In the year 2017 Prime Minister of India announced the news of new tax laws,
Goods and Service Tax (GST). The idea was more criticised. The research paper
main focus is National Tax Tribunal under National Tax Tribunal Act, 2005. The
act is being repealed and struck down by Supreme Court in Madras Bar Association
v Union of India and Anr. The research question in this paper is whether india
needs a separate forum like NTT to resolve Tax matters or not. And the step
taken by Supreme Court to repeal and Struck down the Act itself was a valid move
or not. Whether any other solution was there instead of striking out.
Introduction:
In the year 2017 Prime Minister of India announced the news of new tax laws,
Goods and Service Tax (GST). The whole nation was in shock. Few praising the new
move taken by government whereas few still criticising it. In order to avoid the
multiple taxes, the government brought this new system. It is levied on the
supply of goods and services, and it is a single domestic indirect tax law for
the entire country.[1] The tax system is administered by the Central Board of
Direct Taxes (CBDT) and the Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs (CBIC),
which are part of the Ministry of Finance.[2]
The tax system adopted by India is reprimanded a lot. The reason behind this is
its nature. People find it more multifaceted, uncertainty, and system changes
very often. The government did take measures to overcome the disadvantages.
However, these efforts have been criticized for not addressing the root causes
of the problem, such as the lack of pre-filing support for taxpayers and the
over-reliance on litigation as a means of dispute resolution.[3]
The National Tax Tribunal (NTT) was established under the National Tax Act, 2005
(NTA) with the aim of providing a specialized forum for adjudicating tax
disputes in India[4]. The NTT was envisioned to streamline the process of
resolving tax-related issues by replacing the existing system of appeals to the
High Courts and the Supreme Court with a dedicated tribunal focused on tax
matters.[5] The NTT was designed to hear appeals against orders of the Income
Tax Appellate Tribunal and the Customs, Excise and Service Tax Appellate
Tribunal, with appeals from the NTT to be filed before the Supreme Court.[6] It
intended to reduce the burden on the High Court from taxation cases. The tax
cases required the speed resolution as well.
The NTT was granted the power to regulate its own procedures and was authorized
to hear appeals against orders of the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal and the
Customs, Excise and Service Tax Appellate Tribunal.[7] However, the National Tax
Tribunal Act, 2005, was declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court of India
in 2014, primarily due to concerns related to the separation of powers, judicial
review, and the qualifications of tribunal members to handle complex legal
matters.[8] The National Tax Tribunal (NTT) had jurisdiction over adjudicating
disputes related to the levy, assessment, collection, and enforcement of taxes
in India.[9] It was replaced by Finance Act 2017.[10]
Sr. No. |
Name of the Literature |
Nature of Literature |
Review |
Research Gap |
Intended Research |
|
The National Tax Tribunal Act, 2005 |
Statue |
The ideology behind that act was
good but the powers and composition were a bit more authoritative. |
Before making the statue the law
makers should have known the consequences of taking away the power to review
from High Court. |
Instead of giving powers it could
have been set up as a normal forum which will be entertaining only tax
matters. And the members appointed will be those who are professional in
this field. |
|
Supreme Court Correctly Holds
National Tax Tribunal Unconstitutional but Should Ordinary Law Be Tested
against Basic Structure and Constitutional Convention |
Blog |
It was a great blog. It provided all
the reasons and information needed. |
N/A |
N/A |
|
The need for a National Tax
Tribunal: Reviewing the National Tax Tribunal Act, 2005 |
Article |
The language used was a bit tricky
otherwise a great article to clear basics. |
The article as such did not have any
gap in research but could have used more illustration and example to explain
the concept. |
N/A |
|
Madras Bar Association v. Union of
India and Anr. |
Case |
Instead of Striking and repealing
the Act Supreme Court could have amended the sections. |
N/A |
N/A |
|
Case Analysis of Madras Bar
Association v. Union of India and Anr. By Disha Gupta Writ Petition No. 1072
of 2013 |
Research Paper |
It has explained the case very
nicely and in detail. |
No research Gap |
N/A |
Research Methodology:
Research Methodology used in this research paper is combination of Doctrinal
Analysis and Case Analysis. This Doctrine permits to not only allows to know the
efficiency and effectiveness of the Act but also the functioning of tribunals.
The paper mentions the composition, qualification of members and powers of NTT
given under the NTTA. The Case Analysis method was chosen because the case
justifies the reasoning given behind repealing of the act. And after analysis
personal opinion is also being given in the form of conlusion.
About National Tax Tribunal Act 2005:
As the heading itself says that the act came in 2005. The purpose for making
this law was to provide a more suitable and effective forum to resolve
complicated tax disputes. Apart from these, the already burdened High Court can
take a relief from attending the tax matters. This not only helped to resolve
the disputes more quickly but also ensured that High Court can focus on more
critical and crucial disputes.
Structure established:
Composition of National Tax Tribunal: The National Tax Tribunal shall consist
of a Chairperson and such number of Members as the Central Government deems fit,
to be appointed by that Government, by notification in the Official
Gazette.[11]
This section of the act states that the Chairperson and members of Central
Government shall be appointed as members of tribunal after getting approved by
Central Government. However, there is no mention of judicial members being there
as a member. In other tribunals judicial member are the part of their
requirement of that tribunal. So, the logical conclusion from this provision is
that judges are not required on the bench in the NTT.[12]
Qualification Required:
Qualifications for appointment of Chairperson and other Members:
- The Chairperson of the National Tax Tribunal shall be a person who has been a Judge of the Supreme Court or the Chief Justice of a High Court.
- A person shall not be qualified for appointment as Member unless he:
- is, or has been, or is eligible to be, a Judge of a High Court; or
- is, or has been, a Member of the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal or of the Customs, Excise and Service Tax Appellate Tribunal for at least 1[five years].[13]
The section simply states the basic obligation for a person to become the member
of the tribunal. As per the section chairperson of NTT should be a Judge of
Supreme Court or Chief Justice of High Court. He will qualify as member of
Tribunal of he is, or was or is illegible to be a judge of High Court or he is
or was a member of ITAT or CESTAT for minimum 5 years.
This brings in a problem
as a Chartered Accountant who has practiced accountancy for a minimum of ten
years or has been a registered accountant for a minimum of ten years meets the
eligibility requirement to become an Accountant Member for the ITAT.[14]
Similarly, a person who has been a member of the Indian Customs and Central
Excise Service and has held the post of Collector of Customs or Central Excise
or equivalent or a higher post for a minimum of three years meets the
eligibility requirement to become a Technical Member for the CESTAT. [15]
Powers of National Tax Tribunal:
- The National Tax Tribunal shall not be bound by the procedure laid down by the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (5 of 1908) but shall be guided by the principles of natural justice.
- Subject to the other provisions of this Act, the National Tax Tribunal shall have powers to regulate its own procedure.
- The National Tax Tribunal shall have, for the purposes of discharging its functions under this Act, the same powers as are vested in a civil court under the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (5 of 1908) while trying a suit, in respect of the following matters, namely:
- requiring the discovery and production of books of account and other documents;
- subject to the provisions of sections 123 and 124 of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872 (1 of 1872), requisitioning any public record or document or a copy of such record or document, from any office;
- dismissing an appeal for default or deciding it, ex parte;
- setting aside any order of dismissal of any appeal for default or any order passed by it, ex parte;
- rectifying any mistake or error apparent on the face of record; and
- any other matter which may be prescribed.
- All proceedings before the National Tax Tribunal shall be deemed to be judicial proceedings within the meaning of sections 193 and 228 and for the purposes of section 196 of the Indian Penal Code (45 of 1860) and the National Tax Tribunal shall be deemed to be a civil court for the purposes of section 195 and Chapter XXVI of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (2 of 1974).
Section 16 of the Act lays down the powers of NTT. It had the same powers as a
civil court under the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, while trying a suit, in
respect of the following matters:[16]
The above section states what all powers does NTT have. It adjudicates any
matter regarding direct taxes imposition, collecting, enforcing and evaluating
will be decided by NTT. It also has power to decide the duties and customs rate
which will be applicable on goods. And those goods will be valued by NTT for
customs and central excise duties.[18] The order decided or passed by this
tribunal then that order will be final. The tribunal also has powers to decide a
matter by setting a special bench. If there any cases for direct taxes, then
they all can be transferred to the tribunal. It can also any interim orders as
and when required. And if the parties are not satisfied by the order passed by
the tribunal then they may file its appeal to Supreme Court.
Case Analysis:
The National Tax Act 2005 was being repealed in Madras Bar Association v Union
of India and Anr.[19] This case is not like other cases. This case is combined
one of other cases. The main issue in the case of Madras Bar Association vs
Union of India revolved around the Constitutional validity of the National Tax
Tribunal Act, 2005 and the Constitution (Forty-Second Amendment) Act, 1976.[20]
Apart from independence of judiciary and requirement of judicial review of law
being the grounds the Act was also criticized for allowing tribunals to decide
questions of law, which hitherto were decided by the superior constitutional
courts, and for taking away the power of judicial review of the High Court under
Articles 226 and 227.[21]
The judgement of the case was given by a 5-judge bench. the court considered
previous judgements also and upheld some of the issues while pointed put certain
defects in provisions and ordered to correct the defects so that the same could
be made effective.[22] The court held that, the judgement was given as follows:
- The apex court upheld the constitutional validity of the NCLT and the NCLAT
and that the issue could not be reopened again. Although the national tax
tribunal had been held unconstitutional in the interim, the Court Noted That The
NTT had been held unconstitutional after distinguishing the 2010 judgment.[23]
- On the second issue, the court had held that only those holding the post
of secretaries/ additional secretaries and having technical expertise could
be appointed to the post. it had struck down the parts of the provision
which were inconsistent with the law. this provision stated that joint
secretaries with certain experience were eligible for appointment as
technical members. section 409 (3) of the companies act, 2013 states that
joint secretaries with certain experience are eligible for appointment as
technical members. The Supreme Court reiterated that this was a complete
dilution of the principles that the court had zealously tried to protect in
2010 itself and therefore, struck down section 409(3) (a) and (c).[24]
- On the third issue, section 412 of the companies act, 2013 states that
the selection committee consists of 2 judicial members and 3 administrative
members. The analogous provision in the 1956 act had been discussed in the
2010 judgment wherein the Supreme Court had held that it ought to be a
four-member committee (with equal division between the judicial and
administrative members) and that the chief justice should have the casting
vote. The Supreme Court ruled that the 2010 judgment is binding precedent
and should be followed. It therefore struck down section 412(2) and ordered
that it be brought in accord with the relevant parts of the 2010 judgement.[25]
Conclusion:
The year 2017 was a roller-coaster for all tax payers. The Government introduced
new taxation laws named Goods and Service Tax. It not only removed the previous
multiple taxes system but made a one nation one tax. The idea was more
criticised then being appreciated. This was because firstly, it was a new system
for everyone. Secondly, changing from old regime to new regime was not an easy
task for all generation. Thirdly, the working GST site was way more complicated.
Filling that return was a night mare for people. On the contrary it did reduce
the double taxation cases. And with developing and updating world the country
somewhere did need an updated tax system.
National Tax Tribunal under National Tax Tribunal Act, 2005 was not a bad
strategy. The idea of having a separate body to resolve tax matters was a
thoughtful and well planned step. Through this way not only a special forum
would be created but the judges of that forum will have expertise in that
particular arena. However, the execution of it was something that needed
improvement. Along with these the laws in it which were undermining the basic
principle of independent judiciary was also something that law makers should
have kept in mind while making the law.
In my opinion, the NTTA being held unconstitutional was not a complete accurate
step. Instead of striking out the complete act the court could have thought to
amend its powers, composition and judicial methods. By changing or amending few
section the act could have survived. It is being replaced by Finance Act 2017.
And in High Court a Special bench is being made to entertain GST matters. By the
decision of
Madras Bar Association v Union of India and Anr. The independence
survived but the burden on High Court did increase, leading to a long wait to
get resolution for Tax matters.
References:
- Goods and Services Tax (GST) What Is GST in India? Indirect Tax Law Explained (cleartax) accessed 12 April 2024
- Direct Taxes Litigation Management and Alternate Dispute Resolution (National Institute of Public Finance and Policy 2023)
- The National Tax Tribunal Act, 2005 Section 3
- Khaitan, Sanghvi C-S and Shetty S, Supreme Court Strikes down "National Tax Tribunal" as Unconstitutional (Lexology, 1 October 2014) accessed 12 April 2024
- Procedure and Powers of National Tax Tribunal | National Tax Tribunal Act, 2005 | Bare Acts | Law Library | AdvocateKhoj accessed 12 April 2024
- Madras Bar Association v. Union of India & Another 2020 SC 804
- The National Tax Tribunal Act, 2005
- Supreme Court Correctly Holds National Tax Tribunal Unconstitutional but Should Ordinary Law Be Tested against Basic Structure and Constitutional Convention? – The myLaw.Net Blog (30 September 2014) accessed 13 April 2024
- The National Tax Tribunal Act, 2005 Section 4
- Mahaseth H, The Need For A National Tax Tribunal: Reviewing The National Tax Tribunal Act, 2005 [2017] SSRN
- The National Tax Tribunal Act, 2005 Section 6
- The National Tax Tribunal Act, 2005 Section 16
- 2020 SC 804
- Madras Bar Association v. Union of India, (2014) 10 SCC 1 - Legal Vidhiya (5 October 2023) accessed 13 April 2024
- Gupta D, Case Analysis Of Madras Bar Association V. Union Of India, Writ Petition No. 1072 OF 2013 probono
- Murthy LG, Madras Bar Association- NCLT Constitutionality (SpicyIP, 31 May 2015) accessed 13 April 2024
End-Notes:
- Goods and Services Tax (GST) What Is GST in India? Indirect Tax Law Explained (cleartax) accessed 12 April 2024
- About Us | Goods and Services Tax Council accessed 12 April 2024
- Direct Taxes Litigation Management and Alternate Dispute Resolution (National Institute of Public Finance and Policy 2023)
- The National Tax Tribunal Act, 2005 Section 3
- Khaitan, Sanghvi C-S and Shetty S, Supreme Court Strikes down "National Tax Tribunal" as Unconstitutional (Lexology, 1 October 2014) accessed 12 April 2024
- Supra note 5
- Procedure and Powers of National Tax Tribunal | National Tax Tribunal Act, 2005 | Bare Acts | Law Library | AdvocateKhoj accessed 12 April 2024
- Madras Bar Association v. Union of India & Another 2020 SC 804
- The National Tax Tribunal Act, 2005
- Supreme Court Correctly Holds National Tax Tribunal Unconstitutional but Should Ordinary Law Be Tested against Basic Structure and Constitutional Convention? – The myLaw.Net Blog (30 September 2014) accessed 13 April 2024
- The National Tax Tribunal Act, 2005 Section 4
- Mahaseth H, The Need For A National Tax Tribunal: Reviewing The National
Tax Tribunal Act, 2005 [2017] SSRN
- The National Tax Tribunal Act, 2005 Section 6
- Supra note 12
- Supra note 12
- Supra note 7
- The National Tax Tribunal Act, 2005 Section 16
- Supra note 9
- 2020 SC 804
- Madras Bar Association v. Union of India, (2014) 10 SCC 1 - Legal Vidhiya (5 October 2023) accessed 13 April 2024
- Supra note 7
- Gupta D, CASE ANALYSIS OF MADRAS BAR ASSOCIATION V. UNION OF INDIA, WRIT PETITION NO. 1072 OF 2013 probono
- Murthy LG, Madras Bar Association- NCLT Constitutionality (SpicyIP, 31 May 2015) accessed 13 April 2024
- Supra note 22
- Supra note 22
Written By: Mitali Patel
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