12 August 1971
Supreme Court
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SHEO NATH SINGH Vs APPELLATE ASSISTANT COMMISSIONER OFINCOME TAX, CALCUTTA

Case number: Appeal (civil) 1477 of 1967


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PETITIONER: SHEO NATH SINGH

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: APPELLATE ASSISTANT COMMISSIONER OFINCOME TAX, CALCUTTA

DATE OF JUDGMENT12/08/1971

BENCH: GROVER, A.N. BENCH: GROVER, A.N. HEGDE, K.S.

CITATION:  1971 AIR 2451            1972 SCR  (1) 175

ACT: Income-tax Act, 1922, s. 34(1-A)-Preconditions for issue  of notice-’Reason  to  believe’-Belief must be  of  honest  and reasonable  person and must not be based on mere  suspicion- Court can examine this aspect in writ petition. Supreme   Court   Appeal-Practice-High   Court    sustaining preliminary  objection  to  petition  under  Art.  226   but nevertheless  proceeding  to decide on  merits  question  of validity of notice under s. 34 (1-A)-This Court in appeal is not  barred  from  considering  High  Court’s  decision   on validity of section.

HEADNOTE: The   assessee  appellant  was  at  all  material  times   a shareholder of a number of companies engaged in the business of managing hotels.  Gradually he came to own a large  block of  shares  of  $pence’s  Hotel Ltd.  and  also  became  its managing  director.   He  was in charge  of  the  management thereof at the material time.  He further purchased interest in  Associated  Hotels of India Ltd. and  Hotels  (1938)  in association  with  M. S. Oberoi.  In 1944  Oberoi  purchased from the assessee his share holding in the Associated Hotels of  India Limited for an amount of Rs. 20,657,05/13/0.   The assessee  maintained that he had filed returns of income  in respect of the relevant assessment years and that during the assessment  for  the year 1944-45 he had  disclosed  to  the Income-tax Officer that he had received the aforesaid amount for  the sale of the shares of the Associated Hotels.   That amount was held to be a capital receipt on which no  income- tax was payable.  Subsequently the Income-tax Officer issued seven notices dated 5th November 1954 to the assessee tinder s,  34  (1-A)  of the Income-tax Act,  1922  in  respect  of assessment  years 1940-41 to 1946-47 alleging  therein  that the  income of the appellant had partly escaped  assessment. In   spite   of  the  assessee’s  objections   relating   to jurisdiction  the Income Tax Officer made  asseessmerits  in respect  of  the years 1942-43 to 1945-46.   In  appeal  the Appellate  Assistant Commissioner remanded the case  to  the Income-tax  Officer to submit a report on  various  matters. Thereafter the appellant submitted a petition under Art. 226 in the High Court challenging inter alia the validity of the notice  under  s.  34 (1-A).  The High  Court  accepted  the preliminary   objection  of  the  Revenue  that  since   the

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appellant  had invoked the remedy under the Act  a  petition under  Art. 226 did not lie.  Nevertheless it  proceeded  to hold  that  the notice under s.34 (1-A) was  valid  and  the required  preconditions were satisfied, Appeal was filed  by the assessee in this Court by special leave. HELD  : (i) The correct course for the High Court to  follow after  sustaining  the  preliminary objection  was  to  have dismissed  the  writ petition, Since the High Court  gave  a decision in the matter which 17 6 would  be binding on the Appellate  Assistant  Commissioner. the contention of the Revenue that this Court should decline to go into the question arising out of the provisions of  s. 34 (1-A) could not be accepted. [179 D-E] (ii) There can be no manner of doubt that the words  ’reason to  believe’  suggest  that the belief must be  that  of  an honest  and reasonable person based upon reasonable  grounds and  that  the  Income-tax Officer may  act  on  direct  and circumstantial evidence but not on mere suspicion gossip  or rumour.   The  Income-tax Officer would  be  acting  without jurisdiction  if  the  reason  for  this  belief  that   the conditions  are satisfied does not exist or is not  material or  relevant  to the belief required by  the  section.   The Court can always examine this aspect though the  declaration or  sufficiency  of  the reasons for the  belief  cannot  be investigated by the Court. [182F-H] Chhugamal  Rajpal v. S. P. Chaliha & Ors., 1971 (79)  I.T.R. 603. referred to, There  was no material or fact which had been stated in  the reasons  for  starting proceedings in the  present  case  on which any belief could be founded of the nature contemplated by  s.  34  (1-A) The so called reasons were  stated  to  be beliefs,  thus  leading to an  obvious  self  contradiction. Therefore the requirements of s. 34(1-A) were not  satisfied and,  the notices which had been issued were wholly  illegal and invalid. [183 B] In  the result the appeal must be allowed and  the  impugned notices were quashed.

JUDGMENT: CIVIL  APPELLATE  JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal  No.  1477  of 1967. Appeal from the judgment and order dated October 6, 1966  of the Calcutta High Court in Matter No. 236 of 1961. M.   C.  Chagla,  M. L. Aggarwal, N. K. Aggarwal and  M.  N. Pombara, for the appellant. S.   D. Desai, A. N. Kirpal, R. N. Sachthey and B.     D. Sharma, for the respondents. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by. Grover, J.-This is an appeal by    certificate from the judgment of the Calcutta High Court. The assesses who is the appellant  was at all material times a  share-holder  of  a number of companies  engaged  in  the business  of managing Hotels.  He had also been  a  Director and  Managing Director of various companies.   Gradually  he came  to  own  a large block of shares  of  Spencer’s  Hotel Limited  and  also  became its Managing  Director.   He  was incharge of the Management thereof at 177 the  material  time.   He  further purchased  interest  in Associated  Hotels  of  India Limited  &  Hotels  (1938)  in association  with  M.  S. Oberoi.  In  1944,  M.  S.  Oberoi

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purchased  from  the  assessee  his  share  holding  in  the Associated  Hotels  of  India  Limited  for  an  amount   of Rs.20,657,05/13/0. Similarly in" or about 1949, the  holding in  Hotels  (1938) Limited was purchased by the said  M.  S. Oberoi.   It  was  maintained by the assessee  that  he  has ,filed  returns  of his income in respect  of  the  relevant assessment years and that during the assessment for the year 1945-46,  the  assessee  had  disclosed  to  the  Income-tax Officer, District II,(2) Calcututa that he had received  the aforesaid  amount  for the sale of the shares of  the  Asso- ciated Hotels.  The amount was held to be a capital  receipt on  which no income tax was payable.  During the  subsequent years,  the  assessee continued to show in his  returns  the interest received on the amount of Rs. 20,657,05/13/0. It appears that the case of M. S. Oberoi was referred to the Investigation Commission set up under the Taxation on Income (Investigation Commission) Act, 1947.  The assessee was also served  a notice by the Commission on or about 18th  August, 1951 under section 5(4) of the aforesaid Act, in respect  of the  assessment  year 1940-41.  The assessee  filed  a  Writ Petition  in March, 1953 in the Punjab High  Court  (Circuit Bench)  Delhi  to  quash the  proceedings  before  the  said Commission.   According  to  the  assessee,  the   Solicitor General,  who  appeared in the High Court after a  rule  had been  issued,  gave  an  undertaking  that  all  proceedings against   the   assessee  would  be  dropped.    Upon   such undertaking  being  given,  the rule  was  discharged.   The Income-tax  Officer, District 11 (2) Calcutta  issued  seven notices  dated 5th November, 1954 to the assessee  under  S. 34(1-A) of the Income Tax Act, 1922 in respect of assessment years 1940-41 to 1946-47 alleging therein that the appellant had partly escaped assessment.  In spite of the objection of the assessee that in the absence of any material on  record, the  Income  Tax Officer had no jurisdiction  to  issue  any notice  under  34(1-A), the said Officer proceeded  to  make assessment in respect of the assessment years 1942-43, 1943- 44,  1944-45 and 1945-46.  The assessee filed an  appeal  to the  Appellate  Assistant  Commissioner of  Income  Tax  who remanded 178 the  case  to the Income Tax Officer to submit a  report  on various  matters.  One of such matters was that  the  Income Tax  Officer  should  state as to what  fresh  material  was before  him to satisfy him that the sum of  Rs.  20,00,000/- which  was previously treated as ’capital should be  treated as  income.   In 1961, the assessee filed a  petition  under Art.  226  of the Constitution in the  Calcutta  High  Court challenging  the  order of the Appellate  Assistant  Commis- sioner.   This Writ Petition was dismissed on  6th  October, 1966. In  clause  (v)  of  Para (22) of  the  Writ  Petition,  the assessee  had  stated that at the time when the  notice  had been  issued  under S. 34(1-A) of the Act,  the  Income  Tax Officers  concerned  did not have any material  before  them constituting  reason to believe that any income, profits  or gains  of the assessee had escaped assessment for any  year. It was asserted that the only material before the Income Tax Officers concerned on which they had purported to issue  the notices  consisted of the fact of the receipt of  about  Rs. 22,00,000/- which the assessee had received for the sale  of his shares in the Associated Hotels of India Limited in  the year  1944  that receipt had already been disclosed  to  the Income  Tax  Officer who had made  the  original  assessment relating  to the year 1945-46 and he had held that the  said amount was a capital receipt.  There was merely a denial  in

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the  affidavit in reply with reference to  paragraph  22(v), that the conditions precedent to the exercise of power under S.  34(1-A) had not been fulfilled.  An objection  was  also taken that it was not open to the assessee to urge the  said ground  in  a petition under Art. 226 when  he  had  already invoked  the  remedy  available under the  Act  against  the assessment order pursuant to the notice under S. 34 (1-A) of the  Act.  In para (29) it was stated that "  all  necessary information.regarding the reasons for which the  proceedings were  started under S. 34 was available from the records  of the Income Tax Department ralating to the assessment of  the assessee. The  High Court dealt with several points which were  raised on  behalf  of  the assessee  which  included  the  question whether the Income Tax Officer had the jurisdiction to  make an  assessment  under the provisions of S.  34  unless  the, conditions contained in S. 34 (1-A) were satisfied.  In 179 other  words, unless he had "reason to believe"  that"income profits  or gains chargeable to income had  escaped  assess- ment,  he  could  not have  proceeded  under  the  aforesaid provision.   The High Court in the first place  sustained  a preliminary objection which had been raised on behalf of the revenue  that because the assessee had filed appeals to  the Appellate  Assistant Commissioner, he could not  pursue  his petition under Art. 226 of the Constitution before the  High Court.  The other points which had been canvassed related to the validity and constitutionality of S. 34(1-A).  The  High Court held that it had been settled by a series of decisions of this Court that it was not unconstitutional.  Indeed that point was subsequently abandoned by the learned counsel  for the assessee.  But after holding that preliminary  objection had  substance,  the  High Court  proceeded  to  decide  the question  relating to the satisfaction of the  preconditions under  S.  34 (1-A), although the correct course for  it  to follow  after  sustaining the preliminary objection  was  to have dismissed the Writ Petition.  Since the High Court gave a  decision  on that matter, which would be binding  on  the Appellate Assistant Commissioner, we are unable to accede to the  submission made by the learned counsel for the  revenue that we should decline to go into, the question arising  out of the provisions of S. 34 (1-A). The  impugned  notices which were issued under S.  34  (1-A) stated  that the Income Tax Officer had "reason to  believe" that income, profits and gains assessable to income tax  had escaped  assessment.  There was also a note at the  foot  of the  notices  that  they had  been  issued  after  necessary satisfaction  of  the Central Board of  Revenue.   The  High Court observed that the Income Tax Officer had obtained  the sanction of the Board upon reasons recorded in writing,  and although  the record containing those reasons was sought  to be  produced  before the Court, an objection was  raised  on behalf of the assessee that the recorded reasons should  not be  looked  into.   The High Court felt that  there  was  no necessity  to  travel  beyond the  order  of  the  Appellate Assistant Commissioner read with the assessment orders which were under challenge.  The Appellate Assistant Commissioner, it was felt, had looked into the records which included  the statements  and  other materials filed with the  Income  Tax Investigation Commis-               180 sion  by  the petitioner.  The High Court proceeded  to  say that  although  the Appellate  Asssistant  Commissioner  had looked at all the material, he had expressed some difficulty in  coming to a conclusion without further material  on  the

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question as to what fresh evidence was available before  the Income  Tax  Officer  to convince him that the  sum  of  Rs. 20,00,000/-  which was previously treated as capital  should be  treated  as,  income.   It was  finally  held  that  the assessee  had  failed to establish  that  the  preconditions contained  in  S.  34  (1-A)  had  not  been  fulfilled  and consequently there was an initial lack of jurisdiction. Section  34  (1-A)  to the extent it is  necessary,  may  be reproduced.               "34  (1-A). if, in the- case of any  assessee,               the income-tax officer has reason to believe-               (i)   that income, profits or gains chargeable               to income-tax have escaped assessment for  any               year in respect of which the relevant previous               year falls and               (ii)that  the income, profits or  gains  which               have  so escaped assessment for any such  year               or years amount or are likely to amount to one               lakh of rupees or more;        he    may serve               on the assessee  a notice containing  and  may               proceed  to  assess or  reassess  the  income,               profits or gains of the assessee    ; Provided  that  the  Income-tax Officer shall  not  issue  a notice  under  this sub-section unless he has  recorded  his reasons  for  doing so and the Central Board of  Revenue  is satisfied on such reasons recorded that it is a fit case for the issue of such notice". Since nothing had been disclosed which was relevant for  the purpose  of finding out whether the Income Tax  Officer  had any  reason to believe that the income, profits or gains  of the   assessee   chargeable  to   income-tax   had   escaped assessment, we gave an opportunity to the Revenue to 181 have been found in the records are reports in Form ’B’  made in connection with starting of proceedings under S. 34(1-A), each report relating to a different assessment year.   Items (7)  and  (8)  of  this form relate  to  brief  reasons  for starting  proceedings  and  whether  the  Central  Board  of Revenue  was satisfied that it was a fit case for  issue  of notice.   Against  item  (7) it is stated  "reasons  as  per separate  sheet attached".  Against item (8), the  Secretary of  the Central Board of Revenue signed after writing  "Yes, satisfied".  The reasons for starting the proceedings  given in the separate sheet may be fully reproduced.               "For   the  reasons  hereinafter  recorded   I               believe that income, profits and gains  earned               by  the assessee in his personal capacity  and               in  conjunction with others and chargeable  to               income-tax  have escaped assessment  and  that               the  amount of such concealed income  relating               to  the Accounting years covering  the  period               beginning  on the 1st day of  September,  1939               and  ending  on the 31st day of  March,  1949,               amount  to  or  is likely  to  amount  to  Rs.               1,00,000/-.  The reason for such belief, inter               alia, is as follows :-               (1)   The  assessee  who  is  or  was  at  the               relevant  time a Managing Director in about  a               dozen limited companies, along with  "Oberois"               is  believed to have made some secret  profits               which were not offered for assessment.               (2)   The   assessee  is  believed   to   have               received   a   sum  of  Rs.  22   lakhs   from               "Oberois",and  this  sum or at least  part  of               which    represents   income    has    escaped

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             assessment.                               Sd/- (A.  K. BHOWMIK)                                Income-tax Officer                             Distt. 11 (2), Calcutta". It is abundantly clear that the two reasons which have  been given  for  the belief which was formed by  the  Income  Tax Officer  hopelessly fail to satisfy the requirements of  the statute.  In a recent case-Chhugamal Rajpal 18 2 v.   S.  P. Chaliha and Others ’)which came up  before  this Court,  a similar situation had arisen and under the  direc- tions  of the Court, the Department produced the records  to show  that  the  Income Tax Officer had  complied  with  the conditions  laid  down in the statute for issuing  a  notice relating  to escapement of income.  There also,  the  report submitted  by  the  Officer  to  the  Commissioner  and  the latter’s  orders thereon were produced.  In his report,  the Income Tax Officer referred to some communications  received by  him  from  the Commissioner of Income-tax  ,  Bihar  and Orissa from which it appeared that certain creditors of  the assessee  were mere name-lenders and the  loan  transactions were  bogus and, therefore, proper  investigation  regarding the  loans was necessary.  It was observed that  the  Income Tax  Officer  had not set out any reason for coming  to  the conclusion that it was a fit case for issuing a notice under S.  148 of the Income Tax Act, 1961.  The material that  ,he had  before him for issuing notice had not  been  mentioned. The  facts  contained in the communications which  had  been received were only referred to vaguely and all that had been said was that from those communications it appeared that the alleged  creditors  were name-lenders and  the  transactions were  bogus.  It was held that from the report submitted  by the Income Tax Officer to the Commissioner it was clear that he could not have had reasons to believe that on account  of assessee’s omission to disclose fully and truly all material facts, income chargeable to tax had escaped assessment. In  our  judgment, the law laid down by this  Court  in  the above  case is fully applicable to the facts of the  present case.   There  can  be no manner of  doubt  that  the  words "reason to believe" suggest that the belief must be that  of an  honest  and  reasonable  person  based  upon  reasonable grounds and that the Income Tax Officer may act on direct or circumstantial evidence but not on mere suspicion, gossip or rumour.   The  Income Tax Officer would  be  acting  without jurisdiction   if  the  reason  for  his  belief  that   the conditions  are satisfied does not exist or is not  material or  relevant to the , belief required by the  section.   The court can always examine this aspect though the  declaration or  sufficiency  of  the reasons for the  belief  cannot  be investigated by the court. (1)  1971 (79) I.T.R. 603. 183 There  is no material or fact which has been stated in,  the reasons  for  starting proceedings in the  present  case  on which any belief could be founded of the nature contemplated by  S.  34 (1-A).  The so-called reasons are  stated  to  be beliefs  thus leading to an obvious self-contradiction.   We are satisfied that the requirements of S. 34 (1-A) were  not satisfied and, therefore, the notices which had been  issued were wholly illegal and invalid. In the result, the appeal is allowed and the judgment of the High Court is set aside.  The writ petition succeeds to  the extent that the impugned notices shall stand quashed. The assessee shall be entitled to his costs. G. C.                                       Appeal allowed.

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