Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX,BOMBAY
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE JALGAON ELECTRICITY SUPPLY CO.,LTD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
04/05/1960
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
DAS, S.K.
KAPUR, J.L.
CITATION:
1960 AIR 1182
CITATOR INFO :
D 1961 SC 699 (8)
R 1968 SC 623 (27)
ACT:
Additional Income-tax- If could be levied on excess
dividends, when there are profits in the preceding years-
Manner of calculation of tax-Indian Finance Act, 1949 and
1950, Para. B,of Part 1 of First Schedule.
HEADNOTE:
After making all allowances and deductions, the income of
the assesses company was finally assessed for the years
1949-50
881
and 1950-51 at Rs. 3,423 and Rs. 3,312 respectively. The
assesses company had declared dividends of Rs. 46,024 and
Rs. 56,326 for the above two years. Though no profits were
brought forward from the previous years, the income-tax
officer applied the proviso to para. B of Part 1 of the
Third and First Schedules of the Finance Act, 1949 and 195o,
assessed the difference in each year to additional income-
tax and charged income-tax at the rate of annas 5 in the
rupee on the amounts for the two assessment years. The High
Court held that though excess dividends were, in fact, paid,
the absence of profits from previous years rendered the
Finance Act unworkable in this case.
The question was if the second proviso to para. B read with
the explanation which sets out the manner of calculation of
the tax applied and whether it was the intention of the
Finance Act to levy the additional income-tax on the excess
dividends even if there were no profits brought forward from
preceding year or years :
Held, that the second proviso to para. B of Part 1 of the
first schedule of the Finance Act, 1950, which corresponds
to the corresponding paragraph of the Finance Act, 1949,
introduces a fiction which postulates that there should be
undistributed profit of one or more years immediately
preceding the previous year, that such undistributed profits
should be sufficient to cover the amount of excess dividend
actually paid out in the year under assessment, and that the
undistributed profits should not have been taken likewise
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to cover an excess dividend of any other previous year. The
excess dividends have first to be connected with the profits
of the preceding years and then the tax borne on those
profits has to be found out, and tax is then payable at an
enhanced rate and amounts to the difference between the tax
actually borne by the profits and that demandable under the
paragraph. Where there are no profits of any preceding year
or years, the fiction wholly fails and the method of
calculation, equally so.
Held, further, that the income-tax law seeks to put in the
net certain class of income, and can only successfully do
so, if it frames a provision appropriate to that end. If
the law fails and the taxpayer cannot be brought within its
letter, no question of unjustness as such, arises.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION :Civil Appeal No. 477 of 1957.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated September 9, 1955,
of the Bombay High Court in Income-tax Reference No. 37/x of
1954.
K. N. Rajagopal Sastri and D. Gupta, for the appellant.
N. A. Palkhivala, B. K. B. Naidu and 1. N. Shroff. for the
respondent.
882
1960. May 4. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
HIDAYATULLAH, J.-This appeal is with a certificate granted
by the High Court against its judgment and order dated
September 9, 1955, in a reference under s. 66(1) of the
Indian Income-tax Act. The Tribunal had referred the
following questions for the decision of the High Court:
" (1) Whether there was any excess dividend declared by the
assessee Company ?
(2) Whether the assessee Company is liable to pay
additional income-tax in respect of the excess dividend paid
by the assessee Company ? "
The High Court answered the first question in the
affirmative and the second, in the negative. The
Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay is the appellant before
us, and the Jalgaon Electric Supply Co., Ltd. (the assessee
Company) is the respondent.
The facts of the case are simple. For the assessment years
1949-50 and 1950-51, the book profits of the assessee
Company were respectively Rs. 1,22,469 and Rs. 76,886.
After adjustment of depreciation allowance and other
deductions, the income of the assessee Company was finally
assessed at Rs. 3,423 and Rs. 3,312 respectively. The
assessee Company declared a dividend of Rs. 46,024 in the
first year and Rs. 56,326 in the next. The Income-tax
Officer, applying the Proviso to Para. B of Part 1 of the
Third and First Schedules of the Finance Acts, 1949 and 1950
respectively, assessed the difference in each year to
additional income-tax, and charged income-tax at the rate of
5 annas in the rupee on the amounts for the two assessment
years. The assessee Company appealed first to the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner and then to the Tribunal. In the
Tribunal, there was a difference of opinion between the
President and the Accountant Member, the former holding that
the assessee Company was not liable and the latter, that it
was. The case was then referred to a third Member, who
agreed with the President. The main reason for the decision
of the majority was that there were no profits in the years
Preceding the previous year, and that, therefore, the said
Paragraphs could not, on their terms, operate in
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883
the circumstances. The view of the minority was that even
if there were no profits, the intention of the Finance Act
to levy the additional income-tax on the excess dividends
was perfectly plain, and that the assessee Company was
liable. It may be mentioned at this stage that the decision
of the Tribunal turned entirely upon the fact that no
profits were brought forward from the previous years, and
that, therefore, the Paragraphs could not be applied. The
High Court held that though excess dividends were, in fact,
paid, the absence of profits from previous years rendered
the Finance Act unworkable in this case. It, therefore,
accepted the reasons given by the Tribunal, and upheld its
decision.
Paragraph B of Part 1 of the First Schedule of the Finance
Act, 1950 corresponds to the corresponding Paragraph of the
Finance Act, 1949. It is, therefore, not necessary to refer
to them separately. We shall confine ourselves to the
Finance Act, 1949. It may also be pointed out that the
circumstances of the two years are also on par, except that
the amounts of income and the excess dividends are
different. The paragraph reads as follows:
B. In the case of every company-
Rate
On the whole of total income...... Five annas in
the rupee:
Provided that in the case of an Indian Company---
(i) where the total income, as reduced by seven annas in
the rupee and by the amount, if any, exempt from income-tax,
exceeds the amount of any dividends (including dividends
payable at a fixed rate) declared in respect of the whole or
part of the previous year for the assessment for the year
ending on the 31st day of March,, 1950, and Do order has
been made under sub-section (1) of section 23A of the
Income-tax Act, a rebate shall be allowed at the rate of one
anna per rupee on the amount of such excess;
(ii) where the amount of dividends referred to in clause (i)
above exceeds the total income as reduced by seven annas in
the rupee and by the amount, if any, exempt from income-tax,
there shall be charged
884
on the total income an additional income-tax equal to the
sum, if any, by which the aggregate amount of income-tax
actually borne by such excess (hereinafter referred to as
’the excess dividend ’) falls short of the amount calculated
at the rate of five annas per rupee on the excess dividend.
For the purposes of the above proviso, the expression
dividend’ shall have the meaning assigned to it in clause
(6A) of section 2 of the Income-tax Act, but any
distribution included in that expression, made during the
year ending on the 31st day of March, 1950, shall be deemed
to be a dividend declared in respect of the whole or part of
the previous year.
For the purpose of clause (ii) of the above proviso, the
aggregate amount of income-tax actually borne by the excess
dividend shall be determined as follows:-
(i) the excess dividend shall be deemed to be out of the
whole or such portion of the undistributed profits of one or
more years immediately preceding the previous year as would
be just sufficient to cover the amount of the excess
dividend and as have not likewise been taken into account to
cover an excess dividend of a preceding year;
(ii) such portion of the excess dividend as is deemed to be
out of the undistributed profits of each of the said years
shall be deemed to have borne tax,-
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(a) if an order has been made under subjection (1) of
section 23A of the Income-tax Act, in respect of the
undistributed profits of that year, at the rate of five
annas in the rupee, and
(b) in respect of any other year, at the rate applicable to
the total income of the company for that year reduced by the
rate at which rebate, if an-, was allowed on the
undistributed profits."
The scheme of the Finance Act in relation to excess
dividends and their chargeability to additional income-tax
has been examined by us in Civil Appeal No. 427 of 1957
decided today. We are concerned in this case with the.
application of the second Proviso
885
to the Paragraph, read with the explanations (not socalled),
which set out the manner of calculation of the tax. As we
have already pointed out in the other case, the additional
income-tax is payable if dividends in excess of the limit
fixed by the legislature are paid in any year. This
additional income-tax takes note of such tax as might have
been paid on the profits, albeit at a lower rate, in any
previous assessment year and gives deduction for that
amount. The additional income-tax is payable on the excess
dividends calculated at a different rate but allowing for
the tax already paid. For this purpose, the aggregate
amount of income-tax to be borne by the -excess dividends
has to be calculated in a particular manner. This manner is
indicated in the Paragraph, and it begins by providing that
the excess dividend shall be deemed to be out of the whole
or such portion of the undistributed profits of one or more
years preceding the previous year as would be just
sufficient to cover the amount of the excess dividend and
were not likewise taken into account to cover an excess
dividend of a previous year. It is then provided that the
excess dividends which are so deemed to be the undistributed
profits of each of the previous years shall be deemed to
have borne the tax.
The fictions which have been introduced postulate that there
should be undistributed profits of one or more years
immediately preceding the previous year, that such
undistributed profits should be sufficient to cover the
amount of excess dividend actually paid out in the previous
year under assessment, and that the undistributed profits
should not have been taken likewise to cover an excess
dividend of any other previous year. Where there are no
profits of any preceding year or years, the fiction wholly
fails and the method of calculation, equally so. We do not
agree with the argument of the Commissioner that the fiction
can be given effect to, even if the profits of preceding
years do not exist. The argument suggests that the
chargeability of excess dividends to additional income-tax
can arise under the terms of the Paragraph even in such
circumstances. But a plain reading of the Proviso clearly
shows that the excess
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886
dividends have first to be connected with the profits of the
preceding years and then the tax borne on those profits has
to be found out, and the tax is payable at an enhanced rate
and amounts to the difference between the tax actually borne
by the profit,-, and that demandable under the Paragraph.
The High Court repelled the argument of the Commissioner in
much the same way as we have done, and we entirely agree
with the, reasons given by it.
The Accountant Member, whose decision was in a minority,
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gave two reasons. The first was that " the explanation
provides for the determination of the years out of the
profits of which the excess dividend has come ", and the
second was that " in order to escape the liability imposed
by Cl. (ii), the company must prove that the excess dividend
has borne tax 5 annas in the rupee as it is only in that
event that the additional tax payable will be nil ". These
reasons were also put before us for acceptance. We are,
however, unable to agree. The fiction cannot be whittled
down in the manner suggested in the first reason. The
fiction incorporates within itself not only what the
Accountant Member says but also a mode of calculation, which
is not a part of the fiction. It is the mode of calculation
which cannot be given effect to, though we would go further
and say that the fiction itself fails because no profits of
preceding years at all existed. The second reason given by
the Accountant Member assumes the liability to pay tax, and
that is not permissible, because that is the fact in issue
to be decided. That fact can only be decided if the Para-
graph can be made applicable to the present case and not
otherwise. We cannot start with the assumption that
additional income-tax on excess dividend has got to be paid,
whether the Paragraph applies or not. That would be begging
the very question to be decided.
The Commissioner also suggested numerous modifications of
the language to give effect to the intention to levy
additional income-tax on excess dividends, and pointed out,
as did the Accountant Member, that it would be unjust to
allow an escapement of tax, where there were no profits of
preceding years to set off
887
against the excess dividends. In our opinion, the question
of modification of the language cannot arise in the
circumstances of the case. Our reasons have been given in
Civil Appeal No. 427 of 1957, decided to day, and we need
not go over the ground against There is also no question of
unjustness involved. The Income-tax law seeks to put in the
net certain class of income, and can only successfully do
so, if it frame a provision appropriate to that end. If the
law fail and the tax-payer cannot be brought within its
letter no question of unjustness as such, arises. The
answers given by the High Court to the two questions were
correct in the circumstances of the case.
In the result, the appeal fails, and will be dismissed
with costs.
Appeal dismissed.