20 August 1968
Supreme Court
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INCOME TAX OFFICER, DISTT. II(ii),KANPUR ANDOTHERS Vs SHRI MANI RAM ETC.

Case number: Appeal (civil) 314 of 1966


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PETITIONER: INCOME TAX OFFICER, DISTT. II(ii),KANPUR ANDOTHERS

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: SHRI MANI RAM ETC.

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 20/08/1968

BENCH: RAMASWAMI, V. BENCH: RAMASWAMI, V. SHAH, J.C. GROVER, A.N.

CITATION:  1969 AIR  543            1969 SCR  (1) 724

ACT: Indian  Income-tax Act 1922, s. 18A(3)--Word  ’assessed’  in section  whether confined to regular assessment or  includes provisional assessment-Relevance of corresponding  provision in Indian Income Tax Act 1961 for construing earlier Act.

HEADNOTE: The  respondents  flied returns for the  year   1953-54  and they  were provisionally assessed on 14-10-1954, and regular assessment  was.  made  on  27-2-58.   For  the  next   four succeeding  years the respondents filed returns, and for all the years the regular assessments under s. 23 of the  Income Tax  Act, 1922 were made after 27-2-58.  SinCe  no  estimate of the tax payable on their income as required by s. 18A was seat nor the   in advance paid, the Income Tax Officer while assessing them under s. 23 held that they were liable to pay interest  under  s.  18A(8) and in addition he  applied  the provisions  of  s.  18A(9)(b)  and  imposed  a  penalty  for each year of assessment by virtue of s.  28  read  with   s. 18A(9)(b).    The  respondents  preferred  appeals  to   the Appellate Assistant Commissioner on the ground that the levy of interest and penalty ’was unauthorised.  The appeals were dismissed, and the respondents went :in revision, which  was also  dismissed.   Thereupon,  the  respondents  filed  writ petitions  in  the  High  Court  to  quash  the  order   and succeeded.  The High Court held that s. 18(3) of the Act did not  apply  to  the facts of the case as there  had  been  a provisional assessment under s. 23B of the Act in 1954.   In appeals  to  this  Court, by the Revenue  the  question  for consideration was whether the expression "any person who has not  hitherto  been  assessed" in s. 18A(3)  of  the  Indian Income-Tax Act, 1922 after the all Income Tax Amendment  Act 67 of 1949 should be interpreted so as to ’include a  person who  has only been provisionally assessed under s.  23B  ,of that Act. HELD :--The appeals must be dismissed.  Even when the tax is provisionally  assessed,  there  necessarily  has  to  be  a determination of the total income of the assessee.  The only difference  is  that under section 23 the  total  income  is determined  after  the  Income  Tax  Officer  has  satisfied himself  fully about the correctness of the return  fled  by

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taking  steps, if necessary, under sections 22(4) and  23(2) of  the Act.  In the case of a provisional assessment  under section 23B. of the Act, the powers under sections 22(4) and 23(2) of the Act are not to be exercised and the Income  Tax Officer has to determine the tax on the basis of the  return filed  by the assessee after taking into  consideration  the accounts  and documents available, if any, and after  giving effect  to certain allowances and losses.  In  other  words, what  the  Income  Tax  Officer  has  to  do  is  to  assess provisionally   the  total  income  of  the   assessee   and thereafter he has to determine the tax payable on the  basis of  that  provisionally  assessed income. [731 A-D] It  is  important  to  notice that  in  section  18A(1)  the expression  "assessed" is used without any qualification  or restriction as to whether the assessment should be a regular assessment or any other type of assessment 725 under the Act.  It is also manifest that in section 18A sub- section (5) the two expressions "provisional assessment" and "regular    assessment"   are  expressly   mentioned.    The expression  "regular assessment" is also repeatedly used  in s.  18A,  sub.  s. 6, 7, 8 and 9.  There  is  therefore,  no warrant  for restricting the meaning of the word  "assessed" in   section  18A(1)  so  as  to  include  only  a  "regular assessment" under section 23 of the Act.  There is no reason why Parliament did not add the word "regularly" in the  sub- section  so as to qualify the word "assessed".  Since  there is  no  such qualification, the word "assessed"  in  section 18A(3)  should  be read in its ordinary sense  as  including every kind of assessment including a provisional  assessment under section 23B of the Act. [732 A-C] There is nothing in the 1961 Act to suggest that  Parliament intended to explain the meaning or clear up doubts about the meaning  of  the word "assessee" in section  18A(3)  of  the earlier  Act.    Generally   speaking a  subsequent  Act  of Parliament affords no useful guide to the meaning of another Act which came into existence. before the later one was ever framed.   Under special circumstances, the law does  however admit of a subsequent Act to be resorted to for this purpose but the conditions under which the later Act may be resorted for  the interpretation of the earlier Act are strict;  both must be laws on the same subject and the part of the earlier Act  which  it is sought to construe must be  ambiguous  and capable of different meanings. [733 F-H] Kirkness  (Inspector  of Taxes) v. John Hudson &  Co.  Ltd., [1955]  A.C.  696; In re MacManasway, [1951] A.C.  161   and Inland  Revenue  Commissioners v. Dowdall, O’Mahonay  &  Co. Ltd., [1952]  A.C.  4431, referred to.

JUDGMENT: CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 314 to  322 of 1966 Appeals  by special leave from the judgment and order  dated April  25,  1963  of the Allahabad  High  Court  in  Special Appeals Nos. 662, 663, 679, 664, 665, 667, 666, 669 and  671 of 1962 respectively. S.K. Aiyer and R.N. Sachthey, for the appellant (in all  the appeals. ) J.P. Goyal, Sobhag Mal Jain and P.N. Pachauri,    for the respondents (in all the appeals ). The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Ramaswami,  J.   In  these appeals  which  have  been  heard together a common question of law arises for  determination,

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that  is,  whether the. expression "any person who  has  not hitherto been assessed" in section 18A(3) of the Income  Tax Act, 1922 (hereinafter called the Act) after the Income  Tax Amendment  Act (Act 67 of 1949) should be interpreted so  as to include a person who has only been provisionally assessed under section 23B of that Act. The  respondents  in these appeals  are  four  persons--Mani Ram, Jagmohan, Kishandas,  Bhagirathmal--partners  of  Shri 726 Kishan Das, DhankUtti, Kanpur.  They were members of a joint Hindu farmily carrying on business until they became divided in  the middle of assessment year 1953-54.  Thereafter  they were carrying on the business in partnership.  For the  year 1953-54,  the firm submitted a return showing loss.  But  in the  next succeeding year 1954-55 it disclosed a profit  and submitted  a  return. All the four  partners  filed  returns individually  on  27-9-1954  and  they  were   provisionally assessed  on  their returns on 14-10-1954. But  the  regular assessment  was  made for  this  year  only   on  27-2-1958. The ,firm continued to make profits in the subsequent  years 1955-56, 1956-57, 1957-58 and 1958-59 and the partners filed returns  for their income for each of these years  and  were regularly  assessed for these years under  s.  23   sometime after  27-2-1958.  The assessment order for 1958-59  was  in fact made on 19-2-1959.  It is not disputed that none of the four partners sent any estimate of the tax payable on  their income  as  required by section 18A of the Income  Tax  Act, 1922  or pay the tax in advance. Therefore, the  Income  Tax Officer, Kanpur while assessing them under section 23 of the Act held that they were liable to pay interest under section 18A(8) and determined the amount payable by each in  respect of  each  of  the years on the basis  of  the  income  found taxable in the regular assessment.  In addition, he  applied the  provisions of section 18A(9)(b) and imposed  a  penalty for  each  year of assessment by virtue of section  28  read with  section  18A(9)  (b) of the Act.   The  four  partners preferred appeals to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner on the  ground  that  the  levy of  interest  and  penalty  was unauthorised.  But the appeals were dismissed.  The partners applied in revision to the Commissioner of Income Tax  under section   33A(2),   but  the  revision   applications   were dismissed.   The respondents thereafter moved the  Allahabad High  Court for grant of a writ to quash the orders  of  the Income   Tax   Officer  and  of  the   Appellate   Assistant Commissioner  in  appeal.  The applications  for  writ  were allowed by Mr. Justice S.C. Manchanda who held that  section 18A(3) could not apply to the facts of the case as there had been a provisional assessment under section 23B in the  year 1954.   Against  the  decision  of  the  Single  Judge   the appellants  preferred  appeals before  the  Division  Bench. These  appeals  were dismissed by a common judgment  of  the Allahabad High  Court  dated  25th March, 1963.  The present appeals are brought to this Court by special leave from  the judgment of the Allahabad High  Court dated 25th March, 1963 in the batch of appeals affirming the judgment of the Single Judge dated 25th May, 1956 in C.W.M. No. 1591 of.  1962  and the connected writ applications. It  is necessary at this stage to set out the provisions  of seetions 18A, 23 and 23B of the Income Tax Act, 1922 as they stood at the material time: 727 "18A  (1)  (a).  In the case of income in respect  of  which provision  is  not made under section 18  for  deduction  of income-tax  at the time of payment, the Income  Tax  Officer may, on or after the 1st day of April in any financial year,

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by order in writing, require an assessee to pay quarterly to the  credit  of the Central Government on the  15th  day  of June,  15th day of September, 15th day of December and  15th day  of March in that year,  respectively,  an amount  equal to onequarter of the income-tax and super-tax payable on  so much  of such income as is included in his total  income  of the  latest  previous year in respect of which he  has  been assessed,  if that total income exceeded the maximum  amount not  chargeable  to  tax in his case by  two  thousand  five hundred  rupees.   Such income-tax and  super-tax  shall  be calculated  at the rates in force for the financial year  in which  he is required to pay the tax, and shall bear to  the total  amount of income-tax and super-tax so  calculated  on the said total income the same preparation as the amount  of such inclusions bears to his total income or, in cases where under  the provisions of sub-section (1) of section 17  both income-tax  and super-tax are chargeable with  reference  to the  total world income, shall bear to the total  amount  of income.  tax and super-tax which would have been payable  on his  total  world income of the said previous  year  had  it been.his total income  the same proportion  as the amount of such inclusions bears to his total world income. (2) (3)  Any  person who has not hitherto been  assessed  shall, before the 15th day of March in each financial year, if  his total income of the period which could be the previous  year for an assessment for the. financial. year next following is likely to exceed the maximum amount not chargeable to tax in his  case by two thousand five hundred rupees, send  to  the Income Tax Officer an estimate of the tax payable by him on. that  part of his income to which the provisions of  section 18 do not apply of the said previous year calculated in  the manner  laid  down  in sub-section (1), and  shall  pay  the amount,  on such of the dates specified in that  subsections as  have not expired, by installments which may  be  revised according to the proviso to sub-section (2). (4) (5) Sup. C.I/68--16 728               (6) Where in any year an assessee has paid tax               under  sub-section (2) or sub-section  (3)  on               the  basis  his own estimate, and the  tax  so               paid  is less than eighty per cent of the  tax               determined   on  the  basis  of  the   regular               assessment,  so  far as such  tax  relates  to               income  to which the provisions of section  18               do., not apply and so far as it is not due  to               variations  in  the rates of tax made  by  the               Finance Act enacted for the year for which the               regular assessment is made, simple interest at               the rate of Six per cent per annum from the  1               st  day  of January in the financial  year  in               which  the tax was paid up to the date of  the               Said  regular assessment shall be  payable  by               the assessee upon the amount by which the  tax               so  paid  falls short of the said  eighty  per               cent.               (7)               (8)  Where on making the  regular  assessment,               the  Income Tax Officer finds that no  payment               of  tax has been made in accordance  with  the               foregoing provisions of this section, interest               calculated  in  the manner laid down  in  sub-               section  (6)  shall  be added to  the  tax  as

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             determined   on  the  basis  of  the   regular               assessment.               (9 ) If the Income Tax Officer, in the  course               of  any  proceedings in  connection  with  the               regular  assessment,  is  satisfied  that  any               assessee-               (a)  has  furnished under sub-section  (2)  of               subsection (3 ) estimates, of the tax  payable               by him which he knew or had reason to  believe               to be untrue, or               (b)  has  without reasonable cause  failed  to               comply  with  the provisions.  of  sub-section               (3), the assessee shall be deemed, in the case               referred   to   in   clause   (a),   to   have               deliberately furnished inaccurate  particulars               of his income, and in the case referred to  in               clause  (b)  to  have failed  to  furnish  the               return of his total income; and the provisions               of section 28, so far as may ;be, shall  apply               accordingly.               23.   (1)  If  the  Income  Tax   Officer   is               satisfied  without requiring the  presence  of               the  assessee or the production by him of  any               evidence  that a return made under section  22               is  correct and complete, he shall assess  the               total  income  of  the  assessee,  and   shall               determine the sum payable by him on. the basis               of such return. 729               (2) If the Income Tax Officer is not satisfied               without  requiring the presence of the  person               who  made  the  return or  the  production  of               evidence  that a return made under section  22               is  correct  and complete, he shall  serve  on               such  person a notice either to attend at  the               Income Tax Officer’s Office or to produce,  or               to cause to be there produced, any evidence on               which  such person may rely in support of  the               return..               (3 ) On the day specified in the notice issued               under  sub-section (2), or as soon  afterwards               as  may  be,  the Income  Tax  Officer,  after               hearing  such  evidence  as  such  person  may               produce and such Other evidence as the  Income               Tax  Officer may require, on specified  points               shall,  by  an order in  writing,  assess  the               total income of the assessee and determine the               sum  payable  by  him on  the  basis  of  such               assessment.               (4)  If  any person fails to make  the  return               required by any notice given under sub-section               (2) of section 22 and has not made a return or               a revised return under sub-section (3) of  the               same  section or fails to comply with all  the               terms of a notice iSsued under sub-section (4)               of the same section or, having made a  return,               fails to comply with all the terms of a notice               issued under sub-section (2) of this               section, the Income Tax Officer shall make the               assessment  to  the best of his  judgment  and               determine  the sum payable by the assessee  on               the basis of such assessment and, in the  case               of  a firm, may refuse to register it  or  may               cancel  its  registration  if  it  is  already               registered.

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             23B  (1 ) The Income Tax Officer may,  at  any               time after the receipt of a return made  under               section   22  proceed  to make  in  a  summary               manner,  a provisional assessment of  the  tax               payable  by the assessee, on the basis of  his               return and the accounts and documents, if any,               accompanying  it, after giving due  effect  to               (i) the allowance referred to in paragraph (b)               of  the proviso to clause (vi) of  sub-section               (2) of section  10,  and (ii) any loss carried               forward under sub-section (2) of section 24.               (2) A partner of a  firm  may be provisionally               assessed   under sub-section ( 1 ) in  respect               of his share in the firm’s income, profits and               gains;  if  its  return  has  been   received,               although  the return of the  parroter  himself               may not have been received, 730               (3) A firm may be provisionally assessed under               sub-section (1) as if it were an  unregistered               firm, unless the firm fulfils such  conditions               as the Central Government may, by notification               in  the  official  Gazette,  specify  in  that               behalf.               (4) There shall be no right of  appeal against               a  provisional  assessment  made  under   sub-               section (1).               (5)  For the avoidance of doubt, it is  hereby               declared  that  the provisions of  section  45               (except  the  first proviso)  and  section  46               apply  in  relation  to  any  tax  payable  in               pursuance  of  a provisional  assessment  made               under sub-section (1) as if it were a  regular               assessment made under section 23.               (6)  Income-tax  paid or deemed to  have  been               paid  under  section  18  or  section  18A  in               respect  of any income provisionally  assessed               under sub-section (1), shall be deemed to have               been paid towards the provisional assessment.               (7)  After a regular assessment has been  made               under section 23, any amount paid or deemed to               have   been   paid   towards   a   provisional               assessment  made under sub-section (1),  shall               be  deemed  to  have  been  paid  towards  the               regular assessment; and where the amount  paid               or  deemed  to  have  been  paid  towards  the               provisional  assessment,  exceeds  the  amount               payable  under  the  regular  assessment,  the               excess shall be refunded to the assessee.               (  8 ) Nothing done or deferred by reason   or               in consequence of any  provisional  assessment               made  under this section shall  prejudice  the               determination  on  the merits,  of  any  issue               which  may arise in the course of the  regular               assessment under section 23". It  was  argued  on behalf of the  appellants  that  a  mere provisional assessment under section 23B of the Act will not satisfy  the  requirements  of section  18A(1)  of  the  Act because  the  language  of section  18A(1)  shows  that  the provisions of that subsection only apply when the amount  of tax to be deposited in advance is determined on the basis of the assessee’s total income of previous year to which he has been  assessed.  It  was contended that in  the  case  of  a provisional  assessment under section 23B of the Act,  there is  no computation of the total income of the previous  year

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and that under section 23B of the Act all that is done is to determine provisionally the income-tax payable on the 731 basis of the return filed without properly going through the process  of assessing the total taxable income.  It  is  not possible  to accept this argument because even when the  tax is  provisionally  assessed, there necessarily has to  be  a determination of the total income of the assessee.  The only difference  is  that under section 23 the  total  income  is determined  after  the  Income  Tax  Officer  has  satisfied himself  fully about the correctness of the return flied  by taking  steps, if necessary, under sections 22(4) and  23(2) of  the Act.  In the case of a provisional assessment  under section 23B of the Act, the powers under sections 22(4)  and 23(2) of the Act are not to be exercised and the Income  Tax Officer has to determine the tax on the basis of  the return filed  by the assessee after taking into  consideration  the accounts  and documents available, if any, and after  giving effect  to certain allowances and losses.  In  other  words, what  the  Income  Tax  Officer  has  to  do  is  to  assess provisionally   the  total  income  of  the   assessee   and thereafter he has to determine the tax payable on the  basis of that provisionally assessed income. The  argument  was  next stressed that  section  18A(1)  was introduced  into the Act when section 23B did not  exist  at all  and consequently no inference should be drawn that  the word "assessed" used in section 18A(1) was meant to cover  a provisional ’ assessment under section 23B of the Act  also. In other words, the argument of the appellants was that when the  word "assessed" was used in section 18A(1) of  the  Act Parliament could not have contemplated that this word  would cover  a  case  of  provisional  assessment  as  no  section relating  to  provisional assessment existed in the  Act  at that  time.   We  are  unable to  accept  this  argument  as correct.    It  should  be  noticed  that   the   Parliament introduced  certain  amendments in section 18A  of  the  Act consequential to the introduction of section 23B of the Act. There  is  a reference to the  provisional  assessment  made under  section  23B in sub-section (5) of section  18A,  but Parliament took no step to restrict the meaning of the  word "assessed"  in. section 18A(3) so as to exclude a  reference to provisional assessment under section 23B of the Act.   If Parliament  contemplated  that section 18A(3)  should  apply only  in  the case of a "regular assessment", there  was  no reason  why  it  did  not  put  ’some  qualifying  words  or expressions before or after the word ,"assessed" in  section 18A(  1 ).  It is not possible to accept the  submission  of the  appellants  that Parliament in fact intended  to  bring about  such a decision but only accidentally omitted  to  do so.  On the other hand, the language of section 18A( 1 )  as it  stands,  can  only  lead  to  interpretation  that   the provisions contained in it Would become applicable  whenever a  person  has been assessed whatever be the nature  of  the assessment--whether   it  be  a  regular  assessment  or   a provisional assessment. 732 It  is  important to notice that in section 18A (  1  )  the expression  "assessed" is used without any qualification  or restriction  as  to  whether  the  assessment  should  be  a regular assessment or any other type of assessment under the Act.   It is also manifest that in section  18A  sub-section (5)   the  two  expressions  "provisional  assessment"   and "regular assessment" are expressly mentioned. The expression "regular assessment" is also repeatedly used in section 18A, sub-section  6, 7, 8 and 9.  We see, therefore,  no  warrant

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for  restricting  the  meaning of  the  word  "assessed"  in section 18A(1) so as to include only a "regular  assessment" under  section  23  of  the Act.  There  is  no  reason  why Parliament  did  not add the word "regularly"  in  the  sub- section  so as to qualify the word "assessed".  Since  there is  no  such qualification.  the word "assessed" in  section 18A(3)  should  be read in its ordinary sense  as  including every   kind   of  assessment  including    a    provisional assessment under section 23B of the Act. In  the  last  place, counsel on behalf  of  the  appellants referred  to the language of sections 210 and 212(3) of  the Income Tax Act, 1961 which state:               "210. Order by Income Tax Officer :--(1) Where               a  person has been previously assessed by  way               of regular assessment under this Act or  under               the  Indian Income Tax Act, 1922 ( 11 of  1922               ), the Income Tax Officer may, on or after the               1st  day  of April in the financial  year,  by               order  in writing, require him to pay  to  the               credit  of the Central Government advance  tax               determined  in accordance with the  provisions               of sections 207, 208 and 209.               (2) The notice of demand issued under  section               156  in pursuance of such order shall  specify               the  installments in which the advance tax  is               payable under section 211.               (3)  If, after the making of an order  by  the               Income  Tax  Officer under  this  section  and               before  the  15th  day of.  February.  of  the               Financial  year  tax is paid by  the  assessee               under section 140-A or a regular assessment or               a provisional assessment under section 141  of               the  assessee  or of the  registered  firm  of               which he is a partner is made in respect of  a               previous  year later than that referred to  in               the  order  of  the Income  Tax  Officer,  the               Income  Tax Officer may make an amended  order               queering   the   assessee  to   pay   in   one               installment on the specified date. or in equal               instalments  on the specified dates.  if  more               than  one,  falling  after  the  date  of  the               amended order, the advance tax computed on the               basis 733               of the total income on which tax has been paid               under section 140-A or in respect of which the               regular   assessment   or,   the   provisional               assessment aforesaid has been made as  reduced               by the amount, if any, paid in accordance with               the original order               213. Estimate by assessee,-( 1 )  ........               (3  ) Any person who has not  previously  been               assessed  by way of regular  assessment  under               this Act  or under the Indian Income Tax  Act,               1922 (11 of 1922) shall, before the first  day               of March in each financial your, if his  total               income  exclusive  of  capital  gains  of  the               period  which would be the previous  year  for               the  immediately following assessment year  is               likely  to  exceed  the  maximum  amount   not               chargeable  to income-tax in his case  by  two               thousand  five  hundred rupees,  send  to  the               Income Tax Officer-               (i) an estimate of the total income  exclusive               of capital gains of the said previous year;

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             (ii) an estimate of the advance tax payable by               him  calculated  in the manner  laid  down  in               section   209:  and shall pay such  amount  as               accords  with  his estimate, on  such  of  the               dates  specified  in section 211 as  have  not               expired,  by instalments which may be  revised               according to sub-section (2)". The  argument was that these sections apply to a case  of  a regular  assessment  and  the enactment  of  these  sections should be’ treated as a Parliamentary exposition of  section 18A(3)  of  the earlier Act as referring only to a  case  of regular assessment.We are unable to accept this argument  as correct.   There  is  nothing in 1961 Act  to  suggest  that Parliament  intended  to  explain the meaning  or  clear  up doubts about the meaning  of the word "assessed" in  section 18A(3) of the earlier Act. Generally speaking, a  subsequent Act of Parliament affords no useful guide to the meaning  of another  Act which came into existence before the later  one was ever framed.  Under special circumstances, the law  does however admit of a subsequent Act to be resorted to for this purpose but the conditions under which the later Act may  be resorted  for  the  interpretation of the  earlier  Act  are strict;  both must be laws on the same subject and the  part of  the earlier Act which it is sought to construe  must  be ambiguous  and capable of different meanings.  For  example, in  Kirkness  (Inspector  of Taxes) v.  John  Hudson  &  Co. Ltd.(1) it was held  by the (1) [1955] A.C. 696. 734 House of Lords that the ordinary meaning of the word  "sale" importing  a consensual relation is to be attributed to  the use  of it in the context of section 17(1)(a) of the Act  of 1945.  Since there was no ambiguity in the section,  it  was not  permissible to seek guidance in its  construction  from later  Finance Acts, although it was directed by  Parliament to be construed as one with them.  At page 714 of the Report Viscount Simonds states:               "I have looked at the later Acts to which  the               Attorney  General  referred  to  in  order  to               satisfy  myself  that they do  not  contain  a               restrospective  declaration as to the  meaning               of the earlier Act.  They clearly do not,  and               I do not think that it has been contended that               they  do.  At the highest it can be said  that               they may proceed upon an erroneous  assumption               that  the word "sold" in section  17(1)(a)  of               the Income Tax Act, 1945, has a meaning  which               I hold it has not.  This may be so and, if so,               it is an excellent example of the  proposition               to  which reference was made in the report  of               the  Committee of the Privy Council in  In  re               MacManasway(1)  and  again  by  my  noble  and               learned   friend  Lord  Radcliffe  in   Inland               Revenue Commissioners  v.  Dowdall,  O’Mahoney               & Co. Ltd. (2) that the beliefs or assumptions               of those who frame Acts of  Parliament  cannot               make the law". For  the reasons expressed above, we hold that the  judgment of the High Court dated 25th March, 1963 is right and  these appeals  must be dismissed with costs.  One set  of  hearing fee. Y.P.                                   Appeals dismissed. (1) [1951] A.C. 16L (2) [1952] A.C. 401. 735

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