Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MRS. KUSUMBEN D. MAHADEVIA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX,BOMBAY.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
30/03/1960
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
DAS, S.K.
KAPUR, J.L.
CITATION:
1960 AIR 907 1960 SCR (3) 417
CITATOR INFO :
R 1961 SC 107 (13)
RF 1961 SC1633 (13,26)
RF 1963 SC1356 (121)
R 1963 SC1484 (7)
RF 1973 SC1023 (13)
ACT:
lncome-tax--Reference--High Court’s jurisdiction-If can
decide a question not decided by the Tribunal--Indian
Income-tax Act, 1922 (XI of 1922), s. 66--The States
(Taxation Concessions) Order, 1949, Para. 4.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant was a shareholder of a company known as
Mafatlal Gagalbhai and Co., Ltd. The Company with its
registered office at Bombay was at all material times
resident in British India. It was also doing business in
the former Baroda State and used to keep its profits derived
in that State with Mafatlal Gagalbhai Investment
Corporation, Navsari. In the year 1949 Mafatlal Gagalbhai
and Co. Ltd. declared dividends out of profits which had
accrued partly in British India and partly in the Indian
State. The appellant was assessed to income-tax on the
dividends earned by her. She did not bring those dividends
into British India and claimed the benefit of para. 4 of the
Merged States (Taxation Concessions) Order. The Tribunal
held that the income did not accrue to the appellant in the
Baroda State but it did not decide the question whether she
was entitled to the benefits of the Taxation Concessions
Order. The High Court on a reference to it held that para.
4 of the Taxation Concessions Order. did not apply to the
assessee but it did not decide the other question as to
where the income had accrued to the assessee. On appeal by
special leave the appellant contended, inter alia, that
since the Tribunal had not gone into the question of the
applicability to the assessee of the Concessions Order and
had not expressed any opinion thereon, the High Court could
not raise the question on its own and decide it:
Held, that the High Court exceeded its jurisdiction in going
outside the point of law decided by the Tribunal and
deciding a different point of law.
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Section 66 of the Income-tax Act which confers jurisdiction
upon the High Court only permits a reference of a question
of law arising out of the order of the Tribunal. It does
not confer jurisdiction on the High Court to decide a
different question of law not arising out of such order.
New Jehangir Vakil Mills Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax,
[1959] 37 I.T.R. 11, Scindia Steam Navigation Co. Ltd. v.
Commissioner of Income-tax, [1954] 26 I.T.R. 686,
Commissioner of Incometax v. Breach Candy Swimming Bath
Trust, [1955] 27 I.T.R. 279 and Ismailia Grain Merchants
Association v. Commissioner of Incometax, [1957] 31 I.T.R.
433, distinguished.
Mash Trading Co. v. Commissioner of Income-tax, [1956] 30
I.T.R. 388, considered.
418
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 507 of 1957.
Appeal by special leave from the order and judgment dated
September 28, 1955, and February 20, 1956, of the Bombay
High Court in Income-tax Reference No. 28 of 1955.
R.J. Kolah and I. N. Shroff, for the appellant.
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor - General of India,B. Ganapathy
lyer and D. Gupta, for the respondent.
1960. March 30. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
HIDAYATULLAH, J.-This is an appeal with the special leave of
this Court, and is directed against an order dated September
28, 1955, and a judgment dated February 20, 1956, of the
High Court of Bombay. By the order, the High Court reframed
a question referred to it by the Appellate Tribunal at
Bombay, which it answered by its judgment.
Mrs. Kusumben D. Mahadevia (hereinafter referred to as the
assessee) who has filed this appeal, was, at all material
times, residing in Bombay. She was a shareholder, holding
760 shares of Mafatlal Gagalbhai & Co., Ltd., Bombay. For
the assessment year 1950-51 (the previous year being the
calendar year 1949), she was assessed to income-tax on a
total income of Rs. 1,50,765 which included a grossed-up
dividend income of Rs. 1,47,026. In the latter income was
included a sum of Rs. 47,120 being the dividends declared by
Mafatlal Gagalbhai & Co., Ltd., Bombay. Mafatlal Gagalbhai
& Co., Ltd., is a private limited Company with its
registered office at Bombay. It was, at all material times,
’resident and ordinarily resident’ in British India. It was
also doing business in the former Baroda State, and used to
keep its profits derived in that State with Mafatlal
Gagalbhai Investment Corporation, Navsari. In the year 1949
Mafatlal Gagalbhai & Co., Ltd., declared dividends out of
these accumulated profits by three resolutions, which are
reproduced:
25-3-1949. " That a further dividend of Rs. 17 per ordinary
share free of income-tax for the year 1947 be and is hereby
declared absorbing Rs. 4,29,250
419
and the same be payable in Navsari out of the profits of the
year 1947 lying at Navsari."
24-9-1949. " That a further dividend of Rs. 24 per ordinary
share free of income-tax for the year 1948 be and is hereby
declared absorbing Rs. 6,06,000 and the same be payable in
Navsari out of the profits of the year 1948 lying at Navsari
with Messrs. M.G. Investment Corporation Ltd. on -or after
30th April, 1949."
24-9-1949. " Resolved that an Ad-interim dividend of Rs. 21
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per ordinary share free of income-tax absorbing Rs. 5,30,250
be and is hereby declared for the year 1949 out of the
income of the Company for the year 1949 remaining unbrought
with Messrs. M. G. Investment Corporation Ltd., Navsari,
and that the same be payable in Navsari on or after 30th
April, 1949."
The assessee did not bring these dividends into British
India. She claimed the benefit of para. 4 of the Merged
States (Taxation Concessions) Order, 1949 (hereinafter
referred to briefly as the Concessions Order); but the
Tribunal held that the income did not accrue to her in the
Baroda State. The Tribunal pointed out that the dividends
were declared by Mafatlal Gagalbhai & Co., Ltd., out of its
profits which had accrued partly in, what was then called,
British India and partly in the Indian State. The dividend
was thus declared out of ’ composite profits’. It further
pointed out that the assessee had paid for and acquired the
shares of a Company in British India and was thus holding an
asset in British India, and that the income was from that
asset. The Tribunal, however, at the instance of the
assessee drew up a statement of the case under s. 66(1) of
the Indian Income-tax Act, and referred the following
question to the High Court:
" Whether the net dividend income of Rs. 47,120 accrued to
the assessee in the former Baroda State, or whether it is
income accrued or deemed to have accrued to the assessee in
British India ?"
When the reference was heard, the High Court was of the
opinion that the Tribunal ought to have decided and referred
also the question whether the Concessions
420
Order applied to the assessee. The High Court recognised
the grievance of the assessee that no such point was raised
before the Tribunal. The High Court, however, by its order
dated September 28, 1955, decided that there was no need to
send the case back for a supplemental statement, since all
the facts necessary to decide the two questions were before
the High Court. The High Court then reframed the question,
as it said, to comprehend the two points of law in the
following words:
" Whether the assessee is entitled to any concession under
the Merged States (Taxation Concessions) Order, 1949, with
regard to the net dividend income of Rs. 47,120?"
The reference then came up for final disposal on February
20, 1956, and the High Court answered the question in the
negative, holding that para. 4 of the Concessions Order did
not apply to the assessee. The High Court did not decide
where the income had accrued to the assessee. Leave to
appeal to this Court was refused by the High Court, but the
assessee applied to this Court for special leave against
both the order and the judgment and obtained it, and the
present appeal has been filed.
At the very outset, the assessee has questioned the
jurisdiction of the High Court to frame and deal with a
question of law not arising out of the order of the
Tribunal. The assessee points out that the Tribunal had
decided that the income had accrued in British India. The
assessee had challenged this part of the decision, and if
the Commissioner felt it necessary, he should have obtained
the decision of the Tribunal and asked for a reference on
the other point also. Since the Tribunal had not gone into
the question of the applicability to the assessee of the
Concessions Order and had not expressed any opinion thereon,
the assessee contends that the High Court could not raise
the question on its own, and decide it. The assessee
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strongly relies upon a decision of this Court in New
Jehangir Vakil Mills Ltd. v. Commissioner of Incometax (1).
In that case, the Bombay High Court had
(1) [1959] 37 I.T.R. 11.
421
directed the Tribunal to submit a supplementary statement of
the case on points not arising from the order of the
Tribunal, and this Court held that the High Court had no
jurisdiction to do so. The learned counsel for the
Commissioner, on the other hand, contends that the question
was the assessability of the assessee, who claimed the
benefit of the Concessions Order. The main question was
thus the applicability of the Concessions Order, and the
question of the accrual of the income, whether in British
India or in Baroda, was merely ancillary. The latter
question was, according to the respondent, included in the
first question, and the High Court was right when it framed
a comprehensive question and answered it in the sequence it
did. The respondent points out that the High Court having
held that the Concessions Order did not apply, was not
required to decide the other limb of the question, as it
became unnecessary to do so.
In our opinion, the objection of the assessee is well-
founded. The Tribunal did not address itself to the
question whether the Concessions Order applied to the
assessee. It decided the question of assessability on the
short ground that the income had not arisen in Baroda but in
British India. That aspect of the matter has not been
touched by the Bombay High Court. The latter has, on the
other hand, considered whether the Concessions Order applies
to the assessee, a matter not touched by the Tribunal.
Thus, though the result is the same so far as the assessment
is concerned, the grounds of decision are entirely
different.
The High Court felt that the question framed by it
comprehended both the aspects and, perhaps it did. But the
two matters were neither co-extensive, nor was the one
included in the other. The question of accrual of income
has to be decided under the Incometax Act, and has but
little to do with the Concessions Order. That question can
be adequately decided on the facts of this case without
advertence to the Concessions Order. It cannot, therefore,
be said to be either coextensive with or included in the
decision of the question actually considered by the High
Court to wit, whether the Concessions Order applied or not.
If this
54
422
be so, it is manifest that the Tribunal decided something
which stands completely outside the decision of the Bombay
High Court. The High Court also decided a matter which was
not considered by the Tribunal even as a step in the
decision of the point actually decided. The two decisions
are thus strangers to each other, though they lead to the
same result.
Section 66 of the Income-tax Act which confers jurisdiction
upon the High Court only permits a reference of a question
of law arising out of the order of the Tribunal. It does
not confer jurisdiction on the High Court to decide a
different question of law Dot arising out of such order. It
is possible that the same question of law may involve
different approaches for its solution, and the High Court
may amplify the question to take in all the approaches. But
the question must still be one which was before the Tribunal
and was decided by it. It must not be an entirely different
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question which the Tribunal never considered.
The respondent attempted to justify the action taken by
contending that the decision of the question of the accrual
of the income with reference to the place of accrual implied
the applicability of the Concessions Order. We do not
agree. If this were so, there would be no necessity to
frame the question again. Indeed, the High Court itself
felt that there were two limbs of the question of
assessability, and reframed the question to cover both the
limbs. Where the High Court went wrong was in not deciding
both the limbs but one of them and that too, the one not
decided by the Tribunal. The resulting position can be
summed up by saying that the High Court decided something
which the Tribunal did not, and the Tribunal decided
something which the High Court did not. This is clearly
against the provisions of s. 66. The respondent referred to
Scindia Steam Navigation Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-
tax (1), Commissioner of Income-tax v. Breach Candy Swimming
Bath Trust (2 ) and Ismailia Grain Merchants Association v.
Commissioner of Income-tax (3). They
(1) [1954] 26 I.T.R. 686. (2) [1955] 27 I.T.R. 279.
(3) [1957] 31 I.T.R. 433.
423
were all decisions of the same Court, and arose in different
circumstances. In two of them, the question was wide enough
to take in a line of reasoning not adopted by the Tribunal,
and in the third, the question was widened by deleting a
reference to a section, when another section was also
material. They were not cases where the issues of law as
decided by the Tribunal and the High Court were entirely
different, which is the case here. The Punjab High Court
has taken a contrary view in Mash Trading Co. v. Com-
missioner of Income-tax (1).
For the reasons given above, we are of opinion that the High
Court exceeded its jurisdiction in going outside the point
of law decided by the Tribunal and deciding a different
point of law. The order of the High Court will, therefore,
be set aside, and the case will be remitted to the High
Court to decide the question framed by the Tribunal. In
view of the fact that both the assessee and the Commissioner
pointed out the anomaly to the : High Court and the question
was reframed in spite of this, the costs of this appeal
shall be costs in the reference to. be heard by the High
Court, and will abide the result.
Appeal allowed.
Case remitted.