Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 8534 of 2002
PETITIONER:
OCL INDIA LTD.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF ORISSA AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 17/12/2002
BENCH:
SYED SHAH MOHAMMED QUADRI & ARIJIT PASAYAT
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
2002 Supp(5) SCR 496
The following Order of the Court was delivered : Leave is granted.
The short question that arises for consideration in this appeal, which
arises from the judgment of a Division Bench of the High Court of Orissa in
O.J.C. No. 930 of 1998, dated July 22, 2002, is:
"Whether after the Assistant Commissioner, as a delegatee of the power of
the Commissioner Sales Tax, under Section 23(4)(a) of the Orissa Sales Tax
Act, 1947 read with rule 80 of the Orissa Sales Tax Rules, 1947, has
exercised revisional jurisdiction in respect of an order of the Sales Tax
Officer, the Commissioner can exercise the power under the said provision
to revise the same order over again?"
The facts that gave rise to this appeal may be briefly noted here.
The appellant-assessee, a company registered under the Companies Act, 1956,
is a manufacturer of cement and refractory products. It is a registered
dealer under the Orissa Sales Tax Act, 1947 (for short, ’the Act’). For the
Assessment Year 1986-87, the Sales Tax Officer passed an order of
assessment under the Central Sales Tax Act on October 20, 1987. On December
13, 1995, the Assistant Commissioner, in exercise of the delegated power,
issued a show cause notice to the .assessee to revise the order passed by
the Sales Tax "officer. However, by order dated January 3, 1996, he dropped
the proceedings. While so, on January 2, 1998, the Commissioner, purporting
to exercise the revisional power under Section 23(4)(a) of the Act and Rule
80 of the Rules, issued notice to show cause as to why the turnover
determined by the Sales Tax officer for the Assessment Year 1986-87 should
not be enhanced. Challenging the validity of the said notice, the appellant
filed O.J.C. No. 930/98 before a Division Bench of the High Court of
Orissa. The High Court dismissed the writ petition on July 22, 2002 which
is under challenge in this appeal.
Mr. Bobde, the learned senior counsel for the appellant, has contended that
once the Commissioner has delegated his revisional power and the Assistant
Commissioner-delegatee has exercised the said power and decided the matter,
it was not open for the Commissioner to exercise the very same power and,
therefore, the High Court has erred in not quashing the impugned show cause
notice issued by him, Mr. Dave, the learned senior counsel appearing for
the Revenue, has submitted that though the Commissioner has delegated
power, he was not denuded of the statutory power so he could have still
exercised the power under the said provisions.
Under Section 23(4)(a) of the Act, the Commissioner of Sales Tax has power,
either suo motu or on an application by a dealer or a person, to revise any
orders made under the Act or rule made thereunder by any person other than
the Tribunal appointed under sub-section (3) of Section 3 of the Act. That
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power was delegated by the Commissioner in favour of the Assistant
Commissioner, vide Notification No. I-ST-76/73 14171, dated August 3,1963.
We may notice here Section 23(4)(a) of the Act which is in the following
terms:
"Section 23-Appeals and revisions. (I)to (3)............. (4)(a) Subject to
such rules as may be made and for reasons to be recorded in writing, the
Commissioner may, upon application by a dealer or person or on his own
motion, revise any order made under this Act or the Rules made thereunder
by any person other than the tribunal, appointed under sub-section (3) of
section 3 to assist him:
Provided that the Commissioner shall not entertain any such application for
revision if the dealer or the person filing the same having a remedy by way
of appeal under sub-section (1), or sub-section (3) did not avail of such
remedy or the application is not filed within the prescribed period.
Explanation.-Any provision contained elsewhere in this Act which provides
for determination of any specific matter shall not debar the Commissioner
from determining such matter in exercise of the powers conferred upon him
under this sub-section."
A perusal of clause (a) of sub-section 4 afore-quoted, shows that the
Commissioner is conferred with the power to revise any order made under the
Act or the Rules made thereunder by any person other than the Tribunal
appointed under sub-section (3) of section 3 of the Act to assist him,
either on an application made by a dealer or any person or suo motu. The
proviso thereto bars the exercise of revisional power on the application of
a dealer or any person where remedy of appeal under sub-section (1) and
sub-section (3) of Section 23 has not been availed or where the revision
was not filed within the prescribed period of limitation.
Rule 79 of the Rules deals with exercise of the revisional power on the
application of a dealer or any person and Rule 80 of the Rules deals with
exercise of power suo motu by the Commissioner. Here, we are concerned with
the latter Rule, which runs thus:
"Rule 80: Revision by the Commissioner suo motu.-The Commissioner may on
his own motion at any time within three years from the date of passing of
any order by the Sales Tax Officer or within two years from the date of
passing of any order by the Additional commissioner, Special Additional
commissioner or Assistant Commissioner, as the case may be, call for
records of the proceedings in which such order was passed and if he
considers that any order passed therein is erroneous in so far as it is
prejudicial to the interest of the revenue he may after giving the dealer
an opportunity of being heard and after making or causing to be made such
enquiry as he deems necessary revise any such order."
A plain reading of this rule disclose that the Commissioner can exercise
the revisional jurisdiction suo motu within the period specified-in the
case of an order passed by the Sales Tax Officer, within three years from
the date of passing of the order and in the case of an order passed by the
Additional Commissioner, Special Additional Commissioner or Assistant
Commissioner, as the case may be, within two years from the date of passing
of the order. The revisional jurisdiction can be exercised if the
Commissioner, after calling for the records of the proceedings in which the
order sought to be revised was passed, considers that the order is
erroneous insofar as it is prejudicial to the interest of the Revenue.
Where these jurisdictional facts are present to invoke the revisional
power, the Commissioner has to provide the dealer or a person affected
thereby an opportunity of being heard and after making or causing to be
made such enquiry as he deems necessary, may revise any such order. There
are two situations in which an order in question cannot be revised and they
are; (I) where an appeal against the order is pending before the appellate
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authority under section 23, or (2) where time-limit for filing an appeal
under section 23 has not expired. The same conditions will govern the
exercise of the revisional power by the delegatee of the Commissioner under
Notification No. I-ST-76/73 14171 dated the 3rd August, 1963. The
notification, insofar as it is relevant for our purpose, says that with the
prior approval of the State Government, the Commissioner has delegated his
power and duties under the Act and the Rules framed thereunder as specified
in the Schedule annexed thereto to Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax and
directed that the said powers and duties shall be exercised and discharged
by the said Assistant Commissioner with their respective jurisdiction.
It will be useful to refer to the schedule here. "SCHEDULE"
_________________________________________________________________________
SI. Provisions of the Description of the
powers and
No. Orissa Sales Tax Act, 1947, and duties delegated
Rules made thereunder
specifying the powers and
duties delegated.
__________________________________________________________________________
Sub-section (4)(a) of section 23 Powers to revise assessment of the Orissa
Sales Tax Act, 1947 order passed by the Sales Tax read with rule 80 of the
Orissa Officer and Assistant Sales Tax Sales Tax Rules, 1947.
Officer sou motu provided that no appeal has been filed against such
orders."
It may be seen that the power that had been delegated is under clause (a)
of sub-section (4) of Section 23 of the Act and Rule 80 of the Rules. In
Column 3 the description of the powers and duties delegated are given as
follows:-
"Powers to revise assessment order passed by the Sales Tax Officer and
Assistant Sales Tax Officer suo motu provided that no appeal has been filed
against such orders."
Thus, it is clear that the power conferred on the Assistant Commissioner
was under clause (a) of sub-section (4) of section 23 of the Act read with
rule 80 of the Rules. The Commissioner has revisional power to call for the
records and revise the orders not only of the Sales Tax Officer but also of
the Assistant Commissioner, Additional Commissioner and Special Additional
Commissioner; the power that was delegated to the Assistant Commissioner
was confined to the orders passed by the Sales Tax Officers. In the result
the Commissioner retained his power to revise the orders ’passed by the
Assistant Commissioner, Additional Commissioner and Special Additional
Commissioner. However, in regard to the orders passed by the Sales Tax
Officer, after the delegation, the Assistant Commissioner was competent to
revise and, in fact he did exercise the power to revise the order of the
Sales Tax Officer, after issuing a show cause notice dated December
13,1995. If that be so, the power of the Commissioner (the delegator) under
the afore-quoted provisions has been exhausted by the Assistant
Commissioner and the Commissioner cannot, in law, exercise the delegated
power over again.
It is no doubt true that the Commissioner is not denuded of the statutory
power of revision after delegation, but that, in view of the said
notification, only means that he can resume that power or cancel the
delegation of revisional power to the Assistant Commissioner. That, by no
stretch of imagination, can be construed to mean that once the orders have
been examined under the revisional power by the Assistant Commissioner (the
delegatee), the same orders can again be subjected to the revisional
jurisdiction by the Commissioner.
The attention of the learned Judges of the High Court was invited to an
earlier decision of a Division Bench of the High Court in Orient Paper
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Mills v. State of Orissa, (1988) 70 STC 333 but they got over it referring
to two judgments of this Court in Commissioner of Sales Tax v. Halari
Store, 107 STC 579 and State of Orissa v. Krishna Stores, (104 STC) 594. In
Our view, those judgments of this Court do not deal with the point in
issue, here. The Division Bench was therefore, not right in not following
the said decision of the coordinate bench which was binding on it. Further,
yet another judgment of a Division Bench of the Orissa High Court in J.C.
Budharaja v. State of Orissa and Ors., (118 STC 140) is brought to our
notice. One of us Hon ’ble Arijit Pasayat, CJ, (as he then was) was a party
to it. In that decision the point was exhaustively dealt with to hold that
the Commissioner did not have power to revise the order under the afore-
mentioned provision, after the Assistant Commissioner has, in exercise of
the delegated power, exercised the jurisdiction in respect of an order of
the Sales Tax Officer. We find in that decision a reference to the judgment
of this Court in State of Orissa v. Commissioner of Land Records and
Settlement, Cuttack, [1998] 7 SCC 162 which virtually covers the point
against the Revenue. In that case the statutory power of revision of Board
of Revenue was delegated to the Commissioner. In para 25 of the judgment,
it was laid down that the Board could not revise the orders passed by a
delegatee, the Commissioner.
For all these reasons, we are unable to sustain the order under challenge.
It is, accordingly, set aside. The impugned notice is quashed by allowing
the writ petition.
The appeal is, accordingly, allowed. In the circumstances of the case, we
make no order as to costs.