Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
C. A. ABRAHAM, UPPOOTTIL, KOTTAYAM
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE INCOME-TAX OFFICER, KOTTAYAM AND ANOTHER
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
29/11/1960
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
KAPUR, J.L.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
CITATION:
1961 AIR 609 1961 SCR (2) 765
CITATOR INFO :
R 1961 SC1265 (8)
RF 1962 SC 970 (3,4)
R 1964 SC 825 (3,4)
R 1964 SC1095 (4,11)
D 1966 SC1295 (15)
E 1968 SC 162 (10,11)
F 1968 SC 816 (3)
E 1969 SC 835 (5)
R 1969 SC1352 (7)
R 1970 SC1173 (26)
E 1970 SC1782 (3)
D 1975 SC1549 (21,23,54)
F 1977 SC 459 (3)
ACT:
Income-tax--Suppression of income of Partnership firm--
Penalty, if can be imposed after dissolution of
Partnership--Income-tax Act, 1922 (11 of 1922), SS.
28(I)(c), 44.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant who was carrying on business in food grains in
partnership with another person submitted the returns of the
income of the firm for the accounting years even after his
partner’s death. It was found that certain income of the
firm was concealed and the Income-tax Officer not only
assessed the firm to tax for the suppressed income but also
imposed penalties for concealing the said income. Appeals
to the higher income tax authorities failed and the
appellant then applied to the High Court for a writ of
certiorari quashing the orders of assessment and imposition
of penalty on the ground inter alia that the firm was
dissolved by his partner’s death and no penalty could be
imposed after dissolution of the firm, The High Court
rejected the petition. On appeal with the certificate of
the High Court,
Held, that by virtue of s. 44 and other provisions of the
Income Tax Act a partner of a dissolved partnership firm may
not only be made liable to assessment for income tax for the
accounting years but despite dissolution of the firm he may
be made liable to pay penalty for concealing the income of
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the firm under s. 28(1)(c) of the Act. The analogy of
dissolution of a Hindu joint Family does not apply to
dissolution of a partnership.
Mareddi Krishna Reddy v. Income-tax Officer, Tenali, [1957]
31 I.T.R. 678, approved.
Commissioner of Income-tax v. Ravalaseema Oil Mills, [1959]
37 I.T.R. 208 and S. V. Veerappan Chettiar v. Commissioner
of Income-tax, Madras, [1957] 32 I.T.R. 411, disapproved.
Mahankali Subbarao v. Commissioner of Income-tax, [1957] 31
I.T.R. 867, distinguished.
The Legislature intended that the provisions of Ch. IV of
the Act shall apply to a firm even after discontinuance of
its business. In interpreting a fiscal statute the Court
cannot proceed to make good deficiencies if there be any.
In case of doubt it should be interpreted in favour of the
tax payer.
The expression "assessment" has different connotations an
has been used in its widest connotation in Ch. IV and S. 44
97
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he Act. It is not restricted only to computation of tax but
includes imposition of penalty on tax payers found in the
process of assessment guilty of concealing income.
Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay Presidency and Aden v.
Khemchand Ramdas, [1938] 6 I.T.R. 414, referred to.
The Income-tax Act provided a complete machinery for
obtaining relief against improper orders passed by the
Income-tax Authorities and the appellant could not be
permitted to abandon that machinery, and invoke the
jurisdiction of the High Court under Art. 226 of the
Constitution against the orders of the taxing authorities.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 517 of 1958.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated October 31, 1957,
of the Kerala High Court in O. P. No. 215 of 1957.
G. B. Pai and Sardar Bahadur, for the appellant.
Hardyal Hardy and D. Gupta, for the respondents.
1960. November 29. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
SHAH, J.-C. A. Abraham hereinafter referred to as the
appellant and one M. P. Thomas carried on business in food
grains in partnership in the name and style of M. P. Thomas
& Company at Kottayam. M. P. Thomas died on October 11,
1949. For the account years 1123, 1124 and 1125 M.E.
corresponding to August 1947-July 1948, August 1948-July
1949 and August 1949-July 1950, the appellant submitted as a
partner returns of the income of the firm as an unregistered
firm. In the course of the assessment proceedings, it was
discovered that the firm had carried on transactions in
different commodities in fictitious names and had failed to
disclose substantial income earned therein. By order dated
November 29, 1954, the Income Tax Officer assessed the
suppressed income of the firm in respect of the assessment
year 1124 M.E. under the Travancore Income Tax Act and in
respect of assessment years 1949-50 and 1950-51 under the
Indian Income Tax Act and on the same day issued notices
under s. 28 of the Indian Income Tax Act in respect of the
years 1949-50 and 1950-51 and
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under s. 41 of the Travancore Income Tax Act for the year
1124 M.E., requiring the firm to show cause why penalty
should not be imposed. These notices were served upon the
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appellant.
The Income Tax Officer after considering the explanation of
the appellant imposed penalty upon the firm, of Rs. 5,000 in
respect of the year 1124 M.-E., Rs. 2,O00 in respect of the
year 1950-51 and Rs. 22,000 in respect of the year 1951-52.
Appeals against the orders passed by the Income Tax Officer
were dismissed by the Appellate Assistant Commissioner. The
appellant then applied to the High Court of Judicature of
Kerala praying for a writ of certiorari quashing the orders
of assessment and imposition of penalty. It was claimed by
the appellant inter alia that after the dissolution of the
firm by the death of M. P. Thomas in October, 1949, no order
imposing a penalty could be passed against the firm. The
High Court rejected the application following the judgment
of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in Mareddi Krishna Reddy v.
Income Tax Officer, Tenali (1). Against the order
dismissing the petition, this appeal is preferred with
certificate of the High Court.
In our view the petition filed by the appellant should not
have been entertained. The Income Tax Act provides a
complete machinery for assessment of tax and imposition of
penalty and for obtaining relief in respect of any improper
orders passed ’by the Income Tax authorities, and the
appellant could not be permitted to abandon resort to that
machinery and to invoke the jurisdiction of the High Court
under Art. 226 of the Constitution when he had adequate
remedy open to him by an appeal to the Tribunal. But the
High Court did entertain the petition and has also granted
leave to the appellant to appeal to this court. The
petition having been entertained and leave having been
granted, we do not think that we will be justified at this
stage in dismissing the appeal in limine. On the merits,
the appellant is not entitled to relief. The Income Tax
Officer found that the appellant had, with a view to evade
payment of tax,
(1) (1957) 31 I.T.R. 678.
768
deliberately concealed material particulars of his income.
Even though the firm was carrying on transactions in food
grains in diverse names, no entries in respect of those
transactions in the books of account were posted and false
credit entries of loans alleged to have been borrowed from
several persons were made. The conditions prescribed by s.
28(1)(c) for imposing penalty were therefore fulfilled. But
says the appellant, the assessee firm had ceased to exist on
the death of M. P. Thomas, and in the absence of a provision
in the Indian Income Tax Act whereby liability to pay
penalty may be imposed after dissolution against the firm
under s. 28(1)(c) of the Act, the order was illegal.
Section 44 of the Act at the material time stood as follows:
"Where any business,...carried on by a firm...... has been
discontinued ... every person who was at the time of such
discontinuance ... a partner of such firm,... shall in
respect of the income, profits and gain of the firm be
jointly and severally liable to assessment under Chapter IV
for the amount of tax payable and all the provisions of
Chapter IV shall, so far as may be, apply to any such
assessment."
That the business of the firm was discontinued because of
the dissolution of the partnership is not disputed. It is
urged however that a proceeding for imposition of penalty
and a proceeding for assessment of income-tax are matters
distinct, and s. 44 may be resorted to for assessing tax due
and payable by a firm business whereof has been
discontinued, but an order imposing penalty under s. 28 of
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the Act cannot by virtue of s. 44 be passed. Section 44
sets up machinery for assessing the tax liability of firms
which have discontinued their business and provides for
three consequences, (1) that on the discontinuance of the
business of a firm, every person who was at the time of its
discontinuance a partner is liable in respect of income,
profits and gains of the firm to be assessed jointly and
severally, (2) each partner is liable to pay the amount of
tax payable by the firm, and (3) that the provisions of
Chapter, so far as may be, apply to such assessment. The
liability declared by s. 44 is
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undoubtedly to assessment under Chapter IV, but the
expression "assessment" used therein does not merely mean
computation of income. The expression "assessment" as has
often been said is used in the Income Tax Act with different
connotations. In Commissioner of Income Tax, Bombay
Presidency & Aden v. Khemchand Ramdas (1), the Judicial
Committee of the Privy Council observed:
"One of the peculiarities of most Income-tax Acts is that
the word "assessment" is used as meaning sometimes the
computation of income, sometimes the determination of the
amount of tax payable and sometimes the whole procedure laid
down in the Act for imposing liability upon the tax-payer.
The Indian Income-tax Act is no exception in this
respect............".
A review of the provisions of Chapter IV of the Act
sufficiently discloses that the word "assessment" has been
used in its widest connotation in that chapter. The title
of the chapter is "Deductions and Assessment". The section
which deals with assessment merely as computation of income
is s. 23; but several sections deal not with computation of
income, but determination of liability, machinery for
imposing liability and the procedure in that behalf.
Section 18A deals with advance payment of tax and imposition
of penalties for failure to carry out the provisions there-
in. Section 23A deals with power to assess individual
members of certain companies on the income deemed to have
been distributed as dividend, s. 23B deals with assessment
in case of departure from taxable territories, s. 24B deals
with collection of tax out of the estate of deceased
persons; s. 25 deals with assessment in case of discontinued
business, s. 25A with assessment after partition of Hindu
Undivided families and ss. 29, 31, 33 and 35 deal with the
issue of demand notices and the filing of appeals and for
reviewing assessment and s. 34 deals with assessment of
incomes which have escaped assessment. The expression
"assessment" used in these sections is not used merely in
the sense of computation of income and there is in our
judgment no ground for holding
(1) [1938] 6 I.T.R. 414.
770
that when by s. 44, it is declared that the partners or
members of the association shall be jointly and severally
liable to assessment, it is only intended to declare the
liability to computation of income under s. 23 and not to
the application of the procedure for declaration and
imposition of tax liability and the machinery for
enforcement thereof. Nor has the expression, "all the
provisions of Chapter IV shall so far as may be apply to
such assessment" a restricted content: in terms it says that
all the provisions of Chapter IV shall apply so far as may
be to assessment of firms which have discontinued their
business. By s. 28, the liability to pay additional tax
which is designated penalty is imposed in view of the
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dishonest contumacious conduct of the assessee. It is true
that this liability arises only if the Income-tax Officer is
satisfied about the existence of the conditions which give
him jurisdiction and the quantum thereof depends upon the
circumstances of the case. The penalty is not uniform and
its imposition depends upon the exercise of discretion by
the Taxing authorities; but it is imposed as a part of the
machinery for assessment of tax liability. The use of the
expression "so far as may be" in the last clause of s. 44
also does not restrict the application of the provisions of
Chapter IV only to those which provide for computation of
income. By the use of the expression "so far as may be" it
is merely intended to enact that the provisions in Ch. IV
which from their nature have no application to firms will
not apply thereto by virtue of s. 44. In effect, the
Legislature has enacted by s. 44 that the assessment
proceedings may be commenced and continued against a firm of
which business is discontinued as if discontinuance has not
taken place. It is enacted manifestly with a view to ensure
continuity in the application of the machinery provided for
assessment and imposition of tax liability notwithstanding
discontinuance of the business of firms. By a fiction, the
firm is deemed to continue after discontinuance for the
purpose of assesment under Chapter IV.
The Legislature has expressly enacted that the provisions of
Chapter IV shall apply to the assessment of
771
a business carried on by a firm even after discontinuance of
its business, and if the process of assessment includes
taking steps for imposing penalties, the plea that the
Legislature has inadvertently left a lacuna in the Act
stands refuted. It is implicit in the contention of the
appellant that it is open to the partners of a firm guilty
of conduct exposing them to penalty under s. 28 to evade
penalty by the simple expedient of discontinuing the firm.
This plea may be accepted only if the court is compelled, in
view of unambiguous language, to hold that such was the
intention of the Legislature. Here the language used does
not even tend to such an interpretation. In interpreting a
fiscal statute, the court cannot proceed to make good
deficiencies if there be any: the court must interpret the
statute as it stands and in case of doubt in a manner
favourable to the tax-payer. But where as in the present
case, by the use of words capable of comprehensive import,
provision is made for imposing liability for penalty upon
tax-payers guilty of fraud, gross negligence or contumacious
conduct, an assumption that the words were used in a
restricted sense so as to defeat the avowed object of the
Legislature qua a certain class will not be lightly made.
Counsel for the appellant relying upon Mahankali Subbarao v.
Commissioner of Income Tax (1), in which it was held that an
order imposing penalty under s. 28(1)(c) of the Indian
Income Tax Act upon a Hindu Joint Family after it had
disrupted, and the disruption was accepted under s. 25A(1)
is invalid, because there is a lacuna in the Act, submitted
that a similar lacuna exists in the Act in relation to
dissolved firms. But whether on the dissolution of a Hindu
Joint Family the liability for penalty under s. 28 which may
be incurred during the subsistence of the family cannot be
imposed does not fall for decision in this case: it may be
sufficient to observe that the provisions of s. 25A and s.
44 are not in pari materia. In the absence of any such
phraseology in s. 25A as is used in s. 44, no real analogy
between the content of that section and s. 44 may be
assumed. Undoubtedly,
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(1) [1957] 31 I.T.R. 867.
772
by s. 44, the joint and several liability which is declared
is liability to assessment in respect of income, profits or
gains of a firm which has discontinued its business, but if
in the process of assessment of income, profits or gains,
any other liability such as payment of penalty or liability
to pay penal interest as is provided under s. 25, sub-s. (2)
or under s. 18A sub-ss. (4), (6), (7), (8) and (9) is
incurred, it may also be imposed, discontinuation of the
business notwithstanding.
In our view, Chief Justice Subba Rao has correctly stated in
Mareddi Krishna Reddy’s case (supra) that:
"Section 28 is one of the sections in Chapter IV. It
imposes a penalty for the concealment of income or the
improper distribution of profits. The defaults made in
furnishing a return of the total income, in complying with a
notice under sub-s. (4) of s. 22 or sub-s. (2) of s. 23 and
in concealing the particulars of income or deliberately
furnishing inadequate particulars of such income are
penalised under that section. The defaults enumerated
therein relate to the process of assessment. Section 28,
therefore, is a provision enacted for facilitating the
proper assessment of taxable income and can properly be said
to apply to an assessment made under Chapter IV. We cannot
say that there is a lacuna in s. 44 such as that found in s.
25A of the Act.
We are unable to agree with the view expressed by the Andhra
Pradesh High Court in the later Full Bench decision in
Commissioner of Income Tax v. Rayalaseema Oil Mills (1),
which purported to overrule the judgment in Mareddi Krishna
Reddy’s case (supra). We are also unable to agree with the
view expressed by the Madras High Court in S. V. Veerappan
Chettiar v. Commissioner of Income Tax, Madras (2).
In the view taken by us, the appeal fails and is dismissed
with costs.
(1) [1959] 37 I.T.R. 208.
Appeal dismissed.
(2) [1957] 32 I.T.R. 411.
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