Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX WEST BENGAL I, CALCUTTA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
CLIVE INSURANCE CO. LTD., CALCUTTA
DATE OF JUDGMENT02/05/1978
BENCH:
DESAI, D.A.
BENCH:
DESAI, D.A.
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
PATHAK, R.S.
CITATION:
1978 AIR 1290 1978 SCR (3) 844
1978 SCC (3) 161
ACT:
Income-tax Act, 1922, S. 49D-Relief in respect of Incomes
accruing or arising outside the taxable territories-Warrant
of Payment of interim dividend shows net dividend after
deducting at source U.K. income-tax and certified to be, so
Whether relief under s. 49D of the Act permissible to the
assessee.
HEADNOTE:
The claim for relief under s. 49D of the Income Tax Act 1922
made by the respondent-assessee Company in its return for
the assessment year 1960-61, the relevant previous year
being the calendar year 1959, in respect of the net dividend
income of Rs. 15,266/- after deduction of British income-tax
of Rs. 9,881/- was rejected by the Income-tax Officer
without making the reasons for his decision explicit.
In appeal by the assessee, the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner confirmed the decision of the Income-tax
Officer observing that even if it be held that the net
dividend income suffered U.K. tax by deduction, there is
nothing to show that the tax deducted was paid to U.K.
Revenue and therefore s. 49D is not attracted. In further
appeal by the assessee the Tribunal accepted the contention
of the assessee and at the instance of the Revenue referred
the question to the High Court. The High Court after an
exhaustive examination of the relevant provisions of the
Income-tax Act of U.K. and the decisions bearing on the
question confirmed the decision of the Tribunal.
Dismissing the appeal by certificate, the Court
HELD : 1. All the requirements of s. 49D of the Income-tax
1922 read with Explanation have been satisfactorily
established by the assessee and therefore the High Court
rightly answered the question in the affirmative in favour
of the assessee. [854 F]
2.To be eligible for relief under s. 49D read with its
Explanation, the assessee must establish excluding the non-
disputed requirement that (i) the assessee has income which
has accrued or arisen without taxable territory; and (ii)
the assessee has paid in any country income-tax by deduction
or otherwise under the law in force in that country; (iii)
in that event the assessee would be entitled to the
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deduction from Indian income tax payable by him; (iv) a sum
calculated on such doubly taxed income at the Indian rate of
tax or the rate of tax of the said country, whichever is
lower. The expression rate of tax of the said country’ must
be given the meaning as set out in para (iii) of the
explanation and in doing so the importance of the words
’income assessed in the said country’ has to be borne in
mind. [847 F-H]
3.Under U.K. law, the company has to pay tax on its
profits or gains as its liability and not as agent of
members to whom dividend is distributed out of profits.
Therefore, if dividend is distributed after profit or gain
of the company is charged to tax, it is optional with the
company either to deduct or not to deduct income tax paid by
it from the dividend paid to members and if it chooses to
exercise the option it can do so at standard rate. There is
no specific provision under U.K. Income-tax Act which would
show that dividend income in U.K. in the hands of the
assessee is exempt from payment of income tax. The company
is liable to pay income-tax on its profits and gains and s.
184 enables the company to deduct from the dividend paid out
of profits, tax at the standard rate for the year in which
the amount payable becomes due. Dividends which represent
the distribution of a taxed Fund are, therefore styled as
franked income so far as concerns any further taxation at
the standard rate, i.e. the rate at which deduction has been
made. The assumption underlying this position is that the
dividend represents the residue of the total income which
has already been
845
taxed in the hands of the company, the fiction being that if
tax was not paid by the company there would have been a
higher dividend and, therefore, the dividend income is
already taxed. The company is treated as a large
partnership and though this system is highly artificial but
it is a domestic expedient limited in its operation to U.K.
[849 F-G, 850 B-D, 851 E]
According to the statute law of U.K. and the interpretation
put on it by the highest court in that country, the
dividends which have borne tax in the hands of the paying
company were treated as franked income in the hands of the
assessee. In other words it would mean that the income is
the income in the form of dividends has been subjected to
tax. It is immaterial whether they are taxed in the hands
of the assessee or not but they are deemed to have been
taxed in the hands of the assessee in U.K. Dividends which
are styled as franked income have borne tax at the source.
[852 C-D, F]
If the dividends styled as franked income have been charged
to income-tax at the source, it would mean that it is the
income in respect of which income tax has been paid by
deduction or otherwise in accordance with the law in force
in the country in which the income accrued. If it is now
charged to tax under the Indian Income-tax Act it obviously
becomes a doubly taxed income and one of the requirements of
s. 49D would be satisfied. [852 F-G]
Bradbury v. English Sewing Cotton Co. Ltd., 8 Tax Cases 481
(House of Lords), Commissioners of Inland Revenue v. Cull,
22 Tax Cases 603 at 636 Canadian Eagle Oil Co. Ltd. v. The
King, 27 Tax Cases 205; Cenlon Finance Co. Ltd. v. Ellwood,
40 Tax Cases 176 at 205; F. S. Securities Ltd. v. Com-
missioners of Inland Revenue, 41 Tax Cases 666 discussed.
4.Undoubtedly to be entitled to relief under s. 49D the
requirements for eligibility therein prescribed must be
satisfied by the assessee. one such requirement is that
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income in respect of which relief from double taxation is
sought, is the income in respect of which he has paid
income-tax by deduction or otherwise under the law in force
in the country in which the income accrued. [853 A]
While examining the question whether the assessee has
fulfilled this requirement, it will have to be ascertained
what is the law bearing on income-tax in the country in
which income has arisen and whether according to that law,
the said income has suffered tax by deduction or otherwise
again according to the law in that country. According to
the income-tax law in U.K. dividends represent the
distribution of a taxed fund and are therefore styled as
franked income. The payment of tax by the company and
deduction made at standard rate from dividend distributed to
shareholder operates in relief of the shareholders. Such
dividend income according to the law of the country where it
has arisen is deemed to have been subjected to tax. Viewed
from this angle the dividend income in the hands of
shareholder is not charged to income-tax.[853 B-C]
Inland Revenue Commissioner v. Blott, [1921] A.C. 171 @ 201;
quoted with approval.
5.Once it is accepted that the dividend represents
franked income distributed out of profits and gains and not
liable to further income-tax in the hands of member, it
clearly transpires that for relief against double taxation
it is the income which has been subjected to tax in the
foreign country in which it has arisen and irrespective of
the fact that there is no provision comparable to s. 18(5)
of our Act in the Income-tax Act of U.K. yet the payment of
tax by the company operates in relief of the shareholder and
on that account alone the dividend income is not chargeable
to tax in U.K. Therefore, it can be said with reasonable
certainty that in respect of the dividend income of the
assessee income-tax has been paid by deduction or otherwise
under the law in force in the country in which income has
arisen. The principle of agency in payment by the company
is worked out on the basis of company being treated as a
large partnership so that the payment of tax by the company
would operate to discharge the quasi-partners. [854 D-E]
commissioner of Income-tax v. Tata Sons P. Ltd. [1974] 97
ITR 128; Commissioner of Income Tax v. Cotton Fabrics Ltd.
[1976] 104 ITR 233 over-ruled,
846
6.The expression ’income assessed in the foreign country
would clearly, in the context in which it is used, mean
subjected to tax in the foreign country. In order to
ascertain whether the rate under the Indian Income-tax Act
or the rate of tax in the foreign country is lower, apart
from any other consideration, the rate. of tax in U.K. in
the context of dividend income is easily ascertainable
inasmuch as company can deduct income-tax at standard rate
only. Undoubtedly, where the assessee was also liable to
pay surtax in U.K. on the dividend income no complication
would arise in working out the rate because surtax is
payable on dividend income. But in the present case that
difficulty does not arise as the assessee being a company,
it was neither liable to any surtax nor entitled to any
relief in U.K., and, therefore, the rate of tax can be
worked out with certainty consistent with the provisions of
para (iii) of the Explanation. The assessee thus, in
respect of the dividend income has paid tax at the standard
rate and that is the rate of tax of the foreign country for
the purpose of para (iii) of the Explanation. [853 F-H, 854
A]
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1590 (T) of
1973.
From the Judgment and Order dated the 11th May 1971 of the
Calcutta High Court in Income Tax Ref. No. 138 of 1967.
S. I. Desai, K. C. Dua and A. Subhashini for the Appellant.
K. Ray, J. Ramamurthy and D. N. Gupta for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
DESAI, J. The Revenue in this appeal by certificate
questions the correctness of the judgment of the Calcutta
High Court in Income Tax Reference No. 138 of 1967 in which
the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal, Calcutta Bench ’A’,
referred the following question to the High Court for its
opinion
"Whether on the facts and in the circumstances
of the case, the assessee could be said to
have paid income-tax in U. K. by deduction or
otherwise in respect of the net dividends of
Rs. 15,266 so as to be eligible for the relief
contemplated by section 49D of the Indian
Income Tax Act,, 1922 ?"
The Respondent assessee is a resident Company carrying on
business of general insurance. The Company held shares of
U.K.based joint stock companies. The net dividend income in
respect of the shares held by it amounted to Rs. 15,266/-
after deduction of British Income-tax of Rs. 9 8 8 1 /-, the
amount being stated in rupee equivalent of the pound
sterling. For the assessment year 1960-61 the relevant
previous year being the calendar year 1959, the assessee
applied for relief under S. 49D of the Indian Income-tax
Act, 1922 (for short the Act’).’ The Income-tax Officer
declined to grant the relief but the reasons for the
decision were not made explicit. In appeal by the assessee,
the Appellate Assistant Commissioner confirmed the decision
of the, Income-tax Officer observing that even if it be held
that the: net dividend income suffered U.K. tax by
deduction, there is nothing to show that the tax deducted
was paid to U.K. Revenue and, therefore, S. 49D is not.
attracted. In further appeal by the assessee, the Tribunal
accepted the contention of the assessee and at the instance
of the
847
Revenue, referred the question hereinabove set out, to the
High Court. The High Court, after an exhaustive examination
of the relevant provisions of the Income-tax Act of U.K. and
the decisions bearing on the question, confirmed the
decision of the Tribunal.
The Assessee claims relief in respect of the income arising
outside the taxable territory under s. 49D of the Act. The
relevant portion of s. 49D reads as under :
"49.D. Relief in respect of incomes accruing
or arising outside the taxable territories :-
(1) If any person who is resident in the
taxable territories in any year proves that,
in respect of his income which accrues or
arises during that year without the taxable
territories (and which is not deemed to accrue
or arise, in the taxable territories), he has
paid in any country, with which there is no
reciprocal arrangement for relief or avoidance
of double taxation, income-tax, by deduction
or otherwise, under the law in force in that
country, he shall be entitled to the deduction
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from the Indian income-tax payable by him of a
sum calculated on such doubly taxed income at
the Indian rate of tax or the rate of tax of
the said country, whichever is the lower.
(2) x x x x
(3) x x x x
Explanation-In this section-
(i) x x x x
(ii) x x x x
(iii) the expression "rate of tax of the said
country" means income-tax and super-tax
actually paid in the said country in
accordance with the corresponding laws of the
said country after deduction of all reliefs
due, but before deduction of any relief due in
the said country in respect of double
taxation, divided by the whole amount of the
income assessed in the said country".
To be eligible for relief under s. 49D read with its
explanation, the assessee must establish excluding the non-
disputed requirement that : (i) the assessee has income
which has accrued or arisen without taxable territory; and
(ii) the assessee has paid in any country income-tax by
deduction or otherwise under the law in force in that
country; and (iii) in that event the assessee would be
entitled to the deduction, from Indian income-tax payable by
him; (iv) a sum calculated on such doubly taxed income, at
the Indian rate of tax or the rate of tax of the said
country, whichever is lower. The expression ’rate of tax of
the said country’ must be given the meaning as set out in
para (iii) of the explanation and in doing so the importance
of the words ’income assessed in the said country’ has to be
borne in mind.
848
There is no controversy that the assessee is a resident
company and has dividend income from the U.K. based joint-
stock companies, i.e. income accruing without taxable
territory. Admittedly, there is. no reciprocal arrangement
for relief or avoidance of double taxation between India and
U.K.
The assessee has received dividend income. A specimen
dividend warrant issued in favour of assessee reads as under
STOCKHOLDERS ARE PARTICULARLY REQUESTED TO NOTIFY THE
COMPANY OF ANY CHANGE OF ADDRESS
12125 J. LYONS AND COMPANY LIMITED.
Ordinary & ’A’ Ordinary Stock.
Annexed is a warrant in payment of Interim Dividend on your
Stock on account of the year ending 31st March 1960.
Gross Dividend of is od per 1 unit on-
pound ... Ordinary stock..... Pound 96 120
pound 1932 ’A’ Ordinary stock.... pound 37 88
Less-Income-tax at 7/9d in the pound
------------
Net Dividendpound 59 3 4
-----------
THE CLIVE INSURANCE CO. LTD., CLIVE BUILDINGS,
8, NETAJI SUBHAS, ROAD, CALCUTTA.
I hereby certify that income-tax on the profits of the
Company, of which profits this dividend forms a portion, has
been or will be duly paid to the proper officer for the
receipt of taxes. This voucher will be accepted by the
Island Revenue as proof of the deduction of the tax in
claiming the exemption from or return of income-tax.
H.E. LOFTHOUSE,
Secretary
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1st December, 1959.
Cadby Hall, London, W.14".
The real controversy centres round the question whether
deduction of income-tax from dividend as shown in the
dividend voucher constitutes payment of income-tax by the
assessee by deduction or otherwise in U.K. on his dividend
income.
The first submission is that the income in respect of which
relief can be claimed under s. 49D must be income actually
chargeable top income-tax under the law of the foreign
country, the income must be subject to tax and must hence
actually be taxed in the foreign country Section 49D does
postulate that in order to be entitled to relief against
double taxation the income which has arisen without the
taxable territory must have been charged to income-tax by
deduction or otherwise
849
under the law in force in the country in which the income
has accrued. It cannot be gainsaid that relief against
double taxation can be had in respect of the income which
has been taxed once according to law in force in the country
in which it has arisen and it is the income of the person
who is resident in taxable territory and is liable to be
charged to income-tax according to Indian Income-tax Act.
In other words, it must be doubly taxed income.
The question which was vigorously debated is whether the
dividend income which accrued in U.K. was charged to tax by
deduction or otherwise according to the law of Income-tax in
force at the relevant time in U.K.
In U.K. there is a slight anomalous position with regard to
dividend income. Broadly it is stated that dividend paid
out of the profits of the company to shareholders of the
company is not chargeable to income-tax in the hands of the
assessee. The company pays tax on its profits. If dividend
is distributed after tax is paid by the company it is
optional with the company not to deduct any income-tax from
the dividend paid to shareholders or the company may
reimburse itself in respect of the tax paid by it by
deducting income-tax at standard rate from the dividends
paid to the shareholders, vide s. 184, U.K. Income-tax Act,
1952. The dividend income thus received by the shareholders
is not chargeable to income-tax but is certainly chargeable
to surtax in the hands of the assessee. In view of this
legal position,, it was strenuously contended that there was
no statutory provision for taxing dividend income under the
law of U.K. nor was there any machinery. prescribed for
assessing to income-tax the dividend income accrued to a
shareholder. The Company having been charged to tax on its
income, the dividend income in the hands of shareholders was
not chargeable to income-tax in the hands of shareholders.
It was further said that to work out the mechanics of relief
to be granted it must be shown that the dividend income in
the hands of the assessee must be assessed at some rate of
income-tax in U.K. and then comparison can be made with
Indian rate of income-tax to grant relief.
Initially tile difference that stares in our face in respect
of deduction of income-tax from dividends paid by companies
under U.K. income-tax law and our Act must be noticed.
Under U.K. law the company has to pay tax on its profits or
gains as its liability and not as agent of members to whom
dividend is distributed out of profits. Therefore, if
dividend is distributed after profit or gain of the company
is charged to tax, it is optional with the company either to
deduct or not to deduct the income-tax paid by it from the
dividend paid to members and if it chooses to exercise the
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option, it can do so at standard rate. Under s. 18 of our
Act, the company has to deduct income-tax and supertax at
prescribed rate from the dividend paid to member as agent of
the member and all sums so deducted shall for the purpose of
computing the income of an assessee, be deemed to be income
received vide sub s. (4) of s. 18. The dividend income
including deduction, that is grossed up income, will be
assessed as income of the shareholder and he will be given
credit for the. amount so deducted by the company and paid
over to the authority. It was
850
accordingly pointed out that in U.K. company pays tax under
s. 184 on its own liability and reimburses itself to some
extent by the tax deducted at standard rate from the
dividend paid to shareholder and the deduction so made would
not be paid to treasury for and on behalf of the
shareholder. Therefore, Mr. Desai submitted that even if
income-tax at standard rate is deducted from the dividend
paid by the company to the asseseee, the dividend income in
the hands of assessee is not assessed and charged to tax,
and it could not be said that it is a doubly taxed income,
as envisaged by s. 49D.
No specific pro-vision was pointed out to us which would
show that dividend income in U.K. in the hands of the
assessee is exempt from payment of Income-tax. The company
is liable to pay income-tax on its profits’ and gains and s.
184 enables the company to deduct from the dividend paid out
of profits, tax at the standard rate for the year in which
the amount payable becomes due. Dividends which represent
the distribution of a taxed fund are, therefore, styled as
franked income so far as concerns any further taxation at
the standard rate, i.e. the rate at which deduction has been
made. The assumption underlying this position is that the
dividend represents the residue of the total income which
has already been taxed in the hands of the company, the
fiction being that if tax was not paid by the company there
would have been a higher dividend and, therefore, the
dividend income-is already taxed. But this fiction led to a
number of complications because the company is an
independent juristic person and the scheme of the Income-tax
Act in U.K. does not imply that the Company pays tax on
behalf of the member. To reconcile this position, way back,
Lord Phillimore in Bradbury English Sewing Cotton Co.
Ltd.,(1) observed as under :
"Their taxation would seem to be logical, but
it would be destructive of joint stock company
enterprise, so the Act of 1842 has,
apparently, proceeded on the idea that for
revenue purposes a joint stock company should
be treated as a large partnership, so that the
payment of in,come tax by a company would
discharge the quasi-partners, The reason for
their discharge may be the avoidance of double
taxation, or to speak accurately, the
avoidance of increased taxation. But the law
is not founded upon the introduction of some
equitable principle as modifying the statute;
it is founded upon the provisions of the
statute itself; and the statute carries the
analogy of a partnership further, for it
contemplates a company declaring a divid end
on the gross gains, and then on the face of
the dividend warrant making a proportionate
deduction in respect of the duty, so that the
shareholder whose total income is so small
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that he is exempt from income tax or pays at a
lower rate, can get the income tax which has
been deducted on the dividend warrant returned
to him".
It would appear that company for tax purpose being treated
as a large partnership was not merely a fiction resorted to
reconcile the position of the dividend income in the bands
of the shareholder
(1) 8 Tax Cases 481 (House of Lords)
851
and the juristic personality of the joint stock company, bat
it was traceable in the words of Lord Phillimore, to the
statute itself. Mr. Desai, however, contended that this
theory of company being treated as a large partnership has
been discarded and long since exploded in U.K. itself, and
in this connection reliance was placed on Commissioners of
Inland Revenue v. Cull,(1) where Lord Atkin observed as
under :
"My Lords, it is now clearly established that
in the case of a limited company the company
itself is chargeable. to tax on its profits,
and that it pays tax in discharge of its own
liability and not as agent for its
shareholders. The latter are not chargeable
with Income-tax on dividends, and they are not
assessed in respect of them. The reason
presumably is that the amount which is
available to be distributed as dividend has
already been diminished by tax on the company,
and that it is thought inequitable to charge
it again. At one time it was thought that the
company, in paying tax, paid on behalf of the
shareholder: but this theory is now exploded
by decisions in this House, and the position
of the shareholders as to tax is as I have
stated it."
However, in Canadian Eagle Oil Co. Ltd. v. The King, (2)
wherein Lord Macmillan, after observing that this topic has
been darkened rather than illumined by a false analogy which
it has been sought to draw with the case of the taxation of
the income of United Kingdom companies and their
shareholders, affirmed the observations of Lord Phillimore
in Bradhury’s case (supra) and further observed that this
system of treating the company as a large partnership is
highly artificial; but it is a domestic expedient limited in
its operation to U.K. In Cenlon Finance Co. Ltd. v. Ellwood,
(3) Lord Reid in his speech, after referring to Bradbury’s
case (supra) and two other cases, observed that at one time
it was thought that a company pays tax on behalf of or as
agent for its shareholders, and, if that were so, the
explanation would be obvious, but that idea has long been
discarded. But as late as 4th June 1964, the House of Lords
in F. S. Securities Ltd. v. Commissioners of Inland Revenue,
(4) has reaffirmed the earlier view which becomes abundantly
clear from the speech of Viscount Radcliffe. After quoting
the relevant sentence from the speech of Lord Phillimore in
Bradbury’s case (supra), the noble Law Lord observed that
this analysis. of treating the company as a large
partnership so that payment of income-tax by a company would
discharge the quasi-partners is now accepted as being
correct and it remains essential to the application of the
whole system even though the connection between any
particular fund of profits and a dividend paid has now
become, in effect untraceable and the rule
(1) 22 Tax Cases 603 at 636
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(2) 27 Tax Cases 205.
(3) 40 Tax Cases 176 at 205.
(4) 41 Tax Casts 666.
852
that the company recoups itself at the standard rate of tax
that is current at the date of payment means that company
and shareholder do not necessarily equate their respective
positions as completely as the theory of the matter would
require. Proceeding further, it was observed that if the
dividends have borne tax in the hands of the paying company
and if they were, therefore, franked income in the hands of
the respondent as receiving shareholder, the Revenue could
not enter them as receipt in its trading account for the
purpose of assessing it to tax on a separate taxable
subject, that is the trading profit. It was in terms said
that to do so would be to recognise double taxation in its
most obvious form. There was some dispute whether this view
is the majority view but having seen the opinion of all Law
Lords, we have no doubt about this and it is on this basis
that the appeal of the appellant was allowed.
It, therefore, appears well established according to the
statute law of U.K. and the interpretation put on it by the
highest court in that country that the dividends which have
borne tax in the hands of the, paying company were treated
as franked income in the hands of the assessee. In other
words, it would mean that the income in the form of
dividends has been subjected to tax. It is immaterial
whether they were taxed in the hands of the assessee or not
but they are deemed to have been taxed in the hands of the
assessee in U.K. It would be: 0advantageous to refer Simon’s
Income Tax, 2nd Edn., Vol. I, p. 307, where it is stated
that it is a general principle of the Income Tax Acts in
U.K. that as far as possible tax is charged at the point
where the income first emerges from the source and this is
so even if the person primarily in receipt of the income
does not ultimately enjoy it but pays it over or accounts
for it to another who is the person beneficially entitled to
it. In such cases the person assessed has the right to
recoup himself, when making a payment of income to the
person entitled thereto, by deducting the tax appropriate to
that income, or by crediting himself with the amount when
accounting. The author includes dividend income as one such
income.
It thus clearly emerges that dividends which are styled as
franked income have borne tax at the source and that is why
they are not assessable for income-tax in the hands of the
shareholder.
Now, if thus the dividends styled as franked income have
been charged to income-tax at the source, it would mean that
it is the income in respect of which income-tax has been
paid by deduction or otherwise in accordance with the law in
force in the country in which the income accrued. If it is
now charged to tax under the Indian Income-tax Act, it
obviously becomes a doubly taxed income and one of the
requirements of s. 49D would be satisfied.
It was contended on behalf of the Revenue that S. 49D should
be interpreted having regard to the scheme of our Act and in
harmony with other relevant provisions, and it should not
be interpreted by reference to English statutes not in pari
material or decisions of courts in England interpreting
those statutes. It was pointed out that the course adopted
in England in relation to dividend income has been
853
described as anomalous. Undoubtedly, to be entitled to
relief under s. 49D, the requirements for eligibility
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therein prescribed must be satisfied by the assessee. One
such requirement is that income in respect of which relief
from double taxation is sought, is the income in respect of
which he has paid income-tax by deduction or otherwise under
the law in force in the country in which the income accrued.
While examining the question whether the assessee has
fulfilled this requirement, It will have to be ascertained
what is the law bearing on income tax in the country in
which income has arisen and whether according to that law,
the said income has suffered tax by deduction or otherwise
again according to the law in that country. According to
the income-tax law in U.K. dividends represent the
distribution of a taxed fund and are, therefore, styled as
franked income. The payment of tax by the company and
deduction made at standard rate from dividend distributed to
shareholders, operates in relief of the shareholders (vide
Inland Revenue Commissioners v. Blott.(1) Such dividend in-
come according to the law of the country where it has arisen
is deemed to have been subjected to tax. Viewed from this
angle the dividend income in the hands of shareholder is not
charged to income-tax.
It was, however, said that no relief could be granted to the
assessee because in order to work out the mechanics of the
relief it would be necessary to ascertain the rate at which
the Indian income-tax will be payable on the income in
question and the, rate of income-tax at which income-tax by
deduction or otherwise is paid in the foreign country and
then to ascertain which of the two is the lower one which
can be allowed as a deduction from the tax payable under the
Indian Income-tax Act in respect of such doubly taxed
income. The contention is that in England it being optional
with the company to deduct or not to deduct income-tax from
the dividend paid by it from its profits after tax is paid
by the company, it would be impossible to ascertain the rate
at which the tax is paid in the foreign country in respect
of such income. Now, the position in U.K. with regard to
deduction of incometax from the dividend distributed from
the, profits of the company is clear inasmuch as the tax can
be deducted only at the standard rate. The expression
’income assessed in the foreign country’ would clearly, in
the context in which it is used, mean subjected to tax in
the foreign country. In order to ascertain whether the rate
under the Indian Inccome-tax Act or the rate of tax in the
foreign country is lower apart from any other consideration,
the rate of tax in U.K. in the context of dlvidend income is
easily ascertainable inasmuch as company can deduct imcome-
tax at standard rate only. Undoubtedly, where the assessee
wag also liable to pay surtax in U.K. on the dividend income
no complication would arise in working out the rate because
surtax is payable on dividend income. But in the present
case that difficulty does not arise as the assessee being a
company, it was neither liable to any surtax nor entitled to
any relief in U.K., and, therefore, the rate of tax can be
worked out with certainty consistent with the provisions of
para (iii) of the Explanation. The assessee thus on the
interpretation put by us in respect of the dividend income
has paid tax at the standard
(1) [1921] A.C. 171 at 201.
854
rate and that is the rate of tax of the foreign country for
the purpose of para (iii) of the Explanation.
Mr. Desai submitted that the expressions ’paid’, ’by
deduction or otherwise" and ’rate of tax of the said
country’ and the Explanation to s. 49D clearly postulate
that relief can be granted under that section only in
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respect of the tax on income charged, assessed and actually
paid by the assessee, to the Revenue of the foreign country.
In other words, it was said that the income in the hands of
the person who now claims relief against double taxation
must be assessed as his income and income-tax must be paid
by him to the Revenue of the foreign country or even if it
is paid by the company in respect of dividend income it must
be shown as agent of the shareholder collecting it on behalf
of the shareholder and paying it to the Revenue of the
foreign country on behalf of the shareholder. Some of the
facets of this submission have already been examined and
dealt with by us. The only question is whether the
expression ’assessed’ in para (iii) of the Explanation could
mean assessed in the hands of the shareholder as his income.
Once it is accepted that the dividend represents franked
in.; come distributed out of profits and gains and not
liable to further income-tax in the hands of member, it
clearly transpires that for relief against double taxation
it is the income which has been subjected to tax in the
foreign country in which it has arisen and irrespective of
the fact that there is no provision comparable to s. 18 (5)
of our Act in the Income-tax Act of U.K. yet the payment of
tax by the company operates in relief of the shareholder and
on that account alone the dividend income is not chargeable
to tax in U.K. Therefore, it can be said with reasonable
certainty that in respect of the dividend income of the
assessee income-tax has been paid by deduction or otherwise
under the law in force in the country in which income has.
arisen. The principle of agency in payment by the company
is worked out on the basis of company being treated as a
large partnership so that its payment of tax is on behalf of
quasi-partners.
Thus, it clearly transpires that all the requirements of 49D
read with the Explanation have been satisfactorily
established by the assessee and, therefore, the High Court
rightly answered the question in the affirmative in favour
of the assessee.
Before we conclude, it may be pointed out that the Bombay
High Court in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Tata Sons Pvt.
Ltd..,(,) and the Gujarat High Court in. Commissioner of
Income-tax V. Cotton, Fabrics Ltd., (2) have in terms
followed the decision of the Calcutta High Court under
appeal.
This appeal accordingly fails and is dismissed with costs.
S.R. Appeal dismissed.
(1) [1974] 97 ITR 128.
(2) [1976] 104 ITR 233.
855