Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX,HYDERABAD
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
DEWAN BAHADUR RAMGOPAL MILLS LTD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
08/11/1960
BENCH:
DAS, S.K.
BENCH:
DAS, S.K.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
SHAH, J.C.
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
CITATION:
1961 AIR 338 1961 SCR (2) 318
CITATOR INFO :
MV 1966 SC1026 (2,16)
R 1967 SC 266 (15)
F 1968 SC 162 (18)
E 1968 SC 579 (15)
E 1975 SC 797 (2,3,5,7,30,57,60,62)
F 1989 SC1719 (6,7,10,16,17,18,19,20)
RF 1992 SC1782 (10)
ACT:
Income Tax--Depreciation allowance--Written down value--
Hyderabad Income-tax law--Repeal and extension of Indian In-
come-tax law--Central Government’s notification Providing
for removal of difficulties in such extended
law--Validity--Retrospective effect--Taxation Laws (Part B
States) (Removal of Difficulties) Order, 1950, Para 2,
Explanation--Finance Act, 1950 (25 of 1950), ss. 3, 12,
13--Constitution of India, Art. 14.
HEADNOTE:
Prior to January 26, 1950, when the erstwhile State of
Hyderabad merged in the Union of India and became a Part B
State the respondent company was assessed to income-tax
under the Hyderabad Income-tax Act, by which depreciation
allowance was given to it on the basis of the written down
value of its assets, such as buildings, machinery,
plants, etc., in accordance with cl. (C) of S. 12(5) of
that Act, which provided that in the case of assets acquired
before the previous year and before the commencement of the
Act, the written down value would be the actual cost to the
assessee less (1) depreciation at the rates applicable to
the assets calculated on the actual costs for the first year
since acquisition and for the next year on the actual cost
diminished by the depreciation allowance for one year and so
on, for each year upto the commencement of that Act, and,
(ii) depreciation actually allowed to the assessee on such
assets for each financial year after the commencement of the
Act. After the merger of Hyderabad with the Union of India,
by ss. 3 and 13 of the Finance Act, 950, the taxation laws
in force in the State were repealed and the Indian Income-
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tax Act, 1922, was extended to that area; and in exercise of
the powers conferred by S. 12 of the Finance Act, 1950, the
Central Government issued a notification dated December 2,
1950, called the Taxation Laws (Part B States) (Removal of
Difficulties) Order, 1950. Paragraph 2 of the Order
provided that " in making any assessment under the Indian Income-tax A
ct, 1922, all depreciation actually allowed
under any laws or rules of a Part B State...... shall be
taken into account in computing the aggregate depreciation
allowance referred to in proviso (c) to s. 10(2)(vi) and the
written down value under s. 10(5)(b) of the said Act ".
For the assessment year 1951-52 the respondent was assessed
for the first time under the Indian Income-tax Act, and
basing its claim on para. 2 of the aforesaid Order it asked
for
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the value thereof at their inception and deducting therefrom
such depreciation as was allowed for the three assessment
years in which it was assessed under the Hyderabad Income-
tax Act. 7 By order dated November 30, 1951, the Income-tax
Officer disallowed the respondent’s claim on the ground that
it was against the principle inherent in granting
depreciation allowance which must decrease from year to
year. The matter was taken up to the Supreme Court and
while it was pending there, on May 8, 1956, the Central
Government issued a notification in exercise of its powers
conferred on it by s. 12 of the Finance Act, 1950, whereby
an explanation was added to the aforesaid para. 2 as
follows: "For the purpose of this paragraph, the expression
"all depreciation actually allowed under any laws or rules
of a Part B State " means and shall be deemed to have always
meant the aggregate allowance for depreciation taken into
account in computing the written down value under any laws
or rules of a Part B State or carried forward under the said
laws or rules." The respondent challenged the validity of
the notification of 1956 and also its applicability to the
present case on the grounds (1) that it was ultra vires the
powers conferred on the Central Government by s. 12 of the
Finance Act, 1950, (2) that it contravened Art. 14 of the
Constitution, and (3) that, in any case, it could have no
retrospective effect.
Held : (1) that the true scope and effect of s. 12 was that
it was for the Central Government to determine if any
difficulty of the nature indicated in the section had arisen
and then to make such order, or give such direction, as
appeared to it to be necessary to remove the difficulty, the
legislature having left the matter to the executive.
Pandit Banarsi Das Bhanot v The State of Madhya Pradesh and
Others, [1959] S.C.R. 427, relied on.
In the present case, a difficulty had arisen, because if
depreciation actually allowed under the Hyderabad Income-tax
Act was taken into account in computing the aggregate depre-
ciation allowance and the written down value, an anomalous
result would follow, namely, depreciation allowance to be
allowed to the assessee in the accounting year under the
Indian Income-tax Act would be more than what was allowed in
previous years under the Hyderabad Income-tax Act.
Consequently, the Central Government was within its power
under s. 12 in making the notification dated May 8, 1956.
(2) that the notification of 1956 applied to all those to
whom para. 2 of the Taxation Laws (Part B States) (Removal
of Difficulties) Order, 1950, was applicable and created no
unequal treatment of persons in the like situation.
Accordingly, the notification did not contravene Art. 14 of
the Constitution.
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(3) that the Central Government had the power under S. 12
of the Finance Act, 1950, to make an order or give a
direction so as to remove difficulties which arose in the
very beginning
320
and, therefore, the notification, though added in 1956, was
valid and was applicable to the assessment of 1951-52.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 5 of 1959.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated February 16, 1954,
of the former Hyderabad High Court in Reference No. 347/B-
5/2 of 1953-54.
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General of India, K. N.
Rajagopala Sastri and D. Gupta, for the appellant.
Sanat P. Mehta and J. B. Dadachanji, for the respondent.
1960. November 8. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
S. K. DAS J.-This is an appeal on a certificate of fitness
granted by the High Court of Judicature at Hyderabad under
s.66-A (2) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922. The
Commissioner of Income-tax, Hyderabad, is the appellant
before us. The respondent is Dewan Bahadur Ramgopal Mills
Ltd., a public limited company incorporated in the erstwhile
State of Hyderabad.
The respondent company was assessed under the Hyderabad
Income-tax Act in respect of the assessment years 1357-F,
1358-F and 1359-F. In the assessment for those years
depreciation allowance was given to it on the basis of the
written down value of its assets, such as buildings,
machinery, plant, etc., in accordance with the provisions of
cl. (c) of s. 12(5) of the Hyderabad Income-tax Act. That
clause provided that in the case of assets acquired before
the previous year and before the commencement of the Act,
the written down value would be the actual cost to the
assessee less (i) depreciation at the rates applicable to
the assets calculated on the actual cost for the first year
since acquisition and for the next year on the actual cost
diminished by the depreciation allowance for one year and so
on, for each year upto the commencement of the Act, and (ii)
depreciation actually allowed to the assessee on such assets
for each financial year after the commencement of the
321
Act. The erstwhile State of Hyderabad merged in the Union
of India on January 26, 1950, and became a Part B State.
The Finance Act, 1950, by s. 13 thereof repealed the
taxation laws in force in Part B States except for certain
purposes not relevant to this case, and by s. 3 extended the
Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, to the whole of India except
the State of Jammu and Kashmir. In exercise of the powers
conferred by s. 12 of the Finance Act, 1950, the Central
Government was pleased to make the Taxation Laws (Part B
States) (Removal of Difficulties) Order, 1950 (hereinafter
referred to as the Removal of Difficulties Order, 1950), by
a notification dated December 2, 1950. Paragraph 2 of the
said Order, in so far as it is relevant to this case, was in
these terms:
" Computation of aggregate depreciation allowance and
written down value:
In making any assessment under the Indian Income-tax Act,
1922, all depreciation actually allowed under any laws or
rules of a Part B State, relating to Income-tax and Super-
tax, or any law relating to tax on profits of business,
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shall be taken into account in computing the aggregate
depreciation allowance referred to in sub-clause (c) of the
proviso to clause (vi) of sub-section (2) and the written
down value under clause (b) of sub-section (5) of sec. 10 of
the said Act".
For the assessment year 1951-52 which was in respect of the
account year ending June 30, 1950, the respondent was
assessed for the first time under the Indian Income-tax Act,
1922, read with paragraph 5 of the Part B States (Taxation
Concessions) Order, 1950. Basing its claim on paragraph 2
of the Removal of Difficulties Order, 1950, the respondent
asked for depreciation allowance in respect of its assets
such as buildings, machinery, plant, etc., to the tune of
Rs.8,12,244. It worked out the value of the assets at their
inception and deducted therefrom such depreciation as was
allowed for the three assessment years in which the
respondent was assessed under the Hyderabad Income-tax Act
and calculating the written down
322
value in that manner, it claimed depreciation according to
the prescribed rates. By his order dated November 30, 1951,
the Income-tax Officer disallowed this claim. He held that
the claim of the respondent was against the principle
inherent in granting depreciation allowance which must
decrease from year to year, and further held that the word "
allowed " in paragraph 2 of the Removal of Difficulties
Order, 1950, should be construed as meaning " considered "
only. Accordingly, he took the figures of the written down
value from the income-tax proceedings of 1359-F and allowed
depreciation at the prescribed rate on those figures.
Against the order of the Income-tax Officer, the respondent
went in appeal to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner,
Hyderabad Division. That Officer by an order dated May 23,
1952, upheld the view of the Income-tax Officer and
dismissed the appeal. Then there was an appeal to the
Income-tax Appellate Tribunal which was heard by the Bombay
Bench of the said Tribunal. By its order dated December 12,
1952, the Appellate Tribunal held that in view of the pro-
visions in paragraph 2 of the Removal of Difficulties Order,
1950, the contention of the respondent must prevail, and it
pointed out that the words used in paragraph 2 were "
depreciation actually allowed under any laws or rules of a
Part B State ", and those words did not mean the aggregate
allowance for depreciation taken into account in computing
the written down value under the Hyderabad Act; therefore,
the respondent was entitled to the depreciation allowance
which it claimed. It directed the Income-tax Officer to
compute the written down value on the basis of the actual
cost to the assessee of the assets in question minus the
depreciation allowance actually allowed to the assessee
under the Hyderabad Income-tax Act. The appellant herein
then moved the Appellate Tribunal for a reference to the
High Court under s. 66(1) of the Indian Income-tax Act. In
the meantime, that is, on March 9, 1953, the Central
Government purporting to exercise its powers conferred by s.
60-A of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, added an
Explanation
323
to paragraph 2 of the Removal of Difficulties Order, 1950.
Explanation said:
" Explanation :--For the purpose of this paragraph, the
expression " all depreciation actually allowed under any
laws or rules of a Part B State " means and shall be deemed
to have always meant the aggregate allowance for
depreciation taken into account in computing the written
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down value under any laws or rules of a Part B State or
carried forward under the said laws or rules ".
The Explanation in terms gave effect to the contention urged
on behalf of the Department and said that what has to be
allowed is the aggregate allowance for depreciation taken
into account in computing the written down value under any
law or rules of a Part B State. In support of the
application for a reference, the appellant relied on the
aforesaid Explanation and contended that in view of the
Explanation the respondent could not claim depreciation
allowance on the basis of actual cost minus the depreciation
allowances actually allowed under the Hyderabad Income-tax
Act. On this application the Tribunal expressed the view
that if the Explanation applied to the case on hand, then
the contention of the Department was correct and must be
upheld. It said, however, that it had no power to review
its own order and, therefore, considered it unnecessary to
express any opinion whether the Explanation was valid and
affected the case before it. It said finally that the
following question of law did arise out of its order and
accordingly stated a case thereon:
" Whether in making the assessment for the year 1951-52
under the Indian Income-tax Act is the assessee company
entitled to claim depreciation allowance on the basis of the
written down value computed at the time of the assessment
for the year 1359-F, or is to be computed on the basis of
the actual cost minus the depreciation allowances granted
under the Hyderabad Income-tax Act".
The reference was then heard by the High Court of Judicature
at Hyderabad which by its order dated February 16, 1954,
held that the Explanation added
324
to paragraph 2 of the Removal of Difficulties Order, 1950,
by the notification dated March 9, 1953, was void on certain
grounds one of which was that the Explanation was ultra
vires the powers of the Central Government under s. 60-A of
the Indian Income-tax Act. Therefore, it answered the
question in favour of the respondent. The appellant then
obtained the necessary certificate of fitness and preferred
the present appeal.
In the meantime, there was a further change of law. On May
8, 1956, the Central Government made a notification (No. S.
R. O. 1139) in exercise of the powers conferred on it by s.
12 of the Finance Act, 1950, whereby an Explanation in
identical terms as the earlier Explanation made under s. 60-
A of the Indian Income-tax Act, was added to paragraph 2 of
the Removal of Difficulties Order, 1950. The arguments
before us have proceeded on the basis of the Explanation
added by the notification aforesaid and it is not disputed
that if the Explanation is valid and applies to the present
case, then the appeal must be allowed and the question of
law answered in favour of the appellant. If, on the
contrary, the Explanation is not valid or it does not apply
to the present case, then the appeal must be dismissed.
We proceed now to a consideration in detail of the different
contentions urged before us on behalf of the appellant and
the respondent. We may first read s. 12 of the Finance Act,
1950, under which notification No. S. R. O. 1139 dated May
8, 1956, was made. Section 12 reads:
" If any difficulty arises in giving effect to the
provisions of any of the Acts, rules or orders extended by
section 3 or section 11 to any State or merged territory,
the Central Government may by order, make such provision, or
give such direction, as appears to it to be necessary for
removing the difficulty ".
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On behalf of the appellant it has been argued that the
notification was validly made in exercise of the powers
conferred on the Central Government under s. 12 aforesaid;
that it does not suffer from any of the defects pointed out
by the High Court in regard
325
to the earlier notification of 1953 made under s. 60-A of
the Income-tax Act; and that it adds an Explanation which in
terms gives effect to the contention of the appellant and
this Court must consider the change in law made thereby and
give effect to it in answering the question of law arising
out of the Tribunal’s order. On the other hand, the
validity of the notification has been very strenuously
contested before us by learned Counsel for the respondent.
He has challenged its validity and also its applicability to
the present case on the following grounds : (1) that it is
ultra vires the powers conferred on the Central Government
by s. 12; (2) that it can have no retrospective effect; and
(3) that it contravenes Art. 14 of the Constitution.
We shall consider these arguments in the order in which we
have stated them. The first question is whether the
notification is validly made under s. 12 or is it ultra
vires the powers conferred on the Central Government by that
section ? On behalf of the respondent it is urged that a
condition for the exercise of the power under s. 12 is
contained in the opening clause, which says : " If any
difficulty arises in giving effect to the provisions of any
of the Acts, rules or orders extended by section 3 or
section II to any State etc." The contention is that no
difficulty arose in giving effect to the provisions of any
of the Acts, rules or orders referred to in the opening
clause, to any State etc. and, therefore, the condition for
the exercise of the power is not fulfilled and on that
ground the notification is invalid. We are unable to accept
this argument as correct. Section 10 of the Income-tax Act
says, in its first subsection, that the tax shall be payable
by an assessee in respect of the profits or gains of any
business, profession or vocation carried on by him. Sub-s.
(2) thereof says that such profits or gains shall be
computed after making certain allowances, and one of these
allowances is in respect of the depreciation of such
buildings, machinery, plant, etc. as are used for the
purpose of the business (cl. vi). The depreciation except
in certain cases is calculated on the written down value,
which expression is explained
326
in sub-s. (5) of s. 10. Clause (b) of the sub-section
states:
"S.10(5)--(a)................................................
(b) In the case of assets acquired before the previous year
the actual cost to the assessee less all depreciation
actually allowed to him under this Act, or any Act repealed
thereby or under executive orders issued when the Indian
Income-tax Act, 1886 (11 of 1886), was in force ".
It is obvious that in applying cl. (b) to an assessee in a
Part B State there would be an initial difficulty, in as
much as prior to 1950 when the Indian Income-tax Act came
into force in a Part B State no depreciation could have been
actually allowed to such an assessee under the Income-tax
Act or under any Act repealed thereby; for example, the
Hyderabad Income-tax Act was repealed by the Finance Act,
1950 and not by the Income-tax Act, and would not therefore
be covered by cl. (b). Such and other difficulties led to
the Removal of Difficulties Order, 1950, which has not been
seriously challenged before us. Indeed, the High Court said
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that it was not open to the respondent to challenge the
validity of the Removal of Difficulties Order, 1950, because
such a point was not taken before the Tribunal. Learned
Counsel for the respondent has then submitted that what.
ever initial difficulty there might have been in giving
effect to the Indian Income-tax Act in a Part State, that
difficulty was solved by paragraph 2 of the Removal of
Difficulties Order, 1950, and, in any view, there was no
fresh difficulty which could necessitate the addition of an
Explanation in 1953 or 1956. Here again we think that the
submission is not correct. The basic and normal scheme of
depreciation under the Indian Income-tax Act is that it
decreases every year, being a percentage of the written down
value which in the first year is the actual cost and in suc-
ceeding years actual cost less all depreciation actually
allowed under the Income-tax Act or an Act repealed thereby
etc. The Hyderabad Income-tax Act not having been repealed
by the Income-tax Act but by the Finance Act, 1950, there
was a difficulty in
327
allowing depreciation to an assessee in a Part B State in
the first year of assessment under the Indian Income-tax
Act. This difficulty was sought to be removed by paragraph
2 of the Removal of Difficulties Order, 1950. If, however,
depreciation actually allowed under the Hyderabad Income-tax
Act was taken into account in computing the aggregate
depreciation allowance and the written down value, an
anomalous result would follow as in the present case,
namely, depreciation allowance to be allowed to the assessee
in the accounting year under the Indian Income-tax Act would
be more than what was allowed in previous years under the
Hyderabad Income-tax Act. This would create a disparity and
be against the scheme of the Indian Income-tax Act. It was
therefore necessary to explain paragraph 2 of the Removal of
Difficulties Order, 1950, to assimilate or harmonise the
position regarding depreciation allowance, and the
Explanation added in 1953 or 1956 was obviously intended to
remove the difficulty arising out of that disparity or
disharmony.
Furthermore, the true scope and effect of s. 12 seems to be
that it is for the Central Government to determine if any
difficulty of the nature indicated in the section has arisen
and then to make such order, or give such direction, as
appears to it to be necessary to remove the difficulty.
Parliament has left the matter to the executive; but that
does not make the notification of 1956 bad. In Pandit
Banarsi Das Bhanot v. The State of Madhya Pradesh & Ors. (1)
we said at page 435: " Now, the authorities are clear that
it is not unconstitutional for the legislature to leave it
to the executive to determine details relating to the
working of taxation laws, such as the selection of persons
on whom the tax is to be laid, the rates at which it is to
be charged in respect of different classes of goods and the
like ". We are, therefore, of the view that the notification
of 1956, was validly made under s. 12 and is not ultra vires
the powers conferred on the Central Government by that
section.
The second question is-does the notification apply
(1) [1959] S.C.R. 427.
328
to the assessment in the present case, which is an
assessment for the year 1951-52 ? The notification was made
in 1956 and it added an Explanation to paragraph 2 of the
Removal of Difficulties Order, 1950. It says that a
particular expression occurring in that paragraph means and
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shall be deemed always to have meant the aggregate allowance
for depreciation taken into account in computing the written
down value etc., under any law of a Part B State. The
argument on behalf of the respondent is that the law which
governs an assessment for the assessment year 1951-52 is the
law in force at the time when the Finance Act, 1951, came
into force; accordingly, so the argument proceeds, paragraph
2 of the Removal of Difficulties Order, 1950, as it stood on
April 28, 1951, when the Finance Act, 1951, came into force,
will apply in the present case. We consider this argument
to be unsound. The Explanation, though added in 1956,
explains the meaning of paragraph 2 of the Removal of
Difficulties Order, 1950 and says in express terms that the
paragraph shall be deemed always to have had that meaning.
Section 12 by the very nature of its intent and purpose
confers on the Central Government power to make an order to
remove a difficulty which has already arisen, and the power
to re. move the difficulty must necessarily include the
power to remove the difficulty from the time it arose. The
Central Government has, therefore, the power to make an
order or give a direction so as to remove the difficulty
from the very beginning, and that is what the notification
of 1956 does. It applies to the assessment of 1951-52
indeed it applies to all assessments made under the Indian
Income-tax Act in which paragraph 2 of the Removal of
Difficulties Order, 1950, operates.
The last challenge to the validity of the notification of
1956 is that it contravenes Art. 14 of the Constitution,
because it discriminates between different classes of tax
payers. Learned Counsel for the respondent has asked us to
consider the cases of assessees in three different areas
which subsequently come in a Part B State: in one area
there was no law relating to
329
income-tax; in, the second there was a law relating to
income-tax under which written down value was computed on
the basis of depreciation actually allowed year after year,
while in the third the written down value was computed in
the manner provided under the Hyderabad Income-tax Act; it
is pointed out that on the extension of the Indian Income-
tax Act (read with paragraph 2 of the Removal of
Difficulties Order, 1950 and the Explanation) to those
areas, the assessee in the first area will get depreciation
allowance on the actual cost; in the second area he will get
such allowance on the basis of actual cost less depreciation
actually allowed; and in the third area he will get such
allowance on the actual cost less depreciation taken into
account. It is contended that this resultant discrimination
is arbitrary and without any rational justification, We
think that learned Counsel for the respondent has ignored
one essential consideration which clearly vitiates his
argument. In the matter of depreciation allowance, the
assessee in the three areas in the example given by him do
not stand on the same footing; they are not situated alike
so as to be entitled to be treated alike. It is obvious
that an assessee from an area where there was no income-tax
law at all can never say that in the matter of depreciation
allowance as respects buildings, machinery, plant etc., he
is on a par with a person in an area where there was a law
relating to income-tax allowing depreciation on such
buildings, machinery, plant etc. The same would be the
position with regard to areas where the previous law as to
depreciation was different. Indeed, to treat all these
persons alike would be tantamount to unequal treatment. In
our view, the notification of 1956 creates no unequal
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treatment of persons in a like situation ; it applies to all
who are in a like situation, namely, all those to whom
paragraph 2 of the Removal of Difficulties Order, 1950,
applies. We consider that the challenge to the notification
based on Art. 14 is wholly unsubstantial.
It has not been disputed before us that a change in
42
330
law validly made and applicable to a case pending in appeal
must be considered and given effect to by the Appellate
Court. The conclusion we have reached is that the
notification of 1956 was validly made and applies to the
present case. In view of this conclusion we have considered
it unnecessary to examine the notification of 1953 or the
reasons for which the High Court held that notification to
be bad.
For the reasons given above, we allow this appeal and set
aside the judgment and order of the High Court dated
February 16, 1954. The question referred to the High Court
is answered in favour of the appellant. The appellant has
succeeded by reason of the notification of 1956 and taking
that circumstance into consideration, we direct that there
will be no order for costs for the hearing in this Court.
Appeal allowed.