Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF WEALTH TAX BOMBAYAND ANOTHER
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MRS. KASTURBAI WALCHAND & OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT28/03/1989
BENCH:
PATHAK, R.S. (CJ)
BENCH:
PATHAK, R.S. (CJ)
MISRA RANGNATH
CITATION:
1989 AIR 1326 1989 SCR (2) 131
1989 SCC Supl. (1) 640 JT 1989 (2) 4
1989 SCALE (1)728
ACT:
Wealth Tax Act, 1957--Cl. (b) of Proviso to Sub-s. (
1)
of s. 25--When an appeal against an order of the Appella
te
Assistant Commissioner by either party is pending before t
he
Appellate Tribunal, a revision application to the Commi
s-
sioner against the same order is not competent.
HEADNOTE:
Sub-s. (1) of s. 25 of the Wealth Tax Act, 1957 inves
t-
ing the Commissioner with the power to revise an ord
er
passed by any authority subordinate to him stipulates in c
l.
(b) of the proviso thereto that the power of revision sha
ll
not extend to an order which is the subject of an appe
al
before the Appellate Assistant Commissioner or the Appella
te
Tribunal.
The respondent, a share-holder in a company, adopte
d,
for the purpose of assessment under the Act, valuation
of
shares at their breakup values with paid up capital a
nd
reserves which was rejected by the Wealth Tax Officer w
ho
estimated their value on the basis of capitalisation
of
profits for the assessment year 1960-61 and on the basis
of
the break-up value with certain modifications for the a
s-
sessment years 1958-59 and 1959-60. The respondent’s appea
ls
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were partly allowed by the Appellate Assistant Commission
er
against which the Commissioner of Wealth Tax preferr
ed
appeals to the Appellate Tribunal. The Appellate Tribun
al
dismissed the appeals. During the pendency of the appea
ls
before the Tribunal, the respondent preferred revisi
on
applications to the Commissioner of Wealth Tax and contend
ed
that the valuation of the shares adopted by the Appella
te
Assistant Commissioner was unreasonable and excessive a
nd
should be duly modified. The Commissioner rejected t
he
applications on the ground that they were incompetent
in
view of cl. (b) of the proviso to sub-s. (1) of s. 2
5.
Against that order the respondent filed a writ petiti
on
which was allowed by a Single Judge of the High court hol
d-
ing that the revision applications were competent since t
he
aforesaid provision would not operate as a bar against
an
assessee in a case where the appeal before the Appella
te
Tribunal is filed by the Revenue. An appeal filed again
st
his order was
132
dismissed by a Division Bench of the High Court.
Allowing the appeal,
HELD: Where an appeal is filed before the Appella
te
Tribunal against an order of the Appellate Assistant Commi
s-
sioner, the impugned order merges in the order of the Appe
l-
late Tribunal when the appeal is disposed of on merits.
If
meanwhile a revision application has been filed before t
he
Commissioner against the same order of the Appellate Assis
t-
ant Commissioner, it will not be open to the Commissioner
to
pass any order in revision against the order of the Appe
l-
late Assistant Commissioner as the latter will have merg
ed
with the order of the Appellate Tribunal. It is immateri
al
that the appeal and the revision application have not be
en
filed by the same party. This would be plainly so as in t
he
present case, the subject matter of the appeal before t
he
Appellate Tribunal is the same as that of the revisi
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on
application before the Commissioner. [135B-D]
In this case the High Court omitted to consider that t
he
appeals filed before the Tribunal had been disposed of, a
nd
the impugned order of the Appellate Assistant Commission
er
had merged in the order of the Appellate Tribunal renderi
ng
the revision applications infructuous. What the responde
nt
should have done was to file her own appeals before t
he
Appellate Tribunal. It must be noted that the Appella
te
Tribunal is a superior body to the Commissioner, as is cle
ar
from sub-s. (1) of s. 26 which provides that an appeal sha
ll
lie to the Appellate Tribunal from an order under sub-s. (
2)
of s. 25 of the Commissioner. There would have been
no
difficulty in the Appellate Tribunal considering the appea
ls
of both parties and passing suitable orders in regard to t
he
valuation of the shares. [135F-G; 136A-B]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 88 to
93
to 1974.
From the Judgment and Order dated 10.1. 1973 of t
he
Bombay High Court in Appeal Nos. 102 to 107 of 1966.
Dr. V. Gauri Shankar and Ms. A. Subhashini for the Appe
l-
lants.
Nemo for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
133
PATHAK, CJ. These appeals by special leave raise t
he
question whether the High Court is right in holding that t
he
proviso to sub-s. (1) of s. 25 of the Wealth Tax Act cann
ot
be invoked by the Revenue on the facts of this case.
The respondent is assessed in the status of an individ
u-
al under the Wealth Tax Act, 1957, and these appeals rela
te
to the assessment years 1958-59, 1959-60, and 1960-61 f
or
which the corresponding valuation dates are 31 March, 195
8,
31 March, 1959 and 31 March, 1960 respectively.
The respondent is a share holder in Walchand and Compa
ny
Private Limited. On each of the three valuation dates s
he
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held 140 shares in the Company. For the purpose of asses
s-
ment under the Wealth Tax Act, the respondent adopted t
he
valuation of the shares at their break-up values with pa
id
up capital and reserves as there was no market quotation f
or
those shares. When making the assessment Orders for each
of
the three assessment years, the Wealth Tax Officer reject
ed
the valuation of the shares as claimed by the responden
t,
and estimated their value on the basis of capitalisation
of
profits at six per cent for the assessment year 1960-61 a
nd
on the basis of the break-up value with certain modific
a-
tions for the assessment years 1958-59 and 1959-60. T
he
respondent appealed to the Appellate Assistant Commission
er
of Wealth Tax, and the Appellate Assistant Commission
er
determined the value of the shares on the basis of capital
i-
sation of the investment income at six per cent and oth
er
income at twelve and half per cent. He allowed the appea
ls
of the respondent in part by separate orders dated 10 Nove
m-
ber, 1961. The Commissioner of Wealth Tax preferred appea
ls
to the Appellate Tribunal on the question relating to valu
a-
tion of the shares.
The Appellate Tribunal passed a consolidated order
on
23 July, 1963, dismissing the appeals for the three asses
s-
ment years. It observed that the valuation of the shares
of
the company on the relevant valuation dates determined
by
two valuers on arbitration in the case of another assess
ee
should be taken as the valuation in the case of the assess
ee
also. The value of the shares, the Appellate Tribunal sai
d,
worked out to an amount much less than the valuation dete
r-
mined by the Appellate Assistant Commissioner, and ther
e-
fore, the question of enhancing the value determined by t
he
Appellate Assistant Commissioner did not arise. The Appe
l-
late Tribunal did not reduce the values determined by t
he
Appellate Assistant Commissioner as no appeals had be
en
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filed by the respondent. Meanwhile, however, during the
134
pendency of the appeals before the Appellate Tribunal, t
he
respondent preferred revision applications on 29 June, 19
62
under subsection (1) of section 25 to the Commissioner
of
Wealth Tax in respect of the aforesaid assessment years a
nd
contended that the valuation of the shares adopted by t
he
Appellate Assistant Commissioner was unreasonable and exce
s-
sive and should be duly modified. The Commissioner made
an
order dated 12 August, 1964 rejecting the revision applic
a-
tions on the ground that they were incompetent in view
of
cl. (b) of the proviso to sub-s. (1) of s. 25 of the Ac
t.
Against that order the respondent filed a writ petition
in
the High Court of Bombay and contended that the Commission
er
had erred in dismissing the revision applications as inco
m-
petent. On 10-11 October, 1966 a learned Single Judge of t
he
High Court allowed the writ petition holding the revisi
on
applications to be competent, and accordingly directed t
he
Commissioner to entertain and dispose of the revision appl
i-
cations in accordance with law. The Commissioner appealed
to
a Division Bench of the High Court and the appeal was di
s-
missed on 10 January, 1973.
The relevant provisions of s. 25 of the Wealth Tax A
ct
read as follows:
"Powers of Commissioner to revise orders of subordina
te
authorities.--The Commissioner may either of his own moti
on
or on application made by an assessee in this behalf, ca
ll
for the record of any proceeding under this Act in which
an
order has been passed by any authority subordinate to hi
m,
and may make such inquiry, or cause such inquiry to be mad
e,
and, subject to the provisions of this Act, pass such ord
er
thereon, not being an order prejudicial to the assessee,
as
the Commissioner thinks fit;
Provided that the Commissioner shall not revise a
ny
order under this sub-section in any case--
(a) where an appeal against the order lies to t
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he
Appellate Assistant Commissioner or to the Appellate Trib
u-
nal, the time within which such appeal can be made has n
ot
expired or in the case of an appeal to the Appellate Trib
u-
nal the assessee has not waived his right of appeal;
(b) where the order is the subject of an appe
al
before the Appellate Assistant Commissioner or the Appella
te
Tribunal.
135
The High Court has taken the view that cl, (b) of the prov
i-
so to sub-s. (1) of s. 25 of the Act operates as a bar to
a
revision application by an assessee before the Commission
er
only where the assessee has also filed an appeal before t
he
Appellate Tribuanl. According to the High Court, the b
ar
does not come into operation against an assessee where t
he
appeal before the Appellate Tribunal has been filed by t
he
Revenue..It seems to us that the view taken by the Hi
gh
Court cannot be sustained. Where an appeal is filed befo
re
the Appellate Tribunal against an order of the Appella
te
Assistant Commissioner, the impugned order merges in t
he
order of the Appellate Tribunal when the appeal is dispos
ed
of on merits. If meanwhile a revision application has be
en
filed before the Commisioner against the same order of t
he
Appellate Assistant Commissioner, it will not be open 10 t
he
Commissioner to pass any order in revision against the ord
er
of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner as the latter wi
ll
have merged with the order of the Appellate Tribunal. It
is
immaterial that the appeal and the revision application ha
ve
not been filed by the same party. This would be plainly
so
as in the present case, the subject matter of the appe
al
before the Appellate Tribunal is the same as that of t
he
revision application before the Commissioner. Here, t
he
subject matter of the appeal before the Appellate Tribun
al
was the valuation of the shares held by the respondent.
So
it was also in the revision application before the Commi
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s-
sioner.
In the circumstances, we are unable to agree with t
he
reasoning adopted by. the High Court. The High Court h
as
proceeded on the view that it was open to the Commission
er
to dispose of the revision applications filed by the r
e-
spondents. The High Court, it seems to us, omitted to co
n-
sider that the appeals filed before the Tribunal had be
en
disposed of, and the impugned order of the Appellate Assis
t-
ant Commissioner must be taken to have merged in the ord
er
of the Appellate Tribunal. The revision applications,
in
short, had become infructuous.
What the respondent should have done, on coming to kn
ow
of the filing of the appeal by the Revenue before the Appe
l-
late Tribunal, was to have withdrawn the revision petitio
ns
filed before the Commissioner and filed her own appea
ls
before the Appellate Tribunal with an application for cond
o-
nation of delay under sub-s. (3) of s. 24, in case t
he
period of limitation had expired, and accordingly both t
he
sets of appeals would have been disposed of by the Appella
te
Tribunal. In case the respondent came to know of the fili
ng
of the appeals by the Revenue before the Appellate Tribun
al
and had not yet applied in revision to the Commissioner s
he
should not have filed the revision
136
applications but should have preferred her own appea
ls
before the Appellate Tribunal. It must be noted that t
he
Appellate Tribunal is a superior body to the Commissione
r,
as will be clear from sub-s. (1) of s. 26 which provid
es
that an appeal will lie to the Appellate Tribunal from
an
order under sub-s. (2) of s. 25 of the Commissioner. The
re
would have been no difficulty in the Appellate Tribun
al
considering the appeals of both parties and passing suitab
le
orders in regard to the valuation of the shares. There is
no
difficulty now in dealing with such a situation in view
of
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sub-s. (2A) of s. 24.
In the case of the other respondents, there is a simil
ar
history of proceedings with similar orders passed therei
n,
and this judgment will be considered as disposing of t
he
appeals filed here in those cases also.
In the result, the appeals are allowed and the impugn
ed
orders of the Division Bench and the Single Judge on t
he
writ petitions are set aside and the writ petitions a
re
dismissed. In the circumstances of the case there is
no
order as to costs.
H.L.C. Appeals allowed.
137