Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX, DELHI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BANSI DHAR & SONS
DATE OF JUDGMENT19/12/1985
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
TULZAPURKAR, V.D.
CITATION:
1985 SCALE (2)1416
ACT:
Indian Income Tax Act 1922: Section 66 and Income Tax
Act 1961: Section 256 - High Court - Jurisdiction of - To
grant stay or pass interim orders in pending references.
Interpretation of statutes : Words of statute -
Judicial construction of words by superior court - How far
useful in construing identical words in another enactment.
HEADNOTE:
The Assessee was a Hindu Undivided Family. The father
of the Karta of the HUF died in an air crash. On his death a
sum of over Rs. 2 lakhs was received by the Karta from the
Insurance Company on account of the insurance policy
covering the life of his father. The income derived from the
said amount was treated as his personal income and assessed
in his personal assessment, and it continued to be assessed
in the personal assessment of the Karta even after formation
of the HUF on his marriage and the birth of a son. This
position continued till the assessment year 1959-60.
For the first time in the assessment year 1960-61 the
Income Tax Officer treated the income from the insurance
amount as that of the HUF and assessed the income in the
hands of the HUF. Being aggrieved the assessee appealed and
the Appellate Assistant Commissioner set aside the
assessment holding that the income was the personal income
of the Karta and not of the HUF.
The Revenue preferred an appeal to the Income Tax
Appellate Tribunal. A similar appeal was also preferred to
the Tribunal by the Revenue for assessment year 1962-63.
Both the appeals were disposed of by a common order, whereby
it was held that the income in question was that of the HUF
and was liable to be assessed as such.
The Tribunal referred to the High Court at the instance
of the assessee-HUF the question, "whether the amount
received from
851
the Insurance Company on account of the accident Insurance
Policy covering the risk of his father was correctly treated
as ancestral property." The assessee also filed applications
for injunction and stay under section 151 of the Code of
Civil Procedure invoking the inherent jurisdiction of the
High Court.
In the applications for stay it was contended that for
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the subsequent years 1963-64 & 1964-65 similar appeals had
been filed by the Revenue, before the Tribunal and were
pending, that for the assessment years 1965-66 to 1969-70
the orders of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner were
against the assessee and the assessee-HUF had preferred
appeals to the Tribunal which were also pending, that in the
said appeals preferred by the assessee HUF, on application
by the assessee the Tribunal had granted stay of recovery of
the tax demanded, on the condition that the assessee should
furnish adequate security, that since the matter relating to
the two assessment years (1960-61 and 1962-63) were before
the High Court under section 66(1) of the Indian Income Tax
Act, 1922/section 256(1) of the Income Tax Act, 1961 similar
order of stay should be granted by the High Court because
prejudice would be caused to the assessee if in spite of
full tax being paid by the karta in his personal assessment,
the HUF is asked to pay tax over again in respect of the
same income.
The Revenue opposed the aforesaid applications for
stay, contending in its counter-affidavit that under the
provisions of the Income Tax Acts of 1922 and 1961 the High
Court exercised only an advisory or consultative
jurisdiction, and consequently had no jurisdiction or power
to grant stay of the recovery of tax as prayed for in the
application, and that grant of stay by the High Court and
this court had in fact been prohibited by the two Acts of
1922 and 1961.
The High Court rejected the preliminary objections
raised by the Revenue and granted stay of realisation of
taxes. It found that there should be stay on terms and
granted stay on condition that the assessee should furnish
adequate security for the said amount to the satisfaction of
the concerned Income Tax Officer.
In the appeals to this Court: on the question of
jurisdiction of the High Court and Supreme Court to grant
stay or pass interim orders in pending references under
section 66 of the Indian Income Tax Act, 1922 and section
256 of the Income Tax Act, 1961.
Allowing the Appeals to this Court,
852
^
HELD : 1. The High Court in answering a question under
section 66 of 1922 Act or section 256 of 1961 Act does not
exercise original, appellate or revisional jurisdiction but
only advisory jurisdiction. [866 C; 870 C]
2. Rendering advice on the question of law referred to
the courts has nothing to do with the recovery of tax or
granting stay in respect of the same. [870 G]
3. It cannot be said that the High Court has inherent
power or incidental power in the matter of a reference
pending before it to grant stay of realisation or to grant
an injunction. That must remain within the jurisdiction of
the appellate authority and pendency of a reference does not
detract from that jurisdiction of the Appellate Authority.
The High Court was, therefore in error in the instant case
in exercising its jurisdiction by passing an order for stay
of realisation under section 151 of the Code of Civil
Procedure, 1908 in a pending reference. The High Court could
have exercised its power if the Appellate Authority had not
properly exercised its jurisdiction, not in reference
jurisdiction but by virtue of its jurisdiction under Art.
226 or Article 227 of the Constitution of India in
appropriate cases. But that was not so in the instant
case.[870 H - 871 B]
Sridhar v. Commissioner of Wealth Tax, 153 at 543, at
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547; Dwarka Prasad Baja v. Commissioner of Income Tax, West
Bengal-I, 126 I.T.R. 219. approved.
Polisetti Narayana Rao v. Commissioner of Income Tax,
Hyderabad, 29 I.T.R. 222, over-ruled.
4. In answering questions or disposing of references
either under section 66 of 1922 Act or section 256 of 1961
Act, the High Courts do not exercise any jurisdiction
conferred upon them by the Code of Civil Procedure or the
Characters or by the Acts establishing the respective High
Courts. In respect of certain matters jurisdictions
exercised by the High Court must be kept separate from the
concept of inherent powers or incidental powers in
exercising jurisdiction under section 66 of 1922 Act or
section 256 of 1961 Act. Section 66 of Income-tax Act of
1961 is a special jurisdiction of a limited nature conferred
not by the Code of Civil Procedure or by the Charters or by
the special Acts constituting such High Courts but by the
special provisions of Income-Tax Act 1922 or 1961 for the
limited purpose of obtaining High Court’s opinion on
questions of law. In giving
853
that opinion properly if any question of incidental or
ancillary power arises such as giving an opportunity or
restoring a reference dismissed without hearing or giving
some additional time to file paper book, such powers inhered
to the jurisdiction conferred upon it. But such incidental
powers can not be so construed as to confer the power of
stay of recovery of taxes pending a reference which lie in
the domain of an appellate authority. The concept of
granting stay in a reference ex debito justitiae therefore,
does not arise. That concept might arise in case of the
Appellate Authority exercising its power to grant stay where
there is no express provision. Ex debito justitiae is to do
justice between the parties. [870 C-F]
Tata Iron & Steel Co. Ltd. v. Chief Revenue Authority
of Bombay, 1923 Privy Council - 50 Indian Appeals 212;
Commissioner v. Bombay Trust Corporation, 1936 A.I.R. Privy
Council - 63 Indian Appeals 408; Hukum Chand Boid v.
Kamalanand Singh, [1906] I.L.R> 33, Cal. 927; Commissioner
of Income Tax Bombay v. Scindia Steam Navigation Co. Ltd.,
42 I.T.R. 589; C.P. Sarathy Mudaliar v. Commissioner of
Income Tax, Andhra Pradesh, 62 I.T.R. 576; Jatashankar
Dayram v. Commissioner of Income Tax, 101 I.T.R. 343,
referred.
Income Tax Officer, Cannaore v. M.K. Mohammed Kumhi, 71
I.T.R. 815, explained.
5. In an appropriate case, if the assessee feels that a
stay of recovery pending disposal of the reference is
necessary or is in the interest of justice, then the
assessee is entitled to apply before the Appellate Authority
to grant a stay until disposal of reference by the High
Court or until such time as the Appellate Authority thought
fit. But in case the Appellate Authority acted without
jurisdiction or in excess jurisdiction or in improper
exercise of the jurisdiction, then the decision of such
Appellate Authority can be corrected by the High Court by
issuing appropriate writs under Articles 226 and 227 of the
Constitution. [869 H - 870 B]
6. Prior to 1918, there was no provision for reference
to the High Court at all in respect of any decision by the
revenue authorities. In Act VII of 1918, section 51
contained this provision under which the Chief Revenue
Authority was empowered to refer a case to the High Court
when any questions arose regarding the interpretation of any
of the provisions of the Act or of any rule made thereunder.
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The said authority could do so
854
(i) either suo motu (ii) on reference from a subordinate
authority or (iii) on the application of the assessee. This
is no part of the Civil or appellate or revisional
jurisdiction of the High Court. [858 G-H]
7. Section 66 of the Act of 1922 provides that within
certain time either at the instance of the assessee or at
the instance of the Revenue, the Tribunal might refer a
question of law for the opinion of the High Court. It also
empowered the assessee to make an application to the High
Court in case the Tribunal refused to refer the question
after drawing up a statement of case. Section 66A provides
for reference to be heard by Benches of High Courts and
appeals in certain cases to this Court. Under Section 256 of
1961 Act, the provision of reference to the High Court is
the same as under section 66 of 1922 Act. [859 B, F, 860 C]
8. Once certain words in an Act of Parliament had
received a judicial construction in one of the superior
courts, and the legislature repeated these without any
alteration in a subsequent statute, the legislature must be
taken to have used them according to the meaning which a
court of competent jurisdiction had given to them. This rule
of interpretation affords only a valuable presumption as to
the meaning of the language employed in a statute. Where a
judicial interpretation is well settled and well recognised
the rule ought doubtless, to receive effect, but must be a
question of circumstances whether Parliament was to be
presumed to have tacitly given statutory authority to a
single judgment of a competent court so as to render that
judgment, however, obviously wrong unexaminable by the
Highest Court. [868 E-G]
Barras v. Aberdeen Steam Trawling and Fishing Co. Ltd.,
1933 A.E.R. - 1933 A.C. 402, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1668
(NT) of 1978.
From the Judgment and Order dated 15.7.1977 of the
Delhi High Court in I.T.R. Nos. 82 & 83 of 1973.
WITH
Civil Appeal Nos. 77 & 78 (NT) of 1974
From the judgment and Order dated 30.7.1973 of the
Patna High Court in Tax Appeals Cases Nos. 16 & 17 of 1972.
855
S.C. Manchanda, and Miss A. Subhashini for the Appellant in
C.A. No. 1668 of 1978.
S.T. Desai, Harish Salve, Mrs. A.K. Verma, Miss Lira
Goswami and J.B. Dadachandji for the Respondent in C.A. No.
1668 of 1978.
B.B. Ahuja and Miss A. Subhashini for the Appellant in
C.A. No. 77 & 78 of 1974.
Nemo for the Respondents in C.A. No. 77 & 78 of 1974.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SABYASACHI MUKHARJI, J. The main question involved in
these appeals, is the question of jurisdiction of the High
Court, to grant stay or pass interim orders in pending
references under section 66 of the Indian Income-Tax Act,
1922 (hereinafter called the Act of 1922) and section 256 of
the Income Tax Act, 1961 (hereinafter called the ’Act of
1961’). These appeals are by special leave from the
judgments of the High Courts. The main judgment is the
judgment of the Delhi High Court in the case of L. Bansi
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Dhar and Sons v. Commissioner of Income-Tax, New Delhi (C.A.
No. 1668/78). The question arose in applications filed by
the assessee under section 151 of CPC in two Income-tax
References Nos. 82 and 83 of 1973 relating to the assessment
years 1960-61 and 1962-63 respectively praying that the High
Court might be pleased to grant an order of injuction for
restraining the Commissioner of Income-tax (I), Central
Revenue Building, and/or his subordinate officers including
the Income-tax Officer, Company Circle (III), from enforcing
and/or realising the demand raised in the aforesaid
assessment years 1960-61 and 1962-63, and from taking any
steps for the recovery thereof till the disposal of the
references pending in the High Court.
The assessee is a Hindu undivided family. The Karta of
the HUF is Lala Bansi Dhar. His father, Lala Murlidhar, died
in the year 1949 in an air crash. On the death of the
father, a sum of Rs.2,49,874 was received by Lala Bansi Dhar
from the insurance company on account of an accident
insurance policy covering the risk of the life of the
deceased. The income derived from the said amount was
treated as the income of Lala Bansi Dhar and was assessed in
his personal assessment. Lala Bansi Dhar was married on 3rd
February, 1953, and a son, Tilak Kumar, was born on 3rd
856
February, 1956. The income from the insurance amount
continued to be assessed in the personal assessment of Lala
Bansi Dhar even after formation of the HUF on his marriage
and the birth of a son, and continued to be so assessed till
the assessment year 1959-60.
In the assessment year 1960-61 for the first time, the
Income-tax Officer treated the income from the insurance
amount as that on the HUF and assessed the income in the
hands of the HUF. On appeal by the assessee, HUF, the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner set aside the assessment
holding that the income was the personal income of Lala
Bansi Dhar and not of the HUF. Against that order, the
revenue preferred an appeal to the Income-tax Appellate
Tribunal. A similar appeal was also preferred to the
Tribunal by the revenue for the assessment year 1962-63.
Both the appeals were disposed of by the Tribunal by a
common order on 23rd November, 1970 whereby it was held that
the income in question was that of the HUF and the liable to
be assessed as such. Then at the instance of asseasee-HUF,
the Tribunal referred to the High Court the following
question under section 256(1) of the Income-tax Act, 1961,
as arising out of the said common order namely :
"Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances of the
case, the amount of Rs.2,49,874 received by L. Bansi Dhar
from the insurance company on account of the accident
insurance policy covering the risk to the life of his
father, L. Murlidhar, is correctly treated as ancestral
property of the H.U.F. of which L. Bansi Dhar is the karta?"
Two references were registered as Income-tax References
Nos. 82 and 83 of 1973, and it was in the said references,
that the applications for injunction and stay had been filed
by the assesee-HUF under section 151 of the Code of Civil
Procedure invoking the inherent jurisdiction of the High
Court.
It was stated in the application for stay that for the
subsequent assessment years 1963-64 and 1964-65, similar
appeals had been filed by the revenue before the Tribunal
and the same were pending, that for the assessment years
1965-66 to 1969-70, however the orders of the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner were against the assessee, and the
assessee-HUF had preferred appeals to the Tribunal which
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were also pending, that in the said appeals preferred by the
assessee-HUF on application by the assessee, the Tribunal
had granted stay of the recovery of the tax demanded on
857
the condition that the assessee should furnish adequate
security to the satisfaction of the Income-tax Officer, that
since the matter relating to the two assessment years (1960-
61 and 1962-63) was before the High Court in references
under section 66(1) of the Indian Income-tax Act,
1922/section 256(1) of the Income-tax Act, 1961, similar
order of stay should be granted by the High Court and
prejudice would be caused to the assessee if in spite of
full tax being paid by its karta in his personal assessment,
the HUF is asked to pay tax over again in respect of the
same income. A counter-affidavit was filed in which a
preliminary objection was raised that under the provisions
of the Income-tax Act, the High Court exercised only an
advisory or consultative jurisdiction and consequently had
no jurisdiction or power to grant stay of the recovery of
tax as prayed for in the application, and that, in fact, the
grant of stay by the High Court and this Court had been
prohibited by the two Acts of 1922 and 1961. On merits,
however, it was admitted that tax had been paid by Lala
Bansi Dhar in his personal capacity on the basis of the same
income which had been returned by him in his individual
income-tax return, yet, it was admitted that as a result of
the impugned order of the Appellate Tribunal, the income
from the insurance amount was assessable in the hands of the
HUF and the HUF was obliged to pay the tax unless and until
the question of law referred to the High Court was answered
in favour of the assesee and that the assessee would not be
prejudiced if no stay was granted and the tax was realised,
as it would get a refund of the tax paid in case the
references were answered in its favour.
The question for determination which fell for
consideration before the High Court and which requires to be
considered in these appeals by this Court, is, whether the
court, in a reference to it either under section 66(1) of
the Act of 1922, or under section 256(1) of the Act of 1961,
has jurisdiction or power to pass any order granting stay of
recovery of the taxes pending the disposal of the
references.
The High Court on consideration of certain matters,
rejected the preliminary objection and granted stay of the
realisation of taxes. The High Court found that, in the
facts and circumstances of the case, there should be stay on
terms and the High Court granted that stay on condition that
the assessee should furnish adequate security for the said
amount to the satisfaction of the concerned Income-tax
Officer within six weeks from the date of the order of the
High Court. The other two matters being Civil Appeals Nos.
77 and 78 of 1974 arise out of
858
the decision of the Patna High Court where stay was granted
by the Patna High Court in respect of realisation of tax
pending disposal of the income-tax references.
The revenue has come up to this Court challenging the
validity of the decision of the High Courts that pending
references in income-tax matters to the Courts either under
section 66 of the Act of the 1922 or under section 256 of
the Act of 1961, the High Courts or the Supreme Court, as
the case may be, have inherent powers or jurisdiction to
pass any order granting stay or granting injunction staying
the realisation of the amount pending disposal of the
references. Incidentally, it may be pointed out that at the
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bar at the time of hearing of the appeals, it was stated by
counsel on behalf of the assessee that in the decision of
the Delhi High Court, ultimately the reference has been
answered in favour of the assessee. So far as the assessee
in that matter is concerned the question has become
academic.
The High Court of Delhi in its judgment had discussed
all the relevant authorities. The references were pending
under section 66(1) of the Act of 1922 for the first two
years, in respect of similar appeals for the assessment
years 1965-66 and 1969-70 the references were pending under
section 256(1) of the Act of 1961. The scheme of section
66(1) of the Act of 1922 as well as section 256(1) of the
Act of 1961 are well-known.
The High Court noted and as is the case that the Act of
1922 did not and the Act of 1961 does not contain any
express provision empowering the High Court or the Supreme
Court to grant stay of recovery of tax including pending
disposal of the reference before it or pass any order in
that respect of the same. Therefore, the assessee sought to
invoke the inherent jurisdiction or the ancillary powers of
the courts.
Prior to 1918, there was no provision for reference to
the High Court at all in respect of any decision by the
revenue authorities. In Act VII of 1918, section 51
contained this provision under which the Chief revenue
authority was empowered to refer a case to the High Court
when any question arose regarding the interpretation of any
of the provisions of the Act or of any rule made thereunder.
The said authority could do so (i) either suo motu or (ii)
on reference from a subordinate authority or (iii) on the
application of the assessee. This is no part of the civil or
appellate authority or revisional jurisdiction of the High
Court.
859
Section 66 of the Act of 1922 contains similar
provisions like section 149 of the English Income-Tax Act,
1918. Section 66 of the Act of 1922 provides that within
certain time either at the instance of the assessee or at
the instance of the revenue, the Tribunal might refer a
question of law for the opinion of the High Court. It also
empowered the assessee to make an application to the High
Court in case the Tribunal refused to refer the question
after drawing up a statement of case. It is well-settled
that the fact found by the Tribunal were to be accepted by
the High Court and in case the High Court found that the
facts found by the Tribunal were not sufficient, the High
Court might under sub-section (4) of section 66 require the
Tribunal to make such additions thereto or alteration
therein as the High Court might direct in that behalf. The
High Court upon hearing of any such case should decide the
question of law raised thereby and deliver its judgment
thereon containing the grounds on which such decision is
founded and shall send a copy of such judgment under the
seal of the Court and the signature of the Registrar to the
Appellate Tribunal. Sub-section (7) of section 66 provides
that notwithstanding that a reference is made under the
section to the High Court, "income tax shall be payable in
accordance with the assessment made in the case". It is
provided that if the amount of an assessment is reduced as a
result of such reference, the amount over-paid shall be
refunded with such interest as the Commissioner may allow
unless the High Court, on intimation given by the
Commissioner within thirty days of the receipt of the result
of such reference that he intends to ask for leave to appeal
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to the Supreme Court, or to an authority authorising the
Commissioner to postpone payment of such refund until the
disposal of the appeal to the Supreme Court.
Section 66A provides for reference to be heard by
Benches of High Courts and appeals in certain cases to this
Court.
The provisions of Code of Civil Procedure relating to
appeals to the Supreme Court as far as might apply in case
of appeals under the section in the like manner as in the
case of appeals by the High Court provided that nothing in
sub-section (3) shall be deemed to have effect on sub-
section (5) or sub-section (7) of section 66. Sub-section
(4) of section 66A provides that where the judgment of the
High Court is varied or reversed in appeal under the
section, effect shall be given to the order of the Supreme
Court in the manner provided in sub-section (5) and (7) of
section 66 in the case of a judgment of the High Court.
860
After the High Court and in cases of appeals to the
Supreme Court, the courts answer the question in any manner
or give certain opinion. The appellate tribunals would
dispose of the appeals in accordance with the opinions
expressed or answers given by the High Courts or the Supreme
Court. Therefore under the scheme, the appeal is kept
pending before the Tribunal and the appellate jurisdiction
is retained by the Tribunal, but the High Court exercises an
advisory or consultative jurisdiction.
Under section 256 of 1961 Act, the provision of
reference to the High Court is the same as under section 66
of 1922 Act. The slight differences between section 256 of
1961 Act and section 66(1) and (2) of 1922 Act have been
noted in Kanga & Palkivala’s Income Tax - 7th Edn. - Vol I,
p.1146. For the present purpose it is not necessary to set
these out in detail. There is provision for reference to the
Supreme Court under section 257 of 1961 Act. By sections 261
and 262, there are provisions for appeal to Supreme Court
and hearing before Supreme Court from the decision of the
references in the High Courts. Section 265 enjoins that
notwithstanding that a reference has been made to the High
Court or the Supreme Court or an appeal has been preferred
to the Supreme Court, tax shall be payable in accordance
with the assessment made in the case. The scheme of 1961 Act
so far as the scheme of reference to the High Court on a
question of law is concerned is the same as that of 1922
Act. When a question of law arises, the Tribunal can and in
certain circumstances must seek at the instance of the
assessee or in its own motion or at the instance of the
revenue the opinion of the High Court on such a questions.
The jurisdiction exercised by the High Courts is purely
advisory, it is neither of a Civil Court exercising
original, nor of any appellate or revisional jurisdiction.
Therefore, the powers and jurisdiction of the High Courts
and in certain cases of the Supreme Court, are those which
are expressed and conferred upon them and also those which
inher in the exercise of that jurisdiction or are ancillary
or those which sub-serve the exercise of that function and
jurisdiction of giving advice. The appeal is kept pending
before the Appellate Tribunal.
In Tata Iron & Steel Co. Ltd. v. Chief Revenue
Authority of Bombay, 1923 Privy Council = 50 Indian Appeals
212, the Judicial Committee had to consider the question
whether the function of the High Court under these
provisions was advisory or not. The Judicial Committee
decided that such advice was not judgment within the meaning
of clause 39 of the Letter Patent of the High
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861
Court of Bombay. The use of the expression ’determination’
was not decisive as to whether the decision was merely
advisory or not. The decision or order made by the court
under section 51 was merely advisory. This view was re-
affirmed in Commissioner v. Bombay Trust Corporation, 1936
A.I.R. Privy council 269 = 63 Indian Appeals 408. It is for
this reason that section 66A of the 1922 Act expressly
provided for an appeal from a decision of the High Court
under section 66 of the said Act. The High Court noted that
neither 1922 Act nor 1961 Act did contain any express
provision empowering the High Court or the Supreme Court to
grant stay or recovery of tax pending disposal of the
reference before it. The High Court in the decision under
appeal held that it had inherent jurisdiction under section
66 of 1922 Act or under section 256 of 1961 Act to grant
stay pending disposal of the reference. The High Court
referred to the several decisions some of which will have to
be noticed here. Thereafter on consideration of the relevant
facts, the High Court granted the stay in the instant case
as noted before.
Reliance was placed by the High Court on the decision
of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in Polisetti Narayana Rao
v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Hyderebad, 29 I.T.R. 222. The
Andhra Pradesh High Court referred to the decision in the
case of Hukum Chand Boid v. Kamalanand Singh, (1906) I.L.R.
33, Cal. 927, and referred to the observations of Woodroffe,
J., where he posed the question as to whether the power
vested in the High Court under section 151 of the Code of
Civil Procedure was wide enough to apply to a case like the
present. It was noted that the decision was approved and
followed by the Madras High Court in several cases as was
noted at page 226 of 29 I.T.R. It was further pointed out
that article 227 was wide enough to include such power. The
judgment of that Court was delivered by Bhimasankaram J.
Subba Rao, C.J. of the Andhra Pradesh High Court was a party
to that decision. It may, however, be pointed out that in
the facts and circumstances the Court found that the
assessee was not entitled to any relief pending the disposal
of the reference. As pointed out before that reliance had
been placed by the Andhra Pradesh High Court on the decision
in Hukum Chand Boid’s case (supra). It is necessary,
therefore, to discuss that decision. The said case was
concerned with the nature of the jurisdiction and the ambit
of powers under section 583 and 546 of the Code of Civil
Procedure 1882 as it stood at the relevant time. The
division bench of the Calcutta High Court consisting of
Woodroffe and Mookherjee JJ. held that under the principle
indicated by section 583 of the Code of Civil Procedure a
decree for reversal
862
necessarily carried with it the right to restitution of all
that had taken under the erroneous decree and the Appellate
Court having seisin of the appeal, had as ancillary to its
duty to grant restitution, an inherent power in the exercise
of which it could, notwithstanding that the decree appealed
against had been executed, call upon the respondent to
furnish security for the due performance of any decree which
might be made on the appeal. After discussing the facts the
court held that the Code of Civil Procedure bound the courts
so far as it went. The Code, was not exhaustive and did not
affect the previously existing powers unless it took these
away; in matters with which it did not deal, the court could
exercise an inherent jurisdiction to do that justice between
the parties which was warranted under the circumstances and
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which the necessities of the case required. There was
difference of opinion between Woodroffe J. and Mookerjee J.
on the scope of applicability of section 546 of the Code of
Civil Procedure. Justice Woodroffe at page 931 of the report
observed:-
"The Court has, therefore, in many cases, where
the circumstances require it, acted upon the
assumption of the possession of an inherent power
to act ex debito justitiae and to do that real and
substantial justice for the administration, for
which it alone exists."
Similarly Justice Mookerjee observed at page 941 of the
report as follows:-
"It may be added that the exercise by Courts, of
what are called their "inherent powers" or
"incidental powers" is familiar in other systems
of law, and such exercise is justified on the
ground that it is necessary to make its ordinary
exercise of jurisdiction effectual, because, "when
jurisdiction has once attached, it continues
necessarily and all the powers requisite to give
it full and complete effect can be exercised,
until the end of law shall be attained" (See Works
on Courts and their Jurisdiction section 27 and
Wells on Jurisdiction of Courts, Chapter XVII)".
These observations, however, will have to be understood
in the context in which the same were made. If there was
jurisdiction to do certain matter then all powers to make
that jurisdiction effective must be implied to the authority
unless expressly prohibited. But in references under 1922
Act as well as
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1961 Act the courts merely exercise an advisory or
consultative jurisdiction while the appeals are kept pending
before the tribunal, therefore, nothing should be implied as
distracting from the jurisdiction of the tribunals. Power to
grant stay is incidental and ancillary to the appellate
jurisdiction. What was true of the appellate jurisdiction
could not be predicated of the referential jurisdiction. -
See the observations of the majority judgment of the Delhi
High Court in Narula Trading Agency v. Commissioner of Sales
Tax [1981] 47 S.T.C. p.45, though made in the context of
different statutory provisions.
This decision of Andhra Pradesh High Court was noticed
by this Court in Income-tax Officer, Cannanore v. M.K.
Mohammed Kunhi 71 I.T.R. 815. That decision requires a
little closer examination. This Court in that decision was
dealing with section 254 of the Act of 1961 which conferred
on the Appellate Tribunal powers of the widest amplitude in
dealing with appeals before it. This Court held that power
granted by implication the power of doing all such acts, or
employing such means, as were essentially necessary to its
execution. The statutory power under section 254 carried
with it the duty in proper cases to make such orders for
staying recovery proceedings pending an appeal before the
Tribunal, as would prevent the appeal, if successful, from
being rendered nugatory. Section 254 carried with it the
appellate powers of the Appellate Tribunal. This Court while
interpreting that power referred to the Sutherland’s
Statutory Construction of third edition, articles 5401 and
5402., in Domat’s Civil Law (Cushing’s edition), Volume 1,
at page 88, Maxwell on Interpretation of Statutes, eleventh
edition, and case to the conclusion that where the power was
given to an authority, incidental powers to discharge that
authority were implied in the grant of that power. This
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Court noted that the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal was not a
court but exercised judicial powers. The Court noted that
there were certain decisions in which difficulties were felt
that the Appellate Tribunal did not possess the power to
stay recovery during the pendency of an appeal. Reference
was made to a decision of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in
the case of Vetcha Sreeramamurthy v. The Income-tax Officer,
Vizianagaram and Another 30 I.T.R. 252, where Viswanatha
Sastri, J. observed that there was no confinement of an
express power of granting a stay of realisation of the tax,
nor was there any power allowing the tax to be paid in
instalments. The learned judge observed that neither the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner nor the Appellate Tribunal
was given the power to stay the collection of tax.
Therefore, according to the learned judge,
864
whether the law should not be made more liberal so as to
enable an assessee who has preferred an appeal, to obtain
from the appellate forum, a stay of collection of tax,
either in whole or in part, on furnishing suitable security,
was a matter for the legislature to consider. Referring to
the decision in Pollisetti Narayana Rao v. Commissioner of
Income-tax (supra), this Court made an observation to the
effect that "the same High Court held that stay could be
granted by it pending reference of a case by the Appellate
Tribunal to the High Court. This power the High Court had
under section 151 of the Civil Procedure Code and under
article 227 of the Constitution". This passage in our
opinion cannot be taken as approving the observations of the
Andhra Pradesh High Court in Pollisetti Narayana Rao’s case
(supra). This Court was dealing with the power of the
appellate authority i.e. the Appellate Tribunal. Therefore,
that would be an entirely different question. The appellate
authority must have the incidental power or inherent power-
inherent for the disposal of an appeal to grant a stay or
not to grant a stay.
The High Court, in our opinion, as was contended by the
revenue in answering a question under section 66 of 1922 Act
or section 256 of 1961 Act does not exercise original,
appellate or revisional jurisdiction but only advisory
Jurisdiction. See the observations of the judicial committee
in Tata Iron & Steel Co. Ltd. v. Chief Revenue Authority,
Bombay, (supra). It is only consultative, neither original
nor appellate.
In New Jehangir Vakil Mills Ltd. v. Commissioner of
Income-tax, Bombay North Kutch and Saurashtra 37 I.T.R. 11,
this Court held that the High Court cannot direct the
Tribunal to find new facts or raise a new question of law or
embark a new line of enquiry.
In Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay v. Scindia Steam
Navigation Co. Ltd. 42 I.T.R. 589, a bench of five judges of
this Court was of the view that reference jurisdiction or
special jurisdiction is different from appellate or
supervisory jurisdiction. The jurisdiction of the High Court
in a reference under section 66 of 1922 Act was special one,
different from its ordinary jurisdiction as a civil court.
The High Court hearing a reference under that section did
not exercise any appellate or revisional or supervisory
jurisdiction over the Tribunal. It acted purely in an
advisory capacity on a reference which properly came before
it under section 66(1) and (2) of 1922 Act. This Court noted
that the High Court gives the Tribunal advice,
865
but ultimately it is for the Tribunal to give effect to that
advice. This Court further observed that it was of the
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essence of such a Jurisdiction that the court shall decide
only questions which were referred to it and not any other
questions. This Court was, however of the view that the
power of the court to issue a direction to the Tribunal
under section 66(2) of the Act of 1922 was in the nature of
a mandamus and it was well settled that no mandamus would be
issued unless the applicant had made a distinct demand on
the appropriate authorities for the very reliefs which he
sought to enforce by mandamus and that had been refused.
This question was again considered by this Court in
Petlad Turkey Red Dye Works Co. Ltd. Commissioner of Income-
Tax Bombay North 48 I.T.R. 92. This Court observed at page
98 of the report that the jurisdiction of the High Court was
confined to giving an opinion. It was purely advisory and
the High Court had no jurisdiction to direct the Tribunal to
take fresh evidence.
In C.P. Sarathy Mudaliar v. Commissioner of Income-Tax,
Andhra Pradesh 62 I.T.R. 576, this Court noted that the High
Court cannot set aside the order of the Tribunal and the
High Court does not sit in appeal over the judgement of the
Tribunal. If the High Court found that the material facts
were not stated in the statement of case, or the Tribunal
had not stated its conclusion on material facts, the High
Court might call upon the Tribunal to submit a supplementary
statement of case under section 66(4) of 1922 Act. It may be
mentioned that it would be incidental to answering the
question.
In the case of Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay City
I v. Greaves Cotton and Co. Ltd. 68 I.T.R. 200, this Court
noted that it was well settled that the High Court was not a
court of appeal under reference under section 66 of 1922 Act
or under section 256 of 1961 Act and it was not open to the
High Court in such a reference to embark upon a re-appraisal
of the evidence and the facts found by the Tribunal must be
accepted by the High Court.
A full bench of the Kerala High Court in the case of K.
Ahamad v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Kerala 96 I.T.R. 29,
held that the High Court had power to delete under section
256 of 1961 Act an erroneous sentence in the judgment. The
full bench held that the courts were constituted for the
purpose of doing justice and should have power that is
inherent to the discharge of the function and that these
must have power akin to correct accidental slips. The full
bench therein acted on the principle that no act of the
court should ever injure a party.
866
A learned single judge of the Bombay High Court in the
case of Jatashankar Dayaram v. Commissioner of Income-Tax
101 I.T.R. 343, held that application for a reference under
section 256(2) of 1961 Act in forma pauperis can be
permitted. This would be incidental or ancillary to the
discharge of the function of giving advice conferred under
section 66 of 1922 Act.
This Court in the case of Jaipur Mineral Development
Syndicate v. Commissioner of Income-Tax, New Delhi 106
I.T.R. 653 at 656, held that reference which was dismissed
for paper books not being filed in time could be restored.
It is common ground that jurisdiction conferred upon
the High Court under the Income-Tax Act is neither original
nor appellate. The jurisdiction which it exercised in
dealing with the income-tax reference was advisory and is a
special jurisdiction.
It was contended on behalf of the assessee that the
High Court was a court when it exercised its special
jurisdiction and it was well settled that the High Court
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while hearing a reference under a taxing statute had
inherent power to make all such orders as it would be
necessary to do justice where the circumstances of the case
so required and for this reliance was placed on the
observations of this Court in the case of Jaipur Mineral
Development Syndicate v. Commissioner of Income-Tax, New
Delhi (supra). But as has been noticed before the power that
was exercised was for properly giving advice.
The Allahabad High Court in Sridhar v. Commissioner of
Wealth-Tax, 153 I.T.R. 543 at 547, observed that only power
that High Court could exercise under section 27 of the
Wealth-Tax Act, 1957 was similar to section 66 of 1922 Act
i.e. to give opinion about the questions referred to it in
an advisory capacity by answering the questions in favour of
the assessee or the revenue, as the case might be. Even
while hearing a reference under a taxing statute, the High
Court has certain inherent powers. But the extent and scope
of the inherent power which can be exercised by an appellate
or revisional court cannot be the extent and scope of the
inherent power of the High Court while exercising an
advisory jurisdiction such as is conferred by section 27 of
the Act. The inherent power which the High Court can
exercise while hearing a reference under section 27 must be
confined to the procedure about the hearing of a reference
and to passing such orders as are ancillary or incidental to
the advice which the
867
High Court proposes to give while answering the questions.
While hearing a reference under section 27, the Allahabad
High Court further held that the High Court did not have the
further inherent power to pass interim orders restraining
the orders of AAC or by the Tribunal being given effect to.
It was further held that what the High Court could not do at
the time of passing the final order, it could certainly not
do as an interim measure in the purported exercise of its
inherent power.
It is true that the High Courts sometimes act on the
assumption that it possessed inherent power to act ex debito
justitiae and to do real and substantial justice for which
alone these existed where the circumstances of the case so
required, the power related to matters of procedure and not
substantive rights of the parties. See in this connection
Manohar Lal Chopra v. Rai Bahadur Rao Raja Seth Hiralal,
[1962] 1 Supp. S.C.R. 450, where this Court a page 463 of
the report referred to section 151 of the Code of Civil
Procedure and observed that the section itself said that
nothing in the Code should be deemed to limit or otherwise
affect the inherent power of the court to make orders
necessary for the ends of justice. This ’inherent power’ as
was observed by this Court "had not been conferred on the
court. It was a power inherent in the Court by virtue of its
duty to do justice between the parties before it".
Further the Code itself recognised the existence of the
inherent power of the Code, there was no question of
implying any powers outside the limits of the Code. See also
Padam sen and Anr. v. The State of Uttar Pradesh, [1961] 1
S.C.R. 884 at 887.
The special jurisdiction of the High Court under
section 256 does not deprive it of judicial character or its
inherent power, it was submitted. This in our opinion does
not solve the question because the High Court in answering
reference indubitably acts in judicial capacity and must be
implied to have powers which are necessary to discharge the
obligations in exercising its jurisdiction of giving advice
conferred by the special provisions of the statute. It was
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further submitted that the extent and scope of that inherent
power could not be confined to a straight jacket. It took
within its ambit the power to grant stay of proceedings
before the court as it deemed necessary to do for the ends
of justice. The High Court could exercise such power to
grant stay, it was submitted where the legislature had not
denied or excluded the same in unmistakable terms. But this
was not clear because of the language. It was stated that
pendency of a
868
reference would not stay the realisation, indicates that
reference has nothing to do with the stay of realisation.
The realisation of non-realisation of tax is part of the
appellate jurisdiction of the Tribunal. It was, however,
submitted that the inherent power of the High Court and also
of the Supreme Court had not been excluded by the general
provision in section 265 of 1961 Act which stated that
notwithstanding that a reference has been made to the High
Court or the Supreme Court or an appeal has been preferred
to the Supreme Court, tax shall be payable in accordance
with the assessment made. This section, it was submitted,
did not impose any embargo on the inherent power. It was
submitted that section 265 of 1961 Act, as regards reference
made to the High Court, is in pari materia with section
66(7) which also related to reference to the High Court.
Section 66(7) was interpreted by the Andhra Pradesh High
Court in Pollisetti Narayana Rao v. Commissioner of Income-
tax (supra). It was submitted that legislature by adopting
the identical language in 1961 Act must be regarded as
having accepted it in section 265 of 1961 Act. It was
submitted that while in re-enacting similar provisions of
section 66(7), in section 265 the legislature must be
regarded as intending the same meaning to the pari material
expression in the 1961 Act. For this reliance was placed on
the observations of House of Lords in the Case of Barras v.
Aberdeen Steam Trawling and Fishing Co., Ltd. 1933 A.E.R. =
1933 A.C. 402, where it was held that once certain words in
an Act of Parliament had received a judicial construction in
one of the superior courts, and the legislature repeated
these without any alteration in a subsequent statute, the
legislature must be taken to have used them according to the
meaning which a court of competent jurisdiction had given to
them. Lord Macmillan however observed that this rule of
interpretation afforded only a valuable presumption as to
the meaning of the language employed in a statute. Where a
judicial interpretation is well settled and well recognised
the rule ought, doubtless, to receive effect, but must be a
question of circumstances whether Parliament was to be
presumed to have tacitly given statutory authority to a
single judgment of a competent court so as to render that
judgment, however, obviously wrong, unexaminable by the
highest court.
Therefore, in this case only solitary decision of the
Andhra Pradesh High Court which was not in all subsequent
cases followed and which in a way was contrary to several
decisions of the other High Courts as well as this Court
cannot be said to have received parliamentary acceptance.
The attention of the Andhra Pradesh High Court was not drawn
to the decision of this Court in Seth
869
Premchand Satramdas v. State of Bihar 19 I.T.R. 108, where
dealing with the nature of the Jurisdiction of the Courts in
reference matters under Sales Tax Act this Court observed
that the High Court acquired Jurisdiction to deal with the
case by virtue of an express provision of the Bihar Sales
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Tax Act. Jurisdiction was only consultative neither original
nor appellate.
The Calcutta High Court in the case of Dwarka Prasad
Baja v. Commissioner of Income-tax, West Bengal-I 126 I.T.R.
219, observed that in exercising its Jurisdiction under
section 256 of the Income-Tax Act, 1961, the High Court did
not act as a court of appeal, as the Income-tax Appellate
Tribunal does under section 254 of the Act. The High Court,
in disposing of the reference, could only answer the
questions actually referred and could not raise any question
by itself. The findings of fact by the Tribunal were final
so far as the High Court was concerned and only on limited
grounds such findings of fact could be challenged. After the
judgment of the High Court is delivered, the Tribunal has to
pass necessary orders to dispose of the case in conformity
with the judgment under section 260 of the Act. The High
Court exercised a very limited jurisdiction. It did not
dispose of the entire matter but its decision was confined
only to the questions of law as arise from the order of the
Tribunal. Therefore, it could not be said that the High
Court exercised its general jurisdiction under article 227
of the Constitution in dealing with a reference. If the High
Court could in such case exercise its powers under equity
jurisdiction and grant a temporary injunction or a stay it
would have to ascertain and to go into facts for which the
Income-Tax Act, 1961 did not make any provision. Moreover,
issuance of orders permitting collection or recovery of tax
or staying such collection or recovery if made under
exercise of inherent power would result in extension of the
jurisdiction of the High Court under section 256 of the Act
of 1961. The Calcutta High Court, further, was of the view
that a court could not vest itself with such additional
jurisdiction by invoking its inherent powers. Hence, the
Court, in seisin of a reference under the I.T. Act could not
issue an order of temporary injunction, according to the
Calcutta High Court, or stay of proceedings which was an
injunction in an indirect manner in respect of recovery of
taxes.
In an appropriate case, if the assessee feels that a
stay of recovery pending disposal of the reference is
necessary or is in the interest of justice, then the
assessee is entitled to apply before the appellate authority
to grant a stay until disposal
870
of reference by the High Court or until such time as the
appellate authority thought fit. But in case the appellate
authority acted without jurisdiction or in excess
jurisdiction or in improper exercise of the jurisdiction,
then decision of such appellate authority can be corrected
by the High Courts by issuing appropriate writs under
article 226 and 227 of the Constitution.
It has to be borne in mind that in answering questions
or disposing of references either under section 66 of 1922
Act or section 256 of 1961 Act, the High Courts do not
exercise any jurisdiction conferred upon them by the Code of
Civil Procedure or the Charters or by the Acts establishing
respective High Courts. In respect of certain matters
jurisdictions exercised by the High Court, must be kept
separate from the concept of inherent powers or incidental
powers in exercising jurisdiction under section 66 of 1922
Act or 256 of 1961 Act. Section 66 of Income-Tax Act of 1922
or section 256 of Income-Tax Act of 1961 is a special
jurisdiction of a limited nature conferred not by the Code
of Civil Procedure or by the Charters or by the special Acts
constituting such High Courts but by the special provisions
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of Income-Tax Act 1922 or 1961 for limited purpose of
obtaining High Court’s opinion on questions of law. In
giving that opinion properly if any question of incidental
or ancillary power arises such as giving an opportunity or
restoring a reference dismissed without hearing or giving
some additional time to file paper book, such powers inhered
to the Jurisdiction conferred upon it. But such incidental
powers can not be so construed as to confer the power of
stay of recovery of taxes pending a reference which lie in
the domain of an appellate authority. Therefore, the concept
of granting stay in a reference ex debito justitiae does not
arise. That concept might arise in case of the appellate
authority exercising its power to grant stay where there is
not express provision. Ex debito justitiae is to do justice
between the parties.
Rendering advice on the question of law referred to the
courts has nothing to do with the recovery of tax or
granting stay in respect of the same.
Therefore, in our opinion it cannot be said that the
High Court had inherent power or incidental power in the
matter of a reference pending before it to grant stay of
realisation or to grant injunction. That must remain within
the jurisdiction of the appellate authority and pendency of
a reference does not detract
871
from that jurisdiction of the appellate authority. In our
opinion, therefore, the High Court was in error in
exercising its jurisdiction by passing an order for stay of
realisation under section 151 of the Code of Civil Procedure
in a pending reference. The High Court could have exercised
its power if the appellate authority had not properly
exercised its jurisdiction, not in reference jurisdiction
but by virtue of its jurisdiction under article 226 or
article 227 in appropriate cases. But that was not the case
here.
In that view of the matter, we are in respectful
agreement with the views expressed by the Allahabad High
Court in Sridhar v. Commissioner of Wealth-tax (supra) and
the views of the Calcutta High Court in Dwarka Prasad Baja
v. Commissioner of Income-tax, West Bengal-I (supra) and we
are unable to sustain the views expressed by Andhra Pradesh
High Court in Polisetti Narayana Rao v. Commissioner of
Income-tax, Hyderabad (supra). The appeals are accordingly
allowed. The judgment and order of the High Court are set
aside. But in the facts and circumstances of the case,
parties are directed to pay and bear their own costs.
N.V.K. Appeals allowed.
872