Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
KUNWAR TRIVIKRAM NARAIN SINGH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF UTTAR PRADESH AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
25/09/1964
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
SHAH, J.C.
SIKRI, S.M.
CITATION:
1965 AIR 1267 1965 SCR (1) 336
ACT:
Agricultural Income-tax-Assessment made by Assistant
Collector quashed for want of jurisdiction-Retrospective
amendment of law conferring jurisdiction on Assistant
Collectors-Fresh assessment whether barred by limitation-
U.P. Agricultural Income-tax Act, 1948, (U.P. Act 3 of
1949), as amended by U.P. Act 14 of 1956.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant was assessed to agricultural income-tax by
the Assistant Collector, Banaras, U.P. Act 3 of 1949, under
which assessment was made, mentioned only the ’Collector’
a.,, competent to make assessment. The assessment made by
the Assistant Collector was therefore set aside by the
Collector. Subsequently the law was amended by U.P. Act 14
of 1956 to provide that the word ’Collector’ would include
’Assistant Collector’ and that the Collector could review
his earlier orders quashing assessments on the ground of
want of jurisdiction, if application for review were made to
him by any of the parties within 90 days of the coming into
force of the amendment. Such application having been filed
in the appellant’s case, the Collector set aside his earlier
orders quashing the assessment, and the Assistant Collector
made a fresh assessment. The fresh assessment was
challenged by the appellant by writ petition in the High
Court and having failed there, The appellant came to the
Supreme Court by special leave.
It was contended on behalf of the appellant that the
assessment made by virtue of the provisions of the amending
Act was barred by limitation because the retrospective
operation of the provisions relating to jurisdiction would
not extend the time for making the assessment.
HELD : The Collector’s order on the review application had
the effect of restoring the earlier proceedings. No
question of limitation could possibly arise, for those
proceedings were initiated in time and must be deemed to
have been pending throughout, and the fresh assessment was
made in those very proceedings. [339 A-B].
S. C. Prashar v. Vasantsen, A.I.R. 1963 S. C. 1356 and
Commissioner of Income-tax, Bihar v. Lakhmir Singh, A.I.R.
1963 S. C. 1394, held inapplicable.
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 799 of
1963.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and decree dated
March 1, 1961 of the Allahabad High Court in Special Appeal
No. 205 of 1958.
S. P. Varmaa for the appellant.
C. B. Agarwala, O. P. Rana and Atiqur Rehman, for the
respondents.
337
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Subba Rao J. This appeal by special leave raises the ques-
tion of the scope of the retrospective operation of the U.P.
Agricultural Income-tax (Amendment) Act, 1956 (U.P. Act No.
14 of 1956).
The facts are simple and they are as follows: On January 10,
1953, for the assessment year 1952-53, the Additional
Collector, Banaras, assessed the appellant to agricultural
income-tax under the U.P. Agricultural Income-tax Act, 1948
(U.P. Act 3 of 1949). On February 9, 1956, U.P.
Agricultural Income-tax (Amendment) Ordinance, 1956 (2 of
1956) was passed enacting that the word "Collector" shall
always be deemed to include Additional Collector. That
Ordinance was later replaced by the U.P. Agricultural
Income-tax (Amendment) Act 14 of 1956. On an application
filed by the appellant, the Collector by his order dated May
9, 1956, revoked his earlier order and directed the
Additional Collector to proceed to assess the appellant in
accordance with law. Thereupon, the Additional Collector
resumed proceedings and on June 7, 1956, passed a fresh
assessment order imposing a tax of Rs. 42,761 on the
appellant, and on July 4, 1956, he issued a notice to the
appellant for payment of the tax. On August 7, 1956, the
appellant filed a petition under Art. 226 of the
Constitution in the High Court of Judicature at Allahabad
for quashing the order of assessment and the notice issued
pursuant thereto. The petition was heard, in the first
instance, by Tandon J., who dismissed the same with costs.
The appeal preferred by the appellant against that order to
a Division Bench was also dismissed. Hence the present
appeal.
Mr. S. P. Varma, learned counsel for the appellant contended
that (i) the respondent’s right to assess the appellant to
tax was barred by limitation and, therefore, the Act could
not have the effect of reviving the said right; and (ii) the
amount of malikhana could not be in law the subject-matter
of assessment.
The second point was not raised in the High Court. We did
not permit the learned counsel to raise the point for the
first time before us.
The first point turns upon the relevant provisions of Act 3
of 1.949 and Act 14 of 1956. Under Act 3 of 1949 the defi-
nition of "Collector" did not include "Additional
Collector". Act 14 of 1956 received the assent of the
Governor on April 17, 1956, and was published in the U.P.
Gazette (Extraordinary)
338
dated May 19, 1956. Section 2 of Act 14 of 1956 reads:
"In section 2 of the U.P. Agricultural Income Tax Act, 1948
(hereinafter called the Principal Act), for clause (4), the
following shall be and be deemed always to have been
substituted-
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"(4-a) ’Collector’ shall have the meaning as
in the U.P. Land Revenue Act, 1901, and will
include an Additional Collector appointed
under the said Act."
Section 11 of the Act reads
"Where before the commencement of this Act any
Court or authority has, in any proceedings
under the Principal Act, set aside any
assessment made by an Additional Collector or
Additional Assistant Collector incharge of a
sub-division merely on the ground that the
assessing authority had no jurisdiction to
make the assessment, any party to the
proceedings may, at any time within ninety
days from the date of commencement of this Act
apply to the Court or authority for a review
of the proceedings in the light of the
provisions of this Act, and the Court or
authority to which the application is made
shall review the proceedings accordingly and
make such order, if any, varying or revising
the order previously made, as may be necessary
to give effect to the provisions of the
Principal Act as amended by sections 2 and 8
of this Act."
A combined reading of the said provisions establishes that
if an application for review was filed within the time
prescribed, the previous proceedings would be restored and
the parties would be relegated to the position which they
had occupied before the proceedings were quashed on the
ground of want of jurisdiction.
In this case proceedings were initiated by the Additional
Collector on January 10, 1953, for the purpose of assessing
the appellant for the assessment year 1952-53. There was no
flaw in the said proceedings except that the Additional
Collector was not authorized by Act 3 of 1949, as it then
stood, to make the said assessment. The, Collector quashed
those proceedings by his order dated November 26, 1955.
After the amending Act was passed, within 90 days therefrom
the appropriate income-tax authority had filed an
application before the Collector to review his order. The
Collector reviewed the order and
339
set aside the same. The result was that the proceedings
before the Additional Collector were restored. As by the
amendment the Additional Collector must be deemed to have
been the Collector from the inception of the Principal Act
itself, the said proceedings must be deemed to have been
initiated before the proper authority -under the Principal
Act. In this view no question of limitation could possibly
arise, for the proceedings were initiated in time and must
be deemed to have been pending throughout and the fresh
assessment was made in the said proceedings.
The decisions cited by the learned counsel are really beside
the mark. He relied upon the judgments of this Court in S.
C. Prashar v. Vasantsen(1), and Commissioner of Income-tax
Bihar v. Lakhmir Singh(2). One of the questions raised in
those cases was whether an amending Act revived a remedy
which had become barred before the amendment was introduced.
That aspect of the question has no relevance to the present
enquiry. Here we are dealing with an Act whose
constitutionality is not questioned. It has expressly
conferred power on the appropriate authority to review its
previous order if an application was filed within the time
prescribed. When once that power of review was exercised,
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the proceedings were reopened. In this view, no question of
the application of an amending Act to a barred claim would
arise.
In the result we hold that the order of the High Court is
correct and dismiss the appeal with costs.
Appeal dismissed..
(1) [1964] 1 S.C.R. 29.
(2) [1964] 1 S.C.R. 148.
340