Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, PUNJAB
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
R. D. AGGARWAL & COMPANY
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
06/10/1964
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
SUBBARAO, K.
SIKRI, S.M.
CITATION:
1965 AIR 1526 1965 SCR (1) 660
CITATOR INFO :
R 1977 SC1259 (15)
R 1981 SC 148 (12)
R 1981 SC1047 (10)
R 1987 SC1234 (3,4,6,10)
ACT:
Income-tax Act, 1922 (11 of 1922), s. 42(1)-"Business
connection", meaning of-Assessee canvassing orders for
nonresidents in taxable territories without authority to
accept orders-No other part in transaction -Relation with
nonresident whether amounts to business connection Income
intended to be taxed under s. 42(1)-Nature of.
HEADNOTE:
The assessees were a firm carrying on business as importers
and commission agents. They communicated orders canvassed
by them from dealers in India to non-residents for
acceptance; if a contract resulted and the price was paid by
the Indian dealers to the non-resident exporters the
assessees became entitled to a commission. In assessment
proceedings the income of the assessees was computed by the
addition of 5% of the net total value of the sale effected
by the non-resident exporters in the previous year, because
in the Income-tax Officcr’s view there subsisted a ’business
connection’ between the non-resident dealer and the
assessees. The appellate authorities upheld the said view.
The High Court however held that there was no ’business
connection’ within the meaning of s. 42(1) between the
assessees and the non-resident exporters. The Commissioner
of Income-tax appealed to the Supreme Court by special
leave.
HELD (i) Section 42(1) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922,
seeks to tax those profits of a non-resident which arise or
accrue to him outside the taxable territories through or
from a "business connection" within the taxable territories.
[665 C-E].
(ii)"Business connection" which is not defined in the Act,
may as several forms : it may include carrying on a part of
the main business activity incidental to the main business
of the non-resident through an agent, or it may merely be a
relation between the business of the nonresident and the
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activity in the taxable territories which facilitates or
assists the carrying on of that business. In each case the
question whether there is a business connection from or
through which income profits and gains arise or accrue to a
non-resident must be determined upon the facts and
circumstances of the case. [664 H; 665 B].
(iii)The expression "business connection" postulates a real
and intimate relation between trading activity carried on
outside the taxable territories and trading activity within
the territories, the relation between the two contributing
to the earning of income by the non-resident in his trading
capacity. In the present case, the activity of the assessee
in procuring orders was not as agents of the nonresident it,
the matter of sale of goods manufactured by the latter nor
of procuring raw materials in the taxable territories for
their manufacturing process. Their activity only led to the
making of offers by merchants in the taxable territories to
purchase goods manufactured by the non-residents assessees.
[669 G-H; 670 A].
Commissioner of Income-tax v. Remington Typewriters Co.
Bombay Ltd. L.R. 58 I.A. 42, Commissioner of Income-tax,
Bombay Presidency and Aden v. Currimbhoy Ebrahim and Sons
Ltd. L.R. 63 I.A. 1, Bangalore Woollen, Cotton and Silk
Mills Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax Madras, (1950)
18 I.T.R. 423, Abdullabhai Abdul Kadar v. Commissioner ,of
Income-tax Bombay City, (1952) 22 I.T.R. 241, Anglo-French
Textile
661
Company Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras, [1953]
S.C.R. 454 and Hira Mills Ltd. Cawnpore v. Income-tax
Officer, Cawnpore, (1946) 14 I.T.R. 417, considered.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeals Nos. 808 and
809 of 1963.
Appeals by special leave from the judgment and order dated
October 5, 1960, of the Punjab High Court in Income-tax
Reference Nos. 11 and 13 of 1958.
K. N. Rajagopala Sastri, R. H. Dhebar and R. N. Sachthey,
for the appellant. veda Vyasa and B. P. Maheshwari, for the
respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shah J. R. D. Aggarwal & Company-called for the sake of
brevity ’the assessees-are a registered firm having their
place of business at Amritsar in the State of Punjab. The
assessees carry on business as importers and as commission
agents or non-resident exporters with two of whom we are
concerned in these appeals. These two non-resident
exporters Comptoirs Lainiers Osterieth s.a. Anvers (Belgium)
and Filaturae Tessitura Di Tollengno Biella (Italy) are
exporters and manufacturers of worsted woollen yarn. The
assessees communicate orders canvassed by them from dealers
in Amritsar to the non-residents for acceptance; if a
contract results and price for the goods purchased is paid
by the Amritsar dealer to the non-resident exporter, the
assessees become entitled to commission varying between 1
1/2 and 2 1/2 % of the price.
By letter dated March 24, 1951 the assessees were appointed
"sole agents" for the Italian Company "for sale" of worsted
woollen yarns in the Indian territories terminable by one
month’s notice. The assessees had to "maintain the existing
customers" and to secure new customers "conforming to their
general terms of sales", and were to receive 21 per cent
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commission on the net cash amounts arising from the accepted
business "concluded by the mediation" of the assessees or
directly by the Italian Company with the customers. The
Belgian Company appointed the assessees their
representatives for the whole of India on condition that the
latter did not represent any other Belgian Mill or yarn
producer and did not sell Belgian yam in India on their own
account.
In proceedings for assessment of tax in the assessment year
1952-53 the Income-tax Officer, ’C’ Ward, Amritsar computed
the income of the assasees by adding Rs. 54,558 being 5% of
net total value of yam sold by the non-resident companies
662
to Indian merchants in the previous year, because in his
view there subsisted business connections between the non-
resident exporters and the assessees. The orders passed by
the Income-tax Officer were confirmed in appeal by the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner and also by the Income-tax
Appellate Tribunal.
The Income-tax Appellate Tribunal submitted a statement of
case to the High Court of Punjab on the following two
questions
"(1) Whether the relationship between the
assessee and the non-resident fell within the
meaning of the expression "business
connection" as used in S. 42(1) of the Indian
Income-tax Act ?
(2) If the answer to the (second) question
is in the affirmative whether on the facts and
in the circumstances of this case any profits
or gains accrued or arose or could be deemed
to have accrued or arisen to the nonresident
on account of the business connection of the
non-resident with the assessee during the
previous year under consideration."
The High Court answered the first question in
the negative and declined to answer the second
question. With special leave, the
Commissioner of Income-tax has appealed to
this Court against the opinion of the High
Court in these two cases.
Section 42(1) of the Income-tax Act and two
related sections ss. 40(2) and 43(1) may first
be set out. Section 40, insofar as it is
material, by sub-s. (2) provides :
"Where the . . . agent of any person not
resident in the taxable territories . . . .
(such person being hereinafter in this sub-
section referred to as a beneficiary) is
entitled to receive on behalf of such
beneficiary, or is in receipt on behalf of
such beneficiary of, any income, profits or
gains chargeable under this Act, the tax, if
not levied on the beneficiary direct, may be
levied upon and recovered from such. . .
agent . . . in like manner and to the same
amount as it would be leviable upon and
recoverable from the beneficiary if in direct
receipt of such income, profits or gains."
Section 40(2) is an enabling section providing machinery for
assessment and recovery of tax from an agent of a non-
resident in the taxable territories on income taxable under
the Act which the agent is entitled to receive or in fact
receives on behalf of the principal if tax be not levied on
the principal direct. The
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663.
clause it may be noticed deals with charge to tax on income
which the agent is entitled to receive or in fact receives
on behalf of a non-resident beneficiary.
Section 42, insofar as it is material,
provides:
"(1) All income,profits or gains accruing or
arising, whether directly or indirectly,
through or from any business connection in the
taxable territories, shall be deemed to be
income accruing or arising within the taxable
territories, and where the person entitled to
the income, profits or gains is not resident
in the taxable territories, shall be
chargeable to income-tax either in his name or
in the name of his agent, and in the latter
case such agent shall be deemed to be, for all
the purposes of this Act, the assessee in
respect of such incometax :
Provided........
Provided further
Provided further
(2) Where a person not resident or not
ordinarily resident in the taxable
territories, carried on business with a person
resident in the taxable territories, and it
appears to the Income-tax Officer, that owing
to the close connection between such persons
the course of business is so arranged that the
business done by the resident person with the
person not resident or not ordinarily resident
produces to the resident either no profits or
less than the ordinary profits which might be
expected to arise in that business, the
profits derived therefrom or which may
reasonably be deemed to have been derived
therefrom, shall be chargeable to incometax in
the name of the resident person who shall be
deemed to be, for all the purposes of this
Act, the assessee in respect of such income-
tax.
(3) In the case of a business of which all
the operations are not carried out in the
taxable territories, the profits and gains of
the business deemed under this section to
accrue or arise in the taxable territories
shall be only such profits and gains as are
reasonably attributable to that part of the
operations carried out in the taxable
territories."
LISup.165-17
664
It may be observed that sub-ss. (2) and (3) illustrate
special cases of business connections and do not purport to
limit the connotation of that expression.
Section 43, by the first paragraph, provides
"Any person employed by or on behalf of a
person residing out of the taxable
territories, or having any business connection
with such person, or through whom such person
is in the receipt of any income, profits or
gains upon whom the Income-tax Officer has
caused a -notice to be served of his intention
of treating him as the agent of the non-
resident person shall, for all the purposes of
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this Act, be deemed to be such agent:"
This section authorises the Income-tax Officer to appoint a
person as statutory agent of a non-resident , and to assess
him as agent of a nonresident in respect of the income of
the non-resident in the taxable territories.
The only question that falls to be determined in these
appeals is whether there was in the two cases between the
non-resident companies and the assessees such a relation as
may be called "business connection, in the taxable
territories. If the answer to this question be in the
affirmative, the assessees would as statutory agents be
chargeable to tax on behalf of the non-resident Companies on
profits and gains reasonably attributable to those parts of
the operations which were carried on in the taxable
territories.
The expression "business" is defined in the Act as any
trade, commerce, manufacture or any adventure or concern in
the nature of trade, commerce or manufacture, but the Act
contains no definition of the expression "business
connection" and its precise connotation is vague and
indefinite. The expression "business connection"
undoubtedly means something more than "business " . A
business connection in S. 42 involves a relation between a
business carried on by a non-resident which yields profits
or gains and some activity in the taxable territories which
contributes directly or indirectly to the earning of those
profits or gains. It predicates an element of continuity
between the business of the non-resident and the activity in
the taxable territories a stray or isolated transaction is
normally not to be regarded as a business connection.
Business connection may take several forms it may include
carrying on a part of the main business or activity inci-
dental to the main business of the non-resident through an
agent or it may merely be a relation between the business of
the non-
665
resident and the activity in the taxable territories, which
facilitates or assists the carrying on of that business. In
each case the question whether there is a business
connection from or through which income, profits or gains
arise or accrue to a nonresident must be determined upon the
facts and circumstances of the case.
A relation to be a "business connection" must be real and
intimate, and through or from which income must accrue or
arise whether directly or indirectly to the non-resident.
But it must in all cases be remembered that by s. 42 income,
profit or gain which accrues or arises to a non-resident
outside the taxable territories is sought to be brought
within the net of the Income-tax law, and not income, profit
or gain which accrues or arises or is deemed to accrue or
arise within the taxable territories. Income received or
deemed to be received, or accruing or arising or deemed to
be accruing or arising within the taxable territories in the
previous year is taxable by s. 4 (1 )(a) & (c) of the Act,
whether the person earning is a resident or non-resident.
If the agent of a non-resident receives that income or is
entitled to receive that income, it may be taxed in the
hands of the agent by the machinery provision enacted in s.
40(2). Income not taxable under s. 4 of the Act of a non-
resident becomes taxable under s. 42(1) if there subsists a
connection between the activity in the taxable territories
and the business of the non-resident, and if through or from
that connection income directly or indirectly arises.
Important cases which have arisen before the Courts may be
briefly reviewed, not for evolving a definition applicable
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generally to all cases, but with a view to illustrate what
relation between the non-resident and the activity in the
taxable territories which contributes to the earning of
income may or may not be regarded as business connection.
In Commissioner of Income-tax v. Remington Typewriters Co.
(Bombay) Ltd.(1) a Company incorporated under the Indian
Companies Act, 1913, which was a subsidiary of an American
Company was deemed for the purposes of the Indian Income-tax
Act to be the statutory agent of the latter Company and was
charged to tax under s. 42 (1 ) in respect of profits made
by that Company upon machines exported to the taxable
territories and in respect of dividends received from the
Indian Company, although the assessee Company was not an
agent for the American Company
(1) L.R. 58 I.A. 42.
666
under s. 40, as it had not received the profits and gains in
question. In that case, in consideration of transfer of the
goodwill of the American Company in a specified territory in
India shares were allotted by the assessee Company to the
American Company. In respect of those shares dividend was
paid to the American Company by the assessee Company : the
American Company also sent machines to the assessee Company
for sale within the territory. The profits made by the
American Company by sale of the machines and dividends
received by the American Company from the assessee Company
were held taxable on the ground that there existed a
business ’connection.
In Commissioner of Income-tax Bombay Presidency and Aden v.
Currimbhoy Ebrahim and Sons Ltd.(1) advance of a loan by a
non-resident was held not to be a business connection.
Currimbhoy Ebrahim & Sons Ltd. a private limited Company
carrying on business as managing agents of various companies
and as dealers in cloth, borrowed a loan from the Nizam of
Hyderabad and executed a document in Bombay and as security
for repayment of the loan deposited shares in joint stock
companies and created an equitable mortgage of immovable
properties in British India. The loan was to be repaid in
Hyderabad then an Indian State. The taxing authorities
treated the private Company as agent in the taxable
territories of the Nizam within the meaning of S. 43 of the
Indian Income-tax Act, and assessed to tax the interest on
the loan which the taxing authorities regarded as profit or
gain which must be deemed to have accrued or arisen to the
Nizam, through or from a business connection or property in
British India within the meaning of S. 42(1) of the Act.
The Judicial Committee held that the loan transaction was an
isolated transaction. There being nothing to show that the
Nizam had at any time any interest, direct or indirect, in
the respondent Company, there-was no business connection in
British India within the meaning of s. 42 of the Act between
the Company and the Nizam and the interest on the loan did
not constitute a profit or gain accruing or arising to the
Nizam, directly or indirectly, through or from any business
connection or property in British India, chargeable to
income-tax in the name of the Company.
In Bangalore Woollen, Cotton and Silk Mills Co. Ltd. v. Com-
missioner of Income-tax, Madras (2 ) the assessee a Company
registered in the Indian State of Mysore carried on the
business of manufacturing woollen, cotton and silk goods at
Bangalore. ’Me
(1) L.R. 63 I.A. 1. (2) (1950) 18 I.T.R. 423.
667
assessee’s managing agents had their head office at Madras
in British India. Under the managing agency agreement, the
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agents bought raw materials and other articles or things
required for the purpose or use of the assessee and sold and
disposed of goods manufactured by the assessee.
Manufactured goods were also sold in the Mysore State and
deliveries were effected in that State, but the agents
collected the price of the goods sold in British India and
credited it in their books to the account of the assessee as
they also acted as bankers of the assessee. It was held by
the Income-tax Officer that the assessee Company was liable
to pay tax under the Indian Income-tax Act under two heads-
(i) on the profits attributable to the sale proceeds
received in British India and (ii) on the profits that
accrued or arose outside British India to the assessee by
reason of business connection in British India. The High
Court of Madras held that the managing agents purchased in
British India raw materials required for the business
continuously for several years, received the sale proceeds
of manufactured goods in British India and credited in their
books to the account of the Company acting as bankers, met
all the expenditure from out of the collections in their
hands, paid for the purchase, made also other payments
referred to in the managing agents’ accounts. This was a
clear case of a business connection in British India in
respect of income which accrued or arose to the assessee
outside British India.
In Abdullabhai Abdul Kadar v. Commissioner of Income-tax
Bombay City(1) the assessee acted as commission agent of a
nonresident and entered into transactions within the taxable
territories on behalf of the non-resident, but he was not
the sole commissions agent of the non-resident who did
business through other agents as well. The assessee also
purchased cloth on behalf of other constituents. It was
held that there was a -business connection, because it was
not predicated of a business connection that the broker must
be exclusively retained by the assessee. Chagla C.J., in
dealing with the provisions of s. 42(1) observed
"...... the language used by the Legislature
is very wide, any business connection is not
necessarily that business connection which is
constituted by a permanent and exclusive
agency. On the other hand a mere casual
connection, a connection which has no
continuity, would also not be a business
connection as contemplated by the Legislature
under section 42.
(1) (1952) 22 I.T.R. 241.
668
Therefore, in order that the agency which
constitutes a connection between a non-
resident and the assessee should be a business
connection as contemplated by Section 42there
must be an element of continuity in. the
agency. An isolated transaction through an
agent, or even a connection for a short
period, would not necessarily constitute
business connection."
Then there is a decision of this Court : Anglo-French
Textile Company Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax,
Madras(1). The assesses Company incorporated in the United
Kingdom owned a spinning and weaving factory at Pondicherry
in French India. The assessee had appointed another limited
Company in Madras as its constituted agent for the purpose
of its business in British India. During the relevant year
of account no sales of yam or cloth manufactured by the
assessee Company were effected in British India, but all the
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purchases of cotton required for the factory at Pondicherry
were made by the agents in British India and no purchases
were made through any other agency. In that case, it was
held, that the assessee Company had a business connection in
British India within the meaning of s. 42 and a portion of
the profits of the non-resident attributable to the purchase
of cotton in British India could be apportioned under s.
42(3).
In Hira Mills Ltd., Cawnpore v. Income-tax Officer, Cawn-
pore(2) a non-resident Company carried on business of
manufacturing cloth at Ujjain in the Indian State of Gwalior
and sent cloth to Cawnpore in British India. Goods were
sold by the Company’s salesman at Cawnpore and the sale
proceeds were collected by him at Cawnpore. In these
transactions, income accrued or arose to the Company in
British India within the meaning of s. 4(1). The Company’s
goods were also marketed in British India through brokers
who were not the Company’s employees and who were not
canvassing orders exclusively for the Company. Offers of
purchase sent by brokers to Ujjain were not in any special
form. They were either accepted or rejected by the Company
at Ujjain, but all contracts were for delivery "F.O.R.
Ujjain". Goods were generally consigned to "self" at the
place of destination and the merchants took delivery after
paying the invoiced price plus freight and insurance to a
broker or banker in British India in exchange of endorsed
railway receipts. On
(1) [1953] S.C.R 454.
(2) (1946) 14 I.T.R. 417.
669
the facts the Allahabad High Court held that there was no
business connection in British India.
The distinction between Abdullabhai Abdul Kadar’s case(1)
and the Hira Mills’ case (2) may be noticed. In the former
the commission agents had purchased cloth in the taxable
territories for the non-resident and in the latter the
agents did not purchase or sell goods for the non-resident :
they merely canvassed orders which were in the nature of
offers and communicated them to the non-resident who had the
option to accept or reject the offers. The sales took place
outside the taxable territories, and in the view of the
Income-tax Appellate Tribunal "Presumably also, the goods
were paid for at Ujjain." The Court was on the question
framed and referred not called upon to consider whether
because of payment of the invoiced price plus insurance and
freight to a broker or banker in British India and delivery
in exchange of endorsed railway receipts, the case fell
within s. 4(1)(a) or s.4 (1 ) (c).
Turning to the facts of the present case, as found by the
revenue authorities, contracts for the sale of goods took
place outside the taxable territories, price was received by
the nonresidents outside the taxable territories, and
delivery was also given outside, the taxable territories. .
No operation such as procuring raw materials, manufacture of
finished goods, sale of good or delivery of goods against
price took place within the taxable territories : the
assessees merely procured orders from merchants in Amritsar
for purchase of goods from the non-resident companies. The
orders were offers which the assessees had no authority to
accept on behalf of the non-residents. Some commercial
activity was undoubtedly carried on by the assessees in the
matter of procuring orders which resulted in contracts for
sale by the nonresidents of goods to merchants at Amritsar.
But on this account no business connection of the assessees
with the non-residents within the taxable territories
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resulted. The activity of the assessees in procuring orders
was not as agents of the non-residents in the matter of sale
of goods manufactured by the latter, nor of procuring raw
materials in the taxable territories for their manufacturing
process. Their activities led to the making of offers by
merchants in the taxable territories to purchase goods
manufactured by the non-residents which the latter were not
obliged to accept. The expression "business connection"
postulates a real and intimate relation between trading
activity
(1) 22 I.T.R. 241.
(2) 14 I.T.R 417.
670
carried on outside the taxable territories and trading
activity within the territories, the relation between the
two contributing to the earning of income by the non-
resident in his trading activity. In this case such a
relation is absent.
In that view of the case, these appeals must fail and are
dismissed with costs. One hearing fee.
Appeals dismissed.
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