Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, MADRAS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
M/S. ASHOK LEYLAND LTD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT03/10/1972
BENCH:
HEGDE, K.S.
BENCH:
HEGDE, K.S.
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
DUA, I.D.
CITATION:
1973 AIR 420 1973 SCR (2) 516
1973 SCC (3) 201
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1975 SC1945 (18,20)
ACT:
Income tax--Payment of compensation for terminating managing
agency--Capital or Revenue expenditure.
HEADNOTE:
The assessee-company (respondent) was initially doing the
business of assembly and sale of Austin cars and Leyland
trucks. It appointed Managing Agents under certain terms
regarding office allowance and commission. In 1954, the
respondent ceased to assemble Austin cars, in view of the
decision of the Government and engaged itself in the
manufacture of Leyland commercial vehicles. The progress of
the scheme was reviewed in 1955 and the Government of India
suggested to the respondent that Leyland, U.K., should
provide part of the capital, that the remaining capital
should be raised by the respondent in India and that the
Government would arrange for such capital in India on
condition that the managing agency was abolished. The
respondent terminated the managing agency and paid a sum of
money to the Managing Agents as compensation. The
respondent also entered into an agreement with Leyland, U.K.
for participation. The respondent claimed deduction of the
amount paid as compensation to the Managing Agents, in its
assessment, as revenue expenditure laid out wholly and
exclusively for the purpose of the business in the relevant
previous year. The Income-tax Officer and Appellate
Assistant Commissioner rejected the claim but the Tribunal
and the High Court, on reference, held in favour of the
assessee.
Dismissing the appeal to this Court,
HELD : The managing agency was terminated on business
considerations and as a matter of commercial expediency In
view of the change in business activity, the continuance of
the managing agents had become superfluous. It is true that
by terminating the services of Managing Agents, whose
continuance had become superfluous, the respondent not only
saved expense that it would have had to incur in the
relevant previous year but also for a few more years to
come. But the payment was made only with a view to save
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business expenditure and it, will not be correct to say that
by avoiding certain business expenditure the respondent
acquired an enduring benefit or acquired an income yielding
asset. Therefore, the expenditure was a revenue
expenditure, and not a capital expenditure. [520A-D; 523C-
E]
B.W. Noble Limited v. Mitchell, 11 Tax Cas. 372, Atherton v.
British insulated and Helsby Cables Ltd., 10 T.C. 192, Anglo
Person Oil Ltd. v. Dale, 16 Tax Cas. 253, G. Scammell and
Nephew Ltd. v. Rowles, (1940) I.T.R. Supp. 41 and Anglo-
Persian Oil Co. (India) Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax,
(1933) Vol. 1 I.T.R. 129, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1989 of
1969.
Appeal by certificate from the judgment and order dated
February 8, 1968 of the Madras High Court in Tax Case No. 93
of 1964.,
517
S. Swaminathan, D. P. Mohanthy and S. Gopalakrishnan, for
the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
HEDGE, J. The Commissioner of Income-tax Madras is appealing
against the decision of the Madras High Court in a Reference
under s. 66(2) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 (to be
hereinafter referred to as the Act) after obtaining
certificate of fitness from the High Court.
The question before the authorities under the Act was
whether the payment of Rs. 2,50,000/- made by the
respondent assessee which will hereinafter be referred to as
the ’company’ for the termination of managing agency is an
allowable deduction in computing the total income of the
company for 1956-57. The Income-tax Officer as well as the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner rejected the claim of the
Company that it was a Revenue expenditure but the Tribunal
in appeal upheld the contention of the Company Aggrieved by
the decision of the Tribunal, the Commissioner, demanded a
case to be stated for obtaining the opinion of the High
Court on the question :
"Whether on the facts and in the circumstances
of the case the payment of Rs. 2,50,000/- made
for the termination of Managing Agency is an
allowable deduction in computing the total
income of the assessee company for 1956-57."
The Tribunal refused to state the case taking the view that
its findings are findings of fact. Thereafter the
Commissioner moved the High Court under s. 66(2) and at the
instance of the High Court, the Tribunal stated the case and
submitted the aforementioned question of law to the High
Court. But the High Court answered that question in the
affirmative and in favour of the Company.
Let us now have a look at the facts. The assessee was a
public Limited Co., originally known as Ashok Motors Ltd.
It was incorporated on September 7, 1948. The Articles of
Association of the Company authorised it to carry on various
businesses, such as manufacturers, assemblers, dealers,
hirers, repairers of motorcars, motorcycles, motor buses,
lorries, trucks etc. In particular it authorised the
Company "to import into India Austin Cars and other Austin
products, to assemble Austin products from their components,
to undertake the progressive manufacture in India, of such
parts of Austin products as can under suitable provisions
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for such manufacture be manufactured thereto, supply Austin
518
products and parts to accredited distributors for resale to
the public in India and to provide adequate facilities for
the prompt servicing of Austin products in India."
The Company appointed Car Builders Limited, as their manag-
ing agents under an agreement dated October 18, 1948 for a
term of 14 years from the date of its registration. The
managing agents were to be paid at the rate of Rs. 2,000/-
per mensem as office allowance and 10 per cent of the annual
profits with a minimum of Rs. 18,000 per annum in case of
inadequacy or absence of profits.
Initially the business of the Company consisted in the
assembly ,and sale of Austin cars and Leyland Trucks.
During the year 1952, the Government of India referred the
question of establishing an Automobile Industry in India to
the Tariff Commission. The Company prepared and submitted a
comprehensive memorandum to the Tariff Commission for the
manufacture of Leyland Trucks. It also participated in the
proceedings of the Tariff Corn-mission. The Government
instructed the Company to take up the manufacture of Leyland
Commercial Vehicles. From April 1954, the Company ceased to
assemble Austin Cars in view of the ,Government decision and
engaged itself in the manufacture of Leyland Commercial
Vehicles. The progress of the scheme was reviewed by all
the Directors on January 24, 1955 when the Union Minister
for Commerce and Industry was also present. In the course
of the discussion, the Union Minister suggested to the
’Company to invite Leylands to provide capital as and when
required till their holding bore to the existing paid up
capital in the ratio of 40/45 to 50155 per cent subject to a
maximum of half a million pounds. The Company was asked to
rise the remaining capital in India. The Minister is stated
to have assured that the ’Government would arrange for the
required capital in India but that responsibility would be
in the nature of contingent liability and that it would
accept such a liability only if the Managing Agency is
abolished. The Directors pointed out to the Minister that
they had already taken steps to terminate the services of
the managing agents on payment of compensation.
On January 29, 1955, by means of an agreement between the
Company and the managing agents, the managing agency
agreement was terminated subject to the condition that the
managing agents were to be paid compensation in a sum of
-Rs. 2,50,000/. The Company paid the said sum during the
accounting year ended on December 31, 1955, relevant to the
assessment year 1956-57. The Company claimed deduction of
the same in its assessment as revenue expenditure laid out
wholly and exclusively for the purpose of the business in
the relevant previous
519
year. It may also be mentioned that at about this time the
Company entered into an agreement with Leyland Motor
Limited, Leyland U.K. for participation of the said concern
with the Company for implementing its manufacturing
programme.
On the aforementioned facts, the question arises whether the
compensation paid to the managing agents can be considered
as an expenditure wholly and exclusively laid out for the
purpose of the business or whether the same should be
considered as a capital expense.
There are numerous decisions of this Court., of the High
Courts in this country as well as. of the courts in England
dealing with the controversy whether an item of expenditure
should be considered as a capital expenditure or revenue
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expenditure.
The Act has not defined the expressions "capital
expenditure" and the "revenue expenditure". The line that
divides revenue expenditure from capital expenditure is
often times very thin. Hence the decisions of courts have
not been able to give a quietus to the controversy whether
an item of expenditure is capitol or revenue. The general
tests to be applied to distinguish capital expenditure from
revenue expenditure have been enunciated in various
decisions. There is no difficulty in enumerating those
tests. But the difficulty arises when the courts are called
upon to apply those tests to a given set of facts. Barring
rare, exceptions, facts of no two cases are similar.
A long line of decisions have laid down that when an
expenditure is made with a view to bring into existence an
asset or an advantage for the enduring benefit of a trade,
there is good reason (in the absence of special
circumstances leading to opposite conclusion) for treating
such an expenditure as property attributable not to revenue
but to capital.
It was urged on behalf of the revenue that the termination
of the managing agency has led to reorientation of the
business of the Company. That termination facilitated the
Company to enter into collaboration with Leylands. It also
made it possible for the Company to get financial assistance
from the, Government if there be need. It was also urged
that the compensation was paid at the behest of the
Government and was for a non-business purpose. Under these
circumstances, it was said that the expenditure cannot be
considered as having been incurred to meet any commercial
expediency. The learned Counsel for the Company joined
issue on each one of those contentions. He contended that
because of the Government policy the Company had to give up
its assembling activity and take to manufacture of Leyland
Trucks. For that purpose it sought and obtained the
collaboration of Leylands. In view of the chance in the
business activity of the Company.
520
continuance of the managing agency became superfluous. Its
continuance meant unnecessary business expenditure for the
Company. Hence commercial expediency required the Company
to terminate the services of the managing agents and the
managing agents could be get rid of only by paying
reasonable compensation. The Tribunal found that the
Company. terminated the services of the managing agents on
business considerations, It accepted the plea of the Company
that in view of the change in its business activity, the
continuance of the managing agents became superfluous.
These are findings of fact which are not open to question
before this Court.
There is no doubt that as a result of the termination of the
services of the managing agents, the Company got rid of its
liability to pay office allowance as well as the commission
it was required to pay under the managing agency agreement
not only during the accounting year but also for a few years
more. The expenditure thus saved undoubtedly swelled the
profits of the Company. From the facts found,- it is clear
that the managing agency was terminated on business
considerations and as a matter of commercial expediency.
There is no basis for holding that by terminating the
managing agency. the Company acquired any enduring benefit
,or any income yielding asset. It is true that by
terminating the services of the managing agents, the Company
not only saved the expense that it would have had to incur
in the relevant previous year ’but also for few more years
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to come. It will not be correct to say that by avoiding
certain business expenditure, the Company can be said to
have acquired enduring benefits or acquired any income
yielding asset.
To quote the illustration given by Rowlatt J. in B. IV.
Noble Limited v. Mitchell,(1) in the ordinary case a payment
to get rid of a servant when it is not expedient to keep him
in the interest of trade would be a deductible expenditure.
A payment made to remove the possibility of a recurring
disadvantage cannot be considered as a payment made to
acquire an enduring advantage.
In Noble’s case (supra), Rowlatt J. had to examine the ques-
tion whether the item of expenditure concerned in that case
was a revenue expenditure. Briefly stated the facts-of that
case were : ’Under its Articles of Association, the
management of a company of Insurance brokers registered in
England was vested in its Board of Directors in London, with
powers of delegation. One of the Directors was appointed
Resident Director in France. He conducted the French
business of the Company from an office in Paris under a
power of attorney from the Company. The Company ,claimed as
a deduction from its profits for income-tax purposes a sum
of pound 19,200 payable (by instalments) to a retiring
Director in the following circumstances : The Original
Directors were ap-
(1) 11 Tax Cas 372.
521
pointed for life so long as they held a qualifying number of
shares, Subject. Lo dismissal forthwith for neglect or
misconduct towards the Company. A Director so dismissed was
only entitled to receive his salary then due and could be
required to sell his shares to the under Directors at par.
He would also have to surrender for cancellation certain
notes issued by the, Company entitling him to participate in
surplus profits. Circumstances arose in 1920 and 1921 in
which the Company might possibly have been justified in
-dismissing one of the Directors, but to avoid publicity
injurious to the Company’s reputation, it entered into
negotiation with the Director for his retirement. He
claimed pound 50,000 as compensation; but a compromise was
arrived at and embodied in an agreement dated the 30th
December, 1921 by which he agreed to retire from the
Company, to transfer his 300 pound 1 shares to the, other
Directors at par value (they were then worth considerably
more) and to surrender his participating notes. The Company
agreed to pay him pound 19,200 and the Directors to pay him
pound 300 (as consideration for his shares) making together
pound 19,500 (payable in five annual instalments) which he
agreed to accept in full satisfaction of all claims against
the Company or the Directors. The question was whether the
payment of pound 19,200 was a deductible expenditure. The
Special Commissioners decided against the Company but the
King’s Bench Division as well as Court of Appeal accepted
the Company’s contention and held that the payment of pound
19,200 made was an admissible deduction in arriving its
profits for income-tax purposes. In the course of his
judgment Rowlatt J. sitting on the King’s Bench Division
relied on the observations of Lord Chancellor in Atherton v.
British Insulated and Helsby Cables Ltd. (1) to the effect
"a sum of money expended, not of necessity and
with a view to a direct and immediate benefit
to the trade, but voluntarily and on the
grounds of commercial expediency, and in order
indirectly to facilitate the carrying on of
the business, may yet be expanded wholly and
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exclusively for the purposes of the trade."
These observations of the Lord Chancellor were again quoted
with approval by Lord Hanworth M. R. when the matter was
taken in appeal to the Court of Appeal.
The next case which may be usefully referred is the decision
in Anglo Persian Oil Co. Ltd. v. Dale. (2 ) Therein the
assessee company by agreement made in 1910 and 1914 had
appointed another limited company as its agents in Persia
and the East for a period of years, upon the terms (inter
alia) that the agents should be remunerated by commission at
specified rates. With the passage of time the amounts
payable to the agents by way of corn-
(1) 10 T.C. P. 192.
(2) 16 Tax Cas 253.
522
mission increased far beyond the amounts originally
contemplated by the Company, and, after negotiation between
the parties, the agreements were cancelled in 1922, the
agent company agreeing to go into voluntary liquidation and
the company agreeing to pay to the agents pound 300,000-in
cash. This sum was in fact paid and the company contended
before the Special Commissioners that it was an admissible
deduction in computing the Company’s profits for purposes of
Income-Tax and Corporation Profits Tax. The Special
Commissioners rejected this contention and the Company
appealed. Rowlatt J. sitting in the King’s Bench Division
allowed the appeal and held that the payment to the agents
was an admissible deduction for the purpose of income-tax
and Corporation Profits Tax. His decision was affirmed by
the Court of Appeal. In the course of his judgment Rowlatt
J. observed :
"Now I want to see how the Commissioners have
dealt with it, and what they say is that this
was expenditure of a special nature to secure
an enduring benefit for the Company’s trade by
getting rid of an onerous contract. In my
judgment that is a finding which is perfectly
inconclusive. It does not deal with the
question, The question is not merely getting
rid of an onerous contract, but an
onerous
contract for what ? If it is an onerous
contract for the payment of wages or
commission which are chargeable to revenue
account in the plainest possible way, and if
that is the onerous contract that you are
getting rid of it is impossible to suggest
that is a reason for saying that this is a
capital expenditure unless you get rid of that
onerous contract (as I pointed out just now)
by erecting in its place a capital asset in
the nature of-of course I am only using this
as an illustrative examples labour-saving
machine which gives you an asset and so
dispenses with the expense of labour. But to
say that it is a capital expenditure because
it secured an enduring benefit by getting rid
of an onerous contract is not to state the
material thing, and it is completely
inconclusive."
In C. Scammell and Nephew Ltd. v. Rowles, (1) the Court of
Appeal held that the expenditure incurred for the
termination of a trading relationship in order to avoid
losses occurring in the future through that relationship, wheth
er pecuniary losses or commercial inconveniences, is
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just as much for the purposes of the trade as the making or
the carrying into effect of a trading agreement.
The case which can be said to be the nearest to the facts of
the present case decided by any Indian court is that decided
by the Calcutta High Court in Anglo-Persian Oil Co. (India)
Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax.(2) Therein money was
paid by an
(1) [1940] I.T.R. Suppl 41
(2) [1933] vol. I, I.T.R. 129.
523
oil company in a lump sum as compensation for loss of agency
whereby the company relieved itself of future annual
payments of commission chargeable to revenue account. The
question was whether the money paid as compensation was
allowable as proper deduction from the business profits of
the Company. The court upheld the contention of the company
that it was a revenue expenditure. Further the court
observed that the principle that capital receipt spells
capital expenditure or vice versa is simple but it is not
necessarily sound. Whether a sum is received on capital or
revenue account depends or may depend upon the character of
the business of the recipient. Whether a payment is or is
not in the nature of capital expenditure depends or may
depend upon the character of the business of the payer and
upon other factors related thereto.
It is obvious from the facts set out earlier that the
compensation paid for termination of the services of the
managing agents was a payment made with a view to save
business expenditure in the relevant accounting year as well
as for a few more years. It was not made for acquiring any
enduring benefit or income-yielding asset. We agree with
the High Court that the Tribunal was right in its conclusion
that the expenditure in question was a revenue expenditure.
In the result this appeal fails and the same is dismissed
with costs.
V.P.S.
Appeal dismissed.
16-L498SupCI/73
524