Smt. Kilasho Devi Burman & Ors. vs Commissioner Of Income Tax

Introduction

The Supreme Court judgment in Smt. Kilasho Devi Burman & Ors. vs. Commissioner of Income Tax (1996) 219 ITR 214 (SC) stands as a cornerstone authority on the procedural prerequisites for a valid assessment under the Income Tax Act. This case commentary dissects the apex court’s ruling, which overturned the Calcutta High Court’s decision and restored the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT) order. The core issue revolved around whether a valid assessment existed on a Hindu Undivided Family (HUF) for the assessment year 1955-56, and if so, whether subsequent reassessments for 1958-59 to 1962-63 were valid. The Supreme Court’s analysis reaffirms that an unsigned assessment order is a nullity, and it strictly delimits the High Court’s advisory jurisdiction in tax references. This decision has profound implications for the Revenue’s burden of proof and the sanctity of foundational assessment orders.

Facts of the Case

The assessee, Rash Behari Das Burman, governed by Mitakshara Hindu law, filed a return for the assessment year 1955-56 as Karta of his HUF. The Revenue claimed an assessment was made, but the assessment order on record bore no signature. A demand notice dated 10th April 1958 existed, but the assessee denied receiving it. An acknowledgment slip dated 25th April 1958 was signed by one Phool Singh, whom the assessee claimed had no authority to receive notices. No evidence showed the demand was paid.

For assessment years 1958-59 to 1962-63, the Income Tax Officer (ITO) initiated reassessment proceedings under section 147(a) of the Income Tax Act, 1961, alleging the HUF had escaped assessment. The ITO concluded no genuine partition had occurred. The assessee contested, arguing the HUF had ceased to exist and no valid assessment existed for 1955-56. The ITAT found in favor of the assessee, holding that: (i) there was no signed assessment order; (ii) the demand notice was not properly served; (iii) without a valid 1955-56 assessment, no application under section 25A of the 1922 Act was required; and (iv) the subsequent assessments were invalid.

The Revenue sought a reference to the Calcutta High Court, which reversed the ITAT’s findings. The High Court relied on the acknowledgment slip and a statement in the Revenue’s reference application that Phool Singh had received multiple notices for the assessee. The High Court deemed the ITAT’s factual findings perverse. The assessee appealed to the Supreme Court.

Reasoning of the Supreme Court

The Supreme Court’s reasoning is a masterclass in procedural law and jurisdictional limits. The Court identified two primary legal errors by the High Court.

1. Invalidity of the 1955-56 Assessment Order:
The Court held that a valid assessment order must be signed or initialed by the Income Tax Officer. Citing Kalyankumar Ray vs. CIT (1991) 191 ITR 634 (SC), the Court emphasized that the process of assessment under section 143(3) is complete only when the ITO signs or initials the computation sheets. In the present case, the Revenue failed to produce any signed assessment order for 1955-56. The demand notice and acknowledgment slip, without a signed order, could not establish a valid assessment. The Court stated: ā€œA valid assessment upon the HUF for the asst. yr. 1955-56 was central to the case of the Revenue. Since it was unable to establish, by the production of a signed assessment order for that year, that there was such valid assessment, its case fell.ā€ This finding was fatal to the Revenue’s entire case, as the subsequent reassessments for 1958-59 to 1962-63 were predicated on the existence of a valid 1955-56 assessment.

2. Limits of High Court’s Advisory Jurisdiction:
The Supreme Court meticulously delineated the boundaries of the High Court’s power in a tax reference under section 256 of the Income Tax Act, 1961. The Court held that the High Court exercises advisory jurisdiction only on questions of law. It cannot go behind the facts found by the ITAT. If the High Court believes additional facts are needed, it must call for a supplemental statement of case from the Tribunal. The Court clarified: ā€œThe High Court, in reference proceedings, cannot go behind the facts found. Where the High Court is of the view that it is requisite that facts other than those found need to be ascertained it must call upon the Tribunal to submit a supplemental statement of case.ā€

The High Court had erred by relying on a statement in the Revenue’s reference application that Phool Singh had received multiple notices. This statement was not part of the ITAT’s statement of case. The Court noted: ā€œThe statement of case does not say this about Phool Singh… The High Court could have required the Tribunal to ascertain whether Phool Singh had received earlier notices… but the High Court could not, upon these ā€˜admitted’ facts, have reached the conclusion that the Tribunal’s findings of fact were perverse.ā€ The Court defined ā€œperverseā€ as a conclusion that ā€œno person, duly instructed, could, upon the record before him, have reasonably come to it.ā€ Since the ITAT’s findings were based on the absence of a signed order and lack of service, they were not perverse.

3. Consequence for Subsequent Assessments:
Without a valid 1955-56 assessment, the Revenue could not presume the HUF’s continued existence. Section 25A of the 1922 Act only applies when there is an existing assessment on the HUF. The ITAT had correctly held that the absence of an application under section 25A could not give the ITO jurisdiction to assess a non-existent HUF. The Supreme Court restored the ITAT’s order, thereby invalidating all reassessments for 1958-59 to 1962-63.

Conclusion

The Supreme Court allowed the appeal, set aside the High Court’s judgment, and restored the ITAT’s order. The Court directed the Revenue to pay costs to the appellants. This judgment reinforces several critical principles: (1) An unsigned assessment order is void ab initio; (2) The Revenue bears the burden of proving the validity of foundational assessment orders; (3) The High Court’s reference jurisdiction is strictly confined to the facts found by the ITAT; and (4) A finding of perversity requires a high threshold—it must be a conclusion no reasonable person could reach on the record. This case remains a vital precedent for assessees challenging defective assessments and for courts exercising appellate jurisdiction over tax matters.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the key takeaway from this judgment for tax practitioners?
The judgment underscores that the Revenue must produce a signed assessment order to prove a valid assessment. Without it, all subsequent proceedings based on that assessment are invalid. Practitioners should always verify the existence of a signed order when challenging reassessments.
Can the High Court re-evaluate facts in a tax reference?
No. The High Court’s jurisdiction is advisory and limited to questions of law. It cannot re-evaluate facts found by the ITAT. If additional facts are needed, the High Court must ask the ITAT for a supplemental statement of case.
What does ā€œperverseā€ mean in the context of this case?
A finding is perverse only if it is so unreasonable that no person, properly instructed, could have reached it based on the evidence before the Tribunal. The High Court cannot declare findings perverse by relying on evidence not part of the Tribunal’s record.
How does this case affect the application of section 25A of the 1922 Act?
Section 25A applies only when there is an existing assessment on the HUF. If no valid assessment exists, the HUF is treated as a ā€œdead assessee,ā€ and no presumption of its continued existence arises. The ITO cannot assess a non-existent HUF without a valid foundational assessment.
What is the significance of the Kalyankumar Ray vs. CIT citation in this judgment?
The Supreme Court relied on Kalyankumar Ray to establish that an assessment order must be signed or initialed by the ITO. This case confirms that the absence of a signature renders the assessment order invalid, regardless of other documents like demand notices. SEO_DATA: { “keyword”: “valid assessment order signed ITAT High Court jurisdiction”, “desc”: “Supreme Court ruling in Smt. Kilasho Devi Burman vs CIT: unsigned assessment order invalid; High Court cannot re-evaluate facts in tax reference. Key precedent for procedural sanctity.” }

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