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Case Law Details

Case Name : Principal CIT Vs M/S Manoj Kumar Singh (Allahabad High Court)
Appeal Number : I.T.O. No. 28 of 2016
Date of Judgement/Order : 22/11/2017
Related Assessment Year :

Principal CIT Vs M/s. Manoj Kumar Singh (Allahabad High Court)

It is not disputed that Section 40(a)(ia) proviso is for the benefit of Assessee. When a provision has been made in fiscal statute for benefit of Assessee, in absence of any express provision or a provision which by necessary implication gives a different impression, such provision which is beneficial to Assessee must be read and given effect to retroactively.

FULL TEXT OF THE HIGH COURT ORDER / JUDGMENT

1. Heard Sri Alok Mathur, learned counsel for appellant and Sri Pradeep Agrawal, learned counsel for respondent.

2. This appeal has been filed by Principal Commissioner of Income Tax, Lucknow under Section 260A of Income Tax Act, 1961 (hereinafter referred to as “Act 1961”) arising from judgment and order dated 16.10.2015 passed in ITA No. 260/LKW/2014 relating to Assessment Year 2009-10.

3. It was admitted on 15.03.2016 on following substantial questions of law:­

Whether Under the facts and circumstances of the case, the learned Income Tax Appellate Tribunal erred in law while setting aside the order of CIT (A) and restoring the issue of disallowance u/s 40(a)(ia) of the I.T.Act by retrospective application of second proviso to Section 40(a)(ia) of the Act, which amendment in fact was not curative but prospective w.e.f 01.04.2013.

Whether under the facts and circumstances of the case, the Learned Income Tax Appellate Tribunal failed to appreciate that the judgment of Hon’ble High Court relied upon by it was not of jurisdictional High Court and on the same issue, divergent view was taken y Hon’ble Kerala High Court in the case of Shri Thomas George Muthoot Vs. CIT (Kerala High Court), Income Tax appeal No. 278/2014 dated 03.07.2015 wherein the Hon’ble Kerala High Court had clearly held that the amendment brought in to second proviso to section 40(a)(ia) is prospective and not curative in nature when Finance Act, 2012 did not provide its retrospective application”.

4. Learned counsel for Revenue submitted that second proviso to Section 40(a)(ia) is not retrospective and relied on a Division Bench Judgment of Kerala High Court in ITA No. 278 of 2014 decided on 03.07.2015, while learned counsel for respondent has placed reliance on Division Bench judgment of Delhi High Court in Commissioner of Income Tax Vs. Ansal Land Mark Township Private. Ltd 2015 377 ITR 635 (Delhi) and judgment of Supreme Court in Commissioner of Income Tax (Central)­I Vs. Vatika Township Private Limited (2015) 1 SCC page­1.

5. We have gone through the aforesaid authorities. It is not disputed that Section 40(a)(ia) proviso is for the benefit of Assessee. When a provision has been made in fiscal statute for benefit of Assessee, in absence of any express provision or a provision which by necessary implication gives a different impression, such provision which is beneficial to Assessee must be read and given effect to retroactively and reiterating this principle Constitution Bench of Apex Court in Commissioner of Income Tax Vs. Vatika Township (supra), in particular in paras 27 to 31, has said as under:

22. Before we proceed to answer the question, it would be necessary to keep in mind the scheme of block assessment introduced in Chapter XIVB to Finance Act, 1995 w.e.f. 1st July, 1995.

23. As already mentioned in brief by us, Chapter XIVB of the Act which deals with block assessment lays down a special procedure for search cases. The main reason for adding these provisions in the Act was to curb tax evasion and expedite as well as simplify the assessments in such search cases. 

23.1. Undisclosed incomes have to be related in different years in which income was earned under block assessment. This is because in such cases, the !block period! is for previous years relevant to 10/6 assessment years and also the period of the current previous year up to the date of the search, i.e., form April 1, 2000, to January 17, 2001, in this case. The essence of this new procedure, therefore, is a separate single assessment of the !undisclosed income!, detected as a result of search and this separate assessment has to be in addition to the normal assessment covering the same period. Therefore, a separate return covering the years of the block period is a pre-requisite for making block assessment. Under the said procedure, the Explanation is inserted in Section 158BB, which is the computation section, explaining the method of computation of !undisclosed income! of the block period. It is now well accepted that this Chapter is a complete code in itself providing for self­contained machinery for assessment of undisclosed income for the block period of 10 years or 6 years, as the case may be. In case of regular assessments for which returns are filed on yearly basis, Section 4 of the Act is the charging section. However, at what rate the income is to be taxed is specified every year by the Parliament in the Finance Act. In contradistinction, when it comes to payment of tax on the undisclosed income relating to the block period, rate is specified in Section 113 of the Act. It remains static at 60% of the undisclosed income which is the categorical stipulation in the Section 113 of the Act. Section 158BA(2) of the Act clearly states that the total undisclosed income relating to the block period !shall be charged to tax! at the rates specified Under Section 113 as income of the block period irrespective of previous year or years. Under Section 113 of the Act, the undisclosed income is chargeable to tax at the rate of 60%.

24. From the above, it becomes manifest that Chapter XIVB comprehensively takes care of all the aspects relating to the block assessment relating to undisclosed income, which includes Section 156BA(2) as the charging section and even the rate at which such income is to be taxed is mentioned in Section 113 of the Act. No doubt, Section 4 of the Act is also a charging section which is made applicable on ‘total income of previous year’. As per Section 2(45), ‘total income’ means the total amount of income referred to in Section 5, computed in the manner laid down in the Act. Section 5 of the Act enumerates the scope of total income and prescribes, inter alia, that it would include all income which is received or is deemed to receive in India in any previous year by or on behalf of a person who is a Resident. No doubt, undisclosed income referred to in Chapter XIVB is also an income which was received but not disclosed, therefore, in the first blush, argument of the Department that undisclosed income referred to in Chapter XIVB is also a part of total income and consequently Section 4 becomes the charging section in respect thereof as well. However, a little closer scrutiny leads us to conclude that that is not the position as per the scheme of Chapter XIVB. In the first place, income referred to in Section 5 talks of total income of any ‘previous year’. As per Section 2(34) of the Act, ‘previous year’ means previous year as defined in Section 3. Section 3 lays down that previous year means ‘the financial year immediately preceding the assessment year’. Undisclosed income referred to in Chapter XIVB is not relatable to the previous year. On the contrary, it is for the block period which may be 6 years or 10 years, as the case may be.

25. Consequently, as already mentioned, while analyzing the scheme of Chapter XIVB, such Chapter is a complete code in respect of assessments of ‘undisclosed income’. Not only it defines what is undisclosed income, it also lays down the block period for which undisclosed income can be taxed. Further, it also lays down the procedure for taxing that income. It is very pertinent to note at this stage that for this purpose, specificeprovision in the form of Section 158BA(2) is inserted making it a charging section. Thus, a diagnostic of Chapter XIVB of the Act leads to irresistible conclusion that it contains all the provisions starting from charging section till completion of assessment, by prescribing special procedure in relation thereto, making it a complete Code by itself. Looking it from this angle, the character and nature of ‘undisclosed income’ referred to in Chapter XIVB becomes quite distinct from ‘total income’ referred to in Section 5. It is of some significance to observe that when a separate charging section is introduced specifically, to assess the undisclosed income, notwithstanding a provision in the nature of Section 4 already on the statute book, this move of the legislature has to be assigned some reason, otherwise, there was no necessity to make a provision in the form of Section 158BA(2). It could only be that for assessing undisclosed income, charging provision is Section 158BA(2) alone.

26. Notwithstanding the aforesaid position clarified with us, we are of the opinion that dehors this discussion, in any case on the application of general principles concerning retrospectivity, the proviso to Section 113 of the Act cannot be treated as clarificatory in nature, thereby having retrospective effect. To make it clear, we need to understand the general principles concerning retrospectivity.

General principles concerning retrospectivity

27. A legislation, be it a statutory Act or a statutory Rule or a statutory Notification, may physically consists of words printed on papers. However, conceptually it is a great deal more than an ordinary prose. There is a special peculiarity in the mode of verbal communication by a legislation. A legislation is not just a series of statements, such as one finds in a work of fiction/non fiction or even in a judgment of a court of law. There is a technique required to draft a legislation as well as to understand a legislation. Former technique is known as legislative drafting and latter one is to be found in the various principles of ‘Interpretation of Statutes’. Visà­vis ordinary prose, a legislation differs in its provenance, lay-out and features as also in the implication as to its meaning that arise by presumptions as to the intent of the maker thereof.

28. Of the various rules guiding how a legislation has to be interpreted, one established rule is that unless a contrary intention appears, a legislation is presumed not to be intended to have a retrospective operation. The idea behind the rule is that a current law should govern current activities. Law passed today cannot apply to the events of the past. If we do something today, we do it keeping in view the law of today and in force and not tomorrow’s backward adjustment of it. Our belief in the nature of the law is founded on the bed rock that every human being is entitled to arrange his affairs by relying on the existing law and should not find that his plans have been retrospectively upset. This principle of law is known as lex prospicit non respicit: law looks forward not backward. As was observed in Phillips v. Eyre (1870) LR 6 QB 1, a retrospective legislation is contrary to the general principle that legislation by which the conduct of mankind is to be regulated when introduced for the first time to deal with future acts ought not to change the character of past transactions carried on upon the faith of the then existing law.

29. The obvious basis of the principle against retrospectivity is the principle of ‘fairness’, which must be the basis of every legal rule as was observed in the decision reported in L’Office Cherifien des Phosphates v. Yamashita­Shinnihon Steamship Co. Ltd. (1994) 1 AC 486. Thus, legislations which modified accrued rights or which impose obligations or impose new duties or attach a new disability have to be treated as prospective unless the legislative intent is clearly to give the enactment a retrospective effect; unless the legislation is for purpose of supplying an obvious omission in a former legislation or to explain a former legislation. We need not note the cornucopia of case law available on the subject because aforesaid legal position clearly emerges from the various decisions and this legal position was conceded by the counsel for the parties. In any case, we shall refer to few judgments containing this dicta, a little later.

30. We would also like to point out, for the sake of completeness, that where a benefit is conferred by a legislation, the rule against a retrospective construction is different. If a legislation confers a benefit on some persons but without inflicting a corresponding detriment on some other person or on the public generally, and where to confer such benefit appears to have been the legislators object, then the presumption would be that such a legislation, giving it a purposive construction, would warrant it to be given a retrospective effect. This exactly is the justification to treat procedural provisions as retrospective. In Government of India and Ors. v. Indian Tobacco Association (2005) 7 SCC 396, the doctrine offairness was held to be relevant factor to construe a statute conferring a benefit, in the context of it to be given a retrospective operation. The same doctrine of fairness, to hold that a statute was retrospective in nature, was applied in the case of Vijay v. State of Maharashtra and Ors. (2006) 6 SCC 286 It was held that where a law is enacted for the benefit of community as a whole, even in the absence of a provision the statute may be held to be retrospective in nature. However, we are confronted with any such situation here.

31. In such cases, retrospectively is attached to benefit the persons in contradistinction to the provision imposing some burden or liability where the presumption attaches towards prospectively. In the instant case, the proviso added to Section 113 of the Act is not beneficial to the Assessee. On the contrary, it is a provision which is onerous to the Assessee. Therefore, in a case like this, we have to proceed with the normal rule of presumption against retrospective operation. Thus, the rule against retrospective operation is a fundamental rule of law that no statute shall be construed to have a retrospective operation unless such a construction appears very clearly in the terms of the Act, or arises by necessary and distinct implication. Dogmatically framed, the rule is no more than a presumption, and thus could be displaced by out weighing factors”. 

6. In view of above principle laid down in Commissioner of Income Tax Vs. Vatika Township (supra) followed by Division Bench of Delhi High Court in Commissioner of Income Tax Vs. Ansal Land Mark Township (supra), we find no reason to take a different view and held accordingly. We may respectfully submit that judgment of Kerela High Court in ITA No. 278 of 2014 (supra) relied by Revenue did not have the benefit of authority of Constitution Bench in Commissioner of Income Tax Vs. Vatika Township (supra) and has taken a different view with which we respectfully are unable to agree.

7. In view of above discussions, we answer the aforesaid questions in favour of Assesses and against Revenue. No other points has been argued.

8. Writ petition lacks merit. Dismissed.

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