Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX AND EXCESS PROFITS TAX,
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE SOUTH INDIA PICTURES LTD., KARAIKUDI.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
14/03/1956
BENCH:
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
BENCH:
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
CITATION:
1956 AIR 492 1956 SCR 223
ACT:
Indian Income Tax Act, 1922 (XI of 1922), s. 10-Whether
money received by the Assessee in the accounting period-As a
revenue receipt or capital receipt-On the facts and in the
circumstances of the instant case.
HEADNOTE:
The assessee-a private limited company-carried on the busi-
ness of distribution of films. In some instances the
assessee used to produce or purchase films and then
distribute the same for exhibition in different cinema halls
and in other cases the assessee used to advance monies to
producers of films and secure the right of distribution of
the films produced with the help of the monies so advanced
by the assessee. In the course of such business it advanced
monies to Jupiter Pictures for the production of three films
and acquired the right of distribution of these three films
under three agreements in writing dated the September 1941,
July 1942 and May 1945. The said agreements expressed in
similar language contained similar provisions.
In the accounting year ending 31st March 1946 and in the
previous years the assessee bad exploited its rights of
distribution of the three pictures. On 31st October 1945
the assessee and Jupiter Pictures entered into an agreement
cancelling the three agreements relating to the distribution
rights in respect of the three :films and in consideration
of such cancellation the assessee was paid Rs. 26,000, in
all by the Jupiter Pictures during the accounting period as
compensation. The question for determination was whether on
the facts and in the circumstances of the case the sum of
Rs. 26,000, received by the assessee from the Jupiter
Pictures was a revenue receipt assessable under the Indian
Income Tax Act.
Held, per S. R. DAS C. J. and VENKATARAMA AYYAR J.,
(BHAGWATI J. dissenting) that the sum received by the
assessee was a revenue receipt (and not a capital receipt)
assessable under the Indian Income Tax Act inasmuch as:-
(i) the sum paid to the assessee was not truly compensation
for not carrying on its business but was a sum paid in
ordinary course of business to adjust the relation between
the assessee and the producers of the films;
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224
(ii) the agreements which were cancelled were by no means
agreements on which the whole trade of the assessee had for
all practical purposes been built and the payment received
by the assessee was not for the loss of such a fundamental
asset as was the ship managership of the assessee in Barr
Crombie & Co. Ltd. v. Commissioners of Inland Revenue
([1945] 26 T.C. 406); and
(iii) one cannot say that the cancelled agreements
constituted the framework or whole structure of the
assessee’s profit making apparatus in the sense the
agreement between the two margarine dealers concerned in Van
Den Berghs Ltd. v. Clark (L.R. [1935] A.C. 431) was.
It is not always easy to decide whether a particular payment
received by a person is his income or whether it is to be
regarded as his capital receipt. Income is a word of the
broadest connotation and difficult and perhaps impossible to
define in any precise general formula. Though in general
the distinction between an income and a capital receipt was
well recognised and easily applied, cases did arise where
the item lay on the border line and the problem had to be
solved on the particular facts of each case. No infallible
criterion or test can be or has been laid down and the
decided cases are only helpful in that they indicate the
kind of consideration which may relevantly be borne in mind
in approaching the problem. The character of the payment
received may vary according to the circumstances.
BHAGWATI J. (dissenting): that in the instant case, the
pictures, if produced by the assessee itself would have been
capital assets of the assessee. What the assessee did was
that instead of producing the pictures itself it advanced
monies to the producers for the purpose of producing the
pictures which it acquired for the purpose. of distribution
and exploitation. Nonetheless, the pictures thus acquired
were capital assets of the assessee which it worked upon in
carrying on its business of distribution and exploitation,
the monies it spent on the acquisition of the pictures were
thus capital expenditure and whatever monies were realised
by it by working these capital assets were its capital
receipts except of course the commission which it earned by
distribution and exploitation of the pictures which cer-
tainly would be its trading receipts. Having regard to the
terms of these agreements it could certainly not be
predicated of these pictures that they were its stock-in-
trade so as to constitute the payment in question a trading
receipt of the assessee.
Commissioner of Income-tax v. Shaw, Wallace & Co. ([1932]
L.R. 59 I.A. 206; A.I.R. 1932 P.C. 138; 6 I.T.C. 178), Baja
Bahadur Kamakshya Narain Singh of Ramgarh v. Commissioner of
Income-tax, Bihar and Orissa ([1943) 11 I.T.R. 513, 521;
L.R. 70 I.A. 180), Short Brothers, Ltd. v. The Commissioners
of Inland Revenue ([1927] 12 T. C. 955), Kelsall Parsons &
Co. v. Commissioners of Inland Revenue ([1938] 21 T. C.
608), Glenboig Union Fireclay Co. Ltd. v. The Commissioners
of Inland Revenue ([1922] 12 T.C. 427), Shadbolt
225
(H. M. Inspector of Taxes) v. Salmon Estate ([1943] 25 T.C.
52), Johnson (H.M. Inspector of Taxes) v. W.S. Try, Ltd.
([1945] 27 T.C. 167), Commissioner of Income Tax, Bengal v.
Shaw Wallace and Company (A.I.R. 1932 P.C. 138), Van Den
Berghs, Ltd. v. Clark (Inspector of Taxes) (L.R. [1935] A.C.
431; 19 T. C. 390; 3 I.T.R. (Suppl.) 17) and Barr Crombie &
Co. Ltd. v. Commissioners of Inland Revenue ([1945] 26 T.C.
406), referred to.
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The facts of the case as taken from the judgment of the
Hon’ble The Chief Justice are shortly as follows:-
The assessee is a private limited company. It carried on
the business of distribution of films. In some instances
the assessee used to produce or purchase films and then
distribute the same for exhibition in different cinema halls
and in other cases the assessee used to advance monies to
producers of films and secure the right of distribution of
the films produced with the help of the monies so advanced
by the assessee. In the course of such business it advanced
monies to Jupiter Pictures for the production of three films
and acquired the right of distribution of these three films
under three agreements in writing dated the 17th September
1941, 16th July 1942 and 5th May 1945.
The said several agreements were expressed in similar
language and contained similar provisions. The assessee
bound itself to advance a certain sum in instalments
specified therein and retain the balance to be utilised for
the purpose of press publicity in such way as it thought fit
and proper and at its sole discretion. Jupiter Pictures in
its turn bound itself to arrange for the delivery to the
assessee of twelve copies of the film to be produced after
it would be passed by the Board of Censors (clause 1). The
territories within which the assessee was to have the right
of distribution and exploitation of the film was specified
in clause 2 and such right was to enure for a period of five
years from the date of the release of the film. The
assessee was given the right, at its sole discretion, to
distribute the films at such rates and on such terms and
conditions and in such manner as it might deem fit (clause
2). The amounts realised by the distribution of the films
was to be utilised by the assessee in the following way:
namely, in paying itself its distribution commission and in
retaining the available balance until the entire amount of
advance would be discharged (clause 3) and after the entire
amount of the advance would be discharged, in paying to
Jupiter Pictures the net realisations from the film after
deducting its commission (clause 4). In case the full
amount of advance could not be recouped from the
realisations of the film on or before the expiry of one and
half years from the date of the first release of the film
Jupiter Pictures would be liable to pay to the assessee
whatever balance would remain due with compound interest at
twelve per cent. per annum calculated in the manner men-
tioned in clause 6. The assessee’s commission for
distribution and
226
exploitation of the film through its Organisation was, by
clause 8, fixed at 15 per cent. of the net realisations. In
case of sale of district or territorial rights of the film
made by consent of both parties the assessee alone would be
entitled to put through such sales and receive the proceeds
and would be entitled to a commission of ten per cent.
thereon and to appropriate the balance towards the payment
and discharge of the advance made by it (clause 9). The
assessee was to submit to Jupiter Pictures a monthly
statement of account and show all books of account to
Jupiter Pictures (clauses 11 and 12). The assessee was
given liberty to appoint sub-agents and sub-distributors at
its sole discretion (clause 13). The amount advanced by the
assessee was made immediately repayable in the event of the
film being banned or not passed by the Board of Censors
(clause 14). Clause 15 gave the assessee a charge by way of
security on the negative and positive copies of the film for
whatever amount might be due to the assessee on account of
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the advance made and in case the negative and positive
copies were in possession of Jupiter Pictures the same were
to be held by the latter as trustee of the assessee. The
burden of insuring the negative copies of the film was
placed on Jupiter Pictures at its own cost (clause 16).
Jupiter Pictures agreed to indemnify the assessee against
all claims or demands of any nature whatsoever by any person
or agency in or upon the film and against all claims of any
person or agency on account of any infringement of copyright
(clause 17). If Jupiter Pictures failed to deliver the film
within the time specified therein, the assesses was given
the right, at its option, to complete the picture at its own
cost and in such event, Jupiter Pictures was to be liable to
the assessee for all such expenses with compound interest
thereon at 12 per cent. per annum and the assessee would
have all the rights of distribution, sale, etc. as aforesaid
(clause 19). The last clause provided that on the expiry of
the period of 5 years the assessee would return to Jupiter
Pictures all copies of the film and balance stock of loan
and saleable publicity materials subject to wear and tear.
In the accounting year ending 31st March 1946 and in the
previous years the assessee had exploited its right of
distribution of the three pictures. On 31st October 1945
the assessee and Jupiter Pictures entered into an agreement
cancelling the three several agreements relating to the
distribution rights in respect of the three films and in
consideration of such cancellation Jupiter Pictures agreed
to pay to the assessee towards commission the sum of Rs.
8,666-10-8 (rupees eight thousand six hundred and sixty-six
annas ten and pies eight) for each of the three pictures
aggregating in all to Rs. 26,000 (rupees twenty-six
thousand). It is this sum of Rs. 26,000 (rupees twenty-six
thousand) which was paid during the accounting year which
forms the subject matter of the question that has arisen
between the assessee and the department.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 32 of 1954.
227
On appeal from the judgment and order dated the 26th
September 1951 of the Madras High Court in Case Referred No.
18 of 1949.
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General of India (C. N. Joshi
and R. R. Dhebar, with him) for the appellant.
R. Ganapathy Iyer, for the respondent. 1956. March 14.
DAS C.J.-In the year 1945 the respondent company
(hereinafter called the "assessee") received a payment of a
sum of Rs. 26,000 (rupees twenty-six thousand) from Jupiter
Pictures Ltd. of Madras (hereinafter referred to as Jupiter
Pictures) pursuant to the terms of an agreement between the
assessee and Jupiter Pictures dated the 31st October 1945.
In the course of the proceedings for the assessment of the
assessee’s income-tax for the year 1946-47 and the excess
profits tax for the chargeable accounting period from 1st
April 1945 to 31st March 1946, the following question
arose:-
"Whether on the facts and in the circumstances of the case,
the sum of Rs. 26,000 received by the assessee from Jupiter
Pictures Ltd., is a revenue receipt assessable under the
Indian Income-Tax Act?"
The Income-Tax Officer took the view that the sum was in the
nature of a revenue ’receipt and was liable to be brought to
account for purposes of calculating the tax. The Appellate
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Assistant Commissioner upheld this decision. On further
appeal by the assessee the Income-Tax Appellate Tribunal
held that the case was governed by the decision of the
Judicial Committee in Commissioner of Income-Tax v. Shaw
Wallace and Company(1) and that the sum received by the
assessee was a capital receipt. Accordingly on 26th August
1948 the Tribunal reversed the decision of the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner. At the instance of the Commissioner
of Income-Tax and
(1) [1932] L.R. 59 I.A. 206; A.I.R. 1932 P.C. 138; 6 I.T.C.
178.
228
Excess Profits Tax, Madras the Tribunal under section 66(1)
of the Indian Income-Tax Act, 1922 referred to the High
Court of Madras the question of law quoted above. The High
Court agreed with the Income-Tax Appellate Tribunal and
answered the question in the negative. The present appeal
is directed against this decision of the High Court.
[After stating the facts of the case which gave rise to the
present point in controversy and which have been stated
above His Lordship proceeded as follows:]
As already indicated the question for consideration is
whether this payment constituted a capital receipt or a
revenue receipt. It may be mentioned here that the answer
to this question will be relevant and helpful only in
respect of assessments of other assessees for assessment
years prior to the date when the new sub-section (5-A) was,
by the Finance Act of 1955, added to section 10 of the
Indian Income Tax Act, 1922.
It is not always easy to decide whether a particular payment
received by a person is his income or whether it is to be
regarded as his capital receipt. Income, said Lord Wright
in Raja Bahadur Kamakshya Narain Singh of Ramgarh v.
Commissioner of Income-Tax, Bihar and Orissa(1), is a word
of the broadest connotation and difficult and perhaps
impossible to define in any precise general formula. Lord
Macmillan said in Van Den Berghs, Ltd. v. Clark (Inspector
of Taxes)(2) that though in general the distinction between
an income and a capital receipt was well recognized and
easily applied, cases did arise where the item lay on the
border line and the problem had to be solved on the
particular facts of each case. No infallible criterion or
test can be or has been laid down and the decided cases are
only helpful in that they indicate the kind of consideration
which may relevantly be borne in mind in approaching the
problem. The character of the payment received may vary
according to the circumstances. Thus the amount received as
consideration for the sale of a
(1) [1943] 11 I.T.R. 513, 521; L.R. 70 I.A. 180, 192.
(2) L.R. [1935] A.C. 431: 19 T.C. 390; 3 I.T.R. (Suppl.)
17.
229
plot of land may ordinarily be a capital receipt but if the
business of the recipient is to buy and sell lands, it may
well be his income. The problem that confronts us has to be
approached keeping in mind the different kinds of
consideration taken into account in the different cases.
The assessee before us is a company carrying on a business
and it received the sum in question in connection with that
business. We have, therefore, to ask ourselves as to what
is the substance of the matter from the point of view of a
businessman. The assessee contends that in receiving this
sum it was not carrying on its business,/which was to
distribute films, but that it received this amount as and by
way of compensation for not distributing those films, that
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is to say for not carrying on its business. The sum was,
according to the assessee, received by it in return for its
ceasing to engage in the business of distributing those
three films. We do not think that is the intrinsic business
of the matter. Here was the assessee whose business was to
distribute films, purchased or produced by itself or in
respect of which it secured the distribution rights under
agreements with the producers. For the purpose of this
distribution business the assessee obviously,had
arrangements with the proprietors of different/cinema halls.
If any producer failed to deliver an film as agreed then the
exigencies of the assessee’s business would certainly have
required the assessee to treat that agreement as terminated
by breach and to enter into another agreement for securing
the distribution right in some other film so as to enable it
to fulfil its engagement with the proprietors of the cinema
halls by distributing the new film in the place of the one
that had not been supplied. Likewise if a particular film
secured by the assessee failed to attract public enthusiasm,
business exigencies might well have required the assessee to
enter into an arrangement with the producers concerned to
cancel the agreement for distribution of that film and to
enter into another agreement with the same or other
producers for acquiring the distribution right in another
film likely to bring a better
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box-office collection. The termination of the agreement in
each of the circumstances hereinbefore mentioned could well
be said to have been brought about in the ordinary course of
business and money paid or received by the assessee as a
result of or in connection with such termination of
agreements would certainly be regarded as having been so
paid or received in the ordinary course of its business and
therefore a trading disbursement or trading receipt. There
was no covenant made by the assessee with Jupiter Pictures
not to enter into agreements with other producers or not to
distribute films secured from other producers. In fact in
the accounting year the assessee had distribution rights in
respect of eleven films including these three. These three
agreements would have come to an end on the expiration of
the period of five years from the respective dates of
release of the films and had only a part of the period to
run, a fact which may also be relevantly borne in mind. The
cancellation of these agreements must have left the assessee
free, if it so chose to secure other films which could be
distributed in the place of these films and/which might have
brought in better box-office collections, In the language of
Lord Hanworth, M. R. in Short Bros., Ltd. v. The Com-
missioners of Inland Revenue(1) the sum paid to the assessee
was not truly compensation for not carrying on its business
but was a sum paid in ordinary course, of business to adjust
the relation between the assesse and the producers of the
films. The agreements which were cancelled were by no means
agreements on which the whole trade of the assessee bad for
all practical purposes been built and the payment received
by the assessee was not for the loss of such a fundamental
asset as was the ship managership of the assessee in Barr,
Crombie & Co., Ltd. v. Commissioners of Inland Revenue(2).
Nor can one say that the cancelled agreements constituted
the framework or whole structure of the assessee’s profit
making apparatus in the sense the agreement between the two
margarine dealers concerned in Van Den Berghs
(1) [1927] 12 T.C. 955, 973.
(2) [1945] 26 T.C. 406,
231
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Ltd. v. Clark (Inspector of Taxes) (supra) was. Here’ were
three agreements entered into by the assessee in the
ordinary course of his business along with several similar
agreements. These three agreements were by mutual consent
put an end to. The termination of these three agreements
did not radically or at all affect or alter the structure of
the assessee’s business. Indeed the assessee’s business of
distribution of films proceeded apace notwithstanding the
cancellation of these three agreements.
Learned counsel for the assessee has, as did the High Court,
strongly relied on the decision of the Privy Council in Shaw
Wallace’s case (supra). In that case there was no fixed
period within which the distributing agency was to continue,
whereas in the case before us the agreement was only for a
fixed period of five years out of which a considerable part
had already expired. In Shaw Wallace’s case the entire
distributing agency work was completely closed, whereas the
termination of the agreements in question did not have that
drastic effect on the assessee’s business at all. His
business of distribution of films continued notwithstanding
the cancellation of these three agreements. In Shaw
Wallace’s case, therefore, it could possibly be said that
the amount paid there represented a capital receipt. It is
pointed out that in Shaw Wallace’s case there were other
agencies also which were continuing. A reference to that
case reported sub-nom Shaw Wallace & Co. v. Commissioner of
Income Tax, Bengal(1) will show that Shaw Wallace and Co.
carried on business as merchants and managing agents of
various companies and that they were also the distributing
agents of the two oil companies as well. The business of
managing agency of a company is quite different from the
business of distributing agency of the products of oil
companies. The different managing agencies in that case
were entirely different from and independent of the
distributing agency of the two oil companies and this aspect
of the matter was emphasised
(1) [1931] 5 I.T.C. 211.
31
232
by Sir George Lowndes towards the end of his judgment where
he said:-
"It is contended for the appellant that the "business" of
the respondents did in fact go on throughout the year, and
this is no doubt true in a sense. They had other
independent commercial interests which they continued to
pursue, and the profits of which have been taxed in the
ordinary course without objection on their part. But it is
clear that the sum in question in this appeal had no
connection with the continuance of the respondent’s other
business. The profits earned by them in 1928 were the fruit
of a different tree, the crop of a different field".
If Shaw Wallace and Co. had other distributing agencies
similar to those of the two oil companies then it would be
difficult to reconcile the decision in that case with the
later decisions in Kelsall all Parsons & Co. v.Commissioners
of Inland Revenue(1) and other cases. It has been urged
that the agreements did not create merely an agency for the
distribution of the films but were composite agreements
consisting partly of a financing agreement creating a
security on the films for the monies to be advanced and
conferring the right even to complete the films in case the
producers failed to do so and partly of a distributing
agency agreement giving the assessee the utmost latitude in
the matter of the terms and conditions on which it could
exploit and distribute the films. It was argued that the
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rights acquired by the assessee under the agreements were in
the nature of capital assets of the assessee’s business and
the amounts received by the assessee were the prices or
considerations for the sale or surrender of such capital
assets or were received by way of compensation for the
sterilization or destruction of those capital assets.
Kelsall Parsons & Co.’s case and Short Bros.’ case referred
to above were sought to be distinguished on the ground that
there the payments were made in respect of the cancellation
of contracts directed to result in the making of the trading
profits, whereas in the present case the cancelled
agreements were directed to the acquisition
(1) [1938] 21 T.C. 608.
233
of rights in the films which when worked were to yield
profits. The terms of the agreements summarised above
clearly show that they constitute a financing agreement and
a distributing agency agreement. In so far as they were
only financing agreements they gave the assessee a charge on
the films to be produced with moneys advanced by it but gave
it no right to distribute the films or otherwise work them
for making income, profits or gains. Therefore, it can
hardly be said that by the financing agreements the assessee
acquired capital assets for carrying on its distributing
agency business. In this respect the case differs from the
case of Glenboig Union Fireclay Co. Ltd. v. Commissioners of
Inland Revenue(1), for in that case the lease of the fire
clay fields authorised the assessee who was a manufacturer
of fire clay goods to extract fire clay and manufacture fire
clay goods and consequently was a capital asset of the
assessee’s business. Further, in the present case there is
no suggestion that any part of the moneys advanced by the
assessee for the production of the films was outstanding.
Assuming that to start with the films constituted capital
assets, the entire capital outlay had been recovered and the
security had been extinguished and that part of the
agreements which constituted financing agreements had been
fully worked out and bad come to an end and the three films
ceased to be capital assets and the assessee was holding the
films only under that part of the agreements which consti-
tuted the distributing agency agreements which only were
subsisting. In the premises the amount received by the
assessee was only so received "towards commission", that is
to say, as compensation for the loss of the commission which
it would have earned bad the agreements not been terminated.
In our opinion, in the events that had happened, the amount
was not received by the assessee as the price of any capital
assets sold or surrendered or destroyed or sterilized but in
the language of Rowlatt J. in Short Bros.’ case (supra) the
amount was simply received
(1) [1922] 12 T.C. 427.
234
by the assessee in the course of its going distributing
agency business from that going business. In our judgment,
on the facts and in the circumstances of the present case,
it falls within the principles laid down in Short Bros.’ and
Kelsall Parsons & Co.’s cases rather than within those laid
down in Shaw Wallace’s case or Van Den Bergh’s case or Barr
Crombie’s case.
Reference was made to section 10 (5-A) of the Indian Income
Tax Act, 1922, and it was urged that the language of that
sub-section impliedly indicated that the sum of Rs. 26,000
(rupees twenty-six thousand) was a capital receipt. We are
unable to accept this suggestion. That sub-section was
obviously introduced to prevent the abuse of managing agency
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agreements being terminated on payment of huge compensation
and to nullify the application of the decision in Shaw
Wallace’s case to such cases. But that sub-section does not
necessarily imply that if that sub-section were not there
the kind of payment referred to therein would have been
treated as capital receipt in all cases.
For the reasons stated above the referred question should in
our opinion have been answered in the affirmative and we
answer it accordingly. The appeal is, therefore, allowed
with costs throughout.
WHAGWATI J.-I had the privilege of reading the judgment just
delivered by my Lord the Chief Justice but I regret I cannot
agree with the same.
The facts leading up to the present appeal have been fully
set out in that judgment and it is not necessary to repeat
the same. The relevant portions of the agreement dated the
17th September 1941 which is the sample of the three
agreements entered into between the Jupiter Pictures and the
assessee may be, however, set out herein:
"Whereas the producer has taken on hand the production of a
Tamil talkie picture ’Kannagi’ hereinafter called the said
picture........ and whereas for the purpose of the said
production the producer has approached the distributors for
financial assistance and
235
for the distribution and exploitation of the said picture by
the distributors through their organization and the
distributors have agreed to render such financial assistance
by advancing to the producer altogether a sum of Rs. 57,000
on the terms and in the manner hereinafter appearing and. to
distribute and exploit the said picture through their
organization as requested by the producer.................
Cl. 1. The distributors shall advance to the producer a sum
of Rs. 57,000 only altogether in the manner hereinafter set
out:
(a) a sum of Rs. 7,000 only should be advanced on the
execution of these presents;
(b) a further sum of Rs. 5,000 should be advanced as soon
as 5,000 feet of film shall have been completed and roughly
edited, rushprint thereof shown;
(c) a further sum of Rs. 10,000 should be advanced as soon
as a further 10,000 feet of film shall have been completed;
(d) a further sum of Rs. 10,000 should be advanced as soon
as a further 15,000 feet of film shall have been completed;
(e) a further sum of Rs. 12,000 should be advanced on the
last shooting day of the picture;
(f) a further sum of Rs. 10,000 should be advanced as soon
as the picture is passed by the Board of Censors and 12
copies of the film delivered to the distributors; and the
balance of Rs. 3,000 to be retained by the distributors to
be utilised for the purpose of Press Publicity in regard to
the said picture to be made by the distributors on behalf of
the producer from time to time. The distributors may
utilise the said sum for publicity as they think fit and
proper and at their sole discretion.
Cl. 3. The distributors shall from the realisations of the
said picture made by them:
(a) pay themselves all amounts spent by them for publicity
in respect of the said picture such an expenditure having
been incurred only after obtaining the consent of the
producer;
(b) pay themselves their distribution commis-
236
sion in respect of the said picture as hereinafter provided;
and
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(c) pay themselves the available balance until the entire
advance of Rs. 57,000 should be completely discharged and
satisfied.
Cl. 6. If the distributors should fail to realise the full
amount due to them as aforesaid from the realisation of the
said picture in the manner hereinbefore set out on or before
the expiry of one and a half years from the date of the
first release of the said picture, the producer shall be
liable to pay to the distributors whatever balance may be
then due by them with compound interest at 12 per cent. per
annum the said interest to be calculated on the said balance
amount from the date of expiry of the said one and a half
years and the said payment to be made before the expiry of
one month therefrom.
Cl. 15. And it is hereby expressly agreed by and between
the distributors and the producer that until the entire
amount of Rs.
57,000 to be advanced by the distributors should be repaid
and discharged in full and all other claims of the
distributors arising hereunder completely satisfied the
negative and positive copies of the said picture shall
constitute the security for whatever amount may be due to
the distributors and shall, if in the possession of the
producer or any one on his behalf, be held by them only as
trustees for the distributors.
Cl. 19. In the event of the producer failing to deliver the
said copies of the said picture duly passed by the Board of
Censors as hereinbefore provided before the said period,
namely 1-5-1942, the producer shall become liable to pay to
the distributors at the letters’ option such amount as has
been advanced by the distributors to the producer including
monies ,spent by the distributors in respect of publicity
with interest thereon at 12 per cent. per annum. But if the
said picture be not delivered within two months thereafter,
viz., on or before 1-7-1942 the distributors may at their
option complete the picture at their own cost and in such
case the producer shall be liable to the distributors for
all the expenses with compound
237
interest thereon at 12 per cent. per annum and the
distributors shall have all rights as to the distribution,
sale, etc., as aforesaid.
Cl. 20. On the expiry of the period of five years mentioned
in this agreement, the distributors shall return to the
producer all copies of films and balance stock of loan and
saleable publicity materials of the said picture, subject to
usual wear and tear and subject to the distributors
receiving back from the producer such unrealised amount, if
any, as mentioned in clause (6) above".
The said three agreements *were dated 17th September 1941,
16th July 1942 and 10th May 1945, each having a period of
five years to run ending with 16th September 1946, 15th July
1947 and 9th May 1950 respectively.
The only question which falls to be determined by us herein
is whether the payment of Rs. 26,000 received by the
assessee from the Jupiter Pictures on the cancellation of
the said three agreements on the 31st October 1945 is a
capital receipt or income, profits or gains liable to tax in
the assessment year 1946-47.
The assessee was no doubt carrying on the business of
distributors which involved as a necessary corollary the
acquisition of films for the purpose of distribution. Those
films could either be produced by it or could be acquired by
it from the producers who hired them out to it for the
purpose of distribution. There was, however, an activity in
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this business of distributors which consisted of advancing
monies to the producers to enable the producers to produce
the films and the agreements which were entered into between
the producers and the assessee as distributors were
composite agreements incorporating therein the terms in
regard to the financial assistance as also the distribution
and exploitation of the films thus produce by the producers
with the financial assistance rendered to them by the
assessee. They were not mere agreements for distribution
and exploitation of the pictures which by themselves would
not require any investment of capital but would
238
merely involve the work of distribution and exploitation of
the pictures. The terms above set out were designed for the
purpose of protecting the interests of the assessee in so
far as it advanced considerable sums to the producers for
the purpose of producing the films. Apart from the
commission which the assessee derived from the distribution
and exploitation of the pictures which would certainly be
its revenue receipt in the course of the carrying on of its
business as distributors, it was entitled under the terms of
the agreements to repay itself the amounts of the advances
which it made for the production of the pictures as also the
interest thereon and the agreements also provided that the
negative and positive"., copies of the pictures should
constitute the security for whatever amount might be due to
the assessee not only in respect of the amounts advanced by
it to the producers but also in respect of all other claims
arising under the agreements. The negative and positive
copies of the pictures if in possession of the producers or
any one on their/behalf would only be held by them as
trustees of the assessee and the assessee was invested with
a species of proprietary rights over the same. If the
pictures were not delivered within the specified period the
assessee was at liberty to complete the same and in such a
case the producers were liable to it for all the expenses
with compound interest at 12 per cent. per annum and all the
rights as distributors were to fasten upon the same. The
copies of the films and all the other publicity materials
were to be returned by the assessee to the producers after
the expiry of the period of five years mentioned in the
agreements subject to its receiving from the producers all
unrealised amounts under the agreements.
What is it that the assessee was, acquiring from the
producers under the terms of these agreements? Was it
acquiring capital assets which it would work upon by way of
distribution and exploitation in order to earn its income,
profits or gains or was it acquiring stock-in-trade of its
business as distributors? If it was capital assets which it
thus acquired the monies
239
which it advanced to the producers for acquiring the same
would necessarily be capital expenditure and would not be
debited by it in its accounts as trading expenses which
would be the position if what it, acquired under the terms
of the agreements was mere stock-in-trade of its/business.
The realisations which it made by distribution and
exploitation of the pictures would be undoubted trade
receipts and, therefore, income, profits or gains and no
part of the same would go to its capital account. The
monies which it had advanced for the production of the
pictures would, however, as and when realised, be./ credited
by it in its accounts as capital receipts and they would
certainly not be liable to be treated as trading receipts.
There was thus a sharp distinction between the capital
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account and the trading account, the amounts advanced
towards the production of the pictures being capital
expenditure and the repayments of these advances as and when
made being capital receipts, as distinct from the monies
spent by it in the distribution and exploitation of the
pictures being trading expenses and the commission realised
by it from such distribution and exploitation being trading
receipts. As in the cases of mining leases and other
species of proprietary rights obtained by an assessee being
capital assets available to the assessee for working upon
the same and earning income, profits or gains, so in the
case of these pictures which it acquired by advancing monies
to the producers to be available to it for distributing and
exploiting the same, what it would be acquiring under the
terms of the agreements would be capital assets and if an
agreement was subsequently entered into by it either
transferring these capital assets or surrendering them for
value, whatever payment would be realised out of the same
would be capital receipts and, not trading receipts. The
nomenclature of that receipt as commission for distribution
and exploitation under the agreements would not make any
difference to the position nor would the fact that, at the
time when the said three agreements were. cancelled., no
part of the monies which had been advanced at the commence-
32
240
ment remained outstanding and the only activity of the
assessee qua these pictures was then confined to the
distribution and exploitation of the same. The agreements
were composite agreements and what we have got to look to is
what were the rights in these pictures which the assessee
had acquired under the terms of the agreements. It had a
species of proprietary rights in these pictures all
throughout the period of the agreements not only in respect
of advances which it had made for producing the same but
also in respect of all other claims under the terms of the
agreements and the nature of those rights would not be
changed by the accident of the full amount of the advances
being repaid to it at a particular period of time during the
currency of the agreements. If it acquired capital assets
those assets continued in its possession as such all
throughout the period of the agreements and it would not be
legitimate at any intermediate period of time to see what
was the position obtaining at that time for the purpose of
converting what were acquired as capital assets at the dates
of the agreements into stock-in-trade of its business of
distribution and exploitation of the pictures.
If this be the true position on the construction of the
agreements it follows that what was done by the assessee on
the 31st October 1945 was to surrender these capital assets
to the producers for a consideration. These capital assets
qua the agreements of the 17th September 1941, 16th July
1942 and 10th May 1945 were to endure up to 16th September,
1946, 15th July 1947 and 9th May 1950 respectively. A sum
of Rs. 8,666-10-8 was fixed as the consideration for the
surrender of each and the capital assets which had been
acquired were all of them surrendered by the assessee to the
producers with effect from the 31st October 1945. The
payment thus received by the assessee could only be a
capital receipt being the price of the surrender of the
capital assets and could not be considered a trading receipt
at all.
It is well recognised that the problem of discriminating
between an income receipt and a capital receipt
241
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and between an income disbursement and a capital
disbursement is not always easy to solve. Even, though the
distinction is well recognised and easily applied in
general, cases do arise from time to time , where the item
lies on the border line and the task of assigning it to
income or capital becomes one of much refinement. "While
each case is found to turn upon its own facts, ’and no
infallible criterion emerges, nevertheless the decisions are
useful as illustrations and as affording indications of the
kind of considerations which may relevantly be borne in mind
in approaching the problem................................
The nature of a receipt may vary according to the nature of
the trade in connection with which it arises. The price of
the sale of a factory is ordinarily a capital receipt, but
it may be an income receipt in the case of a person whose
business it is to buy and sell factories" (Per Lord
Macmillan in Van Den Berghs, Ltd. v. Clark (H. M. Inspector
of Taxes(1)). It may also be borne in mind that the
provisions of the Indian Income-tax Act are not in pari
materia with those of the English Income-tax Statutes so
that the decisions on the English Acts are in general of no
assistance in construing the Indian Acts (Vide the
observations of the Privy Council in Commissioner of Income-
tax v. Shaw Wallace & Co.(2) and in Raja Bahadur Kamakshya
Narain Singh of Ramgarh v. Commissioner of Income tax, Bihar
& Orissa(3)).
The authorities which were cited at the Bar may, however, be
shortly referred to. Counsel for the appellant particularly
relied upon the decisions in Short Brothers, Ltd. v. The
Commissioners of Inland Revenue(4) and Kelsall Parsons& Co.
v. Commissioners of Inland Revenue(5) in support of the
position that the cancellation of the agreements in the
present case and the receipt of Rs. 26,000 by the assessee
was in the ordinary course of business in order to adjust
the relations between the producers and the assessee and was
simply a receipt in the course of a
(1) [1935] 19 T.C. 390, 428, 431.
(2) [1932] L.R. 59 I.A. 206, 212.
(3) [1943] L.R. 70 I.A. 180, 188.
(4) [1927] 12 T.C. 955.
(5) [1938] 21 T.C. 608.
242
going business from that going business and nothing else.
It was submitted that it was an essential part of the
assessee’s business to enter into agreements of the nature
in question and that it was an ordinary incident of its
business that such agreements may be altered or terminated
front , time to time. It was therefore a normal incident of
the business such as that of the assessee that the
agreements might be modified and in parting with the
benefits of the agreements the assessee could not be said to
be parting, with something which could be described as an
enduring asset of its business.
This position would have been tenable if the agreements in
question were merely distributing agreements without
anything more. It would then have been an essential part of
the assessee’s business to enter into such agreements and
also it would have been a normal incident of its business to
modify or terminate the same and to adjust the relations
between the parties. In neither of these cases was there
any question of any capital asset having depreciated in
value or become of less use for the purpose of the
assessee’s business. Rowlatt, J. observed in Short
Brothers, Ltd. v. The Commissioners of Inland Revenue
(supra) at page 968 that the money was not received in
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respect of the termination of any part of the assessee’s
business nor was it received in respect of any capital asset
as was the sum in the Glenboig’s case(1). Lord Fleming also
emphasized this aspect of the matter in Kelsall Parsons and
Co. v. Commissioners of Inland Revenue (supra) at page 622
that there was no finding that in consequence of the
termination, any capital asset was depreciated in value or
became of less use for the purpose of the assessee’s
business. If the assessees in those cases bad by virtue of
the agreements in question acquired capital assets which
they could work in order to earn income, profits or gains,
the payments received on termination of the said agreements
would certainly not have been held to be trading receipts
but capital receipts and as such not liable to tax.
(1) [1922] 12 T.C. 427.
243
Reliance was placed on behalf of the assessee on the
decisions in Glenboig Union Fireclay Co. Ltd. v.
Commissioners of Inland Revenue(1) and Van Den Berghs Ltd.
v. Clark (H.M. Inspector of Taxes) (supra), for showing
that, if the capital asset of the assessee was sterilized or
destroyed, the payment would be a capital receipt. Lord
Buckmaster, in Glenboig Union Fireclay Co. Ltd. v. The
Commissioners of Inland Revenue (supra) at page 463,
expressed the opinion that "it made no difference whether it
be regarded as the sale of the asset out and out, or whether
it be treated as a means of preventing the acquisition of
profit that would otherwise be gained. In either case, the
capital asset of the company was to that extent sterilized
and destroyed and it was in respect of that action that the
sum had been paid". Lord Wrenbury also, at page 464 stated
that "the mining leases were capital assets of the company,
the company’s objects were to acquire profits by working the
mines under and by virtue of the titles and rights which
they hold under the leases and the payment was made to the
assessee for abstaining from seeking to make a profit". Put
it in another way: "The right to work the area in which the
working was to be abandoned was part of the capital asset
consisting of the right to work the whole area demised. Had
the abandonment extended to the whole area all subsequent
profit by working would., of course, have been impossible
but it would be impossible to contend that the compensation
would be other than capital. It was the price paid for
sterilising the asset from which otherwise profit might have
been obtained. What is true of the whole must be equally
true of the part"’ (Page 465). In Van Den Berghs Ltd. v.
Clark (H. M. Inspector of Taxes) (supra) it was held that
the payment in question was the payment for the cancellation
of the assessee’s future rights under the agreements which
constituted a capital asset of the assessee and that it was
accordingly a capital receipt. Justice Finlay, whose
judgment was ultimately restored by the House of Lords,
observed at page 413:
(1) [1922] 12 T.C. 427.
244
The ground is not very easy to express, but the ground upon
which I desire to put this part of the case is this, that
the true view here is that the agreement which was cancelled
was just a capital asset of, the Company and, if that is
right, it seems to me to follow that, distinguishing such
cases as Short Brothers(1), one ought to hold that the sum
received was not an income receipt at all". Lord Macmillan,
after discussing the various authorities which according to
him were useful as illustrations and as affording in-
dications of the kind of considerations which maybe
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relevantly borne in mind in approaching the problem,
construed the agreements in question as not ordinary
commercial contracts made in the course of the carrying on
of the assessee’s trade. The agreements in the facts and
circumstances of the case before him related to the whole
structure of the assessee’s profit-making apparatus, they
regulated the assessee’s activities, defined what they might
and might not do and affected the conduct of their business
and he had difficulty in seeing how money laid out to
secure, or money received for the cancellation of, so
fundamental an organization of a trader’s activities could
be regarded as an income disbursement or an income receipt.
He expressed the opinion that the asset, the congeries of
rights which the appellants enjoyed under the agreements and
which for a price they surrendered, was a capital asset.
They provided a means of making profits but they themselves
did not yield profits.
Applying the same ratio here, could it not be said that the
pictures which were acquired by the assessee from the
producers were capital assets of the assessee, the object of
the assessee being to acquire profits by distributing and
exploiting the pictures under and by virtue of the titles
and rights which the assessee acquired under the agreements
or that they provided the means of making profits though
they themselves did not yield profits? That being the true
position on the construction of the agreements, the only
result would be that the pictures constituted capital assets
(1) [1927] 12 T.C. 955.
245
of the company and the payment in question was one for the
cancellation of the assessee’s rights under the agreements
and was accordingly a capital receipt.
The distinction between capital assets on the one hand and
the stock-in-trade on the other was sought to be supported
by reference/to the decisions in Shad bolt (H. M. Inspector
of Taxes) v. Salmon Estate (1) and Johnson (H. M. Inspector
of Taxes) v. W. S. Try Ltd. (2). These were cases of
assessees which carried on the business of building and
selling houses or building and development business and in
the course of their business acquired plots of land which
they utilised for, the purpose of constructing buildings
thereupon, which buildings together with the plots of land
on which they stood were sold by them for a consideration.
The question which arose was whether the acquisition of the
plots of land on which the buildings were thus constructed
was the acquisition of a capital asset or a trading asset
,by the assessees. Justice Macnaghten, whose judgment in
the King’s Bench Division was the final judgment in Shadbolt
(H. M. Inspector of Taxes) v. Salmon Estate (supra)
remarked at page 57 that "it was not disputed that in the
course of such a trade as this, the trade of building houses
for sale, the land on which the houses were-" built was part
of the stock-in-trade of the business and was not a capital
asset. The land being thus a part of their stock-in-trade,
the payment in question for the bit sold by the assessees
would have been a trading receipt and the right to build on
the plots was likewise- a trading asset".In Johnson (H.
M. Inspector of Taxes) v. W. S. TryLtd. (supra), also,
the judgment of the same learned Judge was the final
judgment on the point in issue. The following observations
of the learned Judge at page 172 are very instructive:
"Although in most cases land belonging to a trading company
was part of its capital assets, in the case of a company
engaged in ribbon development the land which is acquired for
the purposes of such development is not part of its capital.
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In such a case the land forms part of its stock-in-trade.,
just
(1) [1943] 25 T.C. 52.
(2) [1946] 27 T.C. 167.
246
as much as the materials which it buys for the purpose of
erecting the buildings on it. The cost of the land must
come into its trading account as a trading expense. If it
sells the land the price must come into its trading account
as a trading receipt. And, likewise, compensation for
injurious affection must also, in my opinion, be regarded as
a trading receipt".
In the instant case also, the pictures, if produced by the
assessee itself would have been capital assets of the
assessee. What the assessee did was that instead of
producing the pictures itself it advanced monies to the
producers for the purpose of producing the pictures which it
acquired for the purpose of distribution and exploitation.
Nonetheless, the pictures thus acquired were capital assets
of the assessee which it worked upon in carrying on its
business of distribution and exploitation, the monies it
spent on the acquisition of the pictures were thus capital
expenditure and whatever monies were realised by it by
working these capital assets were its capital receipts
except of course the commission which it earned by
distribution and exploitation of the pictures which
certainly would be its trading receipts. Having regard to
the terms of these agreements it could certainly not be
predicated of these pictures that they were its stock-in-
trade so as to constitute the payment in question a trading
receipt of the assessee.
Both the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal and the High Court
relied upon the decision of the Privy Council in
commissioner of Income-tax, Bengal v. Shaw Wallace & Co.
(supra), and were of the opinion that the present case was
covered by that decision. On the facts of the case as set
out in the above appeal it does not appear to be clear
whether the two selling agencies there were the only selling
agencies which had been acquired and worked by Shaw Wallace
& Co., and it, is debatable under the circumstances whether
the authority of that decision is not shaken by the
decisions in Short Brothers’ case (supra) and Kelsall
Parsons & Co.’s case (supra). It is sufficient to observe
that the agreements in the case of Shaw Wallace & Co. were
not deemed to constitute capital
247
assets of the assessee and that aspect of the question was
not at all considered by the Privy Council. It is not,
therefore, necessary to express any opinion on the
correctness or otherwise of that decision in this case.
Having regard to all the circumstances adverted to above, it
is, therefore, clear that the payment of Rs. 26,000 received
by the assessee from the producers was in consideration of
the surrender by the assessee of the capital assets which it
had acquired from the producers under the three agreements
in question and constituted a capital receipt not liable to
tax for the assessment year 1946-47. The answer given by
the High Court to the referred question was, therefore,
correct and I would dismiss the appeal with costs.
ORDER.
BY THE COURT:-In accordance with the Judgment of the
majority, the appeal is allowed with costs throughout.