Sen, J.@mdashIn the present reference at the instance of the Commissioner of Income Tax, West Bengal-I, Calcutta, u/s 256(2) of the Income Tax Act, 1961, this court directed the Tribunal to state a case on the following question :
" Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances of the case, the Tribunal was justified in holding that there was a clear mistake apparent from the record within the meaning of Section 154 of the Income Tax Act, 1961, and in directing the Income Tax Officer on that basis to recompute the tax according to the provisions of law laid down in the Finance Act, 1964 ? "
2. The facts found and/or admitted in these proceedings are, inter alia, as follows. Messrs. Simplex Concrete Piles (India) Pvt. Ltd., the assessee, was assessed to Income Tax in the assessment yaar 1964-65 when its total income was assessed at Rs. 5,51,919. On appeal, this amount was reduced to Rs. 4,38,478. Thereupon, the assessee claimed that since it was engaged in the business of manufacture and/or processing concrete piles and since its total income for the said assessment year was below Rs. 5 lakhs it was entitled to relief under the provisions of Paragraph D of Part II of the First Schedule to the Finance Act, 1964, and its income should be charged to tax at the reduced rate as provided in the said Act. The assessee contended that by reason of the order of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner reducing the total income of the assessee below Rs. 5 lakhs a mistake had become apparent from the record in not allowing the relief which the assessee was entitled to and that the said mistake should be rectified by an order u/s 154 of the Income Tax Act, 1961.
3. The Income Tax Officer rejected the assessee''s claim for rectification. Being aggrieved the assessee preferred an appeal to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner who held that the assessee was itself a contractor and erection of piles constituted an essential ingredient of the contracts undertaken by the assessee and such construction could not be treated as a manufacturing activity. The appeal of the assessee was accordingly rejected.
4. The assessee went up by way of further appeal to the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal. Before the Tribunal, it was contended on behalf of the assessee that the activity of the assessee constituted manufacture of goods and nothing else. It was submitted that the piles were manufactured by pouring into a steel cage the raw materials, namely, sand, gravel stone chips and cement mixed mechanically. The decision of the Madras High Court in the case of
5. It was contended on behalf of the revenue that the piles made by the assessee were not goods and, therefore, there could not be any manufacture.
6. The Tribunal noted that the only point for consideration was whether there was a mistake apparent from the record. The Tribunal considered the meaning of the word " pile " from the Concise Oxford Dictionary as follows :
" Pointed stake or post; heavy beam driven vertically into bed of river, soft ground, etc., as support for bridge, etc."
7. The Tribunal found that in certain cases the assessee constructed the piles at the work site itself and in other cases piles were made separately and then taken to the site and driven into the ground. From the letter of the assessee dated the 7th July, 1965, filed by the assessee before the Income Tax Officer prior to the order of assessment the Tribunal noted that the assessee was carrying on a special type of job, namely, doing foundation work of concrete piers for mobile sand pump at the Port of Nagapattinam. The work consisted of casting piles on the ground and thereafter taking them to the deep sea to be driven on the bed.
8. Relying on the definition of the expression " manufacture " as laid down by the Madras High Court in the case of
9. Mr. B. L. Pal, learned counsel for the revenue, has contended before us that, in the facts and circumstances, the order of the Tribunal was patently erroneous inasmuch as there was no mistake which was apparent from the record. He submitted that, mistake, if any, had to be discovered by a detailed investigation of the facts and circumstances which the Tribunal did. He submitted that it was settled law that in a case where two views were possible one view should not be preferred to the other to establish that there was a mistake apparent. In support of his contentions he relied on a decision of the Supreme Court in the case of
" A mistake apparent on the record must be an obvious and patent mistake and not something which can be established by a long drawn process of reasoning on points on which there may conceivably be two opinions. As seen earlier, the High Court of Bombay opined that the original assessments were in accordance with law though in our opinion the High Court was not justified in going into that question. In
10. Dr. Debi Pal, learned counsel for the assessee, on the other hand, contended that in the instant case, the Tribunal found as a fact that the assessee was carrying on a process of manufacture. This finding has not been challenged and, therefore, the conclusion was inescapable that there was a mistake apparent from the record and the Tribunal''s order must be sustained. In support of his contentions Dr. Pal has pitted several decisions as considered hereafter in their chronological order.
(a)
(b)
(c)
" Section 154 of the Income Tax Act, 1961, and the previous Section 35 of the old Act of 1922 provide for rectification of mistake apparent from the record. The scope and ambit of the sections have been the subject-matter of several decisions and it has been held that a mistake which is not obvious or which requires investigation or in respect of which two different views are possible is not a mistake covered or contemplated by Section 154 of the Income Tax Act, 1961. We may refer to the decisions in the cases of
11. Dr. Pal also cited a decision of the Gujarat High Court in
12. In the facts and circumstances of this case, however, in our opinion the order of the Tribunal cannot be sustained. The Tribunal erred, firstly, in embarking on a detailed investigation of facts of the actual work carried on by the assessee as also in seeking to construe the meaning of different general expressions like " manufacture ", " piling " and " goods ". It is only after such investigation and; construction that the Tribunal came to the conclusion that a mistake appeared on the record. The Tribunal was further in error in holding that the provisions of Paragraph D of Part II of the First Schedule to the Finance Act, 1964, did apply in the instant case. .
13. The relevant provisions of the Finance Act, 1964, are as follows :
" In the case of every company, other than the Life Insurance Corporation of India established under the Life Insurance Corporation Act, 1956 (XXXI of 1956)--Rates of super-tax on the whole of total income ...55%.
Provided that--......
(iii) (A) in the case of a company which is wholly or mainly engaged in the manufacture or processing of goods or in mining or in the generation or distribution of electricity or any other form of power and whose total income does not exceed rupees five lakhs, a rebate at the rate of 30 per cent. on so much of its total income as does not exceed rupees 2 lakhs and a rebate at the rate of 20 per cent. on the balance of the total income;......
shall be allowed......"
14. The Tribunal appears to have proceeded on the assumption that the assessee was engaged wholly or mainly in the manufacture or processing of goods. Even if we assume that construction of piles by the assessee amounted to manufacture of goods, there does not seem to be anything on record on which the Tribunal could have come to the conclusion that the assessee was wholly or mainly engaged in such manufacture. From the records before us, as appearing in the paper book, it is quite clear that the assessee was carrying on business of piling, that is laying foundation of other constructions, and not a production of piles simpliciter. In any event it cannot be said with certainty whether the activities of the assessee was mainly manufacture or mainly construction, the manufacture of piles being an ancillary to such construction. Two views were possible as to whether the assessee was carrying on manufacture or processing and also whether the assessee was engaged wholly or mainly in such manufacture or processing.
15. On these grounds, it appears to us that the mistake, if any, in the record is not apparent so as to be rectified u/s 154 of the Income Tax Act, 1961.
16. For the reasons aforesaid, we answer the question referred to us in the negative and in favour of the revenue. There will be no order as to costs.
C.K. Banerji, J.
17. I agree.