Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF ASSAM & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
D.C. CHOUDHURI & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
07/08/1969
BENCH:
GROVER, A.N.
BENCH:
GROVER, A.N.
SHAH, J.C. (CJ)
RAMASWAMI, V.
CITATION:
1970 AIR 2057 1970 SCR (1) 780
1969 SCC (2) 508
CITATOR INFO :
MV 1975 SC2065 (20,21,74)
ACT:
Assam Agricultural Income-tax Act (Assam Act 9 of 1939),
ss. 19, 20 and 30--General notice under s. 19(1)--No
individual notice under s. 19 (2)--No initiation of
proceedings under s. 30--Best judgment assessment under s.
20(4) beyond 3 years of the financial year--Validity.
HEADNOTE:
The assessee, owners of a tea estate in Assam, after
carrying on the business of cultivation, manufacture and
sale of tea during the years 1948 to 1953 sold the tea
estate on July 9, 1953. In 1961, they received a notice
from the Agricultural Income-tax Officer to furnish returns
of their agricultural income for the assessment years 1949-
50 to 1953-54 in respect of that tea estate. They did not
submit any returns. Thereafter, they received a notice of
demand under s. 23 of’ the Assam Agricultural Incometax Act,
1939, for payment of the tax assessed on best judgment
basis under s. 20(4). The assessees were not served with
any notice under s.19(2) which provides for a notice to
be served personally on the assessee, during the
respective years, nor under s. 30 of the Act which deals
with escaped assessment.
The purchasers of the tea estate were served. in 1961,
with assessment orders under s. 20(4) in respect of the
assessment years 1951-52 to 1955-56 with notices of demand
for payment of the tax assessed for each year. These
assessees were also not served with any notice under s.
19(2) or s. 30. All the assessees challenged the
assessments in writ petitions and the High Court allowed the
petitions.
In appeal to this Court, it was contended that the
assessment proceedings commenced with the publication of a
general notice under s. 19(1), that it was open to the
Agricultural Income-tax Officer to make a best judgment
assessment under s. 20(4) without any limitation as to time
and that it was not necessary to issue any individual notice
under s. 19(2) or to initiate proceedings under s. 30.
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HELD: Notwithstanding the difference in language between
s. 20(4) of the Act and s. 23(4) of the Income-tax Act the
principles laid down by this Court in interpreting ss. 22,
23 and 34 of the Income-tax Act apply in the interpretation
of ss. 19, 20 and 30, the corresponding sections of the
Assam Agricultural Income-tax Act. [788 A-C]
On those principles the publication of the general
notice in any financial year under s. 19(1) of the Assam Act
to furnish a ’return o.f one’s agricultural income in the
previous year, does not initiate proceedings against an
assessee unless such assessee files a return. If no return
is made pursuant to the general notice under s. 19(1)
assessment could be made against an assessee under s. 19(2),
serving an individual notice on that assessee during that
financial year. Once that financial year is over, and no
return has been made in response to the general notice
under s. 19(1) and no individual notice has been served
under s. 19(2), there would arise a case of escaped
assessment; and, the only way to bring that income to tax is
to initiate proceedings by a notice in accordance with s. 30
within 3 years of
781
the end of that financial year. Since no such proceedings
were initiated in the present case, the assessment orders.
were rightly quashed. [787 E-H]
The Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay v. Ranchhodas
Karsondas, Bombay, [1960] 1 S.C.R. 114, Ghanshyam Das v.
Regional Assistant Commissioner of Sales-tax, Nagpur,
[1964] 4 S.C.R. 436 and The State of Assam v. Deva Prasad
Barua, [1969] 1. S.C.R. 698, followed.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 1537 to
1545 of 1968.
Appeals from the judgment and order dated April 4, 1963
the Assam High Court in Civil Rules Nos. 233 to 236 and 238
to 242 of 1961.
Naunit Lal and S.N. Choudhury, for the appellants (in
all the appeals).
M.C. Chagla and Sukumar Ghose, for the respondents (in
all the appeals).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Grover, J. These are nine connected appeals by
certificate from a judgment.of the High Court of Assam &
Naggland whereby nine petitions filed by the respondents
under Art. 226 of the Constitution were allowed and the
assessment orders made under the provisions of the Assam
Agricultural Income-tax Act, 1939, hereinafter called the
’Act’, were quashed.
The facts may be first stated. D.C. Choudhuri and S.C.
Dutt petitioners in ,four of the writ petitions owned the
Martycherra Tea Estate in the district of Cachar which they
had purchased on January 1, 1948. They sold this Estate on
July 9, 1953. From January 1, 1948 to July 9, 1953 they
carried on the business of cultivation, manufacture and sale
of black tea at the said Estate under a partnership of which
they were the sole partners. The partnership firm was
served with a notice under the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922
hereinafter called the Income-tax Act and was assessed to
income-tax for the assessment year 1951-52. Appeals were
filed against the assessment order before the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner of Incometax and the Income-tax
Appellate Tribunal in which substantial reliefs were given
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to the assessee. After the sale of the Tea Estate these
assessees ceased to have any agricultural income. The case
of the assessees as laid in the writ petition was that on
January 25, 1961, a letter was received by one of them from
the Agricultural Income-tax Officer directing both the
’assessees to furnish returns of their agricultural income
for the assessment years 1949-50 to 1953-54. Thereafter
they received a notice of demand under s. 23 of the Act for
payment of a certain amount as agricultural income-tax for
the assessment year 1950-51. The assessment
782
order was stated to have been made under s. 20(4) of the
Act. Similar orders were made and demands created with
regard to the subsequent years, namely, 1951-52, 1952-53 and
1953-54. All these assessment orders were challenged by
means of four petitions under Art. 226 of the Constitution.
Apart from other points which were raised the main objection
taken was that no notice under s. 30 of the Act had been
served at any time in respect of the assessment covered by
the impugned orders. Such a notice could be served only
within three years of the end of the financial year. In the
absence of service of the aforesaid notice within the
prescribed period the Income-tax Officer had no jurisdiction
to make any assessment nor could such an assessment be
made after the expiry of a period of three years from the
end of each financial year.
The other set of petitions. under Art. 226 of the
Constitution was filed by the company--The Eastern Tea
Estate Private Ltd. This company owned two tea estates, the
Chandna Tea Estate and the Martycherra Tea Estate. The
Chandna Tea Estate was purchased from the Indian Tea and
Mill Industries Ltd. in 1950 and the Martycherra Tea Estate
was purchased from M/s. D.C. Choudhuri and S.C. Dutt on July
9, 1953. The case of the company was that no notice had
been received under s. 19(2) of the Act for the assessment
years 1951-52 to 1955-56 and therefore no returns were
filed. On October 9, 1959 the company received a letter
from the Agricultural Income-tax Officer, Shillong asking it
to submit returns in respect of Martycherra Tea Estate for
the assessment year 1950-51 onwards. The company
addressed a communication to the Agricultural Incometax
Officer on November 18, 1959 saying, inter alia, that no
notice had been served on it under the Act previously and
as it also owned the Chandna Tea Estate it proposed to
submit returns for the years in respect of which it was
liable under the Act. On October 19, 1959, the company
received a notice under s. 19 (2) of the Act directing it
to submit the return in respect of the previous year for
Martycherra Tea Estate. In response to the notice the
company submitted the return for the year ending December
31, 1958 showing the agricultural income from tea estates.
A number of notices were served subsequently and there was
further exchange of correspondence. It was alleged in the
petitions filed by the company that a letter was received
dated January 23, 1960 from the Agricultural Income-tax
Officer in which it was stated that the company had failed
to submit the returns for the years 1950-51 to 1958-59 and
it was asked to show cause why the assessments for these
years should not be completed summarily. After further
exchange of correspondence the company received an
assessment order dated June 19, 1961 in respect
783
of the assessment year 1951-52 which was made under s. 20(4)
of the Act together with a notice of demand for payment of a
certain amount of agricultural income-tax. Similar
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assessment orders were passed under s. 20(4) and demands
created in respect of the assessment years 1952-53, 1953-54,
1954-55 and 1955-56. All these assessments were challenged
by means of five petitions under Art. 226 of the
Constitution. The main point raised in all these petitions
was that unless individual notices under s. 19(2) of the Act
had been served no assessment could be made under s. 20(4)
except by way of proceedings under s. 30 of the Act.
In the returns which were filed by the Agricultural
Incometax Officer to all the petitions filed in the High
Court it was maintained that the assessees had refused to
accept the service of the notices under ss. 19(2) and 30 of
the Act. The notice under s. 19(1) had been published in
the Assam Gazette and the assessees were bound to make a
return pursuant to that notice. It was denied that there
was any necessity of serving notices under ss. 19(2) or 30
of the Act and that the assessments which had been made were
barred by limitation.
A division bench of the Assam & Nagaland High Court
consisting of Mehrotra, C.J. and S.K. Dutta, J. allowed all
the petitions but delivered separate judgments. The learned
Chief Justice held that where no return had been filed
pursuant to a general notice under s. 19(1) the
Agricultural Income-tax Officer was bound to proceed under
s. 30 and issue a notice under s. 19(2) of the Act within
the prescribed period, namely, three years of the end of the
financial year. He further held that there was no service
of notice on the respondent in respect of the assessment
years in question either under s. 19(2) or s. 30 of the Act.
S.K. Dutta, J., came to the same conclusion as the learned
Chief Justice but he relied on a judgment of the Calcutta
High Court in Commissioner of Agricultural Income-tax v.
Sultan Ali Gharami(1) in which a dissent had been expressed
from the Bombay judgment in Harakchand Makanji & Co.
v.Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay City(2) on the
question as to when proceedings relating to assessment could
be regarded as having commenced. According to the learned
judge if no return is made in response to a public notice
under s. 19(1) of the Act and no individual notice is served
under s. 19(2) there would be no pending proceedings and it
would be a case of escaped assessment. But this would be so
only after the expiry of the financial year. In other words
after the publication of the notice under s. 19(1) there
would be no escapement of income till the end of the
financial year. Once the financial year is over and no
return has been made in response to a notice under
(1) 20 I.T.R. 432. (2) 16 I.T.R. 119.
L15 Sup. CI/69--6
784
s. 19(1) and no individual notice has been served under s.
19(2) a case would arise of "escaped assessment for the
financial year."
The relevant provisions in Chapter IV of the Act may now
be noticed. Sections 19 and 20 contain provisions similar
to ss. 22 and 23 of the Income-tax Act. Under s. 19(1) of
the Act the Agricultural Income-tax Officer before the
specified date shall give notice by publication in the press
or otherwise requiring every person whose agricultural
income exceeds the limits of taxable income prescribed in s.
6 to furnish within such period not being less than 30 days
as may be specified a return in the prescribed form setting
forth his agricultural income during the previous year.
Sub-section (2) provides that in the case of any person
whose total agricultural income is, in the opinion of the
Agricultural Income tax Officer, of such amount as to render
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such person liable to payment of agricultural income tax for
any financial year, he may serve in that financial year a
notice requiring him to furnish within the prescribed period
a return. Sub-section (3) enables a person who has not
furnished a return within the time allowed by or under sub-
s. (1) or sub-s. (2) to furnish a return or a revised return
at any time before the assessment is made. Thus sub-ss. (1),
(2) and (3) of s. 19 of the Act are identical with and
correspond to sub-ss. (1), (2) and (3) of s. 22 of the
Income tax Act.
Under s. 20 of the Act if the Agricultural Income-tax
Officer is satisfied that a return made under s. 19 is
correct and complete he has to assess total agricultural
income of the assessee ’according to it. If he has reason
to believe that such a return is incorrect or incomplete he
has to serve a notice requiring the person who has made the
return to produce any evidence on which he may rely in
support of the return. After hearing such evidence as the
person making the return may produce and such other evidence
as the officer may require on specified points the assess-
ment order is to be made. These are the provisions of
sub-ss. (1), (2) and (3). Sub-s. (4) is in the following
terms :--
"If the principal officer of any company
or other person fails to make a return under
sub-section (1 ) or, sub-section (2) of
section 19, as the case may be or having
made the return, fails to comply with all the
terms of the notice issued under sub-section
(2) of this section, or to produce any
evidence required under sub-section (3) of
this section, the Agricultural Incometax
Officer shall make the assessment to the best
of his judgment, and determine the sum
payable by the assessee on the basis of such
assessment
Provided......................."
785
Turning to s. 23 of the Income-tax Act, sub-sections (1),
(2) and (3) thereof correspond to sub-sections (1), (2) and
(3) of s. 20 of the Act. Sub-section (4) of s. 23 reads :--
"if any person fails to make the return
required by any notice given under sub-section
(2) of section 22 and has not made a return
or a revised return under sub-section (3) of
the same section or fails to comply with all
the terms of a notice issued under
subsection (4) of the same section or, having
made a return, fails to comply with all the
terms of a notice issued under sub-section
(2) of this section, the Incometax Officer
shall make the assessment to the best of his
judgment and determine the sum payable by
the assessee on the basis of such assessment
and in the case of a firm may refuse to
register it or may cancel its registration if
it is already registered".
Provided .............."
Section 30 of the Act which corresponds to s. 34 of the
Incometax Act which deals with income escaping assessment
may now be reproduced :--
"If for any reason any agricultural
income chargeable to agricultural income-tax
has escaped assessment for any financial year,
or has been assessed at too/ow a rate or has
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been the subject of undue relief under this
Act, the Agricultural Income-tax Officer may,
at any time within three years of the end of
that financial year, serve on the person
liable to pay agricultural income-tax on such
agricultural income or, in the case of a
company on the principal officer thereof, a
notice containing all or any of the
requirements which may be included in a notice
under sub-section (2) of section 19, and may
proceed to assess or reassess such income, and
the provisions of this Act shall, so far as
may be, apply ’accordingly as if the notice
were a notice issued under that sub-section:
Provided ............... ,,
The principal contention raised on behalf of the appellant
is that for an assessment to be made under s. 20(4) of the
Act it is not necessary that proceedings should have been
taken under s. 30. The argument is that assessment
proceedings commence with the publication of a general
notice under s. 19(1) and it is open to the Agricultural
Income-tax Officer to make
786
the best judgment assessment under s. 20(4) without any
limitation as to time. It is not necessary to issue any
individual notice under s. 19(2) or to initiate proceedings
under s. 30 in such a situation. Reliance has been placed
on the observations in Harakchand Makanji & Co. v.
Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay City(1) that once a
public notice is given under sub-s. (1) of s. 22 of the
Income-tax Act, which is similar in terms to s. 19(1) of
the Act, the assessment proceedings should be deemed to
have commenced and there is no obligation on the Income-tax
Officer to serve an ’assessee individually as well. But in
the same case it was said that "a notice under s. 34 is
only necessary if at the end of the assessment year no
return has made ’by the assessee and the Income-tax
authorities wish to proceed under s. 22(2) by serving a
notice individually. It may then be said that as the
assessment year had come to an end and as no return had been
furnished and as the authorities wished to proceed under
section 22(2) they should not do so without a notice under
section 34".
The above view was approved by this Court in The
Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay v. Ranchhoddas
Karsondas, Bombay(2), but the portion which has been
extracted does not support the contention which has been
pressed on behalf of the appellant. Indeed it has been
relied upon more firmly by the counsel for the respondents.
If this view is accepted to be correct it follows that a
notice under s. 30 of the Act, in the present case, would be
necessary if at the end of the assessment year no return has
been made by the assessee and the authorities wish to
proceed under s. 19(2). The case would be entirely
different where he himself chooses voluntarily to. make a
return. This he can do after the publication of a general
notice under s. 19(1) of the Act. If the return is filed no
question arises of any income having escaped assessment.
The return under the provisions of s. 19(3) of the Act can
be furnished at any time before the assessment is made.
This is what this Court held in The State of Assam Anr. v.
Deva Prasad Barua & Anr.(3).
The position is altogether different if no return has
been made by the assessee and where income has not been
assessed at all because for one reason or the other no
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assessment proceedings were initiated. That would be a case
of "escaped assessment" -within s. 30 of the Act. The
matter was examined at length by this Court in Ghansyam Das
v. Regional Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax, Nagpur(4)
with reference to the provisions . of the Central Provinces
& Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947. The
(1) 16 I.T.R. 119. (2) [1960] 1 S.C.R. 1l4.
(3) [1969] 1 S.C.R. 698. (4) [1964] 4 S.C.R. 436.
787
following principles were laid down in that case which are
noteworthy :--
(1) In the case of a registered dealer the
proceedings before the Commissioner started
factually when a return was made or when a
notice was issued to him either under s.
10(3) (under which the Commissioner has to
issue a notice if no return is
submitted) or under s. 11(4)(which provides
for the best judgment assessment) of the
Sales Tax Act. The statutory obligation to
file a return did not initiate the
proceedings.
(2) Once a statutory return was filed pursuant
to a notice under s. 10(3) or s. 11 of the
Sales Tax Act the proceedings did not come to
an end until the final assessment was made.
(3) The expression "escaped assessment"in s.
11A of the Sales Tax Act included that of a
turnover which had not been assessed at all
because for one reason or the other no
assessment proceedings were initiated and no
assessment was made in respect thereof.
Keeping in view the above principles it must be held
that in the absence of a return having been filed by the
assessees in the present case pursuant to a general notice
under s. 29(1) of the Act assessment could be made only
after due notice s. 19(2) or by initiating proceedings
under s. 30 of the Act. Section 19(2) requires that an
individual notice is to be served in the financial year. If
no notice is served under that section proceedings under s.
30 can be initiated by a notice in accordance with that
section within three years of the end of that financial
year. In this connection it may also be remembered that s.
43(2)(a) of the Act confers a valuable right on the
assessee in the matter of choosing the forum for the
assessment. According to that provision an assessee may on
receipt of the first notice served on him under s. 19(2)
apply to the Agricultural Income-tax Officer by whom such
notice is served, to be assessed at the usual place of
residence or at the place where the accounts relating to his
agricultural income are kept. The Agricultural Income-tax
Officer can then make an order that the assessee shall be
assessed at the place specified in the application or he has
to refer the matter to the Assistant Commissioner of
Agricultural Income-tax whose decision shall be final. No
such right is conferred on the assessee with reference to
publication of a general notice under s. 19 (1 ). It shows,
therefore that the proceedings for assessment under the Act
can be initiated only by
788
notice trader s. 19(2) or by having resort to the provisions
of s. 30 of the Act.
Counsel for the appellant has sought to make a
distinction between the decision given under the provisions
of the Incometax Act by pointing out that under s. 20(4) of
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the Act best judgment assessment can be made on the
failure to make a return under sub-section (1) or sub-
section (2) of s. 19 whereas under s. 23 (4) of the Income-
tax Act such an assessment can be made only where any person
fails to make the return required by any notice given under
sub-section (2) of s. 22 which is equivalent to s. 19(2) of
the Act. This distinction is hardly material when the
principles which have been laid down by this Court are kept
in view. In support of his contention counsel for the
appellant has also called attention to a decision of the
Privy Council in Gokuldas Ratanti Mandavia v. Commissioner
of Income-tax(1) in which the provisions of the East African
Income-tax (Management) Act, 1952 came up for consideration.
Those provisions are altogether different and the decision
rested on the wording of s. 71 of that enactment. It
cannot, therefore, be of any assistance in the present
case.
For the reasons given above the appeals fail and they
are dismissed with costs. One hearing fee.
V.P.S. Appeals dismissed.
(1) 38 I.T.R. 224 (P.C.)
789