Special leave granted.
This appeal is filed against an order of the Special Court
appointed under the provisions of the Special Court (Trial of Offences Relating,
to Transactions in Securities) Act, 1992. The appellant, an Assistant
Commissioner of Income-tax, sought release of the sum of Rs. 80,80,198.34, being
the tax liabilities of the respondents, who are notified persons under the said
Act, from the funds available with the custodian appointed under the provisions
thereof. Learned counsel appearing for some of these notified persons submitted
to the learned judge that he wished to show that the demands of the appellant
were unreasonable and unjustified and, if satisfied, he should not order release
of the amounts claimed. Having heard counsel, the learned judge passed the
impugned order. It said that while the Special Court could not sit in appeal
over orders of the tax authorities, it was entrusted with the task of
distributing the funds in the manner laid down under section 11 of the said Act
and the priorities laid down thereunder had to be observed. The priorities and
objects of the said Act could and would be defeated if the Special Court could
not " go into the bona fides of a claim. In that case a party, like the
Income-tax Department, may make a claim in an absurdly large amount ".
Whether a claim was " justified or enforceable can only be decided by
looking into that claim ". Counsel for the notified parties was, therefore,
" entitled to try and show to the court that the claim is unreasonable and
unjustified ". The appellant's application was adjourned for the purpose,
and he has appealed.
The said Act was enacted to provide for the establishment
of a Special Court for the trial of offences relating to transactions in
securities and for matters connected therewith or incidental thereto. The Act
requires the appointment of a custodian thereunder who is, inter alia, required
to deal with the property of persons notified in such manner as the Special
Court may direct. The Special Court has jurisdiction, under section 7 of the
Act, exclusively to hear and decide prosecutions in respect of offences under
the said Act, that is to say, offences relating to transactions in securities
after April 1, 1991, and on or before June 6, 1992. By reason of the amendment
of the said Act and the inclusion of sections 9A and 9B, the Special Court is
invested with civil jurisdiction in regard to such transactions. Section 11 is
relevant for our purpose. Sub-section (1) states that the " Special Court
may make such order as it may deem fit directing the custodian for the disposal
of the property under attachment ". Sub-section (2) states that " the
following liabilities shall be paid or discharged in full, as far as may be, in
the order as under :
" (a) all revenues, taxes, cesses and rates due from
the persons notified by the custodian under sub-section (2) of section 3 to the
Central Government or any State Government or any local authority ;.... "
It is clear that the Special Court has no power to sit in
appeal over or overrule the orders of the tax authorities, the Income-tax
Appellate Tribunal or the courts in regard to the tax liabilities of notified
persons. The only power of the Special Court is to determine the priorities in
which claims upon the property under attachment shall be paid. The claims
relating to the tax liabilities of a notified person are, along with revenues,
cesses and rates, entitled to be paid first in the order of priority and in
full, as far as way be. In relation to a claim for payment of the tax liability
of a notified person, the Special Court has, therefore, only the limited power
to determine what, having regard to the funds available, can be paid ; that is
to say, whether the claim can be satisfied in full or only in part. If a
particular tax claim cannot at any time be paid in full, provision would have to
be made for the balance, so far as may be, so that it is not jeopardised.
Our attention was drawn by Mr. A. M. Setalvad, learned
counsel for the custodian, to the judgment of this court in S. V. Kondaskar v.
V. M. Deshpande, ITO, [1972] 83 ITR 685; AIR 1972 SC 878, and to the observation
there under : " that the liquidation court would have full power to
scrutinise the claim of the Revenue after income-tax has been determined and its
payment demanded from the liquidator. It would be open to the liquidation court
then to decide how far under the law the amount of income-tax determined by the
Department should be accepted as a lawful liability on the funds of the company
in liquidation. At that stage the winding up court can fully safeguard the
interests of the company and its creditors under the Act ". The question
that this court had to decide in that case was whether it was necessary for the
Income-tax Officer to obtain the leave of the liquidation court when he wanted
to reassess the company in liquidation for escaped income in respect of past
years. This court said :
" The Income-tax Act is, in our opinion, a complete
code and it is particularly so with respect to the assessment and reassessment
of income-tax with which alone we are concerned in the present case. The fact
that after the amount of tax payable by an assessee has been determined or
quantified its realisation from a company in liquidation is governed by the Act
because the income-tax payable also being a debt has to rank pari passu with
other debts due from the company does not mean that the assessment proceedings
for computing the amount of tax must be held to be such other legal proceedings
as can only be started or continued with the leave of the liquidation court
under section 446 of the Act. The liquidation court, in our opinion, cannot
perform the functions of the Income-tax Officers while assessing the amount of
tax payable by the assessee even if the assessee be the company which is being
wound up by the court. The orders made by the Income-tax Officer in the course
of assessment or reassessment proceedings are subject to appeal to the higher
hierarchy under the Income-tax Act. There are also provisions for reference to
the High Court and for appeals from the decisions of the High Court to the
Supreme Court and then there are provisions for revision by the Commissioner of
Income-tax. It would lead to anomalous consequences if the winding up court were
to be held empowered to transfer the assessment proceedings to itself and assess
the company to income-tax....The language of section 446 must be so construed as
to eliminate such startling consequences as investing the winding up court with
the powers of an Income-tax Officer conferred on him by the Income-tax Act,
because, in our view, the Legislature could not have intended such a result.
"
It is after these observations that the court made the
observation to which Mr. Setalvad drew our attention. It is perfectly clear, in
the circumstances, that this observation referred only to the obligation of the
liquidation court to decide, having regard to the fact that the income-tax
payable by the company in liquidation had to rank pari passu with other debts
due by it, how far the amount determined could be paid while still safeguarding
the interests of the other creditors of the company in liquidation. We are of
the view, therefore, that this judgment does not assist us in upholding the view
taken by the Special Court.
The Special Court has no jurisdiction to sit in appeal
over the assess ment of the tax liability of a notified person by the authority
or Tribunal or court authorised to perform that function by the statute under
which the tax is levied. The Special Court has, therefore, no jurisdiction to
determine whether or not any assessment of the tax liability of a notified
person by the appropriate authority is bona fide or reasonable or justified or
enforceable.
The appeal is allowed. The order under appeal is set aside
in so far as it requires the appellant to produce the records and permits the
notified persons to satisfy the Special Court that the claims made in regard to
their tax liability were not bona fide, or were unreasonable unjustified or
unenforceable.
There shall be no order as to costs.