Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE INCOME TAX OFFICER CIRCLE II MADURA, ANDANOTHER
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
M. R. VIDYASAGAR
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
17/01/1962
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
KAPUR, J.L.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
CITATION:
1963 AIR 503 1962 SCR Supl. (2) 613
CITATOR INFO :
R 1963 SC1456 (8)
ACT:
Income Tax-Payment of advance tax-Assessed
income exceeded the estimate-Levy of interest-
Power to reduce or waive-When could be exercised-
Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 (11 of 1922), s. 18A
(6) fifth proviso-Indian Income-tax (Amendment)
Act, 1953 (225 of 1953), s. 13-Income-tax Rules
r.48.
HEADNOTE:
The Income-tax Officer, Madura, issued notice
under s. 18A (1) of the Indian Income-Tax Act,
1922, for payment of advance tax. R, the then
manager of the Hindu Undivided family availed of
the option to submit a revised estimate for the
years 1946-47 and 1948-49. The assessment of these
two years were completed respectively in November,
1950 and February, 1951, as the total income
assessed far exceeded the estimate submitted by R,
the Income-tax Officer ordered the respondent, the
legal representative of R, to pay the interest
under s. 18A (6) of the Act. On appeal, the
Income-tax Appellate Tribunal reduced the income
and the Income-tax Officer in giving effect to the
said order reduced the interest and called upon
the respondent to make payment. The respondent
asked the Income-tax Officer not to levy interest
under s. 18A (6), submitting that the levy was
illegal and unjustified, alternatively he
requested that the interest be waived by virtue of
the powers vested on the Income-tax Officer under
proviso 5 to s. 18A (6) which was added by s. 13
of Act 25 of 1953, with retrospective effect from
April 1952. The Income-tax Officer and the
Inspection Assistant Commissioner declined to
accede to the request. The respondent then moved
the High Court at Madras for a writ under Art. 226
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cancelling the levy of interest on the ground
among others that refusal by the Revenue
authorities to cancel the levy was arbitrary and
not based on any judicial exercise of the
discretion vested by the Act. The High Court
upheld the plea, ordered the Income tax Officer to
decide whether the respondent had made out a case
for the exercise of the discretion. The only
question in the appeal before the Supreme Court
was whether benefit of the said 5th proviso to s.
18A (6) may be granted in respect of assessments
of income which were completed by the Income-tax
officer before April 1952.
614
^
Held, that the jurisdiction under 5th proviso
of s. 18A (6) of the Income-tax Act may be
exercised by the income-tax Officer in all cases
which were pending on April 1, 1952 before him or
any superior authority having under the Act power
to modify the assessment of income.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal
Nos. 545 and 546 of 1960.
Appeals from the judgment and order dated
August 13, 1954, of the Madras High Court in Writ
Petitions Nos. 743 and 748 of 1954.
K.N. Rajagopal Sastri and P. D. Menon, for
the appellants.
The respondent did not appear.
1962. January 17.-The Judgment of the court
was delivered by
SHAH, J.-These are two appeals with
certificates of fitness granted by the High Court
of Judicature at Madras against certain orders
passed in Writ Petitions under Art. 226 of the
Constitution.
One Ramaswami Iyer-father of the respondent-
was assessed to income-tax in the status of a
Hindu Undivided Family. Ramaswami Iyer died in
1949 and the respondent M.R. Vidyasagar became the
manager of the family. The family was a partner
through its manager in a firm styled "The Madura
Knitting Company", and the share in the profits of
the partnership which was registered under the
Indian Income-tax Act was the principal source of
its assessable income. Under s. 18A of the Indian
Income-tax Act, the Hindu undivided family was
liable to pay advance tax for each of the
assessment years 1946-47, 1947-48 and 1948-49. The
Income-tax Officer, Madura, issued notices under
s. 18A (1) of the Indian Income-tax Act for
payment of advance tax on the basis of the
preceding year’s income. It was open to the
assessee to submit a revised estimate of his
income under s. 18A (2) in respect of the year in
question and Ramaswami Iyer-who was at the
material time the
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manager-availed himself of the option to submit a
revised estimate and estimated the income for each
of the assessment years 1946-47 and 1948-49 at Rs.
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45,000/-. The assessments of these two years were
completed respectively on November 28, 1950 and
February 29, 1951, and the income received from
the Madura Knitting Company was included in the
assessments under s. 23(5). The Income Tax Officer
assessed the total income of the Hindu undivided
family for the year 1946-47 at Rs. 1,01,335/- and
for the year 1948-49 at Rs. 3,10,697/-. As the
total income assessed far exceeded the estimate of
Rs. 45,000/-, submitted by the manager of the
assessee family, the Income Tax Officer in making
the assessment ordered the respondent to pay Rs.
6,999/12/- and Rs. 36,687/- respectively for the
assessment years 1946-47 and 1948-49 as interest.
In appeals against the orders of assessment by the
Madura Knitting Company, by order dated March 12,
1954 the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal reduced the
income of the firm, and on that basis reduced the
share of the family in the income of the firm for
the year 1946-47 to Rs. 83,335/- and for the year
1948-49 to Rs. 2,83,868/-. The Income-tax Officer,
Madura, in giving effect to the orders passed by
the Appellate Tribunal under the 3rd proviso to s.
18A (6) reduced the interest to Rs. 4,358/- for
the year 1946-47 and to Rs. 32,714/10/- for the
year 1948-49, and called upon the respondent to
pay the arrears of tax inclusive of interest so
adjusted. The respondent then called upon the
Income Tax Officer not to levy interest under s.
18A (6) submitting that the levy was illegal and
unjustified, and in the alternative requested that
the interest be waived under the powers vested
under the 5th proviso to s. 18A (6) which was
added by s. 13 of the Indian Income-tax
(Amendment) Act (25 of 1953). The Income-tax
Officer declined to accede to the request and the
respondent’s application to the
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Inspecting Assistant Commissioner for cancelling
the levy of interest was also rejected. The
respondent then moved two petitions (Nos. 743 and
748) under Art. 226 of the Constitution in the
High Court of Judicature at Madras for writs
cancelling the orders imposing liability for
payment of interest, contending that the levy of
penal interest was opposed to law and was prima
facie, unjustified on the facts and circumstances
of the case. The respondent submitted that the
levy of interest under s. 18A(6) was penal in
character and could not be imposed upon the legal
representative of the deceased manager who was not
in any manner responsible for the original return
filed by the firm of which the manager was a
partner. He also contended that the levy was not
warranted by the provisions of the Indian Income-
tax Act inasmuch as in respect of the assessment
years in question the respondent was not the
assessee, that the delay in completing the
assessment was not attributable either to the then
manager of the family, Ramaswami Iyer or to
himself and therefore, no liability for payment of
interest could be imposed, and that in any event
refusal to cancel the levy of interest was
arbitrary and not based on any judicial exercise
of discretion vested in the Income-tax Officer.
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A Division Bench of the Madras High Court
held that the provision imposing liability to pay
interest under sub-s. (6) of s. 18A was not
opposed to law and could be enforced against the
legal representative of the deceased manager, who
was a partner of the assessee firm. The High
Court, however, was of the view that as the
Income-tax Officer and the Inspecting Assistant
Commissioner had failed to consider whether in the
circumstances of the case, the reduction or waiver
of the interest was justified, it be ordered that
the Income-tax Officer to decide whether the
petitioner had made out a case for the exercise of
the discretion vested in the
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Income-tax Officer to waive or reduce the interest
under the powers conferred on him by the 5th
proviso of cl. (6) of s. 18A. Against that order
with certificates of fitness these appeals are
preferred by the Commissioner of Income Tax.
Section 18A which imposes liability upon the
tax payer to make advance payment of tax was
incorporated into the Indian Income-tax Act by Act
11 of 1944. That section enables the Income-tax
Officer on or after the 1st day of April in any
financial year, by order in writing, to require an
assessee to pay to the Central Government in
specified instalments income-tax and super-tax
payable on so much of such income as is included
in the assessee’s total income of the previous
year in respect of which he had been assessed.
Under sub-s. (2), if the assessee who is required
to pay tax by an order under sub s. (1) estimates
at any time before the last instalment is due that
the part of his income to which the sub-section
applies for the period which would be the previous
year for an assessment for the year next following
is less than the income on which he is required to
pay tax and accordingly wishes to pay tax which is
less than amount he is required to pay, he may
send to the Income Tax Officer an estimate of the
tax payable by him, and pay tax as accords with
his statement. It is, however, provided by sub-s.
(6) inter-alia that where in any year the assessee
had paid tax under sub-s.(2) on the basis of his
own estimate and the tax paid is less than 80% of
the tax determined on the basis of his regular
assessment (so far as such tax relates to income
to which the provisions of s. 18 do not apply)
simple interest at the rate of 6% per annum from
the 1st day of January in the financial year in
which the tax was paid upto the date of the said
regular assessment shall be payable by the
assessee upon the amount by which the tax so paid
falls short of the said 80%. As originally enacted
the liability to pay interest upon
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the amount by which the tax paid fell short of 80%
of tax was absolute. The Income-tax Officer had no
discretion in the matter, and was bound to impose
liability for payment of interest. But by s. 13 of
the Indian Income-tax (Amendment) Act, 1953 (25 of
1953), an additional proviso was enacted to sub-s.
(6) in the following form:
"Provided further that in such cases and
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under such circumstances as may be
prescribed, the Income-tax Officer may reduce
or waive the interest payable by the
assessee".
This proviso was given retrospective effect as
from April 1, 1952. Thereafter in exercise of
powers conferred by s. 59 the Central Board of
Revenue added Rule 48 to the following effect:-
"48. The Income-tax Officer may reduce
or waive the interest payable under section
18A in the cases and under the circumstances
mentioned below, namely:-
(1) Where the relevant assessment
is completed more than one year after
the submission of the return, the delay
in assessment not being attributable to
the assessee.
(2) Where a person is under section
43 deemed to be an agent of another
person and is assessed upon the latter’s
income.
(3) Where the assessee has income
from an unregistered firm to which the
provisions of clause (b) of sub-section
(5) of section 23 are applied.
(4) Where the "previous year" is
the financial year or any year ending
near about the close of the financial
year and large profits are made after
the 15th of March in circumstances which
could not be foreseen.
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(5) Any case in which the
Inspecting Assistant Commissioner
considers that the circumstances are
such that a reduction or waiver of the
interest payable under section 18A (6)
is justified.
The effect of the incorporation of the 5th proviso
in s. 18A (6) and of Rule 48 was manifestly to
authorise the Income Tax Officer in exercise of
his discretion to relieve against the rigour of
the inflexible rule originally enacted in cl. (6)
about payment of interest by the assessee when the
tax paid by him on his estimate fell below 80% of
the tax payable on regular assessment.
The only question which falls to be
determined in these appeals is whether the benefit
of the fifth proviso to s. 18A (6) could be
claimed in respect of the assessments of the
income of the respondent’s family which were
completed by the Income-tax Officer before April
1, 1952. The High Court was of the view that even
if the assessment by the Income Tax Officer was
completed before April 1, 1952, if the final
adjustment pursuant to the order of the Appellate
Tribunal was made after that date the Income Tax
Officer was competent, in exercise of the powers
with which he was invested by the fifth proviso to
cl. (6) of s. 18A to reduce or waive the interest
payable by the assessee and the Income-tax officer
having failed to exercise his discretion a case
was made out for the issue of a writ under Art.
226 of the Constitution directing that officer to
consider whether in the circumstances of the case
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relief may be granted to the respondent.
On behalf of the Commissioner of Income-tax
it is urged that the power conferred by the fifth
proviso may undoubtedly be exercised in those
cases where assessment is completed on or after
April 1, 1952, but where the assessment was
completed and liability to pay interest had
crystallized under
620
sub-s.(6) as it originally stood, the Income-tax
Officer has no power under the amended sub-section
to reduce or waive the interest ordered to be paid
by the assessee even if the proceedings in
assessment are pending in appeal before the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner or the Appellate
Tribunal. It was urged that the interest under s.
18A(6) is payable upto the date of the regular
assessment and if in the contingencies prescribed
by s. 18A(6), as originally enacted liability to
pay interest crystallized, the Income-tax Officer
could not, in exercise of the power invested by
the amending Act reopen the order, because the
legislature had given to the amending statute only
a partial retroactive operation and its
retroactivity could not be enlarged; to do so,
would be plainly to defeat the plain intendment of
the Legislature. It is unnecessary for the purpose
of these appeals to consider whether an assessment
which has become final before the date on which
the fifth proviso came into operation, and which
is not subject to any pending appeal, can be
reopened and the benefit of the power conferred by
the fifth proviso be afforded to an assessee. The
question which falls to be determined is whether
in an assessment subject to an appeal which is
pending, or which may be lawfully filed, the power
to reduce or waive the interest can be exercised.
There is, in our judgment, inherent evidence in
the rule indicating that such a power can be
exercised even if the regular assessment is
completed by the Income-tax Officer before April
1, 1952. The power vested in the Income-tax
Officer to reduce or waive interest payable by an
assessee is exercisable "in such cases or such
circumstances as may be prescribed" by the Rules.
By Rule 48 the Income-tax Officer is given the
power to reduce or waive interest payable under s.
18A(6) in the events specified therein. By the
first clause of Rule 48 where the assessment is
completed more than one year after the submission
of the return the delay in assessment
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not being attributable to the assessee-the power
of the Income tax Officer may be exercised There
is nothing in the Rule which indicates that the
power to grant relief may be exercised only before
the regular assessment is completed by the Income-
tax Officer. The terms of clauses (1) and (5) of
the Rule clearly support the view that the order
reducing or waiving interest may be passed even
after the order of assessment is made, and
interest is included. Again, by making Act 25 of
1953 operative retrospectively from April 1, 1952,
the Legislature has evinced an intention that to
regular assessments made between April 1, 1952,
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and the date on which the Act was enacted, the
fifth proviso to 18A(6) may apply. The argument
that liability to pay interest crystallizes when
the Income-tax Officer incorporates the direction
for payment of interest, because the order is not
made appealable has no force. The order for
payment of interest was liable to be modified if
the assessment of income was varied by the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner, or by the
Tribunal. It is true that interest could be
charged upto to the date of regular assessment by
the Income-tax Officer but that does not support
the theory of crystallization of liability. If
therefore the quantum of liability was capable of
being altered even after the date of the regular
assessment, the assumption that the power to give
relief against a rigid statutory provision should
be restricted to cases which are decided by the
Income tax Officer only after April 1, 1952, is
not warranted. The power of the Income-tax Officer
arose only after April 1, 1952, but there is
nothing in the act to show that it was to be
exercised only in respect of assessments made by
the Income-tax Officer after that date. In our
judgment, the jurisdiction under the fifth proviso
may be exercised by the Income-tax Officer in all
cases which are pending on April 1, 1952, before
the Income-tax Officer or any superior authority
having under the Income-tax Act power
622
to modify the assessment of income, or are
commenced after that date.
In the present case, the original assessments
made by the Income-tax Officer in both the years
in question were modified in view of the orders
passed by the Appellate Tribunal in the assessment
of the Madura Knitting Co. The order of the
Appellate Tribunal was passed on April 12, 1953,
i.e. after the date on which Act 25 of 1953 came
into operation. After that date the Income-tax
Officer was bound to give effect to the orders of
the Appellate Tribunal and to adjust liability in
computing the assessable income and the tax
payable thereon. The Income-tax Officer being
bound to adjust liability to pay interest under
cl. (6) of s. 18A we see no reason why in
adjusting that liability he may not exercise the
powers with which he has been invested since
April, 1952, if the circumstances of the case
warrant such exercise.
In our view the High Court was right in
holding that the Income-tax officer had the power
in the case of the assessments in question to
exercise the authority conferred by the fifth
proviso to s. 18A(6) and he having failed to
exercise the discretion, a writ requiring him to
consider whether a case is made out for the
exercise of his discretion was properly issued.
These appeals therefore fail and are
dismissed.
Appeals dismissed.
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