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2002 (3) TMI 30 - HC - Income Tax

Issues Involved:
Interpretation of section 276B of the Income-tax Act regarding failure to deduct tax at source before and after April 1, 1989, applicability of penalty under section 271C, retrospective or prospective effect of the amendment Act, and the quashment of Criminal Case No. 10 of 1992.

Analysis:

The judgment pertains to an application filed under section 482 of the Code of Criminal Procedure seeking the quashment of Criminal Case No. 10 of 1992 before the Additional Chief Judicial Magistrate (Economic Offences), Indore. The case involves allegations by the Income-tax Department against the applicant, an acting partner of a firm, for the firm's failure to deduct tax at source for the assessment year 1987-88. The applicant contended that the law regarding failure to deduct tax at source was amended by the Direct Tax Laws (Amendment) Act, 1987, effective from April 1, 1989, which prescribed penalties under section 271C for such failures.

The applicant argued that as per Circular No. 551 of the respondent-Department, failure to deduct tax at source ceased to be an offense after April 1, 1989, and attracted penalties under section 271C instead. Referring to judgments by the Madhya Pradesh High Court and the Delhi High Court, the applicant contended that failure to deduct tax at source was no longer an offense after the amendment. The non-applicant, however, argued that the complaint was filed within the ambit of the old law since the incident occurred before the amendment.

The judgment delves into the interpretation of the retrospective or prospective effect of the amendment Act, citing legal principles regarding the repeal or deletion of statutes and the applicability of saving clauses. The court noted that in the absence of a saving clause, procedural laws have retrospective effects, while penal laws have prospective effects. Since the complaint was filed after the amendment Act came into force, the court concluded that the complaint would be governed by the amended Act, which prescribed penalties under section 271C and not prosecution under section 276B for failure to deduct tax at source.

Based on the analysis, the court held that the complaint against the applicant was not tenable under the amended Act, leading to the dismissal of the case. The judgment provides a detailed legal analysis of the issues surrounding the interpretation of relevant sections of the Income-tax Act, the retrospective or prospective application of the amendment Act, and the implications for the pending criminal case.

 

 

 

 

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