Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
INCOME-TAX OFFICER, MADRAS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BUDHA PICTURES, MADRAS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
05/04/1967
BENCH:
SIKRI, S.M.
BENCH:
SIKRI, S.M.
SHAH, J.C.
RAMASWAMI, V.
CITATION:
1967 AIR 1547 1967 SCR (3) 425
ACT:
Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, s. 46(5A)-Notice under section
to whom can be given-There must be subsisting relationship
between assessee and person to whom notice is given.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent a film producing company was served a notice
unders. 46(5A) by the Income-tax Officer on June 18, 1957,
asking it to pay to the Income-tax Officer any amount due
from the company or held by it for or on account of ’B’
an actor. On June 26, 1959 the company replied that it had
not engaged ’B’ for its current production and there was no
contract with him and consequently it could not comply with
the notice. On March 28, 1960 the company signed a contract
with ’B’ agreeing to pay him Rs. 20,000 for a role in its
current production. The amount was paid to him in three
instalments on March 28, 1960, February 9, 1961 and March
18, 1961. On March 22, 1961 the Income-tax Officer sent to
the company another notice under s. 46(5A) to which the
company replied that there were no payment due and payable
to ’B’ on the date of receipt of the notice. The Income-tax
Officer held that the payment of Rs. 20,000 to ’B’ was in
violation, of the notice under S. 46(5A) issued on June 18,
1959 and requested the company to pay the said amount to the
Income-tax department. The company filed a writ petition in
the High Court which decided in its favour holding that the
section required the subsistence of a similar relationship
as between a garnishee and the assessee. The department
appealed to this Court.
HELD : In s. 46(5A) the legislature contemplates a
subsisting relationship of which the Income-tax Officer gets
information and which can reasonably lead to the recovery of
arrears. t429C]
The expression "may become due" or "may subsequently hold
money" suggest in the context a subsisting relationship
between the person served with a notice and the assessee;
e.g. assessee’s employer or banker or debtor, or a person
paying an annuity to him; they do not suggest a bank which
he has never dealt with, a person he has never lent money to
or dealt with, or all persons who may possibly in the future
employ an assessee out of job or work. The section cannot
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apply to all possible employers or traders, [429F]
Since there was no subsisting relationship between the
company and ’B’ at the time when the notice was issued the
recovery of Rs. 20,000 from the company was not justified.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 401 of 1966.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
October 10, 1963 of the Madras High Court in Writ Petition
No. 71 of 1962.
T.V. Viswanatha Iyer, S. K. Aiyar, S. P. Nayvar for R. N.
Sachthey, for the appellants.
K. Srinivasan and R. Gopalakrishnan, for the respondent.
426
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Sikri, J. This appeal by special leave is directed against
the judgment of the Madras High Court allowing the petition
filed under art. 226 of the Constitution by Budha Pictures,
Madras, respondent before us. The respondent had, inter
alia, prayed for a writ of mandamus or such other
appropriate writ, order or direction in the nature of a writ
directing the 4th Income-tax Officer, City Circle V, Madras,
to forbear from collecting from the respondent the sum of
Rs. 20,000/- in pursuance of his notices dated June 18,
1959, and March 21, 1961, issued under s. 46(5A) of the
Indian Income-tax Act, 1922. These notices came to be
issued in the following circumstances :
One, T. S. Balaiah, a cine artist, was apparently in arrears
of income-tax. The III Additional Income-tax Officer sent a
letter dated June 18, 1959 to the respondent saying :
"I understand that you have engaged the
services of Shri T. S. Balaiah for a film
being produced by you. As the above gentleman
is in arrears of income-tax, I herewith
enclose a notice under Section 46(5A) of the
I.T. Act, attaching the remuneration payable
by you to Shri Balaiah. Please credit to the
Government account all amount that is and will
become payable to him."
The first paragraph of the notice reads as
under :
"A sum of Rs. 46819-15 is due from Shri T. S.
Baliah on account of Income-tax and/or
penalty, I am to request you, under Section
46(5A) of the Income-tax Act. 1922, to pay to
me forthwith any amount due from you
to, or
held by you for or on account of the said Shri
T. S. Baliah of 4, Arulammal St. Madras-17
upto the amount of arrears shown above, and
also request you to pay any money which may
subsequently become due from you to him or
which you may subsequently hold for or one
account of him up to the amount of arrears
still remaining unpaid, forthwith on the money
becoming due or being held by you as aforesaid
as such payment is required to meet the amount
due by the tax-payer in respect of arrears of
Income-tax and penalty. I am to say that any
payment made by you in compliance with this
Notice is in law deemed to have been made
under the authority of the tax-payer and my
receipt will constitute a good and sufficient
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discharge of your liability to the person to
the extent of the amount referred to in the
receipt."
The respondent replied on June 26, 1959, as
follows "We have not engaged Sri T. S. Baliah
for acting in our production No. 2. Hence
there is no contract with
427
said Shri T. S. Baliah, and consequently we
are unable to comply with your request."
On March 22, 1961, another communication was sent enclosing
a notice under s. 46(5A) of the Indian Income Tax Act. The
notice is in the same form except that the sum to be
recovered had increased to Rs. 86111/12. The respondent
replied on March 25, 1961, saying that "there are no
payments due and payable to Shri T. S. Baliah, cine-artist,
as on the date of receipt of your letter." The respondent
enclosed a statement of account which showed that on March
28, 1960, a cheque for Rs. 7,000/- was given to T. S.
Baliah; on February 9, 1961, cash amounting to Rs. 6,000/-
was paid to him, and again on March 18, 1961, cash amounting
to Rs. 7,000/- was paid to him. The respondent also
enclosed a copy of the contract with T. S. Baliah. The
contract shows that there was an agreement between T. S.
Baliah and the respondent, signed on March 28, 1960, whereby
T. S. Baliah agreed to a role in production No. 2 (Tamil)
for a consolidated remuneration of Rs. 20,000/-. On April
26, 1961, the Income Tax Officer wrote to the respondent
stating that payment of Rs. 20,000/made to T. S. Baliah was
in violation of the notice under s. 46(5A) issued on June
18, 1959, and requested the respondent to pay the sum of Rs.
20,000/- to the Income Tax Department within three days from
the receipt of the letter. On June 26, 1961, the respondent
wrote to the Income Tax Officer protesting that the
respondent was not liable to pay the sum of Rs. 20,000/-
giving various reasons, which need not be mentioned at
this stage.On August 29, 1961, the Income Tax Officer
declined to accept the contention of the respondent and
requested him to pay tothe Department Rs. 20,000/- on or
before September 7, 1961. On January 18, 1962, the
respondent filed the petition under art. 226. After giving
the above facts and the grounds the petitioner, in brief,
alleged that according to law the demand made by the Income
Tax Officer for the sum of Rs. 20,000/- was illegal and
without jurisdiction.
The High Court, as we have already mentioned, held that the
Department was not entitled to call upon Budha Pictures
Ltd., the respondent, to make good the sum of Rs. 20,000/-
already paid to Baliah as such payments did not contravene
the notice under s. 46(5A) dated June 18, 1959.
Section 46(5A) reads as follows
"(5A) The Income-tax Officer may at any time
or from time to time, by notice in writing (a
copy of which shall be forwarded to the
assessee at his last address known to the
Income-tax Officer) require any person from
whom money is due or may become due to the
assessee or any person who holds or may
subsequently hold
428
money for or on account of the assessee to pay
to the Income-tax Officer, either forthwith
upon the money becoming due or being held or
at or within the time specified in the notice
(not being before the money becomes due or is
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held) so much of the money as is sufficient to
pay the amount due by the tax-payer in respect
of arrears of income-tax and penalty or the
whole of the money when it is equal to or less
than that amount.
The Income-tax Officer may at any time or from
time to time amend or revoke any such notice
or extend the time for making any payment in
pursuance of the notice.
Any person making any payment in compliance
with a notice under this sub-section shall be
deemed to have made the payment under the
authority of the assessee and the receipt of
the Income-tax Officer shall constitute a good
and sufficient discharge of the liability of
such person to the assessee to the extent of
the amount referred to in the receipt.
Any person discharging any liability to the
assessee after receipt of the notice referred
to in this sub-section shall be personally
liable to the Income-tax Officer to the extent
of the liability discharged or to the extent
of the liability of the assessee for tax and
penalties, whichever is less.
If the person to whom a notice under this sub-
section is sent fails to make payment in
pursuance thereof to the Income-tax Officer,
further proceedings may be taken by an
d before
the Collector on the footing that the Income-
tax Officer’s notice has the same effect as an
attachment by the Collector in exercise of his
powers under the proviso to sub-section (2) of
section 46.
Where a person to whom a notice under this sub
section is sent objects to it on the ground
that the sum demanded or any part thereof is
not due to the assessee or that he does not
hold any money for or on account of the
assessee, then, nothing contained in this
section shall be deemed to require such person
to pay any such sum or part thereof, as the
case may be, to the Incom-tax Officer."
The learned counsel for the appellant contends
that s. 46(5A) applies in four sets of
circumstances :
(1) when money is due from a person to the
assessee;
(2) when money may become due to the
assessee;
429
(3) when a person holds money for an
assessee; and
(4) when a person may hold money on account
of the assessee.
He says that there is no reason for cutting down the words
in categories (2) and (4); the words are plain and they do
not suggest that at the time of notice a relationship, which
may result in money being owed or being held on account of
the assessee, should subsist. In our view, if the assessee
has no subsisting relationship with a person it would be
speculative to think that that person may get into
relationship with the assessee and start owing money to him
or start holding money for him. We can hardly believe that
the Legislature framed this sub-section on speculative
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considerations. It seems to us that the Legislature
contemplated a subsisting relationship of which the Income-
tax Officer gets information and which could reasonably lead
to recovery of arrears. Theoretically it would be possible
for an assessee to enter into relationship with almost
anybody, say in the town in which he resides. We can hardly
imagine that it was expected that the Income Tax Officer
would issue notices to all the residents of a locality or a
town to pay money in case they begin to hold or owe money to
the assessee.
It seems to us that the High Court was right in holding that
what was contemplated was the subsistence of a similar
relationship as between a garnishee and the assessee. This
construction of the sub-section is strengthened by the last
para in S. 46(5A). A person to whom the notice has issued
has only to object that the sum demanded or part thereof is
not due to the assessee or that he does not hold any money
on account of the assessee. He has not to say that he is
not likely to owe or to hold money. It seems to us that the
expressions "may become due" or "may subsequently hold
money" suggest, in the context, a subsisting relationship
between the person served with a notice and the assessee;
e.g. assessee’s employer, or banker, or debtor, or a person
paying annuity to him; they do not suggest a bank with which
he has never dealt with, a person he has never lent money to
or dealt with, or all persons who may possibly in the future
employ an assessee out of job or work. If the contention of
the Department were to be accepted, the Income Tax Officer
could send a circular letter under s. 46(5A) in respect of
all defaulters to all possible employers of traders. This
would cast enormous burden on persons receiving such
notices. We cannot sustain a construction which could lead
to such results. We agree with the conclusion arrived at by
the High Court.
In the result the appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
G.C. Appeal dismissed.
430