Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
TRAVANCORE-COCHIN CHEMICALS (P.) LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COMMISSIONER OF WEALTH-TAX, KERALA
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
06/04/1967
BENCH:
SIKRI, S.M.
BENCH:
SIKRI, S.M.
SHAH, J.C.
RAMASWAMI, V.
CITATION:
1967 AIR 1534 1967 SCR (3) 448
ACT:
Wealth Tax Act (27 of 1957) s. 45(d), proviso-Company
incorporated on one date and commencing business an a later
date- When "established"-Meaning of "established".
HEADNOTE:
The appellant, which was a private limited company, was
formed and registered under the Indian Companies Act, 1913,
on 8th November, 1951. The erection and construction of its
factory was completed in December 1953 and production
commenced from 1-1-1954. On the question-whether the
company was established on 8th November, 1951, the date of
its incorporation and was therefore liable to pay wealth tax
for the assessment years 1957-58, 1958-59 and 1959-60, on
the basis that the exemption from payment of wealth tax
under the proviso to s. 45d) was only for five successive
assessment years commencing with the assessment year next
following the date on which the company was established.
HELD : A comparison of clauses (d) and (f) of s. 45 shows
that the word "established" in cl. (d) and its proviso, does
not mean "incorporated". The word "established" has the
same meaning it has in s. 5(1) (xxi) of the Act, namely,
that the Company has been put into such a shape that it can
start functioning as a business or a manufacturing
Organisation. So construed, the appellant was established
within s. 45(d) only in December, 1953, or 1st January 1954,
and the five assessment years next following would be 1954-
55, 1955-56, 1956-57, 1957-58 and 1958-59. Therefore, the
appellant would be entitled to exemption for the assessment
years 1957-58 and 1958-59 but not for 1959-60. [451F; 452D-
E; 453B-C]
Commissioner of Wealth Tax, Madras v. Ranzaraju Surgical
Cotton Mills Ltd. [1967] 1 S.C.R. 761, followed.
Thomas J. Davidson v. W. L. Lanier, 18 L.Ed. 377, 379,
referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeals Nos. 405- 407
of 1966.
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Appeals by special leave from the judgment and order dated
March 9, 1964 of the Kerala High Court in Income Tax
Referred Case No. 4 of 1963.
S. T. Desai and G. L. Sanghi, for the appellant (in all
the appeals).
T. V. Vishwanatha Iyer, Gopal Singh, S. P. Nayyar and R.
N. Sachthey, for the respondent (in all the appeals).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Sikri, J. These appeals by special leave are directed
against the judgment of the High Court of Kerala in a
reference made to it by the Income-Tax Appellate Tribunal,
Madras Bench, under S. 27(1) of the Wealth Tax Act, 1957,
hereinafter referred to as the Act. The reference was made
at the instance of the
449
Commissioner of Wealth Tax, Kerala, and the question
referred was as follows :-
"Whether the exemption from tax for the
assessment years 1957-58, 1958-59 and 1939-60
was not rightly granted."
The High Court held that the exemption from tax granted to
the assessee under s. 45(d) of the Act for the assessment
years 1957-58, 1958-59 and 1959-60 was not rightly granted
and answered the question against the assessee. The
relevant facts are as follows :-The appellant, Travancore
Cochin Chemicals (P) Ltd., hereinafter called the assessee,
was formed and registered under the Indian Companies Act on
November 8, 1951. The prior history of the Company is given
in the statement of the case as follows :-
"On 22-7-1949, a partnership was formed
between two public limited companies, viz.,
Fertilisers & Chemical Travancore Ltd.,
Always, and the Mettur Chemical & Industrial
Corporation Ltd., Mettur, for establishing a
Caustic Soda Factory with an estimated capital
of Rs. one crore. The firm could not function
due to lack of finance. The Government of
Travancore was approached for necessary
finance to complete the purchase of plants and
machinery which had been started in August
1949, and that Government entered the Company
and subscribed a large share capital and a new
private limited company was formed and
registered under the Indian Companies Act on
8-11-1951."
Further facts given in the statement of the
case are as follows
buildings, construction stores, materials,
etc., at different stages of erection and also
all book debts and liabilities. The
erection
and construction of the factory was completed
in December, 1953, and production commenced
from 1-1-1954. The trading accounts were
closed for the first time on 31-3-1954. There
was a loss of Rs. 16,04,212/- incurred."
For the assessment year 1957-58 (the relevant date of valua-
tion being March 31, 1957) the assessee claimed before the
Wealth Tax Officer that it was not liable to pay wealth tax
during the year of account as it was exempted from wealth
tax under s. 45 (d) of the Act. The Wealth Tax Officer
rejected the claim on the ground that the assessee was
established within the meaning of s. 45(d) and the proviso
thereto, in November 1951, and consequently the period of
five years exemption was over with the assessment year 1956-
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57.
450
The relevant portion of S. 45 of the Act reads as follows
"45. The provisions of this Act shall not
apply to
(a)
(b)
(c) any company established with the object
of financing, whether by way of making loans
or advances to, or subscribing to the capital
of’, private industrial enterprises in India,
in any case where the Central Government has
made or agreed to make to the company a
special advance for the purpose or has
guaranteed or agreed to guarantee the payment
of moneys borrowed by the company from any
institution outside India;
(d) any company established with the object
of carrying on an industrial under-taking in
India in any case where the company is not
formed by the splitting up, or the
reconstruction of a business already in
existence or by the transfer to a new business
of any building, machinery or plant used in a
business which was being previously carried on
:
Provided that the exemption granted by clause
(d) shall apply to any such company as is
referred to therein only for a period of five
successive assessment years commencing with
the assessment year next following the date on
which the company is established, which period
shall, in the case of a company established
before the commencement of this Act, be
computed in accordance with this Act from the
date of its establishment as if this Act had
been in force on and from the date of its
establishment;
Explanation.-
(e)
(f) any company registered under section 25
of the Companies Act, 1956."
The Wealth Tax Officer followed the same reasoning for the
-assessment years 1958-59 and 1959-60. The Appellate
Assistant Commissioner of Wealth Tax upheld the orders of
the Wealth Tax Officer. The Income Tax Appellate Tribunal,
however, allowed the appeals of the assessee. It held that
the word "established" in S. 45(d) was used in
contradistinction to the word "incorporated". It observed :
"It seems to us that this ’establish’ (sic)
can be inferred only when the object with
which the company was formed or incorporated
is begun to be achieved."
451
It further held :
"To attract tax under sec. 3 there must be an
assessment year as defined in sec. 2 (d). In
this case, the assesssment has commenced for
the first time in 1954-55 and having regard to
Part 11 of the Schedule to the Wealth Tax Act,
the first year 1954-55 having ended in a loss,
the assessment year can be said to commence
only from 1955-56. For five years from then,
the assessee would be entitled to the
exemption."
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As mentioned above, the Appellate Tribunal referred the
question at the instance of the Commissioner, and the High
Court answered the question against the assessee. The
assessee having obtained leave from the High Court, the
appeal is now before us-
The learned counsel for the assessee contends that the word
"established" in s. 45(d) has the same meaning as it has in
s. 5(1)(xxi) of the Act, which was interpreted by this Court
in Commissioner of Wealth Tax, Madras v. Ramaraju Surgical
Cotton Mills Ltd.(1) He says that the word "established"
cannot be equated with the word "incorporated". The learned
counsel for the respondent, on the other hand, contends that
the word "established" in s. 45(d) has a different meaning
to that in s. 5 (1) (xxi), as s. 45 (d) deals with a company
being established while s. 5(1)(xxi) deals with a unit being
established. Bhargava, J., speaking for the Court, in
Commissioner of Wealth Tax, Madras v. Ramaraju Surgical
Cotton Mills Ltd.,(1) observed:
"A unit cannot be said to have been set up
unless it is ready to discharge the function
for which it-is being set up. It is only when
the unit has been put into such a shape that
it can start functioning as a business or a
manufacturing Organisation that it can
be said
that the unit has been set up. The expression
used in the proviso, under which the period
for which the exemption is available is to be
determined, is not the same as that used in
the principal clause. In the proviso, the
period of five successive years of exemption
has to commence with the assessment year next
following the date on which the company
commences operations for the establishment of
the unit. Operations for the establishment of
a unit, from the very nature of that
expression, can only signify steps that have
to be taken to establish the unit. The word
’set up’ in the principal clause, in our
opinion, is equivalent to the word
’established’, but operations for
establishment cannot be equated with the
establishment of the unit itself or its
setting up. The applicability of the proviso
has, therefore, to be decided
(1) [1967] I.S.C.R. 761, 764 : 63 I.T.R. 478,
481-482.
L5Sup CI/67--16
452
by finding out when the company commenced
operations for establishment of the unit,
which operation must be antecedent to the
actual date on Which the company is held to
have been set up for purposes of the principal
clause. This is also the meaning that the
Bombay High Court derived in the case in
Western India Vegetable Products Ltd.,(1)
where that Court was concerned with the
interpretation of the expression set up’ as in
section 2 (II) of the Income-tax Act. That
court held- : ’it seems to us that the
expression setting up means, as is defined in
the Oxford English Dictionary,-to place on
foot or to establish, and in contradistinction
to commence. The distinction is this that
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when a business is established and is ready to
commence business, then it can be said of that
business that it is set up. But before it is
ready to commence business it is not set up.
This view was expressed when that Court was
considering the difference between the meaning
of the expression setting up a business and
commencing of a business."
It seems to us that the same meaning must be given to the
word "established" in s. 45 (d) as in s. 5 ( 1 ) (xxi). It
would be noticed that s. 45 uses the word "established" in
cl. (c) and in the proviso to cl. (d), while the word
"formed" is also used, apart from the word "established" in
cl. (d); and in cl. (f) the word "registered" is used.
There is a clear distinction between the word "registered"
or "incorporated" and the word "established". If the
Legislature was thinking of incorporation of a company, then
we fail to understand why this word was not used instead of
the word "established". Further, if we look at cl. (d), it
excludes certain industrial undertakings from the benefit of
s. 45; what are -excluded are companies "formed by the
splitting up, or the reconstruction of a business already in
existence or by the transfer to a new business of any
building, machinery or plant used in a business which was
being previously carried on." Ordinarily the date of
incorporation of a company has nothing to do with the
transfer of a machinery or plant to it.
The case of Thomas J. Davidson v. W. L. Lanier 2 ) also
lends support to the interpretation which we have placed on
the word "established". Chase, C.J., observed :
"What is meant by putting in operation or
establishing a Banking Company ? We think that
this language has a much wider import than
mere commencement of business. To establish a
company for any business means complete and
permanent provision for
(1) 26 I.T.R. IS 1.
(2) 18 L. Ed. 377, 379.
453
carrying on that business, and putting a
company in operation may well include its
continued as well as its first or original
operation."
We may mention that no other point was debated before us.
In the result we hold that the assessee was established
within s. 45(d) of the Act in December 1953, or January 1,
1954. The first year following the date of establishment of
the Company was 1954-55, and the next four assessment years
would be 1955-56, 1956-57, 1957-58 and 1958-59. The only
assessment year in dispute that is not covered is 1959-60.
Consequently the answer to question referred is that the
exemption for the assessment years 1957-58 and 1958-59 was
wrongly withheld while the exemption for the year 1959-60
was rightly not granted. We accordingly accept the appeals
and answer the question as indicated above. There will be
no order to costs.
V.P.S. Appeal allowed in part.