Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SALES-TAX OFFICER, CIRCLE-1, JABALPUR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
HANUMAN PRASAD
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
11/10/1966
BENCH:
BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA
BENCH:
BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA
SHAH, J.C.
RAMASWAMI, V.
CITATION:
1967 AIR 565 1967 SCR (1) 831
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1972 SC 38 (8,9,10)
R 1985 SC 582 (38)
ACT:
Madhya Pradesh General Sales Tax Act (M. P. Act 2 of 1959)
ss. 19(1) and 52-Assessment under repealed Act-Reassessment-
Period of limitation-Amendment of s. 19(1)-Proviso-Effect.
HEADNOTE:
Pending assessment to Sales-tax of respondent’s turnover
under the Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947,
the Madhya Pradesh General Sales Tax Act, 1958, came into
farce repealing the former Act Thereupon, the respondent was
assessed to tax under s. 11-A(1) of the repealed Act. After
more than three years from this assessment, the Sales Tax
Officer issued a notice for reassessment under s. 19(1) of
the new Act, which provided five years period for reopening
escaped assessment. The respondent objected that his sales
had been assessed under the repealed Act, where the
limitation of three years for reassessment was prescribed
and the proviso to s. 19(1) of the new Act preserved the
rights acquired under the repealed Act. The Sales-tax
Officer rejected the objection. The respondent filed a writ
petition in the High Court which was allowed. Thereafter,
the principal clause of s. 19(1) was amended retrospectively
to include assessments under the repealed Act. In appeal to
this Court-. the appellant Sales-tax Officer, contended that
the main clause of s. 19(1) was applicable and that by the
subsequent amendment to s. 19(1), the principal clause
became applicable to cases assessed under the repealed Act
and not the proviso.
HELD:The appeal must be dismissed.
The mere enforcement of the new Act by the time the order of
assessment was passed by the Sales-tax Officer could not
lead to the conclusion that the assessment was made. under
the new Act and not under repealed Act. [833 H]
The assessment, after enforcement of the new Act, was an
assessment in accordance with the rights and liabilities of
the respondent under the repealed Act; so the proviso to s.
19(1) of the new Act was applicable. The proviso to s. 52
of the new Act also preserved this right of the respondent.
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[834 E]
Even if the effect of the subsequent amending Act was that
under the principal clause of s. 19(1) the reassessment
could be taken up within a period of five years, that
provision became ineffective because of the Continued
existence of the proviso.
A proviso is added to a principal clause primarily with the
object of taking out of the scope of that principal clause
what is included in it and what the Legislature desires
should be excluded. [835 D]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 548 of 1965.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
February 28, 1963 of the Madhya Pradesh High Court in Misc.
Petition No. 381 of 1962.
A. P. Sen, Advocate-General, Madhya Pradesh and L N.
Shroff, for the appellant.
Yogeshwar Prasad and M. V. Goswami, for the respondent.
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The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Bhargava, J. The respondent was a registered dealer carrying
on the business of selling goods liable to sales-tax under
the Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947
(hereinafter referred to as "the repealed Act"). For the
period from 3rd November, 1956 to 23rd October, 1957, the
respondent filed his return, which was not accepted by the
Sales-tax Officer, who, on March 10, 1959, issued a notice
in Form XII to the respondent. Subsequent to this notice,
on May 23, 1959, the turnover of the sales of the respondent
was assessed to tax under s. 11 (4)(a) of the repealed Act.
In the meantime, on April 1, 1959 the Madhya Pradesh General
Sales Tax Act, 1958 (Act No. 11 of 1959) (hereinafter
referred to as "the new Act") came into force. On October
23, 1962, the Sales-tax Officer discovered that part of the
turnover of the respondent for the period mentioned above
had escaped assessment and issued a notice under s. 19(1) of
the new Act. The respondent raised a preliminary objection
that his sales had been assessed under the repealed Act,
under which the limitation of a period of three years was
prescribed by section 11 -A for assessment of escaped
turnover. The Sales-tax Officer rejected that objection by
Ms order dated 29th October, 1962, and decided to proceed
with the reassessment. Thereupon, the respondent moved a
petition under Articles 226 and 227 of the Constitution
before the High Court of Madhya Pradesh, Jabalpur, praying
for the quashing of the order of the Sales-tax Officer dated
29th October, 1962, and the notice dated 23rd October, 1962.
The High Court held that the period of limitation governing
the proceedings instituted by the notice dated 23rd October,
1962, was that laid down under S. 11-A(1) of the repealed
Act, so that the proceedings were barred by time. The
notice dated 23rd October, 1962, and the subsequent order
dated 29th October, 1962 were consequently quashed. The
Sales-tax Officer of Jabalpur has now come up to this Court
in this appeal by special leave against this order of the
High Court.
Section 19(1) of the new Act, on which
reliance was placed by the Sales-tax Officer,
reads as follows
"19. (1) Where an assessment has been made
under this Act and the Commissioner, in
consequence of any information which has come
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into his possession, is satisfied that any
sale or purchase of goods chargeable to tax
under this Act, during any year, has been
under-assessed or has escaped assessment or
assessed at a lower rate or any deduction has
been wrongly made therefrom, the Commissioner
may, at any time within five calendar years
from the expiry of such year, after giving the
dealer a reasonable opportunity of being heard
and after making such enquiry as he considers
necessary, proceed, in such
833
manner as may be prescribed, to reassess the
tax payable on any such sale or purchase and
the Commissioner may direct that the dealer
shall pay, by way of penalty in addition to
the amount of tax so assessed, a sum not
exceeding that amount :
Provided that in the case of an assessment
made under any Act repealed by Section 52, the
period of reassessment on the ground of under-
assessment, escapement or wrong deduction
shall be as provided in such Act
notwithstanding the repeal thereof."
The contention on behalf of the Sales-tax Officer was that
for the sake of assessing the escaped turnover, the
provision applicable was that contained in the main clause
of s. 19(1), and that the proviso was not applicable in this
case. On the other hand, the respondent’s contention was
that, in his case, the assessment had been made under the
repealed Act, so that the proviso was applicable and the
period of limitation for issue of a valid notice was that
laid down in s. II A(1) of the repealed Act which is as
follows:
" 11 -A.(1). If, in consequence of any
information which has come into his
possession, the Commissioner is satisfied that
any turnover of a dealer during any period has
been under-assessed or has escaped assessment
or assessed at a lower rate or any deduction
has been wrongly made therefrom, the
Commissioner may, at any time within three
calendar years from the expiry of such period,
after giving the dealer a reasonable
opportunity of being heard and after making
such enquiry as he considers necessary,
proceed, in such manner as may be prescribed,
to reassess or assess, as the case may be, the
tax payable on any such turnover; and the
Commissioner may direct that the dealer shall
pay, by way of penalty in addition to the
amount of tax so assessed, a sum not exceeding
that amount."
The High Court has accepted the plea put forward on behalf
of the respondent.
The facts given by us above clearly show that the original
assessment of the respondent was in respect of a period when
the new Act had not come into force. The respondent had
filed the return, and even the notice in that connection was
issued by the Sales-tax Officer prior to the enforcement of
the new Act. The actual order of assessment was made on
23rd May, 1959, shortly after the new Act had come into
force. The mere enforcement of that Act by the time the
order of assessment was passed by the Sales-tax Officer
cannot lead to the conclusion that the assessment of the
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respondent was made under the new Act and not under the
repealed Act. It was under s. 52 of the new Act that the
repealed
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Act was repealed, and that section itself, under the
proviso, laid down that such repeal shall not affect the
previous operation of the said Act or any right, title,
obligation or liability already acquired, accrued or
incurred thereunder. There was also the further addition
that subject thereto, anything done or any action taken (in-
cluding any appointment, notification, notice, order, rule,
form, regulation, certificate or licence) in the exercise of
any power conferred by or under the said Act shall, in so
far as it is not inconsistent with the provisions of this
Act, be deemed to have been done or taken in exercise of the
powers conferred by or under this Act, as if this Act were
in force on the date on which such thing was done or action
was taken. In view of this proviso it has to be held that
when this new Act came into force on 1st April, 1959, all
rights, title, obligation or liability already acquired,
accrued or incurred under the repealed Act by the respondent
remained unaffected and intact. The rights and liabilities,
which had been acquired or incurred under the repealed Act,
included the right or liability to be assessed in accordance
with the provisions of the repeated Act in respect of
turnover of sales effected during the time when that Act was
in force. The repealed Act laid down that turnover was
taxable, how it was to be computed, and at what rate the tax
was to be charged. These provisions clearly created rights
as well as liabilities of dealers. Those rights and
liabilities were thus preserved by s. 52 of the new Act.
The assessment which was completed in the case of the
respondent on 23rd May, 1959, was, therefore, an assessment
in accordance with the rights and liabilities of the
respondent under the repealed Act ; and this being so, it
has to be held that the proviso to s. 19(1) of the new Act
was applicable to the case of the respondent. As a result
of this proviso, the period of reassessment on the ground of
under-assessment, escapement or wrong deduction in the case
of the respondent had to be as provided in s. II -A(1) of
the repealed Act, so that the period was three years and not
five years as laid down by s. 19(1) of the new Act. The
notice dated 23rd October, 1962, was clearly issued beyond
the period of limitation prescribed by s. II -A(1) of the
repealed Act, and the proceedings in pursuance of it were
time barred.
In the alternative, this question may be examined in another
aspect. Section 11-A(1) of the repealed Act itself created
a right in favour of the respondent not to be assessed in
respect of turnover that was under-assessed or had escaped
assessment after the expiry of the period prescribed in that
sub-section. The proviso to s. 52 of the new Act preserved
this right of the respondent, and on this ground also, the,
Sales-tax Officer was not competent to issue the notice for
reassessment after that period of limitation had expired.
In this connection, learned counsel for the Sales-tax
Officer drew. our attention to two subsequent pieces of
legislation that
835
amended the new Act. The first one of these is the Madhya
Pradesh General Sales Tax (Second Amendment) Act, 1963 (Act
23 of 1963): (hereinafter referred to as "the Amending
Act"). By section 3 of this Amending Act, section 19(1) of
the new Act was amended, so as to introduce some words in
the principal clause of s. 19(1). The words introduced were
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: "or any Act repealed by section 52" and they were to be
inserted at both the places where the words "this Act"
occurred in the principal clause. It was urged that, as a
result of this amendment, this principal clause became
applicable even to cases in which assessment had been made
under the repealed Act, and, taking into account the effect
of this subsequent amendment, we should hold that the Sales-
tax Officer was not incompetent to make the assessment when
he purported to issue the notice on 23rd October, 1962, as
the notice was issued within the period of five years laid
down in the principal clause of s. 19(1). of the new Act.
It is, however, significant that, though the principal
clause of s. 19(1) was amended, the proviso to it was not
deleted by the Amending Act. The proviso, therefore,
continued to remain in force. It is well-recognised that a
proviso is added to a principal clause primarily with the
object of taking out of the scope of that principal clause
what is included in it and what the legislature desires
should be excluded. Consequently, even if it be held that
the effect of the Amending Act was that, under the principal
clause of s. 19(1), the reassessment of the under-assessed
or escaped turnover in the case of the respondent could be
taken up within a period of five calendar years, that
provision became ineffective because of the continued
existence of the proviso. The Amending Act had not come
into force when the High Court decided the petition’ and
consequently, the High Court had no occasion to consider its
effect. However, as we have indicated above, the order made
by the High Court remains unaffected even after this
amendment, and the decision given that the limitation
applicable to the case of the respondent is that laid down
by s. 11 -A(1) of the repealed Act is correct. It is true
that the amendment is s. 19(1) of the new Act made by the
Amending Act was, given retrospective effect under s. 5 of
the Amending Act, but that also is immaterial, because, even
after the amendment, the provision contained in the proviso
had to prevail over the principal clause of s. 19(1).
The second piece of legislation brought to our notice was
the Madhya Pradesh General Sales Tax (Second Amendment) Act,
1964 (Act 20 of 1964) by which also s. 19(1) of the new Act
was. slightly amended. That amendment, however, has no
bearing on, the point which we are called upon to decide in
this appeal, and’ consequently, needs no consideration.
The appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
Y. P.
Appeal dismissed..
836