Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M/S. BALLIMAL NAVAL KISHORE & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 10/01/1997
BENCH:
B.P. JEEVAN REDDY, K.T. THOMAS
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
B.P. JEEVAN REDDY.J.
Section 10(2)(v) of the Income Tax Act, 1922 allows
deduction of the amount spent on "current repairs" to
buildings, machinery, plant, furniture employed in the
business. The assessee-appellant carries on the business of
exhibiting films in a theatre called "Naval Talkies" at
Panipat. He had purchased the said building in 1937. It was
a ginning factory then. He ran the factory till 1940. In the
year 1945, he converted it into a cinema theatre and was
exhibiting films therein. During the period 1960 to March
1961, the assessee extensively repaired the theatre by
expending substantial amounts. The amounts spent by him are:
on machinery Rs.16,002/-, new furniture Rs.27,889/- sanitary
fittings Rs.5,225/- and replacement of electrical wiring
Rs.13,604/-. In addition thereto, a total amount of
Rs.62,977/- was spent on extensive repairs to walls, to the
hall, to the flooring and roofing, to doors and windows and
to the stage sides etc. Actually the theatre had to be
closed during the aforesaid period for effecting the
repairs.
In the assessment proceedings relating to the relevant
assessment year, the assessee claimed deduction of the
aforesaid amount of Rs.62,977/-. The Income Tax Office
disallowed the same. According to him it was capital
expenditure. On Appeal, Appellate Assistant Commissioner
affirmed the view taken by the Income tax Officer. On
further appeal, however, the Tribunal upheld the assessee’s
case whereupon the following question was referred to the
Bombay High Court under Section 66(1) of the Indian Income
Tax Act, 1922, at the instance of the Revenue: "Whether on
the facts and circumstances of the case, in computing the
Income of the assessee for the material year a sum of
Rs.62977/- or any portion thereof is deductible?" The High
Court answered the question in favour of the Revenue and
against the assessee following the earlier decision of the
said court in New Shorrock Spinning and Manufacturing
Company Ltd. vs Commissioner of Income Tax [30 I.T.R.338].
The expression used in Section 10(2)(v) is "current
repairs" and not mere "repairs". The same expression occurs
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in Section 30(a)(ii) and in Section 31(i) of the Income Tax
Act, 1961. The question is what is the meaning of the
expression in the context of Section 10(2). In New Shorrock
Spinning and Manufacturing Company Ltd., Chagla,C.J.,
speaking for the Division Bench, observed that the
expression "current repairs" means expenditure on buildings,
machinery, plant or furniture which is not for the purpose
of renewal or restoration but which is only for the purpose
of preserving or maintaining an already existing asset and
which does not bring a new asset into existence or does not
give to the assessee a new or different advantage. The
learned Chief Justice observed that they are such repairs as
are attended to as and when need arises and that the
question when a building, machinery etc. requires repairs
and when the need arises must be decided not by any academic
or theoretical test but by the test of commercial
expediency. The Learned Chief Justice observed:
"The simple test that must be
constantly borne in mind is that as
a result of the expenditure which
is claimed as an expenditure or
repairs what is really being done
is to preserve and maintain an
already existing asset. The object
of the expenditure is not to bring
a new asset into existence, nor is
its object the obtaining of a new
or fresh advantage. This can be the
only definition of ‘repairs’
because it is only by reason of
this definition of repairs that the
expenditure is a revenue
expenditure.
If the amount spent was for the
purpose of bringing into existence
a new asset or obtaining a new
advantage, then obviously such an
expenditure would not be an
expenditure of a revenue nature but
it would be a capital expenditure,
and it is clear that the deduction
which, the Legislature has
permitted under Section 10(2)(v) is
a deduction where the expenditure
is a revenue expenditure and not a
capital expenditure."
In taking the above view, the Bombay High Court
dissented from the view taken by the Allahabad High Court in
Ramkrishan Sunderlal vs. Commissioner of Income Tax, U.P.
[(1951) 19 I.T.R..324] where it was held that the expression
"current repairs" in Section 10(2)(v) was restricted to
petty repairs only which are carried out periodically. The
Learned Judge agreed with the view taken by the Patna High
Court in Commissioner of Income Tax vs. Darbhanga Sugar Co.
Ltd. [(1956) 29 I.T.T.21] and by the Madras High Court in
Commissioner of Income Tax vs. Sri Rama Sugar Mills Ltd.
[(1951) 21 I.T.R.191]
In Liberty Cinema vs. Commissioner of Income-Tax,
Calcutta [52 I.T.R.153], P.B. Mukharji, J., speaking for a
Division Bench of the Calcutta High Court, held that an
expenditure incurred with a view to bring into existence a
new asset or an advantage of enduring nature cannot qualify
for deduction under Section 10(2)(v).
In our opinion the test involved by Chagla C.J. in New
shorrock Spinning & Manufacturing Company Limited is the
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most appropriate one having regard to the context in which
the said expression occurs. It has also been followed by a
majority of the High Courts in India. We respectfully accept
and adopt the test.
Applying he aforesaid test, if we look at the facts of
this case, it will be evident that what the assessee did was
not mere repairs but a total renovation of the theatre. New
machinery, new furniture, new sanitary fittings and new
electrical wiring were installed besides extensively
repairing the structure of the building. By no stretch of
imagination, can it be said that the said repairs qualify as
"current repairs" within the meaning of Section 10(2)(v). It
was a case of total renovation and has rightly been held by
the High Court to be capital in nature. Indeed, the finding
of the high Court is that as against the sum of Rs.17,000/-
for which the assessee had purchased the factory in 1937,
the expenditure incurred in the relevant accounting year was
in the region of Rs.1,20,000/-.
The appeal accordingly fails and is dismissed. No Costs