Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
ADDL. COMMISSIONER (LEGAL) & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
M/S. JYOTI TRADERS AND ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 20/11/1998
BENCH:
K. VENKATASWAMI, & D.P. WADHWA.
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
--------
D.P. Wadhwa, J.
--------------
Leave granted.
In both these appeals which are against two separate
judgement of the same Division Bench of the Allahabad High
Court, a common question of law arises. It is that in the
circumstance could a completed assessment under the U.P.
Sales Tax Law be re-opened after the prescribed period when
that period was enlarged by amending the law.
Facts are similar.
In the appeal of Lohia Machines Limited (arising out
of SLP (c) No. 11015 of 1997) assessment for the year
1985-86 under the UP Trade Tax Act, 1948 (for short ’the
Act’) was completed on November 27, 1989. The Act is also
called the U.P. Sales Tax Act. In the appeal of Jyoti
Traders (arising out of SLP(c) No. 8866 of 1997) assessment
for the year 1985-86 was completed on February 28, 1990.
Period for assessment or re-assessment, which is four years
under section 21 of the Act, for the assessment year 1985-86
expired, on March 31, 1990.
The Act was extensively amended by the UP Sales Tax
(Amendment and Validation) Act, 1991. The amending Act
received the assent of the Governor of Uttar Pradesh on
August 19, 1991. Different dates were prescribed for coming
into force of various provisions of the amending Act.
Section 21 of the Act also underwent an amendment and the
relevant provision with which we are concerned came into
force with effect from February 19, 1991.
Taking advantage of the amendment to section 21,
which now prescribed a period of eight years, the Sales Tax
Officer after taking sanction from the Commissioner of Sales
Tax issued notices to the respondents in both these appeals
for re-assessment. In the case of Lohia Machine Ltd.
sanction order is dated December 21, 1993 and notice is
dated September 8, 1994. In the case of Jyoti Traders date
of sanction order is November 12, 1993 and the notice had
been issued for January 11, 1994. Sanctions given and
notices thus issued were after more than four years with
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reference to the assessment year 1985-86 under the Act
before its amendment.
The respondent challenged both these orders of
sanction of the Commissioner of Sales Tax and the notice for
re-assessment in two separate writ petitions which were
allowed by the High Court and the sanction orders of the
Commissioner as well as notices issued by the Sales Tax
Officer were quashed. This led to filing of the present
appeals.
Relevant provisions of section 21 of the Act are as
under:-
"Section 21. Assessment of tax on the turnover not
assessed during the year.
(1) If the assessing authority has reason to believe
that the whole or any part of the turnover of the
dealer, for any assessment year or part thereof, has
escaped assessment to tax or has been under assessed
or has been assessed to tax at a rate lower than
that at which it is assessable under this Act, or
any deductions or exemptions have been wrongly
allowed in respect thereof the assessing authority
may, after issuing notice to the dealer and making
such inquiry as it may consider necessary, assess or
re-assess the dealer or tax according to law:
Explanation.............
(2) Except as otherwise provided in this section no
order of assessment or re-assessment under any
provision of this Act for any assessment year shall
be made after the expiration of four years from the
end of such year."
By the amending Act a proviso was added to
sub-section 2 as under:-
"Provided that if the Commissioner of Sales Tax, on
being satisfied on the basis of reasons recorded by
the assessing authority that it is just and
expedient so to do authorizes the assessing
authority in that behalf, such assessment or
re-assessment may be made after the expiration of
the period aforesaid but not after the expiration of
eight years from the end of such year
notwithstanding that such assessment or
re-assessment may involve a change of opinion."
There are other amendments in section 21 which were
made by subsequent amending Acts but with those we are not
concerned.
As noted above, the proviso to sub-section 2 of
section 21 as inserted by the amending Act, 1991 came into
force with effect from February 19, 1991.
High Court had held that sanction issued by the
Commissioner of Sales Tax for initiation of proceedings
under Section 21 of the Act for the Assessment Year 1985-86
was barred by limitation and that the proviso to Section
21(2) of the Act which had been introduced with effect from
February 19, 1991 and was inapplicable to the Assessment
Year 1985-86 as the assessment order for this year had been
made much before the introduction of the proviso to Section
21(2) of the Act. High Court was thus of the view that when
the period for assessment or re-assessment for the year
1985-86 under Section 21 of the Act before insertion of the
proviso to Sub-section (2) thereof had expired on March 31,
1990, the amendment, had no effect.
Mr. Goel, learned counsel for the appellant
submitted that if we accept the interpretation to
Sub-section (2) of Section 21 to hold that the amendment is
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of prospective nature it will make the proviso redundant.
He said proviso in fact operates after expiry of four years
period prescribed under that sub-section and that notice has
to follow after the order is obtained from the Commissioner
and not before that. Strong reliance was placed by him on a
decision of this Court in Commercial Tax Officer and others
Vs. Biswanath Jhunjhunwalla and another (1996 (5) SCC 626).
In this case, which is under the Bengal Finance (Sales Tax)
Act, 1941 the respondent, a registered dealer under this
Act, was assessed for the assessment years Chitra Sudi 2023
and 2024. The assessments were completed on February 17,
1969 and March 26, 1969 respectively. Under rule 80 (5) of
the Bengal Sales Tax Rules. 1941 made under that Act the
assessment could have been reopened only within a period of
four years. This Rule 80(5) in relevant part is as under:-
"80(5) The Commissioner or any other authority
to whom power in this behalf has been delegated by
the Commissioner, shall not, of his own motion,
revise any assessment made or order passed under the
Act or the rules thereunder if -
(ii) the assessment has been made or the order
has been passed more than four years previously."
Bengal Sales Tax Ordinance, 1973 was promulgated
which was later replaced by the Bengal Finance (Sales Tax)
(Third Amendment) Act, 1974. This amending Act substituted
Section 26(1) of the principal Act under which now the State
Government was empowered to make rules, with prospective or
retrospective effect for carrying out the purposes of the
Act. With this new power conferred on the State Government
Rule 80(5) was amended by notification issued on March 30,
1974 amending the same with effect from November 1, 1971,
and in relevant part now it reads as under:-
"80(5) The Commissioner or any other authority to
whom power in this behalf has been delegated by the
Commissioner shall not, or order passed under the
Act or the rules thereunder if --
(ii) the assessment to Rule 80(5) as aforesaid
Commercial Tax Officer issued notices on November 7,
1974 re-opening the completed assessments for the
years Chitra Sudi 2023 and 2024. These notices were
challenged in the Calcutta High Court by writ
petition questioning the legality of the notices.
High Court upheld the contention of the
respondent-assessee that by the amendment of the
Rule, assessments which had been completed could be
revised within six years of the date of such
completion, but when the writ to revise the
assessments under the unamended provision of the
rule stood barred on the date of the amendment, such
assessments could not be re-opened or revised. High
Court said that the notification did not either
expressly or necessary implication confer any power
of revision of assessment which stood barred on the
date on which it was issued. After referring to
decision of this Court in the cases of ITO vs. S.K.
Habibullah [(1962) 44 ITR 809], S.S. Gadgil, ITO
vs. Lal and Co. (53 ITR 231) and J.P. Jani, ITO
vs. Induprasad Devshanker Bhatt [(1969) 72 ITR 595]
this Court held as under :-
"12. What, therefore, we have to seek is the clear
meaning of thee said Notification. If there be no
doubt about the meaning, the amendment brought about
by the said Notification must be given full effect.
If the language expressly so states or clearly
effect from 1.11.1971, so as to encompass all
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assessments made within they have become final by
reason of the expiry of the period of four years or
not.
13. By reason of the said Notification, with effect
from 1.11.1971, Rule 80(5)(ii) has to be read as
barring the Commissioner (or other authority to whom
power in this behalf has been delegated by the
Commissioner) from revising of his own motion any
assessment made or order passed under the Act or the
rules if the assessment has been made or the order
has been passed more than six years previous to
1.11.1971. Put conversely, with effect from
1.11.1971. Rule 80(5)(ii) permits the Commissioner
(or other authority) to revise of his own motion any
assessment made or order passed under the Act or the
rules provided the assessment has not been made or
the order passed under the Act or the rules provided
the assessment has not been made or the order passed
more than six years previously. This being the
plain meaning, the said Notification must be given
full effect. Full effect can be given only if the
said Notification is read as being applicable not
only to assessments which were incomplete but also
to assessments which had reached finality by reason
of the earlier prescribed period of four years
having elapsed. Where language as unambiguous as
this is employed, it must be assumed that the
legislature intended the amended provision to apply
even to assessments that had so become final; if the
intention was otherwise, the legislature would have
so stated."
Mr. Agrawal, who appeared for Lohia Machine Ltd. and
Mr. Hansaria, for Jyoti Traders, submitted that the
amendment would not have any retrospective operation and
that High Court was right in its view. To get support for
their arguments reference was made to the decisions of this
Court in Y. Narayana Chetty & Anr. vs. Income-Tax officer,
Nellore, & Ors. [(1953) 35 ITR 388]. S.S. Gadgil vs. Lal &
Co. [(1964) 53 ITR 231]. J.P. Jani, ITO vs. Induprasad
Devshanker Bhatt [(1969) 72 ITR 595] and The Ahmedabad
Manufacturing & Calico Printing Co. ltd. vs. S.C. Mehta
Income-tax Officer and another [1963 Supp. (2) SCR 92].
In Y. Narayana Chetty & Anr. vs. Income-Tax
Officer Nellore & Ors. one of the questions raised was that
proceedings taken by the Income Tax officer under Section 34
of the Income Tax Act, 1922 were invalid because the notice
required to be issued under the said section had not been
issued against the assessees contemplated therein. This
Court said that the Income Tax Officer had purported to act
under Section 34(1)(a) against the assessee and proceeded to
hold as under:
"The said sub-section provides inter alia that "if
the Income-tax officer has reason to believe that by
reason of the omission or failure on the part of the
assessee to make a return of his income under
Section 22 for any year or to disclose fully and
truly all material facts necessary for his
assessment for that year, income, profits or gains
for that year, income, profits or gains chargeable
to income-tax has been under-assessed", he may,
within the time prescribed, "serve on the assessee a
notice containing all or any of the requirements
which may be included in the notice under
sub-section (2) of section 22 and may proceed to
re-assess such income, profits or gains." The
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argument is that the service of the requisite notice
on the assessee is a condition precedent to the
validity of any re-assessment made under the
validity of any re-assessment made under Section 34;
and if a valid notice is not issued as required,
proceedings taken by the Income-Tax Officer in
pursuance of an invalid notice and consequent orders
of re-assessment passed by him would be void and
inoperative. In our opinion, this contention is
well-founded. The notice prescribed by section 34
cannot be regarded as a mere procedural requirement;
it is only if the said notice is served on the
assessee as required that the Income-tax officer
would be justified in taking proceedings against
him. If no notice is issued or if the notice issued
is shown to be invalid then the validity of the
proceedings taken by the Income-tax Officer without
a notice or in pursuance of an invalid notice would
be illegal and void. That is the view taken by the
Bombay and Calcutta High Courts in commissioner of
Income-tax vs. Ramuskh Motilal [(1955) 27 ITR 54]
and R.K. Das & Co. vs. commissioner of Income-tax
[(1956) 30 ITR 439] and we think that view is
right".
In S.S. Gadgil vs. Lal & Co. Section 34 of Income
Tax Act, 1922 was considered which prescribed a period of
one year for assessment or re-assessment in the case of
income escaping assessment in the case of a person deemed to
be an agent of a non-resident person. By Section 18 of the
Finance Act, 1956, period of one year was increased to two
years. The relevant clauses of Section 34 prescribing the
period within which notice may be issued read as follows:
"If he may in cases falling under clause (a) at any
time within eight years and in cases falling under
clause (b) at any time within four years of the end
of that year, serve on the assessee...... a notice
containing all or any of the requirements which may
be included in a notice under sub-section (2) of
section 22 and may proceed to assess or reassess
such income, profits or gains or recompute the loss
or depreciation allowance;.......
provided that------....
(iii) Where the assessment made or to be made is an
assessment made or to be made on a person deemed to
be the agent of a non-resident person under section
43, this sub-section shall have effect as if for the
periods of eight years and four years a period of
one year was substituted."
By section 18 of the Finance Act, 1956 section 34 was
extensively amended and clause (iii) of the proviso was
substituted by the following proviso:
"Provided further that the Income-tax Officer shall
not issue a notice under this sub-section for any
year after the expiry of two years from that year if
the person on whom an assessment or reassessment is
to be made in pursuance of the notice is a person
deemed to be the agent of a non-resident person
under section 43."
Income-tax Officer, therefor, could issue a notice
to a person deemed to be the agent of a non-resident after
the expiry of two years from the date of the expiry of the
assessment year. It was common ground that section 18 of
the Finance Act, 1956 was not given retrospective operation
before April 1, 1956. The question before this Court was
whether the Income-tax Officer could issue a notice of
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assessment to a person as an agent of a non-resident party
under the amended provisions when the period prescribed for
such notice had, before the Amended Act came into force,
expired. This Court said that the Amending Act came into
force after the period provided for issue of a notice under
Section 34, before it was amended, had expired. The Court
said that in considering whether the amending statute
applied, the question was one of interpretation, i.e., to
ascertain whether it was the intention of the legislature to
deprive a taxpayer of the plea that action for assessment or
re-assessment could not be commenced, on the ground that
before the amending Act became effective, it was barred. The
Court then held as under:
"As we have already pointed out, the right to
commence a proceeding for assessment against the
assessee as an agent of a non-resident party under
the Income-tax Act before it was amended, ended on
March 31, 1956. It is ture that under the amending
Act by Section 18 of the finance Act, 1956,
authority was conferred upon the Income-tax Officer
to assess a person as an agent of a foreign party
under Section 43 within two years from the end of
the year of assessment. But authority of the
Income-tax Officer under the Act before it was
amended by the Finance Act of 1956, having already
come to an end, the amending provision will not
assist him to commence a proceeding even though at
the date when he issued the notice it is within the
period provided by that amending Act. This will be
so, notwithstanding the fact that there has been no
determinable point of time between the expiry of the
time provided under the old Act and the commencement
of the amending Act. The legislature has given to
Section 18 of the Finance Act, 1956, only a limited
retrospective operation, i.e., up to April 1, 1956,
only. That provision must be read subject to the
rule that in the absence of an express provision or
clear implication, the legislature does not intend
to attribute to thee amending provision a greater
retrospectivity than is expressly mentioned, nor to
authorise the Income-tax-officer to commence
proceedings which before the new Act came into force
had by the expiry of the period."
In J.P. Jani, Income-Tax Officer, Circle TV Ward G,
Ahmedabad & Anr. vs. Induprased Devshanker Bhatt the
assessment for the assessment year 1947-48 was completed on
January 31, 1952 under the Income Tax Act, 1922. Therefore,
the Income-tax Officer received information that a certain
profit made by the assessee had escaped assessment by reason
of the assessee not having disclosed at the time of the
original assessment. The Income-tax Officer, therefore,
after obtaining the approval of the Commissioner of
Income-tax issued notice dated March 27, 1956 under Section
34(1)(a) of the Income-tax Officer completed re-assessmet
proceedings. Assessee went in appeal to the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner who allowed the same by order dated
January 5, 1963 and set aside the order of assessment on the
ground that there was no valid service of notice. By this
time, Income Tax Act, 1961 had come into force. On January
4, 1963, the Income-tax Officer issued a notice calling upon
the assessee to show cause why proceedings should not be
taken under Section 147(a) of the new [Act for brining to
tax the escaped profit of the assessee. Subsequently,
notice under section 148 of the new Act was issued.
Assessee protested against this new notice on the ground
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that action under the old Act had become time barred and the
new Act had no application to his case. After considering
the provisions of the old Act and Section 297 of the new Act
which repealed the old Act and on the effect of the repeal,
this Court said that all the new sections must be read as
applicable only to those cases where right of the Income-tax
Officer to re-open the assessment was not barred under the
repealed section. The Court held as under :
"In our view, the new statute does not disclose in
express terms or by necessary implication that there
was a revival of the right of the Income-tax Officer
to re-open an assessment which was already barred
under the old Act. This view is borne out by the
decision of this Court in S.S. Gadgil vs. Lal & Co.
[(1964) 53 ITR 231].
This Court observed that neither by express terms nor by
necessary implication did section 297(2)(d)(ii) disclosed
that there was revival of the right of the income-tax
Officer to re-open an assessment which was already barred
under the Old Act. The Section was applicable only to those
cases where the right of the Income-Tax Officer to re-open
the assessment was not barred under the old Act.
In The Ahmedabad Manufacturing & Calico Printing
Co., Ltd. Vs. S.C. Mehta, Income-tax Officer & Anr. in
its assessment to income tax for the year 1952-53, the
appellant, a company, had been granted under the provisions
of the Finance Act, 1952, a rebate on a portion of its
profits of the previous year, that is, 1951 which it had not
distributed as dividends to its shareholders. In the next
assessment year 1953-54, the appellant used a part of the
aforesaid undistributed profits for declaring dividends. As
the law then stood, nothing could be done by the revenue
authorities to withdraw the rebate earlier granted on the
ground of the profits being utilised in declaring dividends
in a latter year. From April 1, 1956, however, there was a
change in the law as sub-section (10) of Section 35 of the
Income-tax Act, 1922, was brought into force then. By an
order made on March 27, 1958, under that sub-section, the
aforesaid rebate was withdrawn and the appellant was called
upon to the High Court at Bombay for a writ to quash the
order of March 27, 1958, on the ground that sub-section (10)
was not applicable to the facts of this case. That
application was dismissed by the High Court. The appeal in
the Supreme Court was against this decision of the High
Court at Bombay dismissing the application. Now sub-section
(10) of Section 35 of the Income-Tax Act was enacted by the
Finance Act of 1956. That sub-section, in so far as it is
necessary to state for the purpose of this case, provided
that where in any of the assessment years 1948-49 to
1955-56, a rebate of income-tax was allowed to a company
under the Finance Act prevailing in that year on a part of
its total income "and subsequently the amount on which the
rebate of income-tax was allowed as aforesaid is availed of
by the company, wholly or partly, for declaring dividends in
any year ............ the Income-tax Officer shall
re-compute the tax payable by the company by reducing the
rebate originally allowed." The sub-section in substance
permits a rebate duly allowed in any year before it came
into force to be withdrawn if "subsequently" the amount on
which the rebate was allowed "is availed of" "for declaring
dividends in any year". The appellant contended that the
sub-section did not apply unless the amount on which the
rebate was granted was availed of for declaring dividends
after the sub-section had come into force, that is, after
April 1, 1956 and, therefore, it did not apply to the
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present case. It was said that if it were not so, the
sub-section would be given a retrospective operation and the
rule was that it was to be presumed that a statute dealing
with substantive rights was not to have such operation.
This Court, per majority (3 : 2), held that sub-section
(10) of Section 15 was applicable to the present case.
Sarkar, J. who was in majority, in his concurring judgment,
observed as under:
"There is no dispute that by sub-section (10) the
legislature intended to penalise a case where
subsequent to its enactment, the amount on which
rebate had been granted was utilised in declaration
of dividends. Now is there any reason to think that
the legislature did not want to impose the penalty
also on those who had earlier utilised the amount in
declaration of dividends? There was no special
merit in these latter cases. And I also think that
they formed the majority of the cases. The grant of
rebate having been stopped after March 31, 1956,
there was no occasion to provide for cases of such
grant thereafter. All these circumstances lead me
to the view that the intention of the legislature
was to penalise the cases of utilisation of amounts
on which rebate had been granted in payment of
dividends which had happened before the sub-section
came into force. The remedy which the sub-section
provided would largely fail in any other view. The
general scope and purview of the sub-section and a
consideration of the evil which it was intended to
remedy lead me to the opinion that the intention of
the legislature clearly was that the sub-section
should apply to the facts that we have in this
case."
Hidayatullah, J. who spoke for the majority said that
sub-section (10) was introduced into section 35 of the
Income Tax Act, 1922 by the Finance Act, 1956 and that if
there was nothing more in the language of the sub-section to
give it operation from an earlier date it would have
operated only from April 1, 1956 but the language of the
sub-section gave it additional retrospectively and said so
in such clear and unabiguous language as to leave no doubt.
He then observed :
"In the present case, this is so. The assessee
company declared dividends in the calendar year
1952. The assessment year was 1.4.1953 to
31.3.1954. The letter written on March 18, 1958,
asking the assessee company to show cause was within
the four years reckoned from the end of the
financial year (31-03-1954) in which the amount on
which rebate of Income-tax was availed of for
declaring dividends. It complied with the letter of
the sub-section. Since the power commenced on
1.4.1956, the utmost reach of the Income-tax Officer
would be the end of the assessment year 1952. Any
declaration of dividend after 1 day of April, 1952,
out of accumulated profits of any of the years in
which rebate was earned would be within time for the
recall of the rebate. But a declaration prior to
1.4.1952 would be beyond the power of the Income-tax
Officer to recall. This meaning is the only meaning
which the plain words of the section can bear. Any
other meaning might make sub-s.(10) unworkable
because no company, with the knowledge that rebate
would be recalled, would like to declare dividends
after April 1, 1956 out of amounts on which rebate
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was earned. If the other meaning was attributed,
sub-s. (10) might well be a dead letter. The
sub-section was obviously the result of noting how
rebates were earned and later were being utilized to
fill the pockets of the shareholders. The amendment
met this situation and did it in very clear terms."
We do not think that decisions in the cases of Y.Narayana
Chetty & Anr. S.S. Gadgil and J.P. Jani, ITO are of any
help in interpreting the provisions of law now before us.
In Y.Narayana Chetty’s case, this Court upheld the
contention of the assessee that the notice on the assessee
is a condition precedent to the validity of reassessment
made under Section 34 of the Income Tax Act, 1922. The
Court said that notice prescribed under this section could
not be regarded as a mere procedural requirement and that
the Income-tax Officer gets jurisdiction to reassess only
when notice is served on the assessee as required. In S.S.
Gadgil’s case, this Court said that in considering whether
the amending statute applied, the question was one of the
interpretation and that the amending provision must be read
subject to the rules that in the absence of an express
provision or clear implication the legislature does not
intend to attribute to the amending provision a greater
retrospectively than expressly mentioned. J.P. Jani’s case
was concerned with the retrospective operation of the new
Income Tax Act, 1961 when assessment proceedings under the
old Income Tax Act, 1922 had already concluded and period to
re-open the assessment under the old Act had become barred.
The two decisions in the cases of The Ahmedbad
Manufacturing & Calico Printing Co. Ltd. and Biswanath
Jhunjhunwalla & Anr. are more closer to the issue involved
in the present case before us. They laid down that it is
the language of the provision that matters and when meaning
is clear, it has to be given full effect. In both these
cases this Court held that the proviso which amended the
existing provision gave it retrospectively. When the
provision of law is explicit, it has to operate fully and
there could not be any limits to its operation. This Court
in Biswanath Jhunjhunwalla case said that if the language
expressly so states or clearly implies, retrospectively must
be given to the provision. Under Section 34 of the Income
Tax, 1922, it is the service of the notice which is sine qua
non, an indispensable requisite, for the initiation of
assessment or reassessment proceedings where income had
escaped assessment. That is not so in the present case.
Under sub-section (1) of Section 21 of the Act before its
amendment, the assessing authority may, after issuing notice
to the dealer and making such inquiry as it may consider
necessary, assess or reassess the dealer according to law.
Sub-section (2) provided that except as otherwise provided
in this Section no order for any assessment year shall be
made after the expiry of 4 years from the end of such year.
However, after the amendment, a proviso was added to
sub-section (2) under which Commissioner of Sales Tax
authorizes the assessing authority to make assessment or
reassessment after the expiration of 8 years from the end of
such year notwithstanding that such assessment or
reassessment may involve a change of opinion. The proviso
came into force w.e.f. February 19, 1991. We do not think
that sub-section (2) and the proviso added to it leave
anyone in doubt that as on the date when the proviso came
into force, the Commissioner of Sales Tax could authorise
making of assessment or reassessment after the expiration of
8 years from the end of that particular assessment year. It
is immaterial if a period for assessment or reassessment
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under sub-section (2) of Section 21 before the addition of
the said proviso had expired. Here, it is the completion of
assessment or reassessment under Section 21 which is to be
done before the expiration of 8 years of that particular
assessment year. Read as it is, these provisions would mean
that the assessment for the year 1985-86 could be re-opened
up to March 31, 1994. Authorisation by the Commissioner of
Sales Tax and completion of assessment or reassessment under
sub-section (1) of Section 21 have to be completed within 8
years of the particular assessment year. Notice to the
assessee follows the authorisation by the Commissioner of
Sales Tax, its service on the assessee in not a condition
precedent to re-open the assessment. It is not disputed
that a fiscal statute can have retrospective operation. If
we accept the interpretation given by the respondents, the
proviso added to sub-section (2) of Section 21 of the Act
becomes redundant. Commencement of Act can be different
than the operation of the Act though sometime both may be
the same. Proviso now added to sub-section (2) of Section
21 of the Act does not put any embargo on the Commissioner
of Sales Tax not to reopen the assessment if period, as
prescribed earlier, had expired before the proviso came into
operation. One has to see the language of the provision.
If it is clear, it has to be given its full effect. to
reassure oneself, one may go into the intention of the
legislature in enacting such provision. The date of
commencement of the proviso to Section 21(2) of the Act does
not control its retrospective operation. Earlier the
assessment/ re-assessment could have been completed within
four years of that particular assessment year and now by the
amendment adding proviso to section 21(2) of the Act it is
eight years. The only safeguard being that it is after
satisfaction of thee Commissioner of Sales Tax. The proviso
is operative from February 19, 1991 and a bare reading of
the proviso shows that the operation of this proviso related
and encompasses back to previous eight assessment years. We
need not refer to the provisions of Income Tax Act to
interpret proviso to Section 21(2) Language of which is
clear and unambiguous and so is the intention of
Legislature. We are thus, of the view that High Court was
not right in quashing the sanction given by the Commissioner
of Sales Tax and notices issued by the Assessing Authority
in pursuance thereto.
We, therefore, set aside the impugned judgments and
orders of the High Court and allow the appeals with cost.