Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF U.P. & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
RAZA BULAND SUGAR CO. LTD., RAMPUR
DATE OF JUDGMENT27/02/1979
BENCH:
KAILASAM, P.S.
BENCH:
KAILASAM, P.S.
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
CITATION:
1979 AIR 1104 1979 SCR (3) 419
1979 SCC (3) 96
ACT:
U.P. Agricultural Income-tax Act (1948)-S. 18
Assessment of tax-If could be made against partners of a
firm without issuing notice to the firm. Plea not taken at
the first instance-If could be raised later.
HEADNOTE:
Two joint stock companies entered into agreements with
a former Princely State for the grant of agricultural land
on payment of fair and equitable land revenue. Later the two
companies formed into a partnership firm. On the merger of
the State with the Union of India, the Assessing Authority
under the U.P. Agricultural Income-tax Act issued notices to
the two companies to submit their returns of agricultural
income, which the companies did.
In writ petitions filed by the companies challenging
the assessment orders, the High Court accepted the
contention that since the lands were neither assessed to
land revenue nor were they assessed to any local rate or
cess as required by s. 2(a) of the Act, they were not
assessable to agricultural income-tax and remanded the cases
to the Assessing Authority for determination of this
question.
Before the Assessing Authority, on remand the companies
raised for the first time the contention that since no
notice had been issued to the firm of which they were
partners, the assessment was invalid. The Assessing
Authority rejected this contention. He also held that the
lands satisfied the requirements of s.2(a).
In writ petitions filed by the two companies a single
Judge of the High Court upheld the contention that the
Assessing Authority committed an error of law in assessing
the two partners without assessing the firm. This view was
affirmed by a Division Bench on appeal.
On further appeal to this Court it was contended that
in the absence of a prohibition in the Act, the two
companies could be validly assessed to tax without assessing
the firm.
Allowing the appeal,
^
HELD: 1. The Assessing Authority was not in error in
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assessing tax on the returns submitted by the two companies
and therefore the argument that assessment of the companies,
without assessing the firm, was not legal, is without
substance. [425 H-426 A]
2. "Person" defined in the section means an individual
and includes a firm or a company. [423 G]
3. There is nothing in the Act prohibiting the
Assessing Authority from proceeding against individuals
forming a partnership. Section 18 enables the authorities,
while proceeding with assessment of a firm or a company, not
to
420
determine the tax payable by the firm or the company but to
proceed to determine the agricultural income of each member
of the firm. The provisions do not apply to a case where the
returns were submitted by the partners and the assessment
made on that basis. The section would be applicable if
assessment proceedings against a firm are stopped and the
share of the individual is to be determined under the
provisions of s. 18. [424 F]
4. The well established position under the Income-Tax
Act (Central Act) with regard to assessment of firms is that
where a firm has not made a return it is open to the
department to assess a partner directly in respect of his
share of the firm’s income without resorting to the
machinery provided under the Act and without making an
assessment on the firm, the only prohibition being against
double taxation. [424 H]
C.I.T. v. Murlidhar Jhawar & Purna Ginning & Pressing
Factory, 60 ITR 95 SC; referred to.
5. Secondly, the plea that assessment proceedings ought
to have been taken against the firm, was not taken by them
in the first instance either before the Assessing Authority
or before the High Court. This plea cannot be allowed to be
taken at a later stage. The assessees submitted their
returns on the basis of their respective incomes. [425 F-426
A]
6. The Assessing Authority has correctly come to the
conclusion that the agreement between the parties provided
for payment of land revenue. [426 F-G]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2281 of
1969
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order
dated 6th December, 1965 of the Allahabad High Court in
Special Appeal No. 978/62.
Shiv Pujan Singh and M. V. Goswami for the Appellant.
B. P. Maheshwari and Suresh Sethi for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KAILASAM, J.-This appeal is by the State of U.P. by
special leave granted by this Court against the judgment and
order of the High Court at Allahabad in Special Appeal No.
978 of 1962.
Two companies, the Raza Sugar Co. Ltd. and the Buland
Sugar Co. Ltd., were incorporated under the Rampur State
Companies Act, 1932. Messrs. Govan Brothers (Rampur) Ltd.
were the common managing agents of the two companies. On
10th May, 1933 the Raza Ltd. and on 11th December, 1934, the
Buland Ltd. entered into agreements with the erstwhile State
of Rampur. The agreements provided that the Rampur State
should grant to the companies leases of the agricultural
land with adequate irrigation facilities suitable for
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cultivation of sugar-cane. The companies were required to
pay fair and equitable land revenue which was to be agreed
upon by the com-
421
panies and the Rampur State. On 5th May, 1935, a partnership
deed was a executed by the Raza Ltd. and the Buland Ltd.
constituting a partnership firm of the two companies in
equal shares known as the Agricultural Company, Rampur. In
the year 1939 the Rampur State leased 2,000 acres of land
and in the year 1946 another 2,000 acres of land to the
Agricultural Company, Rampur. In 1949 the State of Rampur
acceded to the Union of India and was merged with the State
of Uttar Pradesh with effect from Ist December, 1949. The
Rampur State had agreed to exempt the Raza Ltd. and the
Buland Ltd. from all taxes for a period of 15 years from the
date of commencement of their business.
The U.P. Agricultural Income Tax Act was applied to the
areas which formed part of the erstwhile State of Rampur on
Ist July, 1950. The Assessing Authority issued notices under
section 16(4) of the U.P. Agricultural Income Tax Act to the
Raza Ltd. and the Buland Ltd. for furnishing returns of
their agricultural incomes for the years 1357 F to 1361 F.
It may be noted that the notice was not issued to the
Agricultural Company, Rampur. The Raza Ltd. and the Buland
Ltd. submitted their returns. The Assessing Authority
assessed the two companies to agricultural income-tax for
the years concerned. The companies preferred an appeal
against the assessment to the Commissioner, Rohikhand
Division, and also filed writ petition No. 2385 of 1959 in
the High Court of Allahabad challenging the assessment
orders. On 17th April, 1961 the writ petition was allowed
and the order of assessment was quashed with a direction
that fresh assessments may be made. The Commissioner also
directed the Assessing Authority to make fresh assessments
in the light of the observations made by the High Court in
its judgment dated 17th April, 1961, allowing the writ
petition No. 2385 of 1959.
When the Assessing Authority started fresh hearing in
pursuance of the order of the High Court an objection was
raised with regard to the assessability of the two companies
on the ground that no notice had been sent to the
Agricultural Company, Rampur. The Assessing Authority
negatived the plea and assessed the Raza Ltd. and the Buland
Ltd. for the years 1357 F to 1361 F and also for the years
1362 F to 1363 F. Against the order of the Assessing
Authority the two companies which in the meantime became
amalgamated as the Raza Buland Sugar Co. Ltd., Rampur, filed
a writ petition No. 1982 of 1962 in the High Court of
Judicature at Allahabad and prayed for the quashing of the
assessment order dated 29th June, 1962, made by the
Assessing Authority against the Raza Ltd. and the Buland
Ltd. for the assessment years 1357 F to 1363 F.
422
The writ petition was heard by a single Judge of the
High Court who by his order dated 4th October, 1962 allowed
the writ petition on the ground that the Assessing Authority
committed an error of law in assessing the two partners of
the Agricultural Company, Rampur, and not assessing the firm
as such. Aggrieved by the order the State filed Special
Appeal No. 978 of 1962 before the Division Bench of the High
Court at Allahabad. The Division Bench of the High Court by
its order dated 6th December, 1965, dismissed the Special
Appeal. An application for leave to appeal to the Supreme
Court was dismissed by the High Court. The appellants then
preferred Special Leave Petition No. 1724 of 1969 to this
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Court and on the leave being granted this appeal is now
before us.
The main contention that has been raised before us by
the appellants is that there being no express prohibition
under the U.P. Agricultural Income Tax Act an assessment can
be validly and legally made on the individual partners, in
the present case the two companies, without proceeding
against the firm. It was pleaded that the tax could be
assessed either on the partnership firm or on the partners
invididually and that the view of the High Court that the
tax can only be recovered from the firm is erroneous.
The facts of the case disclose that on receipt of a
notice by the Assessing Authority under section 16(4) of the
U.P. Agricultural Income Tax Act, the two companies Raza
Ltd. and the Buland Ltd. submitted their returns relating to
the income of the two companies. In the return it was stated
that the income was half of the income received from the
partnership firm, the Agricultural Company, Rampur. The
assessment was made on the basis of the returns. The
assessment was questioned before the Commissioner and in the
writ petition before the High Court of Allahabad on the
ground that the lands were neither assessed to land revenue
in the United Provinces nor were they subject to local rate
or cess assessed and collected by an officer of the
Provincial Government. This contention was accepted by the
High Court which directed the Assessing Authority to
determine the question whether the lands were assessed to
land revenue, in the United Provinces or they were subject
to local rate or cess assessed and collected by an officer
as required under section 2(a) of the U.P. Agricultural
Income Tax Act, 1948. After remand the Assessing Authority
found that the lands from which the income accrued satisfied
the requirements of the section. For the first time before
the Assessing Authority the point was raised that as no
notice was issued to the partnership firm, the partners i.e.
two companies cannot be proceeded with for assessment of the
tax. When this plea was rejected by the
423
Assessing Authority the matter was taken up before the High
Court, first before a single Judge and then before the
Division Bench, which accepted the contention of the two
companies and held that in the absence of notice to the
partnership firm proceedings cannot be taken against the two
companies for assessment of the tax.
The relevant provisions under the United Provinces
Agricultural Income-Tax Act, 1948, may be noticed. Section
2(5) defines "Assessee" as meaning a person by whom
agricultural income-tax is payable. "Company" is defined
under section 2(8) as meaning a company as defined in the
Indian Income-tax Act, 1922. The Indian Income-tax Act,
1922, section 2(5A) defines a company as follows:-
"(5A) "company" means-
(i) any Indian company, or
(ii) any association, whether incorporated or not
and whether Indian or non-Indian, which is or
was assessable or was assessed as a company
for the assessment for the year ending on the
31st day of March, 1948, or which is declared
by general or special order of the Central
Board of Revenue to be a company for the
purposes of this Act;"
"Firm" is defined in section 2(9) as having the same meaning
assigned to it in the Indian Partnership Act, 1932. Section
4 of the Indian Partnership Act, 1932, states that "Persons
who have entered into partnership with one another are
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called individually ’partners’ and collectively a firm and
the name under which their business is carried on is called
the ’firm name’". "Person" is defied in section 2(11) as
meaning an individual or association of individuals, owning
or holding property for himself or for any other, or partly
for his own benefit and partly for that of another, either
as owner, trustee, receiver, manager, administrator or
executor or in any capacity recognized by law, and includes
an undivided Hindu family, firm or company but does not
include a local authority. It may be noted that by the
definition the word "person" means an individual and
includes a firm or a company. The liability of the person
whether he be an individual, partner or the company for the
agricultural income-tax is therefore beyond question. The
only point that is raised in this case is as to when there
is a registered firm of which the two companies were
partners the assessment proceedings cannot be taken against
the two partners, namely the two companies, without
proceeding against the
424
firm. In support of this contention section 18 of the U.P.
Agricultural Income Tax Act was strongly relied on. Section
18 confers the power to assess individual members of certain
firms, associations and companies. Sub-section (1) of
section 18 enables the Assistant Collector with the previous
approval of the Collector of the disrict concerned to pass
order under the circumstances stated in the sub-Sec. that
the sum payable as agricultural income-tax by the firm or
association shall not be determined, and thereupon the share
of each member in the agricultural income of the firm or
association shall be included in his total agricultural
income for the purpose of his assessment thereon. Section
18(2) states that under certain circumstances the Collector
may, with the previous approval of the Commissioner of the
area concerned, pass an order that the sum payable as
agricultural income-tax by the company shall not be
determined and thereupon the proportionate share of each
member in the agricultural income of the company, whether
such agricultural income has been distributed to the members
or not, shall be included in the total agricultural income
of such member for the purpose of his assessment thereon.
The submission of the learned counsel for the respondent
which was accepted by the High Court was that if the
Agricultural Income-tax authorities wanted to proceed
against the individual members of the firm they ought to
have taken proceedings under section 18(1) and in the
absence of such proceedings the partners, in this case the
two companies, could not have been proceeded with. The
argument thus presented though looks attractive does not
stand scrutiny. There is nothing in the provisions of the
Act prohibiting the Assessing Authority from proceeding
against the individuals forming the partnership. Section 18
enables the authorities while proceeding with the assessment
of a firm or a company not to determine the tax payable by
the firm or the company but proceed to determine the
agricultural income of each member of the fir. The
provisions do not apply to a case where the returns are
submitted by the partners, as in this case, and the
assessment made on that basis. The section would undoubtedly
be applicable if assessment proceeding against the firm is
stopped and the share of the individual is to be determined
under the provisions of section 18. Our attention was not
drawn to any provision in the Act which would bar the
income-tax authorities from proceeding against the
individual partners on the returns submitted by the partners
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as such. Under the Indian Income-tax Act it has been held
that where a firm has not made a return and has not offered
its income for assessment, the Department may assess a
partner directly in respect of his share of the firm’s
income without resorting to the machinery provided under the
Act and without making an assessment on the firm, (CIT v.
Murlidhar Jhawar & Purna Ginning
425
& Pressing Factory(1). It has been further held that once
the Department has exercised its option and assessed the
partners individually it cannot thereafter assess the same
income in the hands of the firm as an unregistered firm. It
is not necessary for us to refer to the distinction that is
maintained under the Income-tax Act between a registered and
unregistered firm for no such distinction is maintained
under the U.P. Agricultural Income Tax Act. The only
prohibition is against double taxation. In this case no
assessment proceedings have been taken against the firm much
less any tax imposed on it. The principle that is applicable
in tax statutes is that the income is subject to tax in the
hands of the same person only once. Thus, if an association
or a firm is taxed in respect of its income the same income
cannot be charged again in the hands of the members
individually and vice versa. The trust income cannot be
taxed in the hands of the settlor and also in the hands of
the trustee or beneficiary or in the hands of both the
trustee as well as the beneficiary. These principles are, of
course, subject to any special provision enabling double
taxation in the statute. In the circumstances, we are unable
to share the view of the High Court that without proceeding
against the firm the Assessing Authority was in error in
proceeding against the two partners of the firm on the basis
of the returns submitted by them.
There is yet another objection to the upholding of the
plea of the respondents. Apart from submitting the returns
their only plea in the earlier writ petition before the High
Court was that the lands did not satisfy the requirements of
the provisions of the U.P. Agricultural Income Tax Act in
that they were not assessed to land revenue in the United
Provinces nor were they subject to local rate or cess. This
plea was accepted but the High Court remanded it for the
determination of the question whether the land was assessed
to land revenue or was subject to local rate or cess. The
plea that the assessment proceedings ought to have been
taken against the firm was not taken. This plea cannot be
allowed to be taken in proceedings after remand. The
objection was taken only before the Assessing Authority
after remand. It is true that in the proceedings before the
Assessing Authority the assessment relating to two Fasli
years 1362 and 1363 which did not form part of the
proceedings before the High Court was also taken up. But
here again the returns were submitted by the two companies
on the basis of their respective income. In the
circumstances, it cannot be said that the tax authorities
were in error in assessing a tax on the returns submitted by
the two companies. The plea, therefore, that the
426
assessment on the two companies, in the absence of
proceedings against the firm of which the companies were
partners, is not legal cannot be upheld.
The second contention that was raised before us was
that it has not been established that the lands were either
assessed to land revenue in the United Provinces or were
subject to local rate or cess assessed and collected by an
officer of the Provincial Government. As the Single Judge of
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the High Court and the Division Bench of the High Court
accepted the plea of the assessees that the assessment
proceedings against them could not be sustained because of
the failure of the authorities to take proceedings against
the firm, they considered it unnecessary to go into this
question. It is unfortunate that this aspect of the matter
was not considered either by the Single Judge or by the
Division Bench of the High Court. We do not think it
desirable to remit the case to the High Court for the
determination of this question as the matter has been long
pending. This plea has been elaborately considered by the
Assessing Authority which has pointed out that agreements
with the Raza Sugar Co. Ltd. and the Buland Sugar Co. Ltd.
show that it was stipulated that the Rampur State shall from
time to time grant to the Company lease of agricultural
land. It was further provided that such fair equitable land
revenue as may be agreed between the Rampur State and the
Company shall be payable in respect of such land and shall
be subject to revision by agreement every 15 years. The
lease also provided that fair and equitable water rates and
cesses shall be payable in respect of the land. In section
4(7) of the U.P. Land Revenue Act it is mentioned that the
word "Mal Guzari" will be applicable where it has been duly
assessed or has been determined by means of an auction or by
any other means. On a consideration of all the relevant
facts the Assessing Authority came to the conclusion that
the agreement in favour of the companies provided for
payment of land revenue and the word "rent" used in the
leases has to be considered in relation to the original
agreements and as such it is seen that the agreement
provided for payment of land revenue. The learned counsel
appearing for the respondents was unable to challenge the
correctness of the finding of the Assessing Authority. On a
consideration of all the facts that were placed before the
Assessing Authority, we do not see any reason for not
accepting the conclusion arrived at by the Authority. This
issue also we find against the assessee.
In the result we hold that the High Court was in error
in coming to the conclusion that the assessment proceedings
against the respon-
427
dent were unsustainable. We set aside the judgment and order
of the High Court and restore the order of the Assessing
Authority.
N.V.K. Appeal allowed.
428