Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M/S. CHANDAJI KUBAJI & CO.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF ANDHRA PRADESH.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
29/04/1960
BENCH:
DAS, S.K.
BENCH:
DAS, S.K.
KAPUR, J.L.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
CITATION:
1960 AIR 990
ACT:
Review-Grounds for-Whether allowable on Party’s own deli-
berate negligence and intentional withholding of evidence
Madras General Sales Tax Act, 1939 (Mad. Act IX Of 1939),
s. 12A(6) (a).
HEADNOTE:
The appellant company was a dealer in ghee and groundnut oil
etc. The Deputy Commercial Tax Officer assessed it to sales
tax for the year 1948-49 on a turnover of Rs. 28,69,151 and
odd. Similarly for the year 1949-50 the appellant was
assessed to sales tax on a turnover of Rs. 28,72,o83 and
odd. The appellant challenged these assessments and its
appeal before the Commercial Tax Officer having failed the
two matters came up in second appeal before the Sales Tax
Appellate Tribunal. In the Tribunal the appellant did not
place any materials in support of its contentions and the
two appeals were disposed of by the Tribunal holding that
the appellant was correctly assessed to sales tax. In
respect of the aforesaid orders of the Tribunal the
appellant filed applications for review under S. 12A(6)(a)
of the Madras General Sales Tax Act, 1939 (Mad. Act IX Of
1939), taking the plea that in the first case the materials
could not be placed before the Tribunal as there was none to
instruct the appellant’s advocate in English or Telegu, and
in the second case the relevant correspondence was mixed up
with other records. The Tribunal rejected the applications
for review on the ground that a failure to produce the
necessary materials in support of a plea taken before it,
due either to gross negligence or deliberate withholding,
did not come within the reason of s. 12A(6)(a) of the Act.
The High Court upheld the decision of the Tribunal. On
appeal by special leave in one case and a certificate of the
High Court in the other:
Held, that the provision in s. 12A(6)(a) of the Madras
General Sales Tax Act, 1939 (Mad. Act IX Of 1939), permits
a review when through some oversight, mistake or error the
necessary facts, basic or evidentiary, were not present
before the Court when it passed the order sought to be
reviewed, but a party was not
805
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entitled to ask for a review when it had deliberately or
intentionally withheld evidence in support of a claim made
by it.
State of Andhra v. Sri Arisetty Sriyamulu, A.I.R. 1057
Andhra Pradesh 130, not approved.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 420 of 1957.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
August 8, 1955, of the former Andhra High Court in Tax
Revision Case No. 2 of 1955.
WITH
Civil Appeal No. 142 of 1958.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated July 28, 1955, of
the former Andhra High Court in T.R.C. No. 32 of 1954.
N.Rajeswara Rao and Sardar Bahadur, for the appellants (in
both the appeals).
T.V. R. Tatachari and T. M. Sen, for the respondent (in both
the appeals).
1960. April 29. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
S.K. DAS, J.-These two appeals, one with special leave from
this Court and the other on a certificate granted by the
High Court of Andhra, have been heard together and this
judgment will govern them both.
The facts are similar and the short question for decision is
whether the appellant, Messrs. Chandaji Kubaji and Company,
Guntur, was entitled to apply under s. 12A(6)(a) of the
Madras General Sales Tax Act, 1939 (Madras Act IX of 1939),
as applied to Andhra, for a review of an order of the
Appellate Tribunal made under suchs. (4) of s. 12A of the
said Act. The relevant facts are these. The appellant is a
dealer in ghee, groundnut oil, chillies, etc., and was
carrying on its business at Guntur. In Civil Appeal No. 420
of 1957, the Deputy Commercial Tax Officer, Guntur, assessed
the appellant to sales tax for the year 1948-49 on a
turnover of Rs. 28,69,151 and odd. The appellant having
unsuccessfully appealed to the Commercial Tax Officer,
Guntur, made a second appeal to the Sales Tax Appellate
Tribunal, hereinafter called
105
806
the Tribunal. Before the Tribunal the appellant contended
inter alia that out of the total turnover a sum of Rs.
10,45,156 and odd related to commission purchase of
commodities taxable at the stage of sale on behalf of
principals resident outside the State of Andhra and was not
therefore taxable by the respondent State. In respect of
this plea the Tribunal said:
" As regards the alleged commission agency business to the
tune of Rs. 10,45,156-4-9 the appellants have neither
advanced arguments nor placed before us any materials in
support of the contention raised in this behalf ".
In the result the Tribunal dismissed the appeal on May 30,
1953.
In Civil Appeal No. 142 of 1958 the appellant was assessed
by the Deputy Commercial Tax Officer, Guntur, on a net
turnover of Rs. 28,72,083 and odd for the year 1949-50. The
appellant objected to the inclusion of a sum of Rs.
19,89,076 and odd on the ground that the goods relating
thereto bad been consigned to self and despatched to places
outside the state and in fact were delivered outside the
State. "this plea was disallowed by the Sales Tax autho-
rities, and the Tribunal said
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" In the grounds of appeal it has been urged with regard to
these sale transactions the ownership in the goods continued
to vest in the appellant till the sale price was collected
and the goods were delivered to the buyers at places outside
the State. Beyond advancing a broad argument of this type
no material has been placed before us or was placed before
the assessing authority or the Commercial Tax Officer to
support the appellant’s version that the property in the
goods passed to the buyer only at places outside the State".
x x x
It is not denied that though contracts in writing were not
entered into, these transactions were the result of
correspondence between the appellant on the one hand as
seller and various persons on the other as buyers. It is
conceded that such correspondence exists but the appellants
have not chosen
807
to make this correspondence available either to us or to the
officer below. When documents which would establish the
nature of the transaction beyond doubt are available and
have been withheld by the appellant, the normal result is
that an inference adverse to his contention has to be drawn.
We are accordingly of the opinion that in this case, the
sales must be deemed to have taken place within this State
and that they have been rightly included in the taxable
turnover ".
The appeal was disposed of on this finding on August
19,1952.
In respect of both the aforesaid orders the appellant filed
applications for review under s. 12A(6)(a) of the Act. That
section, in so far as it is relevant for these appeals,
reads:
" 12A(6)(a)-The Appellate Tribunal may, on the application
either of the assessee or of the Deputy Commissioner, review
any order passed by it under sub-section (4) on the basis of
facts which were not before it when it passed the order:
Provided that no such application shall be preferred more
than once in respect of the same order ".
The point taken on behalf of the appellant in Civil Appeal-
No. 420 of 1957 was that the accounts were in Gujrati
language and as there was none on behalf of the appellant
who could give instructions to the appellant’s advocate
either in Telugu or English when the appeal was heard by the
Tribunal, the appellant could hot place the materials before
the Tribunal. In the other appeal, the point taken in
support of the application for review was that the relevant
correspondence was mixed up with other records and so it
could not be placed before the Tribunal. The Tribunal
rejected the applications for review on the ground that a
failure to produce the necessary materials in support of a
plea taken before it, due either to gross negligence or
deliberate withholding, did not come within the reason of s.
12A(6)(a) as stated in the expression " on the basis of
facts which were not before it when it passed the order ".
The appellant then moved the High Court in revision under s.
12B of the Act and
808
contended that the view which the Tribunal took of
s.12A(6)(a) was not correct. The High Court drew a
distinction between what it called basic facts and evidence
in support thereof and said:
" There is an essential distinction between a fact and the
evidence to establish that fact
x x x
Section 12A(6)(a) in our view is not intended to give two
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opportunities to every assessee to establish his case before
a Tribunal. It is really conceived in the interests of ;
the assessee, who was not able to place some facts before
the Tribunal at the first instance which would have made a
difference in its decision ".
In the view which the High Court took of s. 12A(6)(a), it
held that the applications for review were rightly rejected.
In the two appeals before us the argument has been that the
Tribunal as also the High Court took an erroneous view of
the true scope and effect of s. 12A (6)(a) of the Act. Our
attention has been drawn to a Subsequent Full Bench decision
of the same High Court in The State of Andhra v. Sri
Arisetty Sriramulu (1) and it has been submitted that the
view expressed therein is the correct view. In that
decision, it was held that the word " facts " in s.
12A(6)(a) may be taken to have been used in the sense in
which it is used in the law of evidence, that is to say, as
including the factum probandum or the principal fact to be
proved and the factum probans or the evidentiary facts from
which the principal fact follows immediately or by
inference; facts may be either ,facts in issue " which are
the principal matters in dispute or relevant facts which are
evidentiary and which directly or by inference, prove or
disprove the " facts in issue ".
In the view which we have taken of these two appeals, it is
not necessary to discuss at great length the divergent
views taken in the High Court of Andhra as to the true scope
and effect of s. 12A(6)(a) of the Act. A Division Bench
expressed the view that facts " in the sub-section meant
basic facts, that is,
(1) A.I.R. 1957 Andhra Pradesh 130.
809
facts necessary to sustain a claim, and drew a distinction
between such facts and the evidence required to establish
them; it further expressed the view that under s. 12A(6)(a)
the Tribunal may review its order if any of the basic facts
were not present before it when it passed the order, but the
sub-section was not meant to give a second opportunity to a
party to produce fresh evidence. The Full Bench took a
wider view of the sub-section and said that facts referred
to in the sub-section might be "facts in issue" or "
evidentiary facts ". We think that in an appropriate case
evidentiary facts may be so interlinked with the facts in
issue that they may also fall within the purview of the
subsection. The Full Bench, however, went a step further
and said that even if relevant evidentiary facts were
intentionally or deliberately withheld or suppressed, the
party guilty of such suppression or withholding would still
be entitled to ask for a review under s. 12A(6)(a). We say
this with great respect, but this is precisely what the
section does not permit. The Full Bench said:
" The language of section 12A(6)(a) is so wide and general
that it might possibly lead to inconvenient results in that
it might enable an assessee to get a further chance of
hearing before the Appellate Tribunal on the strength of
evidence which he negligently or designedly failed to
produce at the first ,hearing. As the language used in
section 12A(6)(a) is clear and unequivocal and, in our
opinion, capable only of one interpretation, we are bound to
give effect to it in spite of the possibility of any incon-
venience resulting therefrom. The inconvenience, if any, is
not to the assessee for whose benefit the provision is
intended. In any case, the remedy is with the Legislature".
It is, we think, doing great violence to language to say
that an intentional or deliberate withholding or suppression
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of evidence in support of a plea or contention or a basic
fact urged before the Tribunal, is comprehended within the
expression " facts which were not before it (Tribunal) when
it passed the order ". To so construe the section is to put
a premium
810
on deliberate negligence and fraud and amounts to allowing a
party to profit from its own wrong. We do not think that
such a construction follows from the language used, which is
more consistent with the view that the provision in s.
12A(6)(a) permits a review when through some oversight,
mistake or error the necessary facts, basic or evidentiary,
were not present before the Court when it passed the order
sought to be reviewed. It is entirely wrong to think that
the subsection permits a party to play hide and seek with a
judicial Tribunal; that is to say to raise a fact in issue
or evidentiary fact as a plea in support of a claim and at
the same time deliberately withhold the evidence in support
thereof. Such a situation cannot be said to be one within
the meaning of the expression " facts not present before the
Tribunal ".
In the appeals before us there was intentional withholding
or suppression of evidence. In the case, the materials were
not produced on the plea that they were written in Gujrati
and nobody was available to instruct counsel in English or
Telugu and in the other, on an equally specious plea that
the correspondence was mixed up with other records for about
two years. These two appeals can be disposed of on this
short ground that the appellant was not entitled to ask for
review under s. 12A(6)(a) by reason of his own deliberate
negligence and intentional withholding of evidence.
We see no merit in these appeals and dismiss them with
costs.
Appeals dismissed.