16 November 1976
Supreme Court
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PARASHURAM POTTERY WORKS CO. LTD. Vs INCOME TAX OFFICER, CIRCLE-1, WARD 'A', RAJKOT,GUJARAT

Case number: Appeal (civil) 1792 of 1971


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PETITIONER: PARASHURAM POTTERY WORKS CO. LTD.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: INCOME TAX OFFICER, CIRCLE-1, WARD ’A’, RAJKOT,GUJARAT

DATE OF JUDGMENT16/11/1976

BENCH: KHANNA, HANS RAJ BENCH: KHANNA, HANS RAJ KRISHNAIYER, V.R.

CITATION:  1977 AIR  429            1977 SCR  (2)  92  1977 SCC  (1) 408  CITATOR INFO :  R          1992 SC 377  (15)

ACT:             Income  Tax Act, 1961--Secs. 147, 148, 149,  Income  Tax         Act  1922--Sec. 10(2) vi--Reopening of  assessment--Omission         on  the  part of assessee to disclose fully  and  truly  all         material facts--Duty to disclose primary facts--Duty to draw         references  of I.T.O.--Whether I.T.O. can correct his  error         or  give effect to change in his opinion in  reopening  pro-         ceedings.

HEADNOTE:             The appellant a Public Limited Company filed its  Income         Tax  Return  relating to the assessment  years  1957-58  and         1959-60  under  the Income Tax Act, 1922.   The  Income  Tax         Officer  passed assessment orders on 16-4-1959 and on  30-3-         1961  respectively  in respect of the  two  years.   Certain         depreciation was allowed by the Income Tax Officer for  both         the years.  On 5-10-1965.   the Income Tax Officer addressed         a  letter  to the appellant stating that there  had  been  a         mistake  in the calculation of the  depreciation  allowance.         The appellant was asked by that letter if it had any  objec-         tion to. the rectification of the mistake in the calculation         of  the  depreciation amounts. for the  above-mentioned  two         years.  On  2nd February, 1966, the Income Tax  Officer  ad-         dressed a letter under section 147(a) of the Income Tax Act,         1961  alleging that the income of the appellant had  escaped         assessment  for  failure of the appellant  to  disclose  all         materials facts. The appellant in his reply stated that  the         depreciation  was calculated by the Income  Tax  authorities         and  there  was no failure on the part of the  appellant  in         disclosing all the facts.  Thereafter, the Income Tax  Offi-         cer  issued  the  notices on 4-3-1966 stating  that  he  had         reasons to believe that the income of the appellant  charge-         able to tax for the assessment years in question had escaped         assessment within the to meaning of section 147 of the  1961         Act.  The appellant was called upon to furnish fresh return.             The  appellant challenged the said notices by  filing  a         Writ Petition in the High Court.  According to the appellant         there  was  no omission or failure on its part  to  disclose         fully and truly all material facts necessary for the assess-         ment; that all material facts were placed before the assess-

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       ing  authority; and that the fact that initial  depreciation         on the new assets had been allowed was also on the record of         the department.  It was further contended that if there  was         any  oversight  on the part of the Income  Tax  Officer  the         appellant  could  not be held  responsible.  The  respondent         filed  an  affidavit in the High Court contending  that  the         appellant  did  not disclose in the  return  that  initially         depreciation  in respect of certain items of capital  assets         had  been  allowed in the past and that the same  should  be         taken into account while calculating the depreciation allow-         able  for the assessment years in question.  The High  Court         dismissed the Writ Petition on the ground that there was  an         omission or failure on the part of the appellant to disclose         truly  and fully the fact that the initial depreciation  had         been allowed in respect of items of capital assets in  ques-         tion during the previous years.             Under  section 10 of the 1922 Act an assessee is  liable         to  pay tax under the head "Profits and Gains  of  Business,         Profession or Vocation, carried on by him". Such profits  or         gains shall be computed after making a number of allowances.         Those allowances included the allowances provided by section         10(2)(vi) which deals with depreciation under section 147(a)         of  the Income Tax Act, 1961. if the Income Tax Officer  has         reason to believe that the reason of the omission or failure         on the part of the assessee to disclose fully and truly  all         material facts necessary for his assessment, income  charge-         able  to  tax has escaped assessment for that  year  he  may         subject  to the provisions of sections 148 to 151 assess  or         reassess such income or recompute the loss or the  deprecia-         tion allow-         93         ance  as the case may be.  According to section 148 of  1961         Act before making the assessment, reassessment, or  recompu-         tation under section 147, the income Tax Officer shall serve         on  the assessee a notice containing all or any of  the  re-         quirements  which may be included in a notice under  section         149(1).  The Income Tax Officer has also before issuing such         notice  to  record his reasons for doing  so.   Section  149         prescribes  a time limit for the notice.  The time limit  in         respect of section 147(a) is 8 years.         Allowing the appeal,             HELD:  1. Two conditions have to be satisfied before  an         Income  Tax  Officer acquires jurisdiction to  issue  notice         under  section 148 beyond the period of 4 years  but  within         the period of 8 years:                          (i) The Income Tax Officer must have reason                       to  believe that income chargeable to tax  has                       escaped assessment;                          (ii)  He must have reason to  believe  that                       such   income   has   escaped  assessment   by                       reason of the omission or failure on the  part                       of  the assessee to disclose fully  and  truly                       material  facts necessary for  his  assessment                       for that year.         The  duty which is cast upon the assessee is to make a  true         and full disclosure of the primary facts at the time of  the         original  assessment.  The duty of the assessee in any  ease         does not extend beyond making a true and full disclosure  of         primary facts.  Once he has done that his duty ends.  It  is         for  the  Income Tax Officer to draw the  correct  inference         from  the  primary facts.  It is no  responsibility  of  the         assessee to advise the Income Tax Officer with regard to the         inference  which he should draw from the primary facts.   If         an  Income  Tax  Officer draws an  inference  which  appears         subsequently  to  be erroneous mere change of  opinion  with

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       regard  to  that inference would not justify  initiation  of         action for reopening assessment. [98 E-G, H, 99 A-B]         Income  Tax  Officer  v. Lakhmani Mewal Dass,  103  ITR  437         followed.             2. What facts are material and necessary for  assessment         will differ from case to case.         Calcutta  Discount  Co. v. Income Tax Officer, 41  ITR  191,         followed.         The Income Tax return has to be filled in form, No. C  under         rule 19 of the Income Tax Rules, 1922.  Part V of that  form         deals with depreciation.  The said part requires a number of         columns  to be filled in by the assessee.  It has  not  been         suggested  that any of the information furnished or  any  of         the  particulars  given in those columns  by  the  appellant         Company  were factually incorrect.  When Income Tax  Officer         relies  upon his own records for determining the  amount  of         depreciation ’and makes. a mistake in doing so, the  respon-         sibility  for the mistake cannot be ascribed to an  omission         or failure on the part of the assessee.  [99 D--100 B-D,  E-         F]         Commission  of Income Tax v. Bhanji Lavli, 79 ITR  582  fol-         lowed.             (Taxes are the price that is paid for civilisation.   It         is  essential that those who are entrusted with the task  of         calculating  and  realising that  price  should  familiarise         themselves  with  the relevant provisions and  become  well-         versed with the law on the subject.  Any remissness on their         part  can only be at the cost of the national exchequer  and         must  necessarily  result in loss of revenue.  At  the  same         time,  it has to be borne in mind that the policy of law  is         that there must be a point of finality in all legal proceed-         ings).

JUDGMENT:         CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1792 of 1971.             Appeal from the Judgment and Order dated the 31st March,         1970 of the Gujarat High Court in Special Civil  Application         No. 545/66.         R.H.  Dhebar, S.K. Dholakia and A.C. Bhatia for  the  appel-         lant.         R.M. Mehta and Girish Chandra, for Respondent.         94         The Judgment of the Court was delivered by             KHANNA,  J.  This appeal on certificate is  against  the         judgment  of  Gujarat High Court dismissing  petition  under         article 226 of the Constitution of India filed by the appel-         lant  for a writ of certiorari or other appropriate writ  to         quash two notices issued by the respondent to the  appellant         under  section 148 of the Income-tax Act, 1961  (hereinafter         referred to as the Act of 1961).             The  matter relates to the assessment years 1957-58  and         1959-60.  The  appellant is a public limited  company  which         carries on the business of manufacture of pottery and  sani-         tary  wares at Morvi and other places in the State of  Guja-         rat.  In respect of the assessment year 1957-58, the  corre-         sponding  accounting year for which ended on July 31,  1966,         the  appellant filed its return under the Indian  Income-tax         Act, 1922 (hereinafter referred to as the Act of 1922).  The         predecessor-in-interest of the responded by assessment order         dated April 16, 1959 assessed the total income of the appel-         lant  at  Rs. 4,60,372.  In computing the  said  income  the         Income-tax  Officer allowed depreciations amounting  to  Rs.         5,05,487.   For  the assessment year 1959-60  the  appellant

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       like wise filed return.  Assessment order in respect of that         year was made on March 30, 1961 and the income of the appel-         lant  was  assessed   at   Rs.  11,04,650   after   allowing         depreciation  of Rs. 3,57,926.             On  October 5, 1965 a letter was addressed on behalf  of         the respondent to the appellant stating that there had  been         a  mistake in the calculation of the depreciation  allowance         in  respect  of certain items of the capital assets  of  the         appellant  for  the period covered by the  assessment  years         1955-56  to  1962-63.  As a result of the  mistake,  it  was         stated, a sum of Rs. 2,39,723 had been allowed as  deprecia-         tion allowance in excess of the permissible limit.  Enclosed         with  the  letter was a chart  showing  excess  depreciation         allegedly  allowed during the above mentioned  period.   The         excess  amounts  of depreciation for the years  1957-58  and         1959-60 were mentioned in the chart to be Rs. 37,869 and Rs.         26,945 respectively.  The appellant company was asked if  it         had  any  objection to the rectification  of   the  mistake,         the above letter was followed by another letter wherein  the         respondent  wrote  to  the appellant  that "the  mistake  in         depriciation  arose  because  the  initial depriciation  was         not  taken into account in finding out  whether  the   total         depreciation allowed exceeded the original cost".  On Febru-         ary  2,  1966  the  Income-tax  Officer  addressed  ’another         letter  to  the appellant stating that  for  the  assessment         years  1957-58 and 1959-60 the income of the  appellant  had         escaped assessment for failure of the-appellant to  disclose         all  material facts within the meaning of section 147(a)  of         the Act of 1961.  The appellant in reply stated that  depre-         ciation calculation sheets had been worked by the income-tax         authorities  and  there was no failure on the  part  of  the         appellant to disclose all facts.  The impugned notices  were         thereafter issued on March 4, 1966 by the Incometax  Officer         to the appellant stating that he had reason to believe  that         income of the appellant chargeable to tax for the assessment         years in question had escaped assessment within the  meaning         of  section 147 of the Act of 1961.  The Income-tax  Officer         accordingly  stated that he proposed to recompute and  reas-         sess the income/loss/depreciation         95         allowance for the aforesaid years.  The appellant was called         upon  to  furnish returns in the prescribed form  within  30         days  from the date of the service of the notices.   It  was         also  mentioned  that the notices were  being  issued  after         obtaining the necessary satisfaction of the Commissioner  of         Income-tax.             The appellant thereafter filed writ petition in the High         Court  on  April  29, 1966.  According to the  case  of  the         appellant,  there was no omission or failure on its part  to         disclose  fully and truly all material facts  necessary  for         the assessment.  All material facts, it was stated,  regard-         ing  the acquisition of various capital assets from time  to         time  were on the record of the department.  The  fact  that         initial depreciation on the new assets had been allowed  was         also  on  the record of the department.  If  there  was  any         oversight on the part of the Income-tax Officer, the  appel-         lant,  it  was claimed, could not be  held  responsible  for         that.             The  petition  was resisted by the  respondent  and  the         affidavit of Shri N.M. Baxi, Income-tax Officer was filed in         opposition  to the petition.  According to  that  affidavit,         the  appellant did not disclose in the return  that  initial         depreciation  in respect of certain items of capital  assets         had  been  allowed in the past and that the same  should  be         taken into account while calculating the depriciation allow-

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       able for the assessment years in question.             The  High  Court  found that the  first  requirement  of         section 147(a) of the Act of 1961 was satisfied inasmuch  as         the Income-tax Officer had reason to believe that the income         of  the appellant for the two assessment years  in  question         had  escaped assessment.  The mistake arose because  of  the         fact that the initial depreciation allowance which had  been         allowed to the appellant in respect of some of the items  of         the capital assets was not taken into account while  comput-         ing  the depreciation allowance during the  relevant  years.         As  a  result of that, it was found  that  the  depreciation         allowance  during the various years, including  the  initial         depreciation,  exceeded the original cost of those items  of         the  capital  assets  to the appellant.   Dealing  with  the         question as to whether there was omission or failure on  the         part of the appellant to disclose truly and fully all  mate-         rial facts, it was observed that the appellant was bound  to         disclose the fact that initial depreciation had been allowed         in respect of the items of capital assets in question during         the  previous  years.  The  appellant as such .was  held  to         have failed to disclose all material facts.  The plea of the         appellant  that all the material facts were already  on  the         record of the department, in the opinion of the High  Court,         did  not make material difference. In result,  the  petition         was dismissed.             Before dealing with the contentions advanced in  appeal,         it  may  be apposite to refer to  the  relevant  provisions.         According to section 10 of the Act of 1922, the tax shall be         payable by an assessee under the head "Profits and gains  of         business  profession  or vocation" in respect of the  profit         or gains of any business, profession or vocation carried  on         by  him.   Such  profits or gains shall  be  computed  after         making  a  number of allowances.  Those  allowances  include         those         96         allowed in respect of depreciation, as mentioned in  clauses         (vi)  and  (vi-a) of sub-section (2), the material  part  of         which at the relevant time read as under:                             (vi) in respect of depreciation of  such                       buildings, machinery plant or furniture  being                       the   property   of  the   assessee,   a   sum                       equivalent  ......  to such percentage on  the                       written down value thereof as may in any  case                       or class of cases be prescribed, and where the                       buildings  have  been  newly  erected  or  the                       machinery  or  plant  being  new,  not   being                       machinery or plant entitled to the development                       rebate   under   clause   (vi-b),   has   been                       installed, after the 31st day of March,  1945,                       and before the 1st day of April, 1956, a  fur-                       ther   sum   (which  shall  however   not   be                       deductible  in  determining the  written  down                       value  for  the purposes of  this  clause)  in                       respect   of   the   year   of   erection   or                       installation equivalent,--                          (a)  in the case of buildings the  erection                       of which is begun and completed between the st                       day  of April 1946 and the 31st day  of  March                       1956  (both dates inclusive), to  fifteen  per                       cent, of the cost thereof to the assessee;                          (b) in the case of other buildings, to  ten                       per cent of the cost thereof to the assessee;                          (c)  in the case of machinery or plant,  to                       twenty  per cent, of the cost thereof  to  the                       assessee;

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                     Provided that--                           (a)...................                           (b)...................                             (c)  the aggregate of all allowances  in                       respect of depreciation made under this clause                       and  clause (vi-a) or under any  Act  repealed                       hereby,  or under the Indian  Income-tax  Act,                       1886  (II of 1886), shall, in no case,  exceed                       the  original  cost  to the  assessee  of  the                       buildings,  machinery, plant or furniture,  as                       the   case  may  be;  (vi-a)  in  respect   of                       depreciation of buildings newly erected, or of                       machinery  or plant being new which  has  been                       installed, after the 31st day of March,  1948,                       a  further sum (which shall be  deductible  in                       determining  the written down value) equal  to                       the   amount  admissible  under  clause   (vi)                       (exclusive  of the extra allowance for  double                       or multiple shift working of the machinery  or                       plant  and the initial depreciation  allowance                       admissible  under  that clause for  the  first                       year  of  erection  of  the  building  or  the                       installation of the machinery or plant) in not                       more than five successive assessments for  the                       financial  years next following  the  previous                       year in  which such  buildings are erected and                       such machinery and plant installed and falling                       within the period commencing on the 1st day of                       April,  1949,  and ending on the 31st  day  of                       March, 1959,"         97         It  is apparent from the above provisions that  depreciation         of  three  distinct  kinds could be allowed  in  respect  of         buildings,  machinery and plant.  The first category was  of         ordinary  depreciation equivalent to such percentage on  the         written down value thereof as may be prescribed. The  second         category was of depreciation of buildings, newly erected, or         new machinery or plant not being machinery or plant entitled         to  development  rebate under clause (vi-b) which  has  been         installed after the 31st day of March 1945 and before the st         day of April 1956 equivalent to such  percentage if the cost         thereof  as  is prescribed.  Such initial  depreciation  was         granted in the first year of the construction of the  build-         ing or installation of the plant  or machinery.  This  cate-         gory  of depreciation was not deduction in  determining  the         written  down  value for the purpose of clause  (vi).    The         third  category of depreciation was additional  depreciation         which was claimable for a period of five years in respect of         buildings,   newly  erected, or new machinery or  plant  in-         stalled after the 31st day  of March 1948 in terms of clause         (via).  The depreciation permissible under this category was         deduction in determining the written down value.             Clause (c) of the proviso to clause (vi) of  sub-section         (2)  of section 10, however, makes it clear that the  aggre-         gate  of all three categories of depreciation allowance  was         in  no case to exceed the original cost to the  assessee  of         the building, machinery or plant, as the case may be.             The case of the respondent is that the amount of  depre-         ciation allowed to the appellant in respect of certain items         of  capital assets for the two assessment years in  question         was so much that the aggregate of all allowances in  respect         of  depreciation made under clauses (vi) and (vi-a) of  sub-         section  (2) of section 10 of the Act of 1922  exceeded  the         original cost to the appellant of those items of the capital         assets.  There  was thus a violation of  the  provisions  of

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       clause (c) of the proviso to section 10 (2)(vi) of the  Act.         The  above mistake, it  is stated,  occurred   because   the         initial  depreciation  which  had been  allowed  in  respect         of  those  items  of  the capital   assets   was  not  taken         into   account   in computing   the  depreciation  regarding         those  items  in the two assessment years in  question.  The         present is, therefore, a case, according to the  respondent,         of  income escaping assessment under section 147 of the  Act         of  1961. Reliance in this connection is placed upon  clause         (d)  of Explanation (1) to section 147 of the Act  of  1961,         according  to  which it would be a case of  income  escaping         assessment where excessive depreciation allowance is comput-         ed.             The  material part of section  147 of the Act  of   1961         reads as under:                       147. Income escaping assessment.-- If --                           (a)  the Income-tax Officer has reason  to                       believe  that,  by reason of the  omission  or                       failure  on the part of an assessee to make  a                       return under section 139 for any                       8--1458SCI/76                       98                       assessment  year to the Income-tax Officer  or                       to disclose fully and truly all material facts                       necessary  for his assessment for  that  year,                       income   chargeable   to   tax   has   escaped                       assessment for that year, or                           (b) Notwithstanding that there has been no                       omission or failure as mentioned in clause (a)                       on  the part of the assessee,  the  Income-tax                       Officer  has in consequence of information  in                       his  possession reason to believe that  income                       chargeable  to tax has escaped assessment  for                       any assessment year,                       he may, subject to the provisions of  sections                       148 to 153, assess or reassess such income  or                       recompute   the  loss  or   the   depreciation                       allowance, as the case may be, for the assess-                       ment year concerned (hereafter in section  148                       to 153 referred to as the relevant  assessment                       year) ."         According  to  section   148 of the Act  of   1961,   before         making the assessment, reassessment or recomputation under’-         section  147,  the  Income-tax Officer shall  serve  on  the         assessee a notice containing all or any of the  requirements         which  may be included in a notice under sub-section (2)  of         section 139; and the provisions of the Act shall, so for  as         may  be, apply accordingly as if the  notice  were a  notice         issued  under that sub-section.  The Income-tax Officer  has         also, before issuing such notice, to record his reasons  for         doing  so.   Section 149 prescribes the time limit  for  the         notice.   The time limit in a case not falling under  clause         (ii)  of sub-section (1) of section 149, with which  we  are         not  concerned,  shall be eight years from the  end  of  the         relevant assessment year.  In case falling under clause  (b)         of  section 147, however, the time limit for the  notice  is         four  years  from the end of the relevant  assessment  year.         Clause (a) of section 147 of the Act of 1961 corresponds  to         clause  (a) of sub-section (1) of section 34 of the  Act  of         1922.   The language of clause (a) of section 147 read  with         sections  148 and 149 of the Act of 1961 as also the  corre-         sponding  provisions of the Act of 1922 makes it plain  that         two  conditions have to be satisfied before  an   Income-tax         Officer acquires jurisdiction to issue notice under  section         148  in respect of an assessment beyond the period  of  four

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       years but within a period of eight years from the end of the         relevant  year, viz., (i)  the Income-tax Officer must  have         reason to believe that income chargeable to tax has  escaped         assessment,  and  (ii) he must have reason to  believe  that         such income has escaped assessment by reason of the omission         or failure on the part of the assessee (a) to make a  return         under section 139 for the assessment year to the  Income-tax         Officer,  or (b) to disclose fully and truly material  facts         necessary  for  his  assessment for that  year.  Both  these         conditions  must  co  exist to confer  jurisdiction  on  the         Income-tax  Officer.  It is also imperative for the  Income-         tax  Officer to record his reasons before  initiating   pro-         ceedings  as  required by section 148(2).  Another  require-         ment  is  that before notice is issued after the  expiry  of         four  years from the end of the relevant  assessment  years,         the Commissioner should be satisfied on the reasons recorded         by  the  Income-tax Officer that it is a fit  case  for  the         issue of such notice. The duty which is cast upon the asses-         see  is  to make a true and full disclosure of  the  primary         facts at the time of the original assessment.,         99         Production  before  the Income-tax Officer, of  the  account         books  or other evidence from which material evidence  could         with  due diligence have been discovered by  the  Income-tax         Officer  will not necessarily amount to  disclosure  contem-         plated  by law.  The duty of the assessee in any  case  does         not  extend  beyond  making a true and  full  disclosure  of         primary facts.  Once he has done that axis duty ends.  It is         for  the  Income-tax Officer to draw the  correct  inference         from  the  primary facts.  It is no  responsibility  of  the         assessee to advise the Income-tax Officer with regard to the         inference  which he should draw from the primary facts.   If         an  Income-tax  Officer  draws an  inference  which  appears         subsequently  to be erroneous, mere change of  opinion  with         regard  to  that inference would not justify  initiation  of         action for re-opening assessment [see Income-tax Officer  v.         Lakhmani  Mewal Das(1)].            The  words "omission or  failure to disclose   fully  and         truly  all material facts necessary for his  assessment  for         that  year"  postulate a duty on the  assessee  to  disclose         fully and truly all material facts necessary for his assess-         ment.  What facts are material and necessary  for assessment         will differ from case to case. In every assessment  proceed-         ing,  the assessing authority will, for the purpose of  com-         puting  or determining the proper tax due from an  assessee,         require  to know all the facts which help him coming to  the         correct  conclusion.  From the primary facts in his  posses-         sion, whether on disclosure by the assessee,or discovered by         him  on the basis of the facts disclosed, or  otherwise  the         assessing authority has to draw inference as regards certain         other  facts; and ultimately from the primary facts and  the         further facts inferred from them, the authority has to  draw         the  proper  legal inferences, and ascertain  on  a  correct         interpretation  of  the taxing enactment,  the  proper   tax         leviable  see  Calcutta  Discount Co. v.   Income-tax  Offi-         cer(2)] as further observed in that case:                             "Does  the duty, however, extend  beyond                       the  full  and    truthful disclosure  of  all                       primary facts ?  In our  opinion,                       the  answer  to this question must be  in  the                       negative.  Once                       all the primary facts are before the assessing                       authority, he                       requires  no  further  assistance  by  way  of                       disclosure.  It  is

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                     for him to decide what inferences of facts can                       be reasonably                       drawn   and   what   legal   inferences   have                       ultimately   to   be  drawn.  It  is  not  for                       somebody else---far less the assessee                       to   tell   the   assessing   authority   what                       inferences, whether of                       facts  or law, should be drawn.  Indeed,  when                       it  is  remem-   bered that people  differ  as                       regards what inferences  should                       be   drawn  from  given  facts,  it  will   be                       meaningless to demand                       that   the   assessee   must   disclose   what                       inferences--whether of                       facts or law--he would draw from the’  primary                       facts."            Keeping  in view the principles enunciated above, we  may         deal  with the contention advanced on behalf of the   appel-         lant  that  the present is not a case in which action  could         be  taken  under  section 147(a) of the Act of  1961.   This         contention has been controverted         (1) 103 I.T.R. 437.          (2) 41 I.T.R. 191.         100         by the learned counsel for the respondent, who has canvassed         for  the correctness of the view taken by the High Court  in         the  judgment under appeal.             It would appear from what has been’ discussed above that         one of the essential requisites for proceeding under  clause         (a)  of  section 147of the Act of 1961 is  that  the  income         chargeable  to tax should escape assessment because  of  the         omission  or failure on the  part  of the assessee  to  dis-         close  fully and truly all material facts necessary for  his         assessment.   The present is not a case where  the  assessee         had  omitted  or failed to file the return.   Question  then         arises  as to what has been omission or failure on the  part         of  the assessee to make a full and true disclosure.   There         is nothing before us to show that in the return filed by the         assessee-appellant,  the particulars given  were  not   cor-         rect.  Form C under rule 19 of the Indian Income-tax  Rules,         1922 at the relevant time gives the form of return which had         to  be  filed by the companies.  Part V of that  form  deals         with  depreciation.   The  said part requires  a  number  of         columns  to be filled in by the. assessee. It has  not  been         suggested  that any of the information furnished of  any  of         the  particulars  given in those columns  by  the  appellant         company were factually incorrect.  Nor is it the case of the         revenue  that the appellant failed to. furnish the  particu-         lars required to be inserted in those columns.  Indeed,  the         copy  of the return has not been filed and  consequently  no         argument on that score could be or has been addressed before         us.   Part V of the form no doubt requires the  assessee  to         state the written down value in column No. (2).  Such  writ-         ten  down  value  had to be specified  without  taking  into         account  the initial depreciation because such  depreciation         in terms of clause (vi) of section 10(2) of the Act of  1922         could not be deducted in determining the written down  value         for the purpose of that clause. The case of the appellant is         that  in determining the amount of depreciation at the  time         of  the original assessment for the two assessment years  in         question,  the  Income tax Officer relied upon  the  written         down value of the various capital assets as obtaining in the         records  of the department. This stand has not been  contro-         verted.   When  an income-tax officer relies  upon  his  own         records for determining the amount of depreciation and makes         a  mistake  in  doing so, we fail to understand  as  to  how

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       responsibility  for  that  mistake can  be  ascribed  to  an         omission   or failure on the part of the assessee.  It  also         cannot  be disputed that initial depreciation in respect  of         items of capital assets in the shape of new machinery, plant         and  building  installed or erected after the  31st  day  of         March 1945 and before the 1st day of April 1956 is  normally         claimed and allowed. It seems that the Income-tax Officer in         working  ’the figures of depreciation for certain  items  of         capital assets lost sight of the fact that the aggregate  of         the  depreciation, including the initial  depreciation,  al-         lowed under different heads could  not  exceed  the original         cost to the assessee of those items of capital assets.   The         appellant  cannot be held liable because of this  remissness         on  the part of the Income-tax officer in not  applying  the         law  contained  in  clause (c) of  the  proviso  to  section         10(2)(vi)  of the Act  of  1922.  As observed by Shah J.  in         Commissioner  of  Income-tax  v.  Bhanji  Lavji,(1)  section         34(1)(a)  of  the  Act of  1922  (corresponding  to  section         147’(a)         (1)79 I,T.R. 582. S.C.         101         of  the Act of 1961) does not cast a duty upon the  assessee         to instruct the Income-tax Officer on questions of law.             It  may also be mentioned that so far as the  assessment         for   the assessment year 1957-58 is concerned, the  assess-         ment  order was once rectified and at another time  revised.         Despite  such rectification and revision, the above  mistake         in the calculation of the depreciation remained  undetected.         It  was  only in October 1965 that  the  Income-tax  Officer         realised  that higher. amount of depreciation had  been  al-         lowed  to the appellant than was actually due.  A letter  to         that effect  was consequently sent to the assessee on  Octo-         ber  5,  1965.  It was, however, nowhere mentioned  in  that         letter  that  the  higher amount of  depreciation  had  been         allowed  and  the  income as such  had   escaped  assessment         because of the omission or failure on the part of the asses-         see to disclose truly and fully all material facts.   Refer-         ence  to such omission or failure came only in a  subsequent         communication.  The submission made on behalf of the  appel-         lant is not without force that reference was made to  asses-         see’s  omission or failure to disclose truly and  fully  all         material facts because it was realised that after the expiry         of four years from the end of the relevant assessment  year,         no action for reopening of assessment could be taken on  the         basis of detection of mistake alone unless there was also an         allegation that the income had escaped assessment because of         the omission or failure  of  the appellant to disclose fully         and truly material facts.  Looking to a11 the facts, we  are         of the opinion that it cannot be said that the excess depre-         ciation was allowed to the appellant company and its  income         as such escaped assessment because of its omission or  fail-         ure to disclose fully and truly all material facts.             It  has been said that the taxes are the price  that  we         pay for civilization.  If so, it is essential that those who         are  entrusted  with the task of calculating  and  realising         that  price should familiarise themselves with the  relevant         provisions  and become well versed with the law on the  sub-         ject.  Any remissness on their part can only be at the  cost         of  the  national exchequer and must necessarily  result  in         loss of revenue.  At the same time, we have to bear in  mind         that  the  policy of law is that there must be  a  point  of         finality in all legal proceedings, that state issues  should         not be reactivated beyond a particular stage and that  lapse         of  time must induce repose in and set at rest judicial  and         quasi-judicial controversies as it must in other spheres  of

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       human activity.  So far as income-tax assessment orders  are         concerned,  they cannot be reopened on the scope  of  income         escaping  assessment  under section 147 of the Act  of  1961         after  the expiry of four years from the end of the  assess-         ment year unless there be omission or failure on the part of         the assessee to disclose fully and truly all material  facts         necessary  for the assessment.  As already mentioned,  ’this         cannot  be said in  the present case.  The appeal is  conse-         quently allowed; the judgment of the High Court is set aside         and  the impugned notices are quashed.  The parties  in  the         circumstances shall bear their own costs throughout.         P.H.P.                                                    Appeal aIlowed.         102