Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
ALL INDIA REPORTER LTD., NAGPUR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
RAMACHANDRA DHONDO DATAR
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
29/11/1960
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
KAPUR, J.L.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
CITATION:
1961 AIR 943 1961 SCR (2) 773
ACT:
Income-Tax--Decree for compensation for wrongful termination
of service--Arrears of salary, interest and costs, if amount
to salary--Power of employer to deduct income-tax from
salary--Indian Income Tax Act, 1922 (11 of 1922), SS. 18(2),
46(5).
HEADNOTE:
In a civil suit the respondent obtained a decree against his
employer the appellant company for a sum which included com-
pensation for wrongful termination of his service, arrears
of salary, interest and costs of the suit, and then applied
for execution of the decree. The Income-tax Officer served
a notice upon the respondent under s. 46 of the Indian
Income-tax Act and applied to the District Judge that the
appellant be permitted to deduct at source the income-tax,
surcharge and super tax on the sum awarded to the respondent
and pay the same in the Government Treasury. The appellant-
company also moved the executing court for a declaration
that they were entitled and bound to deduct the tax due on
the amount. The District judge directed the appellant
company to pay the income-tax and super-tax to the Income
Tax Department and pay the balance in Court together with a
receipt for the income tax paid. In appeal the High Court
reversed the order of the District judge and directed the
execution of the decree as claimed by the respondent. On
appeal by the appellant company,
Held, that as no tax was assessed against the respondent the
Income Tax Officer could not issue a notice under s. 46(5)
requiring the appellant company to deduct tax from the
decretal amount.
A substantial part of the decretal amount did not represent
salary" of the respondent: it consisted of compensation for
wrongful termination of the respondent’s service, salary in
lieu of six months’ notice, interest and costs of the suit.
It was a judgment-debt-and no provision for payment of
income tax was made in the decree which was liable to be
executed as prayed by the respondent. The appellant company
was not therefore entitled or bound to deduct income tax
under s. 18 sub-s. (2) of the Act.
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 327 of 1959.
Appeal from the order dated June 28, 1956, of the Bombay
High Court at Nagpur in Misc. First Appeal No. 15 of 1954.
98
774
A. V. Viswanatha Sastri, Shankar Anand and A. G.
Batnaparkhi, for the appellant.
K. N. Rajagopal Sastri, as amicus curiae.
1960. November 29. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
SHAH, J.-Ramachandra Dhondo Datar-hereinafter referred to as
the respondent-was employed by the appellant company in its
publications branch. By agreement dated March 23, 1943, the
appellant company agreed to pay to the respondent as from
April 1, 1943, remuneration per annum equal to 3 1/2% of the
gross sales or Rs. 12,000 whichever was greater. The
agreement was to remain in operation for -ten years from
April 1, 1943, in the first instance and was renewable at
the option of the respondent for such period as he desired.
By notice dated April 19, 1948, served on the respondent on
April 22, 1948, the appellant company terminated the
employment of the respondent. The respondent then filed a
civil suit in the court of the Fifth Additional District
Judge, Nagpur, for a decree for Rs. 1,30,000 being the
amount of compensation for wrongful termination of
employment, arrears of salary and interest. On July 17,
1953, the court after giving credit for the amount received
by the respondent passed a decree for Rs. 42,359 (which was
inclusive of Rs. 36,000 as compensation for termination of
employment and Rs. 6,000 as salary in lieu of six months
notice and interest) and costs and interest on judgment.
The respondent then applied for execution of the decree and
claimed Rs. 54,893-12-0 less Rs. 18,501-10-0 decreed against
him in a cross suit filed by the appellant company. The
Income Tax Officer, Nagpur, served a notice under s. 46 of
the Indian Income Tax Act upon the respondent and also gave
intimation to the District Judge, Nagpur, that the appellant
company be permitted to deduct at source and to pay into the
Government Treasury Rs. 15,95613-0 as income-tax, surcharge
and super-tax due on the sum of Rs. 50,972-2-0 awarded to
the respondent. The appellant company also applied that the
775
executing Court do declare that the appellant company was
entitled and in law bound to deduct the tax due on the
amount. The learned Judge directed the appellant company to
pay to the Income Tax Department Rs. 15,956-13-0 on account
of income-tax and super-tax on the amount due to the
respondent and directed it to pay the balance in court after
filing a receipt for payment of tax from the Income Tax
department. In appeal to the High Court of Judicature at
Nagpur, the order passed by the District Judge was reversed
and execution as claimed by the respondent was directed.
The appellant company contends that under s. 18(2) of the
Income Tax Act, it was bound to deduct the tax computed at
the appropriate rate on the salary payable to the respondent
as the amount due under the decree represented salary.
Section 18 sub-s. (2) of the Income Tax Act in so far as it
is material provides that any person paying any amount
chargeable under the head "salaries" shall at the time of
payment deduct income-tax and super-tax at the rate
representing the average of the rates applicable to the
estimated total income of the assessee under the head
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"salary". Sub-s. (7) declares that a person failing to
deduct the taxes required by the section shall be deemed to
be an assessee in default in respect of such tax. The
Legislature has, it is manifest, imposed upon the employer
the duty to deduct tax at the appropriate rate on salary
payable to the employee and if-he fails to do so, the tax
not deducted may be recovered from him. But the liability
to deduct arises in law, if the amount is due and payable as
salary. In this case, there has been no assessment of tax
due by the Income Tax Officer on the amount payable to the
respondent. Under s. 46(5), any person paying salary to an
assessee may be required by the Income Tax Officer to deduct
arrears of tax due from the latter and the employer is bound
to comply with such a requisition and to pay the amount
deducted to the credit of the Government. But this order
can only be passed if income-tax has been assessed and has
remained unpaid. It is undisputed that at the, material
776
time, no tax was assessed against the respondent; -the
Income Tax Officer had accordingly no authority to issue a
notice under s. 46(5). Nor could the Income Tax Officer
claim to recover tax due by a proceeding in the nature of a
garnishee proceeding by applying to the civil court to
attach the Judgment-debt payable by the company. The
application submitted by the Income Tax Officer must
therefore be ignored. Undoubtedly, the employer is by s. 18
of the Act liable to deduct from the salary payable by him
to his employee the amount of tax at the average rate appli-
cable to the estimated total income; but can it be said that
as between the appellant company and the respondent the
decretal amount represented salary? The respondent had
filed a suit for a decree for arrears of salary,
compensation for wrongful termination of employment and
interest. The court having passed a decree on that claim,
it became a judgment-debt. It may have been open to the
appellant company in the suit to apply to the court for
making a provision in the decree for payment of income-tax
due by the respondent, but no such provision was made.
We are not concerned to decide in this appeal whether in the
hands of the respondent the amount due to him under the
decree, when paid, will be liable to tax; that question does
not fall to be determined in this appeal. The question to
be determined is whether as between the appellant company
and the respondent the amount decreed is due as salary
payment of which attracts the statutory liability imposed by
s. 18. The claim decreed by the civil court was for compen-
sation, for wrongful termination of employment, arrears of
salary, salary due for the period of notice and interest and
costs, less withdrawals on salary account. The amount for
which execution was sought to be levied was the amount
decreed against which was set off the claim under the cross-
decree. A substantial -part of the claim decreed
represented compensation fir wrongful termination of
employment and it would be difficult to predicate of the
claim sought to be enforced what part thereof if any
represented salary due. Granting that compensation payable
to an
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employee by an employer for wrongful termination of
employment be regarded as in the nature of salary, when the
claim is merged in the decree of the court,’ the claim
assumes the character of a judgment-debt and to judgment-
debts s. 18 has not been made applicable. The decree passed
by the civil court must be executed subject to the
deductions and adjustments permissible under the Code of
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Civil Procedure. The judgment-debtor may, if he has a
cross-decree for money, claim to set off the amount due
thereunder. If there be any adjustment of the decree, the
decree may be executed for the amount due as a result of the
adjustment. A third person who has obtained a decree
against the judgment-creditor may apply for attachment of
the decree and such decree may be executed subject to the
claim of the third person: but the judgment-debtor cannot
claim to satisfy, in the absence of a direction in the
decree to that effect the claim of a third person against
the judgment-creditor, and pay only the balance. The rule
that the decree must be executed according to its tenor may
be modified by a statutory provision. But there is nothing
in the Income Tax Act which supports the plea that in
respect of the amount payable under a judgment-debt of the
nature sought to be enforced, the debtor is entitled to
deduct income-tax which may become due and payable by the
judgment-creditor on the plea that the cause of action on
which the decree was passed was the contract of employment
and a part of the claim decreed represented amount due to
the employee as salary or damages in lieu of salary.
Counsel for the appellant company strongly relied upon the
decision of the House of Lords in Westminster Bank Ltd. v.
Riches (1). That was a case in which in an action brought
by one R against the Westminster Bank trustee of the estate
of one X-R was awarded a decree for pound 36,255 principal
and pound 10,028 as interest. The Bank thereafter brought
an action for a declaration that it had satisfied the judg-
ment in the action by R by paying him the amount
(1) 18 Tax Cases 159.
778
due less pound 5,014, the latter sum representing income-tax
on the interest awarded by the judgment. It was held by
the House of Lords that pound 10,028 was "interest of money"
within Schedule D and General Rule 21 of the Income Tax Act,
1918, and that income-tax was deductible therefrom. In that
case, the only argument advanced on behalf of the Bank is
set out in the speech of Viscount Simon, L. C. at p. 187:
"The appellant contends that the additional sum of pound
10,028 though awarded under a power to add interest to the
amount of the debt, and though called interest in the
judgment, is not really interest such as attracts Income
Tax, but is damages. The short answer to this is that there
is no essential incompatibility between the two conceptions.
The real question, for the purposes of deciding whether the
Income Tax Acts apply, is whether the added sum is capital
or income, not whether the sum is damages or interest."
The House of Lords in that case by a majority held that
pound 10,028 awarded under the judgment represented not
capital but interest and was liable to tax. In our view,’
this case has no application to the facts of the present
case. In the case before us, there is a decree passed in
favour of the respondent: under the scheme of the Civil
Procedure Code, that decree has to be executed as it stands,
subject to such deductions or adjustments as are permissible
under the Code. There was no tax liability which the
respondent was assessed to pay in respect of this amount
till the date on which the -appellant company sought to
satisfy the alleged tax liability of the respondent. As
between the appellant company and the respondent, the amount
did not represent salary; it represented a judgment-debt and
for payment of income-tax thereon, no provision was made in
the decree. The Civil Procedure Code bars an action of the
nature which was filed in Westminster Bank’s case (supra).
The defence to the execution if any must be raised in the
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execution proceeding and not by a separate action. The
amount payable by the appellant company to the respondent
was not salary but a judgment-debt, and before paying that
debt the appellant company could not claim
779
to deduct at source tax payable by the respondent. Nor
could the appellant company seek to justify its plea on the
ground that the judgment-creditor was indebted to a third
person.
The principle of the case in Manickam Chettiar v. Income Tax
Officer, Madura (1), on which reliance was also sought to be
placed by the appellant company has no application to this
case. In Manickam Chettiar’s case (1), in execution of a
money decree certain properties belonging to a judgment-
debtor were attached and sold and the sale proceeds were
received by the court. The Income Tax Officer who had
assessed the decree-holder to tax payable by him on his
other income applied to the court for an order directing
payment to him out of the sale proceeds the amount of
income-tax due by the decree-holder. It was held that the
claim for income-tax was entitled to priority in payment and
the court had inherent power to make an order on the
application for payment of money due as income-tax. Tax had
admittedly been assessed, and proceedings substantially for
recovery of the tax so assessed were adopted by the Income
Tax Officer. It was held in the circumstances that the
court had jurisdiction to direct recovery of tax out of the
amount standing to the credit of the decree-holder. The
principle of that case can have no application to the facts
of the present case.
The respondent had not appeared before us, but we have been
assisted by Mr. Rajagopala Sastri and we are indebted to him
for placing the evidence and the various aspects of the case
on a true appreciation of which the question in issue fell
to be determined.
The appeal fails and is dismissed. As there was no
appearance for the respondent, there will be no order for
costs.
Appeal dismissed.
(1) VI I.T. R. 180.
780