Alvi upholds FTO’s order to FBR for hearing firm on tax return claims
ISLAMABAD: President Dr Arif Alvi has upheld the decision of the Federal Tax Ombudsman (FTO) directing the Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) to provide an opportunity of hearing to a private food company as per law on a matter where the company had filed refund claims after a delay of five to eight years.
The president rejected an FBR’s representation against the decision of FTO in a case where the private food company had requested the Large Taxpayers Office (LTO), Karachi, in 2020 for condonation in delay under Sales Tax Act 1990 for filing refund claims relating to the period of 2012 to 2016 as the sales tax amount of Rs88.5 million was not claimed/adjusted in their previous sales tax returns due to some technical issues at the company.
The company had approached the FTO and the latter accepted its plea directing FBR to provide a hearing opportunity to the company. But FBR appealed to the president against the FTO decision.
It was pointed out in the president’s order that as per a Supreme Court judgement, a genuine refund could not be refused even if refund applications were filed late.
He added that the fundamental rights as enshrined in Article 24 (1) of the Constitution postulated that no person shall be compulsorily deprived of his property save in accordance with law. He stated that the principle evolved and approved by judicial pronouncements was that it was the duty of the state to return what had been taken erroneously or wrongly; and that a democratic government could not take a plea of limitation to deny what was due to a citizen.
The president referred to the Supreme Court’s decision in Pfizer Laboratories vs the federation of Pakistan case that held that if one party under a mistake, whether of fact or law, paid some money to another party (which included a government department) which was not due by law or contract or otherwise, that must be repaid in view of section 72 of the Contract Act 1872.
According to the decision, there may not be a legal liability on the part of a government functionary to refund any amount received by it as a tax or other levy by virtue of certain special provisions under the special law but keeping in view that we lived in a democratic society governed by the rule of law and every government, which claimed to have ethical and moral values, must do what was fair and just to the citizens regardless of legal technicalities.
The president reiterated that as per Indo-Pak laws the fact that the amount of tax of which the refund was claimed was voluntarily paid did not preclude the right to claim the refund if it was not lawfully payable. He also pointed out that the commissioners of two different zones in the company’s matters of identical nature (Zakariya Traders and Unilever Pakistan Foods) had passed orders contrary to each other i.e in the former case the delay was condoned whereas in the latter it was rejected.
“Such contrary approach in identical matters raises suspicions which as far as possible must be avoided,” he said and, based on these grounds, rejected FBR’s representation.
Published in Dawn, April 17th, 2023