Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE ORIENTAL INVESTMENT CO., LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX,BOMBAY.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
22/05/1957
BENCH:
KAPUR, J.L.
BENCH:
KAPUR, J.L.
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
DAS, S.K.
CITATION:
1957 AIR 852 1958 SCR 49
ACT:
Income-tax-Reference to High Court-Questions of law-
Investment company-Dealer or Investor-Mixed question of law
and fact-Legal effect of facts found, a question of law.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant company was incorporated as an investment
company which by its memorandum of association enabled it,
inter alia, to deal in investments and properties. For the
purposes of assessment to income-tax the appellant claimed,
for the assessment year in question, to be treated as an
investor and not as a ,dealer on the ground that it did not
carry on any business in the purchase or sale of shares,
securities or properties. The Incometax Appellate Tribunal
held that according to the company’s memorandum of
association and its own assertions made all along in the
past, it should be treated as a dealer in investments and
properties and that its income arising from the sales of
shares and properties should be taxed as business profits.
The appellant’s applications for a reference to the High
Court were rejected on the ground that no question of law
arose out of the order of the Tribunal.
Held, that the question whether the appellant’s business
amounted to dealing in shares and properties or to
investment, is a mixed question of law and fact and that the
legal effect of the facts found by the Tribunal as a result
of which the appellant could be treated as a dealer or an
investor, is a question of law.
Accordingly, the order of the High Court was set aside and
the case remitted to the High Court for directing the
Tribunal to state a case.
(1) [1944] 12 I.T.R. 393.
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Meenakshi Mills, Madurai v. Commissioner of Income Tax,
Madras, (1956) S.C.R. 691, applied.
Case law reviewed.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No.
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153 of 1954.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
January 15, 1952, of the Bombay High Court in Income-Tax
Application No. 54 of 1951.
R. J. Kolah, J. B. Dadachanji, S. N. Andley and Rameshwar
Nath, for the appellant.
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General of India, G. N. Joshi
and R. H. Dhebar, for the respondent.
1957. May 22. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KAPUR J.-This is an appeal by the assessee by special leave
and the question for decision is whether questions of law,
if any, arise out of the order of the Appellate Tribunal.
The facts giving rise to the appeal are that the petitioner
company was incorporated on July 29,1924, as an investment
company, the objects of which are set out in el. III of the
memorandum of association and more particularly in sub-cls.
1, 2, 15 and 16 of that clause. The assessment years under
review. are 1943-44 to 1948-49, excepting the year 1947-48.
According to its petition made in the High Court of Bombay,
the petitioner company dealt with its assets as follows:
"The Petitioner Company purchased during the period 1st July
1925 to 30th June 1928 shares of the value of Rs.
1,86,47,789/- major portion of which was comprised of shares
in the Sassoon Group of Mills. During the year ended 30th
June 1929 the Petitioner Company promoted two companies
known as Loyal Mills Ltd. and Hamilton Studios Ltd. and took
over all their shares of the value of Rs. 10 1/2 lacs. In
the year 1930, the Petitioner Company purchased shares of
Rs. 1,33,930. During the period of 9 years from 1st July
1930 to 30th July 1939 no purchases were made with the
exception of a few shares of Loyal Mills Ltd.,
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taken over from the staff of E. D. Sassoon & Co. Ltd., who
retired from service. In the year ended 30th June 1940
reconstruction scheme of the Appollo Mills Ltd., took place
under which debentures held by the Petitioner Company in the
Appollo Mills Ltd., were redeemed and the proceeds were
reinvested in the new issue of shares made by the Appollo
Mills Ltd. Out of the purchases of the value of Rs. 2,794
made by the Petitioner Company during the year ended 30th
June 1941 Rs. 2,000/- was the value of shares of the Loyal
Mills Ltd., taken over from the retiring staff. In the year
ended 30th June 1943 the Petitioner Company took over from
the David Mills Co. Ltd., shares of The Associated Building
Co., of the value of Rs. 56,700/-. After this there were no
purchases at all to this date excepting purchases of the
value of Rs. 34,954 during the year ended 30th June, 1946.
"
The sales are contained in para 3 (b) which may be quoted:
" In relation to the purchases made by the Petitioner
Company as stated above no appreciable sales of shares were
made during the period 29th July 1924 to 30th June 1942, the
sales made in the year ended 30th June 1929 of the value of
Rs. 1,29,333 included shares of the value of ’Rs. 45,000 in
the Loyal Mills Ltd., sold to the members of the staff and
shares of the value of Rs. 83,833 representing sterling
investments handed over to the creditors of the Petitioner
Company in part repayment of the loan taken from them in the
year ended 30th June 1931, shares of the value of Rs.
7,48,356 were handed over to the creditors in payment of the
loan granted by them. From the year ended 30th June 1943 E.
D. Sassoon & Co. Ltd., started relinquishing the managing
agencies of the various Mills under their agency and the
shares held by the Petitioner Company in the Sassoon Group
of Mills were handed over to the respective purchasers of
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the Mills agencies. "
This gives the history of the acquisition and disposal of
shares and also how the various transactions were entered
into and why. Prior to 1940 the assessee company made a
claim every year for being treated as
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a dealer in investments and properties but this contention
was consistently repelled and upto the assessment year 1939-
40 the assessee company was assessed on the basis of being
an investor but it appears that for the assessment year
1940-41 and the two following years 1941-42 and 1942-43 the
Department accepting the plea of the assessee company
treated it as a dealer in shares, securities and immovable
properties and assessed it on that basis. For these years
and for the assessment year 1943-44 the company made its
Return on that basis. But after the Return had been filed
for the year 1943-44 the assessee company withdrew its
Return and filed a revised Return on March 7, 1944,
contending that it was not a dealer but merely an investor.
Along with the Return it filed a letter dated March 6, 1944,
in which inter alia it stated:
"The Return of Total Income which was submitted with the
Company’s letter of 25th May 1943 was prepared in conformity
with the ruling of the Income. tax Officer in the 1940-41
assessment that the company was to be assessed as a dealer
in investments. Since that Return was submitted the Central
Board of Revenue has decided that the Company is an Invest-
ment Holding Company and accordingly an amended Return of
Total Income under Section 22 (1) of the Indian Income-tax
Act is submitted herewith on which the assessment for 1943-
44 may be based, as on this particular question the company
obviously cannot have one status for Excess Profits Tax and
another for Income-tax. "
It was also contended that it never carried on any business
in the purchase or sale of shares, securities or properties
and therefore prayed that in view of the order of the
Central Board of Revenue made on its application under s.
26(1) of the Excess Profits Tax Act it should be assessed
for income-tax purpose as an investor and not as a dealer.
The Income-tax Officer rejected this plea and " held the
investments as the stock-in-trade of its business therein
which it carried on during the ’previous year’ also ". The
company took an appeal to the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner which was dismissed and the
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order of the Income-tax Officer upheld. It then appealed to
the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal, Bombay, where the same
contentions were raised but were, repelled. The Tribunal
said:
" The company having itself raised the point in all the
prior years that it was a dealer in investments and
properties, it would appear to be difficult to understand
why the company now seeks to get the position changed and
desires the Income-tax Officer to treat it as if it was not
dealing in shares, securities and immoveable properties."
The Tribunal after holding that the company was under no
misapprehension when it claimed to be a dealer in
investments in the earlier years because it was then always
incurring losses and that the present contention was raised
because it made "substantial profits" said:
"but we have no doubt that, according to the company’s
memorandum of association and its own assertions made all
along in the past, the assessee company is a ’dealer in
investments and properties and the income arising to it on
the sale thereof has been rightly held by the Income-tax
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Officer to be business profits liable to tax under the
ordinary provisions of the Income-tax Act."
Thus the grounds on which the case was decided against the
assessee were (1) that the assessee claimed to be a dealer
or an investor according as it incurred losses or made
profits and (2) that because of the objects contained in the
memorandum of association and because of its assertion made
in the past as being a dealer the assessee could not be held
to be an investor.
The company then applied to the Appellate Tribunal under s.
66(1) of the Indian Income-tax Act for a reference of the
following questions for the opinion of the High Court:
"(1) Whether on the facts and in the circumstances of the
case the assessee company can rightly be treated as a dealer
in investments and properties; and
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(2)Whether the profits and losses arising from the sale of
shares, securities and immoveable properties of the assessee
company can be taxed as-business profits."
This prayer was rejected because in the opinion -of the
Tribunal no question of law arose out of its order. It said
:
" The Tribunal did not decide this point merely because the
company’s memorandum of association gave power to the
company to deal in investments and properties, but it was
actually found that the company had dealt in investments and
properties throughout and had also all along in the past
asserted that it was a dealer in investments and
properties."
This was more than it had said in its appellate order.
The assessee company then made an application under s. 66(2)
of the Indian Income-tax Act for requiring the Appellate
Tribunal to state the case and refer it to the High Court
but this application was dismissed, and then the company
obtained special leave to appeal to this Court.
Counsel for the assessee company contends that the questions
of law arise out of the order of the Tribunal because the
Tribunal has ignored the documentary evidence produced
before it, has based it decision on irrelevant matters, has
failed to consider crucial facts and has misdirected itself
by assuming that the petitioner was a dealer from the very
beginning which was contrary to the documents produced
before it.
Section 66 (1) of the Income-tax Act (hereinafter termed the
Act) provides that any assessee may require the Appellate
Tribunal to refer to the High Court any question of law
arising out of its appellate order and it is the statutory
duty of the Appellate Tribunal to draft the statement of the
case and refer the question of law arising out of such order
to the High Court but the primary requirement is that there
must be a question of law arising out of the order. Should
the Tribunal refuse to state the case as required under s.
66(1) of the Act on the ground that no question of law
arises, the assessee has the right to apply to the High
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Court requiring the Appellate Tribunal to state a case and
refer it to the High Court but again the essential
consideration is the existence of a question of law. arising
out of the order.
To draw a line between what is a question of law and what is
a question of fact is not always easy. It is difficult to
define this distinction which has given rise to a number of
decisions, which it will be useful to discuss at this stage.
In Stanley v. Gramophone and Typewriter, Limited(1) the
Master of the Rolls discussed this question as follows :
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" It is undoubtedly true that, if the Commissioners find a
fact, it is not open to this court to question that finding
unless there is no evidence to support it. If, however, the
Commissioners state the evidence which was before them, and
add that upon such evidence they hold that certain results
follow, I think it is open, and was intended by the
Commissioners that it should be open, to the court to say
whether the evidence justified what the Commissioners held."
These observations were explained by Hamilton J. in The
American Thread Co. v. Joyce (2) as implying that by giving
the material on which their finding was based the
Commissioners were inviting the court to determine whether
on that material they could reason. ably arrive at the
conclusion on which they did arrive. The House of Lords on
appeal categorically confirmed that the Courts had no
jurisdiction over conclusions of fact except to see whether
there was evidence to justify them and that proper legal
principles had been applied.
Lord Clerk in Californian Copper Syndicate v. Harris (3) has
laid down the test in the following words:
" the question to be determined being-Is the sum of gain
that has been made a mere enhancement of value by realising
a security, or is it a gain made in an
(1) (1908) 5 T.C. 358, 374.
(2) (1911) 6 T.C. 1.
(3) (1904) 5 T.C. 159, 166.
56
operation of business in carrying out a scheme for profit-
making."
In that case the objects set out in the memorandum of
association pointed distinctly to a highly speculative
business and the mode of actual procedure of the company was
also directed in the same direction. Taking into
consideration the course of dealing of the shares by the
company and also that the turning of investment to account
was not merely incidental but was an essential feature of
the business, speculation being among the appointed means of
the company’s business the court came to the conclusion that
the company was carrying on a business.
The Lord President in a Scottish case Cayzer, Irvine & Co.,
Ltd. v. Commissioners of Inland Revenue (1) stated the
grounds on which the court can interfere with the finding of
the Commissioner as follows:
" I think we have jurisdiction to entertain the question at
law, which is whether the majority of the Commissioners were
warranted on -the evidence in determining as they did. At
the narrowest it is always open to this Court in a Stated
Case to review a finding in fact on the ground that there is
no evidence to support it."
Lord Parker in Farmer v. Trustees of the Late William Cotton
(2) after referring to the difficulty of distinguishing
between a question of fact and a question of law observed:
" Where all the material facts are fully found, and the only
question is whether the facts are such as to bring the case
within the provisions properly construed of some statutory
enactment, the question is one of law only."
But this statement of the law was considerably modified in
Inland Revenue Commissioners v. Lysaght (3) where it was
held that if the issue before the court could be described
as a "question of degree" the conclusion must be a question
of fact.
(1) (1942) 24 T.C. 491, 501.
(2) [19I5] A.C. 922,932.
(3) [1928] A.C. 234.
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The Commissioners of Inland Revenue v. The Korean Syndicate,
Ltd. (1) was a case where a syndicate was registered for the
purpose of acquiring and working concessions and turning
them to account, and of investing and dealing with monies
not immediately required. The syndicate acquired part of a
right to a concession in Korea and then under an agreement
described as a "lease", in consideration of receiving sums
of money termed "royalties" but which were really
percentages of profits made by assignee company, assigned
the lease to a development company. Some moneys which were
received from sale of certain shares obtained by the
syndicate in exchange for shares originally acquired in the
mining company were deposited in a bank. The activities of
the company were during the relevant period confined to
receiving the bank interest and royalties, distributing the
amount amongst its shareholders as dividend. The question
for decision was whether the syndicate was carrying on a
business and was therefore liable to excess profits duty.
From these facts it was concluded that they were carrying on
a business.
Atkinson L.J. pointed out at p. 204 that merely because a
company is incorporated it does not necessarily follow that
it is carrying on business.- Its memorandum only shows that
the company was incorporated for a particular purpose but
taking into consideration the surrounding circumstances and
facts of the case it was concluded that the company was
carrying on a business.
In Great Western Railway Company v. Bater (2) the question
for decision was whether a clerk held a -public office to
fall within Sch. E. It was held that the determination by
the Commissioners of questions of pure fact are not to be
disturbed unless it should appear that there was no evidence
before them upon which they, as reasonable men, could arrive
at the conclusion which they came to. Lord Atkinson said:
" What I have many times in this House protested against is
the attempt to secure for a finding on a mixed question of
law and fact the unassailability
(1) (1921) 12 T.C, 181. (2) (1922) 8 T.C. 231, 244.
8
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which belongs only to a finding on questions of pure fact.
This is sought to be affected by styling the finding on a
mixed question of law and fact a finding of fact."
According to the dictum of Lord Wrenbury the question for
the Court was whether on the facts found and stated by the
Commissioners the clerk held the office within the meaning
of the Act which was a question of
law.
In Lysaght v. The Commissioners of Inland Revenue (1) the
question for decision was whether the assessee was a
resident and ordinarily resident in United Kingdom in the
year of assessment. Lord Buckmaster said:.
" The distinction between questions of fact and questions of
law is difficult to It is, of course, true that if the
circumstances found by the Commissioners in the Special Case
are incapable of constituting residence their conclusion
cannot be protected by saying that it is a conclusion of
fact since there are no materials upon which that conclusion
could depend. But if the incidents relating to visits in
this country are of such a nature that they might constitute
residence, and their prolonged or repeated repetition would
certainly produce that result, then the matter must be a
matter of degree; and the determination of whether or not
the degree extends so far as to make a man resident or
ordinarily resident here is for the Commissioners and it is
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not for the Courts to say whether they would have reached
the same conclusion."
Jones v. Leeming(2) was a case where the respondent with
three other -persons obtained an option to purchase a rubber
estate in the Malay Peninsula. That estate along with
another was sold at a profit. The Commissioners found that
the respondent had acquired the property with the sole
object of turning it over again at a profit and at no time
had he the intention of holding it. This transaction was
held not to be in the nature of trade nor the profits
arising therefrom in the nature of income but they were
accretions to
(1) (1928) 13 T.C. 511, 533, 534.
(2) [1930] A.C. 4I5.
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capital and therefore not subject to tax under Case VI of
Sch. D.
In Cameron v. Prendergast (1) the following test was laid
down by Viscount Maugham:
" Inferences from facts stated by the Commissioners are
matters of law, and can be questioned on appeal. The same
remark is true as to the construction of documents. If the
Commissioners state the
evidence.............................................. it is
open to the court to differ from such holding."
In Bomford v. Osborne (2) a farm was working as a mixed farm
but as a single unit. The question for decision was whether
the assessment could be apportioned one part being assessed
as a farm and the other as a nursery. Viscount Simon laid
down the test in the following words:
" No doubt there are many cases in which Commissioners,
having had proved or admitted before them a series of facts,
may deduce therefrom further conclusions which are
themselves conclusions of pure fact. In such cases,
however, the determination in point of law is that the facts
proved or admitted provide evidence to support the
Commissioner’s conclusions." It was also held that this
question was a mixed question of law and fact.
Du Parcq J. in J. H. Bean v. Doncaster Amalgamated
Collieries Ltd.(3) held the following to be the test for
determining whether the question is one of fact or law:
" Unless the Commissioners, having found the relevant facts
and put to themselves the proper question, have proceeded to
give the right answer, they may be said, on this view, to
have erred in point of law. If an inference from facts does
not logically accord with and follow from them, then one
must say that there is no evidence to support it. To come
to a conclusion which there is no evidence to support is to
make an error in law."
(1) [1940] 2 All E.R. 35, 40. (3) [1944] 2 All E.R. 279,
284.
(2) [1941] 2 All E.R. 426, 430.
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In Edward v. Bairstow (1) the respondent embarked upon a
joint venture to purchase a spinning plant with the object
of holding it for quick resale and at a profit. The General
Commissioners found that there was no venture in the nature
of trade but the court held that the facts found led
inevitably to the conclusion that the transaction was a
venture in the nature of trade and that the Commissioners’
inference to the contrary was erroneous.
Lord Simonds observed at p. 54 that:
" To say that a transaction is, or is not, an adventure in
the nature of trade is to say that it has, or has not, the
characteristics which distinguish such an adventure. But it
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is a question of law, not of fact, what are those
characteristics.........
At p. 55 Lord Radcliffe pointed out:
" I think that it is a question of law what meaning is to be
given to the words of the Income Tax Act "trade,
manufacture, adventure or concern in the nature of trade"
and for that matter what constitutes "profits or gains"
arising from it. Here we have a statutory phrase involving
a charge of tax, and it is for the courts to interpret its
meaning, having regard to the context in which it occurs,
and to the principles which they bring to bear on the
meaning of income." and then at p. 57 laid down the test in
the following words:
" When the case comes before the court, it is its duty to
examine the determination having regard to its knowledge of
the relevant law. If the case contains anything ex facie
which is bad law and which bears on the determination, it
is, obviously, erroneous in point of law. But, without any
such misconception appearing ex facie, it may be that the
facts found are such that no person acting judicially and
properly instructed as to the relevant law could have come
to the determination under appeal."
The dicta of Warrington L.J. in Cooper v. Stubbs (2) that
intervention by a court is proper only:
(1) [1955] 3 All E.R. 48.
(2) [1925] 2 K.B. 753, 768, 772.
61
missioners have come to their conclusion without evidence
which should support it, that is to say, have come to a
conclusion which on the evidence no reason-’ able person
could arrive at, or have misdirected themselves in point of
law." and of Atkin L.J. that:
to one conclusion of law..." were quoted with approval by
Lord Radcliffe at pp. 56 and 57.
A review of these authorities shows that though the English
decisions began with a broad definition of what are
questions of law, ultimately the House of Lords decided that
a "matter of degree" is a question of fact and it has also
been decided that a finding by the Commissioners of a fact
under a misapprehension of law or want of evidence to
support a finding are both questions of law.
The Privy Council in Commissioner of Income-tax v.
Laxminarain Badridas (1) said:
" No question of law was involved; nor is it possible to
turn a mere question of fact into a question of law by
asking whether as a matter of law the officer came to a
correct conclusion upon a matter of fact. "
Bose J. in Seth Suwallal Chhogalal v. Commissioner of
Income-tax(2) stated the test as follows:
" A fact is a fact irrespective of the evidence by which it
is proved. The only time a question of law can arise in
such a case is when it is alleged that there is no material
on which the conclusion can be based or no sufficient
material."
Sufficiency of evidence was explained to mean whether the
Income-tax authority considered its existence so probable
that a prudent man ought under the circumstances of the case
to act upon the supposition that it exists.
The question for decision in Dhirajlal Girdharilal v.
Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay(3) was whether a Hindu
undivided family was carrying on business in
(1) [1937] 5 I.T.R. I70, 179. (3) [1954] 26 I.T.R. 736.
(2) [1949] 17 I.T.R. 269, 277.
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shares and it was held that this was a question of fact but
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if the Appellate Tribunal decided the question by taking
into consideration materials which are irrelevant to the
enquiry or partly relevant and partly irrelevant or based
its decision partly on conjectures then in such a situation
an issue of law arises, which would be subject to review by
the court and the finding given by the Tribunal would be
vitiated.
The result of the authorities is that inference from facts
would be a question of fact or of law according as the point
for determination is one of pure fact or a mixed question of
law and fact and that a finding of fact without evidence to
support it or if based on relevant and irrelevant matters is
not unassailable.
The limits of the boundary dividing questions of fact and
questions of law were laid down by this court in Meenakshi
Mills, Madurai v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras (1)
where the question for decision was whether certain profits
made and shown in the name of certain intermediaries were in
fact profits actually earned by the assessee or the
intermediaries. Taking the course of dealings and the
extent of the transaction and the position of the
intermediaries and all the evidence into consideration the
Tribunal came to the conclusion that the intermediaries were
dummies brought into existence by the appellant for
concealing the true amount of profits and that the sales in
their name were sham and fictitious and profits were
actually earned by the assessee. The test laid down by this
Court is to be found in the various passages in that
judgment. At p. 701 Venkatarama Ayyar J. pointed out that
questions of fact are not open to review by the court unless
they are unsupported by any evidence or are perverse. At p.
706 it was observed :
" In between the domains occupied respectively by questions
of fact and of law, there is a large area in which both
these questions run into each other, forming so to say,
enclaves within each other. The questions that arise for
determination in that area are known as mixed questions of
law and fact. These questions involve first the
ascertainment of facts on the evidence adduced and then a
determination of the
(1) [1956] S.C.R. 691.
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rights of the parties on an application of the appropriate
principles of law to the facts ascertained.
The law was thus summed up at p. 720:
(1) When the point for determination is a pure question of
law such as construction of a statute or document of title,
the decision of the Tribunal is open to reference to the
court under s. 66 (1).
(2) When the point for determination is a mixed question of
law and fact, while the finding of the Tribunal on the facts
found is final its decision as to the legal effect of that
finding is a question of law which can be reviewed by the
court.
(3) A finding on a question of fact is open to attack under
s. 66 (1) as erroneous in law if there is no evidence to
support it or if it is perverse.
(4) When the finding is one of fact, the fact that it is
itself an inference from other basic facts will not alter
its character as one of fact.
In the instant case the Appellate Tribunal in its appellate
order has set out the amount of profits made by the assessee
company in the years of assessment 1943-44 to 1948-49. It
has also mentioned the inconsistent positions taken up by
the assessee in first claiming to be a dealer and then to be
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an investor which according to the Tribunal was due to the
fact that it was incurring losses in the earlier years and
had begun making profits when the claim of being an investor
was put forward. But the two basic facts on which the
Tribunal has based its findings are:
(1) the objects set out in the memorandum of association of
the assessee company;
(2) the previous assertion by the assessee company that it
was a dealer in investments and not merely an investor.
Counsel for the assessee relies on the decision of Kishan
Prasad & Co., Ltd. v. Commissioner of Incometax, Punjab (1)
where this Court held that the circumstance whether a
transaction is or is not within the powers of the company
has no bearing on the nature of the transaction or on the
question whether the profits arising therefrom are capital
or revenue income and, therefore, it is contended that the
Tribunal has
(1) [1955] 27 I.T.R. 49.
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relied upon an irrelevant circumstance. Counsel for Revenue
on the other hand refer to the judgment in Lakshminarayan
Ram Gopal v. Government of Hyderabad (1) where the objects
of an incorporated company were held not to be conclusive
but relevant for the purpose of determining the nature and
scope of its activities. Merely because the company has
within its objects the dealing in investment in shares does
not give to it the characteristics of a dealer in shares.
But if other circumstances are proved it may be a relevant
consideration for the purpose of determining the nature of
activities of an assessee. Whether in the instant case it
will have any relevance because of other materials on which
the assessee company was relying in support of its case that
it was merely an investor and not a dealer will have to be
considered when the suggested questions of law are answered.
As to what are the characteristics of the business of
dealing in shares or that of an investor is a mixed question
of fact and law. What is the legal effect of the facts
found by the Tribunal and whether as a result the assessee
can be termed a dealer or an investor is itself a question
of law.
The questions of law that arise out of the order of the
Tribunal are:
(1)Whether there are any materials on the record to support
the finding of the Income-tax Officer that the assessee
company was a dealer in shares, securities and immoveable
property during the assessment year in question ?
(2)Whether the profits and losses arising from the sale of
shares, securities and immoveable properties of the assessee
company can be taxed as business profits ?
We would therefore allow this appeal, set aside the order of
the High Court and remit the case to the High Court for
directing the Tribunal to state a case on the aforesaid two
questions. The appellant will have its costs in this Court
and in the High Court for the proceedings so far taken.
Further costs will be in the discretion of the High Court.
Appeal allowed. Case remitted.
(1) [1955] I.S.C.R. 393; [1954] 25 I.T.R. 449.
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