Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 4808 of 2007
PETITIONER:
State of Punjab & Ors
RESPONDENT:
Bhatinda District Coop. Milk P. Union Ltd
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 11/10/2007
BENCH:
S.B. Sinha & Harjit Singh Bedi
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
(Arising out of SLP (C) NO.5040 of 2007)
S.B. Sinha, J.
1. Leave granted.
2. What should be the reasonable period for reopening an order of
assessment under the Punjab General Sales Tax Act is the question involved
in this appeal which arises out of a judgment and order dated 22.12.2006
passed by a Division Bench of the High Court of Punjab and Haryana at
Chandigarh in CWP No.15477 of 2006 whereby and whereunder the writ
petition filed against a notice dated 4.9.2006 issued by Revisional Authority-
cum-Assistant Excise and Taxation Commissioner, Bhatinda to the
respondent was allowed.
3. Before embarking upon the said question, we may notice the basic
fact of the matter.
4. Respondent herein is a federation of milk union. It is a cooperative
society registered under the Punjab Cooperative Societies Act, 1948. It is
also registered as a dealer under the Punjab General Sales Tax Act and the
Rules framed thereunder. It has been running milk plants under the control
of Punjab State Cooperative Milk Producers Federation Limited,
Chandigarh. The Act provides for levy of purchase tax on milk when
purchased for use in the manufacture of goods which are specified in
Schedule C thereof. Milk when purchased for use in the manufacture of any
goods other than tax free goods provides for levy of purchase tax.
5. In respect of the assessment for the year ending 31.3.2000, the
assessment proceedings were completed relying on the return filed by the
appellant on 20.3.2001. Indisputably, in terms of Section 11 of the 1948
Act, a period of three years has been prescribed as a period of limitation as
contained under sub-section (3) of Section 11 for completing assessment
from the last date for filing of return. Sub-section (6) of Section 11 reads as
under :
\023If upon information which has come into his
possession, the Assessing Authority is satisfied
that any dealer has been liable to pay tax under this
Act in respect of any period but has failed to apply
for registration, the Assessing Authority shall,
within five years after the expiry of such period,
after giving the dealer a reasonable opportunity of
being heard, proceed to assess to the best of his
judgment, the amount of tax, if any, due from the
dealer in respect of such period and all subsequent
periods and in case where such dealer has willfully
failed to apply for registration, the Assessing
Authority may direct that the dealer shall pay by
way of penalty, in addition to the amount so
assessed, a sum not exceeding one and a half times
that amount.\024
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Section 21 of the said Act provides for revision. Section 21 of the Act
with which we are concerned herein reads as under:
\02321. Revision-(1) The Commissioner may of his
own motion call for the record of any proceedings
which are pending before, or have been disposed
of by any authority subordinate to him, for the
purpose of satisfying himself as to the legality or
propriety of such proceedings or order made
therein and may pass such order in relation thereto
as he may think fit.
(2) The State Government may by notification
confer on any Officer the powers of the
Commissioner under sub-section (1) to be
exercised subject to such conditions and in respect
of such areas as may be specified in the
notification.
(3) A Tribunal, on application made to it against
an order of the Commissioner under sub-section
(1) within ninety days from the date of
communication of the order, may call for and
examine the record of any such case and pass such
orders thereon as it thinks just and proper.
(4) No order shall be passed under this section
which adversely affects any person unless such
person has been given a reasonable opportunity of
being heard.\024
6. The authority issued notice upon the respondent to show cause as to
why the proposed action under Section 21(1) of the Act be not taken on the
premise that \023illegalities, irregularities and improprieties\024, as enumerated
therein had been found in the order of assessment dated 20.3.2001. Cause
was to be shown on 14.9.2006. Respondent neither appeared before the
revisional authority nor filed any show cause.
7. It filed a writ petition before the Punjab and Haryana High Court
praying, inter alia, for the following reliefs :
\023(i) A writ in the nature of certiorari calling for
the records of the case from the respondents
and quashing Notice (Annexure P1) as time
barred.
(ii) A writ in the nature of prohibition
restraining the respondents No.2 from
imposing, collecting and recovery of
purchase tax proposed in the notice
exercising Revisional powers u/s 21(1) of
the Act.
(iii) Any other writ, order or direction as this
Hon\022ble Court may deems fit and
appropriate in the facts and circumstances of
the case.\024
8. Appellant, in its affidavit in opposition, took a preliminary objection
that the said writ petition was pre-mature and, thus, should not be
entertained being against a mere show cause notice. It was contended that
respondents would be entitled to take all the points raised by it in the writ
petition before the Revisional Authority.
9. The High Court, relying on some of precedents, opined that the order
of assessment having been passed on 20.3.2001 and as the same is sought to
be revised by issuing notice dated 4.9.2006, without assigning any reason
justifying exercise of revisional jurisdiction, the same was wholly
unsustainable in law.
10. The learned counsel appearing on behalf of the appellant, in support
of this appeal, inter alia, submitted that the High Court in passing the
impugned judgment committed a serious illegality in so far as it failed to
take into consideration that no time limit has been fixed for exercise of suo
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moto jurisdiction of the Revisional Authority. It was further submitted that
as it was open to the respondent to raise all contentions before the Revisional
Authority itself, it was not a fit case where the High Court should have
exercised its power of judicial review.
11. Punjab General Sales Tax Act provides for levy of purchase tax on
certain goods which are specified in Schedule C therein; Entry No. 13
whereof reads as under :
\023Milk \026 when purchased for use in the
manufacture of any goods other than tax free
goods for sale.\024
12. Respondent indisputably has been filing quarterly returns before the
assessing authority showing sales turn over and purchase turn over of the
goods. Under the said provision, deposit of sales tax and purchase tax as per
returns is provided for. It castes a duty on the assessee to deposit the
purchase tax on purchase of milk which is used for the manufacture of goods
other than tax-free goods as provided for in the Schedule appended thereto.
It is neither in doubt nor in dispute that the respondent filed returns for all
the quarters for the year ending 31.3.2000. It also stands admitted that the
assessment proceedings were completed on 28.3.2001.
13. Indisputably, books of accounts and other relevant documents were
taken into consideration by the assessing authority while passing the order of
assessment.
14. Sub-section (1) of Section 11 provided for a three years limitation.
We may notice that the said period of limitation was introduced by reason of
Punjab Act No.12 of 1998 and prior thereto a period of five years was
prescribed therefor. Sub-section (3) of Section 11 also provides for a three
years\022 limitation. Sub-section (6) of Section 11 which is the residuary
provision provides for five years\022 limitation.
15. Sub-section (1) of Section 11 empowers the Commissioner to extend
the period of three years for passing the order of assessment wherefor
reasons are required to be recorded in writing subject, however, to the
mximum period of five years. Ordinarily, therefore, a period of three years
has been prescribed for completion of the assessment in terms of the
provisions of the Act. We may also notice that in cases where an assessment
order is to be reviewed, the same should be done within a period of one year.
16. A bare reading of Section 21 of the Act would reveal that although no
period of limitation has been prescribed therefor, the same would not mean
that the suo moto power can be exercised at any time.
17. It is trite that if no period of limitation has been prescribed, statutory
authority must exercise its jurisdiction within a reasonable period. What,
however, shall be the reasonable period would depend upon the nature of the
statute, rights and liabilities thereunder and other relevant factors.
18. Revisional jurisdiction, in our opinion, should ordinarily be exercised
within a period of three years having regard to the purport in terms of the
said Act. In any event, the same should not exceed the period of five years.
The view of the High Court, thus, cannot be said to be unreasonable.
Reasonable period, keeping in view the discussions made hereinbefore, must
be found out from the statutory scheme. As indicated hereinbefore,
maximum period of limitation provided for in sub-section (6) of Section 11
of the Act is five years.
19. In The State of Orissa v. Debaki Debi & Ors. reported in [AIR 1964
SC 1413], on interpretation of the provisions of Section 12(6) of the Orissa
Sales Tax Act, 1947, 36 months\022 time was considered to be the period of
limitation for exercise of the revisional jurisdiction.
20. In S.B. Gurbaksh Singh v. Union of India & Ors. [1976 (37) STC
425], Untwalia J., speaking for the Bench, opined :
\023Appropos the fourth and last submission of the
appellant, suffice it to say that even assuming that
the revisional power cannot be exercised suo motu
after an unduly long delay, on the facts of this case
it is plain that it was not so done. Within a few
months of the passing of the appellate order by the
Assistant Commissioner, the Commissioner
proceeded to revise and revised the said order.
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There was no undue or unreasonable delay made
by the Commissioner. It may be stated here that
an appeal has to be filed by an assessee within the
prescribed time and so also a time-limit has been
prescribed for the assessee to move in revision.
The appellate or the revisional powers in an appeal
or revision filed by an assessee can be exercised in
due course. No time-limit has been prescribed for
it. It may well be that for an exercise of the suo
motu power of revision also, the revisional
authority has to initiate the proceeding within a
reasonable time. Any unreasonable delay in
exercise may affect its validity. What is a
reasonable time, however, will depend upon the
facts of each case.\024
21. Our attention has been drawn to a decision in Commissioner of Sales
Tax, Orissa & Anr. V. M/s. Halari Store etc. [(1997) 7 SCC 715] wherein
this Court, while considering the provisions of Orissa Sales Tax Act, 1948
and the Rules framed thereunder, held :
\023\005 But, the same is not the position where the
Commissioner decides to exercise his suo motu
revisional power to revise an appellate order.
Significantly the words \023on his own motion\024
occurring in the enactment are conspicuously
present in the proviso the legislature has excluded
the revisional jurisdiction of the Commissioner of
Sales Tax to revise an appellate order if invoked at
the instance of a dealer or a person when such
dealer or person has a remedy by way of an appeal.
As noticed earlier, the limitation on the suo motu
power of the Commissioner as to revise an
appellate order has not been expressly provided in
the proviso. In the absence of any expressed
provisions, no limitation on suo motu power of the
Commissioner to revise an appellate order can be
implied. We accordingly hold that the provisions
of proviso to sub-section (4)(a) of Section 23 of
the Act do not prohibit the Commissioner to
exercise suo motu revisional power to revise an
appellate order.\024
22. The question as to what would be the reasonable period did not fall
for consideration therein. The binding precedent of this Court, some of
which had been referred to us heretobefore, had not been considered. The
counsel appearing for the parties were remiss in bringing the same to the
notice of this Court. Furthermore, from a perusal of the impugned notice
dated 4.9.2006, it is apparent that the Revisional Authority did not assign
any reason as to why such a notice was being issued after a period of 5=
years.
23. Question of limitation being a jurisdictional question, the writ petition
was maintainable.
24. We are, however, not oblivious of the fact that ordinarily the writ
court would not entertain the writ application questioning validity of a notice
only, particularly, when the writ petitioner would have an effective remedy
under the Act itself. This case, however, poses a different question. The
Revisional Authority, being a creature of the statute, while exercising its
revisional jurisdiction, would not be able to determine as to what would be
the reasonable period for exercising the revisional jurisdiction in terms of
Section 21(1) of the Act. The High Court, furthermore in its judgment, has
referred to some binding precedents which have been operating in the field.
The High Court, therefore, cannot be said to have committed any
jurisdictional error in passing the impugned judgment.
25. There is, thus, no merit in the case. It is dismissed accordingly. No
costs.