Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 3952-3955 of 2002
PETITIONER:
Deputy Commissioner of Income Tax,Ahmedabad
RESPONDENT:
M/s. Core Health Care Ltd
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 08/02/2008
BENCH:
S.H. Kapadia & B. Sudershan Reddy
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
CIVIL APPEAL NOS.3952-3955 OF 2002
WITH
Civil Appeal Nos. 8509-10 of 2002
Commissioner of Income Tax,
Baroda \005 Appellant (s)
versus
M/s. Core Health Care Ltd. ... Respondent (s)
KAPADIA, J.
For the sake of convenience we state the facts occurring
in Civil Appeal Nos.3952-55 of 2002 \026 Dy. Commr. of Income
Tax, Ahmedabad v. M/s. Core Health Care Ltd.
2. These civil appeals are directed against judgment and
order dated 25.4.01 delivered by Gujarat High Court in Tax
Appeal Nos.449 and 450 of 2000 and in Civil Application
Nos.53 and 54 of 2001 whereby the Department’s appeals,
under Section 260A of the Income-tax Act, 1961, stood
dismissed.
3. On 31.12.92 assessee filed its return of income for A.Y.
1992-93 declaring "nil" income. Later on the assessee filed a
revised return on 6.8.93 declaring a loss of Rs.1,11,68,543/-.
Assessee-company is engaged in the business of
manufacturing and sale of intravenous solutions. For the
assessment year under consideration assessee claimed
deduction towards expenses aggregating to Rs.2,12,05,459/-
which included interest on borrowings of Rs.1,56,76,000/-.
During the assessment year under consideration assessee had
installed new machinery. The A.O. vide assessment order
dated 30.3.95 disallowed the amount of Rs.1,56,76,000/-
placing reliance on the judgment of this Court in Challapalli
Sugars Ltd. & Anr. v. Commissioner of Income-tax, A.P.
and Anr. \026 (1975) 98 ITR 167, inter alia, on the ground that
during the assessment year under consideration assessee had
installed new machinery on which production had not started.
On appeal, vide order dated 15.11.96, CIT (A) confirmed the
addition of interest amount on borrowings of Rs.1,56,76,000.
Therefore, both the authorities, namely, the A.O. and CIT (A)
added the said amount of Rs.1,56,76,000/- to the income of
the assessee. The matter was carried in appeal by the
assessee. Vide order dated 6.6.2000 the Tribunal held that
the Department was not justified in adding Rs.1,56,76,000/-
to the income of the assessee. In other words, the Tribunal
held that the A.O. was not justified in making disallowance of
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Rs.1,56,76,000/- in respect of borrowings utilized for
purchase of machinery. This decision was confirmed by the
High Court, hence these civil appeals are filed by the
Department.
4. The following question of law has been placed before us
for determination:
"Whether interest paid in respect of borrowings on
capital assets not put to use in the concerned
financial year can be permitted as allowable
deduction under Section 36(1)(iii) of the Income-tax
Act, 1961?"
5. According to the Department, the assessee was not
entitled to treat the interest on borrowings as revenue
expenditure. According to the Department, in view of
Explanation 8 to Section 43(1) of the Income-tax Act, 1961 (for
short, "1961 Act’) the assessee was not entitled to claim
deduction for interest on borrowings, particularly, when the
machines were not put to use during the assessment year
under consideration. According to the Department, provisions
of Section 36(1)(iii) of the 1961 Act were required to be
harmoniously construed along with the provisions of
Explanation 8 to Section 43(1) regarding actual cost.
According to the Department provisions of Section 36(1)(iii)
being general in nature had to give way to the special
provisions contained in Explanation 8 of Section 43(1) of the
1961 Act.
6. At the outset, we may clarify that before the High Court it
was not the case of the Department that a new business was
set up or commenced during the assessment year under
consideration. It was undisputed before the High Court that
three additional machines were installed by the assessee
during the assessment year under consideration for the
production of intravenous injectibles. It was not in dispute
that the assessee had borrowed moneys during the accounting
year commencing from 1.4.91 to 31.3.92.
7. We quote hereinbelow Section 36(1)(iii) and Explanation 8
to Section 43(1) of the 1961 Act which read as follow:
"OTHER DEDUCTIONS
36. (1) The deductions provided for in the following
clauses shall be allowed in respect of the matters
dealt with therein, in computing the income referred
to in Section 28 -
(iii) the amount of the interest paid in respect
of capital borrowed for the purposes of the business
or profession :
Provided that any amount of the interest paid,
in respect of capital borrowed for acquisition of an
asset for extension of existing business or
profession (whether capitalised in the books of
account or not); for any period beginning from the
date on which the capital was borrowed for
acquisition of the asset till the date on which such
asset was first put to use, shall not be allowed as
deduction.
Explanation : Recurring subscriptions paid
periodically by shareholders, or subscribers in
Mutual Benefit Societies which fulfill such
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conditions as may be prescribed, shall be deemed to
be capital borrowed within the meaning of this
clause;"
"Definitions of certain terms relevant to income
from profits and gains of business or profession.
43. In sections 28 to 41 and in this section, unless
the context otherwise requires \026
(1) "actual cost" means the actual cost of the
assets to the assessee, reduced by that portion of
the cost thereof, if any, as has been met directly or
indirectly by any other person or authority:
Provided that where the actual cost of an asset,
being a motor car which is acquired by the assessee
after the 31st day of March, 1967, but before the
1st day of March, 1975, and is used otherwise than
in a business of running it on hire for tourists,
exceeds twenty-five thousand rupees, the excess of
the actual cost over such amount shall be ignored,
and the actual cost thereof shall be taken to be
twenty-five thousand rupees.
Explanation 8: For the removal of doubts, it is
hereby declared that where any amount is paid or is
payable as interest in connection with the
acquisition of an asset, so much of such amount as
is relatable to any period after such asset is first put
to use shall not be included, and shall be deemed
never to have been included, in the actual cost of
such asset."
8. Interest on moneys borrowed for the purposes of
business is a necessary item of expenditure in a business. For
allowance of a claim for deduction of interest under the said
section, all that is necessary is that \026 firstly, the money, i.e.
capital, must have been borrowed by the assessee; secondly, it
must have been borrowed for the purpose of business; and,
thirdly, the assessee must have paid interest on the borrowed
amount [See: Calico Dyeing & Printing Works v. Commr. Of
Income-tax, Bombay City-II \026(1958) 34 ITR 265]. All that is
germane is : whether the borrowing was, or was not, for the
purpose of business. The expression "for the purpose of
business" occurring in Section 36(1)(iii) indicates that once the
test of "for the purpose of business" is satisfied in respect of
the capital borrowed, the assessee would be entitled to
deduction under Section 36(1)(iii) of the 1961 Act. This
provision makes no distinction between money borrowed to
acquire a capital asset or a revenue asset. All that the section
requires is that the assessee must borrow capital and the
purpose of the borrowing must be for business which is
carried on by the assessee in the year of account. What sub-
section (iii) emphasizes is the user of the capital and not
the user of the asset which comes into existence as a
result of the borrowed capital unlike Section 37 which
expressly excludes an expense of a capital nature. The
legislature has, therefore, made no distinction in Section
36(1)(iii) between "capital borrowed for a revenue purpose" and
"capital borrowed for a capital purpose". An assessee is
entitled to claim interest paid on borrowed capital provided
that capital is used for business purpose irrespective of what
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may be the result of using the capital which the assessee has
borrowed. Further, the words "actual cost" do not find place
in Section 36(1)(iii) of the 1961 Act which otherwise find place
in Sections 32, 32A etc of the 1961 Act. The expression "actual
cost" is defined in Section 43(1) of the 1961 Act which is
essentially a definition section which is subject to the context
to the contrary.
9. In the case of Commissioner of Income-tax v.
Associated Fibre and Rubber Industries (P) Ltd. \026 (1999)
236 ITR 471, the Division Bench of this Court held as
follows:
"Even though the machinery has not been actually
used in the business at the time when the
assessment was made, the same has to be treated
as a business asset as it was purchased only for
business purposes. In the circumstances, the
interest paid on the amount borrowed for purpose of
such machinery is certainly a deductible amount."
10. As stated above, the Department contended before us
that the judgments of this Court, prior to insertion of
Explanation 8 in Section 43(1) of the 1961 Act, has no
application to the present case. According to the Department,
Section 36(1)(iii) of the 1961 Act being general in nature has to
give way to special provisions contained in Explanation 8 to
Section 43(1) of the 1961 Act. According to the Department,
in none of the earlier judgments this Court has considered the
true scope of Explanation 8 to Section 43(1) vis-‘-vis Section
36(1)(iii) of the 1961 Act. We find no merit in this contention.
Section 43 groups together all provisions in the nature of
definitions or interpretations relevant to the computation of
income under the head "Profits and Gains of Business".
Section 43(1) defines "actual cost". The definition of "actual
cost" has been amplified by excluding such portion of the cost
as is met directly or indirectly by any other person or
authority. Explanation 8 has been inserted in Section 43(1) by
Finance Act, 1986 (23 of 1986), with retrospective effect from
1.4.74. It is important to note that the word "actual cost"
would mean the whole cost and not the estimate of cost.
"Actual cost" means nothing more than the cost accurately
ascertained. The determination of actual cost in Section 43(1)
has relevancy in relation to Section 32(depreciation allowance),
Section 32A(investment allowance), Section 33(development
rebate allowance), and Section 41(balancing charge). "Actual
cost" of an asset has no relevancy in relation to Section
36(1)(iii) of the 1961 Act. This reasoning flows from a bare
reading of Section 43(1). Section 43 defines certain terms
relevant to income from profits and gains of business and,
therefore, the said section commences with the words "In
Sections 28 to 41 and unless the context otherwise requires"
"actual cost" shall mean the actual cost of the assets to the
assessee, reducing by that portion of the cost thereof, if any,
as has been met directly or indirectly by any other person or
authority. In other words, Explanation 8 applies only to those
Sections like Sections 32, 32A, 33 and 41 which deal with
concepts like Depreciation. The concept of Depreciation is not
there in Section 36(1)(iii). That is why the legislature has used
the words "unless the context otherwise requires". Hence,
Explanation 8 has no relevancy to Section 36(1)(iii). It has
relevancy to the aforementioned enumerated sections.
Therefore, in our view Explanation 8 has no application to the
facts of the present case.
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11. Before concluding on this point we may state that in this
batch of civil appeals we are concerned with the assessment
years 1992-93, 1993-94, 1995-96 and 1997-98. A proviso has
since been inserted in Section 36(1)(iii) of the 1961 Act. That
proviso has been inserted by Finance Act, 2003 w.e.f.
1.4.2004. Hence, the said proviso will not apply to the facts of
the present case. Further, in our view the said proviso would
operate prospectively. In this connection it may be noted that
by the same Finance Act, 2003 insertions have been made by
way of proviso in Section 36(1)(viia) by the same Finance Act
which is also made with effect from 1.4.2004. Same is the
position with regard to insertion of a sub-section after Section
90(2) and before the Explanation. This insertion also operates
w.e.f. 1.4.04. In short, the above amendments have been
made by Finance Act, 2003 and all the said amendments have
been made operational w.e.f. 1.4.04. Therefore, the proviso
inserted in Section 36(1)(iii) has to be read as prospectively
and w.e.f. 1.4.04. In this case, we are concerned with the law
as it existed prior to 1.4.2004. As stated above, we are not
concerned with the interpretation or applicability of the said
proviso to Section 36(1)(iii) w.e.f. 1.4.04 in the present case.
12. In the case of Challapalli Sugars Ltd. (supra) this Court
observed that interest paid on the borrowing utilized to bring
into existence a fixed asset which has not gone into
production, goes to add to the cost of installation of that asset.
It was further observed that if the said borrowing was not "for
the purpose of business" inasmuch as no business had come
into existence, it must follow that it was made for the purpose
of acquiring an asset which could be put to use for doing
business, and hence interest paid on such borrowing would go
to add to the cost of the assets so acquired.
13. In our view the above observations have to be confined to
the facts in the case of Challapalli Sugars Ltd. (supra). It was
a case where the company had not yet started production
when it borrowed the amount in question. The more
appropriate decision applicable to the present case would be
the judgment of this court in the case of India Cements Ltd.
v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras \026 (1966) 60 ITR 52
in which it has been observed that, for considering whether
payment of interest on borrowing is revenue expenditure or
not, the purpose for which the borrowing is made is irrelevant.
In our view, Section 36(1)(iii) of the 1961 Act has to be read on
its own terms. It is a Code by itself. Section 36(1)(iii) is
attracted when the assessee borrows the capital for the
purpose of his business. It does not matter whether the
capital is borrowed in order to acquire a revenue asset or a
capital asset, because of that the section requires is that the
assessee must borrow the capital for the purpose of his
business. This dichotomy between the borrowing of a loan
and actual application thereof in the purchase of a capital
asset, seems to proceed on the basis that a mere transaction
of borrowing does not, by itself bring any new asset of
enduring nature into existence, and that it is the transaction
of investment of the borrowed capital in the purchase of a new
asset which brings that asset into existence. The transaction
of borrowing is not the same as the transaction of investment.
If this dichotomy is kept in mind it becomes clear that the
transaction of borrowing attracts the provisions of Section
36(1)(iii). Thus, the decision of the Bombay High Court in
Calico Dyeing & Printing Works (supra) and the judgment of
the Supreme Court India Cements Ltd. (supra) have been
given with reference to the borrowings made for the purposes
of a running business, while the decision of the Supreme
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Court in Challapalli Sugars Ltd. (supra) was given with
reference to the borrowings which could not be treated as
made for the purposes of business as no business had
commenced in that case. Therefore, there is no inconsistency
between the above decisions.
CONCLUSIONS
14. For the above reasons, we hold that A.O. was not
justified in making disallowance of Rs.1,56,76,000/- in
respect of borrowings utilized for purchase of machines.
Accordingly, the above question is answered in favour of the
assessee and against the Department.
15. Apart from the above question under Section 36(1)(iii),
the present civil appeals are filed by the Department against
the decision of the High Court whereby the High Court has
dismissed Civil Application Nos.53 and 54 of 2001 filed by the
Department. It may be noted that during the pendency of Tax
Appeal Nos.449 and 450 of 2000, the Department had moved
the above two civil applications for amendment of its Memo of
Appeal raising substantial questions of law, namely \026
(a) whether advertisement expenses incurred by the
assessee to create a brand image with enduring
benefit are allowable as revenue expenditure;
(b) whether the Tribunal had erred in granting
deduction under Section 35D regarding short-term
loan, in view of Explanation to Section 35D(3) which
refers only to long-term borrowings;
(c) whether the Tribunal had erred in directing
deduction under Section 80-HH and 80-I on the
miscellaneous income of Rs.26,64,113 being income
on sale of empty containers?
16. Although the Department had moved the said Civil
Application Nos.53 and 54 of 2001 during the pendency of Tax
Appeal Nos.449 and 450 of 2000 well within limitation the
High Court without answering the above three questions
summarily rejected Civil Application Nos.53 and 54 of 2001.
We are of the view that the High Court had erred in dismissing
the above two civil applications for amendment of the Memo of
Appeal in Tax Appeal Nos.449 and 450 of 2000. In our view
the above three questions are substantial questions of law
and, therefore, the High Court ought to have decided those
questions.
17. Accordingly, we remit the above three questions to the
High Court for fresh consideration by it in accordance with
law. Accordingly, Civil Appeal Nos.3952-55 of 2002 and Civil
Appeal Nos.8509-8510 of 2002 filed by the Department are
partly allowed with no order as to costs.