Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
WORKMEN OF WILLIAM JACKS & CO. LTD., MADRAS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MANAGEMENT OF WILLIAM JACKS & CO. LTD., MADRAS
DATE OF JUDGMENT28/04/1971
BENCH:
BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA
BENCH:
BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA
SHELAT, J.M.
DUA, I.D.
CITATION:
1971 AIR 1821 1971 SCR 540
1972 SCC (3) 140
ACT:
The Payment of Bonus Act (21 of 1965), s. 23, Second
Schedule, item 2(c) and Third Schedule, item (1)-Advance
made by head office to branch office-Interest paid by branch
office--If deductible expenditure in calculating profit and
loss of branch office-Provision for gratuity etc.--Diffe-
rence between provision and reserve-Provision when
deductible--Deductible income tax calculated without taking
into account bonus payable--if correct--Payment of Bonus
(Amendment) Act (8 of 1969)-Effect of.
HEADNOTE:
The appellants workmen of the respondent claimed that for
the two years 1964 and 1965 they were entitled to bonus at
the maximum rate of 20% of their annual wages while the
respondent contended that there was no available surplus and
consequently the liability to pay bonus for these two years
could not exceed the minimum of 4% of the wages. The
management, inter alia, claimed deductions: (1) with respect
to interest charged by the London office on advances made by
the London office to the respondent-branch during those two
years; (2) provision for gratuity and other contingencies;
and (3) income tax calculated without taking into account
the bonus which would be payable to the workmen.
The Tribunal allowed the claims.
In appeal to this Court,
HELD: (1) (a) The amounts claimed as interest are really
payments by the branch of the company to its head office. A
payment of interest could be justified only on the basis
that the head office was a creditor and the branch office a
debtor.,. But a company could not be a creditor and its own
debtor simultaneously. The interest paid really represented
amounts of money transferred by the respondent-branch to the
head office, and similarly, the advances made by London
office to the respondent-branch were amounts which continue
to be used by the company for its own business at a
different place. [544F]
(b) This is also made manifest by the proviso to item 1 of
the Third Schedule to the Act. In the deduction of the
current liabilities any amount shown as payable by a company
to its head-office whether towards any advance made by the
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head-office or otherwise, or any interest paid by the
company to its head-office is not to be treated as a
deductible liability, because, the advance made by the head
office is also treated as a part of the investment by the
company. [545D]
(c) Under s. 23 of the Payment of Bonus Act, 1965, there is
a presumption as to the correctness of the statements and
particulars contained in the balance-sheet and the profit
and loss account of a company, if the accounts had been
properly audited by qualified auditors. The presumption,
however, is confined to the accuracy of the statements and
particulars contained in the balance sheet and the profit
and loss account. If any item in the accounts is wrongly
shown as expenditure, when on the face
541
of it is not so, the court is not! bound to hold that. the
method adopted ’in preparing the accounts is correct simply
because the auditors raised no objection. [544H-545C]
Therefore, in the calculation of gross profits for purposes
of bonus the sums deducted as interest for the two years
must be added back since they were wrongly shown as
deductible expenditure in calculating the profit and loss.
(2) The provision for gratuity, and other contingencies
such as furlough salary, passage, service and commission. in
the present case, was made in respect of existing and
known liabilities, though, in some cases the exact amount
could not be ascertained. It was not a case where it was an
anticipated loss or anticipated expenditure which would
arise in the future. Such provision is, not a reserve at
all and it could not be added back under item 2(c) of the
Second Schedule to the Act. It was therefore rightly shown
by the respondent as a deductible expenditure in calculating
profit and loss. [547D]
Metal Box Co. v. The Workmen, [1969] 1 S.C.R. 750, followed.
(3).The calculation of the amount of income-tax shown as
expenditure, without taking into account the bonus which
would be payable to the workmen under the Act, was correctly
done in accordance with the decision of this Court in the
Metal Box Company case.: In that case, the question was
determined on the interpretation of ss. 6(c) and 7 of the
Act, and the amendments made by the Payment of Bonus
(Amendment) Act,, 1969 do not make any change in the law
bearing on the question, as laid down by this Court. [547G]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE Jurisdiction : Civil Appeal No, 1700 of
1968.
Appeal by special leave from ’the Award dated March 9, 1968
of the Industrial Tribunal, Madras in Industrial Dispute
No. II of 1957.
M. K. Ramamurthi, I. Ramamurthy, Vineet Kumar and Shyamala
Pappu, for the appellants.
M. C. Chagla and D. N. Gupta for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Bhargava, J.--This appeal by special leave is directed
against an Award of the Industrial Tribunal, Madras, in a
dispute relating to payment of bonus under the Payment of
Bonus Act, 1965 (No. 21 of 1965) (hereinafter referred to as
"the Act"). The respondent in the appeal is the employer,
William Jacks & Co. Ltd., Madras, while the appellant is the
William Jacks & Co. Employees’ Union, Madras, representing
the workmen employed by the respondent. The appellant
claimed that, for the two calendar years 1964 and 1965, the
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workmen were entitled to bonus at the maximum rate of 20 per
cent of their annual wages while the respondent Co. put
forward the case that there was no available
542
surplus and, consequently, the liability to pay bonus for
these two years could not exceed the minimum of 4 per cent
of the wages. It may be mentioned that the respondent Co.
is a Bench of, William Jacks & Co. Ltd. registered in
England with its Head Office in London. It appears that in
India this Company has three offices. One is in Calcutta
which also functions at the Regional Head Office for all the
three Branches in India. The other two Branches are in
Bombay and in Madras, the latter being the branch to which
the dispute about bonus related. The Company is carrying
business as engineers, manufacturers, representatives and
general merchants. The business of the Company includes the
buying of locally manufactured machinery and other products
and selling them to both private and public sector
industries. The income of the Company is derived primarily
from the sale of imported and indigenous goods at a profit.
In addition, the Branch at Madras earns commission credited
by London Office on direct shipments from London to
customers within the areas served by the Madras Branch, as
well as commission on sale of indigenous products, repairs
and servicing of equipment sold and by local purchase and
sale. These features of the business have been enumerated
by us as they may have bearing on some of the questions
raised in this appeal.
During the hearing of the reference before the Tribunal, the
Company filed its balance-sheets, profits, and loss account,
and calculations of available surplus in accordance with the
provisions of the Act and its schedules showing that there
was no available surplus, so that bonus in excess of 4 per
cent was not payable by it. These calculations were
challenged on various grounds before the Tribunal, but none
of them was accepted and the Award was based on the
calculations filed on behalf of the Company. In this appeal
before us, learned counsel appearing on behalf of the
appellant has challenged the calculations in respect of
seven different items, and we proceed to deal with them in
the order in which they were argued by him.
The first claim on behalf of the appellant was that there
should be an add back of an estimated sum of Rs. 40,000 /
which was received as direct commission paid by the manufac-
turers to the London Office for the benefit of the Branch at
Madras, in calculating the gross profits on the basis of
which available surplus is to be worked out. On this point,
the Tribunal in its award did not give any specific finding,
though, after mentioning this argument raised before it, the
Tribunal still proceeded to accept the Company’s account
disregarding this objection. The only evidence on this
point is found in the statement of the Company’s witness, M.
W. 1, Thiru S. S. Mani, who stated that the direct
commission received by this Company relating to this
543
Branch is credited in the accounts of this Branch. The
amount of commission received by the Company is included
under the head "Commission" in the Profit and Loss Account.
In 1964, the sum of Rs. 8,80,504/- and, in 1965, the sum of
Rs. 7,46,391/include the direct commission. ’According to
his evidence, therefore, the direct commission has already
been taken into account in calculating the gross profits,
and no question can arise of any add back. There is no
cross-examination on this point on behalf of the appellant,
nor has any evidence been led by the appellant to show that
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the statement of this witness is incorrect. In the
circumstances, this claim has to be rejected.
The second item claimed is add back in respect of handling
charges which were included by the London Head Office in the
:invoices for goods sent to Madras. The argument was that a
proportionate amount of administrative (overhead) expenses
of the Head Office in London allocable to the Madras Branch
have already been deducted as expenditure in accordance
with item 6(e) of the second Schedule to the Act, and the
further debit of the handling charges amounted to double
deduction. This argument proceeds on the basis that
handling charges, which are included by the London Head
Office in the various invoices, form part of the
administrative (overhead) expenses of that office. There is
no justification for such an assumption. The only evidence
on this point is again that of M. W. 1, Mani. He clearly
stated that, in the accounts.no sum is shown for handling
charges as an expenditure as such. The handling charges
are only mentioned in the.invoices received from the London
Office for goods sent to India. These refer to the amount
of handling charges incurred by the London Commercial
Departments and an these amounts are recoverable from the
customers in India along with the sale price. He added
that the administrative (overhead) expenses of the Head
Office do not include any portion of the London Commercial
Departments expenses. Thus, it is clear that these handling
charges have no connection with the administrative
(overhead) expenses of the Head office which are taken into accou
nt under item 6(e) of the Second Schedule. The actual expenses incurred b
y various Commercial Departments of the
Company in England in handling the particular goods are
added in the invoices to the cost of those goods and are
realised as part of the sale price. There is no separate
entry of handling charges as an expenditure in the accounts
of the Company. Consequently, there can &rise no question
of making any addition in respect of these handling charges
while calculating gross profit.
The third item is in %respect of the Director’s and General
Manager’s Office expenses in Calcutta amounting to Rs.
44,768/for the year 1964 and Rs. 50,848 /- for the year
1965. The Office
544
in Calcutta, as we have indicated above, is a sort of common
office supervising the business of the Company at all the
three places in Calcutta, Bombay and Madras. The
expenditure of this Regional Office is of the same nature as
the administrative (overhead) expenses of the Company in
London. These sums which have been shown as expenses in the
accounts in the Madras Branch are amounts allocable to that
Branch. This has been again proved by the same witness, M.
W. 1, Mani. There is no cross-examination and no evidence
to show that the case put forward by him is incorrect. In
the circumstances, this objection also fails.
The fourth objection, on which greatest emphasis was laid by
learned counsel for the parties, relates to the question of
interest charged by the London Office. in the sum of Rs.
1,00,657 / for 1964 and Rs. 1,65,255/- for 1965 on advances
made by the London Office to this Branch at Madras during
these years. It was urged that, having regard to the
proviso to item 1(iii) of the Third Schedule to the Act,
this interest should be disallowed. It, however appears to
us that the question of this interest should be examined
from a different aspect and that is whether this interest
can be held to be ’a legitimate item of expenditure in
calculating the profit and loss of the ’Company at Madras.
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It is clear that these amounts have been paid by the Branch
at Madras to Head Office in London and represent interest
which the London Office demanded from the Madras Branch on
the advances made by the former to the latter. These
payments are, thus, by a Branch of the ’Company to its
Head’ Office. The Head Office and the Branch Office both
belong to the same Company. Such a payment of interest
could be justified only on the basis that the London Office
was the creditor and the Madras Branch the debtor in respect
of the advances on which the interest has been claimed by
the London Office. On the face of it, a Company cannot be a
creditor and its own debtor simultaneously. No relationship
of creditor and debtor can exist between two different
Offices of the same Company. The interest paid merely
amounts to money transferred by the Madras Branch o the Head
Office and, similarly, advances made by the London Office to
the Madras Branch are amounts which continue to be used by
the Company for its business at a different place.
Learned counsel appearing for the Company drew our
attention to section 23. of the Act, under which there is a
presumption as to the correctness of statements and
particulars contained in the balance-sheet and profit and
loss account of a Company if they had been properly audited
by qualified auditors, and urged that, since the interest
charged by the Head Office to the Branch
545
Office at Madras was accepted as a proper expenditure for
calculation of profit and loss account by the auditors, the
Court under section 23 must accept that it was correctly
shown as an expenditure. The presumption under section 23
is confined to the accuracy of the statements and
particulars contained in the balance-sheet and the profit
and loss account. If any item in the accounts is wrongly
shown as expenditure when, on the face of it, it is not so,
the Court is not bound to hold that the method adopted in
preparing the accounts is correct simply because the
auditors raised no objection. While the interest was paid
on advances not made by a creditor to a debtor, but by the
Company’s one office to another, the money purported to be
transferred as interest cannot be held to be an expenditure
incurred by the Branch paying it to the other. In fact,
there are indications in the Act itself to support the view
that such advances made to one office by another of the same
Company cannot be treated as liabilities. This is made
manifest by the proviso to item 1 of the Third Schedule.
Under this item, every Company, other than a banking
company, is allowed a return on paid up equity share capital
and on reserves shown in its balance-sheet. The proviso
then deals with the case of a foreign Company and permits a
deduction of 8.5 per cent on the aggregate of the value of
the not fixed assets and the current assets of the company
in India after deducting the amount of the current
liabilities. In deduction of the current liabilities,
however, any amount shown as payable by the Company to its
Head Office, whether towards any advance made by the Head
Office or otherwise, or any interest paid by the Company to
its Head Office, is not be treated as a liability. The
reason very clearly is that the object of the deduction
under item 1 of the Third Schedule is to permit a Company a
return on money invested by it for its business as a prior
charge when calculating the surplus for purposes of bonus.
In the case of an Indian Company, this object is achieved by
giving a return of 8-5 per cent on the equity share capital
and 6 per cent on reserves. In the case of a foreign
Company, the same object is served by working out the
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difference between the total of fixed assets and current
assets, and the current liabilities, which will represent
the actual value of the net holdings of the Company as its
investment. The advances made by the Head Office to a
Branch Office are not deductible as liabilities, because
that amount is also treated as a part of the investment by
the Company on which the Cornpany should be given the return
of 8.5 per cent. It does not, therefore, partake of the
nature of a loan on which interest can be charged by the
Head Office from the Branch Office. The principle of
calculation laid down in item 1 of the Third Schedule, thus,
recognises the position that the Head Office and the Branch
Office do not function as creditor and debtor when only
interest could be legitimately charged by the Head Office
from
35-1 S.C. India/71
546
the Branch Office. In calculation of the gross profit for
purposes of bonus, therefore, the two sums of Rs. 1,00,657/-
for 1964 and Rs. 1,65,255/- for 1965 must be added back on
the basis that they are wrongly shown as expenditure
deductible in calculating profit and loss.
The fifth objection relates to a sum of Rs. 11,747/- in 1964
and Rs. 7,251/- in 1965 shown as expenses incurred in the
Jax Board Factory on the ground that the Jax Board Factory
had ceased to function for these two years. It is, no
doubt, true that M. W. 1, Mani, admits that the Jax Board
Factory had no production in those two years; but there is
nothing to show that the Factory had completely ceased to
function. The expenses are actual expenses in the factory
during those two years as certified by the Auditors and
there is no material on the basis of which it can be held
that these expenses were not incurred. This objection,
therefore, fails.
The sixth claim on behalf of the appellant is that the
provision for gratuity and other contingencies should also
be added back as representing "other reserves" under item
2(c) of the Second Schedule to the Act. The other
contingencies referred to relate to provision made for
furlough salary, passage, service and commission. All these
items are clearly in respect of liabilities which had
already accrued in the years in which the provision was
made. They are not in respect of anticipated liabilities
which may arise in future. The principles on which these
have been calculated were explained by the same witness M.
W. 1, Mani. In the case of gratuity, for example, provision
has been made in respect of the employees on the basis of
the amount of service put in by them up to the years to
which the accounts relate. In some cases, of course, where
the exact liability was not ascertainable, provision has
been made on the basis of the estimated existing liability.
Such provision is quite different and distinct from a
reserve. This Court in Metal Box Co. of India Ltd. v.
Their Workmen(1) held:
"The distinction between a provision and a
reserve is in commercial accountancy fairly
well-known. Provisions made against
anticipated losses and contingencies are
charges against profits and, therefore, to be
taken into account against gross receipts in
the Profit and Loss account and the balance-
sheet. On the other hand, reserves are
appropriations of profits, the assets by which
they are represented being retained to form
part of the capital employed in the business.
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Provisions are usually
(1) [1969] 1 S. C. R. 750.
547
shown in the balance-sheet by way of
deductions from the assets in respect of which
they are made whereas general reserves and
reserve funds are shown as part of the
proprietor’s interest : (See Spicer and
Peglar’s Bookkeeping and Accounts, 15th ed. p.
42). An amount set aside out of profit and
other surpluses, not designed to meet a
liability contingency commitment or diminution
in value of assets known to exist at the date
of the balance-sheet is a reserve but an
amount set aside out of profits and other
surpluses to provide for any known liability
of which the amount cannot be determined with
substantial accuracy is a provision. (See
William Pickles Accountancy, Second Edn., 192,
Part III, cl. 7, Sch. VI to the Companies
Act, 1956 which defines provision and
reserve.) "
The provision for gratuity, furlough salary, passage,
service and commission in the present case was all made in
respect of existing and known liabilities, though, in some
cases, the amount could not be ascertained with accuracy.
It was not a case where it was an anticipated loss or
anticipated expenditure which would arise in future. Such
provision is, therefore, not a reserve at all and cannot be
added back under item 2(c) of the Second Schedule.
The last ground for challenge of the award relates to the
deduction for income-tax. In the present case, the amount
of income-tax shown as expenditure has been calculated
without taking into account the bonus which would be payable
to the workmen under the award. The point raised that it
should be calculated after taking into account the bonus is
fully met by the decision of this Court in the case of Metal
Box Co. of India(1). That case clearly lays down that, in
calculating the income-tax deductible in working out the
gross profit, the bonus which would be payable under the Act
is not to be taken into account and the tax must be worked
out ignoring that bonus at the rates applicable in the
relevant years. Learned counsel for the appellant, however,
drew out attention to the amendment made subsequently by
Parliament in the Act by the Payment of Bonus (Amendment)
Act 8 of 1969, and urged that this amendment should be
treated as the parliamentary exposition of the law which was
interpreted by this Court in the case of Metal Box Co. of
India(1). In that case, the question was determined by
interpretation of only sections 6(c) and 7 of the Act. The
Amendment Act 8 of 1969 makes no substantial changes in
either of these two sections. In fact, section 6 remains
unmended and in section 7, the only amendment is that the
principles laid down in that section are to be applied not
only in respect of section 6(c), but also other sections of
the Act. This change became
(1) [1969] 1 S.C.R. 750.
548
necessary, because amendment was made in section 5 of the
Act by making certain additions which referred to direct
tax, including income-tax. That amendment in section 5 has
no bearing at all on the question whether income-tax to be
taken into account in calculation should be worked out after
taking into account the bonus payable under the Act or
without having regard to it. Consequently, there is no
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reason for us to differ from the view expressed by this
Court in Metal Box case(1). This ground of challenge also,
therefore, fails.
As a result, we hold that the Tribunal was right in
accepting the calculations made by the Company, except in
respect of the interest paid on advances made by the Head
Office to the Branch at Madras. The interest shown as
expenditure in the accounts has to be added back, as
indicated by us above, and the available surplus for
purposes of calculation of the bonus payable as well as for
purposes of set on or set off must be amended accordingly.
We leave this calculation to the Tribunal. With this
partial amendment in the award, the appeal is dismissed. In
the circumstances of this case, we make no order as to
costs.
V.P.S. Appeal dismissed.
(1) [1969] 1 S.C.R. 750.
549