Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX, WEST BENGAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
M/S. ABDUL RAHIM OSMAN & CO. (INDIA) PRIVATELIMITED
DATE OF JUDGMENT19/09/1972
BENCH:
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
BENCH:
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
HEGDE, K.S.
KHANNA, HANS RAJ
CITATION:
1972 AIR 2469 1973 SCR (2) 372
1972 SCC (2) 854
ACT:
Indian Income Tax Act, 1922 (Act 11 of 1922)-Section 23A(1)-
Scope of.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent is a private company. The assessment ’was
for the years 1958-59 and 1959-60 of which the accounting
year ended on 30th June 1957 and 30th June 1958
respectively. The Company had declared dividend after the
12 months following the accounting year, and hence, the
Income Tax Officer subjected the Company to Super Tax in
terms of the latter part of S. 23A(1) of the Indian Income
Tax Act, 1922 by including the dividends of Rs. 15,000 and
Rs. 90,000 declared and paid by the Company in respect of
relevant accounting years.
The respondent contended that once dividend is declared
before: an order is made under S. 23-A(l), no Super-Tax can
be levied in respect of those dividends. This submission
was rejected by the I.T.O., who sought to assess the
respondent by including the dividends already declared and
paid. An appeal to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner,
was unsuccessful. The Tribunal, however, referred the
following question to the High Court under S.66(1)of the
Indian Income Tax Act 1922:"whether, on the. facts of the
case, the Tribunal was right in holding that in the matter
of calculation of undistributed balance of the total income
of an assessee for the purpose of levy of Super Tax, in
terms of S.23-A(1) of the income-tax Act, 1922, the I.T.O.
should take into consideration dividend declared by the
Company after the period of twelve months immediately
following the expiry of the previous years relevant to the
assessment years, 1958-59 and 1959-60, but before the date
on which the orders under S.23-A(1) had been made by the
Income Tax Officer;". The High Court has answered that
question in the affirmative and against the Department. The
question before this Court was whether the High Court was
right in answering the question in the affirmative referred
to by the Tribunal. Dismissing the appeal,
HELD : (i) S.23-A(1) has been enacted with a view to deter
private Companies which do not distribute more than 60% of
their able income; otherwise their undistributed balance of
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the net income will by subjected to additional Super Tax.
The object of the Section is to prevent the share-holders in
adopting device to avoid payment of Super Tax inasmuch as
the rates of Super Tax for the Companies being lower, there
may be temptation to get the Company accumulate profits and
capitalise them, such as, for instance, to issue bonus
shares, which were not assessee able as income in the hands
of the shareholders., It is done to avoid these artifices
and force such companies to declare the, minimum statutory
dividends. in cases where the provisions have not been
complied with, the I.T.O., with the previous approval of the
inspecting Assistant Commissioner, may make an order if at
the time of the passing of the order, it is found that the
company has not distributed its dividends within 12 months
immediately following the accounting year less than the
statutory percentage of its total income of the accounting
year as reduced by the amount of taxes payable by the
company. Though the I.T.O. has jurisdiction to pass an
order under Sub-Section (1), he has to make a regular
assessment of the company under S. 23, which be cannot do if
in fact, a
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dividend had been declared before the making of that order,
as otherwise, the company’s undistributed balance which is
assessed by the I.T.O. would exceed its commercial profits.
There is also a likelihood of double taxation because not-
only the company is charged Super-Tax for not distributing
the dividends, but also it. will be assessed on the
dividends it has in fact distributed, to income tax and once
again, to the Super-Tax. Such a result was not intended as
the company can declare dividends in General Meetings from
the profits, earned by it and when that is declared and
paid, the I.T.O., though for the nonfulfillment of the
conditions prescribed in the Section, may seek to reopen it,
he cannot make an assessment in cases where the dividend
has. actually been declared and paid, before the date of his
order. [375F]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : C. A. Nos. 1378 and 1379 of
1969.
Appeals by certificate from the judgment and order dated May
21, 1968 of the Calcutta High Court in Income-tax Reference
No. 17 of 1965.
V.S. Desai, P. L. Juneja, R. N. Sachthey and S. P. Nayar,
for the appellant.
M.C. Setalvad, S. Roy Chowdhary and G. S. Chatterjee, for
the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
JAGANMOHAN REDDY, J. This appeal is by certificate and
though no reasons have been given for the grant of it, the
learned advocate for the respondent does not contest that a
question of law does arise and has not objected to the
certificate. The question that was referred to the High
Court by the Tribunal under s. 66(1) of the Indian Income-
tax Act, 1922 (hereinafter called. the ’Act’) is as follows
"Whether, on the facts and in the
circumstances of the case, the Tribunal was
right in holding that in the matter of
calculation of undistributed balance of the
total income of an assessee for the purpose of
levy of’ super-tax in terms of S. 23-A(1) of
the Income-tax Act, 1922, the Income-tax
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Officer should have taken into consideration
dividend declared by the company after the
period of 12 months immediately following the
expiry of the previous years relevant to the
assessment years 1958-59 and 1959-60 but
before the date on which the orders under S.
23-A(1) had been made by the Income-tax
Officer ?
The High Court has answered that question in the affirmative
and: against the department following the reasoning which
was obiter in the case of Moore Avenue Properties Private
Ltd. v. C.I.T.(1)-
(1) 59 I.T.R. 466.
374
The respondent is a private company to which- it is not dis-
puted, sub-s.(1) of s.23-A would be attracted if it
fulfilled the conditions prescribed therein. The assessment
relating to which the Income--tax Officer sought to exercise
his jurisdiction under that section was for the years 1958-
59 and 1959-60 for which the accounting year ended on 30th
June 1957 and 30th June 1958 respectively. The order of the
Income-tax Officer was dated October 31, 1961. The
contention of the appellant is that the company had,
declared the dividends after the 12 months following the
accounting year and hence the Income-tax Officer had with
the previous sanction of the Inspecting Assistant Commis-
sioner, validly subjected the company to super-tax in terms
of the latter part of s. 23-A(1). On behalf of the
respondent it was submitted that once dividends were
declared before an order is made under this section no
super-tax can be levied in respect of those dividends. This
submission was rejected by the Income-tax Officer who sought
to assess the respondent by including Rs. 15,000 and Rs.
90,000/- declared as dividends at the general meetings held
on December 17, 1959 and May 26, 1960 in respect of the
relevant assessment years. An appeal to the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner was unsuccessful. The Tribunal
however on a reading of the relevant parts of the section
came to the conclusion that in computing the undistributed
balance of the "total income not only the income-tax and
super-tax payable by the company but also any other tax
levied by the local authority ,etc. are to be deducted but
also "dividends actually distributed, if any" which are the
words used in the latter part of s. 23-A(1). It was also of
the view that no time limit was applicable in taking into
account the actual distribution of dividends in passing an
order under s. 23-A(1) by the- Income-tax Officer as such it
directed that the sums of Rs. 15,000 and 90,000/- were to be
taken into account in arriving at the undistributed balance
of the total income of the respondent company for the
purpose of levy of super-tax. Before considering the
contention on behalf of the revenue it will be necessary to
examine the terms of the section and the object for which it
was enacted. S.23-A(1) after it was recast by the Finance
Act of 1955 is as follows :-
"Where the Income-tax Officer is satisfied
that in respect of any previous year the
profits and gains distributed as dividends by
any company within the twelve months-
immediately following the expiry of that pre-
vious year are less than the statutory
percentage of the total income of the company
of that previous year as reduced by-
(a)the amount of income-tax and super-tax
payable by the company in respect of its total
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income, but ex-
375
cluding the amount of any super-tax payable
under this section;
(b)the amount of any other tax levied under
any law for the time being in force on the
company by the Government or by a local
authority in excess of the amount, if any,
which has been allowed in computing the total
income; and
(c)in the case of a banking company, the
amount actually transferred to a reserve fund
under s.17 of the Banking Companies Act, 1949;
the Income-tax Officer shall, unless he is satisfied that,
having regard to the losses incurred by the company in
earlier years or to the smallness of the profits made in the
previous year, the payment of a dividend or a larger
dividend than that declared would be unreasonable, make an
order in writing that the company shall, apart from the sum
determined as payable by it on the basis of the assessment
under section 23, be liable to pay super-tax at the rate of
fifty per cent in the case of a company whose business
consists wholly or mainly in the dealing in or holding of
investments, and at the rate of thirty-seven per cent in the
case of any other company on the undistributed balance of
the total income of the previous year, that is to say, on
the total amount as reduced by the amounts, if any, referred
to in clause (a), clause (b) or clause (c) and the
dividends actually distributed, if any."
This provision is procedural and applies only to companies
in which the public are not substantially interested. It
seems to have been enacted with a view to deter private
companies which do not distribute more than 60% of their
assessable income on pain of exposing them to the drastic
consequences of subjecting their undistributed balance of
the net income to additional supertax. The object of the
section is to prevent the shareholders in adopting a device
to avoid payment of super-tax inasmuch as the rates of
super-tax for the companies being lower there may be a
temptation to get the company to accumulate profits and
capitalise them such as for instance to issue bonus shares
which were not assessable as income in the hands of the
shareholders. It is to avoid these artifices and force such
companies to declare the minimum statutory dividends, though
in the light of the changed definition of ’dividend’ under
s. 2(6A) profits may attract tax even when they reach the
shareholder in capitalised forms, or where they are
distributed to them on liquidation from accumulated profits
over the years they will be chargeable as dividends. In
cases where the provisions have not been complied with, the
Income-tax Officer with the previous approval and consent of
the Inspecting Assistant Commissioner will get jurisdiction
to make
376
an order if at the time of the passing of the order it is
found that the company has not distributed by way of
dividends within twelve months immediately following the
accounting year less than the statutory percentage of its
total income of the accounting year as- reduced by the
amount of taxes payable by the company and in the case of
banking companies the amount actually carried to a reserve
fund under a statutory compulsion. Though the Income-tax
Officer has jurisdiction to pass an order under sub-s.(1) he
has to make a regular assessment on the company under S. 23
which he cannot do if in fact a dividend had been declared
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before the making of that order, as otherwise the company’s
undistributed balance which is assessed by the Income-tax
Officer would exceed its commercial profits. There is also
a likelihood of double taxation because not only the company
is charged with super-tax for not distributing the
dividends, but also it will be assessed on the dividends it
has in fact distributed to income-tax and once again super-
tax. Such a result was not intended. As the company can
only declare dividends in general meeting from the profits
earned by it, and when that is declared and paid the Income-
tax Officer though for the non-fulfilment ofthe conditions
prescribed in the section may seek to reopen ithe cannot
make an assessment in cases where the dividend has actually
been declared and paid before the date of his order.In
this view, we think the High Court was right in answering
the question in the affirmative. The appeal is accordingly
dismissed with costs.
S.C. Appeal dismissed.
377