Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THIRU AROORAN SUGARS LTD., MADRAS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, MADRAS
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 30/07/1997
BENCH:
SUHAS C. SEN, S.P. KURDUKAR
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
W I T H
(C.A. No. 6636/83, 6637/83, 6638/83M 6639/83, 6640/83, SLP
(C) No. 2611/88, C.A. No. 2399/89, 175-77/85 & 3674/89)
J U D G M E N T
Sen, J.
The assessment years in this group of appeals (C.A. No.
6636/83, 6637/83, 6638/83M 6639/83, 6640/83, & 175-77/85)
are 1962-63 to 1967-68. The assessee-company, Thiru Arooran
Sugar Ltd., is a manufacturer of sugar which purchases
sugarcane from the market for crushing. It also has its own
cane fields where it cultivates sugarcane which is entirely
consumed by its factory. Since the profits made by the
assessee from the sale of sugar arises out of agricultural
activities as well as the manufacturing activities, the
income earned by the assessee has to be divided into two
parts. No tax is leviable under the Income Tax Act on
agricultural income but the profit generated by the non-
agricultural activities is liable to be taxed under the Act.
There is no dispute that the income attributable to the
agricultural activities must be excluded from the income
earned by the assessee from the sale of sugar. But the
problem is of computation of such income.
Section 10(1) of the Income-tax Act lays down that the
agricultural income shall not be taken into computation of
the total income of a previous year of any person under the
Income-tax Act, 1961. Section 295 of the Act which empowers
the Board to make rules for carrying out the purposes of
this Act has specifically empowered the Board by sub-section
(2)(b) of Section 295 to frame Rules for the manner in which
and the procedure by which the income shall be arrived at in
the case of, inter alia, income derived in part from
agriculture and in part from business. In exercise of this
power Rule 7 of the Income-tax Rules, 1962 was framed which
lays down :
"Income which is partially
agricultural and partially from
business -
(1) In the case of income which is
partially agricultural income as
defined in section 2 and partially
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income chargeable to income-tax
under the head "Profits and gains
of business", in determining the
part which is chargeable to income-
tax the market value of any
agricultural produce which has been
raised by the assessee or received
by him as rent-in-kind and which
has been utilised as a raw material
in such business or the sale
receipts of which are included in
the accounts of the business shall
be deducted, and no further
deduction shall be made in respect
of any expenditure incurred by the
assessee as a cultivator or
receiver of rent-in-kind.
(2) For the purposes of sub-rule
(1) "market value" shall be deemed
to be -
(a) Where agricultural produce is
ordinarily sold in the market in
its raw state, or after application
to it of any process ordinarily
employed by a cultivator or
receiver of rent-in-kind to render
it fit to be taken to market, the
value calculated according to the
average price at which it has been
so sold during the relevant
previous year;
(b) Where agricultural produce is
not ordinarily sold in the market
in its raw state or after
application to it of any state or
after application to it of any
process aforesaid, the aggregate of
-
(i) the expenses of cultivation;
(ii) the land revenue or rent paid
for the area in which it was grown;
and
(iii) such amount as the
(Assessing) Officer finds, having
regard to all the circumstances in
each case, the represent a
reasonable profit."
Sub-rule (1) of Rule 7 lays down that market value of
the agricultural produce raised by the assessee will have to
be deducted from the business account of the assessee. The
‘market value’ spoken of in sub-rule (1) will have to be
determined in the manner laid down in sub-rule (2). Sub-rule
(2) lays down in clause (a) the well-known formula of
average price of the goods ordinarily sold in the market as
market value of the goods. The formula contained in clause
(b) will only apply in cases where agricultural produce is
not ordinarily sold in the market in its raw state or after
any process applied to it to make it marketable.
The assessee’s contention is that the market value of
the sugarcane which has been produced and consumed by the
assessee must be determined in the manner laid down n sub-
rule (2)(b) of Rule 7. The contention of the Revenue is that
the procedure laid down in clause (a) of sub-rule (2) will
be the right procedure to follow. The Tribunal was of the
view that the procedure laid down in clause (b) had to be
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resorted to because the price of sugar was controlled by the
Sugarcane Control Order at the material time. The High Court
was of the view that the Sugarcane Control Order
notwithstanding there was a market for sugarcane and even if
the assessee consumes the entire quantity of sugarcane
raised by it the market price of such sugarcane is
ascertainable and this price of such sugarcane is
ascertainable and this price has to be excluded from profits
and gains of business of the assessee.
The Tribunal found that the assessee Company had grown
sugarcane in its own land as well as lands taken on lease.
Since the crushing capacity of the assessee’s factory was
1200 tons per day, the sugarcane grown by the assessee was
not adequate for its requirement. It had, therefore,
purchased sugarcane from other growers. The sugarcane
purchased by the assessee was much more than the sugarcane
produced by it for the assessment years 1962-63, 1966-67 and
1967-68. The assessee purchased sugarcane from the
registered ryots according to the provisions of the
Sugarcane Control Order and also from non-registered ryots.
The quantity of sugarcane purchased from the non-registered
ryots was negligible compared to the quantity of sugarcane
purchased from the registered ryots except during the
periods relevant for assessment years 1962-63, 1963-64 and
1966-67. The Tribunal was of the view that sugarcane could
not be treated as agricultural produce ordinarily sold in
the market during the relevant previous years. Therefore, it
upheld the contention made on behalf of the assessee-company
that sugarcane produced by it had to be valued in accordance
with Rule 7(2)(b).
The High Court took a contrary view. The High Court
took not of the fact that for some of the years under
consideration in this case the average cost of cultivation
shown by the assessee was more than the average cost of
purchase. The assessee was really trying in those years to
get deductions of a higher figure than the market value of
the sugarcane produced by it. The High Court pointed out
that the Tribunal had not come to a finding of fact that
sugarcane was not ordinarily sold in the market in its raw
state in the area where the factory of the assessee was
located. Sugarcane, as a matter of fact, was sold in the
market in raw state, even before the Sugarcane Control Order
came into force. Because of the Control Order, sugarcane did
not cease to be a produce ordinarily sold in the market. The
Control Order merely regulated the market for raw sugarcane.
Merely because the price, the distribution, the production,
the relationship between the grower and the purchaser, were
all subjected to elaborate Government regulations, it could
not be said that the product itself lost either its identity
or its nature or its character of an agricultural produce
sold in the market. The High Court held that Rule 7(2)(a)
will clearly apply in this case and market value of
sugarcane produced and consumed by the assessee-company had
to be computed accordingly.
Under Rule 7(1), in computing the profits and gains of
business, market value of an agricultural produce in raw
state has to be deducted from the profits of partly
agricultural and partly industrial products. Sub-rule (2)
lays down the method of computation of market value. If the
agricultural produce is ordinarily sold in the market, Rule
7(2)(a) will apply. If not, Rule 7(2)(b) will apply. The
question, therefore, is was sugarcane ordinarily sold in the
market in raw state? The answer must be in the affirmative.
The assessee-company itself was buying more sugarcane, than
it was producing, from registered and unregistered ryots.
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Mr. Nariman on behalf of the assessee has argued that
in order to invoke Rule 7(2)(a) it has to be found that a
market exists where sugarcane is ordinarily sold. This
implies that there will be a market of a nature where buyers
and sellers congregate. If such a market does not exist, the
provisions of Rule 7(2)(a) will not apply. Sub-rule (b) was
framed by the Board to determine the value of agricultural
products where such markets for agricultural products did
not exist.
We are unable to uphold this argument. "Market" in the
context of Rule 7 does not mean an open market where buyers
and sellers get together for the purpose of purchase and
sale of goods. The assessee-company regularly, year after
year, in ordinary course of business bought sugarcane from
registered and unregistered ryots. Whether the purchase was
at a price controlled by the Sugarcane Control Order or not
is quite immaterial. There was a price at which sugarcane
could ordinarily be purchased by the assessee for the
purpose of its own business. The price paid by the assessee
was the market price. It is by now well-settled that market
does not have to be one open place of business where buyer
and seller congregate.
If the market is controlled by Government regulation,
sale and purchase of sugarcane within the framework of these
regulations will be the ordinary mode of selling sugarcane.
No special significance can be read into the phrase
‘ordinarily sold’. It is not disputed that the assessee
utilised sugarcane grown by it in its own field for its
factory and also purchases a considerable amount of
sugarcane from outside. Therefore, it is not the case of
assessee that sugarcane growers do not sell sugarcane in
ordinary course of their business in the region where the
assessee carries on business.
Mr. Nariman next contended that the assessee was buying
sugarcane at its own factory gate. There is no other factory
in the region where the assessee’s factory was situated. The
area adjoining the factory gate could not be treated as
market for sugarcane. In the fact of this case there was no
way to find out the average price of the sugarcane which was
being sold in the market in ordinary course during the
previous years. In support of this contention, Mr. Nariman
relied on a Special Bench decision of the Patna High Court
in the case of J.M. Casey vs. Commissioner of Income-tax,
Bihar & Orissa AIR 1930 Patna 44.
This argument again is misconceived. The place where
the sugarcane was bought and sold is quite immaterial for
deciding whether there was a market for sugarcane or not.
The place of delivery of the goods may be decided by the
buyer and seller by mutual consent, express or implied. The
assessee might have purchased and taken delivery of the
goods from the seller’s doorstep. The point that has to be
borne in mind is that in order to apply Rule 7(2)(a),
existence of an open market where buyers and sellers come
together to do business is not an essential pre-requisite.
We are unable to uphold the contention of Mr. Nariman
that where the buyer was only one and the sellers were many
it cannot be said that the sale was in a market and the
price was market price. The case of J.M. Casey (supra) was
decided by a Special Bench of the Patna High Court in the
special and unusual facts of that case. The Special Bench
considered the scope and effect of Section 2(1)(b) of the
Indian income-tax Act. It was observed that the word
"market" in that section implied area centre of economic
exchange. The implication of this observation has to be
understood in the facts of that case. Motihari Jail
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purchased aloe leaves from cultivators not for any
commercial purpose but to keep the prisoners occupied. The
purchase by the jail was not a commercial activity at all.
Courtney Terrel, C.J. explained the position thus:
"The object of the manufacture in
jail is not the conducting of an
economic process which shall render
profitable the cultivation of the
aloe plant but merely to keep the
prisoners employed on sufficiently
laborious and punitive work."
It was held in the facts of the case that purchase of
aloe leaves by jails in an artificial condition had no
relation to market for agricultural produce. But in the case
before us, the purchases of sugarcane made by the factory
were purely commercial transactions controlled by market
forces within the framework of the Sugarcane Control Order.
The Special Bench decision of the Patna High Court does not
support the case made out by Mr. Nariman in any way.
The principle that value of a property will be the
price which it will fetch if sold in the open market is a
well-known method of valuation which has been adopted in a
large number of statutes in England and also in India. It is
well-settled that existence of an open market is not a pre-
condition for application of this principle. There may or
may not be an actual market where buyers and sellers
congregate to purchase and sell goods. Where there is no
such open market an estimate of the market price will have
to be done on a hypothetical basis. In a case under the
Gift-Tax Act, Gift-Tax Officer, Calcutta & Anr. vs. Kastur
Chand Jain 53 ITR 411, dealing with Section 6(1) of that
Act, R.S. Bachawat, J. observed:
"The basic principle of valuation
is embodied in section 6(1) of the
Gift-Tax Act, 1958, and in the
corresponding section, section 36
of the Estate Duty Act, 1953, an
section 7(1) of the Wealth-Tax Act,
1957. The valuer has to find "the
price which....it would fetch if
sold in the open market". The
measure of value of the property is
the price which the hypothetical
buyer in an open market would pay
for it."
In the case of Ahmed G.H. Ariff & Ors. v. Commissioner
of Wealth-Tax, Calcutta 76 ITR 471, explaining the phrase
"if sold in the open market" in Section 7(1) of the Wealth-
Tax Act, it was observed by Grover, J. speaking for the
Court that the phrase did not contemplate actual sale or the
actual state of the market, but only enjoined that it should
be assumed that there was an open market and the property
could be sold in such a market and, on that basis, the value
had to be found out. It was a hypothetical case which was
contemplated and the tax officer must assume that there was
an open market in which the asset could be sold.
In view of the aforesaid, it is very difficult to
uphold the contention of Mr. Nariman that in order to find
out the market price there has to be an actual market where
there will be ‘a concourse of buyers and sellers’. This
argument was specifically rejected by Lord Pearson L.J. in
the case of Building and Civil Engineering Holidays Scheme
Management Ltd. vs. Post Office (1966) 1 QB 247 in the
following words:
"What is meant by "market value"?
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It is not reasonable to suppose
that for the purposes of this
proviso there is no market value
unless there is a concourse of
buyers and sellers. There is no
need to infer that there must be an
open market, or that there must be
a price fluctuating according to
the pressures of supply and
demand."
In that case Lord Denning also explained the concept of
market value in the following words:
"What is the "market value" of
these stamps? It does not connote a
market where buyers and sellers
congregate. The "market value" here
means the price at which the goods
could be expected to be bought and
sold as between willing seller and
willing buyer, even though there
may be only one seller or one
buyer, and even thought one or both
may be hypothetical rather than
real."
These are the principles universally applied to find
out the price at which the goods are ordinarily sold in the
open market. For determination of market value, there is no
pre-requisite that an open market where buyers ad sellers
congregate to buy and sell goods must exist. In the instant
case, the assessee-company actually bought sugarcane from a
large number of growers years after year in ordinary course
of business. The price at which it buys sugarcane must be
taken to the market price. If the price is controlled by
Sugarcane Control Order the controlled price will be taken
as the market price because it is at this price that a
willing buyer and a wiling seller are expected to transact
business. As Lord Denning pointed out, it does not make any
difference to this position that the assessee was the only
buyer in the region where its factory was located.
In the facts of this case, we are of the view that the
High Court has come to a right decision. The appeals are
without any merit and are dismissed. There will be no order
as to costs.
C.A. No. 3674/1989, C.A. No. 2399(NT)/1989 AND S.L.P. NO.
2611/ 1988
Mr. Nariman has argued that there are certain facts in
these cases which were not brought to the notice of the
Tribunal. Therefore, in these cases, there should be a
direction by this Court to the Tribunal to investigate those
facts.
It is not possible to accede to this prayer. Certain
questions of law on the basis of the fact and circumstances
found by the Tribunal have been referred to the High Court
for its opinion. The High Court has give its opinion on
those questions on the basis of facts found by the Tribunal.
The Tribunal is the final fact finding authority. The High
Court cannot go behind the fats found by the Tribunal. It
was for the assessee to raise questions of fact at the time
of hearing of the appeal before the Tribunal. At the
reference stage, no fresh investigation into facts is
permissible. There may be cases where the Court feels that
it is unable to answer the question of law referred because
findings of fact are incomplete. In such cases, the Court
may call for a supplementary statement from the Tribunal.
But that is not the case here. The High Court did not feel
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any difficulty in answering the question on the basis of the
facts found. The assessee’s prayer is for a direction to the
Tribunal to consider new questions of fact which were not
raised before the Tribunal at all. We see no reason to grant
this prayer at this stage.
These appeals must also fail and are dismissed. The
Special Leave Petition No. 2611 of 1988 is also dismissed.
There will be no order as to costs.