Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, BOMBAY CITY , BOMBAY
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BAI SHIRINBAI K. KOOKA
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
23/02/1962
BENCH:
DAS, S.K.
BENCH:
DAS, S.K.
KAPUR, J.L.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
SARKAR, A.K.
SUBBARAO, K.
WANCHOO, K.N.
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
CITATION:
1963 AIR 477 1962 SCR Supl. (3) 391
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1963 SC 577 (16,25)
E&D 1964 SC 318 (6,8)
R 1964 SC1464 (9,10,11)
E 1966 SC 4 (19)
R 1966 SC1514 (12)
E 1968 SC 761 (6)
R 1979 SC 376 (2)
R 1986 SC 368 (16)
RF 1992 SC 604 (92)
ACT:
Income-tax-Profits-Shares purchased by assessee for
investment-Sales of Shares subsequently as trading activity
Computation of profit.
HEADNOTE:
The assessee purchased shares by way of investment in 1939-
40 at a cost price which was much less than their market
value on April 1, 1945. Her dividend income therefrom was
assessed to income tax. In the financial year 1945-46 the
assesee converted these shares into her stock-in-trade and
carried on business in the shares. Per income for the
assessment year 1946-47 was computed on the basis of the
profits which she made by the sale of her shares as a
trading activity. The assessee contended that the cost
price of the shares for computing the profits was their
market value at the beginning of the year when she started
the trading activity, i. e., on April 1, 1945. The
Department contended that the cost Price of the shares was
the actual price for which they were purchased by the
assessee, no matter when she bought them and for what
purpose.
Held (per Das, Kapur, Gajendragadkar, Subba Rao, Wanchoo and
Ayyangar, jj. Sarkar, J., contra), that the profits
392
of the assessee from her business or trading activity must
be computed on the basis that the market value of the shares
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as on April 1, 1945, was the cost price of the shares for
the business. The basis must be the ordinary commercial
principle on which actual profits are computed, and
normally, the commercial profits out of a transaction of
sale of an article are the differences, between what the
article cost the business and what it fetched on sale. In
Kikabhai Premchand v. Commissioner of Income-tax, the
Supreme Court was considering the converse case and the
principles laid down in that case were (1) that there was no
general principle of taxation under income-tax law under
which the State could assess a person on the basis of
business profits that he might have made but had not chosen
to make, and (2) that it was unreal to separate the business
from its owner. Those principles have no application in the
present case which is not a case of any potential future
advantage; the admitted position in the present case is that
there was a sale of the shares in question in pursuance of a
trading or business activity and actual profits had resulted
from the sale. The question here is how such commercial
profits are to be calculated. In a trading or commercial
sense the only fair measure of assessing such trading
profits is to take the market value at one end and the
actual sale proceeds at, the other. This is more in accord
with reality than fiction.
Sir Kikabhai Premchand v. Commissioner of Income-tax
(Central), Bombay, [1954] S. C. R. 219, Sharkey v. Wernher
(1955) 36 T. C. 275, referred to.
Per, Sarkar J.-The assessee’s taxable profits on the sale of
the shares earlier held as investment are the difference
between the sale price and the price at which she had ac-
tually bought those shares, The profits could not be compu-
ted on the basis of a fictional sale by the assessee to
herself on April 1, 1945. The case was governed by the
principles laid down by the Supreme Court in Kikabhai’s
case. The decision of the House of Lords in Sharkey v.
Wernher, which took a contrary view, was not preferable to
that of the Supreme Court in Kikabhai’s case.
Sir Kikabhai Premchand v. Commissioner of Income- tax
(Central), Bombay, ] 1954] S. C. R. 219, followed.
Sharkey v. Wernher, [1955] 36 T.C. 2 75, not approved.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 133 of
1958.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment
393
and order dated March 6, 1956, of the Bombay High Court in
I. T. R. No. 49 of 1955.
H.AT. Additional Solicitor-General of India, K. N.
Rajagopal Sastri, R. H. Dhebar and P. D. Menon, for the
appellant.
N.A. Palkhivala, B. K. B. Naidu and I. N. Shroff, for the
respondent.
1962. February 23. The Judgment of Das, Kapur,
Gajendragadkar, Subba. Rao, Wanchoo and Ayyangar, JJ., was
delivered by Das, J., Sarkar, J. delivered a separate
judgment.
S.K. DAS, J.-This is an appeal by special, leave grante I
by this Court on September 17, 1956. The Commissioner of
Income-tax, Bombay, City 1, is the appellant before us. The
respondent is Bai Shirinbai K. Kooka, who will be referred
to in this judgment as the assessee.
The assessee is a Parsi lady who held by way of investment a
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large number of shares of different companies. These shares
were purchased before the end of and after 1939-40 at a
cost-price which was much less than their market value on
April 1, 1945. Her dividend income was assessed to income-
tax for several year prior to April 1, 1945 ; but in the
assessment year’1946-47, the relevant accounting year being
financial year 1945-46, the Incometax Officer found that the
assessee had converted her shares into her stock-in-trade
and carried on a trading activity, viz. a business in
shares. Her income for the assessment year 1916-47 was
therefore computed oil the basis of the profits which she
made by the sale of her shares as a trading activity, the
profits being calculated on the difference between the
ruling mar:,Let price at the begining Of the account year
And the sale proceeds. -For the assessment year 1947-48, the
relevant accounting year being the financial year 1946-47,
it was found by the Income-tax Officer that tile sale
proceeds of the shares which the assessee had sold amounted
to
394
Ro. 5,49,487/. . The Income-tax Officer calculated the
profits in the following manner :
Sale proceeds ... Rs. 5,49,487
Cost calculated on the basis of
the market price of the shares
at the beginning of the account
year ... Rs. 4,50,822
-------------
... Rs. 98,655
Less: Forward business loss ... Rs. 25,344
-------------
Net profit ... Rs. 73,321
-------------
The assessee then appealed to the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner who enhanced the income of the aasessee by a
sum of Rs. 2,91,307/- including a capital gain of Rs.
37,590/- The Appellate Assistant Commissioner proceeded on
the footing that the profit earned by the assessee on the
sale of the shares -was the difference between the original
cost price of the shares and the sale proceeds. He further
held that the some of the shares which were sold in the
account year 1946-47 were the assessee’s stock-in-trade,
while some other shares were her investment shares. Then,
there was an appeal to the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal and
the principal point taken before the Tribunal related to the
question as to how the profits of the assessee on the sale
of her shares should be calculated. The Judicial Member of
the Tribunal accepted the view expressed by the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner and held that the original cost price
of the shares must be taken in order to find out the profits
which the assessee had made on the sale of the shares. The
Accountant Member agreed, however, with the view of the
Income-tax Officer and held that the market value of the
shares as on the date when
395
they ’were converted into stock-in-trade by the assessee
should be taken into consideration for the purpose of
ascertaining the profits made by the assessee on the sale of
those shares. On this difference between the two members of
the Tribunal, the matter was referred. to the President of
the Tribunal. The President agreed with the view of the
Accountant Member. The Tribunal was then moved by the
appellant to state a case to the High Court of Bombay on the
question of law which arose out of the Tribunal’s order,
namely, what should be the basis of computation of the
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profits made by the assessee by the sale of her shares in
the relevant year. The Tribunal came to the conclusion that
the question as to when the assessee became a dealer in
shares or when the assessee turned her investment shares
into her stock-in-trade, was a question of fact, and the
only question of law that arose was as to how the profit was
to be computed. Accordingly, the Tribunal framed the
question of law in the following terms:
"Whether the asseessee’s profit on the sale of
shares is the difference between the sale
price and the cost price, or the difference
between the sale price and the market price
prevailing on 1-4-1945 ? "
The aforesaid question of law was then referred the High
Court of Bombay under s. 66(1) of the Indian Income-tax Act,
1922 (XI of 1922). This was Income-tax Reference No. 49 of
1955. The reference was heard by a Division Bench
consisting of Chagla, C. J. and Tendolkar, J. By its
judgment and order dated March 6, 1956, the High Court
answered the question in favour of the assessee and held
that the assessee’s assessable profit on the sale of shares
was the difference between the sale price and the market
price prevailing on April 1, 1945. The appellant having
unsuccessfully moved the High Court for a
396
certificate under s. 66A (2) of the Income-tax Act, applied
for special leave to this Court.. Such leave was granted by
this court by an order dated September 17, 1956.
This appeal was heard in part by a Bench of three Judges
presided over by the learned Chief Justice, who directed
that it be posted for hearing before a Bench consisting
of’seven Judges, presumably because one of the points urged
before the Bench was whether the majority , decision of this
Court in Sir KiKabai Premchand v. Commissioner of Income tax
(Central), Bombay(1) required reconsideration. It may 1),
here started that. the learned Judges of the High Court
before them the decision in Kikabhai’s case (1) and they
considered that decision carefully and bold that the
decision could be distinguished, firstly, on the, ground
that the problem which the High Court had before it in the
present case was the content of taxable profits in a
commercial sense out of the amount actually received by the
assessee by a sale of her shares, whereas the problem in
Kikabhai case(1) was of a different nature, namely, whether
it was open to the department to tax an assessee on a
fictional sale or potential profits, and, secondly, on the
ground that the principle laid down in Kikabhai’s case had
no application to a case where real or actual profits, as
distinguished from fictional profits, have to be allocated
or attributed to the trading activity. One of the points
which we have to consider in this appeal is whether, on
principle, the distinction drawn by the High Court is
correct or whether the ratio of Kikabhai’s case (1) should
govern the present case,
As we have stated earlier, the problem is how should the
profit made by the assessee by a sale of her shares as a
trading activity be computed, it being not in dispute that
there was in this case a real
(1) [1954] S.C.R. 219,
397
sale resulting in actual profits. The High Court, first
emphasised the point, which has not been controverted before
us, that in order to arrive at real profits one must
consider the accounts of the business on commercial
principles and construe profits in their normal and natural
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sense, a sense which no commercial man will misunderstand.
It then pointed out that what the shares cost originally to
the assessee at a time when she had no business or, trading
activity, could not, in a commercial sense, be said to be
the cost of the shares to the business which started on
April 1, 1945, the original cost, was really a matter of
historical record and it had no relevance in the
determination or ascertainment of profits which the business
made. Obviously,, the whole of the sale proceeds or
receipts could not be treated as profits and made liable to
tax, for that would make no sense a portion only of the
receipts can be treated as profit-bat ’what portion?
Normally, the commercial profits out of the transaction of a
sale of in article is the difference between what the
article costs the business and what it fetches on sale. The
High Court pointed out that when the assesses purchased the
shares at a lesser price, that is what they cost her, and
not’ the business; but so. far as the business was concer-
ned, the shares cost the business nothing more or less than
their market value on April 1, 1945.
The learned Additional Solicitor General who’ has appeared
on behalf of the appellant in this case has contested the
correctness of the above line of approach. He has
submitted, firstly, that the distinction drawn by the High
Court between Kikabhai’s case (1) and the present case is
not warranted on principle: secondly, he has contended that
the ratio in Kikabhai’s case (1) should apply in the present
case also; and thirdly, he has contended that in holding
that the price of the shares should be the market price as
on April 1, 1945, when the shares were converted into stook-
in-trade the High Court
(1) [1954] S.C.R. 219.
398
In effect held by a legal fiction that the assessee had
realised the potential profits on the said shares on that
date which she had not actually done and Hence the very
basis of the judgment of the High court is vitiated by the
assumption of a fiction. The learned Additional Solicitor-
General has also submitted that there was no warrant for the
High court to introduce a legal fiction that there was a
notional sale of the shares on April 1, 1945, by the
assessee and that the gains which accrued to the assessee on
that sale were capital gains; this notional sale it is
submitted, violates the basic principle that a man cannot
sell to himself nor can he make a loss or profit out of
transactions with himself
We propose now to examine these arguments in some detail.
The question raised is a short question but a difficult one.
In order to examine the arguements urged on behalf of the
appellant, it is necessary first to refer to the decision of
this Court in Kikabhai’s case (1) The facts of that case
were these. The assessee there was a dealer in silver and
shares and he maintained his accounts according to the
mercantile system and valued his stock at cost price both in
the beginning and at the end of the year. During the
relevant accounting year he withdrew some silver bars and
shares from the business and settled them on certain trusts
in which he was the managing trustee and in his books of
account he credited the business with the cost price of the
silver bars and shares so withdrawn. The income-tax
authorities assessed him to tax on the basis of the
difference between the cost price of the silver bars and
shares and their market value at the date of their
withdrawal from the business. The High Court of’ Bombay’
upheld the action of the income tax authorities. This
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Court, however, by a majority decision came to the
conclusion that the assessee was entitled to value the
silver bars
(1) [1954] S. C. R. 219.
399
and shares withdrawn at cost price and was not bound to
credit the business with their market value at the close of
the year for ascertaining the assessable profits for the
year. Bhagwati, J., who expressed the dissentient view said
that so far as the business was concerned it made no
difference whether the stock-in-trade was realised or with-
drawn from the business and the business was entitled to be
credited with the market value of the assets withdrawn as at
the date of the withdrawal, whatever be the method employed
by the assessee for the valuation of its stock-in-trade on
hand at the close of the year. The majority view was exp-
ressed by Bose, J., who dealt with the two contentions of
the learned Attorney General who appeared for the Revenue
(respondent) in that case. The Attorney General’s first
contention was that as the silver bars and shares were
brought into the business, any withdrawal of them from the
business must be dealt with along ordinary and well-known
business lines, namely, that if a person withdraws an asset
from a business he must account for it to the business at
the market rate prevailing at the date of the withdrawal.
This contention was repelled by the majority on the ground
that the transaction of withdrawal was not a business
transaction and by the act of withdrawal the business made
no profit or gain nor did it sustain a loss and the assessee
derived no income from it. It was pointed out that the
assessee might have stored up a future advantage for himself
but as the transactions of withdrawal were not business
transactions and the assessee derived no immediate pecuniary
gain, the State could not tax them; for under the Income-tax
Act the State has no power to tax a potential future
advantage, all it can tax is income, profits and gains made
in the relevant accounting year. In other words, the ratio
of the decision as respects the first contention of the
learned Attorney General was that there was no general
principle of taxation
400
under income-tax law under which the State could assess a
person on the basis of business profits that he might have
made but had not chosen to make. It was also pointed out
that it was unreal and artificial to separate ’the business
from its owner and treat them as if they were separate en-
tities trading with each other and then by means of a
fictional sale introduce a fictional profit which in truth
and in fact was non existent. It was pointed out that a man
could not trade with - himself nor could he make profit or
loss out of transactions with himself. ’rho. second
contention of the learned Attorney General was that if the
act of withdrawal was at a time when the market price wits
higher than the cost price then the State was deprived of a
potential profit. This contention was dismissed as unsound
because, for income-tax purposes each year is a self-
contained accounting period and one must take into
consideration income, profits and gains made in that year
and the assessing authority was not concerned with potential
profits which might be made in another year.
From what has been stated above it would at once appear that
Kikabhai’s case (1) was the converse of the present case.
In Kikabhai’s case (1) a part of the stock-in-trade was
withdrawn from business, there was no sale nor any actual
profit. The ratio of the decision was simply this: under
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the Income-tax Act the State has no power to tax a potential
future advantage and all it can tax is income, profits and
gains made in the relevant accounting year. In the case
under our consideration the admitted position is that there
has been a sale of the shares in pursuance of a trading or
business activity and actual profits have resulted from the
sale. The question in the present case is not whether the
State has a power to tax potential future advantage, but the
question is how should actual profits
(1) [1954] S. C. R. 219.
401
be computed when admittedly there has been a sale in the
business sense and actual profits have resulted therefrom.
We agree with the High Court that in this respect there is a
vital difference between the problem presented by Kikabhai’s
case (1) and the problem in the present case. We. further
agree with the view expressed by the High Court that the
ratio in Kikabhai’s case (1) need not necessarily be
extended to the very different problem presented in the
present case, not only because the facts are different, but
because there is an appreciable difference in the principle.
The. difference lies in this : in one case there is no
question of any business sale or actual profits and in the
other admittedly there are profits liable to tax, but the
question is how the profits should be computed. We must,
therefore, overrule the first two arguments of the learned
Additional Solicitor General that the distinction drawn by
the High Court between Kikabhai’s case (1) and the present
case is not warranted on principle and that the ratio of the
decision in Kikabhai’s case (1) must necessarily apply to
the present case also.
While we are on this question we, must refer to a decision
of the House of Lords in Sharkey v. Wernher (2) to which our
attention has been drawn. Briefly put, the facts of that
case were these : the wife of the assessee there carried on
a stud farm, the profits of which were agreed to be
chargeable to income-tax under case I of Schedule D. She
also carried on the activities of horse racing and training,
which were agreed not to constitute trading. Five horses
were transferred from the stud farm to the racing stables.
The cost of breeding these horses was debited to the stud
farm accounts. On the question of the amount to be credited
as a receipt the assessee contended before the Special
Commissioners that the proper figure to be brought in
respect of the transferred horses was the cost of
(1) 1 [1954] S.C.R. 219.
(2) (1955) 36 T.C. 275.
402
breeding. The Crown contended that the market value of the
animals, which was considerably higher, was the proper
figure. The Commissioners decided in favour of the assessee
and the Crown demanded a case. The case was first heard by
Vaisey, J., who following the decision in Watson Bros. v.
Hornby (1), held that the market value of the five horses
transferred from the stud farm was the proper figure that
should be credited in the accounts. Vaisey, J. based his
decision on the ground that the case was indistinguishable
in principle from an earlier decision, namely, that of
Macnaghten, J.. in Watson Bros. v. Hornby (1). We may here
state that in Watson Bros. v. Hornby (1)the assessee carried
on the business of poultry breeders and dealers. In
addition to keeping birds on their farm for laying purposes,
they had a hatchery which produced chicks primarily for sale
as ’day-old checks’. Some of these chicks were transferred
to brooder houses and became part of the stock on the farm.
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The assessees were assessed to income-tax under schedule Din
respect of the profits of the hatchery part of their
business and under Schedule B in respect of the profits of
the farm. The question that arose in that case was whether
the day-old chicks transferred to the farm should be
credited as stock at the average price at which they were
sold and could have been bought in the open market, namely,
4d. per chick, and that the difference between that price
and the admitted cost of production of each saleable day-old
chick, 7d., was an allowable loss. The Crown contended that
the hatchery and the farm were two activities of the same
person who could not make a loss by transferring from one
department to the other and therefore the chicks should be
credited to the hatchery account at production cost. It was
held by Macnaghten, J., that in the notional sale between
the hatchery and the farm, which should be treated as
separate entities, the price to be credited was the
"’reasonable price" laid down by s. 8 of the
(1) (1942) 24 T.C. 506.
403
Sale of Goods Act, 1893, and that on the admitted evidence
this reasonable price must be the market price of 4d. per
chick. This was the decision which Vaisey, J. followed.
From the decision of Vaisey, J. there was an appeal to the
Court of Appeal. The Court of Appeal referred to two of its
own decisions, namely, Layrock v. Freeman, Hardy & Wills (1)
and Briton Perry Steel Co. Ltd. v. Barry (2) and held that
the principle stated and the reasoning underlying the
judgment of Sir Wilfrid Greene, M. R. in the Briton Ferry
Steel Co. Ltd. v. Barry (2) were inconsistent with the
conclusion in Watson Bros. v. Hornby(3). The Court of
Appeal accordingly allowed the appeal. Sir Raymond
Evershed, M.R., (as he then was) said, however, that if the
matter wore res integra, he would have been inclined to hold
that for the purpose of the stud farm account if one were
seeking to put a value on the animals transferred the value
must be that which the animals were in fact worth. He
expressed the view, however., that the matter was not res
integra and as a result of the authorities referred to above
which expounded the general principle to be applied, he
allowed the appeal. The case was then taken to the House of
Lords. The House of Lords decided in favour of the Crown,
Lord Oaksey dissenting. Viscount Simonds thus expressed his
views in his speech at page 299 of the report:
"But it appears to me that when it has been
admitted or determined that an article forms
part of the stock-in-trade of the trader, and
that upon his parting with it so that it no
longer forms part of his stock-in-trade some
sum must appear in his trading account as
having been received in respect of it, the
only logical way to treat it is to regard it
as having been disposed of by way of trade.
If so, I see no reason for ascribing to it any
(1) 22 T.C. 288.
(2) 23 T.C. 414.
(3) (1942) 24 T.C. 506.
404
other sum than that which he would normally
have received for it in the due course of
trade, that is to say, the market value. As I
have already indicated, there seems to me, to
be no justification for the only alternative
that has been suggested. namely, the cost of
production. The unreality of this alternative
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would be plain to the taxpayer. If, as well
might happen, a very large service fee had
been paid so that the cost of production was
high and the market value did not equal it."
Lord Radcliffe pointed out that when a horse was transferred
from the stud farm to the owner’s personal account, there
was a disposition of trading stock, though the disposition
might not be by way of trade. He then referred to three
methods of recording the result of the disposition in the
stud farm trading accounts. One of them was that there
might be no entry of a receipt at all and Lord Radcliffe
pointed out that this method would give the self supplier an
unfair tax advantage. The second method would be to enter
the cost price; this again would be fictional, because, no
sale in the legal sense bad taken place, nor had there been
any actual receipt. The third method was to enter as a
receipt a figure equivalent to the current realisable value
of the stock item transferred. Lord Radcliffe gave two
grounds in favour of the third method. The first ground was
that it gave a fairer measure of assessable trading profit
as between one taxpayer and another, for it eliminated
variations which were due to no other cause than any one
taxpayer’s decision as to what proportion of his total
product he would supply to himself. The second ground was
that it was better economics to credit the trading owner
with current realisable value of any stock which he bad
chosen to dispose of without commercial disposal than to
credit him with an amount equivalent to the accumulated
expenses in respect of that stock.
405
It is worthy of note that the facts in Sharkey v. Wernher
(1) were similar to the facts of Kikcabhai’s case(1). In
both those cases what had happened was that a part of the
stock-in-trade was withdrawn and the question was at what
figure in the trading accounts the withdrawal should be
accounted for. In Kikabhai’s case (2) this Court came to
the conclusion that the withdrawal should be at the cost
price. In Sharkey v. Wernher (1) the house of Lords hold
that the proper figure should be the market value which give
a fairer measure of assessable trading profit. It is
significant that the House of Lords reached that conclusion
not without dissent. If the facts of the case which we are
now considering were similar to the facts of Kikcabhai’s
case (2), it might have been necessary for us to reexamine
the, ratio of the decision. It is necessary to state here,
however, that the decision of the House of Lords in Sharkey
v. Wernher (1) is an authority which is binding on us. It
is only an authority of persuasive value entitled to great
respect.
In an earlier part of this judgment we have taken pains to
point out the distinction between Kikabhai’s case (2) and
the case under our consideration. In view of that
distinction, we do not think that it is really necessary in
the present case to reexamine the ratio of the decision in
Kikabhai’s case (3). What then is the basis for computing
the actual profits in the present case ? We think that the
basis must be, as the High Court has put it, the ordinary
commercial principles on which actual profits are computed.
We think that the approach of the High Court was correct and
normally the commercial profits out of the transaction of
sale of an article must be the difference between what the
cost the business and what it fetched on sale. So far as
the business or trading activity was concerned, the market
value of the shares as on April 1,
(1) [1955] 36 T.C. 275.
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(2) [1954] S.C.R. 219.
406
1945, was what it costs the business. We do not think that
there is any question of a notional sale here. The High
Court did not create any legal fiction of a sale when it
took the market value as on April 1, 1945 as the proper
figure for determining the actual profits made by the
assessee. That the assessee later sold the shares in
pursuance of a trading activity was not in dispute; that
sale was an actual sale and not a notional sale ; that
actual sale resulted in some profits. The problem is how
should those profits be computed ? To adopt the language of
Lord Radcliffe, the only fair measure of assessing trading
profits in such circumstances is to take the market value at
one end and the actual sale proceeds at the other, the
difference between the two being the profit or loss as the
case may be. In a trading or commercial sense this seems to
us to accord more with reality than with fiction.
For these reasons we hold that the answer given by the High
Court to the question of law referred to it was correct.
The appeal accordingly fails and is dismissed with costs.
SARKAR, J.-Two questions arise in this Appeal. The first is
whether the judgment of the Court, below is against the
decision of this Court in Sir Kikabhai Premchand v.
Commissioner of Income-tax.(1) The second is, if so, does
the decision in Kikabhai’s case(1) require reconsideration ?
It appears that in Sharkey v. Wernher(1) where the question
was the same as in Kikabhai’s case(1) and which was decided
a little later than that case, the House of Lords took a
view contrary to that taken in Kikabhai’s case. It was on
the basis of the reasoning on which Sharkey’s case (2) was
founded that the learned advocate for the respondent
contended that Kikabhai’s case requires reconsideration.
The assessee in the present case is a lady of
(1) [1954] S.C.R. 219; [1957] 23 1. T. R. 506.
(2) [1956] A.C. 58 ; 36 T.C. 275.
407
some means. For many year past she had been holding various
shares by way of investment on the dividends of which she
was being charmed to income-tax. In assessing the tax for
the assessment year 1946-47, the accounting period of which
was the financial year 1945-46, it was found that the
assessee had been carrying on business with some of the said
shares since April, 1945. It is not in dispute that in the
accounting year 1946-47 also, which is the year with which
we are concerned, she carried on the business with various
such shares.
A question arose in connection with the assessment of tax
for 1946-47 as to how the profits of her trading activities
were to be ascertained. The trade was one of purchase and
sale of shares. It is common ground that the profits of
such a trade are the difference between what the thing sold
fetched and what it cost to acquire. The question arose
because difficulty was felt in fixing tile cost of
acquisition. In regard to shares acquired by the assessee
for her trade after she started it, the position was not in
controversy, for the cost in respect of such shares was
admittedly what he bought them for. The controversy
concerned the shares with which she traded in this year and
which, prior to April. 1, 1945, she had been holding as
investment, having acquired them, it may be, quite a few
years ago. The assessee contended that the cost of
acquisition of this latter variety of shares-and with these
alone we are concerned in this appeal, was their market
value on the date when she started her business and thereby
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converted them from investment into stock-in-trade, of her
business. The State contended that the cost of acquisition
of these shares would be what she bought them for, no matter
When she bought them and for what purpose. The Tribunal
accepted by a majority the, contention of the assessee. At
the instance of the State the Tribunal then referred the
following
408
question to the High Court at Bombay under s.66(1) of the
Income-tax Act:
"Whether the assessee’s assessable profits on
the sale of shares is the difference between
the sale price and the cost price, or the
difference between the sale price and the
market price prevailing on 1-4-1945."
The High Court held that the assessable profits were the
difference between the sale price and the market value of
the shares prevailing on April 1, 1945. The State has filed
this appeal against the decision of the High Court.
The State contends that the High Court’s decision is the
judgment of this Court in Kikabhai’s case.(1). That is the
first question which I propose to discuss. The assessee in
Kikabhai’s case was a dealer in shares and silver. The
method employed by him in keeping his accounts was to enter
the cost price of his stock at the beginning, of the year,
to credit the sale proceeds of the stock’ sold during the
year and value the unsold stock at the end of the year at
cost price, these latter being carried forward as the
opening entries of the next year’s accounts. It appeared
that the assessee had withdrawn some silver and shares from
his business and settled these upon certain trusts. In the
accounts he entered the silver and shares so withdrawn at
their cost price. The State contended that these should
have been entered in the accounts at their market value on
the date they were withdrawn from the business. This Court
found this contention unacceptable and held that the entry
should be of the cost price and not of the market value on
that date.
It had been contended on behalf of the State that "As this
is a business, any withdrawal of the assets is a business
matter and this only feasible way of regarding it in a
business light is to enter
(1) (1954) S.C.R. 219; [1957] 23 T.T.R. 506.
409
the market price at the date of the withdrawal," and that
"if- a person withdraws an asset from a business he must
account for it to the business at the market rate prevailing
at the date of the withdrawal." In dealing with these
contentions this Court observed, " It is impossible to (yet
away from the fact that the business is owned and run by the
assessee himself. In such circumstances we are of opinion
that it is unreal and artificial to separate the business
from its owner and treat them as if they were separate
entities trading with each other and then by-means of a
fictional sale introduce a fictional profit which in truth
and in fact is nonexistent. Cat away the fictions and you
reach the position that the man is supposed to be selling to
himself and thereby making a profit out of himself which on
the fact of it is not only absurd but against all canons of
mercantile and income-tax law."
The decision in Kikabhai’s case (1) was however by a
majority, Bhagwati J. having taken a contrary view. For the
purpose of the present question I will have to confine
myself to the judgment of the majority.
It seems to me that the argument of the respondent in the
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present case is the same as that of the Attorney-General in
Kikabhai’s case. She says that she is entitled to debit the
accounts of her business with the market value of the shares
as on the date of their conversion into stock-in-trade, that
is, April 1, 1945. She can no doubt do that if she had
acquired then on that date, from ’the market. But this she
did not do. So she is compelled to rely on a fictional
purchase by her from herself at the market rate of that date
to sustain her contention. Kikabhai’s case definitely held
that no one can be supposed to be trading, with himself for
the purpose of ascertaining taxable profits. A fiction
therefore that one has done so is not permissible. To hold
that the assesses is entitled to enter in the
(1) [1954] S.C.R. 219 ; [1957] 23 I.T.R. 506.
410
accounts of her business, the market value of the shares on
April 1, 1945, would be to go directly against the decision
in Kikabhai’s case and the ratio on which it was based.
It was said that Kikabhai’s case dealt with a fictional sale
and potential or notional profits whereas in the present
case there was actual trading in the shares and the problem
here is to ascertain the profits of that trade. I am not
sure that the distinction so sought to be made is really
possible. Both the cases dealt with the assessment of the
profits of an entire trading activity of a person. There
were real profits in both cases and the question in each
was, how to assess them. The difficulty in one case arose
because a particular stock acquired for the trade had been
withdrawn from it and in the other, because a particular
stock not acquired for the trade had been used for its
purposes. The question in each case was, what value was to
be put on the stock concerned for assessing the profits of
the trade as a whole. It would be incorrect to split up the
entire trade and to treat the deal in each stock separately
and I do not think Kikabhai’s case (1) did so. So
considered the state would have no basis for any claim in
Kikabhai’s case for then there would have been no business
at all to tax. It was therefore that in Kikabhai’s case the
State contended that the stock had been "’brought into the
business" and on that basis only could it advance by
argument. It was this argument advanced on that basis that
this Court considered and rejected, The Court did Dot
consider the profits of a particular item of trade by
itself. So the Court did not consider notional profits in
the sense indicated by the distinction now sought to be made
between the two cases, The present case is the same, for
here also the question is what are the profits of the
assessee’s entire trade, that is, how is the cost price to
be calculated for
(1) [1954] S.C.R.219;[1957]23 I.T.R.506.
411
that purpose ? Here also, if the sale of the investment
sharer by themselves was concerned there would in all
probability have been no trading and no question of
assessing the profits of such trading would have arisen
Therefore, both cases dealt with the assessment of actual
profits ; none was concerned with assessment of notional
profits.
But suppose the two cases are different as suggested, that
doe,; not seem to me to make any distinction., In Kikabhai’s
case (1) it had been held that the withdrawal was not
trading because a ’man could not trade with himself. In the
present case the assessee did no doubt trade by selling her
shares to a stranger. There was no fiction in this trade.
But when the assessee contends that in ascertaining the
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profits of a trading transaction actually lone by her she
should be permitted to value the stock involved in that
trading activity which she had not acquired in the course of
her trade at the market value of the date of the
commencement of that trade
She really says that she should be allowed to proceed on the
basis of a fiction that she had purchased from herself on
that date for she had not then purchased it at all. She
would be asking us to hold that which Kikabhai’s case
refused to hold. I, amenable to agree that in the case of a
real sale Kikabhai’s case does not forbid a dichotomy
between the owner of a business and the. business itself for
ascertaining the profits of that sale as the assessee wants
us to do.
It was also said that to apply the principle that one cannot
trade with himself to the present case would be overlooking
the actual fact that money’s worth was brought into the
business. I am unable to appreciate this contention. There
is no overlooking of the money’s worth brought in, for
(1)[1954] S. C. R. 219; [1957] 2 3 1. T. R. 506,
412
that money’s worth is value at the cost at which the stock
concerned was actually acquired from the market, may be as
an investment and not as a stock in trade. I am unable to
appreciate how it can be said that any money’s worth would
be over looked which, I Will assume, no business in will do
in calculating his profits if the shares are not valued at
the market value of the day on which they are brought into
the trade but are valued at the price it which actually they
had been previously acquired by the assessee. The real
question is what were the shares’ worth in money for
calculating the profits. The contention of the respondent
assumes that the money’s worth must be calculated as on the
date of the commencement of the trade and hence really begs
the question.
Chagla, C.J. who delivered the judgment of the High Court.,
said that he did not understand Kikaabhai’s case (1) to mean
that even for the purpose of accountancy or for the purpose
of ascertaining commercial profits it is not open to the
court to value the shares at the market pi-ice of the date
on which they were brought into the business. I am enable
to agree. Accountancy, I suppose, is not based on fiction
but deals with realities. We are concerned with accountancy
only for the purpose of ascertaining commercial profits, and
it was only for that purpose that this Court held that you
cannot enter in your accounts the market value of ’goods on
the fictional basis that you sold them to yourself. Chagla,
C.J., thought that Kikabhai’s case was not dealing with
commercial profits. I think that since that case was
considering profits for income-tax purposes it was not
dealing with anything else. I am also unable to agree with
the view of Chagla, C.J., that the ratio in the decision of
Kikabhai’s case has no application to the present case. The
ratio was that for the purpose of ascertaining taxable
profits it is not possible to conceive of one trading
(1) [1954]S.C.R.219.[1957]23 I.T.R.506.
413
with himself and it would apply here, for here also taxable
profits are being ascertained.
Chagla, C.J. observed that what has to be ascertained is
what an article costs the business and not the owner, but in
Kikabhai’s case (1) it was expressly said that when the
business is owned by the assessee himself it is unreal to
separate the business from its owner and treat them as if
they were different entities trading with each other.
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Chagla, C.J. also said that for Income-tax purposes profits
of a business have to be understood in a way that a man of
business would understand it. I am not aware that a
commercial man must compute profits on the basis of a
fiction that he has bought from himself and cannot compute
his profits by deducting from the sale proceeds the price
for which he had actually acquired the goods.
Kikabhai’s case said that you cannot asses,% taxable profits
on the basis of a fictional sale. If you cannot do that,
neither do I think can you assess such profits on the basis
of a fictional purchase in the market. And that is what the
assessee wants us to do. I am for myself entirely unable to
make any distinction between Kikabhai’s case and the present
case.
I have now to refer to Sharkey’s case (2) and examine
whether on the reasoning on which it was based it is
necessary to reconsider Kikabhai’s case. That is the second
question which arises in this case. 1 do not find the
reasoning of that case so strong as to lead me to the
opinion that the decision in Kikabhai’s case was wrong. I
first note that one of the learned Judges Lord Oaksey, took
the same view as was taken by this Court in Kikabbai’s case.
In dealing with Sharkey’s case I will be referring to the
judgment of the majority.
(1) [1954] S.C.R. 219, [1957] 23 I.T.R. 506.
(2) [1956] A.C. 58 36 ; T.C. 2 75.
414
Now, Sharkey’s case (1) also dealt with the withdrawal of
assets from a taxable business, There a lady owned two
enterprises, one, a stud farm the income of which was liable
to tax and another a racing establishment, which was
recreational and therefore not liable to tax. The lady
transferred some horses from the stud farm to the racing
establishment. In assessing the income of the stud farm a
question arose as to what value should be put in its
accounts for the horses transferred to the racing
establishment. It will be noticed that by the transfer to
the racing establishment of which she was the owner, the
lady had only withdrawn the horses from her taxable
undertaking. The problem there was therefore just the same
as in Kikabhai’s Case(2).
It was held by the House of Lords that the value to be put
on the horses withdrawn from the stud farm was their market
value at the date of the transfer and not the cost incurred
on them for breeding and otherwise till the transfer. The
House of Lords observed that in Income-tax Law a dichotomy
between the owner of a business and the business is possible
and presumably therefore trading between the,two could be
conceived for tax purposes in certain cases and referred to
some English authorities in support of this view. I will
assume that such a dichotomy is possible in some cases but
the question is whether it is possible in a case like
Sharkey’s case. On that question I do not find the House of
Lords giving any special reason to make that dichotomy. I
also note that the House of Lords did not dispute that as a
general rule the dichotomy cannot be made.
Apart from the general observation mentioned above the House
of Lords based its decision on two grounds. What the House
of Lords thought strongly supported its view first that
since it was conceded before them that some entry had to be
made
(1)[1956] A.C. 58; 36 T.C. 275.
(2) [1954] S.C.R. 219; [1957] 23 I.T.R. 506.
415
in respect of the horses withdrawn, and that whether the
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entry was of the cost incurred for breeding the horses
transferred or of their market value on the date, of the
transfer, the entry would in either case be fictional for
they were not in fact transferred at any of those prices and
therefore it was more real to enter the market value. Now,
as Lord Radcliffe himself noted, the entry of the cost price
would really be canceling the entry of the cost in breeding
the horses which had been made in the accounts of the farms.
He however found no explanation why cancellation should take
place. I think it be legitimately said that there is an
explanation and as was said in Kikabhai’s case, that is that
the bad to take place because assets were
withdrawn from the trade, unless entries were made canceling
the cost of items of stock brought into the trade when they
were taken out of the trade, the accounts would not give the
real picture of the profits of the actual trade.
A second reason which appears only in the judgment of Lord
Radcliffe is that if the market value of the date of
withdrawal is not entered, there will be an inequitable
distribution of the burden of tax. This is not very clear
to rule. Learned advocate for the assessee said that Lord
Radcliffe was contemplating the case of two traders who
started their business on the same day one of whom bought
his stock in trade from the market on that date, of course
at the market value, and the other started his business by
converting what he was earlier holding for his personal
purpose, into stock-in-trade. It was said that unless the
latter was permitted to value his stock in trade at the
market rate on the date of conversion, he would be subjected
to a tax different in amount from that of the tax on the
former and this would result in inequitable distribution of
the burden of taxation. Again I am not convinced that this
reasoning is conclusive. Take the case of
416
two traders. One by his shrewd business method or by
friendly contacts, or may be by means not very creditable
may on the same day acquire goods necessary for his trade at
a much cheaper rate, than the other. The profits of the two
would then be different. I do not imagine that any income-
tax law would find this objectionable. Furthermore, I am
not sure that this anxiety for an equitable distribution of
the burden of tax justifies departure from a cardinal rule
which is accepted in many cases in England also, that a man
cannot be said to trade with himself so as to make taxable
profits.
Lord Radcliffe realised the difficulty of the problem which
he had to solve and said so. I do not think I will be wrong
in saying that he put his decision on the ground of the best
practical solution of that difficulty. The majority
judgment in Sharkcy’s case does not lead me to the
conclusion that our decision in Kikabhai case (1) was wrong.
I respectfully prefer the view taken in Kikabhai’s case and
by Lord Oaksey in Sharkey’s case"). Bhagwati, J. in his
minority judgment in Kikabhai’s case based himself on the
arguments-of the Attorney General. It is not necessary to
specifically deal with his views for they have been dealt
with in that case and with what have been said there I am in
complete agreement.
Before leaving Sharkey’s case it would be of some interest
to point out that Lord Simonds did not think that any
distinction was possible between the case that he had before
him and a case like the one now before us for he said: "And
so also, as I have more than once pointed out in this case,
it is conceded by the tax-payer that some figure must appear
in the stud farm accounts as receipt in respect of the
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transferred horses, though Lady Zia in her capacity as
transferee did not carry on a taxable activity, In the same
way, it would, I suppose, be claimed that, if Lady Zia were
to transfer or retransfer a horse from her racing
establishment to her
(1) [1954] S.C.R. 219.
(2) [1956] A.C. 58 ; 36 T.C. 275.
417
stud farm some figure would have to appear in the stud farm
accounts in respect of that horse though it cost her nothing
to make the transfer- If it were not so and she subsequently
sold the transferred horse and the proceeds of sale were
treated as receipts of the stud farm, she could justly
complain that she had been charged with a fictitious
profit."
In the course of arguments a case was suggested of a man who
had inherited or received by way of gift, a certain
commodity with which after a lapse of some time he started a
trade. It was said that it would be impossible in such a
case to say that the cost of acquisition of his stock-in-
trade was nil and the entire sale proceeds received by him
in respect of that thing in his trade were his profits.
Now, it seems to me that even if it were so, it would not
follow that his stock-in-trade had to be valued at the date
on which he started his trade with that. So to hold would
be against Kikabhai’s case(1). That being so, this
illustration would only beg the question and not prove that
Kikabhai’s case is wrong. I think a businessman would in
such a case enter into his accounts as the price for which
he acquired his stocking trade its value in the market on
the date on which he received it free. That would not
involve going against Kikabhai’s case, for it would not be
based on a fictional trading by a man with himself. If you
cannot distinguish a business from its proprietor, then the
cost of a thing for the purpose of the business would be its
value at the time the proprietor of the business acquired
it. Such value from a businessman’s point of view would in
my opinion be the value for which he acquired it when he
did .go for value, or its market value on the date of
acquisition, when he paid no value for it.
I would therefore allow this appeal and answer the question
framed by the Tribunal by ’saying
(1)[1954] S.C.R. 219.
418
that the assessee’s Taxable profits on the sale of the
shares earlier held as investment are the difference between
the sale price and the cost price, that is, the price at
which she had actually bought those shares.
By COURT : In accordance with the opinion of the majority,
this appeal is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.