Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MESSRS CHATTURAM HORILRAM LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX, BIHAR AND ORISSA.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
18/04/1955
BENCH:
JAGANNADHADAS, B.
BENCH:
JAGANNADHADAS, B.
BOSE, VIVIAN
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.
CITATION:
1955 AIR 619 1955 SCR (2) 290
ACT:
I Indian Income Tax Act, 1922 (Act XI of 1922), s. 34-
Assessment set aside owing to Indian Finance Act of 1939 not
being in force during the assessment year-Indian Finance Act
of 1939 brought into force retrospectively by Bihar
Regulation IV of 1942-Fresh notice under s. 34 issued-
Whether such fresh notice valid.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant in this appeal had been assessed to Income Tax
which was reduced on appeal but that assessment was set
aside by the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal on the ground
that the Indian Finance Act of 1939 was not in force during
the assessment year in Chota Nagpur. On a reference by the
Tribunal the High Court con-firmed the setting aside of this
assessment. By the promulgation of Bihar Regulation IV of
1942 by the Governor of Bihar (which was assented to by the
Governor-General) the Indian Finance Act of 1939 was brought
into force in Chota Nagpur retrospectively as from the 30th
March 1939. On the 8th February 1944 the Income Tax Officer
passed an order in pursuance of which a fresh notice was
issued under s. 34 which resulted in the assessment of the
appellant to income tax. The question for determination in
this appeal was whether the notice under s. 34 was validly
issued.
Held (i) that for the purposes of s. 34 of the Act the
income, profits or gains sought to be assessed were
chargeable to income tax according to the scheme of the Act
and the provisions of ss. 3 and 4 of the Act;
(ii) that it was a case of chargeable income escaping
assessment within the meaning of s. 34 and was not a case of
mere non-assessment of income tax because the earlier
assessment proceedings in the present case had in fact been
taken but failed to result in a valid assessment owing to
some lacuna which was not attributable to the assessing
authorities.
C.I.T., Bombay v. Sir Mahomed Yusuf Ismail ([1944] 12
I.T.R. 8), Fazal Dhala v. C.I.T., B. & O. ([1944] 12 I.T.R.
341), Baghavalu Naidu & Sons v. C.I.T., Madras ([1945] 13
I.T.R. 194), Raja Benoy Kumar Sahas Boy v. C.I.T., West
Bengal ([1953] 24 I.T.R. 70), Chatturam v. C.I.T., Bihar
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([1947] F.C.R. 116), Whitney v. Commissioners of Inland
Revenue ([1926] A.C. 37), C.I.T. Bombay & Aden v. Khemchand
Ramdas ([1938] 6 I.T.R. 414 at 428), Sir Rajendranath
Mukherjee v. C.I.T., Bengal ([1934] 2 I.T.R. 71), Madan
Mohan Lal v. C.I.T., Punjab ([1935] 3 I.T.R. 438), C.I.T.,
Bombay v. Pirojbai N. Contractor ([1937] 5 I.T.R. 338),
Kunwar-
291
Bishwanath Singh v. C.I.T., C.P. ([1942] 10 I.T.R. 322),
Raja Bahadur Kamakshya Narain Singh v. C.I.T. B. & 0.
([1946] 14 I.T.R. 683) and Chatturam v. C.I.T., B. & 0.
([1946] 14 I.T.R. 695), referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 38 of 1954.
Appeal from the Judgment and Decree dated the 14th day of
March 1951 of the High Court of Judicature at Patna in
M.J.C. No. 230 of 1949.
Mahabir Prasad, Advocate-General for the State of Bihar (R.
J. Bahadur and S. P. Varma, with him’), for the appellant.
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General for India (Porus A.
Mehta and P.O. Gokhale, with him), for the respondent.
1955. April 18. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
JAGANNADHADAS J.-This is an appeal by the assessee on leave
granted under section 66-A of the Indian Income-Tax Act.
The assessee by name Chatturam Horilram Ltd., who is the
appellant before us, is a private limited company carrying
on in Chota Nagpur the business of exporting mica for sale
to foreign countries. The assessment in question is for the
year 1939-40 and the accounting year is the calendar year
1938. These proceedings were initiated on a notice issued
to the assessee under section 34 of the Indian Income-tax
Act, 1922, (Act XI of 1922) (hereinafter referred to as the
Act). It is the applicability of this section to the facts
of this case that is the sole matter for consideration in
this appeal. The circumstances under which the above
mentioned notice under section 34 was issued are as follows.
The appellant had previously been assessed to tax on an
income of Rs. 1,09,200 for the same year 1939-40. by an
order dated the 22nd December, 1939, which was reduced on
appeal by Rs. 31,315. That assessment was set aside by the
Income-Tax Appellate Tribunal on the 28th March, 1942, on
the ground that the Indian Finance Act of 1939 was not in
force during
292
the assessment year 1939-40 in Chota Nagpur, which was a
partially-excluded area. On a reference by the Tribunal at
the instance of the Income-tax authorities, the High Court
of Patna agreed with this view and pronounced on the 30th
September, 1943, its judgment confirming the setting aside
of the assessment. Meanwhile, the Governor of Bihar
promulgated Bihar Regulation IV of 1942, Which was assented
to by the Governor-General on the 30th June, 1942. By this
Regulation, the Indian Finance Act of 1939 (along with
Finance Acts of other years with which we are not concerned)
was brought into force in Chota Nagpur retrospectively as
from the 30th March 1939. The relevant portion of the
Regulation was in the following terms.
"The Indian Finance Act, 1939, shall be deemed to have come
into force in the area to which this Regulation extends on
the 30th day of March, 1939". On the 8th February, 1944,
the Income-tax Officer passed an order as follows:
"Due to recent judgment of the High Court the assessment
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under section 23(3) stands cancelled and with it the notice
under section 34 issued in this case becomes ineffective and
is withdrawn. Assessee derives income from mica mining and
dealing, moneylending, mining rents and non-agricultural
sources of zamindary, and this has escaped assessment in its
entirety. Issue notice under section 22(2) read with
section 34 again to file a return of income in the
prescribed form and within the prescribed time, and inform
the assessee that the original notice under section 34 has
been cancelled".
It may be mentioned, in passing, that the notice under
section 34 which is referred to in the above order as having
become ineffective and as, therefore, withdrawn was a prior
one which was issued on the 8th July, 1941, i.e., during the
pendency of the assessee’s appeal relating to the earlier
assessment before the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal. It is
not quite clear from the record in what circumstances ’that
notice came to be issued. But it looks probable that it
relates to certain items appearing in the accounts as
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cash-credits to the tune of four lakhs which, as will appear
presently, were treated in the later proceedings as
concealed income in the absence of any proper explanation by
the assessee. This prior notice under section 34, having
been withdrawn, has no bearing on the question at issue
before us in this appeal and has not been relied on by
either side. In pursuance of the order dated the 8th
February, 1944, quoted above, a fresh notice under section
34 of the Act was issued to the appellant on the, 12th
February, 1944. The income of the assessee-company was
thereupon determined at a sum of Rs. 4,86,351, which on
appeal to the Assistant Commissioner, was reduced by Rs.
11,187. Out of this amount a sum of Rs. 4,04,618 related to
two items of cash-credits appearing in the name of the
partners of the Company which in the absence of any
satisfactory explanation, was treated by the Income-tax
authorities as secreted profits of the Company. Before the
Income-tax Appellate Tribunal two points were raised. (1)
Whether the notice dated the 12th February, 1944, under
section 34 of the Act was validly-issued. (2) Whether the
Income tax authorities were right in holding that the cash-
credit items were secret profits. Both the points were
decided against the assessee. On the assessee’s application
to refer both the points for the decision of the High Court,
the Tribunal declined to make a reference as regards the
second point but referred the first for the opinion of the
Court in the following terms:
"Whether in the circumstances of the case, the notice issued
on 12-2-1944 under section 34 of the Indian Income-tax Act
was validly issued for the assessment year 1939-40?"
The question was answered against the assessee by the High
Court and hence this appeal before us. The assessee
attempted to reopen the second question relating to secret
profits before the High Court but the learned Judges
declined to allow it to be canvassed, since the Tribunal did
not refer the question to them. We are, therefore,
concerned in this appeal only with the question relating to
the validity of the notice
294
issued on the 12th February, 1944, under section 34 of the
Act. It is obvious that if this notice is found to be
invalid the assessee would get relief for the entire amount
including the amount of secret profits.
The answer to the question which arises for consideration in
this appeal depends on a correct appreciation of the
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requirements of section 34 of the Act. Now, it has to be
mentioned that section 34 of the Act as it originally stood
in the Act of 1922, was amended by Act VII of 1939 and this
was in turn amended by Act XLVIII of 1948. At the relevant
date, i.e., for the assessment year 1939-40, section 34 (1)
as amended by Act VII of 1939 (and before its amendment in
1948) was in force. It was as follows:
"If in consequence of definite information which has come
into his possession the Income-tax Officer discovers that
income, profits or gains chargeable to income-tax have
escaped assessment in any year, (or have been under-
assessed, or have been assessed at too low a rate, or have
been the subject of excessive relief under this Act) the
Income-tax Officer may, (in any case in which be has reason
to believe that the assessee has concealed the particulars
of his income or deliberately furnished inaccurate
particulars thereof, at any time within eight years and) in
any other case at any time within four years of the end,of
that year, serve on the person liable to pay tax on such
income, profits or gains, or, in the case of a company, on
the principal officer thereof, a notice containing all or
any of the requirements which may be included in a notice
under sub-section (2) of section 22, and may proceed to
assess or re-assess such income, profits or gains and the
provisions of this Act shall, so far as may be, apply
accordingly as if the notice were a notice issued under that
sub-section".
Omitting from the above sub-section those portions which are
inapplicable to the facts of the present case -marked out
within brackets-it may be seen that the facts which require
to be established for the validity of the notice under this
sub-section are (I’ the income, profits or gains sought to
be assessed should be chargeable to income-tax and have
escaped assess-
295
ment in any year, and (2) the Income-tax Officer should have
discovered it in consequence of definite information which
has come into his possession. The contention of the learned
counsel for the appellant is that, with reference to the
facts of this case, none of these conditions can be said to
have been satisfied. It is urged that the income sought to
be assessed under these proceedings was not, as a fact,
chargeable to income-tax during the assessment year 1939-40.
It is said that in any case there can be no question of the
income having escaped assessment because, as a fact, the
income-tax authorities did proceed to assess the income and
that what happened is that the proceedings became
infructuous by reason of the High Court having pronounced
them to be void. It is also contended that there is no
question of discovery of any relevant fact or information,
because the non-assessment of the income of the assessee for
the period in question was in spite of all the information
relating to the income of the assessee having been
previously furnished and being in the possession of the
Income-tax Officer as would appear from the order of the
Officer dated the 22nd December, 1939. It is convenient to
deal with this last objection in the first instance.
It may be true that all the information relating to the
relevant income of the assessee which is now sought to be
taxed was in the possession of the Income-tax Officer in the
year 1939 itself when the return was submitted in compliance
with the notice under section 22(2) of the Act then issued.
But what was required under section 34(1) was not merely
fresh information as to the income that escaped assessment
but information as to the fact of escapement from assessment
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of the chargeable income. In the present case the income-
tax authorities proceeded to assess the appellant in the
normal way during the assessment year 1939-40 itself. Those
proceedings became infructuous, by virtue of the decision of
the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal and the decision of the
High Court confirming it, which disclosed that the Indian
Finance Act of 1939 was not in operation in
296
the relevant area at the relevant period and that in the
absence thereof no valid assessment could be made. The
fact, therefore, that the income of the appellant for the
relevant year remained without any valid assessment emerged
only on the High Court finally giving its decision that the
assessment proceedings previously taken were invalid. If,
in the circumstances, there was "escapement of chargeable
income from assessment"-a question to be dealt with
presently-there can be no doubt that this fact can be
reasonably said to have been discovered by the Income-tax
Officer only when he got definite information as to (1) the
passing of the Bihar Regulation IV of 1942 applying the
Indian Finance Act of 1939 retrospectively for the relevant
accounting period, and (2) the judgment of the High Court
pronouncing prior proceedings to be invalid It is knowledge
of both these facts, together, that would, with reference to
the circumstances of the present case, constitute the
discovery of the relevant fact in consequence of definite
information received by the Income-tax Officer. The
information as to both these facts taken together could only
be after the decision of the High Court on the 30th
September, 1943. As already stated, the notice under
section 34(1) , whose validity is in question, was based on
the order of the Income-tax Officer dated the 8th February,
1944, after the judgment of the High Court was pronounced.
That order which has been extracted above, shows clearly
that it was in consequence of the judgment of the High Court
in the back-ground of the promulgation of Regulation IV of
1942 that fresh action under section 34 (1) -was being
initiated.
A number of cases (C.I. T. Bombay v. Sir Mahomed Yusuf
Ismail(1); Fazal Dhala v. C.I. T., B.& 0. Raghavalu Naidu &
Sons v. C.I. T., Madras(3); and Raja Benoy Kumar Sahas Roy
v. C. I. T., West Bengal(,) have been cited before us to
show how the phrase "definite information" and the word
"discovery" used in this section have been interpreted by
the various
(1) [1944] 12 I.T.R. S.
(3) [1915] 13 I.T.R. 194.
(2) [1944] 12 I.T.R. 341.
(4) [1953] 24 I.T.R. 70.
297
High Courts. It is unnecessary to deal with these cases at
any length. There is here no question as to any new
subjective facts such as change of opinion consequent on a
correct appreciation of law by the very same, or another, or
higher officer, that is pressed into service as bringing
about "definite information " and "discovery". We are quite
clear that the promulgation of the Regulation and the
decision of the High Court are objective facts, information
regarding which became available to the Income-tax Officer
when he passed the order dated the 8th February, 1944, and
it is only when these facts came to his knowledge, that the
Income-tax Officer can be said to have discovered that
chargeable income escaped assessment in the relevant year.
The main question that requires consideration in this case
is whether, on the facts, it can be said that "income
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chargeable to income-tax has escaped assessment in the
relevant year". The contention of the learned counsel for
the appellant is that during the relevant year 1939-40 the
income was not chargeable to tax as a fact and that the
retrospective operation of the Finance Act for the relevant
year by virtue of a later legislation does not make a
difference for this purpose. To decide this question it is
necessary to have a clear idea of the scheme of the Income-
tax Act and its correlation to the Finance Act of each year.
The Income-tax Act is a standing piece of legislation which
provides the entire machinery for the levy of income-tax.
The Finance Act of each year imposes the obligation for the
payment of a determinate sum for each such year calculated
with reference to that machinery. As has been pointed out
by the Federal Court in Chatturam v. C.I. T., Bihar(1)
(quoting from the judgment of Lord Dunedin in Whitney v.
Commissioners of Inland Revenue (2). "there are three
stages in the imposition of a tax. There is the declaration
of liability, that is the part of the statute which deter-
mines what persons in respect of what property are
(1) [1947] F.C.R. 116 at 126.
(2) [1926] A.C. 37.
38
298
liable. Next, there is the assessment. Liability does not
depend on assessment. That, ex hypothesi, has already been
fixed. But assessment particularises the exact sum which a
person liable has to pay. Lastly, come the methods of
recovery if the person taxed does not voluntarily pay". The
same idea has been expressed in slightly different language
by Lord Romer in the judgment of the Privy Council reported
in C.I.T., Bombay & Aden v. Khemchand Ramdas(1). Chapter
III of the Income-tax Act headed "Taxable Income" contains
the various provisions with reference to which taxable
income is determined. The tax is leviable under section 3
and is in respect of the total income of an assessee in the
previous year. The total income is defined in section 2,
sub-section (15). The application of the Act to the total
income in the hands of an assessee is governed by sections
4, 4-A and 4-B and is determined with reference to concepts
relating to residence, receipt and accrual, as indicated
therein. Section 3, under which the actual charge of
income-tax arises, is as follows:
"Where any Central Act enacts that income-tax shall be
charged for any year at any rate or rates, tax at that rate
or those rates shall be charged for that year in accordance
with, and subject to the provisions of, this Act in respect
of the total income of the previous year of every
individual, Hindu undivided family, company and local
authority, and of every firm and other association of
persons or the partners of the firm or the members of the
association individually".
It is by virtue of this section that the actual levy of the
tax and the rates at which the tax has to be computed is
determined each year by the annual Finance Acts. Thus,
under the scheme of the Income-tax Act, the income of an
assessee attracts the quality of taxability with reference
to the standing provisions of the Act but the payability and
the quantification of the tax depend on the passing and
application of the annual Finance Act. Thus, income is
chargeable to tax independent of the passing of the
(1) [1938] 6 I.T.R. 414 at 428.
299
Finance Act but until the Finance Act is passed no tax can
be actually levied. A comparison of sections 3 and 6 of the
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Act shows that the Act recognises the distinction between
chargeability and the actual operation of the charge.
Section 6 says "save as otherwise provided by this Act, the
following heads of income, profits and gains, shall be
chargeable to income-tax in the manner hereinafter
appearing, etc." while section 3, as already quoted above,
says that "where any Central Act enacts that income-tax
shall be charged for any year at any rate or rates, tax at
that rate or those rates,, shall be charged for that year,
etc." Though, no doubt, sections 3 and 4 are the charging
sections in the Act as pointed out in Chatturam v. C.I.T.,
Bihar(1) at page 125, the wording of section 3 assumes the
pre-existence of chargeable income as indicated in section
6. Hence, according to the scheme of the Act the quality of
chargeability of any income is independent of the passing of
the Finance Act. In this view, therefore, though, as a
fact, on account of the Finance Act not having been extended
to the relevant area during the year 1939-40, legal
authority was then lacking for the quantification of the tax
and imposition of the liability therefor, the income of the
assessee for the relevant year was nonetheless chargeable to
tax at the time, in the sense explained above. Indeed, it
can also be said that the very fact of Regulation IV of
1942, having brought the Finance Act of 1939 into operation
retrospectively, in this area, has factually brought about,
in any case, the chargeability of the tax during that very
year. The relevant portion of the Regulation says that "the
Indian Finance Act of 1939 shall be deemed to have come into
force in the area to which this Regulation extends on the
30th day of March, 1939". By virtue of this deeming
provision the Indian Finance Act of 1939 must be assumed
even factually to have come into operation on the date
specified and the tax must be taken to have become
chargeable in that very year, though the actual liability
for payment could not arise until proper and
(1) [1947] F.C.R. 116.
300
valid steps ’are taken for quantification of the tax. The
contention, therefore, of the appellant that the income was
not chargeable to tax in the year 1939-40 cannot be
accepted.
The next question that arises is whether the income, though
chargeable to tax in the year, can be said to have escaped
assessment in the relevant year. The argument of the
learned counsel for the appellant is that since assessment
proceedings had in fact been taken during the year 1939-40
by an order of assessment dated the 22nd December, 1939, it
cannot be said that the income "escaped" assessment. He
urges that what happened was that, in spite of assessment
having been made, the assessment proceedings became
infructuous on account of the decision of the Income-tax
Appellate Tribunal setting aside the same and High Court
agreeing with it. He contends that, in the circumstances,
this is no more than a failure of the assessment proceedings
but that it is not an escapement from assessment. He relied
upon the Privy Council case in Sir Rajendranath Mukherjee v.
C.I. P., Bengal(1), where their Lordships say that "the
expression ’has escaped assessment’ cannot be read as
equivalent to ’has not been assessed"’ and that "such a
reading gives too narrow a meaning to the word ’assessment’
and too wide a meaning to the word ’escaped"’. Learned
counsel for the respondent relies on a number of subsequent
’cases of the various High Courts (Madan Mohan Lal v.
C.I.T., Punjab(1); C.I. T., Bombay v. Pirojbai N.
Contractor(3); and Kunwar Bishwanath Singh v. C.I. T.,
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C.P.(4) ) which have explained. this decision of the Privy
Council and pointed out that the particular passage in that
judgment which is relied upon bad reference to the, facts of
that case, viz., the proceedings by way of initial
assessment being still pending. While no doubt the Privy
Council case is thus distinguishable, the contention of the
learned counsel for the appellant that the escapement from
assessment is not to be equated to
(1) [1934] 2 I.T R. 71 at 77.
(3) [1937] 5 I.T.R. 338.
(2) [1935] 3 I.T.R. 438.
(4) [1942] 10 I.T.R. 322.
301
non-assessment simpliciter is not without force. Here
again, it is unnecessary to lay down what exactly
constitutes "escapement from assessment". For the purpose
of the present case it appears to us sufficient to say that,
where earlier assessment proceedings had in fact been taken
but failed to result in a valid assessment owing to some
lacuna other than that attributable to the assessing
authorities, notwithstanding the chargeability of income to
the tax, it would be a case of chargeable income escaping
assessment and not a case of mere non-assessment of income-
tax. The proceedings for assessment in the present case
have failed to result in a valid assessment by virtue of a
legal lacuna, viz., the fact of the Indian Finance Act of
1939 not having been extended to the relevant area for the
relevant assessment year. Learned counsel for the appellant
suggests that the failure of the assessment proceedings in
this case must be taken to have been due to the lapse of the
income-tax authorities. It is said that inasmuch as
Regulation IV of 1942 was actually passed during the
pendency of the reference in the High Court in respect of
the prior proceedings, the result would have been different,
if the Regulation had been brought to the notice of the High
Court. There is, however, no reason to think so. The High
Court’s jurisdiction was only to answer the particular
question that was referred to it by the Income-tax Appellate
Tribunal and it is extremely doubtful whether they could
have taken notice of a subsequent legislation and answered a
different question. Learned counsel for the appellant also
urged that in any case the deeming provision enacted in
Regulation IV of 1942, may be taken to have validated the
assessment proceedings previously taken in the year 1939 and
at best to have restored the assessment order passed by the
Income-tax Officer on the 22nd December, 1939, and confirmed
by the Assistant Commissioner. But this overlooks the fact
that the order had in fact been set aside by the Income-tax
Appellate Tribunal and that the setting aside was confirmed
by the High Court on the reference made to it. Admittedly
the Regulation was passed after the decision of the
302
Income-tax Appellate Tribunal. Notwithstanding that the
Regulation IV of 1942 purported to be retrospective) it
cannot have the effect of effacing the result brought about
by the decision of the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal and the
High Court on reference, unless there are clear and express
words to that effect. It might have been quite a different
matter, if by the date of the Regulation the assessment pro-
ceedings themselves were still pending as in fact happened
with reference to assessment proceedings in this area, in
respect of a number of assessees for the subsequent
assessment year, 1940-41, which were pending by the date of
the relevant Regulation and were continued up to their
termination. They were held to be valid both by the High
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Court and by the Federal Court when challenged by the
assessees. (See Raja Bahadur Kamakshya Narain Singh v.
C.I.T., B. & O.(1); Chatturam v. C.I. T., B. & O.(1); as
also Chatturam v. C.I.T., Bihar(1). It follows, therefore,
that, in our view, the income of the assessee ’Chargeable to
income-tax escaped assessment in the relevant year 1939-40.
The High Court was, therefore, right in answering as it did
the question referred to it.
The appeal accordingly fails and is dismissed with costs.
(1) (1946) 14 I.T R. (2) (1946) 14 I.T.R. 695.
(a) 1947 F.C.R. 116 at 126.
303