Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, ANDHRA PRADESH HYDERABAD
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
TOSHOKU LTD., GUNTUR ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT29/08/1980
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
BHAGWATI, P.N.
CITATION:
1981 AIR 148 1981 SCR (1) 587
ACT:
Commission payable to non-resident foreign agent by the
statutory agent-Statutory agent making credit and debit
entries in his books of account under the head "commission
account" on receipt of the sale price from the foreign agent
and thereafter on remitting the commission amount to the
foreign agent-Whether the commission amounts sent were
assessable to income tax-Sections 5(2), 9(1)(i), 160, 161
and 163 of the Income Tax Act, 1961 read with Board’s
Circular (XXVII-I) of 1953 No. 26 (II/53) dated July 17,
1953-Whether the amounts should be treated as income deemed
to have accrued or arisen in India.
HEADNOTE:
Dismissing the Revenue appeal by special leave, the
Court
^
HELD: (1) The credit entries made in the books of a
statutory agent do not by themselves amount to receipt by
assessees who are non-residents as long as the amounts so
credited in their favour are not at their disposal or
control. [592 F]
The non-resident assessees in this case neither
received nor could be deemed to have received the sums in
question when their accounts with the statutory agent were
credited, since a credit balance without more only
represents a debt and a mere book entry in the debtor’s own
books does not constitute payment which will secure
discharge from the debt. They cannot, therefore, be charged
to tax on the basis of receipt of income actual or
constructive in the taxable territories during the relevant
accounting period. [592 F-G]
P. V. Raghava Reddi & Anr. v. Commissioner of Income-
tax [1962] Supp. 2 S.C.R. 596, distinguished.
(2) Under clause (a) of the Explanation to clause (i)
of sub-section (1) of section 9 of the Income Tax Act. in
the case of the business of which all the operations are not
carried out in India, the income of the business deemed
under that clause to accrue or arise in India shall be only
such part of the income as is reasonably attributable to the
operations carried out in India. If all such operations are
carried out in India, the entire income accruing therefrom
shall be deemed to have accrued in India. If, however, all
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the operations are not carried out in the taxable
territories, the profits and gains of business deemed to
accrue in India through and from business connection in
India shall be only such profits and gains as are reasonably
attributable to that part of the operations carried out in
the taxable territories. If no operations of business are
carried out in the taxable territories, it follows that the
income accruing or arising abroad through or from any
business connection in India cannot be deemed to accrue or
arise in India. [593 B-D]
588
In the instant case the non-resident assessees did not
carry on any business operations in the taxable territories.
They acted as selling agents outside India. The receipt in
India of the sale proceeds of tobacco remitted or caused to
be remitted by the purchasers from abroad does not amount to
an operation carried out by the assessees in India as
contemplated by clause (a) of the Explanation to section
9(1)(i) of the Act. The commission amounts which were earned
by the non-resident assessees for services rendered outside
India cannot, therefore, be deemed to be incomes which have
either accrued or arisen in India. [593 E-G]
Commissioner of Income-tax, Punjab v. R. D. Aggarwal &
Co. & Anr. 56 I.T.R. 20 and M/s. Carborandum Co. v. C.I.T.
Madras [1977] 3 S.C.R. 475, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 782-783
of 1973.
Appeals by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order
dated 18-11-1972 of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in Cases
Referred Nos. 50 and 52 of 1970.
P. A. Francis, K. C. Dua and Miss A. Subhashini for the
Appellant.
L. A. Subba Rao for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
VENKATARAMIAH, J.-These two appeals by Special Leave
are filed against a common judgment dated November 18, 1971
delivered by the High Court of Andhra Pradesh in Case
Referred Nos. 50 and 52 of 1970.
Sri Bommidala Kotiratnam (hereinafter referred to as
’the statutory agent’) is a dealer in tobacco at Guntur in
the State of Andhra Pradesh. During the previous year
relevant to the assessment year 1962-63, the statutory agent
purchased tobacco in India and exported it to Japan, where
it was sold through M/s. Toshoku Ltd. (the assessee involved
in Civil Appeal No. 782 of 1973 a Japanese Company and
admittedly non-resident. Under the terms of the agreement
between the statutory agent and the assessee referred to
above, the latter was appointed the exclusive sales agent in
Japan for selling tobacco exported by the former. The
assessee was entitled to a commission of 3% of the invoice
amount. The sale price received on the sale of tobacco in
Japan was remitted wholly to the statutory agent who debited
his commission account with the amount of commission payable
to the Japanese company and credited the same in the account
of the Japanese company in his books on December 31, 1961.
The amount was remitted to the Japanese company on
589
February 1, 1962 on which date an appropriate debit entry
was made in the account of the Japanese company with the
statutory agent.
The statutory agent had similarly sold some tobacco
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during the same accounting period through another non-
resident business house by name ’M/s Societe Pour Le
Commerce International Des Tobacs’ (the assessee involved in
Civil Appeal No. 783 of 1973) carrying on business in
France. The terms of agreement were the same as in the case
of the Japanese Company referred to above, the only
difference being the geographical area in which each of them
had to render service as a selling agent. In this case also
the statutory agent made similar entries in his books
regarding the commission payable to the assessee and
ultimately made a debit entry in the account of the assessee
in his books when the amount was transmitted to the
assessee.
During the assessment year the question whether the
commission amounts sent to the Japanese company and the
French business house (hereinafter referred to collectively
as ’the assessees’) were assessable in terms of section 161
of the Income-tax Act, 1961 (hereinafter referred to as ’the
Act’) arose for consideration before the Income-tax Officer.
The statutory agent contended that the amounts in question
were not taxable in view of the clarification of the legal
position by the Board Circular (XXVII-I) of 53 No. 26
(II/53) dated July 17, 1953 which stated:
"A foreign agent of an Indian exporter operates in
his own country and no part of his income arises in
India. Usually his commission is remitted directly to
him and is therefore not received by or on his behalf
in India. Such an agent is not liable to Indian Income-
tax."
The Income-tax Officer, however, came to the conclusion
that the sums in question were taxable in view of the
decision of this Court in P. V. Raghava Reddi & Anr. v.
Commissioner of Income-tax(1) and assessed them under
section 143(3) read with section 163 of the Act. The appeals
preferred by the statutory agent against the orders of
assessment before the Appellate Assistant Commissioner of
Income-tax and the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal were
unsuccessful. Thereafter the following common question of
law was referred to the High Court of Andhra Pradesh under
section 256(1) of the Act:-
"Whether on the facts and in the circumstances of
the case the assessment on the appellant under section
161 of the Income-tax, Act, 1961 is justified?"
590
The High Court held that the assessments were not
justified and answered the question against the Department.
Hence these appeals under Article 136 of the Constitution.
The relevant provisions of the Act on which reliance is
placed before us are sections 5(2), 9(1)(i), 160, 161 and
163. Section 5(2) of the Act which deals with the
chargeability of the income of a person who is a non-
resident under the Act provides that subject to the
provisions of the Act, the total income of any previous year
of a person who is a non-resident includes all income from
whatever source derived (a) which is received or is deemed
to be received in India in such year by or on behalf of such
person, or (b) accrues or arises or is deemed to accrue or
arise in India during such year. Explanation 1 to section
5(2) of the Act declares that an income arising abroad can
not be deemed to be received in India for the purpose of
that section by reason only of the fact that it is included
in a balance sheet prepared in India. Section 9(1)(i) of the
Act provides that all income accruing or arising whether
directly or indirectly, through or from any business
connection in India, or through or from any property in
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India, or through or from any asset or source of income in
India, or through the transfer of a capital asset situate in
India shall be deemed to accrue or arise in India. The
explanation to this clause provides that in the case of a
business of which all the operations are not carried out in
India, the income of the business deemed under this clause
to accrue or arise in India shall be only such part of the
income as is reasonably attributable to the operations
carried out in India and in the case of a non-resident no
income shall be deemed to accrue or arise in India to him
through or from operations which are confined to the
purchase of goods in India for the purpose of export. An
agent of a non-resident including a person who is treated as
an agent under section 163 of the Act becomes, according to
section 160(1) of the Act, the representative assessee in
respect of the income of a non-resident specified in sub-
section (1) of section 9 of the Act. Section 161 of the Act
makes a representative assessee, who is an agent of a non-
resident personally liable to assessment in respect of the
income of the non-resident. Section 163 of the Act defines
persons who may be regarded as agents of non-residents for
the purposes of the Act. Sections 160, 161 and 163 of the
Act are merely enabling provisions which empower the
authorities at their option to make assessment on and to
recover tax due under the Act from the representative
assessee. It is not disputed in these cases that if the
incomes in question of the assessees are taxable, the
statutory agent is liable to pay the tax. The real question
which falls for determination is whether the said incomes
are taxable. The facts found in these appeals are that the
statutory agent exported his goods to Japan and
591
France where they were sold through the assessees. The
entire sale price was received in India by the statutory
agent who made credit entries in his account books regarding
the commission amounts payable to the assessees and remitted
the commission amounts to them subsequently. One extra
feature in the case of the Japanese company is that it had
been appointed as an exclusive agent for Japan. It is not
disputed that the assessees rendered service as selling
agents to the statutory agent outside the taxable
territories.
In order to establish its case, the Revenue has
strongly relied on the decision of this Court in the case of
P. V. Raghava Reddy (supra). A perusal of that decision
shows that the said case is distinguishable on facts. In
that case the assessee had exported in the years 1948-49 and
1949-50 certain quantity of mica to Japan. Mica was not
exportable directly to Japanese buyers during those years as
Japan was under military occupation but to a State
organisation called Boeki-Cho (Board of Trade). To negotiate
for order and to handle its other affairs in Japan in
connection therewith the assessee engaged San-Ei Trading Co.
Ltd., Tokyo as its agent. The Japanese Company was
admittedly a ’non-resident’ company. Under the agreements
the assessee under-took to pay certain percentage of gross
sale proceeds as commission to the Japanese Company. With
regard to the mode of payment of commission, the agreements
provided a term which read thus:
"In view of the difficulties in this country it is
requested that the first party credits all these
amounts to the account of the second party with them
without remitting the same until definate instructions
are received by the first party."
The first party to the agreement was the assessee and
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the second party was the Japanese Company. During the two
accounting years a total amount of Rs. 13,319-12-4 was paid
to the Japanese Company either directly or through others to
whom the assessee was instructed by the Japanese Company to
pay the amount. The Court rejected the contention of the
assessee that the Japanese Company was not in receipt of the
amount in the taxable territories and the amount was not
income within the meaning of section 4(1)(a) of the Indian
income-tax Act, 1922 with the following observations:-
"This leaves over the question which was earnestly
argued, namely, whether the amounts in the two
accounting years can be said to be received by the
Japanese Company in the taxable territories. The
argument is that the money was not actually received,
but the assessee firm was a debtor in respect of that
amount and unless the entry can be deemed to be a
payment or receipt cl. (a) cannot apply. We need not
consider the fiction,
592
for it is not necessary to go into the fiction at all.
The agreement, from which we have quoted the relevant
term, provided that the Japanese Company desired that
the assessee firm should open an account in the name of
the Japanese Company in their books of account, credit
the amounts in that account, and deal with those
amounts according to the instructions of the Japanese
Company. Till the money was so credited, there might be
a relation of debtor and creditor; but after the
amounts were credited, the money was held by the
assessee firm as a depositee. The money then belonged
to the Japanese Company and was held for and on behalf
of the Company and was at its disposal. The character
of the money changed from a debt to a deposit in such
the same way as if it was credited in a Bank to the
account of the Company. Thus, the amount must be held,
on the terms of the agreement, to have been received by
the Japanese Company, and this attracts the application
of s. 4(1)(a). Indeed, the Japanese Company did dispose
of a part of those amounts by instructing the assessee
firm that they be applied in a particular way. In our
opinion, the High Court was right in answering the
question against the assessee."
The Court, as it is obvious from the portion extracted
above, proceeded to hold that the amount in question was
received by the Japanese Company in India and hence was
taxable on that basis.
In the cases before us there were no terms
corresponding to the term extracted above which was found in
the agreements between the assessee and the Japanese Company
in P. V. Raghava Reddi’s case (supra). It cannot be said
that the making of the book entries in the books of the
statutory agent amounted to receipt by the assessees who
were non-residents as the amounts so credited in their
favour were not at their disposal or control. It is not
possible to hold that the non-resident assessees in this
case either received or can be deemed to have received the
sums in question when their accounts with the statutory
agent were credited, since a credit balance without more
only represents a debt and a mere book entry in the debtor’s
own books does not constitute payment which will secure
discharge from the debt. They cannot, therefore, be charged
to tax on the basis of receipt of income actual or
constructive in the taxable territories during the relevant
accounting period.
The second aspect of the same question is whether the
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commission amounts credited in the books of the statutory
agent can be treated as incomes accrued, arisen, or deemed
to have accrued or arisen in India to the non-resident
assessees during the relevant year. This takes us to section
9 of the Act. It is urged that the commission amounts
593
should be treated as incomes deemed to have accrued or
arisen in India as they, according to the Department, had
either accrued or arisen through and from the business
connection in India that existed between the non-resident
assessees and the statutory agent. This contention overlooks
the effect of clause (a) of the Explanation to clause (i) of
sub-section (1) of section 9 of the Act which provides that
in the case of a business of which all the operations are
not carried out in India, the income of the business deemed
under that clause to accrue or arise in India shall be only
such part of the income as is reasonably attributable to the
operations carried out in India. If all such operations are
carried out in India, the entire income accruing therefrom
shall be deemed to have accrued in India. If, however, all
the operations are not carried out in the taxable
territories, the profits and gains of business deemed to
accrue in India through and from business connection in
India shall be only such profits and gains as are reasonably
attributable to that part of the operations carried out in
the taxable territories. If no operations of business are
carried out in the taxable territories, it follows that the
income accruing or arising abroad through or from any
business connection in India cannot be deemed to accrue or
arise in India. (See Commissioner of Income-tax, Punjab v.
R. D. Aggarwal & Co. & Anr.(1) and M/s. Carborandum Co. v.
C.I.T., Madras(2) which are decided on the basis of section
42 of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, which corresponds to
section 9(1)(i) of the Act.)
In the instant case the non-resident assessees did not
carry on any business operations in the taxable territories.
They acted as selling agents outside India. The receipt in
India of the sale proceeds of tobacco remitted or caused to
be remitted by the purchasers from abroad does not amount to
an operation carried out by the assessees in India as
contemplated by clause (a) of the Explanation to section
9(1)(i) of the Act. The commission amounts which were earned
by the non-resident assessees for services rendered outside
India cannot, therefore, be deemed to be incomes which have
either accrued or arisen in India. The High Court was,
therefore, right in answering the question against the
Department.
For the foregoing reasons, the appeals fail and are
hereby dismissed with costs. (Hearing fee one set).
V.D.K. Appeals dismissed.
594