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Issues Involved:
1. Liability to pay interest u/s 220(2) of the Income-tax Act, 1961. 2. Interpretation of section 220(2) in light of the scheme of the Act. 3. Relevance of the Taxation Laws (Continuation and Validation of Recovery Proceedings) Act, 1964. 4. Applicability of departmental circulars in interpreting statutory provisions. Summary: 1. Liability to pay interest u/s 220(2) of the Income-tax Act, 1961: The primary issue is whether the Department is entitled to levy interest u/s 220(2) on an amount refunded to the assessee, which was later demanded back after the Tribunal restored the original assessment order. The court held that the assessee's liability to pay interest commenced only from the date of the fresh demand notice (Exhibit P-5) issued on February 26, 1980, and not from the date of the refund (November 30, 1977). The court quashed the order to the extent it directed payment of interest from November 30, 1977, to February 26, 1980. 2. Interpretation of section 220(2) in light of the scheme of the Act: The court emphasized that section 220(2) should be interpreted according to the ordinary and natural meaning of the language used. The provision requires that the assessee should continue as a defaulter in the matter of payment of tax demanded after the notice of demand u/s 156 and a further period of 35 days. Since the assessee had paid the tax as demanded initially, the requirements for attracting liability to pay interest u/s 220(2) were not present. 3. Relevance of the Taxation Laws (Continuation and Validation of Recovery Proceedings) Act, 1964: The Department argued that the original notice u/s 156 survives by virtue of section 3 of Act 11 of 1964, which states that actions taken pursuant to the first order, including the demand notice, will survive if the original order is restored by a second appellate authority. The court acknowledged that while no fresh demand notice might be necessary, the original notice's revival has no consequence if the assessee has already complied with the original demand. Hence, the assessee is not liable to pay interest based on the original notice. 4. Applicability of departmental circulars in interpreting statutory provisions: The court found it difficult to rely on the Department's circular No. 334 dated April 3, 1982, which provided instructions regarding the levy of interest u/s 220(2) when the original assessment is set aside. The court held that the provision must be interpreted regardless of the views expressed in the circular, citing CIT v. Malayala Manorama Co. & Ltd. [1983] 143 ITR 29, which stated that the court must put its own construction upon the provisions of the Act regardless of departmental practices and guidance. Conclusion: The court dismissed the writ appeal, confirming the judgment of the learned single judge, and held that the assessee had no liability to pay interest for the period from November 30, 1977, to February 26, 1980. The request for leave to appeal to the Supreme Court was refused, as the case did not involve a substantial question of law of general importance.
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