Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M. K. VENKATACHALAIVI, I. T. O. ANDANOTHER
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BOMBAY DYEING AND MFG. CO., LTD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
28/04/1958
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
SARKAR, A.K.
CITATION:
1958 AIR 875 1959 SCR 703
ACT:
Income-tax-Rectification of order of assessment--Amendment
of law with retrospective enforcement-Error resulting from
such enforcement, if an error apparent from the record-If
such error can be rectified Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 (XI
of 1922), ss. 18-A and 35-Indian Income-tax (Amendment) Act,
1953 (XXV Of 1953), ss. 1 and 13.
HEADNOTE:
The Income-tax Officer, by his order dated October 9, 1952,
assessed the respondent for the assessment year 1952-53 and
gave him credit for Rs. 50,603-15-0 as representing interest
on tax paid in advance under s. 18-A(5) of the Income-tax
Act. On May 24, 1953, the Indian Income-tax (Amendment)
Act, 1953, came into force adding a proviso to s.18-A(5) of
the Act to the effect that the assessee was entitled to
interest not on the whole of the advance tax paid by him but
only on the difference between the payment made and the
amount assessed. The Amendment Act provided that it shall
be deemed to have come into force on April 1, 1952. The
Income-tax Officer, acting under S. 35 of the Act, rectified
the assessment order holding that the assessee was entitled
to a credit of only Rs. 21,157-6-0 by way of interest on tax
paid in advance as a result of the retrospective operation
of the amendment in s. 18-A(5), and issued a notice of
demand against the assessee for the balance of Rs. 29,446-9-
0. The assessee filed a petition in the High Court of
Bombay. under Art. 226 of the Constitution praying for a
writ prohibiting the appellants from enforcing the rectified
order and notice of demand. The High Court issued the writ
holding that s. 35 was not applicable to the case as the
mistake mentioned in S. 35 had to be apparent on the face
of the order and the question could only be judged in the
light of the law as it stood on the day when the order was,
passed:
Held, that the Income-tax Officer was justified in
exercising his powers under s. 35 and rectifying the
mistake. As a result of, the legal fiction about the
retrospective operation of the Amendment Act, the
subsequently inserted proviso must be read as. forming part
of s. 18-A(5) of the principal Act as from April 1, 1952,
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and consequently the order of the income-tax Officer dated
October 9, 1952, was inconsistent with the provisions of the
proviso, and suffered from a mistake apparent from the
record.
Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay Presidency and Aden v.
704
Khemchand Ramdas, (1938) L.R. 65 I.A. 236 and Moka Venkatap-
paiah v. Additional Income-tax Officer, Bapatla, (1957)32
I.T.R. 274, referred to.
The order passed by the Income-tax Officer under s. 18-A was
not final in the literal sense of the word; it was and con-
tinued to be liable to be modified under s. 35. It is also
not correct to say that the retrospective operation of the
amended s.18-A(5) was not intended to affect concluded
transactions.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No.122 of 1956.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated March 5, 1954, of
the Bombay High Court in Appeal from its Original
Jurisdiction Misc. Application No. 1 of 1954.
H. N. Sanyal, Addl. Solicitor-General, G. N. Joshi and R.
H. Dhebar, for the appellants.
N. A. Palkhivala, S. N. Andley, J. B. Dadachanji,
P. L. Vohra and Rameshwar Nath, for the respondent.
1958. April 28. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
GAJENDRAGADKAR J.-This is an appeal by the Income-tax
Officer, Companies Circle I (1), Bombay and the Union of
India and it raises a short question about the construction
of s. 35 of the Income-tax Act read with s. 1, sub-s. (2)
and s. 13 of the Indian Income-tax (Amendment) Act, 1953
(XXV of 1953). It arises in this way. The Income-tax
Officer, by his assessment order made on October 9, 1952,
for the assessment year 1952-53, assessed the respondent,
the Bombay Dyeing and Manufacturing Co. Ltd., under the Act.
In the said assessment order the respondent, was given
credit for Rs. 50,603-15-0 as representing interest at 2% on
tax paid in advance under s. 18A of the Act. This credit
was given to the respondent in pursuance of the provisions
contained in s. 18A, sub-s. (5) of the Act as it then stood.
On May 24, 1953, the Amendment Act came into force. Section
1, sub-s. (2) of the Amendment Act provides that " subject
to any special provision made in this behalf in the
Amendment Act, it shall be deemed to have come into
705
force on the first day of April, 1952 ". By s. 13 of the
Amendment Act, a proviso was added to s. 18A (5) of the Act.
The effect of the amendment made by the insertion of the
said proviso to s. 18A (5) was that the. assessee was
entitled to get interest at 2% not on the whole of the
advance amount of tax paid by him as before but only on the
difference between the payment made and the amount at which
the assessee was assessed to tax under the regular
assessment under s. 23 of the Act. After the Amendment Act
was passed, the first appellant exercised his power under s.
35 of the Act and purported to rectify the mistake apparent
from the record in regard to the credit for Rs. 50,603-15-0
allowed by him to the assessee. The first appellant held
that the assessee was really entitled to a credit of only
Rs. 21,157-6-0 by way of interest on tax paid in advance as
a result of the retrospective operation of the amendment
made in s. 18A (5) by the Amendment Act. In accordance with
this order a notice of demand under s. 29 of the Act was
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issued against the assessee for the sum of Rs. 29,446-9-0 on
the ground that the assessee had been given credit for this
excess amount through mistake. Aggrieved by this notice of
demand, the respondent filed a petition in the High Court of
Bombay on January 4, 1954, under Art. 226 of the
Constitution praying for a writ against the appellants inter
alia prohibiting them from, enforcing the said rectified
order and the said notice of demand. It appears that this
petition was admitted by Tendolkar J. on January 6, 1954,
and a rule issued on it. Thereafter the said petition was
referred to a Division Bench by the Hon’ble the Chief
Justice for final disposal. Accordingly on March 5, 1954,
the petition was heard by Chagla C. J. and Tendolkar J. and
a writ was issued against the appellants. The High Court
held that s. 35 of the Act had no application to the facts
of the case because the mistake apparent from the record
contemplated by the said section is not a mistake which is
the result of the amendment of the law even though the
amending law may be retrospective in operation. In other
words, in the opinion of the High Court, the
706
mistake mentioned by s. 35 had to be apparent on the face of
the order and it can only be judged in the light of the law
as it stood on the day ,When the order was passed. The
appellants then applied for and obtained a certificate from
the High Court on October 8, 1954; on their behalf it is
urged ’-that the High Court of Bombay has erred in law in
taking the view that the appellant No. I was not entitled to
rectify the mistake in question under s. 35 of the Act.
Thus the short question which arises before us in the
present appeal is whether an order which was proper and
valid when it was made can be said to disclose a mistake
apparent from the record if the said order would be
erroneous in view of a subsequent amendment made by the
Amendment Act when the Amendment Act is intended to operate
retrospectively ?
It is unnecessary to refer to the provisions of s. 18A (5)
as well as the provision of the proviso which was
subsequently added by s. 13 of the Amendment Act. It is
common ground that, in the absence of the subsequently
inserted proviso, the assessee would be entitled to obtain a
credit for Rs. 50,603-15-0. It is also common ground that,
if the subsequently inserted proviso covered the assessee’s
case, he would be entitled to a credit only of Rs. 21,156-9-
0. It is thus obvious that the order giving the relevant
credit to the assessee was valid when it was made and that
it would be erroneous under the subsequent amendment. Under
these circumstances, was the first appellant justified in
exercising his power of rectification under s. 35 of the
Act ?
In deciding this question it would be necessary to determine
the true legal effect of the retrospective operation of the
Amendment Act. Section 1, sub-s. (2) of the Amendment Act
expressly provides that subject to the special provisions
made in the said Act it shall be deemed to have come into
force on the first day of April 1952. The result of this
provision is that the amendment made in the Act by s, 13 of
the Amendment Act must, by legal fiction, be deemed to have
been included in the principal Act as from the first of
707
April, 1952, and this inevitably means that, at the time
when the Income-tax Officer passed his original order on
October 9, 1952, allowing to the respondent credit for Rs.
50,603-15-0, the proviso added by s. 13 of the Amendment Act
must be deemed to have been inserted in the Act. As
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observed by Lord Asquith of Bishopstone in East End
Dwellings Co. Ltd. v. Finsbury Borough Council (1), " if you
are bidden to treat an imaginary state of affairs as real,
you must surely, unless prohibited from doing so, also
imagine as real the consequences and incidents which, if the
putative state of affairs had in fact existed, must
inevitably have flowed from or accompanied it. One of those
in this case is emancipation from the 1939 level of rents.
The statute says that you must imagine a certain state of
affairs; it does not say that having done so, you must cause
or permit your imagination to boggle when it comes to the
inevitable corollaries of that state of affairs ". Thus,
there can be no doubt that the effect of the retrospective
operation of the Amendment Act is that the proviso inserted
by the said section in s. 18A (5) of the Act would, for all
legal purposes, have to be deemed to have been included in
the Act as from April 1, 1952.
But it is urged for the respondent that the retrospective
operation of the relevant provision is not intended to
affect completed assessments. It is conceded that, if any
assessment proceedings in respect of the assessee’s income
for a period subsequent to the first of April 1952 were
pending at the time when the Amendment Act was passed, the
proviso inserted by s. 13 would govern the decision in such
assessment proceedings; but where an assessment proceeding
has been completed and an assessment order has been passed
by the Income-tax Officer against the assessee, such a
completed assessment would not be affected and cannot be
reopened under s. 35 by virtue of the retrospective
operation of the Amendment Act. In support of this
contention, reliance is placed on the observations of the
Privy Council in Delhi Cloth and
(1) [1952] A. C. 109, 132.
90
708
General Mills Co. Ltd. v. Income-tax Commissioner, Delhi and
Anr. (1). Lord Blanesburg who delivered the judgment of the
Board referred to the Board’s earlier decision in the
Colonial Sugar Refining Company v. Irving (2) where it was
in effect laid down that, while provisions of a statute
dealing merely with matters of procedure may properly,
unless that construction be textually inadmissible, have
retrospective effect attributed to them, provisions which
touch a right in existence at the passing of the statute are
not to be applied retrospectively in the absence of express
enactment or necessary intendment. The learned Judge then
added that " Their Lordships have no doubt that the
provisions which, if applied retrospectively, would deprive
of their existing finality orders which, when that statute
came into force, were final, are provisions which touch
existing rights. " The argument for the respondent is that
the assessee has obtained a right under the order passed by
the Income-tax Officer to claim credit for the specified
amount under s. 18A(5) and the said right cannot be taken
away by the retrospective operation of s. 13 of the
Amendment Act. The same argument is put in another form by
contending that the finality of the order passed by the
Incometax Officer cannot be impaired by the retrospective
operation of the relevant provision. In our opinion, this
argument does not really help the respondent’s case because
the order passed by the Income-tax Officer under s. 18A(5)
cannot be said to be final in the literal sense of the word.
This order was and continued to be liable to be modified
under s. 35 of the Act. What the Income-tax Officer has
purported to do in the present case is not to revise his
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order in the light of the retrospective amendment made by s.
13 of the Amendment Act alone, but to exercise his power
under s. 35 of the Act; and so the question which falls to
be considered in the present appeal. centres round the
construction of the expression "mistake apparent from the
record " used in s. 35. That is why we think the principle
of the finality of the orders or the sanctity of
(1)[1927] L.R. 54 I.A. 421.
(2)[1905] A.C. 369.
709
the existing rights cannot be effectively invoked by the
respondent in the present case.
The respondent then urged that the Amendment Act should not
be given greater retrospective operation than its language
and its general scheme render necessary. This convention is
based on the provisions of s. 3, sub-s. (2), s. 7, sub-s.
(2) and s. 30, sub-s. (2) of the Amendment Act. Where the
Amendment Act intended that its provisions should affect
even concluded orders of assessment it is expressly so
provided. Since s. 13 does not specifically authorise the
reopening of concluded assessments it should be held that
its retrospective operation is not intended to cover such
concluded assessments. That in brief is the argument. We
are, however, not satisfied that this argument is
wellfounded. Let us examine the three provisions of, the
Amendment Act on which the argument rests. Section 3, sub-
s. (1) of the Amendment Act makes several additions and
modifications in s. 4 of the principal Act. Section 3, sub-
s. (2) then provides that, the amendments made by sub-cl.
(3) of cl. (b) of sub-s. (1) shall be deemed to be operative
in relation to all assessments for any year whether such
assessments have or have not been concluded before the com-
mencement of the Amendment Act of 1953. It would be noticed
that the main object of this sub-section is to extend the
retrospective operation of the relevant provisions of the
Amendment Act beyond the first of April 1952 mentioned by s.
1, sub-s. (2) of the Amendment Act. Since it was intended
to provide for such further retrospective operation of the
relevant provision the legislature thought it advisable to
clarify the position by saying that the said extended
retrospective operation would cover all assessments whether
they had been completed or not before the commencement of
the Amendment Act. Section 7, sub-s. (1) adds two provisos
to s. 9 of the principal Act by cls. (a) and (b). Sub-
section (2) of s. 7 then lays down that the amendments made
in cl. (a) of sub-s. (1) shall be deemed to be operative for
any assessment for the year ending the 31st day of March,
1952, whether made before or after the commencement of this
Act and, where any such
710
assessment has been made before such commencement, he
Income-tax Officer concerned shall revise it whenever
necessary to give effect to this amendment. The position
under s. 30, sub-s. (2) of the Amendment Act is
substantially similar. By sub-s. (1) of this section
certain additions and amendments are made in the schedule to
the principal Act by cls. (a), (b), (c) and (d). sub-s. (2)
then provides for the retrospective operation of the
amendment made by sub-s. (1) in terms similar to those used
in s. 7, sub-s. (2). It is clear that the Provisions in ss.
7 and 30 are intended for the benefit of the assessees and
so the legislature may have thought it necessary to confer
on the Income-tax Officer specific and express power to
revise his orders in respect of the relevant assessments
wherever necessary to give effect to the amendments in
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question. The effect of this provision is to make it
obligatory on he Income-tax Officer to revise his original
orders in he light of the amendments and also to confer on
the assessee right to claim such revision. It may be con-
ceded that in respect of the other retrospective provisions
of the Amendment Act such a power to revise the earlier
orders cannot be claimed or exercised by the Income-tax
Officer. In other words, a distinction can be drawn between
there two provisions of the Amendment Act and the rest in
respect of the power which the Income-tax Officer can
purport to exercise to give effect to the amendments made by
the Amendment Act. Whereas, in respect of the amendments
made by s. 7 and s. 30 of the Amendment Act, the Income-tax
Officer can and must revise his earlier orders covered by s.
7, sub-s. (2) and s. 30, sub-s. (2), such a power of
revision has not been conferred on him in the matter of
giving effect to the other amendments made in the Amendment
Act. Even so, we do not think it would be legitimate or
reasonable to hold that the provisions of s. 7(2) and s.
30(2) lead to the infference that the retrospective
operation of the other provisions of the Amendment Act is
not intended to affect concluded assessments in any manner
whatever. In this connection, it would be pertinent to
remember that the power to revise which has been conferred
on
711
the Income-tax Officer by s. 7(2) and s. 30(2) of the
Amendment Act is distinct and independent of the power to
rectify mistakes which the Income-tax Officer can exercise
under s. 35 of the Act.
It is in the light of this position that the extent of the
Income-tax Officer’s power under s. 35 to rectify: mistakes
apparent from the record must be determined; and in doing
so, the scope and effect of the expression " mistake
apparent from the record " has to be ascertained. At the
time when the Income-tax Officer applied his mind to the
question of rectifying the alleged mistake, there can be no
doubt that he had to read the principal Act as containing
the inserted proviso as from April 1, 1952. If that be the
true position then the order which he made giving credit to
the respondent for Rs. 50,603-15-0 is plainly and obviously
inconsistent with a specific and clear provision of the
statute and that must inevitably be treated as a mistake of
law apparent from the record. If a mistake of fact apparent
from the record of the assessment order can be rectified
under s. 35, we see no reason why a mistake of law which is
glaring and obvious cannot be similarly rectified. Prima
facie it may appear somewhat strange that an order which was
good and valid when it was made should be treated as
patently invalid and ’wrong by virtue of the retrospective
operation of the Amendment Act. But such a result is
necessarily involved in the legal fiction about the
retrospective operation of the Amendment Act. If, as a
result of the said fiction we must read the subsequently
inserted proviso as forming part of s. 18A(5) of the
principal Act as from April 1, 1952, the conclusion is
inescapable that the order in question is inconsistent with
the provisions of the said proviso and must be deemed to
suffer from a mistake apparent from the record. That is why
we think that the Income-tax Officer was justified in the
present case in exercising his power under s. 35 and
rectifying the said mistakes. Incidentally we may mention
that in Moka Venkatappaiah v. Additional Income-Tax Officer,
Bapatla (1), the High Court of Andhra has taken the same
view.
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(1)(1957) 32 I. T. R. 274.
712
In this connection it would be useful to refer to the
decision of the Privy Council in the Commissioner of
[Income-Tax, Bombay Presidency and Aden v. Khemchand Ramdas
(1). In Khemchand’s case, the assessees were registered as
a firm and they were assessed under s. 23(4) on an income of
Rs. 1,25,000 at the maximum rate. Being a registered firm
no super-tax was levied. A notice of demand was also made
before March 1927. On February 13, 1928, the Commissioner,
in exercise of his powers under s. 33, cancelled the order
registering the assessee as a firm and directed the Income-
tax Officer to take necessary action. The Income-tax
Officer accordingly assessed the firm to super-tax on May 4,
1929. The Privy Council held that the assessment made on
January 17, 1927, was final both in respect of the income-
tax and super-tax. The fresh action taken by the Income-tax
Officer on May 4, 1929, was out of time though it had been
taken in pursuance of the directions of the Commissioner and
that the order of May 4, 1929, was one which the Income-tax-
Officer had no power to make. One of the points raised
before the Privy Council was whether, under the relevant
circumstances the Income-tax Officer had power to make the
impugned order in view of the provisions of ss. 34 and 35 of
the Act. The Privy Council dealt with this question on the
footing that the Commissioner’s order cancelling the
registration had been properly made. On this basis their
Lordships thought that it was unnecessary to consider
whether the. case would attract the provisions of s. 34 "
inasmuch as in Their Lordships’ opinion the case clearly
would have fallen within the provisions of s. 35 had the
Income-tax Officer exercised his powers under the section
within one year from the date on which the earlier demand
was served upon the respondents ". The judgment shows that
Their Lordships took the view that looking at the record of
the assessments made upon the respondents as it stood after
the cancellation of the respondents’ registration and the
order effecting the cancellation would have formed part of
the record-it would be apparent that a mistake
(1)(1938) L.R. 65 I.A. 236.
713
had been made in stating that no super-tax was leviable.
This decision clearly shows that the subsequent cancellation
of the assessees’ registration was held by Their Lordships
of the Privy Council to form part of the record
retrospectively in the light of the said subsequent event,
and the order was deemed to suffer from a mistake apparent
from the record so as to justify the exercise of the
rectification powers under s. 35 of the Act. It is because
Their Lordships thought that s. 35 would have been clearly
applicable that they did not decide the question as to
whether s. 34 could also have been invoked. This decision
lends considerable support to the view which we are disposed
to take about the true meaning and scope of the expression "
the mistake apparent from the record " occurring in s. 35.
We must accordingly hold that the High Court of Bombay was
in error in coming to the conclusion that the notice issued
by the Income-tax Officer calling upon the respondent to pay
9the sum of Rs. 29,446-9-0 was not warranted by law. The
result is the order passed by the High Court issuing a writ
against the appellant is set aside and the appeal is allowed
with costs throughout.
Appeal allowed.
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