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Income-Tax Officer vs Shamsher Bahadur.

High Court Of Judicature at Allahabad|11 November, 1963

JUDGMENT / ORDER

JUDGMENT The main goround for asking for a review is that two material facts were not disclosed by the assessee and as such he had disented himself to the exercise of the extraordinary writ juris diction of this court in hais favour. The original writ petitions was directed against the notice of demand dated the 17th of March, 1956, and 25th of August, 1958.
The assesse was a partber in the partbership firm carrying on business in the name and style Mumma Lal and sons, Kanpur. The petitioner assessment of that year the share of profit of the petitioner in the aforesaid firm, including interest, was comput ed at Rs. 88,809 : vide assessment foder, dated the 17th of March, 1955, and on the basis of that order the Income-tax Officer computed the tax paysble at Rs. 39,364.90. the notice of demand issued was dated the 17th March, 1955, requiring payment on or before the 28th March, 1955. On the 17th March, 1955, an individual return of income was filed by the assessee before the income-tax Officer on the basis of which the Income-tax Officer issued a notice under section 23(2) of the Act of 1922 (hereinaf ter referred to as the Act) and fixed the hearing on the same date and also passed an assessment order on that date determining the assessees total income at Rs. 88,809. According to the petitioner he had no knowledge of the notice of demand having been served on any one on his behalf till the 20th September, 1961, when the file was inspected and it was discovered that the notice of demand was served on one Mr. P. Dayal on the 30th March, 1955. The inspection of the records, according to the assessee, had further show that a sum of Rs. 1,000 was paid towards the aforesaid demand on the 1st August, 1955. It further appeared that on the 8th March, 1956, the Income-tax Officer had imposed a penalty of Rs. 1,900 under section 46(1) of the Act, for the alleged default in payment of tax. The order imposing penalty of Rs. 1,900, however, was not filed along with the writ petition. Against that penalty order an appeal was filed. The petitioner did not, however, file any appeal under section 30 of the Act against the assessment order passed on him for the assessment year 1950-51.
In the affidavit accompanyuing the original petition it was stated that the first recovery certificate to the èCollector of Kanpur Under section 46(2) of the Act for the recovery of sum of Rs. 40,264.90 which included the aforesaid penalty of Rs. 1,900, was issued on 24th December, 1956. According to the petitioner as the demand notice was only served on the 30th March, 1955, recovery proceedings ought to have been taken on or before the 30th March, 1956, and therefore they were barred under the provisions of section 46, sub-clause (7), of the act. The petitioner, no doubt, had taken this stand before the Income-tax Officer, Kanpuro, and the Income-tax Officer, Dehra Dun. to whom the proceedings were subsequently transpferred and also before the commissioner of Income-tax Lucknow, and the collector, Dehra Dun The assessee, however, did not place all his cards on the table nor was the department vigilant enough to place the correct facts before this court at the time when the writ petition came to be argued. On the materials on records the recovery proceedings were prima facie barred by time, they having been taken for the first time on the 24th December, 1956, and it having been noticed that the counter-affidavit filed by the department had made no effort to meet the point of limitation, this court considered that there was no alternative but to issue a writ of certiorari quashing the recovery proceedings taken on the 24th December, 1956, and fortiori the subsequent recovery proceedings dated the 25th August 1958. This court, further, without having given a finding as to whether the notice of demand was validly served, had quashed the notice of demand dated the 17th March, 1955. That was not at all necessary when the recovery proceedings themselves were quashed. It is the quashing of the recovery proceedings and the demand notice which is required to be reviewed by the present application Preliminary objections have been taken to the maintainability of the review application on the ground that no review lies against an order passed under article 226 of the Constitution in respect of a matter which does not fall within the civil jurisdiction of this court. Reliance for this proposition by Mr. Pachauri, the learned cousel for the assessee, had been placed on three decision of this court. The first of these decisions is the case of Dan Singh of Dun Singh Bist v. Additional Collector, Bijnor. James J. had held that there was no provision in the Constitution debarring the Hight Court from exercising a power of review; that if such power is found derived from some other statute a High Court will be entitled to review its decision and orders. In that particular case as the proceedings had been started to enforce or vindicate a civil tight it was held that the proceedings were civil proceedings from which it followed that in adjudication upon them under article 226 of the Constitution, the learned judge was exercising civil jurisdiction and therefore the Civil procedure Code the provisions of section 151 gave this court ample power to undo the injustice by recalling the incorrect and invalid order which had come to be passed as a result of the ignorance èof a certain notification. This case, therefore, did not rule out the exercise of the powers of review under the inherent powers which flow from the exercise of plenary jurisdiction under article 226 of the Constitution.
Reliance was next placed on the case of Brij Lal v. State of U.P. where the question of review was not under consideration and the only question decided was that proceedings within the meaning of article 132 of the Constitution.
The Third case relied upon was Income-tax Officer v. Joti Prasad Agarwal, where again it was laid down that proceedings relating to liability to income-tax partake of the nature of a proceedings which had been usually described as a revenue proceeding and that the liability to income-tax is not a civil right enforceable as such in a court of law.
The case cited was a decision of a Full Bench in Mst. Abhilakhi v. Sada Nand. This case merely laid down that no review lies from a judgment of a Bench hearing an appeal under clause 10 of the Letters Patent.
As Against these decisions there are two direct decisions, one of this court and the other of the Calcutta High Court relating to tax matters. Adarsh Bhandar v. Sales Tax Officer, aligarh was a converse case to the present one, inasmuch as section 4 of the U. P. Salaes Tax (validation) Act of 1958 made it obligatory on the High Court to review its pronouncement in certain cases. The Full Bench of this court resisted that attempt of the Government to force the High Court review every order passed by it including order passed under article 226 of the Constitution. Mootham C.J. who delivered the judgment of the Full Bench in this connection, observed :
"The power of the High Court reveiw an order passed by it under article 226 of the Constitution is either included in the power conferred by the article itself or can be exercised under the code of Civil Procedure in case the proceeding is treated as a civil proceedings."
It is therefore, clear that the Full bench considered that power of review is inherent in the power given to this court under article 226 of the Constitution apart from proceedings which are in the nature of civil proceedings which would also be observed by the provisions of the Code.
The Calcutta case in Dilip Nath Sen v. Certificate Officer after noticing the conflict between the Madhya Pradesh High Court on the one hand and the Bombay and Madras High Court on the other, followed the latter view and held that in a proper case an application for review would lie from an order passeed in proceeding under article 226 of the Constitution. This conflict has been noticed in Basus Constitution of India, IV edition, volume III and the following observations appear at page 398 :
"The controversy has however been set at rest by the Supreme Court by holding that the High Court under articel 226 has an inherent power of review apart from statutory conditions."
This is followed up by a quotation from the Supreme Court decision in Sheo Deo Singh v. State of Punjab."
"...... There is nothing in article 226 of the Constitution to preclude the High Court from exercising the power of review which inheres in every court of plenary jurisdiction to prevent miscarriage of justice or to correct grave and palpable errors committed by it."
In view of the Supreme Court decision, the view taken by a Full Bench of this court and the Calcutta High Court, I would hold that a review would lie from an order under èarticle 226 of the Constitution even in matters which do not relate to the civil jurisdiction of this court.
The next objection raised was that the application for review was barred by time as ti was presented beyond 60 days of the order of this court. To begin with the period of limitation is 90 days under article 173 of the First Schedule of the Limitation Act and not 60 days contented for by learned counsel for the assessee. Section 12(2) of the Limitation Act specifically provides for the exclusion of the time taken for obtaining a certified copy. This court in Gauri Shankar v. Kashi Nath laid down that the time taken for obtaining copies is to be excluded under section 12(2) even when the rules of the court do not require the filing of any such certified copy. In the present case a certified copy was in fact applied for the purpose of filing the special appeal. The special appeal which was filed was admittedly in time after excluding the time taken for the obtaining of copies. An application for review having been filed within 30 days of the date on which the special appeal was field would undoubtedly within time as the period of limitation, as already observed, for the filing of a review application is 90 days whereas for a special appeal it is only 60 days. The review application, The review application, therefore, must be held to have been made within time.
It was next contended that in a case where an appeal is provided against an order, an application for review does not lie. The contention is that as the department had filed a special appeal before a Bench of this court it was debarred from filing a review application, as the department was thereby gambling and wanted to take chances both by way of special appeal as well as through the channel of a review application. There is no force in this contention also as there was no element of gambling in the action taken by the department. It was first considered that a special appeal should be filed but later it seems to have been realised, porbably on the pointing out of the Special Bench before whom the appeal came up for hearing, that the main ground being the suppression of two orders extending the time for the payment of the demand notice and as those orders not being on the record when this court had passed ther order on the writ petition, the proper remedy was by way of a review application. Without those two documents haveing been considered by the single judge or having been brought on the record the bench hearing the special appeal could not have gone into those questions. The order of the bench dismissing the appeal bears out the contention of the department. This reads :
"Mr. R. L. Gulati, learned counsel for te appellants, states that the appellant have now moved an application fro review of the judgment of the learned single judge and consequently they do not press this appeal. The appeal is consequently dismissed without going into merits, so that it may not affect, in any way, the decision of the review application."
That is a clear indication as to how that special apeal came to be withdrawn and dismissed by the department. The failure to disclose the fact in the review application that a special appeal had been filed is one which can èreasonable be attributed to inadvertence in view of what happened before the Bench hearing the special appeal. The fact is that the appellant had brought to the notice of the Bench hearing the appeal that a review application had been filed and, therefore, there could have been no sinister motive for the department in not having disclosed the fact of the filing of the special appeal. In the application for review, it is no doubt true that this fact was disclosed after the counter-affidavit was filed by the opposite party and the department would have been well advised to have disclosed this fact in the application for review.
Coming now to the merits of the review application it is based on the suppression of two material orders. They are the order dated the 8th March, 1956 (annexure "A"), and the order dated the 14th March, 1956 (annexure "B") whereby accordign to the department the period of payment of the tax due and the penalty levied was exctended. According to the department, the suppression was deliberate, the facts in the writ petition having been given in a garbled manner. I have examined the original record and there is no doubt in amy mind that, if annexures "A" and "B" aforesaid had been brought to my notice by either party. the recovery proceedings would not have been quashed by the issue of a wirt of certionrari, as these annexures show that the period for payment was extended. The order dated the 8th of March, 1956, reads :
"A demand of Rs. 38,364-9-0 is outstanding against the assessee since long. They approached the higher authority for stay of the recovery of the same. But they declined to interfere in the matter. The assessee was given one more opportunity for payment of the deman but neither he paid the same nor he applied for extentention of time. Under section 46(1) of the Act, penalty of Rs. 1,900 is, therefore, imposed and the total amount of Rs. 40,264-9-0 should be paid on or before March 20, 1956. The demand notice and challan will be issued to the defaulter."
The period for payment under this order not only of the tax due but also in respect of the penalty of Rs. 1900 levied was undoubtedly extended to the 20th March, 1956. The reference in this order to the approach made to the higher authorities is fully borne out by the records which were examined by me. This shawed that not only the assessee but the firm of which he was a partner was from time to time asking for an extension of time for payment of the tax demand. On the 11th August, 1955, three months time was askied for and allowed for the payment of taxes on account of Sri S. B. Mehrotra, the present assessee. This letter which was written for Munna Lal and sons repayment of taxes account of Sri S. B. Mehrotra reads :
"We beg to enclose herewith a cheque for Rs. 1,000 on the National Bank of India Ltd., Kanpur, as a token payment towards the demand of Sri S. B. Mehrotra. Due to heavy difficulties of finances we are not in a position to pay the entire demand at the moment but we are negotiating for the sale of our certain properties and hope that within 3 months time we would be able to pay off the liability due towards Sri S. B. Mehrotra. We would, therefore, request you to kindly allow us the time to pay the same within èthree months time."
The order on that application by the Income-tax Officer was "Allowed". This is duly noted by the said Ramji Das. Again on the 30th September, 1955, apparently before the aforesaid three months time expired on the 30th September, 1955, the said Ramji Das made an application to the Inspecting Assistant Commissioner asking for an extension of time. The order thereon is annexure is "c" dated 30th September, 1955, which reads :
"Shri Ramji Das attends and states that he is approaching the Inspecting Assistant Commissioner for time. Party askied to send a copy of their application to the Inspecting Assistant Commissioner."
The Inspecting Assistant Commissioner on the same date passed the following order :
"Shri Ramji Mehrotra has appeared. He says that negotiations for sale of shares of Jhansi Electric Supply Co. worth Rs. 3 lakhs are going on with some party of Gorkhapur and Sir Padampat. The Gorakhpur party has called him in the 1st week of December, 1955. If it mateiralises, the entire amount will be paid forthwith. Shri ramji Mehrotra has been aksied to see me on December 10, 1955. Put up papers on December 10, 1955."
Further approaches appear to have been made to the Commissioner of Income-tax also for extension of time. Evantually the request was turned down and the matter came back to the Income-tax Officer. The Income-tax Officer informed tha assessee by his letter dated the 2nd March, 1956, that this request was turned down in these words :
"Please refer to your application dated December 17, 1955, addressed to the commissioner of Income-tax, Lukhnow, for extension of time for payment of arrears demand of Rs. 38,364.90 for the assessment year 1950-51. The same has been rejected by him. As such you are requested to make payment of the above arrear demand on or before 6th March, 1956.
Please also note that in case of failure, I shall be reluctantly constranined to invoke recovery proceeding in addition to any penalty to which you may be liable under the Income-tax Act."
Even by this letter the Income-tax Officer had extended the time of payment up to the 6th March, 1956, and on that basis also the recovery proceedings taken on the 24th December, 1956, would also have been within time. The Income-tax Officer after having waited upto the 6th March, 1956, passed an order on the 8th of March, 1956, levying a penalty of Rs. 1900 and once again extended the time for payment upto the 20th March, 1956.
Against the said penalty order the assessee filed an appeal and though the fact of the filing of the appeal was mentioned in the writ petition filed in this court, the order dated the 8th of March, 1956, was not filed nor was the operative part of the order reproduced whereby the period for payment of the demand was extended up to the 20th March, 1956. The memorandum of appeal must have been signed by the assessee even though Ramji Mehrotra at the time of hearing had appeared for him and not the assessee personally. The appeal was dismissed by an order of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner dated the 16th May, 1956. This fact, therefore, that the time had been extended ought to have been disclosed by the the assessee in the writ petition. He has asserted that he had left Kanpur in 1955 and therefore he was not fully aware of all that transpired between the income-tax department and the èpartners acting on his behalf. He has, however, in this connection made contradictory assertions in the letters written by him to the income-tax department. In the letter (anexure "M") to the writ petition he had stated - "since I had left Kanpur in the year 1955 when the assessment was made, I did not known about the proceedings except that a return was signed by me and handed over to be delivered for the assessment." As against this in the foor-note above the signatures of the assessee dated the 8th of November, 1958, it was mentioned :
"The remaining partners of the firm are also not in a position to pay anything towards the arrears of tax due from the applicant. Shri Kundan Lall Mehrotra (partner) is also submitting an application for writing off the arrears of demand. Regarding the remaining two partners, viz., Shri Jang Bahadur Mehrotra and Shri Ramji Das Mehrotra, it may be mentioned that after the assessment year in question, i.e., the year for which the arrear of demand is outstanding against the applicant, viz., 1950-51, both these partners also suffered losses year after year. Not a pice of tax could be imposed on account of heavy losses on both these partners in the subsequent years viz., 1951-52 1952-53 1953-54 1954-55 1955-56 and 1956-57. Sri Jang Bahadur Mehrotra got an attack of paralysis in 1953 and a second attack in 1955. He is completely crippled both physically and financialy and sri Ramji Das Mehrotra has to meet a heavy liability which exceeds the assets by over Rs. 2,00,000."
There is also another letter dated the 7th of January, 1959, addressed to the Commissioner of Income-tax Lucknow, wherein a note is added as follows :
"(N.B.) The recovery of this very demand is also pressed by the D. M. Dehra Dun. Since I reside in Kanpur permanently I would request you to please send for the same here to be consolidated at one place for disposal."
Therefore, it is clear that the assessee was making statements from time to time to suit his purpose without much regard for the actual state of affairs. The fact, however, remains that it was Ramji Das who was acting for him before the Income-tax Officer and the appellate authorities and therefore he may not have been fully conversant with the details but it is difficult to hold that he was as innocent of the facts as he would have this court believe. He had as already noticed by me in the order disposing of the writ petition drawn the attention of the Income-tax Officer and the other authorities to the fact that the demand notice was barred by time. It is indeed surpirsing that none of the authorities or any one on behalf of the department at the time when the writ petition was filed brought these pertinent and importanct facts to the notice of the court. This has resulted not only in miscarriage of justice but in waste of public time and money which is to be deprecated.
The miscarriage of justice however cannot be allowed to be perpetuated and it becomes the duty of this court to recall the order passed in writ petition No. 1558 of 1962, whereby the demand notice and the recovery proceedings were quashed on the ground that the recovery proceedings were barred by limitation under section 46(7) of the Act. The demand notice was only quashed by the writ petition èbecause recovery proceedings were found to be out of time.
The review application is accordingly allowed but in the circumstances of the case there will be no order as to costs. Counsels fee is assessed at Rs. 100.
application allowed.
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Title

Income-Tax Officer vs Shamsher Bahadur.

Court

High Court Of Judicature at Allahabad

JudgmentDate
11 November, 1963