Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 5
PETITIONER:
GENERAL FAMILY PENSION FUND
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX,WEST BENGAL.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
01/11/1954
BENCH:
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
BENCH:
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
MAHAJAN, MEHAR CHAND (CJ)
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
HASAN, GHULAM
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
CITATION:
1955 AIR 50 1955 SCR (1) 822
ACT:
Indian Income-tax Act (XI of 1922), s. 10(7) and schedule
Rule 2(a)(b) as published in 1939-Income-tax on insurance
companyHow ascertained-Statement of Departmental
Representative, Effect of-Insurance Act (IV of 1938) s.
2(11.) -Life Insurance business.
In accordance with the provisions of s. 10(7) of the Indian
Income-tax Act, 1922, the profits and gains of Life
Insurance business for the periods 1943-1944 to 1946-1947
are to be computed under Rule 2(a) and Rule 2(b) of the
rules published in 1939 and contained in the schedule to the
Act. - This computation should be made separately and
independently once under Rule 2(a) and again under Rule
2(b). On such computation income-tax is to be levied on the
greater of the two amounts so computed. It is erroneous to
adopt the computation made under Rule 2(b) as the basis for
computation under Rule 2(a).
Mere statement of the Departmental Representative of the
Income-tax Department to the Tribunal referred to in the
order of the Tribunal cannot have the effect of a finding of
fact by the Tribunal.
Business of a company which consists in granting terminable
pensions or annuities dependent on human life in favour of
the subscribers or their nominees, is an insurance business
within the meaning of s, 2(11) of the Insurance Act, 1938,
HEADNOTE:
823
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 144 of 1953.
Appeal from the Judgment and Order dated the 28th November,
1951, of the High Court of Judicature at Calcutta in
Reference No. 40 of 1950.
Sukumar Mitra (S. N. Mukherjee, with him) for the
appellant.
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General of India, (G. N. Joshi,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 5
with him) for the respondent.
1954. November 1. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
VENKATARAMA AYYAR J.-This is an appeal from the judgment of
the High Court of Calcutta on a reference under section
66(1) of the Income-tax Act. The appellant is a Company
which came into existence in 1870 as an unregistered
association, and in 1906 it was registered under the
provisions of the Indian Companies Act. Its business
consists exclusively in granting terminable pensions or
annuities dependent on human life in favour of the
subscribers or their nominees. The dispute in this appeal
relates to the assessment of the profits of the Company for
income-tax for the periods, 1943-1944, 1944-1945, 1945-1946
and 1946-1947.
To follow the points in issue, it will be useful to refer to
the statutory provisions bearing on the matter. Section
2(11) of the Insurance Act, 1938, defines "life insurance
business" as meaning "the business of effecting contracts of
insurance upon human life" and as including "the granting of
annuities upon human life." The business of the appellant
Company would therefore be life insurance business as
defined in-section 2(11) of the Insurance Act. Under
section 10(7) of the Indian Income-tax Act, the profits and
gains of any business of insurance are to be computed in
accordance with the Rules in the Schedule to the Act. Rule
2 in the Schedule is as follows:
" The profits and gains of life insurance business shall be
taken to be either-
824
(a)the gross external incomings of the preceding year from
that business less the management expenses of that year,
or
(b)the annual average of the surplus arrived at by
adjusting the surplus or deficit disclosed by the actuarial
valuation for the last intervaluation period ending before
the year for which the assessment is to be made’ so as to
exclude from it any surplus or deficit included therein
which was made in any earlier intervaluation period and any
expenditure which may under section 10 of this Act be
allowed for in computing the profits and gains of a
business, whichever is the greater.
"Rule 5(ii) defines "gross external incomings" as including
profits on the sale or the granting of annuities. These
Rules came into force in 1939.
In 1945 the assessment of the profits of the appellant
Company for the years 1943-1944, 1944-1945 and 19451946 was
taken up by the Income-tax Officer. Under Rule 2, what the
Income-tax Officer had to do was to compute the profits of
the Company under the two heads (a) and (b) in that Rule and
to adopt whichever was higher as assessable profits. What
he actually did however is uncertain, because the orders of
assessment themselves have not been exhibited as part of the
record. From the order of the Tribunal dated 5th March,
1949, it appears that the Income-tax Officer firstly
determined the profits under Rule 2(b) on the basis of
actuarial valuation after making certain adjustments; and
secondly on the basis of the figure arrived at under Rule
2(b), he worked out the profits under Rule 2(a) by making
further adjustments. These orders were made on 14th July,
1945. The company preferred appeals against them to the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner, who held by his order
dated 30th November, 1945, that the annuity business
contemplated by Rule 5(ii) was "purely annuity business",
that the business carried on by the Company was "an
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 5
admixture between an annuity and life insurance", and that
there had been no adequate investigation by the Income-tax
Officer of the nature of the business of the Company. He
825
accordingly remanded the case for further enquiry and for
passing fresh orders of assessment.
By the time the matters came up for further enquiry before
the Income-tax Officer in pursuance of the order of remand,
the assessment of the profits of the Company for the year
1946-1947 had also to be made. By order dated 23rd
December, 1946, the Income-tax Officer determined the
assessable profits of the Company for all the four years.
He held that there was no element of insurance in the
business of the Company, and that the computation should be
made under Rule 2(a). Then he proceeded to assess the
profits under that Rule precisely in the manner adopted by
him in his order dated 14th July, 1945. He first took the
annual adjusted surplus calculated according to the
actuarial valuation under Rule 2(b) and after making certain
adjustments, adopted it as the figure under Rule 2(a).
These orders were clearly erroneous. The statement that
there was no element of life insurance in the policies was
rightly hold to be erroneous by the Tribunal and has not
been sought to be supported. If the annuity business of the
Company was not life insurance business, then even Rule 2(a)
would have no application. The Income-tax Officer was
likewise in error in adopting the figures reached under Rule
2(b) as the basis for computing the profits under Rule 2(a)
without an independent enquiry into the materials requisite
under that Rule.
The Company took up the matter in appeal to the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner, who by his order dated 26th
September, 1947, held that the annuity business of the
appellant was life insurance business, and that the profits
should be computed under Rule 2. He further held that in the
absence of a profit and loss ,statement for the previous
year, the Income-tax Officer could only act on the materials
furnished by the actuarial valuation as a guide for
computation under Rule 2(a). He therefore confirmed the
orders of assessment.
The Company then appealed to the Tribunal. By its order
dated 5th March, 1949, the Tribunal held that the business
of the Company was "in a way" insurance,
826
and that computation of the profits should be made in
accordance with Rule 2, after determining the profits both
under Rule 2(a) and Rule 2(b). It took exception to the
modus adopted by the Income-tax Officer in ,computing the
profits under Rule 2(a), and observed that he should have
made independent enquiry under Rule 2(a), and determined the
profits and not merely adopted the figures computed under
Rule 2(b) as the basis for computing the profits under Rule
2(a). The Tribunal accordingly remanded the matter to the
Income-tax Officer for further enquiry for determining the
profits in terms of Rule 2(a).
Dissatisfied with this order, the respondent applied for
reference under section 66(1) of the Income-tax Act, and on
that application, the following questions were referred to
the decision of the High Court:
1. " Whether in the facts and circumstances of the case
the business of the assessee-Company consisted wholly of
annuity business or whether it contained some elements of
ordinary life insurance business as distinct from annuity
business.
2. Whether the Income-tax Officer was justified in making
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 5
an estimate for calculations under Rule 2(a) of the Schedule
attached to section 10(7) of the Income-
tax Act. "
The reference was heard by Chakravarti and S. R. Das Gupta
JJ. They held that the first question did not arise on the
order of the Tribunal, but all the same expressed their
opinion thereon in the following terms :
" Its business is *holly a business of granting annuities on
human life, and no part of its business is ordinary life
insurance business. "
As we are not concerned with this matter in this appeal,
there is no need to further refer to it.
On the second question, they observed that business in
annuities dependent on life as contrasted with "annuities
certain" would be insurance business as defined in section
2(11) of the Act, and that the profits of that business
being "gross external incomings" as defined in Rule 5(ii)
must be determined under Rule 2(a). Dealing next with the
objection of the appellant that there had been no proper
determination of the
827
profits under Rule 2(a), they held that in the absence of
profit and loss statements for the previous years and other
materials the Income-tax Officer had no course open to him
except to adopt the figures computed under Rule 2(b) as a
basis for computation under Rule 2(a). The second question
was accordingly, answered in the affirmative. It is against
this decision that the present appeal has been preferred on
a certificate granted under section 66A (2).
Mr. Mitra for the appellant does not dispute the position
that the business of the Company on annuity policies
dependent on human life is insurance business as defined in
section 2(11), and that the profits of the business should
therefore be computed in accordance with Rule 2 in the
Schedule to the Income-tax Act. His contention is that the
Income-tax Officer had failed to make the computation in
accordance with Rule 2(a), and that the Tribunal was right
in remanding the matter for a correct computation of the
profits in accordance with that Rule. This contention must,
in our opinion, succeed. Under Rule 2, the Income-tax
Officer has to determine under clause (a) what the gross
external incomings of the previous year were, and deduct out
of them the managing expenses for that year. He has also to
find out in terms of clause (b) the annual average surplus
on the basis of actuarial valuation in the manner prescribed
therein. He has then to adopt whichever is higher as the
assessable profits of the year. Now the complaint of the
appellant is that while a computation was made under clause
(b) no independent computation was made under clause (a),
and that therefore the profits had not been determined as
required by the Rules. It is a fact that no independent
computation has been made under Rule 2(a), and therefore
there has been no compliance with the Rule. The learned
Judges declined to uphold this objection on the ground that
the Company did not place any materials before the Income-
tax Officer so as to enable him to make a determination
under Rule 2(a), and that in the absence of any materials
the Income-tax Officer was justified in acting on the
actuarial report for computing the profits even under Rule
2(a).
828
The argument of the appellant is that having regard to the
stand taken by either side at the stage of investigation and
to the opinion expressed by the Income-tax Officer that
there was no element of insurance in the annuity business of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 5
the Company, the true position under the Rules had been
missed by all of them, with the result that there was no
attempt made to compute the profits in terms of the
provisions of Rule 2(a), that the appellant had not wilfully
failed to produce any evidence, and that the observation of
the learned Judges that no profit and loss statement had
been produced was based on a misapprehension, as no such
statement had to be prepared by an Insurance Company.
We must now turn to the statement of the case by the
Tribunal to see what had really happened before the Income-
tax Officer, for the last word on questions of fact is with
it, and that is binding on the Courts. Neither in the
statement of the case by the Tribunal, nor in its order of
remand is there any finding that the requisite materials had
been withheld by the appellant. The only statement bearing
on this question in the order of the Tribunal is as follows:
" ... the Departmental Representative admitted before us
that the calculations purported to have been made under Rule
2(a) were not in accordance with the requirements of Rule
2(a), but it was explained that as the information necessary
for determining income under Rule 2(a) was not available, an
estimate was made and the income determined under Rule 2(b)
was adopted for determining the income under Rule 2(a). "
What is referred to in this passage is only a statement of
the Departmental Representative and not a finding. On the
other hand, the whole tenor of the judgment of the Tribunal
is that there had been no determination of the profits under
Rule 2(a) by reason of the erroneous view taken by the
Income-tax Officer as to the true nature of the business of
the Company. If there had been a finding by the Tribunal
that the requisite materials had been called for and
withheld by the appellant, the decision of the High Court
would be unassailable, and, indeed, that was the only one
that
829
could have been reached. But in the absence of such a
finding, we are unable to see any ground on which the order
of the Tribunal could be upset in a reference under section
66(1). When once it is found that there was no proper
determination of the profits as required: under Rule 2(a)-
and that was indeed conceded-and there was no justification
for it such as the High Court thought there was, the only
order that could properly be made was to remand the case for
further enquiry and fresh disposal in accordance with law.
That was the order which was passed by the Tribunal, and
that, in our opinion, was right.
This appeal will accordingly be allowed, and the second
question referred by the Tribunal answered in the negative.
The result of this will be that the Income-tax Officer will
proceed to enquire into the profits of the appellant Company
for the years in question in accordance with the
requirements of Rule 2. Under the circumstances, we direct
that the parties do bear their respective costs both here
and in the High Court.
Appeal allowed.