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Commissioner of Income-tax Vs. Laxman Dass and Ram Murti - Court Judgment

SooperKanoon Citation
SubjectDirect Taxation
CourtAllahabad High Court
Decided On
Case NumberIncome-tax Applications Nos. 62, 67, 68, 72, 75 and 82 of 1999
Judge
Reported in[2000]246ITR622(All)
ActsIncome-tax Act, 1961 - Sections 256(2); Land Acquisition Act, 1894
AppellantCommissioner of Income-tax
RespondentLaxman Dass and Ram Murti
Appellant AdvocateShambhu Chopra, Adv.
Respondent AdvocateO.P. Sapra, Adv.
Excerpt:
.....court cannot issue a writ of mandamus directing the state authorities to acquire a particular land. land acquisition is not purely ministerial act to be performed by executive no direction in nature of mandamus whether interim or final can be issued by court under article 226 necessarily to acquire particular land in public interest. land acquisition is not a purely ministerial act to be performed by the executive and therefore, no mandamus can be issued by the court in exercise of its power under article 226 of the constitution, whether suo motu or otherwise, whether in public interest litigation or otherwise directing acquisition of land under the provisions of land acquisition act, 1894. it would, however, be open to the court in exercise of that power to invite the..........in which it was held that the interest on enhanced compensation ordered by the court accrues from year to year from the date on which possession of the land was taken and that the assessment of the entire amount of interest in the year in which the order was passed, was not proper. thus, the controversy in rama bai's case : [1990]181itr400(sc) was different. the tribunal has held that the grant of additional compensation and interest thereon has not become final and is sub-judice in the high court. this finding is not disputed. in cit v. hindustan housing and land development trust ltd. : [1986]161itr524(sc) , the supreme court held that when the entire amount was in dispute in appeals filed by the state government, there was no absolute right to receive the amount at that stage. if the.....
Judgment:

1. Income-tax Applications Nos. 62, 82 and 72 are directed against a common order dated November 5, 1997, passed by the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal, New Delhi, in I.T.A. Nos. 2753, 2754 and 2755 of 1997 for the assessment years 1989-90 to 1991-92, while Income-tax Applications Nos. 75, 68 and 67 are directed against an order dated November 11, 1997, passed by the said Tribunal in I.T.A. Nos. 2750 to 2752 of 1997, for the same assessment years and in the subsequent order dated November 11, 1997, the Tribunal has followed its earlier order dated November 5, 1997,referred to above. The Commissioner in these applications prays that the Appellate Tribunal be directed to state a case and to refer the following' identical question for the opinion of this court :

'Whether, the Tribunal was legally correct in holding that the interest accrued and paid to the assessee on additional compensation is not taxable by relying upon the order of the Supreme Court in the case reported upon CIT v. Hindustan Housing and Land Development Trust Ltd. : [1986]161ITR524(SC) , ignoring the amendment to Section 45 of the Income-tax Act by the Finance Act, 1987, and also overlooking the decision of the Supreme Court in the case of Rama Bai : [1990]181ITR400(SC) ?'

2. We have heard Sri Shambhu Chopra, learned counsel for the Commissioner, and Sri O. P. Sapra learned counsel for the respondent. Some agricultural land belonging to the two respondents was acquired under the Land Acquisition Act, 1894. The respondents were not satisfied with the compensation awarded and seem to have approached the district judge under Section 18 of the Land Acquisition Act who awarded additional compensation. Against the award of the district judge, the Government has preferred appeals which are stated to be pending in this court. Certain amounts are said to have been received by the respondents towards the additional compensation and interest thereon and the question was about the taxability of the amount of interest in respect of the additional compensation. The Tribunal found that the matter was sub-judice in the High Court and, therefore, in view of the law laid down by the Supreme Court in CIT v. Hindustan Housing and Land Development Trust Ltd. : [1986]161ITR524(SC) , the interest was not taxable till the dispute is finally settled. The Tribunal held that the case was squarely covered by the decision of the Supreme Court and, therefore, the amount received by the two respondents was not taxable. In the question as proposed reliance is placed on a decision of the Supreme Court in Rama Bai v. CIT : [1990]181ITR400(SC) , in which it was held that the interest on enhanced compensation ordered by the court accrues from year to year from the date on which possession of the land was taken and that the assessment of the entire amount of interest in the year in which the order was passed, was not proper. Thus, the controversy in Rama Bai's case : [1990]181ITR400(SC) was different. The Tribunal has held that the grant of additional compensation and interest thereon has not become final and is sub-judice in the High Court. This finding is not disputed. In CIT v. Hindustan Housing and Land Development Trust Ltd. : [1986]161ITR524(SC) , the Supreme Court held that when the entire amount was in dispute in appeals filed by the State Government, there was no absolute right to receive the amount at that stage. If the appeal was allowed in its entirety, the right to payment of enhanced compensation would have fallen altogether and, therefore, the extra amount of compensation was not income arising or accruing to the respondentsduring the previous year relevant to the assessment year 1956-57. The Supreme Court clarified that there is a distinction between the cases such as the present one where the right to receive payment is in dispute and it is not a question of merely quantifying the amount to be received and the cases where the right to receive the payment is admitted and the quantification only of the amount payable is left to be determined in accordance with the settled or accepted principle. Therefore, the controversy that was raised before the Tribunal and is also sought to be raised in the proposed question is already settled by the aforesaid judgment of the apex court and no referable question of law arises. The applications are accordingly rejected.


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