Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, BOMBAY
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE SCINDIA STEAM NAVIGATlON CO. LTD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
05/04/1961
BENCH:
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
BENCH:
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
DAS, S.K.
KAPUR, J.L.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
SHAH, J.C.
CITATION:
1961 AIR 1633 1962 SCR (1) 788
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1963 SC1356 (121)
R 1963 SC1484 (9)
R 1965 SC1636 (18)
R 1966 SC1385 (11)
R 1966 SC1466 (7)
F 1967 SC 509 (6)
F 1967 SC 657 (6)
F 1967 SC1554 (7)
R 1967 SC1626 (10)
F 1968 SC 139 (4)
E 1968 SC 779 (9)
F 1969 SC 917 (16)
F 1969 SC1068 (6)
R 1970 SC2067 (11)
R 1977 SC1259 (13)
R 1980 SC 769 (8)
RF 1986 SC 421 (24)
F 1988 SC1305 (6)
R 1990 SC1451 (11)
ACT:
Income-tax-Reference-Scope-"Any question of law arising out
of such order", Meaning of Indian Income Tax Act, 1922 (11
1922), as amended by Income-tax (Amendment) Act, 1946 (VIII
of 1946),ss. 66, 10(2)(vii) proviso.
HEADNOTE:
By s. 66 (1) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 "the
assessee or the Commissioner may, by application in the
prescribed form ...... require the Appellate Tribunal to
refer to the High Court any question of law arising out of
such order and the Appellate Tribunal shall ... draw up a
statement of the case and refer it to
789
the High Court." The respondents, who received compensation
from the Government as owners of a requisitioned steamship
lost in enemy action, were assessed to tax under the fourth
proviso to S. 1O(2)(Vii) of the Indian Income-tax Act, which
was inserted into the Act by the Income-tax (Amendment) Act,
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1946 (VIII Of 1946) that came into force on May 4, 1946.
Before the Tax Authorities the respondents sought to resist
the liability on the ground that the income was received not
in the year of account but in the previous year but failed.
No question as to the applicability of the said proviso was
either raised before the Tribunal or dealt with by it. The
question that was referred to the High Court was as
follows:-
"Whether the sum of Rs. 9,26,532 was properly included in
the assessee company’s total income computed for the assess-
ment year 1946-47."
In the High Court the respondents contended that the said
proviso had no application. The appellant took a
preliminary objection to this contention being raised on the
ground that it was not raised and argued before the Tribunal
but the High Court overruled the objection and held that the
compensation amount was not liable to charge as the proviso
in question was not in force on the material date. Against
this decision the Commissioner of Income-tax appealed.
The point for determination in the appeal was whether the
High Court in answering a reference under s. 66 could decide
a question not raised or argued before the Tribunal.
Held (per Das, Kapur, Hidayatullah and Venkatarama Aiyar,
jj.), that the jurisdiction of the High Court under s. 66 of
the Indian Income-tax Act is purely advisory and therefore
different from its ordinary jurisdiction as a Civil Court.
It is of the essence of such a jurisdiction that the High
Court can decide only such questions as are referred to it
and that implies that the questions must necessarily be
those that the Tribunal had occasion to consider.
The words "any question of law arising out of such order" in
s. 66(1) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, do not in the
context mean any question of law arising out of the findings
in the order of the Tribunal but only such questions as were
raised before, or decided by the Tribunal.
The Indian Income-tax Act, I 922, is not in Pari materia
with the British Statute and in view of the difference
between s. 66(i) and the corresponding provisions of the
British Statute no useful purpose can be served by referring
to English decisions for interpreting s. 66 of the Indian
Act.
Commissioner of Income-tax v. Shaw Wallace & Co., (1932)
L.R. 59 I.A. 2o6, referred to.
Attorney-General v. Avelino Armavo & Co., [1925] 1 K.B. 86,
considered.
790
The power the High Court has under s: 66(2) Of the Act to
direct a reference can make no difference since such power
is subject to the same limitations as that of the Tribunal
under s. 66(i) of the Act.
Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras v. Mtt. Ar. S. Ar.
Arunachalam Chettiar, (1953] S.C.R. 463, New jehangir Vakil
Mills Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax, [1960] 1 S.C.R.
249, Kusumben D. Mahadevia v. Commissioner of Income-tax,
[1960] S.C.R. 4I7 and Zoraster & Co. v. Commissioner of
Income-tax, [1961] 1 S.C.R. 210, referred to.
Madanlal Dharnidharka v. Commissioner of Income-tax, [1948]
16 I.T.R. 227, disapproved.
Case-law reviewed.
The jurisdiction of the High Court in deciding a reference
under s. 66(5) is co-extensive with the right of the
litigant to ask for a reference and the power of the court
to make one. Therefore the High Court has jurisdiction in a
reference to decide questions of law arising out of the
order of the Tribunal, that is question of law raised and
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decided by the Tribunal, or question of law raised before
the Tribunal but not decided by it or question of law
decided by Tribunal, though not raised before it, but not
questions not raised or decided by the Tribunal even though
it may arise from its findings.
A question of law may have more than one aspect and s. 66(1)
of the Act does not contemplate that each aspect of a
question is by itself a distinct question. It only requires
that the question of law which is referred to the Court must
have been in issue before the Tribunal. It does not further
require that the reference should be limited to those
aspects of the question which had been argued before the
Tribunal.
The Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay South v. M/s. Ogale
Glass Works Ltd. [1955] I S.C.R. 185 and Zoraster & Co. v.
Commissioner of Income-tax, [1961] 1 S.C.R. 210, approved.
In the instant case, the question referred to the High Court
was wide enough to cover the contention raised by the
respondent and the High Court was right in holding that the
fourth proviso to S. 10(2)(Vii) Of the Act, not being
retrospective in operation, bad no application.
Per Shah, J.-Section 66 of the does not contemplate that the
question which tire Tribunal may refer, or which the High
Court may call upon the Tribunal to refer, must be one that
is raised and argued before the Tribunal at the hearing
under s. 33(4) Of the Act. The section does riot
specifically impose such a restriction nor is it implied.
To import into the expression "any question of law arising
out of such order" any limitation that the question must
either have been argued before the Tribunal or dealt with by
it, would be not only to impose fetters upon the
jurisdiction of the High
791
Court which were plainly not intended by the statute and in
certain cases might involve gross injustice to the parties.
Madanlal Dharnidharka v. Commissioner Of Income-tax, [1948]
16 I.T.R. 227, approved.
Under s. 66(5) Of the Act, the court has to record its
opinion on the questions arising out of the order of the
Tribunal and not on the arguments advanced before it. In
the instant case the High Court, on the question arising out
of the order of the Tribunal and referred to it, had
jurisdiction to decide that the proviso which made the
amount taxable was not in operation at the material date.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 501 of 1957.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
September 13, 1954, of the Bombay High Court in Income-tax
Reference No. 13 of 1954.
K. N. Rajagopala Sastri and D. Gupta, for the appellant.
A. V. Viswanatha Sastri and P. L. Vohra, for the respondent.
1961. April 6. The Judgment of S. K. Das, J. L. Kapur, M.
Hidayatullah and T. L. Venkatarama Aiyar, JJ. was delivered
by Venkatarama Aiyar, J. J. C. Shah, J. delivered a
separate Judgment.
VENKATARAMA AIYAR, J.-The respondents were the owners of a
steamship called "El Madina". That was requisitioned by the
Government during the last world war, and was lost by enemy
action on March 16, 1944. As compensation therefore, the
Government paid the respondents Rs. 20,00,000 on July 17,
1944; Rs. 23,00,000 on December 22, 1944; and Rs. 33,333 on
August 10, 1946. The original cost of the ship was Rs.
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24,95,016 and its written-down value at the commencement of
the year of account was Rs. 15,68,484. The difference
between the cost price and the written. down value viz., Rs.
9,26,532 represents the deductions which had been allowed
year after year on account of depreciation. As the total
compensation received exceeded the cost price, the
respondents have recouped themselves all the amounts
deducted for depreciation.
792
On these facts, the point in controversy between the
respondents and the Department is whether the amount of Rs.
9,26,532 is liable to be included in the total income of the
company for the year of assessment which is 1946-47. The
provision of law under which the charge is sought to be
imposed is s. 10(2)(vii) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922,
hereinafter referred to as the Act, and that is, omitting
what is not relevant, as follows:-
"(2) Such profits or gains shall be computed
after making the following allowances,
namely:-
(vii) in respect of any such building,
machinery or plant which has been sold or
discarded or demolished or destroyed, the
amount by which the written down value thereof
exceeds the amount for which the building,
machinery or plant, as the case may be, is
actually sold or its scrap value:
Provided further that where any insurance,
salvage or compensation moneys are received in
respect of any such building, machinery or
plant as aforesaid, and the amount of such
moneys exceeds the difference between the
written down value and the scrap value no
amount shall be allowable under this clause
and so much of the excess as does not exceed
the difference between the original cost and
the written-down value less the scrap value
shall be deemed to be profits of the previous
year in which such moneys were received:".
It is not disputed by the respondents that the sum of Rs.
9,26,532 would be profits liable to be taxed under this
proviso, if it applies. Equally it is not disputed by the
appellant that apart from this proviso the amount in
question could only be regarded as capital receipt, not
liable to be taxed. Before the income-tax authorities, the
respondents sought to avoid the application of this proviso
on the ground that on representations made by them with
reference to this very matter, the Board of Revenue had
directed that for the purpose of Rule 4, Schedule II, of the
Excess Profits Tax Act, 1940, the amount payable as
793
compensation (both the initial advance as well as any
further payment that may be made) should be taken into
account as though it had actually been received within
thirty days of the date of the loss of the ship; and that in
consequence the amount should be deemed to have been
received on April 16, 1944. If that contention is correct,
the amounts would have been received not in the year of
account which was July 1, 1944, to June 30, 1945, but in the
year previous there to, and they could not therefore be
included in the income of the company for the year of
assessment. This contention, however, was rejected by all
the income-tax authorities. Dealing with it, the Appellate
Tribunal observed in its Order dated July 15, 1953, that the
concession which the Board of Revenue had intended to give
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was limited to excess profits tax, and could not in any
event be relied on for the purpose of cutting down the
operation of the statutory provision enacted in the relevant
proviso ins. 10(2)(vii); and that the material date was when
the compensation was in fact received-and that was in the
year of account and not when it became due and payable, in
the year previous thereto. In the result, the Tribunal held
that the amount was liable to be included in the total
income of the company.
The respondent then filed an application before the
Tribunal, under s. 66(l) of the Act, requiring certain
questions to be referred to the -court, and one of them
was as follows:-
"Whether in view of the fact that the 4th
proviso to section 10(2)(vii) of the Indian
Income-tax Act did not apply to the assessment
for the Assessment year 1945-46 and under the
law in force as applicable to that assessment
year the sum of Rs. 9,26,532 which accrued in
the previous year relevant to that Assessment
year was not taxable at all, and the fact that
having regard to the Assessee’s method of
accounting the said sum should not be assessed
in any other year, the Assessment in respect
of the’ said sum in the subsequent Assessment
year 1946-47 was valid in law."
794
By its order dated February 9, 1954, the
Tribunal referred the following question for
the opinion of the court:-
"whether the sum of Rs. 9,26,532 was properly
included in the assessee company’s total
income computed for the assessment year 1946-
47."
The reference came up for hearing before a Bench of the
Bombay High Court consisting of Chagla, C.J., and Tendolkar,
J., and then the respondents raised the contention that the
proviso to s. 10(2)(vii) under which the charge was made
could not be taken into account in making the present
assessment, as the same had been introduced by the Income-
tax (Amendment) Act, 1946 (VIII of 1946), which came into
force on May 4, 1946, whereas the liability of the company
to be taxed fell to be determined as on April 1, 1946, when
the Finance Act, 1946, came into force. The appellant
raised a preliminary objection to this question being raised
for the first time before the court, on the ground that it
did not arise out of the Order of the Tribunal, having been
neither raised before it nor dealt with by it, and that
further it had not been referred to the court. Overruling
this objection, the learned Judges observed that the form in
which the question was framed was sufficiently wide to take
in the new contention, that even if the particular aspect of
the question had not been argued before the Tribunal, it was
implicit in the question as. framed, and that therefore the
assessee could raise it. On the merits they held that as
the proviso was not retrospective in its operation, the
amount in question was not liable to be included in the
taxable income and answered the question in the negative.
It is against this decision that the present appeal by
special leave is directed.
The main contention urged before us by the appellant is
-that it was not open to the High Court in the present
reference to go into the question as to the applicability of
the proviso to s. 10(2)(vii), as it was neither raised
before the Tribunal nor considered by it, and could not
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therefore be said to be a question arising out of the order
of the Tribunal, which alone could be
795
referred for the decision of the court under s. 66(l). The
court had no jurisdiction, it is argued, to allow a question
to be raised before it, which could not be referred to it
under the section. The contention of the respondents is
that all questions of law which arise on the findings given
by the Tribunal in its order can properly be said to arise
out of its order, and that in making a reference under s.
66(l), the Tribunal is not limited to those questions only
which were raised before it and dealt with in its order, nor
even to those questions which were raised in the application
for reference under s. 66(l). It is further contended that
in the present case, the question as framed and refer-red
was wide enough to take in the contention as to the
applicability of the proviso and that the High Court was in
consequence within its power in entertaining it and deciding
the reference on it.
We may now refer to the provisions of law bearing on the
question. Section 66(l) of the Act confers on the assessee
and the Commissioner a right to apply to the Tribunal in the
prescribed form to refer any question of law arising out of
its order for the decision of the High Court. If the
Tribunal is satisfied that a question of law arises, then it
has to draw up a statement of the case, and refer it to the
decision of the High Court. But if it considers that no
question of law arises on its order, and dismisses the
application under s. 66(l), then the assessee or the
Commissioner, as the case may be, has a right to move the
court under s. 66(2), and if the court is not satisfied
about the correctness of the decision of the Tribunal, it
can require it to state the case and refer it to its
decision. Under s. 66(4) the High Court can, for the
purpose of disposing of the reference which comes to it
under s. 66(l) and (2), call for additional statement from
the Tribunal. Under s. 66(5) the High Court is to decide
the question of law raised in the case and send a copy of
its judgment to the Tribunal and the latter is to pass
appropriate orders for giving effect to it.
Section 59 of the Act confers on the Central Board of
Revenue power to make rules for carrying out the purpose of
the Act and under sub-section (5), the rules
796
made thereunder shall on publication in the official gazette
have effect as if enacted under the Act. Rule 22A framed
under this section provides that: "An application under sub-
,section (1) of section 66 requiring the Tribunal to refer
to the High Court any question Of law shall be in the
following form." The form is R(T) of which paragraphs 3 to 5
are relevant for the present discussion, and they are as
follows:-
"3. that the facts which are admitted and/or
found by the Tribunal and which are necessary
for drawing up a statement of the case, are
stated in the enclosure for ready reference.
4.....that the following questions of law
arise out of the order of the Tribunal:-
(3)
5.....that the applicant, therefore, requires
under sub-section (1) of section 66 of the
aforesaid Act that a statement of the case be
drawn up and the questions of law numbered out
of the questions of law referred to in
paragraph 4 above be referred to the High
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Court."
On these provisions, the question that arises for decision
is whether in a reference under s. 66, the High Court can
consider a question which had not been raised before the
Tribunal and/or dealt with by it in its order even though it
be one of law. On the answer to be given to it there has
been a difference of opinion among the High Courts and that
turns on the meaning to be given to the words, "any question
of law arising out of" the order of the Tribunal. There is
no pronouncement of this Court which concludes this ques-
tion, though there are decisions which afford guidance in
the determination thereof. These decisions will now
be considered.
In Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras v. Mtt.Ar. S.Ar.
Arunachalam Chettiar (1), an order of assessment made by the
income-tax officer was corrected by the Appellate Tribunal
not in an appeal under s. 33(4) but in a miscellaneous
application presented to it under
(1) (1953] S.C.R. 463 471.
797
s. 35. The Commissioner being dissatisfied with the order
applied for a reference under s. 66(l). The Tribunal -was
of the opinion that the order in question could be made in
the exercise of its inherent jurisdiction and referred the
question of its legality to the court under s. 66(l). The
Madras High Court declined to answer it on the ground that
as the order was not one passed in an appeal, the reference
under s. 66(l) was incompetent, as under that provision the
power of the Tribunal to refer was limited to questions of
law arising out of an order passed in an appeal. In affirm-
ing this decision, this Court observed:
"The jurisdiction of the Tribunal and of the
High Court is conditional on there being an
order by the Appellate Tribunal which may be
said to be one under section 33(4) and a
question of law arising out of such an order."
This is an authority for the position that the jurisdiction
of the Tribunal to make, and of the High Court to hear, a
reference must be strictly sought within the four corners of
s. 66.
In The Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay South v. Messrs.
Ogale, Glass Works Ltd. (1), the question referred by the
Tribunal under s. 66(l) was whether certain amounts received
by the assessee from the Government by cheques drawn on the
Reserve Batik at Bombay were income received in British
India within s. 4(l)(a) of the Act. The High Court had held
that. as the cheques were received in the State of Aundh, in
unconditional discharge of the claim, the receipt was not in
British India. On appeal to this Court, it was contended
that as the cheques were posted in British India, the income
must be held to have been received in British India. An
objection was put forward to this contention being raised,
on the ground that it was not argued before the Tribunal or
decided by it and that therefore it did not arise out of its
order as required by s. 66(l). But this Court hold that as
the question as framed and referred was of sufficient
amplitude to cover the new point urged, and as no contention
was raised that the question had not
(1)..[1955] 1 S.C.R. 185, 197.
798
been properly referred under s. 66(l), it could be decided
under s. 66(5), and that in that view, it was not necessary
"to express any opinion on the larger question as to the
scope, meaning and import of the words ’any question of law
arising. out of’ the Tribunal’s order on the interpretation
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of which there exists a wide divergence of judicial
opinion". There was accordingly no decision on the point
now under consideration.
In New Jehangir Vakil Mills Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-
tax (1) the point under discussion wag whether the High
Court was competent under s. 66(4) to call for additional
statement with reference to a question which had not been
referred to it under s. 66(l) or s. 66(2). This Court held
that the scope of a reference under s. 66(2) was coextensive
with that of one under s. 66(l) of the Act, that therefore
the court had no power under s. 66(2) to travel beyond the
ambit of s. 66(l), that under both these provisions it is
only a question of law arising out of the order that could
be referred, that the object of s. 66(4) was to enable the
court to obtain additional statements only for the purpose
of deciding questions referred under s. 66(l) and (2) and
that accordingly no investigation could be ordered in
respect of new questions which were not and could not be the
subject-matter of a reference under s. 66(l) and (2). Here
again there was no decision on the meaning of the words,
"any question of law arising out of" the order of the
Tribunal.
In Kusumben D. Mahadevia v. Commissioner of Income-tax (2),
the question actually referred ’under s. 66(l) to the court
was whether a sum of Rs. 47,120 received by the assessee had
accrued to her in the former State of Baroda or whether it
had accrued or should be deemed to have accrued to her in
British India. On this reference the High Court resettled
the question so as to raise the contention as to whether the
assessee was entitled to any concession under the Merged
States (Taxation Concessions) Order, 1949, as regards the
income of Rs. 47,120, and holding that she was not, answered
the reference against her
(1) [1960] 1 S.C.R. 249.
(2) [196O] 3 S.C.R. 417. 422.
799
without deciding the question as to where the income
accrued. Against this Judgment, the assessee appealed to
this Court and contended that the High Court was in error in
not deciding the question which was actually referred. This
Court accepted this contention and remanded the case to the
High Court for hearing on that point. So far this decision
does not bear on the present controversy. But a further
point was discussed and considered by this Court, and that
was that it was not open to the court to raise the question
about the applicability of the Merged States (Taxation
Concessions) Order, 1949, as that was not a question which
was raised before or considered by the Tribunal or referred
under s. 66(l). In agreeing with this contention, this
Court observed:-
"Section 66 of the Income-tax Act which
confers jurisdiction upon the High Court only
permits a reference of a question of law
arising out of the order of the Tribunal. It
does not confer jurisdiction on the High Court
to decide a different question of law not
arising out of such order. It is possible
that the same question of law may involve
different approaches for its solution, and the
High Court may amplify the question to take in
all the approaches. But the question must
still be one which was before the Tribunal and
was decided by it."
These observations bear on the question now under
consideration but the actual decision was one remanding the
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case with a direction to the High Court to decide the
question that was referred to it.
In Zoraster & Co. v. Commissioner of Income-tax (1), the
assessees were manufacturers of certain kinds of goods in
Jaipur. The Government of India purchased these articles
and paid the price by cheques on the Bombay branch of the
Reserve Bank of India. The Tribunal held that the profits
of these sales had been received in British India, but on
the application of the assessees referred that question to
the court. The High Court remanded the case to the
Tribunal under
s. 66(4) for a supplemental statement observing that
(1) [1961] 1 S.C. It. 210.
800
"it would be necessary for the Appellate Tribunal to find,
inter alia, whether the cheques were sent to the assessee
firm by post or by hand and what directions., if any, had
the assessee firm given to the Department in the matter."
The correctness of this order was challenged by the assessee
on the ground that the court had no power to call for a
fresh statement for the investigation of a new point and
reliance was placed on the decision in New Jehangir Vakil
Mills Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax (1). This Court
held, following that decision, that the jurisdiction to call
for supplemental statement was confined (a) to the facts on
record and/or found by the Tribunal, and (b) to the question
which would arise from the Tribunal’s order; and that
further it could be exercised with reference to a new
question, if it was an integral or even incidental part of
the question which had been referred. This decision also
proceeds on the view that a question which is unconnected
with the question already referred cannot be agitated for
the first time in the reference.
There being thus no direct decision of this Court on the
precise meaning of the words "any question of law arising
out of" the order of the Tribunal, we must examine the
decision of the High Courts on the question, and as already
stated they are in a state of conflict.
In A. Abboy Chetty and Co. v. Commissioner of Income-tax,
Madras (2), the application of the assessee under s. 66(l)
required the Tribunal to refer a question of res judicata to
the court. The Tribunal declined to do so on the ground
that question had not been argued before it. The assessee
then moved the court under s. 66(2) for an order requiring
the Tribunal to refer that question. Dismissing that
application, Patanjali Sastri, J., as be then was, observed
as follows:-
" Mr. Radhakrishnayya for the petitioner
contends that a question, though not raised
before the Appellate Tribunal, can well be
said to ’arise out of its order’, if, on the
facts of the case appearing from the order,
the question fairly arises. I am unable
(1) [1960] 1 S.C.R. 249.
(2) [1947] 15 I.T.R. 442,444.
801
to agree with that view. I am of opinion that
a question of law can be said to arise out of
an order of the Appellate Tribunal only if
such order discloses that the question was
raised before the Tribunal."
Adverting to the contention that the Privy Council had in M.
E. Moola Sons Limited v. Burjorjee (1) allowed a question of
law arising on the facts found, to be raised for the first
time before it, the learned Judge observed: "The case
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furnishes no useful analogy as the scope of the remedy under
s. 66 of the Indian Income-tax Act has to be determined with
reference to the language of the statute". This decision
was followed by the Madras High Court in Commissioner of
Income-tax v. Modern Theatres Ltd., (2) and in The Trustees,
Nagore Durgah v. Commissioner of Incometax (3).
In G. M. Chenna Basappa v. Commissioner of Income-tax (4),
the Andhra High Court followed the decision in A. Abboy
Chetty and Co. v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras (5) and
observed that a question not raised before the Tribunal
"cannot be said to arise out of its order even if it could
be sustained on the facts in the statement of the case by
the Tribunal", and that further the order of the Tribunal
should disclose that the point of law was raised before it.
The same view was adopted by the Patna High Court in Maharaj
Kumar Kamal Singh v. Commissioner of Income-(ax (6). There,
discussing the question with reference to the language of s.
66(1) and (2) and Rule 22A, the court observed as follows:-
"The provisions of Section 66(1) and Section
66(2) do not confer upon the High Court a
general jurisdiction to correct or to decide a
question of law that may possibly arise out of
the income-tax assessment.The section, on the
contrary, confers a special and limited
jurisdiction upon the High Court to decide any
specific question of law which
(1) [1932] I.L.R. 10 Rang. 242.
(3) [1954] 26 I.T.R. 805.
(5) [1947] 15 I.T.R. 442, 444.
(2) [1951] 20 I.T.R. 588.
(4) [1958] 34 I.T.R. 576.
(6) [1954] 26 I.T.R. 79, 86.
802
has been raised between the assessee and the
Department before the Income-tax Tribunal and
upon which question the parties are at issue."
It was accordingly held that only a question of law which
had been actually raised before the Tribunal or actually
dealt with by it could be referred under s. 66(1).
This is also the view consistently held by the Calcutta High
Court, III Commissioner of Excess Profits Tax v. Jeewanlal
Ltd. (1), it was held, agreeing with the decision in A.
Abboy Chetty and CO. V. Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras
(2), that a question of law not raised before the Tribunal
could not be said to arise out of its order even if on the
facts of the case appearing from the order the question
fairly arises. In Chainrup Sampatram v. Commissioner of
Income,-tax (3), the assessee had applied under s. 66(1) of
the Act to refer the question whether a sum of Rs. 2,20,887
was on a true construction of s. 14(2)(c) of the Act
assessable to tax. The Tribunal dismissed the application
on the ground that the question sought to be raised had not
been mentioned at the hearing of the appeal and had not been
dealt with by the Tribunal and was therefore not one which
arose out of its order. The question having been brought up
before the court under s. 66(2), Chakravartti, J. held that
under s. 66(1) it was only a question that arose out of the
Tribunal’s order that could be referred, and that that must
be some question which was actually raised before the
Tribunal and dealt with by it; and that under s. 66(2) the
words, "no question of law arises" could only mean that the
question of which reference had been asked for by the
applicant did not arise,, and that the High Court could not
require the Tribunal to refer some question which was not
proposed before it. The learned Judge then went on to
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observe:
"The Indian Income-tax Act has not charged the
High Court with the duty of setting right in
all respects ill assessments that might come
to its notice; its jurisdiction is not either
appellate or revisional;
(1) [1951] 20 I.T R. 39.
(2) [1947] 15 I.T.R. 443,444.
(3) [1951] 20 I.T. R. 484, 495.
803
nor has it a general power of superintendence
under Section 66. Its sole duty is to serve
as the appointed machinery for resolving any
conflict which may arise between an assessee
or the Commissioner on the one hand and the
Tribunal on the other regarding some specific
question or questions of law. If, on an
application under section 66(2), the High
Court finds that the question which the
applicant required the Tribunal to refer was
not a question that arose out of the
Tribunal’s appellate order, it ought, in my
view, to refuse to require the Tribunal to
refer any such question."
The same view was taken in Allahabad Bank Ltd. v.
Commissioner of Income-tax (1) and in Commissioner of
Income-tax v. State Bank of India (2).
In Mash Trading Co. v. Commissioner of Income-tax (3), a
Full Bench of the Punjab High Court had to consider the true
character of the jurisdiction under s. 66. Therein Kapur,
J., as he then was, held, on an examination of the section
and on a review of the authorities that under s. 66(1) it is
only questions which had been raised before and dealt with
by the Tribunal that could be referred to the High, Court,
that the power of the High Court under s. 66(2) to direct a
reference is limited to questions which could be referred
under s. 66(1) and which the applicant required it to refer,
that the Tribunal has no power to raise a question suo motu,
and likewise the High Court cannot raise any question which
had not been referred to it either under s. 66(1) or s.
66(2), but when once a question is properly raised and
referred to the High Court, the High Court is bound to
answer that question. In this view, it was held that a
reference to the High Court on a question which was not
raised before or considered by the Tribunal was not compe-
tent. Falshaw, J., while generally agreeing with this view
considered that there might be cases in which strict
adherence to this view might work injustice, as for example
when a point raised before the Tribunal had not been dealt
with by it owing to mistake or
(1) [1952] 21 I.T.R. 169. (2) [1957] 31 I.T.R 545.
(3) [1956] 30 I.T.B. 388.
804
inadvertence, or when its jurisdiction itself was ques-
tioned. The learned Judge added that in the former case the
point might be deemed to have been decided against the
assessee in the order, thereby attracting s. 66. It should
be noted that all the Judges agreed in holding that the
reference in question was incompetent as the point had not
been raised before the Tribunal.
We must now consider the decisions which have taken a
somewhat different view. Vadilal Lallubhai Mehta v.
Commissioner of Income-tax (1) was a case under s. 66 of the
Act, as it stood prior to the amendment of 1939 and what was
held there was that even though the assessee had not stated
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in his application for reference the questions which really
arose out of the order, it was for the Commissioner to
formulate the correct questions and refer them to the court,
and where he had failed to do so, the court could direct him
to do so. This is not a decision on the question as to
whether questions not raised before or decided by the
Commissioner could be held to be questions arising out of
his order.
In New Piece goods Bazar Co. Ltd. V. Commissioner of
Income-tax (2), the question that was referred under s.
66(1) was whether taxes paid on urban immovable property by
the assessee were an allowable deduction under s. 9(1)(iv)
and s. 9(1)(v) of the Indian Income-tax Act. An objection
was raised before the court that the question as to the
application of s. 9(1)(iv) had not been argued before the
Tribunal and therefore it could not be referred. Repelling
this contention, Kania, J., as he then was, observed that
the specific question had been put forward as a ground of
appeal, and that was "quoted by the Tribunal in its
judgment" but not dealt with by it, and that in the
circumstances the proper order to pass was to refer the case
back to the Tribunal and "invite it to express’ its opinion
on this aspect of the contention and raise a proper question
of law on that point also." This judgment. again proceeds on
the view that it is only a question raised before and dealt
with by the Tribunal
(1) [1935] 3 I.T.R. 152.
(2) [1947] 15 I.T.R. 319.
805
that-could be referred under s. 66(1), and that is clear
from the observations of the learned Judge that the
decisions of the Privy Council in Commissioner of Income-tax
v. Kameshwar Singh(1) and National Mutual Life Association
V. Commissioner of Income-tax (2), deprecating the practice
of raising new questions in the, stage of argument on the
reference in the High Court did not stand in the way of the
case being referred back to the Tribunal.
In Madanlal Dharnidharka V. Commissioner of Income-tax (3),
the Tribunal referred under s. 66(1) the following question
for the decision of the court:
"Whether the remittance of Rs. 2,01,000 out of
profits, made by the assessee in the years
preceding the Maru year 1999-2000 as a
nonresident, could be included tinder section
4(1)(b)(iii) of the Indian Income-tax Act in
his total income of the year of account in
which he was a resident in British India?"
This question had not been argued before the Tribunal, but
the Tribunal itself referred it because it considered that
it arose out of its order. The reference was heard by
Chagla, C. J. and Tendolkar, J. Before them an objection was
raised that the Tribunal could not refer this question under
s. 66(1) as the same had not been raised before it. Chagla,
C. J., observed:
"In my opinion it is necessary clearly to re-
state the jurisdiction of this court. This is
not a Court of appeal. This court merely
exercises an advisory jurisdiction. Its
judgments are in the nature of advice given on
the questions submitted to it by the Tribunal.
Its advice must be confined to questions
referred by the Tribunal to this court and
those questions must be questions of law which
must arise out of the order made by the
Tribunal. Now, looking at the plain language
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of the section apart from any authority, I
should have stated that a question of law
arose out of the order of the Tribunal if such
a question was apparent on the order itself or
it could be raised on the facts found by the
(1) [1933] 1 I.T. R. 94. (2) [1936] 4 I.T.R. 44-
(3) [1948] 16 I.T.R. 227, 233, 234.
806
Tribunal and which were stated in the order.
I see no reason to confine the jurisdiction of
this court to such questions of law as have
been argued before the Tribunal or are dealt
with by the Tribunal. The section does not
say so and there is no reason why we should
construe the expression ’arising out of such
order’ in a manner unwarranted by the ordinary
grammatical construction of that expression.
This court has no jurisdiction to decide ques-
tions which have not been referred by the
Tribunal. If the Tribunal does not refer a
question of law under section 66(1) which
arises out of the order then the only
jurisdiction of the court is to require the
Tribunal to refer the same Under section
66(2). It is true that the court has
jurisdiction to resettle questions of law so
as to bring out the real issue between the
parties but it is not open to the court to
raise new questions which have not been
referred to it by the Tribunal."
Expressing next his disagreement with the decision of the
Madras High Court in A. Abboy Chetty and Co. v. Commissioner
of Income-tax, Madras (1), the learned Judge observed:
"The decision of the Madras High Court would
also result in this extraordinary situation.
An assessee may raise a question and argue it
before the Tribunal, but if the Tribunal
thought fit to ignore that argument and not to
refer to that point of law in its order, then
the court would have no jurisdiction to call
upon the Tribunal to refer that question of
law to the High Court. It is true that the
Income-tax Act is a very technical statute,
but I see no reason why when the plain
grammatical construction of the section does
not make it necessary to come to that
conclusion it is necessary to do so and arrive
at such an anomalous result."
In Mohanlal Hiralal v. Commissioner of Income-tax (2) a
Bench of the Nagpur High Court, hearing a reference under s.
66(1), held that on the statement of the case by the
Tribunal, the question of law as framed was not correct.
Then observing that in view
(1) [1947] 15 I.T.R. 442.
(2) [1952] 22 I.T.R. 448, 452-453.
807
of the decision of the Privy Council in Commissioner of
Income-tax v. Kameshwar Singh (1), it could not itself
resettle it, called for a fresh statement from the Tribunal
under s. 66(4). Thus far the judgment is on the same lines
as New Piecegoods Bazar Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-
tax (2) and an earlier decision of the Nagpur High Court in
Beohar Singh v. Commissioner of Income-tax (3). When the
case came back on the further statement under s. 66(4),
criticising certain remarks therein, that the court had no
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power to direct the Tribunal to refer a question not argued
before it, the Court observed that they were made under a
misconception, and quoted the observations of Chagla C.J.,
in Madanlal Dharnidharka v. Commissioner of Income-tax (4)
extracted above, with approval. This can hardly be said to
be a decision on the present point.
It will be seen from the foregoing review of the decisions
that all the High Courts are agreed that s. 66 creates a
special jurisdiction, that the power of the Tribunal to make
a reference and the right of the litigant to require it,
must be sought within the four corners of s. 66(1), that the
jurisdiction of the High Court to hear references is limited
to questions which are properly referred to it under s.
66(1), and that such jurisdiction is purely advisory and
extends only to deciding questions referred to it. The
narrow ground over which the High Courts differ is as
regards the question whether it is competent to the Tribunal
to refer, or the High Court to decide, a question of law
which was not either raised before the Tribunal or decided
by it, where it arises ’on the facts found by it. On this
question, two divergent views have been expressed. One is
that the words, "any question of law arising out of" the
order of the Tribunal signify that the question must have
been raised before the Tribunal and considered by it, and
the other is that all questions of law arising out of the
facts found would be questions of law arising out of the
order of the Tribunal. The 1latter is the view
(1) [1933] 1 I.T.R. 94
(3) [1948] 16 I.T.R. 433.
(2) [1947] 15 I.T. R 319.
(4) [1948] 16 I.T.R. 227, 233. 234.
808
taken by the Bombay High Court in Madanlal Dharnidharka v.
Commissioner of Income-tax(1), and approved by the Nagpur
High Court in Mohanlal Hiralal v. Commissioner of Income-tax
(2). The former is the view held by all the other High
Courts. Now the argument in support of the latter view is
that on the plain grammatical construction of s. 66(1), any
question of law that could be raised on the findings of fact
given by the Tribunal, would be questions that arise out of
the order, and that, to hold that they meant that the
question must have been raised before the Tribunal and
decided by it, would be to read into the section words which
are not there.
In support of this contention Shri Viswanatha Sastri,
learned Counsel for the respondents, argued that it was a
fundamental principle of jurisprudence that the duty of the
litigants was only to state the facts and that it was for
the court to apply the appropriate law to the facts found,
arid he relied on the observations of Atkin, L. J., in
Attorney-General v. Avelino Aramavo & Co.(1), that the court
was not limited to particular questions raised by the
Commissioners in the form of questions on the case, and that
if the point of law or the erroneous nature of the
determination of the point of law was apparent on the case
as stated and there were no further facts to be found, the
court could give effect to it. , He also maintained that the
position under the Indian law was the same as under the
British statute, because under s. 66(1) of the Act, the
Tribunal has to refer not only questions of law arising out
of its order, but also a statement of the case, that under
s. 66(2) the court can likewise require the Tribunal to
state the case and refer it and that under s. 66(5) the
court has to decide the question of law raised by the case.
We are unable to agree with this contention. Under the
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British statute when once a decision is given by the
Commissioners, it is sufficient that the assessee should
express his dissatisfaction with it and ask that the matter
be referred to the decision of the High Court.
(1) [1948]16 I.T.R. 227. (2) [1952] 22 I.T.R. 448.
(3) [1925] 1 K.B. 86.
809
It is then for the Commissioners to draw up a statement of
the case and refer it for the decision of the court. The
British statute does not cast, as does s. 66(1) of the Act,
a duty on the assessee to put in an application stating the
questions of law which he desires the Commissioners to refer
to the court and requiring them to refer the questions which
arise out of that order. In Commissioner of Income-tax,
Madras v. Mtt. Ar. S. Ar. Arunachalam Chettiar (1), this
Court has decided that the requirements of s. 66(1) are
matters affecting the jurisdiction to make a reference under
that section. The attempt of the respondents to equate the
position under s. 66(1) of the Act with that under the
British statute on the ground that the Tribunal has to draw
up a statement of the case and refer it, and that the court
is to decide questions of law raised by it, must break down
when the real purpose of a statement in a reference is kept
in view. A statement of case is in the nature of a
pleading, where in all the facts found are set out. There
is nothing in it which calls for a decision by the court.
It is the question of law referred under s. 66(1) that calls
for decision under s. 66(5) and it is that that constitutes
the pivotal point on which the jurisdiction of the court
hinges. The statement of the case is material only as
furnishing the facts for the purpose of enabling the court
to decide the question referred. It has been repeatedly
laid down by the Privy Council that the Indian Act is not in
pari materia with the British statute and that it will not
be safe to construe it in the light of English decisions,
vide Commissioner of Income-tax v. Shaw Wallace & Co. (2).
In view of the difference between s. 66(1) and the
corresponding provision in the British statute, we consider
that no useful purpose will be served by referring to the
English decisions for interpreting s. 66.
But the main contention still remains that the language of
s. 66(1) is wide enough to admit of questions of law which
arise on the facts found by the Tribunal and that there is
no justification for cutting
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 463, 471.
(2) (1932) L.R. 59 I. A. 206.102
810
down its amplitude by importing in effect words into it
which are not there. There is considerable force in this
argument. But then there are certain features, which
distinguish the jurisdiction under s. 66, and they have to
be taken into consideration in ascertaining the true import
of the words, "any question of law arising out of such
order." The jurisdiction of a court in a reference under s.
66 is a special one, different from its ordinary
jurisdiction as a civil court. The High Court, hearing a
reference under that section, does not exercise any
appellate or revisional or supervisory jurisdiction over the
Tribunal. It acts purely in an advisory capacity, on a
reference which properly comes before it under s. 66(1) and
(2). It gives the Tribunals advice, but ultimately it is
for them to give effect to that advice. It is of the
essence of such a jurisdiction that the court can decide
only questions which are referred to it and not any other
question. That has been decided by this Court in New
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Jehangir Vakil Mills Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax(2);
Kusumben D. Mahadevia v. Commissioner of Income-tax(2) and
Zoraster & Co. v. Commissioner of Income-tax (3). If the
true scope of the jurisdiction of the High Court is to give
advice when it is sought by the Tribunal, it stands to
reason that the Tribunal should have had an occasion to
consider the question so that it may decide whether it
should refer it for the decision of the court. How can it
be said that the Tribunal should seek for advice on a
question which it was not called upon to consider and in
respect of which it had no opportunity of deciding whether
the decision of the court should be sought?
It was argued for the respondents, that, in view of the fact
that the court could compel the Tribunal to refer a question
of law under s. 66(2) for its decision, not much
significance could be attached to the advisory character of
its jurisdiction. It is not conceivable, it was said, that
any authority should have a right to compel another
authority to take its advice. We see no force in this
contention. Section 66(2)
(1) [1960] 1 S.C.R. 249. (2) [1960] 3 S.C.R. 417.
(3) [1961] 1 S.C.R. 210.
811
confers on the court a power to direct a reference only
where the Tribunal was under a duty to refer under s. 66(1),
and it is, therefore, subject to the same limitations as s.
66(1). That has been held by this court in New Jehangir
Vakil Mills Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax (1) and in
Zoraster & Co. v. Commissioner of Income-tax (2). Moreover,
the power of the court to issue direction to the Tribunal
under s. 66(2) is, as has often been pointed out, in the
nature of a mandamus and it is well settled that no mandamus
will be issued unless the applicant had made a distinct
demand on the appropriate authorities for the very reliefs
which he seeks to enforce by mandamus and that had been
refused. Thus, the power of the court to direct a reference
under s. 66(2) is subject to two limitations the question
must be one which the Tribunal was bound to refer under s.
66(1) and the applicant must have required the Tribunal to
refer it. R(T) is the form prescribed under Rule 22A for an
application under s. 66(1), and that shows that the
applicant must set out the questions which he desires the
Tribunal to refer and that further, those questions must
arise out of the order of the Tribunal. It is, therefore,
clear that under s. 66(2), the court cannot direct the
Tribunal to refer a question unless it is one which arises
out of the order of the Tribunal and was specified by the
applicant in his application under s. 66(1). Now,, if we
are to hold that the court can allow a new question to be
raised on the reference, that would in effect give the
applicant a right which is denied to him under s. 66(1) and
(2), and enlarge the jurisdiction of the court so as to
assimilate it to that of an ordinary civil court of appeal.
It is again to be noted that, whereas s. 6P(1), as it stood
prior to the amendment of 1939, conferred on the
Commissioner a power to refer a question of law to the court
suo motu, that power has been taken away under the present
section and it has accordingly been held that under s.
66(1), as it now stands, there is no power in the Tribunal
to refer a question of law suo motu for the decision of the
court. If, as contended
(1) [1960] 1 S.C.R. 249.
(2) [1961] 1 S.C.R. 210.
812
for by the respondents, the court is to be held to have
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power to entertain in a reference, any question of law,
which arises on the facts found by the Tribunal, its
jurisdiction under s. 66(5) must be held to be wider than
under s. 66(1) and (2). The correct view to take, in our
opinion, is that the right of the litigant to ask for a
reference, the power of the Tribunal to make one, and the
jurisdiction of the court to decide it are all co-extensive
and, therefore, a question of law which the applicant cannot
require the Tribunal to refer and one which the Tribunal is
not competent to refer to the court, cannot be entertained
by the court under s. 66(5). In view of the above
considerations, we are unable to construe the words, "any
question of law arising out of such order," as meaning any
question of law arising out of the findings in the order of
the Tribunal.
One of the reasons given by Chagla, C. J., in Madanlal
Dharnidharka v. Commissioner of Income-tax(1) for differing
from the decision in A. Abboy Chetty and Go. v. Commissioner
of Income-tax, Madras (2) that it is only a question which
was raised before the Tribunal that could be said to arise
out of its order was that that view must result in great
injustice in a case in which the applicant had raised a
question before the Tribunal but it had failed to deal with
it owing to mistake or inadvertence. In such a, case, it
was said, the applicant would be deprived, for no fault of
his, of a valuable right which the legislature had intended
to give him. But we see no difficulty in holding that in
those cases the Tribunal must be deemed to have decided the
question against the appellant, as Falshaw, J. was disposed
to do in Mash Trading Co. v. Commissioner of Income-tax (3).
This is only an application of the principle well-known to
law that a relief asked for and not granted should be deemed
to have been refused. It is on this footing that Kania, J.
held in New Piecegoods Bazar Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of
Income-tax (4) that, in the circumstances stated above, the
court could call upon
(1) [1948] 16 I.T.R. 227, 233, 234.
(3) [1956] 30 I.T.R. 388.
(2) [1947] 15 I.T.R. 442.
(4) [1947] 15 I.T.R. 319.
813
the Tribunal to state a supplemental case after giving its
own decision on the contention. That was also the procedure
adopted in Mohanlal Hiralal v. Commissioner of Income-
tax(1). Such cases must be exceptional and cannot be
founded on for putting a construction different from what
the language of s. 66(1) would otherwise warrant.
There was also some argument as to the position under s.
66(1) when the Tribunal decides an appeal on a question of
law not raised before it. That would undoubtedly be a
question arising out of the order, and not the less so
because it Was not argued before it, and this conclusion
does not militate against the construction which we have put
on the language of s. 66(1).
The result of the above discussion may thus be summed up:
(1) When a question is raised before the Tribunal and is
dealt with by it, it is clearly one arising out of its
order.
(2) When a question of law is raised before the Tribunal but
the Tribunal fails to deal with it, it must be deemed to
have been dealt with by it, and is therefore one arising out
of its order.
(3) When a question is not raised before the Tribunal but
the Tribunal deals with it, that will also be a question
arising out of its order.
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(4) When a question of law is neither raised before the
Tribunal nor considered by it., it will not be, a question
arising out of its order notwithstanding that it may arise
on the findings given by it.
Stating the position compendiously, it is only a question
that has been raised before or decided by the Tribunal that
could be held to arise out of its order.
In this view, we have next to consider whether the question
which was raised before the High Court was one which arose
out of the order of the Tribunal, as interpreted above. Now
the only question on which the parties were at issue before
the income-tax authorities was whether the sum of Rs.
9,26,532 was assessable to tax as income received during the
year of
(1) [1952] 22 I.T.R. 448.
814
account 1945-46. That having been decided against the
respondents, the Tribunal referred on their application
under s. 66(1), the question, whether the sum of Rs.
9,26,532 was properly included in the assessee company’s
total income for the assessment year 194647, and that was
the very question which was argued and decided by the High
Court. Thus it cannot be said that the respondents had
raised any new question before the court. But the appellant
contends that while before the income-tax authorities the
respondents disputed their liability on the ground that the
amount in question had been received in the year previous to
the year of account, the contention urged by them before the
court was that even on the footing that the income had been
received in the year of account, the proviso to s.
10(2)(vii) had no application, and that it was a new
question which they were not entitled to raise. We do not
agree with this contention. Section 66(1) speaks of a
question of law that arises out of the order of the
Tribunal. Now a question of law might be a simple one,
having its impact at one point, or it may be a complex one,
trenching over an area with approaches leading to different
points therein. Such a question might involve more than one
aspect, requiring to be tackled from different standpoints.
All that s. 66(1) requires is that the question of law which
is referred to the court for decision and which the court is
to decide must be the question which was in issue before the
Tribunal. Where the question itself was under issue, there
is no further limitation imposed by the section that the
reference should be limited to those aspects of the question
which had been argued before the Tribunal. It will be an
over-refinement of the position to hold that each aspect of
a question is itself a distinct question for the purpose of
s. 66(1) of the Act. That was the view taken by this Court
in The Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay v. Messrs. Ogale
Glass Works Ltd. (1) and in Zoraster & Co. v. Commissioner
of Income-tax (2), and we agree with it. As the question on
which the parties were at issue, which was referred
(1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 185.
(2) [1961] 1 S.C.R. 210.
815
to the court under s. 66(1), and decided by it under s.66(5)
is whether the sum of Rs. 9,26,532 is liable to be included
in the taxable income of the respondents, the ground on
which the respondents contested their liability before the
High Court was one which was within the scope of the
question, and the High Court rightly entertained it.
It is argued for the appellant that this view would have the
effect of doing away with limitations which the legislature
has advisedly imposed on the right of a litigant to require
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references under s. 66(1), as the question might be framed
in such general manner as to admit of new questions not
argued being raised. It is no doubt true that sometimes the
questions are framed in such general terms that, construed
literally, they might take in questions which were never in
issue. In such cases, the true scope of the reference will
have to be ascertained and limited by what appears on the
statement of the case. In this connection, it is necessary
to emphasize that, in framing questions, the Tribunal should
be precise and indicate the grounds on which the questions
of law are raised. Where, however, the question is
sufficiently specific, we are unable to see any ground for
holding that only those contentions can be argued in support
of it which had been raised before the Tribunal. In our
opinion, it is competent to the court in such a case to
allow a new contention to be advanced, provided it is within
the framework of the question as referred.
In the present case, the question actually referred was
whether the assessment in respect of Rs. 9,26,532 was
proper. Though the point argued before the Income-tax
authorities was that the income was received not in the year
of account but in the previous year, the question as framed
is sufficient to cover the question which was actually
argued before the court namely that in fact the assessment
is not proper by reason of the proviso being inapplicable.
The new contention does not involve re-framing of the
issues. On the very terms of the question as referred which
are specific, the question is permissible and was open to
the respondents. Indeed the very order of reference
816
shows that the Tribunal was conscious that this point also
might bear on the controversy so that it cannot be said to
be foreign to the scope of the question as framed. In the
result, we are of opinion that the question of the
applicability of the proviso is really implicit, as was held
by Chagla, C.J., in the question which was referred, and,
therefore, it was one which the court had to answer.
On the merits, the appellant had very little to say. He
sought to contend that the proviso though it came into force
on May 5, 1946, was really intended to operate from April 1,
1946, and he referred us to certain other enactments as
supporting that inference. But we are construing the
proviso. In terms, it is not retrospective, and we cannot
import into its construction matters which are ad extra
legis, and thereby alter its true effect. Then it was
argued that the amount of Rs. 9,26,532 having been allowed
as deduction in the previous years, may now be treated as
profits received during the year of assessment, and thereby
subjected to tax. But this is a point entirely new and not
covered by the question, and on the view taken by us as to
the scope of a reference under s. 66(1), it must be
disallowed. In the result, this appeal is dismissed with
costs.
SHAH, J.-The Income-tax Appellate Tribunal, Bombay Bench "A"
referred the following question to the High Court of
Judicature at Bombay under s. 66(1) of the Indian Income-tax
Act:
"Whether the sum of Rs. 9,26,532 was properly
included in the assessee company’s total
income computed for the assessment year 1946-
47."
The question comprehends two component parts, (1) whether
the amount of Rs. 9,26,532 was properly included in the
assessee’s income, and (2) whether the amount was properly
included in the taxable income of the assessees for the
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assessment year 1946-47. The amount sought to be taxed was-
part of compensation received by the assessees from the
Government of India for loss in 1944 by enemy action of
their ship "El Madina." The assessees maintained before the
817
taxing authorities and the Tribunal that the compensation
accrued to them on April 16, 1944. This plea was rejected,
but rejection of that plea was not sufficient to make the
amount taxable. it had still to be decided whether the
amount which was received in the months of July and
December, 1944, war, taxable as income. It is common ground
that before the amendment by Act 8 of 1946 of s. 10, sub-s.
(2), cl. (7), by the inclusion of the fourth proviso,
compensation received for loss of a capital asset like a
ship was not taxable as income under the Indian Income-tax
Act. The tribunal observed that the compensation accrued
when it was ascertained and was received by the assessees in
the year of account and the amount, was therefore rightly
brought to tax in the year of assessment 1946-47.
Manifestly, the tribunal its attention to the statutory
provision on the application of which the exigibility of the
tax depended. But proviso IV to s. 10, sub-s. (2), cl. (7)
came into force on May 4, 1946. It was not in force on
April 1, 1946, the day on which the liability to pay tax for
the year of assessment 1946-47 crystallized. The tribunal
erroneously assumed that the amending Act was in force at
the date of commencement of the year of assessment and the
assessees did not attempt to remove that misapprehension.
But the question whether the amount sought to be taxed was
properly included did arise out of the order of the
tribunal, the tribunal having held that the amount of
compensation was taxable by virtue of s. 10, sub-s. (2), cl.
(7), proviso IV. The question whether the statutory pro-
vision relied upon to tax the assessees was applicable to
the amount sought to be assessed as income was as much a
question arising out of the order of the tribunal as the
question whether the interpretation placed by the tribunal
upon that proviso was correct, may be.
The assessees had maintained that they were not liable to be
taxed under s. 10, sub-s. (2), el. (7), proviso IV because
the amount sought to be taxed was received before the year
of account relevant for the
103
818
assessment year 1946-47. The tribunal held, negativing the
contention, that it was taxable under s. 10, sub-s. (2), el.
(7), proviso IV. A question of law whether the amount was
properly included in the taxable income for the year of
assessment clearly arose and that question was referred by
the tribunal to the High Court. The High Court under s. 66,
cl. (5) of the Income-tax Act has to record its opinion on
the questions arising out of the order of the tribunal and
not on the arguments pro and con advanced before the
tribunal. In my view, the High Court had jurisdiction on
the question arising out of the order of the tribunal and
referred, in deciding that the Act which made the amount
taxable was not in operation at the material date.
This would be sufficient to dispose of the appeal but
counsel for the revenue submits that as it was never urged
before the tribunal by the assessees that the amending Act 8
of 1946 which made the compensation received by the
assessees, taxable as income, was brought into operation
after the commencement of the year of assessment 1946-47,
and the tribunal never directed its attention to that plea,
it had no jurisdiction to refer that question to the High
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Court arid the High Court was not competent to answer that
question even if on the facts found the question clearly
arose out of the order of the tribunal. Counsel urges that
the question arising out of the order of the tribunal is
only that specific question which has been raise(] and
argued before the tribunal and on which the tribunal has
given its decision.
We have heard elaborate arguments on the true meaning of the
expression "any question of law arising out of such order"
and the nature of the jurisdiction exercised by the High
Court under s. 66 of the Income-tax Act. There is wide
divergence of opinion oil the true import of this clause.
Before I refer to the authorities, it would be useful to set
out the scheme of the Income-tax Act relating to reference
of questions to the High Court under s. 66, and the nature
of the jurisdiction which the High Court exercises.
819
"(1) Within sixty days of the date upon which he is served
with notice of an order under sub-s. (4) of s. 33 the
assessee or the Commissioner may, by application in the
prescribed form require the Appellate Tribunal to refer to
the High Court any question of law arising out of such order
and the Appellate Tribunal shall draw up a statement of the
case and refer it to the High Court:
Provided.........
(2) If on any application being made under sub-s. (1)the
Appellate Tribunal refuses to state a case on the ground
that no question of law arises, the assessee or the
Commissioner as the case may be, may apply to the High
Court, and the High Court may, if it is not satisfied of the
correctness of the decision of the Appellate Tribunal,
require the Appellate Tribunal to state a case and to refer
it,, and on receipt of any such requisition the Appellate
Tribunal shall state the ease and refer it accordingly.
(3)..............
(4) If the High Court is not satisfied that the statements
in a case referred under this section are sufficient to
enable it to determine the question raised thereby, the
court may refer the case back to the Appellate Tribunal to
make such additions thereto or alterations therein as the
court may direct in that behalf.
(5) The High Court upon the hearing of any such case shall
decide the questions of law raised thereby and shall deliver
its judgment thereon containing the ground, on which such.
decision is founded and shall send a copy of such
judgment...to the Appellate Tribunal which shall pass such
orders as are necessary to dispose of the case conformably
to such Judgment.
(6)
(7)
(7A)
(8).....................
Under the scheme of the Indian Income-tax Act, the appellate
tribunal is the sole judge of facts. The High Court
indisputably exercises a special advisory
820
jurisdiction to record its opinion on questions submitted,
by the tribunal; it does not act as a court of appeal or
revision on questions of law or fact. After the disposal of
the appeal by the tribunal under s. 33(4) of the Income-tax
Act, the revenue or the tax-payer may call upon the tribunal
to state a case on the questions of law arising out of the
order. If the tribunal refuses to state a case, the party
aggrieved may move the High Court to call upon the tribunal
to state a case and the High Court may so direct if it is
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not satisfied as to the correctness of the decision of the
tribunal refusing to state a case. The question must be one
of law and not, of fact and not merely academic; it must be
a concrete problem bearing directly on the rights and
obligations of the revenue or of the assessees. The power
of the High Court is to require the tribunal to state a case
only if it is satisfied that the view of the tribunal (not
on the merits of the order under s. 33, el. (4)) but on the
application under s. 66(1) is erroneous. If the tribunal is
not called upon to refer a question, the High Court cannot
arrogate to itself the power to call upon the tribunal to
refer questions which arise out of the findings recorded by
the tribunal but which the tribunal was not called upon to
refer. But there is in my judgment no warrant for the view
that the question which the tribunal may refer or which the
High Court on the refusal of the tribunal may call upon the
tribunal to refer, must be a question which was raised and
argued before the tribunal at the hearing under s. 33(4).
The statute does not specifically impose such a restriction
nor is it implied. To import in the meaning of the
expression "any question of law arising out of such order"
the concept that the question must have been argued before
and dealt with by the tribunal in its judgment deciding the
appeal, is to impose a fetter upon the jurisdiction of the
High Court not warranted by the plain intendment of the
statute. The source of the question must be the order of
the tribunal; but of the question it is not predicated that
the tribunal must have been asked to decide it at the
hearing of the appeal. It may very well happen and
frequently
821
cases arise in which the question of law arises for the
first time out of the order of the tribunal. The tribunal
may wrongly apply the law, may call in aid a statutory
provision which has no application, may even misconceive the
question to be decided, or ignore a statutory provision
which expressly applies to the facts found. These are only
illustrative cases: analogous cases may easily be
multiplied. It would indeed be perpetrating gross injustice
in such cases to restrict the assessee or the Commissioner
to the questions which have been raised and argued before
the tribunal and to refuse to take cognisance of questions
which arise out of the order of the tribunal, but which were
not argued, because they could not (in the absence of any
indication as to what the tribunal was going to decide) be
argued.
A concrete question of law having a direct bearing on the
rights and obligations of the parties which may be founded
on the decision of the tribunal is one which in my judgment
arises out of the order of the tribunal even if it is not
raised or argued before the tribunal at the hearing of the
appeal. It is the duty of the tribunal to draw up a
statement of the case and to frame questions; that duty can
only be performed adequately if specific questions relating
directly to the dispute between the parties are raised. If
the import of the question is unduly large, the High Court
has, and is indeed bound in dealing with it to restrict it
to its true content in the light of the findings recorded by
the tribunal. But in dealing with the question, the High
Court may not only entertain those aspects of the case which
were argued before the tribunal, but all such aspects as
have fairly a direct bearing on the dispute. The
jurisdiction of the High Court is by statute not expressly
circumscribed to recording its opinion on arguments advanced
before the tribunal, and the nature of the jurisdiction
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exercised by the High Court does not demand that such a
limitation should be implied. The court has jurisdiction to
decide questions which arise out of the order of the
tribunal, not merely those which were raised and argued
before the tribunal.
822
On the meaning of the expression "question of law arising
out of such order," judicial opinion in the High Courts is
divided, and this court has not expressed any authoritative
opinion thereon. No useful purpose will be served by
entering upon an analysis of the decisions of’ the High
Courts-and there are many-on this question. The decisions
fall into two broad divisions. On the one hand it is ruled
that "a question of law can be said to arise out of an order
of the Appellate Tribunal within the meaning of s. 66(1) of
the Indian Income-tax Act, only if such order discloses that
the question was raised before the tribunal. A question not
raised before the tribunal cannot be said to arise out of
its order even if on the facts of the case appearing from
the; order the question fairly arises." The leading cases in
support of this view are A. Abboy Chetty & Co. v.
Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras (1) and The Commissioner
of Excess Profits Tax, West Bengal v. Jeewanlal Ltd.,
Calcutta (2). This view has been adopted with some
variations in the norms of expression in the following
cases: Maharaj Kumar Kamal Singh v. Commissioner of Income-
tax (3), G. M. Chenna Basappa v. Commissioner of Income-tax,
Hyderabad (4) and Punjab Distilling Industries Ltd.
Commissioner of Income-tax, Punjab (5).
On the other hand is the view expressed by Chagla, C. J. in
Madanlal Dharnidharka v. Commissioner of Income-tax (6)
where the learned Chief Justice recorded his conclusion as
follows:
"I should have stated that a question of law arose out of
the order of the Tribunal if such a question was apparent on
the order itself or it could be raised on the facts found by
the Tribunal and which were stated in the order. I see no
reason to confine the jurisdiction of this Court to such
questions of law as have been argued before the Tribunal or
are dealt with by the Tribunal. he section does not say so
and there is no reason why we should construe the expression
arising out of such order’ in a manner unwarranted by the
(1) [1947] 15 I.T.R. 442.
(3) [1954] 26 I.T.R. 79.
(5) [1952] 22 I.T.R, 232.
(2) [1951] 20 I.T.R. 39.
(4) [1958] 34 I.T.R. 576.
(6) [1948] 16 I.T.R. 227.
823
ordinary grammatical construction of that expression."
For the reasons already set out, in my view, the
interpretation placed by Chagla, C. J. on the expression
"arising out of such order" is the correct one.
Appeal dismissed.