Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX, KANPUR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
M/S. J.K. COMMERCIAL CORPORATION LTD. ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT03/09/1976
BENCH:
UNTWALIA, N.L.
BENCH:
UNTWALIA, N.L.
KHANNA, HANS RAJ
SINGH, JASWANT
CITATION:
1977 AIR 459 1977 SCR (1) 512
1976 SCC (4) 517
ACT:
Income Tax Act (11 of 1922), ss. 23A and 35(1)--Whether
income tax officer has power under s. 35(1) to rectify an
order passed under s. 23A.
HEADNOTE:
Section 23A, Income Tax Act, 1922, confers power on the
Income Tax Officer to assess Companies to super-tax on their
undistributed income in certain cases.
In the present case, subsequent to the passing of the
orders of assessment, the Income Tax Officer passed orders
under s. 23A of the Income Tax Act, 1922, asking the re-
spondent-companies to pay certain amounts of additional
super-tax on the undistributed profit. Thereafter, under s.
35(1), over-ruling the objections of the respondents that
he had no power to rectify any mistake in an order under s.
23A of the Act, he rectified some mistakes and increased the
amounts of additional super-tax payable by the respondents.
The respondents revision applications were dismissed by the
Commissioner, but the High Court quashed the orders, relying
on M.M. Parikh v. Navanagar Transport & Industries Ltd.
[1967] 63 ITR 663 and Sankappa v.I.T.O. Bangalore, [1968] 68
ITR 760.
Allowing the appeal this Court,
HELD: The Income Tax Officer had jurisdiction and
competency to rectify under s. 35(1) any mistakes in his
previous orders under s. 23A. The language of s. 35(1) may
not be wide enough to confer power on the Income Tax Officer
to amend any order passed by him under the Act, and he may
not have the wide powers conferred on him under s. 154(1)(a)
of the 1961-Act. But it is not so narrow as to cover only
the order of assessment or of refund in a very restricted or
limited sense; but is wide enough to cover some other orders
including an order under s. 23A. [518 E-F]
(1) Section 35(1) provides inter alia that the Income Tax
Officer may, at any time within four years from the date of
any assessment order or refund order passed by him, on his
own motion, rectify any mistake apparent from the record of
assessment or refund as the case may be. If such rectifica-
tion has the effect of enhancing an assessment or reducing
the refund, under the. first proviso, the assessee is enti-
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tled to notice and reasonable opportunity to show cause
against such enhancement or reduction. [515 G-H]
(2) The word ’assessment’ is capable of bearing a very
comprehensive meaning. [515 B]
Commissioner of Income-tax v. Khemchand Ramdas [1938] 6
I.T.R. 414 applied.
C.A. Abraham v. Income-tax Officer, Kottayam and another
[1961] 41 I.T.R. 425 at 429 and Kalawati Devi Harlalka v.
Commissioner Of Income-tax [1967] 66 I.T.R. 680 followed.
The assessment under s. 23 is the assessment of the
total income of the assessee, and the determination of the
sum payable by the assessee including income tax, surcharge,
super tax etc. Under s. 24, loss is computed and is allowed
to be set off against the income of the same year or carried
forward to the next year. If one were to go upon the use of
the literal words, then s. 24 is only for computation of the
loss. Yet, it is a step in the assessment proceeding and
will form part of the order of assessment itself. Similar-
ly, the order under s. 23A may not be called an order of
assessment, but it is a part of the assessment proceeding
and may be called a supplementary assessment order directing
a company to pay additional amount of supertax on the undis-
tributed balance of the total income as assessed and deter-
mined in accordance with the provisions of s. 23. [515 C-D;
F]
513
(3) Under s. 35, the Commissioner in revision, the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner and the Tribunal in appeal,
can rectify a mistake in the record of revision or appeal
taken from orders under s. 23, s. 24 and s. 23A, because
such orders are appealable orders under s. 30. Therefore
under the same section, the Income Tax Officer can also
rectify any mistake apparent from the record assessment,
which expression is wide enough not only to cover an order
of assessment made under s. 23 but also an order computing
loss under s. 24 and an order made under s. 23A directing an
assessee-company to pay additional super-tax. [516 D-E]
(4) Further, the first proviso to s. 35(1) and s. 35(3)
shows that rectification of apparent mistakes in an order
computing loss or an order under s. 23A is permissible and
may have the effect of enhancing the assessment or reducing
it. [516 F]
(5) Also under s. 35(7), on the modification of an order
under s. 23A in relation to the assessment of a company in
appeal or revision, power is given to the Income Tax Officer
to make rectification in the computation of the total income
of the shareholders as if it is a mistake apparent from the
record within the meaning of s. 35 making the provisions of
sub-s. (1) applicable to such case. [516 H]
(6) In Parikh’s case it was held that an order under s.
23A was outside the purview of limitation provided in s. 34
of the Act; but the ratio of Parikh’s case is neither
applicable nor should be extended to cover the expression
’Assessment Order’ occurring in s. 35(1). The High Court
has misunderstood Sankappa’s case. According to that deci-
sion, what the Income-tax Officer does in a proceeding under
s. 35(1) is to correct errors in assessment or rectify
orders of assessment made by him, and that either of such
orders is a part of the proceedings for assessment. [517 D;
518 A-B]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION.: Civil Appeal Nos.
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15801583/71.
From the Judgment and Order dated 11-3-69 of the Allaha-
bad High Court in Civil Mic. Writ Nos. 3251, 3252, 3253 and
3254/ 68.
S.C. Manchanda, J. Ramamurthy and S.P. Nayar, for the
Appellants.
S.V. Gupte and Rameshwar Nath, for the Respondent in
C.A. 1580/71.
Rameshwar Nath, for the Respondents in C. As. 1581-1583/71.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
UNTWALIA, J.--These four appeals by certificate are from
a common judgment of the Allahabad High Court allowing four
writ petitions filed by the two respondent companies namely
J.K. Commercial Corporation Ltd. and J.K. Synthetics Ltd.
In respect of the assessment years 1955-56 and 1956-57
assessment orders were passed by the Income-tax Officer,
Kanpur under section 23(3) of the Income Tax Act,
1922--hereinafter referred to as the Act. Subsequent to the
passing of the said orders of assessment the Income-tax
Officer passed four orders in respect of the two assessment
years against the two companies under section 23A of the Act
on January 21, 1957 asking the companies to pay certain
amounts of additional super-tax on the undistributed profit
of the concerned years. In
514
November, 1959 the Income-tax Officer issued a notice under
section 35(1) of the Act for rectification of the mistake
committed in the previous orders passed under section 23A
on 21.1.1957. the assessee companies in response to the
notices objected to the proposed rectification by the In-
come-tax Officer, inter alia, on the ground that he had no
power to rectify any mistake in an order under section 23A
of the Act. The Income-tax Officer over-ruled the objection
raised by the companies, rectified the mistakes in his
previous orders and increased the amounts of additional
super-tax payable by the companies in relation to the two
assessment years. The companies revision applications filed
before the Commissioner of Income Tax, U.P. were dismissed.
Thereupon, four writ applications were filed in the High
Court to challenge the orders passed by the Income-tax
Officer under section 35(1) of the Act as affirmed by the
Commissioner of Income Tax in revisions. A Bench of the
High Court feeling compelled to follow the decisions of this
Court in M.M. Parikh, IncomeTax Officer, Special Investiga-
tion Circle "B", Ahmedabad v. Navanagar Transport and
Industries Ltd. and another(1) and in S. Sankappa and others
v. Income-tax Officer, Central Circle 11, Bangalore(2) has
allowed the writ applications and quashed the impugned
orders passed by the Commissioner of Income-tax and the
Incometax-Officer. The decision of the High Court is re-
ported in J. K. Commercial Corporation Ltd. v. Income-tax
Officer, District 1, (i), Kanpur and another(3). Hence
these appeals by the Revenue.
In our judgment the High Court was not right in applying
the ratio of the two decisions of this Court referred to
above to the facts of these cases. We shall presently show
that the Income-tax Officer had jurisdiction and competency
to rectify the mistakes under section 35 (1) of the Act in
his previous orders passed under section 23A.
Chapter IV of the Act is entitled "Deductions and As-
sessment". In this chapter occurs various sections relating
to assessments of income, determination of tax or super-
tax, tax payable on it, payment of additional super-tax,
computation of loss, provisions for appeal and revision and
provisions for rectification of mistakes either by the
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Income-tax Officer or by the Appellate or the Revisional
authorities. In one of the earliest decisions of the Privy
Council in Commissioner Income-tax v. Khemchand Ramdas(4) at
page 416 it was said:
"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 taxpayer.
The Indian Income-tax Act is no exception in this
respect .......... "
(1) [1967] 63 I.T.R. 663. (2) [1968] 68 I.T.R. 760.
(3) [1969] 73 I.T.R. 464. (4) [1938] 6 I.T.R. 414.
515
The above dictum of the Privy Council was quoted with ap-
proval by this Court in C.A. Abraham v. Income-tax Offi-
cer, Kottayam and another(1). In Sankappa’s case (supra)
the same Bench which had decided the Parikh’s case and
delivered-the judgment through Shah, J. as he then was,
speaking through Bhargava, J. followed Abraham’s case
(supra) and the decision of this Court in Kalawati Devi
Harlalka v. Commissioner of Income-tax(") wherein it has
been stated that the word "assessment" is capable of bearing
a very comprehensive meaning; in the context it can compre-
hend the whole procedure for ascertaining and imposing
liability on the tax payer. It is to be noticed that the
marginal note of section 23 is "Assessment" and sub-section
(3) says "the Income-tax Officer ........ shall, by an
order in writing, assess the total income of the assessee"’
and then adds "determine the sum payable by him on the
basis of such assessment." Literally speaking, therefore,
the assessment is of the total income of the assessee and
then in the same order the sam payable by the assessee is
determined which would include income-tax, surcharge,
super-tax etc. Under section 24 of the Act, loss is comput-
ed and is allowed to be set off against the income of the
same year or carried forward to the next year. If one were
to go upon the use of the literal words, then section 24 is
for computation of the loss. Yet it is a step in the as-
sessment proceeding and will form part of the order of
assessment itself. Section 23A as the marginal note indi-
cates is the "Power to assess Companies to super-tax on
undistributed income in certain cases". The relevant words
of sub-section (1) of section 23A are the following: "Where
the Income-tax Officer is satisfied ........ the Income-
tax Officer shall unless he is satisfied. make an order in
writing that the company shall, apart from the sum deter-
mined as payable by it on the basis of the assessment under
section 23, be liable to pay super-tax" at the rates speci-
fied "on the undistributed balance of the total income of
the previous year ...... " It would thus be seen that
although in a narrow sense an order under section 23A may
not be called an order of assessment, surely it is a part of
the assessment proceeding and may be called a supplementary
assessment order directing a company to pay additional
amount of super-tax on the undistributed balance of the
total income as assessed and determined in accordance with
the provisions of section 23.
We shall now read section 35(1):
"The Commissioner or Appellate Assistant
Commissioner may, at any time within four years
from the date of any order passed by him in appeal
or, in the case of the Commissioner, in revision
under section 33A and the Incometax Officer may, at
any time within four years from the date of any
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assessment order or refund order passed by him on
his own motion rectify any mistake apparent from
the record of the appeal, revision, assessment or
refund as the case may be, and shall within the
like period rectify any such mistake which has been
brought to his notice by an assessee:
(1) [1961] 41 I.T.R. 425. at 429.
(2) (1967) 66 I.T.R. 680.
516
Provided that no such rectification shall be
made, having the effect of enhancing an assessment
or reducing a refund unless the Commissioner, the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner or the Income-tax
Officer, as the case may be, has given notice to
the assessee of his intention so to do and has
allowed him a reasonable opportunity of being heard
:"
The Commissioner or the Appellate Assistant Commissioner can
rectify any mistake apparent from the record of the appeal
or revision. In the like manner, as provided in sub-section
(2), the Appellate Tribunal has been given the power of
rectification of mistakes apparent from the record of the
appeal. The marginal note of section 30 is "Appeal against
assessment under this Act". Various types of orders passed
under the various sections in Chapter IV of the Act have
been enumerated as being appealable orders. The list in-
cludes an order by which the amount of loss may be computed
under section 24 or the amount of tax has been determined
under section 23 and an order made by the Income-tax Officer
under sub-section (1) of section 23A. It is, therefore,
plain that the Commissioner in revision, the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner and the Tribunal in appeal can recti-
fy a mistake in the record of the revision or the appeal, as
the case may be, taken from the order of assessment under
section 23, the order computing loss under section 24, or
an order made under section 23A by the Income-tax Officer.
Viewed in that light it follows as a matter of construction
that the Income-tax Officer can rectify any mistake apparent
from the record of assessment which expression is wide
enough not only to cover an order of assessment made under
section 23 but also an order computing loss under section 24
and an order made under section 23A directing the assessee
company to pay additional super-tax. It is neither advisa-
ble nor necessary in these appeals to give a complete list
of the types of orders, apparent mistakes in which can be
rectified by the Income-tax Officer under section 35(1) of
the Act. Obviously the first proviso to sub-section (1)
of section 35 and sub-section (3) lends support to the view
that rectification of apparent mistakes in an order comput-
ing loss or an order under section 23A is permissible and
may have the effect of enhancing the assessment or reducing
it. The provisions of sub-section (7) of section 35 of the
Act also give an indication that the opinion which we have
recorded above as to the power of the Incometax Officer to
rectify a mistake in an order made under section 23A is
correct. By a deeming provision sub-section (5) gives
powers to the Income-tax Officer to make consequential
correction in the assessment of a partner of firm on the
modification of the assessment of the income of the firm.
Similarly by a deeming provision engrafted in sub-section
(7) on the modification of an order under section 23A in
relation to the assessment of a company in appeal or revi-
sion, power has been given to the Income-tax Officer to make
rectification in the computation of the total income of the
shareholders as if it is a mistake apparent from the record
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within the meaning of section 35 making the provisions of
sub-section, (1) applicable to such a case.
517
Some difficulty is presented, as we shall presently
show, in view of Parikh’s ease (supra) from the provision of
time limit of 4 years provided in section 35(1) for the
exercise of the power by the incometax Officer for the
rectification of the mistakes apparent from the record of
assessment; the starting point of the period being "date of
any assessment order". In Parikh’s case this Court was con-
cerned with the interpretation of the expression "order of
assessment", occurring in sub-section (3) of section 34 of
the Act. In that connection, Shah, J as he then was, deliv-
ering the judgment on behalf of a Division Bench of this
Court said at page 670 of 63 I.T.R.:
"In each of these cases there is computation of
income, determination of tax payable and procedure
is prescribed for imposing liability upon the
taxpayer. But still these are not orders of as-
sessment within the meaning of section 23. The
salient feature of these and other orders is that
the liability to pay tax arises not from the charge
created by statute but from the order of the
Income-tax Officer."
On the above principle an order under section 23A was held
to be outside the purview of limitation provided in section
34 of the Act as in the opinion of the Court it was not an
order of assessment. Doubt about the correctness of the view
taken in the above case has been expressed during the course
of hearing. We need not say anything about that as we
constitute a Bench of equal strength. But we are clear and
definite in our mind that the ratio of Parikh’s case is
neither applicable nor should be extended to cover the
expression "Assessment Order" occurring in section 35(1) of
the Act. In the context the said expression would include
an order made under section 23A also, as, such an order
undoubtedly forms part of the record of assessment. Mr.
Gupte, learned counsel for the respondents in his usual
fairness conceded, and rightly, that the power of rectifica-
tion of mistake conferred on the Income-tax Officer under
section 35(1) of the Act cannot be confined within the very
narrow limit of an order of assessment made under section 23
only. Counsel submitted that it does embrace some other
kinds of order relating to assessment. Having conceded so
far Mr. Gupte endeavoured in vain to take an order made
under section 23A of the Act outside the purview of the
power of the income-tax Officer for rectification of mis-
takes.
In Sankappa’s case, as we have said above, the same
Bench which decided Parikh’s case, after stating on the
basis of certain earlier authorities that the word ’assess-
ment’ under certain circumstances in a given context has a
more comprehensive meaning finally said at page 764 of 68
I.T.R. thus:
"It is clear that, when proceedings are taken
for rectification of assessment to tax either under
section 35(1) or section 35(5) of the Act of 1922,
those proceedings must be held to be proceedings
for assessment. In proceeding under those provi-
sions, what the Income-tax Officer does is to
correct errors in, or rectify orders of assessment
made by him, and orders making such corrections or
rectifications are, therefore, clearly part of the
proceedings for assessment."
518
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The High Court in the judgment under appeal has extracted
the above passage from Sankappa’s case but allowed itself to
be misled by it. Correctly appreciated, the passage means
that what the Income-tax Officer does in a proceeding under
section 35(1) is to correct errors in assessment or
rectify-orders of assessment made by him. Either of such
orders is a part of the proceeding of assessment. In our
considered opinion correcting an apparent error in an order
made under section 23A of the Act is rectifying a mistake in
the record of assessment and clearly falls within the ambit
of the power conferred upon the Income-tax Officer under
section 35(1) of the Act.
Although in the appeals before us we are concerned with
the Income-tax Act of 1922 only, in passing we may make
reference to the corresponding provisions in the Income Tax
Act of 1961. Corresponding to section 23A of the 1922 Act is
section 104 in the 1961 Act. Section 154(1) of the latter
Act corresponds to section 35(1) of the former Act. Clause
(a) of section 154(1) says:
"With a view to rectifying any mistake apparent from
the record--
(a) the Income-tax Officer may amend any order
of assessment or of refund or any other order
passed by him;"
The provision so made is very precise and definite giving
power to the Income-tax Officer to amend any other order
passed by him apart from the order of assessment or refund.
The language of section 35(1) of the 1922 Act, perhaps, is
not wide enough conferring power on the Income-tax Officer
to am.end any order passed by him under the Act and may not
be at par with the wide powers conferred on him under sec-
tion 154(1)(a)’of the 1961 Act. Yet it is not too narrow to
cover only the order of assessment or of refund in a very
restricted or limited sense. It is wide enough to take
within its sweep some other orders made under the Act in-
cluding an order under section 23A.
For the reasons stated above, we allow these appeals and
set aside the judgment and order of the High Court. The
writ petitions filed by the respondents are dismissed. Each
of the two respondent companies must pay one set of costs in
this Court in its respective appeals.
V.P.S. Appeals allowed.
519