High Court Karnataka High Court

K. Sampangirama Raju, S. … vs Vth Income-Tax Officer And Ors. on 9 December, 1987

Karnataka High Court
K. Sampangirama Raju, S. … vs Vth Income-Tax Officer And Ors. on 9 December, 1987
Equivalent citations: 1988 173 ITR 609 KAR, 1988 173 ITR 609 Karn
Bench: S R Murthy


JUDGMENT

1. In these writ petitions, the petitioners who are assessees under the Income-tax Act have challenged the constitutional validity of section 140A(3) of the Income-tax Act, 1961 (“the Act”).

2. Penalty is leviable under the said proviso for any failure to pay the tax or any part of it along with the return furnished under section 139 or under section 148 of the Act.

3. The petitioners have relied upon a decision of the Madras High Court in A.M. Sali Maricar v. ITO , in which the said provisions were struck down by the Madras High Court, being violative of article 19(1)(f) of the Constitution.

4. It is pointed out by learned counsel for the Department that several High Courts have taken a contrary view and relied upon the decision of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in Kashiram v. ITO ; CIT v. Vrajlal Manlilal & Co. ; Seva Ram v. ITO and Gunny Exporters (P.) Ltd. v. ITO [1976] TLR 603 (Cal).

5. To recapitulate, the reasons given by the Madras High Court are : that the penalty levied under section 140A(3) is not compensatory or interest on the delayed payment of tax and its retention has no relation to the duration of the delay or the wilful or other nature of the violation or the inability to pay the tax. It was also held that it has no rationale or intelligible nexus with the recovery of tax and was, therefore, violative of article 19(1)(f) of the Constitution.

6. The earliest of the decisions in favour of the Department is Kashiram v. ITO .

7. The Madhya Pradesh High Court in CIT v. Vrajlal Manilal & Co. , has upheld the validity of section 140A(3) on the ground that the penalty under section 140A(3) is in the nature of additional tax for securing compliance with the provisions of section 140A. The High Court also rejected the contention that it was confiscatory and unreasonable. Then followed the Andhra Pradesh High Court decision in Kashiram v. ITO and the Calcutta High Court decision in Gunny Exporters (P.) Ltd. v. ITO [1976] TLR 603, who have dissented from the Madras High Court decision in Sali Maricar’s case [1973] 90 ITR 116.

8. One other decision which has taken a similar view is that of the Jammu and Kashmir High Court in Seva Ram v. ITO , which has upheld the levy of penalty as a valid levy made under entry 82 of the First Schedule of List I to the 7th Schedule to the Constitution. They also relied upon the Supreme Court decision in C. A. Abraham v. ITO , in support of their conclusion that penalty was only an additional tax and nothing more.

9. Learned counsel for the Department has also relied upon the decision of the Supreme Court in Vrindavan Goverdhan Lal Pittie v. Union of India , in which the validity of section 18(1)(a) of the Wealth-tax Act, 1957, providing for penalty in filing the return of wealth was upheld.

10. In the light of the decisions of several High Courts referred to above which have upheld the validity of the provisions of section 140A(3) of the Act, which I choose to follow, the writ petitions have to be dismissed for the same reasons. Even on facts, the reason for the failure to pay advance tax put forward by the assessee, namely, that there was confusion about the status, cannot be accepted.

11. Therefore, the writ petitions are accordingly dismissed.