Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, KERALA AND COIMBATORE
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
L. W. RUSSEL
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
01/04/1964
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
SHAH, J.C.
SIKRI, S.M.
CITATION:
1965 AIR 49 1964 SCR (7) 569
ACT:
Income Tax-Scheme to effect a policy of insurance for the
purpose of ensuring annuity to every employee on his
attaining age of superannuation or on happening of a
specified contingency Contributions to be made both by
employer and employee-Whether amount paid by the employer
towards premium payable by employee taxable under s. 7(1)-
Meaning of perquisite-Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 (11 of
1922), s. 7(1).
HEADNOTE:
The respondent is an employee of the English and Scottish
Joint Co-operative Wholesale Society Ltd. incorporated in
England. The Society established a superannuation scheme
for the benefit of the male European members of its staff
employed in India by means of deferred annuities. Under the
terms of the scheme, the trustee has to effect a policy of
insurance for the purpose of ensuring an annuity to every
member of the ,Society on his attaining the age of
superannuation or on the happening of a specific
contingency. The Society contributed ,one-third of the
premium payable by each employee. During the year 1956-57,
the Society contributed Rs. 3333/- towards the premium
payable by the respondent, an employee of the Society. The
Income-tax Officer included the said amount in the taxable
income of the respondent for the year 1956-57 under s. 7(1),
Explanation 1, sub-cl. (v) of the Act. The appeals of the
respondent were dismissed both by the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner of Income-tax and the Income-tax Appellate
’Tribunal.
The Tribunal referred to the High Court the following three
questions of law:-
(1) Whether the contribution paid by the
employer to the assessee under the terms of a
trust deed in respect of a contract for a
deferred annuity on the life of the assessee
is a perquisite as contemplated by
s. 7(1) of the Income-tax Act?
(2) Whether the said contributions were
allowed to, or due to the applicant by or from
the employer in the accounting year?
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(3) Whether the deferred annuity aforesaid
is annuity hit by s. 7(1) and para (v) of
Explanation 1 thereto.
The High Court held that the employer’s contribution under
the terms of the trust deed was not a perquisite as con-
templated by s. 7(1). The employer’s contributions were not
allowed to or due to the employee in the accounting year.
The legislature not having used the word "deferred" with
annuity in s. 7(1) and the statute being a taxing one, the
deferred annuity would not hit para (v) of Explanation 1 to
s. 7-(1) of the Act. Against the decision of High Court,
the appellant came to this Court by special leave.
Dismissing the appeal,
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Held: The answers to the questions of law as given by
the High Court were correct. Unless a vested interest in
the sum accrues to an employee, it is not taxable. In the
present case. no interest in the sum contributed by the
employer under the scheme vested in the employee, as it was
only a contingent interest depending upon his reaching the
age of superannuation. it is not a perquisite allowed to him
by the employer or an amount, due to him from the employer
within the meaning of s. 7(1) of the Act. A perquisite is
only that amount of money which is allowed to the employee
by or is due to him from the employer or is paid to him to
effect an insurance on his life.
Smyth v. Stretton, (1904), 5 T.C. 36, and Edwards (H. M.,
Inspector of Taxes) v. Roberts, (1935), 19 T.C. 618,
referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 220/ 1963.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
January 9, 1961 of the Kerala High Court in I.T.R. Case No.
17 of 1959.
K. N. Rajagopal Sastri and R. N. Sachthey, for the ap-
pellant.
The respondent did not appear.
April 1, 1964. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SUBBA RAO, J.-This appeal by special leave preferred against
the judgment of the High Court of Kerala at Ernakulam raises
the question of the interpretation of s. 7(1) of the Indian
Income-tax Act, 1922 (Act No. XI of 1922), hereinafter
called the Act.
The respondent, L. W. Russel, is an employee of the English
and Scottish Joint Co-operative Wholesale Society Ltd.,
Kozhikode, hereinafter called the Society, which was
incorporated in England. The Society established a superan-
nuation scheme for the benefit of the male European members
of the Society’s staff employed in India, Ceylon and Africa
by means of deferred annuities. The terms of such benefits
were incorporated in a trust deed dated July 27, 1934.
Every European employee of the Society shall become a member
of that scheme as a condition of employment. Under the term
of the scheme the trustee has to effect a policy of
insurance for the purpose of ensuring an annuity to every
member of the Society on his attaining the age of
superannuation or on the happening of a specified contin-
gency. The Society contributes 1/3 of the premium payable
by such employee. During the year 1956-57 the Society con-
tributed Rs. 3,333/- towards the premium payable by the
respondent. The Income-tax Officer, Kozhikode Circle, in-
cluded the said amount in the taxable income of the respon-
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dent for the year 1956-57 under s. 7(1), Explanation 1 Sub-
cl. (v) of the Act. The appeal preferred by the
respondent against
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the said inclusion to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner
of Income tax, Kozhikode, was dismissed. The further appeal
preferred to the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal received the
same fate. The assessee thereupon filed an application
under s. 66(1) of the Act to the Income-tax Appellate
Tribunal for stating a case to the High Court. By its order
dated December 1, 1958, the Tribunal submitted a statement
of case referring the following three questions of law to
the High Court of Kerala at Ernakulam: -
(1) Whether the contributions paid by the
employer to the assessee under the terms of a
trust deed in respect of a contract for a
deferred annuity on the life of the assessee
is a ’perquisite’ as contemplated by s. 7(1)
of the Indian Income-tax Act?
(2) Whether the said contributions were
allowed to or due to the applicant by or from
the employer in the accounting year?
(3) Whether the deferred annuity aforesaid
is an annuity hit by section 7(1) and para.
(v) of Explanation 1 thereto?
On the first question the High Court held that the
employer’s contribution under the terms of the trust deed
was not a perquisite as contemplated by s. 7(1) of the Act.
On the second question it came to the conclusion that the
employer’s contributions were not allowed to or due to the
employee in the accounting year. On the third question it
expressed the opinion that the Legislature not having used
the word ’deferred" with annuity in s. 7(1) and the statute
being a taxing one, the deferred annuity would not be hit by
para. (v) of Explanation 1 to s. 7(1) of the Act. The
Commissioner of Income-tax has preferred the present appeal
to this Court questioning the correctness of the said
answers.
The three questions formulated for the High Court’s opinion
are interdependent and the answers to them turn upon the
true interpretation of the relevant part of s. 7(1) of the
Act.
Mr. Rajagopala Sastri, learned counsel for the appellant,
contends that the amount contributed by the Society under
the scheme towards the insurance premium payable by the
trustees for arranging a deferred annuity on the
respondent’s superannuation is a perquisite within the
meaning of s. 7(1) of the Act and that the fact that the
respondent may not have the benefit of the contributions on
the happening of certain contingencies will not make the
said contributions any the less a perquisite. The
employer’s share of the contributions to the fund earmarked
for paying premiums of the insurance policy, the argument
proceeds, vests in the respondent as soon as
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it is paid to the trustee and the happening of a contingency
only ’operates as a defeasance of the vested right. The
respondent is ex-parte and, therefore, the Court has not the
benefit of the exposition of the contrary view.
Before we attempt to construe the scope of s. 7(1) of the
Act it will be convenient at the outset to notice the pro-
visions of the scheme, for the scope of the respondent’s
right in the amounts representing the employer’s
contributions thereunder depends upon it. The trust deed
and the rules dated July 27, 1934, embody the superannuation
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scheme. The scheme is described as the English and Scottish
Joint Co-operative Wholesale Society Limited Overseas
European Employees’ Superannuation Scheme, hereinafter
called the Scheme. It is established for the benefit of the
male European members ’of the Society’s staff employed in
India, Ceylon and Africa by means of deferred annuities.
The Society itself is appointed thereunder as the first
trustee. The trustees shall act as agents for and on behalf
of the Society and the members respectively; they shall
effect or cause to be effected such policy or policies as
may be necessary to carry out the scheme and shall collect
and arrange for the payment of the moneys payable under such
policy or policies and shall hold such moneys as trustees
for and on behalf of the person or persons entitled thereto
under the rules of the Scheme. The object of the Scheme is
to provide for pensions by means of deferred annuities for
the members upon retirement from employment on attaining
certain age under the conditions mentioned therein, namely,
every European employee of the Society shall be required as
a condition of employment to apply to become a member of the
Scheme from the date of his engagement by the Society and no
member shall be entitled to relinquish his membership except
on the termination of his employment with Society; the
pension payable to a member shall be provided by means of a
policy securing a deferred annuity upon the life of such
member to be effected by the Trustees as agents for and on
behalf of the Society and the members respectively with the
Co-operative Insurance Society Limited securing the payment
to the Trustees of an annuity equivalent to the pension to
which such member shall be entitled under the Scheme and the
Rules; the insurers shall agree that the Trustees shall be
entitled to surrender such deferred annuity and that, on
such deferred annuity being so surrendered, the insurers
will pay to the Trustees the total amount of the premiums
paid in respect thereof together with compound interest
thereon; all moneys received by the Trustees from the
insurers shall be held by them as Trustees for and ’on
behalf of the person or persons entitled thereto under the
Rules of the Scheme; any policy or policies issued by the
insurers in connection with the
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Scheme shall be deposited with the Trustees; the Society
shall contribute one-third of the premium from time to time
payable in respect of the policy securing the deferred
annuity in respect of each member as thereinbefore provided
and the member shall contribute the remaining two-thirds-,
the age at which a member shall normally retire from the
service of the Society shall be the age of 55 years and on
retirement at such age a member shall be entitled to receive
a pension of the amount specified in Rule 6; a member may
also, after following the prescribed procedure, commute the
pension to which he is entitled for a payment in cash in
accordance with the fourth column of the Table in the
Appendix annexed to the Rules; if a member shall leave or be
dismissed from the service of the Society for any reason
whatsoever or shall die while in the service of the Society
there shall be paid to him or his legal personal
representatives the total amount of the portions of the
premiums paid by such member and if he shall die whilst in
the service of the Society there shall be paid to him or his
legal personal representatives the total amount of the
portions of the premiums paid by such member and if he shall
die whilst in the service of the Society or shall leave or
be dismissed from the service of the Society on account of
permanent breakdown in health (as to the bona fides of which
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the Trustees shall be satisfied,) such further proportion
(if any) of the total amount of the portions of the premiums
paid by the Society in respect of that member shall be
payable in accordance with Table C in the Appendix to the
Rules; if the total amount of the portions of the premiums
in respect of such member paid by the Society together with
interest thereon as aforesaid shall not be paid by the
Trustees to him or his legal personal representatives under
sub-s. (1) of r. 15 then such proportion or the whole, as
the case may be, of the Society’s portion of such premiums
and interest thereon as aforesaid as shall not be paid by
the Trustees to such member or his legal personal
representatives as aforesaid shall be paid by the Trustees
to the Society; the rules may be altered, amended or
rescinded and new rules may be made in accordance with the
provisions of the Trust Deed but not otherwise.
We have given the relevant part of the Scheme and the Rules.
The gist of the Scheme may be stated thus: The object of the
Scheme is to provide for pensions to its employees. It is
achieved by creating a trust. The Trustees appointed
thereunder are the agents of the employer as well as of the
employees and hold the moneys received from the employer,
the employee and the insurer in trust for and on behalf of
the person or persons entitled thereto under the rules of
the Scheme. The Trustees are enjoined to take out policies
of insurance securing a deferred annuity upon the
574
life of each member, and funds are provided by contributions
from the employer as well as from the employees. The Trus-
tees realise the annuities and pay the pensions to the
employees. Under certain contingencies mentioned above, an
employee would be entitled to the pension only after super-
annuation. If the employee leave the service of the Society
or is dismissed from service or dies in the service of the
Society, he will be entitled only to get back the total
amount of the portion of the premium paid by him, though the
trustees in their discretion under certain circumstances may
give him a proportion of the premiums paid by the Society.
The entire amount representing the contributions made by the
Society or part thereof, as the case may be, will then have
to be paid by the Trustees to the Society. Under the scheme
the employee has not acquired any vested right in the con-
tributions made by the Society. Such a right vests in him
only when he attains the age of superannuation. Till that
date that amount vests in the Trustees to be administered in
accordance with the rules-, that is to say, in case the
employee ceases to be a member of the Society by death or
otherwise, the amount contributed by the employer with
interest thereon, subject to the discretionary power
exercisable by the trustees, become payable to the Society.
If he reaches the age of superannuation, the said
contributions irrevocably become fixed as part of the funds
yielding the pension. To put it in other words, till a
member attains the age of superannuation the employer’s
share of the contributions towards the premiums does not
vest in the employee. At best he has a contingent right
therein. In ’one contingency the said amount becomes
payable to the employer and in another contingency, to the
employee.
Now let us look at the provisions of s. 7(1) of the Act in
order to ascertain whether such a contingent right is hit by
the said provisions. The material part of the section
reads: -
Section 7(1)-The tax shall be payable by an
assessee under the head "salaries" in respect
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of any salary or wages, any annuity, pension
or gratuity, and any fees, commissions,
perquisites or profits in lieu of, ’or in
addition to, any salary or wages, which are
allowed to him by or are due to him, whether
paid or not, from, or are paid by or on behalf
of................ a
company..................... Explanation I-For
the purpose of this section perquisite
includes-
(v) any sum payable by the employer, whether
directly or through a fund to which the pro.
visions of Chapters IX-A and IX-B do not
575
apply, to effect an assurance on the life of
the assessee or in respect ’of a contract of
annuity on the life of the assessees.
This section imposes a tax on the remuneration of an
employee. It presupposes the existence of the relationship
if employer and employee. The present case is sought to be
brought under the head "perquisites in lieu of, or in
addition to, any salary or wages, which are allowed to him
by or are due to him, whether paid or not, from, or are paid
by or on behalf of a company". The expression "perquisites"
is defined in the Oxford Dictionary as "casual emoluments.
fee or profit attached to an office or position in addition
to salary or wages". Explanation 1 to s. 7(1) of the Act
gives an inclusive definition. Clause (v) thereof includes
within the meaning of "perquisites" any sum payable by the
employer, whether directly or through a fund to which the
provisions of Chs. IX-A and IX-B do not apply, to effect an
assurance on the life of the assessee or in respect of a
contract for an annuity on the life of the assessee. A
combined reading of the substantive part of s. 7(1) and cl.
(v) of Expl. 1 thereto makes it clear that if a sum of money
is allowed to the employee by or is due to him from or is
paid to enable the latter to effect an insurance on his
life, the said sum would be a perquisite within the meaning
of s. 7(1) of the Act and, therefore, would be eligible to
tax. But before such sum becomes so exigible, it shall
either be paid to the employee or allowed to him by or due
to him from the employer. So far as the expression "paid"
is concerned, there is no difficulty, for it takes in every
receipt by the employee from the employer whether it was due
to him or not. The expression "due" followed by the
qualifying clause "whether paid or not" shows that there
shall be an obligation on the part of the employer to pay
that amount and a right on the employee to claim the same.
The expression "allowed", it is said, is of a wider connota-
tion and any credit made in the employer’s account is cover-
ed thereby. The word "allowed" was introduced in the sec-
tion by the Finance Act of 1955. The said expression in the
legal terminology is equivalent to "fixed, taken into
account, set apart, granted". It takes in perquisites given
in cash or in kind or in money or money’s worth and also
amenities which are not convertible into money. It implies
that a eight is conferred on the employee in respect of
those perquisites. One cannot be said to allow a perquisite
to an employee if the employee has no right to the same. It
cannot apply to contingent payments to which the employee
has no right till the contingency occurs. In short, the
employee must have a vested right therein.
If that be the interpretation of s. 7(1) of the Act, it is.
not possible to hold that the amounts paid by the Society
576
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to the Trustees to be administered by them in accordance
with the rules framed under the Scheme are perquisites
allowed to the respondent or due to him. Till he reaches
the age of superannuation, the amounts vest in the Trustees
and the beneficiary under the trust can be ascertained only
on the happening of one or other of the contingencies
provided for under the trust deed. On the happening of one
contingency, the employer becomes the beneficiary, and on
the happening of another contingency, the employee becomes
the beneficiary. Learned counsel for the appellant strongly
relied upon the decision of the King’s Bench Division in
Smyth v. Stretton(1). There, one Stretton, one of the
Assistant Masters of Dulwich College, was assessed to
income-tax in the sum of pouns 385 in respect of his
emoluments as Assistant Master received from the Governors
of Dulwich College for the year ended the 5th day of April,
1901. He objected to the assessment on the ground that it
included pound 35 not liable to taxation, being amount
placed to his credit by the Governors under the Provident
Fund Scheme for the year 1900. Channell, J., with some
hesitation, came to the conclusion that the said sum was
taxable. That case was dealing with a scheme for the
establishment of provident fund for the benefit of the
Assistant Masters on the permanent staff of the Dulwich
College. Under para. 1 of the scheme the salaries of
Assistant Masters were increased. Clause (a) of para. 1 of
the scheme provided that Assistant Masters having not less
than five years, but less than fifteen years’ service, would
be allowed an increase of 5 per cent, in their salaries;
under cl. (b) thereof, Assistant Masters having not less
than 15 years’ of service and over, would get an increase of
7-1/2 per cent. in their salaries; under cl. (c) thereof, a
further addition in their salaries, equal in amount to the
above sums, should be granted from the same date to the
Assistant Masters alluded to in (a) and (b), such addition
being, however, subject to the conditions provided by para.
5. Paragraph 5 read:-
"That Assistant Masters having less than ten
years’ service who may resign their
appointments, or from any other cause than
ill-health cease to belong to the College,
shall be entitled to receive the total
increase sanctioned by (a) and the accu-
mulations thereof, but shall not receive the
additional increase sanctioned by (c), or the
accumulations thereof. In the event of any
such Assistant Master retiring from ill-health
the Governors, in addition to the increase
sanctioned by (a), may grant him the further 5
per cent. sanctioned by (c), and the
accumulations thereof. In the event of death
of any such Assistant Master whilst in
(1) (1904) 5 T. C. 36, 46.
577
the service of the College, the 5 percent. due
by (c) as well as under (a), with the
accumulations thereof, shall be paid to his
legal representatives".
It was contended that the amount payable under cl. (c) of
para. I was a contingent one without any vested character
and, therefore, could not be described as income in any way.
The learned Judge construed the provisions of the scheme and
rejected the contention. The main reason for his conclusion
is stated thus:-
"The result seems to me to be that I must take
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that sum as a sum which really has been added
to the salary and is taxable, and it is not
the less added to the salary because there has
been a binding obligation created between the
Assistant Masters and Governors of the Schools
that they should apply it in a particular
way".
No doubt it is possible for another court to come to a
different conclusion on the construction of the provisions
of the scheme; but the learned Judge came to the conclusion
that cl. (c) of para. 1 of the scheme provided for an
additional salary to the Assistant Masters. Indeed, the
Court of Appeal in Edwards (H. M. Inspector of Taxes) v.
Roberts(1) construed a similar scheme and came to the
contrary conclusion and explained the earlier decision on
the basis we have indicated. There, the respondent was
employed by a company under a service agreement dated
’August 21, 1921, which provided inter alia, that, in
addition to an annual salary, he should have an interest in
a "conditional fund", which was to be created by the company
by the payment after the end of each financial year of a sum
out of its profits to the trustees of the fund to be
invested by them in the purchase of the company’s shares or
debenture stock. Subject to possible forfeiture of his
interest in certain events, the respondent was entitled to
receive the income produced by the fund at the expiration of
each financial year, and to receive part of the capital of
the fund, (or, at the trustees’ option, the investments
representing the same) at the expiration of five financial
years and of each succeeding year, and, on death whilst in
the company’s service or on the termination of his employ-
ment by the company, to receive the whole amount then
standing to the credit of the capital amount of the fund (or
the actual investments). The respondent resigned from the
service of the company in September, 1927, and at that date
the trustees of the fund transferred to him the shares which
they had purchased out of the payments made to them by the
company in the years 1922 to 1927. He was assessed to
income-tax on the amount of the current market value of the
(1) (1935) 19 T.C. 618, 638, 640.
LP(D)ISCI-17
578
shares at the date of transfer. The assessee contended that
immediately a sum was paid by the company to the trustee& of
the fund he became invested with a beneficial interest in
the payment which formed part ’of his emoluments for the
year in which it was made, and for no other year, and that,
accordingly, the amount of the assessment for the year 1927
-28 ought not, in any event, to exceed the aggregate of the
sums paid by the company to the trustees, the difference
between the amount and the value of the investments at the
date of transfer representing a capital appreciation not
liable to tax for any year. The Court of Appeal rejected
the contention. Lord Hanworth, M. R., in rejecting the
contention. observed
be said to have accrued to this employee a
vested interest in these successive sums
placed to his credit, but only that he had a
chance of being paid a sum at the end of six
years if all went well. That chance has now
supervened, and he has got it by reason of the
fact of his employment, or by reason of his
exercising an employment of profit within
Schedule E.".
Maugham. L. J., said much to the same effect
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thus:
"The true nature of the agreement was that lie
was to be entitled in the events, and only in
the events mentioned in Clause 8 of the
agreement, to the investments made by the
Company out of the net profits of the Company
as provided in Clause 6.".
The decision of Channel], J., in Smyth v. Stretton(1) was
strongly relied upon before the appellate court. But the,
learned Judges distinguished that case on the -round that
under the scheme which was the subject-matter Of that deci-
sion the sums taxed were really additions to the salary of
the Assistant Master and that. in any view, that decision
should be confined to the facts of that case. The principle
laid down by the Court of Appeal, namely, that unless a
vested interest in the sum accrues to an employee it is not
taxable. equally applies to the present case. As we have
pointed out earlier, no interest in the sum contributed by
the employer under the scheme vested in the employee. as it
was only a contingent interest depending upon his reaching
the age of superannuation. It is not a perquisite allowed
to him by the employer or an amount due to him from the
employer within the meaning of s. 7(1) of the Act. We,
therefore, hold that the High Court has given correct
answers to the questions of law submitted to it by the
Income-tax Appellate Tribunal.
In the result, the appeal fails and is dismissed.
Appeal dismissed.
(1)(1904) 5 T.C 35. 46.
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