Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF KERALA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
K. M. CHARIA ABDULLAH & CO.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
05/10/1964
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
SHAH, J.C.
SIKRI, S.M.
CITATION:
1965 AIR 1585 1965 SCR (1) 601
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1968 SC 843 (2,8,9)
F 1976 SC1115 (7)
R 1976 SC1545 (15,17)
R 1976 SC2136 (12,14)
R 1987 SC 558 (6)
E 1989 SC1829 (21)
ACT:
Madras General Sales Tax Act (9 of 1939) s. 12(2)(1) and
Madras General Sales Tax Rules, 1939, r. 14A-Scope of-If
rule ultra vires the Act.
HEADNOTE:
The respondents submitted return of their turn-over under
the Madras General Sales Tax Act, 1939, and claimed
exemption in respect of certain transactions on the ground
that they were commission sales exempted under the Act. The
Deputy Commercial Tax Officer granted the exemption and
assessed tax only on the rest of the turn-over. The Deputy
Commissioner of Commercial Taxes, called for the record of
the case and in exercise of the powers under s. 12(2) (i) of
the Act and r. 14A of the Madras General Sales Tax Rules,
directed fresh enquiry in respect of the exemption, issued a
notice calling upon the assessee to show cause against the
proposed revision, heard objections and on the basis of
fresh evidence came to the conclusion that the respondents
did, not act as commission agents but carried on the
business of outright purchase and sale in respect of the,
entire turnover. He therefore revised the order of
assessment. The assesses’ appeal to the Sales Tax Appellate
Tribunal was allowed. The State invoked the revisional
jurisdiction of the High Court. The High Court held that in
dealing with a proceeding under s. 12(2), the revising
authority is restricted to the record before the assessing
authority and the order passed on fresh evidence could not
be sustained. It also held that r. 14A which authorised the
revising authority to correct the amount of tax payable
after making such enquiry as the authority considers
necessary was ultra vires the Act. The State appealed to
the Supreme Court and contended that the High Court had
erred in declaring the rule ultra vires
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HELD (per Shah and Sikri JJ.) : The order passed by the High
Court declaring r. 14A to be ultra vires should be set aside
and the proceedings remanded to the High Court for disposal
according to law. [613 A].
Under s. 12(2) (i) the revising authority may call for the
record of the order or the proceeding and the record alone
may be scrutinised for ascertaining the legality or
propriety of an order or the regularity of the proceeding.
If after perusing the record the authority is prima facie
satisfied about the illegality or impropriety or
irregularity, it may under r. 14A, before passing an order,
direct an additional enquiry. The validity of the rule even
though it is directed to have effect as if enacted in the
Act, is always open to challenge on the ground that it is
unauthorised But there is nothing in the Act prohibiting the
revising authority from making or directing a further
enquiry before passing an order in revision, once it is
satisfied on the record about the existence of the
illegality, impropriety or irregularity. The Act, while
conferring revisional jurisdiction under s. 12, leaves it to
the State Government by rules framed under s. 19, to
prescribe the procedure to be followed by the authority. A
provision authorising the revising authority to make a
further enquiry for effectively exercising his jurisdiction
must be regarded as a provision validly conferring power
unless it expressly or by clear implication nullifies, or is
inconsistent with any provision of the Act. The matter
should however be remanded to the High Court to make an
enquiry whether in the circumstances of the
602
case, the Deputy Commissioner was competent to proceed in
the manner he had done and to pass the order in revision.
For, while the revisional jurisdiction is not restricted
only to cases of arithmetical errors, it would not invest
the authority with power to launch upon enquiries at large
so as either to trench upon the powers which are expressly
reserved by the Act or by the rules to other authorities, or
to ignore the limitations inherent in the exercise of the
power. [608 F, H; 609 A, D-E, G-H. 611 G-H. 612 A, D, H].
Per Subba Rao J. (dissenting) : Rule 14A in so far as it
confers a power on the revising authority to make a fresh
enquiry and to determine on the basis of the enquiry the
correct amount of tax payable is void, because, while the
jurisdiction under s. 12(2) is clearly limited to the
scrutiny of the order passed or the proceedings recorded by
the inferior authority, and the scope of the scrutiny is
confined to the question of legality or propriety of the
order or the regularity of the proceedings, the rule
obviously enlarges the enquiry beyond the limits prescribed.
[604 605 A-B].
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 466
of 1962.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment dated December 2,
1959 of the Kerala High Court in Tax Revision Case No. 1 of
1957.
V. P. Gopalan Nambyar, Advocate-General, Kerala and V. A.
Seyid Muhammed, for the appellant.
A. V. Viswanatha Sastri and R. Gopalakrishnan, for the
respondent.
SUBBA RAO J., delivered a dissenting Opinion. The Judgment
Of SHAH and SIKRI JJ. was delivered by SHAH J.
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Subba Rao J. I regret my inability to agree. The facts are
fully stated in the judgment of my learned brother Shah J.
It would, therefore, be enough if only the relevant facts
were stated. The respondents are dealers in pepper and
other condiments. For the year 1950-51 they submitted their
return under the Madras General Sales Tax Act, 1939, wherein
they claimed exemption in respect of certain transactions on
the ground that they were commission sales exempted under s.
8 of the said Act. The Deputy Commercial Tax Officer,
Cannanore (Rural) gave the exemption claimed and assessed
the tax on the turn-over relating to transactions other than
those exempted. The Deputy Commissioner of Commercial
Taxes, Coimbatore Division, called for the record of the
case of the respondents for the said assessment year, and in
exercise of the powers under s. 12(2) (i) of the Act
directed a fresh enquiry in respect of the said exemption.
He issued a notice on February 9, 1956, calling upon the
respondents to show cause against the proposed revision of
assessment. On the basis of fresh evidence, the Deputy
Commissioner of Commercial Taxes came to the conclusion that
the respondents did not act as commission agents
603
but carried on the business of "outright purchase and We" in
respect of the entire turnover. On that finding, he revised
the order of the Deputy Commercial Tax Officer and assessed
the respondents on a larger turnover.
The short question is whether the Deputy Commissioner of
Commercial Taxes has jurisdiction under s. 12 (2) (i) of the
Act, read with the relevant rule, r, 14-A, to make the order
he did.
It is well settled that a subordinate provision, if
inconsistent with the Act, must give way to the Act. Though
there is an apparent conflict between a section of the Act
and a rule made thereunder, an attempt should be made to
reconcile them; that is to say, the rule may be so construe
d, if the phraseology permits it, as to make it consistent
with the Act. If it is not possible, the rule must be
struck down.
It is obvious that the rule cannot override s. 12 of the
Act. If s. 12 does not give jurisdiction to the revisional
authority to make a fresh enquiry and decide the case on
merits, r. 14-A cannot confer on him such power, for r.’14-A
in that event comes into conflict with S. 12 of the Act and
must, therefore, yield to it.
This leads us to the question whether the revisional
jurisdiction conferred under s. 12 of the Act enables the
authority concerned to make a fresh enquiry after issuing
notice to the dealer concerned and determine the question of
assessment on merits. The Act provides for appeals in some
cases and revisions in other cases. Under s. 11 (1) of the
Act any assessee objecting to an assessment made on him may,
within 30 days from the date on which he was served with the
notice of assessment, appeal to such authority as may be
prescribed; under s. 11(3), the appellate authority may,
after giving the appellant an opportunity of being heard,
pass such orders on the appeal as such authority may think
fit. Under s. 12(2) of the Act, the revisional authority
may suo motu "call for and examine the record of any order
passed or proceeding recorded under the provisions of the
Act by any officer subordinate to him, for the purpose of
satisfying himself as to the legality or propriety of such
order, or as to the regularity of such proceeding, and may
pass such order with respect thereto as he thinks fit." When
the Legislature confers a right of appeal in one case and a
discretionary remedy of revision in another, it must be
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deemed to have created two jurisdictions different in scope
and content. When it introduced the familiar concepts of
appeal and revision, it is also reasonable to assume that
the well-known distinction between these two jurisdictions
was also accepted by the
604
legislature. There is an essential distinction between an
appeal and a revision. The distinction is based on
differences implicit in the said two expressions. An appeal
is a continuation of the proceedings; in effect the entire
proceedings are before the appellate authority and it has
power to review the evidence subject to the statutory
limitations prescribed. But in the case of a revision,
whatever powers the revisional authority may or may not
have, it has not the power to review the evidence unless the
statute expressly confers on it that power. That limitation
is implicit in the concept of revision. Section 12 (2) is
no doubt wider in scope than s. 115 of the Code of Civil
Procedure. Even so the revisional authority’s jurisdiction
is confined to the question of legality or propriety of the
order or the regularity of the proceedings. The further
limitation on that jurisdiction is that it can only exercise
the same on the examination of the record of any order
passed or proceedings taken by any authority. The section,
therefore, not only limits the scope of its jurisdiction but
also defines the material on the basis of which the said
jurisdiction.is exercised. The general expression that the
authority "may pass such order as he thinks fit" must
necessarily be confined to the scope of the jurisdiction.
The revisional authority, therefore, cannot travel beyond
the order passed or proceedings recorded by the inferior
authority and make fresh enquiry and pass orders on merits
on the basis of the said enquiry. If it is not construed in
this manner, the distinction between appeal and revision
would be effaced.
Bearing this distinction in mind let me look at r. 14-A.
Rule 14-A of the rules does not make any distinction between
an appellate and a revisional authority. It empowers the
revisional authority to issue a notice to a dealer and
determine the correct amount of tax after making such
enquiry as it considers necessary. The said rule,
therefore, confers a power larger than that conferred upon
the revising authority under s. 12(2) of the Act. While the
jurisdiction under s. 12(2) of the Act is clearly limited to
the scrutiny of the order passed or the proceedings recorded
by the inferior authority and the scope of the scrutiny is
confined to the question of legality or propriety of an
order or the regularity of such proceedings, r. 14-A
obviously enlarges the enquiry beyond the limits prescribed
and permits the revising authority to make a fresh enquiry
and pass fresh assessment orders on the basis of the said
enquiry. It is not necessary to particularize what kind of
orders the revising authority can make and what are the
defects that are comprehended by the expression "legality",
"propriety" and .’regularity", They are well-known concepts.
But the said defects
605
can only be discovered from the said record and proceedings
and not by a fresh enquiry. If so, it follows that r . 14-A
insofar as it confers a power on the revising authority to
make a fresh enquiry and to determine on the basis of the
enquiry the correct amount of tax payable by an assessee is
void. Therefore, the order of the High Court is correct.
In the result, the appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
Shah J. The respondents are dealers in pepper and other
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condiments and have their place of business at Baliapatam,
Malabar (North) District which formerly was part of the
State of Madras, but since the reorganisation of States
under the States Reorganisation Act, 1956, forms part of the
State of Kerala. For the year 1950-51 the respondents
submitted their return under the Madras General Sales Tax
Act, 1939 showing a gross turnover of Rs. 67,38,710-10-11 in
respect of their business, and claimed exemption in respect
of turnover of the value of Rs. 50,83,441-14-4 on the plea
that it represented commission sales which were exempt from
tax by s. 8 of the Act. The Deputy Commercial Tax Officer,
Cannanore (Rural) by order, dated February 19, 1952 granted
exemption from tax on the commission sales covered by s. 8
and computed the net taxable turnover of the respondents at
Rs. 16,84,060-11-9. By order, dated February 26, 1952 the
Deputy Commercial Tax Officer assessed Rs. 26,313-7-3 as the
tax payable on the taxable turn-over of the respondents.
Some time before February 1956 the Deputy Commissioner of
Commercial ’Taxes, Coimbatore Division, called for the
record of the case Of the respondents for the assessment
year in question in exercise of the powers under s. 12(2)
(i) of the Act and directed an enquiry into the validity of
the claim about exemption in respect of the commission sales
under s. 8 of the Act.
The Deputy Commissioner then issued a notice on February 9,
1956 calling upon the respondents to show cause against the
proposed revision of assessment which would result in
enhancement of tax. After hearing the objections raised by
the respondents, by order, dated March 4, 1956, the Deputy
Commissioner held that the respondents did not act as
commission agents but "carried on business of outright
purchase and sale" in respect of the turnover of Rs.
50,83,355-13-4 and on that view in purported exercise of the
powers vested in him by S. 12 (2) (i) of the Act revoked the
exemption granted by the assessing officer by his order,
dated February 19, 1952, revised the order, dated February
26, 1952 and assessed the respondents to pay tax on a total
net turn-over of
606
Rs. 67 ,67,4.16-9-1 for 1950-51. He directed the assessing
officer to take further action in the matter and to recover
the tax due.
Against that order, the respondents moved the Sales Tax
Appellate Tribunal, Madras. The appeal of the respondents
was heard by the Tribunal and by order, dated October 10,
1956 the Tribunal held that the assessing officer had in
assessing the respondents in respect of transactions for
which they had previously ,obtained exemption, acted in
excess of his jurisdiction under s. 12 (2) (i) of the
Act and his order was liable to be set aside. In coming to
that conclusion the Tribunal held that rule 14-A of the
Rules framed under the Act which was brought into force on
January 1, 1948 could be applied only when the amount of tax
payable is found to be less than the correct amount, thereby
indicating that in rule 14-A the "emphasis is more on the
arithmetical aspect rather" than on the merits of an
assessment. In the view of the Tribunal, rule 14-A was
"much more restricted in scope than s. 12 of the Act, and
where a case is taken up under the general power of
revision, one has to look at the scope of s. 12 to find out
the extent of the general power, and not rule 14-A."
Against the order passed by the Tribunal, the State of
Kerala which had acquired jurisdiction in respect of the
sales tax assessment of the respondents by virtue of the
States Reorganisation Act, 1956, applied to the High Court
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of Judicature, Kerala. It may suffice to observe that no
question about the vires of rule 14-A was raised by the
assessees before the Taxing authorities, and the State was
not interested in raising such a contention. But the High
Court held that in dealing with a proceeding under s. 12(2)
of the Madras General Sales Tax Act the revising authority
is restricted to the record before the assessing authority
and his order passed on fresh evidence could not be
sustained. In the view of the High Court the expression
"the record of any order passed or proceeding recorded"
under s. 12(2) restricted the revising authority to the
examination of the legality or propriety of the order of a
subordinate officer or as to the regularity of the pro-
ceeding of such authority and prohibited consideration of
any other evidence, and rule 14-A made by the State
Government in exercise of the power under s. 19 of the Act,
which authorises the revising authority or the appellate
authority to correct the amount of tax payable by the dealer
after issuing a notice to the dealer and after making such
enquiry as such appellate or revising authority considers
necessary was ultra vires the Art.
The State of Kerala in this appeal contends that the High
Court has erred in declaring rule 14-A ultra vires and in
the disposing of
607
its petition invoking the revisional jurisdiction of the
High Court on that footing. To appreciate the argument it
is necessary in the first instance to read the relevant
provisions of the Act and rules framed thereunder. Section
9 of the Act deals with the procedure of the assessing
authority and S. 10 deals with the payment and recovery of
tax. Against an order of assessment an appeal lies under s.
11 to such authority as may be prescribed. By S. 12 as
amended by the first sub-section, the Commercial Tax Officer
is authorised either suo motu or on application in cases in
which an appeal does not lie to him under s. 11, to exercise
revisional jurisdiction. Sub-section (2) with which we are
directly concerned in this appeal provides
(2) The Deputy Commissioner may-
(i) suo motu, or
(ii) in respect of an order passed or
proceeding recorded by the Commercial Tax
Officer under subsection (1) or any other
provision of this Act and against which no
appeal has been preferred to the Appellate
Tribunal under section 12-A, on application,
call for and examine the record of any order
passed or proceeding recorded under the
provisions of this Act by any officer
subordinate to him, for the purpose of
satisfying himself as to the legality or
propriety of such order, or as to the
regularity of such proceeding, and may pass
such order with respect thereto as he thinks
fit."
Sub-section (4), insofar as it is material, provides that in
relation to an order of assessment passed under the Act, the
power of the Deputy Commissioner under cl. (1) of sub-s. (2)
shall be exercisable only within a period of four years from
the date on which the order was communicated to the
assessee. Sub-section (6) provides that no order may be
passed under sub-ss. (1), (2) or (3) enhancing the
assessment, without giving an opportunity to the assessee to
show cause against the proposed enhancement.
Sub-section (1) of S. 19 authorises the State Government to
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make rules to carry out the purposes of the Act. By sub-s.
(2) it is provided :
"In particular and without prejudice to the
generality of the foregoing power, such rules
may provide for-
(j) the duties and powers of officers
appointed for the purpose of enforcing the
provisions of this Act;
608
(k) generally regulating the procedure to be
followed and the forms to be adopted in
proceedings under this Act; and
(1) any other matter for which there is no
provision or no sufficient provision in this
Act and for which provision is, in the opinion
of the State Government, necessary for giving
effect to the purposes of this Act."
Sub-section (5) of S. 19 provides that all rules made under
this section shall be published in the Fort St. George
Gazette, and upon such publication shall have effect as if
enacted in the Act.
The Advocate-General for the State of Kerala contends that
rule 14-A was validly made in exercise of the powers under
s. 19 and that in any event the rule having by sub-s. (5) of
s. 19 the effect as if it is enacted in the Act it is not
liable to be declared invalid. The alternative ground
advanced by the Advocate-General may be easily disposed of.
The rules made under S. 19 and published in the Government
Gazette have by the express provision to have effect as if
enacted in the Act : but thereby no additional sanctity
attaches to the rules. Power to frame rules is conferred by
the Act upon the State Government and that power may be
exercised within the strict limits of the authority
conferred. If in making a rule, the State transcends its
authority, the rule will be invalid, for statutory rules
made in exercise of delegated authority are valid and
binding only if made within the limits of authority
conferred. Validity of a rule whether it is declared to
have effect as if enacted in the Act or otherwise is always
open to challenge on the ground that it is unauthorised.
Turning then to the jurisdiction which the revising
authority may exercise under S. 12(2), attention must first
be directed to the phraseology used by the Legislature. The
Deputy Commissioner is thereby invested with power to
satisfy himself about the legality or propriety of any order
passed or proceeding recorded by any officer subordinate to
him, or the regularity of any proceeding of such officer,
and to pass such orders with respect thereto as he thinks
fit. For exercising this power, he may suo motu or on
application call for and examine the record of any
proceeding or order. There is no doubt that the revising
authority may only call for the record of the order or the
proceeding, and the record alone may be scrutinised for
ascertaining the legality or propriety of an order or
regularity of the proceeding. But there is nothing in the
Act that for passing an order in exercise of his revisional
609
jurisdiction, if the revising authority is satisfied that
the subordinate officer has committed an illegality or
impropriety in the order or irregularity in the proceedings,
he cannot make or direct any further enquiry. The words of
sub-s. (2) of s. 12 that Deputy Commissioner "may pass such
order with respect thereto as be thinks fit" mean such order
as may in the circumstances of the case for rectifying the
defect be regarded by him as just. Power to pass such order
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as the revising authority thinks fit may in some cases
include power to make or direct such further enquiry as the
Deputy Commissioner may find necessary for rectifying the
illegality or impropriety of the order or irregularity in
the proceeding. It is therefore not right baldly to
propound that in passing an order in the exercise of his
revisional jurisdiction, the Deputy Commissioner must in all
cases be restricted to the record maintained by the Officer
subordinate to him, and can never make enquiry outside that
record.
It must be noticed that the Act while conferring upon the
prescribed authority power to entertain an appeal under s.
11, and a petition in revision under s. 12 does not
prescribe the procedure to be followed by the authorities.
It is left to the State Government by rules framed under s.
19 to prescribe the procedure of the appellate and the
revising authorities and a provision authorising the making
of a further enquiry for effectively exercising the
appellate or revisional power, would in the case of a taxing
statute fall within the scope of the rules. Jurisdiction to
revise the order or proceeding of a subordinate officer has
to be exercised for the purpose of rectifying any illegality
or impropriety of the order or irregularity in the
proceeding. But in taking that course the procedure to be
followed is prescribed by the rules, framed under s. 19(1)
to carry out the purposes of the Act and as further
illustrated by the head (1), (k) and (j) of sub-s. (2).
In our view the amplitude of the power conferred by sub-s.
(1) and illustrated by sub-s. (2) of s. 19 takes in the
power to provide for making further enquiry enabling the
revising authority to exercise his powers and unless the
power so conferred expressly or by clear implication
nullifies or is inconsistent with any provision of the Act,
it must be regarded as validly exercised. Conferment of
power to make further enquiry in cases where after being
satisfied about the illegality or impropriety of the order
or irregularity in the proceeding, the revising authority
thinks it just for rectifying the defect to do so does not
amount to enlarging the jurisdiction conferred by s. 12 (2).
It is in this light that the
610
provisions of rule 14-A may be examined. That Rule which
was added with effect from January 1, 1948, provides :
"Where the tax as determined by the initial
assessing authority appears to the appellate
authority under section 11 or revising
authority under section 12 to be less than the
correct amount of the tax payable by the
dealer, the appellate or revising authority
shall, before passing orders, determine the
correct amount of tax payable by the dealer
after issuing a notice to the dealer and after
making such enquiry as such appellate or
revising authority considers necessary."
It must be noticed that the power to determine the correct
amount ,of tax after issuing a notice to the dealer and
after making such enquiry as the authority considers
necessary is vested by this rule in the appellate authority
as well as the revising authority. It is usual in taxing
statutes to confer such power upon the appellate and
revising authorities. Under the Income-tax Act, 1922, by s.
31(2) the Appellate Assistant Commissioner was given the
power before disposing of any appeal, to make such further
inquiry as he thought fit, or cause further inquiry to be
made by the Income-tax Officer. By s. 33 (4) the Appellate
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Tribunal was given power to pass such order in the appeal as
it thought fit and that power included the power to direct
additional evidence to be taken or to take evidence itself :
M. L. Tewary v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Bihar and
Orissa(1). By s. 33-A the Commissioner could on his own
motion or an application presented within one year from the
date of the order sought to be revised, call for the record
of any proceeding under the Act in which an order had been
passed by any authority subordinate to him and could make
such inquiry or cause such inquiry to be made and subject to
the provisions of the Act to pass such order thereon, as he
thought fit. Similar provisions are now incorporated in the
Income-tax Act, Act 43 of 1961. By s. 250(4) of-that Act
the Appellate Assistant Commissioner is authorised before
disposing of an appeal to make such further inquiry as he
thinks fit or to direct the Income-tax Officer to make
further inquiry and report the result of the same to him.
Powers of the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal and the
Commissioner are couched in the same terms as under the Act
of 1922 : [see s. 254(1) and s. 263(1)]. It cannot
therefore be said that a provision which confers upon the
appellate or revising authority power to make such inquiry
as such appellate or revising authority considers necessary
in itself amounts to enlarging the
(1) (1955) 27 I.T.R. 630.
611
revisional or appellate jurisdiction. The only difference
between the Income-tax Acts and the Madras General Sales Tax
Act is that whereas the power to entertain the appeal or
revision application and to make orders for further enquiry
in the hearing of the appeal or revision is wholly dealt
with by the provisions of the Income-tax Acts, under the
Madras General Sales Tax Act the revisional jurisdiction and
appellate jurisdiction are conferred by the Act, but the
power of the appropriate authority in the exercise of the
jurisdiction when it appears to the appellate or revising
authority that the correct amount of tax payable by the
dealer has not been paid to make a further inquiry as the
authority considers necessary is conferred by the rules.
But that is no ground for regarding the conferment of power
to travel outside the record of the subordinate taxing
authorities as unauthorised. Investment of powers to make
such inquiry as the appellate or the revising authority
considers necessary can manifestly be invested by cls. (k)
and (1) of s. 19 sub-s. (2) and if such power is invested
the rule authorising the making of inquiry is not ultra
vires.
The Madras High Court in the State of Madras v. The Madura
Knitting Company Ltd.(1) has held that the powers given to
the revising authority under s. 12(2) are not confined to
errors patent on the face of the record, but would extend to
probing further into the records like calling for despatch
registers and other evidence.
But this is not sufficient to dispose of the appeal before
us. The objection that rule 14-A was ultra vires was raised
for the first time before the High Court. The Tribunal had
merely held that rule 14-A must be so read as to deal with
"the arithmetical aspect rather than on the aspect of the
merits of an assessment." There is, however, no such
restriction in either rule 14-A or in s. 12(2) of the Act.
The power to hold an enquiry to take additional evidence is
a procedural power in aid of the exercise of the revisional
jurisdiction and if the revisional jurisdiction is not
restricted only to cases of arithmetical errors or as the
Tribunal called it "arithmetical aspect", there is no reason
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to assume that the power under rule 14-A to make such
enquiry as the appellate or the revising authority considers
it just to order or to make would be so restricted. But the
power conferred by rule 14-A by the use of the expression
"making such enquiry as such appellate or revising authority
considers necessary" must be read subject to the scheme of
the Act. It would not invest the revising authority with
power to launch upon enquiries at large so as either to
trench
(1) (1959) 10 S.T.C. 155.
612
upon the powers which are expressly reserved by the Act or
by the Rules to other authorities or to ignore the
limitations inherent in the exercise of those powers. For
instance, the power to reassess escaped turn-over is
primarily vested by rule 17 in the assessing officer and is
to be exercised subject to certain limitations, and the
revising authority will not be competent to make an enquiry
for reassessing a tax-payer. Similarly the power to make a
best judgment assessment is vested by S. 9(2)(b) in the
assessing authority and has to be exercised in the manner
provided. It would not be open to the revising authority to
assume that power. The revisional power has to be exercised
for ascertaining whether the order passed is illegal or
improper or the proceeding recorded is irregular and it is
in aid of that power that such orders may be passed as the
authority may think fit. One of the inquiries in
considering the legality or propriety of the orders passed
by the subordinate officer which the revising or the
appellate authority may make is about the correctness of the
tax levied and if after perusing the record the authority is
prima facie satisfied about the illegality or impropriety of
the order or about the irregularity of the proceeding, it
may in passing its order direct an additional enquiry.
Neither s. 12 nor rule 14-A authorises the revising
authority to enter generally upon enquiries which may
properly be made by the assessing authorities and to reopen
assessments.
We are at this stage not called upon to express any opinion
about the correctness of the order passed by the Deputy
Commissioner on the merits. The High Court has not
investigated that question, and we have no materials before
us which would justify us in launching upon an enquiry into
this unexplored field. We have, however, thought it
necessary to explain the restrictions inherent in the
exercise of power under S. 12(2) read with Rule 14-A,
because counsel for the respondents has urged before us that
the enquiry made by the Deputy Commissioner is inconsistent
with the scheme of the Act, in violation of the rules of
natural justice, and in circumvention of the restrictions on
the power to reassess. That is a matter which will demand
investigation before the High Court. We desire only to
impress that the view taken by us that rule 14-A is not
ultra vires is not sufficient to dispose of the revision
application filed before the High Court. The High Court
will have to make enquiry whether in the circumstances of
the case the Deputy Commissioner, Coimbatore Division,, was
competent to proceed in the manner he has done and to pass
the order which was impugned before the Sales Tax Appellate
Tribunal. The border passed by the High Court declaring
rule 14-A to be
613
ultra vires is set aside, and the proceedings are remanded
to the High Court to be dealt with according to law.
There will be no order as to costs.
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ORDER BY COURT
In accordance with the opinion of the majority, the order of
the High Court declaring rule 14-A to be ultra vires is set
aside and the proceedings are remanded to the High Court to
be dealt with according to law. There will be no order as
to costs.
Appeal allowed and proceedings remanded.
614