Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
UNION OF INDIA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
JARDINE HENDERSON AND ORS. (AND VICE VERSA)
DATE OF JUDGMENT16/03/1979
BENCH:
UNTWALIA, N.L.
BENCH:
UNTWALIA, N.L.
PATHAK, R.S.
CITATION:
1979 AIR 972 1979 SCR (3) 555
1979 SCC (2) 258
ACT:
Bengal Public Demands Recovery Act, 1913, Sections 7 to
10 read with Rule 46(2) under the Act, Scope of-Locus standi
of the Purchaser of the property of certificate debtor to
prefer a claim objecting to the sale of property under the
Act.
Taxation Laws (Continuation and Validation of Recovery
Proceedings) Act, 1964, Section 3(1)(a) & (b) read with sub-
section (4) section 35 of the Income Tax Act, 1962-When a
fresh notice of demand is necessary, explained.
HEADNOTE:
In Income Tax Officer, Kolar Circle and Anr. v. Seghu
Buchiah Setty. 52 I.T.R. 538, this Court held that the
recovery proceedings initiated against the assessee-
respondent on the basis of the original demand notice were
had as it was of the view that the amount of tax assessed
when reduced as a result of the appellate orders a fresh
demand notice had to be served on the respondent before he
could be treated as a defaulter. To get over the
difficulties in the collection of income tax and other
direct taxes created by the decision in Seghu Chetty’s case,
the Taxation Laws (Continuation and Validation of Recovery
Proceedings) Act, 1964 was passed with retrospective effect
by an express provision in section 5.
The property belonging to two brothers, the certificate
debtors in C.A. 1575(NT) 71 and C.A. 1965 (NT) of 1963
respectively were purchased by M/s Jurdine Henderson (Ltd.)
on September 20, 1954, i.e. after service of notices under
section 7 of the Bengal Public Demands Recovery Act, 1913.
The objections raised by the certificate debtors were
rejected and the property came to be sold. In both cases the
Company received a notice on August 6, 1956 fixing a date
for settling the terms of the sale proclamation in respect
of the respective one half share of each of the two
Certificate-debtors. Immediately thereafter the respondent-
company made an application in each of the two cases that it
had purchased the property being unaware of the pendency of
any Certificate case against any of its vendors for
realization of incometax dues and that the Company was the
owner of the property and it was not liable to be sold as
that of the Certificate-debtor. The Certificate Officer
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rejected the objection holding that the purchase having been
made after service of notice under section 7 of the Bengal
Act on the Certificate-debtor, was void as against any claim
enforceable in execution of the Certificate and hence the
Company had no right to object to the sale. The Company went
up in appeal before the Commissioner and succeeded in both
the cases. Two revisions were filed before the Board of
Revenue which were allowed. The respondent-company then
moved the High Court under Article 227 of the Constitution.
The petition giving rise to Civil Appeal No. 1575 was
allowed. The other petition giving rise to C.A. 1965 of 1971
was dismissed by the same Bench.
556
Two questions, namely (a) the locus standi of the
purchaser-Company to prefer a claim objecting to the sale of
the property and (b) the effect of section 3(1)(a) and (b)
of the Validation Act, 1964 read with Section 35(4) of the
Income Tax Act, 1962 arose for decision in these appeals.
Allowing C.A. 1575/71 and dismissing C.A. 1965/71 (both
by certificates) the Court.
^
HELD: 1. The Company as a purchaser of the property of
the certificate debtors had locus standi to prefer the
claim. The company preferred a claim objecting to the sale
of property on the ground that it was not liable to be sold
as it had purchased the property from the two certificate
debtors. In the Bengal Public Demands Recovery Act, 1913,
there is no express provision enabling a person other than
the Certificate debtor claiming an interest in the property
to be sold to file any objection. He, of course, under
section 22 can take recourse to the said provision by filing
an application to set aside the sale of immovable property
on deposit of the amounts provided therein. But the rules in
Schedule II under section 38 have the effect as if enacted
in the body of the Act. In Schedule II is to be found rule
39 which is very much like rule 58 of Order 21 of the Code
of Civil Procedure, 1908. [561 F-G]
(a) It was open to it to show under rule 40 that at the
date of the service of notice under section 7 it had some
interest in the property in dispute. If the notice served at
the beginning of the two Certificate cases under section 7
on the two Certificate-debtors was not a valid notice in the
sense that in one case on the reduction of the amount of the
Certificate it became necessary to give a fresh notice and
in the other without a fresh demand notice under the Income-
tax Act for the enhanced amount, the Certificate case could
not proceed, then the Company had validly purchased the
property and its purchase was not void. The property
purchased by it could not then be sold for realization of
the income-tax dues against the two brothers. If, however,
no fresh notice was necessary to be served in either of the
two cases then it is plain that the Company’s purchase was
void as against the claim enforceable in execution of the
Certificate. [561 H, 562 A-C]
(b) It is clear from sections 7, 8, 9 and 10 of the
Bengal Public Demands Recovery Act, 1913, that if the
Certificate is modified or varied by the certificate officer
under Section 10, while disposing of the petition of
objection filed by the Certificate-debtor under section 9,
then the Certificate case proceeds further without a fresh
notice under section 7.[561 D-E]
In the instant case, the amount was not reduced on the
objection of the Certificate-debtor but it was reduced on
receipt of the information from the Income Tax Officer. [561
E]
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2. The transfer was void against the Certificate claims
in both cases under section 8(a) of the Bengal Public
Demands Recovery Act, 1913. In both the cases notices under
section 7 of the Bengal Act had been served upon the
Certificate debtor before the property in question was
transferred by them to the company. In neither of the two
cases did the certificate proceeding became invalid, in one
case by reduction of the demand and in the other by an
enhancement, since clause (c) of section 3(1) of the
Validation Act clearly and expressly provides that no
proceedings in relation to Government dues
557
shall be invalid merely because no fresh notice was
served upon the assessee, after the dues were enhanced or
reduced in any appeal or proceeding. [566 E-F]
Ram Swarup Gupta v. Behari Lal Baldeo Prasad and Ors.,
95 I.T.R. 339; Distinguished.
3. (a) On a plain reading of clause (a) of section 3 of
the Validation Act, it is clear that the intention of the
Legislature is not to allow the nullification of the
proceedings which were initiated for recovery of the
original demand. On the basis of another notice of demand
for the enhanced amount two courses are open to the
department (i) to initiate another proceedings for the
recovery of the amount by which the dues are enhanced
treating it as a separate demand or (2) to cancel the first
proceedings and start a fresh one for the recovery of the
entire amount including the enhanced one. In the latter
case, the first proceedings started for the recovery of the
original amount will lose its force and the fresh
proceedings will have to proceed de novo. But in the former,
the proceedings are not affected at all. [564 E-G]
3. (b) The argument that the effect of sub-section (4)
of section 35 of the Income Tax Act has not been done away
with by clause (a) of section 3 of the Validation Act, 1964
is not correct. Firstly on a correct interpretation of sub-
section (4) of section 35 it would be noticed that though
the expression used is "the sum payable" but in the context
it would mean only the "extra enhanced sum payable" and not
the whole of the enhanced amount. The expression "sum
payable" had to be used in sub section (4) because that sub
section was also providing for a contingency where by the
rectification order the amount of refund was reduced. In
such a case the expression "the sum payable" would obviously
mean the difference between the amount refunded and the
reduced amount which was liable to be refunded. Secondly,
even if it were to be held that in the case of enhancement
the expression "the sum payable" in sub section (4) means
the whole of the enhanced amount by a rule of harmonious
construction it has got to be held that in view of section
3(1)(a) of the Validation Act even in the case of a
rectification a notice of demand is to be served now only in
respect of the amount by which the Government dues are
enhanced. [565 B-E]
4. Sub clause (i) of clause (b) of sub section (1) of
section 3 of the Validation Act clearly provides that it is
not necessary for the Taxing Authority to serve upon the
assessee a fresh notice of demand. The only thing which he
is required to do that he has to give intimation of the fact
of such deduction to the assessee and to the Tax Recovery
officer. The purpose of giving intimation to the assessee is
to bring it to his pointed knowledge that the demand against
him has been reduced, although by other methods also such as
by service of a copy of the Appellate Order or the
revisional order being served on him he may be made aware of
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that. The intimation to the Tax Recovery Officer is
essential as without that intimation from the Taxing
Authority he cannot reduce the amount of the Certificate
debt in the proceedings already commenced. [565 E-H]
(a) The view of the High Court that the provision
contained in subclause (ii) of clause (b) of section 3(1) of
the Validation Act is mandatory and in absence of a formal
intimation to the assessee and to the Tax Recovery Officer
as required by the said provision the proceedings initially
started could not be continued under sub-clause (iii), is
not sustainable in law. [565 H, 566 A]
558
(b) On the facts of the case in C.A. 1575(NT)/71, the
requirement of sub-clause (ii) stood fulfilled and nothing
further had to be done in the matter by the Taxing
Authority. That being so the proceedings initiated on the
basis of the notice of demand served upon the assessee
before the reduction of the amount in appeal could be
continued in relation to the amount so reduced from the
stage at which such proceedings stood immediately before
such disposal as provided for in sub-clause (iii). [566 C-D]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 1575
and 1965 of 1971.
From the Judgment and Order dated 12-1-1968 of the
Calcutta High Court in Civil Rule No. 2523 and 2527 of 1960.
V. S. Desai, S. P. Nayar and Miss A. Subhashini for the
Appellant.
S. T. Desai, J. Ramamurthi and D. N. Gupta for the
Respondents and Vice-Versa.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
UNTWALIA, J.-These two appeals one by the Union of
India and the other by M/s Jardine Henderson Ltd. are by
certificate granted by the Calcutta High Court. Since the
facts in both the cases are very much similar involving the
interpretation of the various clauses of section 3(1) of The
Taxation Laws (Continuation and Validation of Recovery
Proceedings) Act, 1964, hereinafter referred to as the
Validation Act, the two appeals have been heard together and
are being disposed of by this judgment.
There were two brothers named Basanta Kumar Daw,
respondent no. 2 in Civil Appeal No. 1575 of 1971 and
Haridhan Daw, respondent no. 2 in Civil Appeal No. 1965 of
1971. The facts of Civil Appeal No. 1575 of 1971 are these:
For realization of arrears of income-tax dues the
Certificate Officer of 24 Parganas forwarded to the
Collector a Certificate in accordance with Section 46(2) of
the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 specifying the amount of
arrears due from respondent no. 2. Thereupon a Certificate
case was started against him (Basanta Kumar Daw) under the
Bengal Public Demands Recovery Act, 1913, hereinafter called
the Bengal Act, by the Certificate Officer acting as a
Collector. Notice under section 7 was served on the
Certificate-debtor on 31-10-1949. Basanta Kumar Daw entered
appearance and filed an objection under section 9 of the
Bengal Act. This objection was rejected by the Certificate
Officer by his Order dated March 8, 1951. On April 2, 1951
the Certificate-debtor made an application for review of the
said order dated 8-3-1951 stating therein, inter alia that
the appeal preferred by him before the Income-tax Appellate
Tribunal had been allowed in part and some payments also had
559
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been made since then; the Certificate case, therefore, could
not proceed for the recovery of the sum of Rs. 36,874.10
annas, the original amount mentioned in the Certificate. The
Certificate Officer declined to review his previous order
and rejected the review petition. But he made certain
enquiries from the Income-tax Officer whether the amount of
the Certificate had to be reduced. The Income-tax Officer
informed him that the Tribunal had reduced the demand on
appeal on 13-9-1950 and after adjustment of the previous
payments made by the Certificate-debtor the revised demand
stood at Rs. 19,001.3 annas only. Thereupon the Certificate
Officer amended the Certificate on the basis of the
information received from the Income-tax Officer and reduced
the demand. On July 18, 1956 he directed the issue of sale
notice under Rule 46(2) framed under the Bengal Act in
respect of the half share of Basanta Kumar Daw (the other
half belonging to his brother Haridhan Daw) in premises nos.
201 to 205/1, Old China Bazar Street, Calcutta.
Now a few facts of the other appeal being Civil Appeal
No. 1965 of 1971 may be stated. The Income-tax officer sent
a requisition to the Certificate officer of 24 Parganas for
the recovery of a sum of Rs. 59,541.15 annas against
Haridhan Daw, respondent no. 2 in this appeal. A Certificate
case was started. A notice under section 7 of the Bengal Act
was served on the Certificate-debtor on January 30, 1951. He
also filed a petition of objection under section 9. But the
Certificate Officer by his order dated January 13, 1954
rejected the objection filed by the Certificate-debtor under
the Bengal Act. A review application was also rejected in
this case on January 27, 1954. On March 2, 1954, the Income-
tax Officer informed the Certificate Officer that the
original demand of Rs. 59,541.15 annas had been enhanced to
Rs. 59,604.7 annas under section 35 of the Income-tax Act
and requested him to realize the enhanced amount. The order
under section 35 was passed on March 2, 1953. The
Certificate Officer thereupon informed the Income-tax
Officer that the Bengal Act did not provide for enhancing
the demand of the existing Certificate and asked him to file
a separate Certificate for the additional amount. He,
however, continued the Certificate proceedings for the
recovery of the original amount.
M/s. Jardine Henderson Ltd., respondent in Civil Appeal
No. 1575 of 1971 and appellant in Civil Appeal No. 1965 of
1971 purchased the whole of the premises in question on
September 20, 1954 for a total sum of Rs. 3,00,100/-
purchasing one half of the undivided share from each of the
two brothers.
560
In both the cases the Company received a notice on
August 6, 1956 fixing a date for settling the terms of the
sale proclamations in respect of the respective one half
share of each of the two Certificate-debtors. Immediately
thereafter the respondent-company made an application in
each of the two cases that it had purchased the property
being unaware of the pendency of any Certificate case
against any of its vendors for realization of income-tax
dues and that the Company was the owner of the property and
it was not liable to be sold as that of the Certificate-
debtor. The Certificate Officer rejected the objection
holding that the purchase having been made after service of
notice under section 7 of the Bengal Act on the Certificate-
debtor, was void as against any claim enforceable in
execution of the Certificate and hence the Company had no
right to object to the sale. The Company went up in appeal
before the Commissioner and succeeded in both the cases. Two
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revisions were filed before the Board of Revenue which were
allowed. The respondent-company then moved the High Court
under Article 227 of the Constitution. The petition giving
rise to Civil Appeal No. 1575 was allowed and hence the
Union of India has come up in appeal. The other petition
giving rise to Civil Appeal No. 1965 of 1971 was dismissed
by the same Bench and the Company has, therefore, come up in
appeal.
The Validation Act was not there when the orders were
passed either by the Commissioner or the Board of Revenue.
But in the High Court as also here the main controversy
between the parties was the effect of the Validation Act on
the two Certificate proceedings.
Mr. V. S. Desai, appearing for the Union of India, in
the first instance submitted that the order reducing the
amount of the Certificate in Civil Appeal No. 1575 was an
order under section 10 of the Bengal Act. Hence the notice
served under section 7 on the Certificate-debtor continued
to have its effect in spite of the reduction of the amount
and no fresh notice under section 7 was necessary to be
served. In agreement with the High Court we have no
difficulty in rejecting this argument.
We may first read some of the relevant provisions of
the Bengal Act. Section 7 reads as follows:-
"When a certificate has been filed in the office
of a Certificate-officer under section 4 or section 6,
he shall cause to be served upon the certificate-
debtor, in the prescribed manner, a notice in the
prescribed form and a copy of the certificate."
561
The effect of service of notice of certificate is provided
in section 8 which provides :-
"From and after the service of notice of any
certificate under section 7 upon a certificate-debtor-
(a) any private transfer or delivery of any of
his immovable property situated in the
district in which the certificate is filed,
or of any interest in any such property,
shall be void against any claim enforceable
in execution of the certificate."
Under Section 9 the Certificate-debtor may file a petition
of objection denying his liability in whole or in part.
Under section 10 it is provided:-
"The Certificate-officer in whose office the
original certificate is filed shall hear the petition,
take evidence (if necessary), and determine whether the
certificate-debtor is liable for the whole or any part
of the amount for which the certificate was signed; and
may set aside, modify or vary the certificate
accordingly :"
On reading the provisions aforesaid it is clear that if
the Certificate is modified or varied by the Certificate
Officer under section 10 while disposing of the petition of
objection filed by the certificate-debtor under section 9,
then the Certificate case proceeds further without a fresh
notice under section 7. But in the instant case the amount
was not reduced on the objection of the Certificate-debtor
but it was reduced on receipt of the information from the
Income-tax Officer.
In the Bengal Act itself there is no express provision
enabling a person other than the Certificate-debtor claiming
an interest in the property to be sold to file any
objection. He, of course, under section 22 can take recourse
to the said provision by filing an application to set aside
the sale of immovable property on deposit of the amounts
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provided therein. But the rules in Schedule II under section
38 have the effect as if enacted in the body of the Act. In
Schedule II is to be found rule 39 which is very much like
rule 58 of Order 21 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908.
The Company preferred a claim objecting to the sale of
property on the ground that it was not liable to sale as it
had purchased the property from the two Certificate-debtors.
It was, therefore, not quite accurate to say that the
Company had no locus standi to prefer the claim. It was open
to it to show under rule 40 that at the date of the service
of notice under section 7 it had some interest in the
property in dispute. If the notice served at the beginning
562
of the two Certificate cases under section 7 on the two
Certificate debtors was not a valid notice in the sense that
in one case on the reduction of the amount of the
Certificate it became necessary to give a fresh notice and
in the other without a fresh demand notice under the Income-
tax Act for the enhanced amount, the Certificate case could
not proceed, then the Company had validly purchased the
property and its purchase was not void. The property
purchased by it could not then be sold for realization of
the income-tax dues against the two brothers. If, however,
no fresh notice was necessary to be served in either of the
two cases then it is plain that the Company’s purchase was
void as against the claim enforceable in execution of the
Certificate. The answer in both the cases has got to be
given with reference to the Validation Act and no other
point of any consequence was argued or could be pressed with
any success in either of the two appeals.
In Income-tax Officer, Kolar Circle, and another v.
Seghu Buchiah Setty(1) best Judgment assessments had been
made for the assessment years 1953-54 and 1954-55. A notice
of demand for each of the two years was served upon the
assessee under section 29 of the Income-tax Act, 1922. The
assessee preferred appeals. In the meantime for non-payment
tax he was treated as a defaulter and a Certificate was
forwarded to the Collector under section 46(2). Thereafter
the tax payable by the assessee was substantially reduced in
appeal. The Income-tax Officer informed the assessee of the
reduced tax liability and called upon him to pay the reduced
amount. No fresh notice of demand was issued under section
29. Pending further appeals to the Appellate Tribunal the
assessee wanted the Certificate proceedings to be stayed and
on his request being rejected he moved the High Court under
Article 226 of the Constitution. The High Court held that
the department was not entitled to treat the respondent as a
defaulter in the absence of a fresh notice of demand and
quashed the recovery proceedings. On appeal to this Court
the majority view expressed was that the amount of tax
assessed being reduced as a result of the orders of the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner, a fresh demand notice had
to be served on the respondent before he could be treated as
a defaulter. The recovery proceedings initiated against him
on the basis of the original demand notice were therefore
rightly quashed by the High Court.
The Statement of Objects and Reasons which led to the
introduction and passing of the Validation Act would show
that it was to get over the difficulties in the collection
of income-tax and other direct taxes created by the Supreme
Court decision in Seghu Buchiah Setty’s case
563
(supra) that the Validation Act was passed with
retrospective effect. The interpretation of this Act falls
for our consideration for the first time in this Court.
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This is an Act "to provide for the continuation and
validation of proceedings in relation to Government dues and
for matters connected therewith." In the Schedule appended
to the Act are enumerated various tax statutes including the
Income-tax Act. "Taxing Authority" has been defined in
clause (d) of section 2 and clause (e) defines "Tax Recovery
Officer" to mean an officer to whom a certificate for the
recovery of arrears of Government dues may be issued under
this Act. Section 3 without the proviso may be read as a
whole:-
"Continuation and validation of certain
proceedings.-
(1) Where any notice of demand in respect of any
Government dues is served upon an assessee by a Taxing
Authority under any scheduled Act, and any appeal or
other proceeding is filed or taken in respect such
Government dues, then,-
(a) where such Government dues are enhanced in such
appeal or proceeding, the Taxing Authority shall
serve upon the assessee another notice of demand
only in respect of the amount by which such
Government dues are enhanced and any proceedings
in relation to such Government dues as are covered
by the notice or notices of demand served upon him
before the disposal of such appeal or proceeding
may, without the service of any fresh notice of
demand, be continued from the stage at which such
proceedings stood immediately before such
disposal;
(b) where such Government dues are reduced in such
appeal or proceeding-
(i) it shall not be necessary for the Taxing
Authority to serve upon the assessee a fresh
notice of demand;
(ii) the Taxing Authority shall give intimation of
the act of such reduction to the assessee,
and where a certificate has been issued to
the Tax Recovery Officer for the recovery of
such amount, also to that officer;
564
(iii)any proceedings initiated on the basis of the
notice or notices of demand served upon the
assessee before the disposal of such appeal
or proceeding may be continued in relation to
the amount so reduced from the stage at which
such proceedings stood immediately before
such disposal;
(c) no proceedings in relation to such Government dues
(including the imposition of penalty or charging
of interest) shall be invalid by reason only that
no fresh notice of demand was served upon the
assessee after the disposal of such appeal or
proceeding or that such Government dues have been
enhanced or reduced in such appeal or proceeding
:"
The Act was made retrospective by an express provision in
section 5.
Clause (a) deals with the case of an enhancement of
Government dues and provides that the proceedings initiated
may be continued from the stage at which such proceedings
stood immediately before the disposal of the appeal or
proceedings in which the enhancement was made. Another
notice of demand is required to be served in respect of the
amount by which the dues are enhanced. On a plain reading of
clause (a) of section 3 it is clear that the intention of
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the legislature is not to allow the nullification of the
proceedings which were initiated for recovery of the
original demand. On the basis of another notice of demand
for the enhanced amount, two courses are open to the
department-(1) to initiate another proceeding for the
recovery of the amount by which the dues are enhanced
treating it as a separate demand or (2) to cancel the first
proceedings and start a fresh one for the recovery of the
entire amount including the enhanced one. In the latter case
the first proceedings started for the recovery of the
original amount will lose its force and the fresh proceeding
will have to proceed de novo. But in the former the first
proceedings are not affected at all. In Civil Appeal No.
1965 of 1971 this is exactly the view taken by the High
Court and in our opinion rightly.
Mr. S. T. Desai appearing for the Company submitted
that where the amount was enhanced in appeal or revision
there was no express provision in the Income-tax Act for
service of a fresh or another notice of demand for the
additional amount. But if the amount was enhanced under the
power of rectification under section 35 then sub-section (4)
thereof requires:-
565
"Where any such rectification has the effect of
enhancing the assessment or reducing a refund the
Income-tax Officer shall serve on the assessee a notice
of demand in the prescribed form specifying the sum
payable, and such notice of demand shall be deemed to
be issued under section 29, and the provisions of this
Act shall apply accordingly."
The effect of this sub-section, according to the counsel,
has not been done away with by clause (a) of section 3 of
the Validation Act. We reject this argument as being unsound
and for two reasons. Firstly, on a correct interpretation of
sub-section (4) of section 35 it would be noticed that
though the expression used is "the sum payable" but in the
context it would mean only the "extra enhanced sum payable"
and not the whole of the enhanced amount. The expression
"sum payable" had to be used in sub-section (4) because that
sub-section was also providing for a contingency where by
the rectification order the amount of refund was reduced. In
such a case the expression "the sum payable" would obviously
mean the difference between the amount refunded and the
reduced amount which was liable to be refunded. The second
reason is that even if it were to be held that in the case
of enhancement the expression "the sum payable" in sub-
section (4) means the whole of the enhanced amount by a rule
of harmonious construction it has got to be held that in
view of section 3(1) (a) of the Validation Act even in the
case of a rectification a notice of demand is to be served
now only in respect of the amount by which the Government
dues are enhanced.
Now coming to the case of reduction dealt with in
clause (b) of sub-section (1) of section 3 of the Validation
Act it would be seen that sub-clause (i) clearly provides
that it is not necessary for the Taxing Authority to serve
upon the assessee a fresh notice of demand. The only thing
which he is required to do is that he has to give intimation
of the fact of such deduction to the assessee and to the Tax
Recovery Officer. The purpose of giving intimation to the
assessee is to bring it to his pointed knowledge that the
demand against him has been reduced, although by other
methods also such as by service of a copy of the Appellate
Order or the revisional order being served on him he may be
made aware of that. The intimation to the Tax Recovery
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Officer is essential as without that intimation from the
Taxing Authority he cannot reduce the amount of the
Certificate debt in the proceedings already commenced. The
High Court has taken the view that the provision contained
in sub-clause (ii) of clause (b) of section 3(1) of the
Validation Act is mandatory and in absence of a formal
intima-
566
tion to the assessee and to the Tax Recovery Officer as
required by the said provision the proceedings initially
started could not be continued under sub-clause (iii). In
our opinion the view of the High Court is not sustainable in
law. On the facts of this case the assessee himself in his
review application had clearly mentioned that the demand
against him stood reduced in appeal. He also claimed that he
had made certain payments. Although the Tax Recovery Officer
rejected his review petition, as, probably, he had no power
of review, he took the precautionary measure of making
inquiry from the Taxing Authority. Thereupon the Taxing
Authority gave him the information and the amount of the
Certificate debt was substantially reduced. We, therefore,
hold that on the facts of this case the requirement of sub-
clause (ii) stood fulfilled and nothing further had to be
done in the matter by the Taxing Authority. That being so
the proceedings initiated on the basis of the notice of
demand served upon the assessee before the reduction of the
amount in appeal could be continued in relation to the
amount so reduced from the stage at which such proceedings
stood immediately before such disposal as provided for in
sub-clause (iii).
Clause (c) of section 3(1) of the Validation Act is
also important and it clearly and expressly provides that no
proceedings in relation to Government dues shall be invalid
merely because no fresh notice of demand was served upon the
assessee after the dues were enhanced or reduced in any
appeal or proceeding. It is, therefore, plain that in
neither of the two cases did the Certificate proceeding
become invalid, in one case by reduction of the demand and
in the other by an enhancement. In both the cases notices
under section 7 of the Bengal Act had been served upon the
Certificate-debtors before the property in question was
transferred by them to the Company. The transfer was,
therefore, void against the Certificate claims in both the
cases under section 8(a) of the Bengal Act.
Mr. S. T. Desai called our attention to the decision of
the Allahabad High Court in Ram Swarup Gupta v. Behari Lal
Baldeo Prasad and others.(1). That case is, however, clearly
distinguishable as in that the property was sold in
Certificate proceedings started for the realization of the
original amount even after the amount had been reduced in
appeal. It is obvious that that sale was illegal and invalid
as rightly held by the High Court because after reduction
the demand had to be reduced on intimation by the Taxing
Authority and the property could not be sold for the
original amount.
567
For the reasons stated above, Civil Appeal No. 1575 of
1971 is allowed with costs payable by the respondent-
company, the Judgment and Order of the High Court are set
aside and it is directed that the Certificate case shall
proceed to disposal in accordance with law as expeditiously
as possible. Civil Appeal No. 1965 of 1971 is dismissed but
we make no order as to costs in this appeal.
V. D. K. C.A. No. 1965/71 dismissed.
C.A. No. 1965/71
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