Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, MADRAS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
INDIAN BANK LID.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
26/10/1964
BENCH:
SIKRI, S.M.
BENCH:
SIKRI, S.M.
SUBBARAO, K.
SHAH, J.C.
CITATION:
1965 AIR 1473 1965 SCR (1) 833
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1971 SC2434 (8)
ACT:
Income Tax-Deductible expenditure-Tax-free income from
securities -Interest paid on money borrowed for investment
in such securities Whether deductible ?-Indian Income-tax
Act, 1922 (11 of 1922), s. 10(2) (iii).
HEADNOTE:
The Indian Bank Ltd., Madras, in the course of its business
received money in deposit from its constituents and invested
the same, inter alia, in Mysore Government securities which
were free from lncome-tax and super-tax. The Bank claimed
the whole of the interest paid by it to its depositors as a
deduction under s. 10(2) (iii) of the Indian Income-tax Act,
1922. The Income-tax Officer disallowed the claim in part,
holding that interest paid in respect of money which had
been invested in the tax-free securities was not an
admissible deduction. The Appellate Assistant Commissioner
and the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal having affirmed the
above order, a reference under s. 66(1) was, at the instance
of the a , made to the High Court. The reference was
answered in favour of the assessee. The Revenue appealed to
this Court by special leave.
It was contended on behalf of the Revenue that no
expenditure could be allowed as a deduction from the profits
of a business unless the part of the business to which the
expenditure was attributable was capable of producing income
or profits liable to be taxed under the Act.
HELD : In construing an Act it is necessary to adhere
closely to the language employed in it. Only if the terms
of a provision are ambiguous can recourse be had to the
well-established principles of construction. It is not
permissible first to create an artificial ambiguity and then
try to resolve it by some general principles. [836 B]
There is nothing in the language of s. 10 of the Indian
Income-tax Act, 1922 from which it can be fairly implied
that an expenditure or allowance falling within the section
must fulfill some other condition before it can be allowed.
Sub-section (1) of s. 10 directs that an assessee must be
taxed in respect of the profits and gains of business
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carried on by him. Then under sub-s. (2) all the allowances
permissible to him must be deducted. There is no provision
which would justify looking behind the expenditure, if it
fell within the term of sub-s. (2), to see whether it had
the quality of directly or indirectly producing taxable
income. Perhaps the legislature assumed that most types of
expenditure which are laid out wholly and exclusively for
the purpose of business would directly or indirectly produce
taxable income. [836 C-H]
In the instant case, however, it was controverted that the
profits and losses accruing from the sale and purchase of
the securities in question had been included in the
assessment. it followed that the said securities were
capable of producing taxable income and the appeal by the
Revenue, could be dismissed on this ground alone. [835 G-H]
Hughes v. Bank of New Zealand, 21 T.C. 472, relied on.
Chellappa Chettiar v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras,
approved.
Commissioner of Income-tax v. Somasundaran Chettiar, 1
A.I.R. 1928 Mad. 487, Provident Investment Co. Ltd. v.
C.I.T., Bombay, 6 I.T.C. 21 and
834
Indore Malwa Mills v. C.I.T. (Central) Bombay, 45 I.T.R.
210, distinguished.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1095 of
1963.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment dated November 9,
1960 of the Madras High Court ;in T. C. No. 41 of 1959.
S. V. Gupte, Solicitor-General, K. N. Rajagopala Sastri,
R. H.
Dhebar and R. N. Sachthey, for the appellant.
R. Venkatram and R. Gopalakrishnan, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Sikri J. This is an appeal by special leave against the
judgment of the Madras High Court, answering a question
referred to it under S. 66(1) of the Indian Income Tax Act,
1922, hereinafter referred to as the Act, against the
Revenue.
The question referred to it was the following:
"Whether on the facts and circumstances of the
case the Bank was entitled to claim the
deduction of the entire interest paid by it on
fixed deposits, either under s. 10(2) (iii) or
10(2) (xv)?"
The relevant facts and circumstances are these. The respon-
dent, the Indian Bank Ltd., Madras, hereinafter referred to
as the assessee, carried on the business of banking. In the
normal course of its business, it received deposits from
constituents and paid interest to them. It invested a large
sum in securities both of the Central and State Governments
(including Mysore Government). The interest on Mysore
Government securities was exempt from income tax and super
tax under the provisions of a notification issued under s.
60 of the Act. It bought and sold these securities, and the
profits and losses on the purchase and sale of such securi-
ties were duly taken into account in computing the income of
the assessee, under the head ’Business’. For the assessment
year 1951-52 (accounting year Calendar Year 1950) it claimed
a deduction of Rs. 25,91,565 as interest paid to various
depositors, under S. 10(2) (iii) of the Act. The Income Tax
officer. the Appellate Assistant Commissioner and the Income
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Tax Appellate Tribunal disallowed interest amounting to Rs.
2,80,194. This amount was arrived at by calculating the
Proportionate interest which would be payable on money
borrowed for the purchase of Mysore securities for Rs.
2,49,93,511. We need not describe
835
the formula adopted for calculating the proportionate
interest for nothing turns on it.
The grounds given by the Appellate Tribunal for disallowing
the deduction of the proportionate interest were two-fold:
first, as ’income from securities can be taxed only under
section 8, the allowance that could be a charge on that
income can only come under that section and no other’; and
secondly, ’the trend of authorities also seems to be in
favour of Department’s view that the assessee is not
entitled to a double benefit, (i) exemption from tax in
respect of certain securities, and (ii) to an allowance of
interest on the money utilised to purchase those
securities’.
At the instance of the assessee, the Appellate Tribunal
referred the question reproduced above to the High Court.
The High Court has answered the question in favour of the
assessee on the ground that the entire interest paid by the
Bank was a permissible deduction under s. 10(2) (iii) of the
Act.
It is common ground among the parties that s. 8 of the Act
does not apply. The learned counsel for the Revenue, Mr.
Rajagopala Sastri, submits that there is a general principle
that no expenditure can be allowed as a deduction from the
profits of a business unless the part of the business to
which the expenditure is attributable is capable of
producing income or profits liable to be taxed under the
Act. In other words, he contends that if a part of profits
of a business is not taxable, no expenditure incurred for
the purpose of earning those profits can be allowed as a
deduction. He says this is the position specially after the
amendments made in the Act by the Amending Act of 1939, in
s. 4, whereby all income accruing or deemed to accrue to a
person resident in India is attributed a taxable quality.
He goes on to say that if a particular income has no taxable
quality, it also loses quality for qualifying for
expenditure allowable under s. 10.
The learned counsel for the assessee, Mr. R. Venkatram, says
that even if the proposition be accepted, it does not assist
the Revenue in this case. He points out that in the case
before us it is not controverted that the profits and losses
accruing from the sale and purchase of securities have been
included in the assessment. Therefore, the tax free
securities are capable of producing profits and losses.
There is force in the contention of Mr. Venkatram, and the
appeal must fail on this ground alone. But as the question
has been debated before the High Court, and before us, we do
not desire to rest our decision on this narrow ground.
2Sup./65-10
836
Then is there such a principle as has been formulated above
? If there is one, can it be invoked to cut down the
express language of S. 10(2) (iii), which expressly allows
as a deduction interest on capital borrowed for the purpose
of the business ? In our opinion. in construing the Act, we
must adhere closely to the language of the Act. If there is
ambiguity in the terms of a provision, recourse must
naturally be had to well-established principles of construc-
tion but it is not permissible first to create an artificial
ambiguity and then try to resolve the ambiguity by resort to
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some general principle.
We are concerned with the interpretation of S. 10. Let us
then look at the language employed. Sub-section (1) directs
that an assessee be taxed in respect of the profits and
gains of business carried on by him. What is the business
of the assessee must first be looked at. Does he carry on
one business or two businesses along with the business
carried on by him some activity which is not a business? If
he is carrying on an activity which is not business, we must
leave out of account the receipts of that activity. That is
the first step. Secondly, we must look at S. 10(2) and
deduct all the allowances permissible to him. In allowing a
deduction which is permissible the question arises: Do we
look behind the expenditure and see whether it has the
quality of directly or indirectly producing taxable income ?
The answer must be in the negative for two reasons: First,
Parliament has not directed us to undertake this enquiry.
There are no words in s. 10(2) to that effect. On the other
hand, indications are to the contrary. In S. 10(2) (xv),
what Parliament requires to be ascertained is whether the
expenditure has been laid out or expended wholly and
exclusively for the purpose of the business. The
legislature stops short at directing that it be ascertained
what was the purpose of the expenditure. If the answer is
that it is for the purpose of the business, Parliament is
not concerned to find out whether the expenditure has
produced or will produce taxable income. Secondly, the
reason may well be that Parliament assumes that most types
of expenditure which are laid out wholly and exclusively for
the purpose of business would directly or indirectly produce
taxable income, and it is not worth the administrative
effort involved to go further and trace the expenditure to
some taxable income.
Therefore, it seems to us that there is nothing in the
language of S. 10 from which it can be fairly implied that
an expenditure or allowance falling within the section must
fulfill some other condition before it can be allowed.
837
A similar question arose in England in Hughes v. Bank of nEW
Zealand(1), and all the Judges took the view that interest
paid by the Bank on capital borrowed in the course of its
business and utilised in buying tax-free securities had to
be deducted in arriving at the taxable profits of the
business notwithstanding that the interest earned by the
Bank on the tax-free securities could not be taxed.
Lord Thankerton put the reason shortly thus
"It is perhaps enough to say that the Crown
are unable to point to any statutory provision
in support of their contention, whereas the
Respondents find full justification for their
resistance in the provisions of Rule 3 of the
rules applicable to cases I and II of Schedule
D".
This rule is similar to s. 10(2) (xv) of the
Indian Income Tax Act. After setting out the
rule and noticing its effect he says
"It seems to me to be incontrovertible that,
in the present case, the investments in
question were part of the business of the
Respondents’ trade, and that the expense
connected with them was wholly and exclusively
laid out for the purposes of the trade.
Expenditure, in course of the trade which is
unremunerative is none the less a proper
deduction, if wholly and exclusively made for
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the purposes of the trade. It does not
require the presence of a receipt on the
credit side to justify the deduction of an
expense."
Although the Master of Rolls found force in the argument of
the Crown, he could find nothing in the language of the
English Act to eliminate a part of the expenses of an
indivisible trade. Similarly, Greene L.J., could find no
warrant in the language of the Statute to give effect to the
contention of the Crown. He observed that "when the Statute
says that interest is to be exempt, I am quite unable to
read it as meaning that in giving effect to that exemption
by implication, some repercussion is to take place on a
different provision of the Act altogether....... I can find
nothing in the Statute which requires this interest to be
treated, so to speak, as a trade within a trade. This is
really what the Crown contend that in some way this interest
which is to be brought into account as an item of receipt is
to be taken out of it with some
(1) 21 T C 472
838
apportioned expenses appropriated to it as though it were a
trade by itself."
Mr. Sastri urges that the authority of the above decision
has been shaken in Mitchell and Edon (H. M. Inspectors of
Taxes) v. Ross(1), but we are unable to accept this
contention. The, point ,urged in this case was that the
authority of Fry v. Salisbury House Estate (2) had been
qualified by the decision in Hughes v. Bank of New
Zealand(3), but this was negatived.
A number of Indian cases have been cited before us and we
will now proceed to examine them.
The Madras High Court’s decision in Commissioner of Income
’Tax v. Somasundaran Chettiar (4) does not assist Mr.
sastri. The carried on business at Madras, where his head
office was, and Ipoh, a place in the Federated Malay. Money
was borrowed ,at Madras and part of it sent to Ipoh where it
was used as capital in the conduct of Ipoh business. The
High Court held that interest ,on the part of the borrowed
money used at lpoh was rightly disallowed as a deduction
because the business which was being taxed was the business
at Madras and not the business at Ipoh. No exception can be
taken to the decision but it does not advance the
appellant’s case because we are concerned with one
indivisible business.
In Provident Investment Co. Ltd. v. C.I.T. Bombay(5), the
assessee, an Indian Finance Company, borrowed some money in
India and purchased sterling securities out of it and
retained them in India. The Bombay High Court held that
interest on the borrowed money could not be deducted because
"qua the capital which it (the company) is using outside
British India and retaining for that length of time outside
British India, is not carrying on business in respect of
which profits assessable to Indian Income,tax can be earned
so that allowance can be claimed for interest on capital
borrowed within the meaning of S. 10(2) (iii). It :appears
to us that the Bombay High Court divided the business in two
separate businesses. But the business of the present
assessee cannot be divided into two separate businesses. It
is one and indivisible.
In Chellappa Chettiar v. Commissioner of Income Tax
Madras(6), the assessee carrying on business as a
moneylender
(1) 40 T.C. II.
(2) [1930] A.C. 432.
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(3) 21 T.C. 472.
(4) A.I.R. 1928 Mad. 487.
(5) 6 I.T.C. 21
(6) (1937) 5 I.T.R. 97.
839
had borrowed money and lent it out to constituents. He was
obliged to receive agricultural lands in repayment of his
debts from such constituents. The question arose whether he
was entitled to a deduction in respect of the interest paid
by him on capital represented by the agricultural lands.
The Court, following Hughes v. Bank of New Zealand(1) held
that he was entitled notwithstanding that agricultural
income was not taxable under the Income Tax Act. Mr. Sastri
says that this was wrongly and was in fact dissented from by
the Rangoon High Court in C.I.T. Burma v. N.S.A.R.
Concern(2). Dunkley J., in the Rangoon case, distinguished
Hughes v. Bank of New Zealand(1) because he thought that the
scheme of the Burma Income Tax Act was entirely different
from the scheme of the English Income Tax Act, 1918. He
observed that "in England a person is assessed to income tax
in respect of his income, while under the Burma Act it is
the income which is taxed. Under the English Act no class
of income is outside the scope of the Act whereas by s. 4(3)
of the Burma Act the Act is made inapplicable to a number of
classes of income. The English Act merely confers certain
exemptions on a person in respect of his income up to a
certain amount or certain kinds, similar to the exemptions
conferred on certain classes of income by the provisos to
Secs. 8 and 9 of the Burma Act." Then he noted the
difference between the wording of s. 10 (2) (ix) of the
Burma Act and the corresponding clause in the English Act.
But we are unable to appreciate that these differences
necessitate the rejection of the principle laid down in
Hughes v. The Bank of New Zealand(1). It is true that under
the Indian Income Tax Act it is income that is taxed but it
is not taxed in vacuo. It is taxed in the hands of a
person. In England, the interest of tax-free securities was
exempted much in the same way as in India. It did not
matter there who held them. Hughes v. The Bank of New
Zealand(1) cannot be distinguished on the grounds mentioned
by the Rangoon High Court. In our judgment Chellapa
Chettiar v. C.I.T. Madras(3) was correctly decided.
The decision of this Court in indore Malwa United )Wills v.
C.I.T. (Central) Bombay (4 ) is distinguishable. It appears
to us that it was because s. 14 (2) (c) and s. 4 (1 ) (a)
and (c) existed at the relevant time that the words ’profits
and gains’ in s. 24 were limited to such profits and gains
as would have been assessable
(1) 21 T.C 472. (2) (1938) 6 I.T.R. 194.
(3) (1937) 5 I.T.R. 97. (4) [1962] Supp. 3 S.C.R. 310
840
in British India or the taxable territories. This is
apparent from the judgment and from the following
observations of Das J.
"Reading the provisions in section 24 with the
provision in section 4 (1) (a) and (c) and
section 14 (2) (c) it seems clear to us that
section 24 (1) when it talks of profits or
gains has reference to taxable profits and
gains; in other words, it has reference to
such profits and gains as would have been
assessable in British India or the taxable
territories. It has no reference to income
accruing or arising without British India or
without taxable territories which were not
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liable to be assessed in the case of non-
residents."
We cannot imply from this judgment that there is a general
principle that if a part of the income of a business is tax-
free, expenditure incurred for the purpose of earning this
income is outside the purview of s. 10.
In the result we agree with the High Court that the answer
to the question is in the affirmative. The appeal is
accordingly dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.
841