JUDGEMENT SHEET
IN THE ISLAMABADHIGH COURT, ISLAMABAD
JUDICIAL DEPARTMENT
Writ Petition No. 2622/2022
M/s Pakistan LNG Limited through its duly Authorized
Representative.
Vs.
Federation of Pakistan through the Secretary Revenue Division,
Ministry of Finance, Islamabad & others.
PETITIONER BY: Mr. Uzair Shafie, Advocate.
RESPONDENTS BY: Sheikh Anwar ul Haq, Advocate for
FBR.
Mr. Farrukh Shahzad Dall, Assistant
Attorney General.
DATE OF HEARING: 15.08.2022.
========================================
BABAR SATTAR, J.-The petitioner has impugned a
notice issued by respondent No.3 dated 09.03.2022 under
Section 140 of the Income Tax Ordinance, 2001 (“Ordinance”),
pursuant to which the accounts of the petitioner were attached
and the demand generated in the amount of Rs.2,928,517,260/-
for the tax year 2020 against the petitioner by the
Commissioner, Inland Revenue, Islamabad (“Commissioner”)
was recovered from the bank accounts of the petitioner.
2. The learned counsel for the petitioner submitted that
against the Assessment Order issued by the Commissioner under
Section 122(5A) of the Ordinance an appeal was filed before the
Commissioner (Appeals), Inland Revenue, Islamabad
(“Commissioner Appeals”). That the Commissioner Appeals
denied grant of interim injunction against the recovery and that
the petitioner then approached the learned Appellate Tribunal,
Writ Petition No.2622/2022 P a g e |2
Inland Revenue, Islamabad (“Tribunal”) seeking an injunction
against the recovery, which was granted by order dated
31.05.2021. On 09.03.2022, the Commissioner Appeals upheld
the Assessment Order for the tax year 2020. On 10.03.2022, the
day after the date on which the Commissioner Appeals upheld
the Assessment Order, the petitioner filed an appeal against
such order and obtained injunctive relief against coercive
recovery by the respondents. The learned counsel for the
petitioner submitted that while the appellate order passed by the
Commissioner Appeals was uploaded on the web portal of
Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) (i.e. IRIS) at 03:28 p.m on
09.03.2022, respondent No.3 issued a Section 140 notice to the
banks at 04:00 p.m on the same day, and the petitioner’s
accounts were attached and the amount in dispute was
recovered instantly from the banks under the threat of penal
action against the banks in case they demurred. He further
submitted that the petitioner had written to Chairman FBR
seeking refund of the amount recovered by respondent No.3
under Section 140 of the Ordinance, as the learned Tribunal had
already barred tax authorities from coercively affecting the
recovery from the petitioner pending adjudication of its appeal.
But Chairman FBR has not responded to the representation filed
by the petitioner. He contended that while a notice under Section
137 of the Ordinance was issued to the petitioner at the time
when the demand was generated by the Commissioner pursuant
to the Assessment Order, no notice was issued subsequently
under Section 137 or Section 138 of the Ordinance once the
Commissioner Appeals upheld the Assessment Order. And that
Writ Petition No.2622/2022 P a g e |3
the issuance of Section 140 notice to enforce coercive recovery
from the banks on behalf of the petitioner, without first notifying
the petitioner and providing it with a reasonable time to
discharge the demand and/or exercise its right to file an appeal
before the learned Tribunal was a fraud on the statute. He
submitted that the scheme of the Ordinance required that the
State must seek to recover any liability directly from the
taxpayer before taking coercive action for seeking to affect
recovery from a third party in exercise of authority under Section
140 of the Ordinance. He further submitted that coercive
recovery under Section 140 of the Ordinance could not be
affected until the notice of demand had been served under
Section 138 of the Ordinance. He submitted that it had been
held by this Court in Messrs Huawei Technologies Pakistan
Private Limited vs. Commissioner Inland Revenue and
others (2016 PTD Islamabad 1799) and by the learned
Lahore High Court in Mst. Fouzia Razzak vs. Federal Board
of Revenue and others (2021 PTD Lahore 162) and Romex
International vs. Federation of Pakistan and others (2022
PTD Lahore 760) that the issuance of a notice under Section
138 of the Ordinance was a mandatory requirement of law prior
to invocation of Section 140 of the Ordinance.
3. The learned counsel for FBR submitted that there was
no infirmity in the manner in which recovery had been affected
by the respondents. He submitted that rule 210-B of the Income
Tax Rules, 2002, clearly stated that any recovery under Section
140 of the Ordinance was independent of Section 137 and 138 of
the Ordinance and as no injunctive order was in field on
Writ Petition No.2622/2022 P a g e |4
09.03.2022 when the recovery was affected pursuant to the
Assessment Order passed by the Commissioner (as upheld by
the Commissioner Appeals), there was no illegality made out.
4. The learned Assistant Attorney General representing the
Federation submitted that FBR and its employees were under an
obligation to follow due process as prescribed under Sections
137, 138 and 140 of the Ordinance. He submitted that it had
been held by this Court in Huawei Technologies Pakistan
Private Limited that the requirement of issuing a notice under
Section 138 of the Ordinance could not be bypassed. He further
submitted that the question before this Court related to the just,
fair and reasonable exercise of statutory authority by State
officials as required under Section 24-A of the General Clauses
Act, 1897 (“Act”) read together with Article 10-A of the
Constitution.
5. The question before this Court as whether there is any
obligation under provisions of the Ordinance to issue a notice
under Section 138 of the Ordinance before affecting recovery in
exercise of authority under Section 140 of the Ordinance. Let us
first look at the nature of duties that the State owes to the
citizen taxpayers. At least three sets of duties can be identified
as follows:-
1. The duty to act in a just, fair and reasonable manner
while upholding the right of a citizen under Article 4
of the Constitution to be afforded the protection of
law, and to not take action detrimental to the
property of a citizen under Article 4(2)(a) of the
Writ Petition No.2622/2022 P a g e |5
Constitution except in accordance with law read
together with Article 24 of the Constitution that
prohibits the State from depriving a person of his
property save in accordance with law.
2. The duty of the State to give fair notice to a citizen of
any demand that the State has against the citizen to
enable the citizen to discharge such demand without
the need for the State to resort to use of its coercive
powers, or to exercise the right to due process for
determination of civil rights and obligations as
guaranteed under Article 10-A of the Constitution.
3. The duty to uphold the right of a citizen to access
justice before an independent Tribunal and seek the
adjudication of civil rights and obligations before such
Tribunal prior to the State exercising its coercive
authority to realize a claim against the citizen.
6. It is now well settled that the obligations of the State
and all its functionaries to act in a just, fair and reasonable
manner as required under Section 24-A of the Act is to be read
into every statute. All State functionaries exercise state authority
under provisions of the Ordinance and are therefore required to
act in a just, fair and reasonable manner. Article 4 of the
Constitution declares that “to enjoy the protection of law and to
be treated in accordance with law is the inalienable right of every
citizen”. The dictate of the Constitution is clear enough. The
Constitution and the body of statutory laws under it aims to
protect the citizen and prohibit the State from treating the
Writ Petition No.2622/2022 P a g e |6
citizen in a manner that is not backed by law. This requirement
has to be understood in a context wherein a citizen is at liberty
to do what he/she is not prohibited by law from doing and the
functionaries of the State can only interfere with his/her life,
liberty, body, reputation or property where they are authorized
by law to interfere in such manner as prescribed by law.
7. The principles of natural justice are also well settled. It
was held by superior Courts even prior to the introduction of
Article 10-A within the Constitution that to be treaded in
accordance with principles of natural justice is to be regarded as
a fundamental right of a citizen. The principles of natural justice
are understood to include the right of a citizen to a hearing and
the right to be heard by an impartial Tribunal. The independence
of judiciary is recognized as a salient feature of the Constitution
and the right to access to justice includes the right to have one’s
civil entitlements and obligations adjudicated by a Tribunal or
Court that is a neutral arbiter of the law. The importance of
these rights was formally recognized when Article 10-A of the
Constitution was introduced in the Constitution by the 18th
Constitutional Amendment to afford a textual basis to such
rights. The right to access justice and the role of an independent
adjudicatory Tribunal to uphold such right was emphasized by
the august Supreme Court in significant detail in Mehram Ali
and others vs. Federation of Pakistan and others (PLD
1998 SC 1445).
8. It was held by the Full Bench of the learned Sindh High
Court in M/s Pak-Saudi Fertilizers Limited vs. Federation of
Writ Petition No.2622/2022 P a g e |7
Pakistan and others (2002 PTD Karachi 679), in relation to
the Income Tax Ordinance, 1979, that, “while the disputes in the
shape of appeals are pending, no coercive actions are to be
taken.” In this case the department was found to have pressed
for recoveries after passing assessment order with tremendous
haste, by freezing the bank accounts of the taxpayer and
drawing funds therefrom, in a fact pattern similar to that in the
instant matter. The learned Sindh High Court observed that
determination of amount due from the taxpayer remained to be
made by an appellate forum it was consequently held that
recovery proceedings initiated by the tax department, “and
adoption of coercive measures through notices under Section 92
of the Ordinance freezing of the bank accounts of the petitioner,”
were without lawful authority in view of pending
appeals/disputes. And that, “till disposal of the appeals by the
department hierarchies up to the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal
the respondents are restrained from adopting any coercive
measures towards recoveries.” The question of the right of a
taxpayer to have his fiscal obligations adjudicated by an
independent forum outside the hierarchy of FBR has also been
settled in Brothers Textile Mills Limited vs. Federation of
Pakistan through Secretary and 03 others (2003 PTD
Lahore 2834), wherein the learned Lahore High Court held that
the taxpayer was entitled to interim relief till such time that the
demand generated by the tax department was adjudicated by
one appellate forum. Again in Z. N. Exports Private Limited
vs. Collector of Sales Tax (2003 PTD Lahore 1746) the
learned Lahore High Court held that, “in all fairness, equity and
Writ Petition No.2622/2022 P a g e |8
justice, an assessee should not be forced to pay a demand
created by a Revenue Authority unless the order creating such
demand has undergone the scrutiny of at least one independent
forum,”. While identifying the Tribunal as such forum, it was held
that, “before a recovery created by an impugned order by a
Departmental Authority can be effected, an assessee, appellant
must be heard by a forum outside the departmental hierarchy.”
These precedents were then explained by the learned Lahore
High Court in Sun-Rise Bottling Company Private Limited
through Chief Executive vs. Federation of Pakistan and 04
others (2006 PTD Lahore 535) where the question before the
Court was whether a recovery could be affected when injunction
granted by the Tribunal had expired after six months under
Section 46(4) of the Sales Tax Act, 1990. Relying on the law laid
down in Mehram Ali, the learned Lahore High Court reiterated
that an essential feature of the fundamental right of access to
justice was the determination of a grievance by an independent
forum while reiterating the law laid down in Z. N. Exports
Private Limited. In Commissioner of Income Tax and
others vs. Messrs Media Network and others (2006 PTD
SC 2502) the august Supreme Court explained that the right to
natural justice could not be disregarded and that to uphold such
right “it might suffice if reasonable opportunity of hearing is
granted to a person before an adverse action or decision is taken
against him.”
9. Let us now refer to the scheme provided within the
Ordinance. Section 137(2) of the Ordinance states the
following:-
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Section 137. Due date for payment of tax.--
(2) Where any tax is payable under an assessment order or
an amended assessment order or any other order issued by
the Commissioner under this Ordinance, a notice shall be
served upon the taxpayer in the prescribed form specifying
the amount payable and thereupon the sum so specified
shall be paid within thirty days from the date of service of
the notice.
10. Sections 137, 138 and 140 read together with Section
124 of the Ordinance are machinery provisions that relate to the
mechanism for recovery after an assessment is made. It is
during the assessment phase that the tax due from the taxpayer
is determined. The recovery provisions then seek to recover the
tax that has been determined to be due and payable and in this
context Section 137(2) of the Ordinance requires the tax
authorities to notify the taxpayer of the tax amount that has
been determined to be due and payable by the taxpayer
together with prescribing that such payable amount is to be paid
within thirty days from the date of service of notice, thus
specifying the time provided for discharge of the tax liability. In
the event that a taxpayer chooses not to contest the tax liability
as determined by the tax authorities pursuant to a Section 137
notice, he is informed of the payment due as well as the
timeframe within which such payment has to be made. In the
event that the tax liability determined to be due and payable by
the tax department is amended by the Commissioner Appeals,
the Tribunal, High Court or the Supreme Court, there is a
mechanism provided under Section 124 of the Ordinance
requiring the tax authorities to issue notice in order to give effect
to a determination by the Commissioner Appeals, Tribunal, High
Writ Petition No.2622/2022 P a g e | 10
Court or Supreme Court, through which mechanism the taxpayer
is informed of the amount due as determined by the appellate
authorities and the timeframe within which such liability is to be
discharged.
11. The question before us is, however, different, as it
relates to obligation of the tax authorities where an assessment
order has been upheld by the Commissioner Appeals, Tribunal,
High Court or Supreme Court. Does such order by any of the
aforementioned authorities confirming the assessment order by
the Commissioner Inland Revenue automatically bring back to
life the Section 137 notice originally issued by the Commissioner
to the taxpayer? And if so what is the timeframe within which
the taxpayer would be deemed to be obliged to discharge the tax
liability, given that the original 30-day time period prescribed
under Section 137(2) of the Ordinance would have elapsed
during the adjudicatory process? This is where Section 138 of
the Ordinance comes into play. Section 138(1) states the
following:-
Section 138. Recovery of tax out of property and
through arrest of taxpayer.-- (1) For the purpose of
recovering any tax due by a taxpayer, the Commissioner
may serve upon the taxpayer a notice in the prescribed form
requiring him to pay the said amount within such time as
may be specified in the notice.
12. This provision is independent of Section 138(2) of the
Ordinance, which empowers the tax authorities to affect coercive
recovery from the taxpayer in the event that the time period
prescribed under a notice under Section 138(1) of the Ordinance
Writ Petition No.2622/2022 P a g e | 11
to discharge a tax liability determined to be due or payable is not
discharged within such period. The affiliated question is whether
Section 140 of the Ordinance, which empowers the tax
authorities to affect recovery from third parties who hold money
on behalf of the taxpayer is completely independent of Section
138 of the Ordinance, and that recovery can be affected from
such third parties even without issuing a notice to the taxpayer
under Section 138(1) of the Ordinance.
13. The question of the relationship between Sections 137,
138 and 140 of the Ordinance came before this Court in Huawei
Technologies Pakistan Private Limited, wherein it was held
that, “the respondent department before invoking section 140 of
the Ordinance is required to issue a notice intimating the
taxpayer regarding the invocation of section 140 ibid and
requiring him to make payment of the tax liability within a
reasonable time”. Relying on the law as explained by this Court,
the learned Lahore High Court in Fouzia Razzak held that,
”the Respondent-Department before invoking Section 140 of the
Ordinance is required to issue a notice under Section 138 of the
Ordinance intimating the taxpayer regarding the invocation of
Section 140 ibid and requiring him to make payment of tax
liability within a reasonable time”. Reaffirming the law as
explained in Fouzia Razzak the learned Lahore High Court in
Romex International held that, “bypassing of the Section 138
has already been declared illegal by another learned Single
Bench of this Court in judgment Mst. Fouzia Razzak v. Federal
Board of Revenue and others (2021 PTD 162). Until this
Writ Petition No.2622/2022 P a g e | 12
judgment holds field the respondents are bound to comply with
the decision.”
14. A reason why it has been held by this Court (as well as
the learned Lahore High Court) that it is mandatory to issue a
Section 138(1) notice before resorting to coercive use of State
authority and affecting recovery form a third party pursuant to
Section 140 of the Ordinance is that there is an obligation on
behalf of the State to give a taxpayer due notice of his obligation
to pay the tax liability adjudicated against him and areasonable
opportunity to discharge such liability within the timeframe
notified to him by the tax authorities. In case of Section 137(2)
of the Ordinance this timeframe has been prescribed by the
legislature as a 30-day period. However, where the taxpayer
files an appeal against the assessment order, the tax department
is restrained as a matter of routine from affecting coercive
recovery pending adjudication of the appeals as the principle is
now settled that no coercive recovery is to be affected till tax
liability has been adjudicated by at least one appellate forum
outside the hierarchy of the tax department, which has been
declared to mean the learned Tribunal. If the tax liability as
determined through an assessment order by the Commissioner
is upheld by the Commissioner Appeals (or even by the learned
Tribunal), the tax due from the taxpayer as determined by
assessment order might have not changed, but the taxpayer
still needs to be notified of the timeframe within which the
taxpayer is required to discharge such tax liability, failing which
the State could resort the exercise of its coercive power to
enforce recovery under Section 138(2) or Section 140 of the
Writ Petition No.2622/2022 P a g e | 13
Ordinance. If this were not the purpose of Section 138(1) of the
Ordinance, the said provision would be redundant. The power to
enforce coercive recovery against the taxpayer is provided under
Section 138(2) of the Ordinance. Thus, there is no need to
promulgate Section 138(1) of the Ordinance if upon affirmation
of an assessment order of the Commissioner, the tax authorities
could immediately seek to exercise their coercive powers to
affect recovery under Section 138(2) or Section 140 of the
Ordinance without first putting the taxpayer on notice that the
tax liability, as affirmed by an appellate authority, is to be
discharged within such reasonable time as stated in the notice
under Section 138(1) of the Ordinance. It is settled law that
redundancy cannot be attributed to the legislature. It cannot be
imagined that Section 138(1) of the Ordinance was introduced
by the legislature without purpose.
15. There is a second more essential purpose of Section
138(1) of the Ordinance. It is to inform the taxpayer that the tax
liability created by the Commissioner has been affirmed by the
appellate authority and would be recovered by the State unless
such assessment is interfered with by a higher appellate forum.
Section 138(1) notice requires the tax authorities to prescribe a
time period within which the liability is to be discharged. And
such time period has to be a reasonable time period in view of
the requirement of Section 24 of the Act. It is within such period
that a window is created for the taxpayer to appeal the
assessment order, as upheld by an appellate authority before a
higher appellate authority, thereby upholding the right of the
taxpayer to access justice through a fair trial and due process as
Writ Petition No.2622/2022 P a g e | 14
guaranteed by Article 10-A of the Constitution. If Sections 137
and 138 of the Ordinance were to be interpreted such that a
notice under Section 137(2) of the Ordinance would
automatically stand resurrected upon decision by the
Commissioner Appeals upholding an assessment order and the
due date by which the tax assessment was payable could be
deemed to a date that had already passed rendering such
liability to be overdue and authorizing the tax authorities to
resort to coercive means under Section 140 of the Ordinance to
recover such liability, the scheme would frustrate the right of the
taxpayer to file an appeal before the learned Tribunal as
provided under Sections 130 and 131 of the Ordinance. Such
interpretation would fall foul of the right of the taxpayer to
access justice and to have his/her civil rights and liabilities
adjudicated by an impartial arbiter of the law.
16. While the State is within its right to collect the tax due
from citizens, it is under an obligation to inform the citizens of
the tax due as well as the date by which such liability is to be
discharged, failing which the State could resort to use of coercive
means for recovery. Once a taxpayer files an appeal against the
assessment order, the 30-day period prescribed under Section
137(2) of the Ordinance becomes irrelevant (unless the appeal is
filed and decided within such 30-day period). Thus, Section
138(1) of the Ordinance has been enacted, which logically
provides that in order to recover tax due by the taxpayer the
Commissioner may serve a notice specifying the liability due as
well as the time-period within which it is to be discharged. The
requirement to issue Section 138(1) notice is thus mandatory
Writ Petition No.2622/2022 P a g e | 15
where the taxpayer files an appeal against an assessment order
and the Commissioner Appeals or the Tribunal affirms the
assessment order. The issuance of such notice discharges the
obligation of the State to put the taxpayer on notice that a tax
liability due to the State ought to be paid within the period
specified in such notice, failing which the State would be within
its right to use coercive means for recovery. Such notice also
gives fair warning to the taxpayer to avail his remedy of appeal
before the Tribunal or file a reference before the High Court as
the case may be. The provisions of the Ordinance cannot be
interpreted in a manner that frustrates the statutory right of
appeal or that of filing a reference made available to a taxpayer
aggrieved by the order of the Commissioner Appeals or the
Tribunal.
17. Now, we return to the facts of the instant case.
Respondent No.3 had issued a notice under Section 140 of the
Ordinance and had recovered the tax as determined to be due
by the Commissioner and Commissioner Appeals from the banks
within thirty minutes of the Commissioner Appeals uploading its
order on IRIS. It is inconceivable that the Deputy Commissioner
(respondent No.3) would be able to function with such alacrity if
the Deputy Commissioner, had also become aware of the
decision of the Commissioner Appeals at 03:30 p.m on
09.03.2022 when the decision was uploaded in IRIS for the
information of the petitioner. The decision of respondent No.3 to
not issue a notice under Section 138(1) of the Ordinance to the
petitioner, and seeking attachment of the bank accounts of the
petitioner and affecting coercive recovery of tax determined in
Writ Petition No.2622/2022 P a g e | 16
the Assessment Order (despite the law laid down by this Court
and the learned Lahore High Court declaring that a notice under
Section 138(1) of the Ordinance is a mandatory requirement of
law), appears to be aimed at frustrating the right of the
petitioner to seek injunctive relief from the learned Tribunal. The
petitioner did seek such relief the very next day
(i.e. 10.03.2022) and was granted an injunctive order. But the
amount sought to be recovered by the tax department under the
Assessment Order had already been recovered in exercise of the
coercive authority of the State under Section 140 of the
Ordinance. The failure of tax authorities to put the petitioner on
notice that tax was due and payable by the petitioner as
determined in the Assessment Order as upheld by Commissioner
Appeals and prescribing a timeframe for discharge of such
liability within which time the petitioner would be free to avail its
remedy of appeal before the learned Tribunal, is tantamount to
playing a fraud on the statute.
18. Public servants who discharging State authorities under
the Ordinance cannot assume the role of revenue generators on
behalf of the State working with premeditation to meet monthly,
quarterly, biannual or annual quotas. Public servants acting as
tax authorities exercising powers under recovery provisions of
the Ordinance cannot act like bankers with monthly fund-raising
targets that they must meet as a measure of their performance.
Public servants are under obligation to act in just, fair and
reasonable manner and as functionaries of the State they are
under an obligation to exercise their authority under the
Ordinance such that it does not undermine the rights of
Writ Petition No.2622/2022 P a g e | 17
taxpayers to due process, fair trial and access to justice. Tax
authorities are under an obligation to afford the protection of law
to the citizens rather than becoming instruments of denuding
taxpayer of such protection.
19. In view of the opinion above and the reasons stated,
the instant petition is allowed and the impugned notice dated
09.03.2022 issued in exercise of authority under Section 140 of
the Ordinance without complying with the mandatory
requirement of issuing a notice under Section 138(1) of the
Ordinance is devoid of legal authority and is void ab initio being
a fraud on the statute. Section 138(1) of the Ordinance
conceives that a reasonable timeframe is to be specified by the
Commissioner within which the tax due is to be paid. It is
inconceivable that such reasonable time could be a period of less
than 7 days as the purpose of such provision is to put the
taxpayer on notice to discharge the tax obligation within a
reasonable period and also afford the taxpayer an opportunity to
avail his statutory right of appeal, if so advised. Consequently,
whether it is the Commissioner Appeals, the Tribunal or the High
Court upholding an assessment order, the tax authorities are
under an obligation to issue a notice under Section 138(1) of the
Ordinance before they resort to use of coercive means under
Section 138(2) or Section 140 of the Ordinance.
20. As the impugned notice has been declared to be void ab
initio and set-aside, respondents No.2 & 3 will ensure that the
amount recovered from the bank accounts of the petitioner
pursuant to the impugned notice under Section 140 of the
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Ordinance is reimbursed to the petitioner or credited to the same
bank accounts within a period of fifteen days.
21. In view of the facts of the case, this Court is of the view
that respondent No.3 might be liable for abuse of authority and
maladministration in the manner in which authority has been
exercised under Section 140 of the Ordinance. This Court,
therefore, refers the matter to the learned Federal Tax
Ombudsman, who is expected to inquire into the matter and
share his findings and recommendations with this Court within a
period of three months. The office will send a copy the petition
along with the record and a copy of this judgment to the learned
Federal Tax Ombudsman.
22. Before parting of this judgment, this Court would like to
observe that the pernicious practice of forcing tax officials to use
state power to meet fixed fund-raising targets must end. The
State is responsible to uphold Constitutional guarantees made to
the citizens and not act as a blunt tool undermining the same.
The baleful practice of back-dating notices or not serving them
at all to frustrate the right of taxpayers to follow the right to due
process and fair trial must come to end. It does not behoove the
State to assume the role of a trickster and undermine the social
contract with the citizen.
23. Let the office send a copy of this judgment to
Chairman, FBR for his information, who will place the same
before the Board of FBR to ensure that the powers vested in
taxation authorities under fiscal statutes are not used such that
Writ Petition No.2622/2022 P a g e | 19
they undermine fundamental rights of citizens as guaranteed
under the Constitution.
(BABAR SATTAR)
JUDGE
Announced in the open Court on 07.09.2022.
JUDGE
Approved for Reporting.
A.Rahman Abbasi.