PLJ 2023 Islamabad
(Note) 16
Present: Mohsin Akhtar Kayani and Sardar Ejaz Ishaq
Khan, JJ.
COMMISSIONER
OF INLAND REVENUE ZONE-III, ISLAMABAD--Applicant
versus
M/s. PEARL SECURITY (PVT)
LIMITED--Respondent
I.T.R. Appln.
Nos. 51 & 52 of 2016, decided on 31.8.2022.
Income Tax Ordinance,
2001--
----Ss. 133, 153, 170(1)(4)--Filing of income tax
returns--Refund claim--Registration of applications for refund
claim--Appeals-Rejected--Limitation--Connect classification of
Taxpayer--Adverse order of commissioner appeals--Jurisdiction of Commissioner
appeals--Challenge to--Though Section 170(4) required decision to be made
within 60 days, a failure to do so would not ipso facto result
in contested refund claim being deemed decided in favour of taxpayer--An appeal
is a continuation of original proceedings, Commissioner (Appeals) could decide contested
refund claim instead of Commissioner Inland Revenue--Why would taxpayer rush to
file an appeal against failure to pass refund order, when he can bask in knowledge
that on 61st day his tax refund would be deemed approved if no refund order
rejecting claim was passed, while by filing an appeal he would be taking risk
of an adverse order by Commissioner (Appeals)?--Timeframe u/S. 170(4) is
directory and not mandatory--60 day timeframe under Section 170(4) to pass
refund order is directory for as long as right of appeal under Section
170(5)(b) subsists. [Para 13 & 16] B,
C, D, E & F
2017
SCMR 1427; 2019 SCMR 1735.
Income Tax Ordinance,
2001--
----Part III, Chapter X, Ss. 127(5),
170(5)(b)--Limitation--Concept of an appeal against a failure to pass an order
sits uneasily with scheme of Part III of Chapter X, Section 127(5) whereof
stipulates limitation period of 30 days to file an appeal that are to be
counted from ‘the date on which order to be appealed against is served’--Apart
from being at a loss to see how, in practical terms, an appeal might be filed
in absence of an order, limitation period for such an appeal would also be at
large given that Section 170(5)(b) does not have its own limitation period 30
day limitation period u/S. 127(5) can obviously not apply as there is no order
with a date to start counting 30 days. [Para.
6] A
Mr. Manzoor Hussain, Advocate for Applicant
Mr. Amraiz Khan, Advocate for Respondent.
Date of hearing: 20.6.2022
Judgment
Sardar Ejaz Ishaq Khan,
J.--By this judgment we answer the following questions of law
(infelicitously) framed in the instant reference applications by the
Commissioner Inland Revenue (CIR) under Section 133 of the Income Tax
Ordinance, 2001 (ITO):
“Whether limitation
runs against not passing a refund order, where the refund was inadmissible due
to unsubstantiated or unverifiable claim or illegality especially considering
the provisions of sub-section (5)(b) of Section 170 the ITO;
“Whether
or not passing a refund order within 60 days would transform an inadmissible
claim of refund into admissible refund which is patently against the law or
unverifiable.”
After hearing the submissions
at the bar and perusing the record, the question of law for us to answer is a
narrower one extracted out of
the aforesaid two questions framed by the CIR, and is stated in Paragraph
5 of this judgment preceded by the reasons for its formulation.
2 The order-in-original that led to these references was passed
well after the 60 days stipulated in Section 170(4) of the ITO as follows:
“The Commissioner
shall, within sixty days of receipt of a refund application under sub-section
(1), serve on the person applying for the refund an order in writing of the
decision after providing the taxpayer an opportunity of being heard.”
3. The taxpayer, Pearl Security (Pvt.) Limited, filed tax
refund Applications under Section 170(1) of the ITO on 28.07.2011. The 60 day
time limit under Section 170(4) of the ITO for the tax department to serve the
refund order (favourable or otherwise) in writing to the taxpayer expired on
27.09.2011. The order-in-original was passed on 03.12.2012. The
order-in-original reveals that the department did not agree with the basis on
which the taxpayer’s refund claim was filed. The disagreement lay in the
correct classification of the taxpayer--services or contractual[1]
to see whether the tax deductions by the taxpayer[2]
were, or should have been, under the normal tax regime or the minimum tax
regime. This latter question of mixed law and fact was never decided in the two
appeals before the Commissioner (Appeals) and the Appellate Tribunal. The
Commissioner allowed the taxpayer’s appeal confining himself
to the ground of the order-in-original coming into existence well beyond the
statutory prescription of 60 days. The CIR’s appeal before the Appellate
Tribunal failed with the Tribunal agreeing with the Commissioner (Appeals) that
the order-in-original could not have been passed beyond the statutory period.
4. The questions of law set for us to answer ask us to accept
as correct for the mere assertion of the department’s view on the question of
mixed law and fact referred above on which no appellate adjudication has been
carried out and only an order-in-original is placed before us with the
department’s interpretation. Resultantly, this reference application under
Section 133 the ITO is no occasion for this Court to attempt to answer, the
question of mixed law and fact as to which tax classification would govern the
taxpayer for the purposes of deductions made by it under Section 153 of the
ITO. This task was for the Commissioner (Appeals) and the Appellate Tribunal,
neither of whom thought it necessary to visit the merits where the order-in-original
for them was a nullity on the ground of limitation. We therefore extract out of
the two questions of law framed by the CIR the question ‘whether the
Appellate Tribunal (and the learned Commissioner (Appeals)) were correct in law
on the ground of limitation’.
5. The CIR’s submission before us in substance is that the
statutory period for the income tax officer to pass the refund order is
directory, where to hold it mandatory would ‘transform an inadmissible claim of
refund into admissible refund’. This, however, is yet another invitation in
disguise for this Court to answer the aforesaid question of mixed law and fact
or, as the learned counsel for CIR would prefer, accept at face value his
statement that his client’s stance on the taxpayer’s classification for the
purposes of Section 153 of the ITO is the correct one. We steer clear of any
temptation to do so for the first time in a reference application before us,
and proceed to reformulate the question of law that can be extracted out of the
two questions of law framed by CIR that can be decided in these reference
applications by us as follows:
“The 60 day timeframe
under Section 170(4) was not mandatory, as the taxpayer had, per Section 170(5)(b) of the ITO, a remedy of filing an appeal before the
Commissioner (Appeals) under Part III of Chapter X of the ITO, if the taxpayer
was aggrieved by the Commissioner’s failure to pass an order under Section
170(4) within 60 days specified in that subsection.”
6. The concept of an appeal against a failure to pass an order
sits uneasily with the scheme of Part III of Chapter X, Section 127(5) whereof
stipulates the limitation period of 30 days to file an appeal that are to be
counted from ‘the date on which the order to be appealed against is served’.
Apart from being at a loss to see how, in practical terms, an appeal might be
filed in the absence of an order, the limitation period for such an appeal
would also be at large given that Section 170(5)(b)
does not have its own limitation period the 30 day limitation period under
Section 127(5) can obviously not apply as there is no order with a date to
start counting 30 days. We did not receive any assistance on these questions,
and are left with the impression that the CIR itself is not clear as to how an
appeal under Section 170(5)(b) will be filed and
processed.
7. However, the CIR’s stance is that the machinery by which the
appellate process under Section 170(5)(b) will be
triggered and processed is not the question before us. In question before us is
whether the Legislative intent of escalating the failure of refund proceedings
to translate into a refund order (favourable or otherwise) within 60 days to an
officer superior in hierarchy vested with the appellate powers is a clear
indication that the Legislature never intended the resolution of a contested
refund claim in favour of the taxpayer by default for the sole reason of the
refund order not being passed within 60 days.
8. The cornerstone of the taxpayer’s submissions was the
Hon’ble Supreme Court of Pakistan’s recent decision titled Commissioner
Inland Revenue, Zone-II and another versus M/s. Sarwaq Traders and another[3]
(Sarwaq Traders). Her Ladyship, Hon’ble Justice Ayesha A. Malik,
authored the judgment of the two-member bench. Sarwaq Traders scanned
recent precedents of the Supreme Court and found that the 180 days’ timeframe
for the Commissioner (Appeals) to decide appeals under Section 45-B(2) of the Sales Tax Act was mandatory and not directory,
rendering the decision made therein beyond the prescribed period invalid, by
observing that “[T] his is because the statute requires the appeal to be
decided within 180 days, hence, it has to be decided in the prescribed period”.
The Supreme Court applied the test laid down in The Collector of Sales Tax,
Gujranwala and others versus Messrs Super Asia Mohammad Din and Sons and others
(2017 SCMR 1427) (Super Asia), that” ... the ultimate test to determine
whether a provision is mandatory or directory is that of ascertaining the
legislative intent ... while the use of the word ‘shall’ is not the sole factor
which determines mandatory or directory nature of a provision, it is certainly
one of the indicators of legislative intent. Other factors include presence of
penal consequences in case of non-compliance, but perhaps the clearest
indicator is the object and purpose of the statute and the provision in
question”.[4]
9. With this reiteration of the principles governing the test
whether a statutory provision is directory or mandatory, the Supreme Court in Sarwaq
Traders found that the words ‘in no case [exceed][5]
appearing in the second proviso to Section 45-B(2)
were an express indicator of the Legislative intent of prohibition against
exceeding the timeframe for passing the order in question. The language of the
provisos which dominated the conclusion in Sarwaq Traders is reproduced
below:
Provided that such order shall be
passed not later than one hundred and twenty days from the date of filing of
appeal or within such extended period as the Collector (Appeals) may, for reasons
to be recorded in writing fix:
Provided further
that such extended period shall, in no case, exceed sixty days.
(emphasis
supplied)
The Supreme Court elaborated that “...the
Second Proviso clarifies that such extended period shall, in no case, exceed
60 days ... by using the words in no case the legislature has limited or
restricted the discretion of the Commissioner (Appeals) rendering its
compliance mandatory ... the legislature has prescribed a clear timeframe of
180 days for deciding the appeal, by using negative and restrictive language” [6]
(emphasis per the original)
10. Sarwaq Traders also relied on Mujahid Soap and
Chemical Industries (Pvt.) Limited versus Customs Appellate Tribunal, Bench-I,
Islamabad and others (2019 SCMR 1735). The Mujahid Soap case turned on the pari
materia[7]
Section 179(3) of the Customs Act 1969, which also had the same ‘negative and
restrictive language’ whereby the extended timeframe for a decision by the
officer concerned was ‘in no case [to] exceed’ 60 days.
11. Sarwaq Traders followed the Super Asia judgment for
the broader legal lest of the mandatory versus directory question, and also for
the narrower point of use of negative and restrictive language. In Super Asia
too, the phrase ‘in no case exceed’ appeared in the provisos to Sections 11 and
36 of the Sales Tax Act under consideration therein to explicitly restrict the
time frame for passing the orders in question therein.
12. However, and this is
the distinguishing feature, none of the Hon’ble Benches in the judgments
discussed above had before them a provision in pari materia with Section 170(5)(b) of the ITO. In all the judgments cited above, the
subtext is clear that the use of the word ‘shall’ is not the sole
determinant.of the directory or mandatory nature of the statutory time period.
13. A right of appeal
against the inaction of an income tax officer, before his superior exercising
appellate power, is certainly not inconsistent with the inference of the
Legislative intent being that, though Section 170(4) required the decision to
be made within 60 days, a failure to do so would not ipso facto result in the contested refund claim being deemed
decided in favour of the taxpayer, for the taxpayer could very well appeal
against the inaction, and on the principle that an appeal is a continuation of
the original proceedings, the Commissioner (Appeals) could decide the contested
refund claim instead of the Commissioner Inland Revenue. Ignoring Section 170(5)(b) altogether in the circumstances of this case is tantamount
to making Section 170(5)(b) redundant. It is a hallowed canon of statutory
construction that each provision in a statute is to be given effect and a
statute is not to be interpreted so as to result in redundancy ascribed to
another provision. Why would the taxpayer rush to file an appeal against the
failure to pass the refund order, when he can bask in the knowledge that on the
61st day his tax refund would be deemed approved if no refund order rejecting
the claim was passed, while by filing an appeal he would be taking the risk of
an adverse order by the Commissioner (Appeals)? The alternative interpretation
that the Legislative intent was in favour of an appellate escalatory process
instead of the refund being admitted by default rescues Section 170(5)(b) from redundancy. This is not a case of two alternative
interpretations being possible with the one favouring the taxpayer to be
preferred; rather, we find there is only one interpretation possible if Section
170(5)(b) is to be saved from redundancy. The
statutory prescription of appeal under Section 170(5)(b)
cannot be said to matter any the less than Section 170(4), notwithstanding the
mechanics of the appeal not (yet) being clear. Reconciling sub-sections (4) and
(5)(b) of Section 170, we come to the conclusion that
the timeframe under Section 170(4) is directory and not mandatory.
14. We do not read in all the judgements cited above an
unqualified and absolute rule that each and every statutory period for passing
an order by income tax officers is mandatory per se. On the contrary, the
Supreme Court in all those cases embarked on a minute analysis of the
underlying statutory provisions in concluding that the relevant provisions were
mandatory, and none of those judgments can be read to lay down the broad
proposition, which the taxpayer urges at the bar, that the use of the word
‘shall’ alone makes the order passed beyond the statutory time period void. As
noted earlier, no provision in pari materia to Section 170(5)(b) was before the Hoh’ble Judges, whose judicial opinions
read in their entirety do not spell out the broad proposition learned counsel
for the taxpayer urges this Court to accept by referring only to selected
paragraphs and sentences of those judgments out of context of the discussions
that precede and succeed those paragraphs.
15. The taxpayer is estopped from asserting a favourable refund
order by default where it had statutory recourse against the department’s
inaction, which it opted not to pursue. The rationale for this can be
understood to be that a taxpayer not filing an appeal under Section 170(5)(b) is apparently not pushed for an early resolution of its
refund claim, and the taxpayer cannot turn around to hold the tax officer to
his duty to pass the refund order within 60 days, while absolving itself
altogether of any responsibility for proactive action for the refund claim to
be decided as early as possible after the expiry of 60 days.
16. The upshot of the above discussion is that the question of
law formulated in Paragraph 5 above is answered for the Revenue and
against the Taxpayer, in that the 60 day timeframe under Section 170(4)
to pass the refund order is directory for as long as the right of appeal under
Section 170(5)(b) subsists.
(Y.A.) Reference accepted
[1]. Or any other
classification.
[2]. And their calculations
as over, under or fully paid.
[3]. Civil Petition No. 4599 of 2021, decided on 12.05.2022 and approved for reporting.
[4]. Per the latter part of Para
6 of the Sarwaq Traders judgment.
[5]. With reference to the
timeframe for making the decision.
[6]. Paragraph number 4.
[7]. To the second proviso to Section 45-B(2) of the Sales Tax Act.