Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M/S. THE MALABAR INDUSTRIAL CO. LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, KERALA STATE
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 10/02/2000
BENCH:
Syed Shah Mohammed Quadri
JUDGMENT:
SYED SHAH MOHAMMED QUADRI, J.
The unsuccessful assessee is the appellant in this
appeal, by special leave, which arises from the Judgment and
Order of the Division Bench of the High Court of Kerala in
I.T.R.No.15 of 1990 passed on October 22, 1991. By the
impugned order the High Court answered the following two
questions, referred to it at the instance of the appellant,
in the affirmative that is against the appellant and in
favour of the Revenue:- (1) Whether, on the facts and in
the circumstances of the case, that Tribunal was justified
in holding that there was evidence before the Commissioner
of Income-tax that the assessment order was erroneous and
prejudicial to revenue?
(2) Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances of
the case, the Tribunal was justified in holding that
Rs.3,66,649 was a taxable receipt for the assessment year
1983-84?
The facts giving rise to these questions may be
noticed here. The case relates to the assessment year
1983-84 for which the accounting period of the appellant
ended on February 28, 1983. The appellant is a public
limited company. It entered into an agreement for sale of
the estate of rubber plantation measuring acres 699 of land
for consideration of Rs.210 lakhs with M/s. Supriya
Enterprises (for short the purchaser) on July 18, 1982.
The Agreement provided, inter alia, for payment of the
consideration in instalments as scheduled therein. However,
the purchaser could not adhere to the schedule and on his
request the parties agreed to extension of time for payment
of the instalments on condition of his paying
compensation/damages for loss of agricultural income and
other liabilities in a sum of Rs.3,66,649. Accordingly, the
appellant passed a resolution also to that effect on
September 25, 1983 and the purchaser paid the said amount.
In the annexure to the return filed by it for the assessment
in question the amount was noted as compensation and damages
for loss of agricultural income. By Order dated October 31,
1985, the Income-tax Officer accepted the same and endorsed
nil assessment for that year. The Commissioner of
Income-tax having examined the records of the assessment
found that the nil assessment order passed by the Income-tax
Officer was erroneous and it was prejudicial to the
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interests of the revenue. He issued notice to the
appellant, under Section 263 of the Income Tax Act (for
short the Act), to show cause why the order of assessment
should not be set aside and Rs.3,66,649 should not be
assessed under the head income from other sources. After
the appellant filed its reply the Commissioner, by order
dated February 8/9, 1988, concluded that the said amount was
unconnected with any agricultural operation activity and was
liable to be taxed under the head income from other
sources. Dissatisfied with the Order of the Commissioner,
the appellant filed an appeal before the Income-tax
Appellate Tribunal, which was dismissed on August 5, 1988.
On the application of the appellant under Section 256(1) of
the Act, the aforementioned questions were referred to the
High Court of Kerala at Ernakulam. Mr. Roy Abaraham,
learned counsel for the appellant, urged the very same two
contentions which were argued before the High Court, namely,
(i) that the exercise of jurisdiction by the Commissioner
under Section 263(1) of the Act was not only unwarranted but
also illegal; he contended that mere loss of tax could not
be treated as prejudicial to the interests of the revenue
and that only when the order of the Assessing Officer would
affect the administration of the revenue that it could be
treated as prejudicial to the revenue; (ii) that the amount
of Rs.3,66,649 was in reality agricultural income and,
therefore, ought not to have been brought to tax. Mr.
Anoop G. Choudhary, learned senior counsel for the
respondent, asserted that the Income-tax Officer passed the
order without application of mind and inasmuch as it
resulted in loss of tax it was also prejudicial to the
interests of the revenue, therefore, the exercise of
jurisdiction under Section 263(1) of the Act by the
Commissioner was justified and legal. He further submitted
that the second contention was not open to the appellant as
the basic facts found by the Appellate Tribunal were not
questioned before the High Court. To consider the first
contention, it will be apt to quote Section 263(1) which is
relevant for our purpose:- 263. Revision of orders
prejudicial to revenue - (1) The Commissioner may call for
and examine the record of any proceeding under this Act, and
if he considers that any order passed therein by the
Assessing Officer is erroneous insofar as it is prejudicial
to the interests of the revenue, he may, after giving the
assessee an opportunity of being heard and after making or
causing to be made such inquiry as he deems necessary, pass
such order thereon as the circumstances of the case justify,
including an order enhancing or modifying the assessment, or
cancelling the assessment and directing a fresh assessment.
Explanation - x x x
A bare reading of this provision makes it clear that
the prerequisite to exercise of jurisdiction by the
Commissioner suo moto under it, is that the order of the
Income-tax Officer is erroneous insofar as it is prejudicial
to the interests of the revenue. The Commissioner has to be
satisfied of twin conditions, namely, (i). the order of the
Assessing Officer sought to be revised is erroneous; and
(ii) it is prejudicial to the interests of the revenue. If
one of them is absent -- if the order of the Income-tax
Officer is erroneous but is not prejudicial to the revenue
or if it is not erroneous but is prejudicial to the revenue
-- recourse cannot be had to Section 263(1) of the Act.
There can be no doubt that the provision cannot be invoked
to correct each and every type of mistake or error committed
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by the Assessing Officer; it is only when an order is
erroneous that the section will be attracted. An incorrect
assumption of facts or an incorrect application of law will
satisfy the requirement of the order being erroneous. In
the same category fall orders passed without applying the
principles of natural justice or without application of
mind. The phrase prejudicial to the interests of the
revenue is not an expression of art and is not defined in
the Act. Understood in its ordinary meaning it is of wide
import and is not confined to loss of tax. The High Court
of Calcutta in Dawjee Dadabhoy & Co. Vs. S.P. Jain and
Another [31 ITR 872], the High Court of Karnataka in
Commissioner of Income- tax, Mysore Vs. T. Narayana Pai
[98 ITR 422], the High Court of Bombay in Commissioner of
Income-tax Vs. Gabriel India Ltd. [203 ITR 108] and the
High Court of Gujarat in Commissioner of Income-tax Vs.
Smt. Minalben S. Parikh [215 ITR 81] treated loss of tax
as prejudicial to the interests of the revenue. Mr.
Abaraham relied on the judgment of the Division Bench of the
High Court of Madras in Venkatakrishna Rice Company Vs.
Commissioner of Income-tax [163 ITR 129] interpreting
prejudicial to the interests of the revenue. The High
Court held, In this context, it must be regarded as
involving a conception of acts or orders which are
subversive of the administration of revenue. There must be
some grievous error in the Order passed by the Income-tax
Officer, which might set a bad trend or pattern for similar
assessments, which on a broad reckoning, the Commissioner
might think to be prejudicial to the interests of Revenue
Administration. In our view this interpretation is too
narrow to merit acceptance. The scheme of the Act is to
levy and collect tax in accordance with the provisions of
the Act and this task is entrusted to the Revenue. If due
to an erroneous order of the Income-tax Officer, the revenue
is losing tax lawfully payable by a person, it will
certainly be prejudicial to the interests of the revenue.
The phrase prejudicial to the interests of the revenue has
to be read in conjunction with an erroneous order passed by
the Assessing Officer. Every loss of revenue as a
consequence of an order of Assessing Officer cannot be
treated as prejudicial to the interests of the revenue, for
example, when an Income-tax Officer adopted one of the
courses permissible in law and it has resulted in loss of
revenue; or where two views are possible and the Income-tax
Officer has taken one view with which the Commissioner does
not agree, it cannot be treated as an erroneous order
prejudicial to the interests of the revenue unless the view
taken by the Income-tax Officer is unsustainable in law. It
has been held by this Court that where a sum not earned by a
person is assessed as income in his hands on his so
offering, the order passed by the Assessing Officer
accepting the same as such will be erroneous and prejudicial
to the interests of the revenue. Rampyari Devi Saraogi Vs.
Commissioner of Income-tax [67 ITR 84] and in Smt. Tara
Devi Aggarwal Vs. Commissioner of Income-tax, West Bengal
[88 ITR 323]. In the instant case, the Commissioner noted
that the Income-tax Officer passed the order of nil
assessment without application of mind. Indeed, the High
Court recorded the finding that the Income-tax Officer
failed to apply his mind to the case in all perspective and
the order passed by him was erroneous. It appears that the
resolution passed by the board of the appellant- company was
not placed before the Assessing Officer. Thus, there was no
material to support the claim of the appellant that the said
amount represented compensation for loss of agricultural
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income. He accepted the entry in the statement of the
account filed by the appellant in the absence of any
supporting material and without making any inquiry. On
these facts the conclusion that the order of the Income-tax
Officer was erroneous is irresistible. We are, therefore,
of the opinion that the High Court has rightly held that the
exercise of the jurisdiction by the Commissioner under
Section 263(1) was justified. The second contention has to
be rejected in view of the finding of fact recorded by the
High Court. It was not shown at any stage of the
proceedings, the amount in question was fixed or quantified
as loss of agricultural income and admittedly it is not so
found by the Tribunal. The further question whether it will
be agricultural income within the meaning of Section 2(1A)
of the Act as elucidated by this Court in Commissioner of
Income-tax, West Bengal, Calcutta Vs. Raja Benoy Kumar
Sahas Roy [32 ITR 466] does not arise for consideration. It
is evident from the Order of the High Court that findings
recorded by the Tribunal that the appellant stopped
agricultural operation in November 1982 and the receipt
under consideration did not relate to any agricultural
operation carried on by the appellant, were not questioned
before it. Though, we do not agree with the High Court that
the said amount was paid for breach of contract as indeed it
was paid in modification/relaxation of the terms of the
contract, we hold that the High Court is justified in
concluding that the said amount was a taxable receipt under
the head income from other sources. We find no merit in
the appeal and dismiss the same with costs.