Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, MADHYA PRADESH & BHOPAL,
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BHOPAL TEXTILES LTD., BHOPAL.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
17/10/1960
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
DAS, S.K.
SHAH, J.C.
CITATION:
1961 AIR 426 1961 SCR (2) 9
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1967 SC1907 (7)
ACT:
Income Tax--Supply of goods by non-resident company--Place
of Payment, when place of receipt of money by seller--Bank
when agent of seller--Railway receipt, if document of title
of goods--Property in goods, when transferred to buyer.
HEADNOTE:
Respondent, a non-resident company, in the accounting year
supplied goods which were sent F. O. R. Bhopal to the buyers
in British India. The railway receipts were handed over to
a Bank in Bhopal with instructions to hand over the railway
receipts to the buyers, who were named as consignees, only
on receipt of payment of the bill and collection charges.
The branches of the Bank within the taxable territory
collected the amounts due from the buyers and transmitted
them to Bhopal to the credit of the respondent.
The question was whether the profits in the goods were
received or deemed to be received in British India.
Held, that the decision of this Court in Commissioner of
Income-tax v. P. M. Rathod & Co. applied to this case; and
the income, profits or gain must be deemed to have been
received within the taxable territory.
The fact of payment to the agent determines the place where
the money can be said to be received by the seller. Since
in the instant case the railway receipts were not to be
handed over to the buyers by the Bank, as per instructions
of the seller, unless payment for the value of the goods
were received by the Bank which instructions the buyers
could not countermand, this was sufficient to make the Bank
an agent of the seller.
Held, also, that a railway receipt is a document of title to
goods, and, for all purposes, represents the goods. When
the railway receipt is handed over to the consignee on
payment, the property in the goods is transferred.
The Commissioner of Income-tax v. P. M. Rathod and Co.,
[1960] 1 S.C.R. 401, relied on.
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 755 of 1957.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
March 23, 1955, of the former Nagpur High Court in Misc.
Civil Case No. 240 of 1953.
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K. N. Rajagopal Sastri, R. H. Dhebar and D. Gupta, for the
appellant.
Veda Vyasa, S. N. Andley, J. B. Dadachanji,_ Rameshwar Nath
and P. L. Vohra, for the respondent.
1960. October, 17. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by.
HIDAYATULLAH J.-This appeal, with special leave, has been
filed against the judgment of the Nagpur High Court in a
reference under s. 66(1) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922,
by which the High Court answered the following question in
the negative:
" Whether the proportionate profits on the goods of the
value of Rs. 4,10,785 were received or were deemed to be
received in British India, in the year of, account, by or on
behalf of the assessee Company within the meaning of Section
4(1)(a) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 ".
The Commissioner of Income-tax, Madhya Pradesh and Bhopal is
the appellant, and the Bhopal Textiles Ltd., Bhopal, is the
respondent. For the assessment year 1944-45, the Company
which was non-resident was treated as ’ resident and
ordinarily resident’ under s. 4(1)(c) of the Income-tax Act.
In the year of account, it had supplied its manufactured
articles either to the Government of India or its nominees
at Agra, Allahabad and Delhi. Under the orders of the
Government, the goods were sent direct to the persons
nominated, who made the payment against the goods. The
goods were all sent for Bhopal, and the railway freight and
other charges were to be borne by the buyers to whom the
railway receipts made out in the name of the consignees were
sent by the Company through the Imperial Bank at Bhopal.
The Bhopal Branch sent the railway receipts to branches of
the Bank at Agra, Allahabad and Delhi, which collected the
amounts due from the buyers, and transmitted them to the
Imperial Bank, Bhopal, to the credit of the Company. On
these facts, a total sum of Rs. 4,40,373 was held by the
Department to have been received in British India. of that
sum, an amount of Rs. 29,588 which represented the receipts
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for supplies direct to Government is no longer in dispute.
The balance represents the sum, which was the subject-matter
of the reference.
The usual appeals followed, and the contention of the
Company that the money was not received in, British India
was not accepted by the Tribunal. The Tribunal did not
decide about the place of accrual. A reference was then
made by the Tribunal of the question quoted above. The High
Court in deciding the reference went into the question of
passing of property under the Indian Sale of Goods Act,
1930, and came to the conclusion that since the property in
the goods had passed to the buyers, the Imperial Bank of
India, Bhopal, must be " deemed to have received the railway
receipts as agents of the buyers ". Continuing the reason,
the learned Judges observed:
" So also the branches of the Bank at Agra, Allahabad and
Delhi acted as the agents of the buyers when they collected
the money from them and transmitted it to the Bhopal branch.
In this view, the profits cannot be said to be received by
the assessee Company in British India.’ It received the
money only when it reached the Bhopal branch as a credit to
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its own account and that was not in British India at the
material time ".
The case was not decided by the Tribunal on the basis of
accrual of the income, profits or gains to the Company. It
was decided on the fact of actual receipt, whether it was in
British India or in Bhopal, which was then outside the
taxable territories. We need not, therefore, concern
ourselves with the problem whether property in the goods
could be said to have passed absolutely to the buyers
without any right of disposal being reserved by the Company.
It is a matter of some doubt whether the goods were
absolutely at the disposal of the buyers after the rail. way
receipts were handed over to the Bank. It is in evidence-
and has been adverted to by the Incometax Officer-that the
Company, when it handed over the railway receipt to the
Imperial Bank at Bhopal, did so along with a covering letter
in which it asked the Bank to deliver the railway receipt
and the bill to
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the buyers against payment of the bill amount plus
collection charges. In this view of the matter, though we
do not express any final opinion, we doubt whether the right
of disposal was parted with by the, Company.
A railway receipt is a document of title to goods, and, for
all purposes, represents the goods. When the railway
receipt is handed over to the consignee on payment, the
property in the goods is transferred. In this case, it is a
matter of considerable doubt whether the property in the
goods can be said to have passed to the buyers by the mere
fact of the railway receipts being in the name of the
consignees, as has been held by the High Court. Since we
are not deciding the question of accrual, we do not
elaborate the point.
Coming now to the question as to where the amount was
received, we have no doubt that the view of the Tribunal was
correct. This income was received at Agra, Allahabad or
Delhi from the buyers by the Imperial Bank acting as the
agent of the Company. The Company had handed over the
railway receipts to the Bank, and asked the Bank not to hand
over the railway receipts to the buyers, unless payment was
received. This was sufficient to make the Bank an agent of
the Company. The buyers could not have countermanded the
instructions given by the Company to the Bank, which they
would, indubitably, have been able to do, if the Bank was
their agent. This was laid down by this Court in The
Commissioner of Income-tax v. P. M. Rathod and Company
(1). Mr. Veda Vyasa contends that the case is
distinguishable on the ground that the railway receipts
there were " to self ’ whereas here the railway receipts,
were made out in the name of the consignee. Nothing turns
upon this distinction. The document of title to goods was
still the property of the Company till payment for it was
received and it was handed over. In this view of the
matter, we are of opinion that the ruling in question app-
lies.
Mr. Veda Vyasa finally contended that the agreement between
the parties was that the goods were to
(1) [1960] 1 S.C.R. 401.
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be sent for Bhopal, and that the price was also to be paid
there. He contended that the handing over of the railway
receipts to the Bank at Bhopal was in furtherance of the
agreement, that the money was ultimately obtained by the
Bank and handed over at Bhopal also, and that, thus, the
money must be deemed to have been received there. This, in
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our opinion, does not truly represent the character of the
transaction. No doubt, under the agreement, payment was to
be made at Bhopal; but the circumstances show that that was
departed from, and the ordinary mercantile practice of
handing over the railway receipts to one’s own bankers with
a request to hand over the receipts against payment to the
buyers was followed. The Bank, as we have shown above, was
thus the agent of the sellers, as was laid down in the
ruling of this Court, and the fact of payment to the agent
determines the place where the money can be said to be
received by the Company. That place was at Agra, Allahabad
or Delhi. In this view, the income, profits or gains must
be deemed to have been received in the taxable territories,
and the answer to the question ought to have been in the
affirmative.
We accordingly allow the appeal, and answer the question in
the affirmative. The appellant will be entitled to his
costs here and in the High Court.
Appeal allowed.
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