Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
M/s. McMILLAN & CO.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
16/10/1957
BENCH:
DAS, S.K.
BENCH:
DAS, S.K.
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
KAPUR, J.L.
CITATION:
1958 AIR 207 1958 SCR 689
ACT:
Income-Tax-Assessment -Acceptance by Income-tax Officer of
the assessee’s method of accounting--Power of Appellate
Assitant Commissioner in appeal -If can reject such method
and adopt another Indian Income-tax Act (XI of 1922), ss.
31, 13 Proviso-Indian Income-tax Rules, R. 33.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent assessee, a non-resident company, sold and
published books and magazines in various parts of the world.
It submitted for the assessment year in question a return in
which a fixed percentage of the marked price of all
publications sold in India, printed in India or elsewhere,
was adopted as the cost of production and this method of
accounting was followed in the return. The Income-tax
Officer accepting this method, assessed the income at Rs.
82,623. The assessee preferred an appeal on other grounds
to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner. The Appellate
Assistant Commissioner was of opinion that the true income
of the assessee could not be deduced from the method of
accounting followed by him and accepted by the Income-tax
Officer and issued a notice under s. 31(3) of the Indian
Income-tax Act and after hearing the assessee fixed his
assessable income at Rs. 1,11,616 by applying the provisions
of Rule 33 of the Indian Income-Tax Rules. The assessee
appealed to the Appellate Tribunal and the Tribunal, relying
on a recent decision of the Bombay High Court, held that the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner had no jurisdiction to
enhance the income in the way he did and referred the matter
to the High Court at the instance of the appellant. The
High Court held against the appellant and he appealed. The
questions for decision were whether it was open to the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner in exercise of his powers
under S. 31(3) of the Act to reject the method of
accounting, followed by the assessee and accepted by the
Income-tax Officer, under the proviso to s. 13 of the Act,
and compute the income, profits or gains of the assessee
under Rule 33 of the Rules.
Held, (per S. K. Das and Kapur, jj., Bhagwati, J.,
dissenting) that the questions must be answered in the
affirmative and the appeal must succeed.
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There is nothing in s. 31, read with the proviso to s. 13 of
the Indian Income-tax Act which prevents the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner, in, an appeal preferred by the
assessee, from exercising the powers which the Income-tax
Officer can exercise under the proviso to s. 13 of the Act.
Although it is for the Income-tax Officer, in the first
instance, to decide what would be the correct method of
accounting under the proviso in a particular case, he has,
in doing so to act reasonably and judicially and
690
not subjectively or arbitrarily and any decision he may
arrive at cannot be treated as final. Neither s. 13 nor the
proviso imposes any limitation on the wide powers conferred
on the Appellate Assistant Commissioner by s. 31(3) of the
Act once be is in proper seizin of the matter.
Narrondas Manordass, Bombay v. Commissioner of Income-tax,
[1957] 31 I.T.R. 909, approved.
K. F. Vakeel v. The Commissioner of Income-tax, I.T.
Reference NO. 21 of 1950, Bombay High Court, dissented from.
Case-law discussed.
The Appellate Assistant Commissioner has also,the power in
an appeal to apply the provisions of Rule 33 of the, Indian
Income-tax Rules for the purpose of a correct computation of
the assessee’s income although the Income-tax Officer has
not done so.
Per Bhagwati, J.-The difference in the language of the two
conditions, on the fulfillment of which the method of
accounting regularly employed by the assessee can be
rejected under the proviso to s. 13 of the Indian Income-tax
Act clearly indicates that the Legislature intended that any
determination as to the second condition, namely, that the
income, profits and gains of the assessee cannot be properly
deduced from the method regularly employed by him, must be
of the Income-tax Officer alone and no other authority
described in the hierarchy of Income-tax authorities and
defined by the Act.
K. F. Vakeel v. The Commissioner of Income-tax, I.T.
Reference NO. 21 Of 1950, Bombay High Court, approved.
Nor are the powers of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner
under s. 31(3) Of the Act, in however wide terms they may
have been described, absolute in character being
circumscribed, as they necessarily are, by the nature of the
proceedings before him and are limited to the subject-matter
of the assessment.
Narrondas Manordass, Bombay v. The Commissioner of Income-
tax, Bombay, [1957] 31 I.T.R. 909, referred to.
Case-law discussed.
Section 31(3) of the Act has, therefore, to be read along
with s. 13 and its proviso and so read there can be no doubt
the Appellate Assistant Commissioner has no power in appeal
to nullify the power which the Income-tax Officer alone has
under the proviso. He has no power to reject the method of
accounting regularly employed by the assessee suomotu. If
he thinks that the Income-tax Officer was in error in
accepting that method as the proper method for computing the
assessee’s income what he can do is to set aside the
assessment and direct the Income-tax Officer to make a fresh
assessment under s. 31(3)(b) of the Act. Nor can he in
exercising his power of enhancing the assessment under s. 31
(3)(a) exercise the power under the proviso to s. 13 which
is solely vested in the Income- tax Officer.
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The questions must, therefore, be answered in the negative.
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION. Civil Appeal No. 29 of 1955.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
the 14th March, 1953, of the Bombay High Court in
Income-Tax Reference No. 27 of 1952.
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General of India, G. N.Joshi and
R. H. Dhebar, for the appellant.
N. A. Palkhivala, J. B. Dadachanji, S. N. Andley Rameshwar
Nath and P. L. Vohra, for the respondents’
1957 October 16. The judgment of S. K. Das and J. L. Kapur
JJ. was delivered by S. K. Das J. Bhagwati J. delivered a
separate judgment.
S. K. DAS J.--This is an appeal by special leave from the
judgment and order of the High Court of Judicature at
Bombay, dated March 4, 1953, in Income-tax Reference No. 27
of 1952, by which the said High Court answered certain
questions of law referred to it in the negative. The answer
to those questions depends upon the true scope and effect of
certain provisions of the Indian Income-tax Act (XI of
1922), hereinafter referred as the Act, regarding which
there has already been a difference of opinion between two
High Courts in India. Unfortunately, we have come to a
conclusion different from that of our learned senior brother
Bhagwati J., and we are explaining in this judgment, as
briefly and clearly as we can., the grounds on which our
conclusion is founded.
Very briefly put, the relevant facts are these. The
assessee, respondent before us, is a non-resident company
which has its head office in London and branches in India.
It sells and publishes books and magazines in various parts
of the world. For the assessment year in question, it
submitted a return of income in which with regard to all
publications sold in India, whether printed in India or
elsewhere, a fixed percentage of what was known as the
marked price was adopted as the cost of production. This,
if one may so put it, was the method of accounting on which
the assessee company submitted its return. The 88
692
Income-tax Officer apparently accepted it and subject to
certain minor modifications as respects some items of
expenditure and an alleged bad debt with which we are not
now concerned, assessed the assessee on an income of Rs.
82,623. The assessee appealed to the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner. The latter issued a notice under s. 31(3) of
the Act against the assessee, and after hearing the
assessee, enhanced the assessment of the assessee company’s
business income to Rs. 1,11,616. The Appellate Assistant
Commissioner found:
" It is noticed that on total turnover of Rs. 16,01,973 for
the previous year ending 30th May, 1943, the gross profit
amounted to Rs. 4,09,360 working out to just about 25.5 per
cent. In the case of World profit and loss account I find
that the gross profit earned was pound 231,070 on total
sales of pound 628,000
working out to over 37 per cent. The difference in gross
profit is so wide that some explanation had to be called for
from the appellants, especially in view of the fact that the
appellants do not maintain what should be called an Indian
trading and profit and loss account on the same lines as the
World trading and profit and loss account. The profit and
loss account maintained in India shows only the purchases at
the rate at which these were charged to the Indian branches
by the London head office instead of the real cost of these
publications."
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He was of the view that inasmuch as the fixed percentage of
the marked price adopted by the assessee company as the
production cost for its publications sold in India did not
correctly represent the actual cost of production, the
method of accounting regularly employed is such that a true
figure of income, profits and gains is not deducible
therefrom. He fixed the income of the assessee company on
the basis of the net world profit of the assessee on its
world turnover, and applying that basis to its Indian
business came to the conclusion that the income of the
assessee was Rs. 1, 1 1,616. He did so presumably under the
proviso to s. 13 and R. 33 of the Indian Income-tax Rules,
1922.
693
The assessee company then appealed to the Appellate
Tribunal. The Appellate Tribunal remanded the case to the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner, but before the remand
could be decided came the decision of the Bombay High Court
in K. F. Vakeel v. The Commissioner of Income-tax (1). The
Tribunal then held that in view of that decision, the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner had no jurisdiction to
enhance the income to Rs. 1,11,616. Thereafter, the
Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay City, appellant before
us, asked the Tribunal to submit certain questions of law to
the High Court of Bombay. These questions were"
(1) Whether it is open to an Appellate Assistant
Commissioner on appeal to reject the assessee’s books of
account, which have been accepted by the Income. tax Officer
?
(2) Whether it is open to an Appellate Assistant
Commissioner on appeal to invoke the provisions of Rule 33
of the Indian Income-tax Rules for the purpose of computing
the income of a non-resident, the Income-tax Officer not
having done so ?
(3) Whether it is open to an Appellate Assistant
Commissioner on appeal to enhance an assessment in exercise
of the powers conferred upon him by section 31(3)(a) of the
Indian Income-tax Act, where as a result of definite
information he is of opinion that the income of the assessee
has been under-assessed?" By its judgment and order dated
March 4, 1953, the High Court answered the first two
questions in the negative and held-rightly in our view-that
the third question did not arise. The appellant then asked
for and obtained special leave to appeal from the said
judgment and order of the Bombay High Court.
The first question appears to us to have been somewhat
widely framed and, in the terms in which it has been
expressed, is not confined to the method of accounting
referred to in s. 13 of the Act. The Income-tax Officer,
even when he accepts the assessee’s method of accounting, is
not bound by the figure of profits shown in the accounts.
If and when an appeal is taken by the assessee to the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner,
(1) I.T. Reference No. 21 of 1950, Bombay High Court.
694
the latter can re-examine the books of account to test the
correctness of the assessment made. It is not disputed
before us that ’accounts’ must be distinguished from the
’method of accounting’. Section 13 and its proviso are
concerned with the method of accounting. In the context of
the statement of the case,, however, the first question
really means this: is it open to the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner, on an appeal preferred by the assessee, to
reject for the first time the method of accounting,
purporting to act under the proviso to s. 13 of the Act, on
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the ground that the income, profits and gains cannot be
properly deduced therefrom, when the Income-tax Officer
although he has not expressly said so must be taken to have
accepted the self-same method of accounting ?
The answer to the question depends on a correct
interpretation of ss. 13 and 31 of the Act. We shall first
read s. 13 of the Act:
" 13. Income, profits and gains shall be computed, for the
purposes of sections 10 and 12, in accordance with the
method of accounting regularly employed by the assessee:
Provided that, if no method of accounting has been regularly
employed, or if, the method employed is such that, in the
opinion of the Income-tax Officer, the income, profits and
gains cannot properly be deduced therefrom, then the
computation shall be made upon such basis and in such manner
as the Income-tax Officer may determine."
The section enacts that for the purposes of s. 10 (profits
of business, profession or vocation) and s. 12 (income from
other sources) income, profits and gains must be computed in
accordance with the method of accounting regularly employed
by the assessee. The choice of. the method of accounting
lies with the assessee; but the assessee must show that he
has followed the method regularly for his own purposes. The
section and the proviso read together clearly make such a
method of accounting regularly employed by the assessee a
compulsory basis of computation unless, in the opinion of
the Income-tax Officer, the income, profits and gains
cannot properly be deduced therefrom
695
If the true income, profits and gains cannot be ascertained
on the basis of the assessee’s method, or where no method of
accounting has been regularly employed, the income must be
computed upon such basis and in such manner as the Income-
tax Officer may determine.
Thus far, there is no divergence of opinion as to the true
scope and effect of s. 13 and its proviso. The divergence
starts when s. 13 is read along with s. 31, and we come to
the powers of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner. Section
31, in so far as it is relevant for our purpose, is in these
terms:
" 31(3). In disposing of an appeal, the Appellate,
Assistant Commissioner may, in the case of an order of
assessment,--
(a) confirm, reduce, enhance or annul the assessment, or
(b) set aside the assessment and direct the Income-tax
Officer to. make a fresh assessment after making such
further inquiry as the Income-tax Officer thinks fit or the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner may direct, and the Income-
tax Officer shall thereupon proceed to make such fresh
assessment, and determine where necessary the amount of tax
payable on the basis of such fresh assessment.
Provided that the Appellate Assistant Commissioner shall not
enhance an assessment or a penalty unless ’the appellant has
had a reasonable opportunity of showing cause against such
enhancement;
Provided further that at the hearing of any appeal against
an order of an Income-tax Officer the Income-tax Officer
shall have the right to be heard either in person or by a
representative."
On one side, the argument on behalf of the appellant is that
s. 31 does not in any way limit or circumscribe the power of
the Appellate Assistant Commissioner so as to exclude from
the ambit of his jurisdiction the power given by s. 13 and
its proviso; on the other side, the argument for the
respondent is that by reason of the terms of the proviso,
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particularly
696
the expression "in the opinion of the Income-tax Officer"
occurring therein, the power or duty of rejecting the method
of accounting on the ground that the income, profits and
gains cannot properly be deduced therefrom is given to the
Income-tax Officer alone and not to any other authority in
the hierarchy of authorities mentioned in s. 5 of the Act.
Ancillary to the aforesaid two main contentions, there is a
further divergence of opinion as to whether the
determination of the Income-tax Officer under the proviso to
s. 13, in so far as such determination depends on his
opinion, is final or not. On behalf of the appellant it is
contended that it is not final--whether the determination is
in favour of the assessee or not--provided an appeal is
preferred by the assessee and the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner gets seizin of the assessment. For the
respondent, the argument is that it is final when the
determination is in favour of the assessee, even if the
assessee prefers an appeal on any other ground; but it is
not final if the determination is against the assessee and
the assessee appeals against that determination. These are
the rival contentions which now fall for consideration.
Learned counsel for the respondent has drawn a distinction
between what he called at one stage of his arguments (i) an
objective determination by the Income-tax Officer-a
determination based on certain objective facts and leading
to certain consequences for or against the assessee and (ii)
a small category of cases where the determination is purely
subjective and results in certain consequences for or
against the assessee. Learned counsel has expressed the
same argument in less philosophical terms by saying that in
one class of cases, the determination is by whosoever may be
the assessing authority at the initial or appellate stage,
and in the other by a named authority only. According to
him, into the first class of cases the entire hierarchy of
Income-tax authorities are included; but in the second class
of cases, the decision must be that of the named authority
only. He has referred us to certain other sections of the
Act where, according to him, the determination is also
subjective, such as-- s. 4A (a) (iv),
697
a.10(2)(vi), s. 12B(2), s. 23A, etc. In some other
sections, it is pointed out, two or more authorities are
named, e.g., ss. 27, 38, 48, etc. By what we must admit is
a very adroit and plausible piecing together of some of
these sections, learned counsel has built up his argument
that in the present case the opinion of the Income-tax
Officer that the income, profits and gains can be properly
deduced from the method of accounting regularly employed by
the assessee is a subjective determination of the Income-tax
Officer alone, and the opinion of no other officer or
authority can be substituted therefor. The Appellate
Assistant Commissioner had, therefore, no jurisdiction to go
behind that opinion.
We are unable to accept this line of argument as correct,
and our reasons are these. Firstly, we think that learned
counsel is reading more into the expression " in the opinion
of the Income-tax Officer, occurring in the proviso to s. 13
than what is warranted by the language used. Whether the
method of accounting is regularly employed or not is
undoubtedly a matter which the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner can go into when he has seizin of the appeal.
It is not challenged that if the Income-tax Officer decides
against the assessee and determines that the income, profits
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and gains cannot properly be deduced from the assessee’s
method of accounting, the determination is liable to be set
aside on appeal by the assessee. What then is the reason
for holding that a subjective determination or the
determination of a named authority (whatever expression may
be used) is inviolate in one case but not so in the other ?
We have carefully examined the other sections of the Act to
which learned counsel for the respondent has referred; but
we are unable to agree with him that the language used
therein supports the very subtle distinction that he has
drawn. Let us take, for example, s. 23 which deals with
assessment. Under sub-s. (3), the Income-tax Officer
assesses the total income of the assessee and determines the
sum payable on the basis of such assessment; under sub-s.
(4)the Income- tax Officer the assessment to
698
the "best of his judgment"-an expression much stronger than
,in the opinion of the Income-tax. Officer." It is not
disputed that in an appeal from an assessment under s. 23,
the Appellate Assistant Commissioner can interfere with the
determination or judgment of the Income-tax Officer, and in
such an appeal the Appellate Assistant Commissioner can make
his own assessment and exercise the power which the Income-
tax Officer could exercise. Since 1939 an appeal lies from
a " best of judgment " assessment made under sub-s. (4) of
s. 23, but the right is restricted to " the amount of income
assessed or the amount of tax determined." Why can he not
then interfere with the opinion of the Income-tax Officer
under the proviso to s. 13 ? It is contended that both sub-
ss. (3) and (4) of s. 23 prescribed objective conditions for
the exercise of the power referred to therein. It is true
that under both sub-sections the. assessment must be a fair
and honest estimate an not arbitrary or capricious. Apart
from that, however, we do not see what other distinctive,
objective conditions there are which put those sub-sections
in a different category.
The words ’in the opinion of the Income-tax Officer’ are not
to be construed in the sense of a mere discretionary power;
but in the context of the words used in the proviso to s. 13
they impose a statutory duty on the Income-tax Officer to
examine in every case the method of accounting and to see
(i) whether or not it is regularly employed and (ii) to
determine whether the income, profits and gains can properly
be deduced therefrom. Section 30 of the Act gives the
assessee a right of appeal in respect of certain orders
including an order of assessment made under s. 23. Section
31 deals with the hearing of an appeal and powers of the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner. Before disposing of the
appeal, the Appellate Assistant Commissioner may, if he
thinks fit, make a further enquiry himself or cause it to be
made by the Income-tax Officer, and in disposing of the
appeal he may, in the case of an order of assessment,
confirm, reduce, enhance or annul the assessment: he may set
it aside and order a fresh
699
assessment. There is nothing in the language of s. 31 of
the Act which imposes any restriction on the powers of an
Appellate Assistant Commissioner so as to prevent him from
exercising the power under the proviso to s. 13. The
restriction, if any, must be inferred from the language of
the proviso itself. It is contended that the use of the
words " in the opinion of the Income-tax Officer " in the
second part of the proviso to s. 13 suggests a complete
elimination of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner’s
jurisdiction to decide for the first time that the method of
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accounting is such that the income, profits and gains cannot
be properly deduced therefrom. It is true that the decision
as to the method of accounting is to be arrived at first by
the Income-tax Officer after a careful scrutiny of the
accounts whether they are simple or complicated, and the
power is to be reasonably and judicially exercised, which
excludes any subjective or arbitrary decision by the Income-
tax Officer. It cannot, however, be said that a power so
exercised is clothed with finality and would be excluded
from review by the Appellate Assistant Commissioner; and in
reviewing the order the appellate authority can exercise the
same powers which the Income-tax Officer could exercise.
Our attention has been drawn to the difference in language
in which the two conditions for the application of the
proviso have been expressed; the first condition is
fulfilled if no method of accounting is regularly employed ;
the second condition, however, requires an opinion, viz.,
the opinion of the Income-tax Officer that the income,
profits and gains cannot be properly deduced from the method
of accounting regularly employed. It is pointed out that
the first condition involves an objective determination-not
by any named authority but by any and every authority which
may have to consider whether the condition as to the
regularity of the method employed has been fulfilled or not;
whereas the second condition involves a determination by a
named authority. The argument is that by reason of the
aforesaid difference in language, the Legislature clearly
intended that the opinion of no, other officer can be
substituted for the, 89
700
opinion of the named authority, viz., the Income-tax
Officer, with regard to the fulfilment of the second
condition ; therefore, once the Income-tax Officer accepts
the method of accounting as proper, the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner has no jurisdiction to go behind that opinion.
We are unable to accept this argument as correct. It is to
be remembered that with regard to both conditions, the first
and initial duty is that of the Income-tax Officer to
determine whether the conditions or any of them are
fulfilled ; secondly, if the opinion of the Income-tax
Officer with regard to the second condition is to be
inviolate by reason of the difference in language, then it
should be inviolate in all cases. Why should it be
inviolate in one case and not so when the assessee appeals
against a determination made adverse to him ? We feel that
the second condition is expressed in the terms in which it
has been expressed, because it involves an inferential
process and the expression ’in the opinion of the Income-tax
Officer’ is aptly used as that officer must in the first
instance make the determination. It does not necessarily
follow that the Appellate Assistant Commissioner cannot
revise the determination and exercise the power which the
Income-tax Officer could exercise.
A reference was also made by counsel for the respondent to
the definition of ’Appellate Assistant Commissioner’ and
’Income-tax Officer’ in ss. 2(3) and 2(7) of the Act. These
definitions do not carry the matter any further; because in
order to determine the scope of the powers of the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner, ss. 30 and 31 must be looked at and
they will govern appeals, unless those powers are cut down
by the words of ss. 2(3) and 2(7) or any other provision of
the Act.
Another distinction which learned counsel for the respondent
has drawn with regard to the finality of the determination
of the Income-tax Officer under the proviso to s. 13 is
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this: he has said that where the Income-tax Officer
determines that the method is unacceptable in the sense that
income, profits and gains cannot be properly deduced
therefrom, there is
701
a, decision; where, however, he does not so decide, there is
no decision, and it is merely a case of nonexercise of
power. This distinction learned counsel for the respondent
has drawn in order to get over the anomaly that follows in
holding that in one case the determination is final and in
another case it is not so. We are not at all impressed by
this distinction. For one thing the distinction is much too
subtle, then again, looked at from the proper standpoint, a
nonexercise of the power under the proviso is also a,
decision inasmuch as it amounts to an acceptance of the
method of accounting on the ground that the income, profits
and gains can be properly deduced therefrom. In the instant
case the Income-tax Officer has looked into the accounts and
the computation on the basis of the method employed has been
adopted by him.
Lastly, it seems to us clear that the answer to the question
is provided by the language of s. 31. As observed by Chagla
C. J. in M/s. Narrondas Manordass Bombay v. Commissioner of
Income-tax (1), the language is wide enough to enable the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner to " correct the Income-tax
Officer not only with regard to a matter which has been
raised by the assessee but also with regard to a matter
which has been considered by the income-tax Officer and
determined in the course of the assessment." We are unable
to accept the argument that the proviso to s. 13 imposes a
limitation on the powers of the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner under s. 31. No doubt, the two sections must
be read harmoniously; but s. 13 and its proviso contain no
words of limitation or qualification upon the power of the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner in enhancing the assessment
or setting aside the assessment and directing a fresh
assessment to be made by the Income-tax Officer. Dealing
with the powers of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner
Chagla C.J. in Narrondas’s case (1) said:
" It is clear that the Appellate Assistant Commissioner has
been constituted a revising authority against the decisions
of the Income-tax Officer; a revising authority not in the
narrow sense of revising what is
(1) [1957] 31 I.T.R. 909.
702
the subject-matter of the appeal, not in the sense of
revising those matters about which the, assessee makes a
grievance, but a revising authority in the sense that once
the appeal is before him he can revise not only the ultimate
computation arrived at by the Income-tax Officer but he can
revise every process which led to the ultimate computation
or assessment. In other words, what he can revise is not
merely the ultimate amount which is liable tax, but he is
entitled to revise the various decisions given by the
Income-tax Officer in the course of the assessment and also
the various incomes or deductions which came in for
consideration of the Income-tax Officer." We are in
agreement with these observations.
The substance of the matter as it appears to us is this: the
proviso to s. 13 uses the expression " in the opinion of the
Income-tax Officer" merely because, in the first instance,
it will fall on the Income-tax Officer to determine after
considering the method of accounting regularly employed
whether income, profits and gains can be properly deduced
therefrom, in the same way as any other question of fact has
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to be determined initially by the Income-tax Officer; the
Legislature has not drawn any such nice distinction between
objective and subjective determination as is sought to be
made out by learned counsel for the respondent. Lastly, the
proviso to s. 13 does not import any limitation ’on the
power of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner under s. 31
and the latter section gives the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner power to revise every process which leads to
the ultimate computation or assessment.
Two other points also require notice at this stage. In the
course of the arguments before us, a reference was made to
s. 33B, which was inserted by the Income-tax and Business
Profits Tax (Amendment) Act, 1948. There can be no doubt
that, in view of the language used in is. 33B, the
Commissioner of Income-tax may interfere with any order of
the Income-tax Officer, including a determination under the
proviso to S. 13, provided the other conditions of the
section are fulfilled. Section 33B runs counter to the
contention
703
that a determination under the proviso to s. 13 is a
subjective determination or a determination of a named
authority, which is inviolate in character. Any such
construction as is contended for by the respondent will
render this section nugatory.
The other point is this: assume that a determination under
the proviso to s. 13 in favour of the assessee can be gone
into by the Appellate Assistant Commissioner when the
assessee prefers an appeal on some other ground, and assume
also that the Appellate Assistant Commissioner can set aside
the assessment if he finds that the Income-tax Officer has
not applied his mind to the proviso or has wrongly held that
from the method of accounting, the income, profits and gains
can be properly deduced; what can he (lo then.? Can be act
under the proviso himself and determine the question or must
he only direct the Income-tax Officer to apply his mind
afresh to the proviso ? On one side, there is the language
of the proviso, and on the other the language of s. 31 which
gives wide power to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner.
At first sight, there may appear some conflict between the
two. But on a closer scrutiny there is, we think, no
conflict. As we have said before, the language of the
proviso means only this that, in the first instance, the
Income-tax Officer must form his own opinion as to whether
the income, profits and gains can be properly deduced from
the method of accounting regularly employed, if any ; but if
he fails to apply his mind to the proviso or comes to a
wrong determination for or against the assessee in the
computation of the income, the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner can correct the error in computation, provided
he has seizin of the assessment on an appeal filed by the
assessee. If the assessee files no appeal, the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner does not come into the picture,
because the Revenue has no right of’ appeal from an
assessment made by the Income-tax Officer. Whether in a
particular case, a remand will be the proper order or
whether the error can be corrected by the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner himself will depend on the
circumstances of each case. If it be held that the
Appellate Assistant
704
Commissioner can only set aside the assessment in such
circumstances, an impossible result may follow. If the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner holds that from the method
of accounting the income, profits and gains cannot be
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properly deduced, let us assume that the only order he can
pass is to set aside the assessment and direct the Income-
tax Officer to make a fresh assessment. But if the opinion
of the Income-tax Officer is the only opinion which
determines the matter, the Income-tax Officer may adhere to
his opinion. That will result in a deadlock. If the
proviso to s. 13 does not impose any limitation on the power
of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner, as we hold it does
not, then the Appellate Assistant. Commissioner has the
power to correct the error in the way most suitable in the
circumstances of the case, provided he acts within the ambit
of his power under s. 31 of the Act. Section 31 (3) does
not in terms say that the power to vary the assessment
including the power to enhance it is subject to ally
limitation.
We have so far dealt with the questions at issue
untrammelled by any authorities. We now turn to such
authorities as have been placed before us. We take up first
the decision in K. F. Vakeel v. The Commissioner of Income-
Tax (1). The facts of that case were these: the assessee
carried on a business of loading and unloading ships from
January 1, 1943 to June 30, 1944. On July 1, 1944, the
assessee entered into a partnership with his brother. The
assessee maintained his accounts on the cash basis and his
accounting year was the calendar year. For the calendar
year 1943 he was assessed to income-tax on his accounts
which as stated were maintained on cash basis. On July 1,
1944, when the firm of the assessee and his brother came
into existence the position was that there were outstandings
to the extent of Rs. 2,13,306 and there were liabilities to
the extent of Rs. 86,650. Between July 1, and December 31,
1944, the assessee recovered Rs. 202,209 and he discharged
the liabilities to the extent of Rs. 86,650. Therefore, the
nett amount that he realised between July 1 and December 31,
1944, was Rs. 1,15,559. It is this amount
(1) i.t. reference No.21 of 1950
705
which was the subject-matter of the reference. The
contention of the assessee was that as this amount was
realised after he ceased to do business, it was a capital
receipt which was not subject to tax. His further
contention was that as he kept his accounts on cash basis,
this amount could not be included in his accounts of the
business done from January 1 to June 30, 1944, inasmuch as
this amount was not realised during that period but was
realised during a period subsequent to the period for which
accounts were kept. When the matter went before the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner, he took the view that the
assessee continued to carry on the business till December
31, 1944; he also held that a sum of Rs. 2,13,306 was
recovered from July 1 to December 31, 1944, and not a sum of
Rs. 2,02,209 as alleged by the assessee. When the assessee
appealed to the Tribunal from the decision of the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner, his contention regarding the sum of
Rs. 2,02,209 was upheld by the Tribunal. His contention
with regard to the termination of his business was also
upheld by the Tribunal and the Tribunal held that the
business came to an end on June 30, 1944, and not on
December 31, 1944. The assessee further contended before
the Tribunal that the nett amount of Rs. 1,15,559 which he
realised was a capital receipt and not a revenue receipt.
The Tribunal came to the conclusion that the assessee should
be assessed not on the cash basis but on the accrual basis
and, according to the Tribunal, the sum of Rs. 1, 15,559 had
accrued to the assessee during the period of accounts, viz.,
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January 1, 1944, to June 30, 1944, and therefore it was
subject to tax. The Tribunal took the view that it was not
possible to discover the profits made by the assessee if the
accounts were maintained on cash basis and therefore the
proper method of accounting was the mercantile, that is, the
accrual basis and not cash basis. The decision of the High
Court was based on two grounds: first, the Tribunal was
wrong in forming an opinion suo motu that the cash basis was
not the proper basis from which income, profits and gains
can be properly ascertained, because it was not for the
tribunal to form an
706
opinion on that question at all; secondly, there was nothing
before the Tribunal which could justify it in coming to the
conclusion that the Income-tax Officer was not in a position
to deduce the income, profits and gains from the method of
accounting adopted by the assessee. The actual decision can
be easily supported on the second ground itself, because the
Tribunal committed an error of law in coming to a finding on
no material or evidence. Indeed, the learned Advocate-
General appearing for the Revenue, conceded in that case
that in view of the state of the record it was not possible
for him to contend that the Tribunal’s decision was correct
and further the Tribunal was in error in holding that the
assessee could be compelled to adopt the accrual basis in
keeping his accounts and give up the cash basis which he had
regularly maintained in the past. While, therefore, the
actual decision in the case was undoubtedly correct, we are
unable to accept as correct the following further
observations in connection with the first ground :
" But it is for the Income-tax Officer, who is the assessing
officer, to be dissatisfied with the method of accounting
regularly adopted by the assessee. If he’ found no
difficulty in assessing the income, profits and gains from
the method of accounting regularly adopted by the assessee,
then it is not for any other authority to come to a
different conclusion. It may be that if an opinion is
formed by the Income-tax Officer that opinion may be subject
to an appeal to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner or the
Tribunal; but in the first instance an opinion has to be
formed by the Income-tax Officer as required by the
proviso." While we agree that, in the first instance, the
Income-tax Officer as the first assessing officer has to
form an opinion about the applicability of the proviso to s.
13, we do not agree that it is not open to any other
authority, which is lawfully in seizin of the order of
assessment of which the method of accounting under s. 13 is
only a part, to come to a different conclusion with regard
to the applicability of the proviso. Let us examine this
point a little more
707
closely. The Income-tax Officer may proceed in one of three
ways-(1) he may fail to apply his mind to the statutory duty
imposed on him by s. 13 and its proviso and may accept the
assessee’s method of accounting without at all considering
if (a) the method was regularly employed and (b) if the
income, profits and gains of the assessee can be properly
deduced therefrom; (2) he may apply his mind and decide in
favour of the assessee that the method is both regular and
acceptable (in the sense that income, profits and gains can
be properly deduced therefrom) ; or (3) he may decide
against the assessee and hold that the method is either not
regularly employed or is unacceptable. In the first case,
there is a, failure to perform a statutory duty and it has
not been seriously disputed that the appellate authority can
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direct the Income-tax Officer to perform that duty. This is
supported by high authority to which we shall presently
refer. In the third case, it is conceded that the appellate
authority can interfere and set aside the opinion or
determination of the Income-tax Officer, and in doing so the
appellate authority must form his opinion if the method of
accounting is proper and acceptable. The dispute or
divergence of opinion relates only to the second case and to
a part of it only, because it is not disputed that the
finding as to whether the method of accounting is regularly
employed or not is an objective determination which the
appellate authority can revise. Both the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner and the Appellate Tribunal have wide
powers to go into questions of fact and law, the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner under s. 31(3) and the Appellate
Tribunal under s. 33(4). Even the Commissioner can revise
an order of the Income-tax Officer under s. 33B in certain
circumstances stated therein. We see no justification for
holding that these powers, so widely expressed by the
statute, become ineffective in one particular case only,
namely, when the determination or opinion is in favour of
the assessee as respects the propriety of the method of
accounting. It is true that the Revenue has no right of
appeal under s. 30, but hat is not a decisive circumstance.
The assessee can 90
708
make any order of assessment by the Income-tax Officer final
by not appealing therefrom-whether the order is based on a
subjective or objective determination. The point is not
what happens when there is no appeal ; but the point is when
the appellate authority is lawfully in seizin of the matter,
what powers it can exercise.
We are, therefore, of the view that though Vakeel’s case,
(1) was rightly decided, some of the reasons given in
support of the decision are not correct in law.
Next comes the decision of the Punjab High Court in Oriental
Building and Furnishing Company v. Commissioner of Income-
tax (2) where a view contrary to that of the Bombay High
Court was taken. Though we hold that the conclusion arrived
at in this decision is correct, there is no detailed
discussion in the judgment of the issues involved, except
the bare statement that the powers of the Appellate Tribunal
under s. 33 are very wide.
Apart from the aforesaid two decisions which directly bear
on the question under our consideration, there are some
other decisions which have an indirect but not a decisive
bearing on the question. First, in order of priority, is
the decision of the Privy Council in Commissioner of Income-
Tax v. Sarangpur Cotton Manufacturing Co. Ltd. (3). In that
case, the assessees had for years past adopted regularly the
method of valuation of stocks by taking some price well
below both cost and market price and they followed this
method in the relevant accounting year. The object of this
striking under-valuation was the creation of a " secret
reserve " which involved the retention of profits so as not
to be included in the profits shown to the shareholders by
the profit and loss account and the balance sheet, but which
constituted part of the taxable profits. The Income-tax
Officer, without applying his mind to the question whether
the true profits could be deduced from the method of
accounting regularly employed by the assessees, accepted the
accounts and held the assessees bound by the figure of
profit shown in the accounts. The Privy Council held that
the
709
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profit shown in the profit and loss account and the balance
sheet was not the true figure for income-tax purposes and
the Income-tax Officer could not reasonably conclude that
the true profits could be properly deduced from a gross
under-valuation. It is clear from the decision that their
Lordships proceeded on the footing that the Income-tax
Officer had failed to perform the statutory duty imposed on
him; they amended the question accordingly, answered it in
the negative, and directed that it would be for the Incomes
Officer to proceed to the proper discharge of his duty under
s. 13. The decision is clear authority for the view that
where there has been a failure to perform the statutory duty
imposed on the Income-tax Officer under s. 13 of the Act,
his order is liable to be set aside, even though he may have
accepted the accounts and held the assessee bound by the
figure of profit shown in the accounts.
There are a number of decisions where it has been held that
an order of the Income-tax Officer under the proviso to s.
13 against an assessee is liable to be set aside on appeal.
We need only mention some of them here: see Lala Sarju
Prasad In re (1); Pearey Lal Shukla of Cawnpore In re (2);
and Commissioner of Income-Tax v. Kameshwar Singh of
Darbhanga (3). In these cases, it was held that the
determination of the Income-tax Officer under the proviso to
s. 13 did not exempt his computation from examination on
appeal, and the Appellate Assistant Commissioner had juris-
diction, in an appeal against an assessment under the
proviso to s. 13, to substitute a different method of
computation.
Lastly, we refer to a few only of the decisions in which the
power of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner under s. 31
has been held to be confined to the subject-matter of the
assessment appealed against, so that he has no power to
enhance the assessment by assessing new sources of income:
Jagarnath Therani v. Commissioner of Income-Tax (4)
Gajalakshmi Ginning
(1) [1943] 11 I.T. R. 525.
(3) A.I.R. 1933 P.C. 108.
(2) [1942] 10 I.T.R. 239.
(4) (1925) 21 T.C. 4.
710
Factory v. Commissioner of Income-Tax (1); Chowdhury
Sharafat Hussain v. Commissioner of Income-Tax (2). We do
not think that these decisions touch the question at issue
before us. The present is not a case where the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner has traveled outside the ambit of his
jurisdiction under s. 31 of the Act.
For the reasons given above, we would answer question No. 1
in the affirmative. As to question No. 2, only a few
words are necessary. Rule 33 of the Indian Income-tax
Rules, 1922, is in these terms:
" 33. In any case in which the Income-tax Officer is of
opinion that the actual amount of the income, profits or
gains accruing or arising to any person residing out of the
taxable territories whether directly or indirectly through
or from any business connection in the taxable territories
or through or from any property in the taxable territories,
or through or from. any asset or source of income in the,
taxable territories, or through or from any money lent at
interest and brought into the taxable territories in cash or
in kind cannot be ascertained, the amount of such income,
profits or gains for the purpose of assessment to income-tax
may be calculated on such percentage of the turnover so
accruing or arising as the Income-tax Officer may consider
to be reasonable, or on an amount which bears the same
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proportion to the total profits of the business of such
person (such profits being computed in accordance with the
provisions of the Indian Income-tax Act) as the receipts so
accruing or arising bear to the total receipts of the
business, or in such other manner as the Income-tax Officer
may deem suitable."
A similar expression occurs in the rule :-"in any case in
which the Income-tax Officer is Of opinion etc.". For the
same reasons which we have given with regard to question No.
1, the answer to question No. 2 is also in the affirmative.
The appeal must, therefore, be allowed; the judgment and
order of the High Court of Bombay dated
(1) [1952] 22 I.T.R. 502. (2) [1956] 29 I.T.R. 759.
711
March 4, 1953, is set aside and the two questions referred
to the said High Court are answered in favour of the
Revenue. In view of the difficulty of interpretation and
the divergence of opinion as respects the questions of law
involved, we think that the parties must bear their own
costs throughout.
BHAGWATI J.--This appeal with special leave from the
judgment and order of the High Court of Judicature at Bombay
raises an interesting question as to whether the power under
the proviso to s. 13 of the Indian Income-tax Act (Act XI of
1922) hereinafter referred to as " the Act " of rejecting
the method of accounting regularly employed by the assessee
can be exercised by the Appellate Assistant Commissioner
while hearing an appeal of the assessee under s. 31 of the
Act, if the Income-tax Officer had not done so in the first
instance.
The respondent is a limited company registered in England
having its registered office at St. Martin Street, London.
In India it has its branches at Calcutta, Bombay and Madras.
The respondent publishes as well as sells books and
magazines in various parts of the world. The Head Office
and branches outside India invoice publications to the
Indian branches not at cost but at a valuation which is 25%
of the marked price for sterling publications and 30% of the
marked price for currency publications For the purposes of
computing the profits of its Indian branches, the respondent
takes the said valuation as the cost of the publications.
For the assessment year 1944-45 the respondent was assessed
under the Act as a non-resident company. Its year of
account ended on April 30, 1943. In submitting its return
of income for the said assessment year 1944-45 and in the
assessment proceedings before the Income-tax Officer for
that year, the respondent took the aforesaid invoice value
as representing the cost of the books produced by it. The
business Income returned by the respondent was Rs. 79,131.
By his assessment order dated March 24, 1945, the Income tax
Officer accepted the method of accounting employed by the
respondent and its books of account
712
for the Indian business. He,, however, added back certain
items of expenses shown in the respondent’s balance-sheet
and profit and loss account and computed the income at Rs.
82,623 and disallowed the respondent’s claim for a bad debt
of Rs. 3,592.
The respondent appealed against the said disallowance to the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner. The Appellate Assistant
Commissioner allowed the respondent’s claim for bad debt.
He was, however, of the view that the assessee’s method of
accounting, viz., taking the aforesaid invoice value as
representing the respondent’s actual cost of production was
such that the respondent’s profits could not be properly
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deduced therefrom and issued notice to the respondent under
the first proviso to s. 31(3) of the Act, calling upon the
respondent to show cause why its assessment should not be
enhanced. After hearing the respondent the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner made an order dated November 10,
1948, calculating the Indian business profits of the
respondent on an amount which bore the same proportion to
the net world profits of the respondent’s business as the
Indian turnover bore to the world turnover and enhanced the
Indian business income of the respondent by Rs. 1, 1 1,616.
The respondent preferred an appeal to the Income-tax
Appellate Tribunal against this order of the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner and contended inter alia that the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner had no jurisdiction to
discard the respondent’s method of accounting and re-
computing the respondent’s Indian business profits in the
manner he had purported to do and that in any event for the
reasons mentioned by the respondent the margin of net world
profits could not be applied to the Indian business. By its
order dated April 29, 1950, the Tribunal remanded the case
to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner with a direction
that be should allow the respondent to prove the actual cost
of the goods invoiced to and sold in India.
The Appellate Assistant Commissioner submitted his remand
report in due course. In the meanwhile, however, the High
Court had delivered its judgment in
113
K.F. Vakeel v. The Commissioner of Income-tax(1)to the
effect that no authority other than the Income-tax Officer
had jurisdiction to act tinder the proviso to s. 13 of the
Act.
Relying upon that judgment, the respondent raised two
contentions before the Tribunal and they were (a) that it
was not competent to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner on
appeal to reject the respondent’s method of accounting which
had been accepted by the Income-tax Officer and (b) that it
was not competent to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner on
appeal to compute the Indian business profits of the
respondent under r. 33 of the Indian Income Tax Rules, the
Income-tax Officer not having done so. The Tribuna accepted
these contentions of the respondent and by its order dated
October 16, 1951, allowed the appeal.
At the instance of the appellant, the Tribunal stated a case
and referred the following questions of law to the High
Court for its opinion under s. 66(1) of the Act:
" (1) Whether it is open to an Appellate Assistant
Commissioner on appeal to reject the assessee’s books of
account, which have been accepted by the Income-
tax Officer?
(2) Whether it is open to an Appellate Assistant
Commissioner on appeal to invoke the provisions of Rule 33
of the Indian Income-tax Rules for the purposes of computing
the income of a non-resident, the Income-tax Officer not
having done so?
(3) Whether it is open to an Appellate Assistant
Commissioner on appeal to enhance an assessment in exercise
of the powers conferred upon him by section 31(3) of the
Indian Income-tax Act, where as a result of definite
information he is of opinion that the income of the assessee
has been under-assessed ?
The said reference was heard by the High Court on March 4,
1953, and the High Court following its own decision in K. F.
Vakeel’s case (supra), answered the referred questions Nos.
1 & 2 in the negative and stated that the referred question
No. 3 did not arise.
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(1) I. T. Reference No. 21 of 1950, Bombay High Court.
714
The appellant applied to the High Court for a certificate of
fitness to appeal to this Court under section 66A(2) of the
Act but without success. The appellant thereupon applied
for and obtained from this Court special leave to appeal
under Art. 136 of the Constitution.
The provisions of the Act and the rules framed thereunder
that fall to be considered in this appeal are the following:
" Section 13 ‘Method of Accounting’:
Income, profits and gains shall be computed for the purpose
of sections 10 and 12 in accordance with the method of
accounting regularly employed by the assessee:
Provided that, if no method of accounting has been regularly
employed, or if the method employed is such that, in the
opinion of the Income-tax Officer, the income, profits and
gains cannot properly be deduced therefrom, then the
computation shall be made upon such basis and in such manner
as the Income-tax Officer may determine.
Section 31: Hearing of Appeal:
(3) In disposing of an appeal, the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner may, in the case of an order of assessment :
(a) confirm, reduce, enhance or annul the assessment, or
(b) set aside the assessment and direct the Income-tax
Officer to make fresh assessment after making such further
enquiry as the Income-tax Officer thinks fit or the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner may direct, and the Income-
tax Officer shall thereupon proceed to make such fresh
assessment, and determine where necessary the amount of tax
payable on the basis of such fresh
assessment...................................................
Provided that the Appellate Assistant Commissioner shall not
enhance an assessment or a penalty unless the appellant has
had a reasonable opportunity of showing cause against such
enhancement; ................
715
Rule 33 of the Indian Income-Tax Rules, 1922:
"In any case in which the Income-tax Officer is of opinion
that the actual amount of the income, profits or gains
accruing or arising to any person residing out of the
taxable territories whether directly or indirectly through
or from any business connection in the taxable territories
or through or from any property in the taxable territories,
or through or from any asset or source of income in the
taxable territories, or through or from any money lent at
interest and brought into the taxable territories in cash or
in kind cannot be ascertained, the amount of such income,
profits or gains for the purposes of assessment to income-
tax may be calculated on such percentage of the turnover so
accruing or arising as the Income-tax Officer may consider
to be reasonable, or on an amount which bears the same
proportion to the total profits of the business of such
person (such profits being computed in accordance with the
provisions of the Indian Income-tax Act) as the receipts so
accruing or arising bear to the total receipts of the
business, or in such other manner as the Income-tax Officer
may deem suitable. "
It is contended by the learned Solicitor-General for the
appellant that even though no right of appeal is conferred
upon the Revenue against an assessment order made by the
Income-tax Officer, once the assessee carries an appeal
before the Appellate Assist. ant Commissioner the assessment
order is wholly robbed of its finality and the whole of the
assessment is at large before the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner with the result that it is then open to the
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Revenue to urge all the contentions which it could have done
before the Income-tax Officer and ask the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner to reopen the whole enquiry and, in
effect, reassess the assessee and even enhance the
assessment, provided of course, that the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner shall not enhance the assessment unless and
until he has afforded the assessee a reasonable opportunity
of showing cause against such enhancement. It is further
contended that the powers which the Appellate
91
716
Assistant Commissioner thus exercises are not circumscribed
by any limitations and are unfettered and in the exercise of
such powers it is competent to the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner also to reject the method of accounting
regularly employed by the assessee even though the Income-
tax Officer had not done so provided he, the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner, is of the opinion that the method of
accounting employed is such that the income, profits and
gains cannot properly be deduced therefrom and in that event
the Appellate Assistant Commissioner is also entitled to
adopt the mode of computation of the income prescribed by r.
33 of the Indian Income-tax Rules.
It is, on the other hand, contended by the learned counsel
for the respondent that the determination whether the method
of accounting regularly employed by the assessee is such
that the income, profits and gains cannot properly be
deduced therefrom is within the exclusive province of the
named authority, viz., the Income-tax Officer and such
determination by the named authority is the condition
precedent to a certain consequence following thereupon,
viz., the rejection of the method of accounting regularly
employed by the assessee. Such determination then cannot be
substituted by that of another authority, though while
entertaining an appeal at the instance of the assessee such
authority might consider whether the named authority has
correctly determined the question. Once the named authority
has determined that the case does not fall within the
proviso, no other authority has jurisdiction to determine
that question and the main provision of s. 13 operates and
the income, profits and gains of the assessee can only be
computed for the purpose of ss. 10 and 12 in accordance with
the method of accounting regularly employed by the assessee.
Not only is the Income-tax Officer bound in such a case to
compute the income, profits and gains in accordance
therewith by reason of the mandate contained in the main
provision of s. 13 but the Appellate Assistant Commissioner
also is similarly bound and the terms of s. 31(3) which
gives the
717
Appellate Assistant Commissioner power even to enhance the
assessment cannot be construed as abrogating or setting at
naught the imperative terms of s. 13 and the proviso thereto
which vest such power only in the named authority and no
other.
There is paucity of authority on the construction of s. 13
of the Act. The High Court in deciding the reference in
question relied upon an unreported judgment of its own
delivered on October 11, 1950, in K. F. Vakeel v. The
Commissioner of Income Tax and E. P. Tax (1). In that case
the Tribunal for the first time came to the conclusion that
it was not possible to discover the profits made by the
assessee it’ the accounts were maintained on cash basis and
therefore the proper method of accounting was the
mercantile, i.e., the accrual basis and not the cash basis,
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even though the Income-tax Officer had accepted the method
of accounting regularly employed by the assessee and the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner had concurred in the same.
The question that arose before the High Court was whether
the Tribunal had jurisdiction to do so. The High Court
construed the provisions of s. 13 of the Act and was of
opinion that :
"....... it is for the Income-tax Officer to form the
opinion that income, profits and gains cannot properly be
deduced from the method adopted by the assessee and if such
an opinion is formed by the Income-tax Officer then the
computation of income, profits and gains has to be made upon
such basis and in such manner as the Income-tax Officer may
determine. But it is for the Income-tax Officer, who is the
assessing officer, to be dissatisfied with the method of
accounting regularly adopted by the assessee. If he found
no difficulty in assessing the income, profits and gains
from the method of accounting regularly adopted by the
assessee then it is not for any other authority to come to a
different conclusion. It may be that if an opinion is
formed by the Income-tax Officer that opinion may be subject
to an appeal to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner or the
Tribunal; but in the first instance an opinion has to be
formed by the Income tax Officer as required by the
proviso."
718
On the facts of the case before it, no opinion had been
formed by the Income-tax Officer that the method of
accounting regularly employed by the assessee was not
satisfactory. It was the Tribunal that suo motu came to the
conclusion that cash basis was not the proper basis from
which income, profits and gains could be properly deduced.
The High Court was of opinion that the Tribunal was clearly
wrong in forming that opinion, forgetting that it was not
for it to form an opinion on that question at all. The
Tribunal had vested in it the appellate powers and those
powers could only be exercised on the opinion formed by the
Income-tax Officer. There was nothing before it which could
justify it in coming to the conclusion that the Income-tax
Officer was not in a position to deduce the income, profits
and gains from the method of accounting regularly employed
by the assessee or that the Income-tax Officer had formed
any opinion whatever on that question. The High Court
accordingly set aside the decision of the Tribunal on this
point.
As against this decision of the High Court of Bombay, the
appellant relied upon a decision of the Punjab High Court at
Simla in Oriental Building and Furnishing Co. v.
Commissioner of Income-tax, Delhi (1). In that case the
Income-tax Officer while acting under s. 13 read with s. 23
(3) of the Act had made certain disallowance which was
reduced on appeal by the Appellate Assistant Commissioner.
The Department went up in appeal against the order passed by
the Appellate Assistant Commissioner and the Income_ tax
Appellate Tribunal upon examining the assessee’s method of
accounting and the records placed before the Income-tax
Authorities came to the conclusion that the basis of
computation adopted by the Income-tax Authorities was faulty
and the account books did not reflect the correct account of
the assessee. It accordingly computed the income of the
assessee under the proviso to s. 13 of the Act and the
question which arose for the consideration of the Court was
whether the Tribunal had jurisdiction to do so. The High
Court was of opinion that (1) the Tribunal’s
(1)[1952] 21 I.T.R. 105.
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719
power of dealing with an order passed by an Appellate
Assistant Commissioner was plenary and had been expressed in
s. 33 (4) of the Act as widely as could be conceived and (2)
in an appeal under s. 33 the Tribunal was competent to
decide facts as well as law and possessed authority to
substitute its own order of assessment for the order under
appeal.
These are the only two decisions bearing on the construction
of the proviso to s. 13 of the Act and dealing with the
question whether the Appellate Assist. ant Commissioner or
the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal as the case may be, could
for the first time exercise the power of rejecting the
method of accounting regularly employed by the assessee
while entertaining appeals, if the Income-tax Officer had
not done so in the first instance. Whereas the High Court
of Bombay took the view that they were not competent to do
so, the High Court of Punjab took the view that there being
no limitation on the power to be exercised by the Tribunal,
it could while exercising the appellate powers decide facts
as well as law and substitute its own order of assessment
for the order under appeal. I Not much help can be derived
from the reasoning adopted by the High Court of Punjab,
though the High Court of Bombay appears to have applied its
mind to the terms of the proviso to s. 13 of the Act and
stated that it was for the Income-tax Officer, who was the
assessing Officer, to be dissatisfied with the method of
accounting regularly employed by the assessee. If he found
no difficulty in assessing the income, profits and gains
from the method of accounting regularly employed by the
assessee, then it is not for any other authority to come to
a different conclusion. The Income-tax Officer is really
the authority entrusted under the Act with the duty of
computing the income, profits and gains of the assessee
under the relevant provisions of the Act. It is for him to
form an opinion whether the method of accounting regularly
employed by the assessee is such that the income, profits
and gains cannot properly be deduced therefrom and it is
only if he forms such an opinion that the proviso comes into
operation and the computation
720
of the income, profits and gains of the assessee is to be
made upon such basis and in such manner as the Income-tax
Officer may determine.
The appellant also referred to a decision of the High Court
of Allahabad in Pearey Lal Shukla of Cawnpore, In re (1)
where it was held that the basis and manner of assessment
applied by the Income-tax Officer under the proviso to s. 13
of the Act was liable to interference on appeal by the
Assistant Commissioner and the Commissioner. This decision
however throws no light on the question which arises for
determination in this appeal for the simple reason that it
proceeds on the basis that the Income-tax Officer has formed
an opinion that the method of accounting regularly employed
by the assessee is such that the income, profits and gains
cannot properly be deduced therefrom and the proviso having
come into operation the computation of the income has to be
made upon such basis and in such manner as the Income-tax
Officer may determine. The basis and manner thus adopted by
the Income-tax Officer can be examined on appeal by the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner or the Commissioner while
exercising the appellate powers vested in them under the
Act. This case is no authority for the proposition that the
power of rejection of the method of accounting regularly
employed by the assessee can also be exercised by the
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Appellate Assistant Commissioner or the Commissioner
concerned while entertaining an appeal by the assessee
against the order of the Income-tax Officer.
There is, however, a decision of the Privy Council in
Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay v. Sarangpur Cotton
Manufacturing Co., Ltd, (2) which throws some light on the
construction of s. 13 and the nature and scope of the power
to be exercised by the Income. tax Officer under the proviso
thereto. The assessees in that case had employed a regular
method of accounting but had also for some years past
adopted regularly a method of valuation of stock by taking
some price under both cost and market price with the object
of creating a " secret " reserve, which involved the
(1) [1942] 10 T.T.R. 239.
(2) [1938] 6 I.T.R. 6,
721
retention of profits as not to be included in the profits
shown to the shareholders. The assessees submitted their
profit and loss account showing a profit of Rs. 2,64,086 and
a return of the total income of the company showing an
income of Rs. 1,99,086 which was arrived at by taking into
account the result of undervaluation of stock which the
company had adopted in the previous years. The Income-tax
Officer, without considering whether the true income could
be arrived at from the method of accounting employed by the
assessees held that the assessees were bound by the profits
shown in the balance-sheet. On appeal by the assessee the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner confirmed the assessment
and the assessees then applied to the Commissioner of
Income-tax, Bombay, to review the said order under s. 33 of
the Act, or in the alternative, to make a reference of the
questions of law to the High Court under s. 66(2) of the
Act. The Commissioner declined to review the order and also
to make the reference. Thereupon, the High Court on an
application made by the assessees under s. 66(3) of the Act
required the Commissioner to make a reference and he
accordingly made the reference in question. The High Court
amended the referred question as follows:
" Whether in the circumstances of the case the Income-tax
Officer was entitled to compute the income, profits and
gains of the assessees upon the basis of the printed copy of
the profit and loss account sent with the letter of the
assessees of July 18, 1931, without regard to any under-
valuation of the stock which may have been or may be proved
to have been made."
The High Court was of opinion that the covering letter
formed part of the method of accounting employed by the
assessees within the meaning of s. 13 of the Act and that
the Income-tax Officer was not entitled to split up the
method of accounting and to regard the profit and loss
account apart from the covering letter; that the Income-tax
Officer had only accepted a portion of the method, without
taking the method as a whole, which he was not entitled to
do. It, therefore held that the matter was still at large
for the
722
proper decision of the Income-tax Officer and accordingly
answered the amended question in the negative. The
Commissioner of Income-tax then carried an appeal to the
Privy Council and their Lordships found themselves unable to
agree with the view of the High Court as to the meaning of
s. 13 of the Act and they were of the opinion that the
section related to a method of accounting regularly employed
by the assessee for his own purpose and did not relate to a
method of making up the statutory return for assessment to
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income-tax. Secondly, the section clearly made such a
method of accounting a compulsory basis of computation
unless in the opinion of the Income-tax Officer the income,
profits and gains cannot properly be deduced therefrom. The
duty of the Income-tax Officer was to determine whether it
was possible to deduce the true profits from the account and
the judgment of the Income-tax Officer under the proviso
must be properly exercised. Their Lordships laid it down
that it is the duty of the Income-tax Officer where there is
a method of accounting regularly employed by the assessee
not to prima facie, accept the profits and gains shown by
the assessee but to consider whether the income, profits and
gains can properly be deduced therefrom and to proceed
according to his judgment on the question. On the facts of
the case before them their Lordships were of the opinion
that the Income-tax Officer acted on the same view as that
expressed by the Appellate Assistant Commissioner, and did
not perform the duty above stated. In so far as the facts
showed that the method of accounting regularly employed by
the assessees did not show the true income, profits or
gains, the question was further amended by them as follows:
"Whether in view of the provisions of See. 13 of the Income
Tax Act or otherwise, the Income-tax Officer was right in
computing for the purpose of See. 10 of that Act, the
income, profits and gains in accordance with the method of
accounting regularly employed by the assessee when that
method in fact does not show the true income, profits and
gains" and was answered in the negative.
723
Their Lordships further observed that it would then be for
the Income-tax Officer to proceed to the proper discharge of
his duty under s. 13 in the light of the opinion therein
expressed and reach a proper decision with reference
thereto.
This case discards the view that it is prima facie duty of
the Income-tax Officer concerned to accept the profits shown
by the assessee’s accounts where there is a method of
accounting regularly employed by the assessee and it lays
down that it is his duty where there is such a method of
accounting to consider whether the income, profits and gains
can be properly deduced therefrom. It is incumbent on the
Income-tax Officer to come to a determination on that
question and if he forms the opinion that the method of
accounting is such that the income, profits and gains of the
assessee cannot properly be deduced therefrom he is bound to
reject such method of accounting and make a computation upon
such basis and in such manner as he may determine. The
Income-tax Officer has to apply his mind to this aspect of
the question and come to his own determination in that
behalf and if he does not do so and merely accepts the
profits shown by the accounts even though in fact the method
of accounting regularly employed by the assessee does riot
show the true income, profits and gains, he is in error and
his action in thus accepting the method of accounting is
liable to be set aside at the instance of the higher
Tribunal. This leaves open however the question whether if
the higher Tribunal comes to that conclusion, it will be
open to the higher Tribunal to substitute its opinion for
that of the Income-tax Officer concerned and proceed to
assess the assessees applying the proviso to s. 13 of the
Act. Their Lordships of the Privy Council in the case
before them did not do anything of the kind and observed
that it would be then for the Income-tax Officer himself to
proceed to the proper discharge of his duty under s. 13 of
the Act in the light of the opinion expressed in their
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judgment. They did not send back the case either to the
Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay or to the Assistant
Commissioner of
92
724
Income-tax but after having answered the amended question in
the negative simply stated that the Income-tax Officer would
doubtless proceed to reach a proper decision in behalf of
the applicability of the proviso to s. 13 of the Act having
regard to his experience in the preceding years of
assessment. They neither left that duty to be performed by
the Commissioner of Income-tax nor by the Assistant Commis-
sioner of Income-tax but referred the performance of that
duty to the proper authority who was the Income-tax Officer
who alone was invested with the duty of performing it under
the terms of the proviso to s. 13 of the Act.
Certain decisions bearing on the interpretation of s. 33B of
the Act were referred to in this context and reliance was
placed on certain observations contained therein in regard
to the powers vested in the Appellate Assistant Commissioner
while hearing appeals filed before him by the assessee.
(Vide Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tejaji Farasram
Kharawala (1); Commissioner of Income-tax v. Amritlal
Bhogilal & Co., (2) and Smt. Durgabatti and Smt.
Narmadabala Gupta v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Bihar and
Orissa (3).
It may be remembered that the Revenue has not been given any
right of appeal before the Appellate Assistant Commissioner
against the assessment order passed by the Income-tax
Officer. It is only the assessee who has such a right
conferred upon him under s. 30 of the Act. When the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner however hears such appeal
though at the instance of the assessee, the Income-tax
Officer is given the right to be heard, either in person or
by a representative, who appears’ before the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner to justify the assessment order
passed by him. The Legislature in its wisdom has not given
a substantive right to the Revenue to carry an appeal
against the order of the Income-tax Officer. The decision
of the Income-tax Officer is qua the Revenue invested with a
finality and the Income-tax Officer is not regarded as a
party aggrieved against
(1) [1953] 23 I.T.R. 412. (2) [1953] 23 I.T.R. 420.
(3) [1956] 30 I.T.R. 101.
725
his own decision. He in fact represents the Revenue and
there is no question therefore of his ever being able to
question his own decision which is considered to all intents
and purposes a proper decision given by him having regard to
all the circumstances of the case. The assessee is the only
person who is given the right of appeal against the decision
of the Income-tax Officer. If the assessee does not choose
to exercise this right of appeal, the decision of the
Income-tax Officer acquires a finality both qua the Revenue
and himself but if the assessee chooses to exercise the
same, the appeal is heard by the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner. The Income-tax Officer is as aforesaid, then
given the right to be heard either in person or by a
representative. There also the contest is between the
Revenue on the one hand and the assessee on the other. The
powers which are vested in the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner while hearing such appeals are statutory powers
conferred upon him by S. 31 of the Act and in the exercise
of these powers the Appellate Assistant Commissioner may in
the case of an order of assessment (a) confirm, reduce,
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enhance or annul the assessment, or (b) set aside the
assessment and direct the Income-tax Officer to make a fresh
assessment after making such further enquiry as the Income-
tax Officer thinks fit or the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner may direct, and the Income-tax Officer shall
thereupon proceed to make such fresh assessment. and
determine where necessary the amount of tax payable on the
basis of such fresh assessment. If the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner chooses to exercise the powers conferred upon
him under the first alternative and enhance the assessment
he is enjoined by the proviso to s. 31(3) of the Act to give
to the Appellant a reasonable opportunity of showing cause
against such enhancement. There are no doubt limit. lions
grafted on this power of the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner but these limitations have to be found from the
very nature of the proceedings themselves. These
limitations will be indicated at the appropriate place
hereafter.
726
The High Court of Bombay no doubt expressed the opinion in
the Commissioner of Income-tax v. Amritlal Bhogilal & Co.
(1):
" As pointed out in the last reference, the object of
enacting section 33B was to confer a power upon the
Commissioner in the interest of revenue to revise orders of
the Income-tax Officer which could not be revised under any
circumstances if the assessee did not appeal from those
orders. However erroneous the order of the Income-tax
Officer may be, however prejudicial to the Revenue, the
assessee by refusing to exercise his right of appeal could
make that order conclusive. In order to fill up this
obvious lacuna the Legislature enacted Section 33B. But
once the assessee has appealed, there is no difficulty
whatsoever in the way of the department in agitating any
question before the Appellate Assistant Commissioner which
in its opinion should be agitated and decided in the
interest of public revenue. Now, it is clear that when an
appeal is pending before the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner, the Income-tax Officer has the right to be
heard either in person or by a representative, and the very
point which the Commissioner has taken and on which he has
given his decision under section 33B could have been urged
under the directions of the Commissioner before the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner. It is only when no remedy
is open to the Commissioner to revise the order of the
Income-tax Officer that this jurisdiction under section 33B
arises. But when a legal remedy is given to him to get the
orders of the Income-tax Officer revised, he cannot
requisition to his aid the power conferred upon him under
section 33B. Once the appeal with regard to the year 1949-
50 was pending before the Appellate Assistant Commissioner,
the Commissioner was given the full right to get the order
of the Income-tax Officer revised in any manner he thought
necessary in the interest of public revenue."
These are however observations only with regard to the
construction of s.33B of the Act and do not throw any light
on the nature and scope oft he powers
727
vested in the Appellate Assistant Commissioner under s. 31
of the Act, much less do they throw any light on the nature
and scope of the power vested in express terms in the
Income-tax Officer under the proviso to s. 13 of the Act of
rejecting the method of accounting regularly employed by the
assessee if in his opinion the method of accounting is such
that the income, profits and gains cannot properly be
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deduced therefrom. This decision does not help the
appellant in its contention that if the Income-tax Officer
has not in fact done so it will be open to the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner while hearing an appeal filed before
him by the assessee to exercise such power in the first
instance.
The position contended for by the appellant as emerging from
the decision of the High Court of Bombay just referred to is
contrary to the one which was enunciated by the learned
judges of the High Court of Bombay in K. F. Vakeel’s Case
(supra). I am clearly of the opinion that the learned
judges of the High Court of Bombay did not intend to lay
down any such position.
In fact, in the later unreported decision of theirs in M/s.
Narrondas Manordass, Bombay v. The Commissioner of Income-
tax, Bombay (1) the learned judges of the High Court of
Bombay laid down that however wide in terms the powers
conferred upon the Appellate Assistant Commissioner under s.
31 of the Act may have been worded, they are not absolute
but are circumscribed by the very nature of the proceedings
themselves. The learned judges in that context observed:
"Now, in order to understand what the competence of the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner is and what are the powers
conferred upon the Appellate Assistant Commissioner, it is
necessary to bear in mind certain salient facts. It is only
the assessee who has a right conferred upon him to prefer an
appeal against the order of assessment, passed by the
Income-tax Officer. If the assessee does not choose to
appeal, the order of assessment becomes final subject to any
power
(1) [1957] 31 I.T.R. 909
728
of revision that the Commissioner might have under s.33-B of
the Income-tax Act. Therefore,it would be wholly erroneous
to try and compare the powers of the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner with the powers possessed by a Court of Appeal,
under the Civil Procedure Code. The Appellate Assistant
Commissioner is not an ordinary court of appeal in the sense
in which that expression is understood in the Civil
Procedure Code. It is impossible to talk of a court of
appeal when only one party to the original decision is
entitled to appeal and not the other party, and in view of
this peculiar position occupied by the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner, the Legislature, as we shall presently point
out, has conferred very wide powers upon the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner once an appeal is preferred to him by
the assessee. If the assessee chooses to remain content
with the order of the Income-tax Officer there is nothing
that the Appellate Assistant Commissioner can do, however
erroneous the assessment may be; but if the assessment is
opened up by the action of the assessee himself, then the
powers conferred upon the Appellate Assistant Commissioner
are much wider than the powers of an ordinary Court of
appeal. The statute provides that once an assessment comes
before the Appellate Assistant Commissioner his competence
is not restricted to examining those aspects of the
assessment which are complained of by the assessee; his
competence ranges over the whole assessment and it is open
to him to correct the Income-tax Officer not only with
regard to a matter which has been raised by the assessee but
also with regard to a matter which has been considered by
the Income-tax Officer and determined in the course of
assessment.
"It is clear t at the Appellate Assistant Commissioner has
been constituted a revising authority against the decision
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of the Income-tax Officer; a revising authority not in the
narrow sense of revising what is the subject matter of the
appeal, not in the sense of revising those matters about
which the assessee makes
729
once the appeal is before him he can revise not only the
ultimate computation arrived at by the Income-tax Officer
but he can revise every process which led to the ultimate
computation or assessment. In other words, what he can
revise is not merely the ultimate amount which is liable to
tax, but he is entitled to revise the various decisions
given by the Income-tax Officer in the course of the
assessment and also the various incomes or deductions which
came in for consideration of the Income-tax Officer. "
The learned judges then cited with approval the observations
of the Patna High Court in Jagarnath Therani v. Commissioner
of Income-tax (1):
" Now this section (section 31(3)) relating to appeals is
enacted for the benefit of the subject and also, to the
limited extent therein stated, for the benefit of the Crown.
But the subject-matter of the appeal is the assessment and
the scope of the appeal must, in my opinion, be limited by
the subject-matter. The appellate authority has no power to
travel beyond the subject-matter of the assessment, and, for
all the reasons advanced by the appellant, is in my opinion,
not entitled to assess new sources of income. " the
observations of the High Court of Madras in Gajalakshmi
Ginning Factory v. Commissioner of Incometax (2) (approved
by the Patna High Court in Bishwanath Prasad Bhagwat Prasad
v. Commissioner of Income-tax (3) at p. 758):
" Of course, it would not be open to the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner to introduce into the assessment new sources,
as his power of enhancement should be restricted only to the
income which was the subject matter of consideration for
purposes of assessment by the Income-tax Officer. "
and their own observations in an unreported judgment of
theirs in Sharrif Jima & Co. Ltd., Mombassa v. Commissioner
of Income-tax, Bombay City (4):
" When the Appellate Assistant Commissioner exercises his
power of enhancement, be is dealing with
(1) [1925] 2 I.T.C. 4, 8.
(3) [1956] 29 1 T. R. 748.
(2) [1952] 22 I.T.R. 502, 510.
730
the subject-matter of appeal before him, and enhancement is
confined to the sources or items in respect of which the
assessment has been made by the Income-tax Officer.
After considering the various authorities cited above the
learned judges finally came to the conclusion:
" We do not think it can be seriously disputed that those
powers, are very wide and unfettered, but the only question
before us is whether there is any limitation upon those
powers, and if there is any limitation upon those powers,
what is the nature and character of the limitation. It is
not as if the Appellate Assistant Commissioner has
completely unqualified powers; his powers are limited to the
subjectmatter of the assessment and we have attempted to
define what the subject-matter of the assessment is. "
It follows from the above that even though the powers of the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner in the matter of
enhancement of the assessment provided in s. 31(3) of the
Act are not circumscribed by any limitation thereupon and
are as wide as wide can be, there are well-recognized
limitations on the same, one of which has been rightly
accepted by the learned judges of the High Court of Bombay
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in their unreported decision above referred to. It now
remains to consider whether there is any other limitation on
such powers of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner to be
found in the provisions of s. 13 of the Act and the proviso
thereto.
It is clear that not much light is thrown on this question
by the authorities directly bearing on the construction of
s. 13 of the Act above referred to except the observations
of the learned judges of the High Court of Bombay in K. F.
Vakeel’s Case, (supra). This judgment of the learned judges
of the High Court of Bombay has not been dissented from
either in Bombay or else where and stands unchallenged and
would prima facie go to establish the position canvassed
before us by the assessee that it is the Income-tax Officer
and the Income-tax Officer alone who is invested with the
power to determine whether the method of accounting employed
by the assessee is such that
731
the income, profits and gains of the assessee cannot
properly be deduced therefrom.
Not much help can be derived also from the comparison of the
various provisions of the Act where the Income-tax Officer
is vested with the power of arriving at the determinations
on his own, viz., Section 4A(a)(iv),s. 10(5), s. 12B(2), s.
22(2), s. 22(4), s. 23(2), s. 23A,s. 34 and s. 42(2) or
where there are several authorities named besides the
Income-tax Officer for arriving at determinations of the
relative questions, viz., s. 28(1) and (2), s. 37, s. 38, s.
48, and s. 49E of the Act with the provisions contained in
s. 13 and the proviso thereto. It is not necessary to probe
into the reasons for the enactment of these several
provisions by the Legislature in the manner therein stated.
It is sufficient for the present purpose to scrutinise the
provisions of s. 13 itself and reach a conclusion on the
express terms thereof.
Turning then to the provisions of s. 13 itself, one finds
that the main provision thereof enacts the rule that income,
profits and gains shall be computed for the purpose of ss.
10 and 12 in accordance with the method of accounting
regularly employed by the assessee. If the matter stood
there the imperative character of this provision would
entail upon the Income-tax Officer and upon all the income-
tax authorities in the hierarchy to accept that method of
accounting for the computation of income, profits and gains
of the assessee for the purpose of ss. 10 and 12 of the Act.
This method of accounting though regularly employed by the
assessee is however not invested with a sacrosanct character
and is subject to the proviso enacted in s. 13 and it is
that if no method of accounting has been regularly employed
or if the method employed is such that in the opinion of the
Income-tax Officer the income, profits and gains cannot
properly be deduced therefrom, then the computation shall be
made upon such basis and in such manner as the Income-tax
Officer may determine. Two conditions are thus attached to
the rejection of the method of accounting regular employed
by the assessee and
732
they are expressed in different phraseology : (i) if no
method of accounting has been. regularly employed; and (ii)
if the method employed is such that in the opinion of the
Income-tax Officer the income, profits and gains cannot
properly be deduced therefrom. It is to be noted that these
two conditions are couched in quite different terms. In the
case of the first condition, the mere fact of no method of
accounting having been regularly employed is enough to bring
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the proviso into operation but in the case of the second
condition the Income-tax Officer has to form an opinion that
the method of accounting is such that the income, profits
and gains cannot properly be deduced therefrom before the
proviso can ever come into operation. The determination of
the Income-tax Officer concerned to that effect is the
condition of the rejection by him of the method of
accounting regularly employed by the assessee and unless and
until he comes to that conclusion he cannot reject the same
and compute the income, profits and gains of the assessee
upon such basis and in such manner as he may determine. The
difference in the language of these two conditions is
advisedly adopted by the Legislature. The fact that no
method of accounting has been regularly employed by the
assessee would be obvious to any Income-tax Officer merely
on a perusal of the statement of account furnished b the
assessee and would not require any mental process which can
be properly described as a determination. The mental
process involved, however, in the case of the second
condition is of a much more elaborate character and the
Income-tax Officer has to apply his mind to the question
whether even though the method of accounting has been
regularly employed by the assessee, such income, profits and
gains cannot properly be deduced therefrom. Here the
Income-tax Officer concerned has to form a definite opinion
on the question and if he comes to the conclusion that the
income, profits and ’gains of the assessee cannot properly
be deduced from the method of accounting regularly employed
by him the proviso at once comes into operation. He is
entitled to reject
733
assessee and compute the income, profits and gains of the
assessee upon such basis and in such manner as he may
determine. This is not the mental process of the nature
required for the fulfilment of the first condition. It is
the application of mind to the question whether income,
profits and gains of the assessee can be properly deduced
from the method of accounting regularly employed by the
assessee and the Income-tax Officer has to come to the
conclusion that it cannot be so done. This determination is
under the terms of the proviso itself a determination of the
Income-tax Officer himself and of no other authority in the
hierarchy of the Income-tax Officers. It may be noted that
the term" Income-tax Officer" has been defined in s. 2(7) of
the Act as distinct from the term "Appellate Assistant
Commissioner" defined in s. 2(3) of the Act. The Income-tax
Officer, the Appellate Assistant Commissioner and the
Inspecting Assistant Commissioner are separate entities each
with a jurisdiction of its own and the one cannot by any
chance be interpreted to mean the other. If, therefore, the
proviso to s. 13 of the Act talks of the Income-tax Officer,
it is the Income-tax Officer alone as defined in s. 2(7) of
the Act and not the Appellate Assistant Commissioner as
defined in s. 2(3) of the Act or any other officer in the
hierarchy of Income-tax Officers. Such an interpretation
would involve the deletion not only of the term "Income-tax
Officer" from the proviso to s. 13 but also the absolute
negation of the expression "in the opinion’ of the Income-
tax Officer" mentioned therein. I for one cannot ascribe to
the Legislature any negligence or oversight nor can I impute
to it any intention to use these words as though they were
superfluous or redundant. The words used by the Legislature
must be given their full effect and significance and the
only way in which these words can be construed is to ascribe
to the Legislature the intention to make the determination
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by the lncome-tax Officer a condition of the proviso being
brought into operation, with the necessary consequences of
the rejection of the method of accounting regularly
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basis and in such manner as the Income-tax Officer himself
may determine.
To that extent the decision of the High Court of Bombay in
K. F. Vakeel v. Commissioner of Incometax & E. P. Tax (1)
would appear to be correct.
It is however urged that this interpretation would involve
the necessary consequence that the determination of the
Income-tax Officer within the proviso to s. 13 of the Act
would be final so far as the Revenue was concerned as it had
no right to appeal against the determination of the Income-
tax Officer, whereas the assessee would have the right under
s. 30 of the Act to carry an appeal before the Appellate
Assistant Comniissioner and such a result could certainly
not have been contemplated by the Legislature while enacting
this measure. It is also contended that once the assessee
carries an appeal before the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner he himself destroys the finality of the
determination made by the Income-tax Officer and the whole
matter is at large so much so that even though the Revenue
could not have preferred an appeal on its own, once the
appeal is entertained by the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner it would be able to urge any and every ground
including the one which would bring the case within the
proviso to s. 13 of the Act even though the Income-tax
Officer had not entertained the same in the first instance.
The first contention is wholly untenable for the simple
reason that when proceedings are entertained by the Income-
tax Officer, he represents the Revenue and the contest then
is between the Revenue (as represented by him) on the one
hand and the assessee on the other. If the Revenue itself
decides the question in a particular manner in the process
of assessment, it cannot legitimately be heard to say that
it has not been given any right of appeal against the
decision of the Income-tax Officer who represents it fully
all the way. The party aggrieved by the decision of the
Income-tax Officer can only be one and that is the assessee,
the Revenue having decided the question in its on favour.
The assessee only can in the circum-
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stances, therefore be given the right of appeal against the
decision of the Income-tax Officer. Even when the assessee
files an appeal before the Appellate Assistant Commissioner,
the Revenue is represented by the Income-tax Officer himself
who appears before the Appellate Assistant Commissioner
either in person or by a representative. So, there also the
Revenue is fully represented and has its full say at the
hearing of the appeal before the Appellate Assistant Commis-
sioner and the only say which it can ever have would be to
support the decision which has been given in the first
instance by the Income-tax Officer who is its representative
in the assessment proceedings. No grievance can therefore
be made that the Revenue has been conferred no right of
appeal and that if the assessee does not choose to appeal
against the decision of the Income-tax Officer, it has no
redress whatever. It has, in fact, no grievance at all
which can ever be redressed by the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner and if the Revenue cannot by any chance be
treated as an aggrieved party the whole of this argument is
robbed of significance. It is futile on the part of the
appellant therefore to urge that there is finality in one
case and no finality in the other.
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The second contention put forward by the appellant is
equally devoid of substance. The powers of the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner are statutory and they are to be
found in the four corners of s. 31 of the Act. The nature
and scope of these powers have been already discussed above
and these powers are not absolute in character but are
circumscribed in the manner indicated in the judgment of the
High Court of Bombay above referred to. The Income-tax
Officer who appears before the Appellate Assistant Commis-
sioner either in person or by his representative is
concerned to support his own decision and therefore lie
cannot be ever heard to say that the decision which he has
reached in the matter of the proviso to s. 13 of the Act is
wrong in any manner whatever. The Appellate Assistant
Commissioner even though he is exercising these appellate
powers, cannot on its own
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accounting regularly employed by the assessee is such that
the income, profits and gains of the assessee cannot be
properly deduced therefrom. He can only arrive at the
conclusion on the record before him and on the materials
presented before him by the assessee as well as the Income-
tax Officer appearing before him either in person or by a
representative that the conclusion which has been reached by
the Income-tax Officer within the terms of the proviso to s.
13 of the Act is not proper and if he comes to that
conclusion the only thing that be can do is to set aside the
assessment within the meaning of s. 31(3)(b) of the Act avid
direct the Income-tax Officer to make a fresh assessment
after making such further enquiry which the Income-tax
Officer thinks fit or he, the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner, may direct. He has no jurisdiction to arrive
at a determination of his own as to the method of accounting
regularly employed by the assessee being such that the
income, profits and gains of the assessee cannot properly be
deduced therefrom. That is the function of the Income-tax
Officer by the very terms of the proviso to s. 13 itself and
he cannot arrogate that function to himself by abrogating or
setting at naught the express terms of the proviso to s. 13
which lay down that the power of rejection of the method of
accounting regularly employed by the assessee and
computation of the income, profits and gains of the assessee
upon such basis and in such manner as the Income-tax Officer
himself may determine is only vested in the Income-tax
Officer as defined in s. 2(7) of the Act. The power of
enhancement of the assessment conferred upon the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner under s. 31(3)(a) cannot be construed
to mean that the Appellate Assistant Commissioner can on his
own exercise such power within the meaning of the proviso to
s. 13 even though the Income-tax Officer himself has not
done so in the first instance. The powers conferred upon
the Appellate Assistant Commissioner under s. 31(3)(a) have
got to be read with this further limitation that even though
he can enhance the assessment, he cannot do so by exercising
the
737
in the Income-tax Officer concerned under the proviso to s.
13 of the Act. Section 31(3) of the Act has got to be read
harmoniously with the provisions of s. 13 and the proviso
thereto and if they are so read the only conclusion to which
one can arrive is that even though the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner exercises the wide powers conferred upon him
under s. 31(3) of the Act, he cannot abrogate or set it
naught the express power which is vested in the Income-tax
Officer under the proviso to s. 13 of the Act.
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The learned Solicitor-General urged that if the proviso to
s. 13 of the Act was so interpreted it would not only
deprive the Appellate Assistant Commissioner of the power to
bring the proviso to s. 13 of the Act into operation in a
proper case but would also deprive the Commissioner of the
power which he has to revise the Income-tax Officer’s order
of assessment under s. 33B of the Act. As already
indicated, the Court is not concerned here with the
interpretation of s. 33B of the Act and it may also be noted
that there was no such provision to be found in the Act as
it stood at the relevant period. Assuming, however, that
the power of the Commissioner to revise the Income-tax
Officer’s orders under s. 33B of the Act has to be
considered in this context, there is nothing in the terms of
that section which militates against the conclusion arrived
at on the construction of the proviso to s. 13 of the Act.
If the Commissioner considers that any order passed in the
record of any proceedings under the Act by the Income-tax
Officer is erroneous in so far as it is prejudicial to the
interests of the Revenue, it is open to him after giving the
assessee an opportunity of being heard as he deems necessary
to pass such orders thereon as the circumstances of the case
justify. If he comes to the conclusion that the Income-tax
Officer concerned is in error in the matter of accepting the
method of accounting regularly employed by the assessee and
ought to have come to the conclusion that the method of
accounting employed is such that the income, profits and
gains cannot properly be deduced therefrom, it would be open
to the Commissioner to record that opinion of his and pass
an order cancelling
738
the assessment and directing a fresh assessment which would
be within his competence and would be the only order thereon
which the circumstances of the case would justify. No
injustice would be done to the Revenue. The ends of justice
would be equally served if the Commissioner in such a case
makes an order cancelling the assessment and directing a
fresh assessment and remands the case back to the Income-tax
Officer with a direction to apply his mind properly to the
facts of the case and determine the question which is within
his exclusive province under the terms of the proviso to s.
13 of the Act. I cannot see any difficulty of the type
envisaged by the learned Solicitor-General and am of opinion
that this contention of the appellant also must be
negatived.
I am, therefore, of opinion that the conclusion reached by
the High Court of Bombay in the instant case was correct and
the referred questions Nos. 1 and 2 were rightly answered
by the High Court in the, negative. As stated by the High
Court the question No. 3 did not arise for consideration at
all and I would, therefore, dismiss the appeal with costs.
BY THE COURT.-In accordance with the judgment of the
majority, the appeal will be allowed. Each party will bear
its own costs throughout.
Appeal allowed.
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