Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF WEALTH TAX WEST BENGAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
IMPERIAL TOBACCO CO. OF INDIA LTD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
15/04/1966
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
SHAH, J.C.
SIKRI, S.M.
CITATION:
1967 AIR 230 1966 SCR 174
CITATOR INFO :
F 1976 SC 203 (10)
ACT:
Wealth Tax Act (37 of 1957), ss. 17(b) and 27-Divergence of
views in High Courts as to meaning of "Information" in s.
34(2)(b) Income Tax Act which is in pari materia with s.
17(b)-Duty of Tribunal to make reference to High Court.
HEADNOTE:
Orders of reassessment under s. 16(3) read with s. 17(b) of
the Wealth Tax Act were, passed by the Wealth Tax Officer in
respect of two assessment years, and by those orders,
amounts which had been formerly allowed as deduction were
included in the total wealth of the respondent. The orders
were set aside by the Tribunal on the ground that the
reassessment was based on a mere change or opinion on the
part of the Officer, because, there was no "information" in
his Possession, as required by s. 17(b), which could lead
him to believe that chargeable wealth of the respondent had
escaped assessment. The appellant’s applications to the
Tribunal and the High Court, for a reference to the High
Court, were dismissed.
In appeal to this Court,
HELD: The Tribunal should be directed to make a
reference either to the High Court under s. 27(1) or to this
Court under s. 27 (3A) of the Wealth Tax Act. [179 G].
There is a divergence of opinion among the High Courts as to
the meaning of the word "information" in. s. 34(1) (b) of
the Income-tax Act, and some High Courts have taken the view
that a change of opinion by the Income-tax Officer, in
certain circumstances, will justify the issue of notice
under s. 34 (1)(b) of the Income-tax Act. Since that
section is in pari materia with s. 17(b) of the Wealth Tax
Act, a question of law did irises a,; to the interpretation
of the word "information" in s. 17(b) of the Wealth Tax Act
and it should have been referred by the Tribunal to the High
Court. [179 E]
JUDGMENT:
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CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 1062 and
1063 of 1966.
Appeals by special leave from the judgment and order dated
February 15, 1965 of the Calcutta High Court in matters Nos.
231 ,in,] 232 of 1964.
R. M. Hazarnavis, K. D. Karkhanis, R. H. Dhebar and R. N.
Sachthey, for the appellant.
A. K. Sen, T. A. Rancachandran, J. B. Dadachanji, O. C.
Mathur and Ravinder Narain, for the respondent.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
Wanchoo, J. These two appeals by special leave arise out of
two applications by the appellant to the Income-tax
Appellate
175
Tribunal for reference to the High Court of a question of
law, which was formulated as follows:-
"Whether on the facts and in the circumstances
of the case, the Tribunal was right in holding
that the reassessment proceedings under s.
17(b) of the Wealth Tax Act were not validly
initiated and in setting aside the same."
The facts which led to the applications for reference are
briefly these. The respondent submitted wealth-tax returns
for the years 1957-58 and 1958-59. For the year 1957-58 the
respondent claimed that an amount of Rs. 51 lakhs and odd
being provision for taxation and another amount of Rs. 37
lakhs and odd being provision for contingencies, being
ascertained liability, should be allowed as deduction from
the total wealth. For the year 1958-59, the respondent
claimed Rs. 31 lakhs and odd being provision for
contingencies as ascertained liability as deduction from the
total wealth.
Assessment for the year 1957-58 was completed on December
30, 1957 and the Wealth-tax Officer accepted the contention
of the respondent and allowed the claim for deduction.
Subsequently the Commissioner of Wealth-tax by his order
dated December 29, 1958 passed under s. 25(2) of the Wealth
Tax Act, No. XXXVII of 1957, (hereinafter referred to as the
Act) disallowed the deduction of Rs. 51 lakhs and odd being
the provision for taxation for the assessment year 1957-58.
The order of the Wealth-tax Officer allowing deduction for
contingencies for the assessment year 1957-58 however stood.
The assessment for the year 1958-59 was completed on
December 9, 1958 and deduction was allowed for contingencies
only. It may be added that we are not concerned in the
present appeals so far as deduction for provision for taxa-
tion is concerned. On March 22, 1960, the Wealth-tax
Officer completed the assessment of the respondent for the
year 1959-60 and disallowed the claim for deduction of the
provision for contingencies. On June 2, 1960, the Wealth-
tax Officer issued two notices under s. 17(b) of the Act for
reassessment of net wealth for the years 1957-58 and 1958-
59. On September 24, 1961 orders of reassessment under s.
16(3) read with s. 17(b) of the Act were passed in respect
of the assessment years 1957-58 and 1958-59 and by these
orders the amounts which had been formerly allowed as
deduction with respect to contingencies were included in the
total wealth of the respondent. The respondent then went in
appeal against the two reassessment orders and the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner sustained the decision of the Wealth-
tax Officer with respect to the reassessments in question.
The case of the respondent was that the Wealth-tax Officer
had no information on the basis of which he could proceed to
reassess the net wealth of the respondent and in this
connection reliance was placed on the words "in consequence
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of any information in his possession" appearing in s. 17(b)
of the Act.
176
The respondent then went in appeal to the Appellate Tribunal
and his contention there was that the issue of notices under
s. 17(b) of the Act was invalid as it was based on a mere
change of opinion on the part of the Wealth-tax Officer, as
at that time there was no information in the possession of
the Wealth-tax Officer which could lead him to believe that
the net wealth chargeable to tax had escaped assessment. It
was contended that such information must be information
which came into possession of the Wealth-tax Officer
subsequent to the making of the original assessment and that
the information must lead him to believe that income
chargeable to tax had escaped assessment. The Tribunal
accepted this contention of the respondent. It may be
pointed out that the assessment made by the Wealth-tax
Officer for the year 1959-60 was taken in appeal to the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner by the respondent and the
respondent’s appeal was dismissed in November 1960. The
Tribunal pointed out that if the Wealth-tax Officer had
waited till after the decision of the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner about the assessment for the year 1959-60 and
then issued notices there would have been sufficient
information for the purpose of s. 17(b) with the Wealth-tax
Officer to authorise him to issue notice thereunder-, but as
the Wealth-tax Officer issued the notices in June 1960
before that appeal was decided, it was only a case of change
’of opinion by the Wealth-tax Officer which did not justify
issue of notices under s. 17(b). The Tribunal also pointed
out that the departmental representative was specifically
asked what the information was upon which the Wealth-tax
Officer came to the conclusion that taxable wealth had
escaped assessment. The departmental representative was
unable to point to any specific information which came into
the possession of the Wealth-tax Officer and which could
lead him to issue the notices in question. The Tribunal
therefore held that the reassessment proceedings under s.
17(b) for the years 1957-58 and 1958-59 were not validly
initiated and set them aside. Thereupon the appellant
applied to the Tribunal for making references under s. 27(1)
of the Act. The Tribunal rejected the applications. The
appellant then applied to the High Court under s. 27(3) of
the Act for direction to the Tribunal to state a case. The
High Court however rejected the applications summarily.
Thereupon the appellant applied to this Court for special
leave which was granted; and that is how the matter has come
before us.
The main contention that has been urged on behalf of the
appellant before us is that there is divergence of opinion
among the High Courts on the question as to what constitutes
"information" for the purpose of s. 34(1)(b) of the Indian
Income-tax Act. No. IT of 1922, (hereinafter referred to as
the Income-tax Act). That section is in pari materia with
s. 17(b) of the Act and therefore a question of law did
arise which should have been referred to the
177
High Court for its decision on the question raised by the
appellant. Reliance in this connection is placed on the
decision of this Court in Maharajkumar Kamal Singh v.
Commissioner of Income-tax Bihar(1) where this Court held
that "the word ’information’ in section 34(1)(b) included
information as to the true and correct state of the law, and
so would cover information as to relevant judicial
decisions". A further question was raised in that case,
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namely, "whether it would be open to the Income-tax Officer
to take action under s. 34(1) on the ground that he thinks
that his original decision in making the order of assessment
was wrong without any fresh information from an external
source or whether the successor of the Income-tax Officer
can act under s. 34 on the ground that the order of
assessment passed by his predecessor was erroneous". That
question was not decided by this Court in that case, though
this Court pointed out that in construing the scope and
effect of s. 34, the High Courts had expressed divergent
views on the point. It is urged on behalf of the appellant
that the precise question left undecided by this Court in
Maharajkumar Kamalsingh’s case(1) arises in the present
case, and as there are divergent views taken by the High
Courts on that question, a question of law did arise on the
order of the Appellate Tribunal and therefore the Tribunal
should have made a reference.
In Commissioner of Income-tax Bombay v. Sir Mohomed Yusuf
Ismail(1) it was held by the Bombay High Court as far back
as 1943 that under s. 34 a mere change of opinion on the
same facts or on a question of law or the mere discovery of
a mistake of law is not sufficient information within the
meaning of s. 34 and that in order to take action under s.
34 there must be some information as a fact which leads the
Income-tax Officer to discover that income has escaped or
has been under-assessed.
The same view was taken in a later case by the Nagpur High
Court in Income-tax Appellate Tribunal Bombay v. B. P.
Byramji & Co.(1) where it was again emphasised that a mere
change of opinion by the Income-tax Officer is no ground for
taking action under s. 34,
Further in Bhimraj Pannalal v. Commissioner of Income-tax
Bihar(1) it was held by the Patna High Court that "an order
of assessment made after investigation by a particular
officer should Jr not at his sweet will and pleasure be
allowed to be revised merely because he changed his opinion
and that there must exist something either suppressed by the
assessee or a fact or a point of law which was inadvertently
or otherwise omitted to be considered by the Income-tax
Officer, before he can proceed to act under s. 34; and a
mere change of opinion on the same facts and law is not
covered by that section."
(1) [1959] supp. 1 S.C.R. 10: (1959) 35 I.T.R. 1.
(2) (1944) 12 T.T.R. S.
(3) (1946) 14 I.T.R. 174.
(4) (1957) 32 I.T.R. 289.
178
The appellant on the other hand relies on some recent deci-
sions which show that there is some divergence of opinion in
the High Courts on this question. In Salem Provident Fund
Society Limited v. Commissioner of Income-tax Madras(1) the
Madras High Court held that "information for the purpose of
section 34 need not be wholly extraneous to the record of
the original assessment. A mistake apparent on the face of
the order of assessment would itself constitute
’information’; whether someone else gave that information to
the Income-tax Officer or whether he informed himself was
immaterial."
In Commissioner of Income-tax v. Rathinasabhapathy Muda-
liar(1) the Madras High Court again held that "the discovery
of the Income-tax Officer after he had made the assessments
that he had committed an error in not including the minor’s
income in the father’s assessment was ’information’ obtained
after the assessment, and even though all the facts were in
the original records, the case was covered by section
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34(1)(b) of the Income-tax Act and the reassessment was not
invalid, and this was not a case of mere change of opinion
on the same facts but a case of getting information that
income had escaped assessment."
In Canara Industrial and Banking Syndicate Limited v. Com-
missioner of Income-tax, Mysore,(1) the Mysore High Court
held that "if income had escaped assessment owing to the
failure of the Income-tax Officer to understand the true
implication of a notification, and the Income-tax Officer
later on finds that on a correct interpretation of the
notification the income was liable to be assessed, he can
take proceedings under section 34 for assessment of such
income; the word ’information’ in section 34 is wide enough
to apply to such a case."
The last case to which reference is made is Asghar Ali
Mohammad Ali v. Commissioner of Income-tax(1) wherein the
Allahabad High Court held that "the word ’information’ used
in the provision covers all kinds of information received
from any person whatsoever or in any manner whatsoever; all
that is required is that the Income-tax Officer should learn
something i.e. he should know something which he did not
know previously." It was further held that "if there is
information leading to the belief that income has escaped
assessment, the mere fact that this information has resulted
in a change of opinion will not make section 34
inapplicable. A change of opinion is not sufficient for
initiating proceedings under S. 34, only when such change of
opinion is the result of a different method of reasoning,
and not based on ’information’
(1) (1961) 42 I.T.R. 547. (2) (1964) 51 I.T.R. 204.
(3) (1964) 51 I.T.R. 479. (4) (1964) 52 I.T.R. 962.
179
It does appear that some High Courts at any rate are taking
the view that a change of opinion by the Income-tax Officer
in certain circumstances will be sufficient for the purpose
of s. 34(1) (b) and will justify the issue of a notice
thereunder. It may be added that after the decision of this
Court in Maharajkumar Kamal Sigh’s case(1) it is now settled
that "information in s. 34(1)(b) included information as to
the true and correct state of law, and so would cover
information as to relevant judicial decisions" and that such
information for the purpose of s. 34(1)(b) of the Income-tax
Act need not be confined only to cases where the Income-tax
Officer discovers as a fact that income has escaped
assessment. To that extent the decision of the Bombay High
Court in Sir Mohanmed Yusuf Ismail(1) has been overruled.
That is why the Appellate Tribunal stated in its decision
that if the notices in the present case had been issued
after the decision of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner
in the appeal from the assessment for the year 1959-60,
there would have been information in possession of the
Wealth-tax Officer to justify him in issuing notices under
s. 17(b) of the Act. But in the present case the Wealth-tax
Officer issued notices before that decision was known to him
and the question is whether in the circumstances, in view of
the later decisions of the High Courts to which we have
referred, a question of law arose or not. The language of
s. 17(b) of the Act is in pari materia with the language of
s. 34(1)(b) of the Income-tax Act and therefore the
decisions under s. 34(1)(b) of the latter Act would be
relevant in construing the scope and effect of s. 17(b) of
the Act. There does appear to be divergence of opinion
among the High Courts as to the meaning of the word
"information" in section 34(1)(b) of the Income-tax Act, and
in view of that divergence we are of opinion that a question
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of law did arise in the present case as to the
interpretation of the word "information" in s. 17(b) of the
Act and should have been referred by the Tribunal.
We therefore allow the appeals, set aside the order of the
High Court and direct the Tribunal to state a case referring
the question of law arising in these cases in the form
suggested by the appellant. The Tribunal will be free to
decide whether to refer the matter to the High Court under
s. 27(1) or to this Court under s. 27 (3A) of the Act.
Costs of this Court will abide the result of the reference.
Appeals allowed.
(1) [1959] Supp. 1 S.C.R. 10.
(2) 1944 12 I.T.R. 8.
180