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1974 DIGILAW 93 (PAT)

Chand Mull Rajgharia v. Income Tax Officer

1974-04-23

S.K.JHA, S.N.P.SINGH

body1974
JUDGMENT : S.K. JHA, J. 1. These twelve writ applications arise out of common facts and interrelated questions of law. They have, therefore, been heard together, but for the sake of convenience and clarity it is advisable to divide them into three groups. Before setting out the relevant facts at their proper places, I shall broadly specify the cases falling under each group and the reliefs claimed in respect of each of them. 2. CWJC Nos. 642, 644, 646 and 650 of 1971 involve identical questions of law. In these four writ applications the petitioner M/s. C.M. Rajgharia is a firm registered under the Indian Partnership Act and the prayer made is to quash by a writ of certiorari a notice dated 16.3.1971 purported to be issued under Section 148 of the Income Tax Act, 1961 (hereinafter referred to as the 1961 Act) in each case. While the notice aforesaid is Marked Annexure-2 in CWJC No. 642 of 1971, it marked as Annexure-5 in the other three writ applications. A further prayer has been made for the issuance of the writ in the nature of prohibition restraining the respondents, the Income Tax Officer, the Commissioner of Income Tax and the Union of India from taking any steps in pursuance of the said impugned notices. 3. The second group of cases comprises CWJC Nos. 640, 643, 645 and 647 of 1971. In these cases the petitioner is the same as in the previous group, namely M/s. C.M. Rajgharia, a registered firm and the petitions are directed against a notice dated 21.4.1971 in each case purporting to have been issued by the respondent no. 1 under Section 23(2) of the Income Tax Act, 1922 (hereinafter referred to as the 1922 Act), a copy of each of which has been marked Annexure-1 in the respective petition. The prayers made are similar to those made in the earlier group of cases. 4. In the third group of cases fall CWJC Nos. 641, 648, 649 and 651 of 1971. In these cases the petitioner is Chand Mull Rajgharia, an individual against whom a notice dated 16.3.1971 has been purported to be issued under Section 148 of the 1961 Act as a member of an Association of persons. 4. In the third group of cases fall CWJC Nos. 641, 648, 649 and 651 of 1971. In these cases the petitioner is Chand Mull Rajgharia, an individual against whom a notice dated 16.3.1971 has been purported to be issued under Section 148 of the 1961 Act as a member of an Association of persons. The notice in each of the cases has been marked Annexure-1 and the relief sought for is for issuance of a writ of certiorari quashing Annexure-1 and for a writ of prohibition restraining the respondents from taking any steps in pursuance thereof. 5. I shall now deal with the facts of and the points arising in respect of each of the three groups of cases mentioned above. 6. Group I–The facts are not much in controversy. In these four writ applications the petitioner firm consists of Ramratan Lal Rajgharia and Manik Lal Rajgharia as major partners, when it was constituted and five minors were admitted to the benefits of the firm. This firm was also registered under the Income Tax Act from the assessment year 1962-63 onwards. The petitioner firm deals in mica business. The facts and the circumstances leading to the constitution of the petitioner firm may here be set out. In February, 1951 Ramratan Lal Rajgharia and Manik Lal Rajgharia, the two adult sons of Chand Mull Rajgharia filed a partition suit against the father for partition of the properties allegedly belonging to the Hindu undivided family consisting of Chand Mull Rajgharia, his wife, the two adult sons named above and five minor sons. This suit was registered as Partition Suit No. 15 of 1951 in the Court of the Subordinate Judge at Hazaribagh. The subject matter of the suit, inter alia, was also the mica business. During the pendency of the suit the dispute was referred for arbitration to one Shri Ishwar Das Jalan. The suit was disposed of ultimately in terms of an award given by the Arbitrator. The preliminary award was made on 30.11.1953 under which the dispute relating to the mica dealing business was disposed of giving the same to the aforesaid seven sons of Chand Mull Rajgharia with all the assets and liabilities of the mica dealing business. Subsequently, a decree in terms of the award was drawn up by the Court on 8.3.1954. The preliminary award was made on 30.11.1953 under which the dispute relating to the mica dealing business was disposed of giving the same to the aforesaid seven sons of Chand Mull Rajgharia with all the assets and liabilities of the mica dealing business. Subsequently, a decree in terms of the award was drawn up by the Court on 8.3.1954. By virtue of the said decree each of the parties to the suit got 1/9th share in other immoveable properties and one of the items involved in the suit, namely, the mica mining business was allotted jointly to Chand Mull Rajgharia and his wife Shrimati Chandramani Devi, each having an equal share in the mining business. In pursuance of the interim award dated 30.11.1953, the mica dealing business was started by the petitioner firm from 1.12.1953 and later on a partnership deed was formally drawn up on 10.3.1954. The business of the firm was carried on in the name and style of M/s. Chand Mull Rajgharia and a licence for dealing in mica under the Bihar Mica Control Act was also granted to it in 1954. It is an admitted fact that Chand Mull Rajgharia was at no point of time a partner of the petitioner firm. The petitioner firm filed the returns of its income from its inception on 1.12.1953 and went on filing the same regularly from year to year since the assessment year 1954-55. The accounting year being the financial year, the return for the assessment year 1954-55 was filed in respect of the period from 1.12.1953 to 31.3.1954 on 24.2.1955. For the assessment year 1955-56 the return was filed on 31.3.1956. For the assessment year 1956-57 it was filed on 13.3.1957 and in respect of the assessment year 1957-58 the return was filed on 24.4.1958. These four years are respectively the subject matter of CWCJ Nos. 642, 644, 646 and 650 of 1971. The petitioner also received for several assessment years beginning from 1954-55 to 1956-57 notices under Section 23(2) of the 1922 Act and the accounts of the petitioner were also examined for these years, but no assessment ORDER :was passed on the returns filed by the petitioner. Chand Mull Rajgharia aforesaid was being assessed for a long time as an individual in respect of his income from the following sources:– (a) Share income consisting of house property of M/s. Madanlal and Brothers. Chand Mull Rajgharia aforesaid was being assessed for a long time as an individual in respect of his income from the following sources:– (a) Share income consisting of house property of M/s. Madanlal and Brothers. (b) Share income from M/s. J.S. Mull and Company. (c) Income from mica mining business under the name and style of Chand Mull Rajgharia. (d) Income from mica dealing business under the same name and style of Chand Mull Rajgharia. (e) Income from other sources, namely, dividend income. A return was filed by the individual Chand Mull Rajgharia for the assessment year 1954-55 showing the income from the above sources in his return as individual. But later on, for the assessment year 1954-55 he filed a revised return claiming the status of a Hindu undivided family in respect of the income derived by him from the above sources on the assertion that his status as individual was shown wrongly and the real status should have been that of a Hindu undivided family consisting of himself, his wife, and a subsequently born son. The aforesaid claim of Chand Mull Rajgharia was not accepted by the Department for the assessment year 1954-55 and the assessment was completed by the Income Tax Officer in his status as individual. On appeal the Appellate Assistant Commissioner, Ranchi by his ORDER :dated 14.2.1959 allowed the appeal in part and accepted his claim for the assessment in the status of Hindu undivided family with respect to all the sources of income mentioned above excepting in respect of the mica mining and the mica dealing business with regard to which his assessment in the status of an individual was affirmed. The ORDER :of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner was confirmed by the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal on appeal as also by this Court on a reference under Section 66(2) of the 1922 Act by a JUDGMENT : dated 3.2.1966 (the case has since been reported in 66 I.T.R. 347). It also subsequently transpired that in the assessment proceedings of Chand Mull Rajgharia, an individual, the Department assessed him for the mica dealing business of the petitioner every year from the assessment year 1955-56 till the assessment year 1964-65 as his individual income. It also subsequently transpired that in the assessment proceedings of Chand Mull Rajgharia, an individual, the Department assessed him for the mica dealing business of the petitioner every year from the assessment year 1955-56 till the assessment year 1964-65 as his individual income. With respect to the assessment year 1955-56 onwards upto 1957-58 the Appellate Assistant Commissioner dismissed the appeals of Chand Mull Rajgharia and confirmed the assessment made by the Income Tax Officer on Chand Mull Rajgharia as an individual in respect of the mica dealing business of the petitioner firm. Chand Mull Rajgharia then appealed to the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal. A special Bench of the Tribunal at Calcutta which finally heard the appeals of Chand Mull Rajgharia, after examining all the facts and circumstances accepted the claim of Chand Mull and by a consolidated ORDER :dated 5.3.1968 for three assessment years, namely, 1955-56, 1956-57 and 1957-58, held that the mica dealing business belonged exclusively to the petitioner firm and not to Chand Mull Rajgharia. The Tribunal accordingly directed the Income Tax Officer to effect necessary modifications in the assessment of Chand Mull Rajgharia made in the status of an individual. The Department's application for reference under Section 66(1) of the 1922 Act having been rejected, it filed Tax Cases Nos. 24, 25 and 26 of 1969 under Section 66(2) of that Act. These references were rejected by a Bench of this Court by an ORDER :dated 19.8.1969. The Department then moved the Supreme Court for special leave to appeal in Special Leave Applications Nos. 2148, 2149 and 2150 of 1969 which were dismissed by the Supreme Court by an ORDER :dated 8.12.1969. 7. As already stated the petitioner firm had filed its returns for the assessment years from 1954-55 to 1957-58, but apart from issuing notices under Section 23(2) of the 1922 Act, nothing further was done by the Income Tax Officer and on the returns filed by the petitioner no assessment was ever made. By the impugned notice dated 16.3.1971 purporting to be issued under Section 148 of the 1961 Act the Income Tax Officer, respondent no. By the impugned notice dated 16.3.1971 purporting to be issued under Section 148 of the 1961 Act the Income Tax Officer, respondent no. 1 has called upon the petitioner to deliver within thirty days from the date of the service of the notice a return in the prescribed form on the ground that income chargeable to tax for all these years had escaped assessment within the meaning of Section 147 of the 1961 Act. It has further been stated in the notice that the same had been issued after obtaining the necessary satisfaction of the Central Board of Direct Taxes, Delhi. The notice regarding each of these four assessment years has been annexed respectively to each of the writ applications. 8. Mr. A.K. Sen. learned counsel for the petitioner urged the following grounds attacking the jurisdiction of the Income Tax Officer, respondent no. 1 in issuing such a notice. The assessment for the assessment years 1954-55 to 1957-58 became respectively barred on 31.3.1959, 31.3.1960, 31.3.1961 and 31.3.1962. The right of the Department to make an assessment for these assessment years in question having been extinguished under Section 34(3) of the 1922 Act, it could not be revived by Section 297(2)(d)(ii) of the 1961 Act. The Income Tax Officer further had no jurisdiction to issue a notice under Section 148 of the 1961 Act, as no income of the petitioner chargeable to tax could be said to have escaped assessment within the meaning of Section 147 of that Act. The Income Tax Officer further had no 'reason to believe' within the meaning of Section 147 that any income assessable for the assessment years in question had escaped assessments. The sanction of the Central Board of Direct Taxes obtained, if any, was merely mechanical in nature without there being anything to suggest that before recording its satisfaction it had applied its mind to the facts and circumstances of each case. Apart from these common questions of law, a further ground of attack has been put forth in so far as the assessment year 1954-55 is concerned. Apart from these common questions of law, a further ground of attack has been put forth in so far as the assessment year 1954-55 is concerned. This additional ground is that since the assessment for this year relating to the period from 1.12.1953 to 31.3.1954 had already been made in respect of the same business against Chand Mull Rajgharia, an individual and tax recovered from him, the proposed assessment under Section 148 of the 1961 Act in respect of this year would lead to double assessment of the same income on which taxes had already been paid. 9. I shall now examine the validity of the aforesaid grounds of attack. It may be recapitulated that in respect of the four assessment years 1954-55 to 1957-58, the petitioner filed a return respectively on 24.2.1955, 31.3.1956, 13.3.1957 and 24.4.1958. For the first three years in question, notice under Section 23(2) of the 1922 Act was issued by the Income Tax Officer on 15.4.1957 while for the assessment year 1957-58 no such notice was either issued or served on the petitioner. All the same, no regular assessment was made for the years 1954-55, 1955-56 and 1957-58 while for the year 1956-57 a provisional assessment under Section 23B of the 1922 Act was made on 13.3.1957 and a tax on Rs. 5,201/- and odd was collected on the same date. In all these cases the stand taken by the Department in the counter-affidavit filed by the respondents is that the returns filed by the petitioner assessee were disposed of by recording an ORDER :in the ORDER :-sheet purporting to mean as follows:– "Since the claim for partition of the dealing business of Shri C.M. Rajgharia is not accepted, the income from dealing department is included in the individual assessment of Shri C.M. Rajgharia. No assessment is called for from this file." It has further been contended by the Department that even if it be held that the returns were not disposed of by the above ORDER :, the right of the Department to assess the petitioner is not totally extinguished because the assessment could still be made under Section 34(3) of the 1922 Act. The further case of the Department is that the assessment did not become time barred in view of the provisions contained in Section 297(2)(d)(ii) read with Sections 147, 148, 150 and 153 of the 1961 Act. The further case of the Department is that the assessment did not become time barred in view of the provisions contained in Section 297(2)(d)(ii) read with Sections 147, 148, 150 and 153 of the 1961 Act. In this view of the matter, it has to be seen as to whether the income of the petitioner firm can be said to have escaped assessment within the meaning of either sub-section (a) or Sub-section (b) of Section 147 of the 1961 Act. 10. Mr. Sen took great pains to establish that if it be held that the impugned notices were sought to be issued with regard to an escapement of income being assessed within the meaning of Section 147(a) of the 1961 Act, then they must be struck down for these reasons. The returns had been filed by the petitioner in due time and the assessment proceedings having been pending it could not be a case of income having escaped assessment within the meaning of Section 147(a). If the original assessment proceedings are factually treated as pending or must be deemed to be pending, then the provisions of Section 147(a) could not be attracted. Reliance in this connection was placed on numerous decisions, to wit, Sir Rajendra Nath Mukherjee vs. Commissioner of Income Tax, Bengal, (1934) 2 I.T.R. 71 (PC), M.C.T. Muthuraman vs. Commissioner of Income Tax, Madras, (1963) 50 I.T.R. 656, N. Naganatha Iyer vs. Commissioner of Income Tax, Madras, (1966) 60 I.T.R. 647 and Commissioner of Income Tax vs. Onkarmal Meghraj, (1974) 93 I.T.R. 233 (SC). Learned counsel further urged that in any event, the original assessments having been barred under the 1922 Act in respect of assessment years for which returns had been filed under that Act before the 1961 Act came into force (i.e. 1.4.1962), Section 297(2)(d)(ii) of the latter Act can have no application so as to attract the provisions of Section 147, nor for that matter, could a barred assessment be treated as one of escaped assessment of income within the meaning of Section 147(a) of the 1961 Act. Reference in this connection was made to the cases of N. Naganatha Iyer (supra), J.P. Jani, Income Tax Officer vs. Indu Prasad Devshanker Bhatta, (1969) 72 I.T.R. 595 (SC) and Commissioner of Income Tax Bombay City II vs. Ranchhoddas Karsondas, (1959) 36 I.T.R. 569 (SC). Reference in this connection was made to the cases of N. Naganatha Iyer (supra), J.P. Jani, Income Tax Officer vs. Indu Prasad Devshanker Bhatta, (1969) 72 I.T.R. 595 (SC) and Commissioner of Income Tax Bombay City II vs. Ranchhoddas Karsondas, (1959) 36 I.T.R. 569 (SC). I must state here that it is now well established that a time barred assessment under the 1922 Act does not partake of the nature of an escaped assessment within the meaning of Section 147(a) and it cannot, therefore, be availed of by virtue of the provisions contained in Section 297(2)(d)(ii) of the 1961 Act. The Income Tax Officer cannot issue a notice under Section 148 of the 1961 Act in ORDER :to reopen the assessment of an assessee in a case where the right to reopen the assessment was already barred under the 1922 Act when the new Act came into force. It is not permissible to construe Section 297(2)(d)(ii) as reviving the right of the assessing authority to reopen the assessment already barred under the earlier Act. Unless the terms of a statute expressly so provide or unless there is a necessary implication retrospective operation should not be given to the statute so as to affect, alter or destroy any right already acquired or to revive any remedy already lost by the efflux of time. Section 297(2)(a) of the 1961 Act further lays down that where the return of income has been filed before the commencement of this Act for any assessment year by any assessee, proceedings for the assessment may be taken and continued as if this Act had not been passed. Thus a continuation of any pending proceeding for assessment before the 1961 Act came into force has been enjoined to be continued as if this Act had not come into force, at all. As such, Section 297(2)(d) must be read harmoniously with the provisions of Section 297(2)(a) and adopting the harmonious rule of construction, it must be held that the Legislature had expressly intended to exclude either pending or barred assessment proceedings under the 1922 Act from the purview of the 1961 Act. Nonetheless, for the reasons hereinafter given, it is not necessary to dwell upon this aspect of the case at any length. Nonetheless, for the reasons hereinafter given, it is not necessary to dwell upon this aspect of the case at any length. It is true that the impugned notices are silent giving no indication as to under which sub-section of Section 147 the escapement of assessment has been treated to have occurred. But the admitted fact is that there has been no omission or failure on the part of the petitioner to make returns for these years or to disclose fully and truly all material facts necessary for the assessment. All that the law required of the assessee was to have stated and placed before the assessing authority all the primary facts fully and truly to be saved from the mischief of Section 147(a) of the 1961 Act. This the assessee (petitioner) had admittedly complied with. Further more, according to the respondents an ORDER :was passed on the assessment files of the petitioner that no assessment was called for. This really amounted to saying that the returns for these years were closed by the Income Tax Officer as cases of no assessment or not assessed which has in law the effect of a lawful termination of the assessment proceedings as has been held in the cases of Muthuraman vs. Commissioner of Income Tax, Madras (supra) and Commissioner of Income Tax vs. Onkarmal Meghraj (supra). Thus Section 147(a) cannot apply and the notices must be treated as being in respect of alleged escapement of assessment of income within the meaning of Section 147(a) of the 1961 Act. 11. This then brings us to the question as to whether the impugned notices under Section 148 of the 1961 Act can be held to be without jurisdiction. Before the jurisdiction of the Income Tax Officer can be invoked and power exercised under this provision, two pre-requisite conditions must be satisfied. The Income Tax Officer firstly must have reason to believe that income has escaped assessment and secondly such belief must be in consequence of the information received after the original assessment. I shall, therefore, examine as to whether these conditions necessary to confer jurisdiction on the Income Tax Officer had been satisfied in the cases at hand. It is well settled that the existence of the belief can be challenged by the assessee, but not the sufficiency of the reasons for the belief. I shall, therefore, examine as to whether these conditions necessary to confer jurisdiction on the Income Tax Officer had been satisfied in the cases at hand. It is well settled that the existence of the belief can be challenged by the assessee, but not the sufficiency of the reasons for the belief. The belief must not be merely a pretence and it is open to this Court to examine whether the belief has been held in good faith or whether it has a rational connection or a relevant bearing to the formation of a belief and is neither extraneous nor irrelevant for the purpose. To this limited extent only the action of the Income Tax Officer in initiating proceedings under Section 147 of the 1961 Act is open to challenge. But the attempt at re-assessment in the present cases, as was contended by learned standing counsel for the Income Tax Department appearing on behalf of the respondents, was the result of the ORDER :of the Income Tax appellate Tribunal, Calcutta Bench dated the 5.3.1968 in the case of Chand Mull Rajgharia, who had been assessed as an individual in respect of the mica dealing business in question for the assessment years 1955-56, 1956-57 and 1957-58 by the Income Tax Officer whose ORDER :had been upheld by the Appellate Assistant Commissioner. This consolidated ORDER :of the Tribunal in Income Tax Appeal Nos. 2584 to 2586 of 1961-62 as is apparent from the ORDER :under Section 66(1) of the 1922 Act rejecting the reference application of the Commissioner of Income Tax Bihar and Orissa, a true copy of which has been marked as Annexure-2 to CWJC Nos. 644, 646 and 650 of 1971. A true copy of the Tribunal's appellate ORDER :was also furnished to us by the counsel for the parties in course of the hearing of these applications. Before adverting to the relevant facts regarding I those appeals before the Tribunal, must point out that although the impugned notices in the present cases stated that they were being issued after obtaining the necessary satisfaction of the Central Board of Direct Taxes, Delhi, it was yet the admitted position that the notices were not purported to have been issued under Section 147(a) of the 1961 Act. As in these cases the petitioner had given all the primary facts and there was no failure to disclose fully and truly any material fact for the purpose of assessment, Section 147(a) could not at all be resorted to as already held earlier. Be that as it may, the existence of belief itself being challenged either for the purpose of Section 147(a) or Section 147(b) nothing has been said in the counter affidavits filed on behalf of the respondents to justify any reason to believe. Nor was anything shown to us from the original records of the Department which could justify the existence of any such reasonable belief. It is true that the communication of any such reasons to hold a belief to the assessee is not necessary, but they have to be disclosed to this court and the Income Tax Officer may be confined to those recorded reasons to support the assumption of jurisdiction. The question whether the Income Tax Officer had reason to believe was not a mere question of limitation only but was a question of jurisdiction which could be investigated by this Court in an application under Article 226 of the Constitution of India. Reference in this connection may be made to the cases of Daulotram Rawatanmal vs. Income Tax Officer, (1960) 38 I.T.R. 301 , Jamnalal Kabra vs. Income Tax Officer, (1968) 69 I.T.R. 461 and Calcutta Discount Co. Ltd. vs. Income Tax Officer, (1961) 41 I.T.R. 191 (SC). 12. It may, however, be pointed out as contended on behalf of the respondents that the decision of the Tribunal may be treated as information within the meaning of Section 147(b), as laid down by the Supreme Court in the case of Maharaj Kumar Kamal Singh vs. The Commissioner of Income Tax, Bihar and Orissa, (1959) 35 I.T.R. 1 (SC) and the Department would have been perfectly justified in initiating proceedings under that sub-section within four years of the end of the relevant assessment year. But that not having been done, they were sought to be justified by learned Standing Counsel for the Department only on the ground that these cases should be held to be covered by the provisions of Section 150 of the 1961 Act which corresponds to the second proviso to Section 34(3) of the 1922 Act. But that not having been done, they were sought to be justified by learned Standing Counsel for the Department only on the ground that these cases should be held to be covered by the provisions of Section 150 of the 1961 Act which corresponds to the second proviso to Section 34(3) of the 1922 Act. Learned standing counsel for the respondents submitted that the provisions of Section 150 removed not only the bar of limitation imposed by Section 149(1)(b), but also that imposed by Section 153 of the 1961 Act. It was contended that if the case of the petitioner assessee for any of the assessment years fell within the scope of Section 150, the resultant position would be that there was no time bar on the assessment of re-assessment. Reliance in this connection was sought to be placed on the decision of M.C.T. Muthuraman vs. Commissioner of Income Tax, Madras (supra) on a passage at page 661 of (1963) 50 I.T.R. 656. This principle of law, baldly stated, is unexceptionable. It would, therefore, be necessary to find out as to whether the impugned notices can be saved by resorting to the provisions of Section 150 of the 1961 Act which in substance incorporates the same principles which govern the second proviso to Section 34(3) of the 1922 Act. As a matter of fact, in ORDER :to find out as to whether either of the Sections 147, 148 and 150 of the 1961 Act can he resorted to legally, it must be examined as to whether these proceedings were saved by the second proviso to Section 34(3) of the 1922 Act. For this purpose it will have to be examined as to whether the attempt at re-assessment has been made in consequence of or to give effect to any finding or direction contained in the appellate ORDER :of the Tribunal in relation to the three years in question. 13. It is now well settled that the expressions finding and direction in the second proviso to Section 34(3) of the 1922 Act mean respectively a finding necessary for giving relief in respect of the assessment for the year in question and the direction which the Appellate and Revisional Authority are empowered to give under their appropriate jurisdiction. The expression finding or direction cannot be treated as in vacuum. The expression finding or direction cannot be treated as in vacuum. As held by the Supreme Court in the case of Income Tax Officer vs. Murlidhar Bhagwan Das (1964) 52 I.T.R. 335, the exception to the rule of limitation engrafted in the aforesaid proviso only lifted the bar of limitation and did not enlarge the jurisdiction of the Tribunals. The expression any person in the aforesaid proviso must inevitably refer to one, who would be liable to be assessed for the whole or a part of the income that went into the assessment year under appeal or revision. Two well settled principles under the 1922 Act with regard to the removal of this bar of limitation can be called out from the various decisions of the Supreme Court. The finding or direction must be necessary for giving relief in respect of the assessment of the year in question and the direction must be a direction which the Appellate or Revisional Authority, as the case may be is empowered to give under the various sections conferring their respective jurisdictions. The words in consequence of or to give effect to any finding or direction have to be collated with and cannot enlarge the scope of the finding or direction under the proviso mentioned above. Secondly, the words or any person occurring after the words to assessment or re-assessment made on the assessee in the second proviso were necessarily circumscribed by the scope of the subject matter of the appeal or revision, as the case may be, i.e. the person must be one who would be liable to be assessed for the whole or a part of the income that went into the assessment of the year under appeal or revision. In ORDER :to get over the constitutional invalidity of the provisions of the second proviso to Section 34(3) of the 1922 Act, on the construction put by the Supreme Court in the case of S.C. Prashar and another vs. Vasantsen Dearkadas and others, (1963) 49 I.T.R. (SC) 1, the Supreme Court itself confined the applicability of the provisions of the aforesaid proviso to a person intimately connected with the assessee for the assessment relating to the year under appeal by its subsequent decisions in cases of Income Tax Officer vs. Murlidhar Bhagwan Das (supra) and Daffadar Bhagat Singh and Sons vs. Income Tax Officer, (1969) 71 I.T.R. 417 (SC). As a matter of fact, the Supreme Court itself has thus crystallised the law in this respect in a recent decision in the case of Commissioner of Income Tax vs. Onkarmal Meghraj (supra). "The words any person in the second proviso to Section 34(3) has been interpreted by this Court in Income Tax Officer vs. Murlidhar Bhagwan Das, (1964) 52 I.T.R. 335 & AIR 1965 SC 342 , as any person intimately connected like members of HUF, partners of a firm or individuals forming an association of persons because in such cases though they are not so nominee parties they could be deemed to be represented by the HUF, partnership or association before the relevant Income Tax Authority." Indeed, the Gujarat High Court has gone a step further in the case of Commissioner of Income Tax vs. Shantilal Punjabhai, (1965) 57 I.T.R. 58, in holding that the assessee might fall within the scope of the expression any person under the second proviso, but not as an assessee but as a person other than the assessee, who might be affected by the ORDER :of the Tribunal; and that being so, the assessee not a stranger to the proceedings before the Tribunal and consequently the second proviso to Section 34(3) of the 1922 Act could not be invoked by the revenue in his case. This construction, in my view, is rather very narrow and to the extent that it militates against the construction put by the Supreme Court in the case of Commissioner of Income Tax vs. Onkarmal Meghraj (supra) its correctness may be open to serious doubt. I would prefer to confine the application of the provision incorporated therein to any person intimately connected with the assessee, who has gone up in appeal or revision and in the original assessment proceeding of whom any finding or direction was revicorded by the Appellate of the Resional Tribunal, as the case may be. I would prefer to confine the application of the provision incorporated therein to any person intimately connected with the assessee, who has gone up in appeal or revision and in the original assessment proceeding of whom any finding or direction was revicorded by the Appellate of the Resional Tribunal, as the case may be. This being the position in law, as I consider the law to be even after the change in the language of the 1961 Act, I shall now examine as to whether the petitioner firm was the assessee or in anyway intimately connected with the assessee, who went up in appeal to the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal Special Bench, Calcutta for the assessment years 1955-56, 1956-57 and 1957-58, on the basis of which the Department had initiated the proceedings under Section 148 of the 1961 Act. Those appeals were filed before the Tribunal by an individual Chand Mull Rajgharia in whose assessable income the income from the mica dealing business of the petitioner firm had also been added by the Income Tax Officer which was upheld by the Appellate Assistant Commissioner and the Tribunal held that "the income from the mica dealing business will have to be excluded from the present assessment." None of the members of the petitioner firm was an assessee in so far as the appeals before the Tribunal were concerned. Nor, for that matter, was the assessee who went up to the Tribunal in those appeals and who was an individual is a member of the petitioner firm, who is sought to be reassessed in pursuance of the impugned notices. The petitioner firm, therefore, must be treated as being neither the assessee nor any person intimately connected with the assessee regarding the assessment of Chand Mull Rajgharia, an individual for those assessment years. The partners of the firm must be held to be total strangers to the proceedings before the Tribunal. The second proviso to Section 34(3) of the 1922 Act cannot, therefore, be invoked by the revenue. So far as the assessment year 1954-55 which is subject matter of CWJC No. 642 of 1971 is concerned, the position is not different rather worse in so for as there is not even any direction in the appellate ORDER :. The second proviso to Section 34(3) of the 1922 Act cannot, therefore, be invoked by the revenue. So far as the assessment year 1954-55 which is subject matter of CWJC No. 642 of 1971 is concerned, the position is not different rather worse in so for as there is not even any direction in the appellate ORDER :. It must, therefore, be held that the impugned notices in these four writ applications were wholly without jurisdiction and they, therefore, must be struck down. 14. So far as the cases of Group II are concerned, namely CWJC Nos. 640, 643, 645 and 647 of 1971 relating to the assessment years 1958-59, 1959-60, 1960-61 and 1961-62, respectively, the facts are identical with the facts of the cases of Group I. The only difference is that for the year upto 1957-58 individual Chand Mull Rajgharia had been assessed whereas for the subsequent years covered by these four cases of the second group even he had not been assessed. The position, therefore, is that for these years the notices have been purported to be issued under Section 23(2) of the 1922 Act. The petitioner firm had filed its returns for these four years respectively on 22.11.1958, 24.2.1960, 14.11.1960 and 16.12.1961. The impugned notices could be held to be valid only if the assessments had not become barred. The assessment became barred under Section 34(3) of the 1922 Act as no ORDER :of assessment could be made after the expiry of four years from the end of the year in which the income, profits or gains were first assessable. The assessments must be completed within the time prescribed. The only exception to the fetters of the assessing authority are the cases covered by the second proviso to Section 34(3). For the reasons given with regard to the first group of cases, the impugned notices in these four applications must also be struck down as invalid. The contention put forward on behalf of the respondents that the petitioner firm through its major partners and their agents had fun knowledge of all the proceedings in the case of Chand Mull Rajgharia and that the returns filed in the status of the firm were relevant for the assessment of the individual Chand Mull Rajgharia does not make any difference in law. 15. Group III. 15. Group III. The only further relevant facts relating to the four cases falling under this group, namely, CWJC Nos. 641, 648, 649 and 651 of 1971 corresponding to the assessment years 1955-56, 1956-57, 1957-58 and 1958-59 are these. These cases relate to mica mining business of according to the petitioner, a Hindu undivided family consisting of the petitioner Chand Mull Rajgharia, his wife Shrimati Chandramani Devi and a minor son born on 27.1.1954. This mica mining business had been allotted jointly to Chand Mull Rajgharia and his wife Shrimati Chandramani Devi, each having an equal share in the same under the award of the Arbitrator aforesaid followed by a decree of the Court. Excepting the mica mining business and the mica dealing business which were allotted in the manner hereinbefore mentioned, all other immovable properties were distributed under the award and the decree amongst Chand Mull Rajgharia, his wife and each of the then existing seven sons each getting 1/9th share in the properties. The return of the Hindu undivided family for the four years in question was filed respectively on 20.2.1959, 20.3.1959, 28.3.1958 and 22.11.1958. With regard to the first two years, the original returns were filed on 22.12.1955 and 21.9.1956, but revised returns in respect of these two years were filed on 20.2.1959 and 20.3 1959 as mentioned above. The return though filed by and on behalf of the Hindu undivided family an income of these years was assessed in the hands of Chand Mull Rajgharia an individual. In the three appeals relating to the years 1955-56, 1956-57 and 1957-58, already mentioned above the Special Bench of the Tribunal rejected the plea of the Department and held:– "In the result, we have come to the conclusion that the suit, award and decree must be given their full and lawful effect. The income from the mica dealing business will have to be excluded from the present assessment." And again:– "We have now to consider the position of the mica mining business. This was also partitioned by the award, the assessee getting an 1/9th share thereof, but it is not clear why the income was returned as that of the HUF. The HUF has not been previously assessed and the division of the mining business, whether it was by metes and bounds within the meaning of Section 25A or not, has to be accepted. The HUF has not been previously assessed and the division of the mining business, whether it was by metes and bounds within the meaning of Section 25A or not, has to be accepted. The result will therefore, be that the assessee will be liable to be assessed in respect of his share of the income from this business. We may also mention that, in the view he took that partition was bogus the Income Tax Officer did not include any part of the share income of the assessee from the firms and the dividends in the present assessment. Presumably they were left for assessment, or have been assessed, in the hands of the family. But, in consequence of our finding, the assessee's share in these incomes on the basis of the partition will become includible in the present assessment. The I.T.O. will effect modifications necessary to the assessment consequent on our findings regarding the award and the partition." In regard to the assessment year 1958-59 the appeal was taken to the Tribunal by Chand Mull Rajgharia, Chandramani Devi and the subsequently born minor son of Chand Mull Rajgharia which was numbered as Income Tax, Appeal No. 1636 of 1964-65 and the Tribunal by its JUDGMENT : and ORDER :dated 26.4.1968 held as follows:– "The learned counsel submitted that after the Special Bench decision there was no HUF at all. Since the Income Tax Officer had not the benefit of this Special Bench decision, we consider that the Income Tax Officer should have an opportunity to apply his mind afresh and decide what items of income, if any, would be assessable in the status of HUF and what items of income would be assessable in the hands of Sri Chand Mull Rajgharia individual keeping in view the findings of the Special Bench. We accordingly set aside the assessment and direct the Income Tax officer to make the assessment denovo as indicated above." It was thereafter, that the Income Tax Officer issued a notice under Section 148 of the 1961 Act in respect of each of the four years in question on 16.3.1971. The impugned notice in each case has been marked Annexure-1 to each of the applications. These notices have been purported to be issued to Shri Chand Mull Rajgharia, Giridih, A.O.P. Mr. The impugned notice in each case has been marked Annexure-1 to each of the applications. These notices have been purported to be issued to Shri Chand Mull Rajgharia, Giridih, A.O.P. Mr. Sen submitted that the returns having already been filed by the HUF in due time setting out all the primary facts and disclosing fully and truly all the material facts, there could not be a case of income having escaped assessment within the meaning of Section 148(a) of the 1961 Act. Nor, is there anything in the aforesaid two appellate ORDER :s of the Tribunal relating to these four years in question which could be said to be information giving rise to any reasonable belief that income had escaped assessment within the meaning of Section 147(b) of the 1961 Act. The stand taken by learned Standing Counsel of the Income Tax Department was to the effect that these assessments or re-assessments are being sought to be made in pursuance of the findings and directions of the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal in the appeal referred to above. The submission, therefore, on behalf of the respondents was that the assessments or re-assessments must be held to be saved by the provisions of the second proviso to Section 34(3) of the 1922 Act or Section 150(1) of the 1961 Act. I have already quoted above the relevant finding or direction of the Tribunal in those appeals. There is nothing in the appellate ORDER :s of the Tribunal with regard to there being any association of person being the true assessee. As held by the Supreme Court in the case of Commissioner of Income Tax vs. Rameshwarlal Sanwarmal, (1971) 82 I.T.R. 628 (SC), the same person can be taxed both as an individual as well as the karta of his family. The two capacities are totally different units of taxation, and they are two different assessees. Chand Mull Rajgharia either as an individual or as a member of an HUF cannot be treated as the same assessee in the capacity of a member of an association of persons. No association of persons was the subject matter of assessment for these years which had gone up in appeal. Chand Mull Rajgharia either as an individual or as a member of an HUF cannot be treated as the same assessee in the capacity of a member of an association of persons. No association of persons was the subject matter of assessment for these years which had gone up in appeal. There is neither any finding or a direction nor for that matter is there anything in the appellate ORDER :of the Tribunal to suggest even remotely that Chand Mull Rajgharia was a member of an association of persons. In the case of Commissioner of Income Tax vs. Mohd. Shakoor Mohd. Bashir, (1973) 89 I.T.R. 57 (SC), the principle enunciated by the Supreme Court is that in the absence of any finding that during the relevant assessment years certain persons were continuing a business as an association of persons and that the income earned by them from that business was in that capacity, they could not be taxed as an association of persons. It is well settled that where the shares were defined even amongst the members of a family, there could not be any presumption that they formed an association of persons for in such cases they are tenants-in-common and not joint tenants. In the case of Commissioner of Gift Tax vs. R. Valsala Amma, (1971) 82 I.T.R. 828 (SC), the assessee and her sister received under the will of their mother one-half share in the properties bequeathed. Both of them, however under one deed of gift made in favour of their brother gifted away their entire property. The question was whether the gift was by individuals or by an association of persons and it was held that in law each one of them had half the right in the properties that they gifted to their brother. They had been holding the properties in question as tenants-in-common and the question whether they divided the property or not was wholly immaterial. The assessee or her sister could not be assessed as an association of persons, but only as individuals. It is also well settled that the word association includes the voluntary combination for a common endeavour and not a mere legal status resulting from operation of law. Co-owners, co-heirs or co-legatees do not constitute such association in respect of the income of the joint or common asset by reason only of their jural relationship. It is also well settled that the word association includes the voluntary combination for a common endeavour and not a mere legal status resulting from operation of law. Co-owners, co-heirs or co-legatees do not constitute such association in respect of the income of the joint or common asset by reason only of their jural relationship. It is only if they unite themselves with the object of earning income that they constitute an association of persons for assessment purposes C.F. Estate of A. Mohd. Rowther vs. Commissioner of Income Tax, (1963) 49 I.T.R. 39. In the present case, even if there be no evidence of separate enjoyment, as there was no finding by any of the Taxing Authorities including the appellate ORDER :s of the Tribunal that the petitioner Chand Mull Rajgharia had combined in a joint enterprise with any other person including his wife and minor son to produce income and as they had on the admitted facts done no act which had helped to produce the income, it could not be held that either the petitioner or any other person had the status of an association of persons in so far as the assessments of income relating to the years in question were concerned. Reliance in this connection may be placed on a decision of the Supreme Court in the case of Commissioner of Income Tax vs. Indira Balkrishna, (1960) 39 I.T.R. 546 (SC). Indeed, there was, on the materials on record, no A.O.P. at any time. It is thus clear that the stand taken by the respondents for justifying the issuance of the notices as incorporated in Annexure-1 dated 16.3.1971 purporting to have been issued under Section 148 of the 1961 Act cannot be held to be tenable in law. Nor, are the provisions of the second proviso to Section 34(3) of the 1922 Act and Section 150(1) of the 1961 Act are attracted so as to lift the bar of limitation. In the result, therefore, these notices also must be held to be without jurisdiction and fit to be quashed. 16. Nor, are the provisions of the second proviso to Section 34(3) of the 1922 Act and Section 150(1) of the 1961 Act are attracted so as to lift the bar of limitation. In the result, therefore, these notices also must be held to be without jurisdiction and fit to be quashed. 16. I may also state here that a half-hearted attempt was made by the learned Standing Counsel on behalf of the respondents objecting to the maintainability of these writ applications on the ground that since the Income Tax Act contained an exhaustive procedure and a self contained machinery for the disposal of such matters no application for any writ should lie. This argument in so far as the present writ applications are concerned has to be stated merely to be rejected. Instances are legion where writs under Article 226 of the Constitution of India have issued in such cases and it is now too late in the day to suggest any such reason against the maintainability of a writ application, for evidently it goes to the root of the jurisdiction of the assessing authority. The cases of, inter alia, Income Tax Officer vs. Murlidhar Bhagwan Das (supra), Sheo Nath Singh vs. Appellate Assistant Commissioner of Income Tax, (1917) 82 I.T.R. 1947 (SC), Rajpal vs. S.P. Chaliha, (1971) 73 I.T.R. 603 (SC), Union of India and others vs. Rai Saheb Deb Singh Bist and another, (1973) 88 I.T.R. 200 (SC), Calcutta Discount Co. Ltd. vs. Income Tax Officer (supra), Indra Co. Ltd. vs. Income Tax Officer, Central Circle I, Calcutta, (1971) 80 I.T.R. 559 (Calcutta) and Madhya Pradesh Industries Ltd. vs. Income Tax Officer, Nagpur, (1970) 77 I.T.R. 268 (SC), were all cases of writs under Article 226 of the Constitution of India wherein the power of the High Court to interfere under Article 226 in cases of initial lack of jurisdiction or illegal assumption of jurisdiction was always upheld. 17. For the foregoing reasons, the impugned notices dated 16.3.1971 under Section 148 of the 1961 Act against the firm M/s. C.M. Rajgharia in CWJC Nos. 642, 644, 646 and 650 of 1971 and those dated 21.4.1971 against the same petitioner under Section 23(2) of the 1922 Act in CWJC Nos. 640, 643, 645 and 647 of 1971 and the notices dated 16.3.1971 issued against Chand Mull Rajgharia A.O.P. under Section 148 of the 1961 Act in CWJC Nos. 642, 644, 646 and 650 of 1971 and those dated 21.4.1971 against the same petitioner under Section 23(2) of the 1922 Act in CWJC Nos. 640, 643, 645 and 647 of 1971 and the notices dated 16.3.1971 issued against Chand Mull Rajgharia A.O.P. under Section 148 of the 1961 Act in CWJC Nos. 641, 648, 649 and 651 of 1971 must be held to be wholly without jurisdiction and they are accordingly quashed. The respondents are further restrained by writ of prohibition from in any manner taking any action in pursuance of the aforesaid notices. All the writ applications, therefore, succeed. In the circumstances of the case, however, I shall make no ORDER :as to costs. Applications allowed.