Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M/S. JAIPURIA BROTHERS CO.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF UTTAR PRADESH A OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
21/10/1964
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
SUBBARAO, K.
SIKRI, S.M.
CITATION:
1965 AIR 1213 1965 SCR (1) 780
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1994 SC2101 (2)
ACT:
U.P. Sales Tax Act (U.P. Act 15 of 1948), s. 21-B Before and
after amendment by U.P. Act 19 of 1956-Scope of.
HEADNOTE:
The sales tax officer made a best judgment assessment with
respect to the turnover of the appellant under s. 21 of the
U.P. Sales Tax Act, 1948. The order was set aside by the
appellate authority. The revisional authority revised the
appellate order and remanded the case to the sales tax
officer for making a fresh assessment. When the officer
issued a notice for assessment, in pursuance of that order,
the assesee contended that as the original assessment had
been set aside, no proceeding in connection with it was
pending, and that reassessment was barred because, more than
three years had elapsed since the end of the year of
assessment. The office,,rejected the contentions. The
assessee filed a writ petition in the High Court and it was
allowed by a Single Judge. The State appealed to the
Division Bench. While the appeal was pending, s. 21 was
extensively amended in 1956 and the legislature gave
retrospective operation to the amended section. As a result
of the amendment, it was provided that when the officer
proceeded in pursuance of a direction given by the
revisional authority, no period of limitation applied. The
Division Bench, however, relied upon the unamended section
and set aside the order of the Single Judge, holding, that
even under the unamended section, no period of limitation
applied when the assessing officer was directed to proceed
by an order of the revisional authority. The assessee
appealed to the Supreme Court.
HELD:The appeal should be dismissed.
Though the High Court was in error in its interpretation
of the unamended section on the principle of Commissioner of
Income-tax, Bombay Presidency and Aden v. Khemchand Ramdas,
(L.R. 65 I.A. 236) still the order of the High Court must be
confirmed because of the amendment of 1956. The words used
by the legislature in the amended section are precise and
admit of only one interpretation, namely, that nothing
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contained in the section limits the time from the year of
assessment within which proceedings should be taken for
assessment or reassessment in consequence of or to give
effect to an order of the revisional authority. [783 E--G;
784 D-E; 785 H; 786 B]
Even assuming that the amended section applied only to
pending proceedings, when the revisional authority made an
order after examining the record directing the assessing
officer to make a fresh assessment, there was a proceeding
pending before such officer in pursuance of such direction.
[786 E]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 830 of 1963.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and decree dated
March 3, 1960 of the Allahabad High Court in Special Appeal
No. 3 of 1956.
G. S. Pathak and S. P. Varma, for the appellants.
781
O.P. Rana, for the respondents.
K. Srinivasan and R. Gopalakrishnan, for the intervener.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shah J. The appellants public limited Company--having its
registered office at Calcutta, was, with effect from October
5, 1946, appointed sole agent for sale of goods manufactured
by the Swadeshi Cotton Mills Company Ltd. On March 20,
1952, the Sales Tax Officer, Kanpur issued a notice under s.
21 of the U.P. Sales Tax Act, 1948 calling upon the
appellant Company to file a return of its turnover for the
assessment year 1948-49 on the ground that the turnover had
escaped assessment. On March 31, 1952, the Sales Tax
Office.- made a "best judgment" assessment and determined
the taxable turnover of the appellant Company, at Rs. 50
lakhs for the year 1948-49 and determined the appropriate
tax liability.
In the appeal to the Judge (Appeals) Sales Tax, the order
passed by the Sales Tax Officer, was set aside, that
authority holding that the appellant Company was not a
dealer within the meaning of s. 2(c) of the Act. But the
order of the appellate authority was set aside by the Judge
(Revisions) Sales Tax, by order dated March 28, 1955 and the
case was remanded to the Sales Tax Officer for "fresh
assessment". In the view of the Judge (Revisions) Sales
Tax, it was necessary to determine "the ownership of the
goods at the time of their sale".
The Sales Tax Officer then issued a notice calling, upon the
appellant Company to produce its books of account and other
relevant documents on July 23, 1955 for the purpose of
assessment for the year 1948-49. The appellant Company
contended that as the original assessment under s. 21 had
been set aside by the Judge (Revisions) Sales Tax, no
proceeding in connection with that assessment was pending
and re-assessment was barred because more than three year
had elapsed since the end of the year of assessment. The
Sales Tax Officer rejected the contention of the appellant
Company and insisted that the books of account and other
documents be produced as directed earlier. The appellant
Company then petitioned on September 2, 1955 to the High
Court of Allahabad under Art. 226 of the Constitution for a
writ in the nature of prohibition restraining the Sales Tax
Officer, Kanpur, from proceeding with the assessment of the
appellant Company for the assessment year 1948-49 and for
a writ of certiorari quashing the order dated September 2,
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1955 of the Sales Tax Officer, Kanpur and the proceeding
taken for re-assess-
782
ment in pursuance thereof. Chaturvedi J., held that
assessment sought to be made by the Sales Tax Officer
pursuant to the order of the Judge (Revisions) Sales Tax
"was clearly barred by the law of limitation" prescribed in
that behalf by S. 21 of the U.P. Sales Tax Act. It was in
the view of the learned Judge immaterial whether assessment
was being made by the Sales Tax Officer suo motu or under
the direction of a superior authority if at the time of
making the re-assessment the period prescribed by S. 21 had
expired. The order passed by Chaturvedi J., was reversed in
appeal by a Division Bench of the High Court. The High
Court held that the Sales Tax Officer was competent in view
of the order of remand which directed "fresh assessment" to
commence fresh assessment proceedings against the appellant
Company and in commencing and continuing those proceedings
he was acting in compliance with the directions given under
ss. 9 and 10 of the Act which he was bound to carry out and
to such assessment proceedings the period of limitation
prescribed by S. 21 of the Act did not apply. Against the
order passed by the High Court reversing the order passed by
Chaturvedi J., this appeal has been preferred with special
leave.
The material provisions of the U.P. Sales Tax Act are
briefly these : S. 9 conferred a power upon the designated
authority to entertain an appeal against the order passed by
the Sales Tax authority, and by sub-s. (3) of S. 9 it was
provided:
"The appellate authority may, after giving the
appellant a reasonable opportunity of being
heard,
(a) confirm, reduce, enhance or, annul the
assessment, or
(b) set aside the assessment and direct the
assessing authority to pass a fresh order
after such further inquiry as may be directed,
or
(c) . . . .
By sub-s. (3) of s. 10 as it stood at the
relevant time, it was provided:
" The Revising Authority may in his discretion
at any time suo motu or on the application of
the Commissioner of Sales Tax or the person
aggrieved, call for and examine the record of
any order made by any Appellate or Assessing
Authority under this Act, for the purpose of
satisfying himself as to the legality or
propriety of such order and may pass such
order as he thinks fit:
783
Provided that no such application shall be
entertained in any case where an appeal lay
against the order, but was not preferred."
Section 21 as it stood at the relevant time
provided:
"Where the whole or any part of the turnover
of a dealer has, for any reason, escaped
assessment to tax in any year, the Assessing
Authority "may, at any time within three years
from the expiry of such years, and after
issuing notice to the dealer and making such
enquiry as may be necessary, assess the tax
payable on such turnover."
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In the view of the High Court s. 21 which imposed upon the
Assessing Authority duty to exercise his power to assess
turnover which escaped assessment within three years from
the end of the year of assessment applied only to the order
which the Assessing Authority made suo motu : where, he was
directed to, proceed by an order of the appellate or
revisional authority under ss. 9 and 10 of the Act to re-
assess, the period of limitation has no application.
In our view the High Court was in error in so limiting
the operation of s. 21. That section imposes a restriction
upon the power of the Sales Tax Officer: that officer is
competent within three years next succeeding the date to
which the tax relates to assess tax payable on the turnover
which has escaped assessment. But the section does not
provide expressly, nor is there any implication, that the
period within which re-assessment may be made applies only
to those cases where the Sales Tax Officer acts on his own
initiative and not pursuant to the directions of the appel-
late or the revisional authority. In our view the principle
of the judgment of the Privy Council in Commissioner of
Income-tax, Bombay Presidency and Aden v. Khemchand Ramdas
(a firm) (1) applies to this case. In Khemchand’s case(1)
the tax-payer was assessed as a registered firm to income-
tax by order dated January 17, 1927 for the year 1926-27
under s. 23(4) of the Income-tax Act. Under the Act as it
then stood, a registered firm was not liable to pay super-
tax and was liable to income-tax at the maximum rate. On
January 9, 1928 the Commissioner of Income-tax In exercise
of powers of revision under s. 33 of the Act issued a notice
to the assessee requiring him to show cause why the order of
the Income-tax Officer granting registration of the firm and
assessing it on that footing should not be set aside, and by
order dated February 13, 1928 ordered cancellation of
registration and
(1) (1938) L.R. 65 T.A. 236.
784
.directed the Income-tax Officer to take necessary action
thereupon. On May 4, 1929, the Income-tax Officer assessed
to super-:tax the assessee on the footing that its
registration was cancelled. authority of the Income-tax
Officer to assess was challenged. It was held by the
Judicial Committee that as the Income-tax Officer had made
the order imposing super-tax on the assessee more than one
year after the earlier demand in respect of income-tax, the
,order was without jurisdiction. The Judicial Committee
pointed out that once a final assessment has been made, it
cannot be ,reopened by the Income-tax Officer of his own
motion, or at the direction of the Commissioner exercising
his powers under s. 33 of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922,
except in the circumstances and within the time prescribed
by ss. 34 and 35 of the Act. They observed that ss. 34 and
35 were exhaustive and prescribed the only circumstances in
which, and the only time in which, such fresh assessments
could be made and fresh notices of demand could be issued.
As the Income-tax Officer took no fresh step within one year
under the statute, he was "hopelessly out of time whichever
of the two sections was applicable".
But the order of the High Court must still be confirmed,
because during the pendency of the proceeding in the High
Court s. 21 was extensively amended. The section as
amended by Act 19 of 1956 from May 28, 1956 reads as
follows:
"(1) If the assessing authority has reason to
believe that the whole or any part of the
turnover of a dealer has, for any reason,
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escaped assessment to tax for any year, the
assessing authority may, after issuing notice
to the dealer, and making such enquiry as may
be necessary, assess or re-assess him to tax:
Provided that the tax shall be charged at the
rate at which it would have been charged had
the turnover not escaped assessment, or full
assessment, as the case may be.
Explanation.-Nothing in this sub-section shall
be deemed to prevent the assessing authority
from making an assessment to the best of its
judgment.
(2) No order of assessment under sub-section
(1) or under any other provision of this Act
shall be made for ,any assessment year after
the expiry of four years from the end of such
year.
Provided that where the notice under sub-
section (1) has been served within such four
years the assessment or re-assessment to be
made in pursuance of such
785
notice may be made within one year of the date
of the service of the notice even if the
period of four-years is thereby exceeded:
Provided further that nothing contained in
this section limiting the time within which
any assessment or re-assessment may be made,
shall apply to an assessment or re-assessment
made in consequence of, or to give effect to,
any finding or direction contained in an order
under section 9, 10, or 11.
Explanation.-
Under the terms of s. 21 (1) as amended where the assessing
authority has reason to believe that any part of the
turnover has or any reason escaped assessment to tax for any
year, he may make Assessment within four years from the end
of the year in which the turnover has escaped assessment.
The rule is, however, subject to two exceptions: (i) when
notice under sub-s. (1) has been served within four years
the assessment or re-assessment to be made in pursuance of
such notice may be made within one year of the date of the
service of the notice even if the period of four years is
thereby exceeded; and (ii) that, nothing contained in s 21
which limits the time within which any assessment or re-
assessment is to be made applies to assessment or re-
assessment made in consequence of, or to give effect to, any
finding or direction contained in an order under ss. 9, 10
or 11. Therefore where the Sales Tax Officer proceeds in
pursuance of a direction given by the appellate or revising
authority or under an order made by the High Court in a
reference under s. II, the period of limitation prescribed
by sub-s. (2) of s. 21 does not apply. This section was
incorporated in the Act by s. 15 of the amending Act, which
enacted:
"For section 21 of the Principal Act the
following shall be and be always deemed to
have been substituted: "
The amended section was therefore to be deemed to be in
operation at all material times since the enactment of the
U.P. Sales Tax Act 15 of 1948. The Legislature has given a
clear retrospective operation to the amended section as from
the date on which the principal Act came into operation, and
correctness of the order of the Sales Tax Officer holding
that there was no bar of limitation to the making of a fresh
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assessment pursuant to the order of the appellate or
revising authority had to be adjudged in the light of s. 21
as amended by Act 19 of 1956. The words used by the
Legislature are precise and admit of only one interpretation
that
786
proceedings taken for assessment or re-assessment in
consequence of, or to give effect to an order of the
appellate or revising authority or an order passed by the
High Court under s. 11 may be taken notwithstanding the
expiry of the period prescribed by sub-s. (2) of s. 21.
Mr. Pathak on behalf of the appellant Company pleaded
that even if that be the true interpretation of s. 21 as
amended, the section could only apply to proceedings which
were pending at the date on which the Act was amended, but
in law no proceeding was pending because the Judge
(Revisions) Sales Tax had no power to direct after the
expiry of the period prescribed under s. 21 as it originally
stood to make a fresh assessment in respect of the year
1948-49. There are two clear answers to this plea, either
of which is sufficient to reject it. The revisional
authority had under s. 10(3) power to make such order as he
thought fit after calling for and examining the record of
any order made by an appellate or an assessing authority and
after satisfying himself as to the legality or propriety of
such order. Even assuming that the revisional authority
came to a conclusion which was erroneous in law, it was
still an order which he had jurisdiction to make and that
order unless set aside in a proper proceeding could not be
ignored on the ground of lack of jurisdiction. There was,
therefore, a proceeding pending before the Sales Tax Officer
in pursuance of the direction given by the Judge (Revisions)
Sales Tax who had directed the Sales Tax Officer to make a
fresh assessment. Whether in pursuance of this direction, a
fresh assessment could be made under s. 21 before it was
amended, need not detain us. We are concerned with the
jurisdiction of the revising authority to make the order
that he did under the section as it stood amended, and not
with the competence of the assessing authority to pass an
order for assessment under the statute before it was
amended. The other ground is also equally decisive. By s.
15 of Act 19 of 1956, s. 21 of the Act as amended, must be
deemed to have been on the statute book on the date on which
the revising authority passed his order, and under that
amended provision the power of the assessing authority to
assess or re-assess pursuant to an order of the revising
authority was not lost when the period prescribed by sub-s.
2 of s. 21 for assessment or re-assessment expired. Under
s. 21, before it was amended, there could be no order of
assessment or re-assessment either by the Sales Tax Officer
suo motu, or pursuant to the direction of the appellate or
revising authority after the expiry of the period of three
years prescribed by the statute, but under s. 21 as amended,
the power may be exercised by the Sales Tax Officer suo motu
within four years for assessment or
787
re-assessment. That power could be exercised under the
first proviso within a further period of one year if a
notice under sub-s. (1) was served within four years of the
end of the year of assessment and without limit of time when
it was made in consequence of, or to give effect to, any
finding or direction contained in an order of the appellate
or revisional authority or under an order of the High Court
under S. 11. In initiating proceeding for assessment,
pursuant to the direction of the revising authority, the
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Sales Tax Officer was, by virtue of S. 21 as amended,
subject to no restrictions as to the period within which the
order of assessment could be made. The order passed by the
High Court must therefore be confirmed.
The appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.
sup,/65-7
788