Full Judgment Text
REPORTABLE
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CIVIL APPEAL NOS.7689-90 OF 2022
The Commissioner of Income Tax Jaipur .Appellant
Versus
Prakash Chand Lunia (D)
Thr.Lrs. & Anr. ..Respondents
J U D G M E N T
M. R. Shah, J.
1. Feeling aggrieved and dissatisfied with the
impugned judgment and order dated 22.11.2016
passed by the High Court of Judicature for
Signature Not Verified
Digitally signed by
RASHMI DHYANI
Date: 2023.04.26
16:23:21 IST
Reason:
Rajasthan at Jaipur passed in DBITA No.96/2003
Civil Appeal Nos. 7689-90 of 2022 Page 1 of 27
and DBITR No.6/1996 by which the High Court
has allowed the said appeals, the Revenue has
preferred the present appeals.
2. The facts leading to the present appeals in nutshell
are as under:
2.1 A search was conducted by the Directorate of
Revenue Intelligence (DRI) officers at the premises
situated at A-11, 12, Sector - VII, NOIDA taken on
rent by the assessee, Shri Prakash Chand Lunia.
The DRI recovered 144 slabs of silver from the
premises and two silver ingots from the business
premises of the assessee at 1397, Chandni Chowk,
Delhi. The assessee was arrested under Section
104 of the Customs Act for committing offence
punishable under Section 135 of the Customs Act.
The Collector, Customs held that the assessee Shri
Prakash Chand Lunia is the owner of silver/bullion
and the transaction thereof was not recorded in the
books of accounts. The Collector of Customs, New
Delhi ordered confiscation of the said 146 slabs of
Civil Appeal Nos. 7689-90 of 2022 Page 2 of 27
silver weighing 4641.962 Kilograms valued at
Rs.3.06 Crores. The Collector Customs further
imposed a personal penalty of Rs.25 Lakhs on Sh.
Prakash Chand Lunia under Section 112 of the
Customs Act. The Collector held that the silver
under reference was of smuggled nature.
2.2 During the course of the assessment proceedings
the Assessing Officer observed that the assessee
was not able to explain the nature and source of
acquisition of silver of which he is held to be the
owner, therefore the deeming provisions of Section
69A of the Income Tax Act, 1961 (hereinafter
referred to as ‘the Act, 1961) would be applicable.
The investment in this regard was not found
recorded in the books of accounts of the assessee
that were produced before the then Assessing
Officer. Accordingly, the Assessing Officer passed
an assessment Order and made an addition of
Rs.3,06,36,909/- under Section 69A of the Act,
1961. In appeals preferred by the Assessee against
the assessment order, the CIT(A) dismissed the
Civil Appeal Nos. 7689-90 of 2022 Page 3 of 27
appeal of the assessee. Feeling aggrieved the
assessee preferred the appeal before the ITAT. The
ITAT, Jaipur also upheld the order of the CIT(A) so
far as Section 69A is concerned, however, partly
allowed the appeal of the assessee. As regards
some other minor additions, the ITAT set aside
some minor other additions and remanded the
matter to the AO for fresh examination. The AO re-
examined the issue and addition was made. The
CIT(A) also upheld the order of the AO. The
Assessee preferred the appeal against the fresh
order passed by the CIT(A) before the ITAT. The
ITAT, in the second round as well upheld the order
of the authorities below. A reference was made by
the ITAT to the High Court with the following
questions of law:
(i) “ Whether on the facts and in the circumstances
of the case, the Tribunal after construing and
interpreting the provisions contained in section
69A of the Income Tax Act, 1961 was right in law,
in holding that the assessee was the owner of the
144 silver bars found at premises no A 11 & 12 ,
Sector - VII, Noida and two silver bars found at
premises of M/s Lunia & Co Delhi and in
Civil Appeal Nos. 7689-90 of 2022 Page 4 of 27
sustaining addition of Rs.3,06,36,909/- being
unexplained investment in the hands of the
assessee under Section 69A of the Act?
(ii) If the answer to the above question is in
affirmative then, whether, on the facts and in the
circumstances of the case, the Tribunal was right
in law in distinguishing the ratio laid down by
their Lordships of the Supreme Court in the case
of Piara Singh v/s CIT, 124 ITR 41 and thereby
not allowing the loss on account of confiscation
of silver bars?"
2.3 While the reference was pending before the High
Court, penalty proceedings were initiated against
the assessee. An order under Section 271 (i) (c) of
the Act came to be confirmed by both the CIT (A)
and the ITAT. Accordingly, the assessee filed an
appeal under Section 260A of the Act against the
Penalty order, before the High Court. The High
Court while deciding both the cases together, qua
the first question, decided in favour of the Revenue
and the rental premises of the assessee, the same
is to be added to his income as a natural
consequence. However, with regard to the second
question, the High Court held that loss of
Civil Appeal Nos. 7689-90 of 2022 Page 5 of 27
confiscation by the DRI official of Customs
Department is business loss. While holding the
High Court has relied upon the decision of this
Court in the case of CIT, Patiala vs. Piara Singh
reported in 124 ITR 41 . The impugned judgment
and order passed by the High Court is the subject
matter of the present appeal.
3. Shri Balbir Singh, learned ASG has appeared on
behalf of the Revenue and Shri Arijit Prasad,
learned Senior Advocate has appeared on behalf of
the assessee.
3.1 Shri Balbir Singh, learned ASG appearing on
behalf of the Revenue has vehemently submitted
that in the facts and circumstances of the case and
while dealing with the relevant provisions of the
Act, 1961, the High Court has materially erred in
relying upon the decision of this Court in the case
of Piara Singh (supra). It is submitted that as
such the AO, CIT(A) and ITAT have correctly
distinguished the judgment in case of the Piara
Civil Appeal Nos. 7689-90 of 2022 Page 6 of 27
Singh (supra) as the same pertained to an
assessee who was engaged in the business of
smuggling of currency notes and for whom
confiscation of the currency notes was a loss
occasioned in pursuing his business, i.e., a loss
which sprung directly from carrying on of his
business and was incidental to it. It is submitted
that due to this, the assessee in the aforesaid case
was held entitled to deduction under Section 10(1)
of Income Tax Act, 1922. It is submitted that
however in para 7 of the aforesaid judgment which
refers to three cases where an exception to the
aforesaid rule was noted by the Court. It is
submitted that in the said decision this Court
noted earlier decisions of this Court as well as the
Andhra Pradesh High Court and the Bombay High
Court. It is submitted that in the case of Haji Aziz
& Abdul Shakoor Bros. v. CIT, AIR 1961 SC
663 , the assessee’s claim for deduction of fine paid
by him for release of his dates confiscated by
customs authorities, was rejected on the ground
that the amount paid by way of penalty for breach
Civil Appeal Nos. 7689-90 of 2022 Page 7 of 27
of law was not a normal course of business carried
on by it. In the other two cases, customs
authorities had confiscated gold from assessees
otherwise engaged in legitimate businesses. It is
submitted that in two relied upon cases of Andhra
Pradesh High Court and the Bombay High Court
the assessees claimed the value of gold seized as a
trading/business loss which is identical to the
Respondent-Assessee’s claim in the facts of the
present SLP. It is submitted that therefore the
decision of this Court in Haji Aziz & Abdul
Shakoor Bros. v. CIT, AIR 1961 SC 663 , of the
Andhra Pradesh High Court in the case of Soni
Hinduji Kushalji & Co. vs. CIT, (1973) 89 ITR
112(AP) and of the Bombay High Court in the case
of JS Parkar v. VB Palekar, (1974) 94 ITR 616
(Bom) shall be applicable with full force to the facts
of the case on hand.
3.2 It is submitted that the Andhra Pradesh High Court
observed in para 10 of the judgment in case of Soni
Hinduji Kushalji (supra) that when a claim for
Civil Appeal Nos. 7689-90 of 2022 Page 8 of 27
deduction is made, the loss must be one that
springs directly from or is incidental to the
business which the assessee carries on and not
every sort or kind of loss which has absolutely no
nexus or connection with his business. In paras 11
and 12, the High Court relied on various judgments
to state that confiscation of contraband gold is an
action in rem and not a proceeding in personam
and thus, a proceeding in rem in the strict sense of
the term is an action taken directly against the
property (i.e., smuggled gold) and even if the
offender is not known, customs authorities have
power to confiscate the contraband gold. In view of
the aforesaid, the Court stated that confiscation of
contraband gold by customs authorities cannot be
said to be a trading or commercial loss connected
with or incidental to assessee's business. The High
Court further relied on Haji Aziz (supra) and
various other judgments to state that such
confiscation of smuggled/contraband goods which
results in infraction of law and has no
incidence/connection to the business of assessee,
Civil Appeal Nos. 7689-90 of 2022 Page 9 of 27
cannot be allowed as a business loss. Thus, the
aforesaid case which has been referred to and
distinguished in Piara Singh (supra) , squarely
applies to the facts of the present case herein.
Similarly, the case of JS Parkar (supra) would
also be applicable to the present case as in the
former case, the assessee not only claimed the
value of the gold confiscated as a trading loss but
also set off of the said loss against his assumed and
assessed income from undisclosed sources.
Furthermore, the value of gold was sought to be
taxed U/s.69/69A by the tax authorities. However,
in this case also the Bombay High Court rejected
the contention that Section 110 of the Evidence Act
(where a person found in possession of anything,
the onus of proving that he was not the owner is
on the person who affirmed that he was not owner)
was inapplicable to taxation proceedings and
agreed that tax authorities had rightly inferred
assessee to be owner of seized gold based on
circumstantial evidence and assessee was not
Civil Appeal Nos. 7689-90 of 2022 Page 10 of 27
entitled to claim value of such gold as a trading
loss.
3.3 Shri Balbir Singh, learned ASG has further relied
upon the decisions of this Court in the case of
Chuharmal v. CIT, (1988) 3 SCC 588 and CIT v.
K Chinnathamban, (2007) 7 SCC 390 , on onus
of proving ownership being on the person who
denies ownership and who is in possession. It is
submitted that ownership of confiscated silver fell
on the Respondent-Assessee in the present case
which he failed to discharge and which accordingly
rendered the tax authorities’ concurrent findings
on his ownership to be valid. It is submitted that
when the assessee has been unable to deny
possession and ownership and in fact admitted the
same before the Settlement Commission as well as
the High Court, and further claimed the value of
confiscated silver as a trading loss before AO,
CIT(A) and ITAT, to alternatively argue to the
contrary and deny ownership in order to state that
Civil Appeal Nos. 7689-90 of 2022 Page 11 of 27
Section 69A cannot be applied in his case may not
be accepted.
3.4 It is submitted by learned ASG that assessee shall
also not be permitted to claim such loss as a
business expenditure in view of the express
prohibition under Explanation 1 to Section 37(1) of
the Act which was added w.e.f.01.04.1962.
Reliance is placed on the decisions of this Court in
the case of TA Quereshi (Dr.) v. CIT, (2007) 2 SCC
759 as well as Apex Laboratories (P) Ltd. v. CIT,
(2022) 7 SCC 98 . It is submitted that Explanation
1 to Section 37(1) of the Act expressly disallows any
expenditure incurred by an assessee for any
purpose which is an offence or is prohibited by law,
which may be claimed as an expenditure incurred
for the purpose of business/profession.
3.5 It is submitted that in the case of TA Quereshi
(supra), this Court clarified that the facts of the
said case pertained to business loss and not
Civil Appeal Nos. 7689-90 of 2022 Page 12 of 27
business expenditure. It is submitted that in the
said case, ITAT found the assessee engaged in the
business of manufacturing and selling heroin and
thus, this Court held that assessee’s claim of
business loss was allowable as he was in the
business of heroin. It is submitted that the case of
Apex Laboratories (supra) distinguishes the
judgment in TA Quereshi (supra) and states that
the case relating to the assessee bribing doctors,
did not deal with business loss but business
expenditure which was disallowable under
Explanation 1 to Section 37(1). It is submitted that
thus either way, neither can the Respondent-
Assessee claim business loss due to him not being
in the smuggling business nor can he claim
business expenditure as the same is prohibited
under Explanation 1 to Section 37(1).
3.6 Making above submissions and relying upon the
above submissions, it is prayed to allow the present
appeals and restore the ITAT orders.
Civil Appeal Nos. 7689-90 of 2022 Page 13 of 27
4. Shri Arijit Prasad, learned Senior Advocate
appearing on behalf of the assessee has
vehemently submitted that in the present case the
respondent – assessee is engaged in the business
of purchase and sale of silver. Total sales of
Rs.1,46,07,314/- of Silver was declared by the
respondent – assessee with a gross profit of
Rs.1,32,712/- for the assessment year in question.
Search was conducted by the officers of DRI when
unaccounted 146 slabs of silver was recovered.
The Collector of Customs ordered absolute
confiscation of the said 146 slabs of silver valued
at Rs.3,06,036,909/- was proposed to be added as
deemed income under Section 69A of the Act. The
respondent – assessee disputed being the owner of
the slabs. In the alternative, the respondent also
requested that 146 silver slabs having been
absolutely confiscated by the Customs
Department, the value of such tradable silver slabs
should be allowed as loss. However, the Assessing
Officer made the addition of Rs.3,06,036,909/- as
income under Section 69A of the Act being a value
Civil Appeal Nos. 7689-90 of 2022 Page 14 of 27
of 146 silver bars seized from the possession of the
respondent. The said order of addition came to be
confirmed upto ITAT, however by the impugned
judgment and order the High Court has answered
the reference in favour of the assessee by holding
that when the value of material is added to the
income of the respondent, as a natural
consequence, the loss by confiscation of the said
material is required to be allowed as business loss.
It is submitted that it is through that before the
High Court, the assessee did not press the
argument regarding the ownership of the silver
slabs and therefore, the said question was not
answered by the High Court.
4.1 It is submitted that therefore present case is one
where set off is claimed of the value of the 146
silver slabs as loss on account of absolute
confiscation rather than claim of expenditure of
any penalty and/or fine imposed for infraction of
law.
Civil Appeal Nos. 7689-90 of 2022 Page 15 of 27
4.2 It is submitted that as such the issue in the present
appeals is fairly covered in favour of the assessee
in view of the decision of this Court in the case of
TA Quereshi (Dr.) (supra). In the said decision, it
is held that the judgment of the High Court
applying Section 37 of the Act to the case of
business loss on account of absolute confiscation
of the goods was erroneous. It is submitted that
the submission of the assessee therein that Section
37 of the Act related to business expenditure
whereas case of absolute confiscation was one of
business loss has been accepted.
4.3 It is submitted that in the present case, upon
search, 146 silver slabs were found to be in
possession of the assessee. The value of the said
silver slabs was determined to be Rs.
3,06,036,909/- and the same was added to the
computation of income of the assessee under
Section 69A of the Act as undisclosed valuable
article which was not recorded in the books of
account of the assessee.
Civil Appeal Nos. 7689-90 of 2022 Page 16 of 27
4.4 It is submitted that however as the respondent –
assessee was engaged in the business of trading of
silver and the said silver slabs were in possession
of the assessee for the purpose of trading, absolute
confiscation of the said silver slabs would result in
loss of stock in trade and the value thereof would
be available as deduction as business/trading loss.
It is submitted that therefore the decision of this
Court in the case of T.A. Quereshi (Supra) shall
be clearly applicable.
4.5 It is submitted that in the case of T.A. Quereshi
(Supra) this Court has drawn a distinction
between claim of deduction as expenditure of
penalty/fine as against claim of business loss on
account of confiscation of goods which are
unaccounted stock in trade. It is submitted that in
case of claim of deduction as expenditure of any
fine and/or penalty, the Courts have held that
such deduction would not be available to the
assessee as it would defeat the very purpose
Civil Appeal Nos. 7689-90 of 2022 Page 17 of 27
behind such penal action. Whereas, in case of
claim of set off as business loss, the unaccounted
goods though added to the income of assessee but
is not available to the assessee for his trade. It is
submitted that while extending the benefit of such
set off, this Court in the case of Piara Singh
(supra) and T.A. Quereshi (Supra) have held that
the assessee shall be entitled to the set off as
business loss.
4.6 It is submitted that unlike a case of imposition of
redemption fine where the confiscated goods are
released on payment of such amount, absolute
confiscation of the goods results in the said goods
vesting with the Central Government. In such
cases, though the value of the goods is added to the
income of the assessee, but the assessee has no
option of redeeming the goods for its onward trade.
Thus, there is an evident distinction between a
case where deduction is sought of any penalty
and/or fine as allowable expenditure and a case
where business loss is claimed on account of
Civil Appeal Nos. 7689-90 of 2022 Page 18 of 27
absolute confiscation of the goods which results in
loss of stock in trade. It is submitted that present
one is a case where the set off is claimed as
business loss on account of absolute confiscation
of the silver bars and not of any penalty and/or
fine. The judgments cited during the course of
hearing by the Petitioner are therefore rendered on
distinct and distinguishable facts and would not be
applicable to the facts of the present case.
4.7 It is submitted that the said distinction has also
been statutorily recognized. As highlighted by the
appellant, Section 37 which deals with allowance
and deduction of expenditure, was amended vide
Finance Act, 1998 w.e.f. 01.04.1962 whereby
Explanation 1 was added to clarify that any
expenditure incurred by an assessee for any
purpose which is an offence or which is prohibited
by law shall not be deemed to have been incurred
for the purpose of business or profession and no
deduction or allowance shall be made in respect of
such expenditure. In contrast thereto, consciously
Civil Appeal Nos. 7689-90 of 2022 Page 19 of 27
no such restriction has been brought in law with
regard to set off of the value of the unaccounted
stock in trade which have been absolutely
confiscated.
4.8 Making above submissions it is prayed to dismiss
the present appeals.
5. Heard learned counsel for the respective parties at
length.
6. The short question which is posed for
consideration before this Court is whether the High
Court has erred in law in allowing the respondent
– assessee the loss of confiscation of silver bars by
DRI officials as a business loss, relying upon the
decision of this Court in the case of CIT Patiala
vs. Piara Singh, 1980 Supp SCC 166 ?
6.1 While considering the aforesaid question, at the
outset, it is required to be noted that the provisions
of Section 37(1) under the Act has been amended
by Finance (No.2) Act, 1998 by introducing
Civil Appeal Nos. 7689-90 of 2022 Page 20 of 27
Explanation 1 thereto w.e.f. 01.04.1962 wherein
any expenditure incurred by the assessee for any
purpose which is an offence or prohibited by law is
not an allowable business expense. It is true that
in the present case the respondent - assessee did
not claim value of silver bars confiscation as
business expenses thus claimed as business loss.
However, the amendment to Section 37 might have
some bearing on the issue involved.
6.2 On going through the impugned judgment and
order passed by the High Court, it appears that the
High Court has simply relied upon the decision of
this Court in the case of Piara Singh (supra).
Having gone through the decision of this Court in
the case of Piara Singh (supra), we are of the
opinion that the High Court has materially erred in
relying upon the decision of this Court in the case
of Piara Singh (supra).
6.3 In the case of Piara Singh (supra) the assessee
was found to be in the business of smuggling of
Civil Appeal Nos. 7689-90 of 2022 Page 21 of 27
currency notes and to that it was found that
confiscation of currency notes was a loss
occasioned in pursuing his business i.e. a loss
which sprung directly from carrying on of his
business and was incidental to it. Due to this, the
assessee in the said case held entitled to deduction
under Section 10(1) of the Income Tax Act, 1922.
In view of the above fact situation this Court in the
case of Piara Singh (supra) distinguished the
decisions of this Court in the case of Haji Aziz &
Abdul Shakoor Bros. reported in AIR 1961 SC
663 , and the decision in the case of Soni Hinduji
Kushalji & Co. vs. CIT, (1973) 89 ITR 112(AP)
and not agreed with the decision of the Bombay
High Court in the case of J.S. Parkar vs. VB
Palekar, (1974 94 ITR 616 (Bom). It is to be
noted that in all the aforesaid three cases which
were relied upon by the Revenue in the case of
Piara Singh (supra) were found to be involved in
legitimate businesses and not smuggling business
but however they were found to have smuggled
goods contrary to law which resulted in an
Civil Appeal Nos. 7689-90 of 2022 Page 22 of 27
infraction of law and resultant confiscation by
customs authorities.
6.4 In the case of Haji Aziz (supra) the assessee
claimed for deduction of fine paid by him for
release of his dates confiscated by customs
authorities was rejected on the ground that the
amount paid by way of penalty for breach of law
was not a normal business carried out by it. In the
case of Soni Hinduji Kushalji (supra) and JS
Parkar (supra),
the customs authorities had
confiscated gold from assessees otherwise engaged
in legitimate businesses. In the aforesaid two
cases the assessee claimed the value of gold seized
as a trading/business loss. It was held that the
assessees are not entitled to the deductions as
claimed as business loss.
6.5 In the case of Soni Hinduji (supra), the Andhra
Pradesh High Court held that when a claim for
deduction is made, the loss must be one that
springs directly from or is incidental to the
business which the assessee carries on and not
Civil Appeal Nos. 7689-90 of 2022 Page 23 of 27
every sort or kind of loss which has absolutely no
nexus or connection with his business. It was
observed that confiscation of contraband gold was
an action in rem and not a proceeding in personam
and thus, a proceeding in rem in the strict sense of
the term is an action taken directly against the
property (i.e. smuggled gold) and even if the
offender is not known, the customs authorities
have power to confiscate the contraband gold.
JS Parkar (supra),
6.6 In the case of the assessee not
only claimed the value of the gold confiscated as a
trading loss but also set off of the said loss against
his assumed and assessed income from
undisclosed sources. The value of gold was sought
to be taxed under Section 69/69A of the Act by the
tax authorities. However, the Bombay High Court
held the assessee to be the owner of the smuggled
confiscated gold and the assessee was not entitled
to claim value of such gold as a trading loss.
Civil Appeal Nos. 7689-90 of 2022 Page 24 of 27
6.7 In the present case the ownership of the
confiscated silver bars of the assessee now cannot
be disputed and even the assessee is not disputing
the same. Even on that also there are concurrent
findings by all the authorities below and including
the customs authorities. Therefore, the next
question which is posed for consideration before
this Court is whether the assessee can claim the
business loss of the value of the silver bar
confiscated and whether the decision of this Court
in the case of Piara Singh (supra) would be
applicable?
6.8 To answer to the aforesaid question, it can be seen
that in the present case the main business of the
assessee is dealing in silver. His business cannot
be said to be smuggling of the silver bars as was
the case in the case of Piara Singh (supra). As
observed hereinabove in the assessee’s case he was
carrying on an otherwise legitimate silver business
and in attempt to make larger profits, he indulged
into smuggling of silver, which was an infraction of
Civil Appeal Nos. 7689-90 of 2022 Page 25 of 27
law. In that view of the matter the decision of this
Court in the case of Piara Singh (supra) which
has been relied upon by the High Court while
passing the impugned judgment and order and it
has been relied upon by the assessee shall not be
applicable to the facts of the case. On hand or the
other hand the decision of this Court in the case of
Haji Aziz (1961) 41 ITR 350 (SC) and the
decisions of the Andhra Pradesh High Court and
the Bombay High Court which were pressed into
service by the Revenue in Piara Singh (supra)
would be applicable with full force.
7. In view of the above and for the reason stated above
and looking to the business of the assessee namely
silver business and was not in the business of
smuggling silver, the decision of this Court in the
case of Piara Singh (supra) shall not be applicable
and therefore the impugned judgment and order
passed by the High Court quashing and setting
aside the order passed by the Assessing Officer,
CIT(A) and the ITAT rejecting the claim of the
Civil Appeal Nos. 7689-90 of 2022 Page 26 of 27
Assessee to treat the silver bars confiscated by the
customs authorities as business loss and
consequently value allowing the same as business
loss is unsustainable and the same deserves to be
quashed and set side.
8.1 In view of the above and for the reason stated above
present appeals succeed. The impugned judgment
and order passed by the High Court is hereby
quashed and set aside and the order passed by the
assessing officer, CIT(A) and the ITAT are hereby
restored.
Present appeals are accordingly allowed. No
costs.
……………………………J.
(M. R. SHAH)
……………………………J.
(M.M. SUNDRESH)
New Delhi,
April 24, 2023
Civil Appeal Nos. 7689-90 of 2022 Page 27 of 27
REPORTABLE
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 7689-7690 OF 2022
THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX, JAIPUR …APPELLANT
VERSUS
PRAKASH CHAND LUNIA (D) THR LRS & ANR. …RESPONDENTS
J U D G M E N T
M. M. Sundresh, J.
1. The present appeal is filed by the Revenue, challenging the decision of the
Division Bench of the Rajasthan High Court at Jaipur, drawing a distinction
between a claim for deduction of a loss incurred in an illegal business, as
against a claim of a loss qua a legitimate business, though an illegality is
attached to it. The aforesaid issue is to be tested on an offence committed
leading to either a penalty or confiscation.
2. Heard Mr. Balbir Singh, learned Additional Solicitor General, Mr. AK
Shrivastava, learned senior counsel for the Appellant and Mr. Arjit Prasad,
learned senior counsel for the Respondents.
3. I have gone through the well-merited judgment rendered by my learned brother,
Justice M.R. Shah. While concurring with the ultimate conclusion arrived at in
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 7689-7690 OF 2022
1
overturning the decision of the High Court, I would like to give my own
reasoning on the aforesaid aspect. The facts being narrated with utmost clarity
by my learned brother, only those which are required in support of the
reasoning are being recorded.
4. The Director of Revenue Intelligence set out a search at the business premises
of the Respondent/assessee. The recovery yielded silver slabs/silver ingots. The
assessee was in the business of making jewellery.
5. The Respondent/assessee filed his return for the Assessment Year 1989-1990
followed by a petition before the Income Tax Settlement Commission. The
Collector of Customs vide order dated 18.12.1990 ordered confiscation of
goods and imposed penalty. It was done on the premise that the goods were
smuggled by the assessee. A claim was made by the assessee that the loss on
account of confiscation would be allowable as trading loss being incidental to
the business, and hence, deductible. This argument was duly rejected as he was
neither doing the business of smuggling, nor he owned the silver. The plea of
ownership was given up by the Respondent/assessee before the High Court, and
therefore, the decision of the assessing officer in bringing the loss suffered
under Section 69A of the Income Tax Act, 1961 (hereinafter referred to as “the
Act”), has become final.
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2
6. Before the Hight Court, the Respondent/assessee placing reliance upon the
judgment of this Court in Commissioner of Income Tax v. Piara Singh (1980)
Supp. SCC 166, inter alia contended that smuggling by itself being prohibited
in law, any loss occurred thereunder is liable for deduction. The aforesaid
argument made, found acceptance at the hands of the High Court, which is
sought to be impugned by the Revenue before us.
RELEVANT PROVISIONS OF THE INCOME TAX ACT, 1961
“2 . Definitions .- In this Act, unless the context otherwise requires,—
xxx xxx xxx
(13)"business" includes any trade, commerce or manufacture or any
adventure or concern in the nature of trade, commerce or manufacture;”
7. This provision being a definition clause merely defines various activities which
could be termed as a business. Section 2(13) of the Act gives a broad definition
to ‘business’. Section 28 of the Act comes under the heading ‘Profits and Gains
of Business or Profession’. Various types of income enumerated thereunder are
made chargeable to income tax. The income, as referred in Section 28 of the
Act, has to be computed in the manner as prescribed under Section 30 to 43D of
the Act, which is accordingly provided under Section 29 of the Act.
| Section 37: | |
|---|---|
| “37 General.- (1) Any expenditure (not being expenditure of the nature<br>described in sections 30 to 36 and not being in the nature of capital expenditure or<br>personal expenses of the assessee), laid out or expended wholly and exclusively<br>for the purposes of the business or profession shall be allowed in computing the<br>income chargeable under the head "Profits and gains of business or profession". |
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[Explanation 1.]—For the removal of doubts, it is hereby declared that any
expenditure incurred by an assessee for any purpose which is an offence or which
is prohibited by law shall not be deemed to have been incurred for the purpose of
business or profession and no deduction or allowance shall be made in respect of
such expenditure.”
8. Section 37 of the Act, being one of the provisions meant for computing income
from profits or gains of business or profession, is a residuary and omnibus
provision which intends to cover all expenditure to the exclusion of those
mentioned under Section 30 to 36 of the Act, apart from being in the nature of
capital expenditure or personal expenses of the assessee. Therefore, the object
behind this provision is very clear as it includes ‘any expenditure’. The second
mandate of this provision is that the expenditure will have to be laid out or
expended wholly and exclusively for the purpose of the business or profession to
come into the fold of income chargeable to tax as profit and gains of business or
profession.
9. An ambiguity arose as to whether a business, as defined under Section 2(13) of
the Act, and as dealt with under Section 37 of the Act, would include a
deduction when the said expenditure is incurred for any purpose which is an
offence or prohibited by law.
10. Since an anomaly has been created by the interpretation of the pari materia
provision under the Income Tax Act, 1922 (hereinafter referred to as “the Old
Act”), viz. Section 10(1) and (2), therefore, Explanation-I to Section 37 of the
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4
Act came into the statute book with retrospective effect from 01.04.1962
through the Finance (No.2) Act 1998, (Act 21 of 1998).
11. The purpose of the insertion of the aforesaid Explanation was explained by the
Central Board of Direct Taxes Circular No. 772 dated 23.12.1998,
“Disallowance of illegal expenses
20.1 Section 37 of the Income-tax Act is amended to provide that any expenditure
incurred by an assessee for any purpose which is an offence or which is prohibited
by law shall not be deemed to have been incurred for the purposes of business or
profession and no deduction or allowance shall be made in respect of such ex-
penditure. This amendment will result in disallowance of the claims made by
certain assessees in respect of payments on account of protection money,
extortion, hafta, bribes etc. as business expenditure. It is well decided that
unlawful expenditure is not an allowable deduction in computation of income.
20.2 This amendment will take effect retrospectively from 1st April, 1962 and
will, accordingly, apply in relation to the assessment year 1962-63 and subsequent
years.”
12. Explanation-I makes a declaration to remove any possible doubts to reckon a
loss suffered in the form of expenditure for any purpose which is an offence or
one that is prohibited by law. There is no difficulty in holding that this
explanation is clarificatory in nature. Applying the principle of literal
interpretation with the intendment being very clear, giving no room for further
doubts, coupled with the fact that there is no challenge to it, the meaning
appears to be rather very clear. It seeks to prohibit a deduction of any
expenditure incurred by an assessee for any purpose which is an offence or
which is prohibited by law. Due regard will have to be given to the words ‘any
expenditure’ and ‘any purpose’. The reiteration being a legislative clarification
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 7689-7690 OF 2022
5
of the main provision is required to be taken note of, as such, the power of
judicial review over an explanation, which has been introduced to explain and
remove the doubts of the main provision, is rather limited.
13. Though the provision speaks of expenditure while not making a specific
reference to loss, one has to press into service the accepted commercial practice
and trading principles. If one is to treat the expenditure as a genus, a loss would
become a specie. All losses would become expenditures but not vice versa . A
commercial loss in trade arising out of a business being carried on and
incidental to it would be a deductible loss as laid down by this Court in
Badridas Daga v. CIT , (1959) SCR 690. There is a similarity in the test qua a
loss as laid down by this Court, and expenditure under Section 37 of the Act.
Perhaps, there is a distinction when it comes to the accounting treatment of the
two concepts. Thus, there is no difficulty in holding that the word ‘any
expenditure’ mentioned in Section 37 of the Act takes in its sweep loss
occasioned in the course of business, as well. Therefore, I agree with the view
of my learned brother that Section 37 of the Act and Explanation 1 will have a
bearing in the present case.
Section 115BBE
“Section 115BBE .- “Tax on income referred to in section 68 or section
69 or section 69A or section 69B or section 69C or section 69D.- (1) Where the
total income of an assessee,—
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6
(a) includes any income referred to in section 68, section 69, section
69A, section 69B, section 69C or section 69D and reflected in the
return of income furnished under section 139; or
(b) determined by the Assessing Officer includes any income referred to
in section 68, section 69, section 69A, section 69B, section 69C or
section 69D, if such income is not covered under clause (a),
the income-tax payable shall be the aggregate of—
(i) the amount of income-tax calculated on the income referred to in
clause (a) and clause (b), at the rate of sixty per cent; and
(ii) the amount of income-tax with which the assessee would have been
chargeable had his total income been reduced by the amount of
income referred to in clause (i).
(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in this Act, no deduction in
respect of any expenditure or allowance or set off of any loss shall be allowed to
the assessee under any provision of this Act in computing his income referred to
in clause (a) and clause (b) of sub-section (1).”
14. Section 115BBE of the Act deals with levy of tax on income as mentioned in
Section 68, 69, and 69A to 69D of the Act. If a case comes under Section
115BBE sub-section (1) of the Act, the rate of income tax shall be at 60%.
15. The object of this provision is to fill up the loopholes and to make sure
unaccounted money either generated or used, more so in the nature of Black
Money, is penalized. When this provision was introduced in the year 2012, the
rate of tax was fixed at the rate of 30%. The Bill also speaks about the objective
behind not allowing any deduction to the assessee in computing deemed income
under Section 68, 69 and 69A to 69D of the Act. That was the reason why a
decision was made to impose greater tax burden. The rate of tax was increased
by a subsequent amendment to 60%.
16. Sub-section (2) of Section 115BBE starts with a non-obstante clause. It will
have precedence over any other provision contained in the Act, while dealing
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7
with a deduction in respect of any expenditure or allowance or set off of any
loss. In other words, no such deduction would be allowed under any provision
of the Act in computing an assessee’s income under sub-section (1). An
amendment has been introduced by Finance Act, 2016 with the inclusion of ‘set
off of any loss’ being not allowable. Sub-section (2) once again does not speak
about loss but the fact that it makes a reference to ‘set off of any loss’ would
reiterate the view taken earlier, while considering the scope and ambit of
Section 37 of the Act, that such a loss has to be read into expenditure, at least
while applying the test for the purpose of deduction. To make the position clear
one has to understand that the amendment merely speaks about the right of the
assessee to set off the loss which presupposes that the loss has to be treated as a
facet of expenditure.
17. A little bit of interplay between Section 115BBE and Section 37(1) of the Act
might throw more light on both the provisions. If a loss in pursuance to an
offence or prohibited business cannot be brought under Section 115BBE of the
Act for income assessed under 68, 69 and 69A to 69D of the Act, which deals
with unexplained income, expenditure etc., it can never be said that the same
would be brought under Section 37(1) of the Act, despite the fact that the
objective behind both the provisions are overlapping with some connection.
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 7689-7690 OF 2022
8
Section 115BBE being a subsequent legislation, the true meaning of Section
37(1) can be understood on that basis.
18. Having understood the provisions, I shall now consider the decisions relied
upon at the Bar as they deal with the interpretation of the provisions governing.
19. Badridas Daga v. CIT , (1959) SCR 690
19.1 This Court was dealing with a loss suffered due to an embezzlement by an
employee of the assessee. While interpreting Section 10(2) of the Old Act
over a claim made for deduction, for which there was no specific provision,
reliance was made on the accepted commercial practices and trading
principles. Resultantly, it was held that the deduction was allowable in a case
where there is no prohibition either expressed or implied under the Act. Thus,
the Court has made it clear that in the absence of any prohibition, as stated
above, a claim for deduction of a loss is allowable so long as it emanates
directly from the carrying on of the business, being incidental to it. In other
words, it does not include loss of any nature even if it has some connection
with the business, if the same cannot be said to be incidental to the business.
19.2 The court went on to hold that the payment of salary to an employee being
paid for the purpose of business, is deductible under the general provision,
therefore, logically any loss occasioned on the action of an employee would
be incidental to the business.
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 7689-7690 OF 2022
9
19.3 Considering the aforesaid, it can be said that there is a similarity between the
test laid down for deduction of an expense in the residuary omnibus provision
under Section 10(2)(xv) of the Old Act and the test for deduction of loss based
on commercial practices and trading principles. The decision is therefore
supporting the above stated interpretation of Section 37 of the Act.
19.4 Relevant paragraphs:
“The question whether monies embezzled by an agent or employee are
allowable as deduction in computing the profits of a business under s. 10 of the
Act has come up for consideration frequently before the Indian Courts, and the
decisions have not been quite uniform. Before discussing them, it is necessary that
we should examine the principles that are in law applicable to the determination
of the question. Three grounds have been put forward in support of the claim for
deduction: (1) that the loss sustained by reason of embezzlement is a bad debt
allowable under s. 10(2)(xi) of the Act; (2) that it is a business expense falling
within s. 10(2)(xv) of the Act; and (3) that it is a trading loss, which must be taken
into account in computing the profits under s. 10(1) of the Act. As regards the first
ground, the authorities have consistently held that the deduction is not admissible
under s. 10(2)(xi) of the Act, and that, in our view, is correct. A debt arises out of
a contract between the parties, express or implied, and when an agent
misappropriates monies belonging to his employer in fraud of him and in breach
of his obligations to him, it cannot be said that he owes those monies under any
agreement. He is no doubt liable in law to make good that amount, but that is not
an obligation arising out of a contract, express or implied. Nor does it make a
difference that in the accounts of the business the amounts embezzled are shown
as debits, the amounts realised towards them, if any, as credits, and the balance is
finally written off. They are merely journal entries adjusting the accounts and do
not import a contractual liability. Nor can a claim for deduction be admitted under
s. 10(2)(xv), because moneys which are withdrawn by the employee out of the
business till without authority and in fraud of the proprietor can in no sense be
said to be “an expenditure laid out or expended wholly and exclusively” for the
purpose of the business. The controversy therefore narrows itself to the question
whether amounts lost through embezzlement by an employee are a trading loss
which could be deducted in computing the profits of a business under s. 10(1). It
is to be noted that while s, 10(1) imposes a charge on the profits or gains of a
trade, it does not provide how those profits are to be computed. Section 10(2)
enumerates various items which are admissible as deductions, but it is well settled
that they are not exhaustive of all allowances which could be made in ascertaining
profits taxable under s. 10(1). In Income Tax Commissioner v. Chitnavis [(1932)
LR 59 IA 290, 296, 297] the point for decision was whether a bad debt could be
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 7689-7690 OF 2022
10
deducted under s. 10(1) of the Act, there having been in the Act, as it then stood,
no provision corresponding to s. 10(2)(xi) for deduction of such a debt. In
answering the question in the affirmative, Lord Russel observed:
“Although the Act nowhere in terms authorizes the deduction of
bad debts of business, such a deduction is necessarily allowable.
What are chargeable in income tax in respect of a business are the
profits and gains of a year; and in assessing the amount of the
profits and gains of a year account must necessarily be taken of all
losses incurred, otherwise you would not arrive at the true profits
and gains.”
It is likewise well settled that profits and gains which are liable to be taxed under
s. 10(1) are what are understood to be such according to ordinary commercial
principles. “The word ‘profits’ … is to be understood”, observed Lord Halsbury in
Gresham Life Assurance Society v. Styles [(1892) AC 309, 315 : 3 TC 185, 188]
“in its natural and proper sense — in a sense which no commercial man would
misunderstand”. Referring to these observations Lord Macmillan said in
Pondicherry Railway Co. v. Income Tax Commissioner [(1931) LR 58 IA 239,
252]:
“English authorities can only be utilized with caution in the
consideration of Indian income tax cases owing to the differences
in the relevant legislation, but the principle laid down by Lord
Chancellor Halsbury in Gresham Life Assurance Society v. Styles
[(1892) AC 309, 315 : 3 TC 185, 188] , is of general application
unaffected by the specialities of the English tax system.”
The result is that when a claim is made for a deduction for which there is no
specific provision in s. 10(2), whether it is admissible or not will depend on
whether, having regard to accepted commercial practice and trading principles, it
can be said to arise out of the carrying on of the business and to be incidental to it.
If that is established, then the deduction must be allowed, provided of course there
is no prohibition against it, express or implied, in the Act.
These being the governing principles, in deciding whether loss resulting
from embezzlement by an employee in a business is admissible as a deduction
under s. 10(1) what has to be considered is whether it arises out of the carrying on
of the business and is incidental to it. Viewing the question as a businessman
would, it seems difficult to maintain that it does not. A business especially such as
is calculated to yield taxable profits has to be carried on through agents, cashiers,
clerks and peons. Salary and remuneration paid to them are admissible under s.
10(2)(xv) as expenses incurred for the purpose of the business. If employment of
agents is incidental to the carrying on of business, it must logically follow that
losses which are incidental to such employment are also incidental to the carrying
on of the business. Human nature being what it is, it is impossible to rule out the
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 7689-7690 OF 2022
11
possibility of an employee taking advantage of his position as such employee and
misappropriating the funds of his employer, and the loss arising from such
misappropriation must be held to arise out of the carrying on of business and to be
incidental to it. And that is how it would be dealt with according to ordinary
commercial principles of trading.
At the same time, it should be emphasised that the loss for which a
deduction could be made under s. 10(1) must be one that springs directly from the
carrying on of the business and is incidental to it and not any loss sustained by the
assessee, even if it has some connection with his business. If, for example, a thief
were to break overnight into the premises of a moneylender and run away with
funds secured therein, that must result in the depletion of the resources available
to him for lending and the loss must, in that sense, be a business loss, but it is not
one incurred in the running of the business, but is one to which all owners of
properties are exposed whether they do business or not. The loss in such a case
may be said to fall on the assessee not as a person carrying on business but as
owner of funds. This distinction, though fine, is very material as on it will depend
whether deduction could be made under s. 10(1) or not.”
(emphasis supplied)
20. Haji Aziz & Abdul Shakoor Bros. v. CIT, (1961) 2 SCR 651
20.1 The three-Judge bench of this Court in the aforesaid case was concerned with
two principal issues which we are dealing with at present. In clear terms it has
been held that an expenditure is not deductible unless it is a commercial loss
in trade. A penalty incurred for an infraction of law could never be termed as a
commercial loss in carrying on business, apart from being an abnormal
incident, consequently, it cannot be deducted. It falls on the assesse in some
character other than that of a trader. A mere connection between the loss and
the business of the assesse per se can never be the sole factor. To put it simply,
this Court has made the position abundantly clear that a penalty can never be
understood as a commercial expenditure/loss for the purpose of the business
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nor a disbursement made to earn profit. It was further noted that a confiscation
is a proceeding in rem , and therefore, the penalty is imposed on the goods.
That being the position, in any case, an assessee cannot claim deduction of
loss in a case of confiscation/penalty, as arising out of carrying on of the
business or incidental to it.
20.2 Relevant paragraphs:
“ In support of his argument counsel for the appellant firm referred
to Maqbool Hussain v. State of Bombay etc. [(1953) SCR 730] and to the
following passage at p. 742 where Bhagwati, J., said:
“Confiscation is no doubt one of the penalties which the Customs
Authorities can impose but that is more in the nature of
proceedings in rem than proceedings in personam, the object being
to confiscate the offending goods which have been dealt with
contrary to the provisions of the law and in respect of the
confiscation also an option is given to the owner of the goods to
pay in lieu of confiscation such fine as the officer thinks fit. All this
is for the enforcement of the levy of and safeguarding the recovery
of the sea customs duties.”
Similar observations were made by S.K. Das, J., in Shewpujanrai Indrasanrai
Ltd. v. Collector of Customs & Ors. [(1959) SCR 821 at p. 836] where it was said
that a distinction must be drawn between an action in rem and proceeding
in personam and that confiscation of the goods is a proceeding in rem and the
penalties are enforced against the goods whether the offender is known or not.
The view taken by this Court in the other two cases cited by counsel for the
appellants i.e. Leo Roy Frey v. Superintendent, District Jail, Amritsar [(1958)
SCR 822] and Thomas Dana v. State of Punjab [1959 Supp (1) SCR 274 at p.
298] is the same. In Dana case [(1959) SCR 821 at p. 836] Subba Rao, J., said at
p. 298:
“If the authority concerned makes an order of confiscation it is
only a proceeding in rem and the penalty is enforced against the
goods. On the other hand, if it imposes a penalty against the person
concerned, it is a proceeding against the person and he is punished
for committing the offence. It follows that in the case of
confiscation there is no prosecution against the person or
imposition of a penalty on him.”
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In Maqbool Hussain’s case [(1953) SCR 730] the question for decision was
whether after proceedings had been taken under the Sea Customs Act an accused
person could be prosecuted and could or could not rely upon the plea of double
jeopardy, it was held that he could not. In Shewpujanrai case [(1959) SCR 821 at
p. 836] the contention raised was that after proceedings had been taken under the
Foreign Exchange Regulation Act it was not open to the Customs Authorities to
take any action under the Sea Customs Act. The other two cases were similar
to Maqbool Hussain case [(1953) SCR 730] . The contention now raised before us
is quite different. What is to be decided in the present case is whether the penalty
which was paid by the appellant firm was an allowable deduction within s. 10(2)
( xv ) of the Income-tax Act which provides:
S. 10. (2)( xv ) “any expenditure (not being in the nature of capital
expenditure or personal expenses of the assessee) laid out or
expended wholly and exclusively for the purpose of such business,
profession or vocation.”
The words “for the purpose of such business” have been construed in Inland
Revenue v. Anglo Brewing Co. Ltd. [(1925) 12 TC 803, 813] to mean “for the
purpose of keeping the trade going and of making it pay”. The essential condition
of allowance is that the expenditure should have been laid out or expended wholly
and exclusively for the purpose of such business.
In deciding this case, reference to decisions in some English cases will be
fruitful. In Commissioners of Inland Revenue v. Warnes & Co. [(1919) 2 KB
444] , the assessee who carried on the business of oil exporters were sued for a
penalty on an information exhibited by the Attorney-General under the Sea
Customs Consolidation Act for breach of orders and proclamations. The matter
was settled by consent on the assessee agreeing to pay a mitigated penalty of £
2000. All imputations on the moral culpability of the assessees were withdrawn.
The provisions of the Act under which this information was lodged and penalty
paid was similar to the provisions of the Indian Sea Customs Act. This amount
was held not to be a proper deduction because in order to be within the provision
similar to s. 10(2)( xv ) of the Indian Act the loss had to be something within
commercial contemplation and in the nature of a commercial loss. Rowlatt, J.,
relying on the observation of Lord Loreburn, L.C., in Strong &
Co. v. Woodifield [(1906) AC 448] said at p. 452:
“but it seems to me that a penal liability of this kind cannot be
regarded as a loss connected with or arising out of a trade. I think
that a loss connected with or arising out of a trade must, at any rate,
amount to something in the nature of a loss which is contemplable
and in the nature of a commercial loss. I do not intend that to be an
exhaustive definition, but I do not think it is possible to say that
when a fine which is what the penalty in the present case amounted
to has been inflicted upon a trading body, it can be said that that is
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14
a ‘loss connected, with or arising out of’ the trade within the
meaning of this rule”.
This statement of the law was approved in the Commissioners of Inland
Revenue v. Alexander Von Glehn & Co. Ltd. [(1920) 2 KB 553] where also in
similar circumstances by consent of the assessee penalty of £ 3,000 was paid and
the penalty plus the costs were claimed as deduction in arriving at the profits. The
Special Commissioners had found that the penalty and costs were incurred by the
assessee in the course of carrying on their trade and so incidental thereto and were
admissible deductions. Rowlatt, J., on a reference held it to be a non-deductible
item. This judgment was affirmed on appeal by the Court of Appeal. Lord
Sterndale, M.R., was of the opinion that it was immaterial whether technically the
proceedings were criminal or not. The money that was paid was paid as a penalty
and it did not matter if in the information it was called a forfeiture.
It was argued by the assesses in that case that no moral obliquity was
attributed to them and that it did not matter whether the expense was incurred in
consequence of an infraction of the law or whether it was a penalty for doing an
illegal act. At p. 565 Lord Sterndale said:
“Now what is the position here? This business could perfectly well
be carried on without any infraction of the law. This penalty was
imposed because of an infraction of the law, and that does not seem
to me to be, any more than the expense which had to be paid
in Strong & Co. v. Woodifield [(1906) AC 448] appeared to Lord
Davey to be, a disbursement or expense which was laid out or
expended for the purpose of such trade….”
Warrington, L.J. said at p. 569:
“It is a sum which the persons conducting the trade have had to pay
because in conducting it they have so acted as to render themselves
liable to this penalty. It is not a commercial loss, and I think when
the Act speaks of a loss connected with or arising out of such trade
it means a commercial loss, connected with or arising out of the
trade.”
In Strong & Co. v. Woodifield [(1906) AC 448] a brewing company owned a
licensed house in which they carried on the business of inn-keepers. They
incurred a liability to pay damages on account of injuries caused to a visitor, by
the falling in of a chimney. This sum was held not to be allowable as a deduction
in computing the profits. Lord Loreburn, L.C., in his speech said no sum could be
deducted unless it be money wholly and exclusively laid out or expended for the
purpose of such trade and that only such losses could be deducted as were
connected with it in the sense that they were really incidental to the trade itself
and they could not be deducted if they were mainly incidental to some other
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 7689-7690 OF 2022
15
vocation or fell on the trader in some character other than that of a trader. Lord
Davey observed:
“I think the disbursements permitted are such as are made for that
purpose. It is not enough that the disbursement is made in the
course of, or arise out of, or is connected with the trade or is made
out of the profits of the trade. It must be made for the purpose of
earning profits.”
The following passage from Lord Sterndale's judgment at p. 566 in Von Glehn
case [(1920) 2 KB 553] from which we have already quoted shows the effect of
incurring a penalty as a result of a breach of the law:
“During the course of the trading this company committed a breach
of the law. As I say, it has been agreed that they did not intend to do
anything wrong in the sense that they were willingly and
knowingly sending these goods to an enemy destination; but they
committed a breach of the law, and for that breach of the law, they
were fined. That, as it seems to me, was not a loss connected with
the business, but was a fine imposed upon the company personally,
so far as a company can be considered to be a person, for a breach
of the law which it had committed. It is perhaps a little difficult to
put the distinction into very exact language, but there seems to me
to be a difference between a commercial loss in trading and a
penalty imposed upon a person or a company for a breach of the
law which they have committed in that trading. For that reason I
think that both the decision of Rowlatt, J., in this case, and his
former decision in Inland Revenue Commissioners v. Warnes &
Co. [(1919) 2 KB 444] which he followed were right, and that this
appeal should be dismissed with costs.”
In Spofforth and Prince v. Glider [(1945) 26 TC 310] the assessee was a firm of
chartered accountants, who claimed a deduction for certain legal costs paid in
connection with a successful defence of one of the partners in a Police Court. The
assessee Firm also sought legal advice in regard to matters connected with some
proceedings. Summons were issued against the assessee firm but were eventually
dismissed. The assessee contended that the whole of the costs incurred in
connection with the proceedings were “wholly and exclusively” laid out or
expended for the appellant's profession and were therefore allowable deductions.
The Special Commissioner had held against the assessee which was upheld by the
Court. The test laid down by Lord Davey in Strong & Co. v. Woodifield [(1906)
AC 448] was applied and applying that test it was held that except the expenses
for obtaining legal advice the other expenses were not admissible.
In Farrie v. Hall [(1947) 28 TC 200] F, a sugar broker was sued in the
High Court for libel and the Court held that F had acted maliciously and that the
defence of privilege could not prevail and awarded damages against him. F sought
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16
to claim the amount of damages as an allowable deduction contending that it was
an expenditure laid out wholly and exclusively for the purposes of his trade or
was a loss connected with or arising out of the trade. Relying on the cases
abovementioned this amount was disallowed because it fell on the assessee in his
character of a calumniator of a rival sugar broker and it was only remotely
connected with his trade as a sugar broker. Therefore it was not laid out
exclusively and wholly for the purpose of his business. We were also referred to
the observations of Danckwerts, J. in Newson v. Robertson [(1952) 33 TC 452 at
p. 459] where it was said that if the expenditure is incurred by the tax-payer for
more than one purpose including the commercial purposes in the sense that it is
incurred for the purposes of earning profits of the trade and also some outside
purpose then the expenses cannot be claimed at all as not being wholly and
exclusively laid out or expended for the purpose of the trade. In that case
expenses claimed by a Barrister for travelling between his house and his chambers
were disallowed because his object and purpose in travelling was mixed and not
wholly and exclusively for the purpose of the profession.
Coming now to Indian cases; In Mask & Co. v. Commissioner of Income-
tax, Madras [(1943) 11 ITR 454] the assessee in breach of his contract sold
crackers at a lower rate and a decree was passed against him for damages for
breach of contract which he claimed as an allowable deduction. It was held that as
the assessee had disregarded the undertaking given and his conduct was palpably
dishonest it did not constitute an allowable expenditure. Sir Lionel Leach, C.J.,
after referring to Warne’s case [(1919) 2 KB 444] and Von Glehn’s case [(1920) 2
KB 553] held that the amount did not constitute an expenditure falling within
Section 10(2)( xii ). The Madras High Court in Senthikumara Nadar &
Sons v. Commissioner of Income-tax (1957) 32 ITR 138] held that payments of
penalty for an infraction of the law fell outside the scope of permissible
deductions under s. 10(2)( xv ). In that case the assessee had to pay liquidated
damages which was akin to penalty incurred for an act opposed to public policy a
policy underlying the Coffee Market Expansion Act, 1942, and which was left to
the Coffee Board to enforce.
Reference was also made during the course of arguments to Commissioner
of Income-tax v. Hirjee [(1953) SCR 714]. In that case the assessee was
prosecuted under the Hoarding and Profiteering Ordinance but was finally
acquitted and claimed the amount spent in defending himself under s. 10(2)( xv ) in
his assessment. It was held that the distinction between the legal expenses on a
successful and unsuccessful defence was not sound and that the deductibility of
such expenses under s. 10(2)( xv ) must depend on the nature and purpose of the
legal proceedings in relation to the business whose profits are in computation and
are unaffected by the final outcome of the proceedings.
A review of these cases shows that expenses which are permitted as
deductions are such as are made for the purpose of carrying on the business i.e. to
enable a person to carry on and earn profit in that business. It is not enough that
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 7689-7690 OF 2022
17
the disbursements are made in the course of or arise out of or are concerned with
or made out of the profits of the business but they must also be for the purpose of
earning the profits of the business. As was pointed out in Von Glehn’s case
[(1920) 2 KB 553] an expenditure is not deductible unless it is a commercial loss
in trade and a penalty imposed for breach of the law during the course of trade
cannot be described as such. If a sum is paid by an assessee conducting his
business, because in conducting it he has acted in a manner, which has rendered
him liable to penalty it cannot be claimed as a deductible expense. It must be a
commercial loss and in its nature must be contemplable as such. Such penalties
which are incurred by an assessee in proceedings launched against him for an
infraction of the law cannot be called commercial losses incurred by an assessee
in carrying on his business. Infraction of the law is not a normal incident of
business and therefore only such disbursements can be deducted as are really
incidental to the business itself. They cannot be deducted if they fall on the
assessee in some character other than that of a trader. Therefore where a penalty is
incurred for the contravention of any specific statutory provision, it cannot be said
to be a commercial loss falling on the assessee as a trader the test being that the
expenses which are for the purpose of enabling a person to carry on trade for
making profits in the business are permitted but not if they are merely connected
with the business.
It was argued that unless the penalty is of a nature which is personal to the
assessee and if it is merely ordered against the goods imported it is an allowable
deduction. That, in our opinion, is an erroneous distinction because disbursement
is deductible only if it falls within s. 10(2)(xv) of the Income-tax Act and no such
deduction can be made unless it falls within the test laid down in the cases
discussed above and it can be said to be expenditure wholly and exclusively laid
for the purpose of the business. Can it be said that a penalty paid for an infraction
of the law, even though it may involve no personal liability in the sense of a fine
imposed for an offence committed, is wholly and exclusively laid for the business
in the sense as those words are used in the cases that have been discussed above.
In our opinion, no expense which is paid by way of penalty for a breach of the law
can be said to be an amount wholly and exclusively laid for the purpose of the
business. The distinction sought to be drawn between a personal liability and a
liability of the kind now before us is not sustainable because anything done which
is an infraction of the law and is visited with a penalty cannot on grounds of
public policy be said to be a commercial expense for the purpose of a business or
a disbursement made for the purposes of earning the profits of such business.”
21. CIT v. S.C. Kothari, 1972 (4) SCC 402
21.1 The decision rendered in Badridas Daga (supra) was quoted with approval.
However, it was the view expressed that if the profit is to be taken for the
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 7689-7690 OF 2022
18
taxable income, a resultant expenditure/loss cannot be avoided,
notwithstanding the nature of business. We must hasten to note that the
decision rendered in S.C. Kothari (supra) may not be in tune with Badridas
Daga (supra) wherein this Court held that allowing a deduction depends upon
the statute and commercial principles, while applying the test of ‘purpose of
business’ and ‘incidental to business’ and not by way of a general principle.
Hence, non-allowance of a deduction on the ground of one incurred as an
expenditure for a purpose which is an offence or prohibited by law can be
disallowed otherwise through a statute. This Court in SC Kothari (supra) had
merely laid down the general proposition of law by taking note of the position
prevailing in other countries, but in any case, it has got no application over a
case of either a penalty or confiscation.
21.2 The law as laid down in Haji Aziz (supra) despite being noted, was not
followed on both the counts, viz., the deduction of loss qua an offence and the
consequence of a penalty imposed for an infraction of law.
21.3 We must further add that in S.C. Kothari (supra) , this Court was concerned
with Section 10(2)(xv) of the Old Act, which did not contain any explanation
as introduced to Section 37(1) of the Act. This subsequent change in law will
certainly have a bearing on the understanding of the said judgment.
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22.Soni Hinduji Kushalji & Co. v. CIT, (1971) SCC Online AP 223
22.1 The Division Bench of the Andhra Pradesh High Court considered the law laid
down on deduction of loss incurred by way of a confiscation and penalty. It
took into consideration the decision of this Court in S.C. Kothari (Supra) . It
was accordingly held that a loss must be one arising directly from the business
or trade, being incidental to it, as laid down by this Court in Badridas Daga
(supra) . The Court while noting the decision of this Court in Maqbool
Hussain v. State of Bombay etc., (1953) SCR 730 and Haji Aziz (supra) , held
that a confiscation of a contraband being an action in rem is not available for
deduction, as the same, by no process of reasoning can be said to be trading or
commercial loss connected with or incidental to the assessee's business.
22.2 Relevant paragraphs:
“4. Mr. Swamy appearing for the assessee-firm strongly contended that when the
profits earned from an illegal business are not exempt from tax, the loss sustained
in such business should be allowed to be deducted from the profits or gains for
purposes of computing the tax payable by the assessee.
5. What are chargeable to tax in respect of a business carried on by the assessee
are the profits or gains of a particular assessment year. While assessing the profits,
necessarily loss incurred in the business during the year should be taken into
account, as otherwise it is not possible to arrive at the true profits earned by the
assessee. It is well-settled that the taint of illegality associated with profits or
income is immaterial for the purpose of taxation. As observed by Lord Haldane in
Minister of Finance v. Smith [[1927] A.C. 193, 198.] , Income-tax Acts are not
necessarily restricted in their application to lawful business only. One who
contravenes a statute and trades in business prohibited by law while being liable
for prosecution for the offence committed by him will, at the same time, be liable
to pay tax out of the income or profits earned from the illegal trade or business.
We are now concerned with the loss representing the value of gold on account of
the confiscation of the gold for contravention of the provisions of the Customs
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 7689-7690 OF 2022
20
Act. Can that loss be regarded as a commercial loss pertaining to the business or
incidental to the business the assessee was carrying on, is the real question.
6. Mr. Swamy sought to place strong reliance upon a decision of the Gujarat High
Court in Commissioner of Income-tax v. S.C. Kothari [[1968] 69 I.T.R. 1 (Guj.).]
to contend that the assessee is entitled to claim deduction of the value of the
contraband gold confiscated by the customs authorities, as it represented the loss
sustained by the firm in the illegal business carried on by it. The learned judges in
that case were of the view that, when illegal business is business within the
meaning of the Income-tax Act and if profits from illegal business are assessable
to tax, there is no reason either in principle or on authority for refusing to take
into account losses from illegal business. According to these, the losses so
incurred must necessarily be taken into account in order to arrive at the true
profits of the business and such profits may be either positive in the sense that
they are actual profits or they may be negative in the sense that they are losses and
there is in principle no distinction between profits and losses of a business…
xxx xxx xxx
9.Kothari's case [[1968] 69 I.T.R. 1 (Guj.).] , as may be noticed from the facts
stated therein, was not a case where a claim for deduction was made by the
assessee, as he did not say that a particular expenditure incurred by him should be
allowed as a permissible deduction. It is on that ground that the learned judges
ruled that the decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Haji Aziz & Abdul
Shakoor Bros [[1955] 28 I.T.R. 266 (Bom.).] ., relied upon by the revenue, where
the claim for deduction under section 10(2)(xv) of the 1922 Act was negatived,
was not applicable to the case before them. Therefore, the answers given by the
learned judges in Kothari's case [[1968] 69 I.T.R. 1 (Guj.).] render no assistance at
all to the assessee's contention.
10. Here is a specific claim made by the assessee for deduction of the value of the
gold confiscated by the Central Government on the ground that it is a trading or
commercial loss, though the trade was an illegal one. It should not be lost sight of
when a claim for deduction is made, that the loss must be one that springs directly
from the business or trade which the assessee carries on or is incidental to the
business that he carries on and not every sort or kind of loss, which has absolutely
no nexus or connection with his trade or business.
11. It is well to remember that confiscation of contraband gold is an action in rem
and not a proceeding in personam. As observed by Bhagwati J. in Maqbool
Hussain v. State of Bombay [[1953] S.C.R. 730, 742 (S.C.), AIR 1953 S.C. 325.]
confiscation is no doubt one of the penalties which the customs authorities can
impose but that is more in the nature of proceedings in rem than proceedings in
personam, the object being to confiscate the offending goods which have been
dealt with contrary to the provisions of the law. To the same effect is the view
expressed by S.K. Das J. in Shewpujanrai Indrasanrai Ltd. v. Collector of
Customs [[1959] S.C.R. 821, 836 (S.C.), AIR 1958 S.C. 845.] that, so far as the
confiscation of the goods is concerned, it is a proceeding in rem and the penalties
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 7689-7690 OF 2022
21
are enforced against the goods whether the offender is known or not known and
the order of confiscation under section 182 of the Sea Customs Act operates
directly upon the status of the property and under section 184 transfers an
absolute title to the Government. Subba Rao J. (as he then was) in Thomas Dana
v. State of Punjab [AIR 1959 S.C. 375.] , in his dissenting judgment (the dissent
being on other points) observed that if the authority concerned makes an order of
confiscation it is only a proceeding in rem and the penalty is enforced against the
goods.
12. A proceeding in rem, therefore, in the strict sense of the term is an action
taken directly against the property (in this case the smuggled gold) and even if the
offender is not known, the customs authorities have the power to confiscate the
contraband gold. Therefore, by no process of reasoning can the confiscation of the
contraband gold by the customs authorities be said to be a trading or commercial
loss connected with or incidental to the assessee's business.
13. In Commissioners of Inland Revenue v. Alexander Von Glehn & Co. Ltd.
[[1920] 2 K.B. 553, 566 (C.A.).] . Lord Sterndale M.R. observed:
“During the course of the trading this company committed a breach
of the law. As I say, it has been agreed that they did not intend to do
anything wrong in the sense that they were willingly and
knowingly sending these goods to an enemy destination, but they
committed a breach of the law, and for that breach of the law, they
were fined. That, as it seems to me, was not a loss connected with
the business, but was a fine imposed upon the company personally,
so far as a company can be considered to be a person, for a breach
of the law which it had committed. It is perhaps a little difficult to
put the distinction into very exact language, but there seems to me
to be a difference between a commercial loss in trading and a
penalty imposed upon a person or a company for a breach of the
law which they have committed in that trading.”
14. The principle stated by Lord Sterndale M.R. holds good here too, as it is
impossible to hold that the loss incurred by reason of the confiscation of the
contraband gold is an expenditure incurred in connection with the trade or
business of the assessee-firm or incidental to the carrying on of its business.
xxx xxx xxx
16 . Their Lordships of the Supreme Court in Haji Aziz and Abdul Shakoor
Bros. v. Commissioner of Income-tax [[1961] 41 I.T.R. 350 (S.C.), [1961] 2 S.C.R. 651
(S.C.).] , after reviewing several Indian and English cases, observed at page 359:
“As was pointed out in Von Glehn's case [[1920] 2 K.B. 553 (C.A.).] , an
expenditure is not deductible unless it is a commercial loss in trade and
penalty imposed for breach of the law during the course of trade cannot be
described as such. If a sum is paid by an assessee conducting his business,
because in conducting it he has acted in a manner which has rendered him
liable to penalty, it cannot be claimed as a deductible expense. It must be a
commercial loss and in its nature must be contemplable as such. Such
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 7689-7690 OF 2022
22
penalties which are incurred by an assessee in proceedings launched against
him for an infraction of the law cannot be called commercial losses incurred
by an assessee in carrying on his business. Infraction of the law is not a
normal incident of business and, therefore only such disbursements can be
deducted as are really incidental to the business itself. They cannot be
deducted if they fall on the assessee in some character other than that of a
trader. Therefore, where a penalty is incurred for the contravention of any
specific statutory provision, it cannot be said to be a commercial loss falling
on the assessee as a trader, the test being that the expenses which are for the
purpose of enabling a person to carry on trade for making profits in the
business are permitted but not if they are merely connected with the
business…. Anything done which is an infraction of the law and is visited
with a penalty cannot on grounds of public policy be said to be a commercial
expense for the purpose of a business or a disbursement made for the
purposes of earning the profits of such business.”
17. Similar views have been expressed by the Punjab and Allahabad High Courts
in Raj Woollen Industries v. Commissioner of Income-tax [[1961] 43 I.T.R. 36
(Punj.).] , Commissioner of Income-tax v. Mathura Prasad Hardwar Prasad
Deoria [[1965] 55 I.T.R. 476 (All.).] and Mahabir Sugar Mills (P.)
Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax [[1969] 71 I.T.R. 87 (All.).] .
18. The Supreme Court in Badridas v. Commissioner of Income-tax [[1958] 34
I.T.R. 10, [1959] S.C.R. 690 (S.C.).] , considered what would amount to a trading
loss. Venkatarama Aiyar J. observed:
“When a claim is made for a deduction for which there is no
specific provision in section 10(2), whether it is admissible or not
will depend on whether, having regard to accepted commercial
pratice and trading principles, it can be said to arise out of the
carrying on of the business and to be incidental to it. If that is
established, then the deduction must be allowed, provided of
course there is no prohibition against it, express or implied in the
Act. The loss for which a deduction could be made under section
10(1) must be one that springs directly from the carrying on of the
business and is incidental to it, and not any loss sustained by the
assessee, even if it has some connection with his business.”
19. Judged from the test laid down by their Lordships, it is impossible to hold that
the confiscation of contraband gold, which is in the nature of a proceeding in rem,
is a loss that springs directly from the business or trade carried on by the assessee-
firm and is incidental to its business. Following the view expressed by their
Lordships, the Punjab High Court in Ram Gopal Ram Sarup v. Commissioner of
Income-tax [[1963] 47 I.T.R. 611 (Punj.).] , held that the mere fact that there is
some remote connection between a loss and the business would not bring the loss
within the expression “loss incidental to the the”.
xxx xxx xxx
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 7689-7690 OF 2022
23
22. As pointed out by Lord Loreburn L.C. in Strong & Co. Ltd. v. Woodi-field
[[1906] A.C. 448, 452 (H.L.).] , “They cannot be deducted if they are mainly
incidental to some other vocation or fall on the trader in some character other than
that of trader. The nature of the trade is to be considered.”
23. This court in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Chakka Narayana [[1961] 43
I.T.R. 249 (A.P.).] , in a case of loss sustained by an assessee on account of theft
at a railway station, held that the loss resulting thereof was not incidental to the
assessee's business and was not an allowable deduction and that the mere fact that
there was some remote connection between the loss and the business would not
bring the loss within the expression “loss incidental to the the”. The loss sustained
by confiscation of the smuggled gold is absolutely foreign to the vocation or
business of the assessee-firm. It is a loss incurred in some character other than
that of a trader. The confiscation of the gold, being the result of a proceeding in
rem, falls completely outside the trade or business which the assessee was
carrying on. Confiscation of contraband goods is one of the penalties provided
under the Sea Customs Act and the penalty is enforced against the goods
irrespective of the fact whether the offender is known or not traced. Infraction or
violation of the law is not a normal incident of a trade or business and, therefore,
the penalty by way of confiscation of the contraband gold is not a commercial loss
so as to be allowed as a permissible deduction.”
22.3 The aforesaid reasoning of the Andhra Pradesh High Court arrived at after
taking note of the earlier decisions rendered by this Court in its support,
deserves to be approved.
23. J.S Parkar v. V.B Palekar and Others, (1973) SCC Online Bom 161
23.1 Majority view of the Bombay High Court was in line with Soni Hinduji
Kushalji & Co. (supra) , though not referring to the said decision. It is to be
noted that though Justice Mukhi dissented with the view of Justice
Deshpande, the third Judge, Justice Tulzapurkar by a separate judgment,
concurred with the view of Justice Deshpande. Therefore, the majority while
broadly interpreting the view of this Court in Haji Aziz (supra) , held that
confiscation of goods incurred for an infraction of law cannot be said to be a
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 7689-7690 OF 2022
24
normal incident of business, and this loss falls on the assessee in some
character other than that of a trader. The Court further noted that this principle
would equally apply to a case where the business itself is prohibited by law
while disagreeing with the view of the Punjab and Haryana High Court in
Piara Singh (1970) SCC OnLine P&H 429 , which decision did not reach this
Court at that point of time. The Court held that the decision of the Punjab and
Haryana High Court in Piara Singh (1970) SCC OnLine P&H 429, was not in
line with the decision of this Court in Haji Aziz(supra) .
23.2 Relevant paragraphs:
Justice Deshpande:
“23. It is then contended that, admittedly, the entire gold has been confiscated by
the customs department and, as such, value of this should have been treated as a
trading loss and the assessee was entitled to a set-off of this loss against his
assumed and assessed income from undisclosed sources. Reliance was mainly
placed on section 71, though faintly section 70 was also referred to. This point
was raised before the Tribunal. The Tribunal, however, declined to entertain this
plea, as it was raised for the first time before it and it thought that the same cannot
be adjudicated without investigation of further facts. Unfortunately, the order of
the Tribunal is not explicit as to in what manner investigation of further facts was
necessary. It is, therefore, not possible to know if the Tribunal was reluctant to
allow set off for loss tainted with patent illegality, against the income, source of
which was not shown to be illegal or it treated the loss by confiscation as capital
loss and, therefore, was reluctant to deduct the same from the income from capital
gains as required under section 71. Be that as it may, I have no hesitation in
saying that if it were a pure question of law capable of being adjudged on the
material on record, the Tribunal was under a statutory obligation to entertain and
decide the same. I, however, think that, on the admitted facts, the petitioner is not
entitled to claim any set-off. The loss suffered by the assessee consequent on the
confiscation of the gold for infraction of law cannot be said to be a commercial
loss liable to set off under any provision of the Act. It will be enough to refer to
the judgment of the Supreme Court in Haji Aziz and Abdul Shakoor
Bros. v. Commissioner of Income-tax. The Supreme Court upheld the view of this
court in the same case. Dates were imported from abroad by the assessee in
contravention of the provisions of the Sea Customs Act. The customs authorities
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25
confiscated the goods under section 167-B of the Sea Customs Act. It, however,
gave the assessee, under section 183 of the Act, an option to pay the fine in lieu of
confiscation and get the goods released. The assessee exercised the option and got
the goods released on payment of fine. In the course of the assessment
proceedings the assessee claimed deduction of this penalty amount under section
10(2)(xv) of the Indian Income-tax Act of 1922. The Bombay High Court
negatived the claim holding that the penalty for infraction of law does not amount
to any expenditure laid out or expended wholly and exclusively for the purpose of
such business, profession or vocation. The Supreme Court affirmed the said view
of this court on slightly broader base, observing as follows:
“An expenditure is not deductible unless it is a commercial loss in
trade and a penalty imposed for breach of the law during the course
of trade cannot be described as such. Infraction of the law is not a
normal incident of business and, therefore, only such
disbursements can be deducted as are really incidental to the
business itself. They cannot be deducted if they fall on the assessee
in some character other than that of a trader.”
xxx xxx xxx
“ 29 . Applying this test laid down by Grover J., speaking for the Supreme Court,
in S.C. Kothari's case and the test laid down by Kapur J., speaking for the
Supreme Court, in the case of Haji Aziz and Abdul Shakoor Bros. , it shall have to
be held that confiscation of goods incurred for infraction of law cannot be said to
be a normal incident of business and loss suffered therefrom falls on the assessee
in some character other than that of a trader. It is not possible to see how this
principle can make any difference where the business itself is found to have been
prohibited by the law. It is the commercial profit that is taxable and it is the
commercial loss in trade in regard to which deduction can be claimed either
because it goes to lessen the amount of profits before the quantum of net profit is
determined or because the expenses are required to be incurred for the purposes of
running the said business or because losses are incurred under some other sources
of business under the same head or they are incurred while carrying on business
or vocation under some other head. Penalty and confiscation of goods even when
incurred or suffered in the course of prohibited trade or business still cannot be
said to be the normal incident even of such unlawful business and the loss so
suffered can still be not said to be a commercial loss in the trade for the same
reason as gains of theft, dacoity, misappropriation or cheating cannot be treated as
taxable income from any business or commerce. The claim of Mr. Albal for
deduction of value of gold confiscated by way of set-off cannot, therefore, be
entertained.
30 . It is true, as observed by the Punjab and Haryana High Court in Piara Singh's
case , the risk of confiscation of goods and incurring of penalties is inherent in any
unlawful trading or business. So is the risk of conviction and fine. It does not,
however, necessarily follow that every kind of damage suffered in such trading
falls under the category of commercial loss. It shall have to be held, at any rate,
on the authority of the Supreme Court in Haji Aziz and Abdul Shakoor Bros. that
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 7689-7690 OF 2022
26
the confiscation of property or penalty incurred while indulging in prohibited
trading activities does not amount to commercial loss though it happens in fact to
be a loss according to the ordinary meaning of the word “loss” as understood in
common parlance. Attempt to distinguish the above Supreme Court judgment on
the ground that the court was dealing with the claim of the assessee for deduction
of penalty under section 10(2)(xv) and not under section 10(1) of the Income-tax
Act of 1922 is an exercise in futility. That, in the above case, neither the assessee
claimed deduction of such penalty by way of loss under section 10(1) of the Act,
nor the Supreme Court considered it worthwhile allowing the claim under that
sub-section is also indicative, if not decisive, of the untenability of such
contention. Though deduction was claimed under section 10(1) of the Act,
rejection of the claim is based on the broader basis that penalties and
confiscations are not the normal incidents of business and do not constitute
commercial loss. If one examines the scheme of section 10(2), and section 24 of
the 1922 Act and corresponding provisions of sections 28, 29 to 44A and sections
70 and 71 of the 1961 Act, it will be noticed that the provisions deal with the
deductions or disbursement from the profits earned under various contingencies.
If the losses are incurred in the same business (source of income) under the same
head enumerated under section 14, the same are liable to be deducted under
section 22 (section 10(1) of the old Act) of the Act. If losses are incurred under a
different source falling under the same head, the losses are liable to be deducted
from the income of any other source falling under the same head under section 70.
When, however, net result of all sources under any one head of income is loss, the
same is liable to be deducted from the income under another head under section
71. If the net result of all sources under all heads is a loss, the same can be carried
forward under section 72 of the Act. Sections 29 to 44A corresponding to section
10(2), clauses (1) to (xvi), deal with deductions or disbursements by way of
expenses, etc. These provisions deal with the mode of determining the net taxable
profits or income of the assessee. If the true ratio of the Supreme Court judgment
is that penalty incurred by infraction of law is not a commercial loss as it is not
incidental to trade or business, it matters little as to under what count the
deduction or set-off is claimed. That the margin between what is and what is not
incidental is very thin has been noticed by the learned judges of the Supreme
Court themselves. Ratio of this judgment is applicable to all contingencies where
such non-commercial loss is sought to be deducted on any count whatsoever. That
the assessee in that case claimed deduction of penalty under section 10(2)(xv)
cannot make any difference to the ratio of the case. I do not find it possible to
agree with the view of the Punjab High Court. I do not think that the Gujarat High
Court's judgment in Kothari's case supports its view. On the contrary, the ratio of
the two Supreme Court judgments run counter to the ratio of the Punjab case.”
Justice Tulzapurkar:
1
“ 179 . I have already indicated above that in Haji Aziz's case while dealing with
penalty or fine imposed in lieu of confiscation of goods, the Supreme Court has
observed that the penalty suffered by an assessee for an infraction of law cannot
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 7689-7690 OF 2022
27
be regarded as incidental to the business and in fact it falls upon the assessee in
some character other than that of a trader. In my view, the aforesaid authorities
make the position very clear that before any loss could be claimed as deductible
loss under section 10(1) of the Act, it must be a trading loss or commercial loss
arising out of carrying on business or it must be incidental to the business and
such loss must also fall on the assessee in his character as a trader. The question in
the present case is as to whether the loss consequent upon confiscation of goods
for an infraction of law suffered by the assessee could be regarded as a
commercial loss or could it be said to be loss incidental to the business and, what
is of importance, could it be said to have been suffered by him in his character as
a trader? In my view, it is certainly not a commercial loss arising from carrying on
of the business nor can it be regarded as incidental to the activity of the assessee
as dealer in gold; moreover, it cannot be regarded as loss falling upon the assessee
in his character as a trader. It is a loss falling upon him as a person who had
infracted law. The loss suffered by confiscation of goods directly sprang from an
illegal act committed by the assessee, namely, having acquired gold without
requisite permit or permission of the Reserve Bank of India and without having
paid any duty for the import thereof into India. Surely, the loss has not fallen on
the assessee as a trader or businessman, for, obviously, even a lay person who is
not a businessman, if he were to import gold for his private use without requisite
permission and without payment of customs duty, would subject himself to the
penalty of having that gold confiscated from him and he would as a consequence
suffer great loss. It is thus clear that the loss consequent upon confiscation of
goods for infraction of law suffered by the assessee must be regarded as loss
falling upon him in some character other than a trader. In this view of the matter, I
am clearly of the view that the petitioner is not entitled to claim the loss suffered
by him as a result of confiscation of the gold in question as allowable deduction
while computing his business income under section 28 of the Act.
180 . So far as the decision of the Gujarat High Court in S.C. Kothari's case is
concerned—which decision has been confirmed by the Supreme Court— it must
be observed that the judgment is an authority only for the proposition that
illegality of any business is irrelevant for the purpose of computing the net
income thereof under the Income-tax Act and while the revenue is entitled to levy
tax on the income of the assessee earned even from unlawful business, the
assessee is also entitled to insist on deduction of loss arising out of such unlawful
business. There could be no quarrel with this statement of law which has been
approved by the Supreme Court. But even there, the loss in respect of which
deduction could be claimed while computing the profits of the unlawful business
must be a trade loss or commercial loss or loss incidental thereto but suffered by
the assessee in his character as a trader and not loss suffered as a result of
confiscation of goods for an infraction of law which would be a loss suffered by
him in some capacity other than as a trader. Besides, in S.C. Kothari's case neither
the Gujarat High Court nor the Supreme Court had to consider the question
whether the loss suffered by way of penalty or confiscation of goods amounted to
commercial loss or not. In fact, while setting out the facts of the case it has been
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stated by the Supreme Court in paragraph 1 of its judgment that the loss of Rs.
3,40,000 and odd which was claimed as deductible loss had arisen out of certain
transactions entered into by the assessee with different people for the supply of
groundnut oil and it was expected by the assessee that those contracts would be
performed but owing to certain reasons some of the contracts could not be
performed and difference has to be paid. From this it appears clear that the loss of
Rs. 3,40,000 which was claimed as deductible loss was clearly in the nature of
commercial or trade loss for which deduction was claimed under section 10(1) of
the Act. In the circumstances, it is clear that the statement of law enunciated in the
case of S.C. Kothari is unexceptionable but, with respect, I would like to point out
that the decision is no authority for the proposition that the loss suffered by way
of penalty or confiscation of goods amounts to commercial loss that could be
deducted while computing the net profits of a business under section 10(1) of the
Act. It is true that in Piara Singh's case , the Punjab and Haryana High Court has
taken the view that the confiscation of cash amount of Rs. 65,500 from the
assessee, who was engaged in the business activity of smuggling gold, amounted
to trade loss and hence was deductible under section 10(1) of the Act. But for
coming to that conclusion the Punjab High Court has principally relied upon the
decision of the Gujarat High Court and of the Supreme Court in S.C. Kothari's
case , in which, as I have stated above, neither the Gujarat High Court nor the
Supreme Court was required to consider the question whether the loss arising
from penalty or confiscation of goods for an infraction of law amounted to trade
loss or commercial loss; in fact admittedly the nature of loss suffered by the
assessee was commercial since it had arisen on account of payment of differences.
With great deference, I am unable to persuade myself to agree with the view of
the Punjab High Court expressed in Piara Singh's case , especially when it runs
counter to the tests laid down by the Supreme Court in Haji Aziz's case and in
English cases to which the Supreme Court has referred while deciding Haji Aziz's
case . The other contention that this loss should be allowed to be set off against the
income from undisclosed source under section 70 or section 71 was not pressed
by Mr. Albal. In view of the above discussion, on both the points on which there
was difference of opinion between the two learned judges I am in agreement with
the views expressed by Mr. Justice Deshpande.”
23.3 The decision of the Bombay High Court certainly falls in line with the one
rendered in Haji Aziz (supra) . The cogent reasons given by taking penalty and
confiscation out of the purview of Section 10(1) of the Old Act appears to be
the correct view.
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24. Commissioner of Income Tax v. Piara Singh, (1980) Supp. SCC 166
24.1 This Court did not differ with the view expressed by a co-ordinate bench in
Haji Aziz (supra) . In fact, it gave its approval to the said decision. However,
reliance was placed on S.C. Kothari (supra) by drawing a distinction between
an infraction of law committed in carrying out a lawful business, as against
one committed in an inherently unlawful business. It was done upon a
legitimate anticipation that in an illegal business there will be many pitfalls
resulting in expected loss, which cannot be factored into a normal business.
24.2 Law as laid down in Haji Aziz (supra) on both the issues have not been taken
note of by inadvertence, particularly the nature of proceedings involved in the
imposition of confiscation or penalty, being proceedings in rem . This Court
did not have the benefit of the explanation as available under Section 37 of the
Act, while interpreting Section 10(2) of the Old Act, apart from ignoring the
word of caution mentioned in Badridas Daga (supra) .
24.3 We would only clarify the position that, in any case, the law as laid down in
Piara Singh (supra) may not have any application to a case of deduction of
expenditure/loss incurred on account of penalty/confiscation coming under
Section 37(1) of the Act, particularly in light of Explanation 1.
25. Dr. T.A. Quereshi v. Commissioner of Income Tax, Bhopal (2007) 2 SCC 759
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25.1 This Court merely followed Piara Singh (supra) while making a casual
observation on Explanation 1 to Section 37 of the Act. The earlier decisions
have not been taken into consideration as we could see in Piara Singh
(supra) , but the principle laid down was also not taken note of. In this
connection, it has to be remembered that for a precedent to be binding there
has to be a conscious consideration of an issue involved. The judgment in Dr.
T.A. Quereshi (supra) was delivered by a two-Judge Bench while not taking
note of a three-Judge Bench decision in Haji Aziz (supra) , which has neither
been disapproved nor distinguished. Hence, this decision is per incuriam and
not a binding precedent. Once again, the question of a confiscation proceeding
being in rem was not brought to the notice of the Court.
25.2 Therefore, there cannot be a situation where an assessee carrying on an illegal
business can claim deduction of expenses or losses incurred in the course of
that business, while another assessee carrying on a legitimate one cannot seek
deduction for loss incurred on account of either a confiscation or penalty. The
interpretation of Section 37 of the Act given by the Court in Dr. T.A.
Quereshi (supra) leads to a situation where the expenditure incurred in
manufacturing something illegal may not be allowable as a deduction in view
of the Explanation 1, however, if upon seizure, the manufactured goods are
confiscated, in that case deduction will be allowable on commercial
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principles. This classification being artificial not borne out by statute, which
mischief is sought to be clarified by the explanation, has no legal basis.
Conclusion(s)
26. On the abovesaid analysis, the following conclusions are arrived at:
I. The word ‘any expenditure’ mentioned in Section 37 of the Act takes in its
sweep loss occasioned in the course of business, being incidental to it.
II. As a consequence, any loss incurred by way of an expenditure by an
assessee for any purpose which is an offence or which is prohibited by law is
not deductible in terms of Explanation 1 to Section 37 of the Act.
III. Such an expenditure/loss incurred for any purpose which is an offence shall
not be deemed to have been incurred for the purpose of business or
profession or incidental to it, and hence, no deduction can be made.
IV. A penalty or a confiscation is a proceeding in rem, and therefore, a loss in
pursuance to the same is not available for deduction regardless of the nature
of business, as a penalty or confiscation cannot be said to be incidental to
any business.
V. The decisions of this Court in Piara Singh (supra) and Dr. T.A. Quereshi
(supra) do not lay down correct law in light of the decision of this Court in
Haji Aziz (supra) and the insertion of Explanation 1 to Section 37.
27. In view of the aforesaid discussion, I am inclined to hold that the appeal of the
Revenue deserves to be allowed, though conscious of the fact that Section
115BBE of the Act may not have an application to the case on hand being
prospective in nature. Accordingly, the judgment & order dated 22.11.2016
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passed in DBITA No. 96/2003 & DBITR No. 6/1996 by the High Court of
Rajasthan at Jaipur stand set aside. No costs.
…………………………… J.
(M.M. SUNDRESH)
New Delhi,
April 24, 2023
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