JUDGMENT SHEET
IN THE LAHORE HIGH COURT, LAHORE
JUDICIAL DEPARTMENT
W.P No.33566 of 2017
M/s DH Travels
Versus
Commissioner Enforcement & others
JUDGMENT
Date of Hearing. 30-01-2018
PETITIONERS BY: Mr. Hamza H. Rashid, Advocate.
RESPONDENTS BY: Mr. Asfand Yar Khan Tareen, Advocate.
Shahid Karim, J:- This petition challenges the
order dated 21.03.2017 (“the second order”) passed
under Section 52(1) read with section 60 of the Punjab
Sales Tax on Services Act, 2012 (“the Act, 2012”).
One of the defences set up by the petitioner to the
adjudication undertaken by the respondent No.2 vide
the impugned adjudication order was that the contents
of the show cause notice were caught by the principle
of res judicata as the show cause notice envisaged the
allegations which had already been determined on a
previous occasion and had culminated in the favour of
the petitioner. It is pertinent to mention that an order
in original was passed on 15.09.2016 (“the first
order”) by the same officer i.e. respondent No.2. An
appeal was filed which was dealt with by the
Commissioner Appeals through an order dated
21.12.2016 and the appeal filed by the petitioner was
allowed on the following basis:-
W.P No.33566 of 2017 2
“12. Without going into the details of the facts
and merits of the case and other legal grounds
raised, the appeal is decided only on point of
violation of prescribed limitation. In view of the
above discussion and the case-laws cited supra the
time limit of 120 days as envisaged in section 52(4)
has patently lapsed therefore the appeal is accepted
and the impugned order is declared to have been
made without lawful authority, of no legal effect
and is hereby annulled.”
2. Thus it was held that the period of 120 days
mentioned in section 52(4) was a mandatory
requirement and since the said period had lapsed when
the adjudication order dated 15.09.2016 was passed,
that order had no legal effect and was thereby annulled
in appeal by the Commissioner (Appeals). No further
appeal was filed by the department against the said
order passed in appeal and this is admitted on all
hands. The learned counsel for the Punjab Revenue
Authority (PRA) contends that it was not necessary to
have filed an appeal against the order passed by the
Commissioner (Appeals) as PRA was well within its
right to have issued a fresh show cause notice and to
pass an assessment order on the same facts and with
regard to the same allegations. This contention has
been put forth on the ground that the appellate order
dated 21.12.2016 was not passed on merits and was
decided on a threshold question regarding the
mandatory nature of the period prescribed by section
52(4) of the Act, 2012.
3. To reiterate, it is common ground between the
parties that the second order passed under Section 52
and impugned herein has been passed on the same
W.P No.33566 of 2017 3
allegations as were contained in the earlier show cause
notice which culminated in the first order dated
15.09.2016. The question that engages this Court is
whether the subsequent show cause notice and the
ensuing second order could have been issued on the
same allegations.
4. For the purpose of determination of the present
controversy, section 52 will have to be referred to and
for facility it is reproduced as under:-
“52. Recovery of tax not levied or short-levied.–
(1) Where by reason of inadvertence, error,
misconstruction or for any other reason, any tax or
charge has not been levied or has been short levied,
the person liable to pay such amount of the tax or
charge shall be served with a notice, within five
years of the relevant tax period requiring him to
show cause for payment of the amount specified in
the notice.
(2) Where by reason of some collusion, abetment,
deliberate attempt, misstatement, fraud, forgery,
false or fake documents–
(a) any tax or charge has not been paid or is, short
paid, the person liable to pay such tax shall be
served with a notice within five years of relevant tax
period, requiring him to show cause for non-
payment of such tax; and
(b) any amount of the tax is refunded which is not
due, the person obtaining such refund shall be
served with a notice within five years of the receipt
of such refund to show cause for recovery of such
refund.
(3) The officer shall, after considering the
objections of the person served with a notice under
sub-sections (1) or (2) or if the objections are not
received within the stipulated period, determine the
amount of the tax or charge payable by him and
such person shall pay the amount so determined.
(4) Any order under sub-section (3) shall be made
within one hundred and twenty days of issuance of
the notice to show cause or within such extended
period as the officer may, for reasons to be
recorded in writing, fix provided that such extended
period shall not ordinarily exceed sixty days.
W.P No.33566 of 2017 4
(5) In computing the period specified in sub-section
(4), any period during which the proceedings are
adjourned on account of a stay order or
proceedings under section 69 or the time taken
through adjournments by the petitioner not
exceeding thirty days shall be excluded.”
5. The statutory structure of section 52 provides
for issuance of a show cause notice where a tax or
charge has not been levied or has been short levied on
the person liable to pay such amount of tax. Sub-
section (4) will have a gravitational pull on the
resolution of the controversy. It provides for a certain
time frame within which an order under sub-section
(3) shall be passed by the officer issuing the show
cause notice. It provides that an order shall be made
within 120 days of the issuance of the notice to show
cause or within such extended period as the officer
may for reasons to be recorded in writing fix provided
that such extended period shall not exceed sixty days.
This provision was interpreted by the Commissioner
(Appeals) while deciding the appeal on 21.12.2016 to
have a mandatory effect and according to the
Commissioner (Appeals) the order of the officer
passed under Section 52 was outwith his authority
since it had been passed beyond the period specified
under sub-section (4). By the order dated 21.12.2016,
the adjudication made by the officer was held to be
without lawful authority and of no legal effect and was
thereby annulled. Plainly, the purpose of the order
passed by the Commissioner (Appeals) was that it
erased the first order and thereby annulled it. It would
W.P No.33566 of 2017 5
be a travesty of justice according to the petitioner and
a contradiction in terms if the respondent department
was permitted to issue a fresh show cause notice on the
same facts and to require the petitioner to go through
the rigours of adjudication although in a previous
round of litigation the issues in the show cause notice
already stand decided in favour of the petitioner and
the decision of the officer passed under Section 52 has
been annulled.
6. At the heart of the petitioner’s arguments is the
doctrine of res judicata. It has been argued that the
impugned show cause notice is caught by the mischief
of res judicata as the matter has finally been
determined by the appellate tribunal and the claim
against the petitioner cannot be re-opened which
would impinge upon the rights of the petitioner as in
the estimation of the petitioner the matter has attained
finality and cannot be determined afresh.
7. PRA seriously disputes the proposition that the
doctrine can be invoked to aid by the petitioner in the
peculiar circumstances of the case. The principles of
res judicata are enshrined in section 11 of the Code of
Civil Procedure, 1908. However, by virtue of section
141, CPC the procedure provided for the civil court in
regard to suits shall be followed in all proceedings in
any court of civil jurisdiction. This provision in my
opinion extends the principles of res judicata to all
proceedings of civil jurisdiction. Doubtless, the
W.P No.33566 of 2017 6
proceedings in the order in original and the appeal
before the Commissioner Appeals were before
tribunals exercising civil jurisdiction. However, even
if section 11 is not applicable in the strict sense to the
proceedings under the Act, 2012, the general principles
of res judicata will be applicable as the rule is based
on the doctrine of public policy. That doctrine simply
is that where there is a judgment inter parties, it will
prevent a fresh suit between them regarding the same
matter (PLD 1987 SC 145). It has been settled by
respectable authority that the doctrine is of universal
application and in fact a fundamental concept in the
organization of every civilized society and requires
that every case should be fairly tried and public policy
demands that having been tried once all litigation
about that cause should be concluded between those
parties. For, if it were not for the conclusive effect of
such determinations, there will be no end of litigation
and the rights of persons will be embroiled in endless
litigation. The doctrine is also based on the
considerations that it would result in utmost hardship
to an individual if he were to be vexed twice for the
same cause. It is also in the interest of the state as a
provider of justice and the protector of the people’s
right that there should be an end to litigation.
However, for the rule to be made applicable, certain
pre-conditions must be urged to exist and for the
doctrine of res judicata to be invoked. These rules
W.P No.33566 of 2017 7
have once again been settled by the courts over the
years and can be summarized as follows:-
“(1) The matter directly and substantially in
issue in the subsequent suit or issue must be the
same matter which was directly and substantially in
issue either actually, or constructively, in the
former suit.
(2) The former suit must have been a suit
between the same parties or between parties under
whom they or any one of them claim.
(3) The parties as afore-said must have litigated
under the same title in the former suit.
(4) The court which decided the former suit
must have been a court competent to try the
subsequent suit in which such issue is subsequently
raised.
(5) The matter directly and substantially in
issue in the subsequent suit must have been heard
and finally decided by the court in the first suit.”
The enumerations made in section 11 CPC, also
embody the above principles.
8. It is a fallacy to argue that the doctrine of res
judicata does not apply to these proceedings. It must
be borne in mind that that doctrine is based on public
policy and it is indeed a matter of public policy that
dispute and controversies should have finality attached
to them. Litigants should have the assurance that their
rights and liabilities, one determined, will not be
relitigated and will bind the parties in a future claim.
The rendering of a final judgment on the merits of the
claim in a previous action involving the same litigants
will act as a preclusion of a subsequent action. At the
heart of the doctrine is the twin goal: stability and
certainty. In The Law of Judicial Precedent by Bryan
A. Garner et al. the idea underlying the doctrine has
been captured in the following words:-
“Despite these differences, both stare decisis and
res judicata promote a similar goal: stability in the
W.P No.33566 of 2017 8
law. Res judicata stands for the idea that once an
issue has been decided for particular litigants, it
should not be undone by a later lawsuit. This
doctrine lets parties rest assured that they need not
relitigate issues in the future: they can live without
a cloud of uncertain future litigation perpetually
hovering. Similarly, stare decisis promotes the
fundamental notion emphasized throughout this
book: that like cases will be decided alike.”
9. The generality of the doctrine and its various
nuances referred to in the above treaties are being
reproduced hereunder in order to understand the
concept more fully:
“A judgment is binding and conclusive as res
judicata only on the parties to the particular lawsuit
and those in privity with them: it creates estopple
for disputed matters of fact and law. By contrast,
state decisis is conclusive on questions of law, not
of fact, and a judicial precedent is applied to a
similar state of facts later arising, no matter who
the parties are.”
“At its highest level of generalization, res judicata
takes in two concepts that modern courts call claim
preclusion and issue preclusion. Claim preclusion
prevents a litigant from bringing a claim if a court
that had jurisdiction has already rendered a final
judgment on the merits of that claim in a previous
action involving the same litigants or their privies.
Issue preclusion prevents the same parties from
relitigating issues of ultimate fact that they had
already litigated in earlier suits. A nonparty to the
first action can use issue preclusion offensively
against the party who lost the issue decided in the
first case, within certain limits. Stare decisis may
determine which of these two concepts of res
judicata applies in a particular jurisdiction.”
“The doctrine of res judicata applies to disputed
facts as well as to disputed mixed questions of fact
and law, such as whether the defendant drove the
car negligently or whether the plaintiff received
adequate notice of the rejection of a claim so as to
start the running of the statute of limitations.”
10. It has been said by Lord Mansfield (father of
English Commercial Law) that:-
“The successful conduct of trade, investment and
business generally is promoted by a body of
accessible legal rules governing commercial rights
and obligations. In all mercantile transactions, the
W.P No.33566 of 2017 9
great object should be certainty; and therefore it is
of more consequence that a rule should be certain.”
11. The argument of PRA in alleging that the
doctrine does not apply to these proceedings cuts both
ways and is counter-productive. In a converse case,
the PRA might face the same set of argumentation in a
claim which has been decided in its favour previously.
Moreover, no one can really harbour any doubt
regarding proceedings under section 52 of the Act,
2012 (and appeals arising therefrom) and their true
nature. These may be termed as quasi-judicial
proceedings while being dealt with by the
departmental adjudicators but the fact remains that
these officers are obliged to act judicially and so the
doctrine of res judicata remains applicable to these
proceedings. But the question which engages this
Court is whether the doctrine can be invoked by the
petitioner in the present case or not.
12. The primary facts in the instant matter have
been narrated above. To reiterate, an appeal was filed
before the Commissioner (Appeals) which was
decided on 21.12.2016 and was allowed. The basic
ground on which the appeal was allowed was that the
time limit of 120 days mentioned in section 52(4) of
the Act, 2012 was a mandatory time limit and any
order passed beyond the said time limit was void ab
initio. Therefore, admittedly there was no finding on
the merits of the claim. The rule that such a time limit
provided in a provision of law is a mandatory
W.P No.33566 of 2017 10
connotation has been accepted by the Supreme Court
of Pakistan in Collector of Sales Tax v. Super Asia
Muhammad Din and Sons (2017 SCMR 1427) in the
following words:-
“7. From the plain language of the first proviso, it is
clear that the officer was bound to pass an order within the
stipulated time period of forty-five days, and any extension of
time by the Collector could not in any case exceed ninety days.
The Collector could not extend the time according to his own
choice and whim, as a matter of course, routine or right,
without any limit or constraint; he could only do so by
applying his mind and after recording reasons for such
extension in writing. Thus the language of the first proviso
was meant to restrict the officer from passing an order under
section 36(3) supra whenever he wanted. It also restricted the
Collector from granting unlimited extension. The curtailing of
the powers of the officer and the Collector and the negative
character of the language employed in the first proviso point
towards its mandatory nature. This is further supported by the
fact that the first proviso was inserted into section 36(3) supra
through an amendment (note:- the current section 11 of the
Act, on the other hand, was enacted with the proviso from its
very inception in 2012). Prior to such insertion, undoubtedly
there was no time limit within which the officer was required
to pass orders under the said section. The insertion of the first
proviso reflects the clear intention of the legislature to curb
this earlier latitude conferred on the officer for passing an
order under the section supra. When the legislature makes an
amendment in an existing law by providing a specific
procedure or time frame for performing a certain act, such
provision cannot be interpreted in a way which would render
it redundant or nugatory. Thus, we hold that the first proviso
to section 36(3) of the Act [and the first proviso to the
erstwhile section 11(4) and the current section 11(5) of the
Act] is/was mandatory in nature.”
13. There is no question that such a mandate in the
law is a compulsory mandate and ought to be complied
with by the officer making the adjudication. The
holding by the Supreme Court of Pakistan leaves it in
no manner of doubt that the time limit provided is not
directory. However, the consequences of rendering a
decision beyond that time limit have not been spelt out
in Super Asia Muhammad Din and Sons. This remains
a vexed question of law and according to the learned
counsel for the petitioner the order having been set
aside on this basis operates as res judicata and the
claim cannot be reopened.
W.P No.33566 of 2017 11
14. The contention of the learned counsel for the
petitioner, if accepted, would lead to anomalous
results. The entire gemut of arguments on this basis is
in contravention of public policy as also the rule that
public interest must outweigh private interest. This
means that if an officer has not complied with the
mandatory requirements of the law in determining an
adjudication within a certain period of time, then the
taxpayer is relieved of all obligations under the law
from payment with regard to the evaded amount of tax
in question. This also means that public exchequer
shall suffer grievously on this ground and the ultimate
sufferer would be the general public for whom the tax
is collected which get accumulated in the provincial
consolidated fund to be expended on the welfare of the
people and citizens of the Province of Punjab. Such a
course of action cannot be countenanced.
15. Regard for public good is always implicit in the
retention of rights by individuals. They are
circumscribed by political authority to pursue the
general welfare. The right of the petitioner to the
determination of disputes is also subject to restrictions
under laws that promote public good. It has been said
that:-
“The principal end of every legislature is the public
good”.
(Thomas Hayter, An essay on the liberty of the press
chiefly as it respect personal stander 18 (London, J.
Raymond).
W.P No.33566 of 2017 12
16. It is necessary and expedient for the general
advantage of the public and for its collective interest
that loss to the public revenue should not be
occasioned on account of failure of an officer of the
department to understand the mandatory nature of the
determinate limits provided by law.
17. As explicated, the entire proceedings in the
earlier show cause were a nullity, as if they did not
take place at all. And therefore, the question of res
judicata does not present itself. The petitioner might
have a case if the first order in original was a
subsisting order capable of being acted upon. On the
contrary, that order in original will be deemed to be
non-existent as an action extra jus.
18. As Crawford said, “an enactment designed to
prevent fraud upon the Revenue, is more properly a
statute against fraud rather than a taxing statute, and
it should receive a liberal construction in the
Government’s favour”.
(Crawford Statutory Constitution, p.508)
19. It is also a rule of interpretation that any
construction leading to a large-scale evasion of tax is
to be avoided. (SP Jain v Director of Enforcement),
AIR 1962 SC 1764.
20. Cases from the courts of England have gone to
the extent of holding that a mandatory provision may
simply be vitiated by the dictates of public policy.
(See Nagle v Fielden [1966] 2 Q. B 633; Edwards v
W.P No.33566 of 2017 13
SOGAT [1971] Ch. 354. Such a result is founded
upon the interpretation of statutory purpose, rather
than upon any strained distinction between statutory
provisions.
21. In De Smith’s Judicial Review (seventh
edition), the following passage will illustrate the point
in issue:-
“A related question to that of administrative
inconvenience is the extent to which public policy might
be employed to rebut the presumption that a statutory
provision is mandatory. Public policy is employed here
as the public law equivalent of private law equitable
principles, such as that which states that no person may
benefit from his own wrong. Thus the courts will
presume that Parliament did not intend to imperil the
welfare of the state or its inhabitants.”
22. From the ingredients of the doctrine of res
judicata referred to above, it can plainly be seen that
the doctrine of res judicata is not applicable to the
present facts. Clearly and admittedly no adjudication
on merits was made by the Commissioner (Appeals)
and, therefore, the matter was not heard and finally
decided by the Commissioner in the first round of
litigation. However, the matter was directly and
substantially in issue before the officer who
adjudicated it in the first instance but by the order
passed by the Commissioner (Appeals) that order and
the findings rendered therein was erased and became
non est. The effect of the order passed by the
Commissioner was that the order in original dated
15.09.2016 was an invalid order and would be deemed
to have been erased as if it did not exist at any time.
Doubtless this is the effect of the order of the appellate
W.P No.33566 of 2017 14
forum and the learned counsel for the petitioner is not
in a position to deny the consequence referred to above
which was the only consequence which flowed from
declaring the order in original as a nullity. Therefore,
it cannot be argued that there was anything in law to
lay a claim in respect of the tax or surcharge which has
not been levied or short levied by the petitioner as the
petitioner remained liable to pay such amount or
charge. The only prohibition is with regard to the
period of limitation of five years within which the
show cause notice can be issued and no one disputes
the fact that the period of five years has not run out in
the present case. Also the learned counsel for the
petitioner has not referred to any prohibition in the law
which restrains the department from issuing a fresh
show cause notice in such an eventuality. There is an
old legal proverb that what is not prohibited shall be
deemed permitted in law.
23. A reference may also be made to the provisions
of Order VII, Rule 11 CPC which relate to rejection of
plaint. However, Rule 13 of Order VII provides that
the rejection of plaint does not preclude the
presentation of a fresh plaint. Once again, while
reading this provision with section 141 CPC it cannot
be doubted that rejection of the earlier show cause
notice would preclude in any manner the department
from filing a fresh show cause notice.
W.P No.33566 of 2017 15
24. Above all, this case will have to be analysed on
the touchstone of public interest and the rule that
private interest must give way to public interest and it
is certainly in the public interest that the prosecution
be held against the petitioner in respect of a charge or
tax for which the petitioner is liable and on the basis of
a mere technicality the petitioner should not be
allowed to circumvent that liability and that too on
account of indolence shown by an officer of the
department. Moreover, the law relating to the
mandatory nature of such a time limit had not been
crystallized until the judgment of the Supreme Court
of Pakistan referred to above and thus the officer was
not aware of the implication of passing an order
beyond the time limit.
25. In view of the above, this petition is without
merit and is, therefore, dismissed. The Chairman of
PRA is directed to issue instructions to all officers
adjudicating claims under Section 52 of the Act, 2012
to comply with the time limit and its mandatory nature.
They should also be made aware of serious
consequences which will visit those officers in case the
time limit is not adhered to.
(SHAHID KARIM)
JUDGE
Announced in open Court on 21.02.2018.
Approved for reporting.
JUDGE
*
Rafaqat Ali