Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, PUNJAB JAMMU& KASHMIR, HIMACHAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
PUNJAB DISTILLING INDUSTRIES LTD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
24/03/1964
BENCH:
SARKAR, A.K.
BENCH:
SARKAR, A.K.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
SHAH, J.C.
CITATION:
1964 AIR 1709 1964 SCR (7) 447
ACT:
Income Tax-Distiller taking deposit refundable on return of
bottles-Balance of deposits after refund, if trading
receipt-Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 (11 of 1922), s.10.
HEADNOTE:
The assessee, a distiller of country liquor, carried on the
business of selling liquor to licensed whole salers. The
assesses :started collecting from its customers from the
year 1945 besides the price of the liquor and the bottles in
which the liquor was sold a further charge called "empty
bottles return security deposit." The entire sum collected
on this account in respect of any one transaction would be
refunded in full on return of 90 per cent. of the bottles
covered by it. The question for consideration before this
Court was whether the charge "security deposit" amounted to
a trading receipt assessable to Income Tax.
Held: The amounts paid to the assessee and described as
’security deposit’ were trading receipts and therefore
income of the assessee assessable to tax. These amounts
were paid as an integral part of the commercial transaction
of the sale of liquor in bottles and represented an extra
price charged for the bottles. They were not security
deposits as there was nothing to secure, there being no
right to the return of bottles. These appeals are covered
by the judgment of this Court in Punjab Distilling
Industries Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax.
Punjab Distilling Industries Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income.
tax [1959] Supp. 1 S.C.R. 693, relied on.
Davies v. Shell Company of China Ltd. (1951)32 T.C. 133 and
K.M.S. Lakshmanier & Sons v. Commissioner of Incometax and
Excess Profits Tax, Madras [1953] S,.C.R. 1057,
distingushed.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 107-111 of
1963. Appeals by special leave from the judgment :and order
dated March 23, 1961 of the Punjab High Court in Income-tax
Reference No. 14 of 1960.
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R. Ganapathi Iyer and R.N. Sachthey, for the appellant (in
all the appeals).
S.T. Desai, R.K. Gauba, B.P. Singh and Naunit Lal, for the
respondent (in all the appeals).
March 24, 1964. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SARKAR, J.-We think that these appeals are covered by ;the
judgment of this Court in Punjab Distilling Industries Ltd.
v. Commissioner of Income-tax(1) and the High Court
(1) [1959] Supp. 1 S.C.R. 693.
448
was in error in its view that the ratio decidendi of that
judgment was not applicable to them. The earlier case had
arisen out of the assessment of the same assessee but it was
concerned with the years 1947-48 and 1948-49 while the
present appeals are concerned with the years 1946-47, 1949-
50, 1950-51, and 1951-52. The accounting period of the
assessee was from December 1, in one year to November 30 of
the following year. In both the cases the assessments were
for income-tax, excess profits tax and business profits tax.
The point for consideration in respect of all these taxes
was, however, the same.
A full statement of the facts will be found in the Judgment
in the earlier case and it is unnecessary to state them at
length over again. The assessee who was a distiller and
seller of bottled country liquor, started collecting from
its customers from the year 1945 besides the price of the
liquor and the bottles in which the liquor was sold, a
further charge called empty bottles return security
deposit". This charge was made at a certain rate per bottle
delivered depending on its size on the term that it would be
refunded as and when the bottles were returned to the
assessee and that the entire sum collected on this account
in respect of any one transaction would be refunded in full
on return of 90 per cent of the bottles covered by it. The
question is whether this charge is a trading receipt asses-
sable to tax. In the earlier case this Court held it to be
assessable. This Court then said (p. 687), "the trade
consisted of sale of bottled liquor and the consideration
for the sale was constituted by several amounts respectively
called, the Price of the liquor, the price of the bottles
and the security deposit. Unless all these sums were paid
the appellant would not have sold the liquor. So the amount
which was called security deposit was actually a part of the
consideration for the sale and, therefore part of the price
of what was sold."
In respect of the years now under consideration the Income-
tax Officer taxed these charges and on appeal the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner confirmed the Income-tax Officer’s
view. On further appeal, however, the Income-tax Tribunal
reversed the decisions of the authorities below and held
that these charges were loans and not trading receipts. It
may be stated that all this had happened before the afore-
said earlier judgment was delivered. After the Tribunal’s
decision, the Commissioner of Income-tax obtained a
reference of the following question to the Punjab High
Court:
"Whether on the facts and circumstances of the
case the collections by the assessee company
described in its accounts as ’empty bottle
return security deposits’ were income
assessable under Section 10 of the Income-tax
Act."
449
It is of interest to note that the earlier
case also concerned -an identical question and
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had been answered both by the High Court and
this Court in the affirmative.
If the judgment in the earlier case covered the present ap-
peals, then the question referred would, of course, have to
be ,answered in the affirmative. The High Court, however,
took the view that as a result of the amendment of the rules
made under the Punjab Excise Act, 1914 which came into
effect from April 1, 1948, the charges collected after that
date were not covered by that judgment. It held that the
amended rule made the ratio decidendi of our judgment
inapplicable to the charges collected after that date. The
rule referred to is r. 40(14)(f) and the relevant part of it
on which the High Court based its view is as follows:-
(v) It is compulsory for the licensee to
return at least 90 per cent. of the bottles
issued to him by the licensed distiller.
(vi) The licensed distiller may, at the time
of issue, demand security at the rates of
three rupees, two rupees or one rupee and
eight annas per dozen quart, pint or nip
bottles respectively upto 10 per cent. of the
bottles issued by him and confiscate the
security to the extent falling short of the 90
per cent. limit.
The licensee referred to in the earlier of the rules quoted
is the wholesaler to whom the distiller sold his liquor. It
is not very clear what is meant by the words "upto 10 per
cent. of the bottles issued" or the words "falling short of
the 90 per cent. limit". It is not necessary, however, to
pursue this matter for we shall not be concerned with the
precise meaning of these words. It is not in dispute that
some charge described as a deposit was realised on the term
that it would be refunded in certain eventualities and that
is enough for our purpose for the only question is whether
this charge was a trading receipt.
The High Court thought that the earlier judgment of this
Court had been based on three considerations, namely (1)
that the charge concerned had been made without Government’s
sanction and entirely as a condition imposed by the assessee
itself for the sale of its liquor; (2) that it could not be
security deposit for the return of the bottles for there was
no right to their return and (3) that it was refundable
under the contract of sale itself. In the High Court’s view
if these circumstances were not there, our decision would
have been different. The High Court held that since the
amended rules came into force, none of these considerations
was available and, therefore, the
LP(D) ISCI-15a
450
charges could not be held to be trading receipts. The
following quotation from the judgment of the High Court
fairly summarises its reasoning:-
"The amended rules were given effect from 1st
April, 1948. To securities demanded in
accordance with the above rules the three
considerations which prevailed with their
Lordships of the Supreme Court and which have
been mentioned above will not apply to the
instant case. It cannot, therefore, be said,
as was the case in the appeal before their
Lordships of the Supreme Court, that the
’additional amounts had been taken without
Government’s sanction and entirely as a
condition imposed by the appellant itself for
the sale of its liquor’. Again it cannot be
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said that the ’wholesalers were under no
obligation to return the bottles.’ Lastly, in
view of the statutory rule amended in 1948 it
cannot be said that the deposit ’was part of
each trading transaction a)-id was refundable
under the terms of the contract relating to
trading transaction under which it had been
made."
It is not in dispute that if the High Court was in error in
this reasoning, the present case will be governed by the
earlier decision.
With respect to the learned Judges of the High Court, we
think that the earlier judgment of this Court has been
misunderstood by them. That judgment had not been based on
the three points mentioned by the High Court and this we now
proceed to show. The first point of distinction between the
two cases was based on the observation in the earlier case
that the additional amounts had been taken without
Government’s sanction and entirely as a condition imposed by
the appellant itself for the sale of its liquor’. The High
Court apparently thought that by this observation it was
suggested that if the amounts had been taken under
Government’s sanction, then they would not have been
taxable. We are wholly unable to agree that this is a
correct reading of that judgment. That observation
contained only a recital of fact and was made for the
purpose of distinguishing these amounts from the other
amounts charged by the assessee as price of bottles to which
we have earlier referred. The other amount was charged
under a scheme framed by the Government and called the "buy
back scheme". We find nothing in the earlier judgment to
show that the conclusion there arrived at was based on the
fact that the charge had not been made with the sanction of
the Government. That nothing turned on whether a charge was
made under a Government scheme or purely as a matter of
contract would indeed appear to have always been the common
case. Thus even before the
451
amended rules had come into force, the assessee had been
’collecting under the aforesaid "buy scheme" which had the
sanction of the Government, from its customers as price of
the bottles, a charge which was refundable on the return of
the bottles. The charge now under consideration is a charge
additional to that collected under the ’buy back scheme’ and
this we have earlier said. It has never been in dispute,
either in the earlier case or now, that the charge under the
’buy back scheme’ which was collected under Government’s
sanction constituted a taxable income. This Court had never
said, nor was it ever contended by the assessee that a
collection would not be taxable if it had been made with the
sanction of the Government. The first point of distinction
sought to be made by the High Court is, therefore,
unfounded.
The second point made by the High Court was that the
observation in the earlier judgment that the charge could
not be a security for the return of the bottles as there was
no right to such return, was no longer applicable as under
the amended rules there was a right to the return of the
bottles. We do not agree for reasons to be stated later,
that under the amended rules there was such a right but we
will assume for the present that there was. Now, the
argument in connection with which that observation was made
was that if the charges were deposits for securing the
return of the bottles, they were not trading receipts. By
the aforesaid observation this Court dealt with the first
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part of this argument and said that the assumption that the
charges were for securing the return of the bottles was
unfounded for there was no right to such return. If the
charges were not by way of security deposit the argument
must, of course, fail. So that was one answer that was
given to the argument. But this Court did not stop there
and proceeded to consider the argument as a whole, namely,
whether if the charges were security deposits, they were not
trading receipts.
Now, the reason why it was said that if the charges were
security deposits they were not trading receipts is to be
found in two cases on which the argument was based. The
first was the case of Davies v. Shall Company of China
Ltd.(1). In that case the Company had delivered its product
to certain agents for sale and payment of the sale proceeds
to it. The Company took money from each agent as deposit to
secure itself against the risk of default by him to account
for the sale proceeds. It was observed by Jenkins L.J.,
"Mr. Grant described the agents’ deposits as
part of the Company’s trading structure, not
trade receipts but anterior to the stage of
trade receipts, and I think that is a fair
description of them. It seems to
(1) (1951) 32 T.C. 133.
LP(D)ISCI--15
452
me that it would be an abuse of language to
describe one of these agents, after he had
made a deposit, as a trade creditor of the
Company in respect of the deposit, not on
account of any goods supplied or services
rendered by him in the course of its trade,
but simply by virtue of the fact that he has
been appointed an agent of the Company with a
view to him trading on its behalf, and as a
condition of his appointment has deposited
with or, in other words, lent to the Company
the amount of his stipulated deposit."
That was the kind of security deposit which Mr. Sastri
appearing for the assessee on the earlier occasion said the
"empty bottles return security deposits" were. The real
point, therefore, in contending that the deposits were
security deposits was to establish that they were not part
of the trading transactions at all but related to a stage
anterior to the trading transactions. This contention was
rejected and it was held that the "empty bottles return
security deposits" were not the kind of deposits considered
in the Shall Company case.
The other case on which Mr. Sastri then relied was K.M. S.
Lakshmanier & Sons v. Commissioner of Income-tax and Excess
Profits Tax Madras(1). That case dealt with three trade
arrangements. Mr. Sastri contended that the "empty bottles
return security deposits" were the kind of deposits dealt
with in the third arrangement considered in that case but
this argument also failed. Under the third arrangement, the
trader took from its constituent at the commencement of an
expected series of trading transactions with it a deposit
and kept the same till the business connection came to an
end whereupon the deposit was refundable to the Constituent
with interest at 3 per cent per annum after deduction
thereout of any amount remaining due, from the constituent
on the trading transactions. The understanding was that the
constituent would pay for each purchase made by him from the
trader during the continuance of the business connection and
it was only where he failed to make the payment that the
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amount due became liable to be deducted from the deposit.
This deposit was held by this Court to be a loan for these
reasons: "The amount deposited by a customer was no longer
to have any relation to the price fixed for the goods to be
delivered under a forward contract-either in installment or
otherwise. Such price was to be paid by the customer in
full against delivery in. respect of each
contract............... It was only at the end of the
’business connection’ with the appellants that an adjustment
was to be made towards any possible liability arising out
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 1057.
453
of the customer’s default............ The transaction had
thus all the essential elements of a contract of loan." (P.
1063).
None of these cases, therefore, was concerned with the
question whether a security deposit was by its very nature
such that it could not be a trading receipt. The first case
dealt with an actual security deposit but it was held that
that deposit was not a trading receipt not for the reason
that it was a security deposit but for the reason that it
formed, the structure under which trading transactions
producing trading receipts were conducted and was not itself
connected with any trading transaction. In the second case
the receipt was held to be a loan; that it might be also a
security deposit was not even mentioned. It was held not to
be a trading receipt because it had no connection with the
trading transactions but related to a stage anterior to the
trading transactions.
It is, therefore, clear that the contention that the charges
formed a security deposit had been advanced only for the
purpose of showing that they were not a part of the trading
transactions. The question was not really whether the
charges were security deposits but whether they were part of
the trading transactions or had been made at anterior
stages. This Court decided that they were part of the
trading transactions and were not relatable to an anterior
stage. That is all that it was called upon to decide and
did decide.
That on the earlier occasion this Court was not concerned
with the question whether the charges made were security
deposits or not would appear from the following observations
occurring at p. 690. "Mr. Sanyal was prepared to argue
that even if the amounts were securities deposited for the
return of the bottles, they would still be trading receipts,
for they were part of the trading transactions and the
return of the bottles was necessary to enable the appellant
to carry on its trade, namely, to sell liquor in them. As
we have held that the amounts had not been paid as security
for the return of the bottles, we do not consider it
necessary to pronounce upon this contention." This Court,
therefore, did not decide that if the deposits bad been made
to secure the return of the bottles, they could not be a
trading receipt. The High Court was in error in
distinguishing the present case from the earlier one on the
basis that this Court had then so decided.
We now turn to the question whether under the amended rules
there was any right in the distiller to the return of the
bottles. We think there was not and in this respect the two
cases are identical; in none was the charge in fact a
security deposit. The reason for that view is this. The
liquor passed through three sales before it reached the
consumer; first the distiller sold it to wholesaler then the
wholesaler to a retailer and lastly, the retailer to the
consumer, If the
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454
rules created an obligation on the wholesaler to return the
bottles to the distiller, then the rules would provide for a
return of the bottles to the wholesaler by the retailer and
to the retailer by the consumer; without such rules it would
be idle to require the wholesaler to return the bottles to
the distiller. We have not been shown anything creating a
right in the wholesaler or the retailer to a return of
bottles. Clearly, the consumers were under no obligation to
return the bottles in which they bought liquor. Sub-clause
(v) of the rule on which the High Court based itself,
referred to the return of the bottles in which liquor was
sold. In the absence of P. right in the wholesaler to a
return of the bottles from the retailer, it would be
insensible to read that provision as creating an obligation
on the wholesaler to return the bottles. He had no means
under the rules to perform that obligation. That rule,
therefore, must be read as intending only to lay down that
if the wholesaler could not return the bottles, his deposit
was liable to be confiscated under sub-cl. (vi). Again, the
rules do not lay down any procedure by which the distiller
might enforce the return of the bottles to him, which they
would have undoubtedly done if it was intended to give him a
right to the return of the bottles. Indeed there is nothing
to show that he can obtain such a return. Whether the
wholesaler would be liable to punishment under the Act for
breach of his obligation to return the bottles or not is to
no purpose, for we are now concerned with the right of the
distiller to obtain a return of the bottles. It seems to us
that the only reason why the rules required a wholesaler to
return the bottles to the distiller was to authorise the
imposition of a term of the sale upon the breach of which,
the charges made for the bottles would cease to be
refundable.
We now come to the last point of distinction made by the
High Court. On the earlier occasion this Court had said
that the amount deposited was refundable under the terms of
the contract constituting the trading transaction and was,
therefore, a trading receipt. The learned Judges of the
High Court seem to ’have been of the opinion that since the
rule was amended, the deposits had to be made under it and,
therefore, were not thereafter received under the contract
or as part of the trading transaction constituted by it.
With great respect to the learned Judges, there appears to
be some confusion here. The rule by its own force does not
compel a deposit to be made. The terms of the rule make
this perfectly clear. All that it does is to empower a
distiller to take a deposit. But the deposit must be taken
under a contract in regard to it; it is not taken under the
rule itself. In other words, all that the rule does is to
authorise the making of a contract concerning the deposit on
the terms mentioned in it, the object apparently
455
being to avoid any question as to its validity arising
later. We may here point out that the trade in liquor is
largely control-( led by Government regulations. It must,
therefore, be held that the deposit was actually taken under
a contract; it was none the less so though the contract was
authorised by the stationery rules. The third point of
distinction on which the High Court relied was, therefore,
also without foundation. Whether if the deposits had been
made without a contract and Indirectly under the rules and
in respect of a trading transaction made by a contract they
would have been trading receipts or not, is not a question
that arises in the present appeals and on that question we
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express no opinion now.
For these reasons we think that these appeals are completely
governed by the earlier judgment of this Court and we answer
the question referred in the affirmative. We should state
that even according to the High Court the amounts collected
as "empty bottles return security deposit" prior to April 1,
1948, were chargeable to tax.
The appeals are allowed and the respondent will pay the
costs here and below.
There will be one set of costs allowed as hearing fee.
Appeals allowed.
456