Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
M/S. MYSODET (P) LTD., BANGALORE
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 17/03/1999
BENCH:
N.Santosh Hedge, S.P.Bharucha
JUDGMENT:
SANTOSH HEGDE, J.
This appeal arises from the judgment and order of the
High Court of Karnataka dated 13.12.1989 made in I.T.R.C.
No.21/82. The following question was referred to the High
Court for its opinion under Section 256(1) of the Income Tax
Act, 1961 (hereinafter referred to as ‘the Act’) :
"Whether on the facts and in the circumstances of the
case, the Tribunal was right in law in holding that the
provision of Section 104 of the Income-tax Act, 1961 was
applicable to the instant case for the assessment year 1975-
76?"
The facts leading to the abovesaid reference are as
follows :
The respondent-Company is a trading company in which
the public are not substantially interested. The assessing
authority assessed the income of the Company for the
assessment year 1975-76 at Rs.6,27,430/- holding that the
Company did not distribute any dividend to its shareholders.
The Income Tax Officer initiated proceedings under Section
104 of the Act, demanding additional income-tax of
Rs.31,434/-.
Against the said assessment order, the respondent-
Company preferred an appeal before the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner. Having failed before the said Authority, a
further appeal was preferred before the Appellate Tribunal
which, in turn, rejected the said appeal and on a prayer
made by the Company, the Tribunal referred the abovenoted
question for opinion of the High Court.
Before the High Court, the assessee relied upon a
judgment of the Calcutta High Court in Moore Avenue
Properties (P) Ltd. v. C.I.T. (1966) 59 ITR 466 which
took the view that in view of the deemed definition given in
Section 2(22)(e) of the Act, any loan advanced to a
shareholder out of the accumulated profits of the Company in
which public do not have a substantial interest, would
amount to payment of dividend. Hence, Section 104 of the
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Act would not be attracted.
Per contra, the Revenue relied upon a judgment of the
Gujarat High Court in the case of CIT v. Bombay Mineral
Supply Co. (P) Ltd. (1978) 192 ITR 577 wherein it was held
that payment of a loan which is deemed as a dividend cannot
be construed as distribution of dividend within the meaning
of Section 23A of the 1922 Act (equivalent to Section 104 of
the Act). The Karnataka High Court preferred to rely upon
the Calcutta High Court judgment and allowed the reference,
holding in favour of the assessee. Now the Revenue is in
appeal before us.
It was contended on behalf of the Revenue in this
appeal that even if it is to be held that payment of a loan
by a Company is to be deemed to be a dividend, such payment
cannot be treated as distribution of dividend as
contemplated in Section 104 of the Act for avoiding the levy
of super-tax. The stand of the Revenue before us is that
for the purpose of avoiding the levy under Section 104 of
the Act, there should be in fact distribution of dividend as
such in favour of all the shareholders and a deemed payment
of dividend is not what is contemplated under the said
Section. It was also contended before us that the view
taken by the Calcutta High Court (supra) does not lay down
the correct position in law and, on the contrary, the view
taken by the Gujarat High Court (supra) should be accepted.
In the instant case, during the year under reference,
the company had paid a sum of Rs.1,23,053/- to its Managing
Director as a loan and the balance amount left with the
company was admittedly not sufficient to distribute as
dividend among other shareholders. Therefore, the company
had contended that in view of the fact that under Section
2(22)(e) of the Income Tax Act, 1961, payment of any advance
or loan to a shareholder being a deemed payment of dividend,
there was no case for invoking the provision of Section 104
of the Act. As stated above, this contention did not find
favour with the assessing and other authorities except the
High Court.
The question, therefore, is whether the company
concerned has for the relevant year, distributed its surplus
income or not, so as to attract or not to attract the rigour
of Section 104 of the Act. Section 2(22)(e) of the 1961 Act
reads as under :
"(22)(e) "dividend" includes -
any payment by a company, not being a company in which
the public are substantially interested, of any sum (whether
as representing a part of the assets of the company or
otherwise) by way of advance or loan to a shareholder, being
a person who has a substantial interest in the company, or
any payment by such company on behalf, or for the individual
benefit, of any such shareholder, to the extent to which the
company in either case possesses accumulated profits;"
A perusal of this Section shows that for the purpose
of the Act, any payment made by a company of any sum of
money by way of advance or loan to its shareholders is
deemed to be a dividend. Since the Act has not provided for
any other definition of the word "dividend" except the ones
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enumerated in Section 2(22) of the Act, it should be
construed that this definition would be applicable to all
provisions which contain the term "dividend" in the Act.
Section 104 of the Act reads as under :
"104. Income-tax on undistributed income of certain
companies. - (1) Subject to the provisions of this section
and of sections 105, 106 107 and 107A, where the Income-tax
Officer is satisfied that in respect of any previous year
the profits and gains distributed as dividends by any
company within the twelve months immediately following the
expiry of that previous year are less than the statutory
percentage of the distributable income of the company of
that previous year, the Income-tax Officer shall make an
order in writing that the company shall, apart from the sum
determined as payable by it on the basis of the assessment
under section 143 or section 144, be liable to pay
income-tax at the rate of -
(a) fifty per cent., in the case of an investment
company, (b) thirty-seven per cent., in the case of a
trading company, and (c) twenty-five per cent., in the case
of any other company, within India.)
on the distributable income as reduced by the amount
of dividends actually distributed, if any, within the said
period of twelve months.
(2) The Income Tax Officer shall not make an order
under sub-section (1) if he is satisfied -
(i) that, having regard to the losses incurred by the
company in earlier years or to the smallness of the profits
made in the previous year, the payment of a dividend or a
larger dividend than that declared within the period of
twelve months referred to in sub-section (1) would be
unreasonable; or (ii) that the payment of a dividend or a
larger dividend than that declared within the period of
twelve months referred to in sub-section (1) would not have
resulted in a benefit to the revenue; or (iii) that at
least seventy-five per cent. of the share capital of the
company is throughout the previous year beneficially held by
an institution or fund established in India for a charitable
purpose the income from dividend whereof is exempt under
section 11.
(3) If the Central Government is of opinion that it is
necessary or expedient in the public interest so to do, it
may, by notification in the Official Gazette and subject to
such conditions as may be specified therein, exempt any
class of companies to which the provisions of this section
apply from the operation of this section. (4) Without
prejudice to the provisions of section 108, nothing
contained in this section shall apply to a company which is
neither an Indian company nor a company which has made the
prescribed arrangements for the declaration and payment of
dividends within India."
As per this Section, an Income Tax Officer, if
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satisfied that a company in respect of any previous year has
not distributed, as required by the statute, dividends from
out of its profits and gains, shall make an order in writing
that the company shall, apart from the sum determined as
payable by it on the basis of the assessment under Section
143 or 144, be also liable to pay income-tax at the rate
provided in that Section. The Calcutta High Court in the
case cited above held that loans and advances to the
shareholders should be deemed to be dividend under section
2(6A)(e) of the 1922 Act (equivalent to Section 2(22)(e) of
the 1961 Act). Hence, in its opinion, the provision of
Section 23A(1) (equivalent to Section 104 of the 1961 Act)
is not attracted. Per contra, the Gujarat High Court in the
case referred to above, held that the definition of the word
"dividend" as found in Section 2(6A)(e) of the Act will not
be applicable for the dividend to be paid under Section
23A(1) of the Act inasmuch as the latter Section
contemplates an actual distribution of dividend and not
payment of any sum of money which can be termed as
"dividend" by a legal fiction. In the said view of the
matter, the Gujarat High Court was of the opinion that even
if the company concerned had made any advance or payment
which under the Act could be deemed to be a dividend, the
same cannot be used as a defence in the proceedings under
Section 23A of the Act unless the dividend, as such, has
been paid to all the shareholders.
With respect, we are unable to agree with the
reasoning of the Gujarat High Court. The object of the
Legislature in enacting Section 2(22)(e) and Section 104 of
the 1961 Act is one and the same, namely, to prevent the
escapement of super- tax by some shareholder and/or
companies. While under Section 2(22)(e) of the Act, by a
deeming provision, the Legislature has made payment of any
advance or loan to a shareholder a deemed dividend so as to
subject such payments to the levy of super-tax in the hands
of the receiver of the said amount, Section 104 of the Act
provides for levy of super-tax on companies which attempt to
avoid payment of super-tax by its shareholders by not
distributing its surplus profits and income. In either
case, the object of the Act is to see that evasion of
super-tax is prevented. Thus it is clear that the Act did
not contemplate the levying of super-tax twice, namely, once
in the hands of the shareholder who has received it as a
deemed dividend and again in the hands of the Company which,
according to the assessing authority, has failed to declare
the dividend.
The main ground on which the Gujarat High Court based
its decision is the difference in the language used in
Sections 2(6A) and 23A of the Act. According to the High
Court, while in Section 2(6A) the Legislature has used the
expression "any payment", in Section 23A it has used the
words "gains distributed". In view of such use of two
different expressions in these two Sections, the High Court
came to the conclusion that the deeming provision in Section
2(6A) is not available while invoking Section 23A of the
Act. This conclusion of the High Court also, in our view,
is not correct. It is true that the two Sections referred
to above have used two different verbs but that by itself,
in our opinion, would not take away the effect of the
deeming provision found in the definition clause. If
actually the Legislature wanted the deeming clause not to be
made applicable to the provisions of Section 104 of the 1961
Act then it would have said so in categorical terms in the
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Statute, in the absence of which the statutory definition
given under Sections 2(22)(e) of 1961 Act, in our view, will
have to be applied to the word "dividend" as found in
Section 104 also. The Gujarat High Court had also placed
reliance on a judgment of this Court in the case of Navnit
Lal C Javeri v. K K Sen (1965) 56 ITR 198. In our view,
the ratio laid down in the said judgment could not, in any
way, support the ultimate conclusion of the High Court.
This Court in the said case was dealing with the
constitutionality of Section 23A of the 1922 Act, and was
not dealing with the interpretation of Sections 2(6A) and
23A of the said Act. This Court in that case did not have
occasion to decide the question that has arisen before us.
Hence, the Gujarat High Court could not have got any
assistance from the said judgment.
In view of the above discussion, we are of the opinion
that the view taken by the Calcutta High Court in the case
referred to above lays down the correct law and the view
taken by the Gujarat High Court does not lay down the
correct law. Therefore, the judgment of the High Court
under appeal has to be sustained. Consequently, this appeal
fails and is hereby dismissed. No costs.