Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M/S.SARASWATI INDUSTRIAL SYNDICATE LTD.,YAMUNANAGAR,HARYANA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX, HARYANA, ROHTAK
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 10/03/1999
BENCH:
R C Lahoti, S P Bharucha, Syed Shah Mohammed Quadri
JUDGMENT:
Bharucha, J.
Under appeal are the judgments and orders of Division
Benches of the Punjab and Haryana High Court. The
assessment years involved are Assessment Years 1970-71 to
1977-78. The High Court answered in the negative and in
favour of the Revenue the following question :
Whether on the facts and in the circumstances of the
case, the Tribunal was right in law in holding that the
words corrosive chemicals employed in entry (ii)B(7) of
Para III of Part I of Appendix I to the Income-tax Rules,
1962, contemplates not only free chemicals but also non-free
chemicals of corrosive effect.
The assessee is in appeal. The assessee
manufacturers, among other things, sugar. It claimed
depreciation at the higher rate of 15% on machinery it used
in the manufacture of sugar, which was detailed in a
statement placed before the Income tax Officer. It did so
having regard to Item 3(ii)B(7) of Para III of Part I of
Appendix I to the Income Tax Rules, 1962, which reads thus :
Machinery and plant coming rate of depreciation 15% into
contact with corrosive chemicals.
The assessee filed in support of its case the opinion
of an expert. The Income Tax Officer rejected the
assessees claim of higher depreciation at the rate of 15%
on such machinery. He declined to consider the expert
opinion on the ground that the assessee was unable to
produce the expert for cross-examination. He referred to
the meaning of the word chemical and concluded that cane
juice was not something which was obtained through a
chemical process nor was it used for chemical effect. The
contention of the assessee that, during the manufacture of
sugar, the juice was treated with corrosive chemicals like
sulphuric and phosphoric acid, which had corrosive effect on
the sugar machinery, could not be given any importance as
the quantity used was quite small and it was not those acids
which came into contact with the machinery. They formed a
very small part and their use was confined to a particular
stage. It was the cane juice which was the main substance
that came into contact with the machinery. The Appellate
Assistant Commissioner dismissed the assessees appeal. His
view was that depreciation was allowable at the higher rate
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on such plant and machinery in which chemicals with high
corrosive potentials were used for manufacturing purposes
and the manufacture of sugar did not fall in such category.
The Income Tax Appellate Tribunal disagreed. It noted that
the only criticism directed against the statement which had
been tendered by the assessee before the Income Tax Officer
was that it included machinery that came in contact, not
with corrosive chemicals, but with cane juice and molasses,
which were not corrosive chemicals but, at best, corrosive
materials. The Tribunal found no force in this criticism
for the reason that the corrosive chemicals contemplated in
the said entry were not only free chemicals but also
non-free chemicals provided they were corrosive in effect so
far as metals are concerned.
Out of the order of the Tribunal the question, quoted
above, was referred to the High Court. The High Court
disagreed with the Tribunal for the reason that, according
to it, lime and sulphuric acid were mixed with the sugarcane
juice to filter and purify the juice but, by their mixture,
the juice itself was not converted into a chemical.
Reference was made to the dictionary meaning of the word
chemical and it was said that it was obvious therefrom
that sugarcane juice could not be covered by the term simply
because some acid has been mixed with it for its filtration.
The acid and the lime were mixed in the sugarcane juice for
the purpose of its filtration and once the chemical reaction
had been caused, most of its effect was lost. Whatever
remained settled down along with the sediments at the
bottom. Thereafter, the filtered sugarcane juice which came
into contact with the machinery before it was converted into
crystallised sugar could not be said to be a corrosive
chemical.
We can understand that the authorities declined to
rely upon the experts opinion because he was not produced
for cross-examination. But neither the Income Tax Officer
nor, indeed, the High Court were entitled to make statements
on technical matters for which no basis had been laid on the
record by either the Revenue or the assessee. If the High
Court was of the view that further material was required ,
the appropriate course was to require the Tribunal to take
further evidence and draw up a Supplemental Statement of
Case.
This apart, there appears to be some misunderstanding
of what the said entry is intended to convey. Depreciation
at a higher rate is allowed to machinery that comes into
contact with corrosive chemicals. Corrosive chemicals
corrode the machinery. They erode and, by reason of such
erosion, the life of the machinery is truncated. To
compensate, depreciation is allowed at a higher rate. It is
not intended that the machinery must come into contact with
a pure corrosive chemical. It is enough that what passes
through the machinery contains chemicals which are corrosive
and which, therefore, have the effect of wearing it down.
In the instant case, with this understanding of the
said entry in mind, the Tribunal shall take further
evidence, giving both the assessee and the Revenue the
opportunity of producing it, and, based thereon, shall
decide whether the machinery for which the assessee claims
depreciation at the higher rate is entitled to it. It shall
then draw up a Supplemental Statement of Case and the matter
shall be re-heard by the High Court, having regard to what
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is found by the Tribunal and to this judgment. The appeals
are allowed. The judgments and orders under appeal are set
aside. The matters are remanded to the Tribunal to be
proceeded with as set out hereinabove.
This order shall also govern Appeal No.5671/85 where
reference of the question of law aforementioned was
declined. Even in this matter the Tribunal shall conduct a
further enquiry as indicated above and draw up a
Supplemental Statement of Case and it shall then refer the
question aforementioned to the High Court.
No order as to costs.
Learned counsel for the intervenors submits that he is
entitled to the same order as we have just passed. We
cannot pass such an order in an intervention application.
The only purpose of granting an intervention application is
to entitle the intervenor to address arguments in support of
one or the other side. Having heard the arguments, we have
decided in the assessees favour. The intervenors may take
advantage of that order.
Order on the intervention application accordingly.