Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAJA JAGDAMBIKA PRATAP NARAIN SINGH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
CENTRAL BOARD OF DIRECT TAXES & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT17/07/1975
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
GUPTA, A.C.
CITATION:
1975 AIR 1816 1976 SCR (1) 49
1975 SCC (4) 578
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1986 SC1556 (14)
RF 1992 SC1782 (9)
ACT:
Constitution of India-Article 226-Delay-Article 136-
Interference by Supreme Court with exercise of discretion
by High Court-Income Tax Act 1922 Sec 4(3), Sec. 30-
Agricultural Income-Appeal to A.A.C.Condona of delay-
Finality of illegal assessment orders
HEADNOTE:
The appellant an owner of a mango grove has been
deriving income by was of fruits and fallen trees. In the
year 1939-40 he claimed this income to be agricultural
income and therefore immune to income tax. The Assessing
Authorities negatived the claim of the appellant. The High
Court in the year 1963 held the income to be agricultural
income and therefore exempt from income tax. The State did
not challenge the decision of the High Court. The appellant
did not challenge the orders of the Assessing Authorities
for the subsequent years i.e. 1940 to 1962 in the hope that
if ultimately the High Court upheld his contention for one
year the Tax Authorities would give effect to that holding
for all the years. The appellant thereafter approached the
Central Board of Revenue for refund of the tax paid by the
appellant in respect of the subsequent years. The Central
Board rejected the petition in 1968. The appellant moved the
High Court under article 226. The High Court refused to
interfere both on the ground of delay as well as on the
ground that the assessment orders for the relevant years had
become final, the assessee not having taken advantage of his
remedy provided for in the statute. The High Court. however,
made an observation that if so advised the appellant might
file appeals under section 30 of the Income Tax Act, 1922
and pray for condonation of delay under section 30(2) of the
said Act. On. appeal by Special leave to this Court, it was
contended by the appellant.
(1) Since various assessment orders were void the
State was bound to refund what had been
illegally levied.
(2) The Central Board should have exercised its
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power to give appropriate directions for
refund.
(3) Regardless of statutory remedies and rules of
limitation, the High l; Court had power under
Art. 226 to quash the illegal orders and to
prevent unjust enrichment by the State.
The respondents contended:
(1) The appellant is guilty of laches. High
Court has rightly exercised its discretion.
This Court may not interfere with it
(2) The assessment orders have become final
(3) The Central Board of Direct Taxes has no
statutory duty to grant refund even in cases
where orders of assessment, though illegal,
have been allowed to become final by. wilful
default of the assessee.
Dismissing the appeal.
^
HELD: (1) The imposition of tax on agricultural income
is beyond the legislative competence of Parliament and
altogether outside the jurisdiction of the Income Tax
officer. It may well be contended that the impost is ultra
vires. its powers, and therefore, a nullity. We need not
consider this aspect especially since the writ petition
itself is bad for unexplained delay. [54C-E]
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(2) The writ jurisdiction is not measured by statutory
finality to orders regardless of their illegality. If the
levy is illegal the constitutional remedy goes into action.
However, Art. 226 is not blanket power regardless of
temporal and discretionary restraint. of a party is
inexplicably and unduly delayed due to laches the court may
ordinarily deny redress. If the High Court has exercised its
discretion to refuse the redress, this court declines to
disturb such exercise unless the ground is too untellable.
The High Court I in refusing relief on ground of laches did
not exercise its discretion arbitrarily or improperly. [55B.
D-E]
(3) It is doubtful if the Central Board can exercise
any judicial power and direct refund. Even so, it is always
open to the state where the justice of the ease warrants
reconsideration of the levy of a tax illegally imposed, to
view the situation from an equitable standpoint and direct
refund wholly or in part. In this case a liberal approach
may well be justified The Appellate Authority if moved under
section 30(2) will give due regard to the happenings in
between exercising its power of condonation of delay in
filing appeals and no observations made in this judgment or
in the High Court judgment shall be taken into account to
the prejudice of the appellant while considering the
condonation of delay by the appropriate authority. [55G-56C]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2166 of
1970. of 1970
From the Judgment and Order dated the 31st October,
1968 of the Allahabad High Court in W.P. No. 3233 of 1968.
S. C. Manchanda and A. G. Ratanaparkhi, for the
appellant.
T. A. Ramachandran, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KRISHNA IYER, J.-The freak but few facts of this appeal
appear to highlight an issue of morality versus legality.
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But closer scrutiny whittles down this conflict and induces
us to dismiss the appeal, subject to certain observations
warranted by the circumstances of the case. We may proceed
straight to a miniaturised statement of the circumstances
giving rise to the controversy before us.
The appellant has been the owner of a mango grove of
long ago from which he has been deriving income by way of
fruits and fallen trees. Way back in 1939-40 he claimed this
income to be agricultural and therefore immune to Central
income-tax. His plea was over-ruled by the Income-tax
officer, but adverse orders notwithstanding, the assessee
reached the High Court undaunted by the disappointment he
met with as he steered through the statutory spiral of
authorities. Unfortunately, on account of the zigzag course
of this litigation which had its deck-by-deck slow motion,
more than two decades passed before the High Court could
pronounce at long last in favour 5 of the appellant holding
that the income in dispute was agricultural t income and
therefore could not be taxed.
The State did not carry the case further to this Court
and thus the decision of the Allahabad High Court rendered
on March 21, 1963 became final. As a proposition of law, on
the facts of the case the ruling was that such income as
arose from mango fruits and fallen trees was agricultural
income and therefore outside the pale of the
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Income-tax Act (vide s.4(3) of the Income-tax Act). We have
no reason to disagree with this view and proceed to dispose
of this writ appeal which has come to us by certificate
under Art. 133(1)(a) of the Constitution on the footing that
for all the assessment years with which we are concerned as
will be explained presently-what has been taxed and is in
dispute is agricultural income.
Some more facts are necessary to bring out the real
grievance of the appellant. We have already mentioned that
although the first assessment related to the year 1939-40,
the final pronouncement by the High Court came only in 1963.
During this protracted pendency, years rolled on. and, at
the base, the tax officer was busy ritually repeating
annually, by his orders, the tax impost on similar income
accruing year after year treating it as non-agricultural
income. In deed, the assessee had been assessed to tax for
21 years on this assumption but he filed appeals only for 8
years, and even that only upto the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner’s level where he left it off apparently in the
hope that if ultimately the High Court upheld his contention
for one year, the tax authorities would give effect to that
holding for all the years-not a fantastic assumption if
Government were a virtuous litigant. .
At this stage we may state that for the years 1940-41,
1941-42, 1947-48, 1949-50, 1950-51 and 1958-59 to 1961-62
appeals had been preferred most of which were dismissed
although in one year or so the appellate authority gave
relief accepting the plea of agricultural income. So far as
the Income-tax officer was concerned, he uniformly adopted
the hostile line of treating the income as non agricultural
and, except for the years referred to above, the assessee
did not think it necessary-was it wise or otherwise the
sequel proves to challenge these assessment orders. But when
the High Court held in his favour in 1963 for the assessment
year 1939-40, he applied for refund to the Central Board of‘
Direct Taxes of the tax paid by him for the other years on
the glib ground that, limitation apart, the income having
been found by the High Court to be agricultural, had to be
excluded from the tax. The Central Board of Revenue,
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however. declined to oblige him and when on May 11, 1968 his
petition was rejected, the assessee moved the High Court
under Art. 226 seeking many reliefs including a direction to
the Central Board to issue ’necessary instructions to the
Income-tax officer, Faizabad,.. for the purpose of passing
final assessment orders for the assessment years 1940-41 to
1961-62 and for another writ ’quashing the order of the
Central Board of Direct Taxes dated 11th May 1968 wherein
the Board declined to interfere in the matter in dispute’. A
Division Bench of that Court dismissed the writ petition on
two grounds: (a) that the assessment orders for the relevant
years had become final the assessee not having taken
advantage of his remedy provided for in the statute; (b)
that several years had lapsed between the last impugned
order which related to the assessment year 1961-62 and the
writ petition which was filed in September 1968. However,
the Court made an observation that if so advised, the
petitioner may file appeals under s. 30 of the Indian
Income-tax Act, 1922 and pray for condonation of delay under
s. 30(2) of the said Act. Surely discomfited.
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the assessee has come up to this Court hopefully and urged
that the various assessment orders were void, that the State
was bound to refund what had been illegally levied, that the
Central Board should have exercised its power to give proper
directions for refund and that in and case justice should be
done to the party who should not be penalised for not having
filed appeals and second appeals and references to the High
Court year after year-a repeat performance which would add
to the totality of avoidable litigation since the High Court
was seized of the identical point between the same parties.
At the first flush it may seem that the assessee’s
agricultural income having been taxed illegally, a refund
was obligatory and the fanatical insistence on the legal
’pound of flesh’ based on limitation and finality was not to
be expected from a party like the State. Indeed, one might
go to the extent of quoting the cynical words of the ancient
legal wit: "Law and equity are two things which God hath
joined, but which Man has put asunder". We have to examine
the merits of the case in the light of the facts we have set
out above and of the principles settled by this Court in
regard to the exercise of the writ jurisdiction of the High
Court.
Shri Manchanda, alive to the spinal weakness of his
case in law in that his client had, by option for inaction,
permitted the impugned order to become final and listless by
lapse of limitation period, played upon judicial
sensitivity to justice, equity and good conscience. He
argued that regardless of statutory remedies and rules of
limitation, the High Court had power under Art 226 to
quash orders loudly illegal, deprivatory of property and
promoting unjust enrichment by the State. He also urged that
the assessment orders were void and the routine challenges
through prescribed channels could be bypassed and frontal
attack made under Art. 226 in such extraordinary situations.
Sri Ramachandran, appearing for the Revenue, scouted the
supplicant plea for equity as unavailable in a court of law.
He also insisted that the orders of assessment having become
conclusive could not be invaded by the back-door, that the
orders were not nullities but good until set aside through
the regular statutory processes and that the alleged jab on
the face of justice is imaginary, the party himself having
been guilty of gross laches. We will examine these pleas,
not in the general terms set out but within the confines of
the particular facts of the present case.
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We must pause to state one important aspect of the
assessment orders since that oxygenates Sri Manchanda’s
submission on equity. The Income-tax officer, aware of the
pendency in the High Court of the precise question
confronting him about the agricultural character of the
income, had in some years (e.g. 1952-53) recited in his
order under s. 23(3) of the Act, words which kindled hope in
the assessee somewhat in the following terms:
"Income from Mango gul Mahuwa and Kathal have been
excluded from the total income and treated as
agricultural 11 income by the learned Appellate Asstt.
Commissioner of In come Tax Banaras in this very case
but this very point is
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already under consideration before the Hon’ble High
Court of Judicature at Allahabad. However with respects
to the learned A.A.C. and pending the decision of the
Hon’ble High Court on this point the sum of Rs. 7,960/-
is being added back "
But the palliative is absent in the orders relating to many
other years and, above all, the orders are all made under s.
23(3), which means final assessments-neither provisional
assessments being under s. 23(3) nor conditional
assessments, such orders being unknown to the scheme of the
Act.
The points in controversy may be briefly formulated:
(1) Are the orders of assessment, which have not
been assailed, amenable to challenge under
Art. 226 of the Constitution, or is such
jurisdiction inhibited because the regular
statutory remedies have not been pursued ?
(2) Is the appellant guilty of laches to such an
extent that the extra-ordinary remedy in writ
jurisdiction ‘l) should not be exercised in
his favour?
(3) Are the orders of assessments nullities since
they are taxes levied on agricultural income,
and if so, is the appellant entitled to claim
a refund ?
(4) Is the Central Board of Direct Taxes charged
with any statutory duty to grant refunds even
in cases where orders of assessment, though
illegal, have been allowed to become final by
the wilful default of the assessee ?
(5) If justice is on the side of the assessee but
law against him, can he seek redressal in a
Court on that footing ?
We may deal with these points more or less as a package
submission but not in the order in which they have been
itemised.
Counsel has placed considerable stress on the last
point which we deal with first. It is true that two stark
facts generate some considerations of conscience in favour
of the assessee. The High Court having declared this kind of
income which was taxed by the income tax officer,
’agricultural income’, it is not liable to tax under the
Income-tax Act (s. 4(8)). In any case, after the
Constitution of India came into force, the Union List in the
Seventh Schedule expressly excluded agricultural income as
forbidden zone for the Centre, so much so it would be an
unconstitutional levy if a taxing authority imposed tax on
agricultural income purporting to act under the Income-tax
Act. It may, therefore, well be argued that all the
assessments, notwithstanding that no appeals were filed,
were void being beyond the jurisdiction of the officer to
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tax. There is a basic difference between the decision in
Comm. of I.T. v. Tribune Trust,
54
Lahore (1) cited by Sri Ramachandran and the present case.
There, one of the exemptions statutorily provided in favour
of income derived from property held under trust wholly for
religious or charitable purposes, fell for consideration.
The Judicial Committee held that such assessments, regularly
made, which failed to give the exemption claimed, were not
nullities:
"The assessments were duly made, as they were bound to
be made, by the Income-tax officer in the proper
exercise of his duty. .. It does not appear to their
Lordships that they were a ’nullity’ in any other sense
than that if they had been challenged in due time they
might have been set aside."
True, mere exemptions from taxation of income otherwise
competently taxable fell wholly within the jurisdiction of
the officer for determination. There is a fundamental
difference where the claim is that agricultural income is
beyond the legislative competence of Parliament to enact and
altogether outside the jurisdiction of the Income tax
officer. It may well be contended that the impost is ultra
vires his powers and therefore a nullity. Merely because an
order has been passed by the officer and has not been
appealed against, it does not become legal and final if
otherwise it is void; for instance, if there is a flagrant
violation of natural justice, the order by a Tribunal may be
a nullity. However, we need not explore this penumbral area
because we are satisfied, for reasons to be set out below,
that the writ petition itself is misconceived and is bad for
unexplained delay. Even so we may state that the levies for
the various years would have undoubtedly been set aside and
refund ordered if only the assessee had been diligent enough
to make annual appeals to higher authorities. In that sense
there is some justice on his side. What is more, in some of
the orders, as earlier indicated, the Income-tax officer
himself has stated that he is making the assessments finally
but he takes note of the pendency of the identical question
before the High Court. He has vaguely quickened wishful
thinking in the assessee that in the event of his winning in
the High Court he may somehow get a refund. We have set out
what Mr. Manchanda has pressed before us as the ’justice’ of
his case. Assuming for a moment that ’justice’ is on his
side, law is against him because the assessment orders are
now unassailable except perhaps under Art. 226 or Art. 32
with which we will deal separately. Can a court over-ride
law to effectuate what it conceives to be justice ?
Any legal system, especially one evolving in a
developing country, may permit judges to play a creative
role and innovate to ensure justice without doing violence
to the norms set by legislation. But to invoke judicial
activism to set at nought legislative judgment is subversive
of the constitutional harmony and comity of
instrumentalities. So viewed, the appeal of Sri Manchanda,
for relief in the name of justice must fail. If the statute
speaks on the subject the judge has to be silent and stop.
In a contest between morality and legality. the court, in
clear cases has no option. Here, both sides agree that
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the assessments are final, that limitation has long ago run
out, that the Central Board has no judicial power to upset
what has been decided by lesser tribunals. Not being a
fringe area for judicial activism to play the submission
must suffer rejection.
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The surviving issue of some moment is whether the writ
jurisdiction is muzzled by statutory finality to orders
regardless of their illegality. We think not. If the levy is
illegal, the constitutional remedy goes into action. The
Privy Council ruling does not contradict this rule of law
because for one thing there the case was income taxable but
for a statutory exemption; here the income is agricultural
and beyond the orbit of the Income-tax Act. For another, the
Judicial Committee was not considering the sweep of the
constitutional remedy de hors statutory changes but was
construing the plea of ’nullity’ with reference to an order
Passed, erroneously may be but within jurisdiction and
impugned before the statutory tribunals.
Even so, the journey of the appellant is beset with
insurmountable hurdles. Art. 226 is not a blanket power,
regardless of temporal and discretionary restraints. If a
party is inexplicably insouciant and unduly belated due to
laches, the court may ordinarily deny redress. And if the
High Court has exercised its discretion to refuse, this
Court declines to disturb such exercise unless the ground is
too untenable. To awaken this Court’s special power gross
injustice and grievous departure from well-established
criteria in this jurisdiction, have to be made out. In the
present case, long years have elapsed not only after the
impugned orders but even after the High Court held the taxed
income agricultural. The reason for the inaction is stated
to be an illusory expectation of suo moto modification of
assessment orders on representation by the party. The High
Court has examined and dismissed the plea and
consequentially refused relief. We do not think that in so
refusing relief on ground of laches the High Court exercised
its discretion arbitrarily or improperly. And the sorry
story must thus close.
When at the end of the legal tether, the appellant made
a plaintive plea for considerateness based on good
conscience. No doubt, we feel this is a case where, had the
party not been optimistically asleep but had diligently
appealed, the tax could not have been recovered by the
State. We equally see some compassionate merit in his
complaint that a few of the assessment orders made
misleading reference to the pendency of the High Court being
seised of the identical legal issue. But it is no good alibi
in expiation of the sin of gross delay in coming to the High
Court. It is doubtful if the Central Board can exercise any
judicial power and direct refund. Nor is there a statutory
duty cast on it to consider applications for refund and so a
writ of mandamus could not issue from the Court. Even so, it
is always open to the State, where the justice of the case
warrants reconsideration of the levy of a tax illegally
imposed to view the situation from an equitable standpoint
and direct refund wholly or in part. This perhaps is case
where a liberal approach may well be justified. The Court
has, however, jurisdiction only when there is a statutory
duty. There being
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none, the issuance of a writ hardly arises. We endorse the
observations of the High. Court that, despite inordinate
delay, the appellate authority, if moved under s. 30(2),
will give due regard to the happenings in between, in
exercising its power of condonation of delay in filing
appeals. We also make it clear that no observation made in
this judgment with regard to delay on the part of the
assessee in moving the High Court under Art. 226 shall be
taken into account to the prejudice of the assessee while
considering the condonation of the delay on his part in
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preferring the appeal/appeals, if any, filed by him to the.
appropriate authority under the Act.
The appeal fails and is dismissed. The circumstances
are such that the parties may appropriately be, directed to
bear their respective costs. We direct accordingly.
P.H.P. Appeal dismissed.
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