Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 3301 of 2007
PETITIONER:
Commissioner of Income Tax, Chennai
RESPONDENT:
M/s. Alagendran Finance Ltd.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 27/07/2007
BENCH:
S.B. Sinha & Harjit Singh Bedi
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 3301 OF 2007
[Arising out of SLP (Civil) No. 18372 of 2006]
S.B. SINHA, J :
1. Leave granted.
2. Whether for the purpose of computing the period of limitation
envisaged under Sub-section (2) of Section 263 of the Income Tax Act, 1961
(for short "the Act"), the date of order of assessment or that of the
reassessment, is to be taken into consideration is the question involved in
this appeal which arises out of a judgment and order dated 18.01.2006
passed by a Division Bench of the High Court of Judicature at Madras
passed in Income Tax Appeal No. 1384 to 1386 of 2005.
3. The said question arises on the following facts :
Respondent is a company incorporated under the Indian Companies
Act, 1956. It filed its returns for assessment under the Act for the
assessment years 1994-95, 1995-96 and 1996-97 on 23.11.1994, 27.11.1995
and 26.11.1997 respectively. Assessment for the year 1994-95 was
completed on 27.02.1997 and those of the Assessment Years 1995-96 and
1996-97 were completed on 12.05.1997 and 30.03.1998 respectively. In the
said orders of assessment, the assessee’s return under the Head ’Lease
Equalization Fund’ was accepted. However, proceedings for reassessment
were initiated by the assessing officer on 05.03.2004. Orders of
reassessment were passed on 28.03.2002. Proceedings for reassessment,
however, were initiated only in respect of three items, viz., (i), the expenses
claimed for share issue, (ii), bad and doubtful debts and (iii), excess
depreciation on gas cylinders and goods containers.
Although the assessee’s return in respect of lease equalization was
not the subject matter of the reassessment proceedings, the Commissioner of
Income Tax purported to invoke his revisional jurisdiction in terms of
Section 263 of the Act and by an order dated 29.03.2004 held as under:
"5. In short, from the example given it is the
depreciation on the leased assets that is clamed as
Book Depreciation and disallowed in the
computation of income, the assessee sought to
claim in the form of Lease Equalisation from the
lease rentals by virtue of the guidelines note of the
Institute of Chartered Accountants of India.
*
7. Since the assessee has not given the complete
details, the method adopted by the assessee in
arriving at the correct profit for the corresponding
year cannot be checked. I clearly feel that the
orders by the Assessing Officer are prejudicial to
the interest of the revenue as the lease rentals had
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not been properly brought to tax. Hence, all the
three assessments are reopened u/s 263 and the
Assessing Officer is directed to check and assess
the lease rentals from Lease equalisation fund, if
any, and to bring to tax the same for all the above
three years."
Pursuant to or in furtherance of the said order, reassessment
proceedings were carried out in respect of the aforementioned assessment
years by the Assistant Commissioner of Income Tax only in respect of the
income on equalization reserve stating:
"I have considered the various arguments of the
assessee’s representative and I am satisfied that
the deduction made from the gross lease rent is
only a provisional and not an actual expenditure
and therefore the same is to be disallowed and
added to the income returned\005"
The matter came up for consideration before the Income Tax
Appellate Tribunal wherein the contention of the respondent that the said
purported proceedings under Section 263 of the Act were barred by
limitation, found favour with, opining:
"6. We have carefully gone through the record and
considered the rival submissions. In our view, the
contentions of the Assessee deserve to succeed.
The facts of the case clearly show the claim of
lease equalisation fund, if at all accepted, is an
error committed by the Assessing Officer in his
order passed under Sec. 143 (3) of the Act for the
Asst. Year 94-95 on 27.2.97, for the Asst. Year 95-
96 on 12.5.97 and for the Asst. Year on 30.3.98.
The Assessee, no doubt, took up these assessments
in appeal before the CIT (Appeals) and thereafter
the assessment itself was subject to proceedings
under Sec. 148 and ultimately, the orders of
reassessment were framed on 28.3.2002. All the
subsequent events are in respect of matters other
than the allowance of lease equalization fund. In
other words, the error, if any, has been committed,
it was done in the order of the Assessing Officer
passed Asst. the year 97-98. Therefore, these
orders very much subsist despite the subsequent
proceedings under sec. 148 of the Act."
The learned Tribunal referred to several decisions of this Court and
other High Courts for arriving inter alia at the following conclusion:
"8. In the light of the above decisions and
authorities, we are of the opinion that the
impugned order passed under Sec. 263 on
29.03.2004 are clearly barred by limitation with
reference to the orders passed under Sec. 143 (3)
by the Assessing Officer for the above Asst. years
on 27.2.97; 25.12.97 and 30.3.98 respectively.
Accordingly, the orders of the CIT under Sec. 263
are vacated and the ground taken by the Assessee
is allowed."
Revenue preferred an appeal thereagainst before the High Court
which was dismissed by a Division Bench stating:
"2. Learned Senior Central Government Standing
Counsel submits that the very same issue has been
raised and decided by the Court against the
Revenue in the case of CWT Vs. A.K. Thanga
Pillai (252 ITR 260)."
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Aggrieved by and dissatisfied therewith, the Revenue is before us.
4. Mr. Rajiv Dutta, learned senior counsel appearing on behalf of the
appellant in support of the appeal inter alia would submit that having regard
to the Explanation appended to Sub-section (3) of Section 263 of the Act as
also in view of the doctrine of merger, the Tribunal committed a manifest
error in passing the impugned judgment insofar as it failed to take into
consideration that in law computation of period of limitation was to
commence from the date of passing of the order of reassessment viz.,
28.03.2002 and not from the date of the initial assessment, and as the
proceeding under Section 263 was initiated on 05.03.2004, the provision of
sub-section (2) of Section 263 would not be attracted in the instant case.
Strong reliance in this behalf has been placed on Hind Wire Industries Ltd.
v. Commissioner of Income Tax [212 ITR 639].
5. Mr. Anil Diwan, learned senior counsel appearing on behalf of the
respondent \026 assessee, on the other hand, submitted:
(i) The income head ’lease equalization fund’ being not the subject
matter of the reassessment proceedings, the doctrine of merger
will have no application in the instant case and in that view of
the matter, the impugned order of the Tribunal as also the High
Court is unassailable.
(ii) The issue has rightly been held by the High Court to be
squarely covered by the decision of the Madras High Court in
Commissioner of Wealth-Tax v. A.K. Thanga Pillai [252 ITR
260].
6. Before embarking upon the rival contentions of the parties raised
before us, we may notice the relevant part of Section 263 of the Act which is
as under:
"263. Revision of orders prejudicial to revenue -
(1) The Commissioner may call for and examine
the record of any proceeding under this Act, and if
he considers that any order passed therein by the
Assessing Officer is erroneous in so far as it is
prejudicial to the interests of the revenue, he may,
after giving the assessee an opportunity of being
heard and after making or causing to be made such
inquiry as he deems necessary, pass such order
thereon as the circumstances of the case justify,
including an order enhancing or modifying the
assessment, or cancelling the assessment and
directing a fresh assessment.
Explanation.-For the removal of doubts, it is
hereby declared that, for the purposes of this sub-
section,-
(a) *
(b) *
(c) where any order referred to in this sub-
section and passed by the Assessing Officer had
been the subject matter of any appeal filed on
or before or after the 1st day of June, 1988, the
powers of the Commissioner under this sub-
section shall extend and shall be deemed
always to have extended to such matters as had
not been considered and decided in such appeal.
(2) No order shall be made under sub-section (1)
after the expiry of two years from the end of the
financial year in which the order sought to be
revised was passed.
(3) Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-
section (2), an order in revision under this section
may be passed at any time in the case of an order
which has been passed in consequence of, or to
give effect to, any finding or direction contained in
an order of the Appellate Tribunal, the High Court
or the Supreme Court.
Explanation.-In computing the period of limitation
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for the purposes of sub-section (2), the time taken
in giving an opportunity to the assessee to be
reheard under the proviso to section 129 and any
period during which any proceeding under this
section is stayed by an order or injunction of any
court shall be excluded."
7. A bare perusal of the order passed by the Commissioner of Income
Tax would clearly demonstrate that only that part of order of assessment
which related to lease equalization fund was found to be prejudicial to the
interest of the Revenue. The proceedings for reassessment have nothing to
do with the said head of income. Doctrine of merger, therefore, would not
apply in a case of this nature.
8. Furthermore, Explanation (c) appended to Sub-section (1) of Section
263 of the Act is clear and unambiguous as in terms thereof doctrine of
merger applies only in respect of such items which were the subject matter
of appeal and not which were not. The question came up for consideration
before this Court in Commissioner of Income Tax v. Sun Engineering
Works P. Ltd. [198 ITR 297]. Therein the assessee raised a contention that
once jurisdiction under Section 147 of the Act is invoked, the whole
assessment proceeding became reopened, which was negatived by the court
opining:
"Section 147, which is subject to Section 148,
divides cases of income escaping assessment into
two clauses i.e. viz. (a) those due to the non-
submission of return of income or non-disclosure
of true and full facts and (b) other instances.
Explanation (1) defines as to what constitutes
escape of assessment. In order to invoke
jurisdiction under Section 147(a) of the Act, the
ITO must have reason to believe that some income
chargeable to tax of an assessee has escaped
assessment by reason of the omission or failure on
the part of the assessee either to make a return
under Section 139 for the relevant assessment year
or to disclose fully and truly material facts
necessary for the assessment for that year. Both the
conditions must exist before an ITO can proceed to
exercise jurisdiction under Section 147(a) of the
Act. Under Section 147(b) the Income-tax Officer
also has the jurisdiction to initiate proceedings for
reassessment where he has reason to believe, on
the basis of information in his possession, that
income chargeable to tax has been either under-
assessed or has been assessed at too low a rate or
has been made the subject of excessive relief under
the Act or excessive loss or depreciation allowance
has been computed. In either case whether the
Income-tax Officer invokes his jurisdiction under
Clause (a) or Clause (b) or both, the proceedings
for bringing to tax an ’escaped assessment’ can
only commence by issuance of a notice under
Section 148 of the Act within the time prescribed
under the Act. Thus, under Section 147, the
assessing officer has been vested with the power to
"assess or reassess" the escaped income of an
assessee. The use of the expression "assess or
reassess such income or recompute the loss or
depreciation allowance" in Section 147 after the
conditions for reassessment are satisfied, is only
relatable to the preceding expression in Clauses (a)
and (b) viz., "escaped assessment". The term
"escaped assessment" includes both "non-
assessment" as well as "under assessment". Income
is said to have "escaped assessment" within the
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meaning of this section when it has not been
charged in the hands of an assessee in the relevant
year of assessment. The expression "assess" refers
to a situation where the assessment of the assessee
for a particular year is, for the first time, made by
resorting to the provisions of Section 147 because
the assessment had not been made in the regular
manner under the Act. The expression "reassess"
refers to a situation where an assessment has
already been made but the Income-tax Officer has,
on the basis of information in his possession,
reason to believe that there has been under
assessment on account of the existence of any of
the grounds contemplated by the provisions of
Section 147(b) read with the Explanation (I)
thereto."
9. We may at this juncture also notice the decision of this Court in Hind
Wire Industries Ltd (supra) wherein the decision of this Court in V.
Jaganmohan Rao v. CIT and CEPT [75 ITR 373] interpreting the provisions
of Section 34 of the Act was reproduced which reads as under:
"Section 34 in terms states that once the Income-
tax officer decides to reopen the assessment, he
could do so within the period prescribed by serving
on the person liable to pay tax a notice containing
all or any of the requirements which may be
included in a notice under section 22(2) and may
proceed to assess or reassess such income, profits
or gains. It is, therefore, manifest that once
assessment is reopened by issuing a notice under
sub-section (2) of section 22, the previous
underassessment is set aside and the whole
assessment proceedings start afresh. When once
valid proceedings are started under section
34(1)(b), the Income-tax Officer had not only the
jurisdiction, but it was his duty to levy tax on the
entire income that had escaped assessment during
that year."
10. There may not be any doubt or dispute that once an order of
assessment is reopened, the previous underassessment will be held to be set
aside and the whole proceedings would start afresh but the same would not
mean that even when the subject matter of reassessment is distinct and
different, the entire proceeding of assessment would be deemed to have been
reopened.
11. In Sun Engineering Works P. Ltd (supra) also, V. Jaganmohan Rao
(supra) was noticed stating:
"The principle laid down by this Court in
Jaganmohan Rao’s case, therefore, is only to the
extent that once an assessment is validly reopened
by issuance of a notice under Section 22(2) of the
1922 Act (corresponding to Section 148 of the
Act) the previous under assessment is set aside and
the ITO has the jurisdiction and duty to levy tax on
the entire income that had escaped assessment
during the previous year\005The judgment in
Jaganmohan Rao’s case, therefore, cannot be read
to imply as laying down that in the reassessment
proceedings validly initiated, the assessee can seek
reopening of the whole assessment and claim
credit in respect of items finally concluded in the
original assessment. The assessee cannot claim
recomputation of the income or redoing of an
assessment and be allowed a claim which he either
failed to make or which was otherwise rejected at
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the time of original assessment which has since
acquired finality. Of course, in the reassessment
proceedings it is open to an assessee to show that
the income alleged to have escaped assessment has
in truth and in fact not escaped assessment but that
the same had been shown under some
inappropriate head in the original return, but to
read the judgment in Jaganmohan Rao’s case, as if
laying down that reassessment wipes out the
original assessment and that reassessment is not
only confined to "escaped assessment" or "under
assessment" but to the entire assessment for the
year and starts the assessment proceeding de novo
giving the right to an assessee to reagitate matters
which he had lost during the original assessment
proceeding, which had acquired finality, is not
only erroneous but also against the phraseology of
Section 147 of the Act and the object of
reassessment proceedings. Such an interpretation
would be reading that judgment totally out of
context in which the questions arose for decision in
that case. It is neither desirable nor permissible to
pick out a word or a sentence from the judgment of
this Court, divorced from the context of the
question under consideration and treat it to be the
complete ’law’ declared by this Court. The
judgment must be read as a whole and the
observations from the judgment have to be
considered in the light of the questions which were
before this Court. A decision of this Court takes its
colour from the questions involved in the case in
which it is rendered and while applying the
decision to a later case, the courts must carefully
try to ascertain the true principle laid down by the
decision of this Court and not to pick out words or
sentences from the judgment, divorced from the
context of the questions under consideration by
this Court, to support their reasonings\005"
It was furthermore held:
"As a result of the aforesaid discussion, we find
that in proceedings under Section 147 of the Act,
the Income Tax Officer may bring to charge items
of income which had escaped assessment other
than or in addition to that item or items which have
led to the issuance of notice under Section 148 and
where ressessment is made under Section 147 in
respect of income which has escaped tax, the
Income Tax Officer’s jurisdiction is confined to
only such income which has escaped tax or has
been under-assessed and does not extend to
revising, reopening or reconsidering the whole
assessment or permitting the assessee to reagitate
questions which had been decided in the original
assessment proceedings. It is only the under-
assessment which is set aside and not the entire
assessment when reassessment proceedings are
initiated. The Income Tax Officer cannot make an
order of reassessment inconsistent with the original
order of assessment in respect of metters which are
not the subject-matter of proceedings under
Section 147\005"
12. We may at this juncture also take note of the fact that even the
Tribunal found that all the subsequent events were in respect of the matters
other than the allowance of ’lease equalization fund’. The said finding of
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fact is binding on us. Doctrine of merger, therefore, in the fact situation
obtaining herein cannot be said to have any application whatsoever. It is not
a case where the subject matter of reassessment and subject matter of
assessment were the same. They were not.
13. It may be of some interest to notice that a similar contention raised at
the instance of an assessee was rejected by a 3-Judge Bench of this Court in
Commissioner of Income-Tax v. Shri Arbuda Mills Ltd. [231 ITR 50]. This
Court took note of the amendment made in Section 263 of the Act by the
Finance Act, 1989 with retrospective effect from June 1, 1988, inserting
Explanation (c) to Sub-section (1) of Section 263 of the Act stating:
"The consequence of the said amendment made
with retrospective effect is that the powers under
section 263 of the Commissioner shall extend and
shall be deemed always to have extended to such
matters as had not been considered and decided in
an appeal. Accordingly, even in respect of the
aforesaid three items, the powers of the
Commissioner under section 263 shall extend and
shall be deemed always to have extended to them
because the same had not been considered and
decided in the appeal filed by the assessee. This is
sufficient to answer the question which has been
referred."
We, therefore, are clearly of the opinion that in a case of this nature,
the doctrine of merger will have no application.
14. The Madras High Court in A.K. Thanga Pillai (supra), in our opinion,
has rightly considered the matter albeit under Section 17 of the Wealth Tax
Act, 1957 which is in pari materia with the provisions of the Act. Relying
on Sun Engineering Works P. Ltd (supra), it was held:
"Under section 17 of the Wealth-tax Act, 1957,
even as it is under section 147 of the Income-tax
Act, proceedings for reassessment can be initiated
when what is assessable to tax has escaped
assessment for any assessment year. The power to
deal with underassessment and the scope of
reassessment proceedings as explained by the
Supreme Court in the case of Sun Engineering
[1992] 198 ITR 297, is in relation to that which
has escaped assessment, and does not extend to
reopening the entire assessment for the purpose of
redoing the same de novo. An assessee cannot
agitate in any such reassessment proceedings
matters forming part of the original assessment
which are not required to be dealt with for the
purpose of levying tax on that which had escaped
tax earlier. Cases of underassessment are also
treated as instances of escaped assessment.
The order of reassessment is one which deals with
the assessment already made in respect of items
which are not required to be reopened, as also
matters which are required to be dealt with in order
to bring what had escaped in the earlier order of
assessment, to assessment. An assessee who has
failed to file an appeal against the original order of
assessment cannot utilise the reassessment
proceedings as an occasion for seeking revision or
review of what had been assessed earlier. He may
only question the extent of the reassessment in so
far as the escaped assessment is concerned.
The Revenue is similarly bound\005"
The same principle was reiterated by a Division Bench of the Calcutta
High Court in Commissioner of Income-Tax v. Kanubhai Engineers (P.) Ltd.
[241 ITR 665].
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15. We, therefore, are clearly of the opinion that keeping in view the facts
and circumstances of this case and, in particular, having regard to the fact
that the Commissioner of Income Tax exercising its revisional jurisdiction
reopened the order of assessment only in relation to lease equalization fund
which being not the subject of the reassessment proceedings, the period of
limitation provided for under Sub-section (2) of Section 263 of the Act
would begin to run from the date of the order of assessment and not from the
order of reassessment. The revisional jurisdiction having, thus, been
invoked by the Commissioner of Income Tax beyond the period of
limitation, it was wholly without jurisdiction rendering the entire proceeding
a nullity.
16. The Tribunal and the High Court, therefore, in our opinion were
correct in passing the impugned judgment. The appeal, therefore, being
devoid of any merit is dismissed with costs. Counsel’s fee assessed at Rs.
25,000/-.