Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
KARANPURA DEVELOPMENT CO., LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, WEST BENGAL
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
31/08/1961
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
SUBBARAO, K.
CITATION:
1962 AIR 429 1962 SCR Supl. (3) 368
CITATOR INFO :
MV 1966 SC 843 (16)
R 1966 SC1256 (9)
R 1972 SC 732 (12)
R 1980 SC 340 (3,6,8)
ACT:
Income Tax--Appreciation of Capital or profits of business--
Company formed for acquiring and working coal mining
leases---Company developing coal fields and sub-leasing
them--Income realised by way of increased salami--If amounts
to profits of business--Liability to tax--Indian Income-tax
Act, 1922 (11 of 1922) ss. 2(4). 10.
HEADNOTE:
The assessee company was incorporated in 1920 with the
objects, inter alia, of acquiring underground coal-mining
and relative rights and to do business of coal raising etc.
Power was given under the memorandum of association to case,
develop or otherwise deal with the property and rights of
the company. The asscssee acquired from time to time
diverse coal-mining leases and after developing the coal-
fields by providing means of communication etc., sub-leased
them to collieries and other companies. As a condition of
the acquisition of the head leases the assessee had paid
salam at the rate of Rs. 40/- per standard bigha and had
agreed to pay royalty at certain rate-, while from the
subleases it charged salami at the rate of Rs. 400/- and
royalties at higher rates. For the assessment years 1949-50
and 1950-51 the assessee admitted the liability to tax in
respect of the income arising from the enhanced royalties,
but claimed that the excess amount realised by way of
increased salami was an appreciation of capital and could
not be taxed on the grounds that apart from obtaining head
leases, developing the coal fields and sub-leasing its
rights, the assessee did not do any business’ either by
working the coal-fields with a view to raising coal or by
acquiring or selling coal raised by the sublessees.
Held, that the assessee company in acquiring the head leases
and in granting the sub-leases was carrying on a business
within its memorandum of association and that the increased
salami received from the sub-lessees represented profits of
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that business, liable to be included in the assessable
income for purposes income-tax and business profits tax.
Kamakshya Narain Singh v. Commissioner of Income-tax (1943)
L.R. 70 I.A. 180, distinguished.
Californian Copper Syndicate (limited and Reduced) Harris,
(1904) 5 T.C. 159, relied on.
Case-law discussed
369
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal Nos. 376 to 379
of 1960.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated September 18, 1958,
of the Calcutta High Court in Income-tax Reference No. 101
of 1954.
S. Mitra, S. N. Mukherjee and B. N. Ghosh, for the
appellants.
M. C. Setalvad, Attorney-General of India, R. Ganapathy Iyer
and P. D. Menon for the respondents.
1961. August 31. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
HIDAYATULLAH, J. -These are four appeals filed by the
assessee Company (Karanpura Development Co., Ltd.) in
respect of two assessment years, 1949-50 and 1950-51 and two
chargeable accounting periods under the Business Profits Tax
Act, January 1, 1948, to December 31, 1949. By these
appeals, the assessee Company impugns the judgment of the
High Court of Calcutta dated September 18, 1958, answering a
common question "’whether on the facts and in the
circumstances of the case, the sums received as salami by
the asseseee for granting sub-leases were trading receipts
in its hands and the amount of profit therein is assessable
under the Indian Income-tax Act" in the affirmative and
against the assessee Company. The case was certified to
this Court by the High Court under s. 66A (2) of the Income-
tax Act presumably also read with s. 19 of the Business
Profits Tax Act.
The facts of the case are as follows in 1915, the Court of
Wards representing the proprietor of the Ramgarh Estate gra-
nted a prospecting licence to Messrs. Bird & "Co., of an
area of coal-bearing lands described as the Karanpura Coal
Fields. The, licence was for 12 years but was renewable
for .another term of 12 years. The licence reserved to the
licensee the right to take coal mining leases of .the
Karanpura Coal Fields or any part thereof. The
370
licence was transferable. The assessee Company was
incorporated in 1920. The objects for which the assessee
Company was formed, inter alia, were :
"(1) to purchase and acquire from the owners
or proprietors thereof or other persons
interested therein underground coal mining,
relative rights of and in the Karanpura Coal
Fields in the Province of Bihar and Orissa at
such price or prices for such period or
periods and generally upon such terms and
conditions as the Directors may determine and
for that purpose to adopt, enter into and
carry into effect all contracts, agreements
and other documents, and in particular to
enter into and carry into effect, with or
without modifications, either before or after
the, execution thereof, the agreement referred
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to in Article 3 of the Company’s Articles of
Association.
(2)To sell, dispose of and otherwise deal
in all such underground coal mining and rela-
tive rights upon such terms and conditions as
may appear for the benefit of the company.
(3)To carry on the trades or businesses of
colliery proprietors, coal merchants, miners,
smelters, engineers, limeburners and manufac-
turers of brick, tile, cement, lime, coke and
other bye-products of coal in all their
respective branches.
x x x
(6)To prospect for, crush, win, get quarry,
smelt, calcine,, refine, dress, amalgamate,
manipulate and prepare for market coal, ore
metal, and mineral substances of all kinds,
and to carry on any other prospecting, mining
or metallurgical operations, which may seem
conducive to any of the company’s objects and
to buy, sell, manufacture, and deal in
minerals, plants, machinery implements,
conveniences, provisions, and things capable
of being used in connection with prospecting,
371
mining or metallurgical operations or required
by workmen or others employed by the company.
x x x
(34) To acquire by purchase, lease, exchange,
or otherwise, lands, buildings, and
heraditaments of any tenure or description and
any estate or interest therein, and any rights
over or interest therein, and any rights over
or connected with land, and either to retain
the same for the purpose of the company’s
business or to turn the same to account as may
seem expedient.
x x x
(52)To sell, improve, manage develop, exchange
lease, mortgage, dispose of, turn to account,
or otherwise deal with all or any part of th
e
property and rights of the company."
On May 30, 1921, Messrs. Bird and CO., assigned rights
under the prospecting licence to the assessee Company. The
assessee Company then acquired from time to time diverse
coal mining leases over areas aggregating 20,000 standard
bighas. The assessee Company ’developed these coal fields
by providing means of communication, etc., and then
subleased them to collieries and other companies. In the
head leases which the assessee Company had obtained, the
term was 999 years. In the sub-leases the term was the
balance of the period minus 2 days. Apart from obtaining
head leases, developing the coal fields and subleasing its
rights, the assessee Company admittedly did not do any
business. It never worked the coal fields with a view to
raising coal; nor did it acquire or sell coal raised by the
sub-lessees. As a condition of the acquisition of the head
leases, the assessee Company had paid salami at the rate of
Rs. 40 per standard bigha, and had agreed to pay, royalty at
certain rates. From the sub-lessees, the assessee Company
charged salami at the rate of Rs. 400 per
372
standard bigha and royalties at higher rates. For the
assessment year, 1949-50, the assessee Company realised Rs.
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19,14,035 as salami for the mining subleases granted in the
relevant account year, and in the assessment year, 1950-5 1,
it realised Rs. 3,96,000 on the same account. We are not
concerned with the income of assessee Company arising from
the enhanced royalties, because the assessee Company
admitted that that income would be taxable. The assessee
Company’s contention that the excess amount realised by way
of increased salami was on capital account and could neither
be included in the assessable income for purposes of income-
tax nor in the profits for purposes of business profits tax
",as rejected. Two orders in the income-tax cases and two
in the business profits tax cases were passed on January 30,
1952. The assessee Company filed four appeals before the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner, who dismissed them on
March 31, 1953. Four appeals were then filed before the
Income-tax Appellate ’Tribunal, Calcutta Bench, but were
dismissed by a common order dated December 31, 1953. The
Appellate Tribunal was then moved for a reference in all the
four appeals, and the common question to which we have
referred, was raised and referred by the Tribunal with the
result already indicated.
The Tribunal as well as the High Court held that in
acquiring the head leases and in granting the sub-leases,
the assessee Company was carrying on a business within its
Memorandum of Association and the increased salami received
from the sublessees represented profits of that business
liable to be included in the assessable income for income-
tax purposes and in the profits, for purposes of the
business profits tax. The case of the assessee Company was
that it was holding its capital asset namely, the mining
leases through its sub-lessees during the relevant
accounting years, and its activities were the management of
the leasehold right, selection of sub-lessees, collection of
rents or royalties
373
which did not amount to the carrying on of a business. In
return for the charge of salami the assessee Company
transferred only the general right to the benefits under the
leases, and that was a realisation of its capital within the
ruling of the Privy Council in Kamakshya Narain Singh v.
commissioner of Income-tax (1) In transferring this general
right, it was contended, the position of the assessee
Company was indistinguishable from of that a land owner, who
collected rents. All these arguments were advanced before
the Tribunal as well as before the High Court but were not
accepted. In these appeals, we are required to consider
whether the conclusions reached by the High Court and the
Tribunal are right.
The Income-tax Act puts the tax on income profits and gains
irrespective of the source from which they are derived.
Section 3 of the Act provides, inter alia, that income-tax
shall be charged on the, total income of every company.
Under s.4(1), total income includes all income, profits or
gains from whatever source derived, subject to certain
conditions about residence, etc., with which we are not
concerned. Section 6 then enumerates six heads of income
chargeable to income-tax. Two of these heads are (a) income
from property and (b) profits and gains of business, etc.
The several heads into which income is divided under the
Income-tax Act do not make different kinds of taxes. The
tax is always one; but it may arise from different sources
to which the different rules of computation have to be,
applied. The manner of this’ computation is indicated in
the sections that follow. Before income profits or gains
can be brought to computation they have to be assigned to
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one or more heads. These heads are in a sense exclusive of
one another and income which falls within one head cannot be
assigned to, or taxed under another head.
(1) (1943) L.R. 70 I.A. 180.
374
The words "income" has not been defined in the Income-tax
Act. In the definition which is enacted certain receipts
are said to be included in the concept of income; but it
does not say that "income" itself means. Certain working
definitions have been given by Courts, chief among which is
by the Judicial Committee in Commissioner of Income-tax v.
Shaw Wallace & Co. (1) where it was held that by income, is
meant a periodical. monetary receipt, not in the nature of a
windfall but coming in with some sort of regularity or
expected regularity. In business, it was also pointed out,
income was ’the produce of something "loosely spoken of as
capital". This income in business is profit when is earned
by a process of production, or, in other words, by the
continuous exercise of an activity. These observations of
the Privy Council were quoted with approval by this Court in
many cases and recently in Senairam Doongarmall v.
Commissioner of IncometaX (2). In the last case, it was
also pointed out that the addition of the words "profits and
gains" in the phrase "income, profits and gains" used in the
Income-tax Act does not restrict the meaning of the word
"income" by implication, and that the whole expression is
"income" writ large.
But whatever "income" may include or mean it is However,
clear that it does not include fixed capital or the
realising of fixed Capital by turning it into some other
form of capital or money. Fixed capital is something which
the owner keeps in his possession but turns to profit;
circulating capital However, is turned over in the process
of profit making. It may. sometimes happen that in the
process of production, fixed capital may be consumed or
wasted, but that is a reduction of capital. and not an
expenditure in the business claimable as an allowance in the
reduction of assessable income in the shape of profits of
the business..
The profit-, of a business are calculated under s.10 of the
Act. Under that section, tax is payable
(1) [1932] L.R. 59 I.A. 206.
(2) [1962] 1 S.C.R. 257.
375
by a company under the head ,,profits and gains of
business... " in respect of the profits or gains of any
business carried on by the company. In s. 2 (4) of the
Indian Income-tax Act, "business" has been defined to
include any trade, commerce or any manufacture or any
adventure or concern in the nature of trade., commerce.or
manufacture. In all cases where an assessee questions the
finding that assessable profits or gains have been made in a
business it is customary to find the assessee questioning
that a business has at all been carried on, and further that
the return is on the capital account and not revenue. This
well-trodden path was also followed in this case, and the
assessee Company has raised three contentions. It contends
that the return to it as salami represented merely a capital
return because in acquiring the mining lease the assessee
Company acquired two distinct rights (a) the general right
to the benefits under the leases for which consideration was
the salami, and (b) the right to carry on business in coal.
According to the assessee Company, it never exercised the
second right and when it parted with the first right, it
only realised its capital. This is the first contention.
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The assessee Company next contends that there is no
difference between an individual owning properties and
selling them, on the one hand, and a company owning mining
leases and issuing sub-leases, on the other, because in
either case, there are no profits or gains of business, if
no business is done. Lastly, it contends that even if the
assessee Company was carrying on business, it was not
carrying on a trading activity but its activities consisted
in merely collecting rents or royalties which taken with the
performance of other necessary and allied activities could
not amount to the carrying on of a business resulting in
increased salami as profits of the business.
No doubt, in Kamakshya Narain Singh v. Commissioner of
Income-tax (1) the Privy Council
(1) (1943) L.R. 70 I.A. 180.
376
made a distinction between sums received as royal. ties and
Salami by the proprietor of the Ramgarh, Estate holding the
former to be income from other sources within s. 12 of the
Act, and the latter as a payment on capital account; but
the, facts were different. Since the case is relied upon by
the assessee Company, it is necessary to consider it in some
detail. The Court of Wards acting on behalf of the
proprietor of Ramgarh Estate, granted leases for 999 years
to certain companies including the assessee Company. Under
the terms of the leases the lessees agreed to pay to the
lessors royalties at certain rates per ton of different
kinds,of coal raised and a fixed salami or premium,, the
royalty being subject always to a minim annual sum. It was
contended on behalf of the proprietor that none of the, sums
was taxable as income. The contention of the proprietor
with regard to the royalty per ton and the minimum royalty
was not accepted but with regard to the salami it was The
Judicial Committee observed :
"The salami has been, rightly in their
Lordships’ opinion, treated as a capital It is
a single payment made for the acquisition of
the right of the lessees to enjoy the benefits
granted to them by the lease. That general
right may properly be regarded as a capital
asset, and the money paid to purchase it may
properly be held to be a payment, on capital
account."
In that case, the general right was, in effect sold by the
proprietor of the Estate. In his bands as a landowner, the
coal bearing lands were property and when lie sold the right
to the lessees to enjoy the benefits, he sold his property
but he was not doing business. The proprietor parted with
the, general right, but in his bands it was not the
stocking-trade of any business. In his hands the lands or
the rights in. respect of them were. property, but that
character did not necessarily continue in the
377
hands of his lessees. If the lessees treated these lands,
so to speak, as the stock-in-trade of their business and
turned them to account at a profit, the profit so gained may
legitimately be a considered as the profit of business. It
is contended that there is no difference between a landowner
and a company which owns land or leases in land, and
reliance is placed upon the case of Balgownie Land Trust
Ltd. v. Commissioner of Inland Revenue (1). In that case,
the owner.’of an estate left his landed estate to the
trustees " with a direction to realise". The trustees were
unable to dispose of the land on the market and formed a
company to deal in real property to which the estate was
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transferred in exchange of shares allotted to the
beneficiaries. The company then acquired other properties
as well, and received rents which were paid as dividends and
then sold the newly purchased property and parts of the
estate making a profit. It was held that the profits from
the sales were profits of a trade or business.
The actual decision is against the assessee Company, but
what is relied upon is a passage in the judgment of the Lord
President (Clyde) in the Court of Session (Scotland) at p.
692, where it is observed:
"One is not, however, entitled to infer from
the circumstances that a company is
professedly formed with trading purposes in
view and for trading objects that the
transactions in which it engages necessarily
constitute a trade or business ; because it
does not follow from the fact that it has
objects and powers such as 1 have indicated
that it actually uses them for the purpose of
conducting the usual business of a company
trading in real estate."
(1) (1929) 14 T. C. 684.
378
If the assessee Company was not doing business
but was merely realising the property which it
had acquired, this passage might have been of
some use ; but, as will be shown later, there
was more than mere realising of its property
in the present case, and the further
observations of the Lord President apply,
which run :
"But the professed objects of a
company are not for that reason, to be left
out of account ; on the contrary, they must be
kept in view when considering the transactions
in which the company is proved to have been
engaged."
Reliance is also placed upon certain
observations of Lord Warrington of Clyffe in
Fry v. Salisbury House Estates, Ltd. (1),
where it was said :
"Assuming the memorandum of association allows
it, and in this case it unquestionably does, a
company is just as capable as an individual of
being a landowner and as such deriving rents
and profits from its land, without thereby
becoming a trader, and in my opinion it is the
nature of its operations, and not its own
capacity, which must determine whether it is
carrying on a trade or not."
We need not pause to consider the, facts in that case,
because we shall deal with it in detail presently ; but it
is clear even from this passage that the deciding factor is
not ownership of land or leases but the nature of the
activity of the assessee and the nature of the operations in
relation to them. The objects of the company must also be
kept in view to interpret the activity. As was observed by
Lord Sterndale, M. R. in The Commissioners of Inland Revenue
v. The Korean Syndicate Ltd.
"If you once get the individual and the
company spending exactly on the same basis,
(1) [1930] A. C. 432.
(2) (1921) 12 T. C. 18 1.
379
then there would be no difference between them
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at all. But the fact that the limited company
comes into existence in a different way is a
matter to be considered. An individual comes
into existence for many purposes, or perhaps
sometimes for none, whereas a limited company
comes into existence for some particular
purpose, and if it comes into existence for
the particular purpose of carrying out a
transaction by getting possession of
concession and turning them to account, then
that is a matter to be considered when you
come to decide whether doing that is carrying
on a business or not."
The decision in this case must, therefore, turn upon the
objects for which the Company was formed, and whether one of
the objects of the Company was to develop and sell leases
and leaseholds with an eye to making profit and what its
activity was, in relation to its objects. Before, however,
we analyse the objects for which the assessee Company was
formed and scan its activities, it is instructive to refer
to two cases to which the learned Attorney-General for the
Department called our attention and which have also formed
the basis of the decision of the High Court and the
Tribunal.
The first is the well-known case of Californian Copper
Syndicate (Limited and Reduced) v. Harris (1). There, the
assessee company was formed, inter alia, with the following
objects :
" (1) To acquire copper and other mines,
mining rights, metalliferous and auriferous
land, in California or elsewhere in the United
States of America, and any interest therein,
and in particular to acquire the mines known
’as (here follow some names) situate in the
county of ...........
(1) (1904) 5 T. C. 159.
380
(17)To sell, lease, charter or otherwise
dispose of absolutely or conditionally, or for
any limited interest, the whole or any part of
the undertaking, property, rights, concessions
or privileges of the Company for such con-
sideration in cash, shares or otherwise as the
Company may think
fit..........................."
The Company acquired 480 acres of copper-bearing land for E.
24,000 and spent money on development. Later, 80 acres of
this land Were sold to Fresno, Copper Company, Ltd., for ;E.
105,000 payable wholly in fully paid shares of the Fresno
Copper Company. the Company sold the remaining 400 acres
for E. 195,000 payable wholly in fully paid shares of Fresno
Copper Company. The Fresno Company had 400,000 shares of E.
I each, and of these, 300,000 were allotted to the Company.
The Company made no profits assessable to incometax, and the
question was whether the net gain derived from the sale of
the property could be deemed to be profit. The Company
contended that this was only a conversion of one kind of
capital into one of another kind. In the Court of Exchequer
(Scotland) Lord Justice Clerk distinguished between two
kinds of cases-(a) where the owner of an ordinary investment
chooses to realise it, and obtains a greater price for it
than he originally acquired it at ; and (b) where the act is
done not merely as a realisation but in what is truly the
carrying on or carrying out, of a business. He, observed
"There are many companies which in their very
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inception are formed for such a purpose, and
in these cases, it is not doubtful that, when
they make a gain by a realisation, the gain
they make is liable to be assessed for Income
Tax."
The learned Lord Justice observed that the
line might be difficult to draw and each case
must be
381
decided on its own facts and posed, the
question, which is the question to ask here :
"Is the sum of gain that has been made a mere
enhancement of value by realising a security,
or it is a gain made in an operation of
business in carrying out a scheme for profit-
making ?"
The facts in the case were held to indicate a highly
speculative business, and it was said that the mode of the
actual procedure employed also indicated a trading venture.
Lord Trayner also agreed, observing that it was "’a proper
trading transaction" and one which was not only within the
power of the company but also authorised by the Article.
The next case is British South Africa Co. v. Commissioner of
Income-tax (1). In that case, the assessee was the British
South Africa Co., which was incorporated, inter alia, for
carrying into effect concessions and agreements which had
been made by certain chiefs of South Africa and such other
concessions which the Company might acquire. After
acquiring such concessions and mining rights, the Company
gave special grants to other companies in return for fully
paid shares and annual payments over a fixed number of
years. The Income-tax authorities in Rhodesia treated these
sums as profits, and assessed to income-tax the full par
value of the shares. It was held that the sums were not
capital receipts but income from business. The High Court
of Rhodesia and the Rhodesian Court of Appeal affirmed the
view of the Income-tax authorities. On appeal, the Privy
Council did not endorse the view of the Rhodesian Courts on
certain aspects of the case, with which we are not here
concerned, but went on to enquire into the nature of the
receipts in question. Their Lordships in this connection
endorsed the view of Hudson, P. that the payments were
income derived from the business of turning to account
(1) [1946] 4 I. T. R. Supp. 17.
382
the Company’s rights under the concessions of winning and
disposing of minerals by participating in the proceeds of
the exploitation of such rights by its licensees and the
income was, therefore’ taxable as being the profits or gains
of a trade or business. Their lordships also held that it
was not material "that in dealing with its mineral rights
the Company has retained an interest either by way of a
possible reverser of the property or by a shareholding in a
company to which it made a special grant."
The case, of course, is one to which the warning often given
that it is not desirable to rely upon decisions under
different taxing statutes would seem applicable ; but in the
judgment of the Privy. Council, it is made clear that the
Rhodesian Act was not different from the British law. The
decision also rests, not upon the provisions of any special
enactment but upon the more general consideration whether
such receipts can be considered in a business sense as
belonging to capital account or revenue and in what
circumstances.
These two cases and particularly the Californian Copper
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Syndicate case (1) cited by the learned Attorney-General do
establish that if a company sold its assets as a part of its
business with the objects for which the company was formed,
the excess receipts over the expenses of acquisition can be
regarded as profits or gains of the business.
The case of the Californian Copper Syndicate Ltd. (1) is so
similar in facts as to be almost decisive; but the assessee
Company relies upon Tebrau (Johore) Rubber Syndicate Ltd. v.
Farmer (2) as laying down the principle which should govern
this case. In that case, a company was formed with the
object of acquiring estates in the Malay Peninsula and
developing them by planting and cultivating rubber trees.
The Memorandum of
(1) (1904) 5 T.C. 159. (2) (1910) 3 T.C. 658.
383
Association contained a power to sell the property in the
following terms:
(12)"To sell, or otherwise dispose of, as a
going concern or otherwise, the whole or any
part of the business undertaking and property
of the Company for such consideration as the
Company shall think fit."
Two estates were purchased, but for want of adequate capital
were sold to another company for consideration in the shape
mainly of shares in the second company. The return thus
exceeded the amount of capital expended in making the acqui-
sitions. Before the sale, however, a considerable part of
the estates had been planted with rubber trees but no rubber
had been produced and the first company bad not reached the
production stage. The Company had thus not earned any
income except what it got by the sale. This was claimed to
be an increase of capital. The Surveyor of Taxes relied,
inter alia, upon the Californian Copper Syndicate case (1).
It was held by the Court of Exchequer (Scotland) that the
profit on sale was merely an appreciation of capital and not
profit assessable to income-tax. Lord Salvesan observed
that he was unable to distinguish the position of the
company from that of a person who acquired property by way
of investment and who realised it afterwards at a profit.
He, however, observed:
"No doubt if it is a part of his business to
deal in land or investments, any profits which
in the course of that business he realises
form part of his income; but the mere fact
that a person or company has invested funds in
the purchase of an estate which has
subsequently appreciated And so has realised a
profit on his purchase does not make that
,Profit liable to assessment."
The Californian Copper Syndicate case(1) was
(1) (1904) 5 T.C. 159.
384
distinguished, because in that case, Lord Trayner bad found
that business was being done, and the following observation,
from Lord Trayner’s Judgment were emphasized:
"I am satisfied that the Appellant company was
formed in order to acquire certain mineral
fields or workings-not to work the same
themselves, for the benefit of the Company,
but solely with the view and purpose of
reselling the same at a profit."
Lord Salvesen pointed out that such an inference could not
be drawn about the case before him.
These two sets of cases illustrate forcefully the changing
circumstances in which an excess return may be treated as an
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appreciation of capital or as profit. If the sale is after
a company is wound up and business has stopped, it may
(subject to special statutory provisions) be said that any
excess amount received over and above the capital of the
company is merely an appreciation of capital; but the same
cannot be said if business is being done in lands, mineral
concessions, mining rights with a view to making profits.
In the latter case, a sale at an enhanced price is not
appreciation of capital but profit in the way of business,
and the sale is so to speak, of stock-in-trade.
Mr. Mitra relies upon three cases to establish that no
business at all was being done. He contends that the
assessee Company was merely granting sub-leases of property
of which they had the reverter and all that the assessee
Company did was to collect rent and royalties. Before
dealing with the cases, it is necessary to point out that
the ultimate reverter has no significance. The term is 999
years less a few days. Even if it was shorter a possible
reverter is not material. The observations of the Judicial
Committee in the case from Rhodesia quoted earlier have our
assent.
385
The first case relied upon is East India Prospecting
Syndicate v. Commissioner of Excess Profit .Tax(1). In that
case, the facts were very different. In 1919, V.C., a
limited Company, obtained a prospecting licence from the
Raja of Talchar in respect of some 8 sq. miles of coal-
bearing lands. On August 5, 1920 a partnership was formed
which was named the East India Prospecting Syndicate. The
objects of the partnership were:
(1)to purchase from the Company their rights
under the prospecting licence;
(2)to give effect to the conditions of the
said licence ; and
(3)to promote a company or companies with
limited liability for the purpose of acquiring
at a profit to the Syndicate all or any of the
properties including the benefit of the
prospecting licence.
The Syndicate acquired the prospecting licence from the
Company, V.C. In 1921, the Syndicate obtained a mining lease
from the Raja of Talchar over about 500 acres for 30 years
with option to renew. The Syndicate then promoted a Company
called the Talchar Caulfield ’Ltd., (shortly T.C .) and sub-
let the mining property to it. They received payment in
cash, in the shape of shares in T.C. and certain amounts
periodically which were in excess of the amounts payable for
alike period to the’ Raja of Talchar. The contention of the
Syndicate was that they were not carrying on any business.
It was held that the activities of the Syndicate did not
amount to a business and their receipts could not be
regarded as, profits of business and were not chargeable to
excess profits tax. It was conceded by the Department in
that case that the functions of the Syndicate, which was a
partnership, and neither a limited Company nor an
incorporated society, consisted
(1) [1951]19 I.T.R. 571.
386
wholly in the holding of property, and that they had no
other functions whatsoever. It was, therefore, held that
the proviso to s. 2(5) of the Excess Profits Tax Act, which
defined business in certain circumstances, was not
applicable, that proviso read:
"Provided that where the functions of a
company or of a society incorporated by or
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under any enactment consist wholly or mainly
in the holding of investments or other proper-
ty, the holding of the investments or property
shall be deemed for the purpose of this
definition to be a business carried on by such
company or society."
Harries, C.J., and Chatterjee, J., held that,
on the principle expressio unius exclusio
alterius, the fiction in the proviso was not
applicable to individuals and other bodies.
It was, however, pointed
out that:
"If this sub-lease had been granted by a
limited company or by an incorporated society
the net profit could be regarded as profits
for the purposes of Excess Profits Tax Act by
reason of the proviso to Section 2(5) of the
Act."
The case was thus decided on the words of s. 2(5). of the
Excess Profits Tax Act and the fact that the Syndicate was a
partnership. The High Court then went on to consider the
nature of rents and royalties received by the Syndicate, and
held on the authority of In re Commercial Properties Ltd.
(1) that for income-tax purposes the income would fall to be
considered under s. 9 and not s. 10.
It will be noticed that there was but one property which the
Syndicate held and the whole of that property was sub-let to
T. C. Before it was, so sub-let, it was not being used for
any business and all that the Syndicate did with it was to
lease
(1) (1928) I.L.R. 55 Cal. 1057.
387
it out. It was, in these Circumstances, that it was held to
yield income from property and not profits or gains from
business. The case is analogous to In re Commercial
Properties Ltd. (1), which is also cited by the assessee
Company. There, the object of the registered company was to
acquire land, build houses and let premises ’to tenants in
Calcutta and elsewhere. The sole assets were three
properties which were let out and all that the registered
company did was the management and collection of rents.
Rankin, C. J., held that the receipts were income from
property within s. 9 of the Income-Tax Act, that letting out
such property and collecting rents was not doing business,
and that profits, and gains from business were very
different from income from property. These two cases were
decided on their very special facts. The first was a case
of excess profits tax, and the fiction created by s. 2(5) of
the Excess Profits Tax Act not being applicable, the nature
of the business, if any, was examined, and it was held that
there was no more than collection of rents from property.
The second case was also one of rents from property and not
of profits from business.
The last case relied upon is Fry v. Salisbury House Estate
Ltd. (2) already mentioned. in this Judgment. Salisbury
House was a building with 800 rooms. A company was formed
for the express purpose of acquiring it and utilising it.
The rooms were let unfurnished to tenants, but there was
some slight service in the shape of heating and cleaning.
The company also retained some rooms as its offices. The
company was first assessed under r.8(c)(i) of Sch.A VII of
the English Incometax Act of 1918., which provided for
assessment of landlords instead of tenants in the case of
any house or building let in apartments or tenements. The
company paid the tax assessed on it. Then a notice was sent
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under Sch. D. The company admitted
(1) (1928) I.L.R. 55 Cal. 1057.
(2) [1930] A.C. 432,
388
that it had to pay tax under Sch. D on profit it might have
made from the services it rendered, but contended that
income which had. been taxed under Sch. A could not be
taxed under Sch. D. The company demanded a case. Rowlatt,
J., held against the company but his decision was reversed
by the Court of appeal On further appeal to the House of
Lords, it was held that the rents were profits from
ownership of land and assessment under Sch, A was the pro-
per mode and they could not be treated as trade receipts of
the company for purposes of Sch. D. The assessee Company
has relied upon certain passages in the speeches of the
learned and noble Law Lords, one of which from speech of
Lord Warrington of Clyffe has already been quoted. It is
not necessary to quote the other passages except one from
the speech of Lord Tomlin because the purport is the same.
Says Lord Tomlin :
"Further in my view the perception of rents as
land- owner is not an operation of trade
within the meaning of the Act. If this be so,
I am unable to appreciate how the existence o
f
ancillary activities which produce profits
taxable under Schedule D can affect the nature
of the operation or how the legal significance
of the perception is ’altered for the purpose
of income-tax if the recipient is a limited
company rather than an individual."
As has been already pointed out in connection With the other
two cases where there is a letting out of premises and
collection of rents the assessment on property basis may be
correct but not so, where the letting or sub letting is
part of a trading operation The dividing line is difficult
to, find but in the case of a company with its professed
objects and the manner of its activities and the nature of
its dealings I with, its property, it: is possible to say
on which side the operations fall, and to what head the
income is to be assigned.
389
Ownership of property and leasing it out may be done as a
part of business, or it may be done as land owner. Whether
it is the one or the other must necessarily depend upon the
object with which the Act is done. It is not that no
company can own property and enjoy it as property, whether
by itself or by giving the use of it to another on rent.
Where this happens, the Appropriate head to apply is "income
from property" (s. 9), even though the company may be doing
extensive business otherwise. But a company formed with the
specific object of acquiring properties not with the view to
leasing them as property but to selling them or turning them
to account even by way of leasing them out as an integral
part of its business cannot be said to treat them as
landowner but as trader The cases which have been cited in
this case both for and against the assessee Company must be
applied with this distinction properly borne in mind. In
deciding whether a company dealt with its properties as
owner,, one must see not to the form which it gave to the
transaction but to the substance of the matter. The
Californian Copper Syndicate case (1) illustrates vividly
dealings with mineral rights and concessions by a company as
part of the objects of its business, or, in other words, in
the doing of the business. The Calcutta cases and the case
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of Fry v. Salisbury House Estate Ltd.(,) illustrate the
contrary Proposition. There, the property, though dealt
with by a company intending to do business, was dealt with
as landowner. The intention in those cases was not to
derive profit by business done with those properties but to
derive .income by renting them out Where a Company acquires
properties which it sells or leases out with a view to
acquiring other properties to be dealt with in the same
manner, the company is not treating them as properties to be
enjoyed in the shape of rents which they yield but as a kind
of circulating capital leading to profits of business, which
profits
(1) (1904) 5 T. C. 159.
(2) [1930] A. C. 432.
390
may be either enjoyed- or put back into the business to
acquire more properties for further profitable exploitation.
We shall now turn to the present case, because it remains to
consider what the assessee Company was doing with the head
leases. ’The relevant clauses of the Memorandum of
Association of the assessee Company have already been
quoted. They show the various objects for which the
assessee Company was incorporated. Though power was taken
under ClS. (2), (3), (6) and (34) to do business of coal-
raising, etc.., the assessee Company did not do the sort of
business authorised there. It restricted its business to
ClS. (1) and (52). Under el. (1), power was taken to
purchase and acquire underground coal-mining and relative
rights. Under el. (52), power was taken to sell, improve,
manage, develop, exchange, lease, mortgage, dispose- of,
turn to account or otherwise deal with all or any part of
the property and rights of the Company. Business was done
extensively within these two clauses. Annexure F shows the
areas which were sub-leased. A glance, ,at the chart shows
the large number of sub-leases and the different companies
to which the subleases were granted. These sub-leases were
granted, because the assessee Company wanted,, was a matter
of business, to turn its rights to account. The assessee
Company opened out, and developed the areas, and then
granted these sub leases with an eye to profit. It is clear
from these operations that the assessee Company having
secured a large tract of’ coal-bearing land parcelled and
developed it into kind of stock-in-trade to be profitably
dealt with. The assessee Company extended its business
along these lines acquiring fresh fields. In the circum-
stances, the nature of the business was trading within the
objects of the Company and not enjoyment of property as land
owner. There was also no sale of its fixed, capital at a
profit. In our opinion,
391
the High Court rightly answered the question against the
assessee Company.
In the result, the appeals fail, and are dismissed With
costs.
Appeals dismissed.