Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
K. C. THOMAS, FIRST INCOME-TAX OFFICER, BOMBAY
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
VASANT HIRALAL SHAH & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
29/01/1964
BENCH:
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
BENCH:
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
SUBBARAO, K.
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
CITATION:
1964 AIR 1034 1964 SCR (6) 437
CITATOR INFO :
R 1965 SC 342 (20)
ACT:
Income Tax-Escaped income-Notice issued for assessment after
expiry of 8 years-If sanction required-Indian Income-tax
Act, 1922 (11 of 1922). ss. 34(i), 34(ii), 34(3) proviso. as
amended by Act XXV of 1953 and Act XVII of 1956.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant had issued notice to the respondents under s.
34(1)( of the Income Tax Act, 1922 in respect of an escaped
income of Rs. 47,595 for the assessment year 1944-45. The
case of the respondents was that the impugned notice was bad
because the Income-Tax Officer proceeded against the
respondents without obtaining the necessary sanction of the
Central Board of Revenue as required by cl. (iii) of the
proviso to s. 34(1) of the Act. The respondents filed a
writ petition in the High Court challenging the notice
issued under s. 34(1) of the Art. The respondents succeeded
before the High Court.
438
Held: (i) The sanction under cl. (iii) of the proviso to
s. 34(1) is, however, necessary only where the notice in
question is issued under cl. (ii) of the proviso. That is
evidently what the legislature meant when it said "in any
case failing under cl. (ii)". The words "in any case" used
in cl. (iii) only mean a case in which notice can be issued
under cl. (ii). Such a notice can be issued only when the
escaped income is of one lakh of rupees and over. Clause
(iii) requires such sanction where the notice is issued
under cl. (ii) and when on a construction of cl. (ii), no
notice can be issued with respect to a class of escaped
assessments, there can possibly be no requirement of the
sanction of the Central Board of Revenue. If a notice is
issued by virtue of some other provision sub as the second
proviso to sub-s. (3) of s. 34, it would be a notice "in any
other case" referred to in cl. (iii) of the proviso to sub-
s. (1) of s. 34 and in such a case the sanction which is
required is only that of the Commissioner. Such a sanction
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was obtained in this case and therefore, the notice cannot
be said to be bad because the sanction of the Central Board
of Revenue had not been obtained.
In the present case the income which has escaped assessment
is below one lakh of rupees and more than eight years have
elapsed since the assessment year in respect of which the
income is alleged to have escaped assessment. Clearly,
therefore, no notice could issue under cl. (ii).
(ii) The High Court erred in holding that the provisions of
the second proviso to s. 34(3) would not apply to a case
where the escaped assessment is of an amount less than a
lakh of rupees and more than eight years have elapsed.
Apparently, the High Court has overlooked the fact that the
second proviso to sub-s. (3) of s. 34 was amended first by
Act 25 of 1953 and then by Act. 18 of 1956. The amendment
of 1956 would govern the whole of s. 34(1) and would
consequently include even an escaped assessment with respect
to which limitation is provided in cl. (ii) of the first
proviso to s. 34(1). The result would be the same even if
the case fell to be governed by the Amending Act of 1953,
though not by that of the Amending Act of 1956.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 688 of 1962.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
April 1, 1958 of the Bombay High Court in Misc. Application
No. 202 of 1957.
N. D. Karkhanis and R. N. Sachthey, for the appellant.
I. N. Shroff for the respondents.
January 29, 1964. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
MUDHOLKAR J.-This is an appeal by special leave against the
judgment of the Bombay High Court in a writ petition
challenging the notice issued under s. 34(1) of the Indian
Income-tax Act, 1922 by the First Income-tax Officer,
439
Bombay, who is the appellant before us. In the writ
petition various grounds were urged by the respondent in
support of the convention that the notice was bad in law.
The High Court, however, dealt with only one of those
contentions, accepted it, and did not permit the respon-
dents’ counsel Mr. Mehta to put forward the other conten-
tions urged in the writ petition by the respondents.
The appellant had issued notice to the respondents under s.
34(1)(a) of the Income-tax Act in respect of an escaped
income of Rs. 47,595 for the assessment year 1944-45. This
notice was issued by him on March 27, 1957. On behalf of
the respondents, it is contended that the notice was bad
because, though it was in respect of an amount of less than
Rs. 1 lakh it was issued after the expiry of the assessment
year and that the sanction of the Central Board of Revenue
for issuing that notice had not been obtained by the Income-
tax Officer as required by cl. (iii) of the proviso to s.
34(1) of the Act. It is not disputed before us that the
case falls under s. 34(1)(a). That provision reads thus:
"(1) If--
(a) the Income-tax Officer has reason to
believe that by reason of the omission of
failure on the part of an assessee to make a
return of his income under section 22 for any
year or to disclose fully and truly all
material facts necessary for his assessment
for that year, income, profits or gains
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chargeable to income-tax have escaped
assessment for that year, or have been under-
assessed, or assessed at too low a rate, or
have been made the subject of excessive relief
under the Act, or excessive loss or depre-
ciation allowance has been computed, or....
he may in cases falling under clause (a) at
any time . . . . . . serve on the assessee a
notice containing all or any of the require-
ments which may be included in a notice under
sub-section (2) of section 22 and may proceed
440
to assess or re-assess such income, profits or
gains or recompute the loss or depreciation
allowance; and the provisions of this Act
shall, so far as may be, apply accordingly as
if the notice were a notice issued under that
subsection:"
We have quoted only the relevant portion. Then follows the
first proviso which runs thus:
" provided that the Income-tax Officer
shall not issue, a notice under clause (a) of
sub-section (1) (i) for any year prior to the
year ending on the 31st day of March 1941;
(ii) for any year, if eight years have
elapsed after the expiry of that year, unless
the income, profits or gains chargeable to
income-tax which have escaped assessment or
have been underassessed or assessed at too low
a rate or have been made the subject of
excessive relief under this Act, or the loss
or depreciation allowance which has been
computed in excess, amount to, or are likely
to amount to, one lakh of rupees or more in
the aggregate, either for that year, or for
that year and any other year or years after
which or after each of which eight years have
elapsed, not being a year or years ending be-
fore the 31st day of March 1941;
(iii) for any year, unless he has recorded his
reasons for doing so, and, in any case falling
under clause (ii), unless the Central Board of
Revenue, and, in any other case, the
Commissioner, is satisfied on such reasons
recorded that it is a fit case for the issue
of such notice:"
It will thus be seen that where the Income-tax Officer has
reason to believe that due to any act of the assessee a full
and accurate declaration was not made by the assessee for
any year, with the result that part of his income has escap-
ed assessment for that year, the Income-tax Officer may
issue a notice under cl.(a) at any time.
441
The respondents’ contention before the High Court was that
the notice was bad because it had not complied with the two
conditions laid down in the proviso to s. 34(1). Adverting
to this contention the High Court has observed thus:
"Before the amendment of this section which
was in force on the 27th March, 1957 the
period of limitation of eight years was
provided with regard to the issue of notices
under Section 34(1) (a) and a period of four
years for cases falling under Section 34(1)(b)
By the amendment the period of limitation was
removed and the Legislature provided that if
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the case fell under Section 34(1) (a) a notice
can be served at any time. But while removing
any bar of limitation, the Legislature
provided some safeguards for the assessee and
these safeguards were three in number and they
were set out in the proviso. The first
safeguard was that a notice shall not be
issued for any year prior to the year ending
on the 31st day of March 1941; the second
safeguard was that if eight years had elapsed
then the notice should not be issued for an
escaped income which aggregated to less than
one lakh of rupees; and the third safeguard
was that the Central Board of Revenue had to
be satisfied on reasons to be recorded that
this was a fit case for the issue of a notice,
which was for a period beyond eight years.
Now, admittedly, this notice is for an amount
which is less than a lakh of rupees and
admittedly the Central Board of Revenue has
not considered this matter at all. Therefore,
there does not seem to be any answer to the
contention put forward by the petitioner."
The High Court is right in saying that a notice cannot be
issued where the income which has escaped assessment is less
than a lakh of rupees and where more than eight years have
elapsed from the assessment year. To this, however,
442
there is one exception and that is where the matter would
fall to be governed by the second proviso to s. 34(3). To
this aspect we will, however, come little later. But before
that what we must consider is the view of the High Court
that the sanction of the Central Board of Revenue was also
necessary. Under cl. (iii) of the proviso to s. 34(1) a
notice can issue only if the Central Board of Revenue is
satisfied with the reasons recorded by the Income-tax
Officer for issuing a notice. For convenience we are
describing this process as sanction of the Central Board of
Revenue. The sanction under this clause is, however,
necessary only where the notice in question is issued under
cl. (ii) of the proviso. That is evidently what the
Legislature meant when it says "in any case falling under
clause (ii)". For, cl. (ii) has to be read with the opening
words of the proviso: "Provided that the Income-tax Officer
shall not issue a notice under clause (a) of sub-section
(1)". So read it will be clear that the words "in any case"
used in cl. (iii) only mean a case in which notice can be
issued under cl. (ii). Such a notice can be issued only
when the escaped income is of one lakh of rupees and over.
It was, however, contended by Mr. Shroff that cl. (ii) of
the proviso dealt not only with the escaped assessment of
one lakh of rupees and over but also with assessments which
were less than one lakh of rupees and that, therefore, even
in the present case the sanction of the Central Board of
Revenue was required. By excluding action with respect to
escaped assessment of less than one lakh of rupees, cl. (ii)
can, in, one sense, be regarded as dealing with escaped
assessments of this kind. But it would be wrong to say that
because of this, cl. (iii) requires the obtaining of the
sanction of the Central Board of Revenue for a notice to be
issued with respect to it. As already pointed out, cl.
(iii) requires such sanction where the notice is issued
under cl. (ii) and when on a construction of cl. (ii), no
notice can be issued with respect to a class of escaped
assessments, there can possibly be no requirement of the
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sanction of the Central Board of Revenue. If a notice is
issued by virtue of some other provision such as the second
proviso to sub-s. (3) of s. 34, it would be a notice "in any
other case" referred to in cl. (iii) of the proviso to sub-
s. (1) of s. 34 and in such a case the sanction which is
443
required is only that of the Commissioner. Such a sanction
was obtained in this case and, therefore, the notice cannot
be said to be bad because the sanction of the Central Board
of Revenue has not been obtained. Now, we will come to the
other aspect of the matter.
Limitation is no doubt placed upon the power of the Income-
tax Officer by cl. (ii) of the first proviso which says that
if eight years have elapsed after the expiry of that year no
such notice can issue unless the income which has escaped
assessment is likely to amount to one lakh of rupees or
more. Here admittedly the income which has escaped
assessment is below one lakh of rupees and more than eight
years have elapsed since the assessment year in respect of
which the income is alleged to have escaped assessment.
Clearly, therefore no notice could issue under cl. (ii).
The answer given by the Income-tax Officer, however, is that
limitation is taken away by the second proviso to sub-s. (3)
of s. 34. We would quote s. 34(3) and the second proviso to
it. They run thus:
"No order of assessment or reassessment, other
than an order of assessment under section 23
to which clause (c) of sub-section (1) of
section 28 applies or an order of assessment
or reassessment in cases falling within clause
(a) of sub-section (1) or sub-section (]A) of
this section shall be made after the expiry of
four years from the end of the year in which
the income profits or gains were first
assessable:
Provided further that nothing contained in
this seetion limiting the time within which
any action may be taken or any order,
assessment or reassessment may be made shall
apply to a reassessment made under section 27
or to an assessment or re-assessment made on
the assessee or any person in consequence of
or to give effect to any finding or direction
contained in an order under section 31,
section 33, section 33A, section 33B. section
66 or section 66A."
444
The second proviso to s. 34(3) could be pressed in aid by
the Income-tax Officer because in issuing the notice he was
giving effect to a direction contained in the order of a
nigher Income-tax authority.
Dealing with this matter the High Court has observed as
follows in its judgment:
"Now, when there was a limitation of eight
years under section 34(1)(a) the second
proviso to Section 34(3) has to be resorted.
Section 34(3) had to be resorted to by the
Income-tax Department if it wanted to issue a
notice after the period of limitation, and a
notice after eight years in a case falling
under section 34(1) (a) could only be issued
provided it was a result of a direction
contained in an order passed by an Income-tax
Authority. But by reason of the recent
amendment the question of limitation does not
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arise, but the Legislature has provided
certain safeguards as already pointed out.
Therefore, whether a notice is issued as a
result of a direction contained in any order
of an Income-tax Authority or not, if it is a
notice which is issued beyond eight years the
notice must satisfy the conditions laid down
in the proviso to Section 34(1). Therefore,
the result is that in some respects the law
has been made more rigorous against the
assessee; and in other respects it has been
made more lenient. Before the amendment a
notice could be issued after eight years in
respect of any escaped income, whatever the
amount, provided the notice was issued to give
effect to a direction contained in an order of
an Income-tax Authority. Now a direction is
not necessary for the issue of a notice. But
as against that an assessee whose escaped
income is not a lakh of rupees is completely
protected and even though there may be a
direction contained in an order of an Income-
tax Authority no notice can be issued
445
against the assessee if the escaped income is
less than a lakh of rupees. Therefore, on the
one hand, the assessee whose escaped income is
less than a lakh of rupees is now put in a
better position than he was before the amend-
ment. The assessee whose escaped income is
more than a lakh of rupees is put in a worse
position because he can be proceeded against
even without a direction contained in an order
of an Income-tax Authority provided the Cen-
tral Board of Revenue has applied its mind to
It would appear that the view of the High Court was that the
provisions of the second proviso to s. 34(3) would not apply
to a case where the escaped assessment is of an amount less
than a lakh of rupees and more than eight years have
elapsed. Apparently, the High Court has overlooked the fact
that the second proviso to sub-s. (3) of s. 34 was amended
first by Act 25 of 1953 and then by Act 18 of 1956. As it
stood prior to these amendments it read thus:
"Provided further that nothing contained in
this subsection shall apply to a re-assessment
made under section 27 or in pursuance of an
order under section 31, section 33. section
33A, section 33B, section 66 or section 66A."
By the amendment of 1953, for the words "sub-section", the
words "section limiting the time within which any action may
be taken or any order, assessment or re-assessment may be
made" were substituted. By the amendment of 1956 it now
stands as already quoted by us. If the proviso in its
present form applies here it would govern the whole of s.
34(1) and would consequently include even an escaped
assessment with respect to which limitation is provided in
cl. (ii) of the first proviso to s. 34(1). The result, in
our opinion. would be the same even if the case were to fall
to be governed by the Amending Act of 1953, though not by
that of the Amending Act of 1956,
446
We may add that the amendment of 1953 took effect from April
1, 1953 and that of 1956 from April 1, 1956.
Apart from the view expressed by the learned Judges as
regards the effect of the changes made in s. 34(1) with the
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provisos we have set out earlier a view which we have held
is not correct-they aid not further consider the proper
construction to be placed on the second proviso to s. 34(3)
of the Act on which the validity of the impugned notice to
the respondents must ultimately be decided.
As we have pointed out earlier, at the beginning of the
judgment, the learned Judges confined their attention prac-
tically only to the construction of proviso (iii) to s.
34(1) which was decided in favolur of the respondents and
did not permit them to argue the other points raised by
them. We do not propose to decide these other points,
particularly for the reason that the parties are not agreed
as to what precisely were the contentions which were raised
for argument.
For the reasons stated above, the decision of the High Court
is clearly wrong. We, therefore, allow the appeal, set
aside the order of the High Court and remit the matter to it
for the consideration of the other points which were raised
before it by the respondents but upon which they were not
heard. As regards costs we think that they should abide the
result of the appeal before the High Court.
Appeal allowed and cave remanded.