COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX VS VED PARKASH
1991 P T D 121
[Punjab and Haryana High Court (India)]
Before Gokal Chand Mital and S.S. Sodhi, JJ
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX
versus
VED PARKASH
Income-tax Reference No. 31 of 1981, decided on 17/01/1989.
Income-tax-
---Income-tax Authorities---Scope of jurisdiction ---I.T.O., AA.C., Tribunal and High Court, in a reference under section 256 of the Indian Income-tax Act. are only functionaries created by Act and cannot enquire into constitutional validity of any provision of Income-tax Act ---(CIT v. Smt. Godavaridevi Saraf (1978) 113 ITR 589 (Bom.) and CIT v. Vrajlal Manilal and Co. (1981) 127 ITR 512 ,(M P) dissented from].
Decision of particular High Court is binding only upon Authorities; Tribunals and Courts functioning within its territorial jurisdiction---Jurisdiction cannot be deemed to have been conferred upon Income-tax Authorities merely because some other High Courts had taken a contrary view with regard to the constitutional validity of a particular provision---Unless and until Supreme Court or High Court in question in writ jurisdiction declares a provision of Act to be ultra vires, it must be taken to be constitutionally valid---Constitution of India, Art. 226.
The assessee did not deposit an amount of Rs.12,153 which was payable by him under section 140A(1) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1961, within a period of one month of the filing of his return. The Income-tax Officer issued a show cause notice to the assessee calling upon him to explain why penalty should not be imposed upon him under section 140A(3). The assessee contended that since section 140A(3) had been declared ultra vires by the Madras High Court in AX Sali Maricar v. ITO (1973) 90 ITR 116, no penalty was leviable under that provision. The Income-tax Officer rejected the contention of the assessee and imposed penalty on him. The Appellate Assistant Commissioner upheld the levy of penalty. The Tribunal set aside the penalty on the ground that the provisions of section 140A(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1961 had been declared to be ultra vires by the Madras High Court in A.M. Sali Maricar v. ITO (1973) 90 ITR 116. On a reference, the question arose with regard to the jurisdiction of the Income tax Officer, the Appellate Assistant Commissioner and the Appellate Tribunal as also the High Court in a reference under section 256 to declare any of the provisions of the Income-tax Act to be ultra vires the Constitution:
Held, (i) that the Income-tax Officer, the Appellate Assistant Commissioner and the Tribunal as also the High Court, in a reference under section 256 of the Indian Income-tax Act, are but functionaries created by the Act. They cannot, therefore, on principle, enquire into the constitutional validity of any of the provisions of the Act.
(ii) That as the decision of a High Court is binding only upon the Authorities, Tribunals and Courts functioning within its territorial jurisdiction, no Tribunal beyond such jurisdiction can treat or hold as constitutionally invalid any provision of the Income-tax Act solely for the reason that the High Court of another State may have declared the said provision to be ultra vires. To grant such a power to the Tribunal or even to a High Court, in a reference under section 256 of the Indian Income-tax Act, would again amount to conferring jurisdiction upon them to pronounce upon the constitutional validity of the provisions of the statute creating them, which would clearly be contrary to the well-settled position in law.
(iii) That unless and until the Supreme Court or the High Court of the State in question, under Article 226 of the Indian Constitution, declares a provision of the Act to be ultra vires, it must be taken to be constitutionally valid and treated as such.
(iv)That, therefore, the Tribunal was not right in law in holding that the provisions of section 140A(3) of the Act was ultra vires the Constitution. Matter remanded to Tribunal to decide appeal on merits.
CIT v. Smt. Godavaridevi Saraf (1978) 113 ITR 589 (Bom.) and CIT v. Vrajlal Manilal and Co. (1981) 127 ITR 512 (M P) dissented from.
A.M. Sali Maricar v. ITO (1973) 90 ITR 116 (Mad.); Dhrangadhra Chemical Works Ltd. v. CIT(1975) 101 ITR 491 (Bom.); Gunny Exporters P. Ltd. v. ITO (1976) Tax L R 603 (Cal.); K.S. Venkataraman and Co. P. Ltd. v. State of Madras (1966) 60 ITR 112 (S C); Kashiram v. ITO (1977) 107 ITR 825 (AP); Mary Issac v. IA.C. (1987) 163 ITR 341 (Ker.), Mewar Textile Mills Ltd. v. ITAT (1985) 151 ITR 127 (Raj.); Mysore Breweries Ltd. v. CIT (1987) 166 ITR 723; Patil Vijaykumar v. Union of India (1985) 151 ITR 48; Sampangirama Raju (K.) v. Fifth ITO (1988) 173 ITR 609; Senthilnathan Chettiar (C.T.) v. State of Madras (1968) 67 ITR 102 (S C) and Seva Ram v. ITO (1983) 141 ITR 933 (J & K) ref.
L.K. Sood for the Commissioner.
S.S. Mahajan and Sanjay Bansal for the Assessee.
B.S. Gupta, Senior Advocate: Amicus curiae.
JUDGMENT
S.S. SODHI, J.--The matter here concerns the jurisdiction and competence of the authorities constituted under the Income-tax Act, 1961 (hereinafter referred to as "the Act"), namely, the Income-tax Officer, the Appellate Assistant Commissioner and the Tribunal as also the High Court, in a reference under section 256 thereof, to declare or treat any of its provisions to be ultra vires the Constitution of India. This arises in the context of the provisions of section 140A(3) of the Act, having been held to be ultra vires by the High Court of Madras in A.M. Sali Maricar v. ITO (1973) 90 ITR 116.
What had happened in the present case was that the assessee did not deposit an amount of Rs.12,153 which was payable by him under section 140A(1) of the Act, within a period of one month of the filing of his return. A show-cause notice was consequently issued to him calling upon him to explain why penalty be not levied upon him under section 140A(3) of the Act. In reply, one of the points taken by the assessee was that section 140A(3) of the Act had been declared to be ultra vires and that, therefore, no penalty could be levied under that provision. The Income-tax Officer did not accept this explanation and accordingly held the assessee liable to a penalty of Rs.5,000. In appeal, the Appellate Assistant Commissioner reduced the penalty to Rs.4,000. The Tribunal, however, set aside the penalty levied on the ground that the provisions of section 140A(3) of the Act had been declared to be ultra vires by the High Court of Madras in A.M. Sali Maricar's case (1973) 90 ITR lib. This is the factual background leading to the following question being referred to this Court for its opinion:
"Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances of the case, the Tribunal was right in law in holding that the provision of section 140A(3) of the Income-tax Act, was ultra vires the Constitution and accordingly the penalty of Rs.4,000 upheld by the Appellate Assistant Commissioner was not sustainable?"
The provisions of section 140A(3) of the Act being ultra vires as per A.M. Sali Maricar's case (1973) 90 ITR 116 (Mad), appears to be a lone view as several other High Courts have since upheld the constitutional validity of this provision. Amongst such High Courts are that of Calcutta in Gunny Exporters Pvt. Ltd. v. ITO (1976) Tax LR 603; that of Andhra Pradesh in Kashiram v. ITO (1977)107 ITR 825; that of Jammu and Kashmir in Seva Ram v. ITO (1983) 141 ITR 933; that of Rajasthan in Mewar Textile Mills Ltd. v. ITAT (1985) 151 TTR 127; that of Karnataka in K. Sampangirama Raju v. Vth ITO (1988) 173 ITR 609 and that of Kerala in Mary Issac v. IAC (1987)163 ITR 341.
The basic question that arises here is with regard to the jurisdiction of the Tribunal and the High Court in a reference under section 256 of the Act to declare any of provisions of the Income-tax Act to be ultra vires the Constitution.
Considering the importance and complexity of the issues raised, Mr. B.S. Gupta, Advocate, when called upon, very willingly came forth to assist us in this matter with his usual competence and clarity.
It will be seen that the Income-tax Officer, the Appellate Assistant Commissioner and the Tribunal as also the High Court, in a reference under section 256 of the Act, are but functionaries created by the Act. They cannot, therefore, on principle, enquire into the constitutional validity of any of its provisions. In dealing with this matter, the Supreme Court in K.S. Venkataraman and Co. (P.) Ltd. v. State of Madras (1966) 60 ITR 112 observed (at p.130):
"It has been held by this Court that the jurisdiction conferred upon the High Court by section 66 of the Income-tax Act is a special advisory jurisdiction and its scope is strictly limited by the section conferring the jurisdiction. It can only decide questions of law that arise out of the order of the tribunal and that are referred to it. Can it be said that a question whether a provision of the Act is ultra virs of the Legislature arises out of the Tribunal's order? As the Tribunal is a creature of the statute, it can only decide the dispute between the assessee and the Commissioner in terms of the provisions of the Act. The question of ultra vires is foreign to the scope of its jurisdiction. If an assessee raises such a question, the Tribunal can only reject it on the ground that it has no jurisdiction to entertain the said objection or decide on it. As no such question can be raised or ran arise on the Tribunal's order, the High Court cannot possibly give any decision on the question of the ultra vires of a provision..."
A similar view was expressed by the Supreme Court in its later judgment in Senthilnathan Chettiar (C.T.) v. State of Madras (1968) 67 TTR 102.
Following K.S. Venkataraman and Co. (P.) Ltd.'s case (1966) 60 ITR 112 (SC), a Division Bench of the High Court of Bombay in Dhrangadhra Chemical Works Ltd. v. CIT (1975) 101 ITR 491, held that the Supreme Court had consistently taken the view that in a reference under the Income-tax Act or any other taxing statute, since the taxing authorities would have no jurisdiction to go into the vires of a statutory provision, order or notification, neither the High Court on a reference, nor the Supreme Court in an appeal from the decision of the High Court, will be entitled to go into such question.
The Court further observed, "It was well-settled that the jurisdiction possessed by the High Court in exercise of its advisory jurisdiction in a taxing statute, was not the same as the one that had been conferred upon it under Article 226 of the Constitution of India, and, therefore, when a question has to be construed in the exercise of its advisory jurisdiction, the jurisdiction is confined to assessment of the income and the tax under the provisions of the Act, but there is no jurisdiction to go into the question whether the relevant provisions offend the fundamental rights or are bad for want of legislative competence."
There are observations to the same effect in the judgment of the High Court of Karnataka in Mysore Breweries Ltd. v CIT (1987) 166 ITR 723 too.
The other well-established principle to be borne in mind is that the decision of a High Court is binding upon the Authorities, Tribunals and Courts functioning within its territorial jurisdiction, but such decisions have merely persuasive force in other jurisdictions. This view finds expression in Patil Vijaykumar v. Union of India (1985) 151 ITR 48 (Ker.), where it was observed (p.57): "Any decision of a High Court striking down a parliamentary enactment or an all-India enactment, operates only in the territorial area of that High Court and does not operate in any other territorial area however incongruous that may be, unlike in the case of a decision rendered by the Supreme Court." Further, (at p. 57) "Any decision rendered by a High Court either on the validity or the construction of an all-India enactment, will only be binding on that High Court, the Courts and the Tribunals functioning in the territorial area over which it exercises jurisdiction and not on other High Courts, and the Courts and the Tribunals functioning in the territorial area of that other High Court...
A somewhat different theory, however, appears to have been expounded by the High Court of Bombay in CTT v. Smt. Godavaridevi Saraf (1978) 113 ITR 589, namely, that once a provision is declared ultra vires by a competent High Court, that decision has to be accepted by the Tribunal wherever constituted, that is, even in the jurisdiction of another High Court, implying thereby that the decisions of the High Courts would be binding upon Tribunals beyond their jurisdiction too. The Court, in this case, was dealing with a reference under section 256 of the Act, which was in the following terms:
Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances of the case and in view of the decision in the case of A.M. Sali Maricar (1973) 90 ITR 116 (Mad.), the penalty imposed on the assessee under section 140-A(3) was legal?"
The Court observed (at p. 592):
"Until a contrary decision is given by any other competent High Court, which is binding on a Tribunal in the State. of Bombay, it has to proceed on the footing that the law declared by the High Court, though of another State, is the final law of the land. When the Tribunal set aside the order of penalty it did not go into the question of intra vires or ultra vires. It did not go into the question of constitutionality of section 140A(3). That section was already declared ultra vires by a competent High Court in the country and an authority like an Income-tax Tribunal acting anywhere in the country has to respect the law laid down by the High Court, though of a different State, so long as there is no contrary decision of any other High Court on that Question."
It will be seen that the above-quoted view denotes a departure from the well-established principle that a decision of the High Court is binding only upon Courts and Tribunals functioning within its territorial jurisdiction, but is merely of persuasive value elsewhere. Here, it makes the judgment of the High Court binding upon Courts and tribunals in other jurisdictions too, though it is to be treated to be so only for a limited period, namely, so long as there is no contrary decision of another High Court.
The High Court of Madhya Pradesh, on its part in CTT v. Vrajlal Manilal and Co. (1981) 127 ITR 512, following Smt. Godavaridevi Saraf s case (1978) 113 ITR 589 (Bom.), went a step further in arrogating to itself the jurisdiction, in a reference under section 256 of the Act, to pronounce upon the constitutional validity of a provision of the Income-tax Act, namely, section 140A(3) thereof, on the ground that different High Courts had expressed conflicting views with regard to it. What had happened in this case was that relying upon the judgment in A.M. Sali Maricar's case (1973) 90 ITR 116 (Mad.), the Tribunal had cancelled the penalty levied under section 140A(3) of the Act. This order of the Tribunal was upheld by the High Court saying that as there was no contrary ruling when the Tribunal decided the appeal, it was bound to give effect to the Madras judgment. The Court proceeded thereafter to examine for itself the constitutional validity of section 140A(3) of the Act by observing (at p. 516 of 127 TTR): "It is true that the question relating to the constitutional validity of a provision of the Act cannot ordinarily be examined in a reference but the position is different when, as in the instant case, the constitutional validity has already been examined by three High Courts under Article 226 and one of them has declared the provision to be invalid." The provisions of section 140A(3) were thereafter pronounced upon as valid.
With respect, we cannot subscribe to the view expressed by the High Court of Bombay in Smt. Godavaridevi Sarafs case (1978) 113 ITR 589, or by that of the High Court of Madhya Pradesh in Vrajlal Manilal and Co. (1981) 127 ITR 512, as, in our understanding, if the authorities under the Income-tax Act are not possessed of the requisite jurisdiction to pronounce upon the constitutional validity of the provisions of that Act, no such jurisdiction can be deemed to have been conferred upon them merely because some other High Courts had taken a contrary view with regard to their validity. There is an obvious inherent lack of jurisdiction in the Tribunal as also of the High Court in a reference under section 256 of the Act to examine and pronounce upon the constitutional validity of the said provisions.
Further, it is also our view that as the decision of a High Court is binding only upon the authorities and the tribunals within its jurisdiction, no tribunal beyond such jurisdiction can treat or hold as constitutionally invalid any provision of the Income-tax Act, solely for the reason that a High Court of another State may have -declared the said provision to be ultra vires. To grant such power to the Tribunal or even to a High Court, in a reference under section 256 of the Act, would again amount to conferring jurisdiction upon them to pronounce upon the constitutional validity of the provisions of the statute creating them, which would clearly be contrary to the well-settled position in law, in this behalf.
This is not to say that there is no remedy for questioning the vires of the provisions of the Income-tax Act, 1961. Such remedy is undoubtedly there under Article 226 of the Constitution of India.
The clear legal position that thus emerges is that unless and until the Supreme Court or the High Court of the State in question, under Article 226 of the Constitution of India, declares a provision of the Act to be ultra vires, it must be taken. to be constitutionally valid and treated as such.
This being so, there can be no escape from the conclusion that the Tribunal clearly fell in error in holding section 140A(3) of the Act to be ultra vires. The reference has thus to be answered in the negative, in favour of the Revenue and against the assessee. As a consequence, the Tribunal shall decide the appeal of the assessee afresh on merits. This matter is disposed of accordingly. There will, however, be no order as to costs.
Z.S./725/TOrder accordingly.