Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX POONA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
M/s. MANNA RAMJI & CO.
DATE OF JUDGMENT29/08/1972
BENCH:
KHANNA, HANS RAJ
BENCH:
KHANNA, HANS RAJ
HEGDE, K.S.
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
CITATION:
1973 AIR 515 1973 SCR (1)1068
1973 SCC (3) 43
CITATOR INFO :
F 1976 SC 640 (12)
RF 1982 SC1153 (12)
R 1987 SC 500 (39)
ACT:
Indian Income Tax, 1911-Capital Receipts and Revenue
Receipts--Compensation paid by Govt. for loss of earning
where the business premises are requisitioned-Whether
Revenue Receipts.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent was carrying on timber business in premises
consisting of office room and six sheds, In 1944, the
premises were requisitioned under the Defence of India Act
for storing food grains. On request of the respondent,
however, the office room was released wherein the appellant
continued to carry on the timber business. The respondent
claimed compensation of Rs. 1,25,500 for loss of earnings
which was awarded. The Income Tax Officer brought to tax
the said amount attributing the earning to business of
timber, as revenue receipts. On respondent’s motion, the
following question was referred to the High Court by the
Income Tax Appellate Tribunal : "whether, on facts and
circumstances of the case, the sum of Rs. 1,05,074 received
by the applicant as compensation from the ’Government is
taxable as income of the applicant or is a capital receipt
in its hands." The High Court answered the question against
the Revenue.
On appeal by the revenue,
HELD:On the facts found by the Tribunal, namely, that the
compensation was claimed and awarded for loss of profits the
respondent continued the said business in its usual name and
style in the same office premises, and the profit making
apparatus itself was not destroyed, the compensation amount
partakes the character of profits and therefore Revenue
receipts. [1072E]
Held further, the present is not a case wherein the
respondent firm was permanently deprived of a source of
income. On the contrary, the present is a case arising out
of requisition of the premises. Requisition unlike
acquisition, is of a temporary nature. The compensation
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paid to the respondent represents the supposed profit which
the respondent would have earned during the years the
premises remained tinder requisition.[1072G]
but which profit the respondent could not earn because of
the requisition.
Commissioner of Income Tax/Excess Profits Tax, Bombay City
v. Shamsher Printing Press, [1960] 39 I.T.R. 90., referred
to.
Also held, the method of computing the compensation payable
for loss of earnings does not alter the real character of
essential nature of the receipt of the compensation in the
hands of the respondent. The Arbitrator awarding the
compensation on the basis of two years’ purchases cannot be
assailed. [1073E]
The Glembold Union Fireclay Co. Ltl. v. The Commissioner of
Inland Revenue, 12 T.C, 427 and Senairan Doongarmall v.
Commissioner of Income Tax, [1961] 42 I.T.R. 392 (on p.
397), relied upon.
Commissioner of Income Tax, Nagpur v. Rai Bahadur Jairam
Vahi and Others [1959] 35 I.T.R. 148, S.R.Y. Sivaram Prasad
Bahadur v. Commissioner of Income Tax, Andhra Pradesh,
[1971] 82 I.L.R. 527 and Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab
Haryana, Jammu and Kashmir and Himachal Pradesh v. Prabhu
Dayal [1971] 82 I.T.R. 804, held not applicable.
Karnani Properties, Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income Tax, West
Bengal [1971] 82 I.T.R. 547, referred to.
The appeal was allowed,
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 156 of 1969.
Appeal by certificate from the judgment and order dated the
10th and 11th February, 1967 of the Bombay High Court in
Income-tax Reference go. 35 of 1962.
B. B. Ahuja, R. N. Sachthey and S. P. Nayar, for the
appellant.
R. M. Hajarnevis, S. Balakrishnan, G. P. Sahasrabhudhe and
N. M. Ghatate, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Khanna, J. This appeal on certificate granted by the Bombay
High Court is directed against the judgment of that court
whereby it answered the question referred to it under
section 66(1) of the Indian Income Tax Act, 1922
(hereinafter referred to as the Act) in favour of the
respondent assessee.
The reference arose out of the assessment made upon the res-
pondent firm for the assessment year 1951-52, the account
year for which is the, Samvat year 2006 (that is, October
22, 1949 to November 9, 1950). The respondent was carrying
on business for several years in the past in timber under
the name and style of Manna Ramji & Co. in Bhavani Peth
Poona City. The business premises consisted of an office
and six sheds used for storing wood and timber of all kinds.
The respondent firm constructed the six sheds for the
purpose of its business after taking the site thereof on a
long lease. On May 19, 1944 the Collector of Poona
requisitioned the premises of the respondent under the
Defence of India Act as from May 19, 1944 for the purpose of
using them as store houses for food grains. Initially the
requisition order covered the six sheds as well as the
office of the respondent, but at the request of the
respondent firm the Collector agreed to allow it to remain
in possession of the office premises. In October, 1944 the
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respondent made a claim for Rs. 1,85,200 on account of
compensation for the requisitioned premises. In June, 1946
the Collector offered referred to pay compensation at the
rate of Rs. 310 per month. The respondent feeling
dissatisfied with the offer of the Collector, moved the
Government for a reference to arbitration under the
provisions of the Defence of India Act. The Civil Judge,
Senior Division, Poona was thereafter appointed arbitrator
on November 10, 1947. The Government appointed its
Consulting Surveyor as an assessor to help the arbitrator in
determining the amount of compensation. As against that the
respondent appointed an architect as its assessor. There
was considerable difference in the estimates of the two
assessors regarding the amount of compensation payable to
the respondent.
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The Civil Judge, who had been appointed arbitrator,, gave
his award on April 15, 1948. The operative part of the
award of the arbitrator was as under :
"The Government do pay compensation to the
claimants as follows :
(1) Rs. 210/- per month for rent of the
premises from the 15th May 1944 till the date
of restoring the premises to the claimants.
(2) A lump sum of Rs. 1,25,500/- for loss of
earnings.
(3) A sum of Rs. 100/- in respect of the
wooden frames.
(4) Interest at 3% on Rs. 1,25,500/- from
the 15th November, 1944 till the date of
actual payment."
The Government was also ordered to pay Rs. 2,000/- as costs
to the respondent. The Government filed an appeal against
the award of the arbitrator, but the same was dismissed by
the High Court on August 7, 1949. The respondent was
thereafter paid the amount of Rs. 1,70,330-10-0 in the
Samvat year 2006. The above amount included Rs. 1,25,500 on
account of lump sum for loss of earnings and Rs. 2,000 on
account of costs of arbitration.
In computing the respondent’s total income the Income Tax
Officer brought to tax the two sums of Rs. 22,180/- on
account of rent receipts and Rs. 20,551 on account of
interest. Besides that. the Income Tax Officer brought to
tax the sum of Rs. 1,50,074/under section 10 of the Act by
attributing it to the respondent’s business in timber. This
figure of Rs. 1,05,074/- was arrived at by deducting out of
Rs. 1,25,500 a sum of Rs. 20,426/ which, according to the
Income Tax Officer, had been spent by the respondent in the
claim proceedings against the Government over and above the
amount of Rs. 2,000/- which had been awarded as costs by the
arbitrator. The respondent feeling aggrieved by the finding
of the Income Tax Officer that the sum of Rs. 1,05,074
was,business and taxable receipt filed appeal against the
order of the Income Tax Officer. The Appellant Assistant
Commissioner accepted the respondent’s appeal and held that
the above amount was capital receipt. On further appeal by
the department, the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal held that
the sum of Rs. 1,25,500 was a revenue receipt as it had been
received on account of the loss of earnings of the timber
business. The respondent was, however. allowed to set off
the losses of Rs. 4,572 and Rs. 490, which bad been brought
forward from the assessment years 1949-50 and
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1950-51, against the sum of Rs. 1,05,074. On being moved by
the respondent, the Tribunal referred the following question
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to the High Court
"Whether, on the facts and in the
circumstances of the case, the sum of Rs.
1,05,074/- received by the applicant as
compensation from the Government is taxable as
income of the applicant or is a capital
receipt in its hands ?"
The High Court held that the amount received by the
respondent for the requisitioning of the six sheds or
godowns was in the nature of capital receipt in the hands of
the respondent-firm for the damage sustained in the profit
making apparatus. It was, in the opinion of the High Court,
not a revenue receipt and as such, not taxable.
In appeal Mr. Ahuja on behalf of the appellant has assailed
the judgment of the High Court and has urged that the sum of
Rs. 1,05,074 received by the respondent was a revenue
receipt and not a capital receipt as the amount represented
the compensation payable for loss of earnings consequent
upon the requisition of the sheds of the respondent. As
against that, Mr. Hajarnavis on behalf of the respondent has
urged that the amount in question was a capital receipt and
the decision of the High Court in this respect was correct.
In our opinion, the contention advanced on behalf of the
appellant is well founded and that the sum in question
represents a revenue receipt and not a capital receipt.
In order to resolve the controversy as to whether the sum of
Rs. 1,05,074 received by the respondent was a revenue
receipt or a capital receipt, we must try to ascertain the
true nature and character of the payment. Although the
distinction between capital receipt and revenue receipt is
well recognised, the task of assigning it to the appropriate
head in border line cases is not free from difficulty and
becomes one of such refinement. Decided cases can provide
illustrations and afford indications of the kind of
considerations which may relevantly be borne in mind in
approaching the problem. In the final analysis, however,
the controversy would have to be resolved in the light of
the facts and circumstances of each individual case. It
would, therefore, be ,relevant to look into the
circumstances under which the payment was made. In this
respect we find that after the sheds of the respondent
had been requisitioned, the respondent commenced proceedings
for claiming compensation. The Civil Judge Poona was
appointed arbitrator to determine the amount of
compensation. In the course of proceedings before the
arbitrator, the respondent filed written statement claiming
compensation, inter alia, for loss of profits. The
arbitrator by his award dated April 15, 1948
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awarded a sum of Rs. 1,25,500 for loss of earnings to the
respondent. In addition to that we have the finding of the
Tribunal that the respondent firm during the period for
which the claim for compensation was made had been carrying
on business in its usual name and style in the same office
premises in which it used to carry on business prior to the
requisition of the godowns by the Government. The effect of
the requisition of the godowns, according to the Tribunal,
was not to stop the business of the respondent. On the
contrary, the respondent continued to carry on the business
though at a reduced scale. The finding of the Tribunal in
this respect was as under :
"As already pointed out, the office premises
remained with the assessee firm and the
business of disposing of the stock-in-trade
continued to be directed from that place.
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Thus this was not a case of a business coming
to a standstill altogether but it is a case of
carrying on the same business on a smaller
scale. Even this business was carried on by
the assessee firm in its usual name and style
from the same office premises from which it
used to carry it on prior to the requisition
of the godowns by the Government...... If any
injury was caused to the assessee’s business,
including the capital assets it held for the
purpose of carrying on that business, it was
to the volumes of the business and not to the
profit making apparatus itself."
In the light of the above findings of fact, we have no doubt
that the amount received by the respondent for the loss of
earnings was revenue receipt. It can hardly be disputed
that if the respondent firm had been earning profits as a
result of its business during the years the premises in
question remained under requisition, the said profit would
have been treated as revenue receipt and liable to be taxed
as such. The amount received in lieu of the profits which
would have been earned if the premises had not been
requisitioned, in our opinion, would partake of the same
character as the profits. The present is not a case wherein
the respondent firm was permanently deprived of a source of
income. On the contrary, the present is a case arising out
of requisition of the premises. Requisition, unlike
acquisition, is of a temporary nature and though it may
extend over some years, it has not the element of perma-
nence. The compensation’ paid to the respondent represents
the supposed profit which the respondent would have earned
during the years the premises remained under requisition but
which profit the respondent could not earn because of the
requisitions.
A case somewhat similar to the present case is Commissioner
of Income Tax/Excess Profits Tax, Bombay City v. Shamsher
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Printing Press(1). The respondent firm in that case had for
the purpose of its business a printing press. The premises
in which he press was housed were requisitioned by the
Govermnent and the respondent had to shift its business to
another place. Of the various sums paid as compensation for
the requisition, the Government paid Rs. 57,435 towards the
claim of the respondent "on account of the compulsory
vacation of the premises, disturbance and loss of business".
It was held by this Court that the sum of Rs. 57,434 had not
been received by the respondent for any injury to its
capital assets, including goodwill. The above sum, it was
further held, had been received as compensation for loss of
profit and was a revenue receipt liable to tax.
Reference has been made by Mr. Hajarnavis to the
observations in the award of the arbitrator regarding the
manner of computing the compensations payable to the
respondent for the loss of earning. The arbitrator in this
connection took the view that the amount of two years
purchase made by the respondent would be the most equitable
and fair figure for determining the amount of compensation.
The lump sum payable to the respondent for loss of earning
was thus found to be Rs. 1,25,500. The important thing to
note is that the above sum was paid to the respondent on
account of loss of earning. The method of computing the
cornpensation payable for the loss of earning would not in
our opinion, alter the real character or the essential
nature of the receipt of the said compensation in the hand
of the respondent, As observed by Lord Buckmaster in the
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case of The Glennboig Union Fireclay Co. Ltd. v. The
Commissioners of Inland Revenue (2 ) "there is no relation
between the measure that is used for the purpose of
calculating a particular result and the quality of the
figure that is arrived at by means of the application of
that test". The above observation was quoted with approval
by this Court in the case of Sonairam Doongermall v.
Commissioner of Income Tax(3) and it was held that it is the
quality of payment that is decisive of the character of the
payment and not the method of the payment or its measure as
makes it fall within capital or revenue.
Reliance has been placed by Mr. Hajarnavis on the ratio of
the decision of this Court in the case of Senairam
Doongarmall (supra). The assessee family in that case owned
a tea estate consisting of tea gardens, factories and other
buildings and carried on the business of growing and
manufacturing tea. The factory and other buildings on the
estate were requisitioned for defence purposes by military
authorities. Though the assessee continued in possession of
the tea gardens and tended them to preserve the plants, the
manufacture of tea was stopped completely. The
(1) [1960] 39 I. T. R. 90.
(2) 12 T. C. 427.
19-LI72Sup.CI/73, (3) [1961] 42 I. T. R. 392, 387.
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assessee was paid compensation for the years 1944 and 1945
under the Defence of India Rules, calculated on the basis of
the out-turn of tea that would have been manufactured by the
assessee during that period. This Court held that the
amount of compensation received by the assessee was not
revenue receipt and did not comprise any element of income.
In arriving at that conclusion, the Court took note of the
fact that tax was payable by an assessee under the head
"Profits and gains of a business" in respect of a business
carried on by him. As the assessee had not carried on any
business at all, the compensation received by the assessee
was held to be not profit of business. This case, in our
opinion, cannot be of much help to the respondent because in
the present case, as observed earlier, the Tribunal has
expressly found that the respondent was carrying on the
business during the relevant years.
Reliance has also been placed by Mr. Hajarnavis upon the
decision of House of Lords in the case of The Glenboig Union
Fireclay Co. Ltd. (supra). The assessee in that case was
carrying on business for the manufacture of fireclay goods
and had taken in connection with that business a fireclay
field on lease, over part of which ran the lines of the
Caledonian Railway. The railway administration prohibited
the assessee from excavating the field within a certain
distance of the rails and paid compensation therefor in
accordance with the provisions of a statute. It was held by
the House, of Lords that this was a capital receipt as the
compensation was really the price paid "for sterlising the
assets from which otherwise profit might have been
obtained". It would follow from the above that the fireclay
field was accepted to be a capital asset which was to be
utilised for the carrying on of the business of
manufacturing fireclay goods. When the assessee was prohi-
bited from exploiting the field, it was considered to be an
injury inflicted on his capital asset. The case of The
Glenboig Union Fireclay Co. Ltd. (supra) was cited before
this Court in Commissioner of Income Tax, Nagpur v. Rai
Bahadur Jairam Valji and Others(1) and Senairam Doongarmall
(supra) and was distinguished on the ground that it related
to the sterlisation and destruction of a capital asset. In
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the present case there has been no sterlization and
destruction of the capital asset of the respondent firm. As
such, the case of The Glenboig Union Fireclay Co. Ltd.
cannot afford much assistance in the present case.
Reference has also been made by Mr. Hajarnavis to the cases
of S. R. Y. Sivaram Prasad Bahadur v. Commissioner of Income
Tax, Andhra Pradesh (2 ) and Commissioner of Income Tax.
Punjab,, Haryana, Jammu & Kashmir and Himachal Pradesh v.
Prabhu Dayal(3). Sivaram Prasad Bahadur’s case related to
(1) [1959] 35 I. T. R. 148.
(2) [1971] 82 I. T. R. 527.
(3) [1971] 82 I. T. R. 604.
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interim payments made under the Madras Estates (Abolition
and Conversion into Ryotwari) Act, 1948 to a former holder
of an estate which had been abolished during the period
between the taking over of the estate, and the final
determination and deposit of compensation under that Act.
It was held to be a capital receipt and not liable to tax.
Prabhu Dayal’s case related to an assessee who had
discovered by chance the existence of kankar in the Jind
State. The assessee, brought about an agreement between the
State and one Shanti Prasad Jain for the acquisition of sole
and exclusive monopoly rights for manufacturing cement.
Shanti Prasad Jain transferred his rights under the
agreement to a company of which the assessee was one of the
promoters. For the services rendered by him, the company
agreed to pay the assessee a commission of 1 per cent on the
yearly net profits earned by the company. The agreement was
acted upon till 1950 whereafter the company did not pay the
commission to the assessee. The assessee filed a suit which
ended in a compromise. In terms of the compromise, the
assessee was paid certain amounts as commission for the
years 1951, 1952 and 1953 and a further sum of Rs. 70,000 by
way of compensation for the determination of the agreement
between him and the company as from January 1, 1954.
Question which arose for determination was whether the sum
of Rs. 70,000 was capital receipt in the hand of the
assessee. The assessee, it was found, had not engaged
either in the business of discovering kankar or any minerals
or in the business of bringing about agreement between the
parties. There was, indeed, no evidence that he was a
business man. It was held that none (if the activities of
the assessee could be considered to be business activity.
The compromise, in the opinion of this Court, destroyed an
income yielding asset of the assessee and in its place he ,
was given Rs. 70,000 as compensation. The sum of Rs. 70,000
was accordingly held to be capital receipt. It is manifest
from the narration of the facts of Sivaram Prosad Bahadur
and Prabhu Dayal’s cases that there is no similarity
between those cases and the present case. As such, these
two decisions cannot be of any avail to the respondent.
It may also be mentioned that Mr. Hajarnavis has assailed
the findings of fact of the Tribunal. In this respect we
are of the view that the Tribunal is the final fact finding
authority. It is for the Tribunal to find facts and it is
for the High Court and this Court to lay down the law
applicable to the facts found. Neither the High Court nor
this Court has jurisdiction to go behind or to question the
statement of facts made by the Tribunal. The statement of
case is binding on the parties and they are not entitled to
go behind the facts of the Tribunal in the statement. When
the question referred to the High Court speaks of "on the
facts and circumstances of the case", it means on the facts
and circumstances
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found by the Tribunal and not on the facts and circumstances
as may be found by the High Court (see Karnani Properties
Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income Tax, West Bengal(1).
As a result of the above, we accept the appeal, set aside
the judgment of the High Court and answer the question
referred by the Tribunal in favour of the department. In
our opinion, the sum of Rs. 1,05,074 received by the
respondent as compensation from the Government was taxable
as income of the respondent and was not a capital receipt.
In the circumstances of the case, we leave the parties to
bear their own costs of this Court as well as in the High
Court.
S.B.W. Appeal allowed.
(1) [1971] 82 I. T. R. 547.
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