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Rajasthan Investment Corporation Vs. the Deputy Commercial Tax Officer - Court Judgment

SooperKanoon Citation
SubjectSales Tax
CourtChennai High Court
Decided On
Case Number Writ Petition No. 857 of 1964
Judge
Reported in[1968]21STC500(Mad)
AppellantRajasthan Investment Corporation
RespondentThe Deputy Commercial Tax Officer
Appellant Advocate V. Ramachandran, Adv.
Respondent Advocate J. Kanakaraj, Adv. for ;the Government Pleader
DispositionPetition allowed
Cases ReferredK.J. Lingam and Ors. v. Joint Commercial Tax Officer
Excerpt:
.....a return, which is the main allegation in the notice, would fall under section 46(1)(b) of the madras general sales tax act, 1959, and that section provides a maximum composition fee of rs. learned counsel for the petitioner argues that on the same reasoning, when the petitioner has to face a prosecution as it is proposed in the notice for having failed to submit a return for the year in question, the criminal court would be debarred from' examining his liability to be assessed to tax including the question whether he is a dealer and whether the transactions in which he took part were sales or not. down in the decision cited above, the criminal court will be precluded from considering all the defences, which the petitioner wants to rely in support of his action in having failed to..........who want to purchase cars. but the transactions do not constitute sales within the meaning of the madras general sales tax act and the petitioner is not a dealer as defined under that act. nevertheless on 11th may, 1964, the respondent, the deputy commercial tax officer, thyagarayanagar, issued a notice to the petitioner as below:messrs rajasthan. investment corporation are doing the business of hire-purchase of automobiles. during the year 1958-59 they have had transactions to the extent of rs. 24,224. as the assessees are the first dealers in this state, they are liable to pay tax at 6 per cent. on the above transactions. the tax amounts to rs. 1,453-44.the dealers should have filed a return in form a-l showing their turnover for the year 1958-59 on or before 1st may, 1959. they.....
Judgment:
ORDER

Ramakrishnan, J.

1. The petitioner in this petition filed under Article 226 of the Constitution for the issue of a writ of prohibition is the Rajasthan Investment Corporation. The petitioner makes the following allegations in the affidavit appended to the petition. The petitioner carries on business as a financier of hire-purchase transactions and motor vehicles. The nature of the transactions is to advance moneys on the security of motor cars to people who want to purchase cars. But the transactions do not constitute sales within the meaning of the Madras General Sales Tax Act and the petitioner is not a dealer as defined under that Act. Nevertheless on 11th May, 1964, the respondent, the Deputy Commercial Tax Officer, Thyagarayanagar, issued a notice to the petitioner as below:

Messrs Rajasthan. Investment Corporation are doing the business of hire-purchase of automobiles. During the year 1958-59 they have had transactions to the extent of Rs. 24,224. As the assessees are the first dealers in this State, they are liable to pay tax at 6 per cent. on the above transactions. The tax amounts to Rs. 1,453-44.

The dealers should have filed a return in Form A-l showing their turnover for the year 1958-59 on or before 1st May, 1959. They failed to do so and thereby committed an offence punishable under Section 45(2)(a) of the Madras General Sales Tax Act, 1959.

The dealers are hereby required to appear before me in my office at 10-30 a.m. on 18th May, 1964, and state why they should not be prosecuted in the Court of the Sixth Presidency Magistrate for the said offence. If they are willing to have the offence compounded departmentally, by paying a compounding fee of Rs. 2,908 they may state their willingness in writing on the stipulated date.

2. The petitioner contends that by the date of this notice more than five years had elapsed from the end of the year to which the transactions related, that he could not be assessed to sales tax for the turnover even on the footing that the transactions were sales and that therefore the notice asking him to show cause why he should not be prosecuted under Section 45(2)(a) of the Madras General Sales Tax Act is illegal and ultra vires, and it is therefore necessary that a writ of prohibition should issue restraining the respondent from proceeding further in pursuance of the abovesaid notice. There was also another allegation in the affidavit of the petitioner that even assuming the notice would be valid in other respects,, the failure to submit a return, which is the main allegation in the notice, would fall under Section 46(1)(b) of the Madras General Sales Tax Act, 1959, and that section provides a maximum composition fee of Rs. 1,000. The procedure of the respondent in treating the alleged contravention as falling under Section 46(1)(a) for which the composition fee is fixed at a sum not exceeding Rs. 1,000 or double the amount of the tax recoverable, whichever is greater, is also a ground vitiating the notice.

3. Learned counsel for the petitioner at the time of the hearing of the writ petition referred to a decision of a Full Bench of this Court in Public Prosecutor v. V.M. Ramalingam Pillai [1958] 9 S.T.C. 510. That decision dealt with the scope of Section 16-A of the Madras General Sales Tax Act of 1939, which is analogous to Section 48(2) of the Madras General Sales Tax Act, 1959, which states :

The validity of the assessment of any tax, or of the levy of any fee or other amount, made tinder this Act, or the liability of any person to pay any tax, fee or other amount so assessed or levied shall not be questioned in any criminal court in any prosecution or other proceeding, whether under this Act or otherwise.

4. In the view of the Full Bench, when a person is prosecuted under Section 16-A of the Madras General Sales Tax Act, 1939, it will not be open to him to raise any objection, plea or contention which he could have raised before the authorities set up under the General Sales Tax Act, and it will, be open to him to raise only those pleas, objections and contentions, which those authorities are precluded from entertaining. Learned counsel for the petitioner argues that on the same reasoning, when the petitioner has to face a prosecution as it is proposed in the notice for having failed to submit a return for the year in question, the criminal court would be debarred from' examining his liability to be assessed to tax including the question whether he is a dealer and whether the transactions in which he took part were sales or not. Without an examination of those questions his liability to be convicted cannot be determined. For the aforesaid reasons it is urged before me by the learned counsel for the petitioner, that the proposal to prosecute him cannot be sustained, because by reason of the principles laid. down in the decision cited above, the criminal court will be precluded from considering all the defences, which the petitioner wants to rely in support of his action in having failed to submit a return. Per contra the learned Government Pleader submits that the decision in Public Prosecutor v. V.M. Ramalingam Pillai [1958] 9 S.T.C. 510 as well as the principles laid down in Section 48(2) of the Madras General Sales Tax Act, 1959 (Section16-A of the Madras General Sales Tax Act, 1939) relate to completed assessments and can have no application to cases like the present one where there has been no completed assessment and where, further, no assessment may not at all be possible to be made in view of the lapse of time. No doubt the Full Bench has referred at page 527 to the difficulties, which the Magistrate might be faced with, if he is asked to consider about the propriety of an assessment at a trial where he is bound to follow the rules of the Evidence Act, but, on the other hand, the authorities set up by the Sales Tax Act are persons who may be presumed to have acquired, by sheer experience, proficiency and skill in making estimates and computations requisite to arriving at a reasonable figure, whereas the Magistrates do not usually have the training or facilities for the purpose. These observations must be considered in the context of a completed assessment, because we find earlier in the same judgment at page 519, the observations that where tax is determined after notice to the assessees, it is not repugnant to rules of natural justice to provide that the validity of assessment shall not be questioned at the stage of realisation of the tax, and that the provision in Section 16-A of the Sales Tax Act is analogous to the rule which precludes the judgment-debtors from putting forward at the stage of execution of a decree, defences that were open to them in the suit itself. On the other hand, there is another Full Bench decision of this Court of a much earlier date relating to the prosecution under the Local Boards Act, in Ramaswami v. President, Taluq Board, Tade-palligudam : AIR1930Mad766 where the Full Bench has held :

When a Local Board moves a Magistrate under Section 221 of the Madras Local Boards Act, 1920, to recover a penalty imposed under Section 164(1) of that Act for alleged encroachment on land belonging to the Board, the defaulting party can plead that there was no encroachment at all, and the Magistrate can go into the question whether the alleged encroachment was true and therefore justified the imposition of the penalty.

5. In a decision given by me in Public Prosecutor v. Ramachandra Chettiar (1966) 2 M.L.J. 446 it was held that the provision of a time-limit of five years for assessing escaped turnover, cannot be relied upon as an automatic bar for a prosecution under Section 45(2) of the Act for an offence of wilful submission of a false return in respect of a period prior to five years. Even in such circumstances a prosecution can be maintained but it will be for the prosecution to adduce data from which the criminal court could come to the inference that the return submitted by the dealer was false or inaccurate.

6. But in the circumstances of this case it appears to me that it is unnecessary to decide on the question thus propounded, whether by reason of Section 48 (2), the proposed prosecution should be struck down as not maintainable, because more than five years had elapsed from the date to which the alleged return relates, and because there is no actual assessment involving a determination by the authorities of the Sales Tax Department, that the petitioner's transactions are sales and the petitioner is a dealer under the Sales Tax Act. The reason is this. Under Section 46(1)(a) relating to the composition of offences the prescribed authority is required to give to the person who has committed or is reasonably suspected of having committed an offence under this Act an option to pay within a specified period by way of composition of such offence, where the offence consists of the failure to pay, or the evasion of any tax recoverable under the Act, in addition to the tax so recoverable, a sum of money not exceeding one thousand rupees or double the amount of the tax recoverable, whichever is greater. It is under this section that in the notice now impugned the petitioner has been directed to state his willingness in writing before the stipulated date to pay the compounding fee of Rs. 2,908 in lieu of prosecution for the offence under Section 45(2)(a) of the Act. The learned Government Pleader represents that this amount has been arrived at on a computation under the Sales Tax Act, of the tax which the petitioner might be liable to pay treating the alleged hire-purchase transactions as sales. In other words, the composition fee is fixed with reference to Section 46(1)(a) of the Act. It is obvious that Section 46(1)(a) of the Act refers to cases of completed assessment where the assessee has either failed to pay the tax levied or has done something which amounts to evasion of the payment of the tax, which is recoverable under the Act. That this should be the meaning of Section 46(1)(a) will also be clear from the provision in that section, that the composition will be in addition to the tax recoverable. But in the present case there is no question of an assessment having been completed, and therefore, there is no fixing of an amount of tax as recoverable. Therefore it will be totally inappropriate as well as illegal to resort to Section 46(1)(a) for determining the amount of composition fee payable in lieu of prosecution. The appropriate provision must be the residual provision contained in Section 46(1)(b) which fixes a maximum of Rs. 1,000 for the composition.

7. As regards the further question whether the notice is vitiated because a wrong provision of law for fixing composition fee is mentioned therein, it appears to me that the petitioner might be willing to pay a lesser amount of Rs. 1,000 and avoid the prosecution, but where an amount of composition fee, which is totally illegal and which is far in excess of what the law permits, has been proposed to be imposed on him in lieu of prosecution, he will be greatly prejudiced. I am of opinion that the petitioner's submission is right, and the impugned notice, which contains as an essential ingredient, . a proposal to levy composition fee far in excess of what the statute has prescribed as maximum, must be struck down as illegal. The learned Government Pleader refers to a recent decision of Venkatadri, J., in Writ Petition No. 632 etc. of 1963, Since reported as K.J. Lingam and Ors. v. Joint Commercial Tax Officer, Mount Road Distrion, Madras and Ors. [1967] 19 S.T.C. 349 where the learned Judge has made the observation that a proceeding for composition fee under Section 46 will give rise to a revision under Section 33 and that the petitioner will have an alternative remedy of revision. But since in the present case the direction in the notice appears to be patently illegal and without jurisdiction, the remedy now sought by way of a writ can be made available to the petitioner. Therefore the rule nisi is made absolute, and the respondent will be restrained from proceeding further with the notice in its present form. As mentioned already, I am not expressing any opinion in this case on the further question raised earlier as to whether, in the absence of a completed assessment, a notice for prosecution for non-submission of a return under Section 45(2)(a) can be maintained or not. There will be no order as to costs.


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