Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
L. HAZARI MAL KUTHIALA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE INCOME-TAX OFFICER, SPECIAL CIRCLE, AMBALA CANTT.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
27/09/1961
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
DAS, S.K.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
SHAH, J.C.
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
CITATION:
1961 AIR 200 1961 SCR (1) 892
CITATOR INFO :
D 1972 SC 182 (15)
RF 1975 SC2135 (3)
R 1976 SC2581 (12)
R 1983 SC 537 (5)
D 1988 SC2042 (4)
ACT:
Income-tax--Commissioner’s Power of transfer--Statutory pro-
vision for consulting the Central Board of Revenue--If
mandatory--Transfer of pending and non-pending
cases--Patiala Income-tax Act of Samvat 2001 S. 5, sub-ss.
(5), (7A), s. 34--Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 (II Of 1922),
s. 64(1).--Indian Finance Act, 1950 (26 of 1950), s. 13.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant firm which carried on business as forest
lessees and timber merchants in the former Kapurthala State
was assessed to, and paid, income tax, for the account year
1945-46 under the Income-tax law which was then in force in
the said State. Subsequently Kapurthala State integrated
into what was known as Pepsu and the Patiala Income-tax Act,
2001, was made applicable and, came into force in the
integrated State. Later still the Indian Finance Act, 1950
(26 of 1930), applied the Indian Income-tax Act to Part B
States which had emerged as a result of political changes
and s. 13 Of the Indian Finance Act repealed the Income-tax
laws obtaining in Part B States except for the purposes of
levy assessment and collection of income-tax and Super-tax
relating to the period mentioned therein. On November 4,
1953, the Commissioner of Income-tax, Punjab (i) etc.
purporting to act under s. 5, sub-ss. (5) and (7A) of the
Indian Income-tax Act ordered the assessment of the
appellant firm to be done by the Income-tax Officer, Special
Circle, Ambala and not by the Income-tax Officer, B-Ward,
Patiala, who would ordinarily be the competent assessing
authority for the firm under s. 64 Of the Indian Income-tax
Act. On March 12, 1953, the Income-tax Officer, Special
Circle, Ambala, issued a notice purporting to be under the
Patiala Income-tax Act of Samvat 2001 to the appellant firm
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for filing a return of its income and total world income as
he believed that the income had been underassessed. The
appellant then filed an application under Art. 226 of the
Constitution in the High Court for writs of prohibition,
certiorari, quo warranto etc. against the Income-tax
Officer, Special Circle, Ambala, and the Commissioner of
Income-tax, Punjab (i) etc. regarding the reassessment of
the income of the firm for the account year 1945-46. The
High Court dismissed the said petition and this appeal was
filed on a certificate granted by the High Court. The
contentions of the appellant inter alia, were that the
Income-tax Officer, Special Circle, Ambala, had no
jurisdiction to issue a notice under s. 34
893
of the Patiala Income-tax Act of Samvat 2001, and that only
the Income-tax Officer, B-Ward, Patiala, was the competent
authority as he was the locally situated Income-tax Officer
and would have jurisdiction under s. 64(1) of the Income-tax
Act. The transfer of the case by the Commissioner of
Income-tax by his order of November 4, 1954, was
characterised as ultra vires and incompetent. The argument
that the words of s. 13 Of the Indian Finance Act, 1950, did
not include reassessment was abandoned in view of the
decisions of this Court in Lakshmana Shenoy v. The Income-
tax Officer, Ernakulam, [1959] S.C.R. 751. It was further
contended that the Commissioner in acting under s. 5(5) of
the Patiala Income-tax Act was required to consult the
Minister-in-Charge whose place was taken by the Central
Board of Revenue under the Indian Finance Act, 1950.
Held, that although the Commissioner of Income-tax was
required to consult the Central Board of Revenue his failure
to do so did not render his order ineffective however wrong
it might be from the administrative point of view. The
provision about consultation must be treated as directory
and the Commissioner’s power could not be questioned by the
assessee on the ground of failure to consult the Central
Board of Revenue.
State of U.P. v. Manbodhan Lal Srivastava, [1958] S.C.R.
553, K. S. Srinivasan v. Union of India, [1958] S.C.R. 1295,
Montreal Street Railway Company v. Normandin, L.R. 1917 A.
C. 170 and Biswanath Khemka v. The King Emperor, (1945)
F.C.R. 99, followed.
The Commissioner while transferring the case may have
referred to the Indian Income-tax Act and not to the Patiala
income-tax Act but the exercise of the power would be
referable to a jurisdiction which conferred validity upon it
and not to a jurisdiction under which it would be nugatory.
Pitamber Vajirshet v. Dhandu Navlapa, I.L.R. 12 Bom. 486,
followed.
A case which was not pending at the time of transfer could
not be transferred under sub-s. (7A) of S. 5 of the Patiala
Act but it could be transferred from one Income-tax Officer
to another under sub-s. (5) Of s. 5 of the Patiala Act which
was kept alive for assessment and reassessment relating to
previous years. Sub-s. (7A) makes special provision for
transfer of pending cases and is not prejudicial to the
general powers granted by sub-s. (5).
Bidi Supply Co. v. Union of India, [1956] S.C.R. 267, refer-
red to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE, JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 135 of 1958.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated
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114
394
September 4, 1956, of the Punjab High Court in Civil Writ
Case No. 325 of 1965.
N. A. Palkhivala and J. B. Dadachanji, for the appellant.
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General of India, K. N. Rajagopal
Sastri and D. Gupta, for the respondents.
1960. September 27. The Judgment of the Court was
delivered by
HIDAYATULLAH J.-The appellant firm, L. Hazarimal Kuthiala of
Kapurthala, moved the High Court of Punjab under Art. 226 of
the Constitution for writs of prohibition, certiorari, quo
warranto etc., against the Income-tax Officer, Special
Circle, Ambala and the Commissioner of Income-tax, Punjab
(1), Himachal Pradesh, Bilaspur and Simla in respect of
reassessment of the income of the firm for the account year,
1945-1946. The High Court dismissed the petition, but
granted a certificate under Arts. 132 and 133 of the
Constitution, and this appeal has been filed on that
certificate.
The firm carried on business as forest lessees and timber
merchants at Dhilwan in the former Kapurthala State. In
that State, an Income-tax law was in force, and prior to the
integration of the State, on April 10, 1947, the income of
the firm for the account year 1945-1946 (Samvat. 2002) was
duly assessed, and the tax was also paid. Subsequently,
political changes took place, Kapurthala integrated into
what was known as Pepsu, and the Rajpramukh issued two
Ordinances in Samvat. 2005, by which all laws in force in
Kapurthala including the Income-tax law ceased to be
operative from August 20, 1948. The two Ordinances instead
applied laws in force in the Patiala State to the area of
the new State which included Kapurthala, and the Patiala
Income-tax Act, 2001, came into force. Later still, the
Indian Finance Act, 1950 (26 of 1950), applied the Indian
Income-tax Act to the Part B States, which had emerged as a
result of political changes. Section 13 of the Indian
Finance Act, 1950, repealed the Income-tax laws obtaining in
the area of the Part B States except for the purposes
895
of levy, assessment and collection of income-tax and super-
tax in respect of the period defined therein.
On March 12, 1955, the Income-tax Officer, Special Circle,
Ambala, issued a notice purporting to be under s. 34 of the
Patiala Income-tax Act of Samvat. 2001 to the appellant firm
calling upon it to file a return of its income and total
world income, because he had reason to believe that the
income had been underassessed. Previous to this, on
November 4, 1953, the Commissioner of Income-tax, Punjab
(1), Himachal Pradesh, Bilaspur and Simla, purporting to act
under s. 5, sub-ss. (5) and (7A) of the Indian Income-tax
Act, ordered that the assessment of the appellant firm would
be done by the Income-tax Officer, Special Circle, Ambala
and not by the Income-tax Officer, B-Ward, Patiala, who
ordinarily would be the competent authority under s. 64 of
the Indian Income-tax Act to assess the appellant firm. The
appellant firm raised objections, but failed, and then filed
the petition under Art. 226 of the Constitution, out of
which the present appeal arises.
Numerous objections were taken in respect of the competency
of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, but some
of them are no longer pressed. An argument under Art. 14 of
the Constitution has now been abandoned, though it figured
at earlier stages of the present case. A second point that
the reassessment cannot be made under the Patiala In. come-
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tax Act is not in dispute, because the respondents before us
stated that the reassessment, if any, would have to be done
in accordance with the Kapurthala law, as it existed in the
assessment year (Samvat. 2002). A third argument, namely,
that the words of s. 13 of the Indian Finance Act, 1950, did
not include reassessment, has also been abandoned, in view
of the decisions of this Court in Lakshmana Shenoy v. The
Income,-tax Officer, Ernakulam (1) and The Income-tax
officer, Bangalore v. K. N. Guruswamy (2). Only one point
has been pressed before us, and it is that the Income-Tax
Officer, Special Circle, Ambala, had no jurisdiction to
issue a notice under s. 34, and
(1) [1959] S.C.R. 751.
(2) [1959] S.C.R. 785.
896
that only the Income-tax Officer, B-Ward, Patiala, was the
competent authority. Reliance is placed in this connection
upon the provisions of s. 64(1) of the Indian Income-tax
Act, under which the locally situated Income-tax Officer
would have had jurisdiction in this case. The transfer of
the case by the Commissioner of Income-tax by his order
dated November 4, 1953, is characterised as ultra vires and
incompetent, and it is this argument alone to which we need
address ourselves in this appeal.
The Patiala Income-tax Act contained provisions almost
similar to ss. 5(5) and 5(7A) of the Indian Income-tax Act.
Sub-section (5) differed in this that the Commissioner of
Income-tax was required to consult the Minister-in-charge
before taking action under that sub-section. The only
substantial difference in the latter sub-section was that
the Explanation which was added to s. 5(7A) of the Indian
Income-tax Act as a result of the decision of this Court in
Bidi Supply Co. v. Union of India (1) did not find place in
the Patiala Act. The Commissioner, when he transferred this
case, referred not to the Patiala Income-tax Act, but to the
Indian Income-tax Act, and it is contended that if the
Patiala Income-tax Act was in force for purposes of
reassessment, action should have been taken under that Act
and not the Indian Income-tax Act. This argument, however,
loses point, because the exercise of a power will be
referable to a jurisdiction which confers validity upon it
and not to a jurisdiction under which it will be nugatory.
This principle is wellsettled. See Pitamber Vajirshet v.
Dhandu Navlapa(2).
The difficulty, however, does not end there. The
Commissioner, in acting under s. 5(5) of the Patiala Income-
tax Act, was required to consult the Minister-in-charge. It
is contended that the Central Board of Revenue which, under
the Indian Finance Act, 1950, takes the place of the
Minister-in-charge was not consulted, and proof against the
presumption of regularity of official acts is said to be
furnished by the fact that under the Indian law no such
consultation was necessary, and the Commissioner, having
purported
(1) [1056] S.C.R. 267. (2) I.L.R. 12 BOM. 486, 489.
897
to act under the Indian law, could not have felt the need of
consultation with any higher authority. This, perhaps, is
correct. If the Commissioner did not act under the Patiala
law at all, which enjoined consultation with the
Minister-in-charge and purported to act only under the
Indian law, his mind would not be drawn to the need for
’Consultation with the Central Board of Revenue. Even so,
we do not think that the failure to consult the Central
Board of Revenue renders the order of the Commissioner
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ineffective. The provision about consultation must be
treated as directory, on the principles accepted by this
Court in State of U. P. v. Manbodhan Lal Srivastava (1) and
K. S. Srinivasan v. Union of India (2). In the former case,
this Court dealt with the provisions of Art. 320 3)(c) of
the Constitution, under which consultation with the Union
Public Service Commission was necessary. This Court relied
upon the decision of the Privy Council in Montreal Street
Railway Company v. Normandin (3), where it was observed as
follows:
"........ The question whether provisions in a
statute are directory or imperative has very
frequently arisen in this country, but it has
been said that no general rule can be laid
down, and that in every case the object of the
statute must be looked at. The cases on the
subject will be found collected in Maxwell on
Statutes, 5th Ed., p. 596 and the following
pages. When the provisions of a statute
relate to the performance of a public duty and
the case is such that to hold null and void
acts done in neglect of this duty would work
serious general inconvenience, or injustice to
persons who have no control over those
entrusted with the duty, and at the same time
would not promote the main object of the
Legislature, it has been the practice to hold
such provisions to be directory only, the
neglect of them, though punishable, not
affecting the validity of the acts done."
The principle of the Privy Council case was also applied by
the Federal Court in Biswanath Khemka v. The King Emperor
(4), and there, as pointed out by this
(1) [1058] S.C. R. 533.
(3) L.R. 1917 A.C. 170.
(2) [1958] S.C.R. 1295, 1321.
(4) [1945] F.C.R. 99.
898
Court, the words of the provision were even more emphatic
and of a prohibitory character. The essence of the rule is
that where consultation has to be made during the
performance of a public duty and an omission to do so
occurs, the action cannot be regarded as altogether void,
and the direction for consultation may be treated as
directory and its neglect, as of no consequence to the
result. In view of what has been said in these cases, the.
failure to consult the Central Board of Revenue does not
destroy the effectiveness of the order passed by- the
Commissioner, however wrong it might be from the
administrative point of view. The power which, the
Commissioner had, was entrusted to him, and there was only a
duty to consult the Central Board of Revenue. The failure
to conform to the duty did not rob the Commissioner of the
power which he exercised, and the exercise of the power
cannot, therefore, be questioned by the assessee OD the
ground of failure to consult the Central Board of Revenue,
provision regarding which must be regarded as laying down
administrative control and as being directory.
Learned counsel, however, contends that even if all this be
decided against him, he is still entitled to show that the
transfer of the case can only take place under sub-s. (7A)
of S. 5 and not under sub-s. (5). According to him, the
former subjection deals with the transfer of individual
cases, and that inasmuch as there was no pending case at the
time, then, as was ruled by this Court in the Bidi Supply
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case (1), the transfer could not be valid. In the absence
of an Explanation similar to the one added to the Indian
Income-tax Act, he contends that a case which was not
pending, could not be transferred under sub-s. (7A). He
contends also that sub-s. (5) deals not with the transfer of
individual cases but with the distribution of work.
The two sub-sections of S. 5 of the Patiala Income-tax Act
read as follows:
" (5) Income-tax officers shall perform their functions in
respect of such persons or classes of persons or of such
incomes or classes of income or in respect of
(1) [1956] S.C.R. 267.
899
such areas as the Commissioner of Income-tax may in
consultation with the Minister Incharge direct, and, where
such directions have assigned to two or more Income-tax
Officers, the same persons or classes of persons or the same
incomes or classes of income or the same area, in accordance
with any orders which the Commissioner of Income-tax may in
consultation with the Minister Incharge make for the
distribution and allocation of work to be performed. The
Minister Incharge may, with the previous approval of the
ljlasi-Khas, by general or special order in writing, direct
that the powers conferred on the Income-tax Officer by or
under this Act shall, in respect of any specified case or
class of cases, be exercised by the Commissioner, and, for
the purposes of any case in respect of which such order
applies, references in this Act or in any rules made
hereunder to the Income-tax Officer shall be deemed to be
references to the Commissioner.
(7A) The Commissioner of Income-tax may transfer any case
from one Income-tax Officer subordinate to him to another,
and the Minister Incharge may transfer any case from any one
Income-tax Officer to another. Such transfer may be made at
any stage of the proceedings, and shall not render necessary
the re-issue of any notice already issued by the Income-tax
Officer from whom the case is transferred."
There can be no doubt that sub-s. (7A) authorises ,the
Commissioner to transfer individual cases. The words " any
case from one Income-tax Officer subordinate to him to
another ", " such transfer may be made at any stage of the
proceedings " etc., clearly indicate this. Sub-section (7A)
is, however, not applicable here, because in respect of the
cognate sub-section of the Indian Income-tax Act it was
ruled by this Court that it could apply to a pending case
only. It was to overcome this lacuna that the Explanation
was added by the Indian Parliament. This amendment came in
1956, and the Patiala Act did not include a similar
Explanation, because prior to 1956 the question had not
arisen. There is one other difference between the Patiala
Act and the Indian Act. Whereas sub-s. (7A) was introduced
in the Indian Act by an
900
amendment, the corresponding sub-section was enacted at the
same time as the rest of the Patiala Act.
Now, it is quite clear that a case which was not pending at
the time of transfer could not be transferred under sub-s.
(7A) of s. 5 of the Patiala Act. The same reasoning must be
applied to that subsection, as it was applied to the Indian
Act. Learned counsel referred us to an affidavit by the
Under Secretary, Central Board of Revenue, reproduced in
Pannalal Binjraj v. Union of India (1), which stated the
reason for the introduction of sub-s. (7A). It is a little
difficult to accept the affidavit as an aid to find out the
intention why a particular law or amendment was enacted,
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more so where the affidavit concerns quite another Act of a
different legislature. It is, however, pertinent to
remember that sub-s. (7A) expressly gave the power to
transfer pending cases, but said nothing about cases which
were riot pending. The power to transfer such cases before
they came into being must, therefore, be found in some other
enactment. The Department contends that it would fall
within sub-s. (5) of s. 5, and points out that this Court
was not required to consider that sub-section, because the
transfer of the cases dealt with in the Bidi Supply case (2)
was by an authority not named in sub-s. (5) and therefore
the transfer in those instances could not be held to be
under that sub-section. The Department contends that the
Commissioner of Income-tax is mentioned both in sub-s. (5)
and sub-s. (7A) and could derive his power from one or the
other or both.
The short question thus is whether an individual case which
was not a pending case could be transferred from one Income-
tax Officer to another under sub-s. (5) of s. 5 of the
Patiala Act, which was kept alive for assessment and
reassessments relating to previous assessment years. Mr.
Palkhivala argues that the words of the sub-section " such
persons or classes of persons or of such incomes or classes
of income or in respect of such areas " denote, by the
plural employed, a dealing with a group rather than
(1) [1957] S.C.R. 233. 246.
(2) [1956] S.C.R. 267.
901
an individual case. He further contends that if individual
cases were held to be included in sub-s. (5), then sub-s.
(7A) would be unnecessary and otiose. He argues that
harmonious construction thus requires that the two sub-
sections must be taken to cover different situations.
The last argument is hardly open after the decision of this
Court adverted to already. If pending cases alone were
within sub-s. (7A), those cases which were not pending could
not be said to have been provided for, there. There is thus
no overlapping at least in so far as cases not pending were
concerned. An arrangement for their disposal would be a
subject of distribution of work and nothing much turns upon
the employment of the plural number, because the plural
includes the singular. Indeed, a single case might well be
in a class separate from others. Duplication of powers is
sometimes noticeable in statutes, and does not destroy the
effectiveness of the powers conferred. Section 24 of the
Civil Procedure Code dealing with transfers of cases and the
provisions of the Letters Patent of the High Court are
instances in point. If a particular action is valid under
one section, it cannot be rendered invalid because the
identical action can also be taken under another section,
and it makes no difference if the two empowering provisions
are in the same statute. In any event, sub-s. (7A) would
cut down sub-s. (5) only to the extent the former provides,
and it has been held that it was confined to pending cases
only. Sub-section (5) was thus available for cases which
were not pending, and the case which was ’the subject-matter
of the Commissioner’s order was not a pending case.
Mr. Palkhivala contends that sub-s. (5) merely enables
distribution of work, and does not deal with transfers. But
where a case is not pending, an order relating to it may
take the form of transfer or an arrangement for its
disposal. There is nothing to prevent the Commissioner,
acting under sub-s. (5), to arrange that the case of an
assessee shall be disposed of by a particular Income-tax
Officer. The words of
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902
sub-s. (5) that " Income-tax Officers shall perform their
functions in respect of such persons as the Commissioner may
direct " only show that the Commissioner may direct that one
Income-tax Officer shall not and another Income-tax Officer
shall, perform the functions in respect of such and such
person or persons. The plural including the singular, the
order of the Commissioner was valid, because he arranged and
distributed work, and did not seek to transfer any case. It
is, however, contended that this renders sub-s. (7A) otiose.
In our opinion, it does not. Special provision for transfer
of pending cases is all that is provided there, and if such
a transfer takes place, the provisions of sub-s. (7A) will
be invoked. Those provisions are to be read as not pre-
judicing the general powers granted by sub-s. (5) and vice
versa.
For these reasons, the appeal fails, and will be dismissed
with costs.
Appeal dismissed.