The judgment of the court was delivered by
R. M. SAHAI J.-These appeals are directed against an order
of the Orissa High Court which decided the wealth-tax reference under section
27(1) of the Wealth-tax Act, 1957, in favour of the Department. The assessment
years in dispute are 1962-63, 1963-64, 1964-65 and 1965-66. The question of law
referred to the High Court was :
"Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances of
the case, the claim of the assessee for deduction of the tax liability amounting
to Rs. 6,69,766 in computing the net wealth in four wealth-tax assessments is
admissible under the provisions of the Wealth-tax Act ?"
According to the statement of case, the appellant, the
erstwhile Raja of Jeypore, owner of extensive forests, prior to the abolition of
estates in 1953, was assessed to income-tax, on forest income, for the
assessment years 1942-43 to 1946-47 to an aggregate of Rs. 6,69,766. The
validity of the levy was decided ultimately by the High Court in a reference
under section 66 of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 (in brief "the
Act"), in Vikram Deo Varma, Maharaja of Jeypore v. CIT [1956] 29 ITR 76
(Orissa), and it was held that the income being from agriculture was not
exigible to tax. On further appeal to this court at the instance of the
Department, the order of the High Court was set aside on October 14, 1958, and
the assessee was held liable to pay tax on the forest income. In conformity with
the order passed by this court, the Tribunal passed the order under section
66(5) read with section 66A(4) of the Act after June 30, 1964. In pursuance of
this order, the Income-tax Officer issued fresh notice of demand on October 4,
1964, and the amount was paid on March 25, 1965. In wealth-tax assessments for
the years 1962-63 to 1965-66, the assessee disputed his liability in view of the
judgment given by this court in 1958 and claimed that it being a debt within the
meaning of clause (m) of section 2 of the Wealth-tax Act, the amount was liable
to be deducted while computing his net wealth. The Wealth-tax Officer did not
allow the claim as the tax payable remained outstanding for more than twelve
months on the valuation date. The Appellate Assistant Commissioner allowed the
appeals as the liability was created by the judgment of this court which was
discharged in 1965, and, therefore, the assessee was held entitled to claim its
deduction for determination of the net wealth for the assessment years in
dispute. On appeal, at the instance of the Department, the order of the
appellate authority was set aside by the Tribunal and it was held :
"The decision of the Supreme Court was only to
declare the correct state of law applicable to the income disputed by the
assessee in appeal and not to create, for the first time, a liability to tax on
such income. The demands in respect of the amounts in question were, admittedly,
created as a result of assessment of such income and the assessee has been
claiming in appeal and further in reference proceedings that the same was not
payable by him. The demands were also, admittedly, outstanding for more than 12
months if the period is computed from the date of original demand notices
pertaining to assessments made."
This finding was affirmed by the High Court and it was
held that the amount was not deductible while computing the net wealth of the
assessee.
That an income-tax liability is a debt within the meaning
of section 2(m) of the Act is settled by a series of decisions of this court
beginning from Kesoram Industries and Cotton Mills Ltd. v. CWT [1966] 59 ITR 767(SC).
In CWT v. Kantilal Manilal [1985] 152 ITR 447 (SC), this court approved the
decision of the Privy Council in Doorga Prosad v. Secretary of State [1945] 13
ITR 285, that an income-tax liability becomes a debt when payment of the tax is
demanded by a notice issued under section 29 of the Act. The question,
therefore, that requires consideration is whether the High Court was right in
its conclusion that, even though the amount was a debt, it could not be deducted
while determining the net wealth as either the payability of tax was in dispute
on the valuation date or the demand had remained unpaid for more than 12 months
on the valuation date. To examine the correctness of it, section 2(m) of the
Wealthtax Act is extracted below:
"'Net wealth' means the amount by which the aggregate
value computed in accordance with the provisions of this Act of all the assets,
wherever located, belonging to the assessee on the valuation date, including
assets required to be included in his net wealth as on that date under this Act,
is in excess of the aggregate value of all the debts owed by the assessee on the
valuation date other than (i) debts which under section 6 are not to be taken
into account;
(ii) debts which are secured on, or which have been
incurred in relation to, any property in respect of which wealth-tax is not
chargeable under this Act ; and
(iii) the amount of the tax, penalty or interest payable
in consequence of any order passed under or in pursuance of this Act or any law
relating to taxation of income or profits, or the Estate Duty Act, 1953 (34 of
1953), the Expenditure-tax Act, 1957 (29 of 1957), or the Gift-tax Act, 1958 (18
of 1958), (a) which is outstanding on the valuation date and is claimed by the
assessee in appeal, revision or other proceeding as not being payable by him, or
(b) which, although not claimed by the assessee as not
being Payable by him, is nevertheless outstanding for a period of more than
twelve months on the valuation date."
The net wealth, according to sub-section (m) of section 2,
is the aggregate value computed in accordance with the provisions of the Act
less the value of all the debts owed by the assessee. Since income-tax liability
is a debt, the assessee was entitled to claim its deduction from the aggregate
value to arrive at the net wealth. But the deduction of debt was permissible
only if it did not fall in one of the sub-clauses mentioned in clause (iii). The
relevant date for operation of either clause was the valuation date. Clause (a)
was construed in CWT v. Kantilal Manilal [1985] 152 ITR 447 (SC) and it was held
that, in order to invoke the bar prescribed by section 2(m)(iii)(a), it was
necessary for the Department to establish that both the requirements were
satisfied, that is, the amount of tax was outstanding on the valuation date and
further that it was claimed by the assessee in appeal, revision or any other
proceeding as not being payable by him. The valuation dates for the assessment
years in dispute were June 30, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, respectively. Since the
amount had not been paid by the assessee, it was outstanding on the valuation
date but, on these dates, no appeal, revision or any other proceeding was
pending in which the assessee had claimed that the amount was not payable by
him. On a plain reading of the provisions, it is doubtful if the appellant could
be precluded from claiming deduction of the income-tax dues under sub-clause
(a). To this extent, the order of the High Court and the Tribunal do not appear
to be well-founded. To support the order of the High Court, learned counsel for
the Department urged that the proceedings which had been started by the
appellant by way of reference before the High Court did not come to an end in
1958 by the order passed by this court in appeal filed by the Department as the
order passed in advisory jurisdiction either by the High Court or in appeal by
this court could become final only when the Tribunal passed the order in
conformity with the order passed by this court. Since, admittedly, the order
under section 66(5) of the Act was passed in October, 1964, the proceedings
initiated at the instance of the appellant shall be deemed to have been pending
till then. In our opinion, it appears unnecessary to express any opinion on the
nature of reference proceedings and whether the appeal filed by the Department
should be deemed to be continuation of the claim that the tax was not payable by
the appellant for purposes of sub-clause (a) as once the question of law was
decided against the appellant by this court in 1958, may be in appeal filed by
the Department, the appellant's claim that the amount was not payable by him
stood finally adjudicated. Nothing more remained to be decided. The order of the
Tribunal, in conformity with the order passed by this court, could be relevant
for the Department, only to enable it to proceed to realise the amount. It could
not stand as a bar to the claim of the appellant under section 2(m) by operation
of sub-clause (a) of clause (iii).
For the operation of sub-clause (b), the Revenue had to
establish that the amount remained outstanding for a period of more than 12
months on the valuation date. In CWT v. Kantilal Manilal [1985] 152 ITR 447 (SC)
it was held that an amount becomes outstanding after it had been quantified. The
liability under the Income-tax Act arises in the previous year corresponding to
the assessment year and it becomes due as held in Kesoram's case [1966] 59 ITR
767 (SC) after it had been "quantified in accordance with ascertainable
data". The liability of the assessee was determined by the Income-tax
Officer and a demand notice was also served on him. The amount thus became due
and payable and, if the period of 12 months is calculated from this date, the
amount, obviously, remained outstanding for a period of more than 12 months on
the valuation date. But learned counsel for the appellant urged that, on the
facts of this case, the Department cannot succeed on this ground. He urged that
the High Court having answered the reference in favour of the appellant, the
quantification stood set aside and the period could be counted from the date on
which a fresh notice of demand was served by the Income-tax Officer in 1964. The
submission ignores the fact that once proceedings became final and the law was
declared by this court and it was held that forest income was taxable, then the
liability to pay the amount shall be deemed to have existed from the date the
demand was created by the Income-tax Officer. Therefore, the tax payable for
which a notice of demand had been served on the assessee but it had not been
paid because of pendency of appeal, revision or other proceedings, became
payable and since it remained outstanding for a period of more than 12 months on
the valuation date, the bar under clause (b), in our opinion, applied squarely.
Reliance was placed by learned counsel for the appellant on CWT v. Vimlaben
Vadilal Mehta [1984] 145 ITR II (SC) and it was urged that the liability of the
appellant crystallised on the last day of the previous year and it became a debt
but it having been quantified in October, 1964, when the Income-tax Officer
issued a fresh notice of demand, the period of 12 months was liable to be
counted from this date. We do not think that this decision can be applied in the
manner as argued by learned counsel for the appellant. The jurisdiction
exercised by the High Court under section 66 or by the Supreme. Court in an
appeal against that order was only advisory. There would have been some
substance in the submission of learned counsel if the Tribunal had passed the
order under section 66 in conformity with the opinion given by the High Court
that the assessee was not liable to pay any tax on the forest income. That may
have resulted in wiping off the demand created initially by the Income-tax
Officer. But the High Court found and it was not disputed that no order was
passed by it before the law was declared by this court in 1958. The original
demand thus remained outstanding and became operative after the decision of this
court. Reliance was also placed on CWT v. Vadilal Lallubhai [1984] 145 ITR 7
(SC) and it was urged that, in computing the net wealth of an assessee, the
deductions admissible must be calculated on the basis of the tax as finally
quantified even though the assessment may have been made subsequent to the
valuation date. It was urged that, even assuming that the liability arose from
the order passed by this court in 1958, it having been finally quantified after
the order was passed by the Tribunal, the period of 12 months should be
calculated from that date. The facts of the case were entirely different. In
Vadilal's case [1984] 145 ITR 7 (SC), the question was whether the deduction
could be claimed on the basis of estimated liabilities mentioned in the return
or the amount which is finally determined at the final assessment. It was held
that it was not possible to accept the claim of the Department that the net
wealth for purposes of section 2(m) was the tax liability disclosed by an
assessee in his return. What could be deducted was the liability ultimately
determined as payable. In the case of the appellant, the quantification had
already been done. If the order of this court would have necessitated a
variation in it, as happened in CWT v. Vimlaben Vadilal Mehta [1984] 145 ITR 11(SC),
something could be said in favour of the appellant. From the decision in CWT v.
K. S. N. Bhatt [1984] 145 ITR 1 (SC), it is clear that payability of tax for
purposes of clauses (a) and (b) is dependent on liability to pay. If the
liability goes, then the amount ceases to be a debt even if the determination of
the liability takes place after the valuation date. In the appellant's case, the
liability stood determined finally in 1958 and, therefore, the payability of tax
started operating from this date and the period of 12 months could be calculated
from this date and not from October, 1964. The decision in Ahmed Ibrahim Sahigra
Dhoraji v. CWT [1981] 129 ITR 314 (SC) is also not of any help to the appellant,
as the amount payable by the appellant was undoubtedly a debt owed by him on the
valuation dates. But the appellant could claim its deduction only if the Revenue
failed to show that it was outstanding for more than 12 months on the valuation
date.
There is yet another reason why the claim of the
Department that the bar of sub-clause (b) operated appears to be well founded.
Sub-section (7) of section 66 of the Act reads as under :
"(7) Notwithstanding that a reference has been made
under this section to the High Court, income-tax shall be payable in accordance
with the assessment made in the case:
Provided that, if the amount of an assessment is reduced
as result of such reference, the amount overpaid shall be refunded with such
interest as the Commissioner may allow unless the High Court, on intimation
given by the Commissioner within thirty days of the receipt of the result of
such reference that he intends to ask for leave to appeal to the Supreme Court,
makes an order authorising the Commissioner to postpone payment of such refund
until the disposal of the appeal to the Supreme Court."
The appellant was, therefore, bound to pay the tax
assessed irrespective of whether he had filed a reference or not. This,
admittedly, was not done by the assessee, and the amount remained outstanding
throughout the period the reference was pending in the High Court. The effect of
answering the reference in favour of the assessee was that he could claim
refund. But that occasion could arise only if the order under section 66(5) was
passed by the High Court. But, before that, the correctness of the order was
challenged by the Department by filing an appeal in this court which was allowed
and the liability of the appellant to pay tax was upheld. The tax assessed thus
remained unpaid during the pendency of the reference in the High Court, and
during the pendency of the appeal in this court and it was paid only in March,
1965. The effect of non-payment of tax under sub-section (7) of section 66 was
that the tax payable became outstanding by operation of law and it remained so
on the valuation date. Therefore, the bar under sub-clause (b) of clause (iii)
of section 2(m) operated and the appellant could not claim the amount as
deductible while computing his net wealth. It was outstanding on the valuation
dates for more than 12 months whether the period is calculated from service of
notice of demand in pursuance of the assessment order or from the final
determination of liability by the order passed by this court in 1958 or because
of the operation of sub-section (7) of section 66 of the Act. On the facts of
this case, it could not be calculated from October, 1964, when the notice of
demand was served by the Income-tax Officer in pursuance of the order passed by
the Tribunal.
For these reasons, the High Court rightly held that the
amount of Rs. 6,69,766 was not admissible as deduction while computing the net
wealth of the appellant under the Wealth-tax Act for the assessment years
1962-63 to 1965-66. The appeals, accordingly, fail and are dismissed with costs.
Appeals dismissed.