Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
G. VENKATASWAMI NAIDU & CO.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE COMM1SSIONER OF INCOME-TAX
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
24/11/1958
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
SARKAR, A.K.
CITATION:
1959 AIR 359 1959 SCR Supl. (1) 646
CITATOR INFO :
F 1959 SC1252 (7,9,14,15)
RF 1961 SC1062 (7)
R 1962 SC1141 (6)
R 1962 SC1267 (14)
R 1965 SC1898 (9)
R 1968 SC 683 (9)
F 1968 SC 788 (5,7)
F 1968 SC 811 (3)
R 1969 SC 460 (6)
RF 1969 SC1053 (4)
R 1970 SC1560 (9)
R 1971 SC 794 (12)
RF 1975 SC2106 (11,16)
R 1976 SC2150 (3,7,10)
RF 1986 SC1695 (21)
ACT:
Income Tax-Income from isolated transactions--" Adventure in
the nature of trade "-Business income-Indian Income Tax Act,
1922 (XI Of 1922), SS. 2(4), 10.
Reference to High Court-Transaction, whether or not an
adventure in the nature of trade-Mixed question of law and
fact-Indian-Income-tax Act,1922 (XI of 1922),s.66(1)
HEADNOTE:
The appellant, who was a firm acting as managing agents of a
limited company (the Mills), purchased four plots of land
adjoining the Mills on various dates between 1941 and 1942,
and about five years later sold them to the Mills, as a
result. of which the appellant realised a sum of Rs. 43,887
in excess of the purchase price, For the assessment year.
1948-49 the Income tax Officer treated the amount as the
income. of the appellant ’and assessed it to income-tax
under head ’business’, on the ground that there was no
evidence to show that the appellant had purchased the said
lands for agricultural purposes or that they were acquired
as an investment, and, that since the lands: were adjacent
to the Mills the appellant must have- purchased them solely
with a view to sell them to the Mills; with. profit. ’He
considered that the transaction’ had---;ill the elements of
a business transaction’ and was thus an adventure in the,
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natural of ’trade within s. 2(4)of the Indian Income-tax Act
7 The Appellate, Tribunal rejected the explanation given by
the appellate ’regarding" the object with which it had
purchased the plots of land agreed
641
with the view taken by the Income-tax Officer. At the
instance of the appellant the Tribunal referred to the High
Court the question: " whether there was material for the
assessment of the sum of. Rs. 43 87 being the difference
between the purchase and sale price of the four plots of
land as income from all adventure in the nature of trade.
The High Court held that’ the transaction in question was an
adventure in the nature of trade and so the income-tax
authorities were justified in taxing the amount under the
head ’business’ for the relevant year. On appeal by special
leave to the Supreme Court, it was contend ed for the
appellant that on the facts and circumstances of the case it
was erroneous in law to hold that the transaction ill
question was an adventure in the nature of trade. On the
other hand, it was urged for the respondent that the
question as raised before the High Court was one of fact not
liable to be challenged under s. 66(1) of the Act.
Held, (1) that the expression " adventure in the nature of
trade " in sub-s. (4) Of S. 2 of the Indian Income-tax Act,
1922, postulates the existence of certain elements in the
adventure which in law would invest it with the character of
trade or business and that a tribunal while considering a
question as to whether a transaction is or is not an
adventure in the nature of trade, before arriving at its
final conclusion on facts, has to address itself to the
legal requirements associated with the concept of trade or
business. Such a question is one of mixed law and fact and
the decision of the tribunal thereon is open to
consideration under s. 66(1) of the Act.
Meenakshi Mills, Madurai v. Commissioner of Income-tax,
Madras, [1956] S.C.R. 691 and Oriental Investment Co., Ltd.
v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay, [1958] S.C.R. 49,
relied on.
Edwards v. Bairstow [1956] A.C. 14, considered and held not
inconsistent with the above said decisions.
2) that in the circumstances of this case it would be more
appropriate to frame the question in this from: " whether,
on the facts and circumstances proved in the case, the
inference that the transaction in question is an adventure
in the nature of trade is in law justified."
Held, further, that even an isolated transaction might be
regarded as an adventure in the nature of trade within S.
2(4) Of the Act, if it is characterised by some of the
essential features that make up trade or business.
Though judicial decisions which deal with the character of
transactions alleged to be in the nature of trade do not
purport to lay down any general or universal test, the
presence of all the relevant circumstances, mentioned
by..them my help the court to draw a similar inference, but
it is not a matter of merely counting the number of facts
and circumstances pro and con; it is the total effect of all
the relevant factors and circumstances that determine the
distinctive character of the transactions
648
If a person invests money in land intending to hold it,
enjoys its income for some time, and then sells it at a
profit,then it is a case of capital accretion and not profit
derived from an adventure in the nature of trade. But where
a purchase has been made solely and exclusively with the
intention to resell at a profit and the purchaser had no
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intention of holding the property for himself or otherwise
enjoying or using it, there would be a strong presumption
that the transaction is an adventure in the nature of trade;
but this may be rebutted by the other facts or circumstances
of the case.
The Californian Copper Syndicate (Limited and Reduced) v.
Harris (Surveyor of Taxes), (1904) 5 Tax Cas. 159; T. Beynon
JUDGMENT:
lnland Revenue v. Livingston, (1926) 11 Tax Cas. 538; Martin
v. Lowry, (1926) 11 Tax Cas 297; Rutledge v. Commissioners
of Inland Revenue, (1929) 14 Tax Cas. 490; Balgownie Land
Trust, Ltd. v. The Commissioners of Inland Revenue, (1929)
14 Tax Cas. 684; F. A. Lindsay, A. E. Woodward and W. Hiscox
v. Commissioners of Inland Revenue, (1932) 18 Tax Cas. 43
and Cayzer, Irvine and Co., Ltd. v. Commissioners of Inland
Revenue, (1942) 24 Tax Cas. 491, considered.
Commissioners of Inland Revenue v. Reinhold, (1953) 34 Tax
Cas. 389, distinguished and considered as not laying down
any general proposition of law.
In the present case, the circumstances showed that the
appellant whose ordinary business was not to make investment
in lands had purchased the plots of land with the sole
intention of selling them to the Mills at a profit and this
intention raised a strong presumption that the purchase and
the subsequent sale were an adventure in the nature of
trade; and, it was held that in the absence of any rebutting
evidence, the Income-tax authorities were justified in
taxing the amount in question as income from business.
&
Civil APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No.
709 of 1957.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
April 18, 1955, of the Madras High Court in Case Referred
No. 25 of 1952.
A. V. Viswanatha Sastri and M. S. K. Sastri, for the
appellant.
"M. C. Setalvad, Attorney-General for India, R, Ganapathy
Iyer, R. H. Dhebar and D. Gupta, for the respondent.
1958. November.24. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
649
GAJENDRAGADKAR, J.-The appellant is a firm acting as
managing agents of the Janardana Mills Ltd., Coimbatore. It
purchased four contiguous plots of land admeasuring 5 acres
26 cents under four sale deeds executed on October 25, 1941,
November 15, 1941, June 29, 1942, and November 19, 1942,
respectively for a total consideration of Rs. 8,712-15-6.
After about five years these properties were sold by the
appellant in two lots to the Janardana Mills Ltd. The first
lot was sold on September 1, 1947, and the second on
November 10, 1947, the total consideration for the two sales
being Rs. 52,600. These two sales realised for the
appellant a sum of Rs.43,887-0-6 in excess of the purchase
price.
The Income-tax Officer treated the said amount of Rs. 43,887
as the income of the appellant for the assessment year 1948-
49, and assessed it to income-tax under the head " business
". The officer held that there was no evidence to show that
the appellant had purchased the said lands for agricultural
purposes or that it had acquired them as an investment. He
also found that, since the lands were adjacent to the Janar-
dana Mills, the appellant must have purchased them solely
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with a view to sell them to the said mills with a profit.
That is why, though the transaction was in the nature of a
solitary transaction, it was held that it had all the
elements of a business transaction and was thus an adventure
in the nature of trade.
Against this order of assessment the appellant preferred an
appeal to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner. The
appellate authority upheld the appellant’s contention that
the amount in question was not assessable as it cannot be
hold to be income or profit resulting from a profit-making
scheme, and set aside the order under appeal.
The respondent challenged the correctness of this order by
taking an appeal against it to the Incometax Appellate
Tribunal. The tribunal agreed with the view taken by the
Income-tax Officer and held that the amount in question was
not a capital accretion but a gain made in an adventure in
the nature of business
82
650
in carrying out a scheme of profit-making. The tribunal
rejected the explanations given by the appellant as to why
it had purchased the properties and held that the purchase
had been made by the appellant solely with a view to sell
the said properties at profit to the Janardana Mills.
At the instance of the appellant the tribunal then referred
to the High Court of Madras the question suggested by it in
these words: " whether there was material for the assessment
of the sum of Rs. 43,887 being the difference between the
purchase and sale price of the four plots of land as income
from an adventure in the nature of trade ".
This reference was heard by Rajagopalan and Rajagopala
Ayyangar, JJ., and the question referred has been answered
against the appellant. The High Court has held that the
transaction in question was an adventure in the nature of
trade and so the respondent was justified in taxing the
amount in question under the head " business " for the
relevant year. The application for leave made by the
appellant was rejected by the High Court. Thereupon the
appellant applied for, and obtained, special leave to appeal
to this Court. That is how the appeal has been admitted in
this Court ; and the only question which it raises for our
decision is whether the High Court was right in holding that
the transaction in question was an adventure in the nature
of trade.
We may at this stage brie y indicate the material facts and
circumstances found by the tribunal and the inference drawn
by it in regard to the character of the transaction in
question. The appellant purchased the four plots under four
different -sale deeds. The first purchase was for Rs. 521
and it covered a piece of land admeasuring 281 cents; the
second purchase related to 2 acres 791 cents and the price
paid was Rs. 1,250; while the third and the fourth purchases
were for Rs. 1,942 and Rs. 5,000 and they covered 28 1/4
cents and 1 acre and 90 cents respectively. The property
purchased under the first sale deed was sold on November 10,
1947, for Rs. 2,825 whereas the three remaining properties
were sold on September 1, 1947,
651
for Rs. 49,775, the purchaser in both cases being the
Janardana Mills Ltd. The purchase of the first item of
property by the appellant had been made in the name of Mr.
V. G. Raja, assistant manager of the Janardana Mills Ltd.,
who is the son-in-law Of G. Venkataswami Naidu, one of the
partners of the appellant firm. Naturally when this
property was sold to the mills the document was executed by
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the ostensible owner V. G. Raja. It is not disputed that
the purchase in the name of V. G. Raja was benami for the
appellant. All the plots which were thus purchased by the
appellant piecemeal are contiguous and they adjoin the
mills. On the plot purchased on June 29, 1942, there stood
a house of six rooms which fetched an annual rent of about
Rs. 100; and after deduction of taxes, it left a net income
of Rs. 80 per year to the appellant. The other plots are
vacant sites and they brought no income to the appellant.
During the time that the appellant was in possession of
these plots it made no effort to put up any structures on
them or to cultivate them; and so it was clear that the only
object with which the appellant had purchased these plots
was to sell them to the mills at a profit. It was, however,
urged by the appellant that the properties had been bought
as an investment. This plea was rejected by the tribunal.
The tribunal likewise rejected the appellant’s case that it
had purchased the plots for building tenements for the
labourers working in the Janardana Mills. Alternatively it
was urged by the appellant that the Janardana Mills decided
to purchase the plots because’ an award passed by an
industrial tribunal in June 1947 had recommended that the
mills should provide tenements for its labourers. Thus the
appellant’s case was that it had not purchased the
properties with a view to sell them to the mills and the
mills in fact would not have purchased them but for the
recommendation made by the award which made it necessary for
the mills to purchase the adjoining plots for the purpose of
building tenements for its employees. The tribunal was not
impressed even by this plea; and so it ultimately held that
the plots had been purchased by the appellant wholly and
solely,
652
with the idea of selling them at profit to the mills. The
tribunal thought that since the appellant was the managing
agent of the mills it was in a position to influence the
decision of the mills to purchase the properties from it and
that was the sole basis for its initial purchase of the
plots. On these findings the tribunal reached the
conclusion that the sum of Rs. 43,887 was not a capital
accretion but was a gain made in the adventure in the nature
of business in carrying out the scheme of profit-making.
The appellant contends that, on the facts and circumstances
found in the cage, it is erroneous in law to hold that the
transaction in question is an adventure in the nature of
trade.
There is no doubt that the jurisdiction conferred on the
High Court by s. 66(1) is limited to entertaining references
involving questions of law. If the point raised on
reference relates to the construction of a document of title
or to the interpretation of the relevant provisions of the
statute, it is a pure question of law; and in dealing with
it, though the High Court may have due regard for the view
taken by the tribunal, its decision would not be fettered by
the said view. It is free to adopt such construction of the
document or the statute as appears to it reasonable. In
some cases, the point sought to be raised on reference may
turn out to be a pure question of fact; and if that be so,
the finding of fact recorded by the tribunal must be
regarded as conclusive in proceedings under s. 66(1). If,
however, such a finding of fact is based on an inference
drawn from primary evidentiary facts proved. in the case,
its correctness or validity is open to challenge in
reference proceedings within narrow limits. The assessee or
the revenue can contend that the inference has been drawn on
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considering inadmissible evidence or after excluding
admissible and relevant evidence; and, if the High Court is
satisfied that the inference is the result of improper
admission or exclusion of evidence, it would be justified in
examining the correctness of the conclusion. It may also be
open to the party to challenge a conclusion of fact drawn by
the tribunal on the ground that it is not supported by any
legal evidence; or that the impugned conclusion drawn
653
from the relevant facts is not rationally possible; and if
such a plea is established, the court may consider whether
the conclusion in question is not perverse and should not,
therefore, be set aside. It is within these narrow limits
that the conclusions of fact recorded by the tribunal can be
challenged under s. 66(1). Such conclusions can never be
challenged on the ground,,, that they are based on
misappreciation of evidence. There is yet a third class of
cases in which the assessee or the revenue may seek to
challenge the correctness of the conclusion reached by the
tribunal on the ground that it is a conclusion on a question
of mixed law and fact. Such a conclusion is no doubt based
upon the primary evidentiary facts, but its ultimate form is
determined by the application of relevant legal principles.
The need to apply the relevant legal principles tends to
confer upon the final conclusion its character of a legal
conclusion and that is why it is regarded as a conclusion on
a question of mixed law and fact. In dealing with findings
on questions of mixed law and fact the High Court would no
doubt have to accept the findings of the tribunal on the
primary questions of fact; but it is open to the High Court
to examine whether the tribunal had applied the relevant
legal principles correctly or not; and in that sense, the
scope of enquiry and the extent of the jurisdiction of the
High Court in dealing with such points is the same as in
dealing with pure points of law.
This question has been exhaustively considered by this Court
in Meenakshi Mills, Madurai v. Commissioner of Income-tax,
Madras (1). In this case the appellate tribunal had come to
the conclusion that certain sales entered in the books of
the appellant company in the names of certain
intermediaries, firms and companies, were fictitious and the
profits ostensibly earned by them were in fact earned by the
appellant which had itself sold the goods to the real
purchasers and received the prices. On this finding the
tribunal had ordered that the profits received from such
sales should be added to the amount shown as profits in the
appellant’s books and should be taxed. The appellant
654
applied for a reference to the tribunal under s. 66(1) and
the High Court of Madras under s. 66(2), but his application
was rejected. Then it came to this Court by special leave
under Art. 136 and it was urged on its behalf that the
tribunal had erred in law in holding that the firms and
companies described as the intermediaries were its
benamidars and that its application -for reference should
have been allowed. This plea was rejected by this Court
because it was held that the question of benami is purely a
question of fact and not a mixed question of law and fact as
it does not involve the application of any legal principles
for its determination. In dealing with the argument urged
by the appellant, this Court has fully considered the true
legal position in regard to the limitation of the High
Court’s jurisdiction in entertaining references under s.
66(1) in the light of several judicial decisions bearing on
the point. The ultimate decision of the Court on this part
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of the case was that " on principles established by
authorities only such questions as relate to one or the
other of the following matters can be questions of law under
s. 66(1): (1) the construction of a statute or a document of
title (2) the legal effect of the facts found where the
point for determination is a mixed question of law and fact;
and (3) a finding of fact unsupported by evidence or
unreasonable and perverse in nature ". Having regard to this
legal position this Court held that the question of benami
was a pure question of fact and it could not be agitated
under s. 66(1).
The point about the scope and effect of the provisions of s.
66(1)has again been considered by this Court in The Oriental
Investment Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay(1)
This was a case on the other side of the line. It was held
that whether the appellant’s business amounted to dealing in
shares and properties or to investment is a mixed question
of law and fact and that the legal effect of the facts found
by the tribunal as a result of which the appellant could be
treated as a dealer or investor is a question of law. As a
result of this conclusion the appeal
(1) [1958] S. C. R. 49.
655
preferred by the appellant was allowed, the order passed by
the High Court refusing the appellant’s request for
reference was set aside and the case was remitted to it for
directing the tribunal to state a case, on the two questions
mentioned in the judgment.’ These two decisions bring out
clearly the distinction between findings of fact and
findings of mixed questions of law and fact.
What then is the nature of the question raised before us in
the present appeal ? The tribunal and the High Court have
found that the transaction in question is an adventure in
the nature of trade; and it is the correctness of this view
that is challenged in the present appeal. The expression "
adventure in the nature of trade" is used by the Act in s.
2, sub-s. (4) which defines business as including any trade,
commerce or manufacture, or any adventure or concern in the
nature of trade, commerce or manufacture. Under s. 10, tax
shall be payable by an assessee under the head profits and
gains of business, profession or vocation in respect of the
profit or gains of any business, profession or vocation
carried on by him. Thus the appellant would be liable to
pay the tax on the relevant amount if it is held that the
transaction which brought him this amount was business
within the meaning of s. 2, sub-s. (4) and it can be said to
be business of the appellant if it is held that it is an
adventure in the nature of trade. In other words, in
reaching the conclusion that the transaction is an adventure
in the nature of trade, the tribunal has to find primary
evidentiary facts and then apply the legal principles
involved in the expression " adventure in the nature of
trade " used by s. 2, sub-s. (4). It is patent that the
clause " in the nature of trade " postulates the existence
of certain elements in the adventure which in law would
invest it with the character of a trade or business; and
that would make the question and its decision one of mixed
law and fact. This view has been incidentally expressed by
this Court in the case of Meenakshi Mills, Madurai (1) in
repelling the appellant’s argument based on the decision of
the
(1) [1956] S. C. R. 691.
656
House of Lords in Edwards v. Bairstow (1). For the
respondent, the learned Attorney-General has, however,
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relied on the fact that the relevant observations in the
case of Meenakshi Mills, Madurai, are obiter and he has
invited our attention to the decision in the case of Edwards
(1) in support of his contention that the judgment of the
House of Lords would show that the question about the
character of the transaction was ultimately treated as a
question of fact. Before we refer to the said decision it
may be relevant to observe that there are two ways in which
the question may be approached. Even if the conclusion of
the tribunal about the character of the transaction is
treated as a conclusion on a question of fact, it cannot be
ignored that, in arriving at its final conclusion on facts
proved, the tribunal has undoubtedly to address itself to
the legal requirements associated with the concept of trade
or business. Without taking into account such relevant
legal principles it would not be possible to decide whether
the transaction in question is or is not in the nature of
trade. If that be so, the final conclusion of the tribunal
can be challenged on the ground that the relevant legal
principles have been misapplied by the tribunal in reaching
its decision on the point; and such a challenge would be
open under s. 66(1) because it is a challenge on a ground of
law. The same result is achieved from another point of view
and that is to treat the final conclusion as one on a mixed
question of law and fact. On this view the conclusion is
not treated as one on a pure question of fact, and its
validity is allowed to be impeached on the ground that it
has been based on a misapplication of the true legal
principles. It would thus be seen that whether we call the.
conclusion in question as one of fact or as one on a
question of mixed law and fact, the application of legal
-principles which is an essential part in the process of-
reaching the said conclusion is undoubtedly a matter of law
and if there has been an error in the application of the
said principles it can be challenged as an error of law.
The difference then is merely one of form and not substance;
and on the whole it is
(1) [1956] A. C. 14; 36 Tax Cas. 207.
657
more convenient to describe the question involved as a mixed
question of law and fact. That is the view expressed by
this Court in the case of Meenakshi Mills, Madurai (1); and,
in our opinion, it avoids any confusion of thought and
simplifies the position by treating such questions as
analogous to those falling under the category of questions
of law.
Let us then consider whether the decision of the’ House of
Lords in the case of Edwards(2) is inconsistent with this
view. In this case the respondents, who were respectively a
director of a leather manufacturing company and an employee
of a spinning firm, purchased a complete cotton spinning
plant in 1946 with the object of selling it as quickly as
possible at a profit. They hoped to sell the plant in one
lot, but ultimately had to dispose of it in five separate
lots over the period from November 1946 to February 1948.
Assessments to income-tax in respect of profits arising from
this transaction were made under Case I of Schedule D for
the years 1946-47 and 1947-48. On the matter being taken
before the Chancery Division, it was held in accordance with
the earlier decisions of the Court of Appeal in Cooper v.
Stubbs (3) and Leeming v. Jones (4) that the finding of the
General Commissioners was a finding of fact which could not
be challenged in appeal. The attention of the court was
drawn to the different view expressed in a Scottish case,
Commissioners of Inland Revenue v. Fraser (5) where the
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Court of Session had held that it was at liberty to treat
the matter as a mixed question of fact and law, and in fact
it had overruled the finding of the General Commissioners in
that behalf " It does not seem to me ", observed Upjohn, J.,
" that in this court I am at liberty to follow the practice
of the Scottish Court, attractive though it would be to do
so, if the matter was res integra ". However, since
apparently the finding of the General Commissioners did not
appear to the court to be satisfactory, the matter was
remitted to them with an intimation that they should
consider
(2) [1956]A.C.14;36 Tax Cas. 207
(4) (1930) 15 Tax Cas. 333
(1) [1956)S.C.R. 691.
(3) (1925) To Tax Cas. 29.
(5) (1942) 24 Tax Cas. 498.
83
658
the question whether the transaction, being an isolated
transaction, there was nevertheless an adventure in the
nature of trade which was assessable to tax under Case 1 of
Schedule D. The Commissioners were directed to hear further
arguments on this point before stating a supplementary case.
After remand, the Commissioners adhered to their earlier
view and stated that they were of opinion that the
transaction was an isolated case and not taxable and so they
discharged the assessments. With the statement of this
supplementary case, the matter was argued before the
Chancery Division again. Wynn-Parry, J., who delivered the
judgment on this occasion referred to the earlier decisions
of the Court of Appeal and held that " on those authorities
prima facie the matter is concluded by the decision of the
Commissioners that the transaction, the subject-matter of
the case, was not an adventure in the nature of trade ".
Then the learned judge examined the question as to whether
the decision of the Commissioners can be said to be
perverse; and held that it could not be so characterised.
In the result the appeal was dismissed. The question then
reached the Court of Appeal but the result was the same.
The Court of Appeal observed that the earlier decisions were
binding on it no less than the Court of First Instance ; and
so it held that the conclusion of the Commissioners was a
finding of fact which the court cannot disturb. However, it
is apparent from the discussion that took place when the
court granted leave to. the Crown to take the matter to the
House of Lords that the court did not feel happy about the
correctness of the finding made by the General Commissioners
in the case. That is how the matter reached the House of
Lords.
The facts in this case were so clearly against the finding
of the Commissioners that Viscount Simonds made it clear at
the outset that in his opinion, " what. ever test is
adopted, that is, whether the finding that the transaction
was not an adventure in the nature of trade is to be
regarded as a pure finding of fact or as the determination
of the question of law or of mixed law and fact, the same
result would be reached in this
659
case. The determination cannot stand. This appeal must be
allowed and the assessments must be confirmed". It is in
the light of this emphatic statement that the rest of the
judgment of Viscount Simonds must be considered. He
referred to the divergence of views expressed in English and
Scottish decisions and his conclusion was that " if and so
far as there is any,, divergence between the English and
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Scottish approach it is the former which is supported by the
previous authority of this House to which reference has been
made "; but he analysed the position involved in both the
approaches and held that the difference between them was not
of substance. " To say that a transaction is or is not an
adventure in the nature of trade ", observed Viscount
Simonds, " is to say that it has or has not the
characteristics which distinguish such an adventure but it
is a question of law not of fact what are those
characteristics, or, in other words, what the statutory
language means. It follows that the inference can only be
regarded as an inference of fact if it is assumed that the
Tribunal which makes it is rightly directed in law what the
characteristics are and that, I think, is the assumption
that is made ". Dealing with the merits of the case,
Viscount Simonds observed that " sometimes, as in the case
as it now comes before the Court where all the admitted or
found facts point one way and the inference is the other
way, it can only be a matter of conjecture why that
inference has been made. In such a case it is easy either
to say that the Commissioners have made a wrong inference of
fact because they have misdirected themselves in law or to
take a short-cut and say that they have made a wrong
inference of law, and I venture to doubt whether there is
more than this in the divergence between the two
jurisdictions which has so much agitated the Revenue
authorities ". Lord Radcliffe substantially agreed with this
view. He also referred to the divergence of views expressed
in Scottish and English decisions and observed that " the
true position of the Court in all these cases can be shortly
stated.If a party to a hearing before the Commissioners
expresses dissatisfaction with their determination
660
as being erroneous in point of law,it is for them to state a
case and in the body of it to set out the facts that they
have found as well as their determination. I do not think
that inferences drawn from other facts are incapable of
themselves being findings of fact, although there is value
in the distinction between primary facts and inferences
drawn from them. When -the case comes before the Court, it
is its duty to examine the determination having regard to
its knowledge of the relevant law. If a case contains
anything ex facie which is bad in point of law and which’
bears upon the determination, it is obviously, erroneous in
point of law. But, without any such misconception appearing
ex facie, it may be that the facts found are such that no
persons acting judicially and properly instructed as to the
relevant law could have come to the determination under
appeal.In those circumstances,too, the Court must intervene
". Lord Radcliffe remarked that the English courts had been
led to be rather overready to treat these questions as pure
questions of fact and added "if so I would say with very
great respect that I think it a pity that such a tendency
should persist ". Therefore, it seems to us that in effect
this decision is not inconsistent with the view we have
taken about the character of the question raised before us
in the present appeal. As we have already indicated, to
avoid confusion or unnecessary complications it would be
safer and more convenient to describe the question about the
character of the transaction in the context as a question of
mixed law and fact.
The learned Attorney-General has invited our attentionto the
fact that the form in which the question referred tothe High
Court has been framed in the present case seems to assume
that the impugned finding is a finding of fact. It is only
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in regard to a finding of fact that a question can be
properly framed as to whether there was material to support
the said finding. We would, therefore, like to add that it
would be more appropriate to frame the question in this
form: whether, on the facts and circumstances proved in the
case, the inference that the transaction in
661
question is an adventure in the nature of trade is in law
justified ? In substance, that is the basis on which the
question has been framed by the respondent and considered by
the High Court.
This question has been the subject-matter of several
judicial decisions; and in dealing with it all the judges
appear to be agreed that no principle can be evolved which
would govern the decision of all cases in which the
character of the impugned transaction falls to be
considered. When s. 2, sub-s. (4), refers to an adventure
in the nature of trade it clearly suggests that the
transaction cannot properly be regarded as trade or
business. It is allied to transactions that constitute
trade or business but may not be trade or business itself.
It is characterised by some of the essential features that
make up trade or business but not by all of them; and so,
even an isolated transaction can satisfy the description of
an adventure in the nature of trade. Sometimes it is said
that a single plunge in the waters of trade may partake of
the character of an adventure in the nature of trade. This
statement may be true; but in its application due regard
must be shown to the requirement that the single plunge must
be in the waters of trade. In other words, at least some of
the essential features of trade must be present in the
isolated or single transaction. On the other hand, it is
sometimes said that the appearance of one swallow does not
make a summer. This may be true if, in the metaphor, summer
represents trade; but it may not be true if summer
represents an adventure in the nature of trade because, when
the section refers to an adventure in the nature of trade,
it is obviously referring to transactions which individually
cannot themselves be described as trade or business but are
essentially of such a similar character that they are
treated as in the nature of trade. It was faintly argued
for the appellant that it would be difficult to regard a
single or an isolated transaction as one in the nature of
trade because income resulting from it would inevitably lack
the characteristics attributed to it by Sir George Loundes
in Commissioner of I. T. v. Shaw Wallace and Company(1).
’Income their Lordships
(1) (1932) L. R. 59 I.A. 206.
662
think ", observed Sir George Loundes, " in this Act connotes
a periodical monetary return coming in with some sort of
regularity or expected regularity from definite sources Then
the learned judge proceeded to observe that income has been
likened pictorially to the fruit of a tree, or the crop of a
field. It is essentially the produce of something which is
often loosely spoken of as capital". In our opinion, it
would be unreasonable to apply the test involved in the use
of this pictorial language to the decision of the question
as to whether a single or an isolated transaction can be
regarded as an adventure in the nature of trade. In this
connection we may, with respect, refer to the comment made
by Lord Wright in Raja Bahadur Kamakshya Narain Singh of
Ramgarh v. Commissioner of I. P., Bihar and Orissa (1) that
" it is clear that such picturesque similes cannot be used
to limit the true character of income in general ". We are
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inclined to think that, in dealing with the very prosaic and
sometimes complex questions arising under the Income-tax
Act, use of metaphors, however poetic and picturesque, may
not help to clarify the position but may instead introduce
an unnecessary element of confusion or doubt.
As we have already observed it is impossible to evolve any
formula which can be applied in determining the character of
isolated transactions which come before the courts in tax
proceedings. It would besides be inexpedient to make any
attempt to evolve such a rule or formula. Generally speak-
ing, it would not be difficult to decide whether a given
transaction is an adventure in the nature of trade or not.
It is the cases on the border line that cause difficulty.
If a person invests money in land intending to hold it,
enjoys its income for some time, and then sells it at a
profit, it would be a clear case of capital accretion and
not profit derived from an adventure in the nature of trade.
Cases of realisation of investments consisting Of purchase
and resale, though profitable, are clearly outside the doma-
in of adventures in the nature of trade. In deciding
(1) (1943) L.R. 70 I.A, 180, 193.
663
the character of such transactions several factors are
treated as relevant. Was the purchaser a trader and were
the purchase of the commodity and its resale allied to his
usual trade or business or incidential to it ? Affirmative
answers to these questions may furnish relevant data for
determining the character of the transaction. What is the
nature of the commodity purchased and resold and in what
quantity was it purchased and resold ? If the commodity
purchased is generally the subject-matter of trade, and if
it is purchased in very large quantities, it would tend to
eliminate the possibility of investment for personal use,
possession or Goverment. Did the purchaser by any act
subsequent to the purchase improve the quality of the
commodity purchased and thereby made it more readily
resaleable ? What were the incidents associated with the
purchase and resale ? Were they similar to the operations
usually associated with trade or business ? Are the
transactions of purchase and sale repeated ? In regard to
the purchase of the commodity and its subsequent possession
by the purchaser, does the element of pride of possession
come into the picture ? A person may purchase a piece of
art, hold it for some time and if a profitable offer is
received may sell it. During the time that the purchaser
had its possession he may be able to claim pride of
possession and aesthetic satisfaction ; and if such a claim
is upheld that would be a factor against the contention that
the transaction is in the nature of trade. These and other
considerations are set out and discussed in judicial
decisions which deal with the character of transactions
alleged to be in the nature of trade. In considering these
decisions it would be necessary to remember that they do not
purport to lay down any general or universal test. The
presence of all the relevant circumstances mentioned in any
of them may help the court to draw a similar inference; but
it is not a matter of merely counting the number of facts
and circumstances pro and con; what is important to consider
is their distinctive character. In each case, it is the
total effect of all relevant factors and circumstances that
determines the character of the
transaction; and so, though we may attempt to derive some
assistance from decisions bearing on this point, we cannot
seek to deduce any rule from them and mechanically apply it
to the facts before us.
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In this connection it would be relevant to refer to another
test which is sometimes applied in determining the character
of the transaction. Was the purchase made with the
intention to resell it at a profit ? It is often said that a
transaction of purchase followed by resale can either be an
investment or an adventure in the nature of trade. There is
no middle course and no half-way house. This statement may
be broadly true; and so some judicial decisions apply the
test of the initial intention to resell in distinguishing
adventures in the nature of trade from transactions of
investment. Even in the application of this test
distinction will have to be made between initial intention
to resell at a profit which is present but not dominant or
sole; in other words, cases do often arise ’Where the
purchaser may be willing and may intend to sell the property
purchased at profit, but he would also intend and be willing
to hold and enjoy it if a really high price is not offered.
The intention to resell may in such cases be coupled with
the intention to hold the property. Cases may, however,
arise where the purchase has been made solely and exclus-
ively with the intention to resell at a profit and the
purchaser has no intention of holding the property for
himself’or otherwise enjoying or using it. The presence of
such an intention is no doubt a relevant factor and unless
it is offset by the presence of other factors it would raise
a strong presumption that the transaction is an adventure in
the nature of trade. Even so, the presumption is not
conclusive; and it is conceivable that, on considering all
the facts and circumstances in the case, the court may,
despite the said initial intention, be inclined to hold that
the transaction was not an adventure in the nature of trade.
We thus come back to the same position and that is that the
decision about the character of a transaction in the context
cannot be based solely on the application of any abstract-
rule, principle or test and
665
m st in every case depend upon all the relevant facts and
circumstances.
Let us now consider some of the decisions to which our
attention was invited. Normally the purchase of land
represents investment of money in land; but where a company
is formed for the purpose inter alia of acquiring and
reselling mining property, and after acquiring and working
various property, it resells the whole to a second company
receiving payment in fully-paid shares of latter company, it
was held in The Californian Copper Syndicate (Limited and
Reduced) v. Harris (Surveyor of Taxes) (1) that the
difference between the purchase price and the value of the
shares for which the property was exchanged is a profit
assessable to income-tax. In this case Lord Justice Clerk
has observed that "it is quite a well settled principle in
dealing with the question of assessment of Income Tax, that
where the owner of an ordinary in. vestment chooses to
realise it, and obtains a greater price for it than he
originally acquired it at, the enhanced price is not profit
in the sense of Schedule D of the Income Tax Act "; and he
added that " it is equally well established that the
enhanced value obtained from realisation or conversion of
security may be so assessable where what is done is not
merely a realisation or a change of investment but an act
done in what is truly the carrying on or carrying out of a
business ". This was a clear case where the company was held
to be carrying on the business of purchase and sale of
mining property.
Where land purchased, and subsequently developed, with the
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object of making it more readily saleable, was sold at a
profit, the intention of the assessee was treated to be not
to hold the land as an investment, but as a trading asset in
Cayzer, Irvine and Co. Ltd. v. Commissioners of Inland
Revenue(2). In his judgment, Lord President Normand
referred to the large development expenditure incurred by
the assessee to improve the property and observed that it
appeared to be on the whole consistent with the idea that it
was carrying on a trade in land rather than with the idea
that
(1) (1904) 5 Tax Cas. 159.
(2) (1942) 24 Tax Cas. 491.
84
666
it was throughout holding it as an investment only to be
realised if at all when it desired to meet some financial
need. In repelling the plea that the transaction showed
investment, the Lord President added that the Commissioners
" with their knowledge and experience of these matters, have
come to the conclusion that the intention was to hold this
estate not as an investment but as a trading asset and in,
order to develop it and to market it ". It would thus appear
that the conduct of the assessee in incurring a large amount
of expenditure on the development of land consisting mainly
in the construction of roads and sewers was held to justify
the inference that the transaction was an adventure in the
nature of trade, though the property purchased and sold was
land.
In the Commissioner’s of Inland Revenue v. Livingston (1)
the assessees respondents were a ship repairer, a blacksmith
and a fish salesmen’s employee; they purchased as a joint
venture a cargo vessel with a view to converting it into a
steam-drifter and selling it. They were not connected in
business and they had never previously bought a ship. After
the ship was purchased, extensive repairs and alterations
were carried out by the orders of the respondents and the
ship was then sold at a profit. It was held that the profit
arising from the transaction was assessable to income-tax
under Case I of Schedule D. Lord President Clyde said that
in deciding whether the profits in question were taxable,
regard must be had to the character and circumstances of the
particular venture. " If the venture was one consisting
simply in an isolated purchase of some article against an
expected rise in price and, a subsequent sale ", observed
the Lord President, " it might be impossible to say that the
venture was in the nature of trade ". According to him the
test to be applied would be whether the operations involved
in the transaction are of the same kind and carried on in
the same way as those which are characteristic of ordinary
trading in the line of business in which the venture was
made. If they are, there was no reason why the venture
should not be
(1), (1926) 11 Tax Cas. 538.
667
regarded as in the nature of trade merely because it was a
single venture which took only three months to complete.
Reference was then made to the steps taken ,by the assessees
to buy a secondhand vessel and to ,convert into a marketable
drifter; and it was stated -that the profit made by the
venture arose not from the mere appreciation of the capital
value of an isolated purchase for resale but from the
expenditure on the subject purchased of money laid out upon
it for the purpose of making it marketable at a profit. "
That ", said the Lord President, " was the very essence of
trade ". It was in this connection that the Lord President
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observed that the appearance of a single swallow does not
make a summer. It would thus be noticed that this decision
was based substantially on the ground that after the ship
was purchased the assessees bestowed labour and money on
converting it into a marketable drifter and that imprinted
upon the transaction the character of trade. It is true
that some of the observations made by the Lord President
would indicate that from the intention to resell at a profit
it would be impossible to attribute to the transaction the
character of an adventure in the nature of trade. However,
as we will presently point out, these observations have been
explained by the Lord President himself subsequently in
Rutledge v. Commissioners of Inland Revenue (1); and it is
to this case that we will now refer.
In the case of Rutledge(2) the appellant was a moneylender
who was also interested in a cinema company in 1920. Since
that time he had been interested ill various businesses. He
was in Berlin in 1920 on business connected with the cinema
company where he was offered an opportunity of purchasing
very cheaply a large quantity of paper. He effected the
purchase and within a short time after his return to England
he sold the whole consignment to one person at a
considerable profit. This profit ’Was held liable to
assessment to income-tax, Schedule D, and to excess profits
duty as being profit of an adventure in the nature of trade.
This assessment was the subject-matter
(1) (1929) 14 Tax Cas. 490.
668
of an appeal before the Court of Appeal, and on behalf of
the appellant the observations made by the Lord President
Clyde in the case of Livingston (1) were pressed into
service; but the Lord President did not accept the plea
based on his earlier observations because he said that the
said observations were intended to show that a single
transaction fell far short of constituting a dealer’s trade;
whereas, in the present case, the question was whether the
transaction was an adventure in the nature of trade. The
Lord President agreed that mere intention is not enough to
invest a transaction with the character of trade but he
added that, if the purchase is made for no purpose except
that of resale at a profit, there seems little difficulty in
arriving at the conclusion that the deal was in the nature
of trade though it may be wholly insufficient to constitute
by itself a trade. Then he referred to the illustration
which he had cited in his earlier decision about the
purchase of a picture and observed that if a picture was
purchased to embellish the purchaser’s own house for a time,
he might sell it if the anticipated appreciation in the
value ultimately realised itself. " In such a case ", says
the Lord President, " I pointed out that it might be
impossible to affirm that the purchase and sale constituted
an adventure in-the nature of trade although, again, the
crisis of judgment might turn on the particular
circumstances ". It would thus be clear that the strong
observations made by the Lord President in the case of
Livingston (1) must be considered in the light of the
clarification made by him in this case. Lord Sands, who
agreed with the Lord President has thus observed: "Your
Lordship in the Chair has indicated that there may be cases
of purchase and resale at a profit where the transaction
cannot be said to be in the nature of trade. In particular,
this may be the case where there is no definite intention of
reselling when the purchase is made ". This decision,
therefore, shows that where the assessee purchased a very
large quantity of paper with the intention to sell it at
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profit the transaction was treated as an adventure in the
nature of trade. It was held
(1) (1926) 11 Tax Cas. 538.
669
to be a most successful adventure on the part of the
assessee and having regard to the circumstances attending
the purchase and sale it was treated as an adventure in the
nature of trade.
In T. Beynon & Co. Ltd. v. Ogg (1) the court was dealing
with the case of a company which was carrying on business as
coal merchants, ship and insurance brokers and as sole
selling agent for various colliery companies in which latter
capacity it was a part of its duty to purchase wagons on its
own account as a speculation and -subsequently to dispose of
them at a profit. The assessee contended that the
transaction of purchase and sale being an isolated one the
profit was in the nature of a capital profit on the sale of
an investment and should be excluded in computing its
liability to income-tax. The court held that the profit
realised was made in the operation of the company’s business
and was properly included in the computation of company’s
profits for assessment under Schedule D. It appears that, in
1914, acting as agent on behalf of two colliery , companies,
the assessee had purchased two lots of wagons each of which
consisted of 250 wagons. During the course of negotiations
the assessee, foreseeing that the cost of material and wages
was likely to increase, determined to buy a, third lot of
250 wagons for itself and did eventually purchase it. In
July 1915 the assessee sold this lot and made a profit of
pound 2,500. The question which arose for decision was
whether this sum was chargeable to incometax. In dealing
with the argument that as an isolated transaction the profit
arising out of it was not chargeable to tax, Sankey, J.,
observed that he thought " in most cases an insolated
transaction does not fall to be chargeable ". But he added "
you have to consider the transaction and you cannot lay it
down as a matter of law without regard to the circumstances
that in this case the pound, 2,500 is not chargeable ". Then
the learned judge considered that the number of wagons
purchased was large and held that the other circumstances
attending the purchase and sale of the said wagons showed
that this transaction was a
(1) (1918) 7 Tax Cas. 125.
670
transaction, and this profit was a profit " -with the result
that it made the operation of the assessee in that behalf
its business. The learned judge’ however, added a word of
caution that he did not think it desirable to lay down any
rule as to where the line ought to be drawn, and that it was
not even possible to lay down such a rule. " But ", said
the learned judge, " it is perfectly easy to say whether
Case A or Case B falls on the one side or the other ".
In the Balgownie Land Trust, Ltd. v. The Commissioners of
Inland Revenue (1) the owner of a landed estate, at his
death, had left his estate to trustees with a direction to
realise. The trustees were not successful in their efforts
to sell the estate in the market. So they formed a company
with general powers to deal in real property’ and
transferred the estate to this company in exchange for
shares which were allotted to the beneficiaries under the
trust and were, at the date of the appeal still mainly held
by those beneficiaries or their representatives. Soon after
its incorporation the purchaser company made a substantial
purchase of some other property acquired by borrowing on the
security of the original estate. The company received rents
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and paid a regular dividend on its capital. In 1921 and the
following years parts of the original estate were sold and
in 1925 the whole of the additional property was sold. When
the profits realised by the sales were taxed under Schedule
D for the year 1926-27, the assessee contended that the
transactions in question were not in the nature of trade and
the profits arising therefrom cannot be taxed. This
contention was negatived by the General Commissioners
whereupon the assessee appealed. Lord President Clyde
described the problem raised by the assessee as one of. the
most familiar problems under Case I of Schedule D and ob.
served that " a single plunge may be enough provided it is
shown to the satisfaction of the Court that the plunge is
made in the waters of trade; but the sale of a piece of
property-if that is all that is involved in the plunge-may
easily fall short of anything in the nature of trade.
Transactions of sale are characteristic
(1) (1929) 14 Tax Cas. 684.
671
of trade, but they are not necessarily distinctive of it;
much depends on the circumstances". Then the conduct of the
assessee after its incorporation was considered and it was
held that the purchase of the property in substance amounted
to a launching forth albeit, not in a very large scale. In
the result the finding of the Commissioners was confirmed
and the profit, Was held liable to tax.
In Martin v. Lowry (1) the House of Lords was considering a
case of a wholesale agricultural machinery merchant who had
never had any connection with the linen trade purchasing
from the government the whole of its surplus stock of
aeroplane linen (some 44 million yards) at a fixed price per
yard. The contract of purchase provided in detail as to
delivery, and the payment of the price. The purchaser
failed in his original attempt to sell the whole of the
linen to Belfast linen manufacturers outright. Then he
sought to bring pressure on them by placing the linen for
sale to the public. It led to an extensive advertising
’campaign, renting of offices and engaging advertising
manager, a linen expert as adviser and a staff of clerks.
Sales then proceeded rapidly and soon the whole stocks were
disposed of. In all 4,279 orders were received from 1,280
purchasers. Assessment to income-tax and excess profits
duty were made upon the assessee in respect of profits of
the transaction. It was held that the dealings of the
assessee in linen constituted the carrying on of a trade of
which the profits were chargeable to income-tax and excess
profits duty. One of the points raised before the House of
Lords was that the assessee did not carry on trade or
business but only engaged in a single adventure not
involving trading operation. In rejecting this contention,
Viscount Cave, L. C., observed that " the Commissioners have
found as a fact that he did carry on trade, and they set out
in the Case ample material upon which they could come to
that conclusion ". He added that, indeed, having regard to
the methods adopted for the resale of the linen, to the
number of operations into which the assessee entered and to
the time occupied by
(1) [1926] 11 Tax Cas. 297.
672
the resale, he did not himself see how they could have come
to any other conclusion. The other point raised in the
appeal was that the profits in question did not come within
the description of annual profits or ,gains but we are not
concerned with that point.
In F. A. Lindsay, A. E. Woodward and W. Hiscox v.
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Commissioners of Inland Revenue (1) the appellant L, a wine
merchant, had on hand a large quantity of American rye
whisky. He invited the appellants W & H who were also
engaged in the wine trade to join with him in a venture of
shipping the whisky to the United States. It was agreed
that W & H should contribute certain sums towards expenses
and that the profits should be shared in certain
proportions. The. agreement was not reduced to writing.
The shipping of the whisky was arranged by L with
consultation with W & H and was carried out gradually over a
period of two years. From time to time W & H met L who told
them that the whisky had been successfully shipped to the
United States and sold there profitably. Subsequently the
appellants decided to discontinue the export of whisky and
to employ the monies which they had accumulated in the
purchase with a view to resale of a wine business in
Portugal. In respect of the profits made by the appellants
from the sale of wine an assessment was made on them jointly
for 1922-23. The Special Commissioners found that a
partnership or joint venture subsisted between the
appellants and that the profits of the sales of whisky were
assessable to income-tax. The Lord President Clyde rejected
the appellant’s contention and observed that " the nature of
the transaction-apart from the fraudulent breaches of law
which were inherent in it-was neither more nor less than the
commercial disposal of a quantity of rye whisky ". In point
of fact the disposal was not effected by a single
transaction but extended over a year and more; and so it
could not fall outside the sphere of trade. This was a
clear case where a large number of distinctive features of
trade were associated with the transaction.
(1) (1932) 18 Tax Cas. 43.
673
The transaction of the purchase and sale of whisky was again
brought before the court for its decision in the
Commissioners of Inland Revenue v. Fraser (1). In this case
the assessee, a woodcutter, bought through an agent for
resale whisky in bond for pound 407. Nearly three years
thereafter the whisky was sold at a profit for pound, 1,131.
This was the assessee’s sole dealing in whisky. He had no
special knowledge of the trade and he did not take delivery
of the whisky nor did he have it blended and advertised.
Even so, it was held that the transaction was an adventure
in the nature of trade. It may be mentioned that when the
matter was first taken before the Commissioners they took
the view that an adventure in the nature of trade had not
been carried on by the assessee, that merely an investment
had been made and subsequently realised and so the profit
was not assessable to income-tax. This view was, however,
reversed by the First Division of the Court of Session and
it was held that in coming to the conclusion the
Commissioners had misdirected themselves as to the meaning
of " being engaged in an adventure in the nature of trade ".
The Lord President Normand conceded that it would be
extremely difficult to hold that a single transaction
amounted to a trade but he added that it may be much less
difficult to hold that a single transaction was an adventure
in the nature of trade. " There was much discussion ",
observed the Lord President, " as to the criterion which the
court should apply. I doubt if it would be possible to
formulate a single criterion." The following observations
made by the Lord President in this connection may be
usefully quoted:
" It is in general more easy to hold that a single
transaction entered into by an individual in the line of his
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own trade (although not part and parcel of his ordinary
business) is an adventure in the nature of trade than to
hold that a transaction entered into by an individual
outside the line of his own trade or occupation is an
adventure in the nature of trade.
(1) (1942) 24 Tax Cas. 498.
85
674
But what is a good deal more important is the nature of the
transaction with reference to the commodity dealt in. The
individual who enters into a purchase of an article or
commodity may have in view the resale of it at a profit,
and yet it may be that that is not the only purpose for
which he purchased the article or the commodity, nor the
only purpose to which he might turn it if favourable
opportunity of sale does not occur. In some of the cases
the purchase of a picture has been given as an illustration.
An amateur may purchase a picture with a view to its resale
at a profit, and yet he may recognise at the time or after-
wards that the possession of the picture will give him
aesthetic enjoyment if he is unable ultimately, or at his
chosen time, to realise it at a profit. A man may purchase
stocks and shares with a view to selling them at an early
date at a profit, but, if he does so, he is purchasing
something which is itself an investment, a potential source
of revenue to him while he holds it. A man may purchase
land with a view to realising it at a profit, but it also
may yield him an income while he continues to hold it’ If he
continues to hold it, there may be also a certain pride of
possession. But the purchaser of a large quantity of a
commodity like whisky, greatly in excess of what could be
used by himself, his family and friends, a commodity which
yields no pride of possession, which cannot be turned to
account except by a process of realisation, I can scarcely
consider to be other than an adventurer in a transaction in
the nature of a trade; and I can find no single fact among
those stated by the Commissioners which in any way traverses
that view. In my opinion the fact that the transaction was
not in the way of business (whatever it was) of the
Respondent in no way alters the character which almost
necessarily belongs to a transaction like this. Most
important of all, the actual dealings of the Respondent with
the whisky were exactly of the kind that take place in
ordinary trade."
These observations indicate some of the important
considerations which are to be borne in mind in determining
the character of a single transaction.
675
We may now refer to the decision of the House of Lords in
Leeming v. Jones (1). In this case the appellant was a
member of a syndicate of four persons formed to acquire an
option over a rubber estate with a view to resell it at a
profit. The option was secured but the estate was
considered too small for a resale to a company for public
floatation. An option over another adjoining estate was
accordingly secured and it was decided to resell the two
estates to a public company to be formed for the purpose.
Another member of the syndicate undertook to arrange for the
promotion of this company. The syndicate’s total receipts
resulting from the transactions in respect of the estates
amounted to pound 3,000 and the balance remaining, after
deduction of certain expenses, was divided between the
members. The appellant was assessed to income-tax, Schedule
D, in respect of his share. The General Commissioners held
that the appellant acquired the property or interest in the
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property in question with the sole object of turning it over
again at a profit and that he at no time had any intention
of holding it as an investment. That is why they confirmed
the assessment. After the case was heard before the King’s
Bench Division it was remitted to the General Commissioners
for a finding as to whether there was or was not a concern
in the nature of trade. The Commissioners then found that
the transaction in question was not a concern in the nature
of trade and that there was no liability to assessment. It
may be pointed out that in remitting the case for the re-
consideration of the General Commissioners, Rowlatt, J., had
observed that it was quite clear that what the Commissioners
had got to find was whether there was a concern in the
nature of trade and all that they had found was that the
property was acquired with the sole object of turning it
over again at a profit and without any intention of holding
it as an investment. " That describes ", said Rowlatt, J.,
" what a man does if he buys a picture that he sees going
cheap at Christie’s, because he knows that in a month he
will sell it again at Christie’s That ", according to
(1) (1930) 15 Tax Cas. 333.
676
the learned judge, " is not carrying on trade " and " so
what the Commissioners must do is to say, one way or the
other, was this, I will not say carrying on a trade, but was
it a speculation or an adventure in the nature of trade ".
The learned judge to doubt added that he did not indicate
which way the finding ought to be, but he commended the
Commissioners to consider what took place in the nature of
organising the speculation, maturing the property and
disposing of the property, and when they have considered all
that, to say whether they think it was an adventure in the
nature of trade or not. It is thus clear that Rowlatt, J.,
indicated clearly though in cautious words what he thought
was the true nature of the transaction made. Even so, on
reconsideration of the matter the Commissioners returned a
finding in favour of the assessee. After the finding was
returned Rowlatt, J., held that he must abide by his own
decision in Pearm v. Miller (1) and so the appeal was
allowed. The matter was then taken to the Court of Appeal
where the revised finding of the Commissioners was treated
as a finding on a question of fact not open to challenge and
the point which was considered at length was whether even if
the transaction was not an adventure in the nature of trade,
could the profit resulting from it be taxed under Case VI?
The Master of the Rolls Lord Hanworth traced the history of
the dispute, mentioned how Mr. Justice Rowlatt had indicated
to the Commissioners what they had to consider in determin-
ing the question remitted to them and observed that " Mr
Justice Rowlatt, and I think this Court, might perhaps have
taken the course of saying that having regard to what he had
called attention to in this case, the particular facts, of
organising the speculation, of maturing the property, and
the diligence in discovering a second property to add to the
first, and the disposing of the property, there ought to be
and there must be a finding that it was an adventure in the
nature of trade; but Mr. Justice Rowlatt withheld his hand
from so doing and I think he was right, for however strongly
one may feel as to the facts, the facts
(1) (1927) 11 Tax Cas. 610.
677
are for the decision of the Commissioners ". It would thus
be clear that the decision of the Commissioners appeared
both to Rowlatt, J., and the Court of Appeal to be
erroneous. Even so, they refused to interfere with it on
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the ground that it was a decision on a question of fact. We
may, with respect, recall that it was in regard to this
approach that Lord Radcliffe observed in the case of Edwards
(1) that " it was a pity that such a tendency should persist
to treat the findings of the Commissioners on the question
as to the character of the transaction as conclusive ". In
dealing wit the question as to whether if Case I did not
apply Case VI could apply, Lord Justice Lawrence observed
that " in the case of an isolated transaction of purchase
and resale of property there is really no middle course
open. It is either an adventure in the nature of trade, or
else it is simply a case of sale and resale of property ".
The Court of Appeal held that if the transaction did not
fall in Case. It was difficult to see how it could fall
under Case VI. The discussion on this part of the case is,
however, not relevant for our purpose. This decision of the
Court of Appeal was taken before the House of Lords and the
question debated before the House of Lords was about the
-application of Case VI to the transaction. The House of
Lords affirmed the view taken by the Court of Appeal and
held that " Case VI was inapplicable because Case VI neces-
sarily refers to the words of Schedule D, that is to say, it
must be a case of annual profits and gains and those words
again are ruled by the first section of the Act which says
that when an Act indicates that income-tax shall be charged
for any year at any rate the tax at that rate shall be
charged in respect of the profits and gains according to the
Schedules ". Lord Buckmaster agreed with the observations of
Lord Justice Lawrence that there can be no middle course
open in such cases. Viscount Dunedin, in concurring with
the opinion of Lord Buckmaster, dealt with the several
arguments urged by the Crown but the observations made by
him with regard to the last argument are relevant for our
purpose. " The last argument of the
(1) [1956] A.C. 14; 36 Tax Cas. 207.
678
counsel for the Crown ", observed Viscount Dunedin, was that
there was a finding that the respondent never meant to hold
the land bought as an investment. The fact that a man does
not mean to hold an investment may be an item of evidence
tending to show whether he is carrying on a trade or concern
in the nature of trade in respect of his investment but per
se it leads to no conclusion whatever ". According to
Viscount Dunedin, recourse to Case VI ignores the fact that
it had been settled again and again that Case VI does not
suggest that anything that is a profit or gain falls to be
taxed.
The observations made by Viscount Dunedin were considered in
the Commissioners of Inland Revenue v. Reinhold (1). We
ought to add that the appellant has placed strong reliance
on this decision. In this case, the respondent was a
director of a company carrying on a business of
ware house men; he bought four houses in January 1945 and
sold them at a profit in December 1947. He admitted that he
had bought the property with a view to resale and had
instructed his agents to sell whenever a suitable
opportunity arose. The profits made by him on resale were
assessed to tax. On appeal before the General Commissioners
he contended that the profit on resale was not taxable. The
Crown urged that the transaction was an adventure in the
nature of trade and that profits arising therefrom were
chargeable to Ax. The General Commissioners being equally
divided allowed the appeal and discharged the assessment.
It was on these facts that the matter was then taken before
the First Division of the Court of Session and it was urged
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on behalf of the Crown that the initial intention of the
assessee clearly was to sell the property at a profit and so
the view taken by the General Commissioners about the
character of the transaction was erroneous. This argument
was, however, rejected and the order of discharge passed by
the General Commissioners was confirmed. When the Crown
referred to the observations of Lord Dunedin in the case of
Leeming (2) which we have
(1) (1953) 34 Tax Cas. 389.
(2) (1930) 15 Tax Cas. 333.
679
already cited, Lord Carmont observed that he did not wish to
read the said passage out of its context and without regard
to the facts of the case then under consideration. Then
Lord Carmont added that though the language used by Lord
Dunedin " may cover the purchase of houses" it " would not
cover a situation in which a purchaser bought a commodity
which from G its nature can give no annual return ". "This
comment of mine ", said Lord Carmont, " is just another way
of saying that certain transactions show inherently that
they are not investments but incursions into the realm of
trade or adventures of that nature Then reference was made
to the fact that the assessee was a warehouse company
director and not a property agent or speculator and that the
only purchases of property with which he was concerned were
two separated by ten years and that the first heritage was
acquired without the intention to sell, which only arose
fortuitously. His Lordship then put his conclusion in this
way: "I would therefore say that the Commissioners of Inland
Revenue have failed to prove and the onus is on them the
case they sought to make out". According to Lord Carmont,
Lord Dunedin’s observations do not suggest that the initial
declaration of intention per se leads to the conclusion that
the transaction was in the nature of trade. He thought that
much more was required to show that the assessee was engaged
in an adventure in the nature of trade than was proved in
the case before the court. Lord Russell, who concurred with
this opinion, began with the observation that " prima facie
the difference of opinion among the General Commissioners
suggests that the case is a narrow one and that the onus on
the appellants of showing that the transaction was an
adventure in the nature of trade is not a light one". Lord
Russell then mentioned the argument of the Lord Advocate
that if a person buys anything with a view to sale that is a
transaction in the nature of trade because the purpose of
the acquisition in the mind of the purchaser is all-
important and conclusive; and that the nature of the thing
purchased and the other surrounding circumstances do not
680
and cannot operate so as to render the transaction other
than an adventure in the nature of trade, and observed that
in his opinion the argument so formulated " is too absolute
and is not supported by the judicial pronouncements on which
it was sought to be raised ". He then referred to the
variety of circumstances which are or may be relevant to the
determination of such a question; and he concluded with the
observation that the appellants had not discharged the
burden of showing that the transaction was an adventure in
the nature of trade. Lord Keith also took the same view and
stated that " the facts were, in his opinion, insufficient
to establish that this was an adventure in the nature of
trade ". This case was no doubt a case on the border line;
and if we may say so with respect it was perhaps nearer an
adventure in the nature of trade than otherwise. It would
not be unreasonable to suggest that, in this case, if the
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Commissioners had found that the transaction was an
adventure in the nature of trade, the court would probably
not have interfered with the said conclusion; but the
Commissioners were equally divided and so the assessment had
been discharged by them. It was under these circumstances
that the point about the onus of proof became a matter of
substance; and, as we have already pointed out, all tile
learned judges have emphasized that the onus had not been
discharged and that no case had been made out for reversing
the order of discharge -passed by the Commissioners.
However that may be, it would, we think, be unsafe to treat
this case as laying down any general proposition the
application of which would assist the appellant before us.
We would also like to add that there can be no doubt that
Lord Russell’s criticism against the contention raised by
the Lord Advocate was fully justified because the contention
as raised clearly overstated the significance and effect of
the initial intention. As we have already pointed out, if
it is shown that, in purchasing the commodity in question,
the assessee was actuated by the sole intention to sell it
at a profit, that no doubt is a relevant circumstance which
would raise a strong presumption that the
681
purchase and subsequent sale are an adventure in the nature
of trade; but the said presumption is not conclusive and it
may be rebutted or offset by other relevant circumstances.
What then are the relevant facts in the present case ? The
property purchased and resold is land and it must be
conceded in favour of the appellant that land is generally
the subject-matter of investment. It is contended by Mr.
Viswanatha Sastri that the four purchases made by the
appellant represent nothing more than an investment and if
by resale some profit was realised that cannot impress the
transaction with the character of an adventure in the nature
of trade. The appellant, however, is a firm and it was not
a part of its ordinary business to make investment in lands.
Besides, when the first purchase was made it is difficult to
treat it as a matter of investment. The property was a
small piece of 28-1/4 cents and it could yield no return
whatever to the purchaser. It is clear that this purchase
was the first step taken by the appellant in execution of a
well-considered plan to acquire open plots near the mills
and the whole basis for the plan was to sell the said lands
to the mills at a profit., Just as the conduct of the
purchaser subsequent to the purchase of a commodity in
improving or converting it so as to make it more readily
resaleable is a relevant factor in determining the character
of the transaction, so would his conduct prior to the
purchase be relevant if it shows a design and a purpose. As
and when plots adjoining the mills were available for sale,
the appellant carried out his plan and consolidated his
holding of the said plots. The appellant is the managing
agent of the Janardana Mills and probably it was first
thought that purchasing the plots in its own name and
selling them to the mills may invite criticism and so the
first purchase was made by the appellant in the name of its
benamidar V. G. Raja. Apparently the appellant changed its
mind and took the subsequent sale deeds in its own name.
The conduct of the appellant in regard to these plots
subsequent to their
86
682
purchase clearly shows that it was not interested in
obtaining any return from them. No doubt the appellant
sought to explain-its purpose on the ground that it wanted
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to build tenements for the employees of the mills; but it
had taken no steps in that behalf for the whole of the
period during which the plots remained in its possession.
Besides, it would not be easy to assume in the case of a
firm like the appellant that the acquisition of the open
plots could involve any pride of possession to the
purchaser. It is really not one transaction of purchase and
resale. It is a series of four transactions undertaken by
the appellant in pursuance of a scheme and it was after the
appellant had consolidated its holdings that at a convenient
time it sold the lands to the Janardana Mills in two lots.
When the tribunal found that, as the managing agent of the
mills, the appellant was in a position to influence the
mills to purchase its properties its view cannot be
challenged as unreasonable. If the property had been
purchased by the appellant as a matter of investment it
would have tried either to cultivate the land, or to build
on it; but the appellant did neither and just allowed the
property to remain unutilised except for the net rent of Rs.
80 per annum which it received from the house on one of the
plots. The reason given by the appellant for the purchase
of the properties by the mills has been rejected by the
tribunal; and so when the mills purchased the properties it
is not shown that the sale was occasioned by any special
necessity at the time. In the circumstances of the case the
tribunal was obviously right in inferring that the appellant
knew that it would be able to sell the lands to the mills
whenever it thought it profitable so to do. Thus the
appellant purchased the four plots during two years with the
sole intention to sell them to the mills at a profit and
this intention raises a strong presumption in favour of the
view taken by the tribunal. In regard to the other relevant
facts and circumstances in the case, none of them offsets or
rebuts the presumption arising from the initial intention;
on the other hand, most of them corroborate
683
the said presumption. We must, therefore, hold that the
High Court was right in taking the view that, on the facts
and circumstances proved in this case, the transaction in
question is an adventure in the nature of trade.
The result is the appeal fails and must be dismissed with
costs.
Appeal dismissed.