Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
ALLIED MOTORS (P) LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, DELHI.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 10/03/1997
BENCH:
A.M. AHMADI, SUJATA V. MANOHAR, K. VENKATASWAMI
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
(With Tax Reference No.1/94, CA Nos. 3175/91 and 2380/91)
J U D G M E N T
Mrs. Sujata V. Manohar, J.
The two Income-tax References which are before us deal
with a common question relating to the interpretation of
Section 43B of the Income-tax Act, 1961. The references have
been made under Section 256(1) of the Income-tax Act, 1961.
Since the same question arises in the two civil appeals also
these appeals have been heard along with these references.
For the sake of convenience, we are taking the statement of
the case in Income-tax Reference No.2 of 1993.
The following question has been referred to us under
Section 256(1):-
"Whether on the facts and in the
circumstances of the case, the
sales-tax collected by the assessee
and paid after the end of the
relevant previous year but within
the time allowed under the relevant
sales-tax law is to be Income-Tax
Act, 1961 while computing the
business income of the said
previous year "?
The relevant assessment year is 1984-85, the relevant
accounting period being the year ending on 30th of June,
1983. The assessee filed the return declaring an income of
Rs. 1,91,940/-. The Income-Tax Officer, however, disallowed,
inter alia, deduction claimed by the assessee of an amount
of Rs. 5,78.240/- which was on account of sales-tax
collected by the assessee for the last quarter of the
relevant accounting year. This amount was payable within 30
days of the end of the quarter. The deduction which was
claimed by the assessee was disallowed by the Income-tax
Officer under Section 43B of the Income-tax Act, 1961 which
was inserted in the statute with effect from 1.4.1984. The
assessee filed an appeal before the Commissioner of Income-
Tax (Appeals), inter alia, in respect of this disallowance.
However, the appeal was dismissed. The assessee filed an
appeal before the Income-Tax Appellate Tribunal. The
tribunal also dismissed the appeal on the basis of the
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judgments of the Delhi High Court in the case of Sanghi
Motors v. Union of India (187 ITR 703) and Escorts Ltd. v.
Union of India & Ors. (189 ITR 81). Hence the present
reference has come before us. One of the judgment relied
upon by the tribunal was the judgment in the case of
Escorts Ltd. v. Union of India (supra). Civil Appeal No.
3175 (NT) of 1991 is an appeal from the decision of the
Delhi High Court in the above case which is being heard
along with the present tax-references.
The relevant provisions of Section 43B for our purpose
ar as follows :-
"43B:- Certain deductions to be
only on actual payment --
Notwithstanding anything
contained in any other provision of
this Act, a deduction otherwise
allowable under this Act in respect
of --
(a) any sum payable by the assessee
by way of tax, duty, cess or fee,
by whatever name called, under any
law for the time being in force, or
(b) ............................
(c) ............................
(d) ............................
shall be allowed (irrespective of
the previous year in which the
liability to pay such sum was
incurred by the assessee according
to the method of accounting
regularly employed by him) only in
computing the income referred to in
section 28 of that previous year
fin which such sum in actually paid
by him :
- Provided that nothing
contained in this section shall
apply in relation to any sum
referred to in clause (a) or clause
(c) or clause (d) which is actually
paid by the assessee on or before
the due date applicable in his case
for furnishing the return of income
under sub-section (1) of section
139 in respect of the previous year
in which the liability to pay such
sum was incurred as aforesaid and
the evidence of such payment is
furnished by the assessee along
with such return :
Provided further .........
Explanation 1 - ..........
- - Explanation 2 -- For the
purposes of clause (a), as in force
at all material times, ’any sum
payable means a sum for which the
assessee incurred liability in the
previous year even though such sum
might not have been payable within
that year under the relevant law.
Explanation 3 - .............
Explanation 4 - ............."
Section 43B was inserted in the Income-tax Act, 1961
with effect from 1.4.1984. The section, as it originally
stood, did not contain the two provisos. The first proviso
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has been set out above. The proviso was inserted by the
Finance Act of 1987 which came into effect from 1.4.1988.
Explanation 2 has been added subsequently by the Finance Act
of 1989 but with retrospective effect from 1.4.1984. In
these References and appeals we are concerned with the
application of Section 43B as it stood before the provisos
were added.
Prior to the insertion of Section 43B in the Income Tax
Act, 1961, income chargeable under the head ’profits and
gains’ of business or profession was computable in
accordance with the method of accounting regularly employed
by the assessee as per Section 145 of the Income-tax Act,
1961. An assessee who had adopted the mercantile system of
accounting would be entitled to account for his income and
expenditure on the basis of accrual and not on the basis of
actual receipt or disbursement. After insertion of Section
43B, however, even if the assessee had regularly adopted
mercantile system of accounting, the amount of tax payable
by the assessee could be deducted only in the year in which
the assessee incurred the liability to pay that tax. Hence
an assessee (as in the present case), who had collected
sales-tax in the last quarter of the previous accounting
year and deposited it in the treasury within the statutory
period falling in the next accounting year, would not be
entitled to claim any deduction for it. The sales-tax so
collected will form a part of the assessee’s income. To
obviate this kind of unexpected outcome of section 43B, the
first proviso was added in Section 43B by the Finance Act of
1987. The proviso makes it clear that the Section will not
apply in relation to any sum which is actually paid by the
assessee in the next accounting year if it is paid on or
before the due date for furnishing the return of income in
respect of the previous year in which the liability to pay
such sum was incurred and the evidence of such payment is
furnished by the assessee along with the return.
The proviso, however, was not on the statute book when
the assessments were made in respect of these assessees
since the assessments pertain to assessment year prior to
the insertion of the proviso in Section 43B. The assessees,
however, contend that the proviso should be given effect to
retrospectively from the date when section 43B became a part
of the Income-tax Act, 1961, as it is intended to obviate
unexpected hardships in the application of Section 43B.
To under stand the circumstances in which section 43B
came to be inserted in the Income-tax Act and the mischief
which it sought to prevent, it is necessary to look at the
memorandum explaining the provisions in the Finance Bill of
1983 [(1983) 140 ITR (St.) 160] :-
"59. Under the Income-tax Act,
profits and gains of business and
profession are computed in
accordance with the method of
accounting regularly employed by
the assessee. Broadly stated, under
the mercantile system of
accounting, income and outgo are
accounted for on the basis of
accrual and not on the basis of
actual disbursements or receipts.
for the purposes of computation of
profits and gains of business and
profession, the Income-tax act
defines the word ’paid’ to mean
’actually paid or incurred’
according to the method of
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accounting on the basis of which
the profits or gains are computed.
60. Several cases have come to
notice where tax payers do not
discharge their statutory liability
such as in respect of excise duty,
employer’s contribution to
provident fund, Employees’ State
Insurance Scheme, etc.. for long
period of time, extending sometimes
to several years. For the purpose
of their income-tax assessments,
they claim the liability as
deduction on the ground that they
maintain accounts on mercantile or
accrual basis. On the other hand
they dispute the liability and do
not discharge the same. For some
reason or the other undisputed
liabilities also are not paid. To
curb this practice, it is proposed
to proved that deduction for any
sum payable by the assessee by way
of tax or duty under any law for
the time being in force
(irrespective of whether such tax
or duty is disputed or not) or any
sum payable by the assessee as an
employer by way of contribution to
any provident fund, or
superannuation fund or gratuity
fund or any other fund for the
welfare of computing the income of
that previous year in which such
sum is actually paid by him."
The Budget Speech of the Finance Minister for the year
1983-84, reproduced in (1983) 140 ITR (St.) 31, is to the
same effect.
Section 43B was, therefore, clearly aimed at curbing
the activities of those tax payers who did not discharge
their statutory liability of payment of excise duty,
employer’s contribution to provident fund etc. for long
periods of time but claimed deductions in that regard from
their income on the ground that the liability to pay these
amounts had been incurred by them in the relevant previous
year. It was to stop this mischief that Section 43B was
inserted. It was clearly not realised that the language in
which Section 43B was worded would cause hardship to those
tax payers who had paid sales-tax within the statutory
period prescribed for this payment, although the payment so
made by them did not fall in the relevant accounting year.
It could be paid only in the next quarter which fell in the
next accounting year. Therefore, even when the sales-tax had
in fact been paid by the assessee within the statutory
period prescribed for its payment and prior to the filing of
the income tax return, these assessees were unwittingly
prevented from claiming a legitimate deduction in respect of
the tax paid by them. This was not intended by Section 43B.
Hence the first proviso was inserted in Section 43B. The
amendment which was made by the Finance Act of 1987 in
Section 43B by inserting, inter alia, the first proviso, was
remedial in nature, designed to eliminate unintended
consequences which may cause undue hardship to the assessee
and which made the provision unworkable or unjust in a
specific situation.
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Looking to the curative nature of the amendment made by
the Finance Act of 1987 it has been submitted before us that
the proviso which is inserted by the amending Finance Act of
1987 should be given retrospective effect and be read as
forming a part of Section 43B from its inception. This
submission has taken support from decisions of a number of
High Courts before whom this question came up for
consideration. The High Courts of Calcutta, Gujarat,
Karnataka, Orissa, Gauhati, Rajasthan, Andhara Pradesh,
Patna and Kerala appear to have taken the view that the
proviso must be given retrospective effect. Some of these
High courts have held that "sum payable" under Section
43B(a) refers only to the sum payable in the same accounting
year thus excluding sales tax payable in the next accounting
year from the ambit of Section 43B(a). The Delhi High Court
has taken a contrary view holding that the first proviso to
Section 43B operates only prospectively. We will refer only
to some of these judgments.
Explanation 2 was added to Section 43B by the Finance
Act of 1989 with retrospective effect from 1.4.1984. The
Memorandum explaining the reasons for introducing
Explanation 2, states inter alia, as follows [(1989) 176 ITR
(St.) 123] :-
"24. Under the existing
provisions of section 43B of the
Income-tax Act, a deduction for any
sum payable by way of tax, duty
cess or fee, etc., is allowed on
actual payment basis only. The
objective behind these provisions
is to provide for a tax
disincentive by denying deduction
in respect of a statutory liability
which is not paid in time. The
Finance Act, 1987, inserted a
proviso to section 43B to provide
that any sum payable by way of tax
or duty, etc., liability for which
was incurred in the previous year
will he allowed as a deduction, if
it is actually paid by the due date
of furnishing the return under
Section 139(1) of the Income-tax
Act, in respect of the assessment
year to which the aforesaid
previous year relates. This proviso
was introduced to remove the
hardship caused to certain
taxpayers who had represented that
since the sales-tax for the last
quarter cannot be paid within that
previous of section 43B will
unnecessarily involve disallowance
of the payment for the last
quarter.
Certain courts have
interpreted the provisions of
section 43B in a manner which may
negate the very operations of his
section. The interpretation given
by these courts revolves around the
use of the words ’any sum payable’.
The interpretation given to these
words is that amount payable in a
particular year should also be
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statutorily payable under the
relevant statute in the same year.
This is against the legislative
intent and it is, therefore,
proposed, by way of a clarificatory
amendment and for removal of
doubts, that the words ’any sum
payable’ be defined to mean any
sum, liability for which has been
incurred by the taxpayer during the
previous year irrespective of the
date by which such sum is
statutorily payable.
This amendment will take
effect from April 1, 1984."
While interpreting Section 43B without the first
proviso some of the High Courts, in order to prevent undue
hardship to the assessee, had taken the view that Section
43B would not be attracted unless the sum payable by the
assessee by way of tax, duty, cess or fee was payable in the
same accounting year. If the tax was payable in the next
accounting year, Section 43B would not be attracted. This
was done in order to prevent any undue hardship to assessees
such as the ones before us. The memorandum of reasons takes
note of the combined effect of Section 43B and the first
proviso inserted by the Finance Act, 1987. After referring
to the fact that the first proviso now removes the hardship
caused to such tax payers it explains the insertion of
Explanation 2 as being for the purpose of removing any
ambiguity about the term ’any sum payable’ under clause (a)
of Section 43B. This Explanation is made retrospective. The
Memorandum seems to proceed on the basis that Section 43B
read with the proviso takes care of the hardship situation
and hence Explanation 2 can be inserted with retrospective
effect to make clear the ambit of Section 43B(a). Therefore,
Section 43B(a), the first proviso of Section 43B and
Explanation 2 have to be read together as giving effect to
the true intention of Section 43B. If Explanation 2 is
retrospective, the first proviso will have to be so
construed. Read in this light also, the proviso has to be
read into Section 43B from its inception along with
Explanation 2.
This position is reinforced by a departmental Circular No.
550 dated 1st of January 1990, [(1990) 182 ITR (St.) 114,
123] :-
"AMENDMENT OF PROVISIONS
RELATING OF CERTAIN DEDUCTION OT BE
ALLOWED ONLY ON ACTUAL PAYMENT.
15.1 Under the existing
provisions of section 43B of the
Income-Tax Act, 1961, a deduction
for any sum payable by way of tax,
duty, cess or fee, etc., is allowed
on actual payment basis only. The
objective behind these provisions
is to provide for a tax
disincentive by ’statutory
liability’ which is not paid in
time. The Finance Act, 1987,
inserted a proviso to section 43B
to provide that any sum payable
liability for which was incurred in
the previsous year will be allowed
as a deduction, if it is actually
paid by the due date of furnishing
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the return under Section 139(1) of
the Income-tax Act, in respect of
assessment year to which the
aforesaid previous year relates.
This proviso was introduced to
remove the hardship caused to
certain taxpayers who had
represented that since the sales
tax for the last quarter cannot be
paid within the previous year, the
original provisions of section 43B
will unnecessarily involve
disallowance of the payment for the
last quarter.
Certain courts have
interpreted the provisions of
section 43B in a manner which may
negate the very operation of this
section. The interpretation given
by these courts revolves around the
use of the words ’ any sum
payable’. The interpretation given
to these words is that the amount
payable in a particular year should
also be statutorily payable under
the relevant statute in the same
year. Thus, the sales tax in
respect of sales made in the last
quarter was held to be totally
outside the purview of section 43B
since the same is not statutorily
payable in the financial year to
which it relates. This is against
the legislative intent and,
therefore, by way of inserting an
Explanation, it has been clarified
that the words ’any sum payable’
shall mean any sum, liability for
which has been incurred by the
taxpayer during the previous year
irrespective of the date by which
such sum is statutorily payable
........"
The departmental understanding also appears to be that
Section 43B, the proviso and Explanation 2 have to be read
together as expressing the true intention of Section 43B.
Explanation 2 has been expressly made retrospective. The
first proviso, however, cannot be isolated from Explanation
2 and the main body of Section 43B. without the first
proviso, Explanation 2 would not obviate the hardship or the
unintended consequences of Section 43B. The proviso supplies
an obvious omission. But for this proviso the ambit of
Section 43B becomes unduly wide bringing within the scope
those payments which were not intended to be prohibited from
the category of permissible deductions.
In the case of Goodyear India Ltd. v. State of Haryana
and Anr. (188 ITR 402) this court said that he rule of
reasonable construction must be applied while construing a
statute. Literal construction should be avoided if it
defeats the manifest object and purpose of the Act.
Therefore, in the well known words of Judge learned
Hand, one cannot make a fortress out of the dictionary; and
should remember that statutes have some purpose and object
to accomplish whose sympathetic and imaginative discovery
is the surest guide to their meaning. In the case of R.B.
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Jodha Mal Kuthiala v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Punjab,
jammu & Kashmir and Himachal Pradesh (82 ITR 570), this
Court said that one should apply the rule of reasonable
interpretation. A proviso which is inserted to remedy
unintended consequences and to made the provision workable,
a proviso which supplies an obvious omission in the section
and is required to be read into the section to give the
section a reasonable interpretation, requires to be treated
as retrospective in operation so that a reasonable
interpretation can be given to the section as a whole.
This view has been accepted by a number of High Court.
In the case of Commissioner of Income-Tax v. Chandulal
Venichand ([1994] 209 ITR 7), the Gujarat High Court has
held that he first proviso to section 43B is retrospective
and sales-tax for the last quarter paid before the filing of
the return for the assessment year is deductable. This
decision deals with assessment year 1984-85. The Calcutta
High Court in the case of Commissioner of Income-tax v. Sri
Jagannath Steel Corporation ([1991] 191 ITR 676), has taken
a similar view holding that the statutory liability for
sales-tax actually discharge after the expiry of accounting
year in compliance with the relevant stature is entitled to
deduction under Section 43B. The High Court has held the
amendment to be clarificatory and, therefore, retrospective.
The Gujarat High Court in the above case held the amendment
to be curative and explanatory and hence retrospective. The
Patna High Court has also held the amendment inserting the
first proviso to be explanatory in the case of Jamshedpur
Motor Accessories Stores v. union of India and Ors. ([1991]
189 ITR 70.), It was held that amendment inserting first
proviso to be retrospective. The special leave petition from
this decision of the Patna High Court was dismissed. The
view of the Delhi High Court, therefore, that the first
proviso to section 43B will be available only prospectively
does not appear to be correct. As observed by G.P. Singh in
his Principles of statutory Interpretation, 4th Edn. Page
291, "It is well settled that if a statute curative or
merely declaratory of the previous law retrospective
operation is generally intended." In fact the amendment
would not serve its object in such a situation unless it is
construed as retrospective. The view, therefore, taken by
the Delhi High Court cannot be sustained.
In the premises the appeals are allowed and the Income-
tax references are answered in favour of the assessees and
against the revenue. In the circumstances, however, there
will be no order as to costs.