Justice S J Kathawala, in a recent order, expressed unhappiness over this practice and asked the Income Tax authorities to take action against the erring clerks.
The judge also asked the department to forthwith issue a circular to the Commissioners of Income Tax of all the wards making it compulsory for the clerks to sign and put a serial or registration number on copies of letters received by them before handing them over to the bearer of the original letter.
The court was hearing a complaint lodged by the official assignee of
Mumbai on an insolvency petition filed by a person. The official assignee had forwarded a letter dated April 18 to Income Tax Officer of Ward 15 (2) (3) at Grant Road here. The letter was received by a clerk, who put a rubber stamp on the first page of the letter.
The deputy official assignee drew the attention of the court to the fact that despite the rubber stamp having been provided to give the registration number to the letter, the same is left blank by the concerned clerk. When he was asked to fill in the registration number and put his signature on the rubber stamp, he refused to do so.
"If such is the attitude of the clerk receiving mails of the ward offices of the Income Tax Office, it would cause grave inconvenience to the persons addressing letters to the Ward Officer, more particularly, a common man, since he would not have the registration number qua the letter forwarded by him to the Income Tax authorities.
"He will also not have any particulars about the person who has received such a letter," the judge observed.
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