Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 15619-15620 1996
PETITIONER:
SINGHAI RAKESH KUMAR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 28/11/2000
BENCH:
S.P.Bharucha, Doraswaimy Raju,, Ruma Pal
JUDGMENT:
Bharucha, J.
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Under challenge are the orders of a Division Bench of
the High Court of Madhya Pradesh dismissing a writ petition
filed by the appellant-assessee and answering against him a
reference made by the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal of the
following question : Whether on the facts and in the
circumstances of the case, the Tribunal was right in holding
that the profit arising from the sale of agricultural lands
did not amount to capital gains within the meaning of Income
Tax Act, 1961?
The reference related to the Assessment Years 1981-82
and 1983-84.
In the previous years relevant to the Assessment Years
1981-82 and 1983-84 the assessee sold agricultural lands
which were situated within the municipal limits of Bina. He
made capital gains thereon and the Income Tax Officer made
him liable to capital gains tax. The first appellate
authority agreed with the Income Tax Officer and the
assessee approached the Tribunal. The Tribunal held that
the profit on the sale of agricultural lands was not capital
gains within the meaning of the provisions of the ncome Tax
Act, 1961. From the order of the Tribunal the question
aforestated was referred to the High Court. Pending the
reference, the assessee filed in the High Court the writ
petition the order upon which is impugned. The writ
petition asked the H gh Court to declare as unconstitutional
the Explanation to sub-section (1A) and clause (iii) of
sub-section (14) of Section 2 of the Income Tax Act, 1961
and to declare that capital gains arising from the sale of
agricultural lands within a municipal are were not liable to
capital gains tax under the Income Tax Act, 1961. The High
Court dismissed the writ petition and answered the reference
against the assessee.
Article 366 defines, in clause (1), agricultural
income to mean agricultural income as defined for the
purposes of the enactments relating to Indian Income-tax.
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Entry 46 of List II of the Seventh Schedule of the
Constitution speaks of Taxes on agr cultural income; in
other words, it is for the States to legislate on the
subject of taxes on agricultural income. Entry 82 of List I
of the Seventh Schedule reads Taxes on income other than
agricultural income; in other words, it is for the Union t
legislate on the subject of taxes on income other than
agricultural income.
In the Income Tax Act, 1922 agricultural income was
defined in clause (1) of Section 2. Sub-clause (a) thereof
alone is relevant for our purpose. Thereunder,
agricultural income meant any rent or revenue derived
from land which is used for agricult ral purposes ...
Section 2 (4A) defined capital asset to mean property of
any kind held by an assessee but not any land from which
the income derived is agricultural income.
It was submitted by learned counsel for the assessee
that agricultural income in clause (1) of Article 366 must
be read only as it was defined in 1950 when the Constitution
came into force; that is to say, in the manner indicated in
Section 2(1)(A) and 2(4)(A)(iii) of the 1922 Act. To decide
the correctness of the submission, it is necessary to give
true meaning to clause (1) of Article 366. Agricultural
income thereunder means agricultural income as defined for
the purposes of the enactments rel ting to Indian
Income-tax. The definition does not say that agricultural
income means agricultural income as defined in the 1922
Act. It does not even say that it means agricultural
income as defined for the purposes of the enactment relating
to I dian Income-tax. It says that it means agricultural
income as defined for the purposes of the enactments
relating to Indian Income-tax. The use of the plural
enactments is very relevant. It means that agricultural
income for the purposes of the onstitution means
agricultural income as it is defined at the relevant time in
the enactment that then relates to Income-tax.
In the judgment of this Court in Bajaya vs. Gopikabai
& Anr. [1978(2) SCC 542] the position in law, as applicable
here, is stated thus: Broadly speaking, legislation by
referential incorporation falls in two categories: First,
where a statute by specific reference incorporates the
provisions of another statute as of the time of adoption.
Second, where a statute incorporates by general eference the
law concerning a particular subject, as a genus. In the
case of the former, the subsequent amendments made in the
referred statute cannot automatically be read into the
adopting statute. In the case of latter category, it may be
presumed t at the legislative intent was to include all the
subsequent amendments also made from time to time in the
generic law on the subject adopted by general reference.
This principle of construction of a reference statute has
been neatly summed up by Sutherl nd, thus:
A statute which refers to the law of a subject
generally adopts the law on the subject as of the time the
law is invoked. This will include all the amendments and
modifications of the law subsequent to the time the
reference statute was enacte .
Corpus Juris Secundum also enunciates the same
principle in these terms :
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.Where the reference in an adopting statute is to
the law generally which governs the particular subject, and
not to any specific statute or part thereof, .. the
reference will be held to include the law as it stands at
the time it is sought to be app ied, with all the changes
made from time to time, at least as far as the changes are
consistent with the purpose of the adopting statute.
Under the terms of the Constitution, Parliament is
empowered to legislate to say what agricultural income
means. What Parliament says in this regard in the statute
then current relating to income tax is the definition of
In regard to such agricultural income the States may
legislate. In regard to all other income it is for
Parliament to legislate. (See The Karimtharuvi Tea Estates
Ltd., Kottayam & Anr. Vs. State of Kerala & Ors., [1963(1)
agricultural income for the p urposes of the Constitution.
upp. SCR 823].)
It is in this background that the impugned amendments
in the 1961 Act may be seen. Clause (1A) of Section 2
defined agricultural income to mean, inter alia, any rent
or revenue derived from land which is situated in India and
is used for agricultural purposes. Clause (14) of Section
2 defined capital asset to mean property of any kind held
by an assessee in India .. but does not include
agricultural land in India.. The words agricultural
land in India were substituted by the Finance Ac , 1970
with effect from 1st April, 1970 to read thus : (iii)
agricultural land in India, not being land situate -
(a) in any area which is comprised within the
jurisdiction of a municipality (whether known as a
municipality, municipal corporation, notified area
committee, town area committee, town committee, or by any
other name) or a cantonment board and which has population
of not less than ten thousand according to the last
preceding census of which the relevant figures have been
published before the first day of the previous year; or
(b)in any area within such distance, not being more
than eight kilometers, from the local limits of any
municipality or cantonment board referred to in item (a), as
the Central Government may, having regard to the extent of,
and scope for, urbanization o that area and other relevant
considerations, specify in this behalf by notification in
the Official Gazette;
It appears that by reason of the decision of the
Bombay High Court in Manubhai A. Sheth & Ors. Vs. N.D.
Nirgudkar, 2nd Income-Tax Officer, A-II Ward, Bombay & Anr.
[128 I.T.R. 87], an Explanation was added by the Finance
Act, 1989, with effect from 1st A ril, 1970, to clause (1A)
of Section 2 which read thus : Explanation - For the
removal of doubts, it is hereby declared that revenue
derived from land shall not include and shall be deemed
never to have included any income arising from the transfer
of any land referred to in item (a) or item (b) of
sub-clause (iii) of clause (14) of this Section;
The position, as a result, is that income arising from
the transfer of agricultural land that falls within the
terms of items (a) and (b) of sub-clause (iii) of clause
(14) of Section 2 falls outside the ambit of revenue derived
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from land and therefore, utside the ambit of agricultural
income. Such income, therefore, is liable to capital gains
tax chargeable under Section 45 of the 1961 Act.
Parliament has, as aforestated, the power to define
what agricultural income is in the 1961 Act; the amendment
of sub-sections (2) and (14) of Section 2 thereof in the
manner aforestated are, therefore, good in law. The effect
is that the assessee is li able to pay capital gains tax on
the sales of his lands within the municipal limits of Bina.
We are of the view, therefore, that the High Court was
right in the conclusions that it came to. The appeals are
dismissed with costs.