Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
BHANJI BAGAWANDAS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, MADRAS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
18/07/1967
BENCH:
RAMASWAMI, V.
BENCH:
RAMASWAMI, V.
SHAH, J.C.
SIKRI, S.M.
CITATION:
1968 AIR 139 1968 SCR (1) 17
ACT:
Indian Income-tax Act (11 of 1922), ss. 34 and 66(1)-Income
Tax (Amendment) Act, 1959, S. 2-Appellate Assistant
Commissioner holding that cash credit appearing on first day
of accounting year not taxable in assessment year 1949-50-
Order whether amounts to finding that it is taxable in 1948-
49-S. 34(3) second proviso whether attracted-Notice under s.
34(1) (a) for 1948-49 issued in 1958-Limitation whether to
be considered in the light of Amending, Act of 1959-High
Court in reference whether can consider effect of Amending
Act when question not directly referred.
HEADNOTE:
There was a cash credit in November 13, 1947, in the
capital, account of the Appellant assessee whose accounting
period was from November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The
Income-tax Officer assessed the said credit as income from
undisclosed sources in the assessment for the assessment
year 1949-50. The Appellate, Assistant Commissioner relying
on C.I.T. v. Darolia & Sons. (27 I.T.R. 515) held that the
amount was not taxable in the assessment year 1949-50. The
Income-tax Officer thereupon assessed the amount in 1948-49
after having issued in November 1958 a notice under s. 34(1)
(a) of the Indian Income’-tax Act, 1922. He rejected the
appellant’s contention that notice under the said section
was timebarred. In appeal the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner held that in the earlier appeal there was no
finding that the credit represented the assessee’s income or
that it should be assessed in the year 1948-49 and that
consequently the notice under s. 34 issued in November 1958,
was not saved by the second proviso to s. 34(3) of the Act.
The appeal filed by the Revenue was allowed by the Tribunal
and in reference the Madras High Court relying on its own
ruling in A.S. Khader Ismail v. Income-tax Officer, (47
I.T.R. 16) upheld the order of the Tribunal. The appellant
came to this Court and relied on this Court’s decision in
Income-Tax Officer A-Ward Sitapur v. Murlidhar Bhagwandas
(52 I.T.R. 335) in which the aforesaid Madras decision had
been overruled. The Revenue urged that in answering the
reference the effect of s. 2 of the Income-tax (Amendment)
Act 1959 must be taken into consideration. To this the
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appellant objected that the point was outside the scope of
the questions of law referred by the Appellate Tribunal to
the High Court.
HELD:(i) The view taken by the Madras High Court as to
the scope of the word ’finding’ in A. S. Khader Ismail’s
case and followed by it in the present case had been
overruled, by this Court. Accordingly the department could
not take advantage of the second proviso to s. 34(3). [20E-
F]
Income-Tax Officer, A-Ward Sitapur v. Murlidhar Bhagwan Das,
52 I.T.R. 335, applied
(ii)However, the impact of s. 2 of the Amending Act of 1959
had to be considered before the reference could be properly
answered. Although the question had not been raised before
the Tribunal or the High Court it was only an aspect of the
question of limitation which had been referred. All that s.
66(1) requires is that the question of law which is referred
to the High Court and which the High Court is to decide must
be the question which was in issue before
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the Tribunal. When the question itself was under issue
there is no further limitation imposed by the section that
the reference should be limited to those aspects of the
question which had been argued before the Tribunal and it
will be an over-refinement of the position to hold that each
aspect of a question is itself a distinct question for the
purpose of s. 66(1) of the Act. [22B-D]
C.I.T. Bombay v. Scindia Steam Navigation Co. Ltd. 42 I.T.R.
589, applied.
Onkarmal Mehraj v. C.I.T., Bombay-1, 36 I.T.R. 369, and S.
C. Prashar v. Vasantsen Dwarkadas, 49 I.T.R. 1, referred to.
[On the above view the case was remanded to the High Court
for examining the question of law referred to it after
considering the impact of the Amendment Act of 1959.]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1984 of 1966.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated January 2, 1964 of
the Madras High Court in T.C. No,. 153 of 1962.
S. Swaminathan and R. Gopalakrishnan, for the appellant.
Veda Vyasa, A. N. Kirpal, R. N. Sachthey and S. P. Nayar,
for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Ramaswami, J.-This appeal is brought from the judgment of
the Madras High Court dated January 1, 1964 in Tax Case No.
153 of 1962.
The asessment year involved in this appeal is 1948-49, the
corresponding previous year being the financial year 1947-
48. For the accounting period from November 13, 1947 to
November 1, 1948 which was the corresponding previous year
for the assessment year 1949-50 there was shown a credit of
Rs. 25,000 in the capital account of the appellant. On
November 13, 1947, this amount was credited in the books of
the appellant. On October 30, 1948 this amount was
transferred to the account of one Amrithlal. Ranchoodas,
the father-in-law of the appellant. The Income-tax Officer
included the said amount as income of the appellant from
undisclosed sources in the assessment for the assessment
year 1949-50. On appeal to the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner the appellant contended that the amount could
not be included in the assessment year 1949-50 because the
credit appeared prior to March 31, 1948. The Appellate
Assistant Commissioner allowed the appeal holding that the
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credit came into the books of the appellant on November 13,
1947, i.e., in the financial year 1947-48 which is the
previous year for the assessment year 1948-49. On this
finding, the Appellate Assistant Commissioner deleted the
addition of Rs. 25,000 from the assessment of the appellant
for the year 1949-50. In doing so, the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner followed the decision in C.1.T. v.
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P.Darolia & Sons(1). Consequently on November 3, 1958 the,
Income-tax Officer issued a notice under s. 34(1)(a) of the
Incometax Act, 1922, (hereinafter referred to as the. ’Act’
to the appellant for the assessment year 1948-49. By his
order dated April 20, 1959 he rejected the contention of the
appellant that the assessment was barred by limitation and
assessed the sum of Rs. 25,000 as income from other sources.
The appellant took the matter in appeal to the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner who, by his order dated February 23,
1960, allowed the appeal. He took the view that there was
no finding in the order of the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner that the credit represented the income of the
appellant or that the same credit should be assessed in the
assessment year 1948-49. He further held that the notice
under s. 34 issued on November 3, 1958 was bad in law and
was not saved by the second proviso to s. 34(3) of the Act.
The Commissioner of Incometax preferred an appeal against
the order of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner to the
Income-tax Appellate Tribunal which allowed the appeal,
holding that "the order of the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner in the appeal against the assessment for 1949--
50 should be taken to contain a finding that the sum of Rs.
25,000 represented income of the assessee to be considered
in the assessment year 1948-49". At the instance of the
appellant the Appellate Tribunal referred the following
questions of law for the opinion of the High Court under s.
66(1) of the Act:
"(1) Whether on the facts and in the
circumstances of the case, the proceedings
initiated against the assessee for the
assessment year 1948-49 under section 34 and
the assessment for the said year are barred by
limitation and. hence not lawful?
(2) Whether the proceedings initiated
against the assessee
for the assessment year 1948-49 under
section 34 and the assessment made under
section 34 for the assessment
year 1948-49 could be justified in law as for
the purpose of giving effect to, a finding or
directions in the order of the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner in I.T.A. No. 134 of
1958-59?
(3) Whether on the facts and in the
circumstances of the case, the assessment made
is saved from the bar of limitation under the
second proviso to section 34(3)?"
By its judgment dated January 2, 1964, the High Court
answered the questions in favour of the respondent and
against the appellant. The High Court followed an earlier
decision in A.S. Khader Ismail v. Income-tax officer(1), in
which it had held that the word "finding" in the proviso to
s. 34(3) of the Act must be given a
(1) 27 I.T.R. 515.
(2) 47 I.T.R. 16.
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wide significance so as to include not only findings
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necessary for the disposal of the appeal but it would apply
to cases where it is held that the income in question was in
respect of an earlier year which was not the subject-matter
of the appeal before the appellate authority.
On behalf of the appellant Mr. Swaminathan put forward the
argument that the decision of the High Court is contrary to
the view taken by this Court in Income-tax Officer, A-Ward,
Sitapur v. Murlidhar Bhagwan Das(1) in which it was held
that the expressions "finding" and "direction", in the
second proviso to s. 34(3), meant respectively, a finding
necessary for giving relief in respect of the assessment for
the year in question, and a direction which the appellate or
revisional authority, as the case may be, was empowered to
give under the sections mentioned in that proviso. A
"finding", therefore, could only be that which was necessary
for the disposal of an appeal in respect of an assessment of
a particular year. The Appellate Assistant Commissioner
might hold, on the evidence, that the income shown by the
assessee was not the income for the relevant year and
thereby exclude that income from the assessment of the year
under appeal. The finding in that context was that the
income did not belong to the relevant year. He might
incidentally find that the income belonged to another year,
but that was not a finding necessary for the disposal of an
appeal in respect of the year of assessment in question. It
was further held that the second proviso to s. 34(3) did not
save the time-limit prescribed under s. 34(1) in respect of
an escaped assessment of a year other than that which was
the subject-matter of the appeal or revision, as the case
may be, and accordingly the notice issued under s. 34(1) (a)
in that case was barred by limitation and was not saved by
the second proviso to s. 34(3). In the course of its
judgment this Court overruled the judgment of the Madras
High Court in A. S. Khader Ismail v. Income-tax Officer(1).
It follows therefore that the view taken by the High Court
in the present case is not correct in law and must be
overruled.
On behalf of the respondent, however, Mr. Veda Vyasa con-
tended that in answering the reference the effect of s. 2 of
the Income-tax (Amendment) Act (Act 1 of 1959) must be taken
into consideration and in view of the amendment made by that
section of the amending Act the questions referred to the
High Court must be answered necessarily against the
appellant. Section 2 of the Amendment Act. 1959 inserted in
s. 34 of the Act a new sub-section (4) which provides:
"A notice under clause (a) of sub-section (1)
may be issued at any time notwithstanding that
at the time of the-issue of the notice the
period of eight years specified
(1)52 I.T.R. 335.
(2) 47 T.T.R. 16.
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in that subsection before its amendment by
clause of section 18 of the Finance Act, 1956
(18 of 1956), had expired in respect of the
year to which the notice relates.
Section 4 of the Amending Act, 1959 read as
follows:
"No notice issued under clause (a) of sub-
section (1) of section 34 of the principal Act
at any time before the commencement of this
Act and no assessment, reassessment or
settlement made or other proceeding taken in
consequence of such notice shall be called in
question in any court, tribunal or other
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authority merely on the ground that at the
time the notice was issued or at the time the
assessment or re-assessment was made the time
within which such notice should have been
issued or the assessment or re-assessment
should have been made under that section as in
force before its amendment by clause (a) of
section 18 of the Finance Act, 1956 (18 of
1956), had expired."
Mr. Veda Vyasa referred to the decision of the Bombay High
Court in Onkarmal Meghraj v. C.I.T. Bombay-I.(1) in which it
was held that there was nothing in s. 2 or 4 of the
Amendment Act of 1959 to restrict the terms of the words "at
any time" occurring in s. 4 of that Act as meaning "at any
time after April 1, 1956", viz., the date on which the
amendments made by the Finance Act, 1956, came into force
and there was nothing in the provisions of the Amendment
Act of 1959 which limited the retrospective operation of s.
4. It was also held that since the enactment of the
Amendment Act of 1959 a notice issued after April 1, 1956,
for reopening an assessment, by virtue of s. 4, could not be
permitted to be called in question on the ground that the
notice was not issued within the period prescribed by the
unamended s. 34(1)(a). On behalf of the respondent
reference was also made to the decision of this Court in S.
C. Prashar v. Vasantsen Dwarkadas,(2) in which it was held
that s. 4 of the Amendment Act, 1959 operated on and
validated notices issued under s. 34(1)(a) as amended in
1948 even earlier than April 1, 1956, in other words, in
respect of assessment years prior to March 31, 1956. and
therefore notices issued under s. 34(1)(a) of the Income-tax
Act before April 1, 1956, could not be challenged on the
ground that they were issued beyond the time limit of eight
years from the respective assessment years prescribed by the
1948 amendment. On behalf of the appellant Mr. Swaminathan
raised the objection that the point was not taken up by the
respondent in the High Court, nor was there any reference to
it in the statement of the case tiled by the respondent. It
was also contended that the point raised was outside the
scope of the questions of law referred by the Appellate
Tribunal to the High Court. We do not think there is any
substance in the
(1) 38 I.T.R. 369. (2 ) 49 I.T.R. 1.
22
objection raised on behalf of the appellant. One of the
questions referred to the High Court is "whether on the
facts and in the circumstances of the case the assessment
made is saved from the bar of limitation under the second
proviso to section 34(3)?" It is true that the impact of the
Amending Act, 1959 (Act 1 of 1959) was not raised before the
Appellate Tribunal or before the High Court, but it is not a
separate question by itself and is only an aspect of the
question of limitation which has already been referred by
the Appellate Tribunal to the High Court. As pointed out in
CI.T. Bombay V. Scindia Steam Navigation Co. Ltd.,(1) the
question of law referred to the High Court under s. 66 may
be a simple one having its impact on one point, or it might
be a complex one, involving more than one aspect and
requiring to be tackled from different standpoints. All
that section 66(1) requires is that the question of law
which is referred to the High Court and which the High Court
is to decide must be the question which was in issue before
the Tribunal. Where the question itself was under issue,
there is no further limitation imposed by the section that
the reference should be limited to those aspects of the
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question which had been argued before the Tribunal, and it
will be an over-refinement of the position to hold that each
aspect of a question is itself a distinct question for the
purpose of s. 66(1) of the Act. In our opinion, the
argument of the respondent with regard to the legal effect
of the Amending Act of 1959 (Act 1 of 1959) is within the
frame-work of the question already referred to the High
Court and it is therefore competent to this Court, in a case
of this description, to allow a new contention to be
advanced.
It is, however, necessary that the case should be remanded
to the High Court for examining the question of law referred
to it after ’considering the impact of the Amending Act of
1959 (Act 1 of 1959).
For these reasons we allow this appeal, set aside the judg-
ment of the High Court dated January 2, 1964 and remand the
case to it for further hearing and answering the reference
in light of the Income-tax Amending Act 1 of 1959. In the
circumstances of the case we direct that the respondent
should pay the cost of this appeal in this Court,
Appeal allowed.
Y. P.
(1) 421. T.T.R. 589,
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