BOMBAY HIGH COURT
Commissioner of Income Tax
Vs
D N Mehta
(Beaumont,C.J.)
22.08.1934
JUDGEMENT
Beaumont,C.J
.
-
( 1. ) THIS is a reference made by the Commissioner of Income Tax on his motion
under Section 66 (1), Income Tax Act, 1922, in which he raises two questions,
the first one being, in effect, whether Section 24-B, which was added to the
Income Tax Act by the Income Tax (Second Amendment) Act of 1933 has
retrospective effect so as to apply to the case of a person dying before the
Amendment Act was passed, and, secondly, whether, if the Amendment Act has
retrospective effect, the Commissioner was justified in taking action against
the assessee under Section 34, Income Tax Act. It was held by this Court
in Commissioner of Income Tax v. Reid, which was decided at the end of the year
1930, that where a person dies after the commencement of the financial year,
but before his income has been assessed for the purpose of income tax, his
estate is not liable to pay the tax. The amendment Act was passed on 11th
September, 1933, no doubt, with a view to removing the difficulties pointed out
in that case. In the present case the only material facts are that on 20th
April, 1932, a notice was served on Bai Avabai N. Mehta under Section 22(2).
Income Tax Act, requiring her to make a return in respect of her income for the
year 1932-33. She died on 6th May, 1932, before any return had been made, and
the question which arises is whether her estate is liable for the tax in
respect of the year 1932-33 under the provisions of the Amendment Act, she
having died before the Act was passed. Section 11 of the Amendment Act provides
that after Section 24 of the principal Act, the following Sections shall be
inserted, namely : Of the sections so inserted, Section 24-B is the material
one for the present purpose. That provides in sub-Section (1) that Where a
person dies, his executor, administrator or other legal representative shall be
liable to pay out of the estate of the deceased person to the extent to which
the estate is capable of meeting the charge, the tax assessed as payable by
such person, or any tax which would have been payable by him under this Act if
he had not died. Then sub-sections (2) and (3) deal with methods of
assessment, and for the present purpose it is only necessary to notice that
each sub-section commences with the words, where a person dies. The view taken
by the Commissioner is that the principal Act charges tax upon the deceased,
and that the Amendment Act merely provides the machinery for making the charge
effective so that once the machinery is there, the tax charged can be
collected, whatever the date of the death of the deceased. It is, I think,
correct to say that Section 3 of the principal Act charges the tax upon every
one coming within the purview of the Act who was alive at the beginning of the
financial year, but in the case of a person dying before assessment, that
liability was inchoate only, and crystallized into an enforceable liability for
the first time on the passing of the Amendment Act. It is therefore not quite
accurate to say that the Amendment Act merely deals with machinery; it does for
the first time impose an enforceable liability. The principle which must always
be applied in construing a taxing Act is that the Government must show that the
tax sought to be recovered has been imposed in language which admits of no
reasonable doubt. The opening words of each sub-section to Section 24-B : Where
a person dies, though the use of the present tense is not altogether
appropriate on any reading of the Act, seem to me more appropriate to future
than to past deaths. If the Legislature had intended the Act to have a
retrospective effect, it would have been very easy to have said, dies whether
before of after the passing of this Act. Inconvenience and hardship might be
caused by making the tax payable out of an estate which has been distributed on
the basis of the then existing law. The Advocate General has relied on
Section 19 of the Amendment Act, which introduces into the principal Act
Section 49-B, under which a refund may be claimed by the personal
representative of a decease person who was entitled to such refund, and he
suggests that Section 24-B and 49-B should be read together and both given
retrospective effect. But even if the latter section applies to a death before
the Act came into force, it does not, I think, follow that we should give a
similar meaning to Section 24-B. In my opinion the legislature has not shown
with sufficient clearness an intention to make section 24-B retrospective, and
I think therefore we must answer the first question in that sense.
( 2. ) THE second question in terms does not arise, but as the subject has been
discussed in argument, and the Advocate-General had invited the Court to give
some guidance upon it to the Commissioner, I would say that, had I been of
opinion that Section 24-B was retrospective, I should still have thought that
Section 34 had no application in the present case. Sub-Section (1), Section
24-B makes the estate of a deceased person liable for tax under two heads,
first, for tax assessed as payable by such person, and secondly, for any tax
which would have been payable by him under the Income Tax Act if he had not
died. It is not easy to see what tax falls under that second head, because the
deceased would not have become liable for tax merely by continuing to live it
would have been necessary to make an assessment of his income. However,
whatever the meaning of sub-Section (1) may be, the construction of
sub-Sections (2) and (3) to my mind presents no difficulty : sub-Section (2)
deals with the case of the deceased person not having been served with a notice
under sub-Section (2) of Section 22 or Section 34, as the case may be, the
latter section coming into operation where there has been an assessment upon
the deceased under Section 22 (2), but some income has escaped assessment, so
that if the deceased had lived he would have received a notice under Section
34. In either of those events the sub-section in effect provides that the
Income Tax Officer can serve the appropriate notice on the personal
representative, and then proceed to assess the total income of the deceased
person as if such representative were the assessee. THEn sub-section (3) deals
with the case in which a notice has been served on the deceased under
sub-Section (2) of Section 22, and the notice has either not been complied with
at all, or has been complied with imperfectly. In either of those events
the Income Tax Officer can make an assessment of the total income of the
deceased person, and determine the tax payable by him on the basis of such
assessment, and he can call for the production of accounts and documents or
other evidence from the personal representative. That is the sub-section which
would have applied to this case if we had thought that the Act had
retrospective effect, because the deceased had been served with a notice under
sub-section (2) of Section 22 and had not complied with it. But if the estate
of the deceased is assessed either under sub-Section (2) of sub-Section (3) of
Section 24-B I do not myself follow how, at any rate in a normal case, there is
any occasion to introduce the provisions of Section 34, because the estate has
not escaped assessment, but has been assessed under the Amendment Act. We
therefore answer Question No. 1 by declaring that the provisions of Section
24-B introduced by the Amendment Act apply only to cases in which death took
place later than midnight on 10th September, 1933. Question No. 2 does not
arise. THEre will be no order as to costs. I have assumed that the reference in
the Commissioners questions to Section 24-B (2) was a slip, and that it was
intended to refer to Section 24-B. Sen, J. - It seems to me that the
questions referred to us have not been accurately framed. The provisions of
sub-Section (2) of Section 24-B do not appear applicable to the facts of this
case. Here admittedly the deceased was served with a notice before she died,
and sub-Section (2) provides for the case in which a person dies, before he is
served with a notice under sub-Section (2) of Section 22 or Section 34, as the
case may be. It is true that after Avabais death action purporting to be under
Section 34 has been taken by the Income Tax Authorities, and that no notice was
sent to Avabai under Section 34, but I am of opinion that in the circumstances
of this case no action under Section 34 was called for. It therefore seems that
this was a case falling under sub-Section (3) of Section 24-B, which provides
for the case in which a person dies without having furnished a return which he
has been required to furnish under provisions of sub-Section (2) Section 22.
This Court has already held in Commissioner of Income Tax, Bombay Presidency v.
National Mutual Life Association of Australasia Ltd., that the High Court has
power under Section 66 (5) to amend the question asked by the Commissioner, and
after raising the real question to answer it. We accordingly substitute Section
24-B for Section 24-B (2) in the two questions referred to us. Question No. 1
referred to us amounts to this. Does Section 24-B apply to the estate of a
person who died prior to the date of the enactment of the said section, viz.,
11th September, 1933, in other words, has the new section retrospective
operation ? It was held in Commissioner of Income Tax v. Reid, that if in
a case of this nature a charge was created on the income under Section 3 of the
Act, the requisite machinery for assessment and collection of the tax charged
was wanting in the Act. The new section has apparently been enacted with the
object of providing such machinery. It purports to create a liability to pay
the charges arising under Section 3. It is a well-settled rule of law that all
charges upon the subject must be imposed by clear and unambiguous language,
though such an Act is not to be so construed as to furnish a chance of escape
and means of evasion : see Maxwell on Interpretation of Statutes, Edn. 7, pp.
246 and 248. The liability to pay created by the new section must be construed
as a new charge upon a subject : and it does not appear to me that the language
of Section 24-B is altogether free from ambiguity. All the sub-sections of the
said section begin with the words : Where a person dies. This is capable of
meaning, where a person has died before the date of this amendment or shall die
thereafter as well as Where a person shall die on this section becoming part of
the Act. It was held in In re Athlumne (p. 555 of 1828, 2 Q. B.) : Perhaps
no rule of construction is more firmly established than this - that a
retrospective operation is not to be given to a statute so as to impair an
existing right or obligation, otherwise than as regards matters of procedure,
unless that effect cannot be avoided without doing violence to the language of
the enactment. If the enactment is expressed in language which is fairly
capable of either interpretation, it ought to be construed as prospective only. ;