24 September 1968
Supreme Court
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M/S. JAIPUR UDYOG LTD. & ANR. Vs COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, DELHI, RAJASTHANAND ANOTHER

Case number: Appeal (civil) 586 of 1967


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PETITIONER: M/S. JAIPUR UDYOG LTD. & ANR.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, DELHI, RAJASTHANAND ANOTHER

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 24/09/1968

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

CITATION:  1969 AIR  470            1969 SCR  (2) 193

ACT: Income-tax  Act (43 of 1961), ss. 72, 80, 141  and   210(3)- Provisional  assessment under s. 141-If  income-tax  officer can  determine  disputed  claims-Whether s.  80  applies  to provisional  assessments-S. 210 (3)-Advance tax  payable  on the  basis  of  ’provisional  assessment’-Refers  to   valid provisional assessment.

HEADNOTE: The  appellant  filed its returns for the  assessment  years 1954-55 to 1964-65.  The Income-tax Officer passed orders of assessment  for  the years 1954-55 to  1959-60.   While  the appeals  to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner  for  those years, and the, assessment proceedings before the Income-tax Officer  for  the  years  1960-61  to  1962-63,  were  still pending,  for  the assessment year 1963-64 (the  return  for which  was flied under s. 139 of the Income-tax Act,  1961), the  Income-tax Officer made a provisional assessment  under s.  141.   He held that the appellant was  not  entitled  to deduct  the  aggregate  amount of losses as  claimed  by  it during  the previous years and allowed only a  much  smaller sum as loss which could be carried forward from the  earlier years.  For  the  assessment year  1964-65,  the  Income-tax Officer  made a provisional assessment without allowing  any deduction  of  loss claimed by the appellant;  and  for  the assessment  year 1965-66 the Income-tax Officer called  upon the  appellant to pay a certain sum as advance tax under  s. 210(3).   The  appellant filed writ petitions  in  the  High Court for quashing the orders of the Income-tax Officer  for each  of the three years, but the petitions were  dismissed. The  High Court held: (1) that under s. 141 the  provisional assessment  of tax must also be made in accordance with  and subject to the provisions of the Act, and that the  combined effect  of  ss. 72 and 80 was that a business  loss  can  be carried forward to subsequent assessment years only when  it has  been determined in pursuance  of a  return flied  under s.  139; and (2) that under s. 210(3) as inserted by Act  13 of  1963  and  modified by Act 31 of  1964,  the  Income-tax Officer was entitled to make an order for payment of advance tax  for 1965-66 on the provisional assessment for the  year 1964-65.

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In appeal to this Court,     HELD:  (1) Section 141 bars an enquiry, at the stage  of making a provisional assessment, into disputed questions  of law  and fact: it is immaterial that the dispute  raised  is complicated  or easy.  Therefore the Income-tax Officer  was not justified. in ignoring  the  appellant’s claim. [198 D-F]     Under  s. 80 loss of a previous year under the  head  of income from profits and gains may be carried forward only if it has been determined in pursuance of a return filed  under s.  139;  that is, if it is not so determined it  cannot  be carried  forward  and  set off against  the  profit  of  the subsequent year or years.  But the section applies  only  to a   regular  assessment.   In the  case  of  ’a  provisional assessment   under  s.  141,  if  there  has  been  such   a determination of the allowances mentioned  in sub-s. 2 in  a regular assessment for an earlier year, then under s. 141(2) 194 the income-tax officer must whether the assessee has claimed or not give effect to the allowances so determined.  But  he has  no power to adjudicate upon a claim for deduction  made by  the  assessee  when  making  a  provisional  assessment. [196 G; 197 A--198 B; 199 B-C]     The  section  has  been  enacted  with  the  object   of expediting collection of tax on the basis of the return made by  the assessee.  The assessment so made is summary and  is based  only  on the return and the  accounts  and  documents filed by the assessee.  If there be discrepancy between  the return made and the accounts and documents accompanying  the return  the  Income-tax  Officer may  ask  the  assessee  to explain  the  discrepancy but he must   make  a  provisional assessment  on the basis  of the return initially  filed  or clarified,  but cannot hold that certain claims made by  the assessee are in law unjustified.  The provisional assessment does  not bind the assessee nor the department and  the  tax paid pursuant to such provisional assessment is liable to be adjusted  in  the light of the final order  in  the  regular assessment,  and  it is open to the  Income-tax  Officer  to impose  a  penalty in appropriate cases  after  the  regular assessment  is completed. If it is held that the  Income-tax Officer  has jurisdiction to hold an enquiry  into  disputed matters,  the expression ’provisional assessment’ loses  all significance:  the  Income-tax Officer. may,  under  such  a summary  assessment,  without giving an opportunity  to  the assessee  to explain his claim negative it and the  assessee has  no  redress  under the Act  against  any  erroneous  or arbitrary  action  because, the Income-tax  OffiCer  is  not bound  to give notice to the assessee or hear witnesses  and an  appeal  against a provisional  assessment  is  expressly barred.                                   [196 D-E; 198 B-C; B-C;199     (2)  Under s. 210(3) the Income-tax Officer is  entitled to make an order for payment of advance-tax on the basis  of provisional  assessment  under s. 141, but it  predicates  a valid   provisional   assessment.   Since  the   provisional assessment  in  the present case, for the  year  1964-65  is invalid,  an  order for payment of advance-tax or  the  year 1965-66 could not be made. [200 A-C]

JUDGMENT: CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION:  Civil Appeals Nos. 586588  of 1967.     Appeals from the judgment and order dated April 20, 1965

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of  the  Rajasthan High Court in D.B. Civil  Writ  Petitions Nos. 51  F of 1964, and 26 and 67 of 1965.     M.C.  Chagla, Bishambar Lal, H.K. Puri, M.K.  Garg   and K.K. Jain, for the appellants.     S.T.  Desai, N.D. Karkhanis, R.N. Sachthey  and  B.   D. Sharma, for the respondents. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by     Shah, J.  Jaipur Udyog Ltd.--a Company--registered under the Indian Companies Act, 1913, established in 1953 a cement factory at Sawai Madhopur in the  State of  Rajasthan.  From time to time the Company filed its returns under the Income- tax  Act, 1922, and after the repeal of that Act  under  the Act  of  1961.  The following chart sets out the  income  or loss  returned  by  the Company for the  years  1954-55   to 1964-65  and  the 195 income  or  loss computed for the years  by  the  Income-tax Officer on assessment: Year of        Income or loss returned Income or loss compu- Assessment     by the Companyted by the1.    ted bythe T.0. 1954-55   61,24,270    (Loss)22,53,457(LOSS) 1955-56   14,59,963(Profit)19,84,447(Profit) 1956-57   12,92,958(Profit)16,88,480(Profit) 1957-58   23,05,305(Loss)12,53,222(Loss) 1958-59   46,44,779(Loss)31,48,707(Loss) 1959-60   28,77,487(Loss)20,62,180(Loss) 1960-61   11,35,365(Loss)Assessmentpending. 1961-62   66,086    (Loss) 1962-63   44,93,236 (Profit) 1963-64   7452402   (Profit) 1964-65   59,89,757 (Profit) Against  the  orders of assessment made  by  the  Income-tax Officer for the years 1954-55 to 1959-60 determining its net income or loss as set out in the chart the Company  appealed to  the  Appellate Assistant Commissioner, and  the  appeals were  pending at the dates of commencement of the  petition, in  the  High  Court of Rajasthan which  give  rise  to  the proceedings in this Court.  Assessments for the years  1960- 61, 1961-62, 1962-63, 1963-64 and 1964-65 were however  then not  completed.  In its return of income for the  assessment year  1963-64  the Company claimed to set  off  against  the income  returned Rs. 1,03,03,935 being the aggregate  amount of  loss  which it claimed it had suffered in  the  previous years and was entitled to set off against the income of that year.  The Income-tax Officer made a provisional  assessment of tax under s. 141 of the Incometax Act, 1961, and  against the  income returned by the Company he allowed deduction  of Rs.  39,89,731  as  loss carried forward  from  the  earlier years,   and  made  a  demand  for  Rs.  8,73,873   as   tax provisionally  due and Rs. 87,387 as penalty for default  in compliance with the demand.  The Company moved petition  No. 51 of 1964 in the High Court of Rajasthan and challenged the order  claiming  that the Income-tax Officer  was  bound  to accept  the return made by the Company and could not  assess it to tax on income not admitted. For  the assessment year 1964-65 the Company returned a  net income  of Rs. 59,89,757 as profit, and claimed to  set  off against  that amount Rs. 36,01,735 as loss of  the  previous years  and  paid  Rs.  12,12,596-65 as  tax  due  by  it  in accordance with s. 140A (1) of the Act.  But the  Income-tax Officer  made a provisional assessment and computed the  tax on the total income of Rs. 59,89,757 returned by the Company without  allowing  any  deduction claimed  and  ordered  the Company  to  pay an additional amount of  Rs.  17,32,768-60. Against  that  order the Company moved petition  No.  26  of

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1965, for an order quashing the demand 196 of  tax  and for an injunction  restraining  the  Income-tax Officer from enforcing the demand.     For   the  assessment  year  1965-66   the    Income-tax Officer  relying upon s. 210(3) of the Act called  upon  the Company  to  pay  Rs.  29,45,365-25  as  advance-tax.    The Company  moved petition No. 67 of 1965 in the High Court  of Rajasthan, for an  order quashing the demand.     The High Court rejected the  three  petitions.   Against the  orders  passed by the High Court, these  three  appeals have been preferred by the Company.     Section  141 of the Income-tax Act,   1961,   authorises the  Income-tax Officer to make a   provisional   assessment of   the income of the assessee on the basis of  the  return made  under s. 139 and the accounts and documents,  if  any, accompanying the return.  The assessment so made is  summary and  is   based  only on the return  and  the  accounts  and documents filed by  the assessee.  The Income-tax Officer is not  bound to make any enquiry before making  a  provisional assessment: he is not bound even to give to the assessee any notice  of his intention to make a  provisional  assessment, nor  to  hear the  assessee..  He may, if he  desires,  call upon  the  assessee to elucidate the return or  the  entries posted  in  the  accounts and documents,  but  he   is   not obliged  to  do so.  Section 141 has been enacted  with  the object  of expediting collection of tax on the basis of  the return  made  by  the assessee.  The  Act  contains  several provisions for collection of tax before regular  assessment, e.g.  payment  of  advance-tax, deduction of tax  at  source from  salary  and dividends, provision  for  self-assessment etc.  The object of  these provisions  is  to collect tax on certain classes of income before  regular  assessment.   The provisional  assessment does not bind the assessee  nor  the Department:   the  quantum  of   tax   computed   and   levy thereof  are not binding upon the assessee and the  Revenue. Tax paid pursuant to provisional assessment is liable to  be adjusted  in  the light of the final order  in  the  regular assessment.   An  appeal  against  the  order  is  expressly prohibited.  The Income-tax Officer must, however, apply the rate  operative  in  the assessment year by  virtue  of  the Finance  Act and give effect to the allowances mentioned  in sub-s.  (2) of s. 141  whether  the  assessee   has  claimed them  or not.  But the assessee has no right to be heard  or to  explain or elucidate and has no right of appeal  against the computation or the levy of tax.     The  Company claimed that it was entitled to deduct  the aggregate  of  losses which it had suffered since  the  year 1954-55  year after year from the profits of the year  1963- 64.   It is true that the loss returned by the Company  year after year was in excess 197 of the amount of loss determined by the Income-tax  Officer. But  in respect of the orders of assessment   appeals   were pending.  Counsel for the Revenue concedes  that  assessment under  s.  141  being provisional,  the  Income-tax  Officer cannot  make an enquiry into disputed questions of  fact  or law, but he submits, relying upon sub-s. (2) of s. 141, that the assessee cannot claim, and the Income-tax Officer cannot allow,  loss in respect of previous years in excess  of  the loss  certified by the Income-tax Officer. That he  says  is the  effect  of ss. 72 and 80 of the Income-tax  Act,  1961. Section 72 provides:                       "( 1 ) Where for any assessment  year,               the  net result of the computation  under  the

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             head   "Profits  and  gains  of  business   or               profession" is a  loss to  the  assessee, ....               and  such loss cannot be or is not wholly  set               off against income under any head of income in               accordance with the provisions of section  71,               so much of the loss as has not been so set off               or,  ....  or where he has no income under any               other  head, the whole loss shall, subject  to               the  other  provisions  of  this  Chapter,  be               carried  forward to the following   assessment               year, and---                       (i)  it shall be set off  against  the               profits and gains, if any, of any business  or               profession  carried on by him  and  assessable               for that assessment year:                            Provided  that  the  business  or               profession  for which the loss was  originally               computed continued to be carried     on by him               in   the  previous  year  relevant  for   that               assessment year; and                       (ii)  if the loss cannot be wholly  so               set   off,  the amount of loss not so set  off               shall  be  carried forward  to  the  following               assessment year and so on.               (2)                       (3)  No loss shall be carried  forward               under   this  section  for  more  than   eight               assessment  years  immediately succeeding  the               assessment  year for which the loss was  first               computed."               Section 80 of the Act provides:                       "Notwithstanding  anything   contained               in   this      Chapter, no loss which has  not               been   determined   in       pursuance  of   a               return  filed  under  section  139,  shall  be               carried forward and set off under  sub-section               (1 )    of section 72 or               " Under s. 72(1) read with s. 80 loss of a previous year under the  head  of  income from profits and  gains  of  business, profession 198 or  vocation may be carried forward to the  next  succeeding year only if it has been determined in pursuance of a return filed  under  s.  139. If it is not  so  determined  in  the assessment of the subsequent year the loss cannot be carried forward  and  set off against the profit of  the  subsequent year  or years.  By  sub-s.  (2)  of s. 141  the  Income-tax Officer  is  enjoined  to  give   effect  to   the  loss  so certified  and  carried forward.  But it does   not   follow therefrom  that  when the assessee claims that  out  of  the income  of  the  year returned by him  certain  amounts  are liable to be deducted in computing the taxable total income, the  Income-tax Officer may adjudicate upon the validity  of the  claim  in  making a  provisional  assessment.   In  our judgment,  if it be granted that the Income-tax Officer  has jurisdiction  to hold an enquiry into disputed matters,  the expression   "provisional   assessment"    may   lose    all significance: the income-tax  Officer  may  under  a summary assessment  without  giving an opportunity to  the  assessee to  explain  his claim negative it and the assessee  has  no redress  under  the Act against any erroneous  or  arbitrary action.   The  Court  would not,  unless  compelled  by  the phraseology  of   the statute or by  the  clear  implication arising  therefrom, be justified   in accepting  that  view. The  clearest implication of s. 141 bars an enquiry  at  the

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stage  of  making  a provisional  assessment  into  disputed questions of law and fact:  it is a matter of no moment that the  dispute raised is complicated or is easy  of  solution. In  our judgment, once a dispute is raised by  the  assessee the  Income-tax Officer has no discretion.   By  sub-section (2) of s. 141 the Income-tax  Officer  is  enjoined  to  give  effect  to  the provisions  of s. 32(2), 72(1), 73(2) and 74(1) of the  Act: sub-s.  (2) does not enlarge his jurisdiction  under  sub-s. (1).   The  High Court was of the view that the basic  scheme  of the  Act is that tax is to be charged at the rate  or  rates prescribed for the year on the total income of the  assessee and  in accordance with the provisions of the Act, and  that this basic scheme applies alike to a provisional  assessment as to a  regular  assessment. Consequently in construing the provisions  of  s. 141 of the  Act, assessment of  tax  must also  be  made  in  accordance  with   and  subject  to  the provisions  of  the  Act,  i.e.  in  making  u   provisional assessment  the  "necessary facts" about the income  of  the assessee  must be taken by the Income-tax Officer  from  the return  and the documents accompanying it and he should  not travel  beyond, but in making the provisional assessment  he cannot ignore the other statutory provisions: he must  apply the  law  correctly to the   admitted facts as  per  return. The High  Court  proceeded      to   observe:                      "The   combined  effect  of   the   two               sections, namely,   sections 72 and 80 of  the               Act,  is that a business loss can  be  carried               forward to the subsequent assessment years 199 only  when it has been determined in pursuance of  a  return filed under section 139 of the Act." The claim of the Company that it was entitled to the benefit of carry forward losses of previous years, merely because it had shown such losses in the returns, could not, in the view of the High Court, be accepted:  to give effect to the claim of  the Company, in the view of the High Court, will  be  to ignore the provisions of s. 80 which apply both to a regular assessment and a provisional assessment under s. 14].     We  are unable to accept the opinion of the High  Court. If it be assumed that provisional assessment has to  be made in accordance with and subject to the provisions of the Act, distinction  between a provisional assessment and a  regular assessment gets completely blurred.  The scheme of s. 141 is to  call upon the assessee to pay tax provisionally  at  the appropriate  rate  on what he admits is his taxable  income, subject  to the benefit of the allowances under sub-s.  (2). The  section does not permit an enquiry to be  made  whether the total income returned by the assessee exceeds the amount admitted  by him, nor whether the allowances  or  deductions claimed  are admissible.  If there be a discrepancy  between the return made and the accounts and documents  accompanying the  return, the Income-tax Officer may ask the assessee  to explain  the  discrepancy, but he must  make  a  provisional assessment  on  the basis of the return  initially  made  or clarified  and the accounts and documents filed.  He  cannot make a provisional assessment by holding that certain claims made  by  the  assessee  are  in  law  unjustified.   If  it transpires  that  the assessee has without reasonable  cause concealed  particulars   of  his  income  or  has  furnished inaccurate particulars of his income, it may be open to  the Income-tax  Officer  to impose penalty upon  him  after  the regular assessment is completed.  But it is not open to  him to  determine  whether  there has been  any  concealment  of

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particulars  of  income or to decide  whether  claims  which have  been  made  are  unwarranted.  In  the  view  we  have expressed,  the  Income-tax  Officer was  not  justified  in holding  that  the claim made by the  Company  for  carrying forward  and  seeking to debit against Rs. 74 lakhs  odd  an amount of Rs. 103 lakhs odd was liable. to be rejected.     For   the  same  reasons  in  making   the   provisional assessment  for the year 1964-65 the Income-tax Officer  was not  entitled to ignore the claim made by the  Company  that against the income of Rs. 59,89,757 returned, Rs.  36,01,735 should  be permitted to be debited. The order demanding  tax of  Rs. 17,32,768-60 for the year 1964-65 also was,  in  our view, erroneous.     For  the  year 1965-66 the Income-tax  Officer  demanded payment of advance-tax on the provisional assessment for the year  1964-65. It is true that under subs. (3) of s. 210  as inserted by 200 Act  13  of 1963 and later modified by Act 31  of  1964  the Income-tax Officer is entitled to make an order for  payment of  advance tax on the basis of provisional assessment  made under  s.  141, and he is not obliged to demand  advance-tax only for the amount provisionally assessed by way of regular assessment in respect of any previous year. Sub-section  (3) of   s.  210,  however,  predicates  a   valid   provisional assessment  on  the  basis  of  which  advance-tax  may   be demanded.  But the provisional assessment for the year 1964- 65 made by the Income-tax Officer was invalid, and tax could not  be demanded on that invalid assessment.  No  order  for payment  of advance-tax for the year 1965-66 could  then  be made,  relying  upon the provisional  assessment   for   the year 1964-65.  The  appeals will be allowed and the orders passed  by  the High Court set aside.  The orders of provisional  assessment made  by  the Income-tax Officer in respect  of  the   years 1963-64   and  1964-65 will be set aside and the  order  for payment  of  advance-tax for the year 1965-66  is  also  set aside. There will be no order as to costs in these  appeals. The order of penalty in respect of the year 1963-64 is  also quashed. V.P.S.                                   Appeals allowed. 201