Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
C.I.T. CENTRAL, CALCUTTA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
NATIONAL TAJ TRADERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT27/11/1979
BENCH:
TULZAPURKAR, V.D.
BENCH:
TULZAPURKAR, V.D.
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
CITATION:
1980 AIR 485 1980 SCR (2) 268
1980 SCC (1) 370
CITATOR INFO :
R 1982 SC 149 (256)
R 1984 SC 420 (38)
R 1984 SC 993 (21)
ACT:
Income Tax Act, 1922, Section 33B-Construction of
section 33B with particular bearing on the scope of the
appellate powers of the Tribunal under sub-section 4 thereof
and the effect of sub-section 2(b) on sub section (4)-
Whether sub section 2(b) of section 33B has the effect of
attenuation or curtailing the appellate powers of the
Tribunal under sub section 4.
HEADNOTE:
In respect of the accounting years ending March 31,
1957 and March 1958 respectively on the voluntary returns
submitted by the respondent, the Income Tax Officer ’E’ Ward
District II (1) Calcutta completed the assessment for these
years (1957-58 and 1958-59) on total incomes of Rs. 7000/-
and Rs. 7500/- respectively, the same having been made in
the status of unregistered firm consisting of three
partners, namely Asha Devi Vaid, Santosh Devi Vaid and Sugni
Devi Vaid with equal shares. On August 2, 1962, the
Commissioner of Income Tax issued notice to show cause why
the said assessments should not be cancelled under section
33B of the Act as he felt that the completed assessments
were erroneous as being prejudicial to the interests of the
Revenue and the Income Tax Officer ’E’ Ward District II(1)
Calcutta had no territorial jurisdiction over the case of
the assessee. The notice was served on the assessee on
August 3, 1962 and the hearing was fixed by the Commissioner
for August 6, 1962. On the ground that none appeared and
there was no application for adjournment, the Commissioner
passed his order under section 33B ex parte on that date.
By his said order the Commissioner cancelled the
assessments made by the Income Tax Officer on three grounds
(a) that some of the partners were minors and were not
competent to enter into any partnership agreement with the
result that the status of unregistered firm assigned to the
assessee by the Income Tax Officer was clearly wrong and as
such the assessments deserved to be cancelled; (b) that the
books of accounts were unreliable and they were not properly
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examined by the Income Tax Officer with the result that the
assessments made were prejudicial to the interests of the
revenue and (c) that the Income Tax Officer has no
territorial jurisdiction over the case which fell in the
jurisdiction of Income Tax Officer, District III Calcutta
and directed the Income Tax Officer having proper
jurisdiction to make fresh assessments after examining the
records of the assessee in accordance with law.
The appeals preferred to the Appellate Tribunal under
section 33B(3) were accepted. Finding that the
Commissioner’s order passed at 11.30 A.M. ex parte was bad
in as much as the notice served upon the assessee permitted
filing of objections at any time during the course of August
6, 1962 and the objections were in fact filed later in the
day, the Tribunal remanded the case with the direction to
dispose it of afresh after giving due opportunity to the
respondent assessee. On a reference to the High Court at the
instance of the appellant, the
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High Court held: (a) the assumption of jurisdiction by the
Commissioner under section 33B of the Income Tax Act was
valid in law; (b) the Tribunal acted properly in vacating or
cancelling the Commissioner’s order, but, (c) the Tribunal
did not act properly in directing the Commissioner to act
under section 33B(1) because the period of limitation of two
years prescribed under section 33(2)(b) for him to act under
section 33B(1) had expired. In doing so, the High Court held
that the provision of sub section 2(b) was absolute and
covered even a revisional order of the Commissioner passed
in pursuance of a direction given by any appellate
authority.
Allowing the appeal by Certificate, the Court
^
HELD: 1. Under sub section (1) of section 33B of the
Income Tax Act, power has been conferred upon the
Commissioner to revise Income-Tax Officer’s orders but the
exercise of such power is regulated by the two conditions
mentioned therein namely, (a) he must consider the order
sought to be revised to be erroneous as being prejudicial to
the interests of the revenue and (b) he must give an
opportunity to the assessee of being heard before revising
it. Sub-s. (2)(b) prescribes a period of limitation in
negative words by providing that "no order shall be made
under sub-s(1) after the expiry of two years from the date
of the order sought to be revised". Sub-s.(3) confers on the
assessee a right to prefer an appeal to the Appellate.
Tribunal against the Commissioners’ order made under sub-
s.(1) while sub-s. (4) indicates the power of the Appellate
Tribunal in dealing with such appeal by providing that "such
appeal shall be dealt with in the same manner as if it were
an appeal under sub-s.(1) of s. 33". Two things stand out
clearly on a fair reading of the two concerned provisions,
namely, sub-s.(2)(b) and sub-s.(4). The bar of limitation
contained in sub-s. (2)(b) is on the Commissioner’s power to
pass revisional orders under sub-s. (1) and the same appears
to be absolute in the sense that it applies to every order
to be made under sub-s.(1). At the same time sub-s.(4)
confers on the Appellate Tribunal very wide powers which it
has while dealing with an appeal under s. 33(1). In other
words, the Appellate Tribunal has power "to pass such orders
thereon (i.e. on the appeal) as thinks fit." The word
"thereon" restricts the jurisdiction of the Appellate
Tribunal to the subject-matter of the appeal which merely
means that the Tribunal cannot adjudicate or give a finding
on a question which is not in dispute and which does not
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form the subject-matter of the appeal but the words "pass
such orders thereon as it thinks fit" include all the powers
(except possibly the power of enhancement) which are
conferred on the Assistant Appellate Commissioner by s. 31
and consequently the Tribunal has authority in exercise of
its appellate powers to set aside the order appealed against
and direct fresh assessment in the light of the observations
made by it in its judgment. In other words, similar power is
possessed by the Appellate Tribunal while dealing with the
appeal under sub-s.(4) of s. 33B. [275 A-H, 276 A]
Hukamchand Mills’s case, 63 I.T.R. 232; applied.
2. Two principles of construction are relating to casus
omissus and the other in regard to reading the statute as a
whole are well settled. Under the first principle, a casus
omissus cannot be supplied by the Court except in the case
of clear necessity and when reason for it is found in the
four corners of the statute itself but at the same time a
casus omissus should not be readily inferred and
270
for that purpose all the parts of a statute or section must
be construed together and every clause of a section should
be construed with reference to the context and other clauses
thereof so that the construction to be put on a particular
provision makes a consistent enactment of the whole statute.
This would be more so if literal construction of a
particular clause leads to manifestly absurd or anomalous
results which could not have been intended by the
Legislature. [277 B, 278 A-B]
Artemiou v. Procopiou, [1966] 1 Q.B., 878, Luke v.
Inland Revenue Commissioner [1968] A.C. 557 and 577 Quoted
with approval.
3. The object of introducing Section 33B with effect
from March 30, 1948 was to confer revisional powers upon the
Commissioner to correct the erroneous orders of an Income
Tax Officer in so far as they were prejudicial to the
interests of the revenue. The language of the sub-sec.(1)
clearly suggests that the said power was contemplated to be
exercised suo motu by the Commissioner inasmuch as the
opening words show that it was upto the Commissioner to call
for and examine the record of any proceedings under the Act
and on examination of the record if he were satisfied that
any order passed by an Income Tax Officer was erroneous as
being prejudicial to the interests of the revenue he could
revise the same after giving an opportunity to the assessee
of being heard. It is true that sub-s.(2)(b) thereof
prescribed a period of limitation on his power by providing
that no order shall be made under sub-s.(1) after the expiry
of the two years from the date of the order sought to be
revised by the Commissioner and a literal construction of
sub-s.(2)(b) also suggests that the bar of limitation
imposed thereby was absolute in the sense that it applied to
every kind of order to be made under sub-s.(1) and no
distinction was made between a suo motu order and an order
that might be made by him pursuant to a direction given by
any appellate or other higher authority. Sub-s.(3) conferred
on an assessee a right to prefer an appeal to the appellate
Tribunal against the Commissioner’s order made under sub
section (1) and under sub-s.(4) the Tribunal had authority
to deal with the impugned order of the Commissioner in such
manner as it deemed fit in exercise of its appellate powers;
for instance, it could confirm the impugned order, it could
annul that order, or it could after vacating it remand the
case back to the Commissioner for making a fresh assessment
in the light of the observations made by it in its judgment
or it could after calling for a remand report, rectify the
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erroneous order of the Income Tax Officer. Further there was
no period prescribed within which an appeal against the
impugned order of the Commissioner had to be disposed of by
the Tribunal and in the normal course on rare occasions such
appeals would have been heard and disposed of before the
expiry of two years from the date of the Income Tax
Officer’s order which was regard as erroneous by the
Commissioner. More often than not such appeals would come up
for hearing after the expiry of the said period of two
years-a fact fully known and within the contemplation of the
Legislature when it introduced the section in the Act in
1948. [278 E-H, 279 A-D]
4. The Legislature did not intend to attenuate or
curtail the appellate powers which it conferred on the
appellate Tribunal in very wide terms under sub-s.(4) by
enacting sub section 2(b) prescribing a time limit on the
Commissioner’s power to reverse an erroneous order of the
Income Tax Officer when the Commissioner was seeking the
exercise the same not suo motu but in pursuance of or
obedience to a direction from the appellate authority. Any
contrary and literal construction would lead to manifestly
absurd result, because in a given
271
case, like the present one where the appellate authority
(Tribunal) has found (a) the Income Tax Officer’s order to
be clearly erroneous as being prejudicial to the interests
of the revenue and (b) the Commissioner’s order
unsustainable as being in violation of principles of natural
justice; it would be difficult for the appellate authority
to exercise its powers. Obviously it could not withhold its
hands and refuse to interfere with Commissioner’s order
altogether, for, that would amount to perpetuating the
Commissioner’s erroneous order, nor could it merely cancel
or set aside the Commissioner’s wrong order without doing
anything about the Income Tax Officer’s order, for that,
would result in perpetuating the Income Tax Officer’s order
which had been found to be manifestly erroneous as being
prejudicial to the revenue. Moreover, in exercise of its
appellate powers it was open to the Tribunal itself to call
for a remand report from either the Commissioner or the
Income Tax Officer and rectify the Income Tax Officer’s
erroneous order after giving opportunity to the assessee and
in doing so no question of limitation would arise. It was
equally open to the Tribunal to set aside the Commissioner’s
order and remand the case directly to the Income Tax Officer
giving requisite direction to rectify his erroneous order
and thereupon the Income Tax Officer would carry out the
Tribunal’s direction for, admittedly, the bar of limitation
under sub-s.(2)(b) was only on the Commissioner’s power to
make an assessment afresh and not on the Income Tax Officer.
If this be the correct position then it is gravely anomalous
that the Tribunal should not be in a position to set aside
the Commissioner’s order and remand the case back to the
Commissioner for making a fresh assessment because in the
meantime two years’ period of limitation has expired, for,
it would mean that the Tribunal was prevented from achieving
the desired effect directly through the Commissioner but it
could do so indirectly through the Income Tax Officer. A
literal construction placed on sub-s.(2) (b) would lead to
such manifestly absurd and anomalous results, which, were
not intended by the Legislature. Therefore, the words of
sub-section 2(b) should be construed as being applicable to
suo motu orders of the Commissioner in revision and not to
orders made by him pursuant to a direction or order passed
by the Appellate Tribunal under sub-s.(4) or by any other
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higher authority. Such construction will be in consonance
with the principle that all parts of the section should be
construed together and every clause thereof should be
construed with reference to the context and other clauses
thereof so that the construction put on that particular
provision makes a consistent enactment of the whole statute.
[279 D-H, 280 A-G]
Commissioner of Income Tax v. Kishoresingh Kalyan Singh
Solanki, 39, I.T.R. 522 (Bombay); approved.
It is well settled that the principle that the fiscal
statute should be construed strictly is applicable only to
taxing provisions such as a charging provision or a
provision imposing penalty and not to those parts of the
statute which contain machinery provisions and by no stretch
could s. 33B be regarded as charging provision. [281 C-D]
6. A casus omissus has not to be readily inferred and
it could not be inferred from the mere fact that both ss.
33B and 34(3) together with the second proviso were inserted
simultaneously in the Act by the same Amending Act of 1948
and that in the case of former a relaxing provision was not
made as was made in the case of the latter provision,
firstly because the two provisions operated in distinct
fields and secondly it would be improper to do so without
compar-
272
ing the various stages of amendments through which each set
of these Provisions had undergone since inception. The
further aspect the Legislature has in the 1961 Act made the
requisite provision removing or relaxing the bar of
limitation, in section 263(3), is, not of much importance.
Irrespective of the question whether the second proviso to
section 34(3) was enacted ex majore cautella or not (over
which conflicting views obtain) it is clear that s. 263(3)
of the 1961 Act must be regarded as an ex majore cautella
provision. Admittedly, at the time when the said provision
was enacted in the 1961 Act, the Bombay view held the field
and there was no decision to the contrary of any other High
Court. Obviously, therefore, the enactment of s. 263(3) must
be regarded as declaratory of the law which was already
prevailing and this position has been clarified in the Notes
on Clauses of the Income Tax Bill 1961 where it has been
stated that sub-cl. (3) of s. 263 was new and had been added
to get over the difficulty experienced in (wrongly stated
’caused by’) the Bombay High Court’s decision in Solanki’s
case. The enactment of an ex majore cautella provision in
the 1961 Act would, therefore, be a legislative recognition
of the legal position that obtained as a result of judicial
pronouncement qua the 1922 Act. [281 E-H, 282 A]
C.I.T. v. Sabitri Devi Agarwalla, 77 I.T.R. 934 over
ruled.
Pooran Mall’s case, 96 I.T.R. 390; relied on.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 171-172
of 1973.
From the Judgment and Order dated 9-3-1972 of the
Calcutta High Court in I.T Reference No. 117/67.
D. V. Patel, S. P. Nayar and Miss A. Subhashini for the
Appellant.
B. B. Ahuja (Amicus Curiae) for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by.
TULZAPURKAR, J.-These two appeals by certificate raise
an important question as regards the proper construction of
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s. 33B of the Indian Income Tax Act, 1922 with particular
bearing on the scope of sub-s. (4) thereof and the effect of
sub-s. (2) (b) on the sub-s. (4).
The facts giving rise to the aforesaid question may
briefly be stated: The assessment years involved are 1957-58
and 1958-59 corresponding to the accounting years ending
March 31, 1957 and March 31, 1958 respectively. On or about
August 5, 1960 the respondent-assessee submitted voluntary
returns, inter alia, for the said two assessment years
alongwith a declaration dated August 8, 1960. The assessment
for these years were completed on August 12, 1960 by the
Income-Tax Officer, ’E’ Ward, District II(1) Calcutta on
total incomes of Rs. 7,000/- and 7,500/- respectively, the
same having been made in the status of unregistered firm
consisting of three partners, namely,
273
Asha Devi Vaid, Santosh Devi Vaid and Sugni Devi Vaid with
equal shares.
On August 2, 1962, the Commissioner of Income-Tax
issued a notice to show cause why the said assessments
should not be cancelled under s. 33B of the Act as he felt
that the completed assessments were erroneous as being
prejudicial to the interests of the revenue and that the
Income-Tax Officer, ’E’ Ward, District II(1) Calcutta had no
territorial jurisdiction over the case of the assessee. The
notice was served on the assessee on August 3, 1962 and the
hearing was fixed by the Commissioner for August 6, 1962. On
the ground that none appeared and that there was no
application for adjournment, the Commissioner passed his
order under s. 33B ex parte on that date. By his said order
the Commissioner cancelled the assessments made by the
Income-Tax Officer on August 12, 1960 on three grounds: (a)
that some of the partners were minors and were not competent
to enter into any partnership agreement with the result that
the status of unregistered firm assigned to the assesse by
the Income-Tax Officer was clearly wrong and as such the
assessments deserved to be cancelled, (b) that the books of
account were unreliable and they were not properly examined
by the Income-Tax Officer with the result that the
assessments made were prejudicial to the interests of the
revenue and (c) that the Income-Tax Officer concerned had no
territorial jurisdiction over the case which fell within the
jurisdiction of Income-Tax Officer, District III(II)
Calcutta, and directed the I.T.O. having proper jurisdiction
to make fresh assessments after examining the record of the
assesse in accordance with law.
In the appeals preferred to the Appellate Tribunal
under s. 33B(3) the respondent-assessee challenged the said
order of the Commissioner on various grounds. The Tribunal,
negativing all other contentions of the respondent-assessee,
came to the conclusion that on merits the facts justified
the assumption of jurisdiction under s. 33B by the
Commissioner but held that the Commissioner had not
conformed to the requirements of natural justice by putting
to the respondent assessee what case it had to meet and by
giving due opportunity for explaining the same. The Tribunal
noted that the Commissioner had disposed of the matter at
11.30 A.M. when none appeared on behalf of the respondent-
assessee while the notice served upon the latter permitted
filing of objections at any time during the course of August
6, 1962 and objections had been filed by the respondent-
assessee later in the day. The Tribunal, therefore, allowed
the appeals, vacated the Commissioner’s order dated August
6, 1962 and remanded the case to him with the
274
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direction to dispose it of afresh after giving due
opportunity to the respondent-assessee.
Feeling aggrieved by the Tribunal’s aforesaid order
dated July 5, 1965 the appellant sought to refer a set of
six questions of law said to arise out of the said order to
the Calcutta High Court but the Tribunal referred the
following two questions only for the opinion of the High
Court:
"1. Whether on the facts and in the circumstances of
the case, the Tribunal was right in holding that
the assumption of jurisdiction by the Commissioner
under s. 33B of the Income-Tax Act was valid in
law?
2. Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances of
the case, the Tribunal acted properly by vacating
the order of the Commissioner under s. 33B of the
said Act and in directing him to dispose of the
proceedings under the said section afresh after
giving due opportunity to the assessee?"
The High Court disposed of the Reference (I.T.
Reference No. 117 of 1967) by its judgment dated March 9,
1972 whereby it answered the first question in the
affirmative against the assessee, that is to say, on merits
it held that the assessments made by the Income-Tax Officer
required revision at the hands by the Commissioner. As
regards the second question the High Court was of the view
that it comprised two aspects, one relating to the vacating
of the Commissioner’s order and the other relating to the
giving of a direction to him to dispose of the case under s.
33B afresh after giving due opportunity to the assessee and
the High Court held that in exercise of its appellate powers
the Tribunal acted properly in vacating or cancelling the
Commissioner’s order but did not act properly in directing
him to dispose of the case afresh under s. 33B(1) because
the period of limitation of two years prescribed under s.
33(2)(b) for him to act under s. 33B(1) had expired and
answered the question accordingly (i.e. in the affirmative
on the first aspect and in the negative on the second
aspect). In doing so the High Court held that the provision
of sub-s. 2(b) was absolute and covered even a revisional
order of the Commissioner passed in pursuance of a direction
given by any appellate authority and relied in that behalf
on the aspect that, unlike 2nd proviso to sec. 34(3), there
was no provision removing or relaxing the bar of limitation
on the power of the Commissioner under s. 33B(2) (b) . The
High Court preferred the view of the Assam High Court in
C.I.T. v. Sabitri Debi
275
Agarwalla(1) to the view of the Bombay High Court in C.I.T.
v. Kishoresingh Kalyansinh Solanki(2). The Revenue has come
up in appeal to this Court challenging the aforesaid view of
the High Court.
Since the question relates to the proper construction
of s. 33B of the Act with particular bearing on the scope of
the appellate powers of the Tribunal under sub-s. (4)
thereof and the effect of sub-s. (2) (b) thereon, it will be
desirable to note the material provisions of s. 33B. Under
sub-s. (1) power has been conferred upon the Commissioner to
revise Income-Tax Officer’s orders but the exercise of such
power is regulated by the two conditions mentioned therein,
namely, (a) he must consider the order sought to be revised
to be erroneous as being prejudicial to the interests of the
revenue and (b) he must give an opportunity to the assessee
of being heard before revising it. Sub-s. (2) (b) prescribes
a period of limitation in negative words by providing that
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"no order shall be made under sub-s. (1) after the expiry of
two years from the date of the order sought to be revised."
Sub-s. (3) confers on the assessee a right to prefer an
appeal to the Appellate Tribunal against the Commissioner’s
order made under sub-s. (1) while sub-s. (4) indicates the
powers of the Appellate Tribunal in dealing with such appeal
by providing that "such appeal shall be dealt with in the
same manner as if it were an appeal under sub-s. (1) of s.
33". Two things stand out clearly or a fair reading of the
two concerned provisions, namely, sub-s. (2) (b) and sub-s.
(4). The bar of limitation contained in sub-s (2) (b) is on
the Commissioner’s power to pass revisional orders under
sub-s. (1) and the same appears to be absolute in the sense
that it applies to every order to be made under sub-s. (1).
At the same time sub-s. (4) confers on the Appellate
Tribunal very wide powers which it has while dealing with an
appeal under s. 33(1). In other words, the Appellate
Tribunal has power "to pass such orders thereon (i.e. on the
appeal) as it thinks fit". In Hukumchand Mills(3), case this
Court has explained that the word "thereon" restricts the
jurisdiction of the Appellate Tribunal to the subject-matter
of the appeal which merely means that the Tribunal cannot
adjudicate or give a finding on a question which is not in
dispute and which does not form the subject-matter of the
appeal but the words "pass such orders thereon as it thinks
fit" include all the powers (except possibly the power of
enhancement) which are conferred on the Assistant Appellate
Commissioner by s. 31 and consequently the Tribunal has
authority in exercise of its appellate powers to set aside
the order appealed against and direct fresh assessment in
the light of the observations made by it in its
276
judgment. In other words, similar power is possessed by the
Appellate Tribunal while dealing with the appeal under sub-
s. (4) of s. 33B. The question that arises for our
consideration is whether such a direction to dispose of the
case afresh can be given to the Commissioner by the
Appellate Tribunal when the period of limitation prescribed
under sub-s. (2) (b) has expired ? In other words, whether
sub-s. (2) (b) of s. 33B has the effect of attenuating or
curtailing the appellate powers of the Tribunal under sub-s.
(4) ?
Counsel for the Revenue contended that it was a well
settled principle that all the parts of a section or statute
should be construed together and that every clause of a
section should be construed with reference to the context
and other clauses thereof, so that the construction put on a
particular provision makes a consistent enactment of the
whole statute. He further urged that the object of
conferring revisional power upon the Commissioner under s.
33B(1) obviously was to correct erroneous orders of Income-
Tax Officer in so far as they were prejudicial to the
interests of the revenue and such object would be defeated
if the bar of limitation contained in sub-s. (2)(b) is held
applicable to revisional orders passed by the Commissioner
in pursuance of or in obedience to a direction given or
order made by the Appellate Tribunal in appeal under s.
33B(4) or for that matter by the High Court or Supreme Court
in case the matter is carried to those Courts. According to
him it would be proper to construe the provision in sub-s.
2(b) as being applicable to suo motu revisional orders
passed by the Commissioner under sub-s. (1) and not to
orders passed by him in pursuance of a direction issued to
him by the Tribunal in appeal. He urged that there was no
reason why sub-s. (2) (b) should be regarded as having the
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effect of attenuating or curtailing the very wide appellate
powers conferred upon the Tribunal. He further urged that no
argument could be based on the absence of a provision,
similar to the 2nd proviso to s. 34(3), in s. 33B of the Act
the support of his contention strong reliance was placed by
him upon the Bombay High Court’s decision in Solanki’s case
(supra).
On the other hand, counsel for the assessee canvassed
the High Court’s view for our acceptance by pointing out
that both ss. 33B and 34(3) together with the second proviso
were introduced in the Act by the same Amending Act 1948 but
in s. 33B no provision for removing or relaxing the bar of
limitation contained in sub-s. (2)(b) was made and hence it
was not for the Court to supply a casus omissus. He also
relied on the fact that in the 1961 Act the necessary
provision has been enacted in s. 263(3) which also showed
that in the absence of such provision in s. 33B of the 1922
Act the bar of sub-s. (2) (b) was
277
applicable to every order of the Commissioner irrespective
of whether it was made suo motu or in pursuance of a
direction issued by the appellate authority. According to
him since the bar of limitation contained in sub-s. (2) (b)
of s. 33B always operated for the benefit of the assessee as
the same accorded finality to the assessment orders, the
appellate powers of the Tribunal under sub-s. (4) must be
regarded as having been curtailed to the extent that the
Tribunal cannot remand the case to the Commissioner for
making fresh assessment if by then the limitation has
expired.
Two principles of construction-one relating to casus
omissus and the other in regard to reading the statute as a
whole-appear to be well settled. In regard to the former the
following statement of law appears in Maxwell on
Interpretation of Statutes (12th Edn.) at page 33:
Omissions not to be inferred-"It is a corollary to
the general rule of literal construction that nothing
is to be added to or taken from a statute unless there
are adequate grounds to justify the inference that the
legislature intended something which it omitted to
express. Lord Mersey said: ’It is a strong thing to
read into an Act of Parliament words which are not
there, and in the absence of clear necessity it is a
wrong thing to do.’ ’We are not entitled,’ said Lords
Loreburn L.C., ’to read words into an Act of Parliament
unless clear reason for it is to be found within the
four corners of the Act itself.’ A case not provided
for in a statute is not to be dealt with merely because
there seems no good reason why it should have been
omitted, and the omission in consequence to have been
unintentional."
In regard to the latter principle the following statement of
law appears in Maxwell at page 47:
A statute is to be read as a whole-"It was
resolved in the case of Lincoln College [(1595) 3 Co.
Rep. 58b, at p. 59b] that the good expositor of an Act
of Parliament should ’make construction on all the
parts together, and not of one part only by itself.’
Every clause of a statute is to ’be construed with
reference to the context and other clauses of the Act,
so as, as far as possible, to make a consistent
enactment of the whole statute.’ (Per Lord Davey in
Canada Sugar Refining Co., Ltd. v. R : 1898 AC 735)".
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In other words, under the first principle a casus omissus
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cannot be supplied by the Court except in the case of clear
necessity and when reason for it found in the four corners
of the statute itself but at the same time a casus omissus
should not be readily inferred and for that purpose all the
parts of a statute or section must be construed together and
every clause of a section should be construed with reference
to the context and other clauses thereof so that the
construction to be put on a particular provision makes a
consistent enactment of the whole statute. This would be
more so if literal construction of a particular clause leads
to manifestly absurd or anomalous results which could not
have been intended by the Legislature. "An intention to
produce an unreasonable result", said Danckwerts L.J. in
Artemiou v. Procopiou(1) "is not to be imputed to a statute
if there is some other construction available." Where to
apply words literally would "defeat the obvious intention of
the legislation and produce a wholly unreasonable result" we
must "do some violence to the words" and so achieve that
obvious intention and produce a rational construction, (Per
Lord Reid in Luke v. I.R.C.-1968 AC 557 where at p. 577 he
also observed: "this is not a new problem, though our
standard of drafting is such that it rarely emerges. In the
light of these principles we will have to construe sub-s.
(2) (b) with reference to the context and other clauses of
s. 33B.
Section 33B was introduced in the Indian Income-Tax
Act, 1922 by the Income Tax and Business Profit Tax
(Amendment) Act, 1948 with effect from March 30, 1948 and
the object of introducing the same was obviously to confer
revisional powers upon the Commissioner to correct the
erroneous orders of an Income Tax Officer in so far as they
were prejudicial to the interests of the revenue. The
language of the sub-sec. (1) clearly suggests that the said
power was contemplated to be exercised suo motu by the
Commissioner inasmuch as the opening words show that it was
upto the Commissioner to call for and examine the record of
any proceedings under the Act and on examination of the
record if he were satisfied that any order passed by an
Income Tax Officer was erroneous as being prejudicial to the
interests of the revenue he could revise the same after
giving an opportunity to the assessee of being heard. It is
true that sub-s. (2) (b) thereof prescribed a period of
limitation on his power by providing that no order shall be
made under sub-s. (1) after the expiry of two years from the
date of the order sought to be revised by the Commissioner
and a literal construction of sub-s. (2) (b) also suggests
that the bar of limitation imposed thereby was absolute in
the sense that it applied to every kind of order to be made
under sub-s. (1) and no distinction was made between a
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suo motu order and an order that might be made by him
pursuant to a direction given by any appellate or other
higher authority but the question is whether such a literal
construction should be accorded to that provision ? As
stated earlier sub-s. (3) conferred on an assessee a right
to prefer an appeal to the Appellate Tribunal against the
Commissioner’s order made under sub-s. (1) and under sub-s.
(4) the Tribunal had authority to deal with the impugned
order of the Commissioner in such manner as it deemed fit in
exercise of its appellate powers; for instance, it could
confirm the impugned order, it could annul that order, it
could after vacating it remand the case back to the
Commissioner for making a fresh assessment in the light of
the observations made by it in its judgment or it could,
after calling for a remand report, rectify the erroneous
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order of the Income Tax Officer. Further there was no period
prescribed within which an appeal against the impugned order
of The Commissioner had to be disposed of by the Tribunal
and in the normal course on rare occasions such appeals
would have been heard and disposed of before the expiry of
two years from the date of the Income Tax Officer’s order
which was regarded as erroneous by the Commissioner. More
often than not such appeals would come up for hearing after
the expiry of the said period of two years-a fact fully
known and within the contemplation of the Legislature when
it introduced the section in the Act in 1948. In these
circumstances did the Legislature intend to attenuate or
curtail the appellate powers which it conferred on the
Appellate Tribunal in very wide terms under sub-s. (4) by
enacting sub-s. (2) (b) prescribing a time limit on the
Commissioner’s power to revise an erroneous order of the
Income Tax Officer when the Commissioner-was seeking to
exercise the same not suo motu but in pursuance of or
obedience to a direction from the Appellate authority ?
According to the construction contended for by the assesses
and which found favour with the High Court the answer was in
the affirmative because sub-s. (2) (b), on its literal
construction, was absolute. In our view such literal
construction would lead to a manifest y absurd result,
because in a given case, like the present one, where the
appellate authority (Tribunal) has found (a) the Income Tax
Officer’s order to be clearly erroneous as being prejudicial
to the interests of the revenue and (b) the Commissioner’s
order unsustainable as being in violation of principles of
natural justice how should the appellate authority exercise
its appellate powers ? obviously it could not withhold its
hands and refuse to interfere with Commissioner’s order
altogether for, that would amount to perpetuating the
Commissioner’s erroneous order, nor could it merely cancel
or set aside the Commissioner’s wrong order without doing
anything about the Income Tax Officer’s order, for. that
would result in perpetuating the Income Tax
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Officer’s order which had been found to be manifestly
erroneous as being prejudicial to the revenue. But such
result would flow from the view taken by the High Court
which has held that the Tribunal acted properly in vacating
the Commissioner’s order but did not act properly in
directing him to dispose of the proceedings afresh after
giving opportunity to the assesses. Such manifestly absurd
result could never have been intended by the Legislature.
Moreover, it was fairly conceded by the counsel for the
assesses before us that in exercise of its appellate powers
it was open to the Tribunal itself to call for a remand
report from either the Commissioner or the Income Tax
Officer and rectify the Income Tax Officer’s erroneous order
after giving opportunity to the assesses and in doing so no
question of limitation would arise. It was also not disputed
by him that it was equally open to the Tribunal to set aside
the Commissioner’s order and remand the case directly to the
Income Tax Officer giving the requisite direction to rectify
his erroneous order and thereupon the Income Tax Officer
could carry out the Tribunal’s direction. for, admittedly,
the bar of limitation under 1) sub-s. (2) (b) was only on
the Commissioner’s paver to make an assessment afresh and
not on the Income Tax Officer. If this be the correct
position then it is gravely anomalous that the Tribunal
should not be in a position to set aside the Commissioner’s
order and remand the case back to the Commissioner for
making a fresh assessment because in the meantime two years’
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period of limitation has expired, for, it would mean that
the Tribunal was prevented from achieving the desired effect
directly through the Commissioner but it could do so
indirectly through the Income Tax Officer. A literal
construction placed on subs. (2) (b) would lead to such
manifestly absurd and anomalous results, which, we do not
think, were intended by the Legislature. These
considerations compel us to construe the words of sub-s..
(2)(b) as being applicable to suo motu orders of the
Commissioner in revision and not to orders made by him
pursuant to a direction or order passed by the Appellate
Tribunal under sub-s. (4) or by any other higher authority.
Such construction will be in consonance with the principle
that all parts of the section should be construed together
and every clause thereof should be construed with reference
to the context and other clauses thereof so that the
construction put on that particular provision makes a
consistent enactment of the whole statute.
Having regard to the above discussion we are clearly of
opinion that the view taken by the Bombay High Court in
Solanki’s case (supra) on the construction of sub-s. (2) (b)
of s. 33B is correct and we approve of it. In Sabitri Devi
Agrawalla’s case (supra) the Assam High Court took a
contrary view and held that under s. 33B(4) of the
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Act the Tribunal would not be justified in remanding the
case to the Commissioner after the two years had expired
from the date of the order sought to be revised. The
decision seems to rest on three aspects: (a) it being fiscal
statute the same must be strictly construed, (b) the bar of
limitation contained in sub-s. (2)(b) was absolute and
unqualified and covered all types of orders and (c) that
unlike the second proviso to s. 34(3) there was no provision
for removing or relaxing the bar of limitation on the power
of the Commissioner under s. 33B (2) (b) and that since s.
33B as well as s. 34(3) with second proviso had been
introduced in the Act by the same Amending Act of 1948 there
was a deliberate omission to make a provision removing of
relaxing the ’oar of limitation in s. 33B and for such an
omission the remedy lay with the Legislature and not with
the Court. The Assam High Court also alluded to the fact
that under the 1961 Act the Legislature had made a provision
removing or relaxing the bar of limitation in s. 263(3). As
regards aspect (b) we have already dealt with it above. As
regards aspect (a) it is well settled that the principle
that the fiscal statute should be construed strictly is
applicable only to taxing provisions such as a charging
provision or a provision imposing penalty and not to those
parts of the statute which contain machinery provisions and
by no stretch could s. 33B be regarded as a charging
provision. As regards aspect (c) we have already pointed out
above that a casus omissus has not to be readily inferred
and it could not be inferred from the mere fact that both
ss. 33B and 34(3) together with the second proviso were
inserted simultaneously in the Act by the same Amending Act
of 1948 and that in the case of former a relaxing provision
was not made as was made in the case of the latter
provision, firstly because the two provisions operated in
distinct fields and secondly it would be improper to do so
without comparing the various stages of amendments through
which each set of these provisions had undergone since
inception. The further aspect that the Legislature has in
the 1961 Act made the requisite provision removing or
relaxing the bar of limitation in s. 263(3), is, in our
view, not of much consequence. Irrespective of the question
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whether the second proviso to s. 34(3) was enacted ex majore
cautella or not (over which conflicting views obtain), it is
clear to us that s. 263(3) of the 1961 Act must be regarded
as an ex majore cautella provision. Admittedly, at the time
when the said provision was enacted in the 1961 Act, the
Bombay view held the field and, there was no decision to the
contrary of any other High Court. Obviously, therefore, the
enactment of s. 263(3) must be regarded as declaratory of
the law which was already prevailing and this position has
been clarified in the Notes on Clauses of the Income Tax
Bill 1961 where it has been stated that sub-cl. (3) of s.
263 was new and had been 19
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added to get over the difficulty experienced in (wrongly
state ’caused by’) the Bombay High Court’s; decision in
Solanki’s case (supra) . The enactment of an ex majore
cautella provision in the 1961 Act would, therefore, be a
legislative recognition of the legal position that obtained
as a result of judicial pronouncement qua the 1922 Act. In
our view, therefore. the Assam case was wrongly decided.
Reference may now be made to a decision of this Court
in Pooran Mall’s case, where in a similar situation arising
under s. 132 of the Income Tax Act, 1961, a restricted
construction was accorded by this Court to sub-s. (5)
thereof which prescribed certain period of limitation. In
that case pursuant to an authorisation issued under s.
132(1) of the 1961 Act searches were carried out on October
15 and 16, 1971 at the residence and business premises of P,
an individual, and at certain office premises of the firms
in which he was a partner, and jewellery, cash and account
books were seized. There was also a search of two banks and
a restraint order was made under s. 132(3) in respect of l
14 silver bars pledged with those banks on the ground that
they were the property of P. On January 12, 1972, the Income
Tax Officer passed a summary order under s. 132(5) on the
basis that all the assets seized and 114 silver bars
belonged to P. Thereupon, P & Sons, one of the firms in
which P was a partner, and P filed a writ petition in the
High Court challenging the order dated January 12, 1972 and
on April 6, 1977, on the basis of the consent of the
parties, the High Court quashed the order and permitted the
department to make a fresh enquiry after giving an
opportunity to the petitioner and pass a fresh order within
two months. After a fresh enquiry the Income Tax Officer
passed an order on June S, 1972. holding that the silver
bars belonged to P, the individual, and not the firm, P and
Sons. Thereupon, the firm and P again filed a writ petition
challenging the second order. The High Court held that the
Income Tax Officer had no jurisdiction to pass that order
beyond the period prescribed in s. 132(5) and set aside the
order and directed the return of the 114 bars of silver.
This Court held, inter alia, that the order made in
pursuance of a direction given - ’ under s. 132(12) or by a
Court in writ proceedings, was not subject to the limitation
prescribed under s. 132(5). At page 394 this Court has
observed thus:
"Even if the period of time fixed under section
132(5) is held to be mandatory that was satisfied when
the first order was made. Thereafter, if any direction
is given under section 132(2) or by a Court in writ
proceedings, as in this case, we do not think an order
made in pursuance of such a
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direction would be subject to the limitations
prescribed under A section 132 (5) . Once the order has
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been made within ninety days the aggrieved person has
got the right to approach the notified authority under
section 132(11) within thirty days and that authority
can direct the Income Tax Officer to pass a fresh
order. We cannot accept the contention on behalf of the
respondents that even such a fresh order should be
passed within ninety days. It would make the sub-
sections (11) and (12) of section 132 ridiculous and
useless."
It may be pointed out that in s. 132 there is no provision
removing or relaxing the bar of limitation contained in s.
132(5) enabling the Income Tax Officer to pass an order
afresh pursuant to any direction issued to him by a higher
authority under s. 132(12) and even the this Court took the
view that the limitation prescribed under s. 132(5) will be
applicable only to the initial order to be made by the
Income Tax Officer and not to an order that would be made by
him pursuant to a direction from the Board or notified
authority. The concerned provisions were read together and
such construction was put on sub-s. (5) of s. 132 as made a
consistent enactment of the whole statute.
In the result, we are of opinion that the answer given
by the High Court to the second aspect of the second
question referred to it was clearly wrong and, in our view,
the Tribunal’s order vacating the Commissioner’s order and
directing the Commissioner to make assessment afresh after
giving due opportunity to the respondent-assessee was
proper. The appeal is accordingly allowed but in the
circumstances, there will be no order as to costs.
V.D.K. Appeal allowed.
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