K. Govindan and Sons, M/s. v. Commissioner of Income-Tax, Cochin, (SC) BS78134
SUPREME COURT OF INDIA

Before:- S.P. Bharucha, D.P. Mohapatra and Y.K. Sabharwal, JJ.

Civil Appeal No. 1144 of 1999. D/d. 1.12.2000.

M/s. K. Govindan and Sons - Appellant

Versus

Commissioner of Income-tax, Cochin - Respondents

For the Appellant :- Roy Abraham and Ms. Baby Krishnan, Advocates.

For the Respondents :- K.N. Shukla, Sr. Advocate, Rajiv Nande and S.K. Dwivedi, Advocates with him.

Income Tax Act, 1961, Section 139(8), Expln. 2, Expln. 148, Section 2(40) - Income-Tax - "Regular assessment" - Assessment under Section 147 is a 'regular assessment' within meaning of Expln. 2 to Section 139(8) - Held that the interest is chargeable under Section 139(8) - Further held Expln. 2 inserted in 1985 being clarificatory applies to assessment year 1984-85.

[Para 14]

Cases Referred :-

K. Gopalaswami Mudaliar v. Fifth Additional Income-tax Officer, Coimbatore, (1963) 49 ITR 322.

National Agricultural Co-operative Marketing Federation of India Ltd. v. Union of India, (1981) 130 ITR 928 (Delhi).

Lally Jacob v. Income-tax Officer, (1992) 197 ITR 439.

Commissioner of Income-tax v. Triple Crown Agency, (1993) 204 ITR 377 .

Commissioner of Income-tax v. Smt. Sushma Saxena, (1997) 223 ITR 395.

Prakash Lal Khandelwal v. I.T.O., (1989) 180 ITR 604.

Modi Industries Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax, (1995) 216 ITR 759 .

JUDGMENT

D.P. Mohapatra, J. - The question that arises for determination in this appeal is whether in an assessment made under Section 147 of the Income Tax Act, 1961 (for short 'the Act') it is open to the assessing authority to charge interest for default in filing return under Section 139(8) of the Act? For answering this question it is necessary to determine what is a 'regular assessment' for the purpose of Section 139(8) of the Act.

2. Shorn of unnecessary details the facts leading to the present proceeding may be stated thus:

3. For the assessment year 1984-85 the assessee, appellant herein, filed a return of income in response to a notice issued under Section 148 of the Act. While completing the assessment the assessing authority charged interest under Section 139(8) and also under Section 217 of the Act. In the appeal filed by the assessee before the Commissioner of Income-tax (Appeals) it was contended that the assessment in the case was not a 'regular assessment' within the meaning of Section 2(4) of the Act and, therefore, no interest could be charged under Section 139(8) of the Act. The contention did not find favour with the appellate authority so far as the interest charged under Section 217 is concerned, but the contention was accepted in respect of the interest under Section 139(8) of the Act. The assessee carried the matter further in apepal to the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal wherein the contention of the appellant as noted above was accepted and the order passed by the assessing authority and confirmed by the appellate authority were set aside. The Tribunal held that the assessment was not a 'regular assessment' but only a 're-opened assessment' under Section 147(a) of the Act.

4. In compliance with the direction of the High Court in a petition filed by the Revenue under Section 256(1) of the Act, the following question was referred by the Tribunal:

5. The High Court by the judgment dated 31-7-1998 in ITR No. 63 of 1996 answered the question in the affirmative and held thus:

6. The said judgment is under challenge in this appeal filed by the assessee.

7. It will be convenient to refer to the relevant provisions of the Act before considering the merits of the case.

8. In Section 2(40) the term 'regular assessment' is defined to mean the assessment made under sub-section (3) of Section 143 or Section 144.

9. In Section 139(8) a provision is made regarding liability of the assessee to pay simple interest at the rate of fifteen per cent per annum, reckoned from the day immediately following the specified date to the date of the furnishing of the return or, where no return has been furnished, the date of completion of the assessment under Section 144 on the amount of the tax payable on the total income as determined on regular assessment, as reduced by the advance tax, if any, paid and any tax deducted at source. In the proviso to sub-section (8) the Assessing Officer is vested with power in such cases and under such circumstances as may be prescribed, to reduce or waive the interest payable by an assessee under the sub-section. Explanation 2 to sub-section (8) on which strong reliance is placed by the appellant reads thus:

10. This explanation was introduced in the Act by the Taxation Laws (Amendment) Act, 1984 w.e.f. 1-4-1985. The question to be considered is whether the explanation has application to the assessment year 1984-85. The answer to the question depends on whether the explanation is to be read as a clarificatory or an amendatory provision. It was not disputed before us that if the provision is construed as clarificatory then it will be applicable to the assessment year 1984-85.

11. Section 143 lays down the procedure to be followed in a case where a return has been made under Section 139, or in response to a notice under sub-section (1) of Section 142.

12. Section 144 deals with the procedure in a case of Best Judgment Assessment which has application if any person fails to make the return required under sub-section (1) of Section 139 or fails to comply with all the terms of a notice issued under sub-section (1) of Section 142 or having made a return, fails to comply with all the terms of a notice issued under sub-section (2) of Section 143.

13. Section 147 deals with the cases of income escaping assessment. Closely linked with it is Section 148 which makes provision for issue of notice where income has escaped assessment. Both the sections are quoted below:

14. That it is so, is clear on a fair reading of Section 147 in which provision is made for both assessment and re-assessment in a case where any income chargeable to tax has escaped assessment for any assessment year. The proviso treats at par the assessment under Section 143(3) and under Section 147 and makes no distinction whether the escapement of income is by reason of the failure on the part of the assessee to make a return under Section 139 or in response to a notice issued under sub-section (1) of Section 142 or Section 148. Under Clauses (a) and (b) of Explanation 2 to Section 147 - Cases where no return has been furnished by the assessee and where a return of income has been furnished by the assessee but no assessment has been made, have both been included in the expression 'escaped assessment.' Section 148 mandates the Assessing Officer to serve a notice on the assessee before making the assessment, re-assessment or re-computation under Section 147. From the aforementioned provisions it is manifest that an initial assessment made by the Assessing Officer either on the assessee voluntarily furnishing a return of the income or furnishing such a return on being served a notice under Section 148 is a 'regular assessment' under Section 2(40) of the Act but an order passed by the Assessing Officer making a re-assessment or revised assessment in a case where an assessment had been made, does not come within the meaning of the said expression. In both the cases the manner of making the assessment is similar. The position that follows is that while making the assessment under Section 147 in a case where the assessee furnishes a return in pursuance of the notice served on him under Section 148 of the Act the provision for charging interest under Section 139(8) is applicable and it is open to the Assessing Officer to charge interest on the assessee in such proceeding. This construction of the statutory provisions, in our view, is in accord with the intent and purpose for which the power to charge interest on a defaulting assessee has been vested in the Assessing Officer. To hold otherwise will mean that an assessee who files a delayed return will be liable to pay interest while an assessee who does not file any return is free from such a liability. Such an interpretation of statutory provisions which will result in an absurd situation, cannot be accepted.

15. Next we may notice a few decisions of the High Courts dealing with the point.

16. In the case K. Gopalaswami Mudaliar v. Fifth Additional Income-tax Officer, Coimbatore, (1963) 49 ITR 322 (Madras High Court) it was held that in cases where no return has been submitted by the assessee, the expression "regular assessment" in Section 18-A(6) refers to an assessment made under Section 23 after the issue of a special notice under Section 22(2) during the year of assessment itself, as well as an assessment by the issue of a notice analogous to one under Section 22(2) in proceedings initiated under Section 34(1)(a). In either event, it is nothing more than a regular assessment in the sense that it is an initial assessment made upon the assessee and not an assessment which has once been made but is reopened.

(Emphasis supplied)

17. The High Court of Delhi construing the term 'regular assessment' in the light of provisions of Sections 214, 215, 216 and 244(1)(a) of the Act took a similar view in National Agricultural Co-operative Marketing Federation of India Ltd. v. Union of India, (1981) 130 ITR 928 (Delhi) wherein it was held inter alia that the words 'regular assessment' shall as far as possible, be interpreted consistently in all the provisions of Chapter XVII-C. No difficulty will be caused by its interpretation to mean only the first or the initial assessment. It was also held that for the purposes of Sections 214, 215 and 273 there is no reason why an assessment made for the first time under Section 143 should be outside the purview of that section. There are indications in Sections 215 and 216 itself to show that the expression "regular assessment" cannot mean anything but the first or original assessment.

18. The view taken in the aforementioned two decisions was approved by a Full Bench of the Kerala High Court in Lally Jacob v. Income-tax Officer, (1992) 197 ITR 439 which took the view that any assessment made for the first time by resort to Section 147 will also be a regular assessment for the purpose of invoking Section 217 of the Act. Elucidating the point, the Full Bench observed:

19. A contra view has been taken by a Division Bench of Gauhati High Court in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Triple Crown Agency, (1993) 204 ITR 377 in which the Court was of the view that a reading of the provisions of Sections 139, 143, 147, 148 and 217 (1-A) of the Act makes it clear that the assessment or reassessment contemplated under Section 147 is quite different in nature and content from the assessment under Section 143 that a proceeding initiated under Section 147 and terminating in assessment or reassessment is not a 'regular assessment' as contemplated in Section 139(8) and to such a case the provisions of Section 139(8) cannot apply. Construing the explanation 2 to sub-section (8) of Section 139 the High Court took the view that the provision has only widened the scope of the expression "regular assessment" by bringing within its ambit assessment made for the first time under Section 147. The amendment has been incorporated in view of the decisions of various High Courts. The amendment to the provision is not clarificatory in nature but is clearly amendatory in nature.

20. The Punjab and Haryana High Court in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Smt. Sushma Saxena, (1997) 223 ITR 395 took the view that an assessment or reassessment made under Section 147 was not a 'regular assessment' within the meaning of Section 2(40). As noted in the judgment in that case the Patna High Court in Prakash Lal Khandelwal v. I.T.O., (1989) 180 ITR 604 also was of the view that if the assessee filed his return for the first time pursuant to notice under Section 148 of the Act, then it was evident that the assessee was assessed under Section 143(3) read with Section 147 of the Act and, therefore, it was not a "regular assessment."

21. In Modi Industries Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax, (1995) 216 ITR 759 ) this Court had occasion to deal with the meaning of "regular assessment" in Section 214 of the Act. The Court observed (Para 31 of AIR, Tax LR):

(Emphasis supplied)

22. The decisions of the Madras High Court in K. Gopalaswami Mudaliar case (supra), the Delhi High Court in National Agricultural Co-operative Marketing Federation of India case (supra) and Kerala High Court in Lally Jacob case (supra) lay down the correct position in law and they have our approval. The decisions of the Gauhati High Court in Commissioner Income Tax v. Triple Crown Agency case (supra) and of Punjab and Haryana High Court in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Sushma Saxena (supra) where not correct in law.

23. The view taken by us that a first or initial assessment under Section 147 of the Act is a 'regular assessment' within the meaning of Section 139(8) of the Act, has been the position of law even before the explanation in Section 139(8) was added by amendment. In that view of the matter the explanation merely clarified the position taking it beyond pale of doubt. The Parliament thought it necessary to add the explanation with a view to remove the doubt raised in certain decisions of different High Courts in which a contrary view was taken. Thus the explanation is merely a clarificatory provision and has application to the period of assessment in the case i.e. assessment year 1984-85.

24. The appeal filed by the assessee, being devoid of merits, is dismissed with costs.

Appeal dismissed.