Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF MADRAS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
LATEEF HAMID & CO.
DATE OF JUDGMENT02/09/1971
BENCH:
HEGDE, K.S.
BENCH:
HEGDE, K.S.
GROVER, A.N.
CITATION:
1972 AIR 1781 1972 SCR (1) 577
1971 SCC (3) 560
CITATOR INFO :
D 1973 SC1387 (5)
ACT:
Madras General Sales Tax Act 1 of 1959 s. 31-Section
conferring power on Appellate Assistant Commissioner to
enhance assessment Power to enhance assessment under Madras
General Sales Tax Act, 1939 exercisable by Commercial Tax
Officer-Appellate Assistant Commissioner hearing appeal
under s. 31 of 1959 Act whether can exercise power of
enhancement in respect of assessment year 1958-59 which was
governed by 1939 Act-Whether any right or privilege of
assessee under 1939 Act affected if power of enhancement
exercised by Appellate Assistant Commissioner under s. 31 of
1959 Act.
HEADNOTE:
The Appellant was a dealer in hides and skins at Madras. Up
to March 31, 1959 sales tax on dealers in the State of
Madras was leviable under the Madras General Sales Tax Act,
1939. The appellant’s turnover for the assessment year
1958-59 thus stood charged with liability to pay tax as
leviable under the 1939 Act. The 1939 Act was repealed by
the Madras General Sales Tax Act, 1959 which came into force
on April 1, 1959. The appellant was assessed for the year
1958-59 on March 24, 1961. By an order dated August 16,
1962 the Appellate Assistant Commissioner while disposing of
the appeal against the said assessment order enhanced the
assessment under power conferred on him by s. 31 of the 1959
Act. The Tribunal accepted the contention of the assessee
that the Appellate Assistant Commissioner had no power to
enhance the assessment. The High Court in revision held
that since under the 1939 Act the appellate authority while
exercising its appellate powers had no power to enhance the
assessment and the said immunity or protection was a vested
right in the assessee, the same not having been taken away
either expressly or by necessary implication by the 1959
Act, the Appellate Assistant Commissioner could not have
enhanced the assessment. it further held that the immunity
or protection was a right or privilege protected by s. 61(1)
of the 1959 Act as amended in 1963, which amendment was
retrospective in its operation. In appeal to this Court by
certificate,
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HELD: (i) In the matter of assessment the purpose of the
1939 as well as the1959 Act is identical. That purpose was
and is to see that neither theassessee is over assessed
nor the State is deprived of the Revenue towhich it
is entitled. Under the 1939 Act an aggrieved assessee could
first appeal to the Appellate Authority and then to the
Tribunal. Further he could on questions of law go up in
revision to the High Court. Rule 13(1) of the Madras
General Sales Tax Rules, 1939 prescribed that subject to the
provisions of s. 11 any person aggrieved by any original
order passed by the Assistant Commercial Tax Officer may
appeal to the Commercial Tax Officer of the District. Thus
the Commercial Tax Officer had both the powers of the
appellate authority as well as the, special powers conferred
on him under s. 12(1) of the 1939 Act. By the exercise of
those two powers he could have confirmed, altered, amended
or enhanced the assessment made. Under the 1959 Act the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner who primarily took over the
quasi-judicial functions of the Commercial Tax Officer was
conferred with power not only to confirm, vary, or annul the
assessment but also the power to enhance the assessment.
The power conferred on him under
3-1-3Sup.C.I./72
578
s.31 of the 1959 Act combines to an extent both the
appellate power as well as the special power the Commercial
Tax officer had under s. 11 and s. 12(1) of the 1939 Act.
Hence the changes effected by the 1959 Act in the machinery
sections do not touch the substance of the matter. The 1959
Act merely simplified the procedure without touching the
Substance of the right of the parties. [582C-583A]
No assessee has any vested right in the procedure prescribed
under the 1939 Act. So long as the new procedure laid down
in the 1959 Act ,does not interfere with any of his vested
rights, an assessee has no right to claim that his case must
be dealt with under the provisions of the repealed Act. It
is well settled that the new procedure prescribed by law gover
ns all pending cases. The assessee in the present
case filed its appeal under s. 31 of the 1959 Act and not
under s. 11 of the 1939 Act. its right of appeal under the
1959 Act does not take away in any manner .any of its vested
rights under the 1939 Act [585 B-C]
The appeal must accordingly he allowed.
Deputy Commissioner of Commercial Tax, Madras Division v. N.
Balasundaram & Co. 14, S.T.C. 996, disapproved.
Observations contra in Deputy Commissioner of Commercial
Taxes, Madras Division v. Sri S. Swami & Co., 13 S.T.C. 468,
held incorrect.
(Since it was held that no vested right of the assessee was
infringed by the provisions of the 1959 Act the Court did
not find it necessary to consider the meaning of the words
’any right privilege..... accrued......under the Act’ in s.
61 (1) (ii) (c) of the Act or to examine the scope of
s. 61(2) thereof]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 2186 of
1968.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated July 3, 1967 of the
Madras High Court in Tax Case No. 250 of 1964 (Revision No.
172).
S. T. Desai and A. V. Rangam, for the appellant.
R. K. P. Shankardass, R. Vasudeva Pillai, P. Keshava Pillai
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Rajiv Sawhney, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Hegde, J. This appeal by certificate arises from the
decision ’of the High Court of Madras. It raises two
questions for decision viz (1) whether the High Court was
right in its opinion that the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner of Commercial Taxes was incompetent to enhance
the assessment of the assessee, the respondent, herein and
(2) whether the High Court was justified in’ holding that
the additional exemptions granted by the Tribunal were
justified by the evidence on record.
There is no merit in the second contention. Therefore it
will ,be convenient to dispose it of even before going to
the facts of the case. The assessing officer as well as the
Appellate Assistant
579
Commissioner of Commercial Taxes disallowed the two exemp-
tions asked for by the assessee on the ground that there was
interpolation in the, relative documents covering the
turnover. The Tribunal reversed that finding of those
authorities and allowed the exemptions asked for. It
appears from the order of the Tribunal that it proceeded on
the basis that there was no ;Interpolation. This finding of
the Tribunal is essentially a finding of fact and hence we Will
not be justified in interfering with that finding and
more so as the High Court has declined to interfere with
that finding.
This takes us to the real controversy in the appeal namely
whether the Appellate Assistant Commissioner had power to
enhance the assessment of the assessee. The assessee is a
dealer in Hides and Skins at Madras. We are concerned
herein with its assessment for the year 1958-59. That
assessment was made on March 24, 1961. By his order dated
August 16, 1962, the Appellate Assistant Commissioner
enhanced the assessment of the assessee while disposing
of the appeal by the assessee. Until March 31, 1956,
sales tax was being levied on dealers in the State of
Madras under the provisions of the Madras Sales Tax Act,
1939 (to be hereinafter referred to as the "1939 Act"). The
assessee’s turnover for the year 1958-59 stood charged with
the liability to pay tax as leviable under the 1939 Act.
The 1939 Act was repealed by the Madras General Sales Tax
Act, 1959 (to be hereinafter referred to as the "1959
Act"). That Act came into force on April 1, 1959. As
seen earlier the assessee was assessed after that Act
came into force. The assessee filed its appeal under S. 31
of that Act and the Appellate Assistant Commissioner
dealt with that appeal under that provision.
Aggrieved by that order, the assessee took up the
matter in appeal to Tribunal. The Tribunal following
the decision of the Madras High Court in Deputy
Commissioner of Commercial Taxes, Madras Division v. Sri
Swami and Company,(1) accepted the contention of the
assessee. As against that decision, the State of Madras
went up in revision to the High Court under s. 38 of the
1959 Act. That petition was dismissed. Hence this appeal.
The High Court has opined that under the 1939 Act,’ the
appellate authority while exercising its appellate
powers could not have enhanced the assessment of the
assessee. That was an immunity or protection afforded to
the assessee under the 1939 Act. Such an immunity or
protection was a vested right of the assessee. The same
having not been taken away either expressly or by necessary
implication by the provisions of the 1959 Act, the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner could not have. enhanced
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(1)13, S.T.C. 468.
580
the assessment. It further held that that immunity or
protection of the assessee, is protected by s. 66(1) of the
1959 Act as amended in 1963, which amendment was
retrospective in its ,operation.
The turnover of the assessee during the year 1958-59 became
charged with liability to pay sales-tax under the 1939 Act
as and when the assessee effected sales and the total sales-
tax liability of the assessee for that year became fixed
Under the same Act on March 31, 1959. Hence the charging
section in the 1959 Act is not relevant for determining the
liability of the assessee. Herein we have only to consider
the effect of the change in the machinery provisions.
Before enhancing the assessment the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner had given opportunity to the assessee to show
cause against the proposed enhancement. The Appellate
Assistant Commissioner rejected the contention of the
assessee that he had no power to enhance the assessment, as
the power to, enhance assessment conferred on him by. s. 3 1
of the 195 9 Act was inapplicable to the proceedings before
him.
We shall now examine the relevant provisions of the 1939 Act
and the 1959 Act. We shall first take up the material pro-
visions in the 1939 Act. Section 2(a-2) defines the
expression "assessing authority" as meaning any person
authorised by the State Government to make any assessment
under the Act The expression "Commercial Tax Officer" is
defined in s. 2(a-3) as meaning any person appointed to be a
Commercial Tax Officer under s. 2-B. The Deputy
Commissioner is defined in S. 2(b-1) as meaning any person
appointed to be a Deputy Commissioner of Commercial Taxes
under s. 2-B. Section 2-B empowers the State Government to
make appointments of as many Deputy Commissioners of
Commercial Taxes and Commercial Tax Officers as they think
fit for the purpose of performing the functions respectively
conferred on them by or under the Act. The expression
"Appellate Tribunal" is defined in s. 2(a-2) as meaning the
Tribunal appointed under s. 2-A, which empowered the
Government to appoint a Tribunal consisting of three members
to exercise the functions conferred on the Appellate
Tribunal by or under the Act. Section II provided for
appeal by the assessee objecting to an assessment made on
him under s. 9(2) within the prescribed period. Section 9
prescribed the procedure to be followed by the assessing
authority. Section 12(1) conferred certain special powers
on the Commercial Tax Officer. It said that "the Commercial
Tax officer may
(i) suo moto or
(ii) in cases in which an appeal does not lie
to him under section 11, on application, call
for and’
581
examine the record of any order passed or pro-
ceeding recorded under the provisions of this
Act by any officer subordinate to him, for the
purpose of satisfying himself as to the
legality or propriety of such order or as to
the regularity of such proceeding, and may
pass such order with respect thereto as
he thinks fit."
The application under s. 12 (1) (ii) could have been made
even by the assessing authority. It may also be remembered
’that the Commercial Tax Officer was one of the authorities
charged with the duty to see that no taxable turnover went
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untaxed. The power under S. 12(1) could have been exercised
within three years from the date the assessee was served
with assessment order. Power under S. 12(1)(ii) could have
been exercised by the Commercial Tax Officer simultaneously
with the exercise of his appellate powers under s. 11 (1)
Section 12(2) conferred special powers on the Deputy Com-
missioner to call for and examine any order or proceeding
recorded under the provisions of the Act satisfying himself
as to the legality or propriety of that order or as to the
regularity of such proceeding and may pass such order with
respect thereto as he thinks fit. This power he could have
exercised within four years from the date on which the
assessment order was communicated to the assessee.
Section 12-A provided for an appeal by an assessee objecting
to an order relating to his assessment passed by the
Commercial Tax Officer whether on appeal under s. 11 or
under s. 12, sub-s. (1) or by the Deputy Commissioner under
s. 12, sub-s. (2) subject to certain conditions with which
we are not concerned in this case. The assessee as well as
the Deputy Commissioner were conferred with power to move
the High Court under s. 12-B within the prescribed period
against the order of the Appellate Tribunal on the ground
that order either decided erroneously a question of law or
it failed to decide the question of law arising for
decision.
This takes us to the relevant provisions in the 1959 Act.
Therein again ’the assessing authority" is defined in s.
2(c) as meaning any person authorised by the Government or
by any authority empowered by them to make assessment under
the Act. Against the order of assessment made by the
assessing authority an appeal by any person objecting to the
assessment lies to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner
appointed under s. 28, sub-S. (3). Section 31 empowers
the Appellate Assistant Commis-
582
sioner to confirm, reduce, enhance,, or annul the
assessment. The power to enhance the assessment was
conferred on the Appellate Authority for the first time by
the 1959 Act. Under this Act also’ the Deputy
Commissioner’s power to suo moto revise the order of
assessment is retained, subject to certain conditions. Any
person objecting to the, order made by the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner under s. 31(3) or against the order
made by the Deputy Commissioner under s. 31 (1) can appeal
to the Appellate Tribunal. Under s. 38 the assessee or the
Deputy Commissioner can take up a revision to the High Court
either on the ground that the Tribunal has decided a
question of law erroneously or it has failed to decide a
question of law arising for decision.
In the matter of assessment, the purpose of the 1939 as well
as the 1959 Act is identical. That purpose was and is to
see that neither the assessee is over-assessed nor the State
is deprived of the Revenue to which it is entitled. Under
the 1939 Act, an aggrieved assessee could first appeal to
the Appellate Authority and then to Tribunal. Further he
could on questions of law go up in revision to the High
Court. To protect the interest of the State, special powers
were conferred on the Commercial Tax Officer as well as the
Deputy Commissioner of Commercial Taxes. If the Deputy
Commissioner was not satisfied with the decision of the
Tribunal on questions of law, he could have gone up in revi-
sion to the High Court. Under the 1959 Act, the procedure
was simplified to some extent. The Appellate Assistant
Commissioner who primarily took over the quasi-judicial
functions of the Commercial Tax Officer was conferred with
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power not only to confirm, vary or annual the assessment but
also the power to enhance the assessment. The power
conferred on him under s. 31 of the 1959 Act combines to an
extent both the appellate power as well as the special power
the Commercial Tax Officer had under s. 11 and 12(1) of the
1939 Act. Hence the changes effected by the 1959 Act in the
machinery provisions do not touch the substance of the
matter. Even as regards the time within which the
enhancement of assessment can be made the change excepting
in exceptional cases is in favour of the assessees. The
Commercial Tax Officer could have exercised his special
powers under s. 12(1) of the 1939 Act within three years
from the date the assessment order was served on the
assessee. Under the, 1959 Act, he can enhance the
assessment only during the pendency of the appeal and not
thereafter. Herein we are not concerned with the special
powers of the Deputy Commissioner nor with the powers of the
Tribunal or the High Court. In our opinion there is no
basis for saying that the provisions of the 1959 Act
relating to the determination of the assessment are more
onerous than those in the 1939 Act. The 1959 Act in our
opinion merely,
583
simplified the procedure without touching the substance of
the right of the parties. No benefit that was available to
an assessee as regards the procedure, was taken away. by the
1959 Act, if we ignore the remote possibility of an appeal
pending before an Appellate, Assistant Commissioner for more
than three years and that authority failing to exercise his
power to enhance the tax within that period. The assessee
before us cannot even have the benefit of such a contingency
because the order of assessment in this case was made on
March 24, 1961 and the appellate order was passed on August
16, 1962. In this case it cannot be said that any vested
right of the assessee had been in fact affected by the 1959
Act.
Now we shall go to S. 61 of the 1959 Act on the basis of
which the Tribunal and the High Court have upheld the
contention of the assessee. Section 61 (1) to the extent
material for our purpose reads :
"61(1).(i) The Madras General Sales Tax Act,
1939 (Madras Act IX of 1939), (hereinafter in
this section referred to as the said Act), is
hereby repealed.
(ii)The repeal of the said Act by clause (i)
shall not affect-
(a) anything done or any offence committed,
or any fine or penalty incurred or any
proceedings begun before the commencement of
this Act; or
(b) the previous operation of the said Act
or anything duly done or suffered thereunder;
or
(c) any right, privilege, obligation or
liability acquired, accrue or incurred under
the said Act or;
(d) any fine, penalty, forfeiture or
punishment incurred in respect of any offence,
committed against the said Act; or
(e) any investigation, legal proceeding or
remedy in respect of any such right,
privilege, obligation, liability, fine,
penalty, forfeiture or punishment as
aforesaid;
and any such investigation, legal proceeding
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or remedy may be instituted, continued or
enforced and any such fine, penalty,
forfeiture or punishment may be imposed, as if
this Act had not been passed.
(iii)Subject to the provisions of clause
(ii), anything done or any action taken
including any appointment made, notification,
notice or order issued, rule, form or
regulation framed, certificate, licence or
permit
5 84
granted, under the said Act shall be deemed to
have been done or taken under the
corresponding provision of this Act and shall
continue in force accordingly, unless and
until, superseded by anything done or any
action taken under this Act.
(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in
sub-s.
(1) any application, appeal, revision of
other proceeding made or preferred to any
officer or authority under the said Act and
pending at the commencement of this Act, shall
after such commencement, be transferred to and
disposed of by the officer or authority who
would have had jurisdiction to entertain such
application, appeal, revision or other
proceeding under this Act if it had been in
force on the date on which any application,
appeal, revision or other proceeding was made
or preferred.
The rules framed under the 1939 Act (the Madras General
Sales Tax Rules, 1939), provide for the appointment of
Assistant Commercial Tax Officers and the Deputy Commercial
Tax Officers. By his order dated September 15, 1939, in
exercise of the powers conferred on him by cl. (a) of s. 2
and sub-ss. 1 and 2 of S. 14 of the 1939 Act, the Governor
of Madras authorised the Assistant Commercial Tax Officers
to exercise the powers of the assessing authority in the
case of dealers whose turnover does not exceed Rs. 20,000/-
and Deputy Commercial Tax Officers to exercise the powers of
an assessing authority in the case of dealers whose turnover
exceeds Rs. 20,000/-. It is not necessary to refer to the
exceptional cases for which provision is made in the
provisos to cl. (1) of that order. Rule 13(1)of the Rules
prescribed that subject to the provisions of s. 11 any
person aggrieved by any original order of an assessing
authority may appeal to the Commercial Tax Officer of the
District. The proviso to that section permits the Board of
Revenue to transfer an appeal pending before a Commercial
Tax Officer to another Commercial Tax Officer for reasons to
be recorded in writing. But the usual appellate authority
is the Commercial Tax Officer of the District. Hence the
Commercial Tax Officer had both the powers of the appellate
authority as well as the special powers conferred on him
under S. 12(1) of the 1939 Act. By the exercise of those
two powers, he could have confirmed, altered, amended or
enhanced the assessment made. The power conferred on the
appellate authority under the 1959 Act is not wider than
that the Commercial Tax Officer had under the 1939 Act.
Hence the 1959 Act does not adversely affect in any manner
the right of appeal an assessee had under the 1939 Act. If
one probes into the grievance of
585
the assessee before us, it would be obvious that it is
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wholly imaginary. No assessee has any vested right in the
procedure prescribed under the 1939 Act. So long as the new
procedure laid down in the 1959 Act does not interfere with
any of his vested rights, an assessee has no right to claim
that his case must be dealt with under the provisions of the
repealed Act. It is well settled that the new procedure
prescribed by law governs all pending cases. As seen
earlier, the assessee filed its appeal under S. 31 of the
1959 Act and not under s. 11 of the 1939 Act. But that is a
minor aspect. What is of the essence is that his right of
appeal under the 1959 Act does not take away in any manner
any of his vested rights under the 1939 Act.
Inview of what we have said herein before, it is not
necessary for usto consider the meaning of the words
"any right, privilege .......... accrued............ under
the Act" in s. 61(1) (ii)(c). We repeat that no right of
the assessee was infringed by the provisions of the 1959
Act. In this view’ it is not necessary to examine the scope
of s. 61 (2) of the 1959 Act about which there was
considerable argument before us.
The decision under appeal is based on the earlier two deci-
sions of that High Court i.e. in Deputy Commissioner Commer-
cial Taxes, Madras Division v. Sri Swami & Co.(1) and Deputy
Commissioner of Commercial Taxes, Madras Division v. M.
Balasundaram and Co.(2). Hence it is necessary to examine
the correctness of those decisions. In Swami & Co.’s case
(supra) the assessee was assessed by the Deputy Commercial
Tax Officer for its turnover for the year 1955-56 under the
1939 Act. The order or assessment was passed on December
15, 1956. The assessee filed an appeal before the
Commercial Tax Officer on February 15, 1957. During the
pendency of the appeal, the 1959 Act came into force on
April 1, 1959. Thereafter the appeal was transferred to the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner. The Appellate Assistant
Commissioner reduced the turnover of the assessee to certain
extent. Not being satisfied with the’ order of the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner, the assessee preferred a
further appeal to the Appellate Tribunal. In the course of
the hearing of the appeal by the Tribunal, the State
representative filed a petition seeking enhancement of the
turnover of the assessee on certain grounds. The Tribunal
rejected that plea holding that the assessee had a vested
right to have his appeal disposed of under the provisions of
the 1939 Act. It may be noted that under the 1939 Act, only
an assessee could have appealed to the Tribunal against the
order of the Appellate Assistant Com-
(1) 13 S.T.C. 468.
(2) 14. S.T.C. 996.
586
sioner but under the 1959 Act both the assessee as well as
the Deputy Commissioner can appeal against his order.
Aggrieved by the order of the Tribunal, the Deputy
Commissioner took up the matter in revision to the High
Court. The High Court allowed the revision petition. It
held that the Tribunal went wrong in holding that the
petition filed by the State representative for enhancement
of the assessment was not maintainable. In the course of
its judgment the High Court observed
"The immunity or protection which the assessee
had under the 1939 Act so as to save the
assessment made by the Deputy Commercial Tax
Officer, the primary assessing authority, from
being enhanced by the exercise of the
appellate power by the Commercial Tax Officer,
is a vested right, which cannot be interfered
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with or in any way impaired having regard to
the specific provision of S. 61 (1) of the
Madras Act 1 of 195 9. The order of the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner only reduced
the turnover to the benefit of the assessee,
and it is clear that there was no violation of
the vested right of the assessee by reason of
the said order. The order of the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner was passed after the
coming into force of the 1959 Act and on that
date the assessee had no vested right to
prevent an enhancement of his assessment by
the future appellate authority, namely the
Tribunal. The Tribunal entertained an appeal
at the instance of the assesses only under the
new Act as the order appealed against was one
passed after the coming into force of the new
Act, and by a Tribunal which functioned under
the new Act. It is impossible for the
assessee to maintain the position that any
order of the Appellate Tribunal enhancing the
assessment made by the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner would amount to deprivation of
their vested rights or violation of the
provisions of section 61 (1) of the 1959 Act."
These observations appear to us to be somewhat incongruous.
As seen earlier under the 1939 Act, the Revenue could not
have appealed either against the order of the assessing
authority or against that of the appellate authority. If
the non-existence of the right of appeal on the part of the
Department is considered as an immunity or protection and if
that immunity or protection is considered as a vested right,
the assessee will have that right both at the stage of the
appeal to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner as well as at
the stage of the appeal to the Tribunal. It is difficult to
follow how the High Court was able to make a
587
dichotomy as between the powers of the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner and that of the Tribunal in that regard. If
the newly constituted Tribunal were clothed with wider and
larger powers as opined by the High Court, the same would be
the case with the Appellate Assistant Commissioner. In our
opinion, the true test to be applied to the case was whether
in fact any vested right of the assessee had been taken away
under the 1959 Act because of the enlargement of the powers
of the first appellate authority or that of the Tribunal.
As seen earlier, no real right of the assessee was infringed
by the 1959 Act because of the enlargement of the powers of
those authorities.
This takes us to the decision in Balasundaram & Co’s case
(supra). This case was decided by the same bench which
decided Swami & Co’s case. Therein the assessee was
assessed to sales tax under the 1939 Act. During the
pendency of its appeal to the Commercial Tax Officer, the
1959 Act came into force. Its appeal was transferred to the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner who enhanced the
assessment. But on a further appeal, the Tribunal came to
the conclusion that the Appellate Assistant Commissioner had
no jurisdiction to enhance the assessment. As against that
order, the Deputy Commissioner of Commercial Taxes went up
in revision to the High Court. The High Court held that the
assessee had a vested right at the time when the 1959 Act
came into force to prevent the Commercial Tax Officer from
enhancing the assessment in the course of the appeal
preferred by him. However, there was always the peril of
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the Commercial Tax Officer, who was also the revising
authority, revising the assessment to his prejudice in
exercise of his revisional power, but that peril effectively
disappeared when under the 1959 Act, the revisional power
was conferred upon the Deputy Commissioner of Commercial
Taxes and not upon the Appellate Assistant Commissioner.
Therefore the interference by the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner with the assessment order passed by the Deputy
Commercial Tax Officer to the prejudice of the assessee in
the purported exercise of his appellate power, was clearly
violative of the assessee’s vested rights. In our opinion
this decision proceeded on a wrong basis. The question
before the High Court was whether there was a vested right
in the assessee not to have his assessment enhanced, under
the 1939 Act and whether that vested right had been in any
manner infringed by the 1959 Act. As seen earlier he had no
such vested right under the 1939 Act. The fact that a
different procedure is prescribed under the 1959 Act for
enhancing the assessment cannot be said to be an
infringement of a vested right. No one can have a vested
right in a mere procedure. We are of opinion that
Balasundaram’s case (supra) was wrongly decided and some of
the observations
588
in Swami & Co’s case (supra) are not correct though the
decision in that case is not open to question.
Mr. S. T. Desai, learned- Counsel for the Revenue placed
strong reliance on the decision of a Division Bench of the
Kerala High Court in Velukutty v. Kerala Sales Tax Appellate
Tribunal, Trivandrum and Ors. (1) Therein, interpreting a
provision similar to S. 61 (2) of the Act, the High Court
came to the conclusion that the clause "be transferred to
and disposed of by the officer or authority who would have
had jurisdiction to entertain such. application, appeal,
revision or other proceeding under this Act, if it had been
in force on the date on which any application. appeal,
revision or other proceeding was made or preferred" con-
ferred power on the appellate authority to enhance
assessment. The correctness of this conclusion was
contested by Mr. Shankardass, learned Counsel for the
assessee. According to him that clause merely provided for
transference of the appeals pending .before the authorities
under the 1939 Act to the authorities under the 1959 Act
without enlarging their powers. In view of our conclusion
that no vested right of the assessee had been interfered
with, it is not necessary for us to go into this
controversy.
For the reasons mentioned above, this appeal is allowed,
orders of the High Court as well as that of the Tribunal are
set aside and the case is remitted to the Tribunal for
disposal :according to law. In the circumstances of the
case we direct the parties to bear their own costs both in
this Court as well as in the High Court.
G.C. Appeal allowed.
(1) 20 S.T.C. 28.
589