Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
TRAVANCORE SUGARS AND CHEMICALS LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX KERALA
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
20/09/1966
BENCH:
RAMASWAMI, V.
BENCH:
RAMASWAMI, V.
SHAH, J.C.
BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA
CITATION:
1967 AIR 477 1967 SCR (1) 423
CITATOR INFO :
R 1972 SC1634 (16)
R 1973 SC 318 (17,19,20)
RF 1973 SC 982 (1)
D 1985 SC1656 (6,8,9,10)
RF 1987 SC 798 (11)
ACT:
Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, s. 10(2)(xv)--Purchase of
industrial undertaking from Government-Agreement to pay
percentage of net profits to Government annually-Such
payment whether revenue or capital expenditure.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant company was formed with a view to taking over
certain industrial undertakings from the Government of the
erstwhile State of Travancore. Apart from the cash
consideration for the said purchase the appellant agreed to
pay to the Government a certain percentage of its net
profits every year. In proceedings under the Indian Income-
tax Act, 1922, for the assessment year 1958-59 the appellant
claimed the amount so paid to be expenditure allowable under
s. 10(2) (xv). The High Court in reference proceedings held
against the appellant who thereupon came to this Court. It
was urged on behalf of the appellant that the annual payment
was in the nature of revenue expenditure because it was not
related to any part of the purchase price of the assets; on
the other hand the Government had undertaken certain
obligations under the agreement and the payment was in lieu
of these. On behalf of the respondent it was urged that the
payment formed part of the consideration for the purchase.
HELD:(i) No single test of universal application can be
discovered for- a solution of the question whether a
particular expenditure is in the nature of capital
expenditure or revenue expenditure. The name which the
parties may give to the transaction which is the source of
the receipt and the characterisation of the receipt by them
are of little consequence. The court has to ascertain the
true nature and character of the transaction from the
covenants of the agreement tested in the light of
surrounding circumstances. [427 D-E]
(ii) The percentage of the net profits payable by the
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appellant company to the Government under the agreement was
payable for an indefinite period without limitation; it was
related to the annual profits which flowed from the trading
activities of the company having- no relation to the capital
value of the assets; it was -also not tied up in any way to
any fixed sum a,-reed between the parties as part of the
purchase price of the three Government undertakings. There
was no reference to any capital sum in this part of the
agreement. On the contrary the very nature of the payment
excludes the idea that any connection with the capital sum
was intended by the parties.
It is true that the purchaser may buy a running concern and
fix a certain price and the price may be payable in a lump
sum or may be payable by instalments. The mere fact that
the capital sum is payable by instalment specied over a
certain length of time will not convert the nature of that
payment from the capital expenditure into, a revenue
expenditure, but the payment of instalments in such a case
would always have some relationship to the actual price
fixed for the sale of the particular undertaking. As there
was no specific sum fixed in the present case as an addi-
tional amount of price payable in addition to the-cash
consideration and payable in instalments or by any
particular method the annual payment
424
made to the Government could not be held to be in the nature
of capital expenditure. It was revenue expenditure.[428A-C]
Case-law referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 324 of 1965.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
August 20,1963, of the Kerala High Court in I.T.R. Case No.
16 of 1962.
A. K. Sen, G. L. Sanghi, and B. R. Agarwala, for the appel-
lant.
S.T. Desai, S. K. Iyer and R. N. Sachthey for the respon-
dent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Ramaswami, J.-The appellant is a limited company incorpora-
ted under the Travancore Companies Regulation and is
carrying on business, in the State of Kerala,of
manufacturing sugar, running a distillery and also a
tincture factory. The appellant-company was floated with a
veiw to taking over the business assets of a company called
’Travancore Sugars Ltd. (which was being wound up and in
which the State Government held the largest number of
shares), the Government Distillery at Nagercoil and the
business assets of the Government Tincture Factory at
Trivandrum. For this purpose an agreement dated June 18,
1937 was entered into between the Government of Travancore
and Sir William Wright on behalf of Parry & Co. Ltd., the
Promoters of the appellant-company. Under the said
agreement the assets of all the three concerns were agreed
to be sold by the Government of Travancore to the appellant-
company. Clause 3 of the agreement provided that the cash
consideration for the sale of assets of the Travancore
Sugars Ltd. shall be 3 .25 lakhs rupees. Clause 4(a)
provided that the cash consideration for the sale of the
Government Distillery shall be arrived at as a result of
joint valuation by the Engineers to be appointed by the
parties. Clause 5(a) stated that the cash consideration for
the sale of assets of the Government Tincture Factory shall
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be the value according to the books. Under cl. 4(b) and (c)
of the agreement the Government undertook to recognise the
transfer of the licence from the licensees of the Distillery
to the appellant and to secure to it the continuance of the
licence for a continuous period of five years after the
termination of the then existing licence. Under cl. 5(b) of
the agreement the Government agreed to purchase the
pharmaceutical products manufactured by the appellant in the
Tincture Factory, for its medical requirements. Under cl. 6
of the agreement all books of account and connected
documents are to be open to inspection by the authorised
officers of the Government. Under cl. 10 the Government was
entitled to nominate a director on the Board of Directors of
the appellant-
425
company who would not be entitled to any -voting power or to
interfere with the normal management of the company. Apart
from the cash consideration referred to in the agreement,
cl. 7 of the said agreement provided for futher payments as
folows:
" (7). The Government shall be entitled to
twenty per cent of the net profits earned by
the company in every year subject however to a
maximum of Rupees forty thousand per annum,
such net profits for the purposes of this
clause to be ascertained by deduction of
expenditure from gross income and also after-
(i) provision has been made for depreciation
at not less than the rates of allowances
provided for in the income-tax law for the
time being in force, and
(ii) payment of the Secretaries & Treasurers’
remuneration."
By another agreement dated January 28, 1947 the following
clause was substituted for the above cl. 7 of the original
agreement:
"The Government shall be entitled to ten per
cent of the net profits of the Company in
every year. For the purpose of this clause
net profits means the amount for which the
Company’s audited profits in any year are
assessed to Income-tax in the State of
Travancore."
For the assessment year 1958-59 (the corresponding previous
year being May 1, 1956 to April 30, 1957) the amount payable
to Government under the aforesaid cl. 7 came to Rs 42,480/-.
The appellate Assistant Commissioner disallowed the claim of
the appellant for deduction of this amount on the ground
that it was virtually mere sharing of profits after they
came into existence. The appellate Assistant Commissioner
relied upon the decision in The Pondicherry-Railway Company
v. C.I.T.(1) in disallowing this item of expenditure. The
appellant preferred an appeal against the order of the
appellate Assistant Commissioner to the Income-tax Appellate
Tribunal which held that the case came within the principle
of the decision in British Sugar and Manufacturers Ltd. v.
Harris. Inspector of Taxes(2) and that the payment of com-
mission was an expenditure made in order to earn profits of
the business and not an expenditure paid out of earned
profits. In the result the Tribunal allowed the appeal by
the Company. At the instance of the respondent the Tribunal
referred the following question of law to the High Court of
Kerala:
"Whether on the facts and in the circumstances
of the case, the payment of Rs. 42,480/- by
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the assessee to the Travancore Government
under the agreements dated
(1) 5 I.T.C. 363. 58 I.A. 239.
(2) [1939] I.T.R. 101.
426
18-6-1937 and 28-1-1947 was allowable under
sec. 10 of the Income-tax Act?"
By its judgment dated August 20, 1963, the High Court held
that the payment of the aforesaid amount constituted capital
expenditure and was not allowable under s.10(2)(xv)of the
Income Tax Act. In this view the High Court felt it
unnecessary to go into the merits of the respondent’s
contention that the payment represented only a division of
profits. The present appeal is brought, by special leave,
from the judgment of the High Court of Kerala dated August
20, 1963.
On behalf of the appellant Mr. Asoke Sen submitted that the
payment of Rs. 42,480/- was not capital expenditure but was
expenditure of revenue nature which was allowable under s.
10(2) (xv) of the Act. It was pointed out that the annual
payments under cl. 7 were not part of the purchase price of
the assets.Reference was made to cls. 3, 4(a) and 5(a) of
the agreement and it was said that separate and full
considerations were provided for the purchase of the assets
of Travancore Sugars Ltd., the Government Distillery and the
Government Tincture Factory. In addition to selling these
asssets the Government undertook obligations enumerated in
cls. 4(b) and (c) and 5(b) already referred to. It was
:contended that the appellant agreed to make annual payments
to Government in consideration of these obligations. On
behalf of the respondent the opposite view-point was
presented and it was said that the preamble to the agreement
dated January 28, 1947 indicated that the purchase was not
merely for the cash consideration recited but also for the
payment provided by cl. 7. Reference was made to the
following portion of the preamble of the agreement dated
January, 28, 1947.
"WHEREAS on 18th June 1937 an agreement (here-
inafter called ’the principal agreement) was
entered into between M. R. Ry. Rao Bahadur
Rajyasevanirata N. Kunjan Pillai Avl., Chief
Secretary to Government acting for and on
behalf of the said Government of His Highness
-the Maharaja of Travancore of the one part
and Sir William Wright, Kt., C.B.E., of
Messrs. Parry & Co. Ltd., Madras, acting for
and on behalf of the said Messrs. Parry & Co.
Ltd., of the other part, whereby the said
Government should sell and the company should
purchase the assets including the lands of the
Travancore Sugars Ltd., with the buildings,
out-houses, machinery and other things
attached thereto and more particularly
described in the Schedule ’A’ annexed to the
said principal agreement, the factory known as
the Government Distilleries situate at
Nagercoil in South Travancore with lands,
buildings, machinery and other things attached
thereto and more particularly described
427
in the Schedule ’B’ annexed to the principal
agreement, and all the assets of the factory
known as the Government Tincture Factory
situated at Trivandrum and more particularly
described in the Schedule ’C’ annexed to the
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principal agreement for the cash consideration
in the said principal agreement mentioned and
also in consideration inter alia that the
Government should be entitled to 20 Y. (twenty
per cent) of the said net profits earned by
the Company in every year subject however to a
maximum of Rs. 40,000/per annum, such net
profits for purposes of the said agreement to
be ascertained after the deductions set out in
clause 7 of the said agreement."
It is often difficult, in any particular case, to decide and
determine whether a particular expenditure is in the nature
of capital expenditure or in the nature of revenue
expenditure. It is net easy to distinguish whether an
agreement is for the payment of price stipulated in
instalments or for making annual payments in the nature of
income. The court has to look not only into the documents
but also at the surrounding circumstances so as to arrive at
a decision as to what was the real nature of the transaction
from the commercial point of view. No single test of
universal application can be discovered for a solution of
the question. The name which the parties may give to the
transaction which is the source of the receipt and the
characterization of the receipt by them are of little
consequence. The court has to ascertain the true nature and
character of the transaction from the covenants of the
agreement tested in the light of surrounding circumstances.
Examining the transaction from this point of view it is
clear in the present case that the consideration for the
sale of the three undertakings in favour of the appellant
was: (1) the cash consideration mentioned in the principal
agreement, viz., cls. 3, 4(a) and 5(a), and (2) the
consideration that Government shall be entitled to twenty
per cent of the net profits earned by the appellant in every
year subject to a maximum of Rs. 40,000/- per annum. With
regard to the second part of consideration there are three
important points to be noticed. In the first place, the
payment of commission of twenty per cent on the net profits
by the appellant in favour of the Government is for an
indefinite period and has no limitation of time attached to
it. In the second place, the payment of the commission is
related to the annual profits which flow from the trading
activities of the appellant-company and the payment has no
relation to the capital value of the assets. In the third
place, the annual payment of 20 per cent commission every
year is not related to or tied up, in any way, to any fixed
sum agreed between the parties as part of the purchase price
of the three undertakings. There is no reference, to any
capital sum in this part of the agreement. On the contrary,
the very nature of the payments excludes the idea that any
connec SupCI/66-19
428
tion with the capital sum was intended by the parties. It
is true that the purchaser may buy a running concern and fix
a certain price and the price may be payable in a lump sum
or may be payable by instalments. The mere fact that the
capital sum is payable by instalments spread over a certain,
length of time, will not convert the nature of that payment
from the capital expenditure into a revenue expenditure, but
the payment of instalments in such a case would always have
some relationship to the actual price fixed for the sale of
the particular undertaking. As we have already mentioned,
there is nonspecific sum fixed in the present case as an
additional amount of price payable in addition to the cash
consideration and payable by instalments or by any
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particular method. In view of these facts we are of opinion
that the payment of the annual sum of Rs. 42,480/ in the
present case is not in the nature of capital expenditure but
is in the nature of revenue expenditure and the judgment of
the High Court of Kerala on this point must be overruled.
The view that we have expressed is borne out by the decision
of the Court of Appeal in Commissioners of Inland Revenue v.
36/49 Holdings. Ltd. (In Liquidation)(1). In that case, an
undertaking was sold and the price consisted of fixed amount
and a certain commission payable for an indefinite period.
The consideration in the particular agreement which the
Court of Appeal had to consider, which was in addition to
the fixed amount payable by the purchaser to the vendor, was
I shilling for each bicycle not being mechanically propelled
bicycle without deduction and pound for each mechanically
propelled bicycle without deduction, and this was to be paid
on the turnover by the purchasing company. This sum of 1
shilling and pound was to be paid without any limitation of
time, and this sum was not related to any special sum as
being part of the price to be paid by the purchaser to the
vendor. In the course of his judgment, Lord Greene, Master
of the Rolls observed as follows at page 182 of the, report.
"The true nature of a sum payable to a
recipient for purposes such as the present is
to be ascertained from all the circumstances
relevant to that matter-. The true nature of
the sum is not necessarily its nature in law,
but its nature in business or in accountancy
whichever way one likes to put it, because
from the legal point of view there may be no
difference whatsoever as between the
parties
between a capital and an income sum. - It may
be totally irrelevant to the legal
relationships into which they are proposing to
enter. When, however, the tertius gaudens, in
the shape of the Revenue, appears on the
scene, that matter which as between the
parties may have been a matter of not the
slightest importance becomes immediately a
matter of very great importance, and it is
necessary to examine the circumstances
(1) [1943] 25 T.C. 173.
429
.lm15
of each individual case, including any documents which
require to be construed, in order to ascertain what is the
character to be attributed to the payment."
The same view was taken by the Bombay High Court in
Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay City v. Kolhia, Hirdagarh
Co. Ltd. Bombay(1). In that case, there was an agreement
between the proprietor of a colliery and C by which it was
agreed to promote the assessee company for the purpose of
acquiring and carrying on the colliery. The purchase price
was fixed at rupees one lac which was to be discharged by
the payment of a sum of Rs. 75,000/- in cash and the
allotment of fully paid shares of the face value of Rs.
25,000/- to the vendor. It was also agreed that the vendor
should be paid the Minimum annual dividend of four annas for
every ton of coal raised from the colliery and if there was
any deficit in any year the company would make up such
deficit, Under the draft Articles of Association of the
company the vendor was to get, in respect of the
consideration for shares, 500 preference shares or Rs. 50/-
each and a fixed cumulative preferential dividend equivalent
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to four annas per ton of coal raised and railed in each
year. The vendor approved the draft articles and in a
letter stated that he should get four annas per ton
permanently on all coals despatched from the colliery every
year, without any hindrance whatsoever. irrespective of any
loss or gain to the company. The assessee-company was
incorporated and the formal agreement of sale was entered
into between it and the vendor. Subsequently it was found
impossible to pay to the vendor a fixed dividend and
therefore a fresh agreement was executed tinder which the
vendor agreed to give up all the dividends to which he was
entitled and to permit the company to convert the preference
shares into ordinary shares. In consideration of this, the
company agreed to pay a commissioner to the vendor at the
rate of four annas per ton of steam and rubble coal and
three annas per ton of slack coal raised from the colliery
and sold and rented by the company from the colliery. The
question arose whether the sum representing the commission
paid by the assessee company to the vendor under the terms
of the agreement was a revenue expenditure. It was held by
the Bombay High Court that as the payment made by the
assessee company was a payment made for an indefinite
period, a payment made in relation to the turnover of the
company and not in relation to its profits, and as the
payment had no bearing to any specific sum fixed as part of
the price for the purchase of the Undertaking, it was in the
nature of a revenue payment and not a capital payment.
On behalf of the respondent Mr. S. T. Desai referred to the
decision of the Judicial Committee in Minister of National
Revenue
(1) 17 I.T.R. 545.
430
V. Catherine Spooner(1), In that case, the assessee had sold
all her right, title and interest in some land which she
owned in freehold to a company in consideration of a certain
sum in cash, of certain shares in the company and an
agreement to deliver to her 10 per cent of oil produced from
the land. The transferee company, after it had commenced
operations, struck oil and raised some of it in the year of
account, but did not deliver to the assessee any part of the
oil produced. The transferee company sold the whole of it
and paid over 10 per cent of the gross proceeds to the
assessee which she accepted in satisfaction of the royalties
reserved to her under the agreements The question arose
whether the amount which the lady received in lieu of the
oil was ’annual profit or gain from any other source’, and
the Appellate Court in Canada held that it was not so, but
was a capital receipt. On appeal the Judicial Committee
agreed with the Appellate Court in Canada that the case was
not without its difficulties, but in the end they said that
they were not prepared to differ from the view of the
transaction which an eminent Judge like Newcombe, J. had
taken and with which all his colleagues had agreed. The
decision of the Judicial Committee turned on special facts
of that case, viz., that the lady had bargained to receive
her share in oil and that there could be no profit or gain
out of the transaction of that kind. The case was an
exceptional one and the ratio of that decision cannot be
applied to the present case where the facts are manifestly
different. We may, however, refer to the decision in Jones
v. Commissioners of Inland Revenue(") where property was
conveyed in consideration of periodical payments, the
payment being a share of the profits of the business. In
that case, a person sold his interest in certain inventions
and letters-patent for pound 750 in cash and a percentage,
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called a royalty, payable for ten years on the sale of all
machines constructed under the patent. Of the sum of pound
750, pound 300 was paid in cash, but the payment of the
balance was secured by providing that it would have to be
paid by way of 5 per cent on the sale of the machines. It
was conceded by the Revenue that this 5 per cent was not to
be included in computing the total income of the transferor.
A question having arisen with regard to the further 10 per
cent. Rowlatt , J. observed as follows:
"The property was sold for a certain sum, and
in addition the vendor took an annual sum
which was dependent upon the volume of
business done; that is to say, he took
something which arose or fell with the chances
of the business. When a man does that he
takes an income-it is in the nature of
income."
The principle of this case applies to the persent case where
the facts are closely parallel.
(1) [1933] A.C. 6 4.
(2) [1920] 1 K.13. 711.
431
It is not, however, possible for us to finally determine
this appeal because the High Court has not dealt with the
other questions arising in this reference. Even if the
payment of the commission to the Government by the assessee
is not capital but revenue payment, certain other questions
arise for consideration in this case. In the first place,
it has to be determined whether the appellant is right in
his argument that the payment of the commission is
tantamount to diversion of profits by a paramount title. In
this connection reliance was placed on behalf of the
appellant upon the decision in Raja Bajoy Singh Dudhuria v.
Commissioner of Income Tax Bengal(1) in which the assessee
succeeded to the family ancestral estate on the death of his
father. Subsequently his step-mother brought a suit for
maintenance against him in which a consent decree was made
directing the assessee to make a monthly payment of a fixed
sum to his step-mother and declaring that the maintenance
was a charge on the ancestral estate in the hands of the
assessee. In computing his income, the assessee claimed
that the amounts paid by him to the step-mother under the
decree should be excluded. It was held by the Judicial
Committee that the sums paid by the assessee to his step-
mother were not ’income’ of the assessee at all and that the
decree of the court by charging the appellant’s whole
resources with a specific payment to his step-mother had to
that extent diverted his income from him and had directed it
to his step-mother, and to that extent what he received for
her was not his income. It was not a case of the
application by the appellant of part of his income in a
particular way; it was rather the allocation of a sum out of
his revenue before it became income in his hands. Reliance
was also placed on the decision of this Court in Poona
Electric Supply Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of IncomeTax.
Bombay City(2) in which a distinction was drawn between real
profits ascertained on commercial principles and profits
fixed by statute for a specified purpose. In the second
place, the respondent has contended that the transaction
should be treated as a joint venture with an agreement to
share profits between the appellant ,and the Government. In
the third place, the High Court has to ,examine whether the
requirements of s. 10(2)(xv) have been satisfied in this
case. On behalf of the respondent the argument was
presented that the payment of commission was a payment out
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of the profits of the appellant on condition of profits
being earned and that it was not a payment made to earn
profits. Reference was made to the decision of the Judicial
Committee in Pondicherry Railway Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of
Income-tax.(3) The opposite view-point was presented on
behalf of the appellant and it was argued that the payment
of the commission was a payment wholly and exclusively laid
out for the purpose of business and reference was made to
the decision of the Judicial Committee in Indian Radio
(1) [1933] I.T.R. 135. (2) 57 I.T.R. 521.
(3) 5 I.T.C. 363.
432
and Cable Communication Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-
tax(1) and to the decision of the Court of Appeal in British
Sugar Manufacturers Ltd. v. Harris (Inspector of Taxes).(2)
It is necessary that the High Court should consider all
these aspects of the case before furnishing an answer to the
question of law referred to it.
For these reasons we allow this appeal, set aside the
judgment of the High Court of Kerala dated August 20, 1963
and remand the case for being reheard and dealt with in
accordance with the directions given in this judgment. The
parties will bear their own costs up to this page
G.C Appeal allowed.
(1) [1937] 5 I.T.R. 270.
(2) [1939] I.T.R. 101.
432