27 April 1970
Supreme Court
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COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX, PATIALA Vs THE AMBALA FLOUR MILLS

Case number: Appeal (civil) 1277 of 1966


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PETITIONER: COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX, PATIALA

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: THE AMBALA FLOUR MILLS

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 27/04/1970

BENCH: SHAH, J.C. BENCH: SHAH, J.C. HEGDE, K.S. GROVER, A.N.

CITATION:  1972 AIR   83            1971 SCR  (1) 388  1970 SCC  (2)  96

ACT: Income-tax  Act, 1922, ss. 31 and 34(3) &  66-Assessment  by Income-tax Officer in status of ’association of individuals, of which a member Appellate Assistant Commissioner directing assessment’  to be made on family of D-Appeals by  D  before Tribunal   whether  mintainable-D  whether  a  stranger   to proceedings-High  Court  in  reference  whether  can  modify directions   given  by  Appellate  Assistant   Commissioner- Reference to the High Court of a question not raised  before Tribunal not competent.

HEADNOTE: D.   B  and J were partners in a firm which carried  on  the business entitled the Ambala Flour Mills.  On April 29, 1948 J  filed  a  suit  for the dissolution  of  the  firm.   The litigation ended with the judgment of the Panjab High  Court delivered on September 25, 1951.  According to the  judgment the  partnership stood dissolved with, effect from the  date of the filing of the suit, but since the firm had  continued to use J’s share in the property of the firm after that date he  was  held  entitled to a  corresponding  shares  in  the profits   of the  firm after that date, or at his option, to interest  at six per cent on the value of his share  in  the property  of  the firm.  During the pendency of the  suit  B also  served  his  connection with the  business  which  was thereafter  carried on by D alone.  In the  assessment  year 1950-51 D filed three returns of income : (i) on 4-10-50 in the  status of a firm; (ii) on 14-4-51 in the status  of  an individual;  and  (iii) on 1-7-51 in the status  of  a  firm consisting  of  J and D partners.  For the  assessment  year 1951-52  D filed a return in the status of  an  unregistered firm.  For the assessment year 1952-53 D submitted a  return in  the status of a Hindu Undivided Family.  The  income-tax Officer  assessed the Ambala Flour Mills in the three  years of  assessment in the status of an association  of  persons. In  appeals  by  D  the  Appellate  Assistant   Commissioner annulled  the orders of assessment and remanded the case  to the  Income-tax Officer with a direction that the income  be assessed  as the income of the family of D. In appeals by  D the  Income-tax  Appellate Tribunal confirmed the  order  of

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annulment  but  ordered  that the direction  to  assess  the income  in the hands of D be deleted.  The Tribunal’s  order was  based  on  the  view  that D  was  a  stranger  to  the assessment proceedings.  At the instance of the Commissioner of  Income-tax the following questions were referred to  the High Court : (i) Whether D was a stranger in respect of  the income-tax  proceedings  against Ambala Flour Mills  ?  (ii) Whether  the Appellate Assistant Commissioner could  give  a direction  in the case of Ambala Flour Mills to  the  effect that  the income should be assessed in the hands of D  after annulling  the  assessment in the case of the  Ambala  Flour Mills ? (iii) Whether on the facts and in the  circumstances of the case the appeals filed by D were maintainable in law? ’Me High Court answered the first question in the  negative, the  second  in  the affirmative with  the  rider  that  the assessment  against  D  ’could only  be  in  his  individual capacity’;  and  the  third  question  in  the  affirmative. Appeals  were filed in this Court by both the  parties.   In this  appeal the Commissioner of Income-tax  questioned  the order  of the High Court by which they sought to modify  the order of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner. 389 HELD : (i) The first and third of the questions referred  to it were correctly answered by the High Court. (a)  D was competent to maintain the appeals filed by him to the Tribunal because by the order of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner  it  was  directed that he  may  be  personally assessed by the Income-tax Officer in respect of the  income of the Ambala Flour Mills. [391 C-D] (b)  In  making  a  direction  against  ’D’  the   Appellate Assistant  Commissioner  did not exercise his powers  qua  a stranger  to  the assessment proceeding.   D  had  submitted returns  and  had also appealed against the  orders  of  the assessment.  The income earned by the assessee was  assessed to  tax as income of an association of persons of  which  on finding  of the Income-tax Officer ’D’ was a member.  :Since the  Appellate  Assistant Commissioner set aside  the  order assessing  the  income  in  the  status  of  association  of individuals,  he had to give directions with regard to  the assessment  of  the income.  He was competent  to  give  the directions  in view of the provisions of s. 31 read with  s. 34(3)  of  the Income-tax Act, 1922 and  the  interpretation placed  on the litter section by this Court in the cases  of Murlidhar  Bhagwan Das and Kanpur Coal Syndicate. [392  G-E; 394 D-F] Commissioner  of Income-tax, U.P. v. Kanpur Coal  Syndicate, 53  I.T.R.  225 and Income-tax Officer,’A-Ward,  Sitapur  v. Murlidhar Bhagwan ’Das, 52 I.T.R. 335, applied. S.   C.  Prashar  and  another v.  Vasantsen  Dwarkadas  and others, 49 LT.R. 1, referred to. (ii) The  High Court exercising advisory,  jurisdiction  was incompetent  to amend the order of the  Appellate  Assistant Commissioner.   On the question referred to the High  Court, no  inquiry  into  the  power  of  the  Appellate  Assistant Commissioner  to make the impugned direction was  competent. The  second question only related to the assessment  of  the income  in the hands of D after annulling the assessment  of the  Ambala  Flour Mills. it was not  contended  before  the Tribunal that the income of the Ambala Flour Mills could not be assessed in the hands of the family of ’D The  competence of   the  Appellate  Assistant  Commissioner  to  make   the direction  could  not be and was not referred  to  the  High Court. [395 ,k-C]

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JUDGMENT: CIVIL  APPELLATE  JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos.  1277  to 1279 and 1280 to 1282 of 1966. Appeals by special leave from, the judgment and order  dated ,October  14,  1966 of the Punjab High Court  in  Income-tax Refer ence No. 16 of 1962. B.   Sen, S. K. Aiyar, B. D. Sharma and R. N. Sachthey,  for the  appellant (in C.As. Nos. 1277 to 1279 of 1966) and  the respondent (in C.As. Nos. 1280 to 1282 of 1966). Bishan Narain and A. N. Goyal, for the respondents (in C.As. Nos. 1277 to 1279 of 1966) and the appellants (in C.As. Nos. 1280 to 1282 of 1966). The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Shah,  J.  Balkishan Das, Debi Prasad and Jai Ram  Das  were partners in a trading venture, conducted in the name of the 12 Sup.  C 1/70-11 390 Ambala Flour Mills, Ambala.  On April 29, 1948, Jai Ram  Das commenced  an action for dissolution and for account of  the partnership business.  The Trial Court decreed the suit.  In appeal  to the District Court, the decree was reversed.   On appeal  under  the  Letters Patent from the  judgment  of  a single  Judge,  the  High Court of  Punjab  by  order  dated September  26, 1951 restored the decree of the  Trial  Court and  declared that the partnership stood dissolved on  April 29, 1948.  The High Court observed:               ".... notwithstanding the dissolution of  ’the               firm Debi, Parshad and Balkishan Dass  carried               on the business of the firm with the  property               of  the  firm.  On these facts,  Jairarn  Dass               plaintiff is entitled at the option of himself               to  such  share of the profits made  since  he               ceased to be a Partner as may be  attributable               to the use of his share of the property of the               firm  or interest at the rate of six per  cent               per  annum on the amount of his share  in  the               property of the firm." During  the pendency of the suit Balkishan Dass severed  his connection with the business and the business was carried on thereafter by Debi Parshad alone. In  the  assessment year 1950-51, Debi Parshad  filed  three returns of income (i) on 4-10-1950 in the status of a  firm, (ii)  on 14-4-1951 in the status of an individual and  (iii) on 1-7-1951 in the status of firm consisting of Jai Ram  Das and  Debi Parshad, partners.  For the assessment year  1951- 52,  Debi  Parshad  filed  a return  in  the  status  of  an unregistered  firm.   For the assessment year  1952-53  Debi Parshad  submitted  a  return  in  the  status  of  a  Hindu Undivided  Family.   The  Income-tax  Officer  assessed  the Ambala  Flour Mills in the three years of assessment in  the status  of "an association of persons".  In appeals by  Debi Parshad,  the Appellate Assistant  Commissioner,  "annulled" the , orders of’ assessment of the assessee in the status of association  of  persons be set aside and that the  case  be remanded  to the Income-tax Officer to assess the income  as "the  income of the family of Debi Parshad".  In appeals  by Debi  Parshad, the Income-tax Appellate  Tribunal  confirmed the orders of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner annulling the  assessment made by the Income-tax Officer and  directed that the direction for assessing the income in the hands of Debi Parshad be deleted. The Tribunal referred the following three questions at the instance of the Commissioner of Income-tax.               1  "Whether L. Debi Parshad was a stranger  in

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             respect of the income-tax proceedings  against               Ambala Flour Mills ?               391               2.    Whether    the    Appellate    Assistant               Commissioner  could  give a direction  in  the               case of Ambala Flour Mills to the effect  that               the income should be assessed in the hands  of               L. Debi Parshad after annulling the assessment               in the case of Ambala Flour Mills               3.    Whether   on  the  facts  and   in   the               circumstances  of the case the appeals.  filed               by Shri Debi Parshad were maintainable in law The High Court answered the first question in the  negative; the  second  in  the affirmative with  the  rider  that  the assessment against Debi Parshad "could only be in individual capacity"; and the third question in the affirmative. Debi Parshad was competent to maintain the appeals filed  by him to the Tribunal because by the order of the A  appellate Assistant  Commissioner,  it  was directed that  he  may  be personally assessed by the Income-tax Officer in respect  of the Income of the Ambala Flour Mills. Counsel  for  Debvi Parshad, however,  contended  that  Debi Parshad  was  a stranger to the assessment  proceedings  and the, Appellate Assistant Commissioner had no jurisdiction to direct after setting aside the order of assessment that Debi Parshad  be assessed personally in respect of the income  of the  Ambala Flour   Mills.  The relevant provisions  of  the Income Tax Act may be: noticed. The  relevant  provisions of s. 31 of the  Income  Tax  Act, 1922, are these :                             "In disposing of an appeal,  the               Appellate  Assistant Commissioner may, in  the               case of an order of assessment :               (a)   confirm,  reduce, enhance or annual  the               assessment;               (b)   set aside the assessment and direct  the               Income-tax Officer to make a fresh  assessment               after  making  such  further  inquiry  as  the               Income-tax Officer thinks fit or the Appellate               Assistant  Commissioner  may direct,  and  the               Income-tax Officer shall thereupon proceed  of               make such fresh assessment..........               (4)   "Where  as  the  result  of  an  appeal,               any  change  in, the assessment of a  firm  or               association of’ persons or new assessment of a               firm or associa-               392               tion  of  persons is ordered to be  made,  the               Appellate Assistant Commissioner may authorise               the  Income-tax Officer to  amend  accordingly               any assessment made on any partner of               the firm or any member of the association’. All the returns have been filed by Debi Parshad but in  dif- ferent  capacities.  The Income-tax Officer was of the  view that  the  business  was carried on  by  an  association  of persons  and the income from the business was liable  to  be brought  to  tax on that footing.  The  Appellate  Assistant Commissioner  was  of the view that the income  belonged  to Debi Parshad and he was liable to be assessed personally  in respect  of  the income.  Evidently the  Income-tax  Officer held  that Debi Parsbad was a member of an  association  of persons.   Since  the Appellate Assistant  Commissioner  set aside  the’ order assessing the income in’ the status of   " association of individuals", he had to give directions  with regard  to  the  assessment  of  the  income,  provided  the

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assessment was not barred by the law of Limitation. Section  34 subsection 3 prescribes for the period in  which assessment  proceedings shall be completed.  The section  at the  date  of assessment by the Income-tax Officer  read  as follows:-               "No  order  of  assessment  or  re-assessment,               other  than  an  order  of  assessment   under               section 23 to which clause (c) of  sub-section               (1)  of  section  28 applies or  an  order  of               assessment  or reassessment in  cases  falling               within  clause (a) of sub-section (1) or  sub-               section  (IA)  of this Section shall  be  made               after the expiry of four years from the end of               the year in which the income, profits or gains               were first assessable:               Provided  further  that nothing  contained  in               this  section limiting the time  within  which               any  action  may  be  taken.  or  any   order,               assessment or re-assessment may be made, shall               apply to a re-assessment made under section 27               or  to an assessment or re-assessment made  on               the  assessee or any person in consequence  of               or to give effect to any finding or  direction               contained  in  an  order  under  section   31,               section 33, section 33A, section 33B,  section               66 or section 66A". The assessment of tax had according to the law at the  rele- vant  time.  in force, ordinarily, to be  completed  by  the Income-tax  Officer within four years from the last date  of the  year  of  assessment in which  the  income,  was  first assessable.  But to this 393 rule  there were several exceptions.  If the assessment  had to  be made on the assessee or any person ’m consequence  of or to give effect to any findings or direction contained  in an  order of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner or of  the Appellate Tribunal or of the Commissioner in revision or  of an  order made in a reference, the assessment could be  made even  after  the expiry of the four  years.   The  exception applied  to an assessment made against the assessee  or  any person  in consequence of, or to give effect to any  finding or  direction  contained  in  the  order  of  any   superior tribunal,  or ’the High Court or this Court.  This Court  in S.  C.  Prashar  and  another  v.  Vasantsen  Dwarkadas  and others(1)  held that the second proviso to s. 34(3)  of  the Incometax Act, 1922, insofar as it authorised the assessment or reassessment of any person other than the assessee  after the expiry of the period of limitation specified in s. 34 in consequence  of or to give effect to a finding or  direction given in an appeal, revision or reference arising out of the proceeding   in  relation  to  the  assessee  violated   the provisions of Art. 14 of the Constitution and was invalid to that extent. In a later case Income-tax Officer, Award, Sitapur v. Murli- dhar Bhagwan Das(1) this Court explained the connotation  of the  expression  "any person" as used in s.  34  sub-s.  (3) proviso 2 at p. 346 :               "Theexpression  ’any person’ in  its  widest               connotation  may take in any  person,  whether               connected or not with theassessee,      whose               income  for any year has  escaped  assessment,               but this construction cannot be accepted,  for               the  said  expression is  necessarily  circum-               scribed by the scope of the subject matter  of               the  appeal  or revision as the case  may  be.

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             That  is to say, that person must be  one  who               would  be liable to be assessed for the  whole               or  a  part of the income that went  into  the               assessment   of  the  year  under  appeal   or               revision.   If so construed, we must  turn  to               section  31  to ascertain who is  that  person               other  than the appealing assessee who can  be               liable  to be assessed for the income  of  the               said assessment years.  A combined reading, of               section  30(1)  and section 31(3) of  the  Act               indicates  the cases where persons other  than               the  appealing assessee might be  affected  by               orders  passed by the Appellate  Commissioner.               Modification  or setting aside ’of  assessment               made   on   a  firm,   joint   Hindu   family,               association of persons, for a particular  year               may affect the assessment for the said year on               a  partner or partners of the firm, member  or               members of the Hindu Undivided family (1) 49 I.T.R. 1. (1) 52 I.T.R. 335. 394               or  the  individual, as the case may  be.   In               such  cases,.  though the latter  are  not  eo               nomine   parties   to   the   appeal,    their               assessments depend upon the assessment of  the               former.    The   said   instances   are   only               illustrative.   It is not necessary to  pursue               the matter further.  We would, therefore, hold               that  the  expression  ’any  person’  in   the               setting  in which it appears must be  confined               to  a  person  intimately  connected  in   the               aforesaid  sense with the assessments  of  the               year under appeal." In  Commissioner off Income-tax, U.P. v. Kanpur Coal  Syndi- cate(1)  this Court held that-where the  income-tax  Officer assessed  the income of an association of persons  under  s. 31(3).(b) the Appellate Assistant Commissioner was competent to  set aside the assessment and- to direct the  Income-tax Officer  to  assess  the members  individually.   The  Court observed that the Appellate Assistant Commissioner bad under the Act plenary powers in disposing of an appeal, the  scope of his powers being conterminous with that of the Income-tax Officer:  he can do what-the Income-tax Officer can  do  and can  also  direct the Income-tax Officer to do what  he  has failed to do. Debi  Parshad had submitted the returns, and  Debi  Parshad, appealed against the order of assessment.  He could,- in the circumstances  of the case, not be called a stranger to  the assessment.  The income earned by the assessee was  assessed to  tax as income of an association of persons, of which  on the  finding ,of the Income-tax Officer, Debi Parshad was  a member.   In  making a direction against  Debi  Parshad  the Tribunal  did not exercise his powers qua a stranger to  the assessment proceeding. ,Civil Appeal Nos. 1280-1282 of  1966 must therefore fail. The  Appellate Assistant Commissioner had directed that  the income  in  the three assessment years be  assessed  in  the hands of the family of Debi Parshad, apparently on the  view that Debi, Parshad represented the Hindu Undivided family of Which he was a member.  The Tribunal set aside the direction to assess the income of the Ambala Flour Mills in the  hands of Debi Parshad. personally. for in their view Debi  Parshad was  a stanger to the proceeding for assessment.  The  High Court  held,  that  the ,order of  the  Appellate  Assistant

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Commissioner  directing  assessment of "the family  of  Debi Parshad" was "clearly unwarranted and could relate only  ot Debi Parshad in his individual capacity". Appeals  Nos. 1277 to 1279 of 1966 were filed  against  that part of the order of the High Court by which they sought  to ,modify  the order of the Appellate Assistant  Commissioner. The (1)  53 I.T.R. 225. 395 High Court exercising advisory jurisdiction was incompetent to amend the order of the Appellate Assistant  Commissioner. But  on the question referred to the High Court, no  inquiry into  the power of the Appellate Assistant  Commissioner  to make  the  impugned  direction was  competent.   The  second question only related to the assessment of the income in the hands of Debi Parshad after annulling the assessment of  the Ambala  Flour  Mills.   It  was  not  contended  before  the Tribunal that the income of the Ambala Flour Mills could not be assessed in the hands of the family of Debi Parshad.  The competence  of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner to  make the direction was not and could not be referred to the  High Court. Appeals Nos. 1277 to 1279 of 1966 filed by the  Commissioner therefore  fail.  There will be no order as to costs in  all the appeals. G.C.                   Appeals dismissed. 396