Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 11
PETITIONER:
BAJAJ TEMPO LTD. BOMBAY
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX,BOMBAY CITY-IIIBOMBAY
DATE OF JUDGMENT24/04/1992
BENCH:
SAHAI, R.M. (J)
BENCH:
SAHAI, R.M. (J)
ANAND, A.S. (J)
CITATION:
1992 AIR 1622 1992 SCR (2) 765
1992 SCC (3) 79 JT 1992 (3) 185
1992 SCALE (1)912
ACT:
INCOME TAX ACT, 1922
Section 15 C-Industrial undertaking established by
taking on lease building previously used for other
business-transfer of machinery or plant of very nominal
value-Whether the undertaking entitled to claim benefit of
exemption.
Interpretation of Statute:
Taxing statute- provision granting incentives for
promoting , economic growth and development-to be liberally
construed.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant-company, which was formed for exploiting
the manufacturing licence issued by the Government in
favour of its promoter Corporation, entered into an agree-
ment with the promoter corporation to secure and take over
from the promoter Corporation the rights under the licence
to manufacture tempo vehicles and to take over its factory
as a going concern with its assets, liabilities, machinery,
power, quotas etc.Clause 10 of the agreement provided that
the transferee, the appellant company, should be in posses-
sion of the premises of the factory and the building on
payment of monthly rent as a lessee. tools and implements
valued at Rs. 3500 of the promoter corporation, were also
transferred to the company. After the take-over, the licence
was endorsed by the appropriate authority of the Government
of India in favour of the assessee company.
In assessment proceedings for the year 1960-61, the
appellant company, the assessee claimed benefit of partial
exemption from payment of tax under section 15C of the Act
of 1972 as the company was a new undertaking. the Income Tax
Officer rejected the claim on the ground that though the
undertaking was new, it was not entitled to the benefit, as
it
766
was formed by splitting up of business already in existence
and also by transfer to the new business of the building
and machinery previously used in the other business. Howev-
er, the Income Tax Officer observed that it could not be
held, on the facts of the case, that it was a case of recon-
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 11
struction of the business already in existence.
On appeal by the assessee-company, the appellate As-
sistant commissioner held that taking premises on lease
could not be held to amount transfer of the building as the
building in which the undertaking was set up was not pur-
chased but taken onlease only and that since, admittedly,the
value of the building could not be included in the capital
computation for the purposes of section 15 C, the value of
which would be negligible as compared to the value of the
assets installed, the assessee was entitled to claim the
benefit. In further appeal, the Income Tax Appellate Tribu-
nal agreed with the order of the Appellate Authority and
rejected revenue’s contention that since the premises in
question were earlier used for the purpose of business, the
assessee was disentitled from claiming the benefit as the
’newly established undertaking must also refer to a building
previously used by the assessee himself in any other busi-
ness’. It held that lease could not be held to be transfer,
and that an industrial undertaking to be covered in the
mischief of clause (i)of sub-section(2) of section 15C
should have been ’formed’ by transfer of building, plant or
machinery,which was substantial and prominent in the forma-
tion of the undertaking ;in other words, the part played by
such transfer should have been such that the industry with-
out it could not have come into being, and that it could not
stand to reason that a big industrial undertaking should be
denied the benefit of Section 15C, only because it took the
business premises on lease or used its implements and tools
worth a small amount previously used for the purposes of
business.
On a reference made by the department, the High Court
answered the question of law raised by the department in
its favour and against the assessee. Hence the appeals by
the assessee.
On the question whether the assessee was entitled to
claim partial exemption from payment of tax under section
15C of Income Tax Act,1922 on profit and gains derived from
an industrial undertaking established in a building taken on
lease used for other business, and whether the assessee-
company, which had been found by the tribunal, to be a new
767
Company, could be denied the benefit as visualised in Sec-
tion 15C(1) because of operation of clause (i) of sub_sec-
tion (2).
Allowing the appeals by the assessee-Company, this Court,
HELD:1.1. Section 15 C of the Income Tax Act, 1922 read
as a whole, was a provision, directed towards encouraging
industrialisation by permitting an assessee setting up a new
undertaking to claim benefit of not paying tax to the extent
of six per cent in a year on the capital employed. But the
legislature took care to restrict such benefit only to those
undertakings which were new in form and substance, by pro-
viding that the undertaking should not be ’formed’in any
manner provided in clause (i)of sub-section (2) of Section
15C. Each of these requirements, namely, formation of the
undertaking by splitting up or reconstruction of an existing
business or transfer to the undertaking of buildings, raw
material or plant used in any previous business results in
denial of the benefit contemplated under sub-section (1)
clause(i)of sub -section (2) is a restrictive clause. By
this clause, the legislature intended to control any attempt
or effort to abuse the benefit intended for new undertaking
by change of label. The intention was not to deny benefit to
genuine new industrial undertaking but to control the mis-
chief which might have otherwise taken place. Therefore, a
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 11
provision in taxing state granting incentives for promoting
growth and development should be construed liberally.
Consequently, the restriction on it, too, has to be con-
strued so as to advance the objective of the section and
not to frustrate it. Adopting a literal interpretation would
result in defeating the purpose of section 15C. Therefore,
it becomes necessary to resort to a construction which is
reasonable and purposive to make the provision
meaningful[773D-F,774B,774D]
Broach Distt. Co-operative Cotton sales Ginning and
Pressing Society Ltd. Commissioner of Income Tax, Ahmedabad,
177 ITR [1989] 418 SC and commissioner of Income Tax, Amrit-
sar v. Strawboard Manufacturing Company Ltd; 177ITR[1989]
431 SC, relied on.
1.2 Initial exercise, therefore, should be to find out
if the undertaking was new. Once this test is satisfied
then clause(i) should be applied reasonably and liberally in
keeping with spirit of Section 15C (1)of the Act. While
doing so, various situations may arise. For instance, the
formation may be without anything to do with any earlier
business. That is, the undertaking may be formed without
splitting up or reconstructing
768
any existing business or without transfer of any building
material or plant of any previous business. Such an under-
taking undoubtedly would be eligible to benefit without any
difficulty . On the other extreme may be an undertaking new
in its form but not in substance. It may be new in name
only. Such an undertaking would obviously not be entitled to
the benefit. In between the two, there may be various other
situations, for instance, a new company may be formed, as
was in the instant case, but tools and implements worth
Rs.3500 were transferred to it of previous firm. Technical-
ly speaking it was transfer of material used in previous
business.
[777 C-F]
1.3 World of a statute are undoubtedly the best guide.
But if their meaning gets clouded then the courts are re-
quired to clear the haze. Sub-section (2) advances the
objective of sub-section (1)by including in it every under-
taking except if it is covered by clause (i) for which it is
necessary that it should not be formed by transfer of build-
ing or machinery. The restrictions are denial of benefit
arises not by transfer of building or material to the new
company but that it should not be formed by such transfer.
This is the key to the interpretation. The formation should
not be by such transfer. The emphasis is on formation not
on use. Therefore, it is not every transfer of building or
material but the one which can be held to have resulted in
formation of the undertaking . Even if the undertaking is
established by transfer of building, plant or machinery but
it is not formed as a result of such transfer the assessee
could not be denied the benefit.[777G-H,778A]
Commissioner of Income Tax, West Bengal-II v. Sainthia
Rice and Oil Mills, 82ITR[1971]778(cal.);Commissioner of
Income Tax v. Ganga Sugar Corporation Ltd;92 ITR[1973]173
(DELHI);Commissioner of Income Tax , West Bengal -I v.
Electric Construction and Equipment Company Ltd ;(Cal.)1
04ITR [1976] 101;Commissioner of Income tax, Bombay city
-I,v. Kopran Chemical Co. Ltd; 112ITR [1978]893;Commissioner
of Income tax, Bombay City -II v. Sawyer’s Asia Ltd; 122
ITR [1980] 259 and L.G. Balakrishan & Bros. Ltd. v. Commis-
sioner of Income Tax, Madras 151 ITR [1985] 270, approved.
1.4 The words ’previously used in any other business’
cannot be construed so narrowly as to confine it to building
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 11
of the assessee only . but it cannot be said that if new
undertaking was established in a premises
769
taken on lease then it, always, amounted to formation of the
undertaking by transfer of the building previously used.
[779 B]
Capsulation Services Pvt. Ltd. v. Commissioner of
Income Tax, Bombay, 91[’1973] ITR 566; Phagoo Mal Sant Ram
v.Commissioner of Income Tax Patiala, 74 ITR [1969] 734 and
Commissioner of Income Tax, Bombay City-II v. Fordham Press-
ing (INDIA) Pvt. Ltd., 121 ITR 426, partly approved.
Commissioner of Income Tax v. Ganga Sugar Corporation
Ltd., 92 ITR [1973] 173 Delhi and Commissioner of Income
Tax, Gujarat-IV v. Suessin Textile Beraing Ltd., 135 ITR
[1982] 443, approved.
Textile Machinery Corporation Ltd. v. Commissioner of
Income Tax, West Bengal, 107 [1977] 195 SC, affirmed.
1.5. ‘Form’ according to the dictionary has different
meanings. In the context in which it has been used it was
intended to connote that the body of the company or its
shape did not come up in consequence of transfer of build-
ing, machinery or plant used previously for business pur-
pose. Use of the negative before word ’formed’ further
strengthens it. In other words, building, machinery or plant
used previously in other business should not result in the
undertaking being formed by it. The transfer to take out the
new undertaking out of purview of sub-section (1) must be
such that but for transfer the new undertaking could not
have come into being. [779 C-D]
1.6 In the instant case, the part played by taking the
building on lease was not dominant in formation of the
company. The High Court was therefore not justified in
answering the question in favour of the revenue. The assesse
was entitled to partial exemption under Section 15C of the
Income Tax Act, 1922. [799 E]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No.
1211(NT) Of 1982.
From the Judgment and order dated 25.8.1981 of the
Bombay High Court in Income Reference No. 154 of 1971.
WITH
Civil Appeal No. 1258 to 1260 (NT) of 1982
AND
770
Civil Appeal No. 1257(NT) of 1982
P.H. Parekh for the Appellant
J. Ramamurthy, P. Parameswaran for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
R.M. SAHAI, J. The question of law that arises for
consideration in these appeals directed against order of the
Bombay High Court, in an Income Tax reference relating to
assessment year 1960-61, is if the assesse was entitled do
claim partial exemption from payment of tax under section
15C of Income Tax Act of 1922 on Profits and gains derived
from an industrial undertaking established in building taken
on lease used previously for other business.
M/s Bechhraj Trading Corporaion (in brief
’Corporation’), incorporated on 29th September 1945. carried
on business of import-export in various items. In 1957 it
was granted licence for manufacturing tempo 400cc three
wheeled transporters. It entered into an agreement with
foreign collaborator, who agreed to grant the licensee the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 11
know-how rights for the manufacture, in India of tempo
commercial three wheeler vehicles, against payment of German
marks. Accordingly the assessee company M/s Bajaj Tempo
Ltd., Bombay (inshort ’Company’) was, formed, for exploiting
the manufacturing licence issued by the Government 32% of
the shares capital of which was subscribed by the foreign
collaborators and remaining 68% share capital was issued to
the shareholders of the Corporation. The assessee company
entered into an agreement with the Corporation, which was
the promoter company, to secure and take over from the
promoter company the rights under the licence to manufacture
tempo vehicles and to take over the factory registered under
the name of Auto Rickshaw Engineering Factory as a going
concern with its assets liabilities machinery, power, quotas
etc. Clause 10 of the agreement provided that the transfer-
ee, that is, the company shall be in possession of the prem-
ises of the factory and the buildings on payment of monthly
rent as a lessee. Tools and implements, valued at Rs.3,500
of the Corporation, were also transferred to the company.
After take over the licence was endorsed by the appropriate
authority of the Government of India in favour of the compa-
ny
771
In assessment proceedings the assessee claimed benefit
of partial exemption from payment of tax as the company was
a new undertaking. The Income Tax Officer rejected the claim
as even though the undertaking was new it was not entitled
to the benefit as it was formed by splitting up of business
already in existence and also it was formed by transfer to
the new business of the building and machinery previously
used in other business. But while rejecting the claim the
Income Tax officer observed that on facts furnished it was
difficult to hold that it was a case of reconstruction of
the business already in existence. He did not find much
merit even in transfer of tools and implements worth
Rs.3,500. In fact the main ground for rejection of the claim
was establishing of business in a building which was used
previously for business. The Appellate Commissioner did not
agree with the Income Tax Officer as according to him taking
premises on lease could not be held to amount to transfer of
the building as the building in which the undertaking was
set up was not purchased but taken on lease only. The appel-
late authority held that since it was admitted that the
value of the building could not be included in the capital
computation for the purposes of Section 15C the value of
which would be negligible as compared to the value of he
assets installed, the assesee was entitled to claim the
benefit. In further appeal the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal
agreed with the order of the appellate authority it rejected
the contention, advanced on behalf of the revenue that since
the premises in question were earlier used for the purpose
of business the assessee was disentitled from claiming the
benefit as the, ’newly established undertaking must also
refer to a building previously used by the assessee himself
in any other business’. It was further of opinion that lease
could not be held to be transfer. The tribunal held that an
industrial undertaking to be covered in the mischief of
clause (i) of sub-section (2) of section 15C should have
been ’formed’ by transfer of building, plant or machinery,
which was substantial and prominent in the formation of the
undertaking. In other words the part played by such transfer
should have been such that the industry without it could not
have come into being. According to tribunal it could not
stand to reason that a big industrial undertaking should be
denied the benefit of Section 15C only because it took the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 11
business premises on lease or used its implements and tools
worth a small amount previously used for the purposes of
business. On further reference made by the department in the
High Court the question of law raised by department was
answered in its favour and against the assessee without any
772
discussion, only, in view of the decision in Capsulation
Services Pvt. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income Tax, Bombay, 91
[1973] ITR 566. The finding of the tribunal, thus, that the
assessee company cannot be said to have been formed by the
reconstruction of promoter company as, ’the business of the
new industrial undertaking established by the assessee
company did not exit prior to its incorporation and was
neither carried on by the promoter company nor by any other
company’ has become final. The dispute centres round if the
company was formed by transfer of building or material used
in previous business. It had two aspects one taking of
building on lease and other transfer of tools and implements
valued at Rs.3,500.
Section 15C of the Income Tax Act, 1922 is extracted
below :
"15C (1) Save as otherwise hereinafter provided,
the tax shall not be payable by an assessee on so
much of the profits or gains derived from any
industrial undertaking to which this section ap-
plies as do not exceed six percent per annum on the
capital employed in the undertaking, computed in
accordance with such rules as may be made in the
behalf by the Central Board of Revenue.
(2) This section applies to any industrial under-
taking which
(i) is not formed by the splitting up or the recon-
struction of business already in existence or by
the transfer to a new business of building, machin-
ery or plant previously used in any other
business....."
The limited question is whether the asessee which has
been found by tribunal to be a new company could be denied
the benefit as visualised in section 15C(1) because of
operation of the clause (i) of Sub-section (2) It is a
restrictive clause. It denies benefit which is otherwise
available in sub-section (1) A provision in a taxing statute
granting incentives for promoting growth and development
should be construed liberally ! In Broach Distt. Co-
Operative Cotton Sales Ginning and Pressing Society Ltd. v.
Commissioner of Income Tax Ahmedabad, 177 ITR [1989] 418 SC
the assessee a cooperative society claimed that the receipts
from the ginning and pressing activities was exempt under-
Section 81 of the Income tax Act. The question for interpre-
tation was whether the cooperative society which carried on
the business of ginning and pressing was society engaged in
773
‘marketing’ of the agricultural produce of the its members.
The Court held that object of section 81(1) was to encourage
and promote the growth of cooperative societies and conse-
quently a liberal constuction must be given to the operation
of that provision. And since ginning and pressing was inci-
dental or ancillary to the activities menioned in Section
81(1) the assessee was entitled to exemption and the proviso
did not stand in way. In Commissioner of Income Tax, Amrit-
sar v. Strawboard Manufacturing Company Ltd., 177 ITR [1989]
431 SC was held that the law providing for concession for
tax purposes to encourage industrial activity should be
liberally construed. The question before the Court was
whether Straw Board could be said to fall within the expres-
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 11
sion "paper and pulp" mentioned in the Schedule relevant to
the respective assessment years. The Court held that since
word "paper and pulp" was mentioned in the Schedule the
intention was to refer to the paper and pulp industry and
since Straw Board Industry could be described as forming
part of the paper and pulp industry it was entitled to
benefit.
The section, read as a whole, was a provision, directed
towards encouraging industrialisation by permitting an
assesse setting up a new undertaking to claim benefit to the
extent of six percent in a year on the capital employed. But
the legislature took care to restrict such benefit only to
those undertakings which were new in form and substance, by
providing that undertaking should not be ’formed’ in any
manner provided in Clause (i) of sub-section (2) of Section
15C. Each of these requirements, namely, formation of the
undertaking by splitting up or reconstruction of an existing
business or tansfer to the undertaking of building, raw
material or plant used in any previous business results in
denial of the benefit contempleted under sub-section (1)
Since a provision intended for promoting economic growth has
to be interpreted libeally the restriction on it, too, has
to be construed so as to advance the objective of the
section and not to frustrate it. But that turned out to be
the, unintended, consequence of construing the clause liter-
ally, as was done by the High Court for which it cannot be
blamed, as the provision is susceptible of such construction
if the purpose behind its enactment, the objective it sought
to achieve and the mischief it intended to control is lost
sight of. One way of reading it is that the clause excludes
any undertaking formed by transfer to it of any building,
plant or machinery used previously in any other business. No
objection could have been taken to such reading but when the
result of reading in such place and simple manner is analy-
sed
774
then it appears that literal construction would not be
proper. Taking facts of this case as illustration the
inherent fallacy surfaces. The Income Tax Officer found that
tools and implements worth Rs.3,500 used in earlier business
were transferred to it. They comprised of machines which
were of very minor nature. But for one spotwelling machine
the cost of which was Rs.1500, the other 13 items were of
value of Rs.100, Rs.200, Rs.300 or at most Rs.400. On plain
reading the effect of such transfer was operation of the
clause and denial of benefit to the assessee. But that would
be denial of very purpose for which the provision was
enacted. The Legislature by clause (1) of sub-section (2) of
Section 15C intended to control an attempt or effort to
abuse the benefit intended for new undertaking by change of
label.The intention was not to deny benefit to genuine new
industrial undertaking but to control the mischief which
might have otherwise taken place. The result was however
just the contrary. Any use of building or plant or machinery
howsoever nominal either because of compulsion or inadvert-
ence or sheer necessity fell in the mischief and the depart-
mental authorities, bound as they were with the provision of
the section, refused to grant exemption. High Courts also
differed in their approach. Various decisions which were
placed before us leave no room. Some related to transfer of
machinery to the new business and others to the building. In
respect of machinery the High Courts appear to be nearly
unanimous that where the value of transferred machinery was
low or meagre the assessee should not be denied the benefit.
For instance the Calcutta High Court in Commissioner of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 11
Income Tax, West Bengal- II v. Sainthia Rice and Oil Mills,
82 ITR [1971] 778 (Cal.) did not find any reason to deny the
benefit to the assessee where the undertaking was formed by
acquisition of part of machinery in second hand from open
market. But the decision which became the leading decision
on transfer of machinery was rendered by Delhi High Court in
Commisioner of Income Tax v. Ganga Sugar Corporation Ltd.,
92 ITR [1973] 173 (Delhi.) It has been follwed in nearly all
the decisions, given subsequently as it was approved by this
Court. It was held that use of scrap and material of the
unit of the value of a small fraction of the expenditure
involved in the setting up of the new unit did not attract
the concluding words of clause (i) of Section 15(2). The
Calcutta High Court in Commissioner of Income Tax, West
Bengal-I v. Electric Construction and Equipment Company Ltd.
(Cal.), 104 ITR [1976] 101, was of view that where machinery
previously used was ‘very small compared to the value of the
machinery installed’ the assessee was well within sub-
section
775
(1) of Section 15C. Same view was taken by the Bombay High
Court in Commissioner of Income Tax, Bombay City -I v.
Asbsestos, Magnesia & Friction Materials Ltd., 106 ITR
[1977] 286 and it was observed, that the important aspect to
be ‘considered must be the monetary value of the old assets
transferred to and utilised in the new undertaking’. In
Commissioner of Income Tax, Bombay City- I, v. Kopran
Chemical Co. Ltd., 112 ITR [1978] 893 the Court answered the
question in favour of assessee as the machinery transferred
to the new business was of ‘insignificant value’. In another
decision the Bombay High Court in Commissioner of Income
Tax, Bombay City-II v. Sawyer’s Asia Ltd., 122 ITR [1980]
259 while construing analogous provision, Section 84(2) of
1961 Act, opined that where machinery taken on hire formed
‘insignificant part of the total value’ the assessee could
not be denied the benefit. In the case of L.G. Balakrishnan
& Bros. Ltd. v Commissioner of Income-Tax, Mardras, 151 ITR
[1985] 270 the Madras High Court decided against the asses-
see not on proportion or value of the machinery transferred
but because lease of machinery amounted to transfer.
On transfer of building the decision of the Bombay High
Court on which reliance was placed by the High Court for
deciding the case against assessee shall be adverted to
later. But this was relied by the same High Court in
Commissioner of Income Tax, Bombay City-II v. Fordham
Pressing (India) Pvt.Ltd., 121 ITR 462 in a case where the
assessee took land with superstructure on lease, removed the
tin roofing extended the height of wall and covered the
ceiling with new roof. It was held that since the new
structure used by the assessee was not a totally new
structure the undertaking was formed by transfer of the
building used previously for business. In Commissioner of
Income Tax, Gujarat-IV v. Suessin Textile Bearing Ltd, 135
ITR [1982] 443, Gujarat High Court while deciding claim of
assessee under 1961 Act struck a dissenting note and ob-
served, ‘Practical common sense and commercial expediency
would necessitate the conclusion that in so far as a new
undertaking is being carried on in a building which was
previously being used by someone else or which was rented by
someone else other than the assessee and the new undertaking
being started for the first time by the assessee in the
newly rented premises, then, the third negative condition
cannot be said to be violated;
Thus so far transfer of machinery is concerned the
High Courts have consistently taken the view that if the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 11
value of transferred machinery was
776
nominal it could not result in denial of benefit to the
assessee. This conclusion was reached by construing the
provision either on principle of commercial expediency or
practical common sense or to avoid unjust hardship to the
assessee. This was legislatively recoginsed by Explanation
(2) to sub-section (4) of Section 80J of 1961 Act. Similarly
the ineligibility due to transfer of building was toned down
in the first instance by amending the provision in 1967 and
providing that any building used previously for business
purposes taken on lease by the new company would not be
covered in the mischief of clause (ii) of sub-section (4) of
Section 80J of 1961 Act. Later in 1976 it was deleted,
altogether, thus the restriction of the new undertaking not
being formed by transfer to a new business of building used
previously for any order business did not disentitle an
assessee from claiming the benefit for partial exemption.
Sri Ramamurthy the learned counsel for the department
urged that even though from analogous provision in Section
80J (4)(ii) in the Act of 1961 the restriction of transfer
of new business to the building used previously for business
has been omitted but that would not reflect favourably for
assessee in 1960-61. Rather it would show that the
legislature which is the best Judge of need of people,
manifests its intention from time to time through amendment,
substitution and omission considering the social and
economic conditions in view. Since during operation of 1921
Act it intended that an undertaking established in building
used earlier for business could not claim the benefit the
Court should restrain its hands and may not interpret the
provision by 1967 amendment in the 1961 Act, when the
restriction was lifted from leased or rented building or
1976 or when the transfer of business to building used
previously for business no more remained one of the
conditions for disentitling the assessee from claiming
benefit. Subsequently amendments in 1961 Act may or may not
be taken as clarificatory but if a provision for checking
abuse is found to have resulted in nullifying the very
purpose of its enactment and Legislature intervenes then it
can be assumed that the Legislature having been satisfied
of failure of the purpose for which the provisions was
inserted proceeded to cure the defect by suitably amending
the provision or removing it. But for purposes of construing
the proviso in Section 15C it is not necessary to go that
far as there can be no doubt that literal construction of
clause (1) of sub-section (2) was amenable to denial of
benefit to the assessee even in genuine cases. For instance
an undertaking otherwise entitled to benefit would fall
within mischief of the sub-clause if it was
777
established in a building which was used for business
purposes at any time in the remote past. Or it might have
been established in part of building, earlier used for
business purposes due to paucity of accommodation. Denying
benefit to such undertaking could not have been intended
when the very purpose of Section 15C was to encourage indus-
trialisation. It was for this reason that various High
Courts evolved the test of commercial expediency or substan-
tial involvement valued in terms of money etc. to interpret
this clause. Adopting literal construction in such cases
would have resulted in defeating the very purpose of Section
15C. Therefore it becomes necessary to resort to a construc-
tion which is reasonable and purposive to make the provision
meaningful.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 11
Initial exercise, therefore, should be to find out if
the undertaking was new. Once this test is satisfied then
clause (1) should be applied reasonably and liberally in
keeping with spirit of Section 15C(1) of the Act. While
doing so various situations may arise for instance the
formation may be without anything to do with any earlier
business. That is the undertaking may be formed without
splitting up or reconstructing any existing business or
without transfer of any building material or plant of any
previous business. Such an undertaking undoubtedly would be
eligible to benefit without any difficulty. On the other
extreme may be an undertaking new in its form but not in
substance. It may be new in name only. Such an undertaking
would obviously not be entitled to the benefit. In between
the two there may be various other situations. The
difficulty arises in such cases. For instance a new company
may be formed, as was in this case a fact which could not be
disputed, even by the Income Tax Officer. But tools and
implements worth Rs.3,500 were transferred to it of previous
firm. Technically speaking it was transfer of material used
in previous business. One could say as that vehemently urged
by the learned counsel for the department that where the
language of statute was clear there was no scope for
interpretation. If the submission of the learned counsel is
accepted then once it is found that the material used in the
undertaking was of a previous business there was an end of
enquiry and the assessee was precluded from claiming any
benefit. Words of a statute are undoubtedly the best guide.
But if their meaning gets clouded then the courts required
to clear the haze. Sub-section (2) advances the objective of
sub-section (1) by including in it every undertaking except
if it is covered by clause (i) for which it is necessary
that it should not be formed by transfer of building or
machinery. The restriction or denial of benefit arises not
by transfer of building or
778
material to the new company but that it should not be formed
by such transfer. This is the sky to the interpretation. The
formation should not be by such transfer. The emphasis is on
formation not on use. Therefore it is not every transfer of
building or material but the one which can be held to have
resulted in formation of the undertaking. In Textile Machin-
ery Corporation Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income Tax, West
Bengal, 107 [1977] 195 SC this Court while interpreting
Section 15C observed:
"The true test, is not whether the new industrial
undertaking connoted expansion of the existing
business of the assessee but whether it is all the
same a new and identifiable undertaking separate
and distinct from the existing business. No
particular decision in one case can lay down an
inexorable test to determine whether a given case
comes under section 15C or not. In order that the
new undertaking can be said to be not formed out
of the already existing business, there must be a
new emergence of a physically separate industrial
unit which may exist on its own as a viable unit.
An undertaking is formed out of the existing
business if the physical identity with the old
unit is preserved."
Even though this decision was concerned with the clause
dealing with reconstruction of existing business but the
expression ‘not formed’ was construed to mean that the
undertaking should not be a continuation of the old but
emergence of a new unit. Therefore even if the undertaking
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 11
is established by transfer of building, plant or machinery
but it is not formed as a result of such transfer the asses-
see could not be denied the benefit.
Reverting to the Bombay decision on which the High
Court relied for answering the question against the assessee
we would assume for purposes of this case that lease of the
building amounted to transfer. Yet what is significant is
that the High Court did not examine the impact of word
‘formed’. It proceeded on basis that once lease amounted to
transfer the assessee became ineligible from claiming any
exemption. The Court further repelled the contention
advanced on behalf of assessee on strength of Caluctta
decision in Commissioner of Income Tax, West Bengal-II v.
Sainthia Rice & Oil Mills, 82 ITR [1971] 778 Cal. that
transfer of building to the new business to disentitle the
undertaking should have been of the assessee himself. In our
opinion this aspect of the Bombay decision was
779
correctly decided and the tribunal was not justified in
deciding in favour of assessee on this ground. We therefore
endorse the view of Bombay High Court and Punjab and Haryana
High Court in Phagoo Mal Sant Ram v. Commissioner of Income
Tax, Patiala , 74 ITR [1969] 734 of this extent that,
‘previously used in any other business’ cannot be construed
so narrowly as to confine it to building of the assessee
only. But we do not approve of the Bombay view that if a new
undertaking is established in a premises taken on lease then
it, always, amounts to formation of the undertaking by
transfer of the building previously used as the decision was
given without examining the scope of the word ‘formed’ which
as we have indicated above, was construed by this Court in
Textile Machinery Corporation Ltd which approved a decision
of Delhi High Court in Commissioner of Income Tax v. Ganga
Sugar Corporation Ltd. ‘Form’ according to the dictionary
has different meanings. In the context in which it has been
used it was intended to connote that the body of the company
or its shape did not come up in consequence of transfer of
building, machinery or plant used previously for business
purpose. Use of the negative before word ‘formed’further
strengthens it. In other words building, machinery or plant
used previously in other business should not result in the
undertaking being formed by it. The transfer to take out the
new undertaking out of purview of sub-section (1) must be
such that but for transfer the new undertaking could not
have come into being. In our opinion, on facts found by the
tribunal, the part played by taking the building on lease
was not dominant in formation of the company. The High Court
was therefore not justified in answering the question in
favour of the revenue.
The appeals accordingly succeed and are allowed. The
order of the High Court is set aside. The question of law
raised by the department in the High Court is answered
against it and it is held that in the facts and
circumstances of the case the assessee was entitled to
partial exemption under Section 15C of the Act. Reference
before the High Court shall accordingly stand answered in
favour of the assessee and against the revenue.
The assessee shall be entitled to its costs.
N.P.V. Appeals allowed.