Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
S. S. GADGIL, INCOME-TAX OFFICER, BOMBAY
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
LAL AND COMPANY
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
30/04/1964
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
SUBBARAO, K.
SIKRI, S.M.
CITATION:
1965 AIR 171 1964 SCR (8) 72
CITATOR INFO :
R 1969 SC 778 (5)
ACT:
income Tax-Assessment as agent of non-resident party-Time
limit for issuing notice-Scope of amending statute extending
time
73
limit-Validity of notice-Indian Income-tax Act 1922 (11 of
1922). s. 34(1)(b)(iii) proviso.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant company was carrying on business in Bombay as
commission agents. In the course of assessment proceedings
for the year 1954-55, the Income-tax Officer noticed from
the ssee’s boo s of account that the assessee had business
connections with certain nonresident parties and found that
the transactions disclosed that through the assessee those
non-resident parties were receiving income, profits and
gains. He considered that s. 43 of the Indian Income-tax
Act, 1922, was applicable to the assessee and issued on
March 27, 1957, a notice under s. 34 of the Act for
assessment of the assessee as an agent of the said non-
resident parties. The assessee pleaded, inter alia, that
the proceedings intiated by the Income-tax Officer under s.
34 were barred since the notice issued by him was after the
expiry of one year from the end of the assessment year 1954-
55, but the Income-tax Officer rejected the contention
relying on the amendment made to the proviso to s.
34(l)(b)(iii) by the Finance Act, 1956, under which the
period of one year was changed to two years. The amendment
was given retrospective operation upto April 1, 1956, but
since the power to issue a notice under the unamended Act
had come to an end on March 31, 1956, the question was
whether the Income-tax Officer could issue a notice of
assessment to a person as an agent of a non-resident party
under the amended provision when the period prescribed for
such a notice had before the amended Act came into force
expired.
HELD:The proceedings initiated by the Income-tax
Officer by the notice dated March 27, 1957, were barred; the
authority of the Incometax Officer under the Indian Income-
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tax Act before it was amended by the Finance Act of 1956
having come to an end, the amending provision would not
entitle him to commence a proceeding even though at the date
when he issued the notice it was within the period provided
by the amendment.
Notwithstanding the fact that there was no determinable
point of time between the expiry of the time provided under
the old Act and the commencement of the Amendment Act, in
the absence of an express provision or clear implication,
the legislature could not be said to have intended to
attribute to the Amending provision a greater retros-
pectivity than was expressly mentioned.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 322 of 1963.
Appeal from the Judgment and order dated April 1, 1958 of
the former Bombay High Court in Miscellaneous Application
No. 327 of 1957.
K.N. Rajagopala Sastry and R. N. Sachthey, for the
appellant.
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Bishan Narain, S. P. Mehta, J. B. Dadachanji, 0. C. Mathar
and Ravinder Narain, for the respondent.
April 30, 1964. The Judgment of the Court was, delivered by
SHAH J.--M/s Lal and Company hereinafter called the assessee
carry on business in Bombay as commission agents. In the
course of assessment proceedings for the year 1954-55 the
assessee’s books of account were examined by the Income-tax
Officer and it was noticed that the assessee had business
connections with certain non-resident parties. On March,
12, 1957, the Income-tax Officer issued a notice calling
upon the assessee to show cause why in respect of the
assessment year 1954-55 the assessee should not be treated
under s. 43 of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, as an agent
in respect of twenty-five non-resident parties named in the
notice. The assessee denied that he had "direct dealings"
with any non-resident party and that in any event the
proposed action was barred because the period prescribed for
initiation of proceeding had expired, and requested the
Income-tax Officer to drop the proceeding. The Income-tax
Officer B-III Ward, Bombay issued on March 27, 1957, a
notice under s. 34 of the Indian Income-tax Act for
assessment of the assessee as an agent of the twentyfive
named non-resident parties. The assessee submitted a return
showing his income as "nil". The Income-tax Officer held
that the transactions disclosed from the books of account of
the assessee clearly showed that the assessee "had regular
business connection with" non-resident parties, that through
the assessee those non-resident parties were receiving
income, profits and gains, and s. 43 was clearly applicable
to the assessee there being definite business connection
between the assessee and the named non-residents. He
therefore treated the assessee as agent of the non-resident
parties, under s. 43 of the Act.
The Income-tax Officer also rejected the contention of the
assessee that action under s. 34 was barred at the date of
the notice issued to the assessee. Relying upon the first
proviso to s. 34(1) (b) (iii) inserted by the Finance Act,
1956, the Income-tax Officer held that the Legislature had
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by amendment extended the "time-limit in clear and express
terms so as to cover" action under s. 34 against a person on
whom the assessment or reassessment is to be made as an
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agent of a non-resident person under s. 43 of the Act for
the assessment year 1954-55, and accordingly assessed the
income of the assessee at Rs. 60,684, estimating the income
of the parties residing outside the taxable territories, in
the absence of accounts to be Rs. 50,000.
The asessee then :filed a petition under Art. 226 of the
Constitution in the High Court of Judicature at Bombay
praying that a writ in the nature of mandamus or prohibition
do issue restraining and prohibiting the Income-tax Officer
from giving effect to or taking any steps or proceedings by
way of recovery or otherwise in pursuance of the orders of
assessment. The assessee pleaded, inter alia, that the
proceedings for assessment under s. 34 of the Act commenced
by the Income-tax Officer after the expiry of one year from
the end of the assessment year 1954-55 were without the
authority of law. The High Court of Bombay, following its
earlier judgment in S. C. Prashar v. Vasantsen Dwarkadas(1)
held that at the date when the notice was issued, by reason
of the proviso which was in operation under s. 34(1) in
respect of the assessment year 1954-55 the notice was out of
time and that the period provided thereby could not be
extended by the Finance Act of 1956 so as to authorise the
Income-tax Officer to issue a notice for assessment or
reassessment of the assessee as statutory agent of a party,
residing outside the taxable territory. In the view of the
High Court the notice dated March 27, 1957, was invalid, and
a valid notice being a condition precedent to the exercise
of jurisdiction under s. 34, the proceeding under s. 34 was
not maintainable. Against the order of the High Court
issuing writs prayed for by the assessee, with certificate
of fitness this appeal is preferred by the Income-tax
Officer, Bombay.
In order to appreciate the contention raised by the assessee
and which has found favour with the High Court, it is
necessary to refer to the relevant provisions of s. 34,
76
as they stood before the section was amended by the Finance
Act, 1956. The clauses relevant prescribing the period
within which notice may be issued read as follows:
(1) (a) If - x x x
(b) x x x
he may in cases falling under clause (a) at any time within
eight years and in cases falling under clause (b) at any
time within four years of the end of that year, serve on the
assessee, x x x a notice containing all or any of the
requirements which may be included in a notice under sub-
section (2) of section 22 and may proceed to assess or re-
assess such income, profits or gains or recompute the loss
or depreciation
allowance; x x x
Provided that-
(i) x x x
(ii) x x x
(iii) Where the assessment made or to be made is an
assessment made or to be made on a person deemed to be the
agent of non-resident person under section 43, this sub-
section shall have effect as if for the periods of eight
years and four years a period of one year was substituted."
By s. 18 of the Finance Act, 1956, s. 34 was extensively
amended and cl. (iii) of the proviso was substituted by the
following proviso:
"Provided further that the Income-tax Officer shall not
issue a notice under this sub-section for ,any year after
the expiry of two years from that year if the person on whom
an assessment or reassessment is to be made in pursuance of
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the notice is a person deemed to be an agent of non-resident
person under section 43."
Initially a notice of assessment or re-assessment under
s. 34(1) against a person deemed to be an agent of a non-
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resident person under s. 43 could not be issued after the
expiry of one year from the end of the year of assessment:
under the amended section this period was extended to two
years from the end of the relevant assessment year. In the
course of assessment to income-tax for the year 1954-55 the
relevant law applicable prescribed that a notice of
assessment or re-assessment against a person deemed to be an
agent under s. 43 could not be issued after the expiry of
one year from the end of the assessment year. That period
expired on March 31, 1956, and after that date no notice
could be issued, relying upon the law as it stood before
amendment for assessment or re-assessment treating the
assessee as an agent of a non-resident under s. 43. But the
Income-tax Officer sought recourse to the amended provision
which gave him a period of two years from the end of the
assessment year, for initiating assessment proceedings, and
the authority of the Income-tax Officer to so act is
challenged by the assessee.
Section 18 of the Finance Act, 1956, is, it is common
ground, not given retrospective operation before April 1,
1956. The question then is, whether the Income-tax Officer
may issue a notice of assessment to a person as an agent of
a non-resident party under the amended provision when the
period prescribed for such a notice had before the amended
Act came into force expired? Indisputably the period for
serving a notice of re-assessment
under the unamended section had expired, and there was in
the Act as it then stood, no provision for extending the
period beyond the end of one year from the year of assess-
ment. The Income-tax Officer could therefore commence a
proceeding under s. 34 on March 27, 1957, only if the
amended section applied and not otherwise. The amendin- Act
came into force after the period provided for the issue of a
notice under s. 34 before it was amended had expired. It is
true that there was no determinable point of time between
the expiry of the prescribed time within which the notice
could have been issued against the assessee under s. 34
proviso (iii) before it was amended. But there was no
overlapping period either. Prima facie, on the expiry of
the period prescribed by s. 34 as it originally stood, there
was no scope for issuing a notice unless the
78
Legislature expressly gave power to the income-tax Officer
to issue notice under the amended section notwithstanding
the expiry of the period under the unamended provision or
unless there was overlapping of the period within which
notice could be issued under the old and the amended pro-
vision. But counsel for the Commissioner submitted that at
no time was the Income-tax Officer bereft of authority to
issue a notice under s. 34 of the Indian Income-tax Act,
1922. He submitted that till the mid-night of March 31,
1956, notice could be issued in exercise of the powers con-
ferred by s. 34 proviso (iii) before it was amended and
notice of assessment or re-assessment could also be issued
under the amended provision immediately thereafter in
exercise of the powers conferred by s. 18 of the Finance
Act, 1956. Counsel relied upon the rule contained in
s. 5(3) of the General Clauses Act that unless the
contrary
is expressed, a Central Act or Regulation shall be
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construed
as coming into operation immediately on the expiration of
the day preceding its commencement. It was submitted that
this is merely a statutory recognition of the rule which is
well--settled that where a statute names a date on which it
shall come into operation, it shall be deemed to come into
force immediately on the expiration of the previous day and
the law does not take into consideration fractions of a day.
Reliance was placed by counsel upon Tomlinson v. Bullock(’)
and English v. Cliff(2). In Tomlinson’s case(’) the question
was whether an order of affiliation could be made on an
application made in respect of a child born at any time of
the day an August 10, 1872 under the Bastardy Act, 35 & 36
Vict. c. 65. In an application made for an order of
affiliation, it was held that the order could competently be
made in respect of a child born at any time of the day on
the 10th of August, 1872, because the Act in the
contemplation of law for this purpose came into effect from
the commencement of the day on which it received the royal
assent, and that normally an Act which comes into operation
becomes law as soon as it commences. In English v. Cliff (2)
it was held by the Court of Chancery
(1) (1879) 4 Q.B.D. 230
(2) (1914) 2 Ch. D. 376
79
that the trustees under a deed of settlement dated May 13,
1892, who stood possessed of an estate during the term of
twenty-one years from the date of settlement upon trust to
apply the rents and profits mentioned therein and who were
authorised at the expiration of the said period to sell the
estate could competently sell it and their action was not
liable to be challenged as infringing the rule of per-
petuity. It was held in that case that the determination of
the term of twenty-one years and the conunencement of the
trust for sale arising at one and the same moment, the trust
was not void for remoteness on the ground that it was
limited to take effect at the expiration of the term.
Neither of these cases has, in our judgment, any application
to the principle applicable in the present case. The power
to issue a notice under the unamended Act came to an end on
March 31, 1956. Under that Act no notice could thereafter
be issued. It is true that by the amendment made by s. 18
of the Finance Act, 1956, a notice could be issued within
two years from the end of the year of assessment. But the
application of the amended Act is subject to the principle
that unless otherwise provided if the right to act under the
earlier statute has come to an end, it could not be revived
by the subsequent amendment which extended the period of
limitation. The right to issue a notice under the earlier
Act came to an end before the new Act came into force.
There was undoubtedly no determinable point of time between
the expiry of the earlier Act and the commencement of the
new Act; but that would not, in our judgment, affect the
application of this rule.
Reliance was also placed by counsel for the Commissioner
upon the rule which has prevailed in the Supreme Court of
the United States of America that "a new statute should be
construed as a continuation of the old one with the
modifications contained in the new one, although it formally
repeals the old statute, when it re-enacts its substantial
provisions and the two statutes are almost identical." Bear
Lake & River Water Works & irrigation Company and Jarvis-
Conklin Mortgage Trust Company v. William Garland and Corey
Brothers & Co.(’). It appears
(1) I64 U.S. 1
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80
to have been recognised in the Supreme Court of the United
states of America in Pacific Mail S. S. Co. v. jolifee(1)
that repeal in terms of a former statute does not
necessarily indicate an intention of the legislature thereby
to impair right which had arisen under the act which was
repealed. As the provisions of the new act took effect
simultaneously with the repeal of the old one, the Supreme
Court held that the new one might more properly be said to
be substituted in the place of the old one, and to continue
in force, with modifications, the provisions of the old act,
instead of abrogating or annulling them and re-enacting the
same as a new and original act. Apart from the question
whether the rule so enunciated is applicable to the
interpretation of Indian statutes, in this case we are not
concerned with re-enactment of a statute. The statute
abrogates one rule of limitation, and enacts another rule
with a limited retrospective operation. To such a case the
rule enunciated by the Supreme Court of America, assuming it
applies, attributing to the Legislature an intention to
continue in force the provisions of the old Act, with a
modification, so as to give to the new statute in substance
operation retrospectively from the date on which the old
statute was enacted, can have no application. We do not
think that any such intention may be attributed to the
Legislature in enacting s. 18 of the Finance Act, 1956 so as
to make it the basis of a liability to taxation after the
expiry of the period prescribed in that behalf by the
Legislature-.
Counsel also submitted that s. 34 lays down a rule of
limitation for commencing an action for assessment or re-
assessment, and that in the absence of an express provision
to the contrary, a statute of limitation in operation at a
given time governs all proceedings from the moment of its
enactment, even though the cause of action on which the
proceeding was based came into existence before the Act was
enacted. Equating a proceeding under s. 34 of the Indian
Income-tax Act with a suit or a proceeding in a civil court,
counsel said that the law of limitation being a law of
procedure, assessment proceedings including proceedings for
re-assessment are governed by the law in force
(1) 69 U.S. (2 Wall) 459
81
at the date on which they are instituted, and that the rule
that the repeal of a statute without express words or
clear
implication in the repealing statute, cannot take away a
right vested in a party acquired under the repealed
statute
when it was in force, is a rule of prescription and not of
procedure, and notwithstanding general observations to the
contrary in certain decisions, applies only to those actions
in which by the determination of the period prescribed, a
right to institute an action for possession of property is
extnguished. Counsel relies in support of the plea on
Baleswar v. Latafat(1). It is unnecessary to dilate upon
this argument in any detail, or to enter upon an analysis of
the numerous cases which were mentioned at the Bar to
determine whether the rule that without an express pro-
vision, or a clear implication arising from the amending
statute rights acquired under the repealed statute by the
determination of the period of limitation prescribed thereby
cannot be deemed to be revived, applies to suits for posses-
sion only. It may be sufficient to make two comments on the
argument. The rule has in fact been applied to suits other
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than suits for possession: e.g. Mahomed Mehdi Faya v.
Sakinabai(2) (a suit for restitution of conjugal rights); M.
Krishnaswami Nalcker v. A. Thiruvengada Muddaliar(3) (a suit
for recovery of a debt); Shambhoonath Saha v. Guruchurn
Lahiri (4) (an application for execution); and Nepal Chandra
Roy Chowdhury v. Niroda Sundari Ghose(5) (an application for
setting aside an ex parte decree). Again soon after it was
delivered the the authority of Baleswar’s case(’) was
weakened by the judgment in Jagdish v. Saligram(6) where the
Court doubted the correctness of the earlier view.
A proceeding for assessment is not a suit for adjudication
of a civil dispute. That an income-tax proceedings it; the
nature of a judicial proceeding between contesting parties,
is a matter which is not capable of even a plausible
argument. The Income-tax authorities who have power to
assess and recover tax are notacting as judges deciding a
(1) I.L.R. 24 Pat. 249 (2) I.L.R. 37 Bom. 383
(3) A.I.R. (1935) mad. 245(4) I.L.R. 5 Cal. 894
(5) I.L.R. 39 Cal. 506 (6) I.L.R. 24 Pat. 391
51 S.C.-6.
82
litigation between the citizen and the States: they are
administrative authorities whose proceedings are regulated
by statute, but whose function is to estimate the income of
the taxpayer and to assess him to tax on the basis of that
estimate. Tax legislation necessitates the setting up
of
machinery to ascertain the taxable income, and to assess
tax on the income, but that does not impress the
proceeding
with the character of an action between the citizen and the
State: The Commissioner of Inland Revenue v. Sneath(1); and
Shell Company of Australia Ltd. v. Federal Commissioner of
Taxation(’).
Again the period prescribed by s. 34 for assessment or re-
assessment is not a period of limitation. The section in
terms imposes a fetter upon the power of the Income-tax
Officer to bring to tax escaped income. It prescribes
different periods in different classes of cases for enforce-
ment of the right of the State to recover tax. It was
observed by this Court in Ahmedabad Manufacturing and Calico
Printing Co. Ltd. v. S. C. Mehta. income-tax Officer and
another(’):
"It must be remembered that if the Income-tax Act prescribes
a period during which tax due in any particular assessment
year may be assessed, then on the expiry of that period the
department cannot make an assessment. Where no period is
prescribed the assessment can be completed at any time but
once completed it is final. Once a final assessment has
been made, it can only be reopened to rectify a mistake
apparent from the record (s. 35) or to reassess where there
has been an escapement of assessment of income for one
reason of another (s. 34). Both these sections which enable
reopening of back assessments provided their own periods of
time for action but all these periods of time, whether for
the firs assessment or for rectification, or for reassess
ment, merely create a bar when that time passe(
(1) 17 T.C. 149) 164
(2) [1931) A.C. 275
(3) [1963] SUPP. 2 S.C.R. 92,117-118
83
against the machinery set up by the Incometax Act for the
assessment and levy of the tax. They do not create an
exemption in favour of the assessee or grant an absolution
on the expiry of the period. The liability is not
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enforceable but the tax may again become exigible if the bar
is removed and the taxpayer is brought within the
jurisdiction of the said machinery by reason of a new power.
This is, of course, subject to the condition that the law
must say that such is the jurisdiction, either expressly or
by clear implication. If the language of the law has that
clear meaning, it must be given that effect and where the
language expressly so declares or clearly implies it, the
retrospective operation is not controlled by the.
commencement clause."
Counsel for the Commissioner sought to derive some support
from Income-tax Officer, Companies District I, Calcutta and
another v. Calcutta Discount Company Ltd.(’) in which
Chakravartti C.J., dealing with the effect of the Income-tax
and Business Profits Tax (Amendment) Act, 1948, observed:
"The plain effect of the substitution of the new s. 34 with
effect from 30th March, 1948 is that from that date the
Income-tax Act is to be re-ad as including the new section
as a part thereof and if it is to be so read, the further
effect of the express language of the section is that so far
as cases coming within cl. (a) of sub-s. (1) are concerned
all assessment years ending within eight years from 30th
March, 1948 and from subsequent dates, are within its
purview and it will apply to them, provided the notice con-
templated is given within such eight years. What is not
within the purview of the section is an assessment year
which ended before eight years from 30th March, 1948.
(1) 23 I.T.R. 471
84
But it may be recalled that the amending Act of 1948 with
which the Court was concerned in Calcutta Discount Company’s
case(1) came into force on September 8, 1948, but s. 1(2)
prescribed that the amendment in s. 34 of the Income-tax
Act, 1922, shall be deemed to have come into force on March
30, 1948, and the period under the unamended section within
which notice could be issued under s. 34(3) against the
assessee company ended on March 31, 1951. Before that date
the amending Act came into operation, and at no time had the
right to re-assess become barred.
In considering whether the amended statute applies, the
question is one of interpretation i.e., to ascertain whether
it was the intention of the Legislature to deprive a
taxpayer of the plea that action for assessment or re-
assessment could not be commenced, on the ground that before
the amending Act became effective, it was barred. Therefore
the view that even when the right to assess or re-assess has
lapsed on account of the expiry of the period of limitation
prescribed under the earlier statute, the Income-tax Officer
can exercise his powers to assess or re-assess under the
amending statute which gives an extended period of
limitation, was not accepted in Calcutta Discount Company’s
case(’).
As we have already pointed out, the right to commence a
proceeding for assessment against the assessee as an agent
of a non-resident party under the Income-tax Act before it
was amended, ended on March 31, 1956. It is true that under
the amending Act by s. 18 of the Finance Act, 1956,
authority was conferred upon the Income-tax Officer to
assess a person as an agent of a foreign party under s. 43
within two years from the end of the year of assessment.
But authority of the Income-tax Officer under the Act before
it was amended by the Finance Act of 1956 having already
come to an end, the amending provision will not assist him
to commence a proceeding even though at the date whenhe
issued the notice it is within the period provided by that
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amending Act. This will be so, notwithstanding the fact
that there has been no determinable point of time between
the expiry of the time provided under the old Act and the
(1) 23 I.T.R. 471.
85
commencement of the amending Act. The Legislature has given
to s. 18 of the Finance Act, 1956, only a limited
retrospective operation i.e., upto April 1, 1956, only.
That provision must be read subject to the rule that in the
absence of an express provision or clear implication, the
Legislature does not intend to attribute to the amending
provision a greater retrospectivity than is xpressly
mentioned, nor to authorise the Income-tax Officer to
commence proceedings which before the new Act came into
force had by the expiry of the period provided, become
barred.
The appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.