Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M/S. CHIDAMBARAM MULRAK & CO. PVT. LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX, BOMBAY CITY I
DATE OF JUDGMENT21/11/1975
BENCH:
GUPTA, A.C.
BENCH:
GUPTA, A.C.
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
CITATION:
1976 AIR 342 1976 SCR (2) 773
1976 SCC (1) 341
ACT:
Indian Income Tax Act, 1922-Subs. 5A of s. 10
introduced by the Finance Act of 1955-Interpretation of-
Compensation paid for the termination of a managing business
is a payment in relation to the said business-Previous year
relevant to that receipt is the same as the previous year
for the managing agency business itself.
HEADNOTE:
The assessee-appellant received in October, 1953, a sum
of Rs, 9,95,000/- out of Rs. 10,00,000- compensation for the
premature termination of its managing agency business, a sum
of Rs. 5,000/-, having been deducted towards brokerage. The
said amount was credited to the Capital Reserve Account in
its books for the year ending on June 30, 1954 described as
"compensation for loss of office". In the assessment year
1955-56, for which, the appellant’s previous year ended on
June 30, 1954, the Income Tax Officer assessed the entire
amount of Rs. 10,00,000 in the hands of the appellant
company under s. 10 (5A).
The Company preferred an appeal to the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner who allowed the appeal holding that
(i) s. 10(5A) created a new source of income for which the
previous year was not the previous year for the managing
agency business ending on June 30, 1954; (ii) the
compensation of Rs. 10,00,0000 which the assessee received
in October, 1953 fell in the financial year 1953 54 ‘ which
would be the previous year for this income for which the
assessment year was 1954-55, which was before the enactment
of sub-section SA of s. 10; (iii) the fact that the
appellant had entered the amount in its books for the year
that ended on June 30, 1954, could not be taken as an
exercise of option by the assessee, accepting the said year
as the previous year in respect of the receipt; and (iv) if
at all the amount was taxable in the assessment year 1955-
56, the assessee was entitled to a deduction of Rs.
6,00,000/- paid for acquiring the managing agency.
The appeal preferred by the Department was partly
allowed. Tho Tribunal agreed with the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner that the assessee was entitled to a deduction
of Rs. 6,OO,000/- which the assessee had paid for acquiring
the managing agency business. The Tribunal however held that
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Sec. 10 (5A) does not increase a fresh source of income that
since tho amount in question was received in the accounting
year relevant to the assessment year 1955-56 it was taxable
in the assessment year 1955-56;
The High Court on a reference under s. 66(1) of the Act
on the two questions namely
(i) Whether the sum of Rs. 10 lakhs is income
assessable in-the year 1955-56 by virtue of
Section 10(5A)? and
(ii) If the answer is in the affirmative, whether
the initial cost of acquisition of the
Mananging Agency of Rs. 6 lakhs and Rs. 5
thousands paid as brokerage on sale are
deductible ?
agreed with the views of the Tribunal.
On appeal by certificate under s. 66A(2) and dismissing
the appeal, the Court,
^
HELD: (1) Since sub-section 5A of s. 10 came into force
on April 1, 1955, the amount in question if received by the
assessee during the previous year for the assessment year
1955-56, would be taxable under that sub-section. By
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a legal fiction introduced by the sub-section, any amount
received by a managing agent as compensation for the
termination of his managing agency agreement which would
otherwise have been a capital receipt is to be deemed as
profit and gains of a business carried on by the managing
agent. The fiction regards the capital receipt as income and
does not extend to treating the termination of managing
agency itself as a business. The amount received by the
appellant was the payment for the termination of the
managing agency business and, as such, the receipt is
obviously related to that business. Though the amount was
not earned in carrying on the business of managing agency,
yet the source of the receipt was the mananing agency
business itself, it is not therefore correct to say that the
receipt was income from a new and independent source
(2) The High Court was right in holding that in
enacting sub-section 5A, the Legislature was concerned only
with providing a head under which the or receipt which has
been deemed to be income could be brought to tax and was not
concerned with creating a new source fur that deemed income.
[777G]
(3) The compensation paid for the termination of a
managing agency business is a payment in relation to the
said business and, therefore, the previous year relevant to
that receipt would be the same as the previous year for the
managing agency business itself. [778A]
Commissioner of Income Tax, Bombay v. Sir Chunilal V.
Metha & Sons Private Ltd., (1967) 65 I.T.R. 50; and R. V.
Lakshmiah Naidu and Co. v. Commissioner of Income Tax,
Kerala and Coimbatore. (1963) 48 I.T.R. 661, relied on
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 360 of
1971.
From the Judgment and order dated the 27/29-1-1965 of
the Bombay High Court in Income Tax Reference No. 75 of
1961.
S. C. Manchanda, K. J. John and J. B. Dadachanji for
the Appellant.
S. T. Desai, Girish Chandra and M. N. Shroff for the
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Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
GUPTA, J. The appellant is a private limited company.
The assessment year is 1955-56 for which the relevant
previous year ended on June 30, 1954. The shareholders of
the appellant company arc Mulraj Kersondas, members of his
family, allied concerns and nominees only. In 1944 the
appellant purchased the managing agency of the Elphinston
Spinning and Weaving Mills Ltd. for Rupees six lakhs and
thereafter entered into a separate managing agency agreement
with the managed company for a period of seventeen years.
The appellant’s only source of income was this managing
agency in the relevant year. Mulraj and his group also held
among themselves 25,000 ordinary and 10,000 preference
shares of the Elphinston Spinning and Weaving Mills Ltd.
Mulraj entered into an agreement for sale of these shares
with K. D. Jalan of Calcutta for a consideration of Rupees
forty-five lakhs; one of the terms of the agreement was that
Mulraj would have the managing agency of the appellant
company terminated. In implementation of this agreement
Mulraj wrote to the appellant company on October 21, 1953
asking the company to give up the managing agency on receipt
of a sum of Rupees ten lakhs as compensation which he
promised to pay. On the same day the appellant company
passed a resolution accepting Mulraj’s offer and
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wrote to the managed company, Elphinston Spinning and
Weaving Mills Ltd., tendering resignation of its office as
managing agents. The resignation was in due course accepted.
The assessee received from Mulraj a sum of Rs. 9,95,000/- as
compensation for premature termination of the managing
agency, Rs. 5,000/- having been paid by Mulraj as brokerage
to one Dhirajlal Maganlal. The amount received was credited
to the Capital Reserve Account in the appellant’s books for
the year ending on June 30, 1954 described as "compensation
for loss of office".
In the assessment year 1955-56 for which the
appellant’s previous year ended on June 30, 1954, the
Income-tax officer assessed the entire amount of Rupees ten
lakhs in the hands of the appellant company under section
10(5A) of the Income-Tax Act, 1922. Section 10(1) of the
Income-Tax Act, 1922 states that the "tax shall be C payable
by an assessee under the head "Profits and gains of
business, profession or vocation in respect of the profit or
gains of any business, profession or vocation carried on by
him." Sub-section (5A) was inserted in section 10 by the
Finance Act, 1955 with effect from April 1, 1955, the
relevant part of which is in these terms:
"(5A) Any compensation or other payment due to or
received by,-
(a) a managing agent of an Indian company at or
in connection with the termination or
modification of his managing agency agreement
with the company;
(b) a manager of an Indian company at or in
connection with the termination of his office
or modification of the terms and conditions
relating thereto;
(c) any person, by whatever name called, managing
the whole or substantially the whole affairs
of any other company in the taxable
territories, at or in connection with the
termination of his office or the modification
of the terms and conditions relating thereto;
(d) any person, by whatever name called, holding
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an agency in the taxable territories for any
part of the activities relating to the
business of any other person, at or in
connection with the termination of his agency
or the modification of the terms and
conditions relating thereto;
shall be deemed to be profits and gains of a business
carried on by the managing agent, manager or other
person, as the case may be, and shall be liable to tax
accordingly;"
The company preferred an appeal to the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner against the order of the Income-tax
officer. The Appellate Assistant Commissioner allowed the
appeal holding that section 10(5A) created a new source of
income for which the previous year was not the previous year
for the managing agency business which ended on June 30,
1954, that the compensation of Rupees
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ten lakhs which the appellant received in October, 1953 fell
in the financial year 1953-54 which would be the previous
year for this income for which the assessment year was 1954-
55 which was before sub-section (5A) of section 10 was
enacted, and the fact that the appellant had entered the
amount in its books for the year that ended on June 30, 1954
could not be taken as an exercise of option by the assessee
accepting the said year as the previous year in respect of
the receipt. The Appellate Assistant Commissioner further
held that if at all the amount was taxable in the assessment
year 1955-56, the assessee was entitled to a deduction of
Rupees six lakhs paid for acquiring the managing agency. The
Department took an appeal to the Tribunal against the order
of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner. The Tribunal was of
opinion that section 10(5A) only regards the compensation
received by the managing agent as profits and gains of a
business and does not create a fresh source therefore, and
as the amount in question in this case was received in the
accounting year relevant to the assessment year 1955-56 it
was taxable in the assessment year 1955-56. The Tribunal
however agreed with the Appellate Assistant Commissioner
that the assessee was entitled to a deduction of Rupees six
lakhs which the assessee had paid for acquiring the managing
agency, and allowed the appeal partly holding that the
assessee was liable to pay tax on the sum of Rs. 3,95,000/-.
At the instance of the parties the Tribunal referred the
following two questions to the High Court under section
66(1): -
"(i) Whether the sum of Rs. 10 lakhs is income
assess able in the year 1955-56 by virtue of
Section 10 (5A) ?
(ii) If the answer is in the affirmative, whether
the initial cost of acquisition of the
Managing Agency of Rs. 6 lakhs and Rs. 5000/-
paid as brokerage on sale are deductible ?"
The first question was referred at the instance of the
assessee and the second at the instance of the Department.
The High Court overruled the contention of the assessee that
the amount in question was income from a new source for
which the previous year was 1953-54, and answered the first
question in the affirmative and in favour on the revenue. As
regards the second question, the High Court answered it in
favour of the assessee and upheld the order of the Tribunal.
In the present appeal brought on a certificate under section
66A(2), the assessee challenges the correctness of the
answer given by the High Court to the first question.
"Previous year" is defined in section 2(11) of the
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Income-Tax Act, 1922 and the relevant part of the definition
is as follows:-
"(11) ’Previous year’ means in respect of any
separate source of income, profits and gains-
(a) the twelve months ending on the 31st day of
March next preceding the year for which the
assessment is to be made, or, if the accounts
of the assessee have
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been made up to a date within the said twelve
months in respect of a year ending on any
date other than the said 31st day of March,
then at the option of the assessee the year
ending on the day to which his accounts have
so been made up ;"
As stated already, sub-section (5A) of section 10 came
into force on April 1, 1955. Therefore, the amount in
question, if received by the assessee during the previous
year for the assessment year 1955-56, would be taxable under
that sub-section. By a legal fiction introduced by sub-
section (5A) any amount received by a managing agent as
compensation for the termination of his managing agency
agreement which would otherwise have been a capital receipt
is to be deemed as profits and gains of a business carried
on by the managing agent. The appellant contends that sub-
section (SA) indicates that this deemed income is to be
treated as receipt from a New source and, that being, so,
the relevant previous year for this income would not
necessarily be the year ending on June 30, 1954 which was
the previous year for the managing agency business, and the
assessee should have been given an opportunity to choose the
previous year in respect for the receipt in question; if the
financial year 1953-54 is taken as the previous year for
this income from a new source, the argument proceeds, then
the amount would not be taxable in the assessment year 1955-
56. It is further argued that the amount received as
compensation could not be profits and gains of the managing
agency business because the business itself was being
terminated. The words of the sub-section, according to
learned counsel for the appellant, indicate that the receipt
is to be treated as income from a new and independent
source. Sub-section (5A) states, inter alia, that any
compensation or other payment received by a managing agent
in connection with the termination of his managing agency
agreement shall be deemed to be profits and gains of "a
business" carried on by the managing agent. The use of the
indefinite article before the word ’business’, it is
submitted, makes it plain that the income is not relatable
to the managing agency business but to a new and separate
source.
We are unable to accept the contention. The fiction
introduced by sub-section (5A) regards the capital receipt
as income and does not extend to treating the termination of
managing agency itself as a business. The amount received by
the appellant was a payment for the termination of the
managing agency business and, as such, the receipt is
obviously related to that business. It is of course true
that the amount was not earned in carrying on the business
of managing agency, hut it is clear that the source of the
receipt was the managing agency business itself. It cannot
therefore be said that the receipt was income from a new and
independent source. In our opinion the High Court was right
in holding that in enacting sub-section (5A) the legislature
was concerned only with providing a head under which the
receipt which has been deemed to be income could be brought
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to tax and was not concerned with creating a new source for
that deemed income. Two decisions cited on behalf of the
respondent, one of the Bombay High Court, Commissioner of
Income-tax, Bombay v. Sir
778
Chunilal v. Mehta & Sons Private Ltd and the other of the
Madras High Court, R. V. Lakshmiah Naidu and Co. v.
Commissioner of Income-Tax, Kerala and Coimbatore, have both
held that the compensation paid for the termination of a
managing agency business is a payment in relation to the
said business, and, therefore, the previous year relevant to
that receipt would be the same as the previous year for the
managing agency business itself. In our view these two
decisions state the law on the point correctly.
The appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
S.R. Appeal dismissed.
779