SooperKanoon Citation | sooperkanoon.com/652914 |
Subject | Sales Tax |
Court | Supreme Court of India |
Decided On | Dec-02-1965 |
Judge | J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ. |
Reported in | AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC) |
Acts | Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act |
Appellant | State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) |
Respondent | Haji Hasan Dada |
Cases Referred | State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel |
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$viewFile = '/home/legalcrystal/app/View/Case/amp.ctp' $dataForView = array( 'title_for_layout' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ', 'desc' => array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p style="text-align: justify;">Shah, J. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p style="text-align: justify;">12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ), 'casename_url' => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan', 'args' => array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) ) $title_for_layout = 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ' $desc = array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p>Shah, J. </p><p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p>14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ) $casename_url = 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $args = array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) $url = 'https://sooperkanoon.com/case/amp/652914/state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $ctype = '' $caseref = 'State of Bombay v. 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Notice (8): Undefined variable: query [APP/View/Case/amp.ctp, line 120]sales tax - refund - section 13 of central provinces and berar sales tax act, 1947 and sales tax act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under act by assistant commissioner of sales tax (acst) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon section 13 applied to acst to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under act - acst rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by commissioner of sales tax in appeal - board of revenue set aside order of commissioner and ordered that case be returned to commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings section 13 amended with retrospective effect - state claimed under amended section.....Code Contextecho "<div class='table-bordered'><b>Excerpt:</b><br/>";
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Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p style="text-align: justify;">Shah, J. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p style="text-align: justify;">12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ), 'casename_url' => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan', 'args' => array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) ) $title_for_layout = 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ' $desc = array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p>Shah, J. </p><p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p>14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ) $casename_url = 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $args = array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) $url = 'https://sooperkanoon.com/case/amp/652914/state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $ctype = '' $caseref = 'State of Bombay v. 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$viewFile = '/home/legalcrystal/app/View/Case/amp.ctp' $dataForView = array( 'title_for_layout' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ', 'desc' => array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p style="text-align: justify;">Shah, J. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p style="text-align: justify;">12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ), 'casename_url' => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan', 'args' => array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) ) $title_for_layout = 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ' $desc = array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p>Shah, J. </p><p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p>14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ) $casename_url = 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $args = array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) $url = 'https://sooperkanoon.com/case/amp/652914/state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $ctype = '' $caseref = 'State of Bombay v. 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Notice (8): Undefined variable: query [APP/View/Case/amp.ctp, line 123]shah, j. 1. by order dated april 17, 1952, the respondent haji hasan dada was assessed by the assistant commissioner or sales tax, nagpur region, to pay tax under the central provinces & berar sales tax act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period november 13, 1947 to november 1, 1948. the respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on july 8, 1952. thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the c.p. & berar sales tax act, 1947 he applied on november 20, 1952 to the assistant commissioner of sales tax for an order refunding rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the board of revenue to be not taxable. the assistant commissioner.....Code Context}
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$viewFile = '/home/legalcrystal/app/View/Case/amp.ctp' $dataForView = array( 'title_for_layout' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ', 'desc' => array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p style="text-align: justify;">Shah, J. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p style="text-align: justify;">12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ), 'casename_url' => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan', 'args' => array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) ) $title_for_layout = 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ' $desc = array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p>Shah, J. </p><p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p>14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ) $casename_url = 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $args = array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) $url = 'https://sooperkanoon.com/case/amp/652914/state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $ctype = '' $caseref = 'State of Bombay v. 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$viewFile = '/home/legalcrystal/app/View/Case/amp.ctp' $dataForView = array( 'title_for_layout' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ', 'desc' => array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p style="text-align: justify;">Shah, J. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p style="text-align: justify;">12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ), 'casename_url' => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan', 'args' => array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) ) $title_for_layout = 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ' $desc = array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p>Shah, J. </p><p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p>14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ) $casename_url = 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $args = array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) $url = 'https://sooperkanoon.com/case/amp/652914/state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $ctype = '' $caseref = 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel<br>' $content = array( (int) 0 => '<p>Shah, J. ', (int) 1 => '<p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. ', (int) 2 => '<p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. ', (int) 3 => '<p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : ', (int) 4 => '<p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it ', (int) 5 => '<p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and ', (int) 6 => '<p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' ', (int) 7 => '<p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : ', (int) 8 => '<p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. ', (int) 9 => '<p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. ', (int) 10 => '<p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' ', (int) 11 => '<p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. ', (int) 12 => '<p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : ', (int) 13 => '<p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. ', (int) 14 => '<p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' ', (int) 15 => '<p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. ', (int) 16 => '<p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. ', (int) 17 => '<p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. ', (int) 18 => '<p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. ', (int) 19 => '<p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331', (int) 20 => '<p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. ', (int) 21 => '<p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. ', (int) 22 => '<p>14. Appeal allowed. ', (int) 23 => '' ) $paragraphAfter = (int) 1 $cnt = (int) 24 $i = (int) 0include - APP/View/Case/amp.ctp, line 144 View::_evaluate() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 971 View::_render() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 933 View::render() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 473 Controller::render() - CORE/Cake/Controller/Controller.php, line 963 Dispatcher::_invoke() - CORE/Cake/Routing/Dispatcher.php, line 200 Dispatcher::dispatch() - CORE/Cake/Routing/Dispatcher.php, line 167 [main] - APP/webroot/index.php, line 109
Shah, J.
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$viewFile = '/home/legalcrystal/app/View/Case/amp.ctp' $dataForView = array( 'title_for_layout' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ', 'desc' => array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p style="text-align: justify;">Shah, J. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p style="text-align: justify;">12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ), 'casename_url' => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan', 'args' => array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) ) $title_for_layout = 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ' $desc = array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p>Shah, J. </p><p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p>14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ) $casename_url = 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $args = array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) $url = 'https://sooperkanoon.com/case/amp/652914/state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $ctype = '' $caseref = 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel<br>' $content = array( (int) 0 => '<p>Shah, J. ', (int) 1 => '<p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. ', (int) 2 => '<p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. ', (int) 3 => '<p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : ', (int) 4 => '<p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it ', (int) 5 => '<p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and ', (int) 6 => '<p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' ', (int) 7 => '<p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : ', (int) 8 => '<p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. ', (int) 9 => '<p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. ', (int) 10 => '<p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' ', (int) 11 => '<p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. ', (int) 12 => '<p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : ', (int) 13 => '<p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. ', (int) 14 => '<p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' ', (int) 15 => '<p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. ', (int) 16 => '<p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. ', (int) 17 => '<p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. ', (int) 18 => '<p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. ', (int) 19 => '<p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331', (int) 20 => '<p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. ', (int) 21 => '<p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. ', (int) 22 => '<p>14. Appeal allowed. 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1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331.
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$viewFile = '/home/legalcrystal/app/View/Case/amp.ctp' $dataForView = array( 'title_for_layout' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ', 'desc' => array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p style="text-align: justify;">Shah, J. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p style="text-align: justify;">12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ), 'casename_url' => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan', 'args' => array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) ) $title_for_layout = 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ' $desc = array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p>Shah, J. </p><p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p>14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ) $casename_url = 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $args = array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) $url = 'https://sooperkanoon.com/case/amp/652914/state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $ctype = '' $caseref = 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel<br>' $content = array( (int) 0 => '<p>Shah, J. ', (int) 1 => '<p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. ', (int) 2 => '<p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. ', (int) 3 => '<p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : ', (int) 4 => '<p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it ', (int) 5 => '<p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and ', (int) 6 => '<p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' ', (int) 7 => '<p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : ', (int) 8 => '<p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. ', (int) 9 => '<p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. ', (int) 10 => '<p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' ', (int) 11 => '<p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. ', (int) 12 => '<p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : ', (int) 13 => '<p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. ', (int) 14 => '<p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' ', (int) 15 => '<p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. ', (int) 16 => '<p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. ', (int) 17 => '<p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. ', (int) 18 => '<p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. ', (int) 19 => '<p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331', (int) 20 => '<p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. ', (int) 21 => '<p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. ', (int) 22 => '<p>14. Appeal allowed. ', (int) 23 => '' ) $paragraphAfter = (int) 1 $cnt = (int) 24 $i = (int) 2include - APP/View/Case/amp.ctp, line 144 View::_evaluate() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 971 View::_render() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 933 View::render() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 473 Controller::render() - CORE/Cake/Controller/Controller.php, line 963 Dispatcher::_invoke() - CORE/Cake/Routing/Dispatcher.php, line 200 Dispatcher::dispatch() - CORE/Cake/Routing/Dispatcher.php, line 167 [main] - APP/webroot/index.php, line 109
2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively.
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$viewFile = '/home/legalcrystal/app/View/Case/amp.ctp' $dataForView = array( 'title_for_layout' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ', 'desc' => array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p style="text-align: justify;">Shah, J. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p style="text-align: justify;">12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ), 'casename_url' => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan', 'args' => array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) ) $title_for_layout = 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ' $desc = array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p>Shah, J. </p><p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p>14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ) $casename_url = 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $args = array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) $url = 'https://sooperkanoon.com/case/amp/652914/state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $ctype = '' $caseref = 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel<br>' $content = array( (int) 0 => '<p>Shah, J. ', (int) 1 => '<p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. ', (int) 2 => '<p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. ', (int) 3 => '<p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : ', (int) 4 => '<p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it ', (int) 5 => '<p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and ', (int) 6 => '<p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' ', (int) 7 => '<p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : ', (int) 8 => '<p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. ', (int) 9 => '<p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. ', (int) 10 => '<p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' ', (int) 11 => '<p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. ', (int) 12 => '<p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : ', (int) 13 => '<p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. ', (int) 14 => '<p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' ', (int) 15 => '<p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. ', (int) 16 => '<p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. ', (int) 17 => '<p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. ', (int) 18 => '<p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. ', (int) 19 => '<p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331', (int) 20 => '<p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. ', (int) 21 => '<p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. ', (int) 22 => '<p>14. Appeal allowed. 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3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions :
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$viewFile = '/home/legalcrystal/app/View/Case/amp.ctp' $dataForView = array( 'title_for_layout' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ', 'desc' => array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p style="text-align: justify;">Shah, J. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p style="text-align: justify;">12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ), 'casename_url' => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan', 'args' => array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) ) $title_for_layout = 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ' $desc = array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p>Shah, J. </p><p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p>14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ) $casename_url = 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $args = array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) $url = 'https://sooperkanoon.com/case/amp/652914/state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $ctype = '' $caseref = 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel<br>' $content = array( (int) 0 => '<p>Shah, J. ', (int) 1 => '<p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. ', (int) 2 => '<p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. ', (int) 3 => '<p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : ', (int) 4 => '<p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it ', (int) 5 => '<p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and ', (int) 6 => '<p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' ', (int) 7 => '<p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : ', (int) 8 => '<p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. ', (int) 9 => '<p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. ', (int) 10 => '<p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' ', (int) 11 => '<p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. ', (int) 12 => '<p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : ', (int) 13 => '<p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. ', (int) 14 => '<p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' ', (int) 15 => '<p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. ', (int) 16 => '<p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. ', (int) 17 => '<p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. ', (int) 18 => '<p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. ', (int) 19 => '<p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331', (int) 20 => '<p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. ', (int) 21 => '<p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. ', (int) 22 => '<p>14. Appeal allowed. 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'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it
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$viewFile = '/home/legalcrystal/app/View/Case/amp.ctp' $dataForView = array( 'title_for_layout' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ', 'desc' => array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p style="text-align: justify;">Shah, J. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p style="text-align: justify;">12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ), 'casename_url' => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan', 'args' => array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) ) $title_for_layout = 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ' $desc = array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p>Shah, J. </p><p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p>14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ) $casename_url = 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $args = array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) $url = 'https://sooperkanoon.com/case/amp/652914/state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $ctype = '' $caseref = 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel<br>' $content = array( (int) 0 => '<p>Shah, J. ', (int) 1 => '<p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. ', (int) 2 => '<p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. ', (int) 3 => '<p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : ', (int) 4 => '<p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it ', (int) 5 => '<p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and ', (int) 6 => '<p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' ', (int) 7 => '<p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : ', (int) 8 => '<p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. ', (int) 9 => '<p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. ', (int) 10 => '<p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' ', (int) 11 => '<p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. ', (int) 12 => '<p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : ', (int) 13 => '<p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. ', (int) 14 => '<p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' ', (int) 15 => '<p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. ', (int) 16 => '<p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. ', (int) 17 => '<p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. ', (int) 18 => '<p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. ', (int) 19 => '<p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331', (int) 20 => '<p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. ', (int) 21 => '<p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. ', (int) 22 => '<p>14. Appeal allowed. ', (int) 23 => '' ) $paragraphAfter = (int) 1 $cnt = (int) 24 $i = (int) 5include - APP/View/Case/amp.ctp, line 144 View::_evaluate() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 971 View::_render() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 933 View::render() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 473 Controller::render() - CORE/Cake/Controller/Controller.php, line 963 Dispatcher::_invoke() - CORE/Cake/Routing/Dispatcher.php, line 200 Dispatcher::dispatch() - CORE/Cake/Routing/Dispatcher.php, line 167 [main] - APP/webroot/index.php, line 109
2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and
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$viewFile = '/home/legalcrystal/app/View/Case/amp.ctp' $dataForView = array( 'title_for_layout' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ', 'desc' => array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p style="text-align: justify;">Shah, J. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p style="text-align: justify;">12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ), 'casename_url' => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan', 'args' => array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) ) $title_for_layout = 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ' $desc = array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p>Shah, J. </p><p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p>14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ) $casename_url = 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $args = array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) $url = 'https://sooperkanoon.com/case/amp/652914/state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $ctype = '' $caseref = 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel<br>' $content = array( (int) 0 => '<p>Shah, J. ', (int) 1 => '<p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. ', (int) 2 => '<p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. ', (int) 3 => '<p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : ', (int) 4 => '<p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it ', (int) 5 => '<p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and ', (int) 6 => '<p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' ', (int) 7 => '<p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : ', (int) 8 => '<p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. ', (int) 9 => '<p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. ', (int) 10 => '<p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' ', (int) 11 => '<p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. ', (int) 12 => '<p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : ', (int) 13 => '<p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. ', (int) 14 => '<p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' ', (int) 15 => '<p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. ', (int) 16 => '<p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. ', (int) 17 => '<p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. ', (int) 18 => '<p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. ', (int) 19 => '<p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331', (int) 20 => '<p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. ', (int) 21 => '<p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. ', (int) 22 => '<p>14. Appeal allowed. ', (int) 23 => '' ) $paragraphAfter = (int) 1 $cnt = (int) 24 $i = (int) 6include - APP/View/Case/amp.ctp, line 144 View::_evaluate() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 971 View::_render() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 933 View::render() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 473 Controller::render() - CORE/Cake/Controller/Controller.php, line 963 Dispatcher::_invoke() - CORE/Cake/Routing/Dispatcher.php, line 200 Dispatcher::dispatch() - CORE/Cake/Routing/Dispatcher.php, line 167 [main] - APP/webroot/index.php, line 109
3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?'
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$viewFile = '/home/legalcrystal/app/View/Case/amp.ctp' $dataForView = array( 'title_for_layout' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ', 'desc' => array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p style="text-align: justify;">Shah, J. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p style="text-align: justify;">12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ), 'casename_url' => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan', 'args' => array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) ) $title_for_layout = 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ' $desc = array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p>Shah, J. </p><p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p>14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ) $casename_url = 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $args = array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) $url = 'https://sooperkanoon.com/case/amp/652914/state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $ctype = '' $caseref = 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel<br>' $content = array( (int) 0 => '<p>Shah, J. ', (int) 1 => '<p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. ', (int) 2 => '<p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. ', (int) 3 => '<p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : ', (int) 4 => '<p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it ', (int) 5 => '<p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and ', (int) 6 => '<p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' ', (int) 7 => '<p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : ', (int) 8 => '<p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. ', (int) 9 => '<p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. ', (int) 10 => '<p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' ', (int) 11 => '<p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. ', (int) 12 => '<p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : ', (int) 13 => '<p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. ', (int) 14 => '<p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' ', (int) 15 => '<p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. ', (int) 16 => '<p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. ', (int) 17 => '<p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. ', (int) 18 => '<p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. ', (int) 19 => '<p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331', (int) 20 => '<p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. ', (int) 21 => '<p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. ', (int) 22 => '<p>14. Appeal allowed. 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4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows :
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$viewFile = '/home/legalcrystal/app/View/Case/amp.ctp' $dataForView = array( 'title_for_layout' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ', 'desc' => array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p style="text-align: justify;">Shah, J. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p style="text-align: justify;">12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ), 'casename_url' => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan', 'args' => array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) ) $title_for_layout = 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ' $desc = array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p>Shah, J. </p><p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p>14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ) $casename_url = 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $args = array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) $url = 'https://sooperkanoon.com/case/amp/652914/state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $ctype = '' $caseref = 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel<br>' $content = array( (int) 0 => '<p>Shah, J. ', (int) 1 => '<p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. ', (int) 2 => '<p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. ', (int) 3 => '<p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : ', (int) 4 => '<p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it ', (int) 5 => '<p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and ', (int) 6 => '<p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' ', (int) 7 => '<p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : ', (int) 8 => '<p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. ', (int) 9 => '<p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. ', (int) 10 => '<p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' ', (int) 11 => '<p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. ', (int) 12 => '<p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : ', (int) 13 => '<p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. ', (int) 14 => '<p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' ', (int) 15 => '<p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. ', (int) 16 => '<p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. ', (int) 17 => '<p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. ', (int) 18 => '<p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. ', (int) 19 => '<p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331', (int) 20 => '<p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. ', (int) 21 => '<p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. ', (int) 22 => '<p>14. Appeal allowed. ', (int) 23 => '' ) $paragraphAfter = (int) 1 $cnt = (int) 24 $i = (int) 8include - APP/View/Case/amp.ctp, line 144 View::_evaluate() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 971 View::_render() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 933 View::render() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 473 Controller::render() - CORE/Cake/Controller/Controller.php, line 963 Dispatcher::_invoke() - CORE/Cake/Routing/Dispatcher.php, line 200 Dispatcher::dispatch() - CORE/Cake/Routing/Dispatcher.php, line 167 [main] - APP/webroot/index.php, line 109
'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right.
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$viewFile = '/home/legalcrystal/app/View/Case/amp.ctp' $dataForView = array( 'title_for_layout' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ', 'desc' => array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p style="text-align: justify;">Shah, J. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p style="text-align: justify;">12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ), 'casename_url' => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan', 'args' => array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) ) $title_for_layout = 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ' $desc = array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p>Shah, J. </p><p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p>14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ) $casename_url = 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $args = array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) $url = 'https://sooperkanoon.com/case/amp/652914/state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $ctype = '' $caseref = 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel<br>' $content = array( (int) 0 => '<p>Shah, J. ', (int) 1 => '<p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. ', (int) 2 => '<p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. ', (int) 3 => '<p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : ', (int) 4 => '<p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it ', (int) 5 => '<p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and ', (int) 6 => '<p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' ', (int) 7 => '<p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : ', (int) 8 => '<p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. ', (int) 9 => '<p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. ', (int) 10 => '<p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' ', (int) 11 => '<p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. ', (int) 12 => '<p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : ', (int) 13 => '<p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. ', (int) 14 => '<p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' ', (int) 15 => '<p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. ', (int) 16 => '<p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. ', (int) 17 => '<p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. ', (int) 18 => '<p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. ', (int) 19 => '<p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331', (int) 20 => '<p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. ', (int) 21 => '<p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. ', (int) 22 => '<p>14. Appeal allowed. ', (int) 23 => '' ) $paragraphAfter = (int) 1 $cnt = (int) 24 $i = (int) 9include - APP/View/Case/amp.ctp, line 144 View::_evaluate() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 971 View::_render() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 933 View::render() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 473 Controller::render() - CORE/Cake/Controller/Controller.php, line 963 Dispatcher::_invoke() - CORE/Cake/Routing/Dispatcher.php, line 200 Dispatcher::dispatch() - CORE/Cake/Routing/Dispatcher.php, line 167 [main] - APP/webroot/index.php, line 109
2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted.
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$viewFile = '/home/legalcrystal/app/View/Case/amp.ctp' $dataForView = array( 'title_for_layout' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ', 'desc' => array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p style="text-align: justify;">Shah, J. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p style="text-align: justify;">12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ), 'casename_url' => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan', 'args' => array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) ) $title_for_layout = 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ' $desc = array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p>Shah, J. </p><p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p>14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ) $casename_url = 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $args = array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) $url = 'https://sooperkanoon.com/case/amp/652914/state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $ctype = '' $caseref = 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel<br>' $content = array( (int) 0 => '<p>Shah, J. ', (int) 1 => '<p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. ', (int) 2 => '<p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. ', (int) 3 => '<p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : ', (int) 4 => '<p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it ', (int) 5 => '<p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and ', (int) 6 => '<p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' ', (int) 7 => '<p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : ', (int) 8 => '<p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. ', (int) 9 => '<p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. ', (int) 10 => '<p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' ', (int) 11 => '<p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. ', (int) 12 => '<p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : ', (int) 13 => '<p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. ', (int) 14 => '<p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' ', (int) 15 => '<p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. ', (int) 16 => '<p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. ', (int) 17 => '<p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. ', (int) 18 => '<p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. ', (int) 19 => '<p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331', (int) 20 => '<p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. ', (int) 21 => '<p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. ', (int) 22 => '<p>14. Appeal allowed. ', (int) 23 => '' ) $paragraphAfter = (int) 1 $cnt = (int) 24 $i = (int) 10include - APP/View/Case/amp.ctp, line 144 View::_evaluate() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 971 View::_render() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 933 View::render() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 473 Controller::render() - CORE/Cake/Controller/Controller.php, line 963 Dispatcher::_invoke() - CORE/Cake/Routing/Dispatcher.php, line 200 Dispatcher::dispatch() - CORE/Cake/Routing/Dispatcher.php, line 167 [main] - APP/webroot/index.php, line 109
3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.'
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$viewFile = '/home/legalcrystal/app/View/Case/amp.ctp' $dataForView = array( 'title_for_layout' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ', 'desc' => array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p style="text-align: justify;">Shah, J. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p style="text-align: justify;">12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ), 'casename_url' => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan', 'args' => array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) ) $title_for_layout = 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ' $desc = array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p>Shah, J. </p><p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p>14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ) $casename_url = 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $args = array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) $url = 'https://sooperkanoon.com/case/amp/652914/state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $ctype = '' $caseref = 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel<br>' $content = array( (int) 0 => '<p>Shah, J. ', (int) 1 => '<p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. ', (int) 2 => '<p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. ', (int) 3 => '<p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : ', (int) 4 => '<p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it ', (int) 5 => '<p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and ', (int) 6 => '<p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' ', (int) 7 => '<p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : ', (int) 8 => '<p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. ', (int) 9 => '<p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. ', (int) 10 => '<p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' ', (int) 11 => '<p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. ', (int) 12 => '<p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : ', (int) 13 => '<p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. ', (int) 14 => '<p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' ', (int) 15 => '<p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. ', (int) 16 => '<p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. ', (int) 17 => '<p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. ', (int) 18 => '<p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. ', (int) 19 => '<p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331', (int) 20 => '<p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. ', (int) 21 => '<p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. ', (int) 22 => '<p>14. Appeal allowed. ', (int) 23 => '' ) $paragraphAfter = (int) 1 $cnt = (int) 24 $i = (int) 11include - APP/View/Case/amp.ctp, line 144 View::_evaluate() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 971 View::_render() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 933 View::render() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 473 Controller::render() - CORE/Cake/Controller/Controller.php, line 963 Dispatcher::_invoke() - CORE/Cake/Routing/Dispatcher.php, line 200 Dispatcher::dispatch() - CORE/Cake/Routing/Dispatcher.php, line 167 [main] - APP/webroot/index.php, line 109
5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court.
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$viewFile = '/home/legalcrystal/app/View/Case/amp.ctp' $dataForView = array( 'title_for_layout' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ', 'desc' => array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p style="text-align: justify;">Shah, J. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p style="text-align: justify;">12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ), 'casename_url' => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan', 'args' => array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) ) $title_for_layout = 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ' $desc = array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p>Shah, J. </p><p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p>14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ) $casename_url = 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $args = array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) $url = 'https://sooperkanoon.com/case/amp/652914/state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $ctype = '' $caseref = 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel<br>' $content = array( (int) 0 => '<p>Shah, J. ', (int) 1 => '<p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. ', (int) 2 => '<p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. ', (int) 3 => '<p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : ', (int) 4 => '<p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it ', (int) 5 => '<p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and ', (int) 6 => '<p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' ', (int) 7 => '<p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : ', (int) 8 => '<p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. ', (int) 9 => '<p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. ', (int) 10 => '<p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' ', (int) 11 => '<p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. ', (int) 12 => '<p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : ', (int) 13 => '<p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. ', (int) 14 => '<p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' ', (int) 15 => '<p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. ', (int) 16 => '<p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. ', (int) 17 => '<p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. ', (int) 18 => '<p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. ', (int) 19 => '<p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331', (int) 20 => '<p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. ', (int) 21 => '<p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. ', (int) 22 => '<p>14. Appeal allowed. 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6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows :
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$viewFile = '/home/legalcrystal/app/View/Case/amp.ctp' $dataForView = array( 'title_for_layout' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ', 'desc' => array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p style="text-align: justify;">Shah, J. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p style="text-align: justify;">12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ), 'casename_url' => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan', 'args' => array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) ) $title_for_layout = 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ' $desc = array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p>Shah, J. </p><p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p>14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ) $casename_url = 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $args = array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) $url = 'https://sooperkanoon.com/case/amp/652914/state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $ctype = '' $caseref = 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel<br>' $content = array( (int) 0 => '<p>Shah, J. ', (int) 1 => '<p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. ', (int) 2 => '<p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. ', (int) 3 => '<p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : ', (int) 4 => '<p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it ', (int) 5 => '<p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and ', (int) 6 => '<p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' ', (int) 7 => '<p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : ', (int) 8 => '<p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. ', (int) 9 => '<p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. ', (int) 10 => '<p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' ', (int) 11 => '<p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. ', (int) 12 => '<p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : ', (int) 13 => '<p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. ', (int) 14 => '<p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' ', (int) 15 => '<p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. ', (int) 16 => '<p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. ', (int) 17 => '<p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. ', (int) 18 => '<p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. ', (int) 19 => '<p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331', (int) 20 => '<p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. ', (int) 21 => '<p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. ', (int) 22 => '<p>14. Appeal allowed. ', (int) 23 => '' ) $paragraphAfter = (int) 1 $cnt = (int) 24 $i = (int) 13include - APP/View/Case/amp.ctp, line 144 View::_evaluate() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 971 View::_render() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 933 View::render() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 473 Controller::render() - CORE/Cake/Controller/Controller.php, line 963 Dispatcher::_invoke() - CORE/Cake/Routing/Dispatcher.php, line 200 Dispatcher::dispatch() - CORE/Cake/Routing/Dispatcher.php, line 167 [main] - APP/webroot/index.php, line 109
'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act.
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$viewFile = '/home/legalcrystal/app/View/Case/amp.ctp' $dataForView = array( 'title_for_layout' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ', 'desc' => array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p style="text-align: justify;">Shah, J. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p style="text-align: justify;">12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ), 'casename_url' => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan', 'args' => array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) ) $title_for_layout = 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ' $desc = array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p>Shah, J. </p><p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p>14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ) $casename_url = 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $args = array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) $url = 'https://sooperkanoon.com/case/amp/652914/state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $ctype = '' $caseref = 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel<br>' $content = array( (int) 0 => '<p>Shah, J. ', (int) 1 => '<p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. ', (int) 2 => '<p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. ', (int) 3 => '<p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : ', (int) 4 => '<p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it ', (int) 5 => '<p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and ', (int) 6 => '<p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' ', (int) 7 => '<p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : ', (int) 8 => '<p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. ', (int) 9 => '<p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. ', (int) 10 => '<p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' ', (int) 11 => '<p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. ', (int) 12 => '<p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : ', (int) 13 => '<p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. ', (int) 14 => '<p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' ', (int) 15 => '<p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. ', (int) 16 => '<p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. ', (int) 17 => '<p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. ', (int) 18 => '<p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. ', (int) 19 => '<p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331', (int) 20 => '<p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. ', (int) 21 => '<p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. ', (int) 22 => '<p>14. Appeal allowed. ', (int) 23 => '' ) $paragraphAfter = (int) 1 $cnt = (int) 24 $i = (int) 14include - APP/View/Case/amp.ctp, line 144 View::_evaluate() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 971 View::_render() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 933 View::render() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 473 Controller::render() - CORE/Cake/Controller/Controller.php, line 963 Dispatcher::_invoke() - CORE/Cake/Routing/Dispatcher.php, line 200 Dispatcher::dispatch() - CORE/Cake/Routing/Dispatcher.php, line 167 [main] - APP/webroot/index.php, line 109
Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.'
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$viewFile = '/home/legalcrystal/app/View/Case/amp.ctp' $dataForView = array( 'title_for_layout' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ', 'desc' => array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p style="text-align: justify;">Shah, J. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p style="text-align: justify;">12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ), 'casename_url' => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan', 'args' => array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) ) $title_for_layout = 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ' $desc = array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p>Shah, J. </p><p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p>14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ) $casename_url = 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $args = array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) $url = 'https://sooperkanoon.com/case/amp/652914/state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $ctype = '' $caseref = 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel<br>' $content = array( (int) 0 => '<p>Shah, J. ', (int) 1 => '<p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. ', (int) 2 => '<p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. ', (int) 3 => '<p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : ', (int) 4 => '<p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it ', (int) 5 => '<p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and ', (int) 6 => '<p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' ', (int) 7 => '<p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : ', (int) 8 => '<p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. ', (int) 9 => '<p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. ', (int) 10 => '<p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' ', (int) 11 => '<p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. ', (int) 12 => '<p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : ', (int) 13 => '<p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. ', (int) 14 => '<p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' ', (int) 15 => '<p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. ', (int) 16 => '<p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. ', (int) 17 => '<p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. ', (int) 18 => '<p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. ', (int) 19 => '<p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331', (int) 20 => '<p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. ', (int) 21 => '<p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. ', (int) 22 => '<p>14. Appeal allowed. ', (int) 23 => '' ) $paragraphAfter = (int) 1 $cnt = (int) 24 $i = (int) 15include - APP/View/Case/amp.ctp, line 144 View::_evaluate() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 971 View::_render() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 933 View::render() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 473 Controller::render() - CORE/Cake/Controller/Controller.php, line 963 Dispatcher::_invoke() - CORE/Cake/Routing/Dispatcher.php, line 200 Dispatcher::dispatch() - CORE/Cake/Routing/Dispatcher.php, line 167 [main] - APP/webroot/index.php, line 109
7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered.
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$viewFile = '/home/legalcrystal/app/View/Case/amp.ctp' $dataForView = array( 'title_for_layout' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ', 'desc' => array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p style="text-align: justify;">Shah, J. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p style="text-align: justify;">12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ), 'casename_url' => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan', 'args' => array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) ) $title_for_layout = 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ' $desc = array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p>Shah, J. </p><p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p>14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ) $casename_url = 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $args = array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) $url = 'https://sooperkanoon.com/case/amp/652914/state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $ctype = '' $caseref = 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel<br>' $content = array( (int) 0 => '<p>Shah, J. ', (int) 1 => '<p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. ', (int) 2 => '<p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. ', (int) 3 => '<p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : ', (int) 4 => '<p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it ', (int) 5 => '<p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and ', (int) 6 => '<p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' ', (int) 7 => '<p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : ', (int) 8 => '<p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. ', (int) 9 => '<p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. ', (int) 10 => '<p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' ', (int) 11 => '<p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. ', (int) 12 => '<p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : ', (int) 13 => '<p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. ', (int) 14 => '<p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' ', (int) 15 => '<p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. ', (int) 16 => '<p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. ', (int) 17 => '<p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. ', (int) 18 => '<p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. ', (int) 19 => '<p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331', (int) 20 => '<p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. ', (int) 21 => '<p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. ', (int) 22 => '<p>14. Appeal allowed. 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8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order.
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$viewFile = '/home/legalcrystal/app/View/Case/amp.ctp' $dataForView = array( 'title_for_layout' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ', 'desc' => array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p style="text-align: justify;">Shah, J. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p style="text-align: justify;">12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ), 'casename_url' => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan', 'args' => array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) ) $title_for_layout = 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ' $desc = array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p>Shah, J. </p><p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p>14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ) $casename_url = 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $args = array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) $url = 'https://sooperkanoon.com/case/amp/652914/state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $ctype = '' $caseref = 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel<br>' $content = array( (int) 0 => '<p>Shah, J. ', (int) 1 => '<p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. ', (int) 2 => '<p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. ', (int) 3 => '<p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : ', (int) 4 => '<p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it ', (int) 5 => '<p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and ', (int) 6 => '<p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' ', (int) 7 => '<p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : ', (int) 8 => '<p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. ', (int) 9 => '<p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. ', (int) 10 => '<p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' ', (int) 11 => '<p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. ', (int) 12 => '<p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : ', (int) 13 => '<p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. ', (int) 14 => '<p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' ', (int) 15 => '<p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. ', (int) 16 => '<p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. ', (int) 17 => '<p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. ', (int) 18 => '<p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. ', (int) 19 => '<p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331', (int) 20 => '<p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. ', (int) 21 => '<p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. ', (int) 22 => '<p>14. Appeal allowed. ', (int) 23 => '' ) $paragraphAfter = (int) 1 $cnt = (int) 24 $i = (int) 17include - APP/View/Case/amp.ctp, line 144 View::_evaluate() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 971 View::_render() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 933 View::render() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 473 Controller::render() - CORE/Cake/Controller/Controller.php, line 963 Dispatcher::_invoke() - CORE/Cake/Routing/Dispatcher.php, line 200 Dispatcher::dispatch() - CORE/Cake/Routing/Dispatcher.php, line 167 [main] - APP/webroot/index.php, line 109
9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside.
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$viewFile = '/home/legalcrystal/app/View/Case/amp.ctp' $dataForView = array( 'title_for_layout' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ', 'desc' => array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p style="text-align: justify;">Shah, J. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p style="text-align: justify;">12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ), 'casename_url' => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan', 'args' => array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) ) $title_for_layout = 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ' $desc = array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p>Shah, J. </p><p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p>14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ) $casename_url = 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $args = array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) $url = 'https://sooperkanoon.com/case/amp/652914/state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $ctype = '' $caseref = 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel<br>' $content = array( (int) 0 => '<p>Shah, J. ', (int) 1 => '<p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. ', (int) 2 => '<p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. ', (int) 3 => '<p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : ', (int) 4 => '<p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it ', (int) 5 => '<p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and ', (int) 6 => '<p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' ', (int) 7 => '<p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : ', (int) 8 => '<p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. ', (int) 9 => '<p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. ', (int) 10 => '<p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' ', (int) 11 => '<p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. ', (int) 12 => '<p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : ', (int) 13 => '<p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. ', (int) 14 => '<p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' ', (int) 15 => '<p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. ', (int) 16 => '<p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. ', (int) 17 => '<p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. ', (int) 18 => '<p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. ', (int) 19 => '<p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331', (int) 20 => '<p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. ', (int) 21 => '<p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. ', (int) 22 => '<p>14. Appeal allowed. ', (int) 23 => '' ) $paragraphAfter = (int) 1 $cnt = (int) 24 $i = (int) 18include - APP/View/Case/amp.ctp, line 144 View::_evaluate() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 971 View::_render() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 933 View::render() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 473 Controller::render() - CORE/Cake/Controller/Controller.php, line 963 Dispatcher::_invoke() - CORE/Cake/Routing/Dispatcher.php, line 200 Dispatcher::dispatch() - CORE/Cake/Routing/Dispatcher.php, line 167 [main] - APP/webroot/index.php, line 109
10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings.
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$viewFile = '/home/legalcrystal/app/View/Case/amp.ctp' $dataForView = array( 'title_for_layout' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ', 'desc' => array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p style="text-align: justify;">Shah, J. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p style="text-align: justify;">12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ), 'casename_url' => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan', 'args' => array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) ) $title_for_layout = 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ' $desc = array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p>Shah, J. </p><p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p>14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ) $casename_url = 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $args = array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) $url = 'https://sooperkanoon.com/case/amp/652914/state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $ctype = '' $caseref = 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel<br>' $content = array( (int) 0 => '<p>Shah, J. ', (int) 1 => '<p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. ', (int) 2 => '<p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. ', (int) 3 => '<p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : ', (int) 4 => '<p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it ', (int) 5 => '<p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and ', (int) 6 => '<p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' ', (int) 7 => '<p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : ', (int) 8 => '<p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. ', (int) 9 => '<p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. ', (int) 10 => '<p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' ', (int) 11 => '<p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. ', (int) 12 => '<p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : ', (int) 13 => '<p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. ', (int) 14 => '<p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' ', (int) 15 => '<p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. ', (int) 16 => '<p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. ', (int) 17 => '<p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. ', (int) 18 => '<p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. ', (int) 19 => '<p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331', (int) 20 => '<p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. ', (int) 21 => '<p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. ', (int) 22 => '<p>14. Appeal allowed. 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11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331
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$viewFile = '/home/legalcrystal/app/View/Case/amp.ctp' $dataForView = array( 'title_for_layout' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ', 'desc' => array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p style="text-align: justify;">Shah, J. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p style="text-align: justify;">12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ), 'casename_url' => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan', 'args' => array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) ) $title_for_layout = 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ' $desc = array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p>Shah, J. </p><p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p>14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ) $casename_url = 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $args = array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) $url = 'https://sooperkanoon.com/case/amp/652914/state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $ctype = '' $caseref = 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel<br>' $content = array( (int) 0 => '<p>Shah, J. ', (int) 1 => '<p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. ', (int) 2 => '<p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. ', (int) 3 => '<p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : ', (int) 4 => '<p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it ', (int) 5 => '<p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and ', (int) 6 => '<p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' ', (int) 7 => '<p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : ', (int) 8 => '<p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. ', (int) 9 => '<p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. ', (int) 10 => '<p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' ', (int) 11 => '<p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. ', (int) 12 => '<p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : ', (int) 13 => '<p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. ', (int) 14 => '<p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' ', (int) 15 => '<p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. ', (int) 16 => '<p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. ', (int) 17 => '<p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. ', (int) 18 => '<p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. ', (int) 19 => '<p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331', (int) 20 => '<p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. ', (int) 21 => '<p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. ', (int) 22 => '<p>14. Appeal allowed. ', (int) 23 => '' ) $paragraphAfter = (int) 1 $cnt = (int) 24 $i = (int) 20include - APP/View/Case/amp.ctp, line 144 View::_evaluate() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 971 View::_render() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 933 View::render() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 473 Controller::render() - CORE/Cake/Controller/Controller.php, line 963 Dispatcher::_invoke() - CORE/Cake/Routing/Dispatcher.php, line 200 Dispatcher::dispatch() - CORE/Cake/Routing/Dispatcher.php, line 167 [main] - APP/webroot/index.php, line 109
12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed.
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$viewFile = '/home/legalcrystal/app/View/Case/amp.ctp' $dataForView = array( 'title_for_layout' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ', 'desc' => array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p style="text-align: justify;">Shah, J. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p style="text-align: justify;">12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ), 'casename_url' => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan', 'args' => array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) ) $title_for_layout = 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ' $desc = array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p>Shah, J. </p><p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p>14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ) $casename_url = 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $args = array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) $url = 'https://sooperkanoon.com/case/amp/652914/state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $ctype = '' $caseref = 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel<br>' $content = array( (int) 0 => '<p>Shah, J. ', (int) 1 => '<p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. ', (int) 2 => '<p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. ', (int) 3 => '<p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : ', (int) 4 => '<p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it ', (int) 5 => '<p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and ', (int) 6 => '<p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' ', (int) 7 => '<p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : ', (int) 8 => '<p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. ', (int) 9 => '<p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. ', (int) 10 => '<p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' ', (int) 11 => '<p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. ', (int) 12 => '<p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : ', (int) 13 => '<p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. ', (int) 14 => '<p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' ', (int) 15 => '<p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. ', (int) 16 => '<p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. ', (int) 17 => '<p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. ', (int) 18 => '<p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. ', (int) 19 => '<p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331', (int) 20 => '<p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. ', (int) 21 => '<p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. ', (int) 22 => '<p>14. Appeal allowed. ', (int) 23 => '' ) $paragraphAfter = (int) 1 $cnt = (int) 24 $i = (int) 21include - APP/View/Case/amp.ctp, line 144 View::_evaluate() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 971 View::_render() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 933 View::render() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 473 Controller::render() - CORE/Cake/Controller/Controller.php, line 963 Dispatcher::_invoke() - CORE/Cake/Routing/Dispatcher.php, line 200 Dispatcher::dispatch() - CORE/Cake/Routing/Dispatcher.php, line 167 [main] - APP/webroot/index.php, line 109
13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court.
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$viewFile = '/home/legalcrystal/app/View/Case/amp.ctp' $dataForView = array( 'title_for_layout' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ', 'desc' => array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p style="text-align: justify;">Shah, J. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p style="text-align: justify;">12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ), 'casename_url' => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan', 'args' => array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) ) $title_for_layout = 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ' $desc = array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p>Shah, J. </p><p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p>14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ) $casename_url = 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $args = array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) $url = 'https://sooperkanoon.com/case/amp/652914/state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $ctype = '' $caseref = 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel<br>' $content = array( (int) 0 => '<p>Shah, J. ', (int) 1 => '<p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. ', (int) 2 => '<p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. ', (int) 3 => '<p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : ', (int) 4 => '<p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it ', (int) 5 => '<p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and ', (int) 6 => '<p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' ', (int) 7 => '<p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : ', (int) 8 => '<p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. ', (int) 9 => '<p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. ', (int) 10 => '<p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' ', (int) 11 => '<p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. ', (int) 12 => '<p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : ', (int) 13 => '<p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. ', (int) 14 => '<p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' ', (int) 15 => '<p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. ', (int) 16 => '<p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. ', (int) 17 => '<p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. ', (int) 18 => '<p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. ', (int) 19 => '<p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331', (int) 20 => '<p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. ', (int) 21 => '<p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. ', (int) 22 => '<p>14. Appeal allowed. ', (int) 23 => '' ) $paragraphAfter = (int) 1 $cnt = (int) 24 $i = (int) 22include - APP/View/Case/amp.ctp, line 144 View::_evaluate() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 971 View::_render() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 933 View::render() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 473 Controller::render() - CORE/Cake/Controller/Controller.php, line 963 Dispatcher::_invoke() - CORE/Cake/Routing/Dispatcher.php, line 200 Dispatcher::dispatch() - CORE/Cake/Routing/Dispatcher.php, line 167 [main] - APP/webroot/index.php, line 109
14. Appeal allowed.
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$viewFile = '/home/legalcrystal/app/View/Case/amp.ctp' $dataForView = array( 'title_for_layout' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ', 'desc' => array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p style="text-align: justify;">Shah, J. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p style="text-align: justify;">'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p style="text-align: justify;"> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p style="text-align: justify;">7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p style="text-align: justify;">12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p style="text-align: justify;">14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ), 'casename_url' => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan', 'args' => array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) ) $title_for_layout = 'State of Madhya Pradesh Now Maharashtra Vs Haji Hasan Dada - Citation 652914 - Court Judgment | ' $desc = array( 'Judgement' => array( 'id' => '652914', 'acts' => 'Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 - Sections 13; Sales Tax Act', 'appealno' => '', 'appellant' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra)', 'authreffered' => '', 'casename' => 'State of Madhya Pradesh (Now Maharashtra) Vs. Haji Hasan Dada', 'casenote' => 'Sales Tax - refund - Section 13 of Central Provinces and Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 and Sales Tax Act - respondent was assessed on turnover of his business and ordered to pay tax under Act by Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax (ACST) - respondent paid amount of tax but relying upon Section 13 applied to ACST to refund of excess amount of tax paid - claiming that dyeing charges which include in his business not taxable under Act - ACST rejected application and order of rejection confirmed by Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal - Board of Revenue set aside Order of Commissioner and ordered that case be returned to Commissioner for fresh disposal in light of legal principles - during pendency of proceedings Section 13 amended with retrospective effect - State claimed under amended Section right to refund was taken away - Board of Revenue at instance of State referred to High Court - observing Section 13 High Court opined that right to get refund is valuable and substantive right given to respondent by statute and cannot be taken away except by clear words of legislation - Section 13 as amended did not bar on right of respondent - State appealed before Supreme Court - Section 13 authorised Commissioner of Sales Tax to grant refund if amount in excess and not lawfully due - ACST is to decide amount - Order of ACST final unless set aside by appropriate authority - held, application for refund of tax not maintainable under Section 13.<br> - Section 34: [S.B. Sinha & Mukundakam Sharma, JJ] Interest - Money suit - Recovery of loan amount by a Bank - Rate of interest not provided in agreement Held, In absence of any agreement or statutory provisions or a mercantile usage, interest payable can be only at the market rate. In ascertaining rate of interest, Court can take judicial notice of both inflation as also fall in bank rate of interest. Court may grant interest at the rate of 9% p.a., - 331) good law ? In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.', 'caseanalysis' => null, 'casesref' => 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel;', 'citingcases' => '', 'counselplain' => '', 'counseldef' => '', 'court' => 'Supreme Court of India', 'court_type' => 'SC', 'decidedon' => '1965-12-02', 'deposition' => '', 'favorof' => null, 'findings' => null, 'judge' => ' J.C. Shah,; K. Subba Rao and; S.M. Sikri, JJ.', 'judgement' => '<p>Shah, J. </p><p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. </p><p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. </p><p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : </p><p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it </p><p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and </p><p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' </p><p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : </p><p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. </p><p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. </p><p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' </p><p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. </p><p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : </p><p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. </p><p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' </p><p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. </p><p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. </p><p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. </p><p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. </p><p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331</p><p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. </p><p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. </p><p>14. Appeal allowed. </p>', 'observations' => null, 'overruledby' => null, 'prhistory' => '', 'pubs' => 'AIR1966SC905; 1966MhLJ929(SC); [1966]2SCR854; [1966]17STC343(SC)', 'ratiodecidendi' => '', 'respondent' => 'Haji Hasan Dada', 'sub' => 'Sales Tax', 'link' => null, 'circuit' => null ) ) $casename_url = 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $args = array( (int) 0 => '652914', (int) 1 => 'state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' ) $url = 'https://sooperkanoon.com/case/amp/652914/state-madhya-pradesh-now-maharashtra-vs-haji-hasan' $ctype = '' $caseref = 'State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel<br>' $content = array( (int) 0 => '<p>Shah, J. ', (int) 1 => '<p>1. By order dated April 17, 1952, the respondent Haji Hasan Dada was assessed by the Assistant Commissioner or Sales Tax, Nagpur Region, to pay tax under the Central Provinces & Berar Sales Tax Act 21 of 1947 on the turnover from his business in yarn for the period November 13, 1947 to November 1, 1948. The respondent paid the amount of tax assessed on July 8, 1952. Thereafter relying upon s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 he applied on November 20, 1952 to the Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax for an order refunding Rs. 873/10/- on the plea that in the turnover of his business were included dyeing charges which were not taxable under the Act, and which since the order of assessment were held by the Board of Revenue to be not taxable. The Assistant Commissioner rejected the application, and the order was confirmed by the Commissioner of Sales Tax in appeal. The Board of Revenue, Madhya Pradesh, however, set aside the order and ordered that the case be returned to the Commissioner 'for disposal afresh in the light of the legal principles explained in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir of Balaghat v. The State 1943 S.T.C. 331. ', (int) 2 => '<p>2. During the pendency of the proceedings before the taxing authorities, s. 13 of the Act was amended with retrospective effect. It is claimed by the State that under the amended section the right to obtain refund in cases similar to those under examination was taken away retrospectively. ', (int) 3 => '<p>3. The State of Madhya Pradesh moved the Board of Revenue for a reference under s. 23 of the Act to the High Court, and the Board of Revenue referred the following three questions : ', (int) 4 => '<p>'1. Is ruling 57 (in Sheikh Gauhar's case - 3 S.T.C. 331) good law In other words, was the Board right in holding that the Privy Council's decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tribune Trust constituted no bar to the examination on merits of claims for refund made under the original section 13 of the Sales tax Act XXI of 1947 within the time-limit mentioned in it ', (int) 5 => '<p> 2. Has section 24 of Act XX of 1953 been validly enacted, in so far as it seeks to give retrospective effect to the amended section 13 of Act XXI of 1947 - as from the very commencement of the latter on 1-6-47 and ', (int) 6 => '<p> 3. If the answer to question No. 2 is in the affirmative, does sub-section (3) of the new section 13 constitute a bar to the examination on merits of the claim for refund made by the assessee in the present case ?' ', (int) 7 => '<p>4. The High Court held that by s. 13 of the Act as originally enacted, the respondent had 'a valuable right to ask for refund of the amount of the tax paid by him in excess of the amount lawfully due' and that 'the right to obtain a refund being a substantive right given to the respondent by the statute and not being a matter of mere procedure', this right could not be taken away except by clear and unambiguous words, and s. 13 as amended was not legislation which satisfied that test. The High Court accordingly answered the questions as follows : ', (int) 8 => '<p>'1. Ruling No. 57 is good law, and, in our opinion, the Board was right. ', (int) 9 => '<p> 2. Section 24 of Act XX of 1953 has been validly enacted. ', (int) 10 => '<p> 3. The new section 13 sub-section (3), does not bar an examination on merits of the claim for refund made on 20-11-1952 by the assessee.' ', (int) 11 => '<p>5. With special leave, the State of Maharashtra, upon whom the rights of the State of Madhya Pradesh have devolved by virtue of the State Reorganisation Act, 1956, has appealed to this Court. ', (int) 12 => '<p>6. We are of the view that the first question alone need be answered in this appeal, and on the answer we propose to record the claim made by the respondent must stand rejected. Section 13 of the Act, as originally enacted, and which applied during the year of assessment, read as follows : ', (int) 13 => '<p>'The Commissioner shall, in the prescribed manner and either by cash payment or, at the option of the dealer, by deduction of such excess from the amount of tax due in respect of any other period, refund to a registered dealer applying in this behalf any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under this Act. ', (int) 14 => '<p> Provided that no claim for refund shall be allowed unless it is made within twelve months from the date on which the order of assessment with or without penalty was passed or within six months from the date on which the final order is passed on appeal, revision, review or reference in respect of the order of assessment with or without penalty.' ', (int) 15 => '<p>7. The amendment to s. 13 by Act XX of 1953 need not, for reasons already set out, be considered. ', (int) 16 => '<p>8. Section 13, in terms authorised the Commissioner to grant refund to a registered dealer applying in that behalf, of any amount of tax or penalty paid by such dealer in excess of the amount due from him under the Act. The section implies that refund may be granted only of the amount which is not lawfully due, and whether a certain amount is lawfully due or not, must be determined by the Assistant Commissioner in making the order of assessment or re-assessment. The order of the Assistant Commissioner is undoubtedly not final : it is liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in a revision application under the provisions of the Act. But so long as the order passed by the Assistant Commissioner is not so set aside or modified, a dealer cannot call upon him to ignore the previous order, and grant refund contrary to the plain direction of the order. ', (int) 17 => '<p>9. There is abundant authority for the view that until it is set aside by appropriate proceedings under the Act which authorises the levy of tax, full effect must be given to an order of assessment, even if it be later found that the order was erroneous in law : e.g. Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab, North-West Frontier and Delhi Provinces, Lahore v. Tribune Trust, Lahore L.R.74 Ind Ap 306. In that case the Trust which had been in previous years assessed to, and had paid, income-tax, claimed in respect of its assessment for the year 1932-33 that it was exempt from taxation. In appeal which was carried to the Judicial Committee, the contention was upheld. Before the judgment of the Judicial Committee was pronounced, assessments to income-tax were made on the Trust for the years 1933-34 to 1938-39. After the Board's decision, the Trust applied to the Commissioner of Income-tax for an order for refund of income-tax. The High Court of Lahore held in a reference under s. 66(3) of the Indian Income-tax Act that the assessments made for the years 1933-34 to 1338-39 'were a nullity', and that the Trust could not be denied the relief. The Judicial Committee reversed the order of the High Court and held that the assessments which were duly made by the Income-tax Officer in the proper exercise of his duty were validly made and were effective until they were set aside. ', (int) 18 => '<p>10. The Assistant Commissioner appointed under the Act is within the limits of his jurisdiction and authority competent to decide all the questions which arise before his : his orders, it is true, are liable to be set aside in appeal or modified in revision as provided by the Act. But under the Act the Assistant Commissioner - who exercises the powers of the Commissioner - has no power to review his decision, nor is he authorised to ignore his previous order, and to pass an order for refund inconsistent with his previous order which has not been set aside by appropriate proceedings. ', (int) 19 => '<p>11. It is somewhat unfortunate that a later decision of the Bombay High Court in State of Bombay v. Purushottamdas Dwarkadas Patel 1948 S.T.C. 379 a case arising under s. 13 of the Bombay Sales Tax Act, 1946 - which decided the identical question which arose in this appeal, was not brought to the notice of the High Court. In that case it was held by the High Court that an application for refund of sales tax paid under an order of assessment cannot be entertained by the Sales Tax Officer on the plea that the order was made on an erroneous view of the law, unless the order was set aside on appropriate proceedings by way of appeal or revision. The Court in that case in a reference made under the Bombay Sales Tax act disapproved of the view of the Board of Revenue which had in arriving at its decision followed the precedent in Sheikh Gauhar Sheikh Nazir's case 1943 S.T.C. 331', (int) 20 => '<p>12. Application for refund of tax was, therefore, not maintainable under s. 13 of the C.P. & Berar Sales Tax Act, 1947 as originally framed. ', (int) 21 => '<p>13. The appeal must therefore be allowed. The parties to bear their own costs in this Court and in the High Court. ', (int) 22 => '<p>14. Appeal allowed. ', (int) 23 => '' ) $paragraphAfter = (int) 1 $cnt = (int) 24 $i = (int) 23include - APP/View/Case/amp.ctp, line 144 View::_evaluate() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 971 View::_render() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 933 View::render() - CORE/Cake/View/View.php, line 473 Controller::render() - CORE/Cake/Controller/Controller.php, line 963 Dispatcher::_invoke() - CORE/Cake/Routing/Dispatcher.php, line 200 Dispatcher::dispatch() - CORE/Cake/Routing/Dispatcher.php, line 167 [main] - APP/webroot/index.php, line 109