Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MESSRS. DHANDHANIA KEDIA & CO.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
17/10/1958
BENCH:
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
BENCH:
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
SARKAR, A.K.
CITATION:
1959 AIR 219 1959 SCR Supl. (1) 204
CITATOR INFO :
R 1965 SC1358 (21)
RF 1966 SC1285 (7)
R 1966 SC1481 (7)
ACT:
Income-tax-Dividend, tax on-Distribution of accumulated
profits of previous years-" Previous years", meaning of-
lndian Income-Tax Act, 192-2 (XI Of 1922), ss. 2(6A)(c)
and 2(ii).
HEADNOTE:
The appellant, a resident of the once independent State of
Udaipur, held 266 shares in the Mewar Industries Ltd., a
company registered in that State. There was no law in the
State of Udaipur imposing tax on income and it was on April
1, 1950that for the first time the residents of Rajasthan,
in which the State had merged, became liable to pay such a
tax. On January 18, 1950, the Company went into liquidation
and on April 22, 1950, -the liquidator distributed a portion
of the assets among the shareholders, the appellant
receiving a sum of Rs. 26,000. This sum represented the
undistributed profits of the company which had accrued
during the six accounting years preceding the liquidation.
The income-tax authorities included this sum in the taxable
income of the appellant for the assessment year 1051-52
holding that it was dividend as defined in S. 2(6A)(c) of
the Indian Income-tax Act. Under S. 2(6A)(c) the
distribution of accumulated profits which arose during the "
six previous years " preceding the date of liquidation-
would be dividend. Section 2(1) defined " previous year "
to mean the year which was previous to.the assessment year.
The appellant contended that " previous years " in S.
2(6A)(c) must be read in the light of the definition is S.
2(1) and as in the present case there had been no law
imposing a tax prior to April 1, 1950, the profit for the
years 1943-44 to 1948-49 cannot be held to be profits which
" arose during the six previous years ", and consequently
could not be taxed as dividend as defined in S. 2(6A)(c) of
the Indian Income-tax Act.
Held, that the said sum was dividend within the meaning of
S. 2(6A)(c) of the Act and was liable to tax. The
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definitions given in S. 2 Of the Act applied unless there
was anything repugnant in the subject or context. It would
be repugnant to the definition of " dividend " in s.
2(6A)(c) to import into the expression " six previous years
" the definition of " previous year " in s. 2(ii) of the
Act. By the expression "previous years " in s. 2(6A)(c) of
the Act was meant the financial years preceding the year in
which liquidation took-place.
Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras v. K. Srisivasan and
Gopalan, [1953] S.C.R. 486, referred to.
205
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 433 of 1957.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated August 24, 1956, of
the Rajasthan High Court at Jodhpur in Civil Misc. Case No.
17 of 1955.
B. D. Sharma, for the appellant.
A. N. Kripal, R. H. Dhebar and D. Gupta, for the
respondent
1958. October 17. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
VENKATARAMA AIYAR J.-This is an appeal against the judgment
of the High Court of Rajasthan in a reference under s. 66(1)
of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, hereinafter referred to
as the Act.
The facts, so far as they are material, are these The
appellant is a resident of what was once the independent
State of Udaipur. There was in that State a Company called
the Mewar Industries, Ltd., registered under the provisions
of the law in force in that State, and the appellant held
266 shares in that Company. On January 18, 1950, the
Company went into liquidation, and on April 22, 1950, the
liquidator distributed a portion of the assets among the
shareholders, and the appellant was paid a sum of Rs. 26,000
under this distribution. It is common ground that this sum
represents the undistributed profits of the Company which
had accrued during the six accounting years preceding the
liquidation. It should be mentioned that there was in the
State of Udaipur no law imposing tax on income, and that it
was only under the Indian Finance Act, 1950 that the
residents of the State of Rajasthan, in which the State of
Udaipur had merged, became liable for the first time to pay
tax on their income. That Act came into force on April 1,
1950. We are concerned in these proceedings with the
assessment of tax for the year 1951-52, and that, under s. 3
of the Act, has to be on the income of the previous year,
i.e., 1950-51. Now, the dispute in the present case relates
to the sum of Rs. 26,000 paid by the liquidator to the
appellant on April 22, 1950. By his order dated July 3,
1952, the Income-tax Officer held
206
that this was dividend as defined in s. 2(6A)(c) of the Act
and included it in the taxable income of the appellant in
the year of account. The appellant took this order in
appeal to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner who by his
order dated January 12, 1953, confirmed the assessment.
There was a further appeal by the appellant to the Appellate
Tribunal, who also dismissed it on November 10, 1953. On
the application of the appellant, the Appellate Tribunal
referred the following question for the decision of the High
Court:
" Whether on the facts and in the circumstances of this
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case, the aforesaid sum of Rs. 26,000 was liable to be taxed
in the assessee’s hands as dividend within the meaning of
that term in s. 2(6A)(c) of the Indian Income-tax Act."
The reference was heard by Wanchoo, C. J. and Modi, J. who
by their judgment dated August 24, 1956, answered it in the
affirmative. It is against this judgment that the present
appeal has been -preferred on a certificate granted by the
High Court under s. 66A(2) of the Act.
The sole point for determination in this appeal is whether
the sum of Rs. 26,000 received by the appellant on April 22,
1950, is dividend as defined in. s. 2(6A)(c) of the Act.
That definition, as it stood on the relevant date and
omitting what is not material, was in these terms:
" 6(A) ’dividend’ includes-
(a) any distribution by a company of accumulated profits
whether capitalised or not if such distribution entails the
release by the company to its shareholders of all or any
part of the assets of the company ;
(c) any distribution made to the shareholders of a company
out of accumulated profits of the company on the liquidation
of the company:
Provided that only the accumulated profits so distributed
which arose during the six previous years of the company
preceding the date of liquidation shall be so included;".
207
The definition of " previous year " as given in s. 2(l 1),
omitting what is not material, is as follows:
" Previous year " means in respect of any separate source of
income, profits and gains
(a) the twelve months ending on the 31st day of March next
preceding the year for which the assessment is to be
made..."
On these provisions, the contention of the appellant is that
under the definition in s. 2(6A)(c) the assets of a company
distributed after it has gone into liquidation will be
dividend only if they represented the profits thereof
accumulated during the six previous years preceding the date
of the liquidation, and that, in the present case, though
the amounts distributed came out of the accumulated profits
of the Company, those profits had not been accumulated
within the six previous years of the liquidation of the
Company. It is not in dispute that the profits which were
distributed had been accumulated during the years 1943-44 to
1948-49, i.e., during the six years preceding the liquida-
tion. The point in controversy is whether those years can
be said to be " previous years " within s. 2(6A)(c) of the
Act. The appellant contends that " previous year " as
defined in s. 2(l 1) of the Act means the year which is
previous to the assessment year, that accordingly when there
is no year of assessment, there can be no previous year,
that construing the words " six previous years " in s.
2(6A)(c) in the light of the definition of "previous year"
in s. 2(l 1) of the Act, the years 1943-44 to 1948-49 cannot
be held to be previous years, because the Indian Income-tax
Act came into force in the State of Rajasthan only on April
1, 1950, and prior to that date there was at no time any law
imposing tax on income in the State of Udaipur, that there
was therefore no year of assessment, and that, in consequ-
ence, the sum of Rs. 26,000 received by the appellant on
April 22, 1950, is not a dividend as defined in s. 2(6A)(c).
The contention of the respondent which has been accepted by
the Income-tax authorities and by the learned Judges in the
Court below is that the expression " six previous years" is
used in s. 2(6A)(c) not in the technical and restricted
sense in which the
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208
words " previous year " are used in s. 2(11) of the Act, and
that, in the context, it means six consecutive accounting
years preceding the liquidation of the company. The
question is which of these two interpretations is the right
one to be put on the language of s. 2(6A)(c).
The argument of Mr. Sharma for the appellant is that s.
2(11) having defined the meaning which the expression
’previous year" has to bear in the Act, that meaning should,
according to the well-settled rules of construction, be
given to those words wherever they might occur in the
statute, and that that is the meaning which must be given to
the words " six previous years " in s. 2(6A)(c). It is to
be noticed that the definitions given in s. 2 of the Act
are, as provided therein, to govern " unless there is
anything repugnant in the subject or context ". Now, the
appellant contends that the words " unless there is anything
repugnant " are much more emphatic than words such as "
unless the subject or context otherwise requires ", and that
before the definition in the interpretation clause is
rejected as repugnant to the subject or context, it must be
clearly shown that if that is adopted, it will lead to
absurd or anomalous results. And our attention was invited
to authorities in which the above rules of construction have
been laid down. It is unnecessary to refer to these
decisions as the rules themselves are established beyond all
controversy, and the point to be decided ultimately is
whether the application of the definition ins. 2(l 1) is
repelled in the context of s. 2(6A)(c).
Turning to the language of s. 2(II), we have this that
according to the definition contained therein, " previous
year " is the year which is previous to the year of
assessment, and that means that there can be only one
previous year to a given year of assessment. When s. 2(6A)
(c) speaks of six previous years, it is obvious that it uses
the expression " previous year " in a sense different from
that which is given to it in s. 2(l 1), because it would be
a contradiction in terms to speak of six previous years in
relation to any specific assessment year. It was argued
that under s. 13(2) of
209
the General Clauses Act, 1897, words in the singular should
be read as including the plural, and that, therefore, the
definition of "previous year" in s. 2(l 1) could be read as
meaning " previous years ". But s. 13 only enacts a rule of
construction which is to apply " unless there is anything
repugnant in the and to read a " previous year " in s. 2(l
1) would be to nullify the previous year " enacted therein,
and such a construction must therefore be rejected as
repugnant to the context. It was then suggested that all
the six previous years might be regarded as previous each to
the next following year if that was itself a year of
assessment, and that such a construction would, consistently
with the contention of the appellant, give full effect to
the definition in s. 2(11) of the Act. But this argument
overlooks that while there may be several preceding years to
a given year of assessment there can be only one previous
year in relation to it, and that it would make no sense to
speak of six previous years with reference to a year of
assessment. We are satisfied that it would be repugnant to
the definition of " dividend " in s. 2(6A)(c) to import into
the words " six previous years " the definition of previous
year" in s. 2(l 1) of the Act.
An examination of the policy underlying s. 2(6A)(c) also
leads to the same conclusion. When a company makes profits
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and instead of distributing them as dividend accumulates
them from year to year and at a later date distributes them
to the shareholders, the amounts so distributed would be
dividend under s. 2(6A) (a), but when a company which has so
accumulated the profits goes into liquidation before
declaring a dividend and the liquidator distributes those
profits to the shareholders, it was held in Commissioners o
Inland Revenue v. Burrell (1) that such distribution was not
a dividend because when once liquidation intervenes, there
was no question of distribution of dividends, and all the
assets of the company remaining after the discharge of its
obligations were surplus divisible among
(1) (1924) 9 T.C. 27-
210
the shareholders as capital. It was to remove this anomaly
that the Indian legislature, following similar legislation
by British Parliament in the year 1927, enacted s. 2(6A) (1)
in 1939. The effect of this provision is to assimilate the
distribution of accumulated profits by a liquidator to a
similar distribution by a company which is working; but
subject to this limitation that while in the latter the
profits distributed will be dividend whenever they might
have been accumulated, in the former such profits would be
dividend only in so far as they came out of profits
accumulated within six years prior to liquidation. Now, the
reason of it requires that those years must be a cycle of
six years preceding the liquidation, arid that is what is
meant by the words " previous years ". It was argued for the
appellant that if that was what was intended by the
legislature, that was sufficiently expressed by the words "
preceding the liquidation ", and that the words previous
years " would be redundant. But the words preceding years "
would have meant calendar years, whereas the accounting
years of the company for ascertainment of profits and loss
might be different from the calendar years, and the words "
previous year " would be more appropriate to connote the
financial year of a company. Now, it should be mentioned
that when a company in liquidation distributes its current
profits,, that would also be not dividend as held in
Burrell’s case (1), and the law to that extent has been left
untouched by s. 2(6A)(c). And it has accordingly been held
by the High Courts that the current profits of a company in
liquidation which are distributed to the shareholders are
not dividend within s. 2(6A)(c), Vide Appavu Chettiar v.
Commissioner of Income-tax (2) and Girdhardas & Co. Ltd. v.
Commissioner of Incometax (3). Therefore, accumulated
profits which are sought to be caught in s. 2(6A) (c) would
be the profits accumulated in the financial years preceding
the year in which the liquidation takes place, and it is
this that is sought to be expressed by the words " previous
years " in s. 2(6A) (c). In the present case, as the
Company went into liquidation on January 18, 1950,
(1) (1924) 9 T.C. 27. (2) [1956] 29 I.T.R. 768.
(3) [1957] 3i I.T.R. 82.
211
excluding the current year which commenced on April 1, 1949,
the six previous years will be the years 1943-44 to 1948-49.
So far, we have considered the question on the language of
s. 2(6A)(c) and the policy underlying it. On behalf of the
respondent, certain authorities were cited as supporting his
contention that the expression it previous years " in s.
2(6A) (c) is not to be interpreted in the sense in which the
expression " previous year" is defined in s. 2(l 1) of the
Act. It is sufficient to refer to one of them, -and that is
the decision of this Court in Commissioner of Income-tax,
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Madras v. K. Srinivasan and K. Gopalan (1). There, the
point for decision was as to the interpretation to be put on
the words " end of the previous year " in s. 25, sub-ss. (3)
and (4) of the Act which dealt with discontinuance of or
succession to a business, and it was held that the
expression " previous year " in those provisions meant an
accounting year expiring immediately preceding the date of
discontinuance or succession. The decision is not itself
relevant to the present discussion, but certain observations
therein are relied on as bearing on the point now under
consideration. Mahajan, J. delivering the judgment of the
Court observed:
" The expression ’previous year’ substantially means an
accounting year comprised of a full period of twelve months
and usually corresponding to a financial year preceding the
financial year of assessment. It also means an accounting
year comprised of a full period of twelve months adopted by
the assessee for maintaining his accounts but different from
the financial year and preceding a financial year. For
purposes of the charging sections of the Act unless
otherwise provided for it is co-related to a year of
assessment immediately following, but it is not necessarily
wedded to an assessment year in all cases and it cannot be
said that the expression ’previous year’ has no meaning
unless it is used in relation to a financial year. In a
certain context it may well mean a completed accounting year
immediately preceding the happening of a contingency."
(I) [1953] S.C.R. 486, 501
212
The learned Judges in the Court below have relied on these
observations, and quite rightly, as supporting their
conclusion that the expression " six previous years " in. s.
2(6A) (c) means only the six accounting years of a company
preceding the date of liquidation.
The appellant sought to raise one other contention, and that
is that the Indian Companies Act came into operation in the
Udaipur territory on April 1, 1951, only by force of the
Part B Stater, Laws Act (111 of 1951), that during the
relevant period the Mewar Industries Ltd. was not a company
as defined in s. 2(5A) of the Act, and that therefore the
distribution of assets made by that Company on April 22,
1950, could not be held to be a dividend as defined in s. 2
(6A) (c). But that is not a question which was referred for
the opinion of the High Court under s. 66(1) of the Act; nor
is it even dealt with by the Tribunal and therefore cannot
be said to arise out of its order. Moreover, whether the
Mewar Industries Ltd., is a Company as defined in the Indian
Income-tax Act is itself a question over which the parties
are in controversy. The definition of " Company " under the
Indian Income-tax Act has undergone several changes from
time to time, and on the relevant date it stood as follows:
" 2(6) ’Company’ -means
(i) any Indian Company or
(ii) any association, whether incorporated or not and
whether Indian or non-Indian, which is or was assessable or
was assessed as a company for the assessment for the year
ending on the 31st day of March, 1948, or which is declared
by general or special order of the Central Board of Revenue
to be a company for the purposes of this Act."
It is contended for the respondent that the Mewar Industries
Ltd., was an association which was assessable as a Company
for the year ending March 31, 1948, and that it was, in
fact, assessed; but the appellant disputes this. As the
point turns on disputed question of fact., it cannot be
allowed to be raised at this stage.
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213
In the result, we hold that the sum of Rs. 26,000 received
by the appellant on April 22, 1950, ",as dividend as defined
in s. 2(6A) (c) of the Act and is chargeable to tax.
The appeal fails, and is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.