Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
S. N. NAMASIVAYAM CHETTIAR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX,MADRAS(With connected appeals
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
03/02/1960
BENCH:
KAPUR, J.L.
BENCH:
KAPUR, J.L.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
CITATION:
1960 AIR 729 1960 SCR (2) 885
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1991 SC1338 (14)
ACT:
Income Tax-Asscssment-Rejection of accounts and estimate of
Profits-Computation of Profits supported by cases of other
assessees Stock register--Effect of Non-production-Indian
Income-tax Act, 1922 (XI Of 1922) S. 13 Proviso.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant, a resident and ordinarily resident in India,
carried on trade in Colombo in grains and foodstuffs for
cattle. For the relevant assessment years the Income-tax
Officer rejected the accounts produced by the appellant on
the grounds inter alia that there was absence of vouchers
and that the stock account and the manufacturing account had
not been kept or produced; and he then made an estimate of
the profits. The Appellate Tribunal also agreed with the
Income-tax Officer and held that the correct profits could
not be deduced from the books produced by the assessee and
that therefore the proviso to s. 13 of the
(1)(1959) II L.L.J. 38.
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Indian income-tax Act, 1922 applied. Having taken into
consideration all the relevant factors it computted the
profits at 15 on grains imported from India and 12 1/2 % on
grains purchased in Ceylon, and, in support of its
computation, it pointed out that in certain cases which
had come to its notice the rates of profits
went Up to 20%.
The appellant challenged the validity of the assessment
on the ground that the principle of natural justice had been
violated in that the Tribunal had taken into consideration
the rate of profit in other cases without giving an
opportunity to the appellant to explain those cases, and
relied upon Dhakeshwari Cotton Mills Ltd.v.The Commissioner
of lncome-tax, WestBengal. [1I955] i S.C.R. 941- He also
urged that the non-production of stock account was not such
a defect as to entitle the Taxing Authorities to reject the
books and apply the proviso to s. 13 of the Act.
Held:(1) that the percentage of profits made by traders
in other cases was not the basis made by the Tribunal for
arriving at any conclusion as to the percentage at which
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income should be computed in the present case, but was
merely an ancillary support to that conclusion and that
Dhakeshwari Cotton Mills Ltd. v. The Commissioner of Income-
tax, West Bengal, was not applicable to the case.
(2)that the keeping of a stock register is of great
importance because that is a means of verifying the
assessee’s accounts by having aquantitative tally; that
if, after taking into account all the materials including
the want of a stock register, it is found that from the
method of accounting correct profits of the business are not
deducible, the operation of the proviso to s. 13 of the Act
would be attracted.
Ghansyam Das Permanand v. Commissioner of Income-tax C.P. &
Beray (1952) 21 I.T.R. 79, Bombay Cycle Stores Company Ltd.
v. Commissioner of Income-tax. (1958) 33 I.T.R. 13 and
Commissioner of Income-tax v. McMillan and Co. [1958] S.C.R.
689, relied on.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals No. 218 of 1955
and 219 to 223 of’ 1955.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and Order dated
September 14, 1951, of the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal,
Madras, in I.T.A. No. 3158 of 1949-50.
and
Appeals by special leave from the judgment and order dated
September, 30, 1953, of the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal,
Madras, in I.T.A. Nos. 7840 of 1952-53 and E.P.T.A. Nos.
300, 301 and 302 of 1952-53.
S. Chowdhuri, N. A. Palkhivala and Naunit Lal, for the
appellant.
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H. N. Sanyal, Additional Solicitor-General of India,
R. Ganapathi lyer and D. Gupta for the respondent.
1960 February 3. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KAPUR J. -In these six appeals the common question raised is
whether the proviso to s. 13 of the Income-tax Act is
applicable to the facts and circumstances of these cases.
They are therefore disposed of by one judgment. Civil
Appeal No. 218 of 1955 arises out of the assessment for the
year 1943-1944. Civil Appeals Nos. 219 to 223 relate to the
assessment years 1944-1945, 1946-1947 and for the chargeable
accounting periods from January 1943 to February 1944, and
from February 1945 to February 1946. The appellant in each
of the appeals is the assessee and the respondent is the
Commissioner of Income-tax and Excess Profits Tax, Madras.
The appellant is a ’resident and ordinarily resident’ in
India and carried on extensive trade in Colombo in grains,
folder, gram and other food-stuffs for cattle and poultry.
For the assessment year 1943-1944 the appellant showed a
turnover of Rs. 17,74,825 and a gross profit of Rs. 63,217
which is about 3.5 per cent. For the two previous
assessment years the appellant’s gross profits were 9 per
cent and 8 per cent respectively. The Income-tax Officer,
by his order dated March 20, 1948, rejected the accounts and
estimated the gross profit by adding back Rs. 2,38,831 to
the returned income. Thus he raised the turnover to Rs.
20,00,000 and the gross income to Rs. 3,00,000 giving a
profit of 15 per cent on the estimated turnover. On appeal
to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner, the order of the
Income-tax Officer was confirmed. The Income-tax Appellate
Tribunal on appeal by its order dated September 14, 1951,
after pointing out various defects, rejected the account
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books but accepted the appellant’s turnover and computed the
profits at 15 per cent on grains imported from India and 121
per cent on grains purchased in Ceylon. It held that
correct profit for the year under assessment could not be
deduced from the books produced by the appellant. The
Excess Profits tax
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888
for the chargeable accounting period from February 10, 1942
to January 16, 1943, was decided on the basis of the Income-
tax assessment for the year 1943-44. On November 21, 1951,
the appellant applied to the of Tribunal for stating a case
under s. 66(1) on the following four questions:
(1) Whether under the circumstances of the case the
Tribunal was justified in holding that Section 13 of the
Indian Income-tax Act applies to the case.
(2) Whether the reasons set out by the Appellate Tribunal in
paragraph 2 of its judgment are sufficient to invoke Section
13 of the Act.
(3) Whether the Tribunal, having disagreed with the
department on the basis of the assessment, had jurisdiction
to apply Section 13 and make an assessment on an alleged
estimate.
(4) Whether the Tribunal was justified in making an
assessment on the basis of Section 13 without giving an
adequate opportunity to the assessee to meet the materials
upon which eventually the assessment was rested.
But the Tribunal, by its order dated February 12, 1950, held
that no question of law arose and therefore declined to
state a case and thus rejected the application. The
appellant then applied to the High Court of Madras under s.
66(2) of the Act on the same four questions of law. This
application was dismissed by the High Court on February 26,
1953. Against this order of the appellant applied for
special leave to appeal and, by leave of this Court, amended
the petition so as to make it an appeal against the order of
the High Court as well as the order of the Tribunal dated
September 14, 1951.
In the other appeals also the course of proceedings before
the Income-tax Officer, the Appellate Assistant Commissioner
and the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal was the same. For the
assessment years 1944-1945 and 1946-47 the appellant
disclosed a turnover of Rs. 10,35,748 and Rs. 5,98,728
respectively and the gross profits rates were 10.7 per cent
and 8.7 per cent respectively. As the books of accounts in
regard to these years also were rejected, the Income-tax
Appellate Tribunal applied s. 13 and estimated the gross
889
profit rates at 12 1/2 per cent and 10 per cent for the
respective years. The appellant applied to the Tribunal
under s. 66(1) of the Act for stating a case to the High
Court for its decision on the following two points:
(1) Whether on the facts and in the circumstances of the
case, the Department was right in acting under the proviso
to section 13 of the Act in th absence of a finding that
income, profits and gains cannot properly be deduced from
the books produced or that no method of accounting has been
regularly employed.
(2) Whether on the facts and in the circumstances of the
case, the Department had sufficient materials before it to
justify the rates of 12 1/2 per cent and 10 per cent gross
profits on the total turnover on the ground that the rates
worked out by the figures submitted by the assessee work out
at a lesser figure.
The Tribunal dismissed the application on January 15, 1954.
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The appellant did not apply to the High Court under s. 66(2)
of the Income Tax Act but obtained special leave from this
Court against the order of the Tribunal by which it applied
the proviso to s. 13 of the Income Tax Act. All the six
appeals were heard together and a common question arises
whether the Income tax Appellate Tribunal was justified in
applying the proviso to s. 13 of the Income Tax Act.
It was contended by the appellant in Civil Appeals Nos. 218,
219 and 221 of 1955 that the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal
was not justified in applying the proviso to s. 13 and
assuming that the proviso did apply then the percentage
worked out was unjustified and had been arrived at by
relying upon material which the appellant had no opportunity
to meet and therefore the case fell within the rule in
Dhakeshwari Cotton Mills Ltd. v. The Commissioner of Income-
tax, West Bengal (1) where a similar violation of the
fundamental rule of natural justices.e., the information
upon which the Tribunal relied was not disclosed to the
assessee and no opportunity was given to him
(1)[1955] I S.C.R. 941.
890
to rebut such material-was held to be a ground for
interference with the order of the Tribunal.
It was rightly argued that the power to compute
-profits under the proviso to s. 13 arises only where no
method of accounting has been regularly employed by the
assessee and where the method employed is such that the
income, profits and gain cannot properly be deduced
therefrom. It means that the method adopted by the assessee
must prima facie prevail where it is regularly employed,
though the Incometax Officer can resort to the proviso if
the method is such that true profits cannot be correctly
determined therefrom. In other words, even if the assessee
has regularly employed a method of accounting it can be
discarded under the proviso if the method does not show
correct profits of the year.
The Appellate Tribunal, by its order dated September 14,
1951, held that correct profits could not be deduced from
the books produced by the assessee and therefore the proviso
to s. 13 of the Income Tax Act applied. The reasons it gave
were (1) that vouchers for several purchases made in Colombo
had not been produced and for purchases of over Rs. 3,00,000
no vouchers were forthcoming and without the vouchers the
entries in the account books could -not be verified ; (2)
there was no quantitative tally for the grains and for other
materials purchased by the appellant, which were ground into
powder, turned into fodder, packed in different sizes and
then sold. It was not possible, according to the Tribunal,
to accept the books of account, where the turnover was as
large as about seventeen lacs of rupees, without a
quantitative tally; (3) a fairly big sum of money was
alleged to have been paid towards purchasing of license,-,
for export from India; and Rs. 19,000 worth of purchases
were made in Tuticorin when only a small sum of money in
cash was shown in the assessee’s accounts; (4) several
outsiders’ cheques had been entered in the accounts of the
assessee without any proof as to why those cheques were paid
to the assessee; and (5) a fairly big sum of money had been
invested in India in the purchase of property without
891
money being received from Colombo. On these facts the
Tribunal said:
In view of these defects, we are clearly of opinion that the
correct profit could not be deduced from the books produced
by the assessee, and accordingly hold that proviso to
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Section 13 of the Act applies in this case. The question,
therefore, is regarding the estimate.’
After giving this finding the Tribunal accepted the turnover
as shown in the appellant’s books. In making the
computation of profits the Tribunal took into consideration
the following matters: that the export of food grains from
India was prohibited except under a license, that there was
an acute shortage of cattle fodder in Ceylon and the
appellant had to resort to dubious means in order to obtain
grains, that during a substantial portion of the year of
accounting there was no price control in Colombo, that as
the appellant was a manufacturer of forage by mixing several
kinds of grains and powdering them and sold them in packets
of various weights, the appellant must have made higher
profits than persons who deal in grain only. Keeping all
this in view the Tribunal was of the opinion that the rate
of 15 per cent adopted in regard to imported grains was not
too high but in the case of local purchases it was, and
therefore reduced the rate of profit in the latter case to
121 per cent. It was on this material that the Tribunal
adopted the figure of profit as estimated by the Income-tax
Officer, and in order to support this opinion further, the
Tribunal remarked that in certain cases which had come to
its notice the rate of profits ’went up to 20 per cent.’
On the basis of this remark it was argued that the principle
of natural justice had been violated in that the Tribunal
had taken into consideration the rate of profit in other
cases without giving an opportunity to the appellant to
explain those cases and relied upon Dhakeshwari Cotton Mills
Ltd. v. The Commissioner of Income-tax, West Bengal (1)
where a violation of the fundamental rule of justice, i.e.,
where the information was not disclosed to the assessee and
no opportunity was given to rebut that material, was
(1) [1955] I. S.C.R. 941
892
held to be a ground for interference with the order of
the Tribunal. In our opinion, no such case arises in the
present appeal. No information, as in Dhakeshwari’s Case
was supplied to the Tribunal by any one and taken into
consideration by it, and therefore it was not necessary to
give any such opportunity as the appellant contends for. In
the present case the Tribunal has held that from the method
of accounting adopted by the appellant correct profits could
not be deduced because of the various reasons which have
been set out above and the reference to profits made in
other cases was only by way of supporting that conclusion.
It was not the basis on which the conclusion was formed nor
the basis on which the percentage was arrived at.
As a matter of fact, the Income-tax Officer who also
rejected the accounts of the appellant had also given
similar reasons. He had held that there was absence of
vouchers, that the stock account and the manufacturing
account had not been kept or produced, that the cheques of
other parties had been credited in the accounts of the
appellant which had not been explained and that there was
purchase of goods and property by the appellant without
there being sufficient cash in hand. The Income-tax Officer
also said that in other cases where grains were purchased in
India and sold in Colombo the rates of profit were higher,
ranging between 20 per cent and 39 per cent. He then worked
out profits in respect of various grains in the case of the
appellant and found that the average rate of gross profit
worked out to 15.8 per cent., and in his opinion the gross
profit in fodder should have been higher. He further took
into consideration the fact that Colombo was bombed in April
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1942, resulting in panic in that town and therefore during a
portion of the accounting year the appellant might not have
made the same margin of profit. He estimated the sales at
twenty lacs and the gross profit at three lacs, thus
arriving at a figure of 15 per cent on the turnover. It
appears to us that neither the Income-tax Officer nor the
Appellate Tribunal relied upon the profits made by traders
in other cases as a basis for arriving at any conclusion
893
as to the percentage at which the income should be computed
and that they used that material for a different purpose.
It is extremely doubtful if the order of the Income-tax
Officer or the Tribunal would have been different if no
reference had been made to the rate of profits in other
cases. In other words, the profits in other cases were not
the reason for holding that 15 per cent. profit was a proper
rate but merely an ancillary support to that conclusion.
It may be mentioned that throughout in his grounds of appeal
the appellant has emphasised the inapplicability of s. 13 of
the Income Tax Act and the proviso thereto, but not to this
particular violation of principles of natural justice
whichwas emphasised and particularised before us. In his
appeal to the appellate Assistant Commissioner no objection
was taken to the reference by the Income-tax Officer to the
rate of profits made by other dealers in grains. In the
grounds of appeal. to the Tribunal also there was no such
objection. In the application under s. 66(1) there was no
specific ground taken and in the application under s. 66(2)
the matter does not seem to have been raised. The order of
the High Court, dated February 26, 1953, does not show that
any such question was raised before it; all it shows is that
the appellant’s books of account were found to be defective
and afforded no data for arriving at correct profits of the
business. The order also refers to the non-production of
invoices, the unexplained steep fall in profits made during
the year when compared with the previous years. The High
Court could not find any legal flaw in the order of the
Appellate Tribunal to justify an order for directing the
case to be stated. In the grounds of special leave to this
Court no pointed reference was made to the material which is
now alleged to have been used by the Tribunal without giving
an opportunity to the appellant to explain that material.
An amended petition by leave of this Court was filed on
April 28, 1954, and there also no such pointed reference was
made to the material to which objection is now being taken
before us. Dhakeshwari’s Case (1) cannot, in our opinion,
apply to the facts of this case,
(1) [1955] I. S.C.R 941
894
It was then urged that the four reasons given, which we
have set out above, could not make s. 13 applicable. for
the rejection of accounts several reasons were given by the
Appellate Tribunal; one of these reasons was the non-
production. of stock registers and manufacturing accounts.
This reason was given by the Income-tax Officer and
adopted by the Appellate Tribunal. It was submitted that
the non-production of stock account was not such a defect as
to entitle the Taxing Authorities to reject the books and
apply the proviso to s. 13. Reliance was placed on the
judgment of the Punjab High Court in Pandit Brothers v. The
Commissioner of Income-tax, Delhi (1). The facts in that
case were very different. The Income-tax Officer there
added a certain sum to the assessee’s profits on the ground
that the expense ratio was too high and the profits
disclosed were too low and there was no stock register. The
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finding in that case was that the assessee maintained
regular accounts of his purchases and sales and there was no
finding by the Income-tax Officer that in his opinion the
income could not properly be deduced therefrom. Khosla, J.
(as he then was) there said:
‘ There is no finding that there was material before the
Income-tax Officer to lead him to the conclusion that a
proper statement of income, profits and gains could not be
deduced from the material placed before him. All he said
was that the profits appeared to be somewhat low and there
was no stock register.’.
The want of a stock register was, in that particular case,
not a very serious defect because the account books had been
found and accepted as correct and disclosed a true state of
affairs. It cannot therefore be said that that case laid
down as a proposition of law that the want of a stock
register by which a proper check could be made was not such
a serious defect as to make the proviso to s. 13
inapplicable.
The importance of such register was pointed out by the
Nagpur High Court in Ghanshyam Das Permanand v. Commissioner
of Income-tax, C.P. & Berar (2). In cases such as the
instant case, the keeping of a
(1) [1954) 26 I.T.R. 159.
(2) [1952] 21 I.T.R. 79, 81.
895
stock register is of great importance because that is a
means of verifying the assessee’s accounts by having a
quantitative tally’. If, after taking into account all the
materials including the want of a stock register, it is
found that from the method of accounting correct profits of
the business are not deducible, the operation of proviso to
s. 13 of the Income-tax Act would be attracted, Bombay Cycle
Stores Company Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax (1). It
may also be added, as was held by this Court in Commissioner
of Incometax v.Mac Millan & Co. (2), that the Income-tax
Officer, even if he accepts the assessee’s method of
accounting, is not bound by the figure of profits shown in
the accounts. It is for the Income-tax Authorities to
consider the material which is placed before them and, if,
after taking into account in any case the absence of a stock
register coupled with other materials they are of the
opinion that correct profits and gains cannot be deduced,
then they would be justified in applying the proviso to s.
13. In our opinion therefore when the Tribunal applied the
proviso to s. 13 because of the various blemishes which were
pointed out by the Income-tax Officer and accepted by the
Appellate Tribunal, it cannot be said that there was any
error in the order of the Appellate Tribunal justifying the
interference of this Court under Art. 136.
In regard to the Appeal No. 220 of 1955 for the assessment
year 1946-1947 the objection raised was that the Tribunal
had committed the same error in that it took into
consideration the earlier decision of the Tribunal ’in an
identical situation’ i.e., in the case of the same assessee
in regard to previous years. As we have held that there was
no error in the order of the Tribunal in regard to the
previous years, it cannot be said that this observation of
the Tribunal was in any manner erroneous. This appeal
should therefore be dismissed.
The other appeals which arise Under the Excess Profits Tax
Act for the various chargeable accounting periods depend
upon the result of the Income-tax
(1) [ 1958] 33 I.T.R. 13. (2) [1958] 33 I.T.R. 182, 197.
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896
assessment appeals and, as we have dismissed those
appeals, these appeals also must be dismissed.
In the result all the six appeals are dismissed with
costs. As the appeals were consolidated there will be
of One set of costs.
Appeals dismissed.