Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 26
PETITIONER:
MAHADEVA UPENDRA SINAI ETC. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT07/11/1974
BENCH:
ALAGIRISWAMI, A.
BENCH:
ALAGIRISWAMI, A.
RAY, A.N. (CJ)
MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN
GOSWAMI, P.K.
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
CITATION:
1975 AIR 797 1975 SCR (2) 640
1975 SCC (3) 765
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1986 SC 368 (16)
R 1989 SC1719 (16,18)
ACT:
Taxation Laws (Extension to Union Territories) (Removal of
Difficulties) Order 1970 Cl. (3), proviso (2)-If ultra vires
Taxation laws (Extension to Union Territories) Regulation
III of 1963.
HEADNOTE:
Goa, Daman and Diu, erstwhile Portuguese territories became
a Union Territory of the Indian Union on December 19, 1961.
The President of India, in exercise of the powers under Art.
240 promulgated the Taxation Laws (Extension to Union
Territories) Regulation II of 1963. By cl. 3 of the
Regulation, the Indian Income Tax Act, 1961, was extended to
the Union Territory. By cl. (4) the corresponding law in
the Union Territory was repealed from April 1, 1963. Clause
(7) provided that if any difficulty arose in giving effect
in the Union Territory, to the provisions of any Act etc.,
the Central Government may, by general or special order give
necessary directions for the removal of the difficulty..
The petitioners were carrying on business in the Union
Territory, where there was a Portuguese law relating to levy
of tax, the scheme of which was entirely different from the
Indian Act. Under that law, the net profits and gains were
not calculated but a tax was levied at a certain percentage
on the gross income or turnover of the business irrespective
of whether the assessee made any profits or suffered losses.
After the extension of the Indian Act. the petitioners were
assessed under it from the assessment year 1964-65 onwards.
The assessee was allowed depreciation of the assets used by
him for his business. on the basis of the ’written down
value’ under s. 43(6)(b) read with s. 32 of the Income Tax
Act.
Section 32 adopts two methods in allowing depreciation. In
the case of non-ocean going ships and buildings, machinery,
plant or furniture, the prescribed percentage of
depreciation is to be computed on the basis of the written
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 26
down value of the asset. Section 43 (6) defines ’written
down value’ to mean (a) in the case of assets acquired in
the previous year, the actual cost and (b) in the case of
assets before the previous year, the actual cost less all
depreciation actually allowed under the 1961-Act or under
the 1922-Act or any Act repealed by that Act or under any
executive orders. Where the asset was acquired in the
previous year depreciation would be allowed at the
prescribed rate on such cost, and in subsequent years, the
depreciation would be calculated on the basis of actual cost
less depreciation actually allowed.
For the assessment year 1964-65, in assessing the
petitioner, the written down value was taken as the actual
cost of the assessee’s assets since no depreciation was
actually allowed to him earlier and the written down value
was progressively reduced in the succeeding years by
deducting the depreciation actually allowed in
On Nov. 8, 1970, the Central Government, in purported
exercise of its powers under cl. (7) of the Regulation,
promulgated the Taxation Laws (Extension to Union
Territories) (Removal of Difficulties) Order. It provided
in cl. (3) that in making any assessment under the Income
Tax Act, 1961, all depreciation actually allowed tinder the
local laws shall be taken into account in computing the
deductions, and in the proviso 2 to cl. (3), that, where in
respect of any period no depreciation was actually allowed
under the local law, depreciation for that period shall be
calculated at the rate under the Indian Income Tax, 1961, or
the 1922 Act or any Act repealed by that Act or under any
executive orders issued when the Indian Income Tax Act,
1886, was in force, and the depreciation shall be deemed to
be the depreciation actually allowed under the local law.
In the light of proviso 2 to cl. (3) of the 1970 order, the
assessment already made of the petitioner were sought to be
revised, so that, the written down value of the
641
assets for calculating the depreciation allowance-even for
the first time when the petitioners were assessed under the
1961-Act-would not be the actual cost of the assets, but a
far lower sum with proportionate increase in the
petitioner’s liability to tax since the assessment year
1964-65.
The petitioner therefore challenged the validity of Proviso
2 to Cl. (3) of the Taxation laws (Extension to Union
Territories) (Removal of Difficulties) Order 1970.
(Per A. N. Ray, C.J., K. K. Mathew, P. K. (Goswami and R. S.
Sarkaria, JJ.).
HELD : Allowing the Petitions,
The 2nd Proviso to cl. (3) of the 1970-Order is ultra vires
the Central Government when exercising its powers under cl.
(7) of Regulation III of 1963, and the Revenue is not
entitled to levy tax on the basis of the depreciation allow-
ance computed in accordance with the said Proviso. [659E-F]
(1) To keep pace with the rapidly increasing
responsibilities of a welfare democratic state, the
legislature has to turn out a plethora of hurried
legislation. It is well nigh impossible, especially when
the legislature deals with socioeconomic activities of the
State or extends existing Indian laws to territories freshly
merged in the Indian Union, to foresee all the circumstances
to deal with which a statute is enacted or to anticipate all
the difficulties that might arise in its working due to
peculiar local conditions. In order to obviate the
necessity of approaching the legislature for removal of
every difficulty however trivial, encountered in the en-
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 26
forcement of the statute, the legislature invests the
Executive with power to remove difficulties’ for making the
implementation of the statute effective by making minor
adaptations and peripheral adjustments in the statute
without touching its substance. [653D-H]
(2) The existence or arising of a ’difficulty’ is the sine
qua non for the exercise of the power under cl. 7 of the
1963-Regulation. The ’difficulty’ contemplated by the
clause must be a difficulty arising in giving effect to the
provisions of the Act and not a difficulty arising aliunde.
Further, the Central Government can exercise the power under
the clause only to the extent it is necessary for applying
or giving effect to the Act and no further. It may slightly
tinker with the Act to round off angularities and smoothen
the joints or remove minor obscurities to make it workable,
but it cannot change, disfigure or do violence to the basic
structure and primary features of the Act. Under the guise
of removing a difficulty, it cannot change the scheme and
essential provisions of the Act. [653H654B]
(3) The contention that but for the impugned proviso, the
provisions of ss. 32 and 43 (6) (b) of ’the 1961-Act, on its
extension to the Union Territory, could not be given effect
to and applied to the petitioner must be rejected. There
could be no difficulty in computing the ’written down value’
under S. 43 (6) (b) of the assets that had been acquired by
the petitioner before the previous year. Since no
depreciation was, in fact, allowed to the petitioner in the
past under the Portuguese law, in the first assessment under
the Indian Act, the written down value would be the actual
cost of the assets less nil. Thereafter, in each succeeding
year, the depreciation actually allowed in the preceding
year would be deducted causing yearly diminution of the
written down value with consequent decrease in the de
preciation allowed on that basis. This was exactly the
manner in which the ’written down value’ of the assets of
the petitioner had been computed and depreciation allowed
for the several assessment years from 1964-65 onwards,
showing that there was no difficulty in applying the
provisions. [655H-656D]
(4) There is no basis for the argument that the impugned
proviso brings about equality of treatment among the
different assessees in India. Far from ensuring parity of
treatment it puts the assessee in the Union territories in a
worse position than the assessees in the rest of India. [656
D-F]
Straw, Products Ltd. v. Income-tax Officer, Bhopal, [1968]
2, S.C.R. 1 followed.
Commissioner of Income-tax, Hyderabad v. Dewan Bahadur Ram
Gopal Mills Ltd. [1961] 2 S.C.R. 318 at 325 & 326
distinguished.
642
The phrase ’actually allowed’ is limited to the depreciation
actually taken into account or granted or given effect to
and cannot be stretched to mean ’nationally allowed’. In
this Union Territory, under the Portuguese law no
depreciation was ever computed or actually allowed to the
assessees. The impugned proviso. by replacing depreciation
’actually allowed’ with depreciation ’deemed to have been
allowed, by a fiction of law, even where no depreciation was
at all allowed, in effect, attempts to change the
fundamental scheme of the Indian Act in its application to
the assessees in the Union Territory of Goa, Diu and Daman.
[658B-E]
(6) Under s. 32(2) of the Indian Income Tax Act an assessee
is entitled to ,carry forward’ unabsorbed depreciation in
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 26
case of loss or inadequate profits, without any time limit.
For ensuring this right to an assessee, assessments for
ascertaining losses or insufficiency of profits of his
business, since the acquisition and use of the assets by
him, will have to be made. In the Union Territory of Goa
etc., during the interregnums between Dec. 19, 1961, and
April 1, 1963, there was no law authorising the levy of
income tax. Even under the Portuguese law, the tax was in
reality a ’turn over’ tax irrespective of the assessee
making profit or loss. Retrospective assessments for the
purpose, going back to a period prior to 1963, could have
been made under a law of Parliament but not under an execu-
tive fiat. But, in the Indian Income Tax Act as extended to
these territories, there is no provision for making
assessment in respect of those past years. In the absence
of such law, it is impossible to work the Proviso without
riding rough shod over the rights of the assessees to have
their unabsorbed depreciation relating to the pre-1963
period, carried forward. Therefore, a Goan assessee, who
suffered losses and depreciation of his assets will never
get the benefit of such carry forward, as no machinery
exists for determining the inadequacy of profits or the
factual of losses in those years. Viewed from this angle,
the impugned proviso would, in the implementation of the
Act, create difficulties rather than remove them. [659A-E]
(Per Alagiriswami. J., dissenting).
HELD : Dismissing the petition,
(1) The provision regarding written down value and
allowance of depreciation under the Indian Income Tax law
proceeds on the basis of depreciation allowed year by year
with the result that the written down value goes down year
after year aid similarly the depreciation. If, therefore,
because there was no provision under the Income Tax law
applying to the former Portuguese territories providing for
depreciation the written down value of an asset is taken as
the actual cost even after many years of its acquisition it
would mean putting the assessees in those ’territories at an
advantage compared to the assessees in the rest of India.
More important, it would not accord with realities and would
not be in accordance with the scheme of depreciation under
the Indian Income-tax Act. A certain plant and machinery
purchased 10 years earlier and now worth half its original
value would be taken to be worth its original cost and
depreciation allowed on that basis. It is, therefore,
necessary to devise some method by which both the assessees
in the Indian Territory and the erstwhile Portuguese
territory could be put on the same footing and the normal
scheme of depreciation under the Indian Income-tax Act made
applicable to all. A similar problem arose in the case
dealt with in Commissioner of Income Tax, Hyderabad v. Dewan
Bahadur Ramgopal Mills Ltd. [1961] 2 S.C.R. 318 dealing with
assessees in Hyderabad governed by the Hyderabad Income Tax
Act before the Indian Income tax Act was extended to the
Hyderabad area and the decision given therein is exactly to
the point. [661D-H; 663H]
(2) In that case, this Court held that if depreciation
actually allowed under the. Hyderabad Income-tax Act alone
was taken into account in computing the aggregate
depreciation allowance and the written down value an
anomalous result would follow, namely, depreciation
allowance to be allowed to the assessee in the accounting
year under the Indian Income Tax Act would be more than what
was allowed in previous years under the Hyderabad Income-tax
Act, that this would create a disparity and be against the
scheme of the Indian Income tax Act, that it was therefore
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 26
necessary to explain paragraph 2 of the Removal of Dif-
ficulties Order, 1950, (considered to that case) to
assimilate or harmonise the position regarding depreciation
allowance. This is exactly what was proposed to be dead in
the case of the former Portuguese territories by the
impugned Order. [663B-H]
643
(3) The decision in Rajngopal Mills was considered in Straw
Products Ltd. v. I.T.O. [1968] 2 SCR 1. It was not
dissented from and by implication the decision in Ramgopal
Mills is still good law. In the Straw Products case the
court held that the order impugned in that case sought, in
purported exercise of the removal of difficulties power, to
remove a difficulty which had not arisen and that therefore
it was unauthorised. The Court specifically did not think
it necessary to determine to what extent, if any, it would
be open to the Central Government by an Order issued in
exercise of the power to remove difficulties to make pro-
vision which is inconsistent with the provisions of the
Indian Income tax Act, nor did it hold that the Order
impugned in that case was inconsistent with the provision of
the Indian Income-tax Act. It was therefore open to the
Central Government, in exercise of its powers under cl. 7,
to issue the, impugned order. [665B-G]
(4) Under the scheme of the Indian Income tax Act, it was
open to the assessee to carry forward the depreciation for
any length of time if he had sustained any loss. It could
not however, be contended by the assessee in the present
case that it will now be very difficult, if not impossible,
for the assessee to produce all the accounts of earlier
years to show the losses which he had incurred, the
depreciation he was entitled to and which he can carry
forward. Assessees are expected to and would have
maintained accounts at least for the purpose of the Income-
tax Act, which was in force in the former Portuguese
territories, though that Act was a simple one. What is
necessary for working out the impugned order is to know
whether there was a profit or a loss and as the cost of
acquisition of the assets, in respect of which depreciation
allowance is claimed, should also be available it should not
be very difficult to calculate the depreciation and arrive
at the written down value as on the date when the Indian
Income-tax Act was extended to the former Portuguese
territories. To accede to the claim of the assessee that
the original value of the assets should be taken to be the
written down value however long they might have been used
means that they get an advantage not merely in the first
year in which the Indian Income-tax Act was applied to those
territories but to enjoy a continued advantage which will
last is long as their assets last. [665G-666C]
(5) The Order is given retrospective effect, but the
Central Government has the power to make an order or give a
direction so as to remove, the difficulty from the very
beginning, and that is what the Order does. [666F-G]
Ramgopal Mills Case, followed.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION : Writ Petitions Nos. 112, 391-394 of
1971 and 330-31 & 382-387 of 1974.
Petitions under Article 32 of the Constitution of India.
A. K. Sen (In W.P. No. 112/71), N. A. Palkhiwala (In W.P.
330331 and 382-387/74), S. P. Mehta, P. C. Bhartari, J. B.
Dadachanji, G. C. Mathur, Arati Mehta and Ravinder Narain,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 26
for the petitioners.
F. S. Nariman, Additional Solicitor General, P. P. Rao and
S. P. Nayar, for the respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by R. S. Sarkaria,
J. A. Alagiriswami, J. gave a dissenting Opinion.
SARKARIA, J. These writ petitions under Article 32 of the
Constitution raise a question with regard to the validity of
the 2nd Proviso to Clause (3) of the Taxation Laws
(Extension to Union Territories) (Removal of Difficulties)
Order 2 of 1970. The first five petitions of 1971 were
urged earlier by Shri Ashok Sen and the rest have been
argued now by Shri N. A. Palkhiwala. They are being
disposed of by a common judgment.
The petitioners are carrying on business in the Union
Territories of Goa, Daman and Diu. Respondents 1 and 2 are
the Union of India and the Income-tax Officer, respectively.
644
Goa, Daman and Diu are erstwhile Portuguese territories
which became a part of the Union of India on and from
December 19, 1961. Thereupon, the President of India in
exercise of powers under Article 240 of the Constitution
promulgated the Taxation Laws (Extension to Union
Territories) Regulation III of 1963 (for short, the
Regulation). By Clause (3) of this Regulation, amongst
other laws, the Indian Income-tax Act, 1961 (for short, the
Act) was extended to the Union Territory of Goa, Daman and
Diu with effect from April 1, 1963 subject to certain
modifications, one of which was the insertion of s. 294-A in
the Act. Section 294-A gave power to the Central Government
to make exemption, reduction or modification in, respect of
income-tax to avoid hardship or anomaly or to remove
difficulty in the application of the Act to any assessee in
the Union Territories of Dadra Nagar Haveli, Goa, Daman and
Diu etc. The power granting the exemption etc. was
exercisable before March 31, 1967. We are not concerned
with the Section because the impugned order was not made
under it..
By Clause (4) of the Regulation, t˜e laws in force in the
Union Territory corresponding to the Acts specified in the
Schedule, stand repealed from April 1, 1963.
Clause (7) provides
"If any difficulty arises in giving effect in
any Union Territory to the provisions of any
Act, or of any rule, notification or order
made or issued thereunder, the Central
Government may, by general or special order
published in the Official Gazette, make such
provisions or give such directions us appear
to it to be expedient or-necessary for the re-
moval of the difficulty.
On November 8, 1970, the Central Government in purported
exercise of its powers under Clause (7) of the Regulation
promulgated the Taxation Laws (Extension to Union
Territories) (Removal of Difficulties) Order No. 2 of 1970
(hereinafter called the 1970 Order). the material part of
which runs thus
"Whereas certain difficulties have arisen in
giving effect to the provisions of the Income-
tax Act, 1961. in the Union Territories of
Goa, Daman, Diu .... Now therefore.... the
Central Government hereby makes the following
order...
(1)
(2) It shall be deemed to have come into
force on the 1st day of April 1963.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 26
(3) Computation of aggregate depreciation
allowable and written down value-In making any
assessment under the Income-tax Act, 1961 (43
of 1961) all depreciation actually allowed
under the local laws shall be taken into
account in computing the aggregate of all
deductions in respect of depreciation referred
to in Clause (1) of subsection (2) of Section
34, and the written down value under sub
clause (2) of clause (6) of Section 43 of the
said Act.
64 5
Provided that where in respect of any asset,
depreciation has been allowed for any year
both in the assessment made under the local
law and in the assessment made under the
Income-tax Act, 1885, the greater of the two
sums allowed shall only be taken into account,
Provided further that where in respect of any
period no depreciation was actually allowed
under the local law or the depreciation
actually allowed cannot be ascertained, depre-
ciation in respect of that period shall be
calculated at the rate for the time being in
force under the Income-tax Act, 1961 or under
the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, or any Act
repealed by that Act or under any executive
orders, issued when the Indian Income-tax Act,
1886 was in force, as the case may be, and the
depreciation so calculated shall be deemed to
be the depreciation actually allowed under the
local law."
As clarified by the Explanation, "local law" in relation to
the, Union Territory of Goa, Daman and Diu means the
Portuguese law relating to tax on income as in force
immediately before April 1, 1963. In these territories,
there was in force a Portuguese law relating to levy of tax,
the scheme of which was entirely different from that of the
Indian Income-tax Act. Under that law there was no
provision for granting depreciation allowance; the net
profits and gains of the business were not calculated and
the tax was levied at a certain percentage on the gross
income or turnover of the business, irrespective of whether
the assessee had made profits or suffered losses.,
After the extension of the Act to Goa, Daman and Diu, the
petitioners were assessed under the Act for several
assessment years from 1964-65 onwards. In each of the
completed assessments, the assessee was allowed depreciation
of the assets used by him for his business, on the basis of
’written-down value’ under cl. (b) of S. 43(6) road with s.
32. For the assessment year 1964-65 the "written-down value"
was taken as the actual cost of the assets to the assessee
since no depreciation was actually allowed to him earlier.
In each of the succeeding annual assessments the ’written-
down value’ was progressively reduced by deducting the
depreciation actually allowed in the preceding year from the
actual cost of the assets.
In the light of the 2nd Proviso to Clause (3) of the 1970
Order, the past completed assessments in the case of these
petitioners are being revised. In consequence, the written-
down value of the assets for calculating the, depreciation
allowance even for the first time when the petitioners were
assessed under the Act, would not be the actual cost of the
assets to the assessee, but a far lower sum with propor-
tionate increase in the petitioners’ liability to tax since
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 26
the assessment year 1964-65.
In the case of petitioners in Writ Petitions 330-331- of
1971, the Respondent (Income-tax Officer) has already
"revised" the assessment for the year 1965-66, and reduced
the depreciation allowed in view of the 1970 Order and in
the result raised a higher demand. He has, However, kept
that demand in abeyance till the decision of these peti-
646
tions, wherein the validity of the 2nd Proviso (hereinafter
called the impugned Proviso) to Clause (3) of the 1970 Order
is in question.
Section 2(24) (i) of the Act defines "income" to include
"profits and gains". Section 28(i) makes the "profits and
gains of any business or profession which was carried on by
the assessee at any time during the previous year"
chargeable to income-tax. Section 29 requires that the
income referred to in S. 28 shall be computed in accordance
with the provisions including those for deductions contained
in ss. 30 to 43-A. Since the tax is chargeable on "profits
and gains" and not on gross receipts, the profits to be
assessed must be the real profits computed, subject to the
special requirements of the Act in accordance with the
ordinary principles of commercial accounting. It follows
that it the deduction of a particular item from the incoming
of the business, or profession is neither expressly covered
by the aforesaid sections, nor prohibited expressly or by
necessary implication by those provisions, it can be allowed
under S. 28(1) provided on ordinary commercial principles,
it is a proper item to be debited against the incoming in
ascertaining the "profits and gains" property so-called-see
Badridas Degu v. Commissioner of Income-tax(1) and
Commissioner of Income-tax v. Plymaun.(2)
We have alluded to these general principles for a proper
perspective. Dedications by way of depreciation allowance,
with which we are directly concerned, have been specifically
recognised and dealt with in ss. 3 2, 34 and 43 (6) of the
Act.
Section 32 adopts two methods in allowing depreciation. In
the case of ocean-going ships depreciation is allowed, year
after year, at the fixed prescribed percentage on the
original cost of the asset to the assessee s. 32(1)(8).
This has been called the straight-line method. In the case
of non-ocean going ships and buildings, machinery, plant or
furniture, the prescribed percentage, of depreciation is to
be computed on the basis of written-down value of the asset
s, 32(1)(ii). This is known as the "written-down value’
method. Both these methods seek to ensure that the
aggregate of the depreciation allowances granted, year after
year, does not exceed hundred per cent of the original cost
of the asset. In the straight-line method, however, the
entire depreciation is written off sooner than in the
’written-down value’ method, if the figures of actual cost
of the asset and the prescribed percentage are the same in
either case.
Sub-section (2) of s. 32 allows the carry-forward of
unabsorbed depreciation allowance to any subsequent year,
without any time-limit, where such non-absorption is "owing
to there being no profits or gains chargeable for the
previous year or owing to the profits or gains being less
than the allowance". Depreciation loss under s. 32(2) (2)
thus, to a large extent, stands on the same footing as other
business losses.
An assessee claiming depreciation of assets has to show that
such assets are owned by him and were used by him in the
account year for the purpose of his business, the profits of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 26
which are being charged s.
(1) 34 I.T.R. 10 (S. C.).
(2) 46 I.T.R. 649 (S.C.).
647
32 (i) ]. Further, the total of all deductions in respect of
depreciation under s. 32(i) of the Act or under the Indian
Income-tax Act, 1922 (for short, the 1922 Act) or under any
Act repealed by that Act, made year after year, should not,
in any event, exceed the actual cost of the assets to the
assessee s. 34(2)(i).
The definition of "actual cost" is to be found in s. 43(1)
and that of "written-down value" in s. 43 (6). The later
defines it to mean-
(a) in the case of assets acquired in the
previous year, the ,actual cost to the
assessee;
(b) in the case of assets acquired before
the previous year, the actual cost to the
assessee less all depreciation actually
allowed to him under this Act or under the
1922 Act or any Act repealed by that Act, or
under any executive Orders issued when the
Indian Income-tax Act, 1886 was in force.
(emphasis supplied)
The pivot of the definition of "written-down value" is the
"actual cost" of the assets. Where the asset was acquired
and also used for the business in the previous year, such
value would be its full actual cost and depreciation for
that year would be allowed at the prescribed rate oh such
cost. In subsequent year, depreciation would be calculated
on the basis of actual cost less depreciation actually
allowed. The key word in clause (b) is "actually". It is
the anti-thesis of that which is merely speculative,
theoretical or imaginary. "Actually" contraindicates a
deeming construction of the word "allowed" which it quali-
fies. The connotation of. the phrase "actually allowed" is
thus limited to depreciation actually taken into account or
granted and given effect to, i.e. debited by the Income-tax
Officer against the incoming of the business in computing
the taxable income of the assessee; it cannot be stretched
to mean "nationally allowed" or merely allowable, on a
notional basis.
Of course, any depreciation carried forward under s. 32(2)
is, in view of Explanation 3 to S. 43(6) considered as
depreciation "actually allowed. But such is not the case
here.
From the above conspectus, it is clear that the essence of
the scheme of the Indian Income-tax Act is, that
depreciation is allowed, year after year, on the actual cost
of the assets as reduced by depreciation actually allowed in
earlier years. it follows, therefore, that even in the case
of assets acquired before the previous year, where in the
past no depreciation was computed, actually allowed or
carried forward, for no fault of the assessee, the "written-
down value" may, under Clause (b) of s. 43 (6), also, be the
actual cost of the assets to the assessee.
648
Relying on the ratio of this Court’s decision in Straw
Products Ltd v. Income-tax Officer, Bhopal(1), learned
Counsel for the petitioners have pressed these points into
argument
(1) The ’arising of a difficulty’ in giving
effect to the Indian Income-tax Act or rules
etc., made thereunder is a condition precedent
to the invocation of the power under Clause
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 26
(7) of the Regulation, and since the existence
of that condition had not been established as
an objective fact, the Central Government had
no power to promulgate the impugned Proviso.
It is stressed that the Act has been applied
all these years since its extension in April,
1963 to these Territories without any
difficulty.
(2) The power under Clause (7) of the
Regulation can be exercised only in a manner
consistent with the scheme and essential
provisions of the Act. The impugned proviso
seeks to amend and change the scheme and basic
provisions of the Act inasmuch as it provides,
inconsistently with ss.43(6) and 32 of the
Act, for determining the written-down value on
the basis of a notional depreciation in cases
in which no depreciation was actually allowed.
(3) In any case, it would be impossible to
work the impugned Proviso.
Mr. Nariman, learned Additional Solicitor-General, submits,
in reply, that difficulties had arisen in the application of
the provisions of the Act in the matter of allowing
depreciation to assessees in these Union Territories. But
for the impugned provisions, it is contended, such assessees
would not have been entitled to claim depreciation allowance
either under clause (a) or under clause (b) of s.43(6) read
with s.32 of the Act. Clause (a) could not apply to these
cases because the assets were acquired before the year
immediately preceding April 1,1963. Clause (b) would not
cover their case because, firstly, under the scheme of the
Act, the written-down value of assets acquired several years
earlier cannot be ,taken as their full actual cost, and,
secondly, the Portuguese law, under which they were formerly
assessed, was not repealed by the Indian Income-tax Act, but
by the Regulation. It is argued that in s.43(6) read with
s.32, there is an implied prohibition against allowing
depreciation on the actual cost of the assets which were not
acquired in the previous year. This difficulty, says the
Counsel, had to be removed to enable the petitioners to
claim just depreciation allowance. If it is assumed-
proceeds the argument that s. 43 (6) is applicable to the
’case of these assessees and the depreciation has to be
calculated on the original full cost of the assets despite
their being old and worn out by use over the years, such a
course would. be wholly divorced from realities, and give
the assessees in Goa, Daman and Diu an undue advantage over
the assessees in India. This resultant disparity, it is
urged, was a difficulty and the
(1)[1968] 2 S.C.R. 1.
649
impugned Proviso removes it by bringing the assessees in the
former Portuguese Territories at par with the assessees who
had suffered taxation under the Act.
Learned Counsel further maintains that the decision in Straw
Products’ case does not advance the case of the petitioners,
rather it supports the Revenue. In this connection, Counsel
has invited our attention to the observations of this Court
at pp. 8 and 13 of the Report in Straw Products’ case
(supra) to the effect that by the application,of the Indian
Income-tax Act, 1922, to the merged States "a difficulty did
arise in the matter of determining the depreciation allo-
wance under s. 10(2)(vi)" which corresponds to s.32(1)(ii)
of the 1961 Act, and that this "difficulty" was removed by
the Taxation Laws Merged States Removal of Difficulties
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 26
Order 1949.
It is further contended that once it was found that such a
difficulty had arisen, the Central Government could, in the
legitimate exercise of its powers under Clause (7) of the
Regulation, exercise of the same by providing that
allowances, where they were, not actually allowed, should be
deemed to have been allowed for the purpose of depreciation
in prior years. On this point reliance has been placed on
Commissioner of Income-tax, Madhya Pradesh v. Straw
Products(1) and Commissioner of Income-tax Hyderabad v.
Dewan Bahadur RamGopal Mills Ltd.(2).
Since both sides rely, more or less, on the decision of this
Court in Straw Products Ltd. v. Income-tax Officer, Bhopal
(supra) and the other two authorities cited have also been
noticed therein, it will be appropriate to examine the same
in detail.
The assessee therein was a Company formed in 1937 in Bhopal’
State and was exempted by the Ruler of that State from
payment of’ all taxes for a period of ten years expiring on
October 31, 1948. The State of Bhopal merged with India on
August 1, 1949. The Taxation Laws (Extension to Merged
States and Amendments) Act 67 of 1949, which replaced the
earlier Ordinance 21 of 1949, extended with effect from
April 1, 1949, to the merged States, amongst other Acts. the
Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 and by s. 7 the laws in force in
the merged States corresponding to the extended Act stood
repealed Section 6 contained a "removal of difficulty
clause" which was substantially the same as Clause 7 of the
Regulation in the present case. Section 6 provided
"If any difficulty arises in giving effect to
the provisions of any Act, rule or order
extended by Section 3 to the merged States,
the Central Government may, by order, make
such provisions or give such directions as
appear to it to be necessary for removal of
the difficulty."
The Central Government in exercise of its power under Clause
(8) of Ordinance 21 of 1949 (which corresponds to
Section 6 of Act
(1) [1964] 2 S.C.R. 881, 887. (2) [1961] 2 S.C.R. 318, 325.
650
67 of 1949) issued the Taxation Laws (Merged States)
(Removal ,of Difficulties) Order, 1949, clause(2) of which
provided :
"In making any, assessment under the Indian
Income-tax Act, 1922, all depreciation
actually allowed under any laws or rules of a
merged State relating to income-tax and super-
tax, shall be taken into account in computing
the aggregate depreciation allowance referred
to in sub-clause (c) of the Proviso to clause
(vi) of sub-section (2) and the written down
value under clause (b) of sub-s. (5) of
section IO of the said Act.
Provided that where in respect of any asset,
depreciation has been allowed for any year
both in the assessment made in the merged
State and in British India, the greater of the
two sums allowed shall only be taken into
account."
According to clause (2) of the above Order, in computing the
profits and gains of the business carried on by the assessee
for determining the tax payable by it for the assessment
year 1949-50, depreciation allowed under Section 10(2) (vi)
of the 1922 Act was taken as a percentage of the original
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 12 of 26
cost to the assessee of the assets used by it for its
business, and in the four subsequent years the written down
value of the assets admissible for depreciation was
determined on that basis. The Income-tax Officer then
revised the assessments in respect of the assessment years
1952-53 and 1953-54 and recomputed its taxable income on the
footing that since the commencement of the business the
assessee must be deemed nationally to have been allowed
depreciation under the Bhopal Income-tax Act. The Appellate
Assistant Commissioner and the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal
disagreed with the Income-tax Officer and restored the
original assessment. On a reference made by the Appellate
Tribunal, the High Court held in favour of the assessee.
The Income-tax Commissioner appealed to this Court. During
the pendency of that appeal, the Central Government in
exercise of its power under s.6 of the Act 67 of 1949 issued
an Order called the Taxation Laws (Merged States) (Removal
of Difficulties) Amendment Order, 1962, adding this
Explanation to the order of 1949
"Explanation-For the purpose of this
paragraph, the ,expression all depreciation
actually allowed under any laws ,or rules of a
Merged State means and shall be deemed always
to have meant
(a) the aggregate allowance for depreciation
taken into account in computing the written
down value under any laws or rules in force in
a merged State or carried forward under the
said laws or rules, and
(b) in cases where income had been exempted
from tax under any laws or rules in force in a
merged State or under any assessment with a
Ruler the depreciation that would have been
allowed had the income not been so exempted.
651
This Court held in Commissioner of Income-tax, Madhya
Pradesh v. Straw Products Ltd. (supra) that the expression
actually allowed" in the Removal of Difficulties Order 1949,
meant allowance actually given effect to, but by virtue of
the Explanation, added by the aforesaid Order of 1962, the
correct basis for computing the written down value of the
depreciable assets for the relevant period was the one
adopted by the Income-tax officer. This Court then declined
to examine the challenge to the validity of the (Removal of
Difficulties) Amendment Order, 1962, for the reason that an
authority or court administering the Act cannot permit a
challenge to be raised against the vires of the Act.
The assessee thereafter challenged the vires of the 1962
Order by a writ petition filed under Article 226 of the
Constitution. The Petition was dismissed and the assessee
appealed to this Court on a certificate granted by the High
Court. The Court first examined clause (2) of the Removal
of Difficulties Order of 1949, which corresponds to the
unchallenged part of paragraph (3) of the 1970 Order, and
held it to be, valid on the ground that since the Income-tax
Acts of the merged States had not been repealed by the 1922
Act, a difficulty had arisen in taking into account all
depreciation actually allowed under any laws or rules of a
merged State relating to income-tax for the purpose of
computing the aggregate depreciation allowance referred to
in sub-clause (c) of the Proviso to S. 10(2)(vi) of the 1922
Act, and that the 1949 Order did no more than removing this
difficulty.
The Court then proceeded to examine the challenge to the
validity of sub-clause (g) of the Explanation added by the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 13 of 26
1962 Order. In this connection, contentions (1) and (2)
canvassed in that case were precisely the same which have
now been raised before us on behalf of the petitioners.
Both these contentions were accepted by the Court and, as a
result, the aforesaid sub-clause (b) of the Explanation was
struck down. In that context, Shah J. (as he then was)
speaking for the Beach constituted by seven learned Judges,
observed
"Exercise of the power to make provisions or
to issue directions as may appear necessary to
the Central Government is conditioned by the
existence of a difficulty arising in giving
effect to the provisions of any Act, rule or
order. The section does not make the arising
of the. difficulty a matter of subjective
satisfaction. of the Government; it is a
condition precedent to the exercise of power
and existence of the condition, if challenged,
must be established as an objective fact."
The Court held that after the promulgation of the 1949 Order
no difficulty survived or arose in giving effect to the
provisions of s.10 of the 1922 Act. In that connection, it
was observed :
"It is impossible, on the words used in
s.10(5) clause (b) read with the 1949 Order,
to hold that-the written down value of the
assessee in a merged State could not be deter-
mined and with a view to remove that
difficulty the impugned
652
Order was promulgated. The fact that the
assets were acquired by a person at a time
when he was not an assessee under the Indian
Income-tax Act or under the State Act not
disable him, when he is assessed to tax on the
profits will the business, from claiming the
benefit of the depreciation allowance on those
assets if used for the purpose of the
business."
(emphasis added)
The Court noted that the impugned provision of the 1962
Order seeks to alter the connotation of the expression
"depreciation actually allowed." It then towards the end
concluded
"To sum up : the power conferred by s. 6 of
Act 67 of 1949 is a power to r
emove a
difficulty which arose in the application of
the Indian Income-tax Act to the merged States
: it can be exercised in the manner consistent
with the scheme and essential provisions of
the Act and for the purpose for which it is
conferred. The impugned Order which seeks in
purported exercise of the power, to remove a
difficulty which had not arisen was,
therefore, unauthorised."
A comparative study of Explanation (b) in the 1962 Order,
which was being challenged in Straw Products’ case, and the
second Proviso to Clause (3) of Order 2 of 1970, which is
the target of attack from the petitioners’ side in the
instant case, reveals a striking similarity between the two
impugned provisions. There, the 1962 Order envisaged cases
of assessees from a merged State who had not been actually
allowed depreciation of the assets because of their being
exempted by the Ruler of that State from payment of income-
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 14 of 26
tax. In the case in hand, also, the impugned proviso seeks
to cover the case of an assessee, who before the merger of
these Territories in the Union of India, had not been
allowed depreciation because the law by which he was
government was not a law imposing tax on the gross turnover
of the business, irrespective of profits or losses, and, as
such, did not recognise any claim to depreciation. Further,
in both the cases, the impugned provisions seek to change
the essence of the definition of "written-down value" and
scheme of the Indian Income-tax Act relating to depreciation
allowance, by substituting "depreciation fictionally
allowed" for "depreciation actually allowed." This, the
Court held, the Central Government was not competent to do
under the garb of removing a "difficulty" which was not
proved to have arisen.
In Straw Products’ case it was averred in the writ petition
by the assessee that ’no difficulty had arisen in giving
effect to the provisions of the Indian Income-tax Act 1922,"
and as such, there was no question of the exercise of any
power under Section 6 of the Merged States Act "for the
purpose of passing the impugned Order of 1962. This
allegation was denied by the Respondents, and it was
contended on their behalf that the "arising of a difficulty"
in the enforcement of the Income-tax Act was a matter for
subjective satisfaction of the Government.
653
Precisely similar pleas have been taken in the affidavits of
the parties in the present case (vide W.Ps.112,391-394 of
1971). The position here is very much the same as was in
Straw Products’ case (supra) Here also, the Respondents’
plea, in substance, is that there is a deficiency or
omission in the provisions of ss.32 and 43(6) of the (1961
Act and unless the deficiency or omission was supplied, it
would be difficult for the Central Government to collect tax
and allow depreciation to assessees like the petitioners to
the same extent or at the same rate at which it has been
collected from or allowed to assessees who have throughout
been assessed under the Indian Income-tax Act.
This raises two questions : (1) Is this a ’difficulty’
within the contemplation of Clause (7) of the Regulation ?
(2) Is the Central Government in the exercise of its power
under that Clause competent to supply a deficiency or cases
omission of this nature ?
For reasons that follow( the answers to both these questions
must be in the negative.
For a proper appreciation of the points involved, it is
necessary to have a general idea of the nature and purpose
of a "removal of difficulty clause" and the power conferred
by it on the Government.
To keep pace with the rapidly increasing responsibilities of
a Welfare democratic, State, the legislature has to turn out
a plethora of hurried legislation, the volume of which is
often matched with its complexity. Under conditions of
extreme pressure, with heavy demands on the time of the
legislature and the endurance and skill of the draftsman, it
is well nigh impossible to foresee all the circumstances to
deal with which a statute is enacted or to anticipate all
the difficulties that might arise in its working due to
peculiar local conditions or even a local law. This is
particularly true when Parliament undertakes legislation
which gives a new dimension to socioeconomic activities of
the State or extends the existing Indian laws to new
territories or areas freshly merged in the Union of India.
In order to obviate the necessity of approaching the
legislature for removal of every difficulty, howsoever
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 15 of 26
trivial, encountered in the enforcement of a statute, by
going through the time-consuming amendatory process, the
legislature sometimes thinks it expedient to invest the
Executive with a very limited power to make minor
adaptations and peripheral adjustments in the statute, for
making its implementation effective, without touching its
substance. That is why the "removal, of difficulty clause",
once frowned upon and nick-named us "Henry VIII Clause" in
scornful commemoration of the absolutist ways in which that
English King got the "difficulties" in enforcing his
autocratic will removed through the instrumentality of a
servile Parliament, now finds acceptance as a practical
necessity, in several Indian statutes of post independence
era.
Now let us turn to Clause (7) of the Regulation. It will be
seen that the power given by it is not uncontrolled or
unfettered. It is strictly circumscribed, and its use is
conditioned and restricted. The existence or arising of a
"difficulty" is the sine qua non for the exercise
654
of the power. If this condition precedent is not satisfied
as an objective fact, the power under this Clause cannot, be
invoked at au. Again, the "difficulty" contemplated by the
Clause must be a difficulty arising in giving effect to the
provisions of the Act and not a difficulty arising aliunde,
or an extraneous difficulty. Further, the Central Govern-
ment can exercise the power under the Clause only to the
extent it is necessary for applying or giving effect to the
Act etc., and no further. It may slightly tinker with the
Act to round off angularities, and smoothen the joints or
remove minor obscurities to make it workable, but it cannot
change, disfigure or do violence to the basic structure and
primary features of the Act. In no case, can it, under the
guise of removing a difficulty, change the scheme and
essential provisions of the Act.
The above principles, particularly the distinction between a
’difficulty’ which falls within the purview of the Removal
of Difficulty Clause and one which falls outside it, finds
ample illustration in the 1949 Order and the impugned
provision of the 1962 Order which came up for consideration
in Straw Products’ case (supra). Excepting the reference to
the corresponding provision of the 1922 Act, the language of
the 1949 Order was the same as that of the unimpugned part
of clause (3) of Order 2 of 1970 in the present case. The
1949 Order related to the removal of a difficulty which bad
arisen in giving effect to the provisions of s.10(2) (vi)
Proviso (c) and s.10(5) (b) of the 1922 Act, corresponding
to s.34 (2) (i) and s.43 (6) (b) of the Act of 1961. This
difficulty had arisen because the income-tax laws of the
merged States were not repealed by the Indian Income-tax Act
but by the Taxation Laws (Extension to Merged States and
Amendment) Act 67 of 1949. Owing to this, the depreciation
actually allowed under the laws of the merged States could
not be taken into account in computing the aggregate
depreciation allowance referred to in sub-s.(2) (vi).
Proviso (c) or the written down value under clause (b) of
sub-s.(5) of s.10 of the 1922 Act. If this difficulty had
not been removed, anomalous results would have followed.
The written down value of the assets acquired before the
previous year would have been taken as the original cost of
the assets without deduction of the depreciation actually
allowed in the past under the State laws. This would have
given to the assessees in the merged States, a benefit,
inconsistently with the scheme of s.10 of the 1922 Act,
exceeding in the aggregate even the original cost of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 16 of 26
assets.
The 1949 order removed this difficulty. In terms, it did no
more than directing that if under the income-tax laws of a
merged State any depreciation was actually allowed, it was
to be taken into account in ascertaining the written-down
value of the assets. Far from supplanting or changing the
essence of the essential provisions of the Act relating to
depreciation and written down value, it gave effect, life
and meaning to them.
The, observations in Straw Products Ltd’s case (supra) to
the effect, that "by the extension of the Income-tax Act,
1922, the rules and the orders made thereunder to the areas
of the merged States,
655
undoubtedly numerous difficulties arose" and it was,
therefore, necessary to devise machinery for removing those,
difficulties"-On which Shri Nariman relies-were made by this
Court in the context of the 1949 Order. They did not relate
to the then impugned provision of the 1962 Order.
The 1962 Order, Explanation (b), is an instance of an Order
foreign to the Removal of Difficulty Clause. The so-called
"difficulty" which was sought to be ’removed’ by that Order
was not a ’difficulty’ of the kind contemplated by that
Clause, because it did not, in fact, arise in the
application or enforcement of the Income-tax Act, but de-
hors it. No difficulty in implementing the scheme of the
1922 Act read with the 1949 Order existed as an objective
fact.
The 1962 Order, Explanation (b), purported to substitute in
s.10(5) (b) of the 1922 Act (as adopted by the 1949
Order)’depreciation notionally allowed’ for "depreciation
actually allowed". This the Central Government was not
competent to do under that Clause because "depreciation
actually allowed" was the linchpin of the statutory
definition of "written-down value". Indeed, the 1962 Order
sought to amend the essential provisions of the Income-tax
Act in an attempt to collect tax which in the opinion of the
Central Government, the tax-payer could and should pay but
to recall the words of this Court--"which has not been
imposed by adequate legislation". In the present cases,
also, the impugned Proviso of the 1970 Order seeks to do the
same thing by raising the taxable income of the assessee, in
consistently with the scheme of the Act of 1961.
Although the language of the impugned Proviso, in the
present case, is not identical with that of Explanation (b)
of the 1962 Order in the Straw Products Ltd. v. Commissioner
of Income-tax (supra) yet the sum, substance and the device
for replacing depreciation "actually allowed" by
depreciation "fictionally allowed" are the same.
True, that under the income-tax law of the merged State,
depreciation was allowable, and 1962 Order, Explanation (b)
was intended to cover cases where no depreciation was
actually allowed on account of the exemption of the
assessee, from tax under a State law or a rule or under an
agreement with the Ruler of a merged State (whose word was
law); whereas in the instant case depreciation was not
allowed because it was not computed under the Portuguese
Law. But this is a distinction without a difference. As
noticed already, the Portuguese law was not a law imposing
tax on net income. That law levied tax on gross-receipts
and not on the profits and gains of a business. It would
not be, wrong to say that before the merger, in these
territories, there was no income-tax in the sense the tax is
under stood under the Indian Income-tax Act. In principle,
therefore, there would be no difference between a case where
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 17 of 26
one person is exempted from income tax under the law, and a
case where all are exempted, there being no income-tax law.
We are unable to accept the contention that but for the
impugned Proviso, the provisions of s. 32 and s. 43 (6) (b)
of the 1961 Act on
656
its extension to Goa, Daman and Diu could not be given
effect to and applied to the assessees in those territories.
There could be no difficulty in computing the ’written down
value. of the assets that had been acquired by teh
petitioners before the previous year, under clause (b) of s.
43(6). Since no depreciation was, in fact, allowed to the
petitioners in the past under the Portuguese law
in the first assessment under the Indian Income-tax Act, the
written down value would, under " clause (b) work out to be
the actual cost of the assets less nil. Thereafter, in each
succeeding year the depreciation actually allowed in the
preceding year would be deducted causing yearly diminution
of the written down value with consequent decrease in the
depreciation allowed on that basis. Exactly, this was the
manner in which the written down value of the assets of the
petitioners has been computed and depreciation allowed for
several assessment years from 1964-65 ,onwards. This itself
demonstrates that there was no difficulty in applying the
aforesaid provisions to the cases of these assessees.
We find no merit in the argument that the impugned Proviso
brings about equality of treatment among different assessees
in India. The law on the point was declared by this Court
in Straw Products Ltd.’s case about seven years back. If
that decision did not correctly interpret the intendment of
the Legislature, the Parliament would have nullified its
effect by legislation. As a result, no assessee, in the
Territories of the erstwhile Part B States and Merged States
has suffered the disadvantage of depreciation being deducted
on notional basis in determining the written down value,
when in fact, no depreciation had been actually allowed
under the former local laws. Similarly, no assessee in
British India suffered such fictional deduction of
depreciation when it had not been actually allowed earlier.
The impugned Proviso, therefore, far from ensuring parity of
treatment puts the assessee in Union Territories in a worse
position than the assessees in the rest of India.
We may now notice this Court’s decision in Commissioner of
Income-tax, Hyderabad v. Dewan Bahadur Ramgopal Mills Ltd.
(supra), relied upon by Shri Nariman. The facts of that
case were that prior to January 29, 1950, when the erstwhile
State of Hyderabad was merged in the Union of India, the
respondent company therein was assessed to income-tax under
the Hyderabad Income-tax Act, by which depreciation
allowance was granted to it on the basis of the written down
value of its assets in accordance with cl.(c) of s.12 of
that Act. After the merger, the Hyderabad Income-tax Act
was repealed, and by ss.3 and 12 of the Finance Act 1950,
the Indian In come-tax Act, 1922, was extended to that area.
Under the Removal of Difficulty Clause ie. s. 12 of the
Finance Act, the Central Government on December 2, 1950,
issued the Removal of Difficulties.Order, 1950. Paragraph 2
of the Order provided that "in making any assessment under
the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, all depreciation actually
allowed under any laws or rules of Part B State .... shall
be taken into account in computing the aggregate
depreciation allowance referred to in Proviso (c) to s. 10
(2) (vi) and the written down value under s.10(5) (b) of the
said Act". For the assessment year 1951-52
657
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 18 of 26
the, respondent company was assessed for the first time
under the 1922 Act, aid on the basis of para 2 of the 1950
Order, it claimed depreciation allowance by working out the,
value of the assets at their inception and deducting
therefrom such depreciation as was allowed for the three
assessment years in which it was assessed under the
Hyderabad income-tax Act. The matter was brought to this
Court and while, it was pending here, on May 8, 1956, the
Central Government issued another order under s.12 of
Finance Act, 1950, reenacting and adding this Explanation to
the, aforesaid para 2 :
"For the purpose, of paragraph 2, expression
’depreciation actually allowed’ under any laws
or rules of a Part B State means and shall be
deemed to have always meant the aggregate
allowance for depreciation taken into account
in computing the written down value under any
laws or rules of a Part B State or carried
forward under the said laws or rules."
The Company challenged the validity of Para 2 of the Order,
particularly the Explanation inter alia on the ground that
it was ultra vires the powers conferred on Central
Government by Section 12 of the Finance Act, 1950. ’Ibis
Court upheld the, validity of the impugned provision.
Therein, it was manifest that in applying the provisions of
s.10(5) (b) of the 1922 Act to the assessees from Hyderabad
(a Part B State), there was an initial difficulty because
the Hyderabad income-tax Act had been repealed not by the
1922 Act but by the Finance Act, 1950. This difficulty
could be validly removed by making an Order under s.12 of
the Finance Act, 1950. Attempt to remove it by issuing the
1950 Order did not completely achieve its object. In its
application that Order led to an anomalous result, namely,
the written down value of the assets and the allowance to be
allowed on its basis to the assessee in the accounting year
on first assessment under the Indian Income-tax Act, would
be more than what it was allowed in previous years under the
Hyderabad Income-tax Act. It was to remove this difficulty
and to harmonise the position as to depreciation with the
scheme of the Indian Income-tax Act that the impugned
Explanation was added by the 1956 Order.
It will be seen that under the Hyderabad Income-tax Act,
depreciation allowance had actually been allowed to the
assessees on the basis of written down value calculated
according to the mechanism provided in that Act. After the
promulgation of the 1950 Order, the only difficulty that
remained was caused by the different rates at which depre-
ciation had actually been taken into account and allowed
under the Hyderabad Income-tax Act. The Explanation added
by the 1956 Order, in effect, did no more than explaining
that in paragraph 2 of 1950 Order, "all depreciation
actually taken into account by the Income-tax Officer in
computing the written down value under the Hyderabad Income-
tax Act means "all depreciation actually allowed."
As has been said already and it needs to be said again, the
words "depreciation actually allowed" in s. 43 (6) (b)
connote depreciation that has actually been taken into
account and given effect to by the
658
Income-tax authorities in the computation of the, profits
and gains of the, business in assessing income-tax for
earlier years The, said Explanation did not, change that
basic connotation, it only clarified it. Thus in issuing
the 1950 Order and the 1956 Order, adding the Explanation
the Central Government in that case, did not over-step the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 19 of 26
limits of the power delegated to it under s.12 of the
Finance Act, 1950. The impugned provision in the D. B. Ram
Gopal Mills case (supra) corresponds to clause (2) and
Explanation (a) thereto of the 1949 Order and the
substantive part of clause (3) of the 1970 Order, it is not
analogous to the impugned Proviso in the instant case.
The situation before us is materially different. Here, no
depreciation was ever computed or actually allowed to the
assessees under the Portuguese Law. Indeed, under, that-
law the. tax was levied not on net income but on gross
turnover of the business. There wag, strictly speaking,, no
assessment of tax on, real "profits and gains" of a
business, the tax being levied on gross receipts on ad hoc
basis’. Allowing or taking into account depreciation of
assets was out of question in that process of assessment.
In the case in hand, the imputed Proviso seeks to introduce
a new concept of calculating depreciation. By replacing
"depreciation actually allowed" with "depreciation deemed to
have been allowed" by a fiction of law, even where no
depreciation was at all- allowed under any law outside the
taxation territories, it, in- effect, attempts to change the
fundamental scheme of the Act.
D. B. Ram Gopal Mills’s, case (supra) was noticed,
explained and distinguished in, Straw Products Ltd’s case
(supra). It was observed that the former "did not support
the view that the arising of a difficulty is a matter for
the subjective satisfaction of the Central Government" The
precedent case is not in pari materia with D. B. Ram Gopal
Mills’ case. It is in line with Straw Products Ltd. v.
Income-tax Commissioner, and. the, ratio of the latter
decision and the observations made- therein with regard, to
the then impugned Order of 1962 apply with full force to the
impugned Proviso in the instant case.
In the light of what has been said above, we accept
contentions (1) and (2) advanced on behalf of the
petitioners.
Be that as it may, the last contention canvassed by Mr.
Palkhiwala is a clincher. The argument is that the impugned
Proviso is not workable, because, under the Portuguese law
there was no tax on income at all. These Territories were
merged with India on December 19, 1961, and the Indian
Income-tax Act was extended to these Territories from April
1, 1963. During this interregnums, it is contended, the was
no law either Portuguese or Indian, under which the income
659
if those prior years could be computed. If there is a loss,
or profit is inadequate to absorb the depreciation, latter
can be carried- for- Yard without limit of time. Owing to
the absence of any tax law during the aforesaid interregnum,
proceeds the argument, the petitioners would not have the
benefit of carry-forward’ of depreciation form any year
prior to 1963, and, thus, the impugned Proviso instead. of
removing any difficulty, would create serious difficulties
and legal complications.
There is a good deal of force in this contention.
It has been noticed earlier that the tax imposed under the
Portuguese law was, in reality, a ’turn-over’ tax and not a
tax on the income of a business. The levy was exacted on
gross receipts, irrespective of loss or profit. Thereafter,
during the interregnum between December 19, 1661 and April
1, 1963, there .was in force no law authorising the, levy of
income-tax in these Territories. We have also seen that
under the Act an assessee is entitled to ’carry-forward’
unabsorbed depreciation in case of loss or inadequate
profits without any time limit Is. 32(2). For ensuring this
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 20 of 26
right to an assessee, assessments for ascertaining losses or
insufficiency of profits of his business, since the
acquisition and use of the assets by him will have to be
made. In the Indian Income-tax Act as extended to these
Union Territories, there is no provision for making
assessment in respect of those past years. Therefore a Goan
assessee who made losses and suffered depreciation of his
assets will never get the benefit of such carry-forward, as
no machinery exists for determining inadequacy of profits or
the factum of losses in, those years which is. a condition
precedent to carry forward of. depreciation. Retrospective
assessments for this purpose, going back to a period, prior
to 1963 could have been made, if at all, under a law made by
Parliament and not under an executive fiat. In the absence
of such law it is impossible to work the Proviso without
riding rough-shod over the rights of the assessees to have
their unabsorbed depreciation relating to pre-1 963 period,
carried forward. Viewed from this #angle, the impugned
Proviso would, in the implementation of the Act, create
difficulties rather than removing them.
For the foregoing reasons, we allow these petitions and
declare that the 2nd Proviso to Clause (3) of the Taxation
Laws (Extension to Union Territories) (Removal of
Difficulties) Order 2 of 1970, is ultra vires the Central
Government when exercising the powers under Clause (7) ,of
Regulation IIII of 1963 and the Revenue authorities are not
entitled to levy tax on the basis of the depreciation
allowance computed in. accordance with the said Proviso in
the , Order. The respondents, shall pay, the costs of the
petitioners.
660
ALAGIRISAMI, J.These matters have been argued twice once by
Mr. A. K. Sen on behalf of the petitioners in W.P. Nos. 112,
391-394 of 1971, and again by Mr. N. A. Palkhivala on behalf
of the petitioner,, in W.P. Nos. 330-331 & 382-387 of 1974.
The question that arises in. all these petitions is the
constitutional validity of the Taxation Law,, (Extension to
Union Territories) (Removed of Difficulties) Order 2 of 1970
issued under clause 7 of the Taxation Laws (Extension to,
Union Territories) Regulation, 1963 by which the Indian
Income-tax Act was extended, with certain amendments, to the
Union Territories of Goa, Daman and Diu with effect from
April 1, 1963. Clause 7 of that Regulation, which is
relevant for our purposes, reads as follows
"7. If any difficulty arises in giving effect
in any Union Territory to the provisions of
any Act, or of any rule, notification or order
made or issued thereunder, the Central
Government may, by general or special order
published in the Official Gazette, make such
provisions or give such directions as appear
to it to be expedient or necessary for the
removal of the difficulty."
Under the law in force in the former Portuguese territories
of Goa, Daman and Diu income-tax was levied at a certain
percentage of the gross receipts of an assessee. No
allowance in the nature of depreciation was permitted in
computing the gross income. Under clause (ii) of section
32(1) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1961 depreciation is
allowed in the case of buildings, machinery, plant or
furniture at such percentage on the written down value
thereof as may be prescribed. Written down value is defined
in section 43 (6) as follows:
"(6) "Written down value" means-
(a) in the case of assets acquired in the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 21 of 26
previous year, the actual cost to the
assessee;
(b) in the case of assets acquired before
the previous year,. the actual cost to the
assessee less all depreciation actually
allowed to him under this Act, or under the
Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 (XI of 1922), or
any Act repealed by that Act, or under any
executive orders issued when the Indian
Income-tax Act, 1886 (II of 1886), was in
force:
(Proviso omitted)
It would be noticed at once that even if depreciation was
allowable under the Portuguese Income-tax Law, when it was
in force in the former Portuguese territories, clause (b)
above will not apply as that law was not repealed by the
Indian Income-tax Act, 1961 or the Indian Income-tax Act,
1922 or any Act repealed by that Act or under any executive
orders issued when the Indian Income-tax Act 1886 was in
force. As was pointed out by this Court in its decisions in
The Commissioner of Income-tax, Hyderabad v. Dewan Bahadur
Ramgopal Mills Ltd. [1961]. (2) SCR 318] and the Straw
Products Ltd. v. I.T.O. [1968 (2) SCR 1], this is one
difficulty to remove which a Difficulties Removal Order
would have had to be issued. When we put the question to
Mr. Palkhivala as to what would happen if such an order to
remove difficulties was not issued, he maintained that even
so the assessees in
661
these cases would have been entitled to the benefit of
clause (b). I am not sure that he is right but it is
unnecessary to decide that question.
Be that as it may, I shall now discuss the question based on
the relevant provisions of law. Clause (a) deals with a
case of the acquisition of the assets in the previous year,
in which case the actual cost is itself taken as the written
down value. In the case of the assets acquired before the
previous year the actual cost less all depreciation actually
allowed is the written down value. Now what happens if
under the law applicable to the territory in question no
depreciation was allowable at all?’ It stands to reason and
common sense that in such a case the written down value of
the asset in question on the date the Indian Income,-tax Act
1961 becomes applicable to that territory should be related
to realities and not be wholly unrelated to them or
notional. The provision regarding written down value and
allowance of depreciation under the Indian Income-tax Law
proceeds on the basis of depreciation allowed year by year
with the result that the written down value goes down year
after year and similarly the depreciation, as was pointed
out by this Court in Ramgopal Mills case (supra) in the
following words :
" The basic and normal scheme of depreciation
under the Indian Income,-tax Act is that it
decreases every year, being a percentage of
the written down value which in the first year
is the actual cost and in succeeding years
actual cost less all depreciation actually
allowed under the Income-tax Act or any Act
repealed thereby etc."
If, therefore, because there was no provision under the
Income-tax law applying to the former Portuguese territories
providing for depreciation the written down value of an
asset is taken as the actual cost even after many years of
is acquisition it would mean putting the assessees in those
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 22 of 26
territories at an advantage compared to the assesses in the
rest of India. More important, it would not accord with
realities and would not be in accordance with the scheme of
depreciation under the Indian Income-tax Act. It is,
therefore, necessary to devise some method by which both can
be put on the same footing and the normal scheme of
depreciation under the Indian Income-tax Act made applicable
to them. It cannot be argued that a certain plant machinery
purchased 10 years earlier and now worth half its original
value should still be taken to be worth its original cost
and depreciation allowed on that basis. It is not as though
such a problem arises for the first time. In the case dealt
with in the Ramgopal Mills case the Hyderabad Income-tax
Act, which was applicable to the case before the Indian
Income-Tax Act was extended to the Hyderabad area, had come
into force in 1357-F and had been in force for three years.
In the assessment for those three years depreciation
allowance was given to it on the basis of the written down
value of its assets in accordance with the provisions of
clause (c) of s.12(5) of the Hyderabad Income-tax Act. That
clause provided that in the case of assets acquired before
the previous year and before the commencement of the Act,
the written down value would be the actual cost to the
assessee less (i) depreciation at the rates applicable to
the assets calculated on the actual cost for the first year
since acquisition and for the next year
662
On the actual cost diminished by the depreciation allowance
for one year and so on, for each year upto,the-
commencement of the Act and (ii) depreciation actually
allowed to the assessee on such assets for each financial
year after the commencement of the Act. Now this is-
exactly-what is proposed-to be done; in-the-case of the
former Portuguese territories by the impugned order.
For an appreciation of the actual situation that arises let
us take some concrete figures. Suppose in the Hyderabad
case the asset concerned had been purchased for Rs. 100.00
three years before, the Hyderabad Income-tax Act came into
force and depreciation was ten per cent. At the end of the
first year the written-down value would be Rs. 90.00, at the
end of the second year Rs. 8 1.00 and at the end of the
third year Rs. 72.90. It was this Rs. 72.90 that was taken
into account for the purpose of working out the depreciation
allowable under the Hyderabad Income-tax Act in the first
year when that Act came into force. On this basis the
written down value of the asset at the end of the first year
after the Hyderabad Income-tax Act came into force would be
Rs. 65.61, at the end of the second year Rs. 59 (more or
less), at the end of the third year Rs. 53.10, that is, when
the Indian Income-tax Act was extended to the Hyderabad
area. When the Indian Income-tax Act was extended to
Hyderabad area a Difficulties Removal Order was first issued
in there terms in 1950.
"Computation of aggregate depreciation allowance and written
down value
In making any assessment under the Indian
Income-tax Act, 1922, all depreciation
actually allowed under any laws ,or rules of a
Part B State relating to Income-tax on profits
of business, shall be taken into account in
computing the aggregate depreciation allowance
referred to in sub-clause (c) of the proviso
to, clause (vi) of sub-section (2) and the
written down value under clause (b) of
subsection (5) of sec. 10 of the said Act."
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 23 of 26
Taking advantage of the presence of the words "all
depreciation actually allowed" in this order the assessee
argued that only the depreciation ;allowed after the
’Hyderabad Income-tax Act came into force should be taken
into account for the, purpose of arriving at the written
down value for the purpose of the Indian Income tax Act.
That was on the basis that the depreciation allowance
calculated for the three years before the Hyderabad Income-
tax Act came into- force was not depreciation actually
allowed because in those years there was no income-tax
assessment and there was no question of any depreciation
being allowed. In other words, what. the assessee said was
that taking the original cost at Rs. 100.00 the depreciation
actually allowed during the three years during which the
Hyderabad Income-tax Act was in, force, that is, Rs. 72.90
minus, Rs. 65.61 (,Rs. 7.29), Rs. 65.61 minus Rs. 59.00;
(Rs. 6.61) and Rs. 59.00 minus Rs. 53. 10 (Rs. 5.90) that is
Rs. 19.80, should be deducted from the actual cost for
arriving at the written down value for the purposes of
Indian Income-tax Act and that Rs. 90.20(Rs lOO.00 minus Rs.
19.80) should be taken to be the written down value instead
of the figure of Rs.
663
53.10.In order to get over this difficulty an explanation
was added total the Removal of Difficulties Order in 1953 in
the following words
"Explanation : For the purpose of this,
paragraph, the expression "all depreciation
actually allowed under any law or rules of a
Part B State" means and shall be deemed to
have always meant the aggregate allowance for
depreciation taken into account in computing
the written down value under any laws or rules
of a Part B State or carried forward under the
said laws or rules."
(There was another similar explanation added in 1956 but for
the purposes of the argument in this case that is not very
relevant). It was the validity of this second order adding
the explanation that was questioned. In dealing with the
argument that no difficulty arose in giving effect to the
provisions of the Act so as to justify the issuance of the
Difficulties Removal Order and the Explanation thereto this
Court first dealt with the difficulty caused by the fact of
the earlier Income-tax law not having been repealed by the
Indian Income-tax Act 1922 etc. and that difficulty having
to be removed by the issuance of a Difficulties Removal
Order and then made the observation which we have extracted
earlier about the basic and normal scheme of depreciation
under the Indian Income-tax Act and then went on to point
out :
"If, however, depreciation actually allowed
under the Hyderabad Income-tax Act was taken
into. account in computing the aggregate
depreciation allowance and the written down
value, an. anomalous result would. follow as
in the present case, namely depreciation
allowance to be allowed to the assessee in the
accounting year under the Indian Income-tax
Act would be more than what was allowed in
previous years under the Hyderabad Income-tax
Act. This would create a disparity and be
against the scheme of the Indian, Income-tax
Act. It was, therefore, necessary : to
explain paragraph 2 of the, Removal of
Difficulties Order, 1950, to assimilate or
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 24 of 26
harmonise the: position regarding depreciation
allowance, and the explanation added in 1953
or 1956. was obviously intended. to, remove
the difficulty arising out of that disparity
or disharmony."
In, effect it means, in terms of the example which we have
given earlier that instead of the written down value being
taken to be Rs. 53.10 when, the Indian Income-tax Act was
extended to Hyderabad the assessee. wanted Rs. 80.20 to be
taken as the, written down- value and that was why- this,
Court pointed out that the depreciation allowed to the,
assessee. in, the accounting year, under the Indian Income-
tax Act would, he more than what was allowed under the
HYderabad Income-,tax Act, and that. this, would create a
disparity and be against the scheme of the) Indian Income-
tax Act. This decision is exactly to the point. The
effect. of, the argument on, behalf of the petitioners would
be, taking it, that in Goa, also. the asset had, been
acquired for Rs. 100.00 six years,, before, the Indian
Income-,tax Act 1961 was extended to that area and the rate
of depreciation was also ten per
664
cent, that instead of the written down value being Rs. 53.10
it Will be Rs. 100.00, exactly the price at which the asset
was acquired six years earlier, even though its value now
might be much less.
Mr. Palkhilvala relied completely on the decision in Straw
Products’ case in support of his argument that in exercise
of the powers under clause 7 the impugned order could not
be made. In that case when the Indian Income-tax Act was
extended to the State of Bhopal a Removal of Difficulties
Order was issued in 1949 similar to the one introduced in
Hyderabad in the first instance in 1950. When it was argued
then on the basis of the use of the words "depreciation-
actually allowed" that only such depreciation could be taken
into account a second Removal of Difficulties Order was
issued in 1962 which added an explanation in the following
terms :
"Explanation.-For the purpose of this
paragraph, the expression "all depreciation
actually allowed under any laws or rules of a
Merged State" means and shall be deemed,
always to have meant :
a) the aggregate allowance for depreciation
taken into account in computing the written
down value under any laws or rules in force in
a marged State or carried forward under the
said laws or rules, and
(b) in cases where income had been exempted
from tax under any laws or rules in force in a
merged State or under any agreement with a
Ruler, the depreciation that would have been
allowed had the income not been so exempted."
That was because the Ruler of Bhopal had earlier exempted
the income of the assessee from income-tax and there was
therefore no question of any depreciation allowance having
been made or any written down value having to be calculated.
When the matter came up before this Court, this Court held
that whatever difficulty there was removed by the 1949 order
and thereafter there was no further difficulty to be
removed. We shall quote the exact words
"Section 6 of Act 67 of 1949 authorises the
Central Government to make provisions or to
give directions as may appear to be necessary
for removal of difficulties which had arisen
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 25 of 26
in giving effect to the provisions of any Act,
rule or order extended by S. 3 to the merged
States. By the application of the Indian
Income-tax Act to the merged States a
difficulty did arise in the matter of deter-
mining the depreciation allowance under S.
10(2) (vi). That difficulty was removed by
the enactment of the Taxation Laws (Merged
States) (Removal of Difficulties) Order, 1949.
Even by that order all depreciation actually
allowed under any laws or rules of a merged
State relating to income-tax was to be taken
into account in computing the aggregate
depreciation allowance. Thereafter there
665
survived no difficulty in giving effect to the
provisions of the Indian income-tax Act or the
rules or orders extended by s. 3 to the merged
States.
To sum up: the power conferred by s. 6 of Act
67 of 1949 is a power to remove a difficulty
which arises in the application of the
Income-tax Act to the merged States, it can be
exercised in the manner consistent with the
scheme and essential provisions of the Act and
for the purpose for which it is conferred.
The impugned Order which seeks, in purported
exercise of the power, to remove a difficulty
which had not arisen was, therefore, unautho-
rised."
That was the ratio of that decision. This Court
specifically did not think it necessary to determine to what
extent, if any, it would be open to the Central Government
by an order issued in exercise of the power conferred by s.
6 of Act 67 of 1949 to make provision which is inconsistent
with the provisions of the Indian Income-tax, Act. It did
not hold that the 1962 Order was inconsistent with the
provisions of the Indian Income-tax Act. It did consider
the decision in Ramgopal Mills case. After referring to the
Explanation. added to the Removal of Difficulties Order this
Court pointed out
"This Court held that by the Removal of
Difficulties Order, 1950 an anomalous result
followed, and the depreciation allowance
allowed to the assessee under the Indian
Income-tax Act was more than the depreciation
allowance, under the Hyderabad Income-tax Act,
and it was necessary to issue the Removal of
Difficulties Order, 1956. In the view of the
Court, in that case the condition precedent
to, the exercise of the power did exist."
Thus, it ’did not dissent from the decision in Ramgopal
Mills case,. By implication it hold that decision as a good
one. That is exactly the position here. It was, therefore,
open to the Central Government in exercise of its powers
under clause 7 to issue the impugned order. It only brings
it into line with the scheme of the Indian Income-tax Act,
otherwise as I mentioned earlier, the assessees in Goa,
Daman and Diu would be at an advantage compared to the
assessees in the rest of India.
The only contention of any substance which was urged against
This was that under the scheme of the Indian Income-tax Act
it was open to the assessee to carry forward the
depreciation for any length of time if he had sustained any
loss and it would now be very difficult, if not impossible,-
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 26 of 26
for the assessee to produce all the accounts of earlier
years to show the losses which he had incurred, the
depreciation he was entitled to and which he can carry
forward. I do not consider that it is an impossibility. If
it is difficult it is not a difficulty which cannot be
solved as the Hyderabad example shows.
666
Assessees are expected to and would have maintained accounts
at least for the purpose of the Income-tax Act which was in
force in the former Portuguese territories, though that, Act
was a simple one and not as complex as the Indian Income-tax
Act. What is necessary for working out the impugned order
is to know whether there was a Profit or a loss and as the,
cost of acquisition of the assets, in respect of which
depreciation allowance is claimed, should also be available
it should not be very difficult to calculate the
depreciation and arrive at the written down value as on the
date when the Indian Income-tax Art was extended to former
Portuguese territories. To accede to the claim of the
assessees that the original value of the assets should be
taken down to be the written down value, however long they
might have been used, means that they get an advantage not
merely in the first year in which the Indian Income-tax Act
applied to those territories- It is a continued advantage
which will last as long as these assets last. In terms of
the example I have given earlier in the first year instead
of the 10 per cent out of the written down value of Rs.
53.10, that is Rs. 5.30, being allowed as the depreciation
it will be Rs. 10 In the second year it will be Rs. 9.00
instead of Rs. 4.77. In the third year it will be Rs. 8.10
as against Rs- 4-30 and so on. I can see no justification
either on principle or on the wording of the statute to
allow the assessees any such concession. Whatever I have
stated earlier would be sufficient to show that the impugned
order is not in excess of the delegated powers but.merely
carries out the purpose of the delegation.
It only remains to deal with the, further contention raised
that the order is given retrospective effect and that is not
valid. This contention is best answered in the words of
this Court in Ramgopal Mills case thus :
Section 12 (in this case cl. 7) by the very
nature of its intent and purpose confers on
the Central Government power to make an order
to remove a difficulty.which has already
arisen, and the power to remove the difficulty
must necessarily include the power to remove
the difficulty from time to time it arose.
The-Central Government has, therefore. the
Power-to make an order or give a direction so
as to remove-the difficulty from the very
beginning, and that is what the notification
of 1.956 (in this case the notification of
1970) does."
I would, therefore, dismiss these writ
petitions.
V.P.S. Petitions allowed.
667