The judgment of the court was delivered by
GROVER J.--This is an appeal by special leave from a
judgment of the High Court of Andhra Pradesh dated July 2, 1964, in Writ Appeal
No. 25 of 1963 whereby the judgment of the learned single judge allowing a
petition under article 226 of the Constitution was confirmed.
The facts briefly are these. H. E. H. the Nizam of
Hyderabad had, by a deed of trust dated August 6, 1950, created a trust known as
" H. E. H. the Nizam's Miscellaneous Trust " for the benefit of his
family and dependants. One of the beneficiaries was Sahebzadi Ghousunnisa Begum,
a stepsister of the Nizam, to whom an annuity of Rs. 12,000 had to be given. She
died on November 10, 1955. The property passing on her death became, liable to
estate duty under the Estate Duty Act, 1953 (XXXIV of 1953), hereinafter called
" the Act ". The trust fund consisted of three, items one of which was
a loan deposited with the Government of Hyderabad bearing interest at 1 1/4%.
The main dispute before the Assistant Controller of Estate Duty related to the
correct valuation of the aforesaid loan. He valued it at Rs. 2,01,30,000 and,
after making the other necessary calculations, the net market value of the
estate of the deceased was assessed at Rs. 6,61,347 on which demand was created
at Rs. 83,519.40. The trustees preferred an appeal before the Central Board of
Revenue disputing the correctness of the valuation of the estate of the deceased
(Begum) made by the Assistant Controller. The Board of Revenue in its order
dated August 6, 1959, expressed the view that the securities in question had not
been overvalued but had been undervalued. According to the Board the correct
valuation should have been Rs. 3,06,83,760 ; in other words, its opinion was
that the face value of the securities being Rs. 4.5 crores, the market value
should have been at the rate of 78% whereas the basis adopted by the Assistant
Controller came to 52%. He proceeded to say towards the concluding portion of
his order : " However I find that there is some force in the argument
advanced by the appellant's representative against any enhancement being made by
the Board in appeal proceedings. I refrain therefore from making the proposed
enhancement in the value of the securities and confirm the value adopted by the
Assistant Controller.
The Act was amended by the Estate Duty (Amendment) Act,
1958, hereinafter called " the amendment Act." By section 21 of the
amendment Act, sections 56 to 65 of the principal Act were substituted by the
new sections. The new section 59 for the first time gave power to the Controller
of Estate Duty to assess or reassess property escaping assessment. It is common
ground that the amendment Act came into force on July, 1 1960. The Assistant
Controller issued a notice on August 12, 1960, to the trustees in exercise of
the powers conferred by the new section 59 of the Act. In that notice it was
stated that he had reasons to believe that property chargeable under the Act to
estate duty had escaped assessment by reason of undervaluation and, therefore, a
statement of account was called for in respect of the market value of the
securities of Rs. 4.5 crores. On September 20, 1960, the present respondents
filed a writ petition in the High Court challenging the validity and legality of
the notice issued under section 59 of the Act and praying that it be quashed. In
the writ petition two main points were raised : the first was that section 59
had been introduced by the Amendment Act and it could not be made applicable to
assessments which had become final before July 1, 1960, the date on which the
amendment Act came into force. Secondly, the conditions laid down in section 59
had not been fulfilled. It had not been stated what information had been
received or was in the possession of the Assistant Controller in consequence of
which he had reason to believe that property had been undervalued. It was
contended that mere change of opinion would not justify the reopening of
assessment. The present appellant in the return filed to the writ petition in
the High Court claimed that section 59 as introduced by the Amendment Act was
applicable and that the Central Board of Revenue had expressed the opinion that
the correct value of the securities should be 78% of the face value as against
52% as adopted in the assessment order and the appellate order had been received
on August 15, 1959, and therefore, the appellant was fully justified in issuing
the notice as he had reason to believe by virtue of information which had come
into his possession that the securities had been undervalued. The learned single
judge hold that the appellant had no jurisdiction under section 59, as newly
introduced by the Amendment Act, to reopen a matter which had been completed and
which had became final before July 1, 1960. On the second point he was of the
view that the opinion of the Central Board of Revenue did not amount to "
information " within the meaning of section 59(b) of the Act. The writ
petition, Consequently, was allowed. The appellant preferred an appeal under
clause 15 of the Letters Patent which was disposed of by a Division Bench on
July 2, 1964. The Bench did not decide the first point, namely, whether section
59 as newly introduced by the Amendment Act was applicable or not and rested its
decision on the second point. It was held that a mere expression of opinion by
the Central Board of Revenue did not amount to " information " within
the meaning of section 59(b) of the Act.
The learned Solicitor-General has argued on behalf of the
appellant that the decision of the High Court on the second point was erroneous.
According to him any matter of fact or law which may come to the notice of the
appellant after the making of assessment including a finding by a higher
authority would be " information " for the purpose and within the
meaning of section 59. It is urged that the appellant bad not taken action on
mere change of his opinion. The predecessor in office of the appellant had
adopted a wrong mode of valuation and the opinion expressed by the Central Board
of Revenue about the correct mode was " information " which led to the
appellant entertaining a reasonable belief that the property assessed to estate
duty had been undervalued. Reliance has been placed on a number of decisions in
which the meaning of the word " information " in parallel provisions
in the Income-tax Act, 1922, and other enactments came up for consideration. In
Maharaj Kumar Kamal Singh v. Commissioner of Income-tax, it was held that the
word " information " in section 34(1)(b) included information as to
the true and correct state of law, and so would cover information as to relevant
judicial decisions. The following observation may be reproduced with advantage :
" If the word ' information ' used in any other
provision of the Act denotes information as to facts or particulars, that would
not necessarily determine the meaning of the said word in section 34(1)(b). The
denotation of the said word would naturally depend on the context of the
particular provisions in which it is used. It is then contended that sections
33B and 35 confer ample powers on the specified authorities to revise the
Income-tax Officer's orders and to rectify mistakes respectively and so it would
be legitimate to construe the word ' information ' in section 34(1)(b) strictly
and to confine it to information in regard to facts or particulars. This
argument also is not valid. If the word ' information ' in its plain grammatical
meaning includes information as to facts as well as information as to the state
of the law, it would be unreasonable to limit to information as to the facts on
the extraneous consideration that some cases of assessment which need to be
revised or rectified on the ground of mistake of law may conceivably be covered
by sections 33B and 35.
In Commissioner of Income-tax v. A. Raman & Co., it
was said that the expression " information " in the context of section
147(b) of the Income-tax Act, 1961, must mean instruction or knowledge derived
from extraneous sources concerning facts or particulars or as to law relating to
a matter bearing on the assessment. The Bombay High Court, in a recent decision,
commissioner of Income-tax v. A. J. Zaveri, after a discussion of the relevant
case law, came to the conclusion that " information " within the
meaning of section 34(1)(b) of the Income-tax Act, 1922, may consist of a
different view taken of the facts on the record by a higher Tribunal on appeal
from the Income-tax Officer's decision. In that case it was held that the
decision of the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal constituted " information
" to the Income-tax Officer as to which of the assessable parties was
chargeable for a particular item of income. In the latest decision of this court
in R. B. Bansilal Abirchand Firm v. Commissioner of Income-tax, when the first
assessment of the assessee's income was made by the Income-tax Officer the
latter's information was that the assessee was a partner in another concern
known as Bisesar House and that the interest had been received from that concern
in the capacity of a partner. It was only after the Tribunal and the High Court
gave their decision in the proceedings for assessment to tax of Bisesar House
that the Income-tax Officer came to know that the interest was not being
received by the assessee-firm in the capacity of a partner but in its capacity
of a financier advancing monies to Bisesar House as a banker. It was held that
the Income-tax Officer had not acted on his own initiative or on the change of
his own opinion when he took proceedings under section 34(1)(b). The correct
position had been brought to his notice by the decision of the Tribunal and the
High Court and that must be held to be " information " as a
consequence of which he came to believe that the provisions of section 34(1)(b)
were attracted.
The learned counsel for the respondents in the presence of
the above state of law, as settled by this court, sought to contend that the
question of valuation of the securities was neither purely one of fact nor of
law and was a mixed question of law and fact and, therefore, it could not fall
within the rule laid down in the aforesaid decisions. We are unable to agree.
When the expression " information " is understood in the sense of
instruction or knowledge derived from an external source concerning facts or
particulars or as to law relating to a matter bearing on the assessment, it is
difficult to see how determination of valuation for the purpose of assessment of
estate duty would not squarely fall within the meaning of the expression "
information " in the context in which it occurs in section 59 of the Act.
It has not been disputed, and can indeed not be disputed, that the provisions of
section 59 are in pari materia with section 34 of the Income-tax Act, 1922, and
section 147 of the Income-tax Act, 1961. The opinion expressed by the Board of
Revenue, in the present case, as to valuation, was clearly " information
" in the sense in which that expres. sion has been held to have been used
in these enactments. The view of the High Court on this point cannot be
sustained for the aforesaid reasons.
The Division Bench did not decide the first point which
related to the applicability of section 59 to assessments completed before the
amendment Act came into force. This matter will have to go back for decision of
that question. The appeal is allowed and the order of the High Court is set
aside. The case is remanded to the High Court for disposal in accordance with
law. Costs shall be costs in the High Court.
Appeal allowed.