Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
UNION OF INDIA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
GOSALIA SHIPPING PRIVATE LTD., MARGAO, GOA
DATE OF JUDGMENT05/05/1978
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
BHAGWATI, P.N.
DESAI, D.A.
CITATION:
1978 AIR 1196 1978 SCR (3) 943
1978 SCC (3) 28
ACT:
Income Tax Act, 1961, S. 172(2)--Charter party agreement
providing for the payment by the Charterers "for the use and
hire" of the vessel-Whether the payment can be said to have
been made "on account of the carriage of goods" so as to
attract the charging provision of S. 172(2) of the Income
Tax Act, 1961.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent which is a company incorporated under the
Indian Companies Act does the business of Clearing and
Forwarding and as Steamship agents. In 1970, respondent
acted as the shipping agents of "Aluminium Company of Canada
Ltd." which is a non-resident company. The Aluminium
company time-chartered a ship "M.V. Sparto" belonging to
another nonresident company. Clause 4 of the Charter party
provided for the payment by the charterers "for the use and
hire" of the vessel at the rate of U.S. 4.50 dollars per ton
on vessels’ total dead weight carrying capacity per calendar
month commencing on and from the date of delivery of the
ship. "hire to continue until the hour of the day of her
redelivery". The said ’ship called at the port of Betul.
Goa on March 1, 1970 and loaded 13000 long tons of bauxite
belonging to the time-charterers, the Aluminium Co. The ship
was allowed to leave the port of Betal on the basis of the
guarantee bond executed by the respondent in favour of the
President of India undertaking to pay the income tax payable
by the time-charterers under Section 172 of the Income Tax
Act, 1961. On April 15, 1970, the First Income Tax Officer,
Margoa issued a demand notice to the respondent for the
payment of Rs. 51,191/- by way of income tax under the
aforesaid provision. The respondent filed a Writ Petition
asking for a mandamus directing the Income Tax Officer to
withdraw the notice. The petition was allowed by the
Judicial Commissioner Goa.
Dismissing the appeal by Certificate, the Court
HELD : 1. The amount which the time-charterers were required
to pay, to the owners of the ship was not payable on account
of the carriage of goods but was payable on account of the
use and hire of the ship. [947 E-F]
2. It is true that one cannot place over-reliance on the
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terms which the parties give to their agreement or on the
label which they attach to the payment due from one to the
other. One must have regard to the substance of the matter
and if necessary, tear the veil in order to see whether the
true character of a payment is something other than what, by
a clever device of drafting, it is made to appear. [947 F-G]
In the instant case there is no reason to hold that the real
intention of the parties was something different from what
the words used by them, convey in their accepted sense. The
charter party was drawn in a standard form approved by the
"New York Produce Exchange" and there is no warrant for
supposing that though the payment which the charterers bound
themselves to make to the owners of the ship was on account
of the carriage of goods, the parties described it as being
payable for the use and hire of the vessel, in order to
avoid the payment of Indian income Tax. The character of
the payment cannot change according to the use to which the
charterers put the ship or according as to whether the ship
is loaded with goods in a port in India. What is payable as
hire charges for the use of the ship cannot transform itself
into an amount payable on account of the carriage of goods,
by reason
944
of the circumstance that the ship was loaded with goods in
India. The time charterers loaded the ship at Betul, Goa,
with their own goods. They did not sub-let the ship for the
purpose of carriage of goods nor did they load the ship with
goods belonging to a third party in which event they might
have earned some freight on account of the carriage of
goods. They paid hire charges to the owner of the ship for
the use of the ship and since they loaded the ship with
their own goods, they received nothing on account of the
carriage of the goods. Neither the one nor the other,
therefore, received any amount on account of the carriage of
the goods. [947 G-H, 948 A, B, F-G]
3. A contract by charter party is a contract by which an
entire ship or some principal part thereof is let to a
merchant who is called the charterer, for the conveyance of
goods on a determined voyage to one or more places, or until
the expiration of a specified period. The contract’ in the
instant case is of the nature of time-charter-party, whether
there is a demise of the ship or not being immaterial.
Clause 4 of the charter-party provides for the payment by
the charterers "for the use and hire" of the vessel at the
rate of U.S. 4.50 dollars per ton on vessel’s total dead
weight carrying capacity’ per calendar month, commencing on
and from the date of delivery of the ship, "hire to continue
until the hour of the day of her redelivery". These clauses
of the charter-party show that the Aluminium Company took
the ship from its owners on a time-charter-party, that the
owners were entitled to payment for the use and hire of the
ship, that the amount was payable irrespective of what use
the ship was put to by the time-charterers or-indeed,
whether it was put to any use at all and that no part of the
payment can be said to have been made on account of the
carriage of goods. [948 G-H, 949 D-F]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1735 of 1972.
1972.
From the Judgement and Order dated the 29th October 1971 of
the High Court of Goa, Daman and Diu in S.C.A. No. 31 of
1970.
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V. S. Desai and Miss A. Subhashini for the, Appellant.
S. T. Desai, M. V. Shah and R. P. Kapur for Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
CHANDRACHUD, C.J.-The respondent, Gosalia Shipping Private
Limited, which is a company incorporated under the Indian
Companies Act does the business of Clearing and Forwarding
and as Steamship Agents. In 1970, respondent acted as
the shipping agent of ’Aluminium Company of Canada, Limited’
which is a non-resident company. The, Aluminium Company
time-chartered a ship "M. V. Sparto" belonging to a non-
resident company called Sparto Compania Naviera of Panama.
The said ship called at the port of Betul, Goa, on March 1,
1970 where it loaded 13,000 long tons of bauxite belonging
to the time-charterers, the Aluminium Company. On March 20,
1970 the ship left for Alfred port, Canada. The ship was
allowed to leave the port of Betul on the basis of a
guarantee bond executed by the respondent in favour of the
President of India, undertaking to pay the income-tax
payable by the time-charterers under section 172 of the
Income-tax Act, 1961. On April 15, 1970, the First Income-
tax Officer, Margao, Goa, issued a demand notice to the
respondent for payment of Rs. 51,191 by way of income-tax
under the aforesaid provision. The respondent filed Special
Civil Application No. 31 of 1970 in the Court of the
Judicial Commissioner, ’boa, asking for a writ of Mandamus
directing the Income-tax Officer to withdraw the demand
notice. By a judgment dated October 29, 1971,
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the learned Judicial Commissioner allowed the respondent’s
Writ Petition and passed an order quashing the demand
notice. Having obtained from the Judicial Commissioner a
certificate of fitness to appeal to this Court under article
133(1)(b) and (c) of the constitution, the Union of India
has filed this appeal.
The question as to whether the respondent is liable to pay
the income-tax demanded of it by the Income-tax Officer,
depends for its decision on the construction of section 172
of the Income-tax Act, 1961, which read as follows at the
relevant time :
"172. (1) The provisions of this section,
shall, notwithstanding anything contained in
the other provisions of this Act, apply for
the purpose of the levy and recovery of tax in
the case of any ship, belonging to or
chartered by a nonresident, which carries
passengers, live-stock, mail or goods shipped
at a port in India.
(2) Where such a ship carries passengers,live-stock,
mail or goods shipped at a port in India ,one-
sixth of the amount paid or payable on account
of such carriage to the owner or the charterer
or to any person on his behalf, whether that
amount is paid or payable in or out of India,
shall be deemed to be income accruing in India
to the owner or charterer on account of such
carriage.
(3) Before the departure from any port in
India of any such ship, the master of the ship
shall prepare and furnish to the Income-tax
Officer a return of the full amount paid or
payable to the owner or charterer or any
person on his behalf, on account of the carri-
age of all passengers, live-stock, mail or
goods shipped at that port since the last
arrival of the ship thereat :
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Provided that where the Income-tax Officer is
satisfied that it is not possible for the
master of the, ship to furnish the return
required by this sub-section before the
departure of the ship from the port and
provided the master of the ship has made
satisfactory arrangements for the filing of
the return and payment of the tax by any other
person on his behalf the Income-tax Officer
may, if the return is filed within thirty days
of the departure of the ship, deem the filing
of the return by the person so authorised by
the master as sufficient compliance with this
subsection.
(4) On receipt of the return, the Income-tax
Officer shall assess the income referred to in
sub-section (2) and determine the sum payable
as tax thereon at the
946
rate or rates in force applicable to the total
income of a company which has not made the
arrangements referred to ’in section 194 and
such sum shall be payable by the master of the
ship.
(5) For the purpose of determining the tax
payable under sub-section (4), the Income-tax
Officer may call for such accounts or
documents as he may require.
(6) A port clearance shall not be granted to
the ship until the Collector of Customs, or
other Officer duly authorised to grant the
same, is satisfied that the tax assessable
under this section has been duly paid or that
satisfactory arrangements have been made for
the payment thereof.
(7) Nothing in this section shall be deemed
to prevent the owner or charterer of a ship
from claiming before the expiry of the
assessment year relevant to the previous year
in which the date of departure of the ship
from the Indian port falls, that an assessment
be made of his total income of the previous
year and the tax payable on the basis thereof
be determined in accordance with the other
provisions of this Act, and if he so claims,
any payment made under this section in respect
of the passengers, live-stock, mail or goods
shipped at Indian port during that previous
year shall be treated as a payment in advance
of the tax leviable for that assessment year,
and the difference between the sum so paid and
the amount of tax found payable by him on such
assessment shall be paid by him or refunded to
him, as the case may be."
Section 172 occurs in Chapter XV which is entitled
"liability in special cases" and the sub-heading of the
section is "Profits of nonresidents from occasional shipping
business." It creates a tax liability in respect of
occasional shipping by making a special provision for the
levy and recovery of tax in the case of a ship belonging to
or chartered by a non-resident which carries passengers
livestock mail or goods shipped at a port in India. The
object of the section is to ensure the levy and recovery of
tax in the case of ships belonging to or chartered by
nonresidents. The section brings to tax the profits made by
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them from occasional shipping, by means of a summary them
assessment in which one-sixth of the gross amount received
by of the is deemed to be the assessable profit. Before the
departure ship, the master of the ship has to furnish to the
Income-tax Officer a return of the full amount paid or
payable to the owner or charterer on account of the carriage
of passengers, goods etc., shipped at the port in India
since the last arrival of the ship at the port. In the
event that, to the satisfaction of the Income-tax Officer,
the master is
9 47
unable so to do, he has to make Satisfactory arrangements
for the filing of the return and payment of the tax by any
other person on his behalf. A port clearance cannot be
granted to the ship until the tax assessable under the
section is duly paid or satisfactory arrangements have been
made for the payment thereof.
The assessee in this case is the Aluminium Company of Canada
which had time-chartered the ship and on whose behalf its
shipping agent, the respondent, had executed the guarantee
bond. Since the Company is a non-resident and the ship
carried goods which were shipped at a port in India, the
conditions specified in sub-section (1) are satisfied and
the provisions of section 172 will apply for the purpose of
levy of tax, notwithstanding anything contained in the other
provisions of the Income-tax Act.
The charging provision it contained in sub-section (2) of
section 172, the relevant part of which provides that where
a ship belonging to or chartered by a nonresident carries
goods shipped at a port in India, one-sixth of the amount
paid or payable "on account of such carriage" to the owner
or the charterer or to any person on his behalf shall be
deemed to be income accruing in India to the owner or char-
terer on account of such carriage. The ship was delivered
to the time-charterers at Betul, Goa, whereupon they loaded
it with their own goods to the fullest capacity of the ship.
Under the charter party, the charterer had agreed to pay to
the owners of the ship a sum of 4.50 U.S. dollars per ton on
the total dead weight carrying capacity per calendar month,
commencing on and from the date of the delivery of the ship.
The short question for consideration is whether
the amount which the time-charterers had agreed to pay to
the owners of the ship was payable "on account of" the
carriage of goods.
If any guidance is to B sought from the terms of the
agreement between the parties, the conclusion seems
inescapable that the amount which the time-charterers where
required to pay to the owners of the ship was not payable on
account of the carriage of goods but was payable on account
of the use and hire of the ship.
The charter party provided by clause (4) that the charterers
shall pay a sum at the rate of 4.50 U.S. dollars on the
total dead weight carrying capacity of the ship, "for the
use and hire of the said vessel". It is true that one
cannot place over-reliance on the form which the parties
give to their agreement or on the label which they attach to
the payment due from one to the other. One must have regard
to the substance of the matter and, if necessary, tear the
veil in order to see whether the true character of a payment
is something other than what, by a clever device of
drafting, it is made to appear. But we see no reason to
hold that the real intention of the parties was something
different from what the words used by them convey
in their accepted sense. The charterparty was drawn in a
standard form approved by the ’New York Produce Exchange’
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and there is no warrant for supposing that though the
payment which the Charterers bound themselves to make to the
owners of the ship was on account of the
948
carriage of goods, the parties described it as; being
payable for the use and hire of the vessel, in order to
avoid the payment of Indian income-tax.
Indeed, the other terms of the charterparty and the general
tenor of the document show that the payment was in fact to
be made by the time-charterers for use and hire of the ship.
Under the agreement, charterers had the "liberty to
sublet" the vessel for all or any part of the time covered
by the agreement. The Captain of the ship was to be under
the orders and directions of the, charterers as regards
employment and agency. And if the vessel be lost, money
paid in advance and not earned was to be returned by the
owners to the charterers at once. These terms and
conditions of the contract between the parties are not
consistent with the theory that-the charterers were liable
to pay to the owners any amount on account of the carriage
of goods. In order that it may be said that the amount was
payable on account of the carriage of goods. Under the
terms of charterparty, the the consideration for the other,
that is to say, that the payment which the charterers had
agreed to make to the owners of the ship was in
consideration of the carriage of goods. If the charterers
are liable to pay the amount irrespective of whether they
carry the goods or not, it would be difficult to say that
the amount was payable on account of the carriage of goods.
Under the terms of Charterparty, the owners of the ship
received the amount as charges for the use and hire of the
ship. The character of the payment cannot change according
to the use to which the charterers put the ship or according
as to whether the ship is loaded with goods in a port in
India. What is payable as hire charges for the use of the
ship cannot transform itself into an amount payable on
account of the carriage of goods, by reason of the
circumstance that the ship was loaded with goods in India.
It is relevant, for the decision of the question under
consideration. that the time-charterers loaded the ship at
Betul, Goa, with their own goods. They did not sub-let the
ship for the purpose of carriage of goods nor did they load
the ship with, goods belonging to a third party in which
event they might have earned some freight on account of the
carriage of goods. They paid hire charges to the owner of
the ship for the use of the ship and since they loaded the
ship with their own goods, they received nothing on account
of the carriage of the goods. Neither the one nor the
other, therefore, received any amount on account of the
carriage of the goods.
The weakness of the argument advanced by the appellant’s
counsel consists in its assumption that the charterparty has
to be, an agreement for the carriage of something like
goods, passengers, livestock or mail. A contract by
charterparty, says, B. C. Mitra in his "Law of Carriage by
Sea" (Tagore Law Lectures 1972), : "is a contract by which
an entire ship or some principal part thereof is let to a
merchant who is called the charterer, for the conveyance of
goods on a determined voyage to one or more places, or until
the expiration of a specified period; in the former case it
is called a ’voyage charterparty’, and in the latter a ’time
charterparty’ ". A time charter, according to the
949
author is "one in which the ownership and also possession of
the ship remain in the original owner whose remuneration or
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hire is generally calculated at a monthly rate on the
tonnage, of the ship, while a voyage charter is a contract
to carry specified goods on a defined voyage on a
remuneration or freight usually calculated according to the
quantity of cargo carried." In Carver’s "Carriage by Sell"
(Eleventh ed., 1963, page 263), it is stated that "all
charterparties are not contracts of carriage. Sometimes the
ship itself, and the control over her working and
navigation, are transferred for the time being to the
persons who use her. In such cases the contract is really
one of letting the ship, and, subject to the express terms
of the charterparty, the liabilities of the shipowner and
the charterer to one another are to be determined by the law
which relates to the hiring of chattels and not by reference
to the liabilities of carriers and shippers." According to
Scrutton on Charterparties (seventeenth ed., 1964, page 4),
charterparties fall into three main categories (i) charters
by-demise (ii) time charters (not by way of demise), and
(iii) voyage charters. Sometimes categories (i) and (ii)
are both referred to as time charters as distinguished from
category (iii), and they have this in common that the
shipowner’s remuneration is reckoned by the time during
which the charterer is entitled to the use of services of
his ship." The contract in the instant case is of the nature
of time-charterparty, whether there is a demise of the ship
or not being immaterial. Clause 4 of the charterparty
provides for the payment by the charterers "for the use and
hire" of the vessel at the rate of U.S. 4.50 dollars per ton
on vessel’s total dead weight carrying capacity, per
calender month, commencing on and from the date of deliver
of the ship, "hire to continue until the hour of the day of
her redelivery." These clauses of the charterparty show that
the Aluminium company took the ship from its owners on a
time-charterparty, that the owners were entitled to
payment for the use and hire of the ship, that the amount
was payable irrespective of what use the ship was put to by
the time-charterers or indeed, whether it was put to any use
at all and that no part of the payment can be said to have
been made on account of the carriage of goods. Similies can
be misleading but if a hall is hired for a marriage, the
charges payable to the owner of the place are for the use
and hire of the place, not on account of marriage.
For these reasons we confirm the judgment of the learned
Judicial Commissioner and dismiss the appeal with costs.
S.R. Appeal dismissed.
950