The judgment of the court was delivered by
GAJENDRAGADKAR J.---These two appeals arise out of two
writ petitions filed by the two appellants who are brothers, Lalji Haridas and
Chhotalal Haridas, against the respective Income-tax Officers in their areas,
Lalji Haridas, who is a resident of Jamnagar, filed Special Civil Application
No. 132 of 1957 in the High Court of judicature, Bombay, at Rajkot, challenging
the validity of the notices issued against him by the Income-tax Officer, Ward
A, at Jamnagar under section 23(2) of the Income-tax Act, claiming appropriate
writ or order restraining the said Income-tax Officer from taking any further
proceedings under the said notices. This petition was summarily dismissed by the
High Court and the application made by Lalji for a certificate to file an appeal
in this court was also rejected. Thereupon he applied for and obtained special
leave from this court. It is with the special leave granted to him that Lalji
has brought his appeal before this court.
Chhotalal, who is a resident of Bombay, filed Special
Civil Application No. 374 of 1960 in the High Court at Bombay, challenging the
validity of the notices issued against him by the Fourth Income-tax Officer,
Ward G, and claiming appropriate writ or order restraining the said officer from
taking any further proceedings under the said notices. This application was
summarily dismissed by the High Court and Chhotalal's request for a certificate
was likewise rejected. Chhotalal then applied for and obtained special leave
from this court, and that is how his appeal has come to this court.
In the notices issued by the respective Income-tax
Officers against the two appellants an enquiry is proposed to be held in regard
to the liability to pay tax on the alleged total income of Rs. 97,00,000
received by either or both of the two appellants his income represents the
remittances of monies through the Indian Overseas Bank Ltd., Pondicherry, and
the United Commercial Bank Ltd., Pondicherry, and had accrued during the
assessment year 1952-53 respectively. Since both the appellants challenged the
validity of the proceedings commenced against them in their writ petitions the
present a peals can be conveniently treated as companion matters and have been
accordingly placed for hearing together as such. We will first deal with the
appeal preferred by Lalji.
It appears that the appellant, Lalji, filed return of his
income for the year 1952-53 under section 22 of the Act. Later, the Income-tax
Officer, Ward B, Jamnagar, sent the file of the appellant to the Fourth
Income-tax Officer, Ward G, Bombay. On receiving the file the Bombay officer
summoned the appellant to produce his accounts and to attend in person in
connection with the enquiry of the assessment proceedings for the year 1952-53,
under section 37 of the Act. The appellant objected to the validity of the
transfer of his file to Bombay and disputed the jurisdiction of the Bombay
officer to deal with the matter. On September 30, 1953, the Central Board of
Revenue passed an order under section 5(2) of the Act directing that the
Commissioner of Income-tax (Central), Bombay, shall perform his functions in
respect of persons including the appellant. Subsequently, on October 7, 1953,
the Commissioner purporting to exercise powers under section 5(5) of the Act
assigned the appellant's case to the Income-tax Officer, Section IV (Central),
Bombay, and directed that the said officer shall perform the functions of an
Income-tax Officer in respect of the case so assigned. The appellant attempted
to persuade the Central Board to reconsider its order but his attempt failed.
Then he filed Civil Suit No. 226 of 1954 in which he claimed an injunction
restraining the said Income-tax Officer from proceeding with the assessment.
This claim was based on the allegation that the order of transfer passed by the
Central Board of Revenue was illegal and without jurisdiction. An order of
interim injunction passed in the suit naturally halted the proceedings before
the Income-tax Officer. On May 21, 1956, the Central Board cancelled its earlier
order of transfer with the result that the case of the appellant was
retransferred to the Income-tax Officer, Ward A, Jamnagar Circle. On receiving
the papers the said officer, who is the first respondent in the present
proceedings, issued a notice on January 9, 1957, under section 23(2) requesting
the appellant to attend before him on January 17, 1957. Even this proceeding was
stayed by the civil court at the instance of the appellant but the interim
injunction issued in that behalf was subsequently dissolved on March 1, 1957.
The first respondent then issued another notice on February 23, 1957, fixing
March 4, 1957, as the date of hearing. The appellant asked for an adjournment
but the adjournment was refused, and on March 4, 1957, an ex parte order of
assessment was passed. This order showed that the officer took the view that the
appellant was liable to pay tax on the total income of Rs. 93,01,117 and that
the amount of tax was determined at Rs. 87,93,958-13-0. An application made by
the appellant to the said officer for reopening the assessment under section 27
was dismissed. The appellant then took the matter before the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner. The appellate authority allowed the appeals preferred by the
appellant against the ex parte order determining the liability of the appellant
to pay the tax and against the refusal to reopen the issue. As a result of the
appellate order the matter went back to the first respondent for a fresh hearing
and that led to the issue of the notice which has given rise to the present writ
proceedings.
The validity of the notice issued against the appellant is
sought to be challenged by Mr. S. T. Desai on two grounds. He contends that the
assessment proceedings commenced against the appellant are barred by limitation
under section 34(3) of the Act and he argues that the initiation of the said
proceedings is without jurisdiction and as such illegal. The question of
limitation can and ought to be raised by the appellant before the Income-tax
Officer ; that is not a point which can be legitimately agitated in writ
proceedings. We, therefore, do not propose to deal with this point. If the
appellant is so advised he may raise this point before the first respondent, and
we have no doubt that if it is so raised the first respondent will deal with it
in accordance with law.
The question of jurisdiction raised by the appellant is,
in our opinion, not well founded. It is significant that the case for the
appellant is that the order of transfer passed by the Central Board on September
30, 1953, was illegal and unauthorised. Indeed, in the proceedings before us the
validity of the said order is not sought to be supported even by the respondent
so that if the said order was invalid there can be no doubt that the subsequent
order passed by the Commissioner of Income-tax (Central), Bombay, assigning the
case to the Income-tax Officer, Section IV (Central), Bombay, would itself be
invalid. It is obvious that this latter order has been passed by the
Commissioner in pursuance of the authority conferred on him by the earlier order
passed by the Central Board itself. The sequence of the orders leaves no doubt
on the point. Besides, it is not disputed that the Commissioner of Income-tax
(Central), Bombay, would otherwise have no jurisdiction to deal with income-tax
proceedings pending against the appellant at Jamnagar. Therefore, if the
original order of the Central Board is invalid, the assignment of the
appellant's case to the Income-tax Officer, Section IV (Central), Bombay, is
also invalid, and so the matter will have to be dealt with by the first
respondent who under section 64 of the Act has jurisdiction to deal with it.
Mr. Desai faintly attempted to argue that the transfer of
the case papers in regard to the appellant's assessment for the year 1952-53 had
been validly effected by what he described as a notification passed in that
behalf. No such notification has, however, been produced in the present
proceedings and indeed the appellant's case throughout has been that the
Income-tax Officer, Ward B, Jamnagar, transferred the said papers " without
authority, illegally and without any intimation to the appellant and in
contravention of section 64 of the Act. " It is unnecessary to enquire why
and how this case file was sent from Jamnagar to Bombay. It is patent that the
transfer of the case file to Bombay by the Income-tax Officer, Ward B, Jamnagar,
was in law wholly invalid and unauthorised. Therefore, it would be idle for the
appellant to contend that the proceedings had been validly transferred to any
Income-tax Officer in Bombay. That being so, it follows that the proceedings are
properly pending before the first respondent and the notice issued by him is
valid and legal. In our opinion, therefore, there is no substance in the
question of jurisdiction raised by the appellant.
That takes us to the appeal preferred by Chhotalal. As we
have already mentioned Chhotalal is a resident of Bombay and respondent No. 1 is
the Fourth Income-tax Officer, Ward G, at Bombay. It is common ground that
respondent No. 1 had at the relevant time jurisdiction under the Act to assess
the appellant, Chhotalal. An ex parte order was passed against the appellant for
the assessment year 1952-53, on March 30, 1957, by the Seventh Income-tax
Officer, Ward G, Bombay, on the finding that the remittances in question
constituted the income of the appellant from undisclosed business and other
sources during the assessment year. This ex parte order was challenged by the
appellant by preferring an appeal before the Appellate Assistant Commissioner.
The appellate authority allowed the appellant's appeal and set aside the ex
parte order on the ground that there was no service of notice on the appellant
as required by law. The matter was accordingly remitted to the Income-tax
Officer for a fresh assessment. Thereupon the impugned notice was served on the
appellant under section 34 of the Act on February 25, 1959.
The main argument which is urged by Mr. Nambiar in support
of this appeal is that respondent No. 1, the Income-tax Officer, who has issued
the impugned notice, has no jurisdiction to assess the appellant for the income
in question, because he contends that even according to respondent No. 1 the
said proposed assessment would be in the nature of a precautionary or protective
assessment, and Mr. Nambiar's case is that this concept of a precautionary or
protective assessment is not recognised by the Act and as such any attempt to
levy such assessment would be illegal. In support of this argument Mr. Nambiar
strongly relied on the finding recorded against the appellant's brother, Lalji,
in the ex parte assessment order which had originally been passed against him.
It is no doubt true that the said ex parte order had held that Lalji was liable
to pay the tax on the amount of income in question ; but the said order has been
subsequently set aside, and, as we have already seen, fresh proceedings against
Lalji have been commenced at Jamnagar.
Mr. Nambiar also relied on the admission made by the
respondent in his statement of the case before this court, and he contended that
the respondent himself seems to concede that the assessment proposed to be made
against the appellant is no more than precautionary. It is true that paragraph 3
of the statement avers that " steps are being taken against the appellant
for taxation of income in his hands only as a precautionary measure against the
eventuality of its being finally held that the income is not liable to be taxed
in his brother's hands ", and it was added that " the appellant's
contention that such a procedure is not warranted under the Act is entirely
untenable "; but in appreciating the effect of this statement it would be
necessary to consider the other relevant statements made by the respondent in
his statement of the case. In paragraph 4, for instance, it is added that until
the question of liability to pay tax in respect of the income in question is
finally determined it may not be possible to safely predicate that it is the
income of one and not of the other, and the respondent's case appears to be that
in such circumstances protective assessments have to be made so that the income
may not escape taxation altogether. In other words, the respondent's case
clearly is that the notices issued against the two brothers by their respective
Income-tax Officers are intended to determine who is responsible to pay tax for
the income in question ; now though Mr. Nambiar wanted to argue that protective
or precautionary assessment tax is not justified by any of the provisions of the
Act he did not seriously contest the position that at the initial stage it would
be open to the income-tax authorities to determine by proper proceedings who is
in fact responsible for the payment of tax, and that is all that is being done
at the present stage. In cases where it appears to the income-tax authorities
that certain income has been received during the relevant assessment year but it
is not clear who has received that income and prima facie it appears that the
income may have been received either by A or B or by both together, it would be
open to the relevant income-tax authorities to determine the said question by
taking appropriate proceedings both against A and B. That being so, we do not
think that Mr. Nambiar would be justified in resisting the enquiry which is
proposed to be held by respondent No. 1 in pursuance of the impugned notice
issued by him against the appellant. Under these circumstances we do not propose
to deal with the point of law sought to be raised by Mr. Nambiar.
We would, however, like to add one direction in fairness
to the appellants. The proceedings taken against both the appellants should
continue and should be dealt with expeditiously having regard to the fact that
the matter is fairly old. In the proceedings taken against Lalji the Income-tax
Officer should make an exhaustive enquiry and determine the question as to
whether Lalji is liable to pay the tax on the income in question. All objections
which Lalji may have to raise against his alleged liability would undoubtedly
have to be considered in the said proceedings. Proceedings against Chhotalal may
also be taken by the Income-tax Officer and continued and concluded, but until
the proceedings against Lalji are finally determined no assessment order should
be passed in the proceedings taken against Chhotalal. If in the proceedings
taken against Lalji it is finally decided that it is Lalji who is responsible to
pay tax for the income in question it may not become necessary to make any order
against Chhotalal. If, however, in the said proceedings Lalji is not held to be
liable to pay tax or it is found that Lalji is liable to pay tax along with
Chhotalal it may become necessary to pass appropriate orders against. Chhotalal.
When we suggested to the learned counsel that we propose to make an order on
these lines they all agreed that this would be a fair and reasonable order to
make in the present proceedings.
In the result the appeals fail and are dismissed. There
would be no order as to costs.
Appeals dismissed.