Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
NATIONAL CEMENT MINES INDUSTRIES, LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COMMISSIONER,OF INCOME-TAX, WEST BENGAL, CALCUTTA.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
17/01/1961
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
KAPUR, J.L.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
CITATION:
1961 AIR 1032 1961 SCR (3) 502
ACT:
Income-tax-Conveyance with reservation of rights-Category
of-Receipts under the conveyance, if income or capital.
HEADNOTE:
The appellants were carrying on the business of cement and
lime manufacture and supply thereof. By a deed dated May 7’
1935, the appellants conveyed to the Associated Cement Ltd.
the rights which had vested in them under an earlier
conveyance made in their favour by a company known as
Karanpura Cod Under the deed the appellants reserved to
themselves the right to receive from the Associated Cement
Company a sum equal to thirteen annas in respect of every
ton of cement sold by it which shall have been manufactured
from the limestone won by it from the lands transferred and
comprised in the leases and agreements.
Pursuant to this stipulation in the year of account, the
appellants I received from the Associated Cement Ltd. Rs.
77,820. The Income-tax Officer included this amount in the
total assessable income of the appellants in the assesment
year and his order was confirmed by the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner and by the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal. The
contention of the appellants before the High Court in a
reference under s. 66 of the Indian Income-tax Act that on a
proper construction of the deed and on the facts and
circumstances of the case the sum of Rs’ 77,820 did not
represent receipt of a revenue nature in the hands of the
appellants and was not assessable as such, was negatived.
Held, that the deed did not incorporate a transaction of
either sale or lease. The conveyance was subject to several
restrictions and the appellants retained in part, rights in
the land conveyed. The transaction was substantially a
transaction for sharing the profits of the commercial
activities of the Associated Cement Ltd. and the receipt
under cl. 1 of the deed was of the nature of income and not
capital and as such assessable to tax.
503
Foley v. Fletcher, (1858) 3 H. & N. 769, Secretary of State
in Council of India v. Andrew Scoble, [1903] A.C. 299,
Oswald v.. Kirkcaldy Magistrates, [1910] S.C. 147,
Commissioners of Inland Revenue v. N Ramsay, (1935) 20 T.C.
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79, State of Bihar v. Sir Kameshwar Singh, [1952] 21 I.T.R.
382, Captain Maharajkumar Gopal Saran v. Commissioner of
Income-tax, Bihar & Orissa, [1935] 3 I.T.R. 237 (P.C.) and
Chadwick v. Pearl Life Assurance CO., [1905] 2 K.B. 507,
considered and applied.
In assessing the true character of the receipt for the
purpose of the Income-tax Act, inability to ascribe to the
transaction a definite category is of little consequence.
It is not the nature of the receipt under the general law
but in commerce that is material. It is often difficult to
distinguish whether an agreement is for payment of a debt by
instalments or for making annual payments in the nature of
income. The court has, on an appraisal of all the facts, to
assess whether a transaction is commercial in character
yielding income or is one in consideration of parting with
property for repayment of capital in instalments. No single
test of universal application can be discovered for solution
of the problem. The name which the parties may give to the
transaction which is the source of the receipt and the
characterization of the receipt by them are of little
moment, and the true nature and character of the transaction
have to be ascertained from the covenants of the contract in
the light of the surrounding circumstances. The decision of
the question is however not left to the application of any
arbitrary standards. There are certain broad principles
which guide the determination of the character of the
receipt. The distinction between a capital receipt and
revenue receipt though fine is real. The dividing line may
be thin, and often at first sight imperceptible.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 84 of 1958.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
December 22/23, 1955, of the Calcutta High Court in I.T.R.
No. 24 of 1953.
N. C. Chatterjee, D. P. Pal and D. N. Mukherjee for the
appellant.
Hardayal Hardy and D. Gupta, for the respondent.
1961. January 17. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
SHAH, J.-Messrs. National Cement Mines Industries Ltd.-
hereinafter referred to as the appellants-are a public
limited company incorporated to " carry on the
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504
business of cement and lime manufacture and also of
limestone supply and for the purposes of such businesses to
acquire rights and concessions pertaining to limestone, coal
and surface lands from the Dewar khand Karanpura Mines and
Industries Ltd." and also to " work mines or quarries and to
find, win, get, work, etc. or otherwise deal with clay and
bauxite."
Dewarkhand Karanpura Mines and Industries Ltd. hereinafter
called the " Karanpura Company "-had obtained three leases
on November 29, 1930, first for mining limestone from
Maharaja Pratap Narain Udai Nath Shah Deo from limestone
beds in certain villages in Dewarkhand, second from Maharaj
Kumar Nand Kishore Nath Shah Deo of the surface rights
neces. sary to exercise the powers and privileges in respect
of the first lease and the third from Maharaj Kumar Raj
Kishore Nath Shah Deo of surface rights in respect of Hoyer
village. The period in each of the three leases was thirty
years. On March 17, 1932, the Karanpura Company conveyed
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the rights and options under the three leases to the
appellants. On September 30, 1934, the appellants acquired
the limestone and surface rights in respect of limestone
beds in village Umedanda for 95 years from Maharaja Pratap
Narain Uday Nath Shah Deo and Maharaj Kumar Raj Kishore Nath
Shah Deo. On the same date, the appellants entered into two
agreements, one with Maharaja Pratap Narain Uday Nath Shah
Deo which is called the ,bauxite option agreement " thereby
acquiring the first option to take a lease or leases of any
area or areas of bauxite deposits in certain villages, and
another from the said Maharaja for the first option to take
a lease or leases of limestone beds in the Tori District.
By a fourth agreement also dated September 30,1934, between
the Karanpura Company, Maharaja Pratap Narain Udai Nath Shah
Deo acting with the consent of Maharaj Kumars Raj Kishore
Nath Shah Deo and Nand Kishore Nath Shah Deo, the royalties
reserved under the original deeds dated November 29, 1930,
were reduced and the periods of the leases were extended to
99 years from the date of the original leases,
505
By deed dated May 7,1935, the appellants conveyed to
Dewarkhand Cement Company Ltd. (which later came to be known
as Associated Cement Ltd. and will be referred to
hereinafter by that name) the benefits of the four leases
and the two agreements for the unexpired periods. By this
deed, for a present consideration of Rs. 25,000 " for
trouble and expenses in obtaining the leases and agreements
" and for further payment under several covenants which will
be presently set out, the appellants conveyed the rights
vested in them subject to certain reservations. In the year
of account June 1, 1944, to May 31, 1945, the appellants
received from the Associated Cement Ltd. under the first
covenant of the deed, Rs. 77,820 being the amount computed
at the rate of 0-13 As. per ton of cement manufactured from
limestone won from the lands and sold by the company. The
Income-tax Officer, Companies District 1, Calcutta, included
this amount in the total assessable income of the appellants
in the assessment year 1946-47. This order was confirmed in
appeal by the Appellate Assistant Commissioner and by the
Income-tax Appellate Tribunal. At the instance of the
appellants, the Tribunal referred the following question
with another not material for this appeal to the High Court
of Judicature at Calcutta:
" Whether on a proper construction of the Deed
of Assignment dated 7th of May, 1935, and on
the facts and in the circumstances of this
case, the Tribunal was right in holding that,
the sum of Rs. 77,820 represented a receipt of
a revenue nature in the hands of the Applicant
and assessable as such
The following facts were held proved by the Tribunal. The
principal objects of incorporation of the appellants were to
carry on the business of manufacturing cement and lime and
sale of limestone and the appellants were formed with the
object of acquiring the rights and concessions of the
Karanpura Company. By their Memorandum of Association, the
appellants were authorised to sell or dispose of the
undertakings or any part thereof as they thought fit,
506
and to sell, lease, mortgage, dispose of, turn to account or
otherwise deal with all or any part of their property and
rights and in pursuance of these objects the rights and
concessions of the Karanpura Company were acquired and
extension of leases and concessions were obtained and were
transferred to the Associated Cement Ltd. The appellants
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were therefore carrying on in the year of account 1944-45
the business for which they were incorporated.
After reciting the prefatory clauses, it was stated in the
deed:
"WHEREAS it was agreed inter alia that the
Purchaser should pay to the Vendor the sum of
Rupees twenty five thousand for trouble and
expenses in obtaining the leases and
agreements dated the thirtieth day of
September one thousand nine hundred and thirty
four hereinbefore recited and hereinafter
expressed to be hereby transferred and Whereas
the Purchaser hath paid to the Vendor the said
sum of rupees twenty five thousand as the
Vendor doth hereby acknowledge NOW THIS
INDENTURE WITNESSETH that in con. sideration
of the covenants on the part of the Purchaser
hereinafter contained the Vendor hereby grants
assigns and transfers unto the Purchaser and
the Karanpura Company at the request and by
the direction of the Vendor hereby grants
assigns transfers and confirms unto the
Purchaser:".
The deed then proceeds to set out the description of the
various leases and concessions and agreements and the
covenants which the Associated Cement Ltd. undertook in
favour of the appellants. These covenants are:
(1) That it will pay to the Vendor a sum equal to thirteen
annas in respect of every ton of cement sold by it which
shall have been manufactured from the limestone won by it
from the lands hereby transferred and comprised in the
hereinbefore recited leases and agreements.
(2) That it will not sell any Fluxstone won by it from the
said lands to the Tata Iron and Steel Company Ltd., at a
price less than Rupees one and annas
507
fourteen per ton F. O. R. the siding nearest to the quarry
or place from which it shall be won without the consent of
the Vendor.
(3) That it shall pay to the Vendor one-half the profit( if
any) which it shall make by selling Fluxstone to the Tata
Iron & Steel Company Ltd.,or to any other person such
profits to be ascertained after deduction from the price
received all costs, charges and expenses including the
royalty payable to the Maharaja in respect thereof but
before educting overhead charges. Such accounts to be
closed and adjusted on the thirtieth day of June and the
thirty-first day of December in each and every year.
(4) That it will not grant to the Tata Iron & Steel Company
Ltd., the right to quarry and remove Fluxstone from the
lands hereby transferred at a royalty of less than ten annas
per ton, and will pay to the Vendor one-half of any royalty
so charged and received.
(5) That in the event of the payments made under clauses
one, three and four above in any one year not amounting to
the minimum hereinafter set out the Purchaser shall pay in
lieu and in full discharge there for the following minimum:
(a) During the first year to be computed from
the first day of January one thousand nine
hundred and thirty-five, rupees ten thousand.
(b) During the second year rupees thirty
thousand.
(c) During every subsequent year rupees
fifty thousand.
Out of the above minimum payment of rupees fifty thousand
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per year for the purposes of account, the sum of rupees
twenty thousand shall be deemed to have been paid in respect
of payment under clause three above.
(6) That the Purchaser or the persons deriving title under
the Purchaser will at all times from the date hereof duly
pay all rents, royalties and payments becoming due under the
(four) hereinbefore recited Indenture of Lease (,subject as
regards the Limestone lease to the modifications effected by
the agreement for
508
reduction of royalty dated the thirtieth day of September
one thousand nine hundred and thirty-four hereinabove
recited) in respect of the premises agreements options
rights or benefits hereby assigned and transferred and
observe and perform the covenants agreements stipulations
and conditions therein contained and henceforth on the part
of the Lessee or grantee to be observed and performed in
respect of the aforesaid premises or under the said Bauxite
agreement or under the said Tori Option agreement or under
the said agreement for reduction of royalty And also will at
all times from the date hereof save harmless and keep
indemnified the Vendor its successors and assigns from and
against all proceedings costs claims and expenses on account
of any omission to pay the said rent, royalty or payments or
any breach of any of the said covenants agreements
stipulations and conditions.
(7) That the Purchaser will not work raise remove or use
stone or clay in the properties comprised in the leases and
agreements hereby transferred to it for making lime.
(8) That the Purchaser shall not by any of its actions or
omissions cause leases and agreements, mentioned above and
in respect of properties hereby transferred, to be
determined, or the rights thereunder, including the right of
renewal, to be prejudiced.
(9) That in areas comprised in the leases and agree. ments
hereinabove expressed to be hereby assigned and not
containing limestone the Vendor’s rights under leases and
agreements from the Maharaja of Chotanagpur or Maharaj Kumar
Nand Kishore Nath Shah’ Deo other than the leases and
agreements above referred to shall not be jeopardised or
affected by this Indenture.
(10) That the clay and shales lying within areas, which do
not contain Limestone, can be removed and utilised by the
Vendor for all purposes except that of cement manufacture.
The deed then proceeded after setting out certain other
covenants:
509
" AND IT IS HEREBY EXPRESSLY AGREED AND
DECLARED that if the Limestone within the
areas comprised in the Leases hereby
transferred available for manufacturing cement
is exhausted the Purchaser will be entitled to
determine this Indenture on giving to the
Vendor six months’ notice in writing in which
case the Purchaser, if so required, will
retransfer the leases and agreements
aforesaid."
By clauses (1), (3) and (4), the Associated Cement Ltd.
undertook to make certain payments to the appellants. By
cl. (1) they agreed to pay 0-13 As. for every ton of cement
manufactured from the limestone won from the lands and sold;
by el. (3), the Associated Cement Ltd. agreed to pay half
the profits which they made by selling Fluxstone to the Tata
Iron & Steel Co., or to any other person; and by el. (4),
they agreed to pay half the royalty received from the Tata
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Iron & Steel Company for the right to quarry and remove
fluxstone from the lands. By clause (5), provision was made
for minimum payment in the event of the aggregate under cis.
(1), (3) and (4) not reaching the sums specified therein.
Clauses (2), (4), (7), (8) and (9) were in the nature of
restrictive covenants. By cl. (2), the Associated Cement
Ltd. were prohibited from selling any fluxstone won from the
lands to the Tata Iron & Steel Company for less than Re. 1-
14 As. per ton F. O. R. By cl. (4), an obligation not to
convey the right to quarry and remove fluxstone for royalty
less than 0-10 As. per ton was imposed. By el. (7) the
Associated Cement Ltd. undertook not to remove or use or
allow any one to raise work, remove or use stone or clay in
the lands. By cl. (8), the Associated Cement Ltd. undertook
not to do any acts or omissions causing the leases and
agreements to be determined or the rights thereunder to be
prejudiced. By cl. (9), rights of other persons under
leases and agreements in lands not containing limestone were
not to be affected. By el. (10), the right of the appellants
to utilise clay and shale lying within the areas not
containing limestone except for the purpose of manufacturing
cement was retained, There were certain exceptions
510
to this and the ninth clause whereby the Associated Cement
Ltd. were entitled to excavate, use or remove all kinds of
clays in and from the areas within the boundary lines marked
in the plan and they were also authorised to make permanent
structures and use certain strips of lands. By el. (6) the
Associated Cement Ltd. agreed to pay rent stipulated under
the original leases and agreements and also undertook to
keep indemnified the appellants from and against all
proceedings, costs, claims and expenses on account of any
omission to pay the rent royalty or payments or any breach
of any of the covenants agreements and the leases.
There was also the covenant authorising the Associated
Cement Ltd. to terminate the deed in the event of limestone
in the land comprised in the leases being exhausted. The
appellants undoubtedly did not part with all their rights in
favour of the Associated Cement Ltd. by this deed dated May
7, 1935. The consideration under the deed consisted of a
fixed component and annual payments fluctuating with the
business activity of the Associated Cement Ltd. A fixed
amount of Rs. 25,000 was paid " for trouble and expenses in
obtaining the leases and agreements " and additional
payments were to be made under cls. (1), (3) and (4) subject
to the minimum prescribed by el. (5). It is difficult to
categorise a transaction of this character. It is not a
conveyance of all the rights of the appellants nor can it be
regarded as a sale even of the rights which were conveyed.
Numerous restrictions were imposed by the deed upon the
rights of the transferee which were inconsistent in their
very nature with the character of a sale, and the covenant
authorising termination of the deed in the event of the
limestone being exhausted removes all doubt in that behalf.
Nor is it a lease : it is not a transfer of a right to enjoy
property for a certain time in consideration of periodical
payments. It also does not evidence a transaction in the
nature of a joint venture between the appellants and the
Associated Cement Ltd. Cement was to be manufactured by the
Associated Cement Ltd, out of limestone to be won from the
lands
511
and in consideration of the rights conveyed, payments at
specified rates were agreed to be made out of the price to
be obtained by sale of cement, fluxstone and limestone. The
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appellants had no control over the production of limestone
and manufacture of cement, or on the sale of fluxstone and
limestone. But in assessing the true character of the
receipt for the purpose of the Income-tax Act, inability to
ascribe to the transaction a definite category is of little
consequence. It is not the nature of the receipt under the
general law but in commerce that is material. It is often
difficult to distinguish whether an agreement is for payment
of a debt by instalments or for making annual payments in
the nature of income. The court has, on an appraisal of all
the facts, to assess whether a transaction is commercial in
character yielding income or is one in consideration of
parting with property for repayment of capital in
instalments. No single test of universal application can be
discovered for solution of the problem. The name which the
parties may give to the transaction which is the source of
the receipt and the characterization of the receipt by them
are of little moment, and the true nature and character of
the transaction have to be ascertained from the covenants of
the contract in the light of the surrounding circumstances.
The decision of the question is however not left to the
application of any arbitrary standards. There are certain
broad principles which guide the determination of the
character of the receipt. The distinction between a capital
receipt and revenue receipt though fine is real. The
dividing line may be thin, and often at first sight
imperceptible.
Where capital is repaid in instalments, it is not liable to
income-tax; for instance when a person sells his property
and agrees to receive the price stipulated in instalments,
by whatever name such instalments are called, they are not
liable to income-tax-see Foley v. Fletcher (1), Secretary of
State in Council of India v. Andrew Scoble (2), Oswald v.
Kirkcaldy Magistrates and Commissioners of Inland Revenue v.
Ramsay (4).
(1) (1858) 3 H. & N. 769?
(2) [1903] A.C. 299
(3) [1919] S.C. 147.
(4) (1935) 20 T.C. 79.
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512
But where property is conveyed in consideration of what in
truth is annuity payable for a definite or a definable
period, the annuity is not payment on capital account and is
taxable-see State of Bihar v. Sir Kameshwar Singh (1),
Captain Maharajkumar Gopal Saran v. Commissioner of Income-
tax, Bihar and Orissa (2), Chadwick v. Pearl Life Assurance
Co. (3).
Again, if property is conveyed in consideration of
periodical payments, the payment being a share of profits of
a business or profession-(William John) Jones v.
Commissioners of Inland Revenue(4), or a mineral royalty
depending upon the quantity of minerals raised Raja Bahadur
Kamakshya Narain Singh of Ramgarh v. Commissioner of Income-
tax, Bihar and Orissa (5), or computed on sales of
manufactured articles-Commissioners of Inland Revenue v.
36149 Holdings, Ltd. (6), or a percentage of gross profits
made in the exploitation of a secret process-Delage v.
Nugget Polish Co., Ltd. (7), is income and taxable.
Counsel for the appellants submitted that the receipt under
clause (1) of the terms of the deed dated May 7, 1935, was
in the nature of capital payment and relied upon certain
decisions in support of that submission.
In Minister of National Revenue v. Catherine Spooner(8),
decided by the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in an
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appeal from the Supreme Court of Canada, the respondent
Catherine Spooner had sold her rights, title and interest in
land owned by her in freehold to a company in consideration
of a certain sum in cash, besides shares of the company, and
an agreement to deliver 10% of oil produced from the land on
which the company covenanted to carry out drilling and, if
oil was found, pumping operations. These were described as
royalties. Oil was struck in the lands and the respondent
was paid 10 of the gross proceeds of the oil produced in
lieu of oil. The
(1) [1952] 21 I.T.R. 382. (5) (1943) L.R. 70 I.A. 180.
(2) [1935] 3 I.T.R. 237 (P.C.). (6) (1943) 25 T.C. 173.
(3) [1905] 2 K.B. 507. (7) (1906) 2r Times Law Reports 454.
(4) (1919) 7 T.C. 3 10 (8) [1933] A.C. 684.
[1920] 1 H.B. 711,
513
Supreme Court of Canada held that the sum so received was
not an annual profit or gain within the meaning of s. 3 of
the Income War Tax Act, but a receipt of a capital nature
and therefore not chargeable to tax. According to the
Judicial Committee, there was between the respondent and the
company no relation of lessor or lessee: the transaction was
one of sale and purchase, and the transaction had taken the
form which it did because of the uncertainty whether oil
would be found by the purchaser. As the value of the land
depended on this contingency, the price, not unnaturally was
made to depend in part on the event of oil being struck.
The judgment lays down no new principle; it proceeded merely
upon interpretation of the document in the light of the
circumstances.
In Trustees of Earl Haig v. Commissioners of Inland Revenue
(1), the question which fell to be determined was whether a
share of the royalties received in consideration of allowing
the use of the diaries of the late Earl Haig for writing his
biography were, in the hands of the trustees under the will
of Earl Haig, capital receipts. That was undoubtedly a case
in which payments received by the trustees were dependent
upon the professional activities of the author and the
proceeds derived from the sales of the biography he wrote.
By the agreement, the author was authorised to extract and
publish from the diaries what he thought fit. The diaries
were undoubtedly an asset, and after they were used by the
author for publication of the biography, their value as an
asset was, if not wholly, largely exhausted and their future
value was negligible. The agreement was therefore regarded
as conveying an asset in its entirety to the author in
consideration of a share in the royalties and the receipt of
this share was regarded as receipt of capital. That
decision proceeded upon the special character of the
agreement and the nature of the asset transferred and did
not seek to lay down any general principle.
In Nethersole v. Withers (2), N who had acquired under an
agreement the exclusive right to dramatise
(1) (1939) 22 T.C. 725.
(2) (1948) 28 T.C. 501.
514
a novel of Rudyard Kipling received under an agreement with
the widow of the author, a third share of a lump sum for
which the sound and film rights were granted exclusively to
a film company for a period of ten years. The film right of
a comprehensive character having been granted by the legal
representative of the author against payment of the sum
stipulated, the question arose whether the payment received
by N was taxable under the Income Tax Act under Case II of
Schedule D or under case VI of Schedule D. It was held that
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N having ceased to be the owner of the portion of the
copyright she had assigned, the proceeds were not annual
profits or gains within the meaning of Schedule D, Case VI.
That was a case in which N had wholly sold and disposed of a
part of the property and the amount received by her was the
price paid in lump and was not in the nature of income.
That case also proceeded upon the special character of the
transaction.
The case of The Commissioners of Inland Revenue v. The
Marine Steam Turbine Co., Ltd. (1) on which reliance was
sought to be placed by counsel for the appellants needs no
detailed consideration. In that case, a company which was
on the facts found not carrying on a trade or business was
held not assessable to Excess Profits Duty, because the
condition of liability was the carrying on of trade or
business.
The appellants had however not sold the entirety of the
rights acquired by them from the Karanpura Company. The
conveyance was subject to several restrictions and the
appellants retained in part rights in the land conveyed.
The transaction was substantially a commercial transaction
for sharing the profits of the commercial activities of the
Associated Cement Ltd. The High Court was therefore right
in holding that the transaction dated May 7, 1935, was a
commercial transaction and the payment under cl. (1) thereof
at the rate of 0- 13 as. ’per ton of cement sold was of the
nature of income and not capital.
In that view of the case, the appeal fails and is dismissed
with costs.
Appeal dismissed.
(1) (1919) 12 T.C. 174; [1920] I K.B. 193.
515