08 March 1977
Supreme Court
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ROSHAN-DI-HATTI Vs COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX

Case number: Appeal (civil) 284 of 1972


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PETITIONER: ROSHAN-DI-HATTI

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX

DATE OF JUDGMENT08/03/1977

BENCH: BHAGWATI, P.N. BENCH: BHAGWATI, P.N. SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA

CITATION:  1977 AIR 1605            1977 SCR  (3) 153  1977 SCC  (2) 378

ACT:             Income    Tax   Act     1922--Sec.     34(1)(a)--Escaped         income--Reassessment-Burden   of  proof  about   source   of         income--Finding  of facts of the Tribunal can be  interfered         under what circumstances---Conclusion  without  any  materi-         als-No  person acting judicially and properly instructed  as         to the relevant law would come to determination--Income  tax         Appellate  Tribunal--Whether Tribunal can ask  questions  to         assessee  informally--Whether  part  of  record--Income  Tax         Appellate Tribunal Rules 29, 30 and 31.

HEADNOTE:             The assessee, a Hindu Undivided Family, was carrying  on         business  in  gold and jewellery in Lahore till  June  1947.         In  view  of  the impending partition of  India  Roshan  Lal         decided  to move out of Lahore and  accordingly  transferred         sums  of  Rs. 12,094/-, Rs. 13,000/- and  Rs.  6,000/-  from         Lahore  Banks to New Delhi Banks.  He left Lahore  and  pro-         ceeded  to Mussoorie in June,  1947. On his way, he  stopped         at  Amritsar for a few days and opened an account  with  the         Imperial Bank of India with a view to obtaining a locker  in         the   Safe Deposit Vault but a locker was not available  and         hence he deposited a trunk which he had brought from  Lahore         containing  gold  ornaments,  jewellery and  cash  with  the         Imperial  Bank of India.  The assessee  came  to  Delhi   in         October, 19.,7. and rented a house.   In February, 1948.  he         succeeded   in securing business premises and started  busi-         ness on 30.3.1948.   The first entry in the books of account         on  30.3.1948 showed gold ornaments of Rs. 1,19,320/-,  Gold         Rawa  Rs. 1,69,020/- Stones worth Rs. 4,000/- Bank   balance         with   the Imperial Bank of India, Delhi Rs.  35,053/-  Bank         Balance with Hindustan Commercial Bank. Delhi Rs. 221/-  and         Cash of Rs. 2.800/.   The assessee thus brought in an aggre-         gate   capital  of  Rs.  3,33,414/-  in  the   business   on         30.3.1948.    in 1957. it came to the notice of  the  Income         Tax  Officer that the assessee had made considerable  income         in his gold and jewellery business but had failed to pay any         tax on such income and hence issued a notice to the assessee         under  s. 34(1)(a) of the Indian Income Tax Act,  1922,  for         bringing the income of the assessee for the assessment  year         1948-49  to tax.    The assessee flied his return.   In  the

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       course  of  the assessment proceedings   the  I.T.O.  called         upon  the assessee to explain the nature and source  of  the         capital of Rs. 3,33,414/-.             The  assessee contended that he brought the gold   Rawa,         ornaments   and  cash  representing the  capital  when    he         migrated  from Lahore and they were kept in a  sealed  trunk         with  the  bank at Amritsar and thereafter brought  over  to         Delhi  and deposited in the Safe Deposit Vault of  Hindustan         Commercial Bank at Delhi.   When the business of the  asses-         see was commenced,he surrendered the locker and brought  the         entire gold, jewellery  and  cash into the business.             The assessee observed that till he started his  business         in  March   1948, neither the ,assessee nor Roshan  Lal  had         any other business or means of income from which the  amount         of  Rs.  3,33,414/- could have been earned.    The  assessee         examined some witnesses.   The ITO also examined the  broth-         ers  of Roshan Lal who stated that the father of Roshan  Lal         was a man of ordinary means who was almost reduced to penury         by about 1940 and that he   had given a sum of Rs. 2000/- to         his son Roshan Lal for starting gold and jewellery  business         in  1935 and he had also subsequently lent some tooroes   to         Roshan  Lal  on nominal interest.   The Income  Tax  Officer         rejected the explanation offered by the assessee and came to         the conclusion that it was not possible to believe that  the         assessee  had been able to accumulate capital to the  extent         of  Rs. 3.33,414/- out of income from the  business  carried         on.    The Income Tax Officer gave credit for a sum  of  Rs.         20,000/- and treated the balance  of  Rs.         154                 3,30,414/-  as income of the assessee  from   undis-         closed  source.  On  appeal,the Appellate Assistant  Commis-         sioner allowed a further sum of Rs. 80,000./-on the  follow-         ing grounds:                         (1)  That the  assessee  transferred a   sum                       of  Rs.12,004/-,Rs./3,000/-  and  Rs.  6,000/-                       from  Banks  as  Lahore  to the  Bank  at  New                       Delhi.  This shows that the assessee was not a                       man  of very small means while he was  at  La-                       hore.                       (2)  He  was having accounts  in  4  different                       Banks and a man of very modest means would not                       have normally so many  Bank accounts.                           (3) While at Lahore. Roshan Lal had  taken                       Life  Insurance Policies worth  Rs.  22.000/-.                       A  number  of letters and  receipts  regarding                       business transactions in Lahore Indicated that                       the   Lahore business was not as small as  the                       Income  Tax Officer had taken it to  be.   The                       assessee stopped at Amritsar  and  opened   an                       account  and took Safe Deposit Vault where  he                       deposited  a sealed box.  It is reasonable  to                       presume  that there must have  been  something                       quite valuable in the box.           A  further  appeal filed by the assessee to  the  Tribunal         failed. The tribunal, when the appeal came to be heard,  put         a  question to Roshan Lal as to how he had brought gold  and         jewellery  from Lahore and enquired about the weight of  the         box.    The  Tribunal  after hearing the  arguments  of  the         parties  rejected  the  appeal.  The  main  arguments  which         weighed with the Tribunal were:                        (1) that the weight of the box was too less:                       (2)  that  the assessee did not  disclose  his                       assets  under the scheme of the Government  of                       India published in the Press Note  in  January                       1952,  requiring all evacuees to  declare  the

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                     amounts  of money brought by them  from  Paki-                       stan.                        (3) that the assessee did not file any income                       tax  returns  in Lahore. The High  Court  con-                       firmed  the  finding of the  Tribunal  in  the                       reference.          Allowing the appeal,             HELD:  (1)  The  law is well settled that  the  onus  of         proving  the  source of a sum of money found  to  have  been         received by an assessee is on him.                                                        [160 E] A             A.Govindaralulu  Mudaliar v. Commissioner of Income  Tax         (1958)  34 ITR 807 and Commissioner of Income Tax,  U.P.  v.         Devi Prasad Vishwanath Prasad 72 ITR 194 followed.         (2) The conclusion of the Tribunal on a finding of fact  can         be assailed only if it is shown that the Tribunal had  acted         without any matenal or upon a view of the facts which  could         not  reasonably be entertained or the facts found were  such         that no person acting judicially and properly instructed  as         to  the relevant law would have come to that  determination.         [161 C-D].         Mehta  Parikh & Co. v. Commissioner of   Income-Tax   Bombay         30  ITR 181, followed.             (3)  The Tribunal was right in commenting that   primary         evidence   with regard to the extent of the Lahore  business         of  the assessee was not forthcoming but it must  be  remem-         bered that the assessee was being called   upon to prove the         extent  of his business m a territory from which the  member         of  the Hindu undivided family had to .flee for their  lives         and  from  where it was totally impossible  to  produce  any         primary  evidence..  The.  finding  of  the   AAC  that  the         assessee  was doing fairly well m the business m Lahore  was         not  disturbed by the Tribunal.. The .AAC found that it  was         reasonable  to  presume  to at there  Was  something.  quite         valuable m the box .and this finding was also not  dissented         by  the  Tnbunal.  There was no material to  show  that  the         orna-         155         ments,  jewellery and cash brought by the assessee and  kept         in the sealed trunk were of the value of only Rs. 1 lac  and         not  more.    The circumstances that the  assessee  had  not         filed  any  Income Tax return could be of no  avail  to  the         Revenue because admittedly the assessee had brought substan-         tial amount from Lahore.  [161 D-G]             (4)  The  Tribunal  was wrong in  relying  upon  certain         answers  given    by  Roshan Lal, about the  weight  of  the         sealed  box  when he was questioned by the Tribunal  at  the         hearing of the appeal.   It must be pointed out  straightway         that  the answer given by Roshan Lal could not be relied  on         by  the Tribunal because there is a procedure prescribed  in         rules  29. 30 and 31 of the   Income Tax Appellate  Tribunal         Rules for taking additional evidence before the  Tribunal and         if the members of the Tribunal wanted to examine  Roshan Lal         on  any aspects of the case. they should have followed  this         procedure.  The answers given by Roshan Lal  disregarding the         perscribed  procedure could not form part of  the  record and         the  Tribunal was not entitled to rely upon the same.   [162         H, 163 A-C]            (5)  The Tribunal erred in relying on the Press Note  be-         cause admittedly the assessee had brought a sum of Rs. 1 lac         to India and even that was not declared to the Government of         India.  [163 E-F]             (6)  There  was no material on the basis  of  which  the         Tribunal  could  come to the conclusion that the  ornaments.         jewellery  and cash were not worth than Rs. 1 lac.   It  was

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       not proved that Roshan Lal or the assessee had any  business         or  other  means of income in India until  30.3.1948.    The         genuineness  of the entry of March 1948 was also  not  chal-         lenged.    It  is  utterly improbably  amounting  almost  to         impossibility  that  the assessee could have earned  such  a         large amount of Rs. 2.33.414/- as profit within a few months         in  the disturbed conditions which then prevailed in  India.         [164 B-E]             (7)  The Tribunal acted without any material and in  any         event,  the  finding  of fact reached by  the  Tribunal  was         unreasonable  or such that no person acting  judicially  and         properly  instructed  as to the relevant law would  come  to         such finding.  [164 F-G]

JUDGMENT:         CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No.. 284 of 1972.             (From the Judgment and Order dated 3-5-1971 of the Delhi         High Court in I.T. Case No. 6-D of 1964)         A.K. Sen, V.S. Desai and Bishamber Lal, for the appellant.         G.C. Sharma and S.P. Nayar, for the respondent.         The Judgment of the Court was delivered by             BHAGWATI, J.--This is an appeal by special leave direct-         ed against the Judgment of the Delhi High Court answering in         favour  of  the Revenue a question which was directed to  be         referred  by the Tribunal under section 66(2) of the  Indian         Income  Tax Act, 1922.  The controversy between the  parties         arises out of an assessment made on the assessee as a  Hindu         Undivided Family for the assessment year 1948-49, the corre-         sponding  accounting year being the financial year  1947-48.         The  assessee  was at the material time  a  Hindu  Undivided         Family  with one Roshan Lal as its manager and karta.   Till         June 1947 the assessee was carrying on business in gold  and         jewellery  at Chowk Surjan Singh in Lahore.  In view of  the         impending partition of India Roshan Lal decided to move  out         of  Lahore  and  accordingly he transferred  a  sum  of  Rs.         12,094/-  from the account of the assessee with  the  Lahore         Branch  of  the Punjab National Bank Ltd. to the  New  Delhi         Branch of that bank in June 1947.  He also transferred  from         the Lahore         156         Branch  of  the punjab National Bank Ltd. to the  branch  of         that  bank  at New Delhi two sums of Rs.  13,000/-  and  Rs.         6,000/-,  the former in his own name and the latter  in  the         name  of  his wife and obtained fixed deposit  receipts  for         these two amounts from the New  Delhi Branch of the Bank  in         July  1947.   He left Lahore in June 1947 and  proceeded  to         Mussoorie  but on his way he stopped at Amritsar for  a  few         days.  He opened an account with the Amritsar Branch of  the         Imperial Bank of India by depositing a sum of Rs. 300/- with         a view to obtaining a locker in the safe deposit vault where         he  could  deposit  for sale custody a trunk  which  he  had         brought  with  him from Lahore  containing  gold  ornaments,         jewellery  and cash.  It seems that a locker was not  avail-         able and hence he deposited the trunk in a sealed  condition         with  the Amritsar Branch of the Imperial Bank of  India  on         25th june, 1947.  The sealed trunk, according to the  asses-         see,   contained  gold  ornaments  of  the  value   of   Rs.         1,19,320/-,  gold  rawa of the value of Rs.  1,69,020/-  and         stones of the value of Rs. 4,000/-.  Roshan Lal then went to         Mussoorie  via Haridwar and stayed at Mussoorie until  about         October 1947.  The case of the assessee was that during this         period  Roshan Lal did not carry on any business nor did  he         have any other means of income.  In October 1947 Roshan  Lal

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       came over to Delhi and rented a house in Kinari Bazar with a         view  to  settling down in Delhi.  He  started  looking  for         suitable premises for commencing business and it was only in         February  1948 that he succeeded in securing suitable  prem-         ises  at  Dariba Kalan in Delhi.  He then started  gold  and         jewellery  business in these premises in the name and  style         of  Roshan-Di-Hatti on 30th March, 1948.  The  business  was         joint  family business of the assessee and the  first  entry         made in the books of account of the assessee was dated  30th         March, 1948 and it was as follows:             Gold Ornaments                    Rs. 1,19,320/-             Gold Rawa                         Rs. 1,69,020/-             Stones                            Rs. 4,000/-             Bank balance with the Imperial             Bank of India, Delhi              Rs. 35,053/-             Bank balance with Hindustan             Commercial Bank, Delhi            Rs. 221/-             Cash                              Rs. 2,800/-.         The  assessee  thus brought in an aggregate capital  of  Rs.         3,33,414/in  the business on 30th March, 1948.   It  appears         that  the  assessee  prospered in this  gold  and  jewellery         business  of Roshan-Di-Hatti but it did not file any  return         of income nor paid any income tax.  It came to the notice of         the  Income Tax Officer some time in the beginning  of  1957         that  the assessee had made considerable income in its  gold         and jewellery business but had failed to pay any tax on such         income  and hence the Income Tax Officer issued a notice  to         the assessee under section 34(1)(a) of the Indian Income Tax         Act,  1922 for bringing the income of the assessee  for  the         assessment  year  1948-49  to tax. The  assessee  filed  its         return  of income and in the course of the  assessment  pro-         ceedings,  the Income Tax Officer, called upon the  assessee         to  explain  the  nature and source of the  capital  of  Rs.         3,33,414/-  brought by it into the business on  30th  March,         1948.  The assessee pointed         157         out  that  gold rawa, ornaments and cash  representing  this         capital  were  brought by Roshan Lal when he  migrated  from         Lahore and they were kept in a sealed trunk with the  Amrit-         sar Branch o[ the Imperial Bank of India and when Roshan Lal         came  over to Delhi in October 1947, he. deposited the  same         in  a locker in the safe deposit vault of Hindustan  Commer-         cial Bank at Delhi and when the business of the assessee was         commenced, he surrendered the locker and brought the  entire         gold, jewellery and cash into the business.  It was   empha-         sised   by   the assessee as a supportive  fact  that  after         Roshan   Lal  migrated  from Lahore in June 1947  until  the         assessee  started  the business of Roshan Di-Hatti  on  30th         March,  1948,  neither the assessee nor Roshan Lal  had  any         other  business or means of income from which the assets  of         Rs. 3,33,414/- could have been earned.  This explanation was         given in the course of various statements made by the asses-         see  from time to time before the Income Tax  Officer.   The         assessee also examined Hira Lal, Father-in-law of Roshan Lal         and filed affidavits  of  Mulk Ram, Bills Mal, Dalai,  Wazir         Chand,  Devidas  Mehra and Panna Lal before the  Income  Tax         Officer  for  the purpose of showing that the  assessee  was         having a large gold and jewellery business in Lahore  before         migration and that it did not carry on any business in India         before  starting  the business of  Roshan-Di-Hatti  on  30th         March, 1948. The Income Tax Officer also examined Prem  Nath         and Kishan Chand, brothers of Roshan Lal.  The statement  of         Prem Nath was to  the effect that their father was a man  of         ordinary  means  who was almost reduced to penury  by  about         1940  and that he had given a sum of Rs. 2000/- to  his  son

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       Roshan  Lal  for starting gold  and  jewellery  business  in         1935 and he had also subsequently lent some monies to Roshan         Lal at nominal interest.  Prem Nath deposed  that  for   the         purpose  of  the business of the assessee,  Roshan  Lal  was         occupying  a  shop belonging to his father but  he  was  not         paying  rent  though demanded on the ground that he did  not         have  sufficient income to pay the rent  It was also  stated         by  Prem Nath that before the partition of the  country  the         standard  of  living of Roshan Lal and  his  family  was  no         higher  than that of Prem Nath who was getting a  salary  of         Rs. 150/- per month.  The statement of Prem Nath was  clear-         ly  directed towards showing that the assessee did not  have         any flourishing business or large income prior to partition.         The Income Tax Officer, on the basis of this material before         him,  rejected the explanation offered by the  assessee  and         came  to the conclusion that it was not possible to  believe         that the assessee had been able to accumulate capital to the         extent  of  Rs. 3,33,414/- out of income from  the  business         carried  on by it in Lahore and since the nature and  source         of  the capital  of Rs. 3,33,414/- credited in the books  of         account  of the business on 30th March, 1948 was not  satis-         factorily  explained,  the Income Tax Officer,  gave  credit         only  for a sum of Rs. 20,000/- and treated the  balance  of         Rs.  3,13,414/- as income of the assessee  from  undisclosed         sources.             The  assessee appealed against this order of the  Income         Tax  Officer and on appeal, the Appellate Assistant  Commis-         sioner took the view that, on the facts as disclosed by  the         material placed on record in the proceedings, a much  larger         allowance  should have been made in respect of  the  capital         brought by the assessee from Lahore and he allowed a further         sum of Rs. 80,000/-.  The reason given by the Appellate         158         Assistant  Commissioner  for taking this view are  a  little         material and they may be reproduced as follows:                              "There is documentary evidence to  show                       that  assessee  transferred an amount  of  Rs.                       12,094/-  from   the   Punjab  National   Bank                       account  at  Lahore to the same  bank  in  New                       Delhi  in June 1947.  It is also seen that  he                       also  transferred two amounts Rs. 13,000/-  in                       his own name and Rs. 6,000/in his wife’s  name                       from the Punjab National Bank, Lahore, to  the                       same Bank at Minto Road, New Delhi and   fixed                       deposit receipts were taken for this total sum                       of  Rs.  19,000/from the Delhi  Bank  in  July                       1947.  All these monies including the realised                       fixed  deposits later on went into the  asses-                       see’s  account  with the State Bank  of  India                       which reveals a credit balance of Rs. 35,053/-                       as on 30-3-1948.  This at least shows that the                       assessee  was  not a man of very  small  means                       while  he was at Lahore.  He was  having  four                       accounts  in different banks at  Lahore.   The                       particulars,   however, are not available  and                       it is also stated that most of  these accounts                       were  very small; but even then a man of  very                       modest  means  would not  normally   have   so                       many   bank  accounts.   Moreover,  while   at                       Lahore  Shri Roshan Lal had taken life  insur-                       ance  Policies  Rs.  22,000/-.   A  number  of                       letters and receipts regarding business trans-                       actions in Lahore were also filed which  indi-                       cate that the Lahore business was not as small                       as the Income Tax Officer has taken it to  be.

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                     There are some papers which relate  to   deals                       worth Rs. 10,000/- or more at one time.  There                       are  also several vouchers relating to  adver-                       tisement  charges  paid at  Lahore  All  these                       things together with the fact that the  asses-                       see was in position to transfer a sum of   Rs.                       31,000/-  approx. through banks indicate  that                       he  was doing fairly well in the  business  at                       Lahore.   How he could have managed  to  evade                       tax  at Lahore for all these years, is a  mys-                       tery;  but from the circumstances of the  case                       it  appears  that the assessee  had  certainly                       assessable incomes while he was doing business                       there during the pre-partition period.                             There  is another factor which has  also                       to  be  given its due weight.   While  leaving                       Lahore  and  coming  over  to  India  in  JUne                       1947,  the  assessee stopped for few  days  at                       Amritsar.   There  on the 25th June,  1947  he                       deposited a sealed box with the State Bank  of                       India Amritsar Branch. This box was  withdrawn                       by  him  on  the 20-10-47.   These  facts  are                       corroborated  by  the bank  certificate.   The                       assessee  claims  that  he  had   considerable                       amount of jewellery and gold etc. (part of his                       trading  stock in Lahore) as well as cash,  in                       this box that is why he did not take the  risk                       of carrying. it with him on his way to Mussoo-                       rie,  but kept in deposit with the State  Bank                       at Amritsar till such time. as he was able  to                       settle  down  in India.  The contents  of  the                       seated  box are unknown to the bank and so  it                       is  not  possible to ascertain  what  the  box                       actually contained.  But it is  reasonable  to                       159                       presume  that there must have  been  something                       quite  valuable  in the box as  otherwise  the                       assessee would not have kept it in the custody                       of  a bank like State Bank of India.  It  must                       also  be noted that as early as  June,   1947,                       the  assessee hired a locker in the  Hindustan                       Commercial Bank Ltd., New Delhi.  It is  clear                       therefore, that when in June, 1947, the asses-                       see  was leaving Lahore he must have had  with                       him  quite a substantial amount either in  the                       form  of jewellery etc., or cash, as otherwise                       he  would  not have taken  the  precaution  of                       either  depositing  the sealed  box  with  the                       State  Bank of India at Amritsar or opening  a                       locker in a New Delhi Bank.                             Considering  all the evidence  discussed                       above, I am of the opinion that the Income Tax                       Officer’s  allowance  of Rs. 20,000/- only  as                       capital brought over from Pakistan is too low.                       It  is true that the capital disclosed in  the                       books  as on 30-3-1948 is mostly  unverifiable                       and even assuming that the assessee was  doing                       reasonably  well  in his business  at  Lahore,                       there  are hardly any reasons to believe  that                       he could have accumulated so much capital  and                       could  have  brought all that  capital  safely                       into India; but the circumstances  of the case                       do in my view justify a much larger  allowance                       for  old capital than has been allowed by  the                       Income Tax Officer. In my opinion, a reduction

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                     of the. assessment by Rs. 80’000/will meet the                       requirement of the case."         The Appellate Assistant Commissioner thus reduced the figure         undisclosed income of the assessee to Rs. 2,33,414/-.             But  this  relief was not enough and the  assessee  pre-         ferred  a further appeal to the Tribunal.  When  the  appeal         came  to.  be  heard by the Tribunal, Roshan  Lal,  who  was         present  at  the hearing, was asked by the  Members  of  the         Tribunal  as to how he had brought gold  and jewellery  from         Lahore  and he stated that it was brought in train in a  box         of the size of 2-1/2’x l1/2’x 1’ and he was then asked  what         was the weight of the box, to which he replied stating  that         the weight of the contents of the box was about eight seers.         The  Tribunal then, after hearing the arguments of the  par-         ties, rejected the appeal.  The main arguments which weighed         with  the Tribunal in negativing the appeal of the  assessee         were:  first, if the weight of the contents of the  box  was         only eight seers, the value of gold and jewellery in the box         could not be more than Rs. 66,000/- at the then current rate         of  gold  at Rs. 90/- per tola; secondly, the Government  of         India had issued  a Press Note in January 1952 requiring all         evacuees  to  declare the amounts of money brought  by  them         from Pakistan and assuring them that in case they did so, no         further enquiries would be made from them as to how they had         earned the same and whether they had paid any tax on it  and         yet  the assessee had not declared ’before the  Revenue  au-         thorities until the commencement of the assessment  proceed-         ings  in  1957  that  it had  brought  the  capital  of  Rs.         2,33,414/-  from Pakistan; thirdly, the assessee claimed  to         have a flourishing business in Lahore in the course of which         it was supposed to have earned enough to enable it to save a         capital of Rs. 3,33,414/- and yet it had not filed         160         any  income tax return nor was it ever assessed  to   income         tax   in Lahore and fourthly, the depositions of  Mulk  Ram,         Billa  Mal, Dalai, Wazir Chand, Devidas Mehra and Panna  Lal         were vague and based on hearsay and they had no  evidentiary         value  in the absence of contemporaneous  primary  evidence.         The Tribunal, accordingly, held that the assessee could  not         have  brought  assets  worth  more  than Rs. 1,00,000/- from         Lahore  and  the estimate made by  the  Appellate  Assistant         Commissioner  did not call for any interference and in  this         view,  the Tribunal confirmed the assessment  of  the   bal-         ance  of  Rs. 2,33,414/- as the undisclosed  income  of  the         assessee for  the assessment year 1948-49.             The  assessee applied to the Tribunal for  referring  to         the  High Court the question of law arising out of its order         but the Tribunal declined to make a reference on the  ground         that  in  its opinion no question of law arose  out  of  its         order.  This led to the making of an application to the High         Court under section 66(2), but the High Court also took  the         same view and rejected the application.  The assessee there-         upon preferred an appeal to this Court by special leave  and         in the appeal, an order was made by this Court referring the         following question for the opinion of the High Court:                              Whether  there was material for  coming                       to the conclusion that Rs. 2,33,414/-, out  of                       the  capital of Rs. 3,33,414/credited  in  the                       books  of  account  of the  assessee  on  31st                       March,  1948, represented income  from  undis-                       closed source ?             Pursuant  to this order the Tribunal stated a  case  for         the  opinion of the High Court and the High  Court  answered         the  question  referred to it in favour of  the  Revenue  by         holding  that there was material on the basis of  which  the

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       Tribunal  could come to the conclusion that  Rs.  2,33,414/-         represented  the undisclosed income of the  assessee.  Hence         the  present appeal by the assessee with special  leave  ob-         tained from this Court.         Now,  the law is well settled that the onus of  proving  the         source  of a sum of money found to have been received by  an         assessee is on him. If he disputes the liability for tax, it         is for him to show either that the receipt was not income or         that if it was, it was exempt from taxation under the provi-         sions of the Act.  In the absence of such proof, the Revenue         is  entitled to treat it as taxable income.  This  was  laid         down  as far back as 1958 when this Court pointed out in  A.         Govindarajulu  Mudaliar  v.  Commissioner of Income-tax  (1)         that "there  is ample authority for the position that  where         an  assessee  fails to prove satisfactorily the  source  and         nature  of  certain amount of cash received during  the  ac-         counting  year, the Income Tax Officer is entitled  to  draw         the  inference  that  the  receipts  are  of  an  assessable         nature".  To put it differently, where the nature and source         of  a receipt, whether it be of money or of other  property,         cannot  be satisfactorily explained by the assessee,  it  is         open  to  the Revenue to hold that it is the income  of  the         assessee  and no further burden lies on the Revenue to  show         that  that income is from any particular source.  Vide  Com-         missioner  of  Income Tax, U.P. v.  Devi  Prasad  Vishwanath         Prasad(2).  Here,         (1) (1958) 34 I.T.R. 807.         (2) 72 I.T.R. 194.         161         in the present case, the assessee introduces in the books of         account of its business on 30th March, 1948, capital of  Rs.         3,33,414/-  which  consisted of gold rawa,  gold  ornaments,         stones  and cash.  The burden of accounting for the  receipt         of  these  assets  was clearly on the assessee  and  if  the         assessee  failed  to  prove satisfactorily  the  nature  and         source of these’ assets, the Revenue could legitimately hold         that these assets represented the undisclosed income of  the         assessee.  The  assessee offered the explanation that  these         assets had been brought by Roshan Lal when he migrated  from         Lahore in June 1947 and they represented the entire  savings         of  the assessee in Pakistan.  This explanation  was  disbe-         lieved.  by  the Tribunal which took the view that,  on  the         material  on  record, it was not possible to hold  that  the         assessee  must  have brought more than Rs.  1,00,000/-  from         Lahore  and  hence  the Tribunal added the  balance  of  Rs.         2,33,414/-  as  undisclosed income of  the  assessee.   This         conclusion reached by the Tribunal was clearly a finding  of         fact  and  hence it could be assailed only if it  was  shown         that  the Tribunal had acted without any material or upon  a         view of the facts which could not reasonably be  entertained         or the facts found were such that no person acting judicial-         ly and properly instructed as to the relevant law would have         come  to  that determination.  Vide Mehta Parikh  &  Co.  v.         Commissioner of Income-Tax, Bombay(1).             Let us consider what were the primary facts  established         by  the  material on record.  The  assessee  was  admittedly         carrying  on  the business of Roshan-Di-Hatti in Lahore from         1935  until June 1947 when Roshan Lal migrated from  Lahore.         It  is true that the assessee was not paying any Income  tax         in  Lahore  but, as pointed out by the  Appellate  Assistant         Commissioner in his order, a number of letters and  receipts         regarding business transactions in Lahore were filed by  the         assessee  which showed that the business in Lahore  was  not         small  and  there were documents and papers  which  referred         to.   dealings involving Rs. 10,000/- or more at a time  and

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       there  were also several vouchers produced by  the  assessee         relating  to advertising charges paid at Lahore.  The  busi-         ness carried on by the assessee at Lahore was, therefore,  a         reasonably  large  business though its extent could  not  be         verified by any reliable material produced by the  assessee.         The assessee undoubtedly filed affidavits of Mulk Ram, Billa         Mal,  Dalai, Wazir Chand, Devidas Mehra and Panna Lal,  but,         as  commented  upon by the Tribunal, these  affidavits  were         vague  and could not be regarded as having much  evidentiary         value.  Still they did go to show that  the Lahore  business         of the assessee was a fairly large  business.  The  Tribunal         was no doubt right in commenting that primary evidence  with         regard to the extent of the Lahore business of the  assessee         was  not  forthcoming, but it must be  remembered  that  the         assessee  was being called upon to prove the extent  of  its         business in a territory from which the members of the  Hindu         Undivided Family had to flee for their lives and from  where         it  was totally impossible to produce any primary  evidence.         Be  that as it may, it was found as a fact by the  Appellate         Assistant Commissioner and this finding was not disturbed by         the Tribunal that the assessee "was doing fairly well in the         business  in  Lahore".  Roshan Lal, in anticipation  of  the         partition  of the country which was soon to follow,  decided         to  move out of Lahore in June 1947 at a time when  massacre         and holocaust had not yet started         162         and  he  was  in a position to remove  his  belongings.   He         migrated  from Lahore with all his belongings and came  over         to  Amritsar   and   he brought with him a  trunk  which  he         wanted  to  keep in a locker in Safe Deposit  Vault  of  the         Imperial  Bank of India.  He could not obtain a  locker  and         hence  he  deposited  the sealed trunk  with  the   Amritsar         Branch  of  the State Bank of India instead of  carrying  it         with him to Mussoorie.  There is no documentary evidence  to         show  as to what were the contents of the sealed trunk  but,         as  pointed out by the Appellate Assistant Commissioner  and         not dissented by the Tribunal, "it is reasonable to  presume         that  there must have been something quite valuable  in  the         box as otherwise the assessee would not have kept the custo-         dy of a bank like the State Bank of India".  There can be no         doubt, as observed by the Appellate Assistant  Commissioner,         and  not  disputed by the Tribunal that the  assessee  "must         have  had with him quite a substantial amount either in  the         form  of jewellery  etc. or cash, or otherwise he would  not         have  taken the precaution of either depositing  the  sealed         box with the State Bank of India, Amritsar opening a  locker         in  a New Delhi Bank".  The clear finding of  the  Appellate         ASsistant Commissioner, affirmed by the Tribunal, therefore,         was that Roshan Lal did bring ornaments, jewellery and  cash         with him when he migrated from Lahore in June 1947 and  kept         the  same in a sealed trunk with the Amritsar Branch of  the         State  Bank of India. If that be so, then on  what  material         could  it  be said that the ornaments,  jewellery  and  cash         brought by the assessee and kept in the sealed trunk were of         the value of only Rs. 1,00,000/- and no more.  What were the         materials  on the basis of which the claim of  the  assessee         that Roshan Lal had brought gold, ornaments and cash of  the         value of Rs. 3,33,414/- could be rejected ?             The only materials relied upon by the Tribunal was  that         the assessee had never filed any income-tax return nor  ever         paid  any tax on the income of its business in  Lahore   and         the   presumption must, therefore, be that the assessee  did         not earn any assessable income before migration from Lahore.         Now,  it is true that where an assessee has not paid  income         tax,  the presumption ordinarily must be that  the  assessee

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       had no assessable income, but here the fact remains that the         assessee  transferred no less than an aggregate sum  of  Rs.         31,094/-  from Lahore to New Delhi and also   brought   sub-         stantial  amount  either in the form of  jewellery  etc.  or         cash"  and  deposited the same in a sealed  trunk  with  the         Imperial Bank of India, Amritsar Branch in June 1947.  This.         obviously  the assessee could not have done unless it had  a         reasonably large business in Lahore and, therefore, the fact         that  the assessee did not pay income tax in  Lahore  cannot         have  much  evidentiary value.  All that it  would  show  is         that, as pointed out by the Tribunal, "the assessee has  not         been   very  straightforward  in  his  dealings  with    the         income-tax  departments".             The  Tribunal also relied upon certain answers given  by         Roshan  Lal  when he was questioned by the  Members  of  the         Tribunal  at the hearing of the appeal.  It must be  pointed         out straight away that         163         these  answers given by Roshan Lal could not be relied  upon         by the Tribunal for the purpose of coming to any  conclusion         adverse  to the assessee, because there is a procedure  pre-         scribed  in Rules 29. 30 and 31 of the Income-Tax  Appellate         Tribunal  Rules  for  taking additional evidence before  the         Tribunal and if the Members of the Tribunal wanted to  exam-         ine  Roshan Lal on any aspects of the case they should  have         followed this procedure.  But  unfortunately  the Members of         the  Tribunal, disregarding the  prescribed  procedure,  put         questions  to Roshan Lal in an informal manner  unauthorised         by the Rules.  The answers given by Roshan Lal could not  in         the  circumstances form part of the record and the  Tribunal         was not entitled  to reply upon the same in arriving at  its         findings  of fact. It may be noted that the High Court  also         took the  view  that  the procedure adopted by the  Tribunal         was irregular and the answers given  by Roshan Lal  should be         left out of account.             One other circumstance on which the Tribunal relied  was         that notwithstanding the Press Note issued by the Government         of India in January 1952 the assessee did not declare  that.         it  had  brought assets of the value of Rs. 3,33,4/4/-  from         Pakistan  and this circumstance, according to the  Tribunal,         cast considerable doubt  on  the version put forward by  the         assessee.   Now,  the  Press  Note  of Government  of  India         was  not produced before us but we will assume that  it  did         promise  a certain concession to the evacuees. who  declared         the  assets brought by  them from  Pakistan.  Even  so,   we         fail  to  see  how it could be utilised  as  a  circumstance         militating  against the explanation of the  assessee.   Both         according to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner as well as         the  Tribunal,  the  assessee did  bring  assets  worth  Rs.         1,00,000/-  from Lahore in June 1947 and these  assets  were         admittedly  not disclosed by the assessee despite the  Press         Note issued by the Government of India.  Then, how could any         inference be drawn from the non-disclosure of the assets  by         the assessee that the assessee must not have brought  assets         represent  in  the  balance of Rs 2,33  414/-9  Whether  the         assets  brought  by the assessee were Rs 1,00,000/-  or  Rs.         3,33,414/-   the  fact remains that they were not  disclosed         by the    assessee despite the Press Note of the  Government         of India and hence no adverse reference could be drawn  from         the fact of non disclosure of the assets by the assessee.                 It will, therefore, be seen that there was no  mate-         rial  on the basis of which the Tribunal could come  to  the         conclusion  that  though  the assessee had  a  fairly  large         business  in  Lahore and had brought its  entire  ornaments,         jewellery  and cash from Lahore and deposited the same in  a

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       sealed  trunk with the Amritsar Branch of the Imperial  Bank         of Inaia, these ornaments, jewellery and cash were worth not         more  than  Rs. 1,00,000/-.  One may also ask  the  question         that  if the assessee did not bring assets worth  more  than         Rs.  l,00,000/-  from Lahore, where and how did it  get  the         remaining assets of the value of Rs 2 33 414/-?  Roshan  Lal         had  come  away from Lahore as a refugee and  conditions  in         post-partition  India  were also highly  unsettled  and  the         clear and undoubted evidence was  that  neither  Roshan  Lal         nor the assessee had any business or  other means  of         164         income in India until 30th March, 1948.  In this  situation,         it  is  impossible to believe that the assessee  could  have         earned such a huge amount of profit as Rs. 2,33,414/- within         a  few months, even if it be assumed that some business  was         started  by it in October 1947 when Roshan Lal came down  to         Delhi.   The   utter  improbability,  amounting  almost  to,         impossibility,  of the assessee having earned such  a  large         amount  of Rs. 2,33,414./- as profit within a few months  in         the disturbed conditions which then prevailed in India was a         circumstance which ought to have been taken into account  by         the Tribunal but which the Tribunal unfortunately failed  to         do.  It may be pointed out that it was not the case  of  the         Revenue  that  the  books of account of  the  business  were         subsequently written up and the entry crediting the  capital         of  Rs.  3,33,4.14/- on 30th March, 1948 was not  a  genuine         entry  and the undisclosed profits of the subsequent   years         were  sought to be  concealed by the  showing a bogus  entry         of  Rs. 3,33,414/- as capital contribution on  30th   March,         1948.  If such had been the case, the present argument as to         the improbability of the assessee having earned such a  huge         amount of Rs. 2,33,414/- within a few months, would not have         been  available  to the assessee.  But the Revenue  did  not         dispute  the  correctness  of the entry  and  accepted  that         assets worth Rs. 3,33,414/- were introduced in the  business         on 30th March, 1948 and sought to include the amount of  Rs.         3,33,414/- representing the value of these assets as  undis-         closed  income  of  the assessee  for  the  assessment  year         194849.   The  only question could,  therefore,  be  whether         these   assets were brought by the assessee from  Lahore  in         June 1947 or they represented the concealed income earned by         the  assessee  during the period June 1947  to  30th  March,         1948.  The impossibility of the assessee having earned  such         a  huge amount of profit within a a few  months  immediately         after  migration  to India in the  disturbed  and  unsettled         conditions which then prevailed must, therefore, necessarily         support  the inference that the assessee must  have  brought         these assets from Lahore.             We  are,  therefore, of the view that  in  reaching  the         conclusion  that  out  of the capital of  Rs.  3,33,414/-  I         credited  in the books of the assessee on 30th March,  1948,         assets of the value of Rs. 2,33,414/represented  undisclosed         income of the assessee for the assessment year 1948-49,  the         Tribunal  acted  without any  material or in any event,  the         finding of fact reached by the Tribunal was unreasonable  or         such that no person acting judicially and properly instruct-         ed  as to the relevant law would come to such  finding.   We         accordingly  allow  the appeal, set aside the order  of  the         High Court and answer the question referred by the  Tribunal         in  the negative.  The ’Commissioner will pay the  costs  of         the appeal to the assessee.         P.H.P.                                 Appeal allowed.         165

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