Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
AHMED IBRAHIM SAHIGRA DHORAJI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COMMISSIONER OF WEALTH TAX, GUJARAT
DATE OF JUDGMENT07/04/1981
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
PATHAK, R.S.
CITATION:
1981 AIR 1562 1981 SCR (3) 402
1981 SCC (3) 77 1981 SCALE (1)694
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1981 SC1759 (23)
ACT:
Wealth Tax Act, 1957-Section 2(m)-Finance Act, 1965
gave incentives for voluntary disclosure of concealed
income-Assessee declared large amount of such income and
paid tax as provided by Finance Act-Tax so paid-Whether an
allowable deduction as "debt owed " under the Wealth Tax
Act.
HEADNOTE:
As part of a measure to mop up unaccounted money on
which no income tax had been paid, an incentive scheme was
prepared by the Government under which a person disclosing
such income was required to pay a specified rate of tax
without attracting the penal provisions of the Income Tax
Act. Section 68 of the Finance Act, 1965 provided that a
person making voluntary disclosure of his income in
accordance with the provisions of the section would be
charged income tax at a specified rate notwithstanding
anything contained in the Income Tax Act.
The assessee had a large sum of such unaccounted money
in his possession. Without allocating the total sum amongst
the different assessment years, he declared that he had a
sum of Rs. 7 lakhs in his possession which was earned by him
during the assessment years 1957-58 to 1964-65. Income Tax
in respect of this income computed in accordance with
section 68 of the Finance Act was paid by him.
In the wealth tax returns filed by him in response to
the notice issued by the Wealth Tax officer for re-
assessment consequent on the disclosure of his wealth the
assessee claimed deductions of income-tax paid under section
68 of the Finance Act. But the Wealth Tax officer disallowed
the claim holding that since the assessee had not shown the
liability to pay income tax in his balance sheets for the
respective years the deductions claimed by him could not be
allowed in any of the assessment years.
The Appellate Assistant Commissioner dismissed the
assessee’s appeal. The Tribunal, on the other hand, held
that the liability constituted a "debt owed" because in
truth and substance, it was a liability under the Income Tax
Act, 1922 or 1961 and not a new liability created by the
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Finance Act, 1965.
On reference the High Court held in favour of the
Revenue on the ground that section 68 of the Finance Act
enacted a new charge of tax on an ad hoc
403
basis on disclosed income and, therefore, it was not a "debt
owed" which could be allowed as a deduction under the Wealth
Tax Act.
On behalf of the Revenue it was contended that since
the tax paid by the assessee under the voluntary disclosure
scheme was in discharge of a liability created for the first
time by the Finance Act, 1965 it was not an allowable
deduction under the Wealth Tax Act.
Allowing the appeal,
^
HELD: The assessee was entitled to claim deduction of
income tax paid on the amounts added to his total wealth
under section 2 (m) of the Wealth Tax Act in the course of
the assessment proceedings. [418 B] C
1. Merely because the amounts were disclosed in a
declaration under section 68 of the Finance Act, they did
not cease to be incomes not already charged to income tax.
Although the Finance Act merely levied a fixed rate of tax
in respect of all the income disclosed without allowing
deductions, exemptions and such other allowances which are
allowable under the Income Tax Acts, its function was no
more than that of an annual Finance Act despite the fact
that it made certain alterations in regard to the filing of
declaration and computation of taxable income. [414 G-H]
2. The nature of the declaration which was dependent on
the volition of the declaring and the fact that the
liability to tax the amount was contingent upon the
willingness of the declaring to disclose the amount would
not make a difference because such voluntary disclosure,
even in the absence of section 68, would have exposed the
assesseee to assessment or reassessment. The voluntary
character of the declaration cannot alter the character of
the tax. [415 A-B]
3. The true position is that the amount declared has
the liability to pay income tax embedded in it on the
valuation date but only the ascertainment of that liability
is postponed to a future date. [417 C]
In the instant case its determination was allowed to be
done in accordance with the provisions of section 68. Even
though this section was a complete code in itself it was
only a scheme which provided a method for the liquidation of
an already existing income tax liability which was present
on the relevant valuation date. [417 D]
4. Nor did the absence of allocation of the amount
disclosed amongst different assessment years detract the tax
from being called a tax on income because such allocation
would not achieve any additional purpose in the scheme of
section 68 This section is in the nature of a package deal.
The net result achieved was that the declarant was treated
as having discharged all his liability in respect of such
income under the income tax law. [415E]
404
5. The finding of the High Court that section 68
created a fresh charge is incompatible with the foundation
of the very reassessment proceedings under section 17 of the
Wealth Tax Act. [415 H]
6. Moreover section 68, at more than one place stated
that what was pay able was income tax which clearly showed
that what was payable under the section was income tax. [412
B-C]
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C.I.T. v. Khalau Makanji Spinning and Weaving Co.
Ltd.,40 I.T.R. 189. Madurai District Central Cooperative
Bank Ltd. v. Third I.T.O. 101 I.T.R. 24, distinguished.
C. K. Bahu Naidu v. Wealth Tax Officer, 112 ITR 34; C.
Ii T v. GirdhariLal, 99 ITR 79; C.W.T. v. B.K Sharma, 110
I.T.R. 902; C.W.T. v. Bansidhar Poddar. 112 ITR 957; D.C.
Shah v. C.W.T., 117 ITR 348; Bhagwandas Jain v. Addl. C.W.T.
116 ITR 347 and Bhagwanidas Binani v. C.W.T., 124 ITR 783,
approved.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 1217
1222 of 1973.
Appeals by certificate from the Judgment and order
dated 21.12 1972 of the Gujarat High Court in Wealth Tax
Reference No. 2 of 1969.
V. S. Desai, Shardul S. Shroff and H. S. Parihar for
the Appellant.
S. T. Desai, P. A. Francis and Miss A. Subhashini for
the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
VENKATARAMIAH, J. On the basis of a certificate granted
under section 29(1) of the Wealth-tax Act 1957 (hereinafter
referred to as the Act ) the appellant has filed these
appeals against the judgment and order dated December 21
1972 of the High Court of Gujarat in Wealth-tax Reference No
2 of 1969. The questions referred to the High Court under
section 27 of the Act by the In come-tax Appellate Tribunal
Ahmedabad Bench read thus:
"(1) Whether on the facts and in the circumstances of
the case the liability in respect of income-tax
payable on the concealed income disclosed by the
assessee pursuant to section 68 of the Finance Act
1965 is deductible under section 2(m) of the
Wealth-tax Act 1957 in computing the net wealth of
the assessee for the
405
assessment years 1959-60 1960-61 1961-62 1962-63 A
1963-64 and 1964-65.
(2) Whether the Tribunal was right in holding that the
liability to pay tax on the amount disclosed under
section 68 of the Finance Act 1965 arose not under
that Finance Act but under section 3 of the Indian
Income-tax Act 1922.
Having regard to the assessment years in question the
second question should be read as including within its scope
also the question whether the Tribunal was right in holding
that the liability to pay tax on the amount disclosed under
section 68 of the Finance Act, 1965 arose not under that
Finance Act but under section 4 of the Income-tax Act 1961.
The assessee who is the appellant in these appeals had
been assessed on the basis of his returns of net wealth and
the statements filed therewith in the status of an
individual to wealth-tax under section 16(3) of the Act
during the assessment years 1957-58 t 1964-65 on various
dates between January 15 1960 and July 14 1964. Subsequently
the assessee made a disclosure under section 68 of the
Finance Act 1965 (hereinafter referred to as the Finance
Act) of Rs.7,00,000 which had been shown as having been
covered by some hundi transactions with a concern known as
M/s Abdul Razack & Co. in his books of account at the Bombay
branch of his business. Alongwith the declaration the
assessee filed a statement that this concealed income had
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been earned by him during the assessment years 1957-58 to
1964-65. He however did not allocate the total sum disclosed
amongst different assessment years but showed it in a lump
sum. The amount of income-tax was computed at 60% of the
total concealed income and it was paid as contemplated under
section 68 of the Finance Act. The Wealth-tax officer
thereafter reopened the assessments or the assessee to
wealth-tax for assessment years 1957-58 to 1964-65 on the
ground that he had reason to believe that certain wealth of
the assessee had escaped assessment during the said years
and that his belief was founded on the disclosure made by
the assessee under section 68 of the Finance Act. We are
concerned in these appeals only with the assessment years
1959-60 to 1964-65. On scrutiny it was found on the basis of
peak cash credits in each assessment year that the amounts
covered by hundies were as under:
406
Assessment years Peak cash credits
1959-60 RS. 4,57,465/-
1960-61 RS. 5,59,8231-
1961-62 RS. 6,38,325/-
1962-63 RS. 6,82,974/-
1963-64 RS. 7,01,578/-
1964-65 RS. 7,01,578/-
As can be seen from the above statement the assessee
had substantial sums with him in the years in question which
had not been disclosed earlier. Since these amounts
constituted the wealth which was liable to tax on the
respective valuation dates the assessee filed returns of
wealth for the above mentioned years in compliance with the
notices issued to him and in the course of the assessment
proceedings he claimed the deduction for income- tax payable
by him in respect of the sums which had been progressively
earned by him from year to year and which were liable to
income tax under the relevant income tax law in force during
the years relying upon the decision of this Court in Kesoram
Industries and Cotton Mills Ltd v. Commissioner of Wealth-
tax (Central), Calcutta. The Wealth-tax officer however held
that since in his balance selects the assessee had not shown
the liability to pay income-tax the deduction of the amounts
claimed could not be allowed in any of the assessment years
and accordingly the orders of reassessment were passed by
him after disallowing the claim made by the assessee. He
however included the sums mentioned in the above statement
in the net wealth of the respective assessment years and
determined the wealth-tax payable by the assessee. The
appeals filed by the assessee against the orders of the
Wealth-tax officer before the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner were dismissed. On further appeal to the
Income-tax Appellate-Tribunal the Tribunal held that the
deduction claimed in respect of each assessment year was in
truth and substance a liability under the Indian Income-tax
Act 1922 or the Income-tax Act 1961 as the case may be and
not a new liability created by the Finance Act and therefore
it constituted a debt owed by the assessee on the respective
valuation dates within the meaning of section 2(m) of the
Act and that the deduction claimed should be allowed while
computing the net wealth
407
of the assessee. Accordingly the Tribunal allowed the
appeals of the assessee. Thereafter at the instance of the
Commissioner of Wealth-tax the Tribunal referred under
section 27 of the Act the two questions mentioned above to
the High Court. After hearing the parties the High Court
answered both the questions in the negative and in favour of
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the Revenue by its judgment dated December 21 1972. On a
certificate granted by the High Court under section 29(1) of
the Act the assessee has come up in appeal to this Court.
The relevant part of section 2(m) of the Act reads:
"2. (m) net wealth means the amount by which the
aggregate value computed in accordance with the
provisions of this Act of all the assets wherever
located belonging to the assessee on the valuation
date including assets required to be included in
his net wealth as on that date under this Act is
in excess of the aggregate value of all the debts
owed by the assessee on the valuation date other
than
In the case of Kesoram Industries and Cotton Mills Ltd.
(supra.) this Court has held that income-tax other than that
falling under clause (iii) of section 2(m) of the Act
payable on the valuation date is a debt owed by the assessee
and hence is deductible from the total wealth of the
assessee while determining the net wealth for the purpose of
levying wealth-tax.
The principal question which arises for consideration
in these appeals relates to the true character of the tax
paid by the assessee in the proceedings under section 68 of
the Finance Act and the applicability of the ratio of the
decision of this Court in the case of Kesoram Industries and
Cotton Mills Ltd. (supra). Since it is contended by the
assessee that the tax so paid was the tax which he was
liable to pay under the relevant income-tax law in force
during the assessment years in question and it is urged by
the Department that the said payment was in discharge of a
liability created for the first time by the Finance Act it
is necessary to examine the provisions of section 68 of the
Finance Act in some detail in so far as they relate to the
question involved in this case. The relevant part of section
68 of the Finance Act which came into force on March 1 1965
reads:
408
"68. Voluntary disclosure of income-(1) Where any
person makes a declaration in accordance with sub-section
(2) in respect of the amount representing income-
(a) which he has failed to disclose in a return of
income for any assessment year filed by him before
the first day of March 1965 under the Indian
Income-tax Act 1922 (Xl of 1922) or the Income-tax
Act 1961 (XLIII of 1961) or
(b) which has escaped assessment for any assessment
year for which an assessment has been made before
the 1st day of March 1965 under either of the said
Acts or
(c) for the assessment of which no proceeding under
either of the said Acts has been taken before the
1st day of March 1965,
he shall notwithstanding anything contained in the said
Acts be charged income-tax at the rate specified in sub
section (3) in respect of the amount so declared if he-
(i) pays the amount of income-tax as computed at the
said rate or
(ii) furnishes adequate security for the payment there
of in accordance with sub-section (4) and under
takes to pay such income-tax within a period not
exceeding six months from the date of the
declaration as may be specified by him therein or
(iii)On or before the 31st day of May 1965 pays such
amount as is not less than one-half of the amount
of income-tax as computed at the said rate or
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furnishes adequate security for the payment there-
of in accordance with sub-section (4) and in
either case assigns any shares in or debentures of
a joint stock company or mortgages any immovable
property in favour of the President of India by
way o f security for the payment of the balance
and undertakes to Fay such balance within the
period referred to in clause (ii).
409
(2) The declaration shall be made to the Commissioner
and shall specify the period required to be
specified under clause (ii) of sub-section (1)
contain the name address and signature of the
person making the declaration and also full
information in respect of the following matters
namely:- B
(a) Whether he was assessed to income-tax or not
and if assessed the name of the Income-tax
Circle in which he was assessed.
(b) The amount of income declared giving where
available details of the financial year or
years in which the income was earned and the
amount pertaining to each such year.
(c) Whether the amount declared is represented by
cash (including bank deposits) bullion
investments in shares debts due from other
persons commodities or any other assets and
the name in which it is held and location
thereof:
Provided that the declaration shall be of no
effect unless it is made after the 28th day of February
1965 and before the Ist day of June 1965. F
(3) The rate of income-tax chargeable in respect of
the amount referred to in sub-section (1) shall be
sixty per cent of such amount:
Provided that if before the Ist day of April 1965
the tax on the amount declared is paid by the declarant
at the rate of fifty seven per cent of such amount he
shall not be liable to pay any further tax on such
amount.
(4) A person shall not be considered to have furnished
adequate security for the payment of the tax for
the purposes of sub-section (I) unless the payment
is guaranteed by a scheduled bank or the person
makes an assignment in favour of the President of
India of any security of the Central or State
Government.
Explanation-For the purposes of this sub-section
where an assignment of Government securities is made in
410
favour of the President the amount covered by such
assignment shall be the market value of the securities
on the date of the assignment.
(5) Any amount of income-tax paid in pursuance of a
declaration made under this section shall not be
refundable in any circumstances and no person who
has made the declaration shall be entitled i n
respect of any amount so declared or any amount of
tax so paid to reopen any assessment or
reassessment made under the Indian Income-tax Act
1922 (XI of 1922) or the Income-tax Act 1961
(XLIII of 1961) or the Excess Profits Tax Act 1943
(XV of 1940) or the Business Profits Tax Act 1947
(XXI of 1963) or the Companies (Profits) Surtax
Act 194 (VII of 1964) or claim any set-off or
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relief in any appeal reference revision or other
proceeding in relation to any such assessment -
or reassessment.
(6) (a) Any amount declared by any person under this
section in respect of which the tax referred to in
subsection (3) is paid shall not be included in
his total income for any assessment under any of
the Acts mentioned hl sub-section (5) if he
credits in the books of account if any maintained
by him for any source of income or in any other
record the amount declared as reduced by the tax
paid thereon under this section...
Section 68(1) of the Finance Act provides that where
any person makes a declaration in accordance with section
68(2) in respect of any amount represent n g income which he
has failed to disclose in his return or which has escaped
assessment for any assessment year for which an assessment
has been made before March 1, 1965 under either of the two
Acts namely the Indian Income-tax Act 1922 and the Income-
tax Act 19 1 or for the assessment of which no proceeding is
taken before March 1, 1965 he shall notwithstanding anything
contained in the said Acts be charged income-tax at the rate
specified in sub-section (3) thereof in respect of the
amount so declared. If he pays the amount of income-tax as
computed at the said rate or furnishes adequate security for
the payment thereof in accordance with sub-section (4)
thereof and undertakes to pay such income-tax within the
period specified in the section he would be absolved from
the liability under the relevant law of in
411
come-tax. The declaration should however be filed with the
particulars mentioned in section 68(2). Section 68(3)
provides that the rate of income-tax chargeable in respect
of the amount referred to in the declaration shall be sixty
percent of such amount provided that if the tax is paid
within April 1, 1965 the tax payable would be fifty seven
percent. Sub-section (5) of section 68 of the Finance Act
provides that any amount of income-tax paid in pursuance of
a declaration made under that section shall not be
refundable in any circumstances nor a declarant is entitled
in respect of any amount declared or tax paid thereon to
reopen any assessment or reassessment made under the Indian
Income-tax Act 1922 or Income-tax Act 1961 or any other Act
mentioned therein. He cannot also claim any set-off or
relief in any appeal reference revision or other proceeding
in relation to any such assessment or reassessment. Clause
(a) of sub-section (6) of section 68 grants immunity from
proceedings under the Acts mentioned in section 68(5) to the
assessee by providing that any amount declared by any person
under section 68 in respect of which the tax referred to hl
sub-section (3) thereof is paid shall not be included in his
total income for any assessment under any of the assessments
made under any of the Acts mentioned in section 68(5) if he
credits in the books of account if any maintained by him for
any source of income or hl any other record the amount
declared as reduced by the tax paid thereon under section
68.
On an examination of the several provisions contained
in section 68 of the Finance Act it becomes clear that they
had been enacted as a part of the measures adopted with a
view to unearthing unaccounted money in possession of the
members of the public on which income-tax had not been paid
and also to create an incentive to such persons to make
disclosure of their unaccounted incomes and to pay tax
thereon at the specified rate without the liability to pay
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any interest thereon or penalties for non-compliance with
the law of income-tax. The declaration to be riled by a
person under section 68 is about an amount representing his
income earned in an earlier accounting period which has not
been subjected to tax in the ordinary course although
income-tax was payable hl respect of it. If the declarant
pays tax at the rate specified in sub-section (3) of section
68 he would be absolved from any further liability to tax on
such income. The declaration has to be made before the
Commissioner of Income-tax and it should contain full
information namely whether he was assessed to income-tax or
not and if assessed the name of the Income-tax circle in
which he was assessed the
412
amount of income declared giving w ere available details of
the financial year or years in which the income was earned
and the amount pertaining to each such year and whether the
amount declared is represented by cash (including bank
deposits) bullion investment in shares debts due from other
persons commodities or any other assets and the name in
which it is held and the location thereof. Section 68 also
states at more than one place that what is payable pursuant
to a declaration is income-tax. Section 68 (1) contains
words such as he shall notwithstanding anything contained in
the said Acts be charged income tax at the rate specified in
sub-section (3) . if he pays the amount of income-tax at the
said rate and undertakes to pay such income-tax . Section
68(3) contains the words: the rate of income-tax chargeable.
Section 68(5) refers to: (a) any amount of income-tax paid
and section 68(7) contains the words: paid the income-tax
under this section . These words show that Parliament was of
the view that what was payable under section 68 was income-
tax.
The points of difference between any Finance Act that
may be passed annually fixing the rates of income tax and
section 68 of the Finance Act however relate to (i) the time
within which and the manner in which information in regard
to the income is to be furnished (ii) the method of
computation of taxable income and E(iii) the rate of tax
payable on such income. The declaration which is equivalent
to a return to be filed under the Indian Income-tax Act 1922
or Income-tax Act 1961 need not contain all the particulars
that have to be furnished in such return. The declaration
can be filed during the period mentioned in proviso to
section 68(2). There is no provision to claim various
deductions exemptions set off etc. in respect of the income
disclosed in the declaration as in the case of income shown
in an ordinary return. Since the rate of tax is a uniform
one and does not vary with the quantum of the income
disclosed there is no need to trace it to any specific
assessment year. Further the declaration is a voluntary one
and it is not pursuant to any notice issued by the
Department.
The question is whether these distinguishing features
make the amount disclosed in a declaration anything
different from the income of an assessee and the tax paid
under section 68 anything different from a tax on income. In
other words does section 68 impose a new charge on the
income of the declarant for the first time wholly
independent of the levy under section 3 of the Indian
Income-tax Act 192’ or section 4 of the Income-tax Act 1961
? The High
413
Court has given the following reasons for holding that the
tax paid under section 68 is not tax on income payable under
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the Indian Income-tax Act 1922 and Income-tax Act 1961: (i)
the charge under the Income-tax Act is on the total income
of the previous year and not on any particular item of
income but that is not so under section 68,(ii) payment of
tax under section 68 has no reference to any assessment year
and unless it is correlated to an assessment year it can not
be ordinary income-tax and (iii) the disclosed income is
chargeable to tax without allowing usual deductions and
without providing for any procedure for qualification.
The High Court proceeded to hold that section 68
enacted a new charge of tax on an ad hoc basis on disclosed
income irrespective of the assessment year in which it was
earned. The disclosure of concealed income coupled with the
payment of tax as contemplated in clause (i) of sub-section
(1) according to the High Court not only created a charge of
tax but also satisfied it. In its view the disclosure of
concealed income coupled with furnishing of security and
undertaking as contemplated in clause (ii) created a new
charge of tax and when the undertaking was carried out by
payment of tax the liability arising from the charge of tax
was satisfied.
one basic fallacy underlying the conclusion of the High
Court that a new charge is being levied under section 68
appears to be the assumption that the amount in question in
respect of which tax is payable under that provision was not
liable to income-tax earlier. lt should be borne in mind
that the declaration contemplated under section 68 is a
declaration in respect of income of earlier years which had
been concealed and on which tax was payable during the
relevant assessment years in the ordinary course. Section 3
of the Indian Income-tax Act 1922 and section 4 of Income-
tax Act 1961 which are couched more or less in the same
language state that where any Central Act enacts that inc
me-tax shall be charged for any year at any rate or rates
income-tax at that rate or those rates shall be charged for
that year in accordance with and subject to the provisions
of the relevant Act in respect of the total income of the
previous year or previous years as the case may be of every
person. Now it is well settled by a series of judicial
decisions that the liability to income-tax arises by virtue
of the charging section in the relevant Income-tax Act and
it arises not later than the close of the previous year even
though the rate of tax for the year of assessment may be
fixed after the close of the previous year and the
assessment has necessarily to be made after the previous
year.
414
The quality of chargeability of any income to tax is not
dependent upon the passing of the Finance Act though its
quantification may be governed by the provisions of the
Finance Act in respect of any assessment year vide Wallace
Brothers and Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax. Messers
Chatturam Horilram Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax and
Ors. and Kalwa Devadattam & Ors. v. The Union of India &
Ors. In the case of Kesoram Industries and Cotton Mills Ltd.
(supra) Subba Rao J. (as he then was) summarised the legal
position thus :-
To summarize: A debt is a present obligation to
pay an ascertainable sum of money, whether the amount
is payable in prasenti or in futuro: debitum in
prsesenti, solvendum in futuro. But a Sum payable upon
a contingency does not become a debt until the said
contingency has happened. A liability to pay income-tax
is a present liability though it becomes payable after
it is quantified in accordance with ascertainable data.
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There is a perfected debt at any rate on the last day
of the accounting year and not a contingent liability.
The rate is always easily ascertainable. If tile
Finance Act is passe l it is the rate fixed by that
Act; if the Finance Act has not yet been passed it is
the rate proposed in Finance Bill pending before
Parliament or the rate in force in the preceding year
whichever is more favourable to the assessee. All the
ingredients of a debt are present. It is a present
liability of an ascertain able amount.
It is thus clear that it- the assessee had brought to
the notice of the Department in the usual course the
existence of incomes which were later on declared under
section 68 they would have been taxed during the relevant
assessment year. Hence merely because they are disclosed in
a declaration filed under section 68, they cannot cease to
be income not already charged for income tax. It is true
that the Finance Act in question merely levied a fixed rate
of tax in respect of all the income disclosed without
allowing deductions exemptions and set-off under the
relevant income-tax law yet its function was no more than
that of a Finance Act passed annually even though it made
certain alterations with regard to filing of declaration and
computation of taxable income
415
It was however urged on behalf of the Department that
the nature of the declaration which was dependent upon the
volition of the declarant and the fact that the liability to
tax the amount mentioned therein was contingent upon the
willingness of the declarant to disclose the amount ought to
make a difference. We do not think so because any such
voluntary disclosure by an assessee even in the absence of
section 68 would have exposed him to an assessment or
reassessment as the case may be being made in respect of the
sum disclosed as part of the income of the relevant
assessment year and of course with the additional liability
to payment of interest and levy of penalty and perhaps with
the right to claim deductions if any admissible in the
circumstances of the case and the benefit of other
procedural rights. The voluntary character of the
declaration cannot therefore alter the character of the tax.
There is also no substance in the contention that in the
absence of the allocation of the amount disclosed amongst
different assessment years the tax payable under section 68
cannot be termed as a tax on income because such allocation
would not achieve any additional purpose in the scheme of
section 68 Irrespective of the other income which may have
been determined in an ordinary proceeding under the relevant
law of income-tax a fixed rate of tax is payable under
section 68(3) and hence the amount disclosed being treated
as the income of any particular year would not make any
difference regarding the quantum of tax. Nor is there any
other purpose to be served by such allocation. Section 68 is
in the nature of a package deal but the net result achieved
is that the declarant is treated as having discharged all
his liability in respect of the said income under the
income-tax law.
There is one other circumstance which may be noticed
here. The tax levied under section 68 can be only a tax on
income. If we hold it otherwise it may become a tax on
wealth itself. The basis of the liability in this case is
the admission made by the declarant that the amount declared
was his income earned in previous years but concealed from
the knowledge of the Department. In these circumstances it
cannot be said that the amount declared under section 68 is
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not income which was not taxable under the Indian Income-tax
Act 1922 or the Income-tax Act 1961 as the case may be. The
finding of the High Court that section 68 created a fresh
charge is incompatible with the foundation of the very
reassessment proceedings under section 17 of the Act. The
basis of these proceedings is the information which the
Wealth-tax officer acquired
416
from the declaration filed by the assessee in this case that
the assessee was in possession of unaccounted funds
represented by the non-genuine hundis which had
progressively reached the level of Rs. 7,01,578 during the
assessment year 1964-65 from the level of Rs. 4,57;465 in
1959-60 by gradual accumulation of income. But for this
assumption in the absence of any other material reassessment
under the Act would have been possible only in the last year
in which the disclosure was made. That however is not the
case here.
The High Court in support of its view has relied on the
decision of the Kerala High Court though not the reason
given in support of that decision in C. K. Babu Naidu v.
Wealth-tax Officer. That decision has since been reversed in
appeal by a Division Bench of that Court in C. K. Babu Naidu
v. Wealth-tax Officer, ’A’ Ward, Calicut & anr in which the
Kerala High Court has held that the liability for tax
arising under section 68 of the Finance Act was nothing
other than the liability under the Income-tax Act 1961
itself and accordingly has allowed the deduction of tax paid
under section 68 as a debt owed on the valuation date. In
Commissioner of Wealth-Tax, Haryana, H.P. & Delhi-III v.
Girdhari Lal, Commissioner of Wealth-tax v. B. K Sharma,
Commissioner of Wealth tax, West Bengal-III, Calcutta v.
Bansidhar Poddar, D. C. Shah v. commissioner of Wealth-tax
Mysore and Shri Bhagwandas Jain v. Addl. Commissioner of
Wealth-tax, M. P., the High Courts of Delhi Allahabad
Calcutta Karnataka and Madhya Pradesh have accepted the view
that the tax paid under section 68 of the Finance Act should
be treated as a debt owed for purposes of determining net
wealth as denied in section 2(m) of the Act. The High Court
of Bombay has also recalled the same conclusion in
Bhagwandas Binani v. Commissioner of Wealth-tax, Bombay
City-III but in doing so it observed that it appears to us
that although it is not possible to say that the amount of
income-tax paid under section 68 of the Finance Act 1965 is
income-tax under the charging sec-
417
tion 3 or section 4 of the I.T. Acts it must be regarded as
income-tax paid in lieu of such income-tax and would be
entitled to the same considerations as lavished by the
Supreme Court on the ordinary charge of income-tax. The High
Court of Bombay appears to take the view as the High Court
of Gujarat has done in the decision under appeal that a new
liability is created by section 68 but it however would not
have any adverse effect on the right of the assessee to
claim the deduction. While we approve of the conclusion
reached by the High Court of Bombay we feel that the said
decision to the extent it attempts to follow the reason
given by the Gujarat High Court to hold that the liability
under section 68 is a fresh liability is not correct. The
true position is that the amount declared has the liability
to pay income-tax imbedded in it on the valuation date but
only the ascertainment of that liability is postponed to a
future date. In the instant case its determination is
allowed to he done in accordance with the provisions of
section 68. Even though it may appear to be itself a
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complete code it is only a scheme which provides a method
for the liquidation of an already existing income-tax
liability which was present on the relevant valuation date.
The view does not in any way To counter to any observations
made by this Court in Commissioner of Income-Tax, Bombay
City I v. Khatau Makanji Spinning and Weaving Co. Ltd. In
that case this Court was concerned with the validity of a
charge levied by the Finance Act 1951 in respect of
dividends distributed in excess of the specified limit under
clause (ii) of the proviso to Paragraph of Part I of the
First Schedule to that Act as applied to the assessment year
1953-54 by the Finance Act 1953. This Court held that
income-tax was a tax on income of the previous year and it
would not cover some thing which was not the income of the
previous year or made fictionally so and according to the
scheme of that provision it was impossible to say that the
additional income-tax was properly laid upon the total
income because what was actually taxed was never a part of
the total income of the previous year. This decision is
clearly distinguishable from the present case where what is
taxed is the income which was ordinarily liable to tax but
which had not been included in the return of the assessee or
which had escaped assessment or which was still to be
assessed to income-tax under the relevant Income-tax Act. It
was in fact a part of the total income though not assessed
till the declaration was made. Merely because it is stated
that the rate of tax charged on the
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amount declared is sixty per cent or fifty-seven per cent as
the case may be it does not cease to be a part of the total
income. This is not a case where what was not in fact income
had been converted into income by section 68. For the same
reason the Department cannot derive any support from the
observations made by this Court in Madurai District Central
Co-operative Bank Ltd. v. Third Income tax officer,
Madurai.(l) We are therefore of the view that the assessee
was entitled to claim deduction of income tax payable on the
amounts added to his total wealth under section 2(m) of the
Act in the course of the reassessment proceedings.
In the result these appeals are allowed the judgment of
the High Court is set aside and the questions referred to it
are answered in the affirmative and in favour of the
assessee. The Department will pay the costs of the
appellant-assessee Hearing fee one set.
P.B.R. Appeals allowed.
419