11 December 1985
Supreme Court
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MAYA RANI PUNJ Vs COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX, DELHI.

Bench: MUKHARJI,SABYASACHI (J)
Case number: Appeal Civil 1943 of 1974


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PETITIONER: MAYA RANI PUNJ

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX, DELHI.

DATE OF JUDGMENT11/12/1985

BENCH: MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J) BENCH: MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J) TULZAPURKAR, V.D. MISRA RANGNATH

CITATION:  1986 AIR  293            1985 SCR  Supl. (3) 827  1986 SCC  (1) 444        1985 SCALE  (2)1267

ACT:      Income Tax  Act 1922 : Section 28, Income Tax Act 1961: Sections 271 (1)(a), 297(1) and 297(2)(j).      Delay in  filing return  for assessment year under 1922 Act - Penalty - Quantum of - Determination - 1961 Act coming into effect  - Discretion  to reduce penalty fixed under new Act -  Provision of new Act - Availability of.      Imposition of  penalty -  Assessment year  or  date  of filing return  - Not  material -  Satisfaction of  assessing authority that default occurred - Importance of.      Return - Non-filing of - Whether a continuing default.

HEADNOTE:      The appellant  is the  assessee. The year of assessment was 1961-62.  The return  was due  by September 28, 1961 but the same  was neither  filed within  that time,  nor was any extension asked for. The assessee filed the return on May 3, 1962 beyond  more than  seven months  of the  due date. With effect from  April 1,  1962 the  Income Tax  Act of 1961 had come into  force. The  Income Tax  Officer finding  that the assessee had  not been prevented by any reasonable cause for not complying  with the  statutory obligation  to  make  the return, took proceedings under section 271(1)(a) of the 1961 Act and imposed a penalty of Rs.4,060 for failure to furnish the return within time.      The assessee  challenged the  imposition of  penalty by preferring an appeal to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner who refused to interfere and dismissed the appeal.      On further  appeal the  Appellate  Tribunal  held  that penalty was  leviable under  the 1961 Act, but the amount of penalty had  to be quantified according to the provisions of section 28  of the  Income Tax  Act, 1922  and applying  the provisions of the said Act reduced the penalty to Rs. 400.      The question whether ’the Tribunal was in law competent to reduce  the penalty  levied under  section 271(1)(a) to a figure 828 lower than  the sum  equal to  2% of the tax for every month during which  the default  continued’, was  referred at  the instance of the Revenue to the High Court which answered the reference in  favour of the Revenue and against the assessee

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by relying  upon section  297(2)(j)  of  the  1961  Act  and holding that section 271(1) of the Act was applicable to the levy of  penalty for  defaults committed under the 1922 Act, and that  the word  ’may’ used in section 297(1) of the 1961 Act vested  in the  Income Tax  Officer discretion either to levy or  not to  levy a penalty but if he did decide to levy one, he  had no  option but  to  levy  the  penalty  at  the prescribed rate.      Dismissing the appeal of the assessee, this Court, ^      HELD: 1.  The assessment  was made on June 30, 1964 and proceedings for  imposition of  penalty were  directed to be initiated that  day. Provisions  of section 271(1)(a) of the 1961 Act were fully applicable and the demand of penalty was thus justified being within the limits of law. [842 C]      2. Under  the 1922  Income Tax  Act liability to make a return was  contingent upon  service of notice under section 22, while  under the 1961 Income Tax Act every person having a taxable income has under section 139 the liability to make a return within the time provided by the Act. [833 D]      In the  instant case,  clause (f)  of section 297(2) of the 1961  Act is  not attracted because the return was filed on May  3, 1962  and assessment was made subsequent to April 1, 1962. [833 D]      3. For  the  imposition  of  penalty  it  was  not  the assessment year or the date of the filing of the return that was important  but it was the satisfaction of the income tax authorities  that  a  default  had  been  committed  by  the assessee which attracted the provisions relating to penalty. Whatever be the stage at which the satisfaction was reached, the scheme  of section 274(1) and 275 of the Act of 1961 was that the  order imposing  penalty must  be  made  after  the completion of  the assessment.  The crucial date, therefore, for the  purpose of  penalty is the date of such completion, and the  satisfaction of  the authority that proceedings for levy of penalty be initiated. [834 F-G]      In the  instant case,  though the  default occurred  in September  1961   the  date  relevant  for  the  purpose  of initiating proceedings  for imposition  of penalty  is when, following the 829 assessment made,  the Income Tax Officer decided to initiate the penalty  proceedings. The  proper provision to apply for dealing  with  the  situation  relating  to  penalty  is  as provided in section 271(1)(a) of the 1961 Act. [837 A-B]      Jain Brothers  & Ors.  v. U.O.I. & Ors., 77 I.T.R. 107; Third Income  Tax Officer,  Mangalore v. M. Damodar Bhat, 71 I.T.R. 806 - [1969] 2 S.C.R. 29, referred to.      4. Under  section 28 of the 1922 Act the upper limit of penalty only  was provided  and there was no prescription of any particular  rate as  found in section 271(1)(a)  of 1961 Act. Penalty  contemplated under  the respective sections of the two Acts is quasi-criminal in character.[834 H - 835A]      5. Accrual  of penalty  depends upon  the terms  of the statute imposing  it and  in view  of the  language used  in section 271(1)(a)  of the  1961 Act,  the position is beyond dispute that the Legislature intended to deem the non-filing of the return to be a continuing default the wrong for which penalty is to be visited, commences from the date of default and continues month after month until compliance is made and the default  comes to  an end. The rule of de die in diem is applicable not on daily but on monthly basis. [840 H]      Corpus Juris Secundum, Vol 85, p. 1027, referred to.      6. The  imposition of penalty not confined to the first default but  with reference  to  the  continued  default  is

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obviously  on   the  footing  that  noncompliance  with  the obligation of  making a  return is  an infraction as long as the default continued. Without sanction of law no penalty is impossible with  reference to  the defaulting  conduct.  The position that  penalty is  impossible not only for the first default but  as long  as  the  default  continues  and  such penalty is  to be calculated at a prescribed rate on monthly basis  is   indicative  of   the  legislative  intention  in unmistakable terms  that as  long as  the assessee  does not comply with  the requirements  of law  he  continues  to  be guilty of  the infraction and exposes himself to the penalty provided by law. [841 D-E]      Third Income  Tax Officer, Mangalore v. M.Damodar Bhat, [1969] 2  S.C.R. 29,  referred to and Commissioner of Wealth Tax, Amritsar v. Suresh Seth, [1981] 3 S.C.R. 419, explained and over-ruled. 830      7. If  a duty  continues from  day  to  day,  the  non- performance of  that duty  from day  to day  is a continuing wrong. The legislative scheme under section 271(1)(a) of the 1961 Act in making provision for a penalty conterminous with the default  to  be  raised  provides  for  a  situation  of continuing wrong. [842 B]      Ajit Kumar  Sarkar v. Assistant Registrar of Companies, West Bengal, [1979] Tax Law Reports 2001; United Savings and Finance Co.  Pvt. Ltd.  & Anr.  v. The Deputy Chief Officer, Reserve Bank  of India,  [1980] Crl. L.J. 607; Oriental Bank of Commerce  & Anr.  v. Delhi  Development Authority & Ors., [1982] Crl.  L.J. 2230;  G.D. Bhattar  & Ors.  v. The State, A.I.R. 1957 Cal. 483, referred to.

JUDGMENT:      CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1943 of 1974.      From the  Judgment and  Order dated  21.12.1972 of  the Delhi High Court in Income Tax Reference No. 50 of 1968      S.K. Dholakia,  R.C. Bhatia  and P.C.  Kapoor  for  the Appellant.      S.C. Manchanda,  M.N. Tandon and Miss A. Subhashini for the Respondent.      The Judgment of the Court was delivered by      SABYASACHI MUKHARJI,  J. The  assessee is  in appeal by special leave  challenging the  decision of  the Delhi  High Court reported in 92 I.T.R. 394.      The year  of assessment  is 1961-62. The return was due by September 28, 1961, but the same was neither filed within that time,  nor was  any extension  asked for.  The assessee filed the  return on  May 3,  1962 beyond  more  than  seven months of  the due date. With effect from April 1, 1962, the Income Tax  Act of 1961 (’1961 Act’ for short) had come into force. The Income Tax Officer took proceedings under section 271(1)(a) of the 1961 Act and imposed a penalty of Rs. 4,060 for failure  to furnish  the return  within the  time  on  a finding that  the assessee  had not  been prevented  by  any reasonable  cause  for  not  complying  with  the  statutory obligation to  make the  return. The assessee challenged the imposition  of  penalty  by  preferring  an  appeal  to  the Appellate Assistant  Commissioner who  refused to  interfere and dismissed  the appeal.  On further  appeal the Appellate Tribunal 831 held that  penalty was  leviable under  the 1961 Act but the amount of  penalty had  to be  quantified according  to  the

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provisions of  section 28 of the Income Tax Act, 1922 (’1922 Act’ for  short). Applying  the provisions  of the 1922 Act, the Tribunal  reduced the penalty to Rs.400. At the instance of the  Revenue the  following question  was referred to the High Court under section 256(1) of the 1961 Act:           "Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances of           the case,  the Tribunal  was in  law competent  to           reduce the  penalty levied under section 271(1)(a)           to a  figure lower than the sum equal to 2% of the           tax for  every  month  during  which  the  default           continued but  not exceeding  the aggregate 50% of           the tax?" The High  Court answered  the reference  in  favour  of  the revenue and against the assessee.      Though the quantum of penalty is small, the question of law is of substantial importance, and covers on aspect which often arises  for determination  before the  tax authorities and the High Courts.      Provisions of  three sections,  one of the 1922 Act and two of  the 1961  Act, are  relevant for the decision of the point at  issue. Section  28 of  the 1922  Act,  as  far  as relevant, provided :           "Penalty for  concealment of  income  or  improper           distribution of profits:-           (1) If  the Income  Tax Officer,  or the Appellate           Assistant Commissioner  or the Appellate Tribunal,           in the  course of  any proceedings under this Act,           is satisfied that any person -           (a) has without reasonable cause failed to furnish           the return  of  his  total  income  which  he  was           required to  furnish, by  notice given  under sub-           section (1)  or sub-section  (2) of  section 22 or           section 34, or has without reasonable cause failed           to furnish  it within  the time allowed and in the           manner required by such notice, or            (b) x x x x 832            (c) x x x x           he or  it may direct that such person shall pay by           way of  penalty in  the case referred to in clause           (a) in  addition to  the amount  of the income tax           and super  tax, if  any, payable by him, a sum not           exceeding one and a half times that amount..... "      The two  sections relevant to the point of the 1961 Act are sections  271 and  297. Section 271 is the corresponding provision of  section 28.  Sub-section (1)(a) thereof is the relevant provision. It provides :           "If the  Income Tax  Officer ... is satisfied that           any person :           (a) has without reasonable cause failed to furnish           the return  of total  income which he was required           to furnish under sub-section (1) of section 139 or           by notice  given under  sub-section (2) of section           139 or section 148 or has without reasonable cause           failed to  furnish it  within the time allowed and           in the  manner  required  by  sub-section  (1)  of           section 139 or by such notice, as the case may be,           or           (b) x x x x x           (c) x x x x x           he may direct that such person shall pay by way of           penalty :           (a) x x x x x           (b) in  any other  case, in addition to the amount           of the tax, if any, payable by him, a sum equal to

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         2% of  the assessed  tax for  every  month  during           which the default continued." Section 297(1)  repealed the  1922 Act.  Sub-section (2), as far as relevant, provided :           "Notwithstanding the  repeal of  the Indian Income           Tax Act,  1922 (hereinafter  referred  to  as  the           repealed Act),- 833           (a) to (e) x x x           (f) any proceeding for the imposition of a penalty           in respect  of any assessment completed before the           first day  of April, 1962 may be initiated and any           such penalty may be imposed as if this Act had not           been passed ;           (g) any proceeding for the imposition of a penalty           in respect  of any  assessment for the year ending           on March  31, 1962,  or any  earlier year which is           completed on or after first day of April, 1962 may           be initiated  and any  such penalty may be imposed           under this Act ..."      It is  sufficient to  take note  of the  position  that under the 1922 Act liability to make a return was contingent upon service of notice under section 22 while under the 1961 Act every  person having  a taxable income has under section 139 the  liability to make a return within the time provided by the  Act. On  the facts of the case before us, clause (f) of section  297(2) of  the 1961 Act is not attracted because the return was filed on May 3, 1962, and assessment was made subsequent to April 1, 1962.      The Income Tax Officer found that there was default for a little  more than  seven months. He imposed penalty at the rate of  2% as provided in section 271(1)(a) of the 1961 Act and raised  a demand  of Rs.  4,060. That  demand  has  been upheld  in  appeal.  The  Tribunal  did  not  refer  to  the provisions of  section 271 (1)(a) while reducing the penalty to Rs.  400 but the reduction was directed on the basis that the assessee  was ill  and had been absent from headquarters on that account. Before the High Court the Revenue had taken the stand  that there  was  statutory  prescription  in  the matter of  imposition of penalty and the Act having provided that the  penalty shall be a sum equal to 2% of the assessed tax for  every month  during which  the default continued, a sum equal to the prescribed rate had to be imposed and could not be  reduced. The  High Court  accepted the  stand of the Revenue and found support for its conclusion by relying upon section 297(2)(j)  of the  1961 Act and holding that section 271(1) of that Act was applicable to the levy of penalty for defaults committed under the 1922 Act. According to the High Court the  words "such  penalty" occurring  in clause (g) of section 297(2)  of the 1961 Act related to penalty which was referred to  in the  earlier part  of that  clause,  namely, penalty impossible under section 271 of the 1961 Act and had no reference to penalty under section 28 of the 1922 Act. It was of the further view that the 834 word ’may’  under section  297(1) of  the 1961 Act vested in the Income  Tax Officer  discretion either to levy or not to levy a  penalty but  if he did decide to levy one, he had no option but  to levy  penalty at  the prescribed rate. In the instant case, the Income Tax Officer was, therefore, obliged to levy  penalty at  the rate  of 2%  per month subject to a maximum of  50% of  the demanded  tax. Exercising  the  same powers as the Income Tax Officer did, the Appellate Tribunal had no  jurisdiction to  reduce the  penalty to a sum lesser than the  prescribed rate. Support for the conclusion of the

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High Court  was drawn  from a Constitution Bench decision of this court  in Jain  Brother &   Ors.  v. Union  of India  & Ors., 77 I.T.R. 107.      In Jain  Brothers’ Case  this Court mainly examined and decided about  the vires  of section  297(1)(g) as  also the justification of  fixing the commencement of the Act of 1961 with effect  from April  1, 1962. Challenge was on the basis of Article  14 of the Constitution. This Court took the view that it  was for  the Legislature  to fix  the date  when  a particular statute  would  come  into  force  and  with  the repealing of the 1922 Act Parliament was fully competent and it was  within its  legislative jurisdiction to fix April 1, 1962, as  the date  of commencement  of the  1961  Act.  The validity of  section 297  (2) and  in particular clauses (f) and (g)  thereof was  upheld. The  Court held  that  penalty proceedings were  not  necessarily  a  continuation  of  the assessment proceedings.  It was  well settled that in fiscal enactments the  legislature has  a larger  discretion in the matter of  classification so  long as there was no departure from the  rule that  persons included  in a  class  are  not singled out  for special  treatment. It  was not possible to say that  while applying the penalty provisions contained in the Act  of 1961  to cases of persons whose assessments were not completed  after April  1,  1962,  any  class  has  been singled out  for special  treatment. It was obvious that for the imposition  of penalty it was not the assessment year or the date  of the filing of the return that was important but it was the satisfaction of the income tax authorities that a default had  been committed  by the assessee which attracted the provisions  relating to  penalty. Whatever  the stage at which the  satisfaction was  reached the  scheme of sections 274(1) and  275 of  the Act  of  1961  was  that  the  order imposing penalty  must be  made after  the completion of the assessment. The  crucial date, therefore, for the purpose of penalty is the date of such completion, and the satisfaction of the  authority that  proceedings for  levy of  penalty be initiated.      Under section  28 of  the 1922  Act the  upper limit of penalty only  was provided  and there was no prescription of any particular  rate as  found in  section 271(1)(a) of 1961 Act. That penalty 835 contemplated under  the respective  sections of the two Acts is quasi-criminal in character is not disputed. Mr. Dholakia for the appellant canvassed before us that in Jain Brothers’ case the  challenge raised  by the assessee was not examined with reference  to the  provisions  of  Art.  20(1)  of  the Constitution. Under  sub-art. (1) of Art. 20 no person is to be subjected to a penalty greater than that which might have been inflicted  under the  law in  force at  the time of the commission of  the offence. According to counsel, when there was default  in furnishing  the return  within September 28, 1961, the  breach had  occurred and the assessee had exposed himself to be visited with penalty. That was a time when the Act of  1922 was in force. Therefore, for levying penalty on the assessee  resort should have been made to the provisions of section  28 of  the 1922 Act and not to section 271(1)(a) of the  1961 Act. If the 1922 Act applied, in the absence of a prescription of any particular rate or the minimum, it was open to  the Tribunal to reduce the penalty in the manner it has done  and no  objection could be raised to the reduction of the  quantum of  penalty.  In  Jain  Brothers’  case  the conclusions of  a three  Judge Bench  in  Third  Income  Tax Officer, Mangalore  v. M.  Damodar Bhat,  71  I.T.R.  806  - [1969] 2  S.C.R. 29,  were quoted with approval. In Damaodar

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Bhat’s case this Court had said :           "In other words, the procedure of the new Act will           apply  to   the  cases   contemplated  by  section           297(2)(j) of the new Act mutatis mutandis." In Jain  Brothers’ case  the Court  held that "similarly the provisions of  section 271  of the  Act of  1961 will  apply mutatis  mutandis   to  proceedings   relating  to   penalty initiated in accordance with section 297(2)(g) of that Act."      Learned counsel  for the  appellant has taken the stand that the  observations in  Damodar Bhat’s  case  which  were approved by  the five  Judge Bench  in Jain  Brother’s  case related only to the procedural part of it and this Court did not decide the question of quantum.      The contention  of Mr.  Dholakia that  in  providing  a prescribed rate  of penalty  for  imposition  under  section 271(1)(a) of  the 1961  Act there has been breach of Article 20(1) of  the Constitution  cannot be accepted. A five Judge Bench of  this Court  in K.  Satwant Singh  v. The  State of Punjab, [1960] 2 S.C.R. 89, examined a similar submission at great length keeping Article 20 of the Constitution in view. In the  matter before  the Constitution  Bench this question arose for consideration in view 836 of the  fact that  no minimum  sentence  of  fine  had  been provided under  section 420  of the  Indian Penal Code which was the  law in  force at the time of the occurrence but the provisions of  Ordinance No. 29 of 1943 made imposition of a minimum  fine   compulsory.  Imam,  J.  who  spoke  for  the Constitution Bench, at page 113 of the report stated :           "In the  present case  even if  it be assumed that           section 10  of the  Ordinance was an ex post facto           law in  that in  the matter  of penalty  a minimum           sentence of  fine was  directed to be imposed by a           court whereas  at  the  time  that  the  appellant           committed the  offence, section  420 contained  no           such provision,  what is  prohibited under Article           20 of  the Constitution  is the  imposition  of  a           penalty greater  than that  which might  have been           inflicted under  the law  in force  at the time of           the commission  of the offence. The total sentence           of fine  - ’ordinary’  and ’compulsory’  - in  the           present case  cannot be  said to  be greater  than           that  which  might  have  been  imposed  upon  the           appellant under  the law  in force  at the time of           the commission  of the  offence, because  the fine           which could  have  been  imposed  upon  him  under           section 420  was unlimited.  A law  which provides           for a  minimum  sentence  of  fine  on  conviction           cannot be  read as  one which  imposes  a  greater           penalty than  that which might have been inflicted           under the law at the time of the commission of the           offence where  for such  an offence  there was  no           limit as  to the  extent of  fine which  might  be           imposed.      Mr. Dholakia  candidly accepts  that his  submission is contrary to  the ratio  of the decision. It is conceded that under section  28 of the 1922 Act in the facts of the case a fine of  more than  Rs. 4,060 (being within the limit of 1/2 times of  the tax  amount) could  have  been  levied.  While conceding to  that extent,  Mr. Dholakia  submits  that  the decision of  the Constitution Bench of this Court in Satwant Singh’s case  requires reconsideration  as it  has not taken into account  the ratio  of an  important  decision  of  the United States Supreme Court in the case of Elbert B. Lindsay v. State  of Washington, (1937) 81 L. Ed. 1182. We are bound

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by the  decision of  the Constitution Bench. It has held the field for  a quarter of a century without challenge and non- consideration of  an American  decision which apparently was not then cited before this Court does not at all justify the 837 submission at  the Bar for a reconsideration of the decision of this  Court in Satwant Singh’s case. On the ratio of Jain Brothers’ case, the following conclusions are reached :           (a) Though the default occurred in September, 1961           the date  relevant for  the purpose  of initiating           proceedings for  imposition of  penalty  is  when,           following the  assessment  made,  the  Income  Tax           Officer decided to initiate penalty proceedings;           (b) The proper provision to apply for dealing with           the situation  relating to  penalty is as provided           in section 271(1)(a) of the 1961 Act.      The question  that remains  for consideration now is as to whether  the default  of non-filing  of the return within the time stipulated by law is not a continuing offence. This aspect is  relevant in  the matter  of imposition of penalty and its  quantification. In  the decision  of this  Court in Commissioner of  Wealth Tax,  Amritsar v.  Suresh Seth,  129 I.T.R. 328  = [1981]  3 S.C.R.  419, the  default related to non-filing of  the return  under  section  18(1)(a)  of  the Wealth Tax  Act. The  law relating to penalty under that Act was amended in 1964 and again in 1969. These amendments were not retrospective.  With reference  to  the  application  of these amendments  the question as to whether the default was a single one or a continuing one fell for consideration. The amended Wealth  Tax provided  for imposition of penalty with reference to every month during which the default continued. This Court took the view that such a provision indicated the legislative intention  that a  multiplier had  to be adopted for determining  the quantum of penalty and did not have the effect of  making the  default a continuing one. The default having already  occurred prior  to the  enforcement  of  the amendments, the  amending  provisions  had  no  application. Dealing with the point this Court observed :           "A liability  in law  ordinarily arises  out of an           act of  commission or  an act  of omission. When a           person does  an act  which law  prohibits him from           doing it  and attaches  a penalty for doing it, he           is stated  to have  committed an act of commission           which amounts  to a  wrong  in  the  eye  of  law.           Similarly, when  a person omits to do an act which           is required  by law  to be  performed by  him  and           attaches a  penalty for  such omission, he is said           to have committed an act of omission which is also           a wrong in the eye of law. 838           Ordinarily a wrongful act or failure to perform an           act required by law to be done becomes a completed           act of commission or omission, as the case may be,           as soon  as the  wrongful act  is committed in the           former case and when the time prescribed by law to           perform an  act expires in the latter case and the           liability arising  therefrom gets fastened as soon           as  the  act  of  commission  or  of  omission  is           completed.  The   extent  of   that  liability  is           ordinarily measured  according to the law in force           at the  time of  such completion.  In the  case of           acts amounting  to crimes  the  punishment  to  be           imposed  cannot  be  enhanced  at  all  under  our           Constitution  by  any  subsequent  legislation  by           reason of  Article 20(1) of the Constitution which

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         declares that  no person  shall be  subjected to a           penalty greater  than that  which might  have been           inflicted under  the law  in force  at the time of           the commission of the offence." There can  be no  dispute to  what has been stated above. In Suresh Seth’s case this Court proceeded to say :           "In  other   cases,  however,   even  though   the           liability may be enhanced it can only be done by a           subsequent  law   (of  course   subject   to   the           Constitution) which  either by express words or by           necessary   implication    provides    for    such           enhancement. In the instant case the contention is           that the wrong or the default in question has been           altered into  a continuing wrong or default giving           rise to  a liability de die in diem, that is, from           day to day. The distinctive nature of a continuing           wrong is  that the  law that is violated makes the           wrong doer  continuously  liable  for  penalty.  A           wrong or  default  which  is  complete  but  whose           effect may  continue to  be felt  even  after  its           completion is,  however, not a continuing wrong or           default. It  is reasonable  to take  the view that           the court  should not be eager to hold that an act           or omission  is continuing wrong or default unless           there are  words in  the statute  concerned  which           make out  that  such  was  the  intention  of  the           legislature. In  the  instant  case  whenever  the           question of  levying penalty arises what has to be           first  considered  is  whether  the  assessee  has           failed without reasonable cause to file the return           as required  by law  and if it is held that the he           has failed  to do so then penalty has to be levied           in 839           accordance with  the measure  provided in the Act.           When the default is the filing of a delayed return           the penalty  may be  correlated to  the  time  lag           between the last day for filing it without penalty           and the  day on  which it is filed and the quantum           of tax or wealth involved in the case for purposes           of determining  the quantum  of  penalty  but  the           default however  is only  one which takes place on           the expiry  of the  last day for filing the return           without penalty  and not  a  continuing  one.  The           default in  question does  not, however, give rise           to a fresh cause of action every day.      This conclusion  has been seriously disputed by learned counsel for  the Revenue  and according  to him  the amended Wealth Tax  Act  and  section  271(1)(a)  of  the  1961  Act provides for  a continuing default. A Bench of this Court in State of  Bihar v.  Deokaran Nenshi,  [1973] 1  S.C.R. 1004, while examining  the provisions  of section  66 of the Mines Act,  very   appropriately  drew   the  distinction  between continuing offence and offences which take place when an act or omission  is committed  once  and  for  all.  Shelat,  J. speaking for the Court stated :           "A continuing  offence is one which is susceptible           of continuance and is distinguishable from the one           which is  committed once and for all. It is one of           those offences  which arises  out of  a failure to           obey or  comply with a rule or its requirement and           which involves  a penalty, the liability for which           continues until  the rule  or its  requirement  is           obeyed or  complied with.  On every  occasion that           such disobedience  or  non-compliance  occurs  and

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         recurs  there   is  the   offence  committed.  The           distinction between  the two  kinds of offences is           between an  act or  omission which  constitutes an           offence once  and for  all and  an act or omission           which continues and therefore, constitutes a fresh           offence  every   time  or  occasion  on  which  it           continues. In  the case  of a  continuing offence,           there is thus the ingredient of continuance of the           offence which  is absent in the case of an offence           which takes  place when  an  act  or  omission  is           committed once and for all." Under Regulation  3 read  with section  66 of  the Mines Act failure to  file the  annual return  by the appropriate date becomes an offence. There was no scope for applying the rule or de die in diem. 840      VENKATARAMIAH, J.  in Suresh  Seth’s case  quoted  Lord Lindley in  Hole v.  Chard Union,  [1894]1 Ch. D. 293, where the following observation had been made :           "What is  a continuing  cause of  action? Speaking           accurately, there  is no  such thing;  but what is           called a  continuing cause of action is a cause of           action which arises from the repetition of acts or           omissions of  the same  kind as that for which the           action was brought."      Some decisions  of  different  High  Courts  were  also quoted with  approval by Venkataramiah, J. in support of the conclusion that  the default  had been committed on the last day allowed  to file  the return  and there was no case of a continuing default.  We are  inclined to  agree with counsel for the Revenue that the conclusion reached in Suresh Seth’s case is  contrary  to  law.  Jain  Brother’s  case  was  not referred to all in Suresh Seth’s case. On the facts found in Suresh Seth’s  case where  the returns  for  the  assessment years 1964-65 and 1965-66 had been filed on March, 18, 1971, and for  which assessment  was made  on March  22, 1971, the ratio  of   Jain  Brothers’   case  would  have  been  fully applicable. Though Jain Brothers’ case was with reference to the Income Tax Act, 1961, the provisions of section 18(1)(a) of the  Wealth Tax  Act, as  amended, brought  in a  similar provision and  a sum  equal to 2% of the tax for every month during which the default continued with an optimum of 50% of the tax  due become  payable. As rightly pointed out in Jain Brothers’ case,  the question of imposition of penalty would arise only  after assessment  of tax is made and, therefore, in Suresh  Seth’s case  on the analogy of the ratio accepted by this  Court in Jain Brothers’ case the amended provisions would become applicable.      In ’Words & Phrases’, Permanent Edition, under the head ’Continuing  Offence’,   instances  have  been  given  which indicate that  as long  as the default continues the offence is deemed  to repeat  and,  therefore,  it  is  taken  as  a continuing offence.  As has  been appropriately indicated in Corpus Juris  Secundum, Vol. 85, p. 1027, accrual of penalty depends upon  the terms  of the  statute imposing  it and in view of  the language  used in section 271(1)(a) of the 1961 Act, the  position is  beyond dispute  that the  Legislature intended to  deem the  non-filing of  the  return  to  be  a continuing default  - the  wrong for  which penalty is to be visited, commences  from the  date of  default and continues month after  month until  compliance is made and the default comes to  an end.  The rule  of de die in diem is applicable not on daily but on monthly basis. 841      In State v. A.H. Bhiwandiwalla, A.I.R. 1955 Bombay 161,

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(a  decision   referred   to   in   Suresh   Seth’s   case), Gajendragadkar, J.  (as he  then  was),  after  quoting  the observations of  Beaumount, C.J.  in an  earlier Full  Bench decision of that Court observed:           Even so,  this expression  has  acquired  a  well-           recognised meaning  in criminal  law.  If  an  act           committed by  an  accused  person  constitutes  an           offence and if that act continues from day to day,           then from  day to day a fresh offence is committed           by the  accused so  long  as  the  act  continues.           Normally and  in the ordinary course an offence is           committed only  once. But  we  may  have  offences           which can  be committed  from day to day and it is           offences falling  in this latter category that are           described as continuing offences."      The imposition  of penalty  not confined  to the  first default but  with reference  to  the  continued  default  is obviously  on  the  footing  that  non-compliance  with  the obligation of  making a  return is  an infraction as long as the default continued. Without sanction of law no penalty is imposable with  reference to  the  defaulting  conduct.  The position that  penalty is  imposable not  only for the first default but  as long  as  the  default  continues  and  such penalty is  to be calculated as a prescribed rate on monthly basis  is   indicative  of   the  legislative  intention  in unmistakable terms  that as  long as  the assessee  does not comply with  the requirements  of law  he  continues  to  be guilty of  the infraction and exposes himself to the penalty provided by law.      There  are  several  statutory  provisions  where  such default is  stipulated to be visited with daily penalty. For instance, see  Ajit Kumar  Sarkar, v. Assistant Registrar of Companies, West  Bengal 1979 Tax Law Reports 2001, where the Calcutta High  Court dealing  with the provisions of section 159 and 162 of the Companies Act of 1956, held the liability to be  a continuous one; United Savings and Finance Co. Pvt. Ltd. &  Anr. v.  The Deputy  Chief Officer,  Reserve Bank of India, 1980  Crl.L.J. 607, where referring to section 58B(2) of the Reserve Bank of India Act it was held that refusal to comply with the terms of the said section created an offence and continued  to be  an offence  so long as such failure or refusal persisted;  Oriental Bank  of Commerce Anr. v. Delhi Development Authority  & Ors.,  1982  Crl.L.J.  2230,  where referring to  the provisions of the Delhi Development Act of 1957, the  Court held that the offence was a continuous one. In G.D.  Bhattar &  Ors. v. The State, A.I.R. 1957 Cal. 483, it was 842 pointed out  that a continuing offence or a continuing wrong is after all a continuing breach of the duty which itself is continuing. If  a duty  continues from  day to day, the non- performance of  that duty  from day  to day  is a continuing wrong. We  are of the view that the legislative scheme under section 271(1)(a)  of the 1961 Act in making provision for a penalty conterminus  with the  default to be raised provides for situation of continuing wrong.      In the  instant case  assessment was  made on  June 30, 1964,  and   proceedings  for  imposition  of  penalty  were directed to  be initiated  that day.  Provisions of  section 271(1)(a) of  the 1961  Act were  fully applicable  and  the demand of penalty was thus justified being within the limits of law.  In our  opinion the  High Court had taken the right view and  the appeal has, therefore, to be dismissed. In the facts of the case we direct parties to bear their own costs. N.V.K.                                     Appeal dismissed.

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