Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
ASHOK SINGH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ASSISTANT CONTROLLER OF ESTATE DUTY.CALCUTTA AND OTHERS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT12/05/1992
BENCH:
MOHAN, S. (J)
BENCH:
MOHAN, S. (J)
RAY, G.N. (J)
CITATION:
1992 AIR 1756 1992 SCR (3) 190
1992 SCC (3) 169 JT 1992 (4) 147
1992 SCALE (1)1126
ACT:
Estate Duty Act, 1953:
Sections 53-A, 56(2), 58, 59 and 73A-Estate Duty-Levy
of-Proceedings not commenced within five years from the
death of estate owner-Application for grant of succession
certificate made by the deceased’s son after attaining
majority-Whether proceedings debarred-Whether succession
certificate could be denied on ground of non-production of
certificate from Controller-"Proceedings for the levy of any
duty"-Whether includes proceedings for assessment.
Interpretation of Statues-Plain meaning to be given
effect to.
Words and Phrases-World ’levy’-Meaning of.
Legal Maxims-Quai Hearet in Litera Haeret in Cortice.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant’s father died intestate leaving behind
the appellant and his brother. Since they were minors at
that time their maternal uncle was appointed as guardian by
the City Civil Court. The guardian never filed the account
of the property or the return as required under Sections 53
or 56 of the Estate Duty Act, 1953 in respect of the estate
of the appellant’s father within five years from the date of
his death.
On attaining majority, the appellant as Karta, applied
to the City Civil Court for the grant of a succession
certificate in respect of the estate of his father.
However, during the proceeding, it was pointed out that a
certificate from Estate Duty Authority was necessary under
Section 56(2) of the Act.
On behalf of the appellant it was urged that in view of
Section 73A of the Act, the time to commence any proceedings
for levy of estate duty
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had become barred inasmuch as five years had expired from
the date of the death of his father. Hence, the question of
production of certificate under Section 56(2) did not arise.
The Chief Judge of the City Civil Court held that he
could not go into this question since the authorities
constituted under the Act alone could decide this.
Thereafter, the appellant filed the return with the
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Assistant Controller of Estate Duty. the appellant was
served with a notice under Section 58(2), along with a
questionnaire with the first respondent-the Assistant
Controller of Estate Duty. Despite the appellant’s
objection that no proceedings could be initiated in view of
the statutory bar under Section 73A, inasmuch as the period
of five years had expired from the date of his father’s
death, the appellant was called upon to furnish certain
particulars. Under these circumstances the appellant
challenged before the High Court the notice issued under
Section 58(2) of the Act, along with the questionnaire and
the proceedings. A Single Judge cancelled the notice in
question.
On appeal by the first respondent, the Division Bench
held that Section 73A did not do away with the liability of
an accountable person for payment of duty; it only barred
the initiation of proceedings for levy of duty. Therefore,
if the liability remained but proceedings could not be
initiated, there was no question of full payment of duty.
As such it could not be stated in the certificate by the
Controller that there was no claim of estate duty from
accountable person; and, accordingly, the bar of limitation
was not applicable to cases as provided under Section 73A
where application was made for grant of representation or
succession certificate and the account or the copy
application was delivered to the Controller as required
under Section 56.
In the appeal before this Court, on behalf of the
appellant it was contended that the construction placed by
the Division Bench was totally incorrect; Section 73A was
comprehensive in its scope in so far it threw a statutory
bar preventing the authority from commencing any proceeding
after the expiry of five years; and would take within it
Section 56 also; that the High Court was not correct in its
view that no grant of representation of succession
certificate could be made after the expiry of five years;
that Section 56 would have to be so read as to bring about a
harmonious
192
construction between Section 73A and Section 56; and that
strict literal interpretation would defeat the object and
purpose of the statutory bar under Section 73A.
Allowing the appeal, this Court,
HELD : 1.1 The language of Section 73A of the Estate
Duty Act, 1953 is unambiguous. This section throws a
statutory bar and is comprehensive in nature. In so far as
it says "no proceeding under this Act", that means any
proceedings whatever in relation to levy can ever be
commenced after five years. The world "levy" used in
Section 73A embraces within it the process of assesment and
also the imposition of tax. Therefore, it is certain that
even a proceeding for assessment cannot be taken after five
years.
Padampat Singhania and others v. Controller of Estate
Duty, Kanpur, 122 ITR 162 at 163, relied on.
Controller of Estate Duty v. Bbola Dutt, 130 ITR 468
approved.
P.C. Saxena v. The State, 104 ITR 106, distinguished.
Block’s Law Dictionary (fifth edition) page 816,
referred to.
1.2. No doubt, both under sub-section (1), clause (b)
and sub-section (2), the language used in "no order shall be
made upon his application". To require in a case of this
character, the production of certificate from the Controller
would amount to the insistence of an impossible compliance.
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1.3 The Division Bench of the High Court was not
correct in holding that Section 73A was only applicable to
proceedings initiated under Section 59. Merely because
Section 59 says "subject to section 73A" that does not mean
a statutory bar under Section 73A is lifted. On the
contrary, Section 53A reinforces the rigour of Section 73A.
The words "commencement of any proceedings under the Act"
are comprehensive enough to include Section 59 as well.
Equally, it was not correct in holding that the application
of 73A to cases coming under Section 56 would make the
latter Section unsustainable. That will be only placing in
literal interpretation of Section 56 regardless of
situation.
1.4 If, therefore, the object of Section 73A is
unambiguous to bar the
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commencement of any proceeding for levy after the period of
five years in the case of first assessment, the rigour of
the Section cannot be diluted, by introducing a construction
not warranted in the situation. If it was the intention of
the Parliament to provide exceptional cases making Section
73-A inapplicable to such cases nothing would have been
easier than to have so expressed. The language under
Section 73A is imperative. It admits of no doubt that there
cannot be two limitations (i) in a case where the assessee
files a belated return, and (ii) in a case where the
assessee seeks a succession certificate. In such a case
where the assessee, as in the instant case, seeks a
certificate from the Controller, all that the Controller has
to say is that no such certificate could be issued since in
view of the statutory bar under Section 73A. In this
context, Section 56 will have to be given meaning and life.
He who clings to the letter of the law clings ot the dry
bone; that would be against the spirit of the Act.
Herbert Broom Legal Maxims, pp. 466-67.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 2107 of
1980.
From the Judgment and Order dated 16.3.1979 of the
Calcutta High Court in Appeal No. 348 of 1973.
Shanker Ghosh and P.K. Mukharjee for the Appellant.
B.B. Ahuja, Ms. A. Subhashini and Manoj Arora for the
Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
MOHAN J. This appeal by certificate is directed against
the judgment and order of the Calcutta High Court dated 16th
March 1979 in Appleal No. 348 of 1973.
The facts are that on 6th February, 1967 one Ganga
Singh, governed by Mitakshara School of Hindu Law, died
intestate. He left two sons, the appellant and one Binod
Singh. The wife of Ganga Singh had pre-deceased him. As
the appellant and Binod Singh were minor at the time of
death of Ganga Singh the maternal uncle of the appellant
moved an application in the City Civil Court at Calcutta in
March 1967 for the appointment of guardian of the appellant
and his brother. Accordingly, he was appointed
194
as the guardian. When the paternal uncle of the appellant
and his brother appealed against the order, the appointment
was confirmed. However, the guardian was directed to
continue till the appellant attained majority.
On 7th December, 1970 the appellant attained majority.
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As karta he applied to the City Civil Court at Calcutta for
the grant of a succession certificate in respect of the
estate of Ganga Singh. It appears that the guardian never
filed the account of the property or the return as required
under Section 53 or 56 of the Estate Duty Act, 1953
(hereinafter referred to as the Act). The appellant being a
minor did not know about this. The result is that no
account had been filed by any person in respect of the
estate of Ganga Singh within five years from the date of his
death.
In the proceedings before City Civil Court the grant of
succession certificate it was pointed out that a certificate
from Estate Duty Authority was necessary under Section 56(2)
of the Act. It was urged on behalf of the appellant that in
view of Section 73A of the Act the time to commence any
proceedings for levy of estate duty had become barred
inasmuch as five years had expired from the date of the
death of Ganga Singh. Hence, the question of production of
certificate under Section 56(2) would not arise.
By an order dated July 25, 1972 the learned Chief Judge
of the City Civil Court held that he could not go into this
question since the authorities constituted under the Act
alone could decide this. Since the appellant was advised to
file an account to the Estate Duty Authority, he filed the
return on 18th August, 1972 with the Assistant Controller of
Estate Duty. As per the return the estate was valued
approximately at Rs.52,000. The appellant was served with a
notice under Section 58(2) along with a questionnaire by the
first respondent, the Assistant Controller of Estate Duty,
fixing the date for hearing. On the said date of hearing
the appellant contended that no proceedings could be
initiated in view of the statutory bar under Section 73A,
inasmuch as the period of five years had expired from the
date of the death of Ganga Singh. Hence, no proceedings
could be commenced. In spite of these objections, the first
respondent adjourned the case calling upon the appellant to
furnish certain particulars. It is under these circumstances
the notice dated 4th of September, 1972 issued under Section
58(2) of the Act along with a questionnaire and the
proceedings were challenged the High Court of Calcutta by
way of a writ petition in Matter
195
No. 417 of 1972. The learned Single Judge making the rule
absolute held that the impugned notice under Section 58(2)
of the Estate Duty Act, 1953, dated 4th September, 1972 was
cancelled by a writ of mandamus.
Aggrieved by the said order, the first respondent took
up the matter in appeal. The Division Bench considered the
scope of Section 73A vis-a-vis Section 56 and concluded that
Section 73A does not do away with the liability of an
accountable person for payment of duty. It only bars the
initiation of proceedings for levy of duty. Therefore, if
the liability remains but proceedings cannot be initiated,
there is no question of full payment of duty. In such a
case, it cannot be stated in the certificate by the
Controller that there is no claim of estate duty from
accountable person. Accordingly, the bar of limitation is
not applicable to cases as provided under Section 73A where
application is made for grant of representation or
succession certificate and the account or the copy
application is delivered to the Controller as required under
Section 56. Thus, this appeal by special leave.
Mr. S. Ghosh, learned counsel for the appellant would
urge that the construction placed by the Division Bench is
totally incorrect. Section 73A is comprehensive in its
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scope in so far as it throws a statutory bar preventing the
authority from commencing any proceeding after the expiry of
five years. Having regard to the use of words "under this
Act" that will take within it Section 56 also. If in any
case of this character the appellant is required to produce
a certificate from the Controller it will be requiring him
to do the impossible. In respect of his submission he would
place reliance on the ruling of the Allahabad High Court in
Controller of Estate Duty v. Bhola Dutt, (130 ITR 468).
That was a case when the proceeding was sought to be
commenced on the basis of a return filed by the accountable
person voluntarily after five years. The High Court held
that the Assistant Controller had no jurisdiction because of
the expiry of the limitation. It is that ratio which has to
be adopted in this case.
If the interpretation placed by the High Court is
accepted it would amount to putting a premium on the laches
of the authority and enabling it to do something indirectly
which it cannot do even directly.
The view of the High Court that no grant of
representation or succession certificate can be made after
the expiry of five year, cannot be supported. Section 56
will have to be read as to bring about a har-
196
monious construction between Section 73A and Section 56. No
doubt if there is no original assessment, reassessment is
impossible but on the score the statutory bar under Section
73A cannot be lifted. If, as held by the High Court,
Section 73A is made inapplicable where application is made
for the grant of representation or succession certificate
and the account or copy application is delivered to the
Controller as required by Section 56 it will be conferring
an additional power on Controller which is not in
contemplation under the Act. The strict literal
interpretation will defeat the object and purpose of the
statutory bar under Section 73a. In support of the
submission reliance is placed on Herbert Broom’s Selection
of Legal Maxims : QUI HAERET IN LITERA HAERET IN CORTICE
(Page 466).
In opposition to this, Mr. B.B. Ahuja, learned counsel
for the Revenue, comments the acceptance of the view of the
Division Bench of the High Court. When Section 56 is
mandatory in character the requirement of that Section
Cannot be dispensed with even by Court. The party who seeks
a succession certificate or representation in Civil Court is
bound to fulfil the statutory conditions without any
exception, is exactly the view taken by the Delhi High Court
in P.C. Saxena v. The State, (104ITR 106).
Section 73A used the word "levy". As to what exactly
is mentioned by levy under the Act could be gathered by
Padampat Singhania and other v. Controller of estate Duty,
Kanpur, (122 ITR 162 at 163). Therefore, there is no merit
in the plea.
We shall now proceed to consider the relative merits of
the respective submissions. Section 73A reads as follows:
"73A. No proceedings for the levy of any estate
duty under this Act shall be commenced-
(a) in the case of a first assessment, after the
expiration of five years from the date of death of
the deceased in respect of whose property estate
duty became payable; and
(b) in the case of a re-assessment, after the
expiration of three years from the date of
assessment of such property to estate duty under
this Act."
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A careful reading of the above Section discloses the
following :
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(i) For the levy of any estate duty
(ii) Under this Act
(iii) No proceedings shall be commenced.
We are concerned, in this case, only with clause (a).
Therefore, the fourth qualification will be after the
expiration of five years from the date of death of the
deceased. The language, in our considered view, is
unambiguous. This section throws a statutory bar and is
comprehensive in nature. In so far as it says "no
proceeding under this Act" that means any proceeding
whatever in relation to levy can ever be commenced after
five years. The word "levy" in Black’s Law Dictionary
(fifth edition) at page 816 is stated thus :
"Levy, v. To assess; raise; execute; exact; tax;
collect; gather; take up; seize. Thus, to levy
(assess, exact, raise, or collect) a tax; to levy
(raise or set up) a nuisance; to levy (acknowledge)
a fine; to levy (inaugurate) war; to levy an
execution, i.e., to levy or collect a sum of money
on an execution."
As a matter of fact, in Padampat Singhania (supra) the
meaning of this word under this very Act came to be laid
down which is extracted as under:
"The word "levy" has been interpreted by the
Supreme Court in the case of Assistant Collector of
Central Excise v. National Tobacco Co. of India
Ltd., AIR 1972 SC 2563, as embracing within it the
process of assessment and also the imposition of
tax."
Therefore, even a proceeding for assessment cannot be
taken after five years. That much is certain. Now, we come
to the decisions cited on behalf of the appellant. In
Controller of Estate Duty v. Bhola Dutt, (130 ITR 468 at
470) the following passage is found:
"This provision lays down a clear and categorical
bar to the commencement of assessment proceedings.
They cannot be commenced after the expiry of five
years from the date of death of the deceased.
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Under the E.D. Act, the assessment proceedings
commence with the filing of the return as
prescribed by s. 53(3) of the Act and, under it,
the return could validly be filed within six months
of the date of death or within such further time as
may be extended by the Asst. Controller. That
provision obviously is not applicable to the facts
of the present case. Under s. 56 of the Act
another method of commencement of assessment
proceedings is by the Controller requiring the
accountable person to file the requisite return.
Yet another method of commencement of assessment
proceedings is prescribed by s.58 of the Act. Sub-
section (4) of s.58 provides that in any case where
no account has been delivered as required by s.53
or s.56, or the person accountable fails to comply
with the terms of the notice served under sub-s.
(2), the Controller shall make the assessment to
the best of his judgment and determine the amount
payable as estate duty. In this provision
assessment proceedings could be commenced by the
Controller in case the requisite return has not
been filed by the accountable person. But to all
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these modes of commencement of assessment
proceeding s.73A is applicable. Ex hypothesis
assessment proceedings under either of these
provisions could not validly be commenced after the
expiry of the period of limitation prescribed by
s.73A of the Act. Here, the proceedings were
sought to be commenced on the basis of the return
filed by the accountable person voluntarily but
after the expiry of the prescribed period of five
years. In view of s.73A, the Asst. controller had
no jurisdiction to commence the proceedings even on
the basis of such a voluntary return.
Our attention was invited to s.56 of the Act.
It is true that s.56 does not prescribe any period
of limitation, but it applies in limited
circumstances. Sub-section (1) of s.56 applies to
a case where the executor of the deceased wants a
representation certificate. Then alone he is
required to file an account of the properties of
the deceased to the Controller. Under sub-s.(2),
the accountable person is required to produce a
certificate from the Controller that the requisite
estate duty has been paid in respect of the
property for which a succession certificate is
applied for. Proceedings under s.56 commence when
some one
199
desires to have a representation certificate or a
succession certificate, not otherwise. In the
present case, none of the two situations have
occurred. We are, therefore, clear that the
assessment proceedings were invalid and were
rightly quashed by the Tribunal."
We think the High Court is right in its approach. In
opposition to this, what is relied on is the case in P.C.
Saxena (supra). It is sufficient to extract the head-note.
"In 1966 the appellant applied in the court of the
Subordinate Judge for grant of a succession
certificate to realise various debts and securities
of the deceased who had died on October 28, 1959.
The Subordinate Judge allowed the petitions and
ordered grant of the succession certificate subject
to the production of a certificate of clearance in
respect of estate duty under section 56(2) of the
Estate Duty Act, 1953. The appellant thereupon
applied for exemption from complying with the
condition for production of the clearance
certificate in respect of estate duty claiming that
in view of Section 73A of the Act no proceedings
could be commenced for levy of estate duty on the
estate of the deceased after the expiry of five
years from the date of his death. The Subordinate
Judge rejected the application for exemption. On
appeal to the High Court :
Held, dismissing the appeal, (i) that the
civil court did not possess any jurisdiction or
discretion to waive the condition under section
56(2) of the Act which was precedent to the grant
of representation or succession certificate;
(ii) that the bar imposed by Section 73A of the Act
could not be claimed by a party who sought a
succession certificate and applied to a civil court
for grant of representation or succession
certificate and he was bound to fulfil the
statutory conditions, without any exception, before
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obtaining the certificate."
We are of the view that this is only an authority for
the proposition that the civil court does not possess any
jurisdiction or discretion to waive the condition to produce
the certificate from the Controller which is a precedent to
the grant of representation or succession certificate.
200
Now, we come to Section 56. That is extracted below:
"56. (1) In all cases in which a grant of
representation is applied for-
(a) the executor of the deceased shall, to the
best of his knowledge and belief, specify in an
appropriate account annexed to the affidavit of
valuation filed in court under section 19-I of the
Court-Fees Act, 1870, all the property in respect
of which estate duty is payable upon the death of
the deceased and shall deliver a copy of the
affidavit with the account to the controller, and
(b) no order entitling the applicant to the grant
of representation shall be made upon his
application until he has delivered the account
prescribed in clause (a) and has produced a
certificate from the Controller under sub-section
(2) of section 57 or section 67 that the estate
duty payable in respect of the property included in
the account has been or will be paid, or that none
is due, as the case may be.
(2) In all cases in which a grant of a succession
certificate is applied for, a copy of the
application shall be furnished by the applicant to
the Controller and no order entitling the applicant
to the grant of such a certificate shall be made
upon his application until he has produced a
certificate from the Controller under sub-section
(2) of section 57 or section 67 that the estate
duty payable in respect of the property mentioned
in the application has been or will be paid, or
that none is due, as the case may be."
No doubt, both under sub-section (1) clause (b) of sub-
section (2) the language used is "no order shall be made
upon his application". To require in a case of this
character the production of a certificate from the
Controller would amount to the insistence of an impossible
compliance.
The view of the Division Bench of the High Court is
unacceptable to us when it holds that Section 73A is only
applicable to proceedings initiated under Section 59.
Merely because Section 59 says "subject to section 73A" that
does not mean a statutory bar under Section 73A is lifted.
201
On the contrary, Section 53A reinforces the rigour of
Section 73A. The words "commencement of any proceedings
under the Act" as we stated above are comprehensive enough
to include Section 59 as well.
Equally, the finding that the application of Section
73A to cases coming under Section 56 would make the latter
Section unsustainable is not correct. That will be only
placing a literal interpretation of Section 56 regardless of
situation. In this connection, we may usefully quote
Herbert Broom’s Legal Maxims (Pages 466-67) :
"QUI HAERET IN LITERA HAERET IN CORTICE (Co. Litt
283b.)-
He who considers merely the letter of an
instruments goes skindeep into its meaning.
The law of England respects the effect and
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substance of the matter, and not every nicety of
form or circumstance. "The reason and spirit of
cases make law, and not the letter of particular
precedents". Hence it is , as we have already
seen, a general rule connected with the
interpretation of deeds and written instruments,
that, where the intention is clear, too minute a
stress should not be laid on the strict and precise
signification of words. For instance, by the grant
of a remainder, a reversion may pass, and a
converso; and if a lessee covenant to leave all the
timber which was growing on the land when he took
it down, but leaves it there; for this, though a
literal performance of the covenant, would defeat
its intent."
"In interpreting an Act of Parliament, likewise, it
is not always a true line of construction to decide
according to the strict letter of the Act; but,
subject to the remarks already made, the Courts may
consider what is its fair meaning, and expound it
differently from the letter, in order to preserve
the intent. The meaning of particular words,
indeed, in statutes, as well as in other
instruments, is to be found not so much in a strict
etymological propriety of language, nor even in
popular use, as in the subject or occasion on which
they are used, and the object that is intended to
be attained."
202
If, therefore, the object of Section 73A is unmbiguous
to bar the commencement of any proceeding for levy after the
period of five years in the case of first assessment, we do
not think we can dilute the rigour of Section 73A by
introducing a construction not warranted in the situation.
If it was the intention of the Parliament to provide
exceptional cases making Section 73A inapplicable to such
cases nothing would have been easier than to have so
expressed. The language under Section 73A is imperative.
It admits of no doubt that there cannot be two limitations
(i) in a case where the assessee files a belated return and
(ii) in a case where the applicant seeks a succession
certificate. In such a case where the assessee, as in the
instant case, seeks a certificate from the Controller, all
that the Controller has to say is, that no such certificate
could be issued since in view of the statutory bar under
Section 73A. In this context, Section 56 will have to be
given meaning and life. He who clings to the letter of the
law clings to the dry bone; that would be against the spirit
of the Act.
In the result, we set aside the impugned judgment. The
appeal will stand allowed. However, there shall be no
orders as to costs.
N.P.V. Appeal allowed.
203