Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SETH PREMCHAND SATRAMDAS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF BIHAR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
30/11/1950
BENCH:
FAZAL ALI, SAIYID
BENCH:
FAZAL ALI, SAIYID
MUKHERJEA, B.K.
AIYAR, N. CHANDRASEKHARA
CITATION:
1951 AIR 14 1950 SCR 799
CITATOR INFO :
R 1952 SC 324 (13,23)
R 1963 SC1484 (6)
R 1964 SC1897 (8)
E 1968 SC 733 (7)
RF 1986 SC 421 (37)
ACT:
Bihar Sates Tax Act (VI of 1944) s. 21 (3)--Order of
High Court refusing to require Board of Revenue to state
case--Appeal to Federal Court--Maintainability--Letters
Patent Patna High Court:, cl. 31--"Final Order"--Order in
exercise of advisory jurisdiction of High Court.
HEADNOTE:
No appeal lay to the Federal Court from an order of the
Patna High Court dismissing an application under s. 21(3)of
the Bihar Sales Tax Act, 1944, to direct the Board of Reve-
nue, Bihar, to state a case and refer it to the High Court.
Such an order is not a‘ "final order" within the meaning of
cl. 31 of the Letters Patent of the Patna High Court, inas-
much as an order of the High Court under s. ’21 (3) is
advisory and standing by itself does not bind or affect the
rights of the parties though the ultimate order passed by
the Board of Revenue may be based on the opinion expressed
by the High Court. Nor is such an order passed by the High
Court in the exercise either of its appellate or original
jurisdiction within the meaning of the said clause.
Sri Mahant Harihar Gir v. Commissioner of Income-tax,
Bihar and Orissa (A.I.R. 1941 Pat. 225) and Tata Iron and
Steel Company v. Chief Revenue Authority, Bombay (50 I.A.
212 applied.
Feroze Shah Kaka Khel v. Income-tax Commissioner,
Punjab (A.I.R. 1931 Lab. 138)disapproved.
JUDGMENT:
APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 61 of 1950.
Appeal from an order of the High Court of Patna dated
9th September, 1948, (Agarwala C.J. and Meredith J.) in
M.J.C. No. 5 of 1948. The appeal was originally filed as
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Federal Court Appeal No. 71 of 1948 on a certificate granted
by the Patna High Court under cl. 31 of the Letters Patent
of that High Court that the case was a fit one for appeal to
the Federal Court.
H.P. Sinha (S.C. Sinha, with him) for the appellant.
S.K. Mitra (S. L. Chibber, with him) for the respondent.
1950. November 30. The judgment of the Court was deliv-
ered by FAzL ALl J.
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FAZL ALI J. --This is an appeal from an order of the
High Court of Judicature at Patna dated the 9th September,
1948, declining to call upon the board of Revenue to state a
case under section 21 (3) of the Bihar Sales Tax Act, 1944
(Act VI of 1944), with reference to an assessment made under
that Act.
The Bihar Sales Tax Act was passed in 1944, and section
4 of the Act provides that "every dealer whose gross turn-
over during the year immediately preceding the commencement
of the Act exceeded Rs. 5,000 shall be liable to pay tax
under the Act on sales effected after the date so notified."
It is not disputed that, having regard to the definitions of
dealer, goods and sale under the Act, the appellant, who has
been doing contract work on a fairly extensive scale for the
Central Public Works Department and the East Indian Railway,
comes within the category of a dealer mentioned in section
4. Section 7 of the Act provides that "no dealer shall,
while being liable under section 4 to pay tax under the Act,
carry on business as a dealer unless he has been registered
under the Act and possesses a registration certificate". In
pursuance of this provision, the appellant filed an applica-
tion for registration on the 19th December, 1944, and a
certificate of registration was issued to him on the 21st
December, 1944. On the 8th October, 1945, the Sales Tax
Officer issued a notice to the appellant asking him to
produce his accounts on 10th November, 1945, and to show
cause why in addition to the tax to be finally assessed on
him a penalty not exceeding one and a half times the amount
should not be imposed on him under section 10 (5) of the
Act. Section 10 (5), under which the notice purported to
have been issued, runs thus:--
"If upon information which has come into his posses-
sion, the Commissioner is satisfied that any dealer has been
liable to pay tax under this Act in respect of any period
and has nevertheless wilfully failed to apply for registra-
tion, the Commissioner shall, alter giving the dealer a
reasonable opportunity of being heard, assess, to the best
of his judgment, the amount of tax, if any, due from the
dealer in respect of such
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period and all subsequent periods and the Commissioner may
direct that the dealer shall pay, ’by way of, penalty, in
addition to the amount so assessed, a sum not exceeding one
and a half times that amount."
The appellant appeared before the Sales Tax Officer in
response to this notice, but obtained several adjournments
till 16th March, 1046, and ultimately failed to appear.
Thereupon, he was assessed by the Sales Tax Officer, accord-
ing to the best of his judgment, and was ordered to pay Rs.
4,526-13-0 as tax and a penalty amounting to one and a half
times the amount assessed, under section 10 (5) of the Act.
The appellant appealed to the Commissioner against the
assessment and the penalty levied upon him, but his appeal
was dismissed on the 6th June, 1946. He then filed a peti-
tion for revision to the Board of Revenue, against the order
of the Commissioner, but it was dismissed on the 28th May,
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1947. He thereupon moved the Board of Revenue to refer to
the High Court certain questions of law arising out of is
order of the 28th May, but Mr. N. Baksi, a Member of the
Board, by his order of the 4th December, 1947, rejected the
petition with the following observations :-
"No case for review of my predecessor’s order made out.
No reference necessary."
Section 21 of the Act provides that if the Board of
Revenue refuses to make a reference to the High Court, the
applicant may apply to the High Court against such refusal,
and the High Court, if it is not satisfied that such
refusal was justified, may require the Board of
Revenue to state a case and refer it to the High Court.
The section also provides that "the High Court upon the
hearing of any such case shall decide the question of law
raised thereby, and shall deliver its judgment thereon
containing the grounds on which such decision is founded,
and shall send to the Board of Revenue a copy of such judg-
ment under the seal of the Court ......... and the Board
shall dispose of the case accordingly." In accordance with
this section, the appellant made an application to the High
Court praying that the Board of Revenue may be called upon
to state a case and refer
802
it to the High Court. Dealing with this application, the
High Court pointed out that the Member of the Board had not
been asked to review his predecessor’s order but only to
state a case, and gave the following directions :--
"The ease must, therefore, go back to the Board of
Revenue for a case to be stated or for a proper ,order
rejecting the application to be passed."
The Board then reheard the matter and rejected the
application of the appellant and refused to state a case and
refer it to the High Court. The appellant thereafter made
an application to the High Court for requiring the Board of
Revenue to state a case, but this application was summarily
rejected. He then applied to the High Court for leave to
appeal to the Federal Court, which the High Court granted,
following the decision of a Full Bench of the Lahore High
Court in Feroze Shah Kaka Khd v. Income-tax Commissioner,
punjab and N.W.F.P., Lahore The High Court pointed out in
the order granting leave that in the appeal that was taken
to the Privy Council in the Lahore case, an objection had
been raised as to the competency of the appeal, but the
Privy Council, while dismissing the appeal on the merits,
had made the following observation:-"
The objection is a serious one. Admittedly such an appeal
as the present is not authorized by the Income-tax Act
itself. If open at all, it must be justified under clause
"9, Letters Patent of the Lahore High Court, as being an
appeal from a final judgment, decree or order made in the
exercise of original jurisdiction by a Division Bench of the
High Court. And this present appeal was held by the Full
Court to be so justified. Before the Board the question was
not fully argued, and their Lordships accordingly refrain
from expressing any opinion whatever upon it" (2).
The High Court in granting leave to the appellant seems
to have been influenced mainly by the fact that the view of
the Lahore High Court had not been held by the Privy Council
to be wrong.
(1) A.I.R. 1981 Lah. 138. (2) A.I.R. 1933 P. C. 198.
803
At the commencement of the hearing of the appeal in this
Court, a preliminary objection was raised by the learned
counsel for the respondent that this appeals was not compe-
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tent, and, on hearing both the parties, we are of the opin-
ion that the objection is wellfounded.
In Sri Mahanth Harihar Gir v. Commissioner of Income-
tax, Bihar and Orissa (1) it was held by a special Bench of
the Patna High Court that no appeal lay to His Majesty in
Council under clause 31 of the Letters Patent of the Patna
High Court, from an order of the High Court dismissing an
application under section 66 (3) of the Income-tax Act, (a
provision similar to section 21 of the Act before us) to
direct the Commissioner of Income-tax to state a case. In
that case, the whole law on the subject has been clearly and
exhaustively dealt with, and it has been pointed out that
the view taken by the Full Bench of the Lahore High Court in
the case cited by the appellant was not supported by sever-
al other High Courts and that the Privy Council also, when
the matter came before it, refrained from expressing any
opinion as to its correctness. In our opinion, the view
expressed in the Patna case is correct.
Clause 31 of the Letters Patent of the Patna High Court,
on the strength of which the appellant resists the prelimi-
nary objection raised by the respondent, runs thus :--
"And We do further ordain that any person or persons may
appeal-to Us, Our heirs and successors, in Our or Their
Privy Council, in any matter not being of criminal juris-
diction, from any final judgment, decree, or order of the
said High Court of Judicature at Patna, made on
appeal and from any final judgment, decree on order made in
the exercise of original jurisdiction by Judges of the said
High Court or of any Division Court, from which an appeal
does not lie to the said High Court under the provisions
contained in the 10th clause of these
(1) A.I.R. 1941 Prat. 225.
804
presents: provided, in either case, that the sum or matter
at issue is of the amount or value of not less than ten
thousand rupees, or that such judgment,decree or order
involves, directly or indirectly, some claim, demand or
question to or respecting property amounting to or of the
value of not less than ten thousand rupees; or from any
other final judgment, aecree or order made either on appeal
or otherwise as aforesaid, when the said High Court declares
that the case is a fit one for appeal to Us ...... "
In order to attract the provisions of this clause, it is
necessary to show, firstly, that the order under appeal is a
final order; and secondly, that it was passed in the exer-
cise of the original or appellate jurisdiction of the High
Court. The second requirement clearly follows from the
concluding part of the clause. It seems to us that the order
appealed against in this case, cannot be regarded as a final
order, because it does not of its own force bind or affect
the rights of the parties. All that the High Court is
required to do under section 21 of the Bihar Sales Tax Act
is to decide the question of law raised and send a copy of
its judgment to the Board of Revenue. The Board of Revenue
then has to dispose of the case in the light of the judgment
of the High Court. It is true that the Board’s order is
based on what is stated by the High Court to be the correct
legal position, but the fact remains that the order of the
High Court standing by itself does not affect the rights of
the parties, and the final order in the matter is the order
which is passed ultimately by the Board of Revenue. This
question has been fully dealt with in Tata Iron and Steel
Company v. Chief Revenue Authority, Bombay(1), where Lord
Atkinson pointed out that the order made by the High Court
was merely advisory and quoted the following observations of
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Lord Esher in In re Knight and the Tabernacle Permanent
Building Society(2):
"In the case of Ex parte County Council of Kent, where a
statute provided that a case might be stated
(1) [1892] Q.B. 613 at 617.
805
for the decision of the Court it was held that though the
language might prima facie import that there has to be the
equivalent of a judgment or order, yet when the context was
looked at it appeared that the jurisdiction of the Court
appealed to was only consultative, and that there was noth-
ing which amounted to a judgment or order."
It cannot also be held that the order was passed by the
High Court in this case in the exercise of either original
or appellate jurisdiction. It is not contended that the
matter arose in the exercise of the appellate jurisdiction
of the High Court, because there was no appeal before it.
Nor can the matter, properly speaking, be said to have
arisen in the exercise of the original jurisdiction of the
High Court, as was held by the Judges of the Lahore High
Court in the case to which reference was made, because the
proceeding did not commence in the High Court as all origi-
nal suits and proceedings should commence. But the High
Court acquired jurisdiction to deal with the case by virtue
of an express provision of the Bihar Sales Tax Act. The
crux of the matter therefore is that the jurisdiction of the
High Court was only consultative and was neither original
nor appellate.
In this view, the appeal must be dismissed, though on
hearing the parties, it appeared to us that the salestax
authorities including the Commissioner and the Board of
Revenue were in error in imposing a penalty upon the appel-
lant under section 10 15) of the Act which had no applica-
tion to his case, inasmuch as he had been registered as
required by section 7 of the Act.
In the circumstances, while dismissing the appeal, we
make no order as to costs.
Appeal dismissed.
Agent for the appellant: R.C. Prasad.
Agent for the respondent: p.K. Chatterjee.
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