| This Judgment has been overruled by : Honda Siel Power Products Ltd. Vs. Commissioner of Income Tax, Delhi, |
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S. Muralidhar, J.@mdashThis appeal is directed against the impugned order dated 10.9.2003 passed by the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (''Tribunal'') in M.A.No.344/Del/2002 in ITA No. 5544/Del/96 and ITA No. 5545/Del/96. By the said impugned order, the application filed by the Respondent assessed u/s 254(2) of the Income Tax Act, 1961 (''Act'') was allowed and the earlier order dated 2.4.2002 passed by the Tribunal in the said appeals was ''rectified'' and ground No. 2 of ITA No. 5544/Del/96 and ground No. 3 of ITA No. 5545/Del/96 was reconsidered and allowed.
2. In the first order dated 2.4.2002, grounds 2 and 3 were dealt with by the Tribunals under:
34. The Ld. DR during the course of hearing submitted that as the actual payment as contained in Section 43A has not been paid after fluctuation of rate (of exchange), no benefit u/s 43 ought to have been passed on to the assessed. On the other hand, Ld. AR relied upon the order of the authorities below.
35. A perusal of Section 43A leaves no room to doubt that the making of payment is a condition precedent for availing the benefit of the section and as the actual payment has not been made after fluctuation, the value of the asset could not be increased by adding the increase on account of fluctuation and thus, we feel that depreciation was not only wrongly claimed but also wrongly allowed by the CIT (A). The ground Nos. 2 and 3 of ITA No. 5544 and 5545/D/96 are respectively allowed.
3. Accepting the assessed''s application for rectification, the Tribunal by the impugned order dated 10.9.2003 recalled its earlier decision on the above grounds 2 and 3 and held:
Admittedly, a decision of the co-ordinate Bench was cited and placed on record but the same has escaped the attention of this Bench. The fact that a decision of co-ordinate Bench though cited but not considered when examined in the context of the Judgment of the Apex Court, referred to above would make it clear that an error in writing the order which is an error within the meaning of Section 254(2) has crept in and Therefore, needs rectification and that the ground No. 2 of ITA No. 5544 and Ground No. 3 of ITA No. 5545/Del/96 needs reconsideration and after considering the submission made at the bar coupled with the Judgments relied upon, we have no hesitation in accepting the application. As the issue raised in Ground No. 3 of the application is covered by the order of the Tribunal in ITA No. 2352/Del/96, the ground No.3 of the application in these circumstances is allowed.
4. The principal ground on which the impugned order dated 10.9.2003 is sought to be assailed by the Revenue is that in the garb of rectifying the earlier order dated 2.4.2002 the Tribunal has in fact reviewed it. Mr. R.D. Jolly, learned Counsel for the Revenue (appellant) submitted that that is impermissible in law and beyond the scope of the powers of the Tribunal u/s 254(2) of the Act. The further submission is that the reason given by the Tribunal for accepting the assessed''s application for rectification viz., ''a decision of the co-ordinate Bench was cited and placed on record but the same has escaped the attention of this Bench'', was not a justifiable reason for rectification and that if the assessed was aggrieved by the finding rendered in regard to this ground in the main order dated 2.4.2002, there was always a remedy available by way of an appeal. Mr. Jolly has placed reliance on the recent decision dated 2.6.2006 passed by a Division Bench of this Court in Commissioner of Income Tax v. Income Tax Appellate Tribunal [2006] 155 Taxman 378 (Del) . Reliance has also been placed on the decision of this Court in
5. In reply Mr. M.S. Syali, the learned senior counsel appearing for the respondent assessed, submits that the impugned order is nothing but an order by way of rectification of the earlier order dated 2.4.2002 as is evident from the fact that the entire order dated 2.4.2002 has not been recalled or reviewed but only in respect of two grounds, the said decision has been varied. Referring to the proviso to Section 254(2) of the Act, Mr. Syali submits that pursuant to an application for rectification, the Tribunal could pass an order, amending the earlier order that has the effect of ''enhancing an assessment'' or ''reducing a refund'' or ''increasing the liability of the assessed''. The only requirement is that this should not be done without notice to the assessed. A reasonable opportunity of being heard should also be afforded to the assessed. As regards the meaning to be attributed to the expression ''mistake apparent from the record'', Mr. Syali seeks to distinguish this from the expression "mistake on the face of the record" occurring in Order 47 Rule 1 CPC. He submits that the expression in Section 254(2) of the Act is wider in nature and permits the Tribunal to look into the entire record. Reliance is placed on the Judgments in
6. In conclusion, Mr. Syali submits that there are at least three instances where exercise by way of rectification could result in an order completely different from the previous one and that this was permissible within the scope of Section 254(2). According to him, these are recognised in the decisions in
7. In order to appreciate the above submissions, we may first refer to the provisions of Section 254 of the Act, the relevant portion of which reads as under:
Orders of Appellate Tribunal 254
(1) The Appellate Tribunal may, after giving both the parties to the appeal an opportunity of being heard, pass such orders thereon as it thinks fit.
(2) The Appellate Tribunal may, at any time within four years from the date of the order, with a view to rectifying any mistake apparent from the record, amend any order passed by it under Sub-section (1) and shall make such amendment if the mistake is brought to its notice by the assessed or the [Assessing Officer]:
Provided that an amendment which has the effect of enhancing an assessment or reducing a refund or otherwise increasing the liability of the assessed, shall not be made under this Sub-section unless the Appellate Tribunal has given notice to the assessed of its intention to do so and has allowed the assessed a reasonable opportunity of being heard....
A plain reading of the above provision indicates that in order to exercise the power vested in it u/s 254(2) of the Act, the Tribunal has to ensure that the following factors are present:
(a) The application is made within 4 years from the date of the order sought to be rectified.
(b) There is a mistake apparent from the record which is brought to its notice by either the assessed or the assessing officer. As regards the procedure to be followed, if the amendment sought has the effect of enhancing the assessment or reducing a refund or increasing the liability of the assessed, the Tribunal has to give prior notice to the assessed and also allow the assessed a reasonable opportunity of being heard.
8. It is plain that the power to rectify a mistake is not equivalent to a power to review or recall the order sought to be rectified. Rectification is a species of the larger concept of review. Although it is possible that the pre- requisite for exercise of either power may be similar (a mistake apparent from the record), by its very nature the power to rectify a mistake cannot result in the recall and review of the order sought to be rectified. Otherwise, what cannot be done directly by seeking a review of an order can be achieved indirectly, by seeking a rectification of that order. This is even more significant in light of the fact that under the Act there is no express power given to the Tribunal to review its own orders. A reference may be made to the observation of the Hon''ble Supreme Court in
9. The first significant decision in this regard is Commissioner of Income Tax v. K.L. Bhatia (supra). The facts of that case were that the assessed filed an application before the Tribunal u/s 254(2) of the Act stating that certain material facts were not correctly noted by the Tribunal in its order dated 27.6.1985 in which it concluded that the property claimed by the assessed as belonging to his wife, in fact belonged to him and that the wife was only a benamidar. The Tribunal accepted this application and came to the conclusion that there was a mistake in the earlier order dated 27.6.1985 and as such the order was required to be recalled. One of the questions raised in the appeal before this Court was whether the Tribunal had any power to recall its earlierorder. this Court categorically held that the Tribunal had no power to recall its order on merits in exercise of its powers u/s 254 of the Act.
This Court held as under (ITR p. 367):
As we have already observed, the Tribunal is a creation of the statute. It is an admitted case, and it is now well-settled, that though the Tribunal has no inherent power of reviewing its order on merits, the Tribunal has incidental or ancillary powers which can be exercised by it. But such power cannot be invoked to rehear a case on merits. The Tribunal can, after disposing of the appeal u/s 254(1), rehear the matter on merits only within the purview of Section 254(2). The Supreme Court has held in
In the course of the Judgment in K.L. Bhatia it was observed (ITR p. 364-65):
The Income Tax Act is a self-contained code. The Income Tax Appellate Tribunal is a creation of the statute and its powers are circumscribed by the provisions of the Act. Appeals are filed before it u/s 253 of the Act. Section 254(1) contemplates disposal of the said appeal after giving an opportunity to both the parties of being heard. Sub-section 20 of Section 254 enables the Tribunal to rectify any mistake apparent from the record. Sub-section (4) of Section 254 specifies that save as provided in Section 256, the order passed by the Appellate Tribunal on appeal are final.
A reading of Section 254 shows that the orders which are passed u/s 254 are final except under two circumstances: (1) if a rectification is called for, then such an order can be passed u/s 254(2), and (2) a reference can be made on questions of law arising out of this order under the provisions of Section 256. As far as the Tribunal is concerned, Section 254(4) provides that the orders passed by it on appeal are final.
Importantly this Court in K.L. Bhatia drew a distinction between the power u/s 35 of the Income Tax Act, 1922 (''1922 Act'') (which was the corresponding provision relating to rectification of orders) and the present Section 254 of the 1961 Act. Referring to the Judgment of the Hon''ble Supreme Court in
10. The next important decision is
It was indeed the duty of the counsel to address this Bench first on the Rule 29 application if at all the same was desired to be pressed or argued. Admittedly not having done so it cannot now be attributed as a mistake apparent from record to the Tribunal.
The Tribunal concluded (ITR p. 406):
14.7 In the circumstances, the appellants having argued on merits, not having highlighted/argued petition under Rule 29 and the Tribunal in its order having dealt with in extenso the letter dated February 21, 1995, there is no mistake apparent from record calling for rectification u/s 254(2) of the Act and restricting the appellant to the material on record sans additional evidence, was in order and not a mistake apparent from record. We Therefore, find no merit in these applications and dismiss the same.
Before this Court, the question that again arose was whether the Tribunal had erred in rejecting the applications for rectification. this Court formulated the question and answered it as under (ITR p. 415):
Could any relief have been allowed to the petitioners in exercise of jurisdiction conferred by Section 254(2) of the Act amending the order passed by the Tribunal with a view to rectify any mistake apparent from the record.
The language of the provisions is clear. The foundation for exercising the jurisdiction is ''with a view to rectify any mistake apparent on the record''and the object is achieved by ''amending any order passed by it.''
The power so conferred does not contemplate a rehearing which would have the effect of re-writing an order affecting the merits of the case. Even there would be no distinction between a power to review and a power to rectify a mistake. What is not permitted to be done by the statute having deliberately omitted to confer review jurisdiction on the Tribunal, cannot be indirectly achieved by recourse to Section 254(2) of the Act.
Following the decision in K.L. Bhatia, this Court in Deeksha Suri dismissed the appeals of the assessed holding that the Tribunal was right in dismissing the rectification application.
11. The third important decision is J.N. Sahni v. ITAT (supra), again by a Division Bench of this Court. In that case, the Tribunal entertained the applications filed by the Revenue seeking rectification of an order on the ground that there were certain mistakes apparent from the record. The Tribunal then proceeded to recall the entire order and fixed the appeals for re-hearing. The assessed then moved this Court by way of an appeal and placing reliance upon the decisions in Deeksha Suri and K.L. Bhatia, urged that the Tribunal had exceeded its jurisdiction u/s 254(2) of the Act and could not have possibly recalled the entire order. After referring to the case law, this Court reiterated that the power entrusted u/s 254(2) could not be used to recall the order itself. Reference was made to the decision in Smt. Baljeet Jolly v. CIT (supra) where it was categorically held that "amendment of an order does not mean obliteration of an order originally passed and its substitution by a new order." this Court expressly dissented from the decision of the Rajasthan High Court in
With utmost respect we are unable to subscribe to the aforementioned view. The Tribunal in the absence of any express power cannot be said to have a power of substantive review. The Tribunal has merely the power to amend its order. While exercising the said power it cannot recall its order. The expression ''amendment'' must be assigned its true meaning. While an order of amendment is passed, the order remains but when an order is recalled it stands obliterated. It is well settled that what cannot be done directly, cannot be done indirectly. The review of its own order by the Tribunal is forbidden in law, it cannot be permitted to achieve the same object by exercising its power under Sub-section (2) of Section 254. The Income Tax Appellate Tribunal does not have an inherent power of review.
12. In CIT v. Vichtra Construction (P.) Ltd. (supra), the Tribunal decided to recall the earlier order in its entirety while accepting the application for rectification. This Court held that such an order by the Tribunal was beyond the scope of the Section 254(2). It was held as under (ITR p. 374):
In view of the provisions and judicial pronouncement indicated hereinabove, we are of the view that the power to rectify a mistake u/s 254(2) cannot be used for recalling the entire order. No power of review has been given to the Tribunal under the Income Tax Act. Thus, what it cannot do directly, cannot be allowed to be done indirectly. If the assessed was aggrieved, it was open for him to approach the appropriate forum but the Tribunal could not have reviewed the entire Judgment delivered by it earlier in the garb of exercising its power u/s 254(2). Accordingly, the answer is required to be given in favor of the Revenue and against the assessed.
13. Recently, in CIT v. ITAT (supra) a Division Bench of this Court was considering a case where the Tribunal had recalled the earlier order on the ground that it had failed to note of a decision rendered by a three member Bench of the Tribunal at Allahabad. The Revenue in appeal before this Court contended that this could hardly be a ground for the recall of the entire order in terms of Section 254(2) of the Act. In para 6 and 7 this Court in CIT v. ITAT (supra) held as under (Taxman, p. 381-82):
6. It is evident from the above that the power available to the Tribunal is not in the nature of a review as is understood in legal parlance. The power is limited to correction of mistakes apparent from the record. What is significant is that the section envisages amendment of the original order of the Tribunal and not a total substitution thereof. That position is fairly well-settled by two decisions of this Court in
The scope and ambit of application of Section 254(2) is very limited. The same is restricted to rectification of mistakes apparent from the record. We shall first deal with the question of the power of the Tribunal to recall an order in its entirety. Recalling the entire order obviously would mean passing of a fresh order. That does not appear to be the legislative intent. The order passed by the Tribunal u/s 254(1) is the effective order so far as the appeal is concerned. Any order passed u/s 254(2) either allowing the amendment or refusing to amend gets merged with the original order passed. The order as amended or remaining unamended is the effective order for all practical purposes. The same continues to be an order u/s 254(1). That is the final order in the appeal. An order u/s 254(2) does not have existence de hors the order u/s 254(1). Recalling of the order is not permissible u/s 254(2). Recalling of an order automatically necessitates re-hearing and readjudication of the entire subject-matter of appeal. The dispute no longer remains restricted to any mistake sought to be rectified. Power to recall an order is prescribed in terms or Rule 24 of the Income Tax (Appellate Tribunal) Rules, 1963, and that too only in cases where the assessed shows that it had a reasonable cause for being absent at a time when the appeal was taken up and was decided ex parte. This position was highlighted by one of us (Justice Arijit Pasayat, Chief Justice) in
7. That being the legal position, the Tribunal was not in our opinion justified in recalling the order passed by it in toto and setting the matter down for a fresh hearing. Just because a pronouncement made on the subject either by the Tribunal or by any other Court was not noticed by the Tribunal while taking a particular view on the merits of the controversy may constitute an error that would call for correction in an appropriate appeal against the order. Any such error may however fall short of Constituting a mistake apparent from the record within the meaning of Section 254(2) of the Act. More importantly just because a point is debatable (which is one of the reasons given by the Tribunal in the instant case) would hardly provide a justification for recalling the order and fixing the appeal for a de novo hearing. While doing so, the Tribunal has no doubt made certain observations in regard to the levy of interest u/s 158BFA being statutory in nature with no power vested in any authority or Tribunal to condone the same, but the very fact that the Tribunal has made those observations would not render valid the order of recall passed by it. The net result of the order made by the Tribunal continues to remain the same viz, the appeal has to be heard again simply because one of the issues decided by the Tribunal is debatable or the Tribunal has not noticed an earlier decision rendered by another Bench. Both these reasons were insufficient to justify the order of recall made by the Tribunal.
14. Turning to the facts of the present case, we are of the considered view that it makes no difference whether the entire order is sought to be recalled or the order passed by the Tribunal on individual grounds is sought to be recalled in entirety. In other words, if the Tribunal has given its decision on say grounds 3 and 4 in a particular way in its first order while dealing with ten separate grounds and pursuant to a rectification application, it recalls its decision on grounds 3 and 4 and gives a completely different decision on the said grounds, then it would certainly amount to recall and review of its entire order in respect of those grounds. We are unable to persuade ourselves to accept the submission of Mr. Syali that what the decision in K.L. Bhatia and other decisions that have followed it, forbids is only a recall of the Tribunal''s entire decision on all the ten grounds and not to the recall and review of only two out of the ten grounds. There is no basis for such a distinction either from the language of Section 254(2) of the Act or of the decisions of this Court in the numerous cases noticed hereinabove.
15. The decisions cited by Mr. Syali in K. Venkatachalam''s case (supra), S.A.L. Narayan Row v. Ishwarilal Bhagwandas and Karamchand Premchand P. Ltd''s case (supra) turned on their own facts. K. Venkatachalam pertained to the power u/s 35 of the 1922 Act. As observed by Division Bench of this Court in K.L. Bhatia, Section 35 of the 1922 Act did not provide for a further reference to the High Court against the decision there under whereas under the present Act a reference u/s 256 is permissible in respect of a decision u/s 254. In S.A.L. Narayan Row a subsequent legislative change related back to the assessment period covered by the assessment order in question necessitating its recall. This was not an instance of a mistake on record. Karamchand Premchand P. Ltd. involved Section 256(1) of the Companies (Profits) Surtax Act and not Section 254(2) of the Income Tax Act, 1961. Not surprisingly, Therefore, the said decision in Karamchand Premchand P. Ltd. Does not refer to any of the decisions discussed hereinabove and is Therefore distinguishable on that ground itself.
16. Mr. Syali placed considerable reliance on the decision of the Gujarat High Court in Assistant CIT v. Saurashtra Kutch Stock Exchange Ltd (supra) where it was held (ITR p. 155):
The proposition that a contention raised but not dealt with by the Tribunal should be held to have been negatived is correct only up to a stage. Once a party brings to the notice of the Tribunal that an important point or contention raised by the party has not been dealt with it would be within the jurisdiction and powers of the Tribunal to decide whether the same constitutes a mistake apparent from the record and thereafter, if necessary, reopen the appeal. Such a power is inherent in the Tribunal, as a party has suffered prejudice due to a lapse on the part of the Tribunal and not on account of any fault of such a party. An act of the Tribunal should not prejudice a party so as to force the party into unwarranted litigation.
It was further observed in the above decision that "after the mistake is corrected, consequential order must follow, and the Tribunal has power to pass all necessary consequential orders." Mr.Syali accordingly advocates for a similar wider interpretation of the scope of the power u/s 254(2) of the Act by this Court, in the peculiar facts of this case.
17. We are unable to agree with this submission of Mr. Syali. One instance of a mistake apparent from the record is indicated in Rule 24 of the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal Rules and that mistake is permissible to be corrected by recalling the order. However, in order to invoke the power u/s 254(2) the mistake would have to be shown to be a mistake apparent from the record. The Tribunal, in the present case records in para 5 of the impugned order dated 10.9.2003 that "admittedly, a decision of the co-ordinate Bench was cited and placed on record but the same has escaped the attention of this Bench." We have already held this can hardly be construed as a mistake apparent from the record. As pointed out by this Court in CIT v. ITAT (supra), this might be a good ground for an appeal but not for a rectification. A distinction as rightly been drawn in several decisions of this Court between the scope of the power of review and recall and that of rectification. In the circumstances we are with respect, unable to subscribe to the broad-brush approach of the Gujarat High Court.
18. We may add that u/s 254(2) the limitation for filing an application for rectification is an unusually long period of four years. Contrasted with far lesser periods of limitation for filing appeals, it underscores the need for the Tribunal to be circumspect about the instances where it will entertain applications for rectification. It must be remembered that this is not a power of review but is restricted to rectifying mistakes ''apparent from the record.'' A liberal approach might constitute an invitation to parties to allow the period for filing an appeal to expire, anticipate a change of coram of the bench that heard the appeal in the first instance, and then at their own sweet will ''take a chance'' by filing a rectification application on any fancy imagined ''mistake apparent from the record'' at any time before the expiry of four years. The likelihood of ingenuous layering resulting in the abuse of the provision cannot be ruled out. In the circumstances, we would caution against the Tribunal interpreting the narrow power of rectification wider than what it is.
19. In conclusion, we are of the view that the impugned order of the Tribunal dated 10.9.2003 by which it recalled and reversed its earlier decision dated 2.4.2002 on grounds 2 and 3, is impermissible and unsustainable in law. We reiterate that in the facts of the present case it makes no difference whether the entire order is sought to be recalled or the order passed by the Tribunal on individual grounds is sought to be recalled in its entirety. Neither is permissible under the garb of rectification.
20. For all the aforementioned reasons, the impugned order dated 10.9.2003 of the Tribunal is set aside and appeal is allowed with no order as to costs.