LAWS(PVC)-1937-5-76

SM RAJMANI DEVI Vs. COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX

Decided On May 04, 1937
SM RAJMANI DEVI Appellant
V/S
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX Respondents

JUDGEMENT

(1.) This is a reference under Section 66(3), Income-tax Act, 11 of 1922. The proceedings in connection with which the reference arose were proceedings under Section 27 of the Act and the assessment year was the year 1932-33 ending with Chait 1989. The assessee was one Lala Ramji Das who was a banker and carried on money lending business on an extensive scale. He maintained his accounts by the year ending on 15 Chait which corresponds roughly with the financial year. The previous year or the accounting year would in the present case end with 15th Chait 1988.

(2.) When the assessment began, Ramji Das was alive, but he died on 9 April 1933, and the application under Section 27 which was submitted by Eamji Das was continued by his widow Mt. Rajmani Devi. The Income-tax Officer dismissed the application under Section 27 on 13 April 1934 and an appeal against the said decision was dismissed by the Assistant Commissioner on 24 July 1934. On 27th August 1934 the assessee filed a combined application for review and reference to the High Court. On 8 October 1934 the learned Commissioner refused to state a case and on the application for review he remitted certain issues to the Income- tax Officer. We are not concerned in the present proceeding with the result of the application for review. The assessee then filed an application in the High Court praying that we should require the Commissioner to state a case under Section 66 (3) of the Act. By our order dated 27 February 1936 we required the Commissioner to state a case and formulated three questions of law. We mentioned then that the only matter which we had to decide at that stage was whether a question of law arose out of the decision of the Assistant Commissioner, and we were of the opinion that the three questions formulated by us did arise and we did not agree with the opinion of the Commissioner that no question of law arose although counsel for the Department also pressed that point before us even at that stage.

(3.) The learned Commissioner has now stated a case and has referred the three questions of law which we had ourselves formulated, but once more he has lodged a mild protest questioning our jurisdiction in requiring him to state a ease under Section 66(3), for he is still of the opinion that a question of law did not arise. He thinks that a question of law is foreign to an appeal pending before the Assistant Commissioner against an adverse order passed by an Income-tax Officer under Section 27. He says: The expression prevented by sufficient cause in Section 27 involves some definite active cause, making compliance with a notice impossible and not a passive cause such as the opinion that compliance is not obligatory because of rights supposed to be secured under the Act.