Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MUGNEERAM BANGUR & CO.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
31/03/1965
BENCH:
SIKRI, S.M.
BENCH:
SIKRI, S.M.
SUBBARAO, K.
SHAH, J.C.
CITATION:
1966 AIR 50 1965 SCR (3) 611
CITATOR INFO :
C 1967 SC1475 (5)
ACT:
Income-tax Act (11 of 1922)--Sale of going concern--Slump.
price --When part attributable to stock-in-trade.
HEADNOTE:
The business of the assessee firm, carrying on land
development business was sold as a going concern to a
company promoted by the assessee s partners. The purchase
price included sums for the value of land, goodwill, etc.
The amount shown as the value of the goodwill v:as sought to
be assessed to income-tax on the grounds (i) that the
assessee’s business was purely one of buying and selling
land and (ii) the amount was profit attributable to the sale
of land which was the stock-in-trade of the assessee. In
appeal to this Court.
HELD: On the facts of this case it could not be said that
the assessees were carrying on the business of purely buying
and selling land. They were engaged in buying land,
developing it and then selling it. The sale was the sale of
the whole concern and no part of the slump price was
attributable to the cost of the land. If that was so, no
part of it was taxable. [617H-618A, E]
Commissioner of Income-tax, Kerala v. West Coast Chemical
and Industries Ltd. 46 I T.R. 135 and Doughty v.
Commissioner of Taxes (1927) A.C. 327, applied.
In the case of a concern carrying on the business of buying
land, developing it and the selling it is easy to
distinguish a realisation sale from an ordinary sale, and it
is very difficult to attribute part of the slump price to
the cost of land sold in the realisation sale. The mere fact
that in the schedule the price of land was stated did not
lead to the conclusion that part of the slump price was
necessarily attributable to the land sold. There was no
evidence that any attempt was made to evaluate the land on
the date of sale. As the assessees were transferring the
concern to a company. constituted by the assessees
themselves, no effort would ordinarily have been made to
evaluate the land as on the date of sale. [618B-D]
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 310 of 1964.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
December 1’3, 1961 of the Calcutta High Court in Income-tax
Reference No. 74 of 1956.
N.D. Karkhanis, Gopal Singh and R.N. Sachthey, for the
appellant.
A.V. Viswanatha Sastrt, S. Murthy and B, P. Maheshwari,
for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Sikri, J. This is an appeal by special leave directed the
judgment of the High Court at Calcutta in a reference under
612
s. 66 of the Income Tax Act. The four questions referred to
the High Court by the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal are:
"(1) Whether on the facts and circumstances of
this case the Income-tax Officer, Central
Circle XIV, Calcutta, was competent to file
the appeal before the Tribunal against the
order of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner
of Income Tax, Range-A. Calcutta?
(2) Whether on the facts and circumstances of
this case the sum of Rs. 2,50,000 represented
the surplus on the sale of lands which was the
stock in trade of the assessee company or was
the value of goodwill alleged to have been
transferred?
(3) Whether on the facts and circumstances
of this case by the sale of the whole business
concern it could be held that there was
taxable profit in the sum of Rs. 2.50,000?
(4) Whether on the facts and circumstances of
this case and in view of the findings of the
Tribunal that the entire share capital of the
vendee company (excepting seven ordinary
shares) was taken over by the vendor firm in
lieu of the sale price of the business as a
whole, there was any profit in the amount of
Rs. 2,50,000 the same being taxable under the
Indian Income Tax Act?
The relevant facts and circumstances are these. The
respondent, M/s Mugneeram Bangur & Co. (Land Department)
Calcutta (hereinafter referred to as the vendors) were a
firm carrying on the business of land development in
Calcutta. By an agreement dated July 7, 1948, the partners
of the firm agreed to sell all the business of the said firm
to the Amalgamated Development Limited, here in after called
the vendee, which company was promoted by the partners of
the firm. The relevant paragraphs of the said agreement are
as follows:
"And Whereas the Vendors have agreed to sell
and the company has agreed to purchase all the
said business on the basis hereinafter set
out.
Now it is hereby agreed and declared between
the parties as follows:--
1. The Vendors do hereby agree to sell
and the company both hereby agree to purchase
All That the said business with effect from
the eighth day of July One thousand nine
hundred and forty-eight. Together with the
goodwill of the said business And all stock in
trade, fixtures. tools, implements. furniture,
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fittings and all other articles and things
belonging to the said business or in any way
used in the same including the benefit and
advantages of all contracts.
613
2. The purchase price shall be Rupees
thirty-four lakhs ninty-nine thousand and
three hundred paid and satisfied by the
Company allotting to the Vendors or their
nominees seventeen thousand five hundred
Redeemable Preference shares of Rupees one
hundred each and seventeen thousand four
hundred and ninetythree Ordinary s
hares of
Rupees one hundred each in the capital of the
Company which will be accepted by the Vendors
in full satisfaction of the said purchase
price.
3. The Company shall undertake and
discharge all debts and liabilities of the
Vendors including development expenses such as
opening out roads, laying out drains and
sanitary arrangements providing electricity in
the areas and providing a School in Tolly
gunge for education of Children for which the
Vendors have given an undertaking to the
Tollygunge Municipality and also the liability
of the Vendors in respect of the deposits made
with them by various intending purchasers of
lands but excluding the liabilities of the
Vendors for Income-tax, Super-tax or any
other tax or duty on income or revenue in
respect of the profits of the business".
The sum of Rs. 34,99,300 was arrived at in the Schedule
thus:
(In rupees)
1. Laud ........ 12,68,628 7 7
2. Goodwill . ........... 2,50,000 0 0
3. Motor Car & Lorries .......... 25,866 8 6
4. Furniture, Fixture etc ........... 5,244 5 6
5. Mortgage secured .......... 71,62,367 6 0
6. Deposits for purchase of land ........ 53,500 0 0
7. Advance paid to pleaders solicitors, contractors’ staff
and other
outstanding ............ 1,83,622 3 6
8. Cash in Bank ............ 71,800 1 8
----------------
36,21,029 0 9
Less liabilities .. 1,21,729 0 9
------------------
34,99,300 0 0
614
The consideration of Rs. 34,99,300 was paid by allotment
of 17,500 Redeemable Preference shares of Rs. 100 each and
17,493 Ordinary shares of Rs. 100 each, the allotment being
to the vendors-partners or their nominees. Thus the vendors
received shares of the face value of Rs. 34,99,300 for the
assets transferred to the company.
The Income Tax Officer held that the sum of Rs. 2,50,000
was actually charged by the vendors as a lump sum amount of
profits on sale of valuable stock in trade and not goodwill
as alleged. The Appellate Assistant Commissioner, on appeal,
held that the said sum of Rs. 2,50,000 was the value of the
goodwill. He further held that since the transfer was a
transfer of business as a going concern, the profit was the
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capital gain and therefore not liable to tax. Relying on
Doughty v. Commissioner of Taxes,(1) he held that as "the
transfer is a transfer of all assets of the firm to a
company the transfer is a capital sales".
The Income Tax Officer filed an appeal before the
Appellate Tribunal. The Appellate Tribunal held that
although the sale was the sale of a business as a going
concern, the value of the stock could be traced, and,
therefore, the profits arising out of the sale was taxable
income. Regarding the goodwill, the Tribunal observed:
"We do not think that there was much value of
the goodwill of the business that was
transferred. Mugneeram Bangur & Co. was a firm
constituting of several partners and
Mugneeram Bangur & Co. Land Department was
a separate firm consisting of the same
partners with. however. different shares in
the firm Mugneerarn Bangur & Co. were also
carrying on business in lands and buildings
along with its activities in other businesses.
Our attention was drawn by the Department
Representative to the fact that in the case of
transfer of lands and buildings of the
assessee firm the conveyances were as a rule
executed in the name of Mugneeram Bangur & Co.
The assessee’s learned Counsel did not object
to this fact. We are therefore accepting it as
correct. If so, there was nothing in the name
of Mugneerarm Bangur & Co. Land Department.
The conversion of the said firm into a Company
in an entirely different name would also
indicate that not much of importance was
attached to the name of Mugneeram Bangur & Co.
Land Department. In the circumstances. in
our opinion, the price paid by the purchase
Core Dany was not on the consideration of the
goodwill of the
[1927] A.C. 327.
615
vendors but upon taking over the entire going
concern and paying the consideration not in
money but by allotment of shares. In such
circumstances, the surplus was out of the sale
of the business as a whole, including the
stock in trade of the assessee firm. Since the
other assets transferred had definite value
which would not increase in value by the
process of transfer, the only value that could
increase was the value of the stock in hand,
that being the land in the present case. In
our opinion, therefore, the amount of Rs.
2,50,000 was really the excess value of the
lands sold along with the other assets".
But the Tribunal dismissed the appeal on the ground that
although the vendors were a different entity from the
vendee, the first being a partnership and the second being a
limited company, the transaction was mere adjustment of the
business position of the partners. It further observed that
the Income Tax Department was not entitled to take mere
book-keeping entries as the evidence of any profit in the
matter.
The High Court first answered question No. 4,
thus:
"There was no profit in the transaction by
which the entire stock in trade and the
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business of the firm were transferred to the
limited company. Again the fact that two
outsiders were brought in as directors with
seven shares allotted to them out of 39,300
shares
’ makes no difference. In Sir Homi Mehta’s
case 400 shares out of 6,000 shares were
allotted to Sir Homi Mehta’s sons. Nor again
can I see any difference in principle between
the case of conversion of business into a
private limited company and one in which it is
converted into a public limited company if in
the latter company outsiders are not allotted
any sizeable proportion of the shares issued".
The High Court felt that this answer was enough to dispose
of the matter, but as questions 2 and 3 had been referred,
they answered them. Regarding question No. 2, the High Court
held that "as the assets of the firm transferred to the
company have been itemised and as there can be no question
of variation of the figures given in items 3 to 8 in the
agreement for sale, it must be held that Rs. 2,50,000 shown
as the value of the goodwill must be represented by surplus
on the sale of lands which was the stock-in-trade of the
assessee company". Regarding question No. 3, the High Court
held that even if the value of the stock in trade taken over
by the assessee was greater than the figure shown therefore
in the agreement for sale in view of the answer to question
4, there was no profit which could be taxed.
616
We may mention that it is not necessary to deal with
question No. 1 because it was given up before the High
Court. Mr. Karkhanis, learned counsel for the appellant.
urges that the Doughty’s case(1) was wrongly decided in
one respect and that the ’vendors and the vendee being
different entities. it is not permissible to tear the
corporate veil to see whether the partners of the vendors
were the same persons as the shareholders of the vendee. He
says that if the veil is not torn, then there was a sale by
the vendors to the vendee and profits arose out of the sale.
Learned counsel for the respondent, Mr. Viswanatha Sastri,
says that if the third question is answered in his favour,
it would not be necessary to deal with the other questions.
As we are inclined to answer the third question in the
favour of the vendors, it is not necessary to deal with the
other questions and the arguments addressed in respect of
them.
The Appellate Tribunal held in this case that the sale
was a sale of business as a going concern. This is also
apparent from clause 1 of the agreement set out above. If
this is so Doughty’s case(1) applies. The facts in Doughty’s
case may be conveniently taken from the headnote in that
case. "In 1920, two partners carrying on business in New
Zealand as general merchants and drapers sold the
partnership business to a limited company in which they
became the only shareholders. The sale was of the entire
assets, including goodwill, the consideration being fully
paid shares, and an agreement by the company to discharge
all the liabilities. The nominal value of the shares being
more than the sum to the credit of the capital account of
the partnership. in its last balance sheet, a new balance
sheet was prepared showing a larger value for the stock in
trade. The Commissioner of Taxes treated the increase in
value so shown as a profit on the sale of the stock in
trade, and assessed the appellant upon it for income tax
under the Land and Income Tax Act, 1916, of New Zealand,.
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which imposes the tax on all profits or gains derived from
any business".
The Privy Council decided the case in favour of the
appellant on two grounds, the first being that "if the
transaction is to be treated as a sale, there was no
separate sale of the stock. and no valuation of the stock as
an item forming part of the aggregate which was sold". In
connection with this ground, Lord Phillimore observed that
"income-tax being a tax upon income, it is well established
that the sale of a whole concern which can be shown to be a
sale at a profit as compared with the price given for the
business, or at which it stands in the books does not give
rise to as profit taxable to income-tax". He further
observed that "where. however, the business consists, as in
the present case, entirely in buying and selling, it is more
difficult to distinguish between an ordinary and a
realization sale the
617
object in either case being to dispose of goods at a higher
price than that given for them, and thus to make a profit
out of the business. The fact that large blocks of stock are
sold does not render the profit obtained anything different
in kind from the profit obtained by a series of gradual and
smaller saks. This might even be the case if the whole
stock was sold out in one sale. Even in the case of a
realization sale, if there were an item which could be
traced as representing the stock sold, the profit obtained
by that sale, though made m conjunction with a sale of the
whole concern, might conceivably be treated as taxable
income". Lord Phillimore concluded with the following
observations:
"If a business be one of purely buying and
selling. like the present, a profit made by
the sale of the whole of the stock, if it
stood by itself, might well be assessable to
income tax; but their view of the facts (if it
be open to them to consider the facts) is the
same as that of Stout C.J.--that is, that this
was a slump transaction".
This Court. in Commissioner of Income-tax, Kerala v. West
Coast Chemicals and Industries Ltd.(1) understood the
Doughty’s case(2) thus:
"This case shows that where a slump price is
paid and no portion is attributable to the
stock-in-trade, it may not be possible
to hold
that there is a profit other than what results
from the appreciation of capital. The essence
of the matter, however, is not that an extra
amount has been gained by the selling out or
the exchange but whether it can fairly be said
that there was a trading from which alone
profits can arise in business".
It follows from the above that once it is accepted that
there was a slump transaction in this case. .e. that the
business was sold as a going concern. the only question that
remains is whether any portion of the slump price is
attributable to the stock in trade
the learned counsel for the appellant relies on two
grounds to support the contention that there is profit
attributable to the sale of land which was stock-in-trade of
the vendors. He says first that in the schedule to the
agreement the value of land and the value of goodwill and
other items is specified. He says that although the
amount of Rs. 2,50,000 was shown as price of goodwill, it
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was really excess value of the land sold along with other
assets. Secondly. he says, relying on the passage already
cited above from Doghty’s case("’) that the vendors’
business was a business of purely buying and selling land.
In our opinion. on the facts of this case it cannot be said
that the vendors were carrying on the business of purely
buying and selling land. In
(1) 46 I.T.R. 135.
(2) [1927] A.C. 327.
618
this case the vendors were engaged in buying land,
developing it and then selling it. The agreement itself
shows that the vendors had already incurred debts and
liabilities for development expenses such as opening out
roads, laying out drains and, sanitary arrangements,
providing electricity and providing for a school.
It seems to us that in the case of a concern carrying on
the business of buying land, developing it and then selling
it, it is easy to distinguish a realisation sale from an
ordinary sale, and it is very difficult to attribute part of
the slump price to the cost of land sold in the realisation
sale. The mere fact that in the schedule the price of land
is stated does not lead to the conclusion that part of the
slump price is necessarily attributable to the land sold.
there is no evidence that any attempt was made to evaluate
the land on the date of sale. As the vendors were
transferring the concern to a company, constituted by the
vendors themselves, no effort would ordinarily have been
made to evaluate the land as on the date of sale. What was
put in the schedule was the cost price, as it stood in the
books of the vendors. Even if the sum of Rs. 2,50,000
attributed to goodwill is added to the cost of land, it is
nobody’s case that this represented the market value of the
land.
In our view the sale was the sale of the whole concern
and no part of the slump price is attributable to the cost
of land. If this is so, it is clear from the decision of
this Court in Commissioner of Income-tax, Kerala v. 14lest
Coast Chemicals and Industries Ltd.(1) and Doughty’s case(2)
that no part of the slump price is taxable. We, therefore,
answer question No. 3 in the negative. As stated before, in
view of this answer, it is not necessary to answer questions
Nos. 2 and 4.
The appeal is accordingly dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.
(1) 46 I.T.R.135.
(2) [1927] A.C. 327.
619