22 March 1961
Supreme Court
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ABDULLABHAI M. BHAGAT, ETC. Vs THE INCOME-TAX OFFICER, SPECIAL CIRCLE,MADRAS

Bench: KAPUR,J.L.
Case number: Writ Petition (Civil) 140 of 1959


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PETITIONER: ABDULLABHAI M. BHAGAT, ETC.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: THE INCOME-TAX OFFICER, SPECIAL CIRCLE,MADRAS

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 22/03/1961

BENCH: KAPUR, J.L. BENCH: KAPUR, J.L. AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA DAS, S.K. HIDAYATULLAH, M. SHAH, J.C.

CITATION:  1961 AIR 1389            1962 SCR  (1) 512

ACT: Income   Tax-Surcharge-"Federal  purposes"  and   "for   the purposes of the Central Government", Meaning of-Finance Act, 1942  (XII of 1942), s. 8(1)-Government of India  Act,  1935 (25 and 26 Geo. V. Ch. 42), ss. 100, 124(1), 138(1)  Proviso (b), 313, Seventh Schedule item 54, List I, General  Clauses Act, 1897 (10 of 1897), ss. 3(8ab) (a), 18a.

HEADNOTE: The  petitioners  as  partners of  a  registered  firm  were assessed  to income-tax for the relevant  assessment  years. Thereafter  they made a disclosure of their income  under  a "Voluntary  Disclosure Scheme" regarding profits  which  had escaped  assessment,  and on reassessment of  the  disclosed income income-tax, super-tax and surcharge were levied.  The levy of surcharge but not     income-tax  and super-tax  was challenged as unauthorised. Held, that the power to  legislate for levy of tax on income was  conferred  upon the Federal Legislature by s. 100  sub- ss. (1)   and (2) of the Government of India Act, 1935,  and item  54 of List I of the Seventh Schedule and  the  Federal Legislature  was competent under that entry to legislate  in regard to the levy of a surcharge on tax; s. 138(1)  proviso (b)  did  not  restrict the amplitude  of  that  legislative power.  The term "Federal purposes" in s. 138 is not defined in  the Government of India Act nor in the  General  Clauses Act;  but  there  is sufficient indication  in  the  section itself that surcharges were to form part of the Revenues  of the Federation and such Revenues were to be expended for the purposes  therein  mentioned.   The  concept  of  the  words "purposes  of  the  Central Government"  under  the  General Clauses Act was not different from what was intended by  the use of the words "Federal purposes" in s. 138(i) proviso (b) of the Government of India Act.

JUDGMENT: ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Petitions Nos. 140 and 177 to 191  of

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1959. Petitions under Article 32 of the Constitution of India  for enforcement of Fundamental Rights. M.   R. M. Abdul Karim and K. R. Choudhury, for petitioners. K.   N. Rajagopala Sastri and D. Gupta, for respondents. 513 1961.  March 22.  The Judgment of the Court was delivered by KAPUR,  J.-These are sixteen petitions under Art. 32 of  the Constitution  challenging the legality of the imposition  of surcharge  imposed on the income of the assessees under  the Finance  Acts of 1942, 1943, 1944 and 1945.  The  assessment relates  to four assessment years 1942-43, 1943-44,  1944-45 and 1945-46. The   petitioners  are  four  partners  of  a   firm   named Mohammedaly  Sarafaly & Co., Madras, which was  carrying  on business   in  hardware,  stocks,  shares,  etc.   For   the assessment years 1942-43 to 1945-46 this firm was treated as a  registered  firm  under the  Indian  Income-tax  Act  and therefore  the  partners were assessed on  their  respective shares  of the profits from the business of the  firm.   All assessments were completed before 1949 and total income  for the purpose of assessment for those four years was about Rs. 29,00,000.   In  1955  the petitioners  under  a  ’Voluntary Disclosure Scheme’ with regard to profits which had  escaped assessment made a disclosure of their income and proceedings were taken under s. 34 of the Income-tax Act.  In the  month of  April,  1959, there was a reassessment on all  the  four partners and the total income for the four assessment  years thus came to about Rs. 35 lakhs which included Rs. 29  lakhs already  assessed.  On that income,  income-tax,  super-tax, and surcharge were levied.  The surcharge, according to  the petition  was Rs. 3,82,791.  It is this surcharge  which  is impugned as being, without the authority of law inasmuch  as the  then  Federal  Legislature, it is  submitted,  was  not competent to levy the surcharge. Provision  for  surcharge  was made under  s.  8(1)  of  the Finance  Act, 1942 (Act XII of 1942).  This section may  now be quoted:- Section  8(1) "Subject to the provisions of sub-sections (2) and (3),- (a)  income-tax  for  the year beginning on the 1st  day  of April, 1942, shall be charged at the rates specified in Part I   of  Schedule  II  increased  in  the  cases   to   which subparagraph (b) of paragraph A 65 514               and paragraph B of that part apply with a sur-               charge   for  the  purposes  of  the   Central               Government  at the rate specified  therein  in               respect of each such rate of income-tax, and               (b)   rates   of   super-tax  for   the   year               beginning  on  the  1st day  of  April,  1942,               shall,  for the purpose of section 55  of  the               Indian   Income-tax   Act,  1922,   be   those               specified in Part II of Schedule II  increased               in the cases to which paragraphs A, B and C of               that  Part  apply  by  a  surcharge  for   the               purposes of the Central Government at the rate               specified therein in respect of each such rate               of super-tax." It  was contended that the Federal Legislature had no  power under  the Government of India Act, 1935,(25 and 26  Geo  V, Ch.  42),  to impose a surcharge "for the  purposes  of  the Central  Government".  The legislative power of the  Federal Legislature  was given in s. 100 of the Government of  India

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Act, 1935, and the power to tax income was contained in item 4 of List I of the Seventh Schedule which was as follows: "Taxes on income other than agricultural income." Part  VII of the Government of India Act, 1935,  deals  with Finance, Property and Suits and the first chapter deals with Finance.  The relevant section which has been relied upon by the  petitioners,  i.e., s. 138(1) of that Act, is  in  that Part  which deals with Distribution of Revenues between  the Federation and the Federal Units.  That section reads:-               Section  138(1)  "Taxes on income  other  than               agricultural   income  shall  be  levied   and               collected by the Federation...................               Provided that-               (a)......................................................... .....               (b)  the Federal Legislature may at  any  time               increase  the  said taxes by a  surcharge  for               Federal purposes and the whole proceeds of any               such   surcharge  shall  form  part   of   the               revenues of the Federation." It was submitted that according to this section the power of the  Federal Legislature to impose a surcharge was only  for Federal purposes; that by s. 8(1) of the Finance Act,  1942, and similar provisions in 515 the  other  Finance  Acts  of  three  following  years,  the surcharge  had been levied "for the purposes of the  Central Government" and that the terms "the purposes of the  Central Government" and "for Federal purposes" were not the same but were two different concepts.  Section 311 of the  Government of  India Act, 1935, deals with Interpretation but  "Federal purposes" is Dot defined in that section.  In subsection (3) of s. 313 which is in Part XIII, dealing with Transitional Provisions, it is provided:--               Section 313(3) "References’ in the  provisions               of this Act for the time being in force to the               Governor-General  and the  Federal  Government               shall, except as respects matters with respect               to  which the Governor-General is required  by               the  said provisions to act in his  discretion               be  construed as references to  the  Governor-               General  in council, and any reference to  the               Federation,  except where the reference is  to               the establishment of the Federation, shall  be               construed as a reference to British India, the               Governor-General in Council, or the  Governor-               general, as the circumstances and  the context               may require." On  the  basis of this section it was urged  that  the  term "Federal  purposes"  in s. 138(1)(b) of  the  Government  of India   Act,  1935,  means  the  purposes  of  the   Federal Government, i.e., of the Governor-General in Council or  the Governor-General as the case may be and that in the  context it is a term of lesser amplitude than the term "purposes  of the   Central  Government".   "Central  Government"  in   s. 3(8ab)(a)  of the General Clauses Act, 1897, was defined  as follows:- Section 3 (8ab) "Central Government’ shall-               (a)  in  relation  to anything done or  to  be               done after the commencement of Part III of the               Government  of  India  Act,  1935,  mean   the               Federal Government;".               "Federal   Government"  was  defined  in   the               General Clauses Act in s. 18 a as follows:-               Section 18 a " ’Federal Government’ shall-

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             (a)   in  relation to anything done or  to  be               done after the commencement of Part III of the               Government of India Act, 1935, but before  the               establishment  of  the  Federation,  mean,  as               respects matters               516               with respect to which the Governor-General  is               by  and under the provisions of the  said  Act               for the time being in force required to act in               his  discretion, the Governor-General  and  as               respects  other matters, the  Governor-General               in Council; and shall include-               (i)   in relation to functions entrusted under               section   124(1)  of  the  said  Act  to   the               Government  of  a  Province,  the   Provincial               Government  acting  within the  scope  of  the               authority  given to it under that  subsection;               and               (ii)  in  relation to the administration of  a               Chief   Commissioner’s  Province,  the   Chief               Commissioner  acting within the scope  of  the               authority given to him under section 94(3)  of               the said Act;". From  these  sections it was argued that the  term  "Federal Government" in the Government of India Act 1935, only  meant the  Governor-General or the Governor-General in Council  as the  case  may be but under the definition  in  the  General Clauses  Act  the  term "Central Government"  did  not  only denote  the  Governor-General  or  the  Governor-General  in Council  as  the case may be but also included  for  certain purposes the Provincial Governments acting within the  scope of  the  authority  given to them under  a.  124(1)  of  the Government  of  India  Act, 1935.   This  argument,  in  our opinion, is wholly fallacious. The  power  of  the Federal  Legislature  to  legislate  was conferred  by s. 100, sub-ss. (1) and (2).  The  first  sub- section  deals with the power of the Federal Legislature  to legislate  in  regard to items contained in the  First  List which  was  exclusively  within the  power  of  the  Federal Legislature.   The  Federal Legislature  therefore  had  the power  to  legislate in regard to any subject  contained  in List  I and item 54 relating to taxes on income was in  that List.  It has been held that the items have to be given  the widest  possible amplitude.  But it was submitted  that  the power  under item 54 howsoever wide it may be is subject  to the  limitation  contained in s. 138(1), proviso  (b).   Now "Federal purposes" is not defined in the Government of India Act, 1935, nor is it defined in the General 517 Clauses  Act.  But there is-sufficient indication in s.  138 itself that the amounts recovered as surcharge were to  form part  of  the Revenues of the Federation and  such  Revenues were to be expended for the purposes there indicated.  Under s. 124(4) of the Government of India Act, 1935, where powers and  duties  are conferred by s. 124 upon a  Province  or  a Federated State there shall be paia by the Federation to the Province  or the Federated State such sum as may  be  agreed Hence  by the definitions given in ..................  Hence by  the  given  in the  General  Clauses  Act  no  different concept  of the words "purposes of the  Central  Government" was intended from what was intended by the use of the  words "Federal  purposes"  in s. 138(1)(b) of  the  Government  of India Act, 1935. These petitions therefore fail and are dismissed with costs. One hearing fee.

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Petitions dismissed.