Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M.R. PRATAP
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
V.M. MUTHUKRISHNAN, ITO CENTRAL CIRCLE-III
DATE OF JUDGMENT29/04/1992
BENCH:
YOGESHWAR DAYAL (J)
BENCH:
YOGESHWAR DAYAL (J)
KULDIP SINGH (J)
CITATION:
1994 AIR 674 1992 SCR (2) 947
1992 SCC (3) 384 JT 1992 (4) 22
1992 SCALE (1)992
ACT:
Income-tax Act, 1961: Sections 2(7)(20)(31)(35), 139,
140(c) (Asamended by Taxation Laws (Amendment) Act, 1975 and
276, 277, 278B and 278C).
Income-tax-Return-Prosecution for false verification-
Private Company-Managing Director filing Return of Company-
Return found false-Prosecution of Managing Director-Validity
of-‘Managing Director’ held covered by the word ‘persons’
under section 277 and held liable for prosecution-Effect of
amendment of Section 140(c) and introduction of Section 278B
explained.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant was the Managing Director of a Private
Limited Company. As a Principle Officer of the Company, he
filed a return of the Income of the company for the
assessment year 1965-66 which was verified and signed by
him. Subsequently it was discovered that the return was
false. He was charged for making wilfully and knowingly
false verification of the Company’s return and was thus
prosecuted under section 277 of the Income-tax Act, 1961.
He filed a petition challenging the maintainability of
the complaint against him as the Managing Director which
was dismissed. The High Court also upheld his prosecution
and dismissed his Revision Petition and the petition filed
under section 482 of the Code of Criminal procedure for
quashing the complaint.
In appeal to this court it was contended on behalf of
the appellant that: (i) the word ‘person’ in section 277
refers only to an assessee and does not include the person
who made the verification on behalf of the assessee; (ii)
the substitution of the word‘Managing Director’ for the term
‘Principal Officer’ in section 140(c) of the Act by the
Taxation Laws (Amendment) Act, 1975 shows that the
expression ‘Principal Officer’ will
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not relate to Managing Director.
Dismissing the appeals, this Court,
HELD : 1. The appellant cannot escape on the plea that
the word ‘person’ used in Section 277 of the Income-tax Act
refers only to an assessee but not the person who has made
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the verification on behalf of the said assessee. In view of
Section 139 read with Section 140(c) of the Act the return
has to be signed by the principal officer of the company. A
statutory obligation is cast on the principal officer to
sign the tax returns. The appellant admittedly was the
Managing Director of the Company and he was thus the
principal officer thereof. [955 B, G-H]
2. The substitution of the words ‘Managing Director’
for the term ‘Principal Officer’ in section 140(c) by the
Taxation Laws (Amendment) Act, 1975 will not in any way
alter the position with regard to the operation of the
provisions of the Income-tax Act as against a managing
director of a company when he has signed the return of the
company in such capacity. The effect of the amended section
140(c) of the Act is that the company’s return of income
should be signed only by the managing director or by any
director, when there is no managing director, and not by the
Secretary or the treasurer, who are however included within
the meaning of ‘Principal Officer’ under section 2(35) of
the Act. The effect of introduction of Section 278B by the
Taxation Laws (Amendment) Act of 1975, with effect from 1st
October, 1975 is to make every person connected with the
affairs of the company, apart from the managing director
who has signed the return, liable to be proceeded against
and punished. [955 H, 956 A-D]
Kapurchand Shrimal v. Tax Recovery Officer, Hyderabad
and Ors., [1969] 72 ITR 623, relied on.
Inspecting Assistant Commissioner of Income-tax v.
Chotabhai Javerbhai, [1941] 8 ITR 604 (Mad.), approved.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Criminal Appeal Nos.
383-384 of 1979.
From the Judgment and Order dated 4.2.1977 of the
Madras High Court in Criminal Misc. Petition No. 4813/76 and
Criminal Revision Case No. 44 of 1974.
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A.T.M. Sampath for the Appellant.
Dr. V. Gauri Shankar, S. Rajappa for Ms. A. Subhashni
and Raju Rama Chandran for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
YOGESHWAR DAYAL, J. These appeals are directed against
the judgment of the learned Single Judge of the Madras High
Court dated 4th February, 1977 and arise in the following
circumstances.
The first accused, Sh. M.R. Pratap, who was the
Managing Director of the Company Rayala Corporation Private
Ltd., is the appellant in the present appeals. The
respondent/complainant is the Income-tax Officer, Central
Circle III, Madras. The appellant is the first accused along
with the second accused. A complaint was filed before the
Chief Presidency Magistrate purporting to be under Sections
277 and 273 of the Income-tax Act, 1961 (hereinafter
referred to as ‘the Act’) and Sections 120-B and 193 of the
Indian Penal Code, relating to an offence said to have been
committed during the assessment year 1965-66.
According to the complaint the first accused was the
managing Director of the Rayala Corporation private Ltd.,
(hereinafter referred to as ‘the Company’) and the second
accused was the Chief Accountant of the said Company. The
Company was as assessee under the Act. The return of the
income of the company for the assessment year 1965-66 dated
17th November, 1976 was delivered to the respondent on 18th
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November, 1965 showing a total income of Rs. 21,36,785 for
the accounting year ended 31st march, 1965. The return so
submitted was verified and signed by the first accused-the
appellant herein. The accompanying statements were signed by
the second accused. According to the complaint, as a result
of a search at the premises of the company and the residence
of both the accused and others, made under Section 132 of
the Act, it was discovered that the return of income and the
statements accompanying the said return were deliberately
false, being less than the true income by more than Rs. 6
lakhs and the expenditure show in the statements had been
obviously inflated by at least Rs. 2,69,765. The complaint
charged the appellant for making willfully and knowingly
false verification of the company’s return of income and
thereby committed an offence punishable under Section 277 of
the Act. Besides this, the first and the second accused were
charged with other
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offences also. However, for the purpose of the present
appeals we are not concerned with the rest of the charges
made in the complaint.
The appellant herein filed a miscellaneous petition
before the Magistrate as to the maintainability of the
complaint against him in his capacity as the Managing
Director. The Magistrate dismissed the miscellaneous
petition by order dated 28th November, 1973. Against the
said order the appellant filed a revision petition. The
appellant also field another petition being Crl. Misc.
Petition No. 4813 of 1976 under Section 482 of the Code of
Civil Procedure praying to quash the complaint and the
proceedings in pursuance thereof.
The Learned Single Judge dismissed both the revision
petition as well as the petition under Section 482 of the
Code of Criminal Procedure and upheld the prosecution of the
appellant.
Numerous contentions were urged before the learned
Single Judge but before this Court really one contention was
urged, namely-that the word "person" occurring in Section
277 of the Act would relate only to an assessee and not to
any person other than the assessee and, therefore, the
appellant who signed the return of income on behalf of the
company in the capacity of Managing Director, cannot be
included within the definition of the word "person" as used
in Section 277 and, consequently, if person other than the
assessee is prosecuted, it would be void, because Section
277 contemplates an offence by an assessee against whom
penalty is impossible and not by any person other than the
assessee, viz. the Company.
Before us Mr. Sampath, learned counsel for the
appellant, repeated the submissions which were urged before
the High Court. It was inter alia submitted by the learned
counsel that Section 2(31) of the Act defines the word
"person" and the word "assessee" is defined in Section 2(7)
as a person by whom any tax or any other sum of money is
payable under the Act and includes a person in respect of
whom proceedings under the Act have been taken for the
assessment of his income, etc.
However, according to learned counsel for the
respondent under Chapter XXII, in Section 276, 276A, 276B,
277, 278 and 279, the word "person" is used. He submitted
that the word "person" in Section 277 does not and cannot
mean the assessee. It was submitted on behalf of the
respondent that the word "person" occurring in Section 277
means the
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individual who makes a declaration on oath which he believes
to be false and he need not necessarily be only the assessee
on whom penalty is leviable under Section 271 (1)(c) for
concealment and that the word "person" occurring in Section
276 means the individual who fails to do the acts prescribed
by the statute and the word "person" occurring in Section
276A means the individual who acts in a manner contrary to
the statute and the expression "person" used in Section 277
is not used in the sense as is defined in Section 2(31) of
the Act. Support in this behalf was sought from the decision
of the Supreme Court in Kapurchand Shrimal v. Tax Recovery
Officer, Hyderabad, and other (1969) 72 ITR 623 SC. In this
case it was held thus:-
"We are unable to hold that the expression ‘person’
in sections 276, 276A and 277 is used in the sense
in which it is defined in section 2(31) of the Act.
For each specific act which is deemed to be an
offence under those provisions, and individual who,
without reasonable cause or excuse, fails to do the
acts prescribed by Statute or acts in a manner
contrary to the statute, or makes a declaration on
oath which he believed to be false or does not
believe to be true, is made liable to be punished.
Section 278 penalises the abetment or inducing any
person to make and deliver an account, statement or
declaration relating to any income chargeable to
tax which is false and which he either knows to be
false or does not believe to be true. In the
context in which the expression ‘person’ occurs in
sections 276, 276A, 277 and 278, there can be no
doubt that it seeks to penalise only those
individual who fail to carry out the duty cast by
the specific provisions of the statute, or are
otherwise responsible for the acts done."
Another argument of learned counsel for the appellant
was that the term "principal officer" is defined in Section
2(35) as the secretary, treasurer, manager or agent of the
company, but would not include Managing Director as the said
term "managing director" is conspicuously omitted there and
that, therefore, whenever an assessee or any other person is
to by prosecuted or is intended to be subjected to certain
obligation, the statute intends the "company and the
principal officer" as mentioned in Sections 204, 206 and 236
of the Act. It was thus urged that the omission
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of the words "principal officer" or "managing director" in
Section 277 is very significant and the Managing Director
cannot at all be prosecuted in a case where the company
itself is an assessee. Therefore, according to the learned
counsel for the appellant the word "person" occurring in
Section 277 will include neither the managing director nor
the principal officer nor the representative assessee, and
as the definition of "person" includes only the company, the
verification has to be under Section 139 only by the company
and the person who signs that verification is only a
signatory whereas the company is the assessee, the person
who is obliged to file the verified return. He also
submitted that according to the newly introduced Sections
278B and 278C (Introduced on 1st october, 1975) a director
in the case of the company and a karta in the case of a
Hindu Undivided Family can be prosecuted, and, therefore, by
virtue of the said new amendments, the legislature in its
wisdom has thought it fit to bring the managing director
also along with the company as accused person only by this
amendment which takes effect from 1st October 1975, and this
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introduction of the amendment will go in support of the
appellant’s contention that the legislature itself had not,
during the relevant period in this case intended the
managing director to be included and so the managing
director cannot be prosecuted at all in this case. It was
urged that if the contention of the prosecution that the
managing director can be prosecuted before 1st October, 1975
is correct, then there was no necessity for this amendment
to fill up the lacuna, and, therefore, before 1st October,
1975, in view of Section 279 (1A), the assessee alone can be
prosecuted.
Learned counsel for the respondent in reply to this
argument submitted that the main decision of the Supreme
Court in Kapurchand’s case (supra) that the karta cannot be
detained in a civil jail, rests on Section 222 which
specifically uses the word " assessee" and therefore, the
conclusion arrived at in that case, while dealing with
Section 222, cannot be availed of by the appellant in this
case. Before the learned Single Judge reliance was also
placed on the decision of the madras High Court in
Inspecting Assistant Commissioner of Income-tax v. Chotabhai
Javerbhai, (1941) 9 ITR 604 (Madras) wherein Horwill, J.,
while dealing with Section 52 of the Indian Income-tax Act,
1922 (corresponding to Section 277 of the 1961 Act), has
held that the word "person" in that section does not
necessarily mean the assessee and that it must be given its
ordinary
955
dictionary meaning and that it includes a person duly
authorised.
It appears that in view of the dictum of this Court in
Kapurchand’s case (supra) we are unable to accept the
arguments advanced by the learned counsel for the appellant.
On the other hand we are of the view that the appellant
cannot escape on the plea that the word "person" used in
Section 277 refers only to an assessee but not the person
who has made the verification on behalf of the said
assessee.
It has been found by the learned Single Judge that the
verification of the return which was signed by the appellant
was signed by him in his capacity as principal officer.
Learned counsel for the appellant submitted that the
parliament has now, be the Taxation Laws (Amendment) Act of
1975, which took effect from 1st April, 1976, removed the
expression "the principal officer" occurring in Section 140
(c), in so far as it related to a company, and instead has
substituted the words "the managing director........or,
where there is no managing director, any director thereof".
It was thus contended that the substitution of the word
"managing director" for the term "principal officer" is an
indication to show that the expression "principal officer"
will not relate to the managing director and that is why the
above sustitution has now taken place.
We are afraid we cannot also agree with this submission
of the learned counsel for the appellant. Section 2(35) of
the Act defines the term "principal officer" and Section
2(20) of the Act defines the term "director". Section 2 sub-
section (24) of the Companies Act defines the word
"manager". At the relevant time Section 197A of the
Companies Act provided that no company shall appoint or
employ at the same time more than one of the following
categories of managerial personnel, viz., the managing
director and the manager. In the present case the appellant
admittedly was the Managing Director of the Company and he
was thus the principal officer thereof. Rule 12(1) of the
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Income-tax Rules states that the return of income shall, in
the case of a company, be in Form No. 1 and be verified in
the manner indicated therein. In view of Section 139 read
with Section 140(c) of the Act the return has to be signed
by the principal officer of the company. A statutory
obligation is cast on the principal officer to sign the tax
returns. The substitution of the words made under the new
Amendment Act will not in any way alter the position with
regard
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to the operation of the provisions of the Income-tax Act as
against a managing director of a company when he has signed
the return of the company in such capacity. The effect of
the amended Section 140(c) of the Act is that the company’s
return of income should be signed only by the managing
director or by any director, when there is no managing
director, and not by the secretary or the treasurer, who are
however included within the meaning of "principal officer"
under Section 2 (35) of the Act. By the Introduction of
Section 278B by the Taxation Laws (Amendment) Act of 1975,
with effect from 1st October, 1975, it is enacted that where
an offence under this Act has been committed by a company,
every person who, at the time the offence was committed, was
in charge of, and was responsible to, the company for the
conduct of the business of the company, as well as the
company shall be deemed to be guilty of the offence and
shall be liable to be proceeded against and punished
accordingly. The effect of the new section is to make every
person connected with the affairs of the company, apart
from the managing director who has signed the return, liable
to be proceeded against and punished
We are in complete agreement with the reasonings and
conclusion of the High Court. No other point was urged. The
result is that the appeals fail and are dismissed.
T.N.A. Appeals dismissed.
957