Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
GURSAHAI SAIGAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, PUNJAB
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
31/08/1962
BENCH:
SARKAR, A.K.
BENCH:
SARKAR, A.K.
KAPUR, J.L.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
CITATION:
1963 AIR 1062 1963 SCR Supl. (3) 893
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1963 SC1066 (13)
R 1963 SC1456 (8)
R 1964 SC1742 (8)
RF 1968 SC 623 (28)
F 1971 SC2039 (18,23)
D 1976 SC 313 (31,55,56)
R 1978 SC 533 (5,7)
R 1981 SC1887 (12,28,29,31,32)
RF 1985 SC 537 (15)
R 1986 SC1099 (9)
RF 1988 SC 361 (9)
R 1989 SC 611 (6)
RF 1990 SC1676 (6)
RF 1992 SC 224 (11)
ACT:
Income, Tax-Advance payment-Construction of enactment-Rule-
Penalty in addition to liability-Indian income-tax Act,
1922 (II of 1922), s.18A, Sub-ss. (2),(3),(6),(8),(9).
HEADNOTE:
By Sub-s. (8) of s. 18 A, " where on making the regular
assessment, the Income-tax Officer finds that no payment of
the tax has been made in accordance with the foregoing
provisions of this section, interest calculated in the
manner laid down in sub-section (6) shall be added to the
tax as determined on the basis of the regular assessment".
Sub. section (6) of s. 18A provided, "where in any year an
assessee has paid tax under ..sub-section(3) on the basis of
his own estimate, and the tax so paid is less than eighty
percent of the tax determined on the basis of regular
assessment... .. simple interest at the rate of six per cent
per annum from the first day of.’ January in the financial
year in which the tax was paid up to the date of the said
regular assessment shall be payable by the assessee upon the
amount by which the tax so paid falls short of the said
eighty per cent."
The assessee should have under sub-s.(3) of s.18A made an
estimate of his income and paid tax according to it but he
did neither. He was thereupon charged with interest under
sub-s.(8) of s.18A. He contended that interest could
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894
not be so charged because under sub-s.(8) interest could be
charged only in the manner laid down in sub-s. (6) that is,
from January 1. of a year in which tax was paid and on the
shortfall between eighty per cent of the tax payable on
regular assessment and the amount actually paid, neither of
which could be done in his case as he had not paid any tax
at all.
Held, the rule that in a taxing statute one has to look
merely at what is clearly said and that in such a statute
there is no room for any intendment applies only to a taxing
provision and does not apply to a provision not creating a
charge for the tax but laying down the machinery for its
calculation or procedure for its collection. The provisions
in a taxing statute dealing with machinery for assessment
have to be construed by the ordinary rules of- construction,
that is to say, in accordance with the clear intention of
the legislature which is to make a charge levied effective.
Commissioner of Income-tax v. Mahaliram Ramjidas, A.I.R.
1940 P.C. 124, Indian United Mills Ltd. v. Commissioner of
Excess Profits Tax, [1955] 1 S.C.R 810 Whitney v.
Commissioners of Inland Revenue, (1925) 10 ’C. 88 and Allen
v. Trehearne, (1938) 22 T. C. 15, referred to.
Sub-s of s. 18A is a provision which lays down the
machinery for(8) the assessment of interest. Its plain
affect is to impose a liability to pay interest and then it
provides that in calculating the interest the machinery laid
down in sub-s. (6) should be applied. Sub-s. (6) should
therefore be read in a manner which makes it workable and
prevents the clear intention of the legislature from being
defeated. That sub. section should, where it is to be
applied because of sub-s. (8), therefore, be read, as "from
the 1st day of January in the financial year in which the
tax ought to have been paid" and in such a case the
shortfall contemplated in sub-s. (6) would be the entire
eighty per cent.
The penalty under sub-s. (9) of s. 18A is in addition to the
liability under sub-ss (6) and (8). Sub-s. (9) does not
arise in the construction of sub-ss. (6) and (8).
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 10 to 12 of
1962.
Appeals from the judgment and order dated February 5, 1960
of the Punjab High Court in T. R. No. 20 of 1956.
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A.V. Viswanath Sastri and R. Gopalakrishnan for the
Appellant.
Gopal Singh and R. N. Sachthey for the Respondent.
1962. August 31. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
SARKAR, J.-In certain assessment proceedings under the
Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, the assessee was charged with
interest under sub-see. (8) of P. 18A of that Act, That sub
section provided that in the cases there mentioned interest
calculated in the manner laid down in sub-sec. (6) of a. 18A
shall be added to the tax assessed. The assessee contends
that he could not be made liable to pay the interest as in
his case it could not be calculated in the manner indicated.
The only question that arises in this appeal is whether this
contention is right.
The assessee’s contention was rejected by the Appellate
Commissioner but not by the Appellate Tribunal. The
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respondent Commissioner thereupon obtained a reference of
the following question to the High Court of Punjab for its
decision :
"Whether, on a true construction of sub-
Sections(6),(8) and(9 of Section 18A of the
Indian Income-tax Act, the interest referred
to in sub-Section (8) is chargeable for
failure on the part of an assessee to submit
an estimate of his income and pay tax, as
required by the terms of sub-Section (3) of
that Section".
The High Court answered that question against the assessee.
Hence the present appeals by him. There are three appeals
because there are three
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orders charging interest under s-18A(8), one in respect of
each of three assessment years.
It would help now to refer briefly to some of the provisions
of s. 18A. That Section deals with advance payment of
income-tax and Super-tax, that is, payment of such taxes on
income of the year in which taxes are paid and therefore
before assessment Sub-section (1) of this section gives
power in certain cases to an Income-tax Officer to make an
order directing a person to make an advance payment of tax
of an amount equal to the amount of the tax payable for the
latest previous year in respect of which he has been
assessed. Sub-section (2) gives an assessee on whom an
orders under sub-see. (1) has been make, power to make his
own estimate of the advance tax payable by him and to pay
according to such estimate instead of according to that
order. Sub-section (3) deals with the case of a person who
has not been assessed before and requires him to make his
own estimate of the tax payable by him in advance and pay
accordingly. This sub-section applies to the assessee in
the present case for he had not been assessed earlier. The
assessee however neither submitted any estimate nor paid any
tax. It remains now to states that the payment of tax in
advance has to be made on June 15, September 15, December
15, and March 15 in each financial year or on such of these
dates as may not have expired in the cases contemplated by
sub-secs. (2) and (3), and that the income on which tax is
payable in advance under the section does not include income
in respect of which provision is made by s. 18 for deduction
of the tax at the source of the income.
Now we shall take up Sub-secs. (6) and (8) of s. 18A both of
which have to be considered in some detail as the decision
in this case depends on the words used in them Sub-section
(6) is the
897
sub-section which has created the difficulty felt in this
case and the relevant portion of it is in these terms
"Where in any year an assessee has paid tax
under sub-section (2) or sub-section (3) on
the basis of his own estimate, and the tax so
paid is less than eighty per cent of the tax
determined on the basis of regular assessment
simple interest at the rate of six per cent
per annum from the 1st day of January, in the
financial year in which the tax was paid up to
the date of the said regular assessment shal
l
be payable by the assessee upon the amount by
which the tax so paid fails short of the said
eighty per cent".
It is designed to apply to cases ’where tax
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has been paid by the assessee according to his
own estimate but that estimate is on regular
assessment found to be deficient. Under this
sub-section interest has to be calculated from
January 1, in the financial year in which the
tax mentioned was paid and such calculation
has to be made on the shortfall between the
amount paid and eighty per cent of the tax
which was found payable on the regular
assessment sub-section (8) provides:
" where, on making the, regular assessment the
income-tax Officer finds that no payment of
tax has been made in accordance with the
foregoing provisions of this section, interest
calculated in the manner laid down in sub-
section (6) shall be added to the tax as
determined on the basis of the regular
assessment.
The assessee does not dispute that sub-secs (3)of s. 18A
applies to him and that he should have made an estimate and
paid tax according to it but he has not done either. He
admits that he is a person to whom sub-sec. (8)applies. His
contention is that in
898
his case since he has not paid tax at all, it is not
possible to calculate interest in the manner laid down in
sub-sec.(6).
Now sub sec. (8) by its terms applies to a case where
no payment of tax has been made and, therefore, there is no
first day of January of a financial year in which tax was
paid, from which day the calculation of interest has to
commence. Neither, the assessee contends, can any question
of a shortfall between eighty per cent of the tax payable on
regular assessment and the amount paid arise where nothing
had been paid. The assessee really says that as the
language of sub-sec. (6) stands, it can have no operation in
his case and therefore he has been wrongly charged with
interest. To clear the ground we may state before
proceeding further that the assessee has no other objection
to the orders under sub-sec. (8) making him liable for
interest.
The question thus raised is one of construction of sub-secs.
(6)and (8). The assessee relies on a rule of construction
applicable to taxing statutes which has been variously
stated. Rowlatt J.put it in these words in Cape Brandy
Syndicate v.Inland Revenue Commission, (1).
"In a taxing Act one has to look merely at
what is clearly said. There is no room for
any intendment. There is no equity about a
tax. There is no presumption as to a tax.
Nothing is to be read in, nothing is to be
implied. One can only look fairly at the
language used."
The object of this rule is to prevent a taxing statute being
construed "according to its intent, though not according to
its words": In re Bethlem Hospital (2). This Court has
accepted this rule.
(1) (1921) 1 K.B. 64, 71.
(2) (1875) L.R. 19 Eq. 475, 459.
899
Bhagwati J. in A. V. Fernandez v. The State of Kerala (1)
said,
"If.......... the case is not covered within
the four corners of the provisions of the tax-
ing statute, no tax can be imposed by
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inference or by analogy or by trying to probe
into the intentions of the legislature and by
considering what was the substance of the
matter."
It has been said that "If the provision is so wanting in
clarity that no meaning is responsibly clear, the courts
will be unable to regard it at; of any effect." : see Inland
Revenue Commissioners v. Baldnoch Distillery Co. Ltd. (2)
The assessee therefore contends that on the plain words of
sub-as. (8) and (6) he cannot be charged any interest and in
fact in a case like his, subsection (8) has to be regarded
as of no effect.
Now it is well recognised that the rule of construction on
which the assessee relies applies only to a taxing provision
and has no application to all provisions in a taxing statue.
It does not, for example, apply to a provision not creating
a charge for the tax but laying down the machinery for its
calculation or procedure for its collection. The provisions
in a taxing statute dealing with machinery for assessment
have to be construed by the ordinary rules of construction,
that is to say, in accordance with the clear intention of
the legislature which is to make a charge levied effective.
Reference may be made to a few oases laying down this
distinction. In Commissioner of Income-tax v. Mahaliram
Ramjidas (3) it was said,
"The Section, although it is part of a taxing
Act, imposes no charge on the subject, and
deals merely with the machinery of
(1) [1957] S.C.R. 83 7, 847.
(2) (1948) 1 All. E. R. 676, 625.
(3) A.I.R. (1940) P.C. 124.126-127.
900
assessment. In interpreting provisions of
this kind the rule is that construction should
be preferred which make the machinery workable
utres valeat potius quam pereat."
In India United Mills Ltd. v. Commissioner of
Excess Profits Tax (1) This Court observed,
"That section is, it should be emphasised, not
a charging section, but a machinery section.
And a machinery section should be so construed
as to effectuate the charging sections."
We may now profitably read what Lord Dunedin
said in Whitney v. Commissioners(2) of Inland
Revenue :
"My Lords, I shall now permit myself a general
observation. Once that it is fixed that there
is liability, it is antecedently highly
improbable that the statute should not go on
to make that liability effective. A statute
is designed to be workable and the interpreta-
tion thereof by a Court should be to secure
that object, unless crucial omission or clear
direction makes that end unattainable. Now
there are three stages in the imposition of a
tax: there is the declaration of liability,
that is the part of the statute which
determines what persons in respect of what
property are liable. Next, there is the
assessment, Liability does not depend on
assessment. That, ex hypothesis, has already
been fixed. But assessment particularises the
exact sum which a person liable has to pay.
Lastly, come the methods of recovery, if the
person taxed does
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not voluntarily pay."
(1) (1955) 1 S.C. R. 810, 816.
(2) (1925) 10 T.C. 88, 110.
901
There is one other case to which we think it
useful to refer and that is Allen v. Trehearne
where s. 45(5) of the English Finance Act,
1927 which laid down that "Where in any year
of assessment a person ceases to hold an
office or employment...... chargeable under
Schedule ’E’ tax shall be charged for that
year on the amount of his emoluments for the
period beginning on the sixth day of April in
that year and ending on the date of the
cessation" came up for construction. It was
contended that a sum of pound 10,000 which
became payable to the assessee as the executor
of the deceased holder of an office under the
terms on which the office was held was not
liable to tax under the section as it could
not be said to be " his emoluments" since it
was payable after his death. It was observed
by Scott L.J.,
"the rules...... in Section 45, Sub-section
(5) and (6), are rules affecting assessment
and collection, and that if there is any
difficulty in the precise applicability of the
language of those Sub-sections, it should be
interpreted largely and generously in order
not to defeat the main object of liability
laid down by Rule 1 of Schedule E."
Dealing with the words "his emoluments
occurring in the subsection the learned Lord
Justice said,
"It is quite true that strictly speaking the
emoluments in question never became his in the
sense that the quantitative amount of pound
10,000 became his property, It never became
payable to him, because he died. But that it
was his emoluments under the agreement with
the Company in a broad sense seems to me to be
obvious, and in order to prevent the Revenue’s
failure to get the tax which was intended b
Rule 1 of schedule E, it appears to me to be
legitimate to treat the words in
(1) (1938) 22 T.C. 25, 26 27.
902
question as meaning on the amount of the
emoluments attaching to the office which he
held’."
On this interpretation of Sub-section (5) tax was
assessed in this case.
Now it seems to us that we are dealing here with a provision
which lays down the machinery for the assessment of
interest. That sub-section (8) intended to and did in the
clearest term impose a charge for interest seems to us to be
beyond dispute. It says that interest calculated in a
certain mariner "shall be added to the tax." We do not here
have to resort to any equitable rule of constructing or to
alter the meaning of the language used or to add to or vary
it in order to arrive at the conclusion that the provision
intended to impose a liability to pay interest. That is the
plain affect of the language used. But the Subsection also
provides that the interest for which liability was created,
has to be calculated in a certain manner. It is this
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provision which has given rise to the difficulty. But
obviously this provision only lays down the machinery for
assessing the amount of interest for which liability was
clearly created; it in substance says that in calculating
the amount of interest the machinery of calculation laid
down in sub, sec. (6) shall be applied. The proper way to
deal with such a provision is to give it an interpretation
which, to use the words of the Privy Council in Mahairam
Kamjidas’s(1)case ’,’makes the machinery workable, utres
valeat potius quam pereat". We, therefore, think that we
should read sub-sec.(6), according to the provision of which
interest has to be calculated as provided in sub-sec.(8) in
a manner which makes it workable and thereby prevent the
clear intention of sub-sec.(8) being defeated. Now, how is
that best done? As we have
(1) A.I.R. (1940) P.C. 124,126-127.
903
earlier said sub-sec.(6) deals with a case in which tax has
been pail and therefore it says that interest would be
calculated "from the I at day of January in the financial
year in which the tax was paid". This obviously cannot
literarily be applied to a case where no tax has been paid.
If however the portion of sub-see. (6) which we have quoted
above is read as, "from the 1st day of January in the finan-
cial ear in which the tax ought to have been paid", the
provisions becomes workable. It would not be doing too
much violence to the words used to read them in this way.
The tax ought to have been paid on one or other of the dates
earlier mentioned. The intention was that interest should
be charged from January 1 of the financial year in which the
tax ought to have been paid. Those who paid the tax but a
smaller amount and those who did not pay tax at all would
than be put in the same position substantially which is
obviously fair and was clearly intended. Which is the
precise financial year in any case would depend on its facts
and this, would make no difference in the construction of
the provision.
With regard to the other question about there being no
shortfall between eighty per cent. of the amount of tax
found payable on the regular assessment and the amount of
tax paid in a case where no tax was paid, it seems to us the
position is much simpler. If no tax is paid, the amount of
such shortfall will naturally be the entire eighty per cent.
We also think that the case before us is very near to
Allen’s case(1)
It remains now to refer to sub-s,(9) of s. 18A. That
subsection provides for payment of penalty in terms of s. 28
upon submission of estimates under sub-sees. (2) and (3)
known or reasonably believed to be untrue or upon failure
without
(1) (138) 22 T.C. 15. 16, 17.
904
reasonable cause to comply with the provisions of sub-
sec.(3). We are unable to see that this provision in any way
affects the construction of sub secs.(6) or (8) or assists
in the solution of the, difficulty which has arisen in this
case. The penalty under sub-sec.(9) is in addition to the
liability under sub-sec. (6) and (8) which his not penalty
in the real sence, and is leviable for reasons different
from those on which the levy of interest under sub-secs. (6)
and (8) is besad.
The result, therefore, is that these appeals are dismissed
and the decision of the High Court answering the question
framed is upheld for the reasons earlier mentioned. The
respondent will get the costs of these appeals.
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Appeals dismissed.