Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 9
PETITIONER:
HOOSEIN KASAM DADA (INDIA) LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH AND OTHERS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
23/02/1953
BENCH:
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
BENCH:
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
MAHAJAN, MEHR CHAND
CITATION:
1953 AIR 221 1953 SCR 987
CITATOR INFO :
E 1957 SC 540 (20,65)
R 1960 SC 980 (5,8,11)
RF 1967 SC 344 (4,8,9)
R 1968 SC 13 (9)
D 1978 SC2280 (10)
D 1988 SC2010 (7)
ACT:
Appeal-Right to appeal-Whether vested right-When right vests
-Change of law after initiation of proceedings in lower
Court -Law governing appeal-Law making deposit of amount of
appeal a condition for admission of appeal-Whether manner of
mere procedure- -Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act,
1947, s. 22 (1) -Central Provinces Sales Tax Act (Second
Amendment) Act, 1950.
HEADNOTE:
The right of appeal is a matter of substantive right and not
merely a matter of procedure, and this right becomes vested
in a party when the proceedings are first initiated in, and
before a decision is given by, the inferior Court and such a
right cannot be taken away except by express enactment or
necessary intendment.
Section 22(l.) of the Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax
Act, 1947, provided that no appeal against an order of
assessment should be entertained by the prescribed authority
unless it was satisfied that such amount of tax as the
appellant might admit to be due from him, had been paid.
This Act was amended on the 25th November, 1949, and s.
22(l) as amended provided that no appeal should ])a admitted
by the said authority unless such appeal was accompanied by
satisfactory proof of the payment of the tax in respect of
which the appeal had been preferred. On the 28th of
November, 1947, the appellant submitted a return to the
Sales Tax Officer, who, finding that the turnover exceeded 2
lacs, submitted the case to the Assistant Commissioner for
disposal and the latter made an assessment on the 8th April,
1950. The appellant preferred an appeal on the 10th May,
1950, without depositing the amount of tax in respect of
which he had appealed. The Board of Revenue was of opinion
that s. 22(l.) as amended applied to the case as the
assessment was made, and the appeal was preferred, after the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 9
amendment came into force,’ and rejected the appeal.
Held, (i) that the appellant had a vested right to appeal
when the proceedings were initiated, i.e., in 1947, and his
right to appeal was governed by the law as it existed on
that date ; (ii) that the amendment of 1950 cannot be
regarded as a mere alteration in procedure or an alteration
regulating the exercise of the right of appeal, but whittled
down the right itself, and it had no retrospective effect as
the Amendment Act of 1950 did not expressly or by necessary
intendment give it retrospective effect, and the
988
appeal could not therefore be rejected for non-payment of
the tax in respect of which the appeal was preferred.
Colonial Sugar Refining Co. Ltd. v. Irving [1905] A.C. 369,
Nanabin Aba v. Sheku bin Andu (I.L.R. 32 Bom. 337), Delhi
Cloth and General Mills Co. Ltd. v. Income-tax Commissioner,
Delhi (54 I.A. 421), Kirpa Singh v. Rasaldar Ajaipal Singh
(A.I.R. 1928 Lab. 627), Sardar Ali v. Dalimuddin (I.L.R. 56
Cal. 512) applied.
Badraddin Abdul Rahim v. Sitaram Vinayak Apte (I.L.R. 52
Bom. 753) disapproved.
In re Vasudeva Samiar (A.I.R. 1929 Mad. 381), Ram Singha v.
Sankar Dayal (I.L.R. 50 All. 965), Radhakisan v. Sri Dhar
(A.I.R. 1950 Nag. 17), Gordhan Das v. Governor--General in
Council (A.I.R. 1950 Punj. 103) and Nagendra Nath Bose v.
Monmohan (1930, 34 C.W.N. 1009) referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 182 of 1952.
Appeal by special leave from the Judgment and Order dated
2nd August, 1951, of the High Court of Judicature at Nagpur
in Miscellaneous Petition No. 187 of 1950 under arts. 226
and 227 of the Constitution.
N. C. Chatterjee (R. M. Hajarnavis, with him) for the
appellant.
R. Ganapathy Iyer for the State of Madhya Pradesh.
1953. February 23. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
DAS J. On the 28th November, 1947, the appellant Hoosein
Kasam Dada (India) Ltd., (hereinafter referred to as the
assessee) submited to the Sales Tax Officer, Akola, a Sales
Tax return in Form IV for the first quarter. Notice in Form
XI calling upon the assessee to produce evidence in support
of the said return having been issued by the Sales Tax
Officer, the assessee produced his account books. Not being
satisfied by the inspection of the account books as to the
correctness of the return and being of opinion that the
taxable turnover exceeded rupees two lacs the Sales Tax
Officer submitted the case to the Assistant Commissioner of
Sales Tax, Amravati, for assessment,
989
On the 25th January, 1949, the Assistant Commissioner issued
a fresh notice in Form XI under section 11 and fixed the
case for disposal on the 5th February, 1949. After various
adjournments and proceedings to which it is not necessary to
refer, the hearing commenced on the 9th June, 1949, when an
agent of the assessee appeared with books of account of the
Akola Branch. Eventually after various further proceedings
the Assistant Commissioner on the 8th April, 1950, assessed
the assessee, to the best of his judgment, in the sum of Rs.
58,657140 and a copy of the order in Form XIV was sent to
the assessee. Being aggrieved by the order of assessment
the assessee on the 10th May, 1950, preferred an appeal to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 9
the Sales Tax Commissioner, Madhya Pradesh, under section
22(l) of the Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947
(hereinafter referred to as the Act). The appeal not having
been accompanied by any proof of the payment of the tax in
respect of which the appeal had been preferred, the
authorities, after giving the assessee several adjournments,
declined to admit the appeal. The assessee moved the Board
of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, by a revision application
against the order of the Sales Tax Commissioner contending
that his appeal was not governed by the proviso to section
22(l) of the Act as amended on the 25th November, 1949, by
the Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax (Second Amendment)
Act (Act LVII of 1949) but was governed by the proviso to
section 22(l) of the Act as it stood when the assessment
proceedings were started, i.e., before the said amendment.
The Board of Revenue took the view that as the order of
assessment was made after the amendment of the section and
the appeal was filed thereafter such appeal must be governed
by the provisions of law as it existed at the time the
appeal was actually filed and that the law as it existed
before the filing of the appeal could not apply to the case.
The assessee thereupon moved the High Court of Madhya
Pradesh under articles 226 and 227 of the Constitution of
India praying, amongst other things, for a writ of mandamus
or an appropriate
128
990
order directing the Sales Tax Commissioner to admit and hear
the appeal without demanding payment of the amount of sales
tax assessed by the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax.
The High Court dismissed the application on the 2nd August,
1951. The assessee applied to the High Court for leave
to appeal to this Court which was also dismissed by the
High Court on the 14th March, 1952. ’The assessee thereupon
applied to this Court for special leave to appeal on the
12th May, 1952. This Court granted special leave to appeal,
but such leave was, by the order granting such leave,
limited to the question of the effect of the amendment to
section 22 of the Act on the petitioner’s appeal to the
Sales Tax Commissioner, Madhya Pradesh. This Court took the
view that the other questions sought to be raised by the
assessee would have to be decided by the Sales Tax
Commissioner in case the appeal succeeded. The appeal has
now come up for final disposal before us and in this appeal
we are concerned only with the limited question of the
effect of the amendment to section 22 of the Act.
Section 22(l) of the Act was originally expressed in the
following terms :-
"22. (1) Any dealer aggrieved by an order under this Act
may, in the prescribed manner, appeal to the prescribed
authority against the order:
Provided that no appeal against an order of assessment, with
or without penalty, shall be entertained by the said
authority unless it is satisfied that such amount of tax or
penalty or both as the appellant may admit to be due from
him, has been paid."
The relevant portion of section 22 as amended runs as
follows:--
"22. (1) Any dealer aggrieved by an order under this Act
may, in the prescribed manner, appeal to the prescribed
authority against the order:
Provided that no appeal against an order of assessment, with
or without penalty shall be admitted by the said authority
unless such appeal is accompanied by a satisfactory proof of
the payment of the tax, with
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 9
991
penalty, if any, in respect of which the appeal has been
preferred."
It is clear from the language used in the proviso to section
22 (1) as it stood prior to the amendment that an aggrieved
assessee had only to pay such amount of tax as he might
admit to be due from him, whereas under the proviso to
section 22(l) as amended the appeal has to be accompanied by
satisfactory proof of payment of the tax in respect of which
the appeal had been preferred. The contention of the
present assessee is that as the amendment has not been made
retrospective its right of appeal under the original section
22(l) remains unaffected and that accordingly as it does not
admit anything to be due it was not liable to deposit any
sum along with its appeal and the Commissioner was bound to
admit its appeal and had no jurisdiction or power to reject
it on the ground that it had not been accompanied by any
proof of payment of the tax assessed against the appellant
as required under the amended proviso and the Board of
Revenue and the High Court were in error in not directing
the Commissioner to admit the appeal.
That the amendment has placed a substantial restriction on
the assessee’s right of appeal cannot be disputed, for the
amended section requires the payment of the entire assessed
amount as a condition precedent to the admission of its
appeal. The question is whether the imposition of such a
restriction by amendment of the section can affect the
assessee’s right of appeal from a decision in proceedings
which commenced prior to such amendment and which right of
appeal was free from such restriction under the section asit
stood at the time of the commencement of the proceedings.
The question was answered in the negative by the
Judicial Committee in Colonial. Sugar Refining Co., Ltd. v.
Irving(1). In that case the Collector of Customs acting
under an Act called the Excise Tariff Act, 1902, required
the appellants to pay pound 20,100 excise duty on 6,700 tons
of sugar. The appellants disputed the claim. So they
deposited
(1) L.R. [1905] A.C. 369.
992
the money with the Collector and then brought the action by
issuing a writ on the 25th October, 1902. A special case
having been stated for the opinion of the Supreme Court,
that Court on the 4th September, 1903, gave judgment for the
Collector. In the meantime the Judiciary Act, 1903, was
passed and received Royal assent on the 25th August, 1903,
that is to say about 10 days before the judgment was
delivered. By section 39(2) of that Act the right of appeal
from the Supreme Court to the Privy Council given by the;
Order in Council of 1860 was taken away and the only appeal
therefrom was directed to lie to the High Court of
Australia. The appellants having with the leave of the
Supreme Court filed an appeal to the Privy Council the
respondents filed a petition taking the preliminary point
that no appeal lay to the Privy Council and praying that the
appeal be dismissed. in dismissing that application Lord
Macnaghten who delivered the judgment of the Privy Council
said:-
"As regards the general principles applicable to the case
there was no controversy. On the one hand, it was not
disputed that if the matter in question be a matter of
procedure only, the petition is well founded. On the other
hand, if it be more than a matter of procedure, if it
touches a right in existence at the passing of the Act,- it
was conceded that, in accordance with a long line of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 9
authorities extending from the time of Lord Coke to the
present day, the appellants would be entitled to succeed.
The Judicary Act is not retrospective by express enactment
or by necessary intendment. And therefore the only question
is, was the appeal to His Majesty in Council a right vested
in the appellants at the date of the passing of the Act, or
was it a mere matter of procedure ? It seems to their
Lordships that the question does not admit of doubt. To
deprive a suitor in a pending action of an appeal to a
superior tribunal which belonged to him as of right is a
very different thing from regulating procedure. In princi-
ple, their Lordships see no difference between abolishing an
appeal altogether and transferring the appeal to a new
tribunal. In either case there is an interference
993
with existing rights contrary to the well-known general
principle that statutes are not to be held to act
retrospectively unless a clear intention to that effect is
manifested."
The principle of the above decision was applied by Jenkins
C.J. in Nana bin Aba v. Sheku bin Andu (1) and by the Privy
Council itself in Delhi Cloth and General Mills Co. Ltd. v.
Income-tax Commissioner, Delhi(’). A Full Bench of the
Lahore High Court adopted it in Kirpa Singh v. Rasaldar
Ajaipal Singh (3). It was there regarded as settled that
the right of appeal was not a mere matter of procedure but
was a vested right which inhered in a party from the com
mencement of the action in the Court of first instance and
such right could not be taken away except by an express
provision or by necessary implication.
In Sardar Ali v. Dalimuddin (4), the suit out of which the
appeal arose was filed in the Munsiff ’s Court at Alipore on
the 7th October, 1920. The suit having been dismissed on
the 17th July, 1924, the plaintiffs appealed to the Court of
the District Judge but the appeal was dismissed. The
plaintiffs then preferred a second appeal to the High Court
on the 4th October, 1926. That second appeal was heard by a
Single Judge and was dismissed on the 4th April, 1928. In
the meantime Clause 15 of the Letters Patent was amended on
the 14th January 1928 so as to provide that no further
appeal should lie from the decision of a Single Judge
sitting in second appeal unless the Judge certified that the
case was a fit one for appeal. In this case the learned
Judge who dismissed the second appeal on the 4th April,
1928, declined to give any certificate of fitness. The
plaintiffs on the 30th April, 1928, filed an appeal on the
strength of clause 15 of the Letters Patent as it stood
before the amendment. The contention of the appellants was
that the amended clause could not be applied to that appeal,
for to do so would be to apply it retrospectively and to
impair and indeed to defeat a substantive right which was in
existence
(1) (1908) I.L.R. 32 Bom. 337. (3) A. I. R 1928 Lah.
627.
(2) (1927) L.R. 54 I.A. 421 ; I.L.R. 9 Lah. 284. (4) (1929)
I.L.R. 56 Cal. 5I2.
994
prior to the date of the amendment. The apppllants claimed
that on the 7th October, 1920, when the suit was filed they
had vested in them by the existing law a substantive right
to a Letters Patent appeal from the decision of a Single
Judge and that an intention to interfere with it, to clog it
with a new condition or to impair or imperil it could not be
presumed unless it was clearly manifested by express words
or necessary intendment. In giving effect to the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 9
contentions of the appellants Rankin C.J. observed at p.
518:-
Now, the reasoning of the Judicial Committee in The Colonial
Sugar Refining Company’s case is a conclusive authority to
show that rights of appeal are not matters of procedure, and
that the right to enter the superior court is for the
present purpose deemed to arise to a litigant before any
decision has been given by the inferior court. If the
latter proposition be accepted, I can see no intermediate
point at which to resist the conclusion that the right
arises at the date of the suit."
It was held that the new clause could not be given
retrospective effect and accordingly the date of pre-
sentation of the second appeal to the High Court was not the
date which determined the applicability of the amended
clause of the Letters Patent and that the date of the
institution of the suit was the determining factor.
As against the last mentioned decision of the Calcutta High
Court Sri Ganapathy Aiyar, appearing for the respondent,
refers us to the decision of a Bench of the Bombay High
Court in the case of Badruddin Abdul Rahim v. Sitaram
Vinayak Apte (1), where it was held that the amendment of
clause 15 of the Letters Patent operated retrospectively.
That case followed an earlier decision of the same High
Court in Fram Bomanji v. Hormasji Barjorji (2). The
decision in the old case proceeded upon two grounds, namely,
(1) that the question was one of procedure and (2) that sec-
(1) (1928) I.L R. 52 Bom. 753; A.I.R. (1928) Bom. 371.
(2) (1866) Bom. H.C. (O.C.J.) 49.
995
tion 2 of the New Letters Patent of 1865 gave retrospective
operation to the Letters Patent by making it applicable to
all pending suits. In so far as the first ground is
concerned it clearly runs counter to the decision of the
Privy Council in Colonial Sugar Refining Co. Ltd. v. Irving
(supra) and must be taken as overruled as Fawcett J. himself
acknowledged at page 756. As regards the second ground it
is inapplicable to the case before us and it is not
necessary to express any opinion as to the. soundness and
validity of that ground. It may be mentioned here that in
Shaikh Hasan Abdul Karim v. King Emperor (1) another Bench
of the same High Court expressly dissented from the decision
in Badruddin Abdul Rahim v. Sitaram Vinayak Apte (supra).
The principle laid down in the Colonial Sugar Refining Co.’s
case (supra) was followed by a Special Bench of Madras in In
re Vasudeva Samiar (2). A Full Bench of the Allahabad High
Court in Ram Singha v. Shankar Dayal (3) fell into line and
held that the earlier decision on this point of that Court
in Zamin Ali Khan v. Genda (4) stood overruled by the Privy
Council decision in the Colonial Sugar Refining Co.’s case.
A Full Bench of Nagpur High Court in Radhakisan v. Shridar
(5 ) has also taken the same view. The Punjab High Court
has also adopted the same line in Gordhan Das v. The
Governor General in Council (1).
The case of Nagendra Nath Bose v. Mon Mohan Singha Roy (7)
is indeed very much to the point. In that case the
plaintiffs instituted a suit for rent valued at Rs. 1,30615
and obtained a decree. In execution of that decree the
defaulting tenure was sold on the 20th November, 1928, for
Rs. 1,600. On the 19th December, 1928, an application was
made, under Order XXI, rule 90 of the Code of Civil
Procedure, by the present petitioner, who was one of the
judgment-debtors,
(1) I.L.R (1945) Bom. 17.
(2) A I.R. (1929) Mad 381 ; 56 M.L.J 369.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 9
(3) (1928) I.L.R. 50 All. 965; A.I.R. (1928) All. 437.
(4) (1904) I.L.R. 26 All. 375.
(5) A.I.R. (1950) Nag. 177.
(6) A.I.R, (1952) Punjab 103 (F.B.),
(7) (1930) 34 C.W.N. 1009.
996
for setting aside the sale. That. application having been
dismissed for default of his appearance the petitioner
preferred an appeal to the District Judge of Hoogly who
refused to admit the appeal on the ground that the amount
recoverable in execution of the decree had not been
deposited as required by the proviso to section 174, clause
(c), of the Bengal Tenancy Act as amended by an amending Act
in 1928. The contention of the petitioner was that the
amended provision which came into force on the 21st
February, 1929, could not affect the right of appeal from a
decision on an application made on the 19th December, 1928,
for setting aside the sale. Mitter J. said at page 1011:-
" We think the contention of the petitioner is wellfounded
and must prevail. That a right of appeal is a substantive
right cannot now be seriously disputed. It is not a mere
matter of procedure. Prior to the amendment of 1928 there
was an appeal against an order refusing to set aside a sale
(for that is the effect also where the application to set
aside the sale is dismissed for default) under the
provisions of Order 43, rule (1), of the Code of Civil
Procedure. That right was unhampered by any restriction of
the kind now imposed by section 174(5), Proviso. The Court
was bound to admit the appeal whether appellant deposited
the amount recoverable in execution of the decree or not.
By requiring such deposit as a condition precedent to the
admission of the appeal, a new restriction has been put on
the right of appeal, the, admission of which is now hedged
in with a condition. There can be no doubt that the right
of appeal has been affected by the new provision and in the
absence of an express enactment this amendment cannot apply
to proceedings pending at the date when the new amendment
came into force. It is true that the appeal was filed after
the Act came into force, but that circumstance is
immaterial--for the date to be looked into for this purpose
is the date of the original proceeding which eventually
culminated in the appeal."
997
The, above decisions quite firmly establish and our
decisions in Janardan Reddy v. The State (1) and in Ganpat
Rai v. Agarwal Chamber of Commerce Ltd. (2) uphold the
principle that a right of appeal is not merely a matter of
procedure. It is matter of substantive right. This right
of appeal from the decision of an .inferior tribunal to a
superior tribunal becomes vested in a party when proceedings
are first initiated in, and before a decision is given by,
the inferior court. In the language of Jenkins C.J. in Nana
bin Aba v. Shaik bin Andu (supra) to disturb an existing
right of appeal is not a mere alteration in procedure. Such
a vested right cannot be taken away except by express
enactment or necessary intendment. An [intention to
interfere with or to impair or imperil such a vested right
cannot be presumed unless such intention be clearly
manifested by express words or necessary implication.
Sri Ganapathy Aiyar urges that the language of section 22(1)
as amended clearly makes the section ret. rospective. The
new proviso, it is pointed out, peremptorily requires the
authority not to admit the appeal unless it be accompanied
by a satisfactory proof of the payment of the tax in respect
of which the appeal is preferred and this duty the authority
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 9
must discharge at the time the appeal is actually preferred
before him. The argument is that after the amendment the
authority has no option in the matter and he has no
jurisdiction to admit any appeal unless the assessed tax be
deposited. It follows, therefore, by necessary implication,
according to the learned Advocate, that the amended
provision applies to an appeal from an assessment order made
before the date of amendment as well as to an appeal from an
order made after that date. A similar argument was urged
before the Calcutta Special Bench in Sardar Ali v.
Dalimuddin (supra), namely, that after the amendment the
court had no authority to entertain an appeal without a
certificate from the Single Judge.
(1) [1950] S.C.R. 941.
(2) (1952) S.C.J. 564.
129
998
Rankin C.J. repelled this argument with the remark at page
520:-
" Unless the contrary can be shown, the provision which
takes away jurisdiction is itself subject to the implied
saving of the litigants’ right."
In our view the above observation is apposite and applies
to the case before us. The true implication of the above
observation as of the decisions in the other cases referred
to above is that the pre-existing right of appeal is not
destroyed by the amendment if the amendment is not made
retrospective by express words or necessary intendment. The
fact that the pre-existing right of appeal continues to
exist must, in its turn, necessarily imply that the old law
which created that right of appeal must also exist to
support the continuation of that right. As the old law
continues to exist for the purpose of supporting the pre-
existing right of appeal that old law must govern the
exercise and enforcement of that right of appeal and there
can then be no question of the amended provision preventing
the exercise of that right. The argument that the authority
has no option or jurisdiction to admit the appeal unless it
be accompanied by the deposit of the assessed tax as
required by the amended proviso to section 22(1) of the Act
overlooks the fact of existence of the old law for the
purpose of supporting the pre-existing right and really
amounts to begging the question. The new proviso is wholly
inapplicable in such a situation and the jurisdiction of the
authority has to be exercised under the old law which so
continues to exist. The argument of Sri Ganapathy lyer on
this point, therefore, cannot be accepted.
The learned Advocate urges that the requirment as to the
deposit of the amount of the assessed costs does not affect
the right of appeal itself which still remains intact, but
only introduces a new matter of procedure. He contends that
this case is quite different from the case of Sardar Ali v.
Dalmuddin (supra), for in this case it is entirely in the
power of the appellant to deposit the tax if he chooses to
do so whereas it was not
999
within the power of the appellant in that case to secure a
certificate from the learned Single Judge who disposed of
the second appeal. In the first place the onerous condition
may in a given case prevent the exercise of the right of
appeal, for the assessee may not be in a position to find
the necessary money in time. Further this argument cannot
prevail in view of the decision of the Calcutta High Court
in Nagendra Nath Bose v. Mon Mohan Singha (supra). No
cogent argument has been adduced before us to show that that
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 9
decision is not correct. There can be no doubt that the new
requirement "touches" the substantive right of appeal vested
in the appellant. Nor can it be overlooked that such a
requirement is calculated to interfere with or fetter, if
not to impair or imperil, the substantive right. The right
that the amended section gives is certainly less than the
right which was available before. A provision which is
calculated to deprive the appellant of the unfettered right
of appeal cannot be regarded as a mere alteration in
procedure. Indeed the new requirement cannot be said merely
to regulate the exercise of the appellant’s pre-existing
right but in truth whittles down the right itself and cannot
be regarded as a mere rule of procedure.
Finally, Sri Ganapathy lyer faintly urges that until actual
assessment there can be no ’lis’ and, therefore, no right of
appeal can accrue before that event. There are two answers
to this plea. Whenever there is a proposition by one party
and an opposition to that proposition by another a ’lis’
arises. It may be conceded, though not deciding it, that
when the assessee files his return a ’lis’ may not
immediately arise, for under section 11 (1) the authority
may accept the return as correct and complete. But if the
authority is not satisfied as to the correctness of the
return and calls for evidence, surely a controversy arises
involving a proposition by the assessee and an opposition by
the State. The circumstance that the authority who raises
the dispute is himself the judge can make no difference, for
the authority raises the dispute in the interest of the
State and in so acting only represents the State. It
1000
will appear from the dates given above that in this case the
’lis’ in the sense explained above arose before the date of
amendment of the section. Further, even if the ’lis’ is to
be taken as arising only on the date of assessment, there
was a possibility of such a ’lis’ arising as soon as
proceedings started with the filing of the return or, at
any rate, when the authority called for evidence and started
the hearing and the right of appeal must be taken to have
been in existence even at those dates. For the purposes of
the accrual of the right of appeal the critical and relevant
date is the date of initiation of the proceedings and not
the decision itself.
For all the reasons given above we are of the opinion that
the appellant’s appeal should not have been rejected on the
ground that it was not accompanied by satisfactory proof of
the payment of the assessed tax. As the appellant did not
admit that any amount was due by it, it was under the
section as it stood previously entitled to file its appeal
without depositing any sum of money. We, therefore, allow
this appeal and direct that the appeal be admitted by the
Commissioner and be decided in accordance with law. The
appellant is entitled to the costs of this appeal and we
order accordingly.
Appeal allowed.
Agent for appellant: Rajinder Narain.
Agent for respondent: G. H. Rajadhyaksha.
1001