Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX,WEST BENGAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MESSRS. JEEWANLAL LTD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
08/10/1953
BENCH:
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
BENCH:
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
SASTRI, M. PATANJALI (CJ)
BOSE, VIVIAN
HASAN, GHULAM
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
CITATION:
1953 AIR 473 1954 SCR 0
ACT:
Excess Profits Tax Act (XV of 1940), s.2(11)-Director con-
trolled company -Definition-Directors authorised by another-
Company holding majority of shares to vote in respect of the
shares-- Company, whether director controlled.
HEADNOTE:
Ordinarily a company will be a, "company, the directors
whereof have a controlling interest therein" for the
purposes of the Excess Profits Tax Act, 1940, only if the
directors thereof hold, and are entered in the share
register as holders of, a majority of the vote-carrying
shares of the company. It is not necessary that they must
have a beneficial interest in such shares, but the mere fact
that one of the directors of the company has been authorised
by another company which held a majority of shares in the
former company, to vote on its behalf in respect of the
shares held by it, will not make the former company a
director controlled company.
Glasgow Expanded Metal Co. Ltd. v. Commissioners of Inland
Revenue (12 Tax Cas. 573), Commissioners of Inland Revenue
v. B. W. Noble (12 Tax Cas. 911), Inland Revenue
commissioners V. ,T. Bibby and Sons Ltd. (14 I.T.R. Suppl-
7, 29 Tax Cas. 167), Commissioner of Income-tax v. Bipin,
Silk Mills Ltd. (14 I.T.R. 344) and Commissioners of -Inland
Revenue v. Hodgkinson (Salford) Ltd. (29 Tax Cas. 395)
relied on. British American Tobacco Co. Ltd. v.
Commissioners of Inland Revenue ([1943] A.C. 335) and New
Shorrock Spinning and Manufacturing Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner
of -Incometax, Bombay (18 I.T.R. 712) distinguished.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 78 of 1952.
Appeal from the Judgment and Order dated the 17th January,
1951, of the High Court of Judicature at Calcutta (Harries
C.J. and Banerjee J.) in its Special Jurisdiction (Income-
tax) in Income-tax Reference No. 50 of 1950.
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C.K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General for India (G. N. Joshi,
with him) for the appellant,
26
190
N. C. Chatterjee (S. C. Majumdar, with him) for the
respondent.
1953. October 8. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
DAS J.-This is an appeal from the judgment and order of a
Bench of the Calcutta High Court delivered on a reference
made by the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal under section 21
of the Excess Profits Tax Act, 1940, read with section 66(1)
of the Indian Income-tax Act, whereby the High Court
answered in the affirmative the question of law referred to
it. The question referred was:
"Whether in the facts and circumstances of these cases, the
Income-tax Appellate Tribunal was right in holding that the
directors of the respondent company had a controlling
interest in it as contemplated by section 2 (21) of the
Excess Profits Tax Act."
The controversy arose between the parties during proceedings
for assessment of excess profits tax for five chargeable
accounting periods ending on the 31st December of each of
the years 1939 to 1943.
The relevant facts which are not in dispute are these: The
respondent company is a company incorporated in what was
then British India having a capital of Rs. 3,600,000 divided
into 360,000 shares of Rs. 10 each. The Aluminium Limited,
a company incorporated in Canada, held 359,790 shares in the
chargeable accounting periods ending on December31, 1939,
and December 31, 1940, and 359,600 shares in the chargeable
accounting periods ending on December 31, 1941, December 31,
1942, and December 31, 1943. In exercise of the power given
to it by article 105 of the articles of association of the
respondent company, the Aluminium Ltd. appointed three
permanent directors on the board of directors of the
respondent company. Two of these directors eventually
retired and only one, namely, Mr. L. G. Bash continued to be
a director of the respondent company nominated by the
Aluminium Ltd. Mr. L. G. Bash and the other directors had
between them during the chargeable
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accounting periods ending on December 31, 1939, and December
31, 1940, only 210 shares and in the chargeable accounting
periods ending on December 31, 1941, December 31, 1942, and
December 31, 1943, 400 shares, Mr. L. G. Bash not having a
single share during these last mentioned chargeable
accounting periods. By a resolution passed by the directors
of the Aluminium Ltd., Mr. L. G. Bash was appointed to vote
and/or from time to time to appoint a special or general
proxy to vote for and on behalf of the Aluminium Ltd. in
respect of the shares held by it in the respondent company
at all ordinary or extraordinary general meetings of the
shareholders of the respondent company. Article 90 of the
articles of association of the respondent company provides:-
"90. Where a company registered under the provisions of the
Indian Companies Act or not is a member of this company a
person duly appointed to represent such company at a meeting
of this company in accordance with the provisions of section
80 of the Indian Companies Act, 1913, shall not be deemed to
be a proxy but shall be entitled to vote for such company on
a show of hands -and to exercise the same power on behalf of
the company which he represents as if he were an individual
member of this company including the power to appoint a
proxy whether special or general and the production at the
meeting of a company of such resolution appointing such
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representative duly signed by one director of such company
and by the secretary (if any) and certified by them or him
as being a true copy of the resolution shall on production
at the meeting be accepted by this company as sufficient
evidence of the validity of his appointment."
Mr. L. G. Bash has at all material times been exercising the
powers conferred by the above article as the representative
of the Aluminium Ltd.
The claim of the respondent company was that it should be
regarded as a company the directors whereof had a
controlling interest therein, inasmuch as Mr. L. G. Bash,
one of the directors, had the I authority to exercise the
voting power of the Aluminium Ltd. and,
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as such, could control the affairs of the respondent company
and that in computing the standard profits the statutory
percentage should be taken at 10 per cent. per annum and not
at 8 per cent per annum. This contention was rejected by
the Excess Profits Tax Officer. On appeal by the respondent
company the Appellate Assistant Commissioner of Excess
Profits Tax upheld the decision of the Excess Profits Tax
Officer. The respondent company thereupon appealed to the
Incometax Appellate Tribunal "which reversed the decision of
the Appellate Assistant Commissioner observing that in view
of the power of attorney that was given to Mr. L. G. Bash by
the Aluminium Ltd. there was no room for doubt that the
respondent company, which was then the appellant before the
Tribunal, was a director-controlled company. On the
application of the Commissioner of Income-tax, the Appellate
Tribunal referred the question of law herein before set out.
By its judgment dated the 11th January, 1951, the High Court
of Calcutta has answered the question in the affirmative.
The Commissioner of Excess Profits Tax, West Bengal, has now
come up on appeal to this court with a certificate under
section 66-A (2) of the Indian Income-tax Act.
In common parlance a person is said to have "a controlling
interest" in a company when such a person acquires, by
purchase or otherwise, the majority of the vote-carrying
shares in that company, for the control of the company
resides in the voting powers of its shareholders. In this
sense, the directors of a company may well be regarded as
having "a controlling interest" in the company when they
hold and are entered in the share register as holders of the
majority of the shares which, under the articles of
association of the company, carry the right to vote. [See
Glasgow Expanded Metal Co., Ltd. v. Commissioners of Inland
Revenue (1) and Commissioners of Inland Revenue v. B. W.
Noble(2)]. It is not, however, necessary that in order to
have "a Controlling interest" the person or persons who hold
the majority of the votecarrying shares must have a
beneficial interest in the
(1) (1923) 12 Tax Cas. 573.
(2) (1926) 12 Tax Cas, 911.
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shares held by them. These persons may hold the shares as
trustees and may even be accountable to their beneficiaries
and may be brought to book for exercising their votes in
breach of trust, nevertheless, as between them as
shareholders and the company, they are the shareholders, and
as such, have "a controlling interest" in the company. [See
Inland Revenue Commissioners v. J. Bibby & Sons Ltd.(1) and
Commissioner of Income-tax v. Bipin Silk Mills Ltd. (2)].
According to the facts found in the statement of the case
the directors of the respondent company do not themselves
hold the majority of shares which, on the contrary, are
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registered in the name of the Aluminium Ltd. and, therefore,
according to the principles discussed above, they cannot be
said to have "a controlling interest" in the respondent
company.
Learned counsel for the respondent company, however,
contends, on the analogy of the reasonings adopted by the
House of Lords in British American Tobacco Co. Ltd. v.
Commissioners of Inland Revenue(3) that although Mr. L. G.
Bash does not hold the majority of shares and has no
beneficial interest in the shares held by the Aluminium Ltd.
in the respondent company and although he may be bound to
cast the votes according to the directions of his
principals, the Aluminium Ltd., and may be answerable to the
latter if he acts in breach of his duty, nevertheless, as
long as his authority is not revoked, as far as the
respondent company is concerned, tile, majority of its vote-
carrying shares are subject, directly or indirectly, to his
will and ordering and, therefore, the directors of the
respondent company in fact control its affairs at general
meetings and as such have " a controlling interest "
therein, no matter by what machinery or means that result
has been effected. This line of argument found favour with
the Appellate Tribunal and the High Court. We are unable,
with all respect, to accept this argument as sound, for this
argument appears to us to oversimplify the position.
Assuming, but without, expressing any final opinion as
(1) [1946] 14 I.T.R. (Suppl.) 7; [1945] I All E.R. 667; 29
Tax Cas. 167,
(2) A.I.R. 1947 Bom. 45; 14 I.T.R. 344.
(3) [1943] A.C. 335; 11 I.T.R. (Suppl.) 29; 29 Tax Cas. 49,
194
to, the correctness of the decision in the last mentioned
case, we have no doubt that the analogy is inapt, for the
principle of that decision can have no application to the
case before us. In the case of directors, who hold the
majority of shares as trustees they, so far as the company
is concerned, are the registered shareholders and the right
to vote is vested in them, although as between them and
their beneficiaries the beneficial interest is -vested in
the latter. They are the registered holders of the shares
and the votes they cast are their own votes. That case is
entirely different from the case of directors who are only
the agents of the holders of the majority of shares. When a
shareholder holding the majority of shares authorises an
agent to vote for him in respect of the shares so held by
him, the agent acquires no interest, legal or beneficial, in
the shares. The title in the shares remains vested in the
shareholder. The shareholder may revoke the authority of
the agent at any time. In spite of the appointment of the
agent the shareholder may himself appear at the meeting and
cast his votes personally. Therefore, the shares being
always subject to his will and ordering, the controlling
interest which the holder of the majority of shares has
never passes to the agent. Let us take the facts of the
present case. Under article 90, when Mr. L.G. Bash as agent
of the Aluminium Ltd. attends a general meeting of the
respondent company he has to produce the resolution of his
principals authorising him to cast the votes of his
principals. The votes he casts are not his votes but are
the votes of the Aluminium Ltd. In such a situation, in the
eye of the law, the controlling interest remains vested in
the Aluminium Ltd. and is at no time vested in Mr. L. G.
Bash. The shares in question which give the controlling
interest are neither held by Mr. L. G. Bash nor are they
subject, directly or indirectly, to his will and ordering,
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and, therefore, he cannot, applying either of the tests
mentioned above, be said to have a controlling interest.
The decision of the Court of Appeal in Commissioners of
Inland Revenue v. Jamed Hodgkinson (Salford) Ltd.(1)
(1) (1949) 29 Tax Cas. 395.
195
appears to us to be apposite. It is unfortunate that the
last mentioned case was not brought to the notice of the
High Court before the judgment under appeal was delivered.
Dissent has been expressed in the judgment under appeal from
the recent decision of the Bombay High Court in New Shorrock
Spinning and Manufacturing Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of
Income-tax, Bombay(1). The facts of that case are entirely
different from the facts of the case before us and that
decision has no manner of application to the present case.
It is, therefore, unnecessary for us to discuss or express
any opinion as to whether the observations to be found in
the judgment in that case are or are not well-founded.
For reasons stated above, we accept this appeal and hold
that the answer to the question referred by the Appellate
Tribunal to the High Court should be in the negative. The
respondent company must pay the costs of the appellant in
this court as well as in the High Court.
Appeal allowed. Agent for the appellant: G. H.
Rajadhyaksha. Agent for the respondent: S. C. Banerjee.