STERLING COMPUTERS LTD. VS UNION OF INDIA
2001 P T D 3596
[240 I T R 748]
[Madras High Court (India)]
Before R. Jayasimha Babu, J
STERLING COMPUTERS LTD
versus
UNION OF INDIA and another
Writ Petition No.7231 and W.M.P. No.11090 of 1991. decided on 10/09/1998.
Income‑tax‑‑‑
‑‑‑‑Assessment‑‑Additional tax under S. 143(IA)‑‑‑Constitutional validity of provisions‑‑‑‑Section 143(IA) does no: contravene Art.14 or Art.19 of Constitution‑‑‑Provision is valid‑‑‑Indian Income Tax Act, 1961. S.143‑‑ Constitution of Indic, Arts. 14, 19 & 226.
Section 143(IA) of the Income Tax Act, 1961, was introduced by the Direct Tax Laws (Amendment) Act, 1989. This provision is made for the levy of additional income‑tax in the circumstances referred to in that provision, viz., where the income shown by any person in the return is increased or the loss declared in the return is reduced or is converted into income. If after the provisions are properly applied to the return submitted by the assessees, the adjustments are found to be warranted, then the provisions providing for the levy of additional income‑tax on the amounts so adjusted will operate. This provision does not in any manner violate Article 14 of the Constitution as there is no discrimination among the assessees. A person who is dishonest and does not declare his income correctly cannot be put in the same class as the other assessee, who truthfully declares his income and items of expenditure and who does not conceal or withhold the income received by him. The additional income‑tax leviable on persons whose returns do not state the figures accurately under the relevant heads is in no way discriminatory or unjust and the levy of such additional tax does not amount to deprivation of property without any authority of law nor is the imposition of such additional tax beyond the power of Parliament. The provision is valid.
Kerala State Coir Corporation Ltd. v. Union of India (1994) 210 ITR 121 (Ker.) ref.
Philip, George for Petitioner.
Mrs. Chitra Venkataraman for Respondents.
JUDGMENT
The petitioner challenges the provision providing for levy of additional tax under section 143(lA) of the Income Tax Act, 1961, introduced by the Direct Tax Laws .(Amendment) Act, 1989, on the ground that the same is discriminatory and unconstitutional. This provision is one made for the levy of additional income‑tax in the circumstances referred to in that provision, viz., where the income shown by any person in the return is increased or the loss declared in the return is reduced or is converted into income. The said section is intended to encourage assessees to be honest, while filing the return, and also to discourage assessees from adjusting the figures by treating amounts as income not received or by treating them as a loss or as an item of expenditure. If after the provisions are properly applied to the return submitted by the assessees, the adjustments are found to be warranted, then the provisions providing for the levy of additional income- tax on the amounts so adjusted will operate. There can, therefore, be no doubt as to the section being a salutary one it the public interest and the interest of citizens of the country who are to pay the tax levied under the Act with honesty and without withholding the amounts properly due to the State. This provision does not in any manner violate Article 14 of the Constitution of India, as there is no discrimination among the assessees. A person who is dishonest and does not declare his income correctly cannot be put in the same class as that of the other assessees, who truthfully declare their income and items of expenditure and‑ who do not conceal or withhold the income received by them. The additional income‑tax leviable on persons whose returns do not state the figures accurately under the relevant heads is in no way discriminatory or unjust and the levy of such additional tax, does not amount to deprivation of property Without any authority of law nor is the imposition of such additional tax beyond the power of Parliament.
There is no merit in the challenge made to this provision.
A similar view has been taken by another learned single Judge in the case of Kerala State Coir Corporation Ltd. v. Union of India (1994) 210 ITR 121 (Ker.). The writ petition and the connected miscellaneous petition are dismissed. No costs.
M.B.A./372/FC
Petition dismissed.