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Messrs. Sohan Pathak And Sons vs Commissioner Or Income-Tax, ...

High Court Of Judicature at Allahabad|22 August, 1961

JUDGMENT / ORDER

JUDGMENT This is a writ petition under article 226 of the Constitution of India.
The relief sought by this writ petition is for the refund of a sum of Rs. 11,175-9-0 paid by the petitioner on September 1, 1946, as excess profits tax for the chargeable accounting period, October 19, 1942, to July 10, 1943. The relevant facts for the decision of the point involved in the case are as follows.
The petitioner is a Hindu undivided family and it sued to carry on two businesses, namely, money-lending business and Banaras brocade business. On July 16, 1943, a partial partition took place in the family so far as the brocade business was concerned. The brocade business of the Hindu undivided family was wound up. Its assets and liabilities were distributed amongst the coparceners and the business was no longer carried on by the family as such. Subsequent to the winding up and the distribution of the assets and liabilities between the coparceners, two partnerships were started and carried on brocade business similar to the one carried on by the family. It may be stated that the partners of the two firms were members of the Hindu undivided family.
The partition and the setting up of the two partnership firms was treated by the excess profits tax authorities as being hit by the provisions of section 10A of the Excess Profits Tax Act and it was held that the partial partition in respect of the brocade business and the subsequent formation of the two partnerships and the carrying on of brocade business was for the avoidance and reduction of liability to excess profits tax. This view was upheld up to the reference stage in this court.
The petitioner went up in appeal to the Supreme Court and the Supreme Court reversed the decision of this court on September 23, 1953. The findings of the Supreme Court were that there was in fact a partial partition, that the brocade business of the Hindu undivided family was wound up and the assets and liabilities distributed between the members constituting the Hindu undivided family, that subsequently two partnerships were formed for carrying on brocade business, that the partnerships which carried on the brocade business had nothing to do with the Hindu undivided family, that the profits of the partnership businesses were not the profits of the Hindu undivided family, and that these profits could not be taken into consideration in computing the liability of the Hindu undivided family for payment of excess profits tax.
Consequent upon the decision of the Supreme Court, the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal on September 6, 1954, made an order under section 66(5) of the Income-tax Act cancelling the order of the Excess Profits Tax Officer under section 10A. The necessary consequence of the cancellation of the order under section 10A was that the petitioner became entitled to the refund of the excess profits tax paid by him. Accordingly, on September 23, 1954, the petitioner made an application to the Excess Profits Tax Officer, Varanasi, asking him to refund a sum of Rs. 60,761-15-0 to which the petitioner alleged himself to have become entitled as a consequence of the decision of the Supreme Court.
In order to appreciate the stand of the petitioner it is necessary to consider the excess profits tax liability of the petitioner as determined by the department in respect of the chargeable accounting periods commencing from the 1st September, 1939, and ending on the 31st March, 1946. This may be illustrated best by the following table, which is incorporated in paragraph 11 of the affidavit filed in support of the writ petition :
Business profits Business profits Standard profits Standard profits Excess profits Excess profits Deficiency Deficiency Tax paid Tax paid Rs.
Rs.
Rs.
Rs.
Rs.
Rs.
Rs.
Rs.
Rs. A. P.
Rs. A. P.
1-9-39 to 21-10-39 3,923 5,387 ...
1,464 ...
22-10-39 to 9-10-40 29,128 34,742 ...
5,614 ...
10-10-40 to 29-10-41 27,137 35,000 ...
7,863 ...
30-9-41 to 18-10-42 37,658 37,839 ...
10,239 ...
19-10-42 to 16-7-43 68,652 26,709 41,943 ...
11,175-9-0 17-7-43 to 8-10-43 nil 8,129 ...
8,129 11,902-11-0 9-10-43 to 26-9-44 3,138 34,800 ...
31,662 25,515- 5-0 27-9-44 to 13-10-45 2,082 37,838 ...
34,756 4,673- 5-0 16-10-45 to 31-3-46 1,186 16,548 ...
15,362 7,495- 5-0 41,943 1,15,089 60,761-15-0 The excess profits tax paid is shown in the last column of the table. The excess profits tax authorities have allowed a refund of the last four sums of money paid as tax in respect of the last four chargeable accounting periods. That is as it should be, but the excess profits tax authorities have not allowed refund of the sum of Rs. 11,175-9-0 for the refund of which this writ petition has been filed. The last four items of excess profits tax became payable on the basis that the profits of the partnership businesses in brocade were the profits of the Hindu undivided family. It having been held that the brocade business after partial partition was no longer the business of the Hindu undivided family, the excess profits of the business could not be taken into consideration at all in computing the excess profits tax liability of the Hindu undivided family, and so the last four items of tax paid had in any case to be refunded.
The reasons for the refusal of the refund of the fifth item of Rs. 11,175-9-0 given by the Excess Profits Tax Officer are two-fold : firstly, that the claim in regard to that amount was barred by limitation under section 50 of the Income-tax Act read with section 21 of the Excess Profits Tax Act, and secondly, that according to the findings of the Supreme Court, the brocade business of the Hindu undivided family had been wound up on July 16, 1943. The order by which the refund of this amount was refused is a very short order and no attempt whatsoever has been made by the Excess Profits Tax Officer to elucidate the second grounds upon which relief had been refused to the petitioner.
Sri R. S. Pathak, learned counsel for the petitioner, has urged before me in regard to the first point that the matter of refund in the circumstances of this case does not come under section 50 of the Income-tax Act read with section 21 of the Excess Profits Tax Act. His contention is that he is claiming relief under section 66A(4) by reason of the decision of the Supreme Court and only asks for effect being given to the order of the Supreme Court. Section 66A(4) runs as follows :
"Where the judgment of the High Court is varied or reversed in appeal under this section, effect shall be given to the order of the Supreme Court in the manner provided in sub-sections (5) and (7) of section 66 in the case of a judgment of the High Court."
Sri R. S. Pathak says that the Supreme Court gave its decision only on September 23, 1953, and it was not even necessary for him to have made any application as it was the duty of the taxing authorities themselves to give effect to the decision of the Supreme Court and in such a situation no question of the bar of limitation under section 50 of the Income-tax Act read with section 21 of the Excess Profits Tax Act can arise. Section 66A(4) further refers to sub-sections (5) and (7) of section 66. Those provisions lay down that the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal shall pass such orders as are necessary to dispose of the case conformably to the judgment of the High Court and further under the proviso to sub-section (7) of section 66, any amount overpaid shall be liable to be refunded with such interest as the Commissioner may allow.
Sri R. S. Pathak further contends that, so far as section 50 of the Income-tax Act is concerned, it lays down that no claim to refund of income-tax or super-tax under this Chapter shall be allowed unless it is made within four years from the last day of the financial year commencing next after the expiry of the previous year in which the income arose, accrued or was received or was deemed to have arisen, etc., etc. The chapter in which the section occurs is headed "Refunds" and begins with section 48. Sri R. S. Pathak took me through the various sections of this chapter and argued that only three sections in this chapter relate to refunds strictly speaking, and the other sections deal with special cases providing for relief which may not necessarily amount to refund. Strictly speaking, section 48 appears to make provision for refund by the Income-tax Officer in assessment proceedings before him and further for refund by the Appellate Assistant Commissioner and by the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal in appeals before those authorities. The other two provisions, the one in section 49E makes provision for refund to which the assessee may be entitled by way of set-off against tax, interest or penalty remaining payable by the assessee, while the other in section 49F makes provision for refund upon death, incapacity, bankruptcy or liquidation of the person entitled to claim refund by his legal representative, trustee or received. There is force in this contention of Sri R. S. Pathak. Nothing has been urged to the contrary by the learned counsel for the income-tax department and I am of the view that the Excess Profits Tax Officer was not right in holding that the claim for refund of the sum of Rs. 11,175-9-0 was barred by limitation under section 50 of the Income-tax Act read with section 21 of the Excess Profits Tax Act.
So far as the second ground on which the claim for refund has been refused I have already observed that the Excess Profits Tax Officer has made no attempt to elucidate the ground of refusal. The position appears to be as follows :
The petitioner in this case was carrying on two businesses, one of money-lending and the other in Benaras brocade. The second proviso to section 2(5) of the Excess Profits tax Act in as follows :
"Provided further that all businesses to which this Act applies carried on by, the same person shall be treated as one business for the purposes of this Act."
Accordingly for the purposes of the Excess Profits Tax Act, the two businesses, which the Hindu undivided family carried on, lost their identity and became one business. Subsequently, on the findings recorded by the Tribunal on remand and accepted by the Supreme Court, the Benaras brocade business was wound up. The business of money-lending, however, continued above, this may be described in another way, viz., that the "business" of the Hindu undivided family did continue, but in a deflated form. It must also be noticed that the persons who were the owners of the deflated "business" continued to be the same, namely, the Hindu undivided family. In other words, there was no change in the persons carrying on the "business". It follows that the provisions of section 8 of the Excess Profits Tax Act did not apply to the case. I am supported in this view by the decision of the Madras High Court in Ramaswami Raja v. Commissioner of Excess Profits Tax. The second paragraph of the headnote of the said report is to the following effect :
"Section 8(1) does not provide that if a person carrying on more than one business drops one business and continues to carry on the remaining business, the business so continued should be treated as a new business. So long as there is no change in the ownership of the business, and the business continues whether in a dwindled or expanded form, the section has no application."
I respectfully agree with this decision. Sri Gopal Behari, learned counsel for the income-tax department, relied on two subsequent decisions of the Madras High Court in Govindarajulu Chettiar v. Commissioner of Excess Profits Tax and Veerappa Chettiar v. Commissioner of Excess Profits Tax. Both these cases are clearly distinguishable for the reason that in both the cases there was a transfer of the business. By reason of that transfer the view taken was that there was a change in the ownership of the business. Change in the ownership being the crucial point in section 8, clearly in these two cases the provisions of section 8 applied. In the earlier of these cases, namely, Govindarajulu Chettiar v. Commissioner of Excess Profits Tax the decision in Ramaswami Raja v. Commissioner of Excess Profits Tax was considered and it was distinguished on the ground that there the question was not one of the transfer of business, but one of the businesses out of the several businesses had been dropped.
If section 8 does not apply, then clearly relief under section 7(a) of the Excess Profits Tax Act is admissible to the petitioner. The petitioner would be entitled to reduction of tax liability if the deficiency for all the chargeable accounting periods is larger than any excess profits during any one or more of the chargeable accounting periods. Referring again to the table which has been incorporated in this judgment, it will be found that the total deficiency for all the chargeable accounting periods commencing from the 1st September, 1939 , and ending on the 31st March, 1946, was Rs. 1,15,089 and the excess was only Rs. 41,943. It follows that there were no such excess profits as to attract the excess profits tax liability and clearly the petitioner was entitled to relief in respect of the sum of Rs. 11,175-9-0 also.
Two other points raised by learned counsel for the department may now be noticed. On of the points was that by reason of the partial partition of the Banaras brocade business, there was a disruption in the status of the Hindu undivided family and hence a change in the person carrying on the business. It is elementary Hindu law that partial partition as regards its business does not cause a disruption or severance of the joint family status.
The other point was that in this case Rs. 11,175-9-0 was paid as excess profits tax on September 1, 1946, i.e., prior to the coming into force of the Constitution; so no relief by way of refund can be allowed under article 226 of the Constitution under which relief only in respect of post-Constitution matters can be granted. This argument is misconceived. It is true that the amount was paid on the 1st September, 1946. But it became refundable only by reason of the fact that the petitioners appeal was allowed by the Supreme Court on the 23rd September, 1953. Clearly what the petitioner wants by this petition under article 226 of the Constitution is that effect be given to the order of the Supreme Court dated September 23, 1953. This was refused by the Excess Profits Tax Officer by his order dated May 28, 1956. There is therefore no question of the petitioner desiring relief in respect of a pre-Constitution matter. There is no force in this point also.
In the result, the writ petition is allowed. A writ of mandamus will issue requiring the respondents to refund the account of Rs. 11,176-9-0 to the petitioner. The petitioner shall be entitled to his costs of this petition.
Petition allowed.
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Title

Messrs. Sohan Pathak And Sons vs Commissioner Or Income-Tax, ...

Court

High Court Of Judicature at Allahabad

JudgmentDate
22 August, 1961