Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX WEST BENGAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ANWAR ALI
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
29/04/1970
BENCH:
GROVER, A.N.
BENCH:
GROVER, A.N.
SHAH, J.C.
HEGDE, K.S.
CITATION:
1970 AIR 1782 1971 SCR (1) 446
1970 SCC (2) 185
CITATOR INFO :
F 1972 SC 132 (18)
D 1973 SC 22 (13)
RF 1977 SC2194 (2)
RF 1980 SC1146 (7)
RF 1992 SC 591 (2)
ACT:
Income-tax Act (11 of 1922), s. 28-Penalty proceedings-
Whether of a criminal nature-Onus on department show amount
concealed as income.
HEADNOTE:
The Income-tax Officer, while assessing the respondent to
tax discovered an undisclosed bank account of the
’respondent for a large sum. He did not accept the
explanation of the respondent as to the source of the amount
and held that it represented income from an undisclosed
source. Thereafter he initiated penalty proceedings under
s. 28 and imposed a penalty which was confirmed by the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner. In appeal, the Tribunal
held that penalty proceedings were of a criminal nature and
that the burden lay on the department to show that the
amount concealed was of a revenue nature and was assessable
as income and that the onus was not discharged in the
present case by merely showing that the assessee’s
explanation was not accepted in the assessment proceedings.
The High Court agreed with the Tribunal.
In appeal to this Court,
HELD. (1) Penalty proceedings are included in the expression
"assessment" and the true nature of a penalty is the
imposition of an additional tax. But, one of the principal
objects of s. 28 is to provide a deterrent against
recurrence of default on the part of the assessee. There-
fore, the section is a penal provision and the proceedings
were of a penal nature. [450 B-C]
C. A. Abraham v. Income-tax officer, 41 I.T.R. 425 (S.C.),
explained. Commissioner of Income-tax, Ahmedabad v. Gokuldas
Harivallabhdas
34 I.T.R. 98, Commissioner of Income-tax Gujarat v. L. H.
Vora, 56 I.T.R. 126 and Commissioner of Income Tax Bihar and
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Orissa v. Mohan Mallah, 54 I.T.R. 499, approved.
Moman Rain Ram Kumar v. Commissioner of Income-tax,
U.P., 59 I.T.R. 135 and Lal Chand Gopal Das v. Commissioner
of Income-tax, U.P., 48 I.T.R. 324, not approved.
Hindustan Steel Ltd. v. State of Orissa, C.As. Nos. 883-
892/66 dt. 4-8-1969 and Fattorini (Thomas) (Lanchashire)
Ltd. v. Inland Revenue Commissioner, (1943) (11) I.T.R.
Supp. 50, referred to.
(2)The gist of the offence under s. 28(1)(c) is that the
assessee has concealed the particulars of his income or
deliberately furnished inaccurate particulars of such
income, and therefore, the department must establish that
the receipt of the amount in dispute constitutes income of
the assessee. If there is no evidence on the record except
the explanation has been found to be false, if does not
follow that the receipt constitutes his taxable income. [450
E-G]
447
Commissioner of, Income-tax, Ahmedabad v.Gokuldas
Harivallabhdas, 34 I.T.R. 98, approved.
(3)’Since the proceedings under s. 28 are of a penal nature
and the burden is on the department to prove that a
particular amount is a revenue receipt, the finding given in
the assessment proceedings that the assessee’s explanation
is false and that the disputed amount represents income is
evidence but is not conclusive. Before penalty could be
imposed the, entirety of circumstances must reasonably point
to the conclusion that the disputed amount represented
income and that the assesses , had consciously. concealed
the particulars of his income or had deliberately furnished
inaccurate particulars. [450-451 A-C]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2560 of 1966.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated May 11, 1966 of the
Calcutta High Court in Income-tax Matter No. 98 of 1962.
S. T. Desai, G. C. Sharma and R. N. Sachthey, for the
appellants.
D. K. De, A. N. Sinha, Rathin Das for P. K. Mukherjee, for
respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Grover, J. This is an appeal by special leave from a judg-
ment of the Calcutta High Court answering the following
question which was referred to it by the Tribunal in the
negative and in favour of the assessee.
"Whether on the facts and in the circumstances
of the case, the Income-tax authorities were
justified in imposing a penalty on the
assessee under Section, 28 (1) (c) of the
Income-tax Act ?"
The assessee during the assessment year 1947-48, the
corresponding- previous year being the financial year ending
on March 31, 947 was a partner in the firm of M/s. Haji Sk.
Md. Hussain Md. Jan of Calcutta. The Income-tax Officer
while making the assessment discovered an undisclosed bank
account of the assessee with the Central Bank of India Ltd.
Bettiah, Bihar. It was found that a cash-deposit of Rs.
87,000 had been made by the assessee on November 21, 1946 in
that Bank. He was asked to explain the source, of the
amount of deposit. According to his explanation all his
relations got panicky during the communal riots in Bihar in
the year 1946 and entrusted him with whatever cash amounts
they had with them at that time for safe custody.
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448
It was stated that a sum of Rs. 87,000 had been received in
the following manner
Zahir Hussain alias Md. Zahir (Cousin)Rs. 18,500/-
Mohammad Jan (deceased father)Rs. 1,000
Mohd. Haniff (cousin) Rs.1,750
Khairunnessa Bibi (mother)Rs.23,000
Safihan Bibi (Sister) Rs.13,000
Fatema Bibi (Wife) Rs.15,750
Hasuia Bibi (Brother’s wife)Rs.12,000
___________
Rs.87,000
____________
These amounts which were received by the assessee from his
relations were deposited by him in a fixed deposit account
in the joint name of himself and his minor sons in the Bank
at Bettiah. The Income-tax Officer did not accept the
explanation of the assessee and held that the sum of Rs.
87,000 represented income from undisclosed sources. He
added the amount to the total income of the assessee in his
personal assessment. This addition was maintained by the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner in appeal. The Appellate
Tribunal also agreed with the decision of ,the Income-tax
Officer and the Appellate Assistant Commissioner.
Penalty proceedings were initiated after the assessment and
in due course the Income-tax Officer imposed a penalty
amounting to Rs. 66,000 on the assessee under S. 28 (1) (c)
for concealing income and deliberately furnishing inaccurate
particulars. The Appellate Assistant Commissioner in appeal
held that the case clearly called for a penal action but he
reduced the amount of penalty by Rs. 22,000. Subsequently
he rectified his order under S. 35 and confirmed the penalty
of Rs. 66,000 imposed by the Income-tax Officer. The
assessee went up to the Appellate Tribunal in appeal. The
Tribunal took the view that penalty proceedings were of a
criminal nature. The onus lay on the department to show by
adequate evidence that the amount of the cash stated to have
been concealed by the assessee was of a revenue nature and
was assessable as income and that the assessee had concealed
it or deliberately furnished false particulars in regard
thereto. This onus, in the opinion of the Tribunal, was not
,discharged by the Income-tax authorities by showing merely
that the explanation given by the assessee in the assessment
proceedings was found to be unacceptable. The Income-tax
Officer, according to the Tribunal, must find some material
apart from he falsity of the assessee’s explanation to
support his finding that the receipt from undisclosed
sources was income. As no satisfactory evidence had been
produced by the department to establish
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that the amount in question represented the income of the
assessee the Tribunal held that no penalty could be imposed.
Now penalty can be imposed under s. 28 (1) (c) if the Income
tax Officer, the Appellate Assistant Commissioner or the
Appellate Tribunal in the course of any proceedings under
the Income-tax Act 1922 is satisfied that any person "has
concealed the particulars of his income or deliberately
furnished inaccurate particulars of such income". In the
judgment under appeal reference has been made to the
decisions of the various High Courts on the true ambit and
scope of this provision and the burden in the matter of
establishing concealment of particulars of income or
deliberately furnishing inaccurate particulars of such
income. The majority of High Courts, namely, Bombay in
Commissioner of Income-tax, Ahmedabad v. Gokuldas
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Harivallabhdas(1), Gujarat in Commissioner of Income-tax
Gujarat v. L. H. Vora (2 ) and Patna in Commissioner of
Income-tax Bihar & Orissa v. Mohan Mallah(3) had expressed
the view that proceedings under s. 28 ( 1 ) (c) were of a
penal nature and it was for the department to establish that
the assessee was guilty of concealment of, the particulars
of income. The mere fact that the assessee had given a
false explanation did not prove that the receipt necessarily
constituted income of the assessee. Allahabad High Court,
however, in Moman Rain Rant Kumar(1) v. Commissioner of
Income-tax U.P. observed that where the explanation offered
by the assessee in respect of an item of income- shown as
capital receipt was deliberately false it was open to the
Income-tax authorities to impose a penalty under s. 2 8 (1)
(c). In the earlier judgment in Lal Chand Gopal Das v.
Commissioner of Income-tax U.P.(5) the Allahabad court had
said that if a receipt was income but was disguised in the
account or in the return as a non-assessable receipt it was
clearly a case of concealment of the particulars or of
furnishing inaccurate particulars of income and a penalty
under s. 2 8 (1) (c) should be imposed on the assessee.
The first point which falls ’for determination is whether
the imposition of penalty is in the nature of a penal
provision. The determination of the question of burden of
proof will depend largely on the penalty proceedings being
penal in nature or being merely meant for imposition of an
additional tax,, the liability to pay such tax having been
designated as penalty under s. 28. One line of argument
which has prevailed particularly with the Allahabad High
Court in Lal Chand Gopal Das(5) cage is that there was no
essential difference between tax and penalty because the
liability for payment of both was imposed as a part of the-
(1) 34 I.T.R. 98. (2) 56 I.T.R.
126.
(3) 54 I.T.R. 499. (4) 59 ].T.
P. 135.
(5) 48 I.T.R. 324.,
450
-machinery of assessment and the penalty was merely an
additional tax imposed in certain circumstances on account
of the assessee’s conduct. The justification of this view
was founded on certain observations in C. A. Abraham v.
Income-tax Officer, Kottayam & Anr.(1). It is true that
penalty proceedings under s. 28 are included in the
expression "assessment" and the true nature of penalty has
been held to be additional tax. But one of the principal
objects in enacting S. 28 is to provide a deterrent against
recurrence of default on the part of the assessee. The
section is penal in the sense that its consequences are
intended to be an effective deterrent which will put a Stop
to practices which the legislature considers to be against
the public interest. It is significant that in C. A.
Abraham’s(1) case this Court was not called upon to
determine whether penalty proceedings were penal or of quasi
penal nature and the observations made with regard to
penalty being an additional tax were made in a different
context and for a different purpose. It appears to have
been taken as settled by now in the sales tax law that an
order imposing penalty is the result of a quasi criminal
proceedings; (Hindustan Steel Ltd. v. The State of
Orissa(1). In England also it has never been doubted that
such proceedings are penal; Fattorini (Thomas) (Lanchashire)
(Ltd., v. Inland Revenue Commissioner (3).
The next question is that when proceedings under S. 28 are
penal in character what would be the nature of the burden
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upon the department for establishing that the assessee is
liable to payment of penalty. As has been rightly observed
by Chagla C.J., in Commissioner of Income-tax, Ahmedabad v,
Gokuldas Harivallabhdas (4) the gist of the offence under S.
2 8 ( 1 ) (c) is that the assessee has concealed the
particulars of his income or deliberately furnished
inaccurate particulars of such income and therefore the
department must establish that the receipt of the amount in
dispute ,constitutes income of the assessee. If there is no
evidence on the record except the explanation given by the
assessee which ,explanation has been found to be false it
does not follow that the receipt constitutes his taxable
income.
Another point is whether a finding given in the assessment
proceedings that a particular receipt is income after
rejecting the explanation given by the assessee as false
would prima facie be sufficient for establishing in
proceedings under S. 28 that the disputed amount was the
assessee’s income. It must be remembered that the
proceedings under S. 28 are of a penal nature and the burden
is on the department to prove that a particular amount
(1) 41 1. T.R. 425.
(3) 1943 (11) I.T.R. (Supp.)50.
(2) C.A.S. 883-392/66 dt. 4-8-1969.
(4) 34 I.T.R. 98.
451
is a revenue receipt. It would be perfectly legitimate to
say that the mere fact that the explanation of the assessee
is false does not necessarily give rise to the inference
that the disputed amount represents income. It cannot be
said that the finding given in the assessment proceedings
for determining or computing the tax is conclusive. However
it is good evidence. Before penalty can be imposed the
entirety of circumstances must reasonably point to the
conclusion that the disputed amount represented income and
that the assessee had consciously concealed the particulars
of his income or had deliberately furnished. inaccurate
particulars.
In the present case, it was neither suggested before the
High Court nor has it been contended before us that apart
from the falsity of the explanation given by the assessee
there was cogent material or evidence from which it could be
inferred that the assessee had concealed the particulars of
his income or had deliberately furnished inaccurate
particulars in respect of the same and that the disputed
amount was a revenue receipt. The question was, therefore,
rightly answered by the High Court.
The appeal fails and it is dismissed with costs.
V.P.S. Appeal
dismissed.
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