Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THVL BOMBAY AMMONIA PVT. LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF TAMIL NADU
DATE OF JUDGMENT24/03/1976
BENCH:
SINGH, JASWANT
BENCH:
SINGH, JASWANT
RAY, A.N. (CJ)
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH
CITATION:
1976 AIR 2136 1976 SCR (3) 856
ACT:
Madras General Sale Tax Act, 1959 s. 32-Suo Motu Power-
Scope of exemption-Exemption not claimed before assessment-
Appeal not preferred-If could plead mistake later.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant submitted a sales-tax return showing the
taxable turnover. The assessing authority, while checking
the accounts, discovered an undisclosed turnover. He added
that sum to the turnover and then assessed sales-tax on that
turnover. The appellant did not file any appeal against the
assessment order. The Deputy Commissioner of Sales Tax
issued a notice to the appellants in exercise of suo motu
power of revision under s. 32 of the Madras Sales-tax Act to
show cause why a penalty should not be imposed in respect of
the undisclosed turnover. While challenging the exercise of
this power the appellant alternatively prayed for exemption
in respect of a sum representing works contracts which, they
alleged, did not amount to sale of goods. The first ground
was rejected. On the second ground it was held that since
the appellants did not file an appeal in the regular course
against the assessment order they were not entitled to
exemption. On appeal, the Appellate Tribunal allowed the
claim for exemption on the ground that it represented works
contract.
The High Court in revision set aside the order of the
Tribunal granting exemption.
Dismissing the appeal,
^
HELD : The suo motu power of revision of the Deputy
Commissioner in s. 32 is wide and can be exercised both in
favour of the revenue as well as the tax-payer in order to
correct any error or illegality committed by the assessing
authority in his order of assessment. [860D]
State of Kerala v. K. M. Cheria Abdulla and Company
(1965) 16 S.T.C. 875 [1965] 1 S.C.R. 601 and The Swastik Oil
Mills Ltd. v. H. B. Munshi Deputy Commissioner of Sales Tax,
Bombay (1968) 21 S.T.C. 383 referred to.
But in the present case the Deputy Commissioner was
right in refusing to exercise his revisional power in favour
of the appellants and the High Court was right in reversing
the order of the Appellate Tribunal. At no stage of the
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proceedings before the assessing authority did the assessee
bring it to the assessing authority’s notice that a
substantial portion of the turnover related to works
contracts and as such exempt from liability to tax.
Secondly, the appellants acquiesced in the order of
assessment passed by the assessing authority and did not
prefer any appeal. In face of the decision of this Court in
State of Madras v. Gannon Dunkerley and Co. Ltd. [1959] SCR
379 the appellants cannot plead that they did not claim
exemption under the mistaken impression that the
transactions amounted to sale of goods. [860 E G; 861 B]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1699 of
1973.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and order
dated 4-5-73 of the Madras High Court in T.C. No. 223 of
1969.
K. S. Ramamurthi and (Mrs) S. Gopalakrishna, for the
appellant.
857
P. Ram Reddy, A. V. Rangam and (Miss) A. Subhashini,
for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
JASWANT SINGH, J. This is an appeal by special leave
against the judgment and order dated May 4, 1973 passed by
the High Court of Madras in T.C. No. 223 of 1969.
It appears that the appellants who are dealers in
refrigerators, spare parts etc. submitted a return for the
year 1964-65 to the Joint Commercial Tax officer, Madras
(hereinafter called the ’Assessing Authority’) under the
Madras General Sales Tax Act, 1959 (hereinafter referred to
as ’the Act’) showing a total taxable turnover of Rs.
6,41,031.77. On checking the accounts of the appellants, the
Assessing Authority by its order dated January 31, 1966 made
an addition of Rs. 33,710.88 to the turnover reported by the
appellants and assessed the sales tax on the turnover of Rs.
6,74,742.65. The appellants did not choose to prefer an
appeal against this assessment.
On January 7, 1967, the Deputy Commissioner, Commercial
Taxes, Madras Division, in exercise of his suo motu power of
revision under section 32 of the Act issued a notice to the
appellants calling upon them to show cause why a penalty of
Rs. 5,056/- on the aforesaid undisclosed turnover of Rs.
33,710.88 be not levied against them.
In response to the notice, the appellants submitted
their objections challenging the jurisdiction of the Deputy
Commissioner to levy the proposed penalty and requested him
to drop the proceedings. In the alternative, they prayed
that they should be granted exemption in respect of Rs.
6,32,142/- which represented works contracts for complete
fabrication, erection and installation or air-conditioning
plants with their employers which did not amount to sale of
goods.
The Deputy Commissioner negatived the contention of the
appellant regarding his jurisdiction to levy the penalty,
and revising the assessment levied a penalty of Rs. 3,371/-
under section 12(3) of the Act. The Deputy Commissioner also
declined to allow the aforesaid exemption claimed by the
appellants on the ground that they ’did not file appeals in
the regular course as contemplated by the provisions of the
Act’.
The appellants went up in appeal from this order to the
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Sales Tax Appellate Tribunal, Madras, who substantially
allowed the appeal, cancelled the penalty and acting on the
statements of transactions filed before him by the
appellants allowed an exemption for tax on a turnover of Rs.
5,99,468/- as representing the works contracts holding that
as suo motu power of revision could be exercised by the
Deputy Commissioner both for the benefit of the State and
the taxpayer, he should have gone into the question of
exemption and set right the assessment by allowing the
exemption on the turnover relating to works contracts.
Aggrieved by this order of the Sales Tax Appellate
Tribunal. the respondent filed a petition under section 38
of the Act to the High Court of Judicature at Madras for
revision of the order of the Sales
858
Tax Appellate Tribunal. The High Court allowed the revision
petition in part and set aside the order of the Tribunal in
so far as it related to the deletion of the turnover of Rs.
5,99,468/-.
Counsel for the appellant has urged before us that as
the suo motu power of revision under section 32 of the Act
is wide enough and can be exercised both in favour of the
revenue as well as the assessee regardless of the fact
whether the latter has filed an appeal against the order of
assessment or not, the High Court ought not to have reversed
the order of the Sales Tax Appellate Tribunal in respect of
the turnover of Rs. 5,99,468/- which related to works
contracts.
Two questions arise for determination in this appeal.
Firstly, what is the scope of the suo motu power under
section 32 of the Act. Secondly, whether the Deputy
Commissioner rightly refused to exercise discretion under
section 32 of the Act in favour of the appellants.
For the determination of the first question, it is
necessary to refer to section 32 of the Act which runs as
follows:-
"32. Special powers of the Deputy Commissioner.-
(1) The Deputy Commissioner may, of his own motion,
call for and examine an order passed or proceeding
recorded by the appropriate authority under section 4-
A, section 12, section 14, section 15, or sub-sections
(1) and (2) of section 16 and may make such inquiry or
cause such inquiry to be made and, subject to the
provisions of this Act, may pass such order thereon as
he thinks fit.
(2) The Deputy Commissioner shall not pass any order
under sub-section (1), if-
(a) the time for appeal against the order has not
expired;
(b) the order has been made the subject of an appeal to
the Appellate Assistant Commissioner or the Appellate
Tribunal, or of a revision in the High Court; or
(c) more than five years have expired after the passing
of the order.
(3) No order under this section adversely affecting a
person shall be passed unless that person has had a
reasonable opportunity of being heard.
(4) In computing the period referred to in clause (c)
of sub-section (2), the time during which the
proceedings before the Deputy Commissioner remained
stayed under the order of a Civil Court or other
competent authority shall be excluded."
The language of this section makes it clear that the
suo motu power conferred on the Deputy Commissioner in
regard to the order or proceeding specified therein is quite
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wide and he can, subject to the conditions laid down in sub-
sections (2) and (3), exercise the
859
same even at the instance of an assessee who has not filed
an appeal against the order for the purpose of rectifying
any illegality or impropriety therein.
This section has also been subject matter of
interpretation in two decisions of this Court viz. State of
Kerala v. K. M. Cheria Abdulla, and Company(1) and The
Swastik Oil Mills Ltd. v. H. B. Munshi Deputy Commissioner
of Sales Tax, Bombay(2). In the case of K. M. Cheria Abdulla
and Company (supra) the majority held as follows in regard
to the scope of the revisional power:-
"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 proceedings 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
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....... 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........
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."
The limitations to which the revisional power is
subject were indicated by the majority thus :-
"It would not invest the revising authority with power
to launch upon enquiries at large so as 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 those powers.
For instance, the power to reassess escaped turnover 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 taxpayer. Similarly,
the power to make a best judgment assessment is vested
by section 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."
860
The above view was affirmed by this Court in the case
of The Swastik Oil Mills Ltd. (supra). In regard to the
limitations to which the revisional power is subject, this
Court went on in that case to observe:-
"In fact, when a revisional power is to be exercised,
we think that the only limitations, to which that power
is subject, are those indicated by this Court in K. M.
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Cheria Abdulla & Co’s case (1965) 16 S.T.C. 875. These
limitations are that the revising authority should not
trench upon the powers which are expressly reserved by
the Acts, or by the Rules to other authorities and
should not ignore the limitations inherent in the
exercise of those powers."
In view of the above, we are of opinion that the suo
motu power of revision of the Deputy Commissioner is of wide
amplitude and can be exercised in favour of the Revenue as
well as the taxpayer in order to correct any error or
illegality committed by the assessing authority in his order
of assessment.
With regard to the second question relating to the
refusal by the Deputy Commissioner to exercise his
revisional power in favour of the appellants, we are of the
view that the order does not suffer from any infirmity. It
is true that money paid under a mistake of law common both
to the assessee and the taxing authority can be got refunded
[See the decision of this Court in The State of Kerala v.
Aluminium Industries Ltd.(1)]. But in the instant case, the
appellants themselves submitted a return showing taxable
turnover of Rs. 6,41,031.77. At no stage of the assessment
proceedings before the assessing authority did they bring it
to his notice that a substantial portion of the turnover
related to works contracts and was as such exempt from
liability to tax. The appellants not having raised the
question by claiming the exemption, the Assessing Authority
had no occasion to consider it. It cannot, therefore, be
said that the order of assessment suffered from any
illegality. It is also significant that the appellants
acquiesced in the order of assessment passed by the
assessing authority and did not prefer any appeal against it
nor did they take any other step to have it modified. Even
in the objections filed by them to the show cause notice
issued by the Deputy Commissioner in regard to the levy of
penalty, they made a half-hearted attempt to claim
exemption. It will be relevant in this connection to advert
to the prayer made by them which is couched in the following
terms:-
"In the circumstances we request you that the Deputy
Commissioner may either totally drop the proposal to
levy
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penalty or in the alternative totally cure the
illegality of the assessment and render justice."
The plea put forth by the appellants that they did not
claim exemption under the mistaken impression that the
transactions amounted to sale of goods cannot also be
countenanced in view of the fact that as far back as in 1954
it was held by the Madras High Court in Gannon Dunkerley and
Co. Ltd. v. State of Madras(1) that works contracts did not
involve any element of sale of materials and the levy of
sales tax thereon was unlawful. This ruling was affirmed by
this Court in State of Madras v. Gannon Dunkerley and Co.
Ltd.(2) We are, therefore, of the view that the Deputy
Commissioner rightly refused to exercise his revisional
jurisdiction in favour of the appellants and the High Court
was right in reversing the order of the Appellate Tribunal
in so far as it related to the appellants’ claim to the
aforesaid exemption.
For the foregoing reasons, we do not find any merit in
this appeal which is dismissed with costs.
P.B.R. Appeal dismissed
862
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