Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
ADDITIONAL COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX GUJARAT, AHMEDABAD
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SURAT ART SILK CLOTH MANUFACTURERS ASSOCIATION, SURAT
DATE OF JUDGMENT19/11/1979
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, P.N.
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, P.N.
UNTWALIA, N.L.
TULZAPURKAR, V.D.
PATHAK, R.S.
SEN, A.P. (J)
CITATION:
1980 AIR 387 1980 SCR (2) 77
1980 SCC (2) 31
CITATOR INFO :
R 1981 SC1408 (1,10,12)
R 1981 SC1462 (9)
APL 1981 SC1765 (1)
R 1981 SC1922 (8)
R 1986 SC1054 (6,7,10)
R 1992 SC1456 (20,73)
ACT:
Income-tax Act 1961-Sections 2 (15), 11 and 13(1) (bb)-
Scope of- "Advancement of any other object of general public
utility not involving the carrying on of any activity for
profit" meaning.
HEADNOTE:
The assessee which was an incorporated company, carried
on various activities for promotion of commerce and trade in
art silk yarn, art silk cloth and silk cloth. Its other
objects were to obtain licences for import of raw material
needed by its members, to obtain licences for export of
cloth manufactured by its members and to do all other lawful
things as are incidental or conducive to the attainment of
the objects. Its income and property were to be applied
solely for the promotion of its objects and no portion of
the income or property was to be paid or transferred
directly or indirectly by way of dividend, bonus or profits
to its members. In the event of its winding up or
dissolution, surplus of assets over liabilities, if any,
could not be distributed amongst the members but was liable
to be given or transferred to some other company having the
same objects as the assessee, to be determined by the
members of the assessee or by the High Court which has
jurisdiction in the matter.
The assessee received income by way of annual
subscription from its members (the revenue conceded that
this amount was exempt from tax) and commission on the basis
of certain percentage of the value of licences for import of
foreign yarn and quotas for the purchase of indigenous yarn.
The assessee constructed a building out of the amounts
received and the rent received from the tenants was an
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additional source of its income.
The assessee’s claim for exemption under section 11(1)
of the Income Tax Act was rejected by the Income-Tax Officer
on the ground that its objects were not charitable within
the meaning of section 2(15) of the Act. On the other hand
the Appellate Assistant Commissioner held that the
assessee’s income was entitled to exemption under section 11
(1) because the activities carried on by the assessee were
in fulfillment of the primary purposes which did not involve
the carrying on of any activity for profit. This view of the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner was affirmed by the
Appellate Tribunal in appeal by the revenue.
In view of the conflicting decisions amongst different
High Courts on the interpretation of the words "not
involving the carrying on of any activity for profit" in the
definition of charitable purpose in section 2(15) of the
1961 Act the Appellate Tribunal referred to this Court,
under section 257 of the Act.
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the question whether the assessee was entitled to exemption
under section 11(1) of the Act.
It was contended on behalf of the revenue that if the
means to achieve or carry out the object of general public
utility involve the carrying on of any activity for profit,
the purpose of the trust, though falling within the
description "any other object of general public utility",
would not be a charitable purpose and the income from
business would not be exempt from tax.
Dismissing the appeal,
^
HELD: (Per majority Bhagwati, Untwalia and Tulzapurkar,
JJ)
1. The contention that the objects of the assessee did
not fall within the category of "advancement of any other
object of general public utility" and were not charitable
within the meaning of section 2(15) in that its members were
merely specified individuals who did not constitute a
section of the public cannot be allowed to be raised in this
reference. In a reference under s. 257 of the Income Tax,
Act, 1961 the Tribunal is not competent to refer to this
Court a question in respect of which there is no conflict of
decisions amongst different High Courts nor can this Court
travel beyond the particular question of law referred to it
by the Tribunal on account of conflict in the decisions of
the High Courts. [92 A-B]
2. (a) It is well-settled that where the main or
primary objects are distributive, each and every one of the
objects must be charitable in order that the trust of
institution may be upheld as a valid charity. But if the
primary or dominant purpose of a trust is charitable another
object which by itself may not be charitable but which is
merely ancillary or incidental to the primary or dominant
purpose would not prevent it from being valid charity. [92
D-E]
(b) The test which has to be applied is whether the
object which is said to be non-charitable is the main or
primary object of the trust or institution or it is
ancillary or incidental to the dominant or primary object
which is charitable.[92 F]
Mohd. Ibrahim v. Commissioner of Income-tax 57 Indian
Appeal 260; East India Industries (Madras) Ltd. v.
Commissioner of Income-tax, 65 ITR 611= [1967]3 SCR 356;
Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras v. Andhra Chamber of
Commerce, 65 ITR 722=[1965] 1 SCR 565, Commissioner of
Inland Revenue v. Yorkshire Agricultural Society [1928] 1
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K.B. 611; 13 Tax Case. 58; Institution of Civil Engineers v.
Commissioner of Inland Revenue [1931] 16 Tax Cas. 158
(C.A.); referred to.
In the instant case the income and property of the
assessee are held under a legal obligation for the purpose
of advancement of an object of general public utility within
the meaning of s. 2(15) of the Act. The dominant or primary
purpose of the assessee is to promote commerce and trade in
art silk yarn etc., which is charitable and the other
objects are in the nature of powers conferred upon the
assessee for the purpose of securing fulfillment of the
dominant or primary purpose. They would no doubt benefit the
members of the assessee but this benefit would be incidental
in carrying out the main or primary purpose of the assessee.
If therefore the dominant or primary purpose of the
assessee.
79
was charitable the subsidiary objects would not militate
against its charitable character and the purpose of the
assessee would not be any the less charitable. [93 E-G]
3. It is settled law that the words "advancement of any
other object of general public utility" would exclude
objects of private gain; but this requirement is also
satisfied in the present case because the object of private
profit is eliminated by the recognition of the assessee
under s. 25 of the Companies Act. 1956 and the objects set
out in clauses 5 and 10 of its Memorandum of Association [94
C-D]
4. Where the purpose of a trust or institution is
relief of the poor, education or medical relief, the
requirement of the definition of "charitable purpose" would
be fully satisfied even if an activity for profit is carried
on in the course of the actual carrying out of the primary
purpose of the trust or institution. But if the purpose of
the trust or institution is such That it cannot be regarded
as covered by the heads of "relief of the poor, education
and medical relief" but its claim to be a charitable purpose
rests only on the last head "advancement of any other object
of general public utility" then it requires, for its
applicability, fulfillment of two conditions, namely, (i)
the purpose of the trust or institution must be advancement
of an object of general public utility; and (ii) the purpose
must not involve the carrying on of any activity for profit.
[94 G-H]
M/s. Dharamdipti v. Commissioner of Income-Tax, [1978]
3 S.C.R. 1038, referred to.
5. The words "not involving the carrying on of any
activity for profit" qualify or govern only the last head of
charitable purpose and not the earlier three heads. [94 G]
6. The meaning of the words "not involving the carrying
on of any activity for profit" added in s. 2(15) of the 1961
Act is that when the purpose of a trust or institution is
the advancement of an object of general public utility it is
that object of general public utility and not its
accomplishment which must not involve the carrying on of any
activity for profit. [94 H]
7. If the argument of the Revenue that if the means to
achieve the object of general public utility involve the
carrying on of any activity for profit, the purpose of the
trust though falling within the description "any other
object of general public utility" would not be a charitable
purpose and the income from business would not be exempt
from tax it right it would not be possible for a charitable
trust whose purpose is promotion of an object of general
public utility to carry on any activity for profit at all.
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[97 F-H]
8. The consequence would be that even if a business is
carried on by a trust or institution for the purpose of
accomplishing or carrying out an object of general public
utility and the income from such business is applicable only
for achieving that object, the purpose of the trust would
cease to be charitable and not only income from such
business but also income derived from other sources would
lose the exemption. Such a far-reaching consequence was not
intended to be brought about by the legislature when it
introduced the words "not involving the carrying on of any
activity for profit" in s. 2(15). [98 B-C]
80
9. What is inhibited by the words "not involving the
carrying on of any activity for profit" is the linking of an
activity for profit with the object of general public
utility and not its linking with the accomplishment or
carrying out of the object. It is not necessary that the
accomplishment of the object or the means to carry out the
object should not involve an activity for profit. That is
not the mandate of the newly added words. What these words
require is that the object should not involve the carrying
on of any activity for profit. The emphasis is on the object
of general public utility and not on its accomplishment or
attainment. [98 E-G]
Commissioner of Income-tax v. Cochin Chamber of
Commerce and Industry, 87 I.T.R. 83 and Andhra Pradesh State
Road Transport Corporation v. Commissioner of Income-tax,
100 I.T.R. 392 approved.
10. If the intention of the legislature were to
prohibit trusts of this nature from carrying on any activity
for profit it would have made such a provision in the
clearest terms that no such trust or institution shall carry
on any activity for profit. [99 E-F]
11. Section 13(1)(bb) introduced in the Act with effect
from April 1, 1977 provides that in the case of a charitable
trust for the relief of the poor, education or medical
relief which carries on any business, income derived from
such business would not be exempt from tax unless the
business is carried on in the course of the actual carrying
out of a primary purpose of the trust or institution. Where,
therefore, a charitable trust falling within any of the
first three categories of charitable purpose set out in
section 2(15) carries on business which is held in trust for
the charitable purpose, income from such business would not
be exempt by reason of section 13(1)(bb) and section 11(4)
would, therefore, have no application in the case of a
charitable trust falling within any of the first three-heads
of charitable purpose. Similarly, on the construction
contended for by the Revenue it would have no applicability
in the case of a charitable trust falling under the last
head of charitable purpose, because in such a case income
from business would not be exempt since the purpose would
cease to be charitable. The construction contended for by
Revenue would have the effect of rendering s. 11(4) totally
redundant after the enactment of section 13(1) (bb). A
construction which renders a provision of the Act
superfluous and reduces it to silence cannot be accepted.
[100 C-F]
12. If the language of a statutory provision is
ambiguous and is capable of two constructions that
construction must be adopted which will give meaning and
effect to the other Provisions of the enactment rather than
that which will none. [100 G]
13. If a business is held under trust or legal
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obligation to apply its income for promotion of an object of
general public utility or it is carried on for the purpose
of earning profit to be utilised exclusively for carrying
out such charitable purpose, the last concluding words in
section 2(15) would have no application and they would not
deprive the trust or institution of its charitable
character. What these last concluding words require is not
that the trust or institution whose purpose is advancement
of an object of general public utility should not carry on
any activity for profit at all but that the purpose of the
trust or institution should not involve the carrying on of
any activity for profit. So long as the purpose does not
involve the carrying on of any activity for
81
profit, the requirement of the definition would be met and
it is immaterial how the monies for achieving or
implementing such purpose are found, whether by carrying on
an activity for profit or not. [104 D-G]
Commissioner of Income-tax v. Dharmodayan Company, 109
I.T.R. 527 followed.
Indian Chamber of Commerce v. Commissioner of Income-
tax (1975) 101 I.T.R. 796 wrongly decided.
The Trustees of the Tribune, (1939) 7 I.T.R. 415;
Commissioner of Income-tax v. Krishna Warrier; 53 I.T.R.
176, J.K. Trust v. Commissioner of Income-tax 32 I.T.R. 535
and Sole Trustees Lokshikshana Trust v. Commissioner of
Income-tax (1975) 101 I.T.R. 234 (S.C.) referred to.
14. It has therefore to be seen whether the purpose of
the trust or institution in fact involves the carrying on of
an activity for profit or in other words whether an activity
for profit is actually carried on as an integral part of the
purpose "as a matter of advancement of the purpose". There e
Must be an activity for profit and it must be involved in
carrying out the purpose of the trust or institution that
is, it must be carrying on in order to advance the purpose
or in the course of carrying out the purpose of the trust or
institution. It is then that the inhibition of the ex.
Exclusionary clause would be attracted. [105 G-H]
15. Every trust or institution must have a purpose for
which it is established and every purpose must for its
accomplishment involve the carrying on of an activity. The
activity must be for profit in order to attract the
exclusionary clause. [106 D]
16. The preposition "for" in the phrase "activity for
profit" has many shades of meaning but when used with the
active principle of a verb it means "for the purpose of" and
connotes the end with reference to which something is done.
[106 E]
17. Where an activity is not pervaded by profit motive
but is carried on primarily for serving the charitable
purpose, it would not be collect to describe it as an
activity for profit. But where an activity is carried on
with the predominant object of earning profit, it would be
an activity for profit, though it may be carried on in
advancement of the charitable purpose of the trust or
institution. Where an activity is carried on as a matter of
advancement of the charitable purpose, it would not be
incorrect to say as a matter of plain English grammar that
the charitable purpose involves the carrying on such
activity, but the predominant object of such activity must
be to subserve the charitable purpose and not to earn
profit. [106 F-H]
Dharamdipti v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Kerala,
[1978] 3 S.C.R. 1038 referred to.
18. The test to be applied is whether the predominant
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object of the activity involved in carrying out the object
of general public utility is to subserve the charitable
purpose or to earn profit. Where the predominant object of
the activity is to carry out the charitable purpose and not
to earn profit, it would not lose its character of a
charitable purpose m-rely because some profit arises
82
from the activity. The exclusionary clause does not require
that the activity must be carried on in such a manner that
it does not result in any profit. The restrictive condition
that the purpose should not involve the carrying on of any
activity for profit would he satisfied if profit making is
not the real object.[107 G-H]
19. (a) The observations in Lok Shikshana Trust and
Indian Chamber of Commerce that activity involved in
carrying out the charitable purpose must not be motivated by
a profit objective but it must be undertaken for the purpose
of advancement or carrying out of the charitable purpose are
correct. But the further observation that whenever an
activity is carried on which yields profit, the inference
must necessarily be drawn. in the absence of some indication
to the contrary, that the activity is for profit and the
charitable purpose involves the carrying on of an activity
for profit is not correct. [109 H; li) A-Bl
(b) It is not necessary that there must be a provision
in the constitution of the trust or institution that the
activity shall be carried on a "no profit no loss" basis or
that the profit shall proscribed. Even if there is no such
express provision. the nature of the charitable purpose, the
manner in which the activity for advancing the charitable
purpose is being carried on, and the surrounding
circumstances may clearly indicate that the activity is not
propelled by a dominant profit motive. What is necessary to
be considered is whether having regard to all the facts and
circumstances of the case, the dominant object of the
activity is profit making or carrying out a charitable
purpose. If it is the former the purpose would not he a
charitable purpose but if it is the latter the charitable
character of the purpose would not be lost. [110 C-D]
In the instant case, the activity of obtaining licences
for import of foreign yarn and quotas for purchase of
indigenous yarn was not an activity for profit. The
predominant object of the activity was the promotion of
commerce and trade in those commodities which was clearly an
object of general public utility and profit was merely a by-
product which resulted incidentally in the process of
carrying out charitable purpose. The assessee’s profit could
he utilized only for feeding this charitable purpose. The
dominant and real object of the activity being the
advancement of the charitable purpose the mere fact that the
activity yielded profit did not alter the charitable
character of the assessee .
Per Pathak J. (concurring)
In the scheme under the Income-tax Act. 1961 for
exemption from income tax of income derived from property
held under trust for charitable purposes, two safeguards
have been provided. One arises from the limited definition
of "charitable purpose" by s. 2(15), Income-tax Act, 1961.
and the other is provided by the controls imposed on the
utilisation of accumulated income derived from the
charitable trust or institution. The first relates to the
very purpose of the trust or institution, the second to the
application of the resulting income. In construing what is a
"charitable purpose" under s. 2(15) of purpose Act,
considerations pertinent to the application of the
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accumulated income should not ordinarily be taken into
account. [114 F-G]
The first three heads of "charitable purpose" in s.
2(15) of the Act arc defined in specific terms. namely,
relief of the poor, education and medical relief. The fourth
head is described generally as a residuary head. The
83
definition of "charitable purpose" with reference to the
fourth head shows that the purpose is the "advancement of
any other object of general public utility.. ". The
charitable purpose is not the "object of general public
utility", it is the advancement of the object. The
definition defines "charitable purpose" in terms of an
activity. An object by itself cannot connote an activity. It
represents a goal towards which, or in relation to which. an
activity is propelled. The element of the activity is
embodied in the word "advancement". If "charitable purpose"
is defined in terms of an activity, the restrictive clause
"not involving the carrying on of any activity for profit"
must necessarily relate to "the advancement" of the object
contemplated. [115 B-C]
The words "activity for profit" should be taken as
descriptive of the nature of the activity. It is an activity
of a kind intended of yield profit. Conversely if profit has
resulted from an activity, that has does not, without
anything more, classify it as an "activity for profit". [116
B-C]
The requirement of section 2(15) is satisfied where
there is either a total absence of the purpose of profit-
making or it is so insignificant compared to the purpose of
advancement of the object of general public utility that the
dominating role of the latter renders the former unworthy of
account. If the profit-making purpose holds a dominating
role or even constitutes an equal component with the purpose
of advancement of the object of general public utility, then
the definition in section 2(15) is not satisfied. [116-G-H]
If the purpose is charitable in reality, the mode
adopted must be one which is directed to carrying out the
charitable purpose. The carrying on of such a business does
not detract act from the purpose which permeates it, the end
result of the business activity being the effectuation of
the charitable purpose. A business activity carried on not
with a view to carrying out the charitable purpose of the
trust but which is related to a non-charitable purpose falls
outside the scope of the trust. If it is a business entered
into for working out be purpose of the trust or institution
with a view to realisation of the charitable purpose, the
income therefrom would be entitled to exemption under s. 11.
Section 11(4) and section 13(1)(bb) represent the mode of
finding finance for working out the purpose of the trust or
institution by deriving income from the corpus of the trust
property and also from an activity carried on in the course
of actual carrying out of the purpose or the trust or
institution. [117 B-E]
A distinction must be maintained between what is merely
a definition of "charitable purpose" and the powers
conferred for working out or fulfilling that purpose. While
the purpose and the powers must correlate they cannot be
identified with each other. [118 B]
In the instant case the purpose of the assessee falls
within the definition of section 2(15). The objects of the
assessee were to promote commerce and trade, which have been
held to be an object of general public utility and, there is
nothing to show that the relevant sub-clause of the
Memorandum of Association involves the carrying on of any
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activity for profit. The remaining sub-clauses enumerate
powers for which the company was constituted. [118 G-H]
The Trustees of the Tribune, (1939) 7 I.T.R. 415,
Commissioner of Income-tax v. Andhra Chamber of Commerce
(1965) 55 I.T.R. 722, referred
84
Sale Trustees, Loka Shikshana Trust v. Commissioner of
Income-tax, Mysore (1975) 101 I.T.R. 234; Indian Chamber of
Commerce v. Commissioner of Income-tax, West Bengal II
(1975) 101 I.T.R. 796 not approved.
Per Sen, J. (dissenting)
The two decisions in Sole Trustees Lok Shikshana Trust
v. C.I.T. (101 ITR 234) and Indian Chamber of Commerce v.
C.I.T. (101 ITR 796) lay down the law correctly and are
still good law. [119 D]
1. The words "not involving the carrying on of any
activity for profit" occurring in section 2(15) of the Act
quality only the fourth head of charitable purpose namely
"any other object of general utility" and not the first
three heads. [119 E]
2. It is the vagueness of the expression "any other
object of general public utility" occurring in section
4(3)(i) of the 1922 Act which impelled Parliament to insert
the restrictive word "not involving the carrying on of any
activity for profit.’ It is not permissible for the court to
whittle down the plain language of the section. It would be
contrary to all rules of construction to ignore the impact
of the newly added words and to construe the definition as
it the newly added words were either not there or were
intended to be otiose and redundant. Such a construction
would frustrate the very object of the legislation. The
relative simplicity of the language brings out the necessary
legislative intent to counteract tax advantages resulting
from the ’so-called charities in camouflage. [119 H; 120 A-
C]
3 . The restriction introduced by the definition of the
term "charitable purpose" in section 2(15) is that the
advancement of objects of general public utility should not
involve the carrying on of any activity for profit. If it
involved any such activity the charity would fall outside
the definition. [120 D-E]
4. There is no statutory bar to earn exemption in
respect of income derived from a business undertaking if
such business undertaking is held under a trust for a
charitable purpose. The first essential condition for
exemption under section 11(1) is that the property from
which the income is derived must be held under trust or
other legal obligation. Section 11(4) gives a statutory
recognition to the principle that the business is property
and if a business is held in trust wholly for a charitable
purpose, the income therefrom would be exempt under section
11(1) [121 B-D]
In re. The Trustees of the Tribune (1939) 7 ITR 415;
All India Spinner’s Association v. C.I.T. (1944) 12 ITR 482;
C.I.T. v. P. Krishna Warriar (1964) 53 ITR 176 C.I.T. v.
Andhra Chamber of Commerce (1965) 56 ITR 722; J.K. Trust v.
C.I.T. (1957) 32 ITR 535 referred to.
5. The restrictive words "not involving the carrying on
of any activity for profit" were deliberately introduced in
the definition to cut down the wide ambit of the fourth head
as a measure to check avoidance of tax. Engagement in an
activity for profit by religious or charitable trusts
provides scope for manipulation for tax evasion. [121 F-G]
6 Even assuming that the dominant object of a trust is
the promotion or ’advancement of any other object of general
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public utility, if it involves any activity for profit i.e.
any business or commercial activity, then it ceases to be a
charitable purpose within the meaning of section 2(15). In
that event the profits derived from such business are not
liable to exemption under section 11(1)
85
read with section 2(15). The concept of profits to feed the
charity is also of no avail. That is because the concept of
’profits to feed the charity’ can only arise under the first
three heads of ’charitable purpose’ as defined in section
2(15) of the Act, that is, "relief of the poor" "education"
and "medical relief" but they are not germane in so far as
the fourth head is concerned. If the fulfillment of an
object of general public utility is dependant upon any
activity for profit, it ceases to be a charitable purpose. A
reading of section 2(15) and section 11 together shows that
what is frowned upon is an activity for profit by a charity
established for advancement of an object of general public
utility in the course of accomplishing its objects. [126 H;
127 A-B]
7. It would be clearly inconsistent to hold that if the
dominant or primary purpose was ’charity’ it would be
permissible for such an object of general public utility to
augment its income by engaging in trading or commercial
activity. [131 F]
8. If the object of the trust is advancement of an
object of general public utility and it carried on an
activity for profit, it is excluded from the ambit of
charitable purpose defined in section 2(15). The distinction
is clearly brought out by the provision contained in section
13(1)(bb) which provides that in case of a charitable trust
or institution for the relief of the poor, education or
medical relief which carries on any business, any income
derived from such business, unless the business is carried
on in the course of the actual carrying out of a primary
purpose of the trust or institution, shall not be excluded
from the total income of the previous year. [132 G-H]
9. If the advancement of an object of general public
utility involves the carrying on of an activity for profit,
it ceases to be a charitable purpose and, therefore, the
income is not exempt under section ll(l)(a). In case of a
trust falling under any of the first three heads of charity,
namely, ’relief of the poor’ ’education’ and ’medical
relief’ it may engage in any activity for profit and the
profits would not taxable if they were utilized for the
primary object of the trust. In other words the business
carried on by them is incidental or ancillary to the primary
object namely relief of the poor, education and medical
relief. The concept of ’profits to feed the charity’
therefore is applicable only to the first three heads of
charity and not the fourth. It would be illogical to apply
the same consideration to institutions which are established
for charitable purposes of any object of general public
utility. Any profit-making activity linked with an object of
general public utility would be taxable. The theory of the
dominant or primary object of the trust cannot. therefore,
be projected into the fourth head of charity, namely,,
’advancement of any other object of general public utility’
so as to make the carrying on of any business activity
merely ancillary or incidental to the main object. [134 A-E]
10. The restrictive words ’not involving the carrying
on of any activity for profit’ in the definition of
"charitable purpose" in s. 2(15) must be given their due
weight. Otherwise, it would have the effect of admitting to
the benefits of’ exemption the fourth in
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determinate class, namely, objects of general public utility
engaged in activity for profit contrary to the plain words
of s. 2(15). [134 G]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Tax Reference No. 1A of
73.
Tax Reference under section 257 of the Income Tax Act
1961 made by the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal, Ahmedabad in
R.A. No. 66 (AHD) of 1971-72 arising out of I.T.A. No. 1697
of 1967-68 decided on 10-9-71 Assessment year 1962-63.
86
AND
Tax Reference Nos. 10-14 of 1975
Tax Reference under section 257 of the Income Tax Act,
19(1 made by the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal, Ahmedabad in
R.A. Nos. 140-144/AHD/73-74 arising out of I.T.A. Nos. 2098-
2102/AHD/7172 for assessment years 1963-64 to ]97-68.
V.S. Desai (in T.R. No. 1A/73), B.B. Ahuja and Miss A.
Subhashini for the Appellant.
Sanat P. Mehta, Ravinder Narain, A.N. Haskar and Shri
Narain for the Respondent.
Dr. Devi Pal, P.V. Kapur, S.R. Agarwal, Praveen Kumar
and R.K. Chaudhary for the Intervener (Indian Sugar Mills).
Dr. Devi Pal and D.N. Gupta for the Intervener (Bengal
Chamber).
R.N. Bajoria, S.R. Agarwal and Praveen Kumar for the
Intervener (Indian Chamber, Calcutta).
F.S. Nariman, N. Nettar, A.K. Sanghi and O.P. Vaish for
the Intervener (Indian Chamber, New Delhi).
The Judgment of P.N. Bhagwati, N. L. Untwalia and V. D.
Tulzapurkar, JJ. was delivered by Bhagwati, J. R.S. Pathak,
J. gave a separate opinion and A.P. Sen, J. gave a
dissenting opinion.
BHAGWATI, J. These tax references have been made by the
Tribunal directly to this Court under Section 257 of the
Income Tax Act, 1961 (hereinafter referred to as the Act),
since there is a conflict of opinion amongst different High
Courts as to the interpretation of the words "not involving
the carrying on of any activity for profit" occurring at the
end of the definition of "charitable purpose" in clause (15)
of Section 2. Originally these references came up for
hearing before a Bench of three Judges but having regard to
the great importance of the question involved and the
serious repercussions, which an adverse decision might have
on a large number of public trusts in the country, the Bench
thought it desirable to refer the cases to a larger Bench
and that is how these references have now come before us.
Though the references are six in number. they relate to
the same assessee and raise the same question, only the
assessment years being different. The assessee is the Surat
Art Silk Cloth Manufacturers Association, a company
incorporated under the Indian.
87
Companies Act, 19]3. The original Memorandum of Association
set out the objects for which the assessee was incorporated,
but we are not concerned with it since vital amendments were
made in the Memorandum with effect from 14th July, 1961 at
the time when the assessee was permitted under section 25 of
the Companies Act, 1956 to omit the word "limited" from its
name by order of the Central Government and it is the
amended Memorandum which governed the assessee during the
relevant assessment years. The amended objects, so far as
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material, were as follows:
(a) To promote commerce and trade in Art ilk Yarn, Raw
Silk, Cotton Yarn, Art Silk Cloth. Silk Cloth and
Cotton Cloth.
(b) To carry on all and any of the business of Art
Silk Yarn, Raw Silk, Cotton Yarn as well as Art
Silk f loth, Silk Cloth and Cotton Cloth belonging
to and on behalf of the members.
(c) To obtain import Licences for import of Art Silk
Yarn, Raw Silk, Cotton Yarn and other Raw Mate
rials as well as accessories required by the
members for the manufacture of Art Silk, Silk and
Cotton Fabrics.
(d) To obtain Export Licences and export cloth manu-
factured by the members
(e) To buy and sell and deal in all kinds of cloth and
other goods and fabrics belonging to and on behalf
of the Members.
(f) X X X
(g) X X X
(h) X X X
(i) X X X
(j) X X X
(k) X X X
(l) X X X
(m) X X X
(n) To do all other lawful things as are incidental or
conducive to the attainment of the above objects.
Clause 5 of the Memorandum provided in sub-clause (1) that
the income and property of the assessee wheresoever derived
shall be applied solely for the promotion of its objects as
set forth in the
88
Memorandum and sub-clause (2) directed that no portion of
the income or property shall be paid or transferred,
directly or indirectly, by way of dividend, bonus or
otherwise by way of profit, to persons, who at any time are
or have been members of the assessee or to any one or more
of them or to any person claiming through anyone or more of
them. What should happen to the assets in case of winding up
or dissolution of the assessee, was set out in clause 10 of
the memorandum and it provided that the property remaining
after satisfaction of all the debts and liabilities shall
not be distributed amongst the members of the assessee but
shall be given or transferred to such other company having
the same objects as the assessee, to be determined by the
members of the assessee at or before the time of the
dissolution or in default? by the High Court of Judicature
that has or may acquire jurisdiction in the matter. The
income and property of the assessee were thus liable to be
applied solely and exclusively for the promotion of the
objects set out in the memorandum and no part of such income
cr property could be distributed amongst the members in any
form or under any guise or utilised for their benefit either
during the operational existence of the assessee or on its.
winding up and dissolution.
The assessee carried on various activities for
promotion of commerce and trade in Art Silk Yarn, Silk Yarn,
Art Silk Cloth and Silk Cloth. The income of the assessee
was h derived primarily from two sources. One was annual
subscription at the rate of Rs. 3/- per power loom collected
by the assessee from its members and the other was
commission calculated on the basis of a certain percentage
of the value of licences for import of foreign yarn and
quotas for purchase of indigenous yarn obtained by the
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assessee for the members. There was no dispute between the
parties in regard to the first category of income derived
from annual subscription collected from the members and it
was conceded by the Revenue to be exempt from tax but the
real controversy centered round the taxability of the second
category of income. The amount collected by the assessee
from the members in respect of licences for import of
foreign yarn was credited in an account styled "Vahivati
Kharach" while the amount collected in respect of quotas of
indigenous yarn was credited in another account called
"Building Fund". The assessee constructed a building out of
the amount credited to the "Building Fund" during the
accounting year relevant to the assessment year 1965-66 and
it was let out to various tenants and the rent received .
from them augmented the income of the assessee. The assessee
claimed in the course of assessment to income tax for the
assessment year 1962-63 that it was an
89
institution for a charitable purpose and its income was,
therefore, exempt from tax under Section 11 sub-section ( 1
) of the Act. This claim was rejected by the Income-tax
officer on the ground that the objects of the assessee were
not charitable within the meaning of sec. 2 clause (15). The
assessee carried the matter in appeal and, in the appeal,
the view taken by the Appellate Assistant Commissioner was
that the purpose of the assessee was pre-dominantly
development of Art Silk Industry which was an object of
general public utility, but since the Income-tax officer had
not examined whether the object involved the carrying on of
an activity for profit and had also not considered whether
the other conditions of section 11 sub-section (1) were
satisfied, the Appellate Assistant Commissioner set aside
the order of assessment and remanded the case to the Income-
tax officer with a direction to make a fresh assessment
after considering these issues. The Tribunal on further
appeal at the instance of the Revenue did not agree with the
procedure adopted by the Appellate Assistant Commissioner
and taking the view that the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner should not have set aside the order of
assessment and made an order of remand for making a fresh
assessment but instead, if he wanted any further facts, he
should have called for a remand report from the Income-tax
officer and then disposed of the appeal by deciding whether
the assessee was entitled to exemption from tax under
section 11 sub-section (1), the Tribunal directed the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner to submit a remand report
on the question "whether the objects for which the assessee
company has been established are for charitable purposes
within the meaning of section 2(15) and whether it satisfies
the other conditions laid down under section 11." The
Appellate Assistant Commissioner in his remand report found
in favour of the assessee on both the points referred to him
and after considering the remand report, the Tribunal
confirmed the view taken by the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner that the primary purpose for which the assessee
was established was to promote commerce and trade in Art
Silk and Silk Yarn and Cloth as set out in sub-clause (a) of
Clause (3) of the Memorandum of Association and the other
subjects set out in sub- clause (b) to (e) of clause (3)
were merely subsidiary objects and since the primary purpose
was plainly advancement of an object of general public
utility, the first part of the requirement for falling
within the last head of "charitable purpose" in sec. 2
clause (15) was satisfied. The Tribunal also agreed with the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner that this primary purpose
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for which the assessee was constituted did not involve the
carrying on of any activity for profit, because whatever
activity was carried on by the assessee in fulfil-
90
ment of the primary purpose was for advancement of an object
of general public utility and not for profit. The Tribunal
pointed 1 out that there was no dispute in regard to the
fulfillment of the other conditions mentioned in section 11
and held that, in the circumstances, the income of the
assessee was entitled to exemption under sub-section (1) of
section 11. The Revenue, being aggrieved by the decision of
the Tribunal, made an application for a reference and since
there was a conflict of decisions between the Calcutta and y
Mysore High Courts on the one hand and Kerala and Andhra
Pradesh High Courts on the other in regard to the true
interpretation of the words "not involving the carrying on
of any activity for profit", the Tribunal referred the
question "whether on the facts and in the circumstances of
the case, the assessee is entitled to exemption under sec.
11 (1) (a) of the Income-tax Act, 1961" directly to this
Court. So far as the assessment years 1963-64 to 1967-68 are
concerned, the assessment proceedings followed the same
pattern and the Tribunal, following its earlier decision for
the assessment years 1962-63, held the assessee to be exempt
from tax in respect of its income under section 11 sub-
section (1) and thereupon, at the instance of the Revenue an
identical question of law for each assessment year was
referred by the Tribunal directly to this Court.
Now before we proceed to consider the true meaning and
connotation of the words "not involving the carrying on of
any activity for profit" occurring at the end of the
definition of "charitable purpose" in section 2 clause (15),
it will be convenient to dispose of a short contention
raised on behalf of the Revenue in Tax Reference Nos. 10 to
14 of 1975. The Revenue urged that the objects for which the
assessee was incorporated did not fall within the Category
denoted by the words "advancement of any other object of
general public utility" since the objects set out in sub-
clauses (b) to (e) of clause (3) of Memorandum of
Association were for the benefit only of the members of the
assessee and not for the benefit of a section of the public.
It was contended that in order that a Purpose may qualify
for being regarded as an object of general public utility,
it must be intended to benefit a section of the public as
distinguished from specified individuals. The section of the
community sought to be benefitted must be sufficiently
defined and identifiable by same common quality of a public
or impersonal nature and where there is no such common
quality uniting the potential beneficiaries into a class,
the purpose would not be liable to be regarded as a
"charitable purpose". The argument was that since the
members of the assessee did not constitute a section of the
91
public, but were merely specified individuals, the objects
set out in sub-clauses (b) to (e) of clause (3) which were
meant to benefit only the members of the assessee could not
be regarded as objects of general public utility and hence
the assessee could not be said to be an institution for a
"charitable purpose" within the meaning of section 2 clause
(15).
We do not think it is open to the Revenue to urge this
contention in the present References. These References
having been made under section 257 on account of a conflict
of decisions amongst different High Courts in regard to the
true interpretation of the words "not involving the carrying
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on of any activity for profit" in section 2 clause (15), it
is only that particular question which can be decided by
this Court in these References. Section 257 provides that
if, on an application made under section 256, the Tribunals
of the opinion that, on account of a conflict in the
decisions of High Courts in respect of any particular
question of law, it is expedient that a reference should be
made direct to the Supreme Court, the Tribunal may draw up a
statement of the case and refer it through its President
direct to the Supreme Court. It is only the particular
question of law on which there is a conflict of decisions in
the High Courts that can be referred by the Tribunal
directly to this Court. Here in the present case the
conflict of decisions amongst the different High Courts was
as to what is the true scope and meaning of the words "not
involving the carrying on of any activity for profit" in
section 2 clause (15) and whether on account of the presence
of these words, the purpose for which the assessee was
constituted, though falling within the words "advancement of
an object of general public utility" would not be a
charitable purpose within the meaning of section 2 clause
(15) and it was on account of conflict of decisions on this
question that a direct reference was k made to this Court by
the Tribunal. This Court cannot travel beyond the particular
question of law which has been referred to it by the
Tribunal on account of conflict in the decisions of the High
Courts. It cannot in a direct reference deal with a question
of law on which there is no conflict of decisions amongst
the High Courts because such a question would be outside the
jurisdiction of the Tribunal to refer under section 257. It
is possible that a situation may arise where there may be
two questions of law arising from the order of the Tribunal,
one in respect of which there is a conflict of decisions
amongst different High Courts and the other in respect of
which there is no such conflict of decisions and in such a
situation it may become necessary to consider whether one
single reference comprising both questions should be made to
92
the High Court or two references can be made, one to the
High Court and the other to this Court. We do not wish to
express any opinion on this rather intriguing question but
one thing is clear that a question of law in respect of
which there is no conflict of decisions amongst different
High Courts cannot be referred to this Court under section
257. The contention that the objects of the assessee did not
fall within the category "advancement of any other object of
general public utility" and were, therefore, not charitable
within the meaning of section 2 clause (15) cannot, in the
circumstances, be allowed to be raised in these References.
But even if such a contention were permissible, we do
not think there is any substance in it. The law is well
settled that if there are several objects of a trust or
institution, some of which are charitable and some non-
charitable and the trustees or the. managers in their
discretion are to apply the income or property to any of
those objects, the trust or institution would not be liable
to be regarded as charitable and no part of its income would
be exempt from tax. In other words, where the main or
primary objects are distributive, each and everyone of the
objects must be charitable in order that the trust or
institution might be upheld as a valid charity Vide Mohd.
Ibrahim v. Commissioner of Income-tax and East India
Industries (Madras) Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax. But
if the primary or dominant purpose of a trust or institution
is charitable, another object which by itself may not be
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charitable but which is merely ancillary or incidental to
the primary or dominant purpose would not prevent the trust
or institution from being a valid charity: Vide Commissioner
of Income-tax, Madras v. Andhra Chamber of Commerce(3) The
test which has, therefore, to be applied is whether the
object which is said to be non-charitable is a main or
primary object of the trust or institution or it is
ancillary or incidental to the dominant or primary object
which is charitable. It was on an application of this test
that in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Andhra Chamber of
Commerce (supra), the Andhra Chamber of Commerce was held to
be a valid charity entitled to exemption from tax. The Court
held that the dominant or primary object of the Andhra
Chamber of Commerce was to promote and project trade,
commerce and industry and to aid stimulate and promote the
development of trade, commerce and industry and to watch
over and protect the general commercial interests of India
or any part thereof and this was clearly an object of
general
93
public utility and though one of the objects included the
taking of steps to urge or oppose legislation affecting
trade, commerce or manufacture, which, standing by itself,
May be liable to be condemned as non-charitable, it was
merely incidental to the dominant or primary object and did
not prevent the Andhra Chamber of Commerce from being a
valid charity. The Court pointed out that if "the primary
purpose be advancement of objects of general public utility,
it would remain charitable even if an incidental entry into
the political domain for achieving that purpose e.g.
promotion of or opposition to legislation concerning that
purpose, was contemplated." The Court also held that the
Andhra Chamber of Commerce did not cease to be charitable
merely because the members of the chamber were incidentally
benefitted in carrying out its main charitable purpose. The
Court relied very strongly on the decisions in Commissioner
of Inland Revenue v. Yorkshire, Agricultural Society and
Institution of Civil Engineers v. Commissioner of Inland
Revenue for reaching the conclusion that merely because some
benefits incidentally arose to the members of the society or
institution in the course of carrying out its main
charitable purpose, it would not by itself prevent the
association or institution from being a charity. lt would be
a question of fact in each case "whether there is so much
personal benefit, intellectual or professional, to the
members of the society or body of persons as to be incapable
of being disregarded".
It is this criterion which has to be applied in the
present case and if we do so, it is clear that the dominant
or primary purpose of the assessee was to promote commerce
and trade in Art Silk Yarn, law Silk, Cotton Yarn, Art Silk
Cloth, Silk Cloth and Cotton Cloth as set out in sub-clause
(a) of clause (3) of the Memorandum and the objects
specified in sub-clauses (b) to (e) of clause (3) were
merely incidental to the carrying out of this dominant or
primary purpose. The objects set out in sub-clauses (b) to
(e) of clause (3) were, in fact, in the nature of powers
conferred upon the assessee. for the purpose of securing the
fulfillment of the dominant or primary purpose. The Revenue,
it may be conceded, is right in contending that these
objects or powers in sub-clauses (b) to (e) or clause (3)
would benefit the members of the assessee, but this benefit
would be incidental in carrying out the main or primary
purpose forming the basis of incorporation of the assessee.
If, therefore, the dominant or primary purpose of the
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assessee was charitable, the subsidiary objects set out in
sub-clauses
94
(b) to (e) of clause (3) would not militate against its
charitable character and the purpose of the assessee would
not be any the less charitable. Now having regard to the
decision of this Court in Commissioner of Income-tax v.
Andhra Chamber of Commerce (supra), there can be no doubt
that the dominant or primary purpose to promote commerce and
trade in Art Silk Yarn, Raw Silk, Cotton Yarn, Art Silk
Cloth, Silk Cloth and Cotton Cloth fell within the category
of advancement of an object of general public utility. It is
true that according to the decision of the Judicial
Committee of the Privy Council in All India Spinners
Association v. Commissioner of Income-tax, the words
"advancement of any other object of general public utility"
would exclude objects of private gain, but this requirement
was also satisfied in the case of the assessee, because the
object of private profit was eliminated by the recognition
of the assessee under section 25 of the Companies Act, 1956
and clauses 5 and 10 of its Memorandum. It must, therefore,
be held that the income and property of the assessee were
held under a legal obligation for the purpose of advancement
of an object of general public utility within the meaning of
section 2 clause (15) .
But the question still remains whether this primary
purpose of the assessee, namely, to promote commerce and
trade in Art Silk ; Yarn, Raw Silk, Cotton Yarn, Art Silk
Cloth, Silk Cloth, and Cotton Cloth could be said to be "not
involving the carrying on of any activity for profit." This
question arises on the terms of section 2 clause (15) which
gives an inclusive definition of "charitable purpose". It
provides that "charitable purpose" includes "relief of the
poor, education, medical relief and the advancement of any
other object of general public utility not involving the
carrying on of any activity for profit." It is now well
settled as a result of the decision of this Court in M/s.
Dharamdipti v. Commissioner of Income-tax that the words
"not involving the carrying on of any activity for profit"
qualify or govern only the last head of charitable purpose
and not the earlier three heads. Where therefore the purpose
of a trust or institution is relief of the poor, education
or medical relief, the requirement of the definition of
"charitable purpose" would be fully satisfied, even if an
activity for profit is carried on in the course of the
actual carrying out of the primary purpose of the trust or
institution. But if the purpose of the trust or institution
is such that it cannot be regarded as covered by the heads
of "relief of the poor,
95
education and medical relief", but its claim to be a
charitable purpose rests only on the last head "advancement
of any other object of general public utility", then the
question would straight arise whether the purpose of the
trust or institution involves the carrying on of any
activity for profit. The last head of "charitable purpose"
thus requires for its applicability, fulfillment of two
conditions (i) the purpose of the trust or institution must
be advancement of an object of general public utility; and
(ii) that purpose must not involve the carrying on of any
activity for profit. The first condition does not present
any difficulty and, as we have already pointed out above, it
is fulfilled in the present case, because the primary
purpose of the assessee, namely, promotion of commerce and
trade in Art Silk Yarn, Raw Silk Cotton Yarn, Art Silk
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Cloth, Silk Cloth and Cotton Cloth is clearly advancement of
an object of general public utility. But the real difficulty
arises when we turn to consider the applicability of the
second condition. What do the words "not involving the
carrying on of any activity for profit" mean and what is the
nature of the limitation they imply, so far as the purpose
of advancement of an object of general public utility is
concerned ?
It would be convenient at this stage to refer briefly
to the legislative history of the definition of "charitable
purpose in the Income-tax law of this country, as that would
help us to understand the true meaning and import of the
words "not involving the carrying on of any activity for
profit". These restrictive words, it may be noted, were not
to be found in the definition of "charitable purpose" given
in sub-section (3) of section 4 of the Indian Income-tax
Act, 1922 and they were added for the first time when the
present Act was enacted. What were the reasons which
impelled the legislature to add these words of limitation in
the definition of "charitable purpose" is a matter to which
we shall presently advert. but before we do so, we may
usefully take a look at the definition of "charitable
purpose" in Section 4 sub-section (3) of the Act of 1922.
There, "Charitable purpose" was defined as including "relief
of the poor, education, medical relief and the advancement
of any other object of general public utility" without the
additive words "not involving the carrying on of any
activity for profit". Now it is interesting to compare this
definition of "charitable purpose" with the concept of
"charity" under English Law. The English Law of charity has
grown round the Statute of Elizabeth, the Preamble to which
contained a list of purpose regarded as worthy of protection
as being charitable. These purposes have from an early stage
been regarded merely as examples and have through the
centuries been considered as guide
96
posts for the courts in the differing circumstances of a
developing and fast changing civilization and economy.
Whenever a question has arisen whether a particular purpose
is charitable, the test has always been whether it is or is
not within the spirit and intendment of the Preamble to the
Elizabeth Statute. The law has been developed by analogy
upon analogy and it is to be found in the large case of
case-law that has been built up by the courts in over the
years. The result is that the concept of charity in English
Law is as vague and undefined as it is wide and elastic and
every time there has to be a search for analogy from the
Preamble to the Statute of Elizabeth or from decided cases.
An early attempt to simplify this problem by a
classification under main heads was made by Sir Samuel
Romilly when he tried to subsume charitable purposes under
four heads in the following summary submitted by him in the
course of arguments in Morice v. Bishop of Durham "relief of
the indigent, the advancement of learning, the advancement
of religion and the advancement of objects of general public
utility". This classification was adopted in substance by
Lord Macnaghten in his classic list of charitable purposes
in Special Commissioners v. Pemsel where the learned Law
Lord pointed out that charity in its legal sense comprises
four principal divisions: trusts for the relief of poverty,
trusts for the advancement of education, trusts for the
advancement of religion and trusts for other purposes
beneficial to the community not falling under any of the
preceding heads." It will be noticed that the first head inn
the definition of "charitable purpose" both in the Act of
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1922 and in the pursuant Act is taken from the summary of
Sir Samuel Romilly; the second from the classification of
Lord Macnaghten after omitting the word "advancement"; the
third is a new head not to be found either in the summary of
Sir Samuel Romilly or in the classification of Lord
Macnaghten while the fourth is drawn from the last head in
the summary of Sir Samuel Romilly. The definition of
"charitable purpose" in Indian Law thus goes much further
than the definition of charity t be derived from the English
cases, because it specifically includes medical relief and
embraces all objects of general public utility. In English
Law it is not enough that a purpose falls within one of the
four divisions of charity set out in Lord Macnaghten’s
classification. It must also be within the spirit and
intendment of the Preamble to the Statute of Elizabeth if it
is to be regarded as charitable. There is no such limitation
so far as Indian Law is concerned even if a purpose is not
within the spirit and intendment
97
of the Preamble to the Statute of Elizabeth, it would be
charitable if it falls within the definition of "charitable
purpose" given in the Statute. Every object of general
public utility would, therefore, be charitable under the
Indian Law, subject only to the condition imposed by the
restrictive words "not involving the carrying on of any
activity for profit" added in the present Act. It is on
account of this basic difference between the Indian and
English law of charity that Lord Wright uttered a word of
caution in All India Spinners’ Association v. Commissioner
of Income-tax (supra) against blind adherence to English
decisions on the subject. The definition of "charitable
purpose" in the Indian Statute must be construed according
to the language used there and against the background of
Indian life. The English decision may be referred to for
help or guidance but they cannot be regarded as having any
binding authority on the interpretation of the definition in
the Indian Act.
With these prefatory observations, we may now turn to
examine the crucial words "not involving the carrying on of
any activity for profit". One question of semantics that was
posed before us was-and that is a question which we must
first resolve before we can arrive at the true meaning and
effect of these words-whether these words qualify
"advancement" or "object of general public utility". What is
it that must not involve the carrying on of any activity for
profit in order to satisfy the requirement of the
definition; "advancement" or "object of general public
utility ? The Revenue contended that it was the former and
urged that whatever be the object of general public utility,
its ’advancement’ or achievement must not involve the
carrying on of any activity for profit, or in other words,
no activity for profit must be carried on for the purpose of
achieving or attaining the object of general public utility.
The argument was that if the means to achieve or carry out
the object of general public utility involve the carrying on
of any activity for profit, the purpose of the trust or
institution, though falling within the description "any
other object of general public utility" would not be a
charitable purpose and the income from business would not be
exempt from tax. Now, if this argument is right it would not
be possible for a charitable trust or institution whose
purpose is promotion of an object of general public utility
to carry on any activity for profit at all. Not only would
it be precluded from carrying on a business in the course of
the actual carrying out of the primary purpose of the trust
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or institution, out it would also be unable to carry on any
business even though the business is held under trust or
legal obligation to
98
apply its income wholly to the charitable purpose or is
carried on by the trust or institution by way of investment
of its monies for the purpose of earning profit which, under
the terms of its constitution, is applicable solely for
feeding the charitable purpose. The consequence would be
that even if a business is carried on by a trust or
institution for the purpose of accomplishing or carrying out
an object of general public utility and the income from such
business is applicable only for achieving that object, the
purpose of the trust or institution would cease to be
charitable and not only income from such business but also
income derived from other sources would lose the exemption.
This would indeed be a far reaching consequence but we do
not think that such a consequence was intended to be brought
about by the legislature when it introduced the words ’not
involving the carrying on of any activity for profit" in
section 2 clause (15). Our reasons for saying so are as
follows:
It is clear on a plain natural construction of the
language used by the Legislature that the ten crucial words
"not involving the carrying on of any activity for profit"
go with "object of general public utility" and not with
"advancement". It is the object of general public utility
which must not involve the carrying on of any activity for
profit and not its advancement or attainment. What is
inhibited by these last ten words is the linking of activity
for profit with the object of general utility and not its
linking with the accomplishment or carrying out of the
object. It is not necessary that the accomplishment of the
object or the means to carry out the object should not
involve an activity for profit. That is not the mandate of
the newly added words. What these words require that The
object should not involve the carrying on of any activity
for profit. The emphasis is on the object of general public
utility and not on its accomplishment or attainment. The
decisions of the Kerala and Andhra Pradesh High Courts in
Commissioner of Income-tax v. Cochin Chamber of Commerce and
Industry and Andhra Pradesh State Road Transport Corporation
v. Commissioner of Income-tax in our opinion lay down the
correct interpretation of the last ten words, in section 2
clause (15). The true meaning of these last ten words is
that when the purpose of a trust or institution is the
advancement of an object of general public utility, it is
that object of general public utility and not its
accomplishment or carrying out which must not ll involve the
carrying on of any activity for profit.
99
It is true that the consequences of a suggested
construction cannot alter the meaning of a statutory
provision where such meaning is plain and unambiguous, but
they can certainly help to fix its meaning in case of doubt
or ambiguity. Let us examine that would be the consequence
of the construction contended for on behalf of the Revenue.
If the construction put forward on behalf of the Revenue
were accepted, then, as already pointed out above, no trust
or institution whose purpose is promotion of an object of
general public utility, would be able to carry on any
business, even though such business is held under trust or
legal obligation to apply its income wholly to the
charitable purpose or is carried on by the trust or
institution for the purpose of earning profit to be utilised
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exclusively for feeding the charitable purpose. If any such
business is carried on, the purpose of the trust or
institution would cease to be charitable and not only the
income from such business but the entire income of the trust
or institution from whatever source derived, would lose the
tax exemption. The result would be that no trust or
institution established for promotion of an object of
general public utility would be able to engage in business
for fear that it might lose the tax exemption altogether and
a major source of income for promoting objects of general
public utility would be dried up. It is difficult to believe
that the legislature could have intended to bring about a
result so drastic in its consequence. If the intention of
the legislature were to prohibit a trust or institution
established for promotion of an object of general public
utility from carrying on any activity for profit, it would
have provided in the clearest terms that not such trust or
institution shall carry on any activity for profit, instead
of using involved and obscure language giving rise to
linguistic problems and promoting interpretative litigation.
The legislature would have used language leaving no doubt as
to what was intended and not left its intention to be
gathered by doubtful implication from an amendment made in
the definition clause and that too in language far from
clear.
Moreover, another consequence of the construction
convassed on behalf of the Revenue would be that section 11
sub-section (4) would be rendered wholly superfluous and
meaningless. Section 11 sub section (4) declares that for
the purpose of section 11 ’property held under trust" shall
include a business undertaking and, therefore, a business
can also be held under trust for a charitable purpose and
where it is so held, its income would be exempt from tax,
provided of course, the other requisite conditions for
exemption are satisfied. It may be pointed out that section
11 sub-section (4) where it provides that a
100
business may also be properly held under trust, does not
bring about any change in the law, because even prior to the
enactment of that provision, it was held by the Judicial
Committee of the Privy Council in the Tribune’s case that
property in the corresponding section 4(3) (i) of the Act of
1922 included business and this principle was affirmed by
the pronouncements of this Court in J. K. Trust v.
Commissioner of Income-Tax and Commissioner of Income-Tax v.
Krishna Warrier. (3) Section 11 sub-section (4) merely gave
statutory recognition to this principle. Now section 13(1)
(bb), introduced in the Act 1961 with effect from 1st April,
1977, provides that in the case of a charitable trust or
institution for the relief of the poor, education or medical
relief which carries on any business, income derived from
such business would not be exempt from tax unless the
business is carried on in the course of the actual carrying
out of a primary purpose of the trust or institution. Where
therefore, there is a charitable trust or institution
falling within any of the first three categories of
charitable purpose set out in section 2 clause (15) and it
carries on business which is held by it under trust for its
charitable purpose, income from such business would not be
exempt by reason of section 13(1)(bb). Section 11 sub-
section (4) would, therefore, have no application in case of
a charitable trust or institution falling within any of the
first three heads of ’charitable purpose’. Similarly, on the
construction contended for on behalf of the Revenue, it
would have no applicability also in case of a charitable
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trust or institution falling under the last head of
’charitable purpose’ because according to the contention of
the Revenue, even if a business is held under trust by a
charitable trust or institution for promotion of an object
of general public utility, income from such business would
not be exempt since the purpose would cease to be
charitable. The construction contended for on behalf of the
Revenue would thus, have the effect of rendering section 11
sub-section (4) totally redundant after the enactment of
sec. 13(1)(bb). We do not think, we can accept such a
construction which renders a provision of the Act
superfluous and reduces it to silence. If there is one rule
of interpretation more well settled than any other, it is
that if the language of a statutory provision is ambiguous
and capable of two constructions, that construction must be
adopted which will give meaning and effect to the other
provisions of the enactment rather than that which will give
none. The construction which we are placing of section 2
clause (15) leaves a certain area o’; operation to section
11 sub-section (4) notwithstanding the enactment of section
101
13(i) (bb) and we must, therefore, in any event prefer that
construction to the one submitted on behalf of the Revenue.
We must, however, refer to the decision of this Court
in Indian Chamber of Commerce v. Commissioner of Income-tax
because that is the decision on which the strongest reliance
was placed on behalf of the Revenue. The question which
arose for decision in that case n was whether income derived
by the Indian Chamber or Commerce from arbitration fees
levied by the Chamber, fees collected for issuing
certificates of origin and share of profit for issue of
certificates of weighment and measurement was exempt from
tax under section 11 read with section 2 clause (15) of the
Act. The argument of the Indian Chamber of Commerce
(hereinafter referred as the assessee) was that its objects
were primarily promotional and protective of Indian trade
interests and other allied service operations and they fell
within the broad sweep of the expression "advancement of any
other object of general public utility" and its purpose was,
therefore, charitable within the meaning of section 2 clause
(15) and its income was exempt from tax under section 11.
The Revenue, on the other hand, contended that though the
objects of the assessee were covered by the expression
"advancement of any other object of general public utility"
the activities of the assessee which yielded income were
carried on for profit and the advancement of accomplishment
of these objects of the assessee, therefore, involved
carrying on of activities for profit and hence the purpose
could not be said to be charitable and the income from these
activisms could not be held to be exempt from tax. These
rival contentions raised the same question of interpretation
of section 2 clause (15), which has arisen in the present
case. Krishna Iyer, J. speaking on behalf of the Court
lamented the obscurity and complexity of the language
employed in section 2 clause (15) a sentiment with which we
completely agree-and after referring, to the history of the
provision the learned Judge proceeded to explain what
according to him was the true interpretation of the last
concluding words in section 2 clause (15). The learned Judge
said:
"So viewed, an institution which carries out
charitable purposes out of income "derived from
property held under trust wholly for charitable
purposes" may still forfeit the claim to exemption in
respect of such takings or incomes as may come to it
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from pursuing any activity for profit. Notwithstanding
the possibility of obscurity and of dual meanings when
the emphasis is shifted from "advancement" to "object"
used in section 2(15), we are clear in our minds that
by the
102
new definition the benefit of exclusion from total
income is taken away wherein accomplishing a charitable
purpose the institution engages itself in activities
for profit. The Calcutta decisions are right in linking
activities for profit with advancement of the object.
If you want immunity from taxation, your means of
fulfilling charitable purposes, must be unsullied by
profit-making ventures. The advancement of the object
of general public utility must not involve the carrying
on of any activity for profit. If it does, you forfeit.
The Kerala decisions fall into the fallacy of
emphasizing the linkage between the objects of public
utility and the activity carried on. According to that
view, whatever the activity, if it is inter wined with,
wrapped in or entangled with the object of charitable
purpose even if profit results, therefrom, the immunity
from taxation is still available. This will result in
absurd conclusions. Let us take this very case of a
chamber of commerce which strives to promote the
general interests of the trading community. If it runs
certain special types of services for the benefit of
manufacturers and charges remuneration from them, it is
undoubtedly an activity which, if carried on by private
agencies, would be taxable. Why should the . Chamber be
granted exemption for making income by methods which in
the hands of other people would have been exigible to
tax ? This would and up in the conclusion that a
chamber of commerce may run a printing press,
advertisement business, market exploration activity or
even export promotion business and levy huge sums from
its customers whether they are members of the
organisation or not and still claim a blanket exemption
from tax on the score that the objects cf general
public utility which it has set for itself implied
these activities even though profits or surpluses may
arise therefrom. Therefore, the emphasis is not on the
object of public utility and the carrying on of related
activity for profit. On the other hand, if in the
advancement of these objects the chamber resorts to
carrying on of activities for profit, then necessarily
section 2(15) cannot confer cover. The advancement of
charitable objects must not involve profit making
activities. That is the mandate of the new amendment".
It will thus be seen that Krishna Iyer, J. accepted the
contention of the Revenue that the means of accomplishing or
carrying out an object of general public utility must not
involve the carrying on of any activity for profit or to use
the words of the learned Judge "must be unsullied
103
by profit-making ventures" and even if a business is carried
on by n A trust or institution for earning profit to be
applied wholly for an object of general public utility, the
trust or institution would forfeit the claim for exemption
from tax. The view taken by him was that the benefit of the
exemption would be taken away where in accomplishing or
carrying out an object of general public utility, the trust
or institution engages itself in activity for profit or in
other words, the trust or institution should not resort to
carrying on of an activity for profit for the purpose of
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accomplishment or attainment of the object of general public
utility. This view clearly supports the construction
canvassed on behalf of the Revenue for our acceptance, but,
with the greatest respect to the learned Judges who decided
the Indian Chamber of Commerce case, we think, for reasons
already discussed, that this view is incorrect and we cannot
accept the same.
We have already examined the language of section 2
clause (15) and pointed out how the plain natural meaning of
the words used by the Legislature in that definitional
clause does not accord with the contention of the Revenue.
We have said enough on the subject and nothing more need be
said about it. It is enough to point out that in a
subsequent decision in Commissioner of Income-tax vs.
Dharmodayan Company which came by way of an appeal from the
judgment of the Kerala High Court, this Court itself has, in
effect and substance, departed from this view and adopted
the same construction which has commended itself to us. The
question which arose in this case was whether the income
from business of conducting kurries carried on by the
assessee was exempt from tax. The contention of the Revenue
was that since the assessee was an institution established
for promoting an object of general public utility and this
purpose was sought to be achieved out of the income of the
business of conducting kurries, the last concluding words of
section 2 clause (15) were attracted and the income of the
assessee was disentitled to exemption from tax. This
contention was, however, rejected by the Kerala High Court
which took the view that the business of conducting Kurries
was held under trust to apply its income for the charitable
purpose of the assessee and was rot carried on as a matter
of advancement of that charitable purpose and hence it was
not possible to say that the purpose of the assessee
involved the carrying on of an activity for profit so as to
attract the mischief of the last few words in section 2
clause (15). Krishna Iyer, J., in the Indian Chamber of
Commerce case, while discussing the judgment of the Kerala
High Court in the Dharmodayan case, observed, consistently
with the interpretation placed by him on the last concluding
words in section 2 clause (15), that the decision
104
of the Kerala High Court in this case proceeded on a wrong
test and impliedly, therefore, was incorrectly decided. But
this court while disposing of the appeal from the decision
of the Kerala High Court differed from the view taken by
Krishna Iyer, J. and upheld the Judgment of the Kerala High
Court. This Court pointed out that the facts of Dharmodayan
case were not before Krishna Iyer, J. and that the test
applied by Kerala High Court was held by him to be wrong on
the assumption that the case fell under the last clause of
section 2 clause (15) but, in fact, this assumption was
invalid, as Dharmodayan case was not one falling under the
last part of the definitional clause. The finding of the
Kerala High Court was that the business of conducting
kurries was a business held under trust for applying its
income to the charitable purpose and it was not carried on
as a matter of advancement of the primary purpose of the
trust or in the course of carrying out such purpose and it
could not, therefore, be said that the primary purpose of
the trust involved the carrying on of an activity for profit
within the meaning of the last concluding words in section 2
clause (15). This Court thus held in no uncertain terms that
if a business is held under trust or legal obligation to
apply its income for promotion of an object of general
public utility or it is carried on for the purpose of
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earning profit to be utilised exclusively for carrying out
such charitable purpose, the last concluding words in
section 2 clause (15) would have no application and they
would not deprive the trust or institution of its charitable
character. What these last concluding words require is not
that the trust or institution whose purpose is advancement
of an object of general public utility should not carry on
any activity for profit at all but that the purpose of the
trust or institution should not involve the carrying on of
any activity for profit. So long as the purpose does not
involve the carrying on of any activity for profit, the
requirement of the definition would be net and it is
immaterial how the monies for achieving or implementing such
purpose ’ are found, whether by carrying on an activity for
profit or not. We may point out that even in Sole Trustees
Lokshikshan Trust v. Commissioner of Income Tax, a decision
which, as we shall presently point out, does not commend
itself to us on another point, the same interpretation has
been accepted by this Court.
We must then proceed to consider what is the meaning of
the requirement that where the purpose of a trust or
institution is advancement of an object of general public
utility, such purpose must not involve the carrying on of
any activity for profit. The question that is necessary to
be asked for this purpose is as to when can the purpose of a
trust or institution be said to involve the carrying on of
any activity
105
for profit. The word "involve" according to the Sherter
Oxford Dictionary "to enwrap in anything, to enfold or
envelop; to contain or imply". The activity for profit must,
therefore, be interwined or wrapped up with or implied in
the purpose of the trust or institution or in other words it
must be an integral part of such purpose. But the question
again is what to do we understand by these verbal labels or
formulae what is it precisely that they mean ? Now there are
Two possible ways of looking at this problem of
construction. One interpretation is that according to the
definition what is necessary is that the purpose must be of
such a nature that it involves the carrying on of any
activity for profit in the sense that it cannot be achieved
without carrying on an activity for profit. On this view, if
the purpose can be achieved without the trust or institution
engaging itself in an activity for profit, it cannot be said
that the purpose involves the carrying on of an activity for
profit. Take for example a case where a trust or institution
is established for promotion of sports without setting out
any specific mode by which this purpose is intended to be
achieved. Now obviously promotion of sports can be achieved
by organising cricket matches on free admission or no profit
no loss basis and equally it can be achieved by organising
cricket matches with the predominant object of earning
profit. Can it be said in such a case that the purpose of
the trust or institution does not involve the carrying on of
an activity for profit, because promotion of sports can be
done without engaging in an activity for profit. If this
interpretation were correct, it would be the easiest thing
for a trust or institution not to, mention in its
constitution as to how the purpose for which it is
established shall be carried out and then engage itself in
an activity for profit in the course of actually carrying
out of such purpose and thereby avoid liability to tax. That
would be too narrow an interpretation which would defeat the
object of introducing the words "not in the carrying on of
any activity for profit". We cannot accept such a
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construction which emasculates these last concluding words
and renders them meaningless and ineffectual. The other
interpretation is to see whether the purpose of the Trust or
institution in fact involves the carrying on of an activity
for profit or in other words whether an activity for profit
is actually carried on as an integral part of the purpose or
to use the words of Chandrachud, J. as he then was in
Dharmodayan case, "as a matter of advancement of the
purpose". There must be and activity for profit and it must
be involved in carrying out the purpose of the trust or
institution or to put it differently, it must be carried on
in order to advance the purpose or in the course of carrying
out the purpose of the trust or institution. It is then that
the inhibition of the 8-868SCI/79
106
exclusionary clause would be attracted. This appears to us
to be a more plausible construction which gives meaning and
effect to the last concluding words added by the legislature
and we prefer to accept it. Of course, there is one
qualification which must be mentioned here and it is that if
the constitution of a trust or institution expressly
provides that the purpose shall be carried out by engaging
in an activity which has a predominant profit motive, as,
for example, where the purpose is specifically stated to be
promotion of sports by holding cricket matches on commercial
lines with a view to making profit, there would be no scope
for controversy, because the purpose would, on the face of
it, involve carrying on of an activity for profit and it
would be non-charitable even though no activity for profit
is actually carried on or, in the example given, no cricket
matches are in fact organised.
The next question that arises is as to what is the
meaning of the expression "activity for profit". Every trust
or institution must have a purpose for which it is
established and every purpose must for its accomplishment
involve the carrying on of an activity. The activity must
however, be for profit in order to attract the exclusionary
clause and the question therefore is when can an activity be
said to be one for profit? The answer to the question
obviously depends on the correct connotation of the
proposition "for". This proposition has many shades of
meaning but when used with the active participle of a verb
it means "for the purpose of" and connotes the end with
reference to which something is done. It is not therefore
enough that as a matter of fact an activity results in
profit but it must we carried on with the object of earning
profit. Profit-making must be the end to which the activity
must be directed or in other words, the predominant object
of the activity must be making of profit. Where the activity
is not pervaded by profit motive but is carried on primarily
for serving the charitable purpose, it would not be correct
to describe it as an activity for profit. But where, on the
other hand, an activity is carried on with the predominant
object of earning profit, it would be an activity for
profit, though it may be carried on in advancement a of the
charitable purpose of the trust or institution. Where an
activity is carried on as a matter of advancement of the
charitable purpose or for the purpose of carrying out the
charitable purpose, it would not be incorrect to say as a
matter of plain English grammar that the charitable purpose
involves the carrying on of such activity, but the
predominant object of such activity must be to subserve the
charitable purpose and not to earn profit. The charitable
purpose should not be submerged by the profit making motive;
the latter should not masquerade under the guise of the
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former. The purpose the
107
trust, as pointed out by one of us (Pathak, J.) in M/s
Dharmodipti v. Commissioner of Income Tax, Kerala (supra)
must be "essentially charitable in nature" and it must not
be a cover for carrying on an activity which has profit
making as its predominant object. This interpretation of the
exclusionary clause in section 2 clause (15) derives
considerable support from the speech made by the Finance
Minister while introducing that provision. The Finance
Minister explained the reason for introducing this
exclusionary clause in the following words;
’The definition of "charitable purpose" in that
clause is at present so widely worded that it can be
taken advantage of even by commercial concerns which,
while ostensibly severing a public purpose, get fully
paid for the benefits provided by them namely, the
newspaper industry which while running its concern on
commercial lines can claim that by circulating
newspapers it was improving the general knowledge of
the public. In order to prevent the misuse of this
definition in such cases, the Select Committee felt
that the 1 words "not involving the carrying on of any
activity for profit" should be added to the definition.
It is obvious that the exclusionary clause was added with a
view to over-coming the decision of the Privy in the Tribune
cases where it was held that the object of supplying the
community with an organ of educated public option by
publication of a newspaper was an object of general public
utility and hence charitable in character, even though the
activity of publication of the newspaper was carried on
commercial lines with the object of earning profit. The
publication of the newspaper was an activity engaged in by
the trust for the purpose of carrying out its charitable
purpose and on the facts it was clearly an activity which
had profit-making as its predominant object, but even so it
was held by the Judicial Committee that since the purpose
served was an object of general public utility, it was a
charitable purpose. It is clear from the speech of the
Finance Minister that it was with a view to setting at
naught this decision that the exclusionary clause was added
in the definition of ’charitable purpose’. The test which
has, therefore, now to be applied is whether the predominant
object of the activity involved in carrying out the object
of general public utility is to subserve the charitable
purpose or to earn profit. Where profit-making is the
predominant object of the activity, the purpose, though an
object of general public utility, would cease to be a
charitable purpose. But where the predominant object of the
activity is to carry out the charitable purpose and not to
earn profit, it would not lose its character of a charitable
purpose merely because
108
some profit arises from the activity. The exclusion any
clause does not require that the activity must be carried on
in such a manner that it does not result in any profit. It
would indeed be difficult for persons in charge, of a trust
or institution to so carry on the activity that the
expenditure balances the income and there is not resulting
profit. That would not only be difficult of practical
realisation but would also reflect unsound principle of
management. We therefore, agree with Beg. J. when he said in
Sole Trustee, Lok Sikshana Trust case (supra) that "if the
profits must necessarily feed a charitable purpose under the
terms of the trust, the mere fact that the activities of the
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trust yield profit will not alter the charitable character
of the trust. The test now is, more clearly than in the
past, the genuineness of the purpose tested by the
obligation created to spend the money exclusively or
essentially on charity." The learned Judge also added that
the restrictive condition "that the purpose should not
involve the carrying on of any activity for profit would be
satisfied if profit-making is rot the real object" (emphasis
supplied). We wholly endorse these observations.
The application of this test may be illustrated by
taking a simple example. Suppose the Gandhi Peace Foundation
which has been established for propagation of Gandhian
thought and philosophy, which would admittedly be an object
of general public utility, undertakes publication of a
monthly journal for the purpose of carrying out charitable
object and charges a small price which is more than the cost
of the publication and leaves a little profit, would it
deprive the Gandhi Peace Foundation of its charitable
character ? The pricing of the monthly journal would
undoubtedly be made in such a manner that it leases some
profit for the Gandhi Peace Foundation, as, indeed, would be
done any prudent and wise management, but that cannot have
the effect of polluting the charitable character of the
purpose, because the predominant object of the activity of
publication of the monthly journal would be to carry out the
charitable purpose by propagating Gandhian thought and
philosophy and not to make profit or in other words, profit-
making would not be the driving force behind this activity.
But it is possible that in a given case the degree or extent
of profit-making may be of such a nature as to reasonable
lead lo the interference that the real object of the
activity is profit-making and not serving the charitable
purpose. If, for example, in the illustration given by us,
it is found that the publication of the monthly journal is
carried on wholly on commercial lines and the pricing of the
monthly journal is made on the same basis on which it would
be made by a commercial organisation leaving a large margin
of profit.
109
it might be difficult to resist the inference that the
activity of publication of the journal is carried on for
profit and the purpose is non-charitable. We may take by way
of illustration another example given by Krishna Iyer, J. in
the Indian Chamber of Commerce case where a blood bank
collects blood on payment and supplies blood for a higher
price on commercial basis. Undoubtedly, in such a case, the
blood bank would be serving an object of general public
utility but since it advances the charitable object by sale
of blood as an activity carried on with the object of making
profit, it would be difficult to call its purpose
charitable. Ordinarily there should be no difficulty in
determining whether the predominant object of an activity is
advancement of a charitable purpose or profit-making. But
cases arc round to arise in practice which may be on the
border line and in such cases the solution or the problem
whether the purpose is charitable or not may involve much
refinement and present real difficulty.
There is, however, one comment which is necessary to
be made whilst we are on this point and that arises out of
certain observations made by this Court in Sole Trustee Lok
Sikshana Trust case (supra) as well as Indian Chamber of
Commerce case. It was said by Khanna, J. in Sole Trustee Lok
Sikshana Trust cases; "..................
.......... if the activity of a trust consists of
carrying on a business and there are no restrictions on
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its making profit, the court would be well justified in
assuming in the absence of some indication to the
contrary that the object of the trust involves the
carrying on of an activity for profit."
And to the same effect, observed Krishna Iyer, J. in the
Indian Chamber of Commerce case when he said:
"An undertaking for a business organisation is
ordinarily assumed for profit unless expressly or by
necessary implication or by development surrounding
circumstances the making of profit stands loudly
negatived a pragmatic condition, written or unwritten
proved by a prescription of profits or by long years of
invariable practices or spirit from some strong
surrounding circumstances indicative of anti-profit
motivation such a condition will nullify for charitable
purpose."
Now we entirely agree with the learned Judges who decided
these two cases that activity involved in carrying out the
charitable purpose must not be motivated by a profit
objective but it must be undertaken for the purpose or
advancement or carrying out of the charitable purpose.
110
But we find it difficult to accept their thesis that
whenever an activity is carried on which yields profit, the
inference must necessarily be drawn, in the absence of some
indication to the contrary, that the activity is for profit
and the charitable purpose involves the carrying on of an
activity for profit. We do not think the Court would be
Justified in drawing any such inference merely because the
activity results in profit. It is in our opinion not at all
necessary that there must be a provision in the constitution
of the trust or institution that the activity shall be
carried on profit no loss basis or that profit shall be
prescribed. Even if there is no such express provision, the
nature of the charitable purpose, the manner in which the
activity for advancing the charitable purpose is being
carried on and the surrounding circumstances may clearly
indicate that the activity is not propelled by a dominant
profit motive. What is necessary to be considered is whether
having regard to all the facts and circumstances of the
case, the dominant object of the activity is profit-making
or carrying out a charitable purpose. If it is the former,
the purpose. would not be a charitable purpose, but, if it
is the latter, the charitable character of the purpose would
not be lost.
If we apply this test ill the present case, it is clear
that the activity of obtaining licences for import of
foreign yarn and quotas for purchase of indigenous yarn,
which was carried on by the assessee, was k not an activity
for profit. The predominant object of this activity was
promotion of commerce and trade in Art Silk Yarn, Raw Silk
Cotton Yarn, Art Silk Cloth, Silk Cloth and Cotton Cloth,
which was clearly an object of general public utility an(l
profit was merely a bye-product which resulted incidentally
in the process of carrying out the charitable purpose. It is
significant to note that the aSsessee was a Company
recognised by the Central Government under Section 25 of the
Companies Act, 1956 and under its Memorandum of Association,
the profit arising from any activity carried on by the
assssee was liable to be applied solely and exclusively for
the promotion of trade and commerce in various commodities
which we have mentioned above and no part of such profit
could be distributed amongst the members in any form or
under any guise. The profit of the assessee could be
utilised only for the purpose of feeding this charitable
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purpose and the dominant and real object of the activity of
the assessee being the advancement of the charitable
purpose, the mere fact that the activity yielded profit did
not alter the charitable character of the assessee. We are
or the view that the Tribunal was right in taking the view
that the purpose for which the assessee was established was
a charitable purpose within the meaning of section 2 clause
(15) and
111
the income of the assessee was exempt from tax under sec.
ll. The A question referred to us in each of these
references must, therefore, be answered in favour of the
assessee and against the Revenue.
The Revenue will pay the costs of the assessee in two
sets; one in one Reference Case No. 1A/73 and the other in
Reference Cases Nos. 10-14 of 1975.
PATHAK, J.-To the judgment prepared by my learned
brother Bhagwati, I propose to add a separate judgment,
Persuaded by the considerable importance of the question
which arises and because of a somewhat different perspective
in which the point appears to me.
The controversy in these references centres on the true
interpretation of the words "not involving the carrying on
of any activity for profit" in the definition of the
expression "charitable purpose" by s. 2(15) of the Income
Tax Act, 1961.
The preceding enactment, the Indian Income Tax Act,
1922 provided, by s. 4(3)(i), for the exclusion from the
total income of an assessee of any income derived from
property held under trust or other legal obligation wholly
for charitable purposes. The words "charitable purpose" were
defined as including "relief of the poor, education, medical
relief and the advancement of any other object of general
public utility."
The terms in which the benefit was conferred were not
sufficient, it appears, to provide against its misuse by a
certain class of tax payer. Advantage was taken of the
judicial construction given by the courts to the content of
the provision. As long ago as l 939, the Privy Council had
in The Trustees of the ‘Tribune’(1) held that the object of
a trust of supplying the public with an organ of educated
public opinion constituted an object of general public
utility and was a charitable object. It was found that the
newspaper and press had not been established for the private
profit of the testator or any other individual. The
circumstance that the purpose of the trust envisaged a
commercial activity, the newspaper charging its readers and
advertises at ordinary commercial rates, was held not to
detract from the conclusion that it was an object of general
public utility. While enacting the Income Tax Act, 1961,
Parliament added a new dimension to the definition of
"charitable purpose". A restrictive clause has been
inserted, and s. 2(15) of the Act defines "charitable
purpose" as including "relief of the poor, education,
medical relief, and the advancement of ally other object of
general public utility y not
112
involving the carrying on of any activity for profit." The
Finance Minister explained in Parliament:-
"The other objective of the Select Committee,
limiting the exemption only to trusts and institutions
whose object is a genuine charitable purpose has been
achieved by amending the definition in clause 2(15).
The definition of ’charitable purpose’ in that clause
is at present so widely worded that it can be taken
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advantage of even by commercial concerns which, while
ostensibly serving a public purpose, get fully paid for
the benefits provided by them, namely, the newspaper
industry, which while running its concern on commercial
lines can claim that by circulating newspapers it was
improving the general knowledge of the public. In order
to prevent the misuse of this definition in such cases,
the Select Committee felt that the words ’not involving
the carrying on of any activity for profit’ should be
added to the definition. 1)
The new scheme, besides redefining "charitable purpose",
added a second safeguard directed to protecting the grant of
the tax benefit at another point. A new set of provisions
controlled the utilisation of the accumulated income derived
from the charitable trust or institution.
Section 11 of the Act, in its material provisions, as
originally framed declared:
"(1) Subject to the provisions of sections 60 to
63, the following income shall not be included in the
total income of the previous year of the person in
receipt of the income-
(a) income derived from property held under trust
wholly for charitable.. purposes, to the extent to
which such income is applied to such purposes in India;
and, where any such income is accumulated for
application to such purposes in India, to the extent to
which the income so accumulated is not in excess of
twenty-five per cent of the income from the property or
rupees ten thousand, whichever is higher;
(b) income derived from property held under trust
in part only for such purposes, the trust having been
created before the commencement of this Act, to the
extent to which such income is applied to such purposes
in India; and where any such income is finally set
apart for application to such purpose in India, to the
extent to which the income so set
113
apart is not in excess of twenty-five per cent, of the
income. A from the property held under trust in part;
(c)...........................
(2) Where the persons in receipt of the income
have complied with the following conditions, the
restriction specified in clause (a) or clause (b) of
sub-section (1) as respects accumulation or setting
apart shall not apply for the period during which the
said conditions remain complied with-
(a) such persons have, by no ice in writing given
to the Income-tax officer in the prescribed manner,
specified the purpose for which the income is being
accumulated or set apart and the period for which the
income is to be accumulated or set apart, which shall
in no case exceed ten years;
(b) the money so accumulated or set apart is
invested in any Government security as defined in
clause (2) of section 2 of the Public Debt Act, 1944
(XVIII of 1944), or in any other security which may be
approved by the Central Government in this behalf.
(3) Any income referred to in sub-section (1) or
sub- section (2) as is applied to purposes other than
charitable ................ as aforesaid or ceases to
be accumulated or set apart for application thereto or
is not utilised for the purpose for which it is so
accumulated in the year immediately following the
expiry of the period allowed in this behalf shall be
deemed to be the income of such person of the previous
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year in which it is so applied, or ceases to be so
accumulated or so set apart or, as the case may be, of
the previous year immediately following the expiry of
the period aforesaid."
Further restrictions were imposed by s. 12A and s. 13.
Section 13 barred the exemption in the case of a trust for
charitable purposes or a charitable institution, created or
established after the commencement of the Act, if the trust
or institution was created or established for the benefit of
any particular religious community or caste. The exemption
was also barred, subject to certain modifications, if any
part of the income, or any property of such trust or
institution, was M used or applied for the benefit of the
author of the trust or founder of the institution or of a
person who had made a substantial contribu-
114
tion to such trust or institution or of a relative of such
author, founder or contributor.
The net of restrictive provisions in relations to the
utilisation of the income of the trust or institution was
tightened still further by successive amendments to the Act.
It was relaxed in one particular, that to earn the exemption
the money accumulated or set apart could alternatively be
deposited in a Post office Savings Bank account or a banking
company to which the Banking Regulation Act, 194 applies, or
a banking co-operative society, or was deposited with a
financial corporation providing long, term finance for
industrial development in India and approved by the Central
Government for the purposes of s. 36(1)(viii).
A notable amendment, inserted as cl. (bb) in s. 13(1),
provided that the exclusion of the income derived from any
business carried on by a charitable trust or institution for
the relief of the poor, education or medical relief, was not
permissible unless "the business is carried on in the course
of the actual carrying out of a primary purpose of the trust
or institution." This amendment, brought in with effect from
April 1, 1977, was pertinent to the first three heads set
forth in the definition of "charitable purpose" and affected
the operation of s. 11 with reference to that part of the
definition. Simultaneously, cl. (d) was also inserted in s.
13 (l) which, operating subject to cl. (bb), insisted that
to earn the exemption on income the funds of the charitable
trust or institution should be invested o deposited in the
forms or modes specified in s. 13(5).
The scheme embodied in the statute protected the tax
benefit from misuse by reference to two principle vantage
points, (a) a cautiously worded definition of "charitable
purpose", which intended that trusts created and
institutions established for purposes not "charitable within
that definition should not be entitled to the benefit, and
(b) provisions which carefully control the application of
the accumulated income flowing from the property held under
trust or owned by the institution. The first relates to the
very purpose of the trust or institution, the second to the
manner in which the resulting income is employed. We are
concerned in these references with the former.. an(l it is
therefore necessary to avoid resting the construction of
section 2(15) on considerations pertinent to the latter.
While construing the definition of ’’charitable
purpose" in s. 2(15), it is imperative to remember that what
we are considering is a definition. It is a definition and
nothing more. The operative provision is enacted elsewhere
in the Act. Viewed in that light, the meaning of the
definition is capable of clearer resolution.
115
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Section 2(15) says that "charitable purpose" includes
relief of the poor, education, medical relief, and the
advancement of any other object of general public utility
not involving the carrying on of any activity for profit.
The first three heads of "charitable purpose" are defined in
specific and clearly disclosed terms. Relief of the poor,
education and medical relief. The fourth head is described
generally as a residuary head (although that description
appears inapt to what finds place in an "inclusive"
definition). Now, it is important to note that the purpose
described is "the advancement of any other object of general
public utility.... ". The object is not the purpose. The
advancement of the object is the purpose. Harking back to
the first three heads of charitable purpose, the definition
defines purpose in terms of an activity. When Sir Samuel
Romilly, in the course of his argument in Morice v. Bishop
of Durham(l) summarised the main heads of charity, they
included "relief of the indigent, the advancement of
learning, the advancement of religion, and the advancement
of objects of general public utility." Note the sense of
action, of something to be done in relation to an object.
When Lord Macnaghten adopted the classification of
charitable purposes in Special Comrs. v. Pemsel(2), he spoke
of "trusts for the relief of poverty, trusts for the
advancement of education, trusts for the advancement of
religion, and trusts for other purposes beneficial to the
community not falling under any of the preceding heads." In
the Indian law, the relief of poverty and the advancement of
education were embodied as "relief of the poor" and
"education". Medical relief was added. And for the fourth
head, with which we are concerned, the language, an echo of
Sir Samuel Romilly’s classification, referred to "the
advancement of any other object of general public
utility....". It will be at once evident that the word
"object" cannot by itself connote an activity. It represents
a goal towards which, or in relation to which, an activity
is propelled. The element of activity is embodied in the
word "advancement". If "charitable purpose" is defined in
terms of an activity, that is to say, the advancement of an
object, the restrictive clause "not involving the carrying
on of any activity for profit", which is also descriptive of
an activity, must necessarily relate to "the advancement of
an object.. ". I am of opinion, therefore, that the
restrictive clause must be read with "the advancement of any
other object of general public utility" and not with "the
object of general public utility. En passant, it may be
observed that much confusion can be avoided if in the
context of the fourth head the purpose of the trust or
institution is referred to as the "purpose" and
116
not as the "object" of the trust or institution, because the
purpose there is defined as "the advancement of an object’.
It being clear then that the charitable purpose is the
advancement of the object, and that the advancement must not
involve carrying on 13 of an activity for profit, I proceed
to the next step. The words "activity for profit" should, I
think, be taken as descriptive of the nature of the
activity. It is an activity of a kind intended to yield
profit. It is a profit-making activity. That it may not
actually yield profit during any period does not deny its
true nature. Conversely if profit has resulted from an
activity, that does not, without anything more, classify it
as an "activity for profit".
Therefore, for a purpose to fall under the fourth head
of "charitable purpose", it must constitute the, advancement
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of an object of general public utility in which the activity
of advancement must not involve a profit making activity.
The word "involving" in the restrictive clause is not
without significance. An activity is involved in the
advancement of an object when it is enwrapped or enveloped
in the activity of advancement. In another case, it may be
interwoven into the activity of advancement, so that the
resulting activity has a dual nature or is twin faceted.
Since we are concerned with the definition af "charitable
purpose", and the definition defines in its entirety a
"purpose" only it will be more appropriate tc, speak of the
purpose of profit making being enwrapped or enveloped in the
purpose of the advancement of an object of general public
utility or, in the other kind of case, the purpose of profit
making being interwoven into the purpose of the advancement
of that object giving rise to a purpose of possessing a dual
nature or twin facets. Now, s. 2(15) clearly says that to
constitute a "charitable purpose", the purpose of profit
making must be excluded. In my opinion the requirement is
satisfied where there is either a total absence of the
purpose of profit making or it is so insignificant compared
to the purpose of advancement of the object of general
public utility that the dominating role of the latter
renders the former unworthy of account. If the profit making
purpose holds a dominating role or even constitutes all
equal component with the purpose of advancement of the
object of general public utility, then clearly the
definition in s. 2(15) is not satisfied. When applying s.
11, it is open to the tax authority in an appropriate case
to pierce the veil of what is proclaimed on the surface by
the document constituting the trust or establishing the
institution, and enter into an ascertainment of the true
purpose of the trust or institution. The true purpose must
be genuinely and essentially charitable.
117
Now, the definition of a purpose is a thing apart from
the mode or method employed for carrying out the purpose.
Yet the nature of the purpose controls in some degree the
mode which is open for carrying it out. If the purpose is
charitable in reality, the mode adopted must be one which is
directed to carrying out the charitable purpose. It would
include, in my opinion, a business engaged in for carrying
out the charitable purpose of the trust or institution. The
carrying on of such a business does not detract from the
purpose which permeates it, the end result of the business
activity being the effectuation of the charitable purpose.
business activity carried on not with a view to carrying out
the charitable purpose of the trust but which is related to
a non-charitable purpose or constitutes an end in itself
falls outside the scope of the trust, and indeed may betray
the fact that the real purpose of the trust is not
essentially charitable If it is a business entered into for
working out the purpose of the trust or institution, that is
to say, in the course of, and with a view to, the
realisation of the charitable purpose, the income therefore
will be entitled to exemption under section 11. In this
connection, it is appropriate to note that s 11(4)
specifically defines "property held under trust" as
including a business undertaking. Moreover, when it was
found that judicial decisions had held the restrictive
clause in s. 2(15) to control the fourth head only, and not
also the first three heads in the definition, Parliament
attempted to secure its original intent by enacting cl. (bb)
in s. 13(1). The two provisions represent the mode of
finding finance for working out the purpose of the trust or
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institution, by deriving income from the corpus of the trust
property and also from an activity carried on in the course
of the actual carrying out of the purpose of the trust or
institution..
At this stage, it will be appropriate to point out that
the question whether a trust is created or an institution is
established for a charitable purpose falls to be determined
by reference to the real purpose of the trust or the
institution and not by the circumstance that the income
derived can be measured by standards usually applicable to a
commercial activity. The quantum of income is no test in
itself. It may be the result of an activity permissible
under a truly charitable purpose for, as has been observed,
a profitable activity in working out the charitable purpose
is not excluded. I am unable to agree, with respect, with
all that has fallen from H. R. Khanna and A. C. Gupta, JJ.
in Sole Trustee, Loka Shikshana Trust v. Commissioner of
Income-tax, Mysore that the terms of the trust must impose
restrictions on making profits otherwise the purpose of the
trust must be regarded
118
as involving the carrying on of a profit making activity. On
the contrary, 1 find myself in agreement with Beg, J. to the
extent that he says, in the same case, that it is the
genuineness of the purpose, that it is truly charitable,
which determines the issue. It seems necessary to me that a
distinction must constantly be maintained between what is
merely a definition of "charitable purpose" and the powers
conferred for working out or fulfilling that purpose. While
the purpose and the powers must correlate, they cannot be
identified with each other. Reference may, of course, be
made to the nature and width of the powers as evidence of
the charitable or non-charitable nature of the purpose. For
the same reason, I a.m compelled, with respect, to hold that
the observations of Krishna Iyer, J. speaking for the Court
in Indian Chamber of Commerce v. Commissioner of Income-tax,
West Bengal-ll(1) do not accord with what I believe to be a
true construction of s. 2(15). If that decision can be
justified, it can be only on the basis that in the opinion
of the court the true purpose of the trust or institution
was not essentially charitable. I am unable to accept the
proposition that if the purpose is truly charitable,, the
attainment of the purpose must rigorously exclude any
activity for profit. I am also unable to endorse the
position that by permitting, the trust or institution to
carry on an activity which brings in profit, although that
activity is carried on in the course of the working out of
the purpose of the trust or institution, "business men have
a high road to tax avoidance". It was apparently not brought
to the notice of the learned judges that a carefully enacted
scheme has been incorporated in the Act which closely
controls the utilisation of the trust income, and that the
tax exemption is conditional on the observance of the
statutory conditions stipulated in that schedule.
on the facts of the present reference s which are set
out in the judgment prepared by my brother Bhagwati, I have
no hesitation in holding that the purpose of the respondent
company falls within the definition of s. 2(15) of the
Income Tax Act, 1961. Sub-clause (a) of clause 3 of the
Memorandum of Association declares that the purpose for
which the company has been established is "to promote
commerce and trade in Art Silk Yarn, Raw Silk, Cotton Yarn,
Art Silk Cloth, Silk Cloth and Cotton Cloth." The promotion
of commerce and trade has been held by this Court in
Commissioner of Income Tax v. Andhra Chamber of Commerce(2)
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to be an object of general public utility, and there is
nothing to show that, viewed as the "purpose" for which the
company was incorporated, the sub-clause involves the
119
carrying on of any activity for profit. The remaining sub-
clauses enumerate the powers for which it has been
constituted.
Having regard to the interpretation placed by me on the
words defining the Fourth head of "charitable purpose" in s.
2(15) of the Act, I answer the question referred in each of
the references in the affirmative, in favour of the assessee
and against the Revenue. The Revenue will pay the costs of
the assessee in two sets, one in Tax Reference Case No. lA
of 1973 and the other in Tax Reference Case Nos. 10 to 14 of
1975.
SEN J. I have had the advantage of reading the judgment
prepared by my learned brother Bhagwati J. I regret my
inability to share the views expressed by him as to the
construction of the expression ’charitable purpose" as
defined in s. 2(15) of the Income-tax Act, 1961. I am of the
opinion that the two decisions in Sole Trustee, Loka
Shikshana Trust v. C.I.T. (1) and Indian Chamber of Commerce
v. C.I.T.(2) lay down the correct law and still hold good.
In the definition of "charitable purpose", contained in
s. 2(15) of the Act of 1961, the words "not involving the
carrying on of any activity for profit", which did not find
place in the Act of 1922, qualify only the fourth head of
charitable purpose viz., "any other object of general public
utility", and not any of the first three heads. The
definition of "charitable purpose" in s. 2(15) is in these
terms:
"2(15) ’charitable purpose’ includes relief of the
poor, education, medical relief, and the advancement of
any other object of general public utility not
involving the carrying on of any activity for profit;"
It has brought about radical changes in the system of
taxation of income and profits of charities, with particular
reference to ’objects of general public utility’ to prevent
tax evasion, by diversion of business profits to charities.
After the experience gained in the 39 years that followed
the enactment of the Act of 1922, it came to be realised
that many activities for profit were not subject to tax on
income merely because they could be regarded as objects of
general public utility. What was amiss under the Act of 1922
was not the idea of giving income-tax relief in respect of
charity, but undue width of the range of what ranks as a
charity for that purpose. It is the Vagueness of the
expression "any other object of general public utility
120
"that impelled Parliament to insert the restrictive words
"not involving the carrying on of any activity for profit".
It is not permissible for the Court to whittle down the
plain language of the section. "It would be contrary to all
rules of construction", in the words of Khanna J., speaking
for himself and Gupta J. in Loka Shikshana Trust "to ignore
the impact of the newly added words ’not involving the
carrying on of any activity for profit’ and to construe the
definition as if the newly added words were either not there
or were intended to be otiose and redundant, i.e., as
qualifying and affirming the position under the Act of
1922". Such a construction would, I am afraid, frustrate the
very object of the legislation The section is self-
explanatory. The relative simplicity of the language brings
out the necessary legislative intent to counter-act tax
advantages resulting from so-called ’charities in
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camouflage’.
No distinction had been made by the Act of 1922 between
the well-known charities of relief to the poor, education
and medical relief on the one hand and charities resulting
from the advancement of any other object of general public
utility, on the other hand. But such a distinction has been
introduced by the definition of the term "charitable
purpose" in s. 2(15) though the definition is an inclusive
one. The restriction is that the advancement of objects of
general public utility should not involve the carrying on of
any activity for profit. If it involved any such activity,
the charity will fail outside the definition of charitable
purpose in s. 2(15). This change has radically altered the
law and whenever the advancement of an object of general
public utility involved an activity for profit that object
will cease to be a charitable purpose. So, in such cases,
the income from the activity for profit cannot be exempted
from tax under s. 11 of the Act. The object of this addition
of the restrictive words "not involving the carrying on of
any activity for profit." was to clearly overcome the
decision in In re The Trustees of the Tribune(1), All India
spinners’ Association v. C.I.T.(2) and J.K. Trust v.
C.l.T.(8) All these cases arose under s. 4(3) (i) of the Act
of 1922, which did not include the words "not involving the
carrying on of any activity for profit". and they are no
longer good law.
There is a distinction between "a business held under
trust.’ and "a business carried on by or on behalf of the
trust". Section 11(1) exempts income derived from property
held under trust wholly for
121
charitable or religious purposes, to the extent to which
such income is applied to such purposes in India. Section
11(4) includes within the "property held under trust" a
business undertaking so held. Therefore, income from a
business undertaking held under a trust for a charitable
purpose is exempt under s. 11 ( 1 ) . There is, therefore,
no statutory bar or restriction to earn exemption in respect
of income derived from a business undertaking, if such
business undertaking is held under a trust for a charitable
purpose. That ’property’ ill s. 11(1) includes business has
been well established not only by the decisions of the Privy
Council dealing with the corresponding provision in s. 4(3)
(i) of the Act of 1922 in Tribunes Trustees (supra) and
Spinners Association (supra) but also by the two decisions
of this Court in C.I.T. v. Radhaswami Satsang Sabha(1) and
C.I.T. v. P. Krishna Warrier(2). The first essential
condition for exemption under s. 11(1) is that the
’property’ from which the income is derived must be held
under trust or other legal obligation. Section 11(4) gives a
statutory recognition of the law laid down by this Court in
Radhaswami Satsang Sabha namely that business is property
and if a business is held in trust wholly for a charitable
purpose, the income therefrom will be exempt under s. 11(1).
As already stated above, the Act of 1961 now defines
’charitable purpose’ to include ’relief of the poor,
education, medical relief, and the advancement of any other
object of general public utility not involving the carrying
on of any activity for profit’. It is accepted that the
words ’not involving the carrying on of any activity for
profit’ qualify only the fourth head of charitable purpose
stated in the definition viz. ’any other object of general
public utility’. Consequently, it is clear that in cases
falling under the first three heads of charitable purpose
stated in the definition imposes no ban on the carrying on
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of any activity for profit. The restrictive words ’not
involving the carrying on of any activity for profit’ were
deliberately introduced in the definition of charitable
purpose in s. 2(15) to cut down the wide ambit of the fourth
head viz. ’any other object of general public utility’ as a
measure to check avoidance of tax. Indubitably, engagement
in activity for profit by religious or charitable trusts
provides scope for manipulation for tax avoidance. The
Parliament, however, thought that it will not be desirable
to ban an activity for profit which arises in the pursuit of
the primary object of the trust created with the object of
relief the poor, education or medical relief.
122
A study made by the Department of Company Affairs of 75
trusts, of which 62 were charitable, showed that the
business houses creating the trusts had mostly appropriated
the trust funds for their own businesses. Considering the
problem of tax avoidance through formation of charitable and
religious trusts, the Public Accounts Committee in a recent
report(’) observed that ’while trusts fulfil a laudable
social objective, they have also been used as a device to
avoid tax’. The Committee also took note of the fact that
out of 45 trusts connected with industrial- houses and
having a corpus of Rs. 24.11 crores, the investments by 32
trusts in concerns connected with the industrial houses were
SO per cent or more of their funds. In some cases, it was
noticed that the investment in such concerns amounted to as
much as 90 per cent of the funds of the trusts. In other
words, the big business houses established their own
’charitable trusts’ because they find it financially
advantageous to filter money through them. In the United
States of America, despite several provisions for preventing
misuse of funds of public trusts, taxpayers still find ways
and means to use charity as a cover for tax avoidance. In
his revealing study ’The Rich and the Super Rich’ Ferdinand
Lundberg(2) observes:
"....foundations can do anything that is
financially possible, without any sort of public
supervision or regulation. In the sphere of finance,
name it and they can do it, tax free.
" He goes on to add:
"It is mainly because of the Protean utility of
the foundation, particularly in the evasion of taxes,
that nearly everyone in the community of wealth has
come now to share the original insight of only a few
such as the pioneering Carnegie and Rockfeller."
Avoidance of tax through the media of charitable trusts
is a malady prevalent in other countries as well. The
British Royal Commission on Taxation of Profits and Income
observed that the vagueness of definition of ’charity’, or
more precisely the absence of a definition, has enabled very
substantial benefits of exemptions to be claimed by
activities which, in extreme cases, had no real connection
with the idea of charity at all. The Royal Commission on
Taxation for Canada also took note of this problem in its
report and
123
recommended that charity should pay income-tax on business A
income.
There has been a sharp conflict of opinion upon the
construction of the crucial words ’not involving the
carrying on of any activity for profit’, qualifying the
fourth head of charity, ’advancement of any other object of
general public utility’. According to the Kerala High Court
in C.I.T. v. Indian Chamber of Commerce,(2) C.I.T. v. Cochin
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Chamber of Commerce (3) and C.I.T. v. Charmodayan & Co.,(4)
it was observed that in order to take an object of general
public utility outside the scope of the definition, that
object must involve carrying on of any activity for profit.
The Calcutta High Court in C.I.T. v. Indian Chamber of
Commerce(5) took a view different from that of the Kerala
High Court observing that the fourth head of charity ’the
advancement of any other object of general public utility
not involving the carrying on of any activity for profit’
plainly indicates that it is not the object of general
public utility which would involve the carrying on of any
activity for profit, but the advancement of that object.
Otherwise, the Calcutta High Court held that ’it would lead
to a contradictory situation and be destructive of the
limitation which the Parliament in its wisdom thought it
necessary to impose. It further observed that that was the
only way to avoid a conflict between ss. 11 and 2(15),
specially with the provisions of s. 11(1)(a) and 11(4). This
Court resolved the conflict in Loka Shikshana Trust (supra)
and Indian Chamber of Commerce (supra) by holding that the
words ’not involving the carrying on of any activity for
profit’ govern the word ’advancement’ and not the words
’object of general public utility’ and observed that if the
advancement or attainment of the object involves an activity
for profit, tax exemption would not be available. F
The words ’charity’ and charitable purpose’ must be
construed in their legal or technical sense which is
different from their popular meaning. Charity is a word of
art, of precise and technical meaning and an exhaustive
definition of charity in the legal sense has never been
attempted. The cases in which the question of charity has
come before the Courts are legion, and not all the
decisions, even of the highest authority, are easy to
reconcile.
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In England, the locus classicus on the subject is the
decision of Lord Macnaghten in Commissioner for Special
Purposes of Income-tax v. Pemsel decided in the House of
Lords. In that case Lord Macnaghten, after explaining that
no doubt the popular meanings of the words ’charity’ and
’charitable’ do not coincide with their legal meaning, but
when used in such expressions as ’charitable uses’
’charitable trust’ or ’charitable purposes’, the word has a
well-settled technical meaning, observed:
" ’Charity’ in its legal sense comprises four
principal divisions: trusts for the relief of poverty;
trusts for the advancement of education; trusts for the
advancement of religion; and trusts for other purposes
beneficial to the community not falling under any of
the preceding heads."
The fourth head of this classification has been the subject
of much discussion in cases in England. In some of them it
has been held to be synonymous with ’philanthropic’, while
in others it has been given a narrower meaning. In Re.
Macduff(2) it was held that while a charitable purpose may
well be a purpose of general utility, all purposes of
general utility cannot be deemed to be charitable. It was
observed that the words ’public utility’ are so large that
they comprehend purposes which are not charitable. This view
was affirmed on appeal, and with regard to Pemsel’s case
Lord Justice Lindley observed:
"I am certain that Lord Macnaghten did not mean to
say that every object of public general utility must
necessarily be. charitable. Some may be and some may
not be."
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The fourth head of Lord Macnaghten’s four-fold
classification is vague because of its generality, I do not
think much useful purpose would be served by referring to
the other English cases dealing with the subject, or in
attempting to reconcile the dicta of eminent Judges
contained in some of them.
It will be sufficient for our present purposes to say
that the Indian Legislature while enacting the Act of 1922
appears to have steered clear of these difficulties by using
phraseology which is much wider and more comprehensive than
that of Lord Macnaghten’s fourth head of classification. It
was in 1896 that Lord Lindley and other Law Lords held in
Macduff’s case that the words "general public utility were
very wide in their scope, that every object of public
utility was not necessarily a charitable purpose’, and yet
22 years later in 1918.
125
when the Explanation to s. 4 (3) of the Income-tax Act, 1922
was placed on the statute book, the Indian Legislature while
practically adopting Lord Macnaghten’s phraseology in
enumerating the first three heads of the definition,
described the fourth as ’advancement of other objects of
general public utility, without any restriction or
qualification whatever. The Courts, therefore, felt it their
duty to give full effect to the plain meaning of the words
used in s. 4(3) of the Act of 1922.
In s. 4(3) the Legislature deliberately refrained from
qualifying in any way the words "any other object of general
public utility", and there was nothing in the context which
indicated that it was intended to give them a restricted
meaning. It was, therefore, not open to the Courts or other
authorities whose duty it was to interpret the section, to
cut down the plain and comprehensive meaning of the words
used, simply because they would give to the expression
"charitable purpose" a meaning which is hot in accord with
popular notions.
In re. The Trustees of the Tribune (supra) the Privy
Council held that the object of supplying State with an
organ of educated public opinion was an object of public
utility, and it was a charitable object, in the absence of a
motive of private profit, even though the newspaper charged
its readers and advertisers at ordinary commercial rates.
The case established that under the Act of 1922, the
charitable institutions which carried out trade at a profit
was exempt in respect of the profits, provided the
institution was held on a charitable trust and the profits
were and could be applied only to the charitable purposes of
the institution.
The result of this and other similar decisions was that
a charitable institution could escape the payment of tax on
income earned from business provided it could be shown that
the money was spent for an "object of general public
utility". Exemption from income-tax of the income of
charitable trusts provides opportunities for tax avoidance.
The fact that some of charitable trusts are created for the
purpose of evasion or avoidance of tax is virtually endemic,
an unmitigated well-known evil.
The question of tax avoidance through formation of
charitable and religious trusts has been engaging the
attention of the Government for quite some time. Before
coming into force of the Income-tax Act, 1961, s. 4(3) (i)
of the Act of 1922 governed exemption of income of
charitable trusts. H
The definition of the expression "charitable purpose"
in s. 2 (15) of the Act is different from the definition of
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that expression in s.4
126
(3) (i) of the Act of 1922. The words "not involving the
carrying on of any activity for profit" were inserted in the
Act of 1961 at the Select Committee stage. The Committee was
of the opinion that the definition of "charitable purpose"
needed a change to eliminate the tax avoidance device in-
built in it. It first considered the insertion of the words
"other than the furtherance of an undertaking for commercial
profit", after the sentence "any other object of general
public utility", but subsequently this was changed to "not
involving the carrying on of any activity for profit" and
thus the changed definition of "charitable purpose" in s. 2
(15) of the present Act was brought in. The main object was
to take away the element of ’business’ from ’charity’.
The then Finance Minister while introducing the Bill
had said.
"The definition of ’charitable purpose’, in that
clause is at present so widely worded that it can be
taken advantage of even by commercial concerns which,
while ostensibly serving a public purpose, get fully
paid from the benefits provided by them, namely, the
newspaper industry which while running its concern on
commercial lines can claim that by circulating
newspapers it was improving the general know ledge of
the public. In order to prevent the misuse of this
definition in such cases, the Select Committee felt
that the a; words ’not involving the carrying on of any
activity for profit’ should be added to the
definition."
The words "not involving the carrying on of any
activity for profit have changed the picture completely, and
the decision of the Privy Council in Trustees of the Tribune
(supra) and Spinners’ Association (supra) as well as that of
this Court in Radhaswami Satsang Sabha (supra), J. K. Trust
v. C.I.T. and C.I.T. v. Andhra Chamber of Commerce(o) are
now of academic interest only. Parliament by introducing
these words have not only curtailed the scope of the fourth
head of charity, ’advancement of any other object of general
public utility’, but also left little room for the tax-
payers to manoeuvre the diversion of their business profits
to charity.
Even assuming that the dominant object is the promotion
or advancement of any other object of general public
utility’, if it involves any activity for profit, i.e., any
business or commercial activity, then it ceases to be a
"charitable purpose" within the meaning of s. 2 (15). In
that event, the profits derived from such business
127
are not liable to exemption under s. 11 (1) read with s. 2
(15). The A concept of ’profits to feed the charity’ is also
of no avail. That is because the concept of profits to feed
the charity’ can only arise under the first three heads of
’charitable purpose’ as defined in s. 2 (15) of the Act,
i.e., "relief of the poor ", "education" and "medical
relief", but they are not germane insofar as the fourth head
is concerned, viz., "the advancement of any other object of
general public utility". If the fulfillment of an object of
general public utility is dependent upon any activity for
profit, it ceases to be a charitable purpose.
This Court in Loka Shikshana Trust (supra) and Indian
Chamber of Commerce (supra) has had occasion to deal with
the legal significance of the words "not involving the
carrying on of any activity for profit" added to the
definition of "charitable purpose as contained in s 2 (15)
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of the Act. After referring to the Finance Minister’s speech
it observed that the amended provision was directed at a
change of law as it was declared by the Privy Council in
Trustees of the Tribune (supra).
The case of Loka Shikshana Trust first brought out the
legislative intent. This was a typical case of an abuse of
the tax exemption given to charitable institutions that
brought about a change in the law. It was a case of a trust
constituted by a person who appointed himself the sole
trustee with absolute discretion and the entire activity of
the trust was in fact that of running a wide circulation
newspaper. It was claimed that the mere act of printing and
publishing and circulating a newspaper was tantamount to
carrying out the charitable object of education. By claiming
exemption of tax, the trust funds had over the years,
swelled from about Rs. 4,000/- to nearly Rs. 2 lakhs. During
the assessment year in question, the total receipts of the
trust were of the tune of Rs. 22 lakhs. It was entirely a
commercial activity and there was not even a semblance of
spending any part of the income on the object of education
by way of granting scholarships or providing means of
education and so on.
The Court laid down that if the object of the
charitable trust is advancement of any object of general
public utility, any income derived by it from any activity
for profit, will not be entitled to exemption under s. 11 of
the Act, having regard to the words "not involving the
carrying on of any activity for profit", introduced in the
definition of the term ’charitable purpose’ as contained in
s. 2 (15).
Khanna J., speaking for the Court, pointed out that as
a result of the addition of the words "not involving the
carrying on of any activity for profit", at the end of the
definition in s. 2(15) of the
128
Act, even if the purpose of the trust is "advancement of any
other object of general public utility", it would not be
considered to be "charitable purpose" unless it is shown
that the advancement of such object does not involve the
carrying on of any activity for profit, saying
"It is also difficult to subscribe to the view
that the newly added words "not involving the carrying
on of any activity for profit" merely qualify and
affirm what was the position as it obtained under the
definition given in the Act of 1922. If the legislature
intended that the concept of charitable purpose should
be the same under the Act of 1961, as it was in the Act
of 1922, there was no necessity for it to add the new
words in the definition. The earlier definition did not
involve any ambiguity and the position in law was clear
and admitted of no doubt after the pronouncement of the
Judicial Committee in the cases of Tribune and All
India Spinners’ Association. If despite that fact the
legislature added new words in the definition of
charitable purpose, it would be contrary to all rules
of construction to ignore the impact of the newly added
words and to so construe the definition as if the newly
added words were either not there or were intended to
be otiose and redundant."
Beg J., who delivered a separate but concurring
judgment, while discussing the scope of s. 2 (15), observed:
"As a rule, if the terms of the trust permit its
operation ’for profit’, they became, prima facie,
evidence of a purpose falling outside charity. They
would indicate the object of profit making unless and
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until it is shown that the terms of the trust compel
the trustee to utilise the profits of business also for
charity. This means that the test introduced by the
amendment is: Does the purpose of a trust restrict
spending the income of a profitable activity
exclusively or primarily upon what is "charity" in law
? If the profits must necessarily feed a charitable
purpose, under the terms of the trust, the mere fact
that the activities of the trust yield profit will not
alter the charitable character of the trust. The test
now is, more clearly then in the past, the genuineness
of the purpose tested by the obligatory created to
spend the money exclusively or essentially on
’charity’. li that obligation is there, the income
becomes entitled to exemption. That in our opinion, is
the most reliable test."
129
These observations of Beg J. were in the nature of an obiter
dictum, as on facts he held the trust in that case to be
actually engaged in activity for profit. I shall, however,
deal with the observations later as they create some
difficulty.
The matter was put beyond the pale of controversy by
the Court in Indian Chamber of Commerce (supra). The
assessee was a Chamber of Commerce. Its objects were to
promote and protect trade interests and other allied service
operations falling within the expression the advancement of
any other object of general public utility". The Chamber
deriv d income from (i) arbitration fees levied by it, (ii)
fees collected for issuing certificates of origin, and (iii)
share in the profits made by issuing certificates of
weighment and measurement. The question was whether tile
activates of the Chamber being activities carried on for
profit, in the absence of any restriction in its memorandum
and articles of association against the making of profit
from such activities the income of the Chamber from those
activities was liable to income-tax or was exempt from
income-tax under s. 11 read with s. 2(15). D
Krishna Iyer, J., speaking on behalf of himself, Gupta
and Fazal Ali J.T., referred to the legislative history, the
evil sought to be remedied, and the speech of the Finance
Minister, which gave the "true reason for the remedy", said:
"The obvious change as between the old and the new
definitions is the exclusionary provision introduced in
the last few words. The history which compelled this
definitional modification was the abuse. to which the
charitable disposition the statute to charitable
purposes was subjected, by exploiting businessman. You
create a charity, earn exemption from the taxing
provision and run big industries virtually enjoying the
profits with a seeming veneer of charity, a situation
which exsuscitated Parliament and constrained it to
engraft a clause deprivatory of the exemption in the
institution fulfilling charitable purposes undertook.
activities for profit and thus sought to hoodwink the
statute. The Finance Minister’s speech in the House
explicates the reason for the restrictive condition."
(Emphasis supplied)
He lamented the legislative obscurity in the definition of
charitable purpose in s. 2(15) of tho Act but observed that
the Court must adopt a construction which advances the
legislative intent, stating:
"The evil sought to be abolished is thus clear.
The inter pretation of the provision must naturally
fall in line with the advancement of the object."
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130
The whole object of adding the words "not involving the
carrying on of any activity for profit" at the end of the
definition of ’charitable purpose’ in s. 2(15), in the words
of Krishna Iyer J., was:
"This expression, defined in section 2(15), is a
term of art and embraces object of general public
utility. But, under cover of charitable purposes, a
crop of camouflaged organisations sprung up. The mask
was charitable, but the heart was hunger for tax-free
profit. When Parliament found this dubious growth of
charitable chemelsons, the definition in section 2(15)
was altered to suppress the mischief by qualifying the
broad object of "general public utility" with the
additive "not involving the carrying on of any activity
for profit. The core of the dispute before us is
whether this intentional addition of a "cut back"
clause expels the chamber from the tax exemption zone
in respect of the triune profit-fetching sub-
enterprises undertaken by way of service or facility
for the trading community."
A realistic line of reasoning, according to him, is to
interpret ’charitable purpose" in such a manner that ’we do
not burke any word’, ’treat any expression as redundant’ or
’miss the accent of the amandatory phrase’. He struck a note
of warning regarding the ’possibility of obscurity’ and
’dual meanings’ by shifting of emphasis from ’advancement’
to ’object’ used in s. 2(15). The emphasis is not on the
object of public utility and the carrying on of related
activity for profit. On the other hand, if in the
advancement of these objects, the trust resorts to carrying
on of activities for profit, then necessarily s. 2(15)
cannot confer cover. The advancement of charitable objects
must not involve profit-making activities. That according to
him, is the mandate of the new law. In reaching that
conclusion he observes:
"In our view, ll e ingredients essential to earn
freedom from tax are discernible from the definition,
if insightfully, actually read against the brooding
presence of the evil to be suppressed and the
beneficial object to be served. The policy of the
statute is to give tax relief for charitable purpose,
but what falls outside the page of charitable purpose
’? The institution must confine itself to the carrying
on of activities which are not for profit. It is not
enough if the object be one of general public utility.
The attainment of that object shall not involve
activities for profit "
In conclusion, he sums up the legislative intent, saying:
"To sum up, section 2(15) excludes from exemption
the carrying on of activities for profit even if they
are linked with
131
the objectives of general public utility, because the
statute interdicts, for purpose of tax relief, the
advancement of such objects by involvement in the
carrying on of activities for profit."
The dictionary meaning of the word "involve" is "to
envelop, to entangle, to include, to contain, to imply":
Shorter oxford Dictionary, 3rd ed., p. 1042. The word
"involve" thus contemplates the advancement of the object of
general public utility being sought to be achieved by
carrying on of an activity for profit. That conclusion is
inevitable on a proper analysis of the two decisions. In
Loka Shikshana Trust, the object of the trust could not be
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achieved without carrying on the business of publication of
newspapers. In Indian Chamber of Commerce, the income from
fees from arbitration or fees for issuing certificates of
weighment and measurement, might have been conceived as part
of its objects of assisting trade and commerce. If the
profit-making activity is thus the appointed means of
achieving a charitable object of general public utility,
then, the profit would be taxable. At p. 803 of the Report,
Krishna Iyer J., speaking for the Bench, held that "by the
new definition, the benefit of exclusion from the total
income is taken away where in accomplishing a charitable
purpose the institution engaged itself in activities for
profit". A reading of s. 2(15) and s. 11 together shows that
what is frowned upon is an activity for profit by a charity
established for advancement of an object of general public
utility the course of accomplishing its objects.
These being the principles upon which exemption of
income derived from property held under trust by an object
of general public utility under s. ll(l) read with s. 2(15)
can be claimed, it is clearly inconsistent with them to hold
that if the dominant or primary purpose was ’charity’, it
was permissible for such an, object of general public
utility, to augment its income by engaging in trading or
commercial activity. That would be clearly against the whole
scheme of the Act. I need hardly say that, if the altered
definition of ’charitable purpose’ in s. 2(15) were to be
applied, according to the well-known canons of
construction, no such point would for a moment be arguable.
There can be no doubt that Parliament wanted to bring about
a change in the law to prevent tax avoidance by diversion of
business profits to pseudo charities. Surely, it cannot be
said that Parliament did not mean what it intended to
achieve, by introducing the restrictive words "not involving
the carrying on of any activity for profit". It clearly
meant to prevent tax-free profits from being ploughed back
in business. But it is said that the law is different; and
the point upon which the case
132
must turn cannot be more distinctly put that was put by Beg
J. in his judgment in Loka Shikshana Trust.
The observations of Beg J. have given rise to a
controversy that the condition that the purpose should not
involve the carrying on of any activity for profit would be
satisfied if profit-making is not the real object; and that
if the terms of the trust permit the carrying on of business
activity for profit it would prima facie indicate the object
of profit-making unless those terms indicate the real object
to be charitable by compelling the trustees to utilize the
business profit for charity. This is contrary to what Khanna
and Gupta JJ. stated. While they observed that ’if the terms
of the trust do not impose restrictions on profit-making,
the court would be well justified in assuming. In the
absence of some indication to the contrary, that the object
of the trust involved the carrying oil of an activity for
profit. To quote again, Beg J. Observed: "If the profits
must necessarily feed a charitable purpose, under the terms
of the trust, the mere fact that the activities of the trust
yield profit will not alter the charitable character of the
trust". On the basis of the observations of Beg J. it is,
asserted that the test now is, more clearly than in the
past, the genuineness of the purpose tested by the
obligation created to spend the money exclusively or
essentially on ’charity’. It is stated that despite the
addition of the words "not involving the carrying on of any
activity for profit" in s. 2(15) of the Art, there is a
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distinction between (a) a business being held under trust
where profits feed a charity in which case the income of
such trust would be wholly exempt, and (b) the carrying on
of a business in carrying out what is conceived as a
charitable purpose in which case the income may be taxable.
It is said that the distinction is fine, but must be kept in
view. The so-called distinction, in my opinion, is without
any basis whatever. It runs counter to the very abject and
purpose of the legislation.
Under the existing provisions, if the object of purpose
of a trust is relief of the poor, education or medical
relief, the trust can carry on an activity for profit
provided it is in the course of carrying out the primary
object of the trust. However, if the object of the trust is
advancement of an object of general public utility and it
carried on. any activity for profit, it is excluded from the
ambit of charitable purpose defined in s. 2(15). The
distinction is clearly brought out by the provision
contained in s. 13(1)(bb) inserted by Tax Laws (Amendment)
Act. 1975, which provides that in case of a charitable trust
or institution for the relief of the poor, education or
medical relief, which carries on any business,, any income
derived from such business, unless the business is carried
on in the course of the actual carrying out of a
133
primary purpose of the trust or institution shall not be
excluded from the total income of the previous year.
It seems that the attention of Beg J. in Loka Shikshana
Trust (supra) was not drawn to the fact that he was dealing
with a case falling under the fourth head of charity
"advancement of any other object of general public utility",
the ambit of which was restricted by the qualifying clause
"not involving the carrying on of any activity for profit",
aud, therefore, there was no occasion for him to observe,
"if the profits must necessarily feed a charitable purpose,
under the terms of the trust, the mere fact that the
activities of the trust yield profit will not alter the
charitable character of the trust". These considerations can
only arise under the first three heads of charity viz.,
’relier of the poor’, ’education’ and ’medical relief’
In C.I.T. Kerala v. Dharmoddyam Co.,(1) Dharmaposhanam
Co. v. C.I.T., Kerala(2) and Dharmadipti v. C.I.T.,
Kerala(3) the Court had occasion to deal with the definition
of ’charitable purpose’ in s. 2(15). In Dharmodayam, the
finding of the Kerala High Court was that the kuri business
was itself held under trust or religious or charitable
purpose, and therefore, the Court observed:
"lt is a necessary implication of this finding
that the business activity was not undertaken by the
respondent in order to advance any object of general
public utility. It, therefore did not become necessary
to enquire whether conducting the kuri business
involved the carrying on of my activity for profit, in
as much as the income derived by the assessee from the
kuries was exempt from tax under s. 11(1) (a)."
In Dharposhanam, it was held that the income from the,
business of conducting, kuries and money lending fell under
the residual general head ’any other object of general
public utility’ and being carried on or profit could not be
regarded as charitable purpose under s. 2(15). In
Dharmadipti, the Court came to a contrary conclusion because
the income from the kuri business was derived from a
business held under trust for charitable purposes. In all
these cases, there was nonfulfillment of one condition or
the other, i.e., either the business was not held under
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trust or being an object of general public utility was
engaged in an activity for profit.
With respect, I venture to say that if an object of
general public utility is engaged in an activity for profit,
it ceases
134
to be a charitable purpose and, therefore, the income is not
exempt under 6. 11(i) (a). In case of a trust falling under
any of the first three heads of charity, viz., ’relief of
the poor’, ’education’ and ’medical relief’ it may engage in
any activity for profit, and the profits would not be
taxable if they were utilized for the primary object of the
trust. In other words, the business carried on by them is
incidental or ancillary to the primary object viz., relief
of the poor, education and medical relief. To illustrate, a
charitable hospital holding buildings on trust may run a
nursing home. The profits of the nursing home owned and run
by the trust will be exempt under s. 11(4), because the
business is carried on by the trust in the course of the
actual carrying out of the primary purpose of the trust. The
concept of ’profits to feed the charity’, therefore, is
applicable only to the first three heads of charity and not
the fourth. It would be illogical and, indeed, difficult to
apply the same consideration to institutions which are
established for charitable purposes of any object of general
public utility. Any profit-making activity linked with an
object of general public utility would be taxable. The
theory of the dominant or primary object of the trust
cannot, therefore, be projected into the fourth head of
charity, viz., ’advancement of any other object of general
public utility’, so as to make the carrying on of a business
activity merely ancillary or incidental to the main object.
In fact, if any other view to prevail, it would lead to
an alarming result detrimental to the revenue. The whole
object of inserting the restrictive words ’not involving the
carrying on of any activity for profit’ in the stricter
definition of ’charitable purpose’ in s. 2(15) to make the
range of favoured activity less flexible than it had been
hitherto before i.e., to prevent big business houses from
siphoning of a substantial portion of their income in the
name of charity, would be defeated. The danger of permitting
diversion of business profits, which was sought to be
prevented by Parliament is but apparent. In my opinion, the
restrictive words ’not involving the carrying on of any
activity for profit’ in the definition of ’charitable
purpose’ in s.2(15) of the Income-tax Act, 1961 must be
given their due weight. Otherwise, it would have the effect
of admitting to the benefits of exemption the fourth
indeterminate class viz., objects of general public utility
engaged in activity for profit contrary to the plain words
of s.2(15).
Modern legislation has changed in pattern towards re-
casting taxes and provisions with very wide language, while
at the same time dealing in much more detail with some crees
of law. Judges,
135
in part, responding to general trends of law, but also
reacting to A the farm of modern tax legislation, must be
prepared to take account of the context and purposes of the
change brought about.(1) Most Judges, in dealing with tax
legislation, have refused to engage in what Megarry J. calls
"a bout of speculative judicial legislation" to cut down the
wide words of the statute: Inland Revenue Commissioner v.
Brown.(2) In Harrison v. Nairn Williamson(3) Goulding J.
Observes:
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"The way I have to approach this pure question of
verbal interpretation is, I think, to give the words
used by Parliament their ordinary meaning in the
English language, and if, consistently with ordinary
meaning, there is a choice between two alternative
interpretations, then to prefer the construction that
maintains a reasonable and consistent scheme of
taxation without distorting the language."
Both the Judge’s conclusion, and his reasoning, were
adopted expressly in the Court of Appeal, where the Court
was exercised by the fact that the taxpayer’s interpretation
of the section in question might lead to a most obvious way
of tax evasion. This attitude was rejected earlier by
Megarry J. in the following comment: ’There is high
authority for saying that it scarcely lies in the mouth of
the taxpayer who plays with fire to complain of burnt
fingers’ Reeves v. Evans Boyce and Northcott Syndicate(4)
Lord Justice Sellers in F. S. Securities v. I.R.C.(6) also
found that "enrichment without any service to the community
and without taxation is hard to countenance". Lord Reid in
Greeberg v. I.R.C.(6) voices the same concern about the
prevailing attitude to tax statutes, saying:
"Parliament is very properly determined to prevent
this kind of tax evasion, and if the courts find it
impossible to give very wide meanings to general
phrases the only alter native may be for Parliament to
do as some other countries have done and introduce
legislation of a more sweeping character."
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It is legitimate to look at the state of law prevailing
leading to the legislation so as to see what was the
mischief at which the Act was directed. This Court has on
many occasions taken judicial notice of such matters as the
reports of parliamentary committees, and of such other facts
as must be assumed to have been within the contemplation of
the legislature when the Acts in question were passed. In
C.I.T., M.P. & Bhopal v. Sodre Devi(1) the question before
the Court was as to the construction of s. 16(3) of the
Income-tax Act, 1922. After finding that the word
’individual’ occurring in the aforesaid sub-section was
ambiguous, Bhagwati J. observed: "In order to resolve this
ambiguity therefore we must of necessity have resort to the
state of law before the enactment of the provisions, the
mischief and the defect for which the law did not provide;
the remedy which the legislature resolved and appointed to
cure the defect; and, the true reason for the remedy."
The then prevailing law relating to exemption of income
of charitable trusts contained several loopholes. The Law
Commission in its Twelfth Report felt the need to eliminate
the tax avoidance device in-built in the definition of
’charitable purpose’ in s. 4(3) of the Act of 1922, by
insertion of an Explanation to the effect:
"Explanation: In this sub-section ’property’ does
not include ’business’."
The Direct Taxes Administration Enquiry Committee in
their report (1958-59) observed as follows:
"The existing provisions relating to exemption of
the income of charitable trusts under Section 4(3) (i)
of the Income-tax Act contain certain loopholes which
help the formation of pseudo charitable trusts."
"Another wide loophole rests in the interpretation
of the word ’property’, whereunder a trust could carry
on business which had nothing to do with the primary
object of the trust itself and still yet exemption in
respect of the income from this business. Courts have
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held that business can also be ’property’, held under
trust. Certain amendments in Section 4(3) (i) of the
Income-tax Act were made through the Indian Income-tax
(Amendment) Act, 1953 to try to ensure that income of a
’charitable’ business got e exemption only if the
business was carried on behalf of a religious and
charitable institution and was carried on in
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the course of implementing a primary purpose of the
institution or the work of the business was mainly done
by the beneficiaries of the institution. This was done
by adding proviso (b) to Section 4(3) (i) of the Indian
Income-tax Act. That proviso says that the income
derived from property held under trust for religious or
charitable shall not be exempt and shall consequently
be included in the total income."
"Courts have, however, taken the view that the
above two conditions (in the proviso) for getting
exemption apply only where business is carried on
behalf of a religious or charitable institution and not
where the business itself is held upon trust, and that
as such the income of such a business would still be
entitled to exemption under the substantive part of
Section 4(3) (i) despite nonfulfillment of the
conditions set out in the proviso."
Adopting the recommendation of the Select Committee,
Parliament inserted the words "not involving the carrying on
of any activity for profit" in the definition of the
expression ’charitable purpose’ in s. 2(15) of the Act.
The report of the Public Accounts Committee made a
comprehensive study of the problem and indicated the
magnitude of avoidance of tax through formation of
charitable trusts, and considered whether the words ’not
involving the carrying on of any activity for profit’ should
be deleted, but recommended against its deletion.
The Direct Taxes Enquiry Committee (otherwise know as
the Wanchoo Committee) considered the question whether the
restriction of trusts in the matter of engaging in
activities for profit should be removed and made the
following recommendations.
"It is in this background that we address
ourselves to the question as to whether religious or
charitable trusts enjoying tax exemption should be
permitted to carry on any activity for profit.
Indubitably, engagement in activity for profit by such
trusts provides scope for manipulations for tax
avoidance. We, however, consider that it will not be
desirable to ban an activity for profit which arises in
the pursuit of the primary purpose of a trust created
with the object of relief of the poor, education or
medical relief. For instance, 10-868SCI/79
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in the case of a trust for vocational training, it
would be essential for the trust to carry on its
vocation. We, there. fore, recommend that law should be
suitably amended to provide that where a trust for the
religion of the poor, education or medical relief
derives income from any activity for profit, its income
would be exempt from income-tax only if the said
activity for profit is carried on in the course of the
actual carrying out of a primary purpose of the
institution. We wish to make it abundantly clear that
even where a business is settled in trust, the trust
should fulfil this condition if it is to enjoy tax
exemption in respect of the income from such business.
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So far as trusts for any other object of general public
utility are concerned, pursuit of any activity for
profit should continue to render them ineligible for
tax exemption.
The Direct Taxes Laws Committee in Chapter 2 (Interim
Report, December 1977) on charitable trusts considered the
question whether the above expression in the definition
should be deleted and recommended the deletion of the above
expression stating:
"We have received a large number of
representations on the hardship caused as a result of
the total banning of activity for profit so far as
trusts having the fourth category objects are
concerned. It has been pointed out that activities for
;. profit are essentially fund-raising in nature,
without which charities cannot exist. We find
considerable substance in these representations. We are
aware that some trusts have abused the provisions
enabling them to carry on business ’ I and that,
sometimes, expansion or consolidation of business is by
itself, sought to be justified as furtherance of
charity. such abuses would particularly arise where a
business is merely held by a charitable trust as
property unconnected with the objects of charity. The
remedy, in our opinion, lies in the direction of proper
enforcement of the provisions relating to application
of trust funds for charitable purposes and not of
totally banning all activities for profit. Moreover, it
is noticed that charitable trusts generally have
objects falling under all the four categories. Very
often, a trust has come into difficulties on account of
a single object under the fourth category, even though
all the important objects fall under the first three
categories. We, therefore,
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recommend deletion of the words "not involving the
carrying on of any activity for profit" occurring in
section 2(15)."
The Government, however, has not accepted the
recommendation. I fail to comprehend when the recommendation
has not been acted upon by the Government by suitable
legislation, how can this Court by a process of judicial
construction achieve the same result.
Fears expressed at the Bar that this harsh measure
enacted by, Parliament has shrivelled and dried up many
genuine charities, does not take into account that it had to
step in when the tax exemptions available to charitable and
religious trusts started being misused for the unworthy
purposes of tax avoidance. The law has been so re-
structured to prevent allergy to taxation masquerading as
charity. It cannot be disputed that many business houses
have abused the provision relating to exemption from tax by
carrying on activities for profit as a means for expansion
and consolidation of business, which was sought to be
justified as in furtherance of charity, i.e., charity became
big business. Now, the law is designed to prevent this
misuse of tax exemption in the name of charity. It is not
the function of a court of law to give the words a strained
and unnatural meaning. It may be that many genuine
charitable trusts promoting objects of general public
utility are severely affected and are caught in-between the
two extremes. But this call for a change in the law. I am
only reiterating what has been said over and over again in
deal with taxing Acts. In Cape Brandy Syndicate v. Inland
Revenue Commissioner(l) the principle was formulated and
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stated by Rowlat J. in his own terse language:
"In a taxing Act one has merely to look at what is
clearly said. There is no room for any intendment.
There is no equity about a tax. There is no presumption
as to a tax. Nothing is to be read in, nothing is to be
implied. one can only look fairly at the language
used."
In Inland Revenue Commissioner v. Ross & Coulter(’)
Lord Thanketro in describing ’the harsh consequences of a
taxing provision’ said:
"..If the meaning of the provision is reasonably
clear, the courts have no jurisdiction to mitigate such
harshness."
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The judicial attitudes cannot be formed in isolation
from Legislative processes, particularly in connection with
Tax avoidance provisions.
I would, accordingly, answer the references in favour
of the Revenue and against the assessee. The Commissioner
will be entitled to his costs.
P.B.R.
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