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1962 DIGILAW 472 (SC)

Commissioner Of Income Tax, Madras v. Janaba Mohammad Hussain Nachiar Ammal

1962-12-12

A.K.SARKAR, J.L.KAPUR, M.HIDAYATULLAH, RAGHUBAR DAYAL, S.R.DASS

body1962
Judgment S. K. DAS, J. The facts of this appeal have been stated by my learned brother Kapur, J. and as I am in agreement with him, I need not re-state the facts. 2. The relevant assessment year was 1942-1943. The proceedings under S. 34 of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 were initiated with the issue of a notice on July 25, 1949. The assessee s contention was that the initiation of proceedings on July 25, 1949 was invalid as the department s right to revive the assessment was governed by old S. 34 where the period of limitation prescribed was only four years in the case of a failure to file a return and this period having expired on March 31, 1947 and the Amending Act of 1948 (XLVIII of 1948) having come into force on March 30, 1948 the eight years period provided therein could not be invoked. The High Court upheld this contention and said: "In our opinion, the contention of the learned counsel for the assessee is well founded, that the new rule of limitation of eight years prescribed by the amended S. 34 would not apply to the case of the assessee before us, whose was an instance of a failure to submit a return, when the period of four years had ran out long before 30th March 1948 when the amended S. 34 came into force as part of the Income-tax Act with effect from that date, 30th March 1948. The learned counsel for the Department next referred to S. 31 of Act XXV of 1953 in support of his contentions that the notice issued on 25th July 1949 was valid. The learned counsel himself had to realize that S. 31 of Act XXV of 1953 did not enlarge the scope of the amended S. 34; nor did it purport to amend it. The validity of the notice, dated 25th July 1949 will still have to be decided with reference to the provisions of the amended S. 34. Section 31 of Act XXV of 1953 does not therefore affect the question at issue whether the extended period of limitation of eight years would apply to the assessee, when the period of limitation applicable to the assessee lad expired before the amended S. 34 came into force on 30th March, 1948." 3. Section 31 of Act XXV of 1953 does not therefore affect the question at issue whether the extended period of limitation of eight years would apply to the assessee, when the period of limitation applicable to the assessee lad expired before the amended S. 34 came into force on 30th March, 1948." 3. For the reasons given by me in S. C. Prashar v. Vasantsen Dwarkadas, C. A. No. 705 of 1957, D/- 12-12-1962: in which judgment has been delivered to-day. I think that the High Court correctly answered the question referred to it. 4. I would therefore dismiss the appeal with costs. KAPUR, J. : 5. This is an appeal against the judgment and order of the High Court of Madras. The appellant is the Commissioner of Income-tax and the respondent is the assessee and the year of assessment is 1942-43. 6. The respondent is the wife of one Sheikh Abdul Khadar who was residing abroad in Bangkok from September 1940 to July 1947 During the period he remitted monies in the name of his agent for payment to the respondent. In the account year the aggregate amount so remitted was Rs. 9,180/-. The respondent submitted no return of her income as she was bound to do and the amount became taxable under S. 4 (2) of the Income-tax Act, hereinafter referred to as the "Act". In 1949 the Income-tax Officer on receipt of definite information that such income had escaped assessment issued a notice under S. 34 of the Act as amended by the Amending Act of 1948 and an appeal was taken to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner but the assessment was confirmed. A further appeal to the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal, Madras, was also unsuccessful. The reference was thereupon made to the High Court and one of the questions referred was :-. "Whether the proceedings under section 34 of thee Indian Income-tax Act initiated on 25th July, 1949 to assess the amount of Rs. 9,180/which escaped assessment during the year 1942-43 by failure to submit a voluntary return are valid in law"? The reference was thereupon made to the High Court and one of the questions referred was :-. "Whether the proceedings under section 34 of thee Indian Income-tax Act initiated on 25th July, 1949 to assess the amount of Rs. 9,180/which escaped assessment during the year 1942-43 by failure to submit a voluntary return are valid in law"? It was held that the limitation of eight years prescribed by Section 34 as amended by the Amending Act of 1948 did not apply to the case of the assessee which was a case of failure to submit the return and the period of four years had expired before March 30,, 1948 when the amendment in S. 34 was made by the Amending Act of 1948. It was also held that Section 31 of the Amending Act of 1953 was not applicable and the question was therefore answered in the negative. Against that judgment and order the Commissioner of Income-tax has come in appeal to this Court. 7. This case is governed by the decision in C. A. No. 705 of 1957: the judgment in which has been delivered today. The appeal is therefore dismissed with costs. The appellant was granted the certificate by the High Court expressly on the condition that he would pay the costs of this appeal in any event to which he had agreed. SARKAR, J. : 8. The respondent in this appeal is the assessee. She is the wife of one Sheikh Abdul Khader who lived in Siam. In the year 1941-42, she received from her husband from Siam a sum of Rs. 9,180/-. It is not disputed that this amount constituted "income" in her hands within S. 4 (2) of the Income-tax Act, 1922. She did not however submit any return in respect of it. On July 25, 1949, a notice under Sec. 34 of the Act was issued to her asking her to file a return. Thereafter, she was assessed on the aforesaid income on October 24, 1949. She appealed from that order but was unsuccessful in having the assessment set aside. At her request, the Appellate Tribunal submitted the following question to the High Court at Madras for its decision : "Whether the proceedings under section 34 of the Indian Income- tax Act initiated on 25th July 1949 to assess the amount of Rs. She appealed from that order but was unsuccessful in having the assessment set aside. At her request, the Appellate Tribunal submitted the following question to the High Court at Madras for its decision : "Whether the proceedings under section 34 of the Indian Income- tax Act initiated on 25th July 1949 to assess the amount of Rs. 9,180/which escaped assessment during the year 1942-43 by failure to submit a voluntary return are valid in law" ? The High Court answered the question in the negative. The revenue authorities have, therefore, come up in appeal. 9. Section 34 contains provisions for assessment and re-assessment in cases where income for any year has not in the relevant assessment year been fully assessed for the reasons mentioned in it. With these reasons it is not necessary to trouble ourselves in this appeal. Sub-s. (1) of S.34 deals with the period of time within which a notice calling for a return on the escaped income may be served and sub-s. (3) deals with time within which the assessment can be made. This section was amended by the Income-tax and Business Profits Tax (Amendment) Act; 1948. This Act was passed on September 8, 1948 but the section which amended Section 34 of the Income-tax Act was brought into force retrospectively from March 30, 1948. It is not in dispute that under S.34, as it stood before the amendment, the time to issue the notice calling for a return and to make the assessment in this case had expired on March 31, 1947, that is, on the expiry of four years after the year in which the escaped income was first assessable, namely, 1942-43. It is not in dispute either that under S. 34, as it stood after the amendment in 1948, the notice could be served and an assessment made within eight years from the end of that year, that is, in this case, within March 31, 1951. The notice and the assessment order impugned in this case have, therefore, to be held to be valid if S. 34 after its amendment in 1948 was applicable. It is the contention of the appellant that it was so applicable. The High Court held that the time having already expired under the existing law, the amended S. 34 could not be given retrospective operation to validate the notice and the order of assessment. 10. It is the contention of the appellant that it was so applicable. The High Court held that the time having already expired under the existing law, the amended S. 34 could not be given retrospective operation to validate the notice and the order of assessment. 10. Now, on May 24, 1953, was passed the Income-tax (Amendment) Act, 1953 (XXV of 1953) which was brought into force retrospectively from April 1, 1952. This Act contained a section, namely, S. 31, which to my mind makes S. 34 as amended by the 1948 Amending Act, applicable to the proceedings in this case. I am unable to accept the High Court s view to the contrary and regret my inability to comprehend the reasons on which that view is based. That section also amended sub-section (3) of S. 34 so as to include in it provisions regarding the time of the issue of the notice but we will not be concerned with this amendment in this appeal. Now, S. 31 is in these terms: Section 31. "For the removal of doubts it is hereby declared that the provisions of subsections (1), (2) and (3) of S. 34 of the principal Act shall apply and shall be deemed always to have applied to any assessment or re-assessment for any year ending before the 1st day of April, 1948, in any case where proceedings in respect of such assessment or re-assessment were commenced under the said sub-sections after the 8th day of "September, 1948, and any notice issued in accordance with sub-s. (1) or any assessment completed in pursuance of such notice within the time specified in sub-section (3), whether before or after the commencement of the Indian Income-tax (Amendment) Act, 1953, shall, notwithstanding any judgment or order of any Court, Appellate Tribunal or Income-tax authority to the contrary, be deemed to have been validly issued or completed, as the case may be, and no such notice, assessment or re-assessment shall be called in question on the ground merely that the provisions of S. 34 did not apply or purport to apply in respect of an assessment or re-assessment for any year prior to the 1st day of April 1948". No question as to sub-section (2) of S. 34 mentioned in this section arises in this appeal and that sub-section may be left out of consideration. 11. No question as to sub-section (2) of S. 34 mentioned in this section arises in this appeal and that sub-section may be left out of consideration. 11. It seems to me quite plain that section 31 of the 1953 Act applies sub-ss. (1) and (3) of S. 34 of the Income-tax Act, 1922 (hereafter called the principal Act), as it stood after the 1948 amendment, to assessment proceedings in respect of years ending before April 1, 1948 where the proceedings commenced after September 8, 1948 and makes the validity of the proceedings depend on that section as so amended. Indeed, the contrary has not been contended at the bar. It has to be remembered that the amending Act of 1948 was passed on September 8, 1948 but it was given retrospective effect from March 30, 1948. It may be stated that the amending Act repealed the existing S. 34 of the principal Act and substituted for it a new section. I think it is quite clear that the pre-existing S. 34 which was repealed by the 1948 amendment could not have applied to proceedings commenced after the repeal. There was no question of applying the pre-existing law to such proceedings. But where the proceedings related to a period when the pre-existing law was in force, there might be some doubt as to which law was to apply. Section 31 was enacted to remove that doubt and to make S. 34 of the principal Act as it stood after the 1948 amendment applicable to these proceedings. That is why the words "shall always be deemed to have applied." are used; they emphasise that the amended section is deemed always to have applied to proceedings even in respect of a period when the amendment had not been made. The latter part of S. 31 also makes this view equally clear. It says that no notice or order of assessment shall be called in question on the ground that section 34 did not apply in respect of assessment for a year prior to April 1, 1948. Section 34 here contemplated must be the section as amended in 1948, for if it was not so, then it would be the pre-existing section which of course would have applied if not repealed, to an assessment for a year ending prior to April 1, 1948 and no question of its not so applying would have arisen. Section 34 here contemplated must be the section as amended in 1948, for if it was not so, then it would be the pre-existing section which of course would have applied if not repealed, to an assessment for a year ending prior to April 1, 1948 and no question of its not so applying would have arisen. 12. We thus arrive at the conclusion that under S. 31 of the 1953 Act, the provisions of sub-sections (1) and (3)-we leave sub-section (2) out as irrelevant-of S. 34 of the principal Act as amended in 1948 are to be applied and deemed always to have applied to assessment proceedings in respect of year ended before April 1, 1948 where the proceedings were commenced after September 8, 1948. A notice issued and an order of assessment made in such proceedings are to be held valid if the notice is issued "in accordance with sub-section (1)" of S. 34 as it stood after the 1948 amendment and the assessment is "completed in pursuance of such notice within the time specified in sub- section (3)" of the same S. 34. Now the notice and assessment in the present case satisfy all these conditions. To them, therefore, S. 34 as amended in 1948 applies. Judged by that section, admittedly the notice and assessment order are unexceptionable. 13. It is true that in the present case when the notice was issued and the assessment made, the time to do either under the law as it stood before the 1948 amendment had expired. It may be that that law would have applied to it if the 1953 Act had not been passed. It may also be, as was said in the Calcutta Discount Co. case, (Income-tax Officer, Companies, District 1, Calcutta v. Calcutta Discount Co. Ltd.) AIR 1953 Cal 721 that by itself, the 1948 amendment of S. 34 would not have permitted assessment proceedings in respect of 1942-43 to be commenced in 1949 when under the previous law the time to issue a notice and to make an assessment for that year had expired before the 1948 amendment had come into force. All this however is to no purpose. No such question arises here. All this however is to no purpose. No such question arises here. The Legislature had undoubtedly the power to make S. 34 as amended in 1948 apply to an assessment for 1942-43 by giving it a retrospective operation in spite of the time to issue a notice and to make an assessment fixed by the pre-existing law having expired before the amendment came into effect. The question really is one of interpretation, namely, whether the Legislature had given such retrospective operation. 14. Now it seems to me that S. 31 of the 1953 Act clearly gives S. 34 of the principal Act as amended in 1948 such retrospective operation. It plainly makes Sec. 34 as so amended applicable to assessments for years ended before the amendment came into force. It does not say that S. 34 as amended is to apply to assessments for these years only when the time to issue the notice or make the assessment in respect of these Years under the pre-existing law had not expired. It applies the amended S. 34 "to any assessment.... for any year ending before the 1st day of April, 1948 in any case where proceedings .... were commenced .... after the 8th day of September 1948". Likewise any notice and any assessment in respect of any year ending before April 1, 1948 is to be held valid, if valid under S. 34 as amended in 1948. I find no justification in view of the language used to interpret S. 31 as applying S. 34 as amended in 1948 only to cases where the time to issue the notice and make the assessment had not expired while the pre-existing law was in force. The latter part of S. 31 seems to lead independently to the same conclusion. It makes "any notice issued in accordance with sub-section (1) or any assessment completed in pursuance of such notice within the time specified in sub-section (3)" valid. All that is necessary is that all notices and assessment orders in respect of years ending before April 1, 1948 in proceedings commenced after April 8, 1948 shall, comply with the provisions of s. 34 as amended in 1948. All that is necessary is that all notices and assessment orders in respect of years ending before April 1, 1948 in proceedings commenced after April 8, 1948 shall, comply with the provisions of s. 34 as amended in 1948. So a notice and an assessment order valid under S. 34 as amended in 1948 would be valid even if the time prescribed in respect of them by S. 34 as it stood before the 1948 amendment, had expired. 15. In my view, for these reasons, S. 34 of the principal Act as amended in 1948 applies to the notice issued and the assessment order made in this case. Both of them are valid under S. 34 as so amended. The High Court should have answered the question framed In the affirmative. 16. In the result, I would allow the appeal and set aside the order of the High Court. The appellant will however pay the respondent s costs of this appeal as it had agreed to do so as appears from the certificate on which this appear has been admitted. Hidayatullah, J. (for self and Raghubar Dayal, J.) - (for judgment see AIR 1963 SC 1356 ). ORDER 17. BY THE COURT : In accordance with the opinion of the majority, the Appeal is allowed. The appellant will pay the costs of the respondent as was agreed to by the parties. Appeal allowed. For Citation : AIR 1963 SC 1401