Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
AZAM JHA BAHADUR (DEAD) BY HIS LEGAL REPRESENTATIVES
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
EXPENDITURE TAX OFFICER, HYDERABAD
DATE OF JUDGMENT30/08/1971
BENCH:
GROVER, A.N.
BENCH:
GROVER, A.N.
HEGDE, K.S.
CITATION:
1972 AIR 2319 1972 SCR (1) 470
1971 SCC (3) 621
CITATOR INFO :
D 1990 SC1637 (49)
RF 1992 SC1782 (9)
ACT:
Expenditure Tax Act, 1957--S. 2(g) (i) as amended by Finance
Act, 1957-"Dependent" meaning of S. 16, validity of notice
under Legislative competence-Act covered by entry 97 List I.
Constitution of India, 1950-Article 14-Taxing statute-
incidence of tax different on different classes of
assessees-Does not amount to legislation without
classification.
HEADNOTE:
Section 2(g) of the Expenditure Tax Act, 1957, before its
amendment by the Finance Act, 1959, defined ’dependent’ to
mean "where the assessee is an individual, his or her spouse
or child wholly or mainly dependent on the assessee for
support and maintenance". After the amendment ’dependent’
meant "where the assessee is an individual, his or her
spouse or minor child, and includes any person wholly or
mainly dependent on the assessee for support and
maintenance".
The appellant was assessed as an individual to expenditure
tax for the assessment years 1959-60, 1960-61 and 1961-62.
After the completion of the assessment, the Expenditure Tax
Officer issued notice under section 16 of the Act calling
upon the appellant to file supplementary returns for the
three years on the ground that he had reason to believe that
the appellant’s expenditure had escaped assessment or had
been under assessed. The assessments were sought to be
reopened for including the expenditure incurred by the wife
of the appellant. The appellant, thereupon, filed a writ
petition in the High Court challenging the reopening of the
assessments on various grounds. The petition was dismissed.
In appeal to this Court it was contended : (1) the
appellant’s wife, who admittedly had her own properties and
assets and had substantial income therefrom could not be
regarded as ’dependent’ within the meaning of section 2(g)
(i) and, therefore, her expenditure could not be included
under section 4(ii) for computing the expenditure of the
assessee; (2) that there was no reasonable basis for making
a distinction between an assessee, who was an individual and
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an assessee which was a Hindu undivided family; (3) that the
action of the Expenditure Tax Officer in reopening the
assessments under s. 16(a) was wholly arbitrary and illegal;
that there had been no omission or failure on the part of
the assessee to make a return of his expenditure or to
disclose fully and truly all material facts; and the Act was
void for want of legislative competence.
Dismissing the appeal.
HELD : (1) The Act divided the assessees into well known
classes, namely, an assessee who was an individual and an
assessee which was a Hindu Undivided Family. The two cases
were dealt with separately in s. 2(g) and in s. 4(ii).
Where the assessee was an individual on& bad to look for his
"dependent" in cl. g(i) and where the assessee was a Hindu
Undivided Family the "dependent" had to be. found in cl.
(g)(ii) of section 2. After the amendment cl. g(i) of s. (2)
under went a complete
471
change. Before the inclusive part of the definition the
meaning of the word "dependent" had been clearly and
completely specified. The legislature stopped short of
making the spouse or the minor child "dependent on the
assessee for support and maintenance" and employed those
words only for the new category of persons who came to be
included, namely, any one who was neither the spouse nor the
minor child of the assessee but was otherwise wholly or
mainly dependent on him for support and maintenance. In the
absence of any ambiguity in the language employed in the
first part of s. 2(g) (i) the plain meaning had to be taken.
The whole construction of that clause left no room for doubt
that in the first part, no question of dependence in fact
arose and the spouse or the minor child simpliciter had to
be treated as a "dependent"., [477 A-H; 480 B-C]
Commissioner of Expenditure Tax, Madras v. T. S. Krishna, 78
1. T. R. 541 and Rajkumar Singhji v. Commissioner of
Expenditure Tax, M.P., 78 I.T.R. 405, disapproved.
M. N. Patwardhan v. Commissioner of Expenditure, Tax,
Poona, 78 I.T.R.338, referred to.
No double taxation would be involved if the meaning of the
word "dependent" as given in the first part of s. 2(g) (i)
was to be applied without qualifying the same with what
followed. The charging section 3, only subjected to tax the
expenditure incurred by an individual or a Hindu Undivided
Family., Once the expenditure incurred by both the assessee
as an individual and the spouse had been included in his or
her assessment of expenditure tax, it could not be again
subjected to tax in the assessment of the other spouse.
There was nothing in the Act which did away with the
principle that in the absence of express provision the same
item will not be taxed over again. [478 E]
(2)The High Court was right in coming to the conclusion
that in tax legislation where the incidence of the tax fell
differently upon different classes of assessees, as in the
present case, it could not be said that there was
legislation without any classification or that there was no
rational relation to the object. Because some classes are
taxed higher than the others, or some are given concessions
while others are not, it cannot be held that there had been
discrimination within the meaning of art. 14. [479 B-D]
(3)Though the impression created by the notices which were
issued and the correspondence which followed between the
assessee and the Expenditure Tax Officer was that the notice
had been issued under s. 16 (a) of the Act, in the writ
petitions and in the returns which were filed both sides
were quite clear that the matter was not confined to only
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clause (a) of section 16(1) and clause (b) figured
prominently.. The pleadings in the writ petitions covered
both clauses of s. 16 and, in any case, the Expenditure Tax
Officer had made a positive averment that the information
with regard to expenditure incurred by assessee’s wife
became available to him only on 5th May, 1962. Thus the
notices were issued on that date were within the period of 4
years which was the limit prescribed with regard to Acts
under clause (b) the limit being more in respect of clause
(a). It was no where controverted in the High Court that
the requisite information came into possession of the
Expenditure Tax Officer only on 5th May, 1962. [482 E]
(4)Entry 97 in List I which is the residuary entry covered
the tax of the kind imposed by the Act.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeals Nos. 1794 to
1796 of 1967.
472
Appeals from the judgment and order dated April 14, 1967 of
the Andhra Pradesh High Court in Writ Appeals Nos. 67 to 69
of 1964.
and CIVIL APPEALS Nos. 2389 to 2391 of 1968.
Appeals from the judgment and order dated August 17, 1967 of
the Madhya Pradesh High Court in Misc. Civil Case No. 32 of
1966.
Y. V. Anjaneyulu, A. Subha Rao, B. Datta, J. B.
Dadachanji, O. C. Mathur and Ravinder Narain, for the
appellants (inC.As. No. 1794 to 1796 of 1967.
Jagadish Swarup, Solicitor-General, A. N. Kirpal, R.
N. Sachthey and B. D. Sharma, for the responded (in C.As.
Nos.1794 1796 of 1967) and the appellant (in C.As. Nos.
2389 to2391 of 1968).
M. C. Chagla, A. K. Chilah and S. K. Gambhir, for the
respondent (in C.As. Nos. 2389 to 2391 of 1968).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Grover, J. The points involved in all these appeals by
certificate are common and relate primarily to the true
scope and interpretation of certain provisions of the
Expenditure Tax Act, 1957. as amended by the Finance Act,
1959, hereinafter called the ’Act’.
The facts in C.As. 1794-1796/67 may be stated. Prince Azam
Jha Bahadur the eldest son of the Nizam of Hyderabad filed
returns for the purpose of assessment of Expenditure Tax for
the assessment years 1959,1960-61and 1961-62. The
assessments were completed asfollows :-
1959-60....................... completed on 27-3-1961.
1960-61....................... 22-12-1961.
1961-62....................... 25-1-1962.
On May 5, 1962 the Expenditure Tax Officer issued notices
under S. 16 of the Act calling upon the assessee to file
supplementary returns for the three years in question on the
ground that he had reason to believe that assessee’s
expenditure had escaped assessment or had been under-
assessed. The supplementary returns were filed on March 16,
1962 declaring the same expenditure as shown in the original
returns. It appears that the assessee or the assessee’s
representative was informed by the Expenditure Tax Officer
that the assessments had been reopened for including the
expenditure incurred by the wife of the assessee. A letter
also appears to have been written by the said officer to the
473
assessee on July 20, 1962 but that letter has not been
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included in the printed record. The assessee filed three
writ petitions in the High Court of Andhra Pradesh
challenging the reopening of the assessments on various
grounds. The writ petitions were dismissed by a learned
single judge of the High Court on November 1, 1963. Appeals
were filed by the assessee under the Letters Patent which
were ultimately decided by a full bench of the High Court.
The judgment of the learned single judge was upheld by the
full bench although Krishna Rao J. while agreeing with the
other two learned judges in dismissing the appeals wrote a
separate judgment and expressed a somewhat different view on
some of the points.
In order to determine the questions that have been raised it
is necessary to refer to the relevant provisions of the Act
as they stood before the amendment made by the Finance Act
1959 and after the amendment.
"BEFORE AMENDMENT AFTER AMENDMENT
(2) (g) "dependent" Means: 2(g) "Dependent" means
(i)where the assessee is an (i) where the assessee
individual, his or her spouse or is an individual his or
child wholly or mainly dependent spouse or minor child
on the assessee for support and and includes any person
maintence; wholly or mainlly
dependent on the
assessee for support and
maintence;
(ii) where the assessee is a
Hindu undivided family. (ii) where the assessee
is a Hindu undivided
family.
(a) every coparcener other than (a) every coparcener
the katra and other than the katra
and
(b) any other member of the family (b) any other member
who under any law or order or decree of family who under
of a court is entitled to maintence any law or order or
from the joint family property. decree of a court is
entitled to maintence
from the joint family
property.
2(h)........................ 2(h)................
3. CHANGE OF EXPENDITURE TAX. 3. CHARGE ON EXPENDI-
TURE TAX.
(i) Subject to the other provisions (i) Subject to the
contained in this Act there shall be other provisions
charged for every financial year contained in this
Act
commencing on and from the first day there shall be charg-
of April 1958 a tax (here in after ed for every
financial
reffered to as expenditure tax) at year commencing on
the rate or rates specified in the and from the first
schedule in respect of the expenditure day of April, 1958
incurred by an individual or Hindu un- a tax (hereinafter
divided family in the previous year. referred to as expe-
nditure tax) at the
rate or rates speci-
fied in the scedule
in respect of the
expenditure incurred
by any individual or
Hindu undivided family
in the previous year:
474
provided_that no expenditure tax
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shall be payable by an assessee for any assessment
year if his income from all
sources during the relevant previous year as reduced by
the amount of taxes to which such income may be liable under
any other law for the time being in force does not exceed
rupees thirty-six thousand.
Before amendment, After amendment.
Provided that no expendi-
ture tax shall be payable
by an assessee for any
assessment Year if the
income from all sources
derived by the assessee and
his dependents during the
previous year as reduced by
the amount of taxes
which such income may be
liable under any law for
the time being in force
does not exceed thirty
six-thousand.
S.4.the following amounts
shall be included in computing
the expenditure the time being
of an assessee.
S. 4.(i)..S. 4. no change S.4.. no charge
(ii)Any expenditure incurred (ii) where the assessee is
by any dependent of the assessee an individual any
for the benefit of the assessee expenditure incurred
or of his dependent out of gift, by any dependent of the
donation or settlement on trust assessee where the
or out of any other sources made assessee is a Hindu
or created by the assessee, undivided family, any
whether directly or indirectly. expenditure incurred
by any dependent from
or out of any income or
property transferred
directly to the dependent
by the assessee.
Explanation......................
S.6 (1) The taxable expenditure 6(1) The taxable expendi-
of an assessee for any year ture of an assessee for any
shall be computed after making year shall be computed
the following deduction and after making following
allowances, namely:- deductions and allowances,
namely:-
(h) a basic allowance:- (h) a basic allowance:--
(i) Where the assessee is an (i) Where the assessee is
Rs.30,000/- and an individual of Rs.
30,000/- for himself
(ii)................. and all his depen-
dant."
The controversy has centered round the definition in S. 2
(g) of the word "dependent" for the purpose of S. 4(ii).
According to the assesses his wife who admittedly had her
own properties and assets and had substantial income
therefrom could not be regarded as a dependent within S.
2(g) and therefore her expenditure could not be included
under S. 4(ii) for computing the expenditure of the assesses
for the purpose of assessing his liability to tax under the
Act. In other words even after the amendment made in 1959
"dependent" means where the assessee was an individual his
or her spouse or child wholly or mainly dependent on
475
the assessee for support and maintenance. Now after the
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amendment the language underwent a complete change and
sufficiently clear language was employed according to which
"dependent" meant where the assessee was an individual his
or her spouse or minor child and included any person wholly
or mainly dependent on the assessee for support and
maintenance. But the Madras and the Madhya Pradesh High
Court have given decisions which support the view advanced
on behalf of the assessee. It will be best to examine the
reasoning in these decisions because the arguments which
have been addressed to us are based mainly on the same
grounds. In Commissioner of Expenditure Tax, Madras v. T.
S. Krishna(1) the Madras High Court referred to the decision
of the Madhya Pradesh High Court in Rajkumar Singhji v.
Commissioner of Expenditure Tax, M.P.(2) which is the
subject matter of the other set of appeals i.e. C.As. 2389-
2391/68. In the Madras case the view of the Madhya Pradesh
High Court was not accepted that the expression "any
expenditure incurred by any dependent from or out of any
income or property transferred directly or indirectly to the
dependent by the assessee" occurring in section 4(ii)
applied not only when the assessee was a Hindu undivided
family but also when the assssee was an individual. But the
reasoning with regard to delimiting the scope and effect of
s. 2(g)(i) in the Madhya Pradesh case was accepted. This is
what was observed by the Madras High Court at page 545 :-
"The word "dependent" is not a term of art in
taxation and should bear its naturl meaning,
which may not include one who is independent
and who does not require and get the
assistance of another for support and
maintenance. There is nothing in the language
of section 2(g) (i) which compels us to take a
different view. As it originally stood, the
expression meant in the case of an
assessee
who is an individual’ "his or her spouse or
child wholly or mainly dependent on the
assessee for support and maintenance". Even
after the amendment, that substantially
remains to be the position in the case of a
spouse or child except that the child should
be a minor and that the expression "dependent"
has been expanded to include, apart from
spouse or minor child, any person who
factually is a dependent on the individual for
support and maintenance"
It was further observed that it was not possible to see why
a distinction had been made between the spouse or the minor
child
(1) 78 I.T.R. 541.
(2) 78 I.T.R. 405
476
of an individual on the one hand and the spouse or the minor
child of a coparcener in a Hindu undivided family on the
other hand. In the latter case the expenditure of a wife or
a minor child who could be a member or coparcener could be
included in the taxable expenditure of the Hindu undivided
family only if the wife or the minor child was entitled to
maintenance from the joint family property under any law
order of a court. There was no reason why from the
standpoint of checking evasion of tax that qualification was
to be ignored in the case of a spouse or minor child of an
individual. It was also suggested that if the view
commended by the Revenue were to be accepted one will have
to impute to the legislature an unjustifiable discrimination
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in the matter of. addition of expenditure between a spouse
or minor child of an individual and spouse and minor child
of a coparcener in a Hindu undivided family. Such a
discrimination could not have been intended.
Another argument which was employed in the Madhya Pradesh
case and which appealed to the High Court was that as the
unit of assessment was the individual and not the individual
together with his or her spouse and the minor children the
result would be that the expenditure incurred by the husband
and the wife separately from their independent sources would
be subject to double taxation once with the husband as an
assessee and the wife as the dependent and again with the
wife as the assessee and the husband as the dependent. This
result would follow if s. 2(g) (i) is to be interpreted to
mean that where the assessee is an individual his or her
spouse or minor child would be a dependent irrespective of
the fact whether such spouse or minor child was wholly
independent of the assessee for support and maintenance. As
such an absurd result could be contemplated by the Act it
must be held that it was only that spouse or minor child who
was wholly or mainly dependent on the assessee for support
and maintenance who would fall within the definition of the
term "dependent" given in section 2 (g) (i).
We are unable to concur in the view of the Madras and Madhya
Pradesh High Courts that the word "dependent in S. 2(g) (i)
should be given a meaning which, owing to the clear and
plain language employed therein, cannot possibly be given.
Section 2 (g) (i) has to be read in two parts. The first
part which ends with minor child followed by coma contains
the word "means". The second part is intended to include
the kind of person mentioned therein namely, one who is
wholly or mainly dependent on the assessee for support and
maintenance. Before the inclusive part of the definition
starts the meaning of the word "dependent" has been clearly
and com-
477
pletely specified. If s. 2 (g) (i) as it stood before the
amendment is contrasted with the section as it was
substituted by the amendment the intention of the,
Legislature becomes obvious. Before the amendment
"dependent" meant where the assessee was an individual his
or her spouse or child wholly or mainly dependent on the,
assessee for support and maintenance. After the amendment
s. 2 (g) (i) underwent a complete change. The legislature
stopped short of making the spouse or the minor child
dependent on the assessee for support and maintenance and
employed those words only for the new category of persons
who came to be included, namely, any one who was neither the
spouse nor the minor child of the assessee but was otherwise
wholly or mainly dependent on him for support and
maintenance. Thus in the concluding part even major
children of the assessee came to be included so long as they
satisfied the conditions that they were wholly or mainly
dependent on him. The argument that the amended definition
is only intended to enlarge the categories of "dependent" by
adding another category cannot be sustained.
Coming next to clause (ii) of s. 2(g) which deals with a
case where the assessee is a H.U.F. no change was made in
the language even after the amendment. There every
coparcener other than the karta would fall within the
meaning of "dependent" and also any other member of the
family who under any law, order or decree of a court is
entitled to maintenance from the joint family property.
Section 4(ii) again deals with different cases. The first
is where the assessee is an individual; in his case any
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expenditure incurred by his dependent is to be included in
computation of the expenditure to be subjected to tax. The
other is where the assessee is a H.U.F. Any expenditure
incurred by any dependent from out of the income or property
transferred directly or indirectly to the dependent by the
assessee is to be included in computation of the assessee’s
liability. Thus the two cases are dealt with separately
both in s. 2(g) and s. 4(ii). In other words where the
assessee is an individual one, has to look for his dependent
to clause (g) (i) and where the assessee is a H.U.F. the
dependent has to be found in clause (g) (ii) of s. 2. The
argument that has been pressed on behalf of the assessee is
that the use of the common word "assessee" in the concluding
part of s. 4 (ii) which can take in both the individual as
well as the H.U.F. shows that the words preceding it apply
to both the cases. It is true that the words "Hindu
undivided family" have not been used instead of the word
"assessee" towards the concluding part ’of s. 4(ii). But
that will not alter the true import of the aforesaid
provision read with s. 2(g). The scheme, as noticed before,
is that the assessees have been divided into two clauses
which are well known. One is that of an individual and the
other, of the
12-L1340Sup.CI./71
478
Hindu undivided family. in the case of an individual
assessee the only qualification for the expenditure to be
included in his assessment is that it should have been
incurred by his dependent as defined in S. 2 (g) (i). In
the case of a H.U.F. it could be included only if it is from
out of the income or property transferred directly or
indirectly to the dependent by the family. Even otherwise
looking at the context in which the word assessee is found
in the concluding part of S. 4(ii) that word has clearly
been used only with reference to the second part of clause
(ii) which relates to the case of an assessee which is a
H.U.F.
It does look somewhat anamolous and illogical that where the
expenditure has been incurred by the wife, and minor
children who are altogether independent of the assessee and
which has no connection with their being dependent on him or
with any property transferred to them should be included in
the expenditure of the assessee. The position would be
similar where the wife is the assessee and the expenditure
incurred by the husband comes to be included in computation
of her liability to tax because the word used is "spouse" in
S. 2(g) (i). But it must be remembered that logic or reaso
n cannot be of much avail in interpreting a taxing
statute.
We are unable to see that any double taxation would be
involved if the meaning of the word "dependent" as given in
the first part of s. 2(g)(i) is to be applied without
qualifying the same with what follows in the second part of
that clause i.e., that that person should be wholly or
mainly dependent on the assessee for support and
maintenance. Although there is no bar to double taxation
but the legislature must distinctly enact it. It is only
when there are general words of taxation and they have to be
interpreted that they cannot be so interpreted as to tax the
subject twice over to the same tax. There is nothing in the
Act which does away with the principle that in the absence
of an express provision, the same item will not be taxed
over again. Moreover the charging s. 3 only subjects to tax
the expenditure incurred by an individual or a Hindu
undivided family. Once the expenditure incurred by both the
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assessee as an individual and the spouse has been included
in his or her assessment of expenditure tax, it cannot be
again subjected to tax in the assessment of the other
spouse. The learned Solicitor General agrees to this being
the true position.
A good deal of reliance has been placed on the decisions
which are in favour of the assessee that there is no
reasonable basis for making a distinction between an
assessee who is an individual and an assessee, that is, a
Hindu undivided family which would justify a different
treatment. It was and has been suggested that the relevant
provisions of the Act should not be so interpreted as
479
to give rise to discrimination between the two cases, there
being no reasonable basis for such discrimination. We find
no force, or substance in this argument. Firstly, it is not
disputed that the case of an individual and that of a Hindu
undivided family fall into two different classes. The
challenge is based only on there bring no nexus between the
differentia and the object sought to be achieved by the
legislation, the suggestion being that favorable treatment
has been accorded to the Hindu undivided family. The
learned Single Judge who disposed of the writ petitions in
the present case considered the matter very fully and we
find no infirmity in his reasoning in coming to the
conclusion that in a tax legislation where the incidence of
the tax falls differently upon different classes of
assessees as in the present case it cannot be said that
there is legislation without any classification or that
there is no rational relation to the object. According to
the learned Judge,. the object of the enactment is to
augment the revenue, to encourage thrift and to avoid
wasteful expenditure and because some classes are taxed
higher than the others or some are given concessions while
others are not, it cannot be held that there has beer
discrimination within the meaning of Art. 14.
It was contended before the High Court and that contention
has been reiterated in a half-hearted manner before us that
the Act was void ab initio for want of legislative
competence. It has been pointed out that there is no Entry
in List I of the Seventh Schedule or in List III relating to
tax on expenditure. Reference has been made to Entry 62 in
List II which reads "Taxes on luxuries including taxes on
entertainments, amusements, betting and gambling". We are
wholly unable to comprehend how expenditure tax can fall
within the aforesaid Entry. We are inentire agreement with
the majority decision of the Andhra Pradesh High Court that
Entry 97 in List I which is the residuary Entry covers the
tax of the kind imposed by the Act.
Mr. M. C. Chagla while supporting the judgment under appeal
in Civil Appeals Nos. 2389-2391/68 has sought support from
what is stated at pages 212-213 in Craies on Statute Law
(6th) Edn.). Cockburn C.J. said as early as in the year 1865
in Wakefield Board of Health v. West Riding, etc., Ry.,(1)
"I hope the time will come when we shall see no more of
interpretation clauses, for they frequently lead to
confusion". It has also been pointed out that an
interpretation clause which extends the meaning of a word
does not take away its ordinary meaning. In other words, an
interpretation clause which extends the meaning by using the
word "include" is not meant to prevent the word receiving
its ordinary, popular and natural sense whenever that would
(1) (1865) 6 B. & S. 794.
480
be properly applicable. Mr. Chagla has laid a great deal of
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stress on the- meaning of the word "dependent" and according
to him that word as defined in the first part of s. 2 (g)
(i) of the Act ,cannot lose its natural signification and
import even though the language of the statutory provision
seems to confine its meaning to the spouse or minor child of
the assessee without any further qualification. The
contention of Mr. Chagla cannot be acceded to. In the
absence of any ambiguity in the language employed in the
first part of s. 2 (g) (i), we have to go by the plain
meaning ,and that is confined to the spouse or minor child
of the assessee when he is an individual irrespective, of
such spouse or minor ,child being dependent on or
independent of the assessee for support and maintenance. As
a matter of fact the whole construction of that clause
leaves no room for doubt that in the first part, no question
of dependence in fact arises and the spouse or the minor
child simpliciter has to be treated as a dependent. The
conjunctive word "and" appearing between the two parts makes
the intention of the, legislature still clearer. The second
part or any words in that part do not qualify the first
part. We may conclude the discussion on this point by
referring to a decision of the Bombay High Court in M. N.
Patwardhan v. Commissioner of Expenditure Tax, Poona(1) in
which the decision of the Andhra Pradesh High Court under
appeal has been followed after a full consideration of the
various points which arose for determination. Rajkumar
Singhji’s case (2 ) which is the subject matter of appeal in
C.As. 2389-2391/68 was dissented from by the Bombay High
Court. In our judgment the majority of the full bench of
the Andhra Pradesh High Court was right in holding that the
expenditure incurred by the wife of the assessee was
includable in his assessment for computing the expenditure
tax under the Act.
The other point which was canvassed before the High Court
,of Andhra Pradesh and has been urged before us relates to
the validity of the notice which was issued by the
Expenditure Tax Officer for reopening the assessments in
question. In the notices, it was stated that whereas the
Expenditure Tax Officer had reason to believe that
expenditure chargeable to expenditure tax had (a), escaped
assessment, (b) been under-assessed, (c) been assessed at
too low a rate it was proposed to reassess the expenditure
for the assessment year in question. The assessee was
required to file a return in form ’A’ of expenditure for the
assessment years in question. From the judgment of the
learned Single Judge it appears that in a subsequent letter,
the Expenditure Tax Officer referred to "return of
expenditure filed in response to the notices issued under S.
16(a) of the Expenditure Tax Act, 1957". In the writ
petition which was filed on behalf of Prince am Jha
(1) 78 I.T.R. 338.
(2) 78 I.T.R. 405.
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Bahadur in the High Court, it was stated in para 7 that the
action of the Expenditure Tax Officer in reopening the.
assessments under s. 16 (a) was wholly arbitrary and
illegal. it was, however, further stated "there has been no
omission or failure on the part of the petitioner to make a
return of his expenditure or to disclose fully and truly all
material facts. Nor has the respondent come into,
possession of any information warranting a reasonable belief
that any expenditure has escaped taxation. All the material
facts were disclosed. AR the necessary information was
available.." In the. counter affidavit of the Expenditure
Tax Officer in para 5, it was asserted that he had reason to
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believe that on account of omission or failure on the part
of the assessee to disclose truly and fully all material
facts necessary for his assessment expenditure of his
dependents chargeable to tax had escaped assessment. In
para 8 also, reliance was placed mainly on the provisions of
s. 16(a) of the Act but in para 9, the Expenditure Tax
Officer went on to, say that the actual expenditure incurred
by the assessee’s wife was disclosed by her returns Mud
before him and in consequence of the aforesaid information
available to him on 5th May 1962, he had reason to believe
that the expenditure of the assessee chargeable to tax had
escaped assessment. It was pointed out that the notices
which had been issued were within four years limit
applicable to s. 16(b) of the Act. It was reiterated that
as the notices had been issued within four years
reassessment proceedings could be sustained either under s.
16(a) or s. 16(b) of the Act.
Section 16 of the Act is in the following terms:--
"16. If the Expenditure Tax Officer-(a) has
reason to believe that by reason of the
omission or failure on the part of the
assessee to make a return of his expenditure
under s. 13 for any assessment year, or to
disclose fully and truly all material
necessary for his assessment for that year,
the expenditure chargeable to tax has escaped
assessment for that year, whether by reason of
under-assessment or assessment at too low a
rate or otherwise; or
(b) has in consequence of any information in
his possession reason to believe
notwithstanding that there has been no such
omission or failure as is referred to in
clause (a), that the expenditure chargeable to
tax has escaped assessment for any assessment
year, whether by reason of under assessment or
assessment at too low a rate or otherwise; 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
482
end of that assessment year, serve on the
assessee a notice under sub-s. (2) of s. 13,
and may proceed to assess or reassess such
expenditure, and the provisions of this Act
shall, so far as may be, apply as if the
notice had issued under that sub-section".
On behalf of the assessee, a contention had been raised
before the, learned Single Judge of the High Court that the
notices had been issued by the Expenditure Tax Officer under
S. 16(a) of the Act. The notices were illegal inasmuch as
the facts that Princess Durree Shehvar was the wife of the
assessee and that she had .to be considered as his dependent
within the meaning of S. 2 (g) (i) ,of the Act were within
the knowledge of the Expenditure Tax Officer and had been
duly mentioned to him and as such there was no omission or
failure on the part of the assessee to make a return of his
expenditure or to disclose fully and truly all material
facts. Since all the material facts had been disclosed and
all the necessary information was available, the
Expenditure Tax Officer had no jurisdiction to reopen the
assessment merely because he had changed his opinion.
It is no doubt true that the impression created by the
notices which were issued and the correspondence which
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followed between the assessee and the Expenditure Tax
Officer was that the notices had been issued under S. 16 (a)
of the Act but in the writ petitions and the returns which
were filed, both sides were quite clear that the matter was
not confined only to clause (a) of S. 16 (i) and clause (b)
figured prominently. We are unable to see that the notices
which had been issued were confined only to the terms of S.
16(a). ’It is not disputed on behalf of the assessee that
if the matter was covered by S. 16(b), they would be per-
fectly valid. The pleadings ’in the writ petitions covered
both clauses of s. 16 and in any case, the Expenditure Tax
Officer had made a positive averment that the information
with regard to the expenditure incurred by the assessee’s
wife became available to him only on 5th May 1962. Thus the
notices which were issued on that date relating to the
assessment years 1959-60, 1960-61 and 1961-62 were within
the period of four years which was the limit prescribed with
regard to action under clause (b) the limit being more in
respect of clause (a). In our judgment, this concludes the
matter because it was nowhere controverted in the High Court
that the ’requisite information came into possession of the
Expenditure Tax Officer only on 5th May, 1962.
In the result Civil Appeals Nos. 1794-1796 of 1967 fail and
are hereby dismissed. The other set of appeals i.e., Civil
Appeals Nos. 2389-2391 of 1968 of the Commissioner of
Expenditure Tax succeed and are hereby allowed. The answer
given by the High
483
Court in that case to the, question referred by the Tribunal
shall stand discharged and instead the answer to the
question will be in the affirmative and in favour of the
Revenue. Keeping in view the nature of the points involved,
the parties are left to bear their own costs in all these
appeals.
K.B.N. C.A. Nos. 1794 to 1796 dismissed.
C.A. Nos. 2389 to 2391 allowed.
484