Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MAHARANA MILLS PVT. LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
INCOME TAX TRIBUNAL, AHMEDABAD & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT03/05/1989
BENCH:
PATHAK, R.S. (CJ)
BENCH:
PATHAK, R.S. (CJ)
KANIA, M.H.
CITATION:
1989 AIR 1719 1989 SCR (3) 1
1989 SCC Supl. (2) 210 JT 1989 (2) 399
1989 SCALE (1)1447
ACT:
Income Tax Act 1922--Sections 10(2)(vi) and 60A--Depre-
ciation allowance and written down value--Computation
of--Saurashtra Income Tax Ordinance 1949--Effect of.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant-assessee is a company carrying on the
business of manufacturing and selling Textile at Porbunder
(formerly a princely State) in Saurashtra in the State of
Gujarat. No income tax was levied by the former Porbunder
State prior to 1948. In 1949 the princely State of, Porbund-
er integrated into newly formed Saurashtra State. In 1949
the State of Saurashtra promulgated the Saurashtra Income
Tax Ordinance wherein provision for grant of depreciation
based on written down value was made. On 26.1.1950, State of
Saurashtra became a part of the Union of India as a Part ’B’
State and thus the Income Tax Act, 1922 became applicable to
the State of Saurashtra from 1st April 1950 under the Fi-
nance Act, 1950. The said Saurashtra Income Tax Ordinance
was repealed under Sec. 13 of the Finance Act, 1950. Section
12 of that Act provided for removal of difficulties, if any,
arising in giving effect to the Income Tax Act. The Central
Govt. on 2.12.50 issued an order known as "Taxation Laws
(Part B States) Removal of Difficulties) Order 1950". Clause
2 of the said order provided the manner in which the aggre-
gate depreciation allowance and written down value were to
be computed. On March 9, 1953, the Central Government in the
exercise of its powers under Sec. 60A of the Indian Income
Tax Act, 1922, added an Explanation to the said clause (2).
The vires of the said Explanation was challenged before the
Andhra Pradesh High Court which held that the Explanation
referred to above was ultra vires the powers of the Central
Government under Sec. 60A of the Income Tax Act.
Commissioner of Income-Tax, Hyderabad v. D.B.R. Mills
Ltd., [1956] 29 I.T.R. 210.
Thereupon, the Central Government issued another notifi-
cation dated the 8th May, 1956 in exercise of its powers
under Section 12 of the Finance Act 1950, whereby an Expla-
nation in identical terms as the earlier Explanation was
added to Clause (2) of the Removal of Difficulties Order,
1950. The validity of the said Explanation added by the
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notification dated 8th May, 1956 was upheld by this Court in
The Commissioner of Income-tax, Hyderabad v. Dewan Bahadur
Ramgopal Mills Ltd., [1961] 2 SCR 318. On the appeal from
the said decision of the High Court
2
of the Andhra Pradesh in Commissioner of Income-tax, Hydera-
bad v. D.B.R. Mills, [1956] 29 I.T.R. 210.
The assessee was assessed under the Indian Income Tax
Act from 1940-41 in respect of the income arising or deemed
to arise in British India from 1940-41 onwards. For these
years its income was assessed on receipt basis but in calcu-
lating the world income depreciation was taken into consid-
eration for arriving at the income outside British India.
The assessee was also assessed for the assessment year
1949-50 under the Saurashtra Income Tax Ordinance, 1949.
From 1950-51 it was assessed under the Income Tax Act. The
assessment years concerned in this case are 1957-58, 1958-59
and 1959-60, the corresponding previous years being the
Calender years 1956, 1957 and 1958 respectively. The case of
the assessee is that during the course of the assessment of
its income, depreciation was allowed for the assessment year
1950-51 and thereafter on the original cost of the assets as
reduced by the depreciation allowance given under the Sau-
rashtra Income Tax Ordinance 1949. The respective written
down values for the assessment years 1951-52 and 1952-53
were fixed on the basis of the written down value for the
assessment year 1950-51. But later the concerned Income Tax
Officer rectified the calculations of depreciation allowance
by further reducing the written down value of the assets of
the assessee. The Income Tax Officer took the written down
value for the assessment years 1940-41 as the starting
point.
The assessee was not satisfied with this rectification.
Its contention was that the depreciation for the previous
years should have been calculated only on the basis of
Clause (2) of the Taxation Laws (Part B States) (Removal of
Difficulties) Order 1950, which provided for computation of
the aggregate depreciation allowance on the basis of the
deduction which was actually allowed under the Saurashtra
Income Tax Ordinance, 1949. Regarding the explanation, the
assessee contended that it was ultra rites the powers of the
Central Government as it was not necessary for the removal
of any difficulty.
The contentions of the assessee were rejected by the
Income Tax authorities as well as by Income Tax Appellate
Tribunal. It was contended by the assessee before the Tribu-
nal that the decision of this Court in Commissioner of
Income Tax Hyderabad v. Dewan Bahadur Ramgopal Mills Ltd.,
[1961] 2 SCR 318 was no longer good law in view of the later
decision of this Court in Straw Products Ltd. v. Income Tax
Officer "A" Ward, Bhopal and Ors., [1968] 68, ITR 227. The
Tribunal having rejected the said contentions, at the in-
stance of the assessee a reference was made to the Gujarat
High Court in which the -following question was raised:
3
"Whether on the facts and in the circumstances
of the case. the Tribunal was justified in
holding that the depreciation allowable and
not ’actually allowed’ under the Saurashtra
Income-tax Ordinance, 1949, should be taken
into account in computing the aggregate depre-
ciation allowance and written down value under
Sec. 10(2)(vi) of the Income Tax Act 1922."
The High Court held that in its advisory jurisdiction under
the Income Tax Act, it could not go into the question of the
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vires of the said Explanation and therefore answered the
question against the assessee. Therefore, the appellant
filed Special Civil Application 1797 of 1972 in the High
Court.
The Division Bench of the High Court in its judgment
disposing of the said special Civil Application pointed out
that the decision of this Court in the Commissioner of
Income Tax, Hyderabad v. Dewan Bahadur Ramgopal Mills, case,
referred to above had upheld the validity of the Explanation
in question. The High Court further opined that some of the
arguments which did not find favour with this court in the
said case were accepted by a Bench of 7 Learned Judges in
the Straw Products Ltd. v. Income- Tax Officer, "A" Ward,
Bhopal and Ors., [1968] 68 I.T.R. 227. The High Court fur-
ther pointed out that in its decision in the said case of
Straw Products this court had considered the decision in
Dewan Bahadur Ramgopal Mills Ltd. and explained that on the
facts of that case a difficulty had arisen and it was for
removing that difficulty that the Order of 1956 was issued.
For the said reason the High Court considered that decision
was good law and following the same, it dismissed the Spe-
cial Civil Application. Hence this appeal by the assessee.
In this appeal the Explanation added by the Central
Government by its notification dated May 8, 1956 as well as
the assessments made on the assessee for the assessment year
1957-58 to 1959-60 have been assailed. It was inter-alia
contended on behalf of the assessee that there was no diffi-
culty which had arisen in giving effect to the provisions of
the Indian Income Tax Act in the State of Saurashtra and
hence the pre-condition on which the Central Government was
authorised to make an Order under the Removal of Difficul-
ties Order and add the Explanation in question had never
come into existence and as such the Explanation was without
the authority of Law, invalid and of no legal effect. It was
further contended by the assessee that under the scheme of
the Income Tax Act, generally speaking, almost the entire
cost of a capital asset used for purposes of business or
profession should
4
be allowed to be written off by way of depreciation, whether
worked on the basis of straight line method or written down
value. The assessee disputed the mode of assessment and the
applicability of the Explanation.
Following this Court’s decision in Dewan Bahadur Ramgo-
pal Mills’ Ltd. [1961] 2 SCR 318 this Court dismissing the
appeal,
HELD: The Saurashtra Income Tax Ordinance was repealed
by Section 13 of the Finance Act 1950 and not by any provi-
sion in the Indian Income Tax Act. 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 deprecia-
tion actually allowed under the Income Tax Act or any Act
repealed thereby etc. [18D-E]
Commissioner of Income Tax Hyderabad v. Dewan Bahadur
Ramgopal Mills Ltd., [1961] 2 SCR 318.
The Saurashtra Income Tax Ordinance having been repealed
not by the Indian Income Tax Act but by Sec. 13 of the
Finance Act 1950, a difficulty had come into existence, and
hence it could not be said that the Government had no good
basis to come to the conclusion that a difficulty had, in
fact, arisen. [18F-G]
Madeva Upendra Sinai v. Union of India & Ors., [1975] 98
I.T.R.
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209.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 612 (NT)
of 1975.
From the Judgment and Order dated 24/25.9. 1974 of the
Gujarat High Court in Special Civil Application No. 1797 of
1972.
Harish N. Salve, Mrs. A.K. Verma and Joel Pares for the
Appellant.
V.S. Desai, M.B. Rao and Ms. A. Subhashini for the
Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KANIA, J. This is an appeal from the judgment of a Division
of
5
the High Court of Gujarat in Special Civil Application No.
1797 of 1972 on a certificate granted under Article 133(1)
of the Constitution of India. The relevant facts are as
follows:
The assessee is a Private Limited Company and carries on
the business of manufacturing and selling textile at Porbun-
dar in Saurashtra in the Gujarat State. Before 1948 Porbun-
dar was a part of the Princely State of that name. No In-
come-Tax was levied by the erstwhile Porbundar State prior
to 1948. In 1948 there was a merger of several Princely
States and as a result of the merger, the State of Saurash-
tra was formed. No income-tax was levied by the State of
Saurashtra till 1949 when it promulgated the Saurashtra
Income-tax Ordinance. Under that Ordinance provision was
made for the grant of depreciation allowance based on the
written down value. The said Ordinance defined "written down
value" as follows:
"Written down value" means:
(a) in case of assets acquired in the previous
year, the actual cost to the assessee; and
(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 Ordinance or allowed under an act
repealed thereby or which would have been
allowed to him if the Income-tax Act, 1922 was
in force in past."
On 26th January, 1950 State of Saurashtra
became a part of Union of India as a Part B
State. The Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 became
applicable to the State of Saurashtra from 1st
April, 1950 under the provisions of the Fi-
nance Act, 1950. By Section 13 of the Finance
Act of 1950, which provides for repeals and
savings, the Saurashtra Income-tax Ordinance
was repealed. Section 12 of that Act provided
for the removal of difficulties as follows:
"If any difficulty arises in giving effect to
the provisions of any of the Acts, rules or
orders extended by Section 3 or Section 11 to
any State or merged territory, the Central
Government may, by order, make such provision,
or give such direction, as appears to it to be
necessary for removing the difficulty."
In exercise of the powers conferred upon it by
Section 12 of the
6
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Finance Act, 1950, the Central Government
issued an order known as "Taxation Laws (Part
B States) (Removal of Difficulties) Order,
1950". Clause (2) of the Order of 1950 reads
as follows:
"Computation of aggregate depreciation allow-
ance and the written down value:
In making any assessment under the
Indian Incometax Act, 1922, all depreciation
actually allowed under any laws or rules of a
Part B State relating to Income-tax and
Super-tax or any law relating to tax on prof-
its 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 sub-
section (5) of Section 10 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
Part B State and in the taxable territories,
the greater of the two sums allowed shall only
be taken into account."
This order was made by the Central Govern-
ment on December 2, 1950. Subsequently, on
March 9, 1953, in exercise of the powers
conferred upon it by Section 60A of the Indian
Income-tax Act, 1922, an Explanation was added
by the Central Government to the above Clause
(2) of the Order of 1950 with effect from that
date and that Explanation was in the following
terms:
"For the purpose of this paragraph, the ex-
pression ’all depreciation actually allowed
under any laws or rules of a Part B State’
means and shall be deemed always to have 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."
In Commissioner of Income-tax, Hyderabad v. D.B.R. Mills
Ltd., [1956] 29 I.T.R. 210 the Hyderabad High Court held
that this Explanation was ultra vires the powers of the
Central Government under Section 60A of the Indian Income-
tax Act, 1922. After the said decision of the High Court the
Central Government issued a notifica-
7
tion on 8th May, 1956 in exercise of the powers conferred
upon it by Section 12 of the Finance Act, 1950 and under
this notification an Explanation in identical terms as the
earlier Explanation inserted by an order made under Section
60A of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 was added to Clause
(2) of the Removal of Difficulties Order, 1950. As far as
the appellant-assessee is concerned, it was assessed under
the Indian Income-tax Act from 1940-41 in respect of the
income arising or deemed to arise in British India from
1940-41 onwards. For these years income of the assessee was
computed on receipt basis, but in calculating the world
income, depreciation was taken into consideration for arriv-
ing at the income outside British India. The assessee was
also assessed for assessment year 1949-50 under the Saurash-
tra Income-tax Ordinance, 1949. From the assessment year
1950-51 onwards the assessee was assessed under the Indian
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Income-tax Act, 1922 (referred to hereinafter as "the Indian
Income-tax Act"). The assessment years with which we are
concerned are the assessment years 1957-58, 1958-59 and
1959-60, the corresponding previous years being the calendar
years 1956, 1957 and 1958 respectively. It is the case of
the assessee that during the course of the assessment of the
assessee’s income under the Act of 1922, depreciation was
allowed for the assessment year 1950-51 and thereafter on
the original cost of the assets as reduced by the deprecia-
tion allowance given under the Saurashtra Income-tax Ordi-
nance, 1949. The respective written down values for assess-
ment years 1951-52 and 1952-53 were fixed on the basis of
the written down value for assessment year 1950-51. However,
subsequently, the Income-tax Officer concerned having juris-
diction over the case of the petitioner, rectified the
calculations of depreciation allowance by further reducing
the written down value of the assets of the assessee by
adopting the procedure which has been set out in paragraph 7
of the petition filed by the assessee. What was done by the
Income-tax Officer was that the written down value taken for
the assessment year 1940-41 by the Income-tax Officer,
Bombay was taken as the starting point. From this written
down value, the depreciation that was actually allowed to
the assessee in respect of the assessment years 1940-41 to
1944-45 was deducted. For the assessment years 194546 to
1948-49 the written down value was calculated after calcu-
lating the depreciation allowance which would be allowable
under the rules. For the assessment year 1949-50, the depre-
ciation allowance as calculated under the Saurashtra
Income-tax Ordinance, 1954 was deducted. For the assessment
years 1950-51 to 1952-53, the depreciation allowance actual-
ly deducted under the assessment orders passed under the
Indian Income-tax Act was calculated and for the assessment
year 1953-54 the depreciation allowance was calculated under
Rule 8 of the
8
Indian Income-tax Rules made under the Indian Income-tax
Act. For the assessment years 1954-55 to 1956-57 the depre-
ciation was calculated on the basis of the above rectifica-
tion order. The contention of the assessee is that the
depreciation for the previous years should have been calcu-
lated only on the basis of Clause (2) of the Taxation Laws
(Part B States) (Removal of Difficulties) Order, 1950, which
provided for computation of the aggregate depreciation
allowance on the basis of the deduction which was actually
allowed under the provisions of Saurashtra Income-tax Ordi-
nance, 1949. Regarding the Explanation which was added as
set out earlier, the contention of the assessee was that it
was ultra vires the powers of the Central Government as it
was not necessary for the removal of any difficulty. This
contention of the assessee was rejected by the Income-tax
authorities as well as the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal.
For the assessment years 1957-58 and 1959-60 the assessee
again contended before the Income-tax authorities and the
Tribunal that Explanation to Clause (2) as notified in 1956
was ultra vires the powers of the Central Government. It was
contended by the assessee before the Tribunal that the
decision of this Court in The Commissioner of Income-tax,
Hyderabad v. Dewan Bahadur Raingopal Mills Ltd., [1961] 2
S.C.R. 318; (1961) 41 I.T.R. 280 which upheld the validity
of the Explanation was no longer good law in view of the
decision of this Court in Straw Products Ltd. v. Income-tax
Officer. "A" Ward, Bhopal, and Ors., [1968] 68 I.T.R. 227.
The contention of the assessee was rejected by the Tribunal
by its order dated April 16, 1969. From this decision of the
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Tribunal at the instance of the assessee a reference was
made to the Gujarat High Court in which the following ques-
tion was raised:
"Whether on the facts and in the circumstances
of the case, the Tribunal was justified in
holding that the depreciation allowable and
not ’actually allowed’ under the Saurashtra
Income-tax Ordinance, 1949 should be taken
into account in computing the aggregate depre-
ciation allowance and written down value under
Section 10(2)(vi) of the Income-tax Act,
1922?"
This reference was numbered as Reference No. 45 of 1970.
On August 17, 1972 the High Court held that in its advisory
jurisdiction under the Income-tax Act it could not go into
the question of the vires of the said Explanation and an-
swered the question against the assesee. Thereafter the
assessee filed Special Civil Application No. 1797 of 1972
from the decision wherein this appeal arises. In this Spe-
cial Civil Application the vires of the Explanation added by
the Central Government by its
9
notification dated May 8, 1956 in exercise of the powers
under Section 12 of the Finance Act of 1950 as well as the
assessments made on the assessee for the assessment years
1957-58 to 1959-60 were challenged. The Division Bench of
the Gujarat High Court in its impugned judgment pointed out
that the decision of this Court in The Commissioner of
Income-tax, Hyderabad v. Dewan Bahadur Ramgopal Mills Ltd.,
had upheld the validity of the said Explanation. The Gujarat
High Court noted that the decision of this Court in Straw
Products Ltd. v. Income-tax Officer, arose from the merged
State of Bhopal. Some of the arguments which did not find
favour with this Court in the case of The Commissioner of
Income-tax, Hyderabad v. Dewan Bahadur Ramgopal Mills Ltd.,
were accepted by a Bench of seven learned Judges of this
Court in the case of Straw Products. The Gujarat High Court
pointed out that in its decision in the case of Straw
Products, this Court had considered the decision in the case
of Dewan Bahadur Ramgopal Mills Ltd., and explained that
decision by stating that the Supreme Court was satisfied
that on the facts of that case a difficulty had arisen and
it was for removing that difficulty that the Order of 1956
was issued. The Division Bench of the Gujarat High Court
considered the decision of this Court in Dewan Bahadur
Raingopal Mills Ltd., as binding and following the same
dismissed the Special Civil Application filed by the asses-
see.
Mr. Salve made two submissions before us. The first
submission made by him was the same as made on behalf of the
assessee before the High Court, namely, that there was no
difficulty which had arisen in giving effect to the provi-
sions of the Indian Income-tax Act in the State of Saurash-
tra and hence the pre-condition on which the Central Govern-
ment was authorised to make an order under the Removal of
Difficulties Order and add the Explanation had never come
into existence and hence adding of the Explanation was
without any authority of law and invalid and no legal ef-
fect. The next submission urged by Mr. Salve was that it is
the fundamental scheme of the Indian Incometax Act that,
generally speaking, almost the entire cost of a capital
asset used for purposes of business or profession should be
allowed to be written off by way of depreciation. This could
be done in more than one ways. It could be done by allowing
a fixed percentage of the actual cost to be deducted as
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depreciation allowance every year till the entire cost is
written off. This is known as the Straight Line Method. The
other is the method of calculating the depreciation on the
basis of written down value. Written down value would be
determined by deducting a fixed percentage of the original
cost of the asset in assessment year relevant to the previ-
ous year in which the asset was
10
acquired and thereafter giving the same percentage of the
written down value determined on the footing of the original
cost less the depreciation already allowed. Taking into
account the definition of the term "written down value"
contained in Section 10 of sub-section (5) of Indian
Income-tax Act, 1922, the basic scheme under the said Act
appears to be that in determining the written down value for
depreciation allowance, the taxing authority can deduct only
such amounts as have been allowed earlier by way :of deduc-
tion. It was submitted by him that this position was accept-
ed in the decision of this Court in Straw Products Ltd. v.
Income-tax Officer. In the present case, if the impugned
Explanation was applied, the result would be that the writ-
ten down value of the capital asset of the assessee acquired
prior to 1949 would be determined by making deductions for
depreciation allowance which was not actually allowed to the
assessee between the assessment years 1945-46 to 1948-49.
This result would follow from the manner in which the writ-
ten down value was calculated under the Saurashtra Income-
tax Ordinance of 1949. It was urged by him that in exercise
of its delegated powers it was not open to the Central
Government to enact such an Explanation. In order to examine
this contention it would be useful to bear in mind some of
the provisions of the Indian Income-tax Act. In that Act the
charge of Income-tax is in respect of "total income" of the
previous year. The expression "total income", very briefly
stated, is defined in sub-section (15) of Section 2 as
meaning the total amount of income, profits and gains com-
puted in the manner laid down in the Act. Chapter 3 of the
Act deals with the various Heads of Income chargeable to
Income-tax and Section 10 deals with the Head of Income in
respect of profits or gains of business, profession or
vocation carried on by the assessee. Sub-section (2) of
Section 10 deals with the allowances which have to be made
in the computation of the profits and gains from business,
profession or vocation and Clause (vi) of the said sub-
section provides for depreciation. The relevant portion of
Clause (vi) ran as follows:
"In respect of depreciation of such buildings,
machinery, plant or furniture being the
property of the assessee, a sum equivalent
where the assets are ships other than ships
ordinarily plying on inland waters to such
percentage on the original cost thereof to the
assessee as may in any case or class of cases
be prescribed and in any other case, to such
percentage on the written down value thereof
as may in any case or class or cases be pre-
scribed."
The expression "written down value" as used in
sub-section (2)
11
of Section 10 of the Act has been defined in
sub-section (5) of Section 10. The relevant
part of Clause (b) of the said sub-section
runs as follows:
"In the case of assets acquired before the
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previous year the actual cost to the assessee
less all depreciation actually allowed to him
under this Act, or any Act repealed thereby,
or under executive orders issued when the
Indian Income-tax Act, 1886 (II of 1886), was
in force.
X X X
X
Provided that in the case of a
building previously the property of the asses-
see and brought into use for the purposes of
the business, profession or vocation after the
28th day of February, 1946, ’written down
value’ means the actual cost to the assessee
reduced by an amount equal to the depreciation
calculated at the rate in force on that date
that would have been allowable had the build-
ing been used for the aforesaid purposes since
the date of its acquisition by the assessee
and had the provisions of this Act relating to
the allowance for depreciation been in force
on and from the date of acquisition."
In The Commissioner of Income-tax, Hyderabad v. Dewan
Bahadur Ramgopal Mill Ltd., the very Explanation added by
the notification dated 8.5.1956, which is challenged before
us, came up for consideration before a Constitution Bench of
this Court.
The facts in that case were that prior to January 26,
1950, when the erstwhile State of Hyderabad merged in the
Union of India and became a Part B State, the respondent
company was assessed to Income-tax under the Hyderabad
Income-tax Act, under which depreciation allowance was given
to it on the basis of the written down value of its assets,
such as buildings, machinery plants, etc., in accordance
with clause (c) of section 12(5) of that Act, which 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 calculat-
ed on the actual costs for the first year since acquisition
and for the next year on the actual cost diminished by the
depreciation allowance for one year and so on, for each year
upto the commencement of that Act and (ii) depreciation
actually allowed to the assessee
12
on such assets for each financial year after the commence-
ment of the Act. After the merger of Hyderabad with the
Union of India, by sections 3 and 13 of the Finance Act,
1950, the taxation laws in force in that State were repealed
and the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, was extended to that
area; and, in exercise of the powers conferred by section 12
of the Finance Act, 1950, the Central Government issued a
notification dated December 2, 1950, called the Taxation
Laws (Part B States) (Removal of Difficulties) Order, 1950.
Paragraph 2 of the Order provided that "in making any as-
sessment under the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, all depreci-
ation actually allowed under any laws or rules of a Part B
State ........ shall be taken into account in computing
the aggregate depreciation allowance referred to in proviso
(c) to section 10(2)(vi) and the written down value under
section 10(5)(b) of the said Act".
For the assessment year 195 1-52 the respondent was
assessed for the first time under the Indian Income-tax Act,
and basing its claim on paragraph 2 of the aforesaid Order
it asked for depreciation allowance in respect of its assets
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by working out the value thereof 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. By an order dated November 30, 195
1, the Incometax Officer disallowed the respondent’s claim
on the ground that it was against the principle inherent in
granting depreciation allowance which must decrease from
year to year. The matter was taken up to this Court and
while it was pending there, on May 8, 1956, the Central
Government issued a notification in exercise of its powers
conferred on it by section 12 of the Finance Act, 1950,
whereby an Explanation was added to the aforesaid paragraph
2 as follows:
"For the purpose of this paragraph, the ex-
pression ’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."
The respondent challenged the validity of the notification
of 1956 and also its applicability to the present case on
grounds (1) that it was ultra vires the powers conferred on
the Central Government by section 12 of the Finance Act,
1950, (2) that it contravened Article 14 of the Constitu-
tion, and (3) that, in any case, it could have no retrospec-
tive effect.
13
It was held by this Court that the true scope and effect of
Section 12 of the Finance Act, 1950 was that it was for the
Central Government to determine if any difficulty of the
nature indicated in the section arises and then to make such
order or give such direction, as appeared to it to be neces-
sary to remove the difficulty, the legislature having left
the matter to the executive.
In the present case, a difficulty had arisen because if
depreciation actually allowed under the Hyderabad Income-tax
Act was taken into account in computing the aggregate depre-
ciation 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. Conse-
quently, the Central Government was within its power under
section 12 in making the notification dated May 8, 1956.
It was also held that the notification of 1956 applied
to all those to whom paragraph 2 of the Taxation Laws (Part
B States) (Removal of Difficulties) Order, 1950, was ap-
plicable and created no unequal treatment of persons in the
like situation. Accordingly, the notification did not con-
travene Article 14 of the Constitution. In the course of the
leading judgment, S.K. Das, J., set out the chain of events
which led to the notification dated May 8, 1956 under sec-
tion 12 of the Finance Act, 1950 being issued which we have
already set out earlier and went on to state as follows:
"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. The Hyderabad Income-tax
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Act not having been repealed by the Incometax
Act but by the Finance Act, 1950, there was a
difficulty in allowing depreciation to an
assessee in a Part B State in the first year
of assessment under the Indian Income-tax Act.
This difficulty was sought to be removed by
paragraph 2 of the Removal of Difficulties
Order, 1950. 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
14
case, namely, depreciation allowance to be
allowed to the assessee in the accounting year
under the Indian Incometax 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 Remov-
al of Difficulties Order, 1950, to assimilate
or harmonise the position regarding deprecia-
tion allowance, and the Explanation added in
1953 or 1956 was obviously intended to remove
the difficulty arising out of that disparity
or disharmony."
It is not disputed that, if this decision is to fol-
lowed, both the contentions urged by the learned Counsel,
Mr. Salve before us must be negatived. The decision clearly
lays down that a difficulty had come into existence and the
Central Government had, in exercise of the power delegated
to it, issued the said notification in 1956 adding the said
Explanation to resolve the difficulty. The Court took the
view that, under the scheme of the Indian Income-tax Act, in
respect of assets acquired before the relevant previous
year, depreciation is to be allowed on the basis of the
original cost less depreciation in respect of earlier years.
viz., the years intervening between the relevant previous
year and the year of acquisition. Where any tax on income
was levied during any of these intervening years, the actual
cost would have to be reduced by the depreciation actually
allowed but in respect of such intervening years when there
was no tax levied on income, depreciation on a notional
basis would have to be deducted from the actual cost of the
asset. In deducting an amount on account of such notional
depreciation there seems to be nothing against the basic
scheme of the Income-tax Act. These are the conclusions
which flow from the said decision of Court in the case of
Dewan Bahadur Ramgopal Mills Ltd.. The said decision has
been rendered by a Bench comprising five learned Judges of
this Court and must normally be regarded as binding. upon
us. The question, however, is whether the said decision
needs to be reconsidered in view of two later decisions of
this Court which we shall presently discuss. The first of
the said two decisions cited by Mr. Salve is that in the
case of Madeva Upendra Sinai v. Union of India & Ors.,
[1975] 98 I.T.R. 209. The said decision has been rendered by
majority comprising four learned Judges out of five compris-
ing the Bench which decided the case. In that case, the
challenge was to the validity of the second Proviso to
Clause (2) of the Taxation Laws (Extension to Union Territo-
ries) (Removal of Difficulties) Order No. 2 of 1970 which
was deemed to have come into force on 1st April,
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15
1963. In brief, this clause provided that in making any
assessment under the Indian Income-tax Act, 1961 all depre-
ciation actually allowed under the local laws shall be taken
into account in computing the written down value. The second
Proviso to that Clause was as follows:
"Provided further that where in respect of any
period, no depreciation was actually allowed
under the local law or the depreciation actu-
ally allowed cannot be ascertained, deprecia-
tion in respect of that period shall be calcu-
lated at the rate for the time being in force
under the Income-tax Act, 1961 or under the
Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 ........ and the
depreciation so calculated shall be deemed to
be the depreciation actually allowed under the
local law".
The majority judgment took the view that the existence
or arising of a difficulty was the sine qua non for the
exercise of the power under Clause (7) of the Taxation Laws
(Extension to Union Territories) Regulation, 1963. The
"difficulty" contemplated by that clause had to be a diffi-
culty arising "in giving effect to" the provisions of the
Act, etc., and not a difficulty arising aliunde or an extra-
neous difficulty. Further, the Central Government could
exercise the power under the clause only to the extent it
was necessary for applying or giving effect to the Act,
etc., and no further. The second Proviso to Clause (2) of
the said Order of 1970 sought to raise the taxable income of
the assessee inconsistently with the scheme of the Income-
tax Act, and was ultra vires the Central Government under
Clause 7 of the 1963 Regulation and the Revenue was not
entitled to lay tax on the basis of the depreciation allow-
ance computed in accordance with that proviso. It was fur-
ther held that the said second proviso to Clause (2) of the
1970 order would, in the implementation of the Act, create
difficulties rather than remove them. It was further held
that the key word in Clause (b) of Section 43(6) of the
Income-tax Act, 1961 is "actually". 11 is the antithesis of
that which is merely speculative, theoretical or imaginary.
"Actually" contra-indicates a deeming construction of the
word "allowed" which it qualifies. It cannot be stretched to
mean "notionally allowed" or merely allowable on a notional
basis. In Straw Products Ltd. a challenge was made to the
validity of sub-clause (b) of paragraph 2 of the Taxation
Laws (Merged States) (Removal of Difficulties) Order, 1949
inserted therein by the Taxation Laws (Merged States)
(Removal of Difficulties) Amendment Order, 1962.1t was held
that the said sub-clause of the said Explanation was ultra
vires
16
the Central Government under Section 6 of the Taxation Laws
(Extension to Merged States and Amendment) Act, 1949 under
which it was purported to be made, since no "difficulty" was
proved to have arisen justifying the invocation of the power
under Section 6; and the revenue authorities were not enti-
tled to levy tax on the basis of depreciation allowance
computed in accordance with sub-clause (b) of the said
Explanation to paragraph 2 of the Order. It was held that
the expression "depreciation actually allowed" connotes
under Section 10(2)(vi) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922
under Clause (2) of the Taxation Laws (Merged States)
(Removal of Difficulties) Order, 1949 and the notification
under Section 60A of the Income-tax Act, depreciation taken
into account in assessing the income of an assessee arising
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from carrying on business, and does not mean depreciation
merely allowable or applicable under the taxing provision
(68 I.T.R. 227 at p. 236). The Court took the view that the
exercise of the power under Section 6 of the Taxation Laws
(Extension to Merged States and Amendment) Act, 1949 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 extended by Section 3 to the Merged
States. The Section does not make the arising of a difficul-
ty 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 estab-
lished as an objective fact. It may be mentioned that the
decision in the case of The Commissioner of Income-tax,
Hyderabad v. Dewan Bahadur Ramgopal Mills Ltd., was noticed
and discussed in this judgment but it was pointed out that
in that case the difficulty had arisen because, as pointed
out by the Court in that case but for the Explanation a
difficulty would have arisen insofar as the depreciation
allowance allowed to assessee under the Indian Income-tax
Act would have been more than the depreciation allowance
under the Hyderabad Income-tax Act.
After giving our anxious consideration to the matter, we
find ourselves unable to accept the submissions of Mr.
Salve, learned Counsel for the assessee. As pointed out by
us earlier, it was frankly conceded by the learned Counsel
that unless we took the view that the decision of this Court
in The Commissioner of Income Tax, Hyderabad v. Dewan Baha-
dur Ramgopal Mills Lid, was not good law or, at least, that
it needed reconsideration by a larger Bench, we must follow
that decision and the appeal of the assessee must be dis-
missed. It is the undisputed position that the very provi-
sion which is challenged before us was earlier challenged
before a Constitution Bench of this Court in
17
the aforementioned case and that challenge was negatived.
The mainplank of learned Counsel’s argument is that in the
case of Straw Products Ltd. v. Income-tax Officer, a view
has been taken which is inconsistent with the view taken in
The Commissioner of Income-tax, Hyderabad v. Dewan Bahadur
Ramgopal Mills Ltd. Now, in fact, we find that a Bench
comprising seven learned Judges of this Court in this case
of Straw Products Ltd. has considered the decision of this
Court in Dewan Bahadur Ramgopal Mills Ltd. and has observed
that the case could be distinguished because in that case
there was a difficulty which had, in fact, arisen and hence,
it was necessary to issue the Removal of Difficulties Order,
1956. The observations of this Court in that case (at page
237 to 238 of the aforesaid Report) only show that this
Court disapproved the interpretation given to the decision
in the case of Dewan Bahadur Ramgopal Mills Ltd. by the
Madhya Pradesh High Court, namely, that it was a matter for
subjective satisfaction of the Government to decide whether
a difficulty has arisen and it was not open to the Court to
investigate that question. It was pointed out that in Dewan
Bahadur Ramgopal Mills Ltd. this Court was satisfied that,
in fact a difficulty had arisen and that difficulty had to
be removed and for removing the difficulty, the Order of
1956 was issued. On a fair reading of the decision in the
case of Straw Products along with the decision in the case
of Dewan Bahadur Ramgopal Mills Ltd., it appears to us that
the view taken in Straw Products Ltd., is that although it
is for the Government to subjectively satisfy itself that a
difficulty has arisen of the kind set out in those decisions
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before an order can be issued under the power to issue
orders for removal of difficulties but that satisfaction is
not conclusive as suggested by the High Court of Madhya
Pradesh and it is the duty of the Court concerned to examine
for itself whether there was a reasonable basis for the
Government to have come to such a conclusion. Anyway, al-
though it is not for the Court to determine for itself in
the first instance whether such a difficulty, as contemplat-
ed, had arisen, it is open to the Court to see whether the
Government had a sound basis to come to the conclusion that
such a difficulty had arisen. The decision in the case of
Straw Products, therefore, in no way casts doubt the deci-
sion of this Court in Dewan Bahadur Ramgopal Mills Ltd. The
other case relied upon by Mr. Salve. namely, Madeva Sinai v,
Union Of India has cast no doubt whatever on the decision of
this Court in Dewan Bahadur Ramgopal Mills Ltd. but the
Court there took the view that the existence of a difficulty
was sine qua non for the exercise of the power in Clause 7
of the Taxation Laws (Extension to Union Territories)
(Removal of Difficulties) Regulation, 1963.
18
It is not disputed that the decision of the Constitution
Bench of this Court in the case of Dewan Bahadur Ramgopal
Mills Ltd. is binding on us. In the light of what we have
discussed earlier, we do not feel that it is necessary to
direct this matter to be placed before a larger Bench so
that the decision in Dewan Bahadur Ramgopal Mills Ltd.,
could be reconsidered. In fact, in the case of Straw
Products a larger Bench of this Court did consider that
decision and came to the conclusion that on the facts of
that case the decision was correct. In view of this, we fail
to see how any useful purpose would be served by referring
this appeal to a larger Bench. Moreover, problems of the
type which have arisen in these cases are not likely to
recur hereafter except very rarely. In view of this, we
would prefer to follow the decision in The Commissioner of
Income-tax Hyderabad v. Dewan Bahadur Ramgopal Mills Ltd.
and the appeal of the assessee must stand dismissed.
Even apart from what we have stated in the foregoing
paragraph, we may point out that in the present case, the
Saurashtra Income-tax Ordinance was repealed by Section 13
of the Finance Act, 1950 and not by any provision of the
Indian Income-tax Act. As observed in the case of The Com-
missioner of Income Tax, Hyderabad v. Dewan Bahadur Ramgopal
Mills Ltd. (at page 326) 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 Indian Income-tax Act or any Act repealed
thereby, etc. In that case, an anomalous situation arose
because the Hyderabad Income-tax Act was not repealed by the
Indian Income-tax Act but by the Finance Act, 1950 and
hence, a difficulty arose in allowing depreciation to an
assessee in Part B State. In the present case also, the
Saurashtra Income-tax Ordinance having been repealed not by
the Indian Income-tax Act but by Section 13 of the Finance
Act, 1950, a similar difficulty had come into existence, and
hence we fail to see how it can be said that the Government
had no good basis to come to the conclusion that a difficul-
ty had. in fact, arisen as contemplated in the case of Dewan
Bahadur Ramgopal Mills Ltd.
In the result, the appeal fails and is dismissed. Howev-
er, considering the facts and circumstances of the case,
there will be no order as to costs.
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Y.L. Appeal dis-
missed.
19