Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
K. BASAVARAJAPPA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
TAX RECOVERY COMMISSIONER, BANGALORE AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 11/10/1996
BENCH:
A.S. ANAND, S.B. MAJMUDAR
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
S.B. Majmudar, J.
Leave granted in these Special Leave Petitions.
By consent of learned advocates of contesting parties
the appeals were heard finally and are being disposed of by
this judgment.
A short question falls for our consideration in these
two appeals arising out of a common judgment or Division
bench of the Karnataka High Court in Writ Appeal No 293 of
1991 connected with Writ Appeal No.721 of 1991 the question
is whether the common appellant in these appeals who was
original petitioner no.2 in these Special Leave Petitions
had any locus standi to prefer an application under Rule 60
of the Second Schedule to the Income Tax Act, 1961 for
setting aside the sale of immovable property of the
defaulter income tax assessee from whom he is alleged to
have agreed to purchase the said property and which property
was sold in auction by the Income Tax Department in
execution of Certificate of Recovery of lncome Tax issued
against the defaulter, owner of the property.
In order to answer this question the backdrop facts may
be noted at the outset. One Y.S. Devendra Murthy who was the
owner of the property auctioned by the income Tax Department
had committed default in payment of income tax dues assessed
against him for the relevant assessment years. The Tax
Recovery Officer under the Income Tex Act issued notice to
him on 3rd September 1973 as per Rule 2 of the Second
Schedule to the Income Tax Act which deals with Procedure
for Recovery of Tax. The said defaulter Shri Y.S, Devendra
Murthy entered into an agreement dated 20th November 1982
with the common appellant to sell his property being
agricultural land being Survey No.20 and part Of Survey
no.21 for Rs.2,80,000/- and received an advance of Rs
1.62,000/-. The Sale deed was to be executed by said shri
Y.S.Devendra Murthy within eight months which time limit was
further extended by five months. The appellant filed a quit
for specific performance of the Agreement to sell on 2nd
January 1984 alleging that said Shri Y.S. Devendra murthy
had failed to execute the sale deed pursuant to the
agreement. Earlier an ex parte decree was passed in the said
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decree was set aside and the proceedings remained pending.
In the meantime by an order dated aforesaid properties to
Y.S. Devendra Murthy and thereafter proclamation of sale was
issued for putting the tax dues of the defaulter. the Tax
recovery officer brought the said attached properties to
sale on 14th march 1988. The third respondent herein was
the successful bidder at the said auction and he became
auction purchaser of these properties. thereafter on 12th
April 1988, that is, within thirty days from the date of
the auction sale the appellant filed an application under
Rule 60 of the Second Schedule to the Income Tax Act. To the
said application was annexed a letter from the general power
of attorney holder of the defaulter Shri Y.S.Devendra
Murthy authorising him to deposit the amount of tax arrears.
The appellant along with the said application sought to
deposit the interest and solatium at the rate of 5% with
costs. The appellant also deposited Rs.3,42,322/- being the
arrears of tax with interest and solatium with costs with
the tax recovery officer on the same day, that is 12th
April 1988 He accordingly prayed for setting aside the
auction sale. The tax Recovery officer by his order dated
20th April 1988 rejected by the commissioner of Income Tax,
Karnataka II, Bangalore to confirm the auction sale he had
confirmed the auction sale he had confirmed the auction sale
and hence the appellant carried the matter in appeal before
the Tax Recovery commissioner who rejected the said appeal
and passed order dated 13th June 1988. At that stage the
appellant along with the general power of attorney holder of
Y.S. Devendra Murthy, named Shri Y.S. Surender filed a writ
petition in the Karnataka High Court challenging the orders
of the Tax Recovery Officer and Tax Recovery Commissioner.
A learned single Judge of the High Court by his order dated
14th December 1990 allowed the writ petition and quashed the
orders dated 20th April 1988 passed by Tax Recovery Officer
and dated 13th June 1988 passed by Tax Recovery
Commissioner. The learned Single Judge held that the
application moved by the appellant was maintainable under
Rule 60 and as he had in the meantime withdrawn the
deposited amount he permitted the general Power of Attorney
holder of Y.S. Devendra Murthy to make deposit within the
weeks and directed the Tax Recovery Officer to deal with the
matter in accordance with law. An amount of Rs. 4,45,783/-
was accordingly deposited with the Tax Recovery Officer. The
aforesaid order of the learned Single Judge was challenged
by the Tax Recovery Commissioner. Karnataka II., Bangalore
and Tax Recovery Officer by way of Writ Appeal No.293 of
1991 while respondent no. 3 preferred Writ Appeal No.72I of
1991 against the very judgment and order of the learned
Single Judge as by the said order of the learned Single
Judge the auction sale in favour of respondent no.3 was
liable to be set aside if the remanded proceedings under
Rule by were successful. Both these writ appeals were heard
together by a Division Bench of the Karnataka High Court
consisting of S.P. Bharucha, CJ (as he then was) and Justice
Shivraj Patil. The Division Bench of the High Court came to
the conclusion that the appellant‘s application under Rule
60 was not maintainable and he had no locus standi to file
such an application. Consequently the writ appeals were
allowed and the writ petition was dismissed with the result
that the order of the Tax Recovery Officer dated 20th April
1988 and the further order of the Tax Recovery Commissioner
dated 13th June 1988 came to be confirmed. Aggrieved by the
common order of the Division Bench of the high Court in the
aforesaid two writ appeals two Special Leave petitions were
moved in this Court initially by two petitioners. The first
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petitioner was Y.S. Surendra, the general Power of Attorney
holder of the defaulter and the present appellant was
petitioner no.2. But during the proceedings at notice stage
the original petitioner no.1, the Power of Attorney holder
of the defaulter , Y.S. Surendra withdrew from contest with
the result that original petitioner no.2 remained the
solitary petitioner in both the S.L.Ps and has now pursued
the present two appeals as the sole appellant.
Learned senior counsel, Shri P P. Rao, for the
appellant submitted that the Division Bench of the High
Court arred in taking the view that the appellant‘s
application under Rule 60 of Second Schedule to the Income
Tax Act was not maintainable. That his application was
backed up by the authority letter entitling him to deposit
the tax amount on behalf of the defaulter and that authority
letter was duly signed by the Power of Attorney holder of
the defaulter and that application was moved within thirty
days of the auction sale. It was, therefore, perfectly
maintainable and it was too much to contend that the
defaulter cannot be the amount deposited through anyone much
less through the appellant who had interest in the property
ad his suit for specific performance was not only pending on
the date of the auction sale but had got decreed by consent
on the very next day of moving such application. Shri P.P.
Rao submitted that the application was moved on 12th April
1986 and the suit in favour of the appellant was decreed by
consent of parties on the day on which the Tax Recovery
Officer rejected the appellant‘s application he was already
having the full title in this property as successor-in-
interest of the defaulter. It was vehemently submitted that
even assuming it is held that the defaulter through his
Power of Attorney holder had not filed a separate
application under Rule 60 and had merely supported the
application of the appellant even then as per the said Rule
the appellant had sufficient locus standi as he was
interested in the property which was subject-matter of the
auction sale and that Revenue was only concerned with its
tax dues. Once the deposit fully met the said claim of the
Revenue it could not insist on such a technicality that the
appellant‘s application was not maintainable the auction
purchaser respondent no.3 who did not get any better right
by the auction in his favour which was liable to be set
aside on payment of tax within thirty days of the auction by
the defaulter or by any of his agents. In support of this
contention strong reliance of the Kerala High Court in the
case of H. Rajgopal v. Secretary state Transport Authority,
Trivandrum and others (1978) 115 I.T.R. 364.
On the other hand learned counsel for the Revenue as
well as learned senior counsel Shri Salve for respondent no
3 auction purchaser vehemently contended that the Division
Bench of the High Court was perfectly justified in taking
the View that appellants application was not maintainable
under Rule 60 of the Rules as his alleged agreement to
purchase the property was avoid from the inception as the
said agreement dated 20th November 1982 few in the face of
statutory prohibition engrafted by Rule 16 sub-rule (1) of
the Rules in the Second Schedule of the Income Tax Act. It
was also submitted that once the defaulter’s property was
attached on 11th February 1988 as per Rule 51 of the Rules
the attachment related back to the date of service of
notice, that is, 3rd September 1973 and, therefore, the
agreement itself became void. In any case according to Shri
Salve the application moved by the appellant could not have
been entertained and was rightly rejected by the Tax
authorities as because of such an agreement which was
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violative of provisions of Rule 16 sub-rule (1) and Rule 51
read with Rule 48 the appellant could not be said to be a
person having any legal interest in the property put to
auction. That such an interest must be of a person who had
required some legal right or interest in the property prior
to the issuance of notice under Rule 2 of the Second
Schedule and would not cover a person whose transaction with
the defaulter was within the sweep of the prohibition of
Rule 16 sub-rule (1) and Rule 51 read with Rule 48 of the
Rules. In Rejoinder learned senior counsel Shri Rao for the
appellant submitted that the application moved by the
appellant could not be said to be by an unauthorised person
or a stranger to the property as he was having sufficient
legal interest in the property and his agreement was not
void at initio but was subject of the superior right of
recovery of the tax by the Revenue and once that was assured
by the appellant by depositing the entire amount with
interest and costs the Revenue could not contend that it
would still insist on going ahead with the auction and
getting it confirmed. That the appellant had moved
application under Rule 60 within the permissible limit of
thirty days from the date of auction.
In the light of the aforesaid rival contentions we now
proceed to deal with the question posed for our
consideration. Rule 60 of the Rules in the Second Schedule
to the Income Tax Act reads as under:
"60 (1) Where immovable property
has been sold in execution of a
certificate, the defaulter, or any
person whose interests are affected
by the sale may at any time within
thirty days from the date of the
sale, apply to the Tax Recovery
Officer to set aside the sale, on
his depositing-
(a) the amount specified in the
proclamation of sale as that for
the recovery of which the sale was
ordered. with interest thereon at
the rate of fifteen per cent per
annum, calculated from the date of
the proclamation of sale to the
date when the deposit is made; and
(b) for payment to the purchaser,
as penalty, a sum equal to five per
cent of the purchase money, but not
less than one rupee.
(2) Where a person makes an
application under rule 61 for
setting aside the sale of his
immovable property, he shall not,
unless he withdraws that
application, be entitled to make or
prosecute an application under this
rule."
It is no doubt true that original defaulter Shri Y.S.
Devendra Murthy whose property was put to auction had
sufficient locus standing to move an application under Rule
60 within thirty days of the sale far getting it set aside
on his depositing the requisite amount as laid down by the
said provision and his general Power of Attorney holder
could also legitimately contend that he had locus standi to
move such an application on behalf of the defaulter. However
for reasons best known to him he had not done so. It is not
the case of the appellant that Shri Y.S. Devendra Murthy or
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his Power of Attorney holder Shri Y.S. Surendra had moved
such an application. On the contrary his consistent case is
that he himself had moved such an application but he was
supported by the authority given by the Power of Attorney
holder of Y.S. Devendra Murthy to deposit the amount of tax
arrears, Shri P.P. Rao, learned senior counsel for the
appellant was right when he contended that once an
appropriate application is moved by the defaulter or his
Power of Attorney holder under Rule 60, the further question
as to from which source he gets money for being deposited or
through whom be gets the money deposited would pale into
insignificance and that even a peon of the defaulter can
also carry out the ministerial act of actually depositing
the money on his behalf. But unfortunately for the appellant
such is not the case here. When we run to the application
dated 12th April 1988 moved by the appellant under Rule 60
it becomes at once clear that it was not the defaulter or
his Power of Attorney holder who was moving this application
but it was only the appellant who was armed with an
agreement to purchase the property put to auction who was
moving this application and the moneys were being deposited
by him on his own behalf and for which action he had got
authority from the Power of Attorney holder of the
defaulter. The following pertinent recitals in the
application make this position clear:
"I am the prospective purchaser of
the properties bearing Nos.
20/1,2,3 and 21. situated at
Byaderahalli village, Viswaneedam
Post, Bangalore-560 091, and Y.S.
Devendra Murthy has executed an
agreement in this behalf agreeing
to sell the properties. I have
filed the suit for specific
performance of the contract to
enforce the said agreement in O.S.
No.5/1984 on the file of the
Additional Civil Judge, Bangalore.
I have paid the amount also in
advance. In the meantime, your
Hon‘ble Authority was pleased to
hold auction on 14.3.1988 in
respect of arrears due in respect
of Sri Y.S. Devendra Murthy. Still
there is time to pay the amount by
the said Y.S. Devendra Murthy. As I
am having right and interest over
the property that has been
auctioned. I am ready and willing
to pay the amount in full. To this
effect. Sri Y.S. Surendra the
brother and the Power of Attorney
Holder of Sri Y.S. Devendra Murthy
has authorised in to pay the
amount. The said authorisation
letter is enclosed herewith.
Accordingly, I am prepared to pay
the amount that your Hon‘ble
Authority is entitled to recover
from Y.S. Devendra murthy. The
amount detailed below may kindly be
accepted and the sale may kindly be
set aside."
In the prayer clause of the said application it has
been stated that above application is filed under Rule 60 of
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Schedule II of Income Tax Act, 1961 and the sale be set
aside by accepting the amount deposited by him. It is of
course. true as contended by learned senior counsel Shri Rao
for the appellant that along with this application he also
annexed the authority letter given to him by the Power of
Attorney holder of the defaulter. He invited our attention
to the said letter annexed to the appellant’s application
under Rule 60. The said letter is addressed to the Income
Tax Commissioner by the Power of Attorney holder of the
defaulter Shri Y.S. Devendra Murthy. by the said letter the
Power of Attorney holder has informed the Income Tax
Commissioner that he was prepared to pay the amount that was
due to his brother as his Power of Attorney holder and in
this behalf he had authorised K. Basavarajappa, plaintiff in
Original Suit No.5 of l984 on the file of Additional Civil
Judge Bangalore (the appellant herein), to pay the amount.
Now it becomes clear that this letter addressed to the
Income Tax Commissioner, Third Circle. Bangalore, could by
no stretch of imagination be considered to be an application
under Rule 60, moved by the defaulter or his Power of
Attorney holder Shri Y.S. Surendra as such an application
has to be moved before the Tax Recovery Officer who has
conducted the auction sale with the prayer to get it set
aside. That letter is merely an intimation to the Income Tax
Commissioner that he had authorised the appellant, plaintiff
of the suit, to make payment on behalf of his defaulter
brother. Such a letter. therefore. could not constitute an
appropriate application under Rule 60 by the defaulter or
his Power of Attorney holder for getting the section sale
set aside. So for as the appellant is concerned he no doubt
moved that application under Rule 60. But his application
was moved on the basis that he was already filed a civil
suit for specific performance of his agreement to purchase
the suit property which was subject matter of auction. Thus
he was putting forward his own claim as prospective
purchaser of the property. On the date of the application he
was not armed with any decree granting specific performance
of the agreement. We also find considerable substance in the
submission of Shri Salve learned senior counsel for the
auction purchaser that when equities are to be balanced
between the two rival claimants, namely, the prospective
purchaser of the auctioned property under an agreement to
set on take one hand and the auction purchaser who had
purchased the property in the tax recovery proceedings on
the other, it has to be seen further the appellant could
claim any legal interest and even a preferential interest in
the property which would entitle him to get the auction sale
set aside. In this connection Rule 16(2) on which strong
reliance was placed by Shri Salve, is found clearly to have
hit the said agreement in favour of the appellant. To
recapitulate, notice under Rule 2 of the Second Schedule of
the Income Tax Act was issued to the defaulter on and
September 1973. It may be that the attachment might have
taken place years afterwards but on 20th November 1982 when
the defaulter agreed to sell off his property to be
appellant he totally bypassed the requirement of Rule 16(2)
which lays down that where a notice has be served on the
defaulter under Rule 2 the defaulter or his representative-
in-interest shall not be competent to mortgage. charge,
lease or otherwise deal with any property belonging to him
except with the permission of the Tax Recovery Officer, nor
shall any civil court issue any process against such
property in execution of a decree for the payment of money.
By entering into such an agreement to sell his property the
defaulter had clearly committed breach of Rule 16 and had
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bypassed the procedure laid down therein for getting
permission of the Tax Recovery Officer. In this connection
Shri P.P. Rao, learned senior counsel for the appellant was
right when he contended that such dealing with the property
by the defaulter was not absolutely prohibited but it was
subject to the permission of the Tax Recovery Officer while
under sub-rule (2) of Rule 16 once attachment has been made
under this sub-rule any private transfer or delivery of the
property attached or any interest therein and any payment to
the default of any debt, dividend or other moneys contrary
to such attachment, shall be void as against all claims
enforceable under the attachment. However this does not
improve the situation for the appellant for the simple
reason that once attachment was levied on 11th February 1988
by virtue of Rule 51 it related back to the date of the
notice. that is, 3rd September 1973 and the appellant’s
agreement was in between. It was contended by Shri P.P. Rao
relying on the judgment of the Kerala High Court in the case
of M. Rajgopal (supra) that all that Revenue was concerned
with was security of its dues and consequently even though
any transaction which was hit by the provisions of Rules
16(1) and (2) the parties to such transaction would have
sufficient interest to move an application under Rule 60 for
setting aside the auction sale on offer to deposit full tax
dues. It is not possible to countenance this submission. If
a party with open eyes bypasses the statutory requirement of
Rule 16(1) and gets an agreement to sell executed by the
defaulter, it cannot on the basis of such an agreement claim
to get the auction sale of defaulter‘s property set aside by
depositing the amount after the property is put to auction
for recovering the tax dues of the department. It would
amount to circumventing statutory provisions of rule 16(1)
and (2) read with Rule 51 and 48 of the Rules. It must,
therefore, be held as rightly submitted by Shri Salve,
learned senior counsel for respondent no.3 that the
appellant had no locus standi to move the application dated
12th April 1988 for getting the auction sale set aside. It
is also to be noted that he had no legal interest in the
said property on the date of the application. It is
axiomatic that mere agreement to sell creates no legal
interest or right in the property which is the subject-
matter of the agreement. In this connection a Division Bench
of the Karnataka High Count in D.V. Satyanarayana & Ors. v.
Tax Recovery Officer & Ors. (1992) 197 I.T.R 407 has taken
the view that a person who had obtained an agreement to sell
which is hit by Rule 16 of the Second Schedule to the Income
Tax Act cannot make an application under Rule 61 for setting
aside the sale as a person holding interest in the property.
On the scheme of the Rules aforesaid this view represents
the correct legal position. On the same analogy such an
agreement holder cannot equally apply under Rule 60 in his
own right to get such auction sale set aside. The decision
of the learned Senior Judge of the Kerala High court heavily
relied upon by learned senior counsel for the appellant is
of no assistance to him for the simple reason to in the case
The court was not concerned with any attachment following
the notice under Rule 2 of Schedule II to the Income Tax
Act. The Court was concerned with the short question whether
the Tax Recovery Officer could issue any notice to the
transferee from the defaulter who had received notice under
Rule 2 and whether such a Power few from Rule 16 sub-rule
(1). It is no doubt true that it has been observed that
there would be time lag between the service of notice and
attachment of property and such time lag was fairly long
since the Revenue might take time to ascertain the
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properties the defaulter is possessed of. And because of
Rule 51 any attachment of immovable property is made
operative from the date of service upon the defaulter to pay
the arrears. The question in the present case is entirely
different. By mere agreement to sell the appellant got no
interest in the property put to auction to enable him to
apply for setting aside such auction under Rule 60 and
especially when his transaction was hit by Rule 16(1) read
with Rules 51 and 48. Consequently he could not be said to
be having any legal interest to entitle him to move such an
application. Consequently no fault could be found with the
decision of the Division Bench of the High Court rejecting
the entitlement of the appellant to move such an
application. It is, however, pertinent to note that though
originally the Power of Attorney holder of the defaulter was
also a party to these proceedings as petitioner no.l,
pending these proceedings he had withdrawn from these
proceedings and he has acquiesced in the order of the High
Court rejecting the appellant’s claim for being entitled to
move such an application, The order of the High Court qua
the defaulter and his Power of Attorney holder has become
final. Therefore, as on date the appellant is not supported
by the defaulter or his Power of Attorney holder either. He
has to swim or sink on his own. Under these circumstances,
therefore, the appellant must be held to be devoid of any
locus standi for moving an application under Rule 60 of the
Rules for setting aside this auction sales.
In the result these appeals fail and are dismissed. In
the facts and circumstances of the case to there will be no
order as to costs.