Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX,BOMBAY CITY-I, BOMBAY
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ASSOCIATED CEMENT COMPANIES LTD., BOMBAY
DATE OF JUDGMENT04/05/1988
BENCH:
KANIA, M.H.
BENCH:
KANIA, M.H.
PATHAK, R.S. (CJ)
CITATION:
1988 SCR (3) 917 1988 SCC Supl. 378
JT 1988 (2) 287 1988 SCALE (1)829
ACT:
Indian Income-tax Act, 1922-Whether expenditure
incurred by assessee in accounting period relevant to the
assessment period is liable to be allowed as deductible from
assessee’s profits under section 10(2) (xv)-Of.
HEADNOTE:
This was an appeal by certificate under Section
66(A)(ii) of the Indian Income-tax Act against the judgment
of the Bombay High Court on a reference of the question
whether expenditure incurred by the company in the
accounting period relevant to the assessment period was
allowable as deduction in determining the profits of the
company for the assessment year.
The assessee respondent had a factory at Shahabad.
Under a tripartite agreement between the government, the
assessee and the Municipality of Shahabad, the assessee had
undertaken to supply water and electricity to Shahabad and
to concrete the road from the factory to the railway
station. Under clause 23, in consideration of these
amenities to be provided by the assessee company, the
Government undertook not to include any properties of the
company within the limits of Shahabad Municipality, etc. for
a period of fifteen years from the date of the agreement.
According to the assessee, certain expenditure was
incurred during the year of account under the said
agreement, on the laying of pipelines, installations and
accessories of which the Shahabad Municipality had become
the owner under the agreement, and this amount was claimed
as deduction. The Income-tax Officer disallowed the amount.
On appeal by the Company, the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner allowed the deduction. The Revenue preferred an
appeal to the Incometax Appellate Tribunal, which passed an
order, directing the Incometax Officer to scrutinize the
expenditure, and allowed the deduction to the extent that it
did not result in the company becoming the owner of any
asset. The High Court in deciding the reference held that
the expenditure in question was revenue expenditure and was
liable to be allowed
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as deduction, and answered the question referred in the
affirmative and in favour of the assessee. Revenue appealed
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to this Court against the decision of the High Court.
Dismissing the appeal, the Court,
^
HELD: Water supply lines were laid as a result of the
expenditure incurred, but these water pipelines were not the
assets of the assessee but of the Shahabad Municipality and
it was not as if the expenditure resulted in bringing into
existence any capital asset for the company. The only
advantage derived by the assessee by incurring the
expenditure was that it obtained an absolution or immunity,
under normal conditions, from the levy of certain municipal
rates, taxes and charges.[922E]
As observed by this Court in Empire Jute Co. Ltd. v.
Commissioner of Income-tax, [1980] 124 I.T.R. S.C. p. 1,
there may be cases where the expenditure, even if incurred
for obtaining an advantage of enduring benefit, may
nonetheless be on revenue account and the test of enduring
benefit may break down. It is not every advantage of
enduring nature acquired by an assessee that brings the case
within the principles laid down in this test. What is
material is the nature of the advantage in a commercial
sense and it is only where the advantage is in the capital
field that the expenditure would be disallowable on
application of this test. If the advantage consists merely
in facilitating the assessee’s trading operations or
enabling the management and conduct of the assessee’s
business to be carried on more effectively or more
profitably while leaving the fixed capital untouched, the
expenditure would be on revenue account, even though the
advantage may endure for an indefinite future. [922H;923A-C]
In this case, the advantage secured by the assessee by
making the expenditure was the securing of absolution or
immunity from liability to pay municipal rates and taxes
under normal conditions for a period of fifteen years. If
these liabilities had to be paid, the payments would have
been on revenue account and hence the advantage secured was
in the field of revenue and not capital. As a result of the
expenditure there was no addition to the capital assets of
the assessee company and no change in its capital structure.
The pipelines which came into existence as a result of the
expenditure belonged to the Municipality. The expenditure
was liable to be allowed as deductible from the profits
under Section 10(2) (xv) of the Indian Income-tax Act.
[923F-H;924A]
919
Atherton v. British Insulated and Helsby Cables Ltd.,
[1924] 10 Tax Cases 155, 192 and Empire Jute Co. Ltd. v.
Commissioner of Income-tax, [1980] 124 I.T.R. S.C.p. 1,
referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 512 (NT)
of 1975.
From the Judgment and Order dated 15.11.1973 of the
Bombay High Court in Income Tax Reference No. 15 of 1964.
S.C. Manchanda, K.C. Dua and Ms. A. Subhashini for the
Appellant.
Harish Salve, Mrs. A.K. Verma and D.N. Misra for the
Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KANIA, J. This is an appeal, on a certificate given
under Section 66(A)(ii) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922,
against a judgment and order of a Division Bench of the
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Bombay High Court. The appeal is preferred by the
Commissioner of Income-tax and the assessee, the Associated
Cement Companies Ltd. is the respondent.
The judgment against which the appeal is directed was
rendered on a reference under Section 66(1) of the Indian
Income-tax Act, 1922. The question referred to the Court for
consideration was as follows:
"Whether on the facts and in the circumstances of
the case, the expenditure of Rs.2,09,459, or any
portion thereof, incurred by the company in the
accounting period relevant to the assessment
period 1959-60 was allowable as deduction in
determining the profits of the company for the
assessment year 1959-60."
The relevant facts are as follows:
The assessee, the Associated Cement Companies Ltd. has
a chain of factories manufacturing cement all over the
country. The assessment year in question is the year 1959-60
and the corresponding previous year was ended on 31st July,
1958. One of the factories of the assessee was situated at
Shahabad, which is now in the State of Karnataka, but was at
the relevant time forming part of the then State
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of Hyderabad. In September, 1956, the Government of
Hyderabad had decided to include the area on which the said
factory at Shahabad was situated within the municipal limits
of the Shahabad Town Municipality. A tripartite agreement
between the Government of Hyderabad, the assessee company
and the Municipality was arrived at on 30th October, 1956
between the aforesaid three parties. Under the agreement,
the assessee undertook to supply water to the Shahabad town
and village. It further agreed to put up a high tension
electric transmission line and to supply electricity for the
street lighting of the Shahabad town. It also agreed to
concrete free of charge the existing main road from the
factory upto the railway station via the main bazar. During
the relevant previous year, the only work done was with
respect to provision of water supply to the said town and
village. Under the agreement, the assessee initially agreed
to supply certain quantity of water to the Shahabad town at
a concessional rate and for the purpose of such supply the
assessee company was to undertake and complete at its own
cost the water supply scheme for the town and village,
involving laying of the main water pipelines. The assessee
company was to be the owner of the pipelines, installations
and other accessories pertaining to the water supply lying
within the company’s premises and on the land a little
outside the premises. The Shahabad Municipal Committee was
to take over possession of the remaining pipelines,
installations and accessories and it was declared to be the
owner thereof. These pipelines, installations, etc. had to
be maintained by the Minicipal Committee in future. Under
Clause 23, in consideration of the assessee company having
agreed to provide these amenities, supply and services, the
Govt. of Hyderabad undertook not to include any of the
properties of the company comprising the cement factory, the
main workshop, the housing colony, quarries and the
limestone bearing lands within the limits of the Shahabad
Minicipality or the village panchayat or like body for a
period of fifteen years from the date of the agreement.
According to the assessee, a sum of Rs.2,09,459 was
spent during the year of account under this agreement and
this amount pertained to the laying of pipelines,
installations and accessories of which the Shahabad
Municipality became the owner under the agreement and this
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amount was claimed as a deduction. The Income-tax officer
disallowed this amount, holding that it was a capital
expenditure on the basis that as a result of this
expenditure the company derived an advantage of an enduring
nature, namely that it would not have to pay municipal taxes
for a period of fifteen years. On an appeal by the Company,
the Appellate Asstt. Commissioner allowed the deduction
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holding that the amount was the payment of a composite sum
of the revenue outgoings for the following 15 years. The
Revenue preferred an appeal to the Income-tax Appellate
Tribunal. The Income-tax Appellate Tribunal passed an order
directing the Income-tax officer to scrutinize the
expenditure and allowed the deduction of the expenditure to
the extent that it did not result in the company becoming
the owner of any asset.
Before the High Court it was contended on behalf of the
company that the entire amount of Rs.2,09,459 pertained to
expenditure on pipelines installations and other accessories
which under the agreement came to ownership of the Shahabad
Town Municipality and did not pertain to any increase of the
assets of the company. The Division Bench which decided the
reference has pointed out that it had not been disputed by
the Revenue before the Tribunal that the entire expenditure
concerned was laid out for the purpose of business and the
only question was whether it was capital expenditure or
revenue expenditure. The only ground on which the claim of
the assessee for deduction of the said expenditure under
Section 10(2) (xv) of the Indian Income-tax Act was resisted
that it was capital expenditure. After exhaustively
considering several decisions of the Supreme Court and
several English decisions, the Division Bench of the Bombay
High Court came to the conclusion that the expenditure in
question was revenue expenditure and was liable to be
allowed as deduction. On the basis of these conclusions the
Bombay High Court decided the question referred in their
affirmative and in favour of the assessee.
In the judgment appealed against the learned Judges
have referred to the dictum of Viscount Cave L.C. in
Atherton v. British Insulated and Helsby Cables Ltd., [1924]
10 Tax Cases 155, 192 which runs as follows:
"But when an expenditure is made, not only once
and for all, but with a view to bringing into
existence an asset or an advantage for the
enduring benefit of a trade. I think that there is
very good reason (in the absence of special
circumstances leading to an opposite conclusion)
for treating such an expenditure as properly
attributable not to revenue but to capital."
The Division Bench further pointed out that this dictum
was stated with approval by this Court in Assam Bengal
Cement Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax, [1955] 27
I.T.R. 34 (S.C.) where this
922
Court inter alia approved the decision of a Full Bench of
the Lahore High Court in Banarasidas Jagannath in re 1947 15
I.T.R. 185 (Lah) (F.B.) holding that expenditure may be
treated as properly attributable to capital when it is made
not only once and for all, but with a view to bringing into
existence an asset or an advantage for enduring benefit of
the trade. If, on the other hand, what is got rid of by lump
sum payment is an annual business expense chargeable against
revenue, the lump sum payment should equally be regarded as
a business expenses, but if the lump sum payment brings in a
capital asset, then that puts the business on another
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footing altogether.
The Division Bench also took into account the fact that
the assessee was already running a cement factory at
Shahabad and it was not as if the expenditure incurred was
in connection with starting of a new business.
Mr. Manchanda, learned counsel for the appellant has
raised only two contentions before us. The first contention
was that, since, as a result of the expenditure incurred,
certain water pipelines were laid which could be regarded as
capital assets the expenditure could only be regarded as
capital expenditure. In our view, there is no substance in
this contention. It is true that certain water supply lines
did come to be laid as a result of the expenditure incurred,
but the facts on records, which we have referred to above,
clearly show that these water pipelines on which the
expenditure in question was incurred were not assets of the
assessee, but assets of the Shahabad Municipality and hence
it was not as if the expenditure resulted in bringing into
existence any capital asset for the company. The only
advantage derived by the assessee by incurring the
expenditure was that it obtained an absolution or immunity,
under normal conditions, from levy of certain municipal
rates and taxes and charges. In view of this the first
contention of Mr. Manchanda must be rejected.
The next submission made by Mr. Manchanda was that the
advantage of not being liable to pay municipal rates, taxes,
etc. which the assessee company secured by reason of making
the expenditure in question was for a period of fifteen
years and hence it could be said to be an advantage of an
enduring nature, so that the expenditure incurred in
acquiring the same would be regarded as capital expenditure.
In our view it is difficult to accept this submission
either. As observed by the Supreme Court in the decision in
Empire Jute Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Incometax, [1980]
124 I.T.R. SC p. 1 that there may be cases where
expenditure, even if incurred for obtaining an advantage of
enduring benefit, may, none
923
the less, be on revenue account and the test of enduring
benefit may break down. It is not every advantage of
enduring nature acquired by an assessee that brings the case
within the principles laid down in this test. What is
material to consider is the nature of the advantage in a
commercial sense and it is only where the advantage is in
the capital field that the expenditure would be disallowable
on an application of this test. If the advantage consists
merely in facilitating the assessee’s trading operations or
enabling the management and conduct of the assessee’s
business to be carried on more effectively or more
profitably while leaving the fixed capital untouched, the
expenditure would be on revenue account, even though the
advantage may endure for an indefinite future. In that case
the appellant, a company carrying on the business of
manufacture of jute, was a member of the Indian Jute Mills
Association, which was formed with the objects, inter alia,
of protecting the trade of its members, including imposing
restrictive conditions on the conduct of the trade and
adjusting the production of the mills of its members. A
working time agreement was entered into between the members
restricting the number of working hours per week for which
the mills were entitled to work their looms. Clause 4 of the
working time agreement provided that no signatory shall work
for more than 45 hours per week. Clause 6(b) provided that
the signatories shall be entitled to transfer, in part or
wholly, their allotment of hours of work per week to any one
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or more of the other signatories. Under this clause the
appellant purchased "looms hours" from four other mills for
the aggregate sum of Rs.2,03,255 during the previous year
relevant to the assessment year 1960-61 and claimed to
deduct that amount as revenue expenditure. The Tribunal held
that the expenditure incurred by the appellant was revenue
in nature and hence deductible in computing the appellant’s
profits. The High Court reversed this decision, but on
appeal, the Supreme Court allowed expenditure as deductible
expenditure on the basis of the principle set out earlier.
If this principle is applied to the facts of the case before
us, what we find is that the advantage which was secured by
the assessee by making the expenditure in question was the
securing of absolution or immunity from liability to pay
municipal rates and taxes under normal conditions for a
period of fifteen years. If these liabilities had to be
paid, the payments would have been on revenue account and
hence the advantage secured was in the field of revenue and
not capital. As a result of the expenditure incurred, there
was no addition to the capital assets of the assessee
company and no change in its capital structure. The
pipelines, etc. which might have been regarded as capital
assets and which came into existence as a result of the
expenditure incurred did not belong to the assessee company
but to the municipality. In these circumstances,
924
applying the principles laid down in Empire Jute Co.’s case
the expenditure is clearly liable to be allowed as
deductible from the profits under Section 10(2) (xv) of the
Indian Income-tax Act. In the result, the appeal fails and
is dismissed with costs.
S.L. Appeal dismissed.
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