exercise it within a
reasonable time and not after a long lapse of lime.
Dismissing the appeals,
^
HELD: The Legislature has not provided any period
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within which an order is to be made by an appellant or
revisional authority or a court. [250 E] F
(1)(a) If the appeal is filed in time for the exercise
of the appellate power either to assess or to direct
assessment under s. 20(2), there is no limitation of time.
The limits of the revisional power in s. 20(3) are akin to
the power of the appellate authority in s. 20(2). [250 F-H]
(b) No limitation has been provided for the suo moto
exercise of the re visional power similar to the one
provided in rule 66(2) of the Delhi Sales Tax Rules for
filing an application in revision. [251 D]
(c) It will be wholly unreasonable almost impossible-to
say that all orders in appeal, revision or reference must be
passed within four years of the end of the period of
assessment and that otherwise they would be barred. The
contention that there would be anomaly because of s. 11(2a)
in that if the appellate or revisional authority made a
remand order, the assessing authority could pass a fresh
assessment order within four years of the remand order
whereas if the appellate or revisional authority itself
passed an order of assessment, it should be done within four
years. and that such an anomaly would be avoided if it was
held that the revising authority must exercise its powers
within four years in all cases is not warranted by the
language of the provision. Further, it does not solve the
anomaly because even if the order
248
of remand is made just on the last day of the period of four
years it would be competent to the assessing authority to
make a fresh assessment within the further period of four
years. [252 D; B-C]
(d) The State of Orissa v. Debki Debi [15 STC, 153 (SC]
is distinguishable because the period of limitation in that
case applied to assessment made i exercise of the appellate
or revisional power also whereas in the present case there
is no period of limitation for the exercise of appellate or
revisional power
[252 F]
( 2) While correcting a mistake in exercise of his
revisional power the Commissioner was merely setting right
the illegality in the appellate order, and was not doing
anything- which the Sales Tax Officer was empowered to do
under s. 11A and so was not bound by the period of
limitation mentioned in that section. [253]
The State of Kerala v. K. M. Cheria Abdulla and
Company, 16 Sales Tax Cases, 875, referred to.
(3) The order of assessment was that of the Sales Tax
officer action as an officer to assist the Commissioner for
the purpose of assessment. The term "Commissioner" is merely
descriptive and includes the various officers appointed
under s. 3 to assist the Commissioner. There is a hierarchy
of officers and all cannot be treated as "Commissioner" for
the purpose of different powers exercised by them. [253 G-Hl
(4) Assuming that the revisional power could not be
exercised suo moto after a long and unreasonable delay, in
the instant case there was no undue delay. What is
reasonable time will depend upon the facts of each case.
[254 A-B]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 667-668
of 1975.
From the Judgment and order dated the 10-5-1973 of the
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Delhi High Court in Letter Patent Appeal Nos. 65 and 103 of
1969.
F. S. Nariman. Randhir Chawla. G. C. Sharma. Mrs. A; K.
Verma, Talat Ansari. Ravinder Narain, and O. C. Mathur for
the Appellant.
G. L. Sanghi, R. N. Sachthey and Girish Chandra for the
Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
UNTWALIA, J. In these appeals by certificate the
question for determination is whether the exercise of the
power of revision under sub-section (3) of section 20 of the
Bengal Finance (Sales Tax) Act, 1941 as extended to the
Union Territory of Delhi-hereinafter called the Act-is
subject to the period of limitation provided in sub-section
(2a) of section 11 or section 11A of the said Act. The
requisite 3 facts lie in a narrow compass and may usefully
be stated at the outset.
The appellant who was carrying on the business of
execution of building contracts was assessed to sales tax
under the Act by the Sales Tax officer for the year 1955-56
by an order of assessment made on November 23, 1959. The
appellants appeal before the Assistant Commissioner of Sales
Tax succeeded in part. He held that the assessment for the
first two quarters of the year 1955-56 was invalid having
been made out of time. The case was, therefore, remanded to
the Sales Tax officer for a fresh assessment in respect of
the 3rd and 4th
249
quarters of the year. The Sales Tax officer in pursuance of
the A appellate order of remand dated February 11, 1960
passed a fresh . assessment order on March 21, 1960. The
Commissioner, however, after notice dated July 21, 1960 to
the appellant, by his order dated July 29, 1960 revised the
appellate order of the Assistant Commissioner in exercise of
his power under section 20(3) of the Act. He held that no
part of the assessment for the year 1955-56 was barred and
directed a fresh assessment to be made. A fresh assessment
for all the four quarters was accordingly made by the Sales
Tax officer on September 24, 1960. The appellant filed two
writ petitions in the Delhi High Court challenging the order
made in revision by the Commissioner and the fresh
assessment order passed by the Sales Tax officer in
pursuance thereof. A learned single Judge of the High Court
allowed the writ applications on April 2, 1969 and quashed
the impugned orders. The respondents took up the matter in
letters patent appeal and succeeded before a Bench of the
High Court. Hence these appeals by the assessees
Mr. F. S. Nariman appearing for the appellant
contended:
(1) That the appellate and the revisional authorities
must exercise their appellate or revisional power
within the period prescribed under sub-section
(2a) of section 11 of the Act. If their orders are
final orders of assessment then directly they are
exercising their powers under sub-sections (1) or
(2) of section 11. In case their orders are of
remand for fresh assessment to the assessing‘
authority then also they must pass their orders
within the periods aforesaid although under the
proviso added in 1959 the assessing authority may
have a further period of 4 years or 6 years, as
the case may be, for passing a fresh assessment.
(2) That the Commissioner while exercising the power
in revision cannot overstep and ignore the period
of limitation of 3 years provided in section 11A
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of the Art
(3) That the authority mentioned in sections 11, 11A
and 20(3) being the Commissioner, the Commissioner
is subject to the period of limitation provided in
sections 11 and 11A even when exercising the
revisional power under section 20(3).
(4) That in any view of the matter the revisional
authority must exercise the Dower in a reasonable
manner and- within a reasonable time. It cannot
exercise the power of revision, suo moto, after a
long lapse of time at its sweet will and pleasure.
Under section 3 of the Act, a hierarchy of officers has
been constituted by the Chief Commissioner-namely, the
Commissioner of Sales Tax, Sales Tax officers and others to
assist him. Section 11 of the Act deals with assessment of
tax. The Sales Tax officer
250
exercising the powers as an officer to assist the
Commissioner under section 11(1) of the Act can proceed to
assess the amount of the tax due from a registered dealer
within 18 months of the expiry of a particular period. A
dealer who has been liable to pay tax under the Act but has
failed to get himself registered can be assessed to tax
under sub-section (2). Then sub-section 2(a) says:
"No assessment under sub-section (1) shall-be made
after the expiry of four years and no assessment under
subsection (2) shall be made after the expiry of six-
years from the end of the year in respect of which or
part of which the assessment is made :"
A proviso was added to sub-section (2a) w.e.f. October
1, 1959 By the Amending Act of 1958 and it reads as follows:
"Provided that where such assessment is made in
consequence of or to give effect to any order of an
appellate or revisional authority or of a court, the
period of four years or six years, as the case may be,
shall be reckoned from the date of such order."
lt is to be noticed that a period of limitation has
been provided in section 11(2a) and no assessment either
under sub-section (1) or sub-section (2) can be made after
the expiry of the specified period. But where such an
assessment is made by the assessing authority in consequence
of or to give effect to any order of an appellate or
revisional authority or any order of a court made in
reference, writ or in any other proceeding then under the
proviso the period of limitation is to be reckoned from the
date of such order. The Legislature has not provided any
period. within which an order is to be made by an appellate
or revisional authority of a court. Obviously it would have
been unpractical and unworkable to do so.
Section 20 deals with an appeal, revision or review. If
the appeal is filed in time the appellate authority in
disposing of any appeal filed Under sub-section (1) may-
(a) confirm, reduce, enhance or annul the assessment,
or;
(b) set aside the assessment and direct the assessing
r authority to make a fresh assessment after such
further inquiry as may be directed."
For exercise of the appellate power in any of the manners
mentioned above, there is no limitation of time. If
assessment can be reduced in appeal at any time it can be
enhanced also without the fetter of time. If the assessment
is set aside and the case remanded to the assessing
authority to make a fresh assessment then the authority,
because of the proviso to section 11(2a), is obliged to make
the fresh assessment within four years of the appellate
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order. Sub-section (3) of section 20 reads thus:
"Subject to such rules as may be prescribed and
for reasons to be recorded in writing, the Commissioner
upon
251
application or of his own motion may revise any
assessment A made or order passed under this Act or the
rules there under by a person appointed under section 3
to assist him, and subject as aforesaid, the Chief
Commissioner may, in like manner, revise any order
passed by the Commissioner."
The Commissioner can revise any assessment made or order
passed under the Act including the order of the appellate-
authority. The limits of the revisional power are not
circumscribed in sub-section (3), ut it goes without saying
that they will be akin to the power of the appellate
authority as mentioned in sub-section (2). The revisional
authority obviously, as pointed out by this Court in the
case of The State of Kerala v. K. M. Cheria Abdulla and
Company(1) should not trench upon the power expressly
reserved by the Act or the rules to other authorities and
cannot ignore the limits inherent in exercise of those
powers. Section 11A is one such power which deals with
assessment and re-assessment of tax in case of an escaped
assessment or under-assessment. Exercise of that power is
subject to the limitations provided therein. In Rule 66(2)
of the Delhi Sales Tax Rules, 1951 a period of limitation of
60 days has been provided for the filing of an application
in revision which can be extended under the proviso appended
to that rule on sufficient cause being shown. But no such
limitation has been provided for the suo moto, exercise of
the revisional power.
Mr. Nariman very strongly relied upon the majority
decision of this Court in The State of Orissa v. Debaki Debi
and others (2) and Submitted that the power of revision
exercised by the Commissioners ill this case beyond the
period of four years prescribed in sub-section (2a) of
section 11 was illegal and ultra vires. A close scrutiny of
the argument will result in its rejection.
In the Orissa case all the orders made by the Collector
in exercise of his power of revision under section 23 of the
Orissa Sales Tax Act were passed later than 36 months from
the expiry of the period in respect of which the assessment
was made. The High Court’s view that they were in
contravention of section 12(7) which was a power of
assessment or re-assessment in case of an escaped or under-
assessment was not upheld. But it was found that the proviso
to section 12(6) was in general terms. It was not only a
proviso providing for the period of limitation for the first
assessment but it governed the assessment made in exercise
of the appellate or the revisional power. The main ratio
decidendi of the case is that the proviso in section 12(6)
is in reality an independent legislative provision unrelated
to section 12(6). Therefore, its operation was not confined
to assessment under section 12 but applied to any assessment
made under the Act. In the alternative it was also opined
that assessment made in exercise of the revisional power was
an assessment made under section 12. It was so said because
if the appellate or the revisional authority would have
directed the assessing authority to make a fresh assessment
it could do so only under section 12 and then it
(1) 16 Sales Tax Cases, 875. (2) 15 Sales Tax Cases,
153.
252
would be subject to the period for limitation of 36 months.
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It was pointed out in the majority decision of this Court
that there would be an anomalous situation. If the appellate
authority set aside the assessment and remanded it for fresh
orders, no fresh assessment could be made because of the
period of limitation. But if instead of doing so the
appellate authority affected the same assessment there would
be no bar of limitation. In the present case in view of the
proviso added to section 11(2a) the anomaly flows in the
reverse direction. If the appellate or the revisional
authority made a remand order the assessing authority could
pass a fresh order of assessment within 4 years of such
order. But if the higher authority itself revised the
assessment then it would be barred by the rule of limitation
provided in section 11 (2a) . To avoid such an anomaly Mr.
Nariman suggested a construction to be put which neither
solves the anomaly nor is warranted by the language of the
provisions of the Act. Counsel submitted that in all cases
the powers must be. exercised within 4 years of the period
in respect of which an assessment was being made on a
registered dealer. It will be wholly unreasonable-almost
impossible-to say that all orders in appeal, revision or
reference must be passed within four years of the end of the
period of assessment, otherwise they will be barred. It does
not solve the anomaly either. Even if the order of
remand is made, say, just on the last day of the period of
four years, it will be competent to the assessing authority
to make a fresh assessment within the further period of four
years. The ratio of the case in Debaki Debi’s (supra) must
be confined within its four corners and cannot be extended
to the facts of the instant case.
In The Swastik oil Mills Ltd. v. H. B. Munshi, Deputy
Commissioner Of Sales Tax Bombay (1) the decision of this
Court in Debaki Debi’s case was distinguished on the ground
that the provision of limitation of 36 months in substance
was not a real proviso to the section in which it was placed
but was in fact a period of limitation for all orders of
assessment made under any other provision of the Orissa Act,
while in the Bombay Acts there was no such general provision
prescribing a period of limitation for making an assessment.
Reference to the period of limitation in section 11A of the
Bombay Act which is a power of making assessment or re-
assessment in case of an escaped or under-assessed
assessments was also rejected.
our attention was also drawn to the decision of a
single Judge of the Punjab High Court, Delhi Bench, in Sir
Sobha Singh & Company v. Commissioner of Sales Tax, Delhi
(2) wherein following the decision of this Court in Debaki
Debi’s case it was held that an order of review made by the
Commissioner under section 20(4) of the Act in effect is an
order of assessment under section 11(1) and cannot be made r
o after the expiry of the period prescribed under section
11(2a). The learned Judge in the course of his judgment made
it clear that he was concerned with the construction of the
Act as it stood before 1959 and was not obliged to consider
the effect of the proviso added to section 11(2a) in 1959.
It is not necessary to decide in this case whether without
the aid of the proviso aforesaid the decision of the
(1) 21 Sales Tax Cases, 383. (2) 18 S. T. C. 416.
253
learned single Judge was correct or not but surely in face
of the proviso it cannot hold good.
In Commissioner of Commercial Taxes, Bihar, Patna v.
Sheodutta Prasad Chandeshwar Singh (1) the review
proceedings initiated by the assessing authority was held to
be barred under the proviso to section 13(6) of the Bihar
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Sales Tax Act, 1947. But distinguishing the said decision
another Bench of the Patna High Court held in Commissioner
of Commercial Taxes, Bihar v. Ashoka Marketing Ltd: (2) that
the order of review passed by the Deputy Commissioner was
not bared by time. The decision of the Patna High Court in
Commissioner of Commercial Taxes, Bihar, Patna v. Sheodutta
Prasad Chandeshwar Singh (supra) on identical facts was
followed in Commissioner of Commercial Taxes, Bihar v. Shiva
Pujan Prasad Bhagat (3). But the principle decided in those
cases cannot help the appellant. It may well be that if the
assessing authority itself exercises the power of review it
cannot circumscribe the bar of limitation provided in
section 11 (2a) . But it will be unjust, unreasonable and
impracticable to say that the said bar of limitation must
also continue to run at all stages of the proceedings,
namely, the appellate, revisional, reference, writ or any
other stage.
It was pointed out by this Court in Swastik oil Mills’
case (supra) that the Deputy Commissioner when seeking to
exercise his revisional powers was not encroaching upon the
powers reserved to other authorities. The powers were not
exercised for the purpose of assessing or re-assessing an
escaped turn over. The revisional powers were sought to be
exercised to correct what appeared to be an incorrect order
passed by an Assistant Commissioner and for such a purpose
proceedings could not possibly have been taken under section
11A. In the instant case also it could not be disputed that
the view taken by the Assistant Commissioner in appeal was
obviously wrong. The Commissioner while correcting that
mistake in exercise of his revisional power was not doing
anything which the Sales Tax officer was empowered to do
under section 11A. He was merely setting right the
illegality in the appellate order.
The third point urged by the appellant is too obviously
wrong to merit any detailed discussion. It was not the
Commissioner who had passed the assessment order under
section 11. That order was of the Sales Tax officer acting
as an officer to assist the Commissioner for the purpose of
assessment. The assessment order was interfered with by the
appellate authority, the Assistant Commissioner and the
Commissioner was revising the order of the Assistant
Commissioner. All cannot be treated as Commissioners for the
purpose of the different powers exercised by the three
different authorities. The use of the term "Commissioner" in
the sections is merely for the purpose of describing and, at
any rate, including the officer assisting the Commissioner
as Commissioner.
(1) 25 S.T.C. 114. (2) 33 S.T.C. 24,
(3) ,33 S.T.C. 466.
254
Apropos the fourth and the last submission of the
appellant, suffice it to say that even assuming that the
revisional power cannot be exercised suo moto after an
unduly long delay, on the facts of this case it is plain
that it was not so done. Within a few months of the passing
of the appellate order by the Assistant Commissioner, the
Commissioner proceeded to revise and revised the said order.
There was no undue or unreasonable delay made by the
Commissioner. It may be stated here that an appeal has to be
filed by an assessee within the prescribed time and so also
a time limit has been prescribed for the assessee to move in
revision. The appellate or the revisional powers in an
appeal or revision filed by an assessee can be exercised in
due course. No time limit has been prescribed for it. It may
well be that for an exercise of the suo moto power of
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revision also, the revisional authority has to initiate the
proceeding within a reasonable time. Any unreasonable delay
in exercise may affect its validity. What is a reasonable
time, however, will depend upon the facts of each case.
For the reasons stated above the appeals fail and are
dismissed with costs. One set of hearing fee.
P.B.R. Appeals dismissed.
255