Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 5
PETITIONER:
M/S HASIMARA INDUSTRIES LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX WEST BENGAL-IX AND ANOTHER
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 13/05/1998
BENCH:
SUJATA V. MANOHAR, S. RAJENDRA BABU
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
Rajendra Babu, J.
This appeal by special leave under Article 136 of the
Constitution of India is preferred by an assessee under the
Income Tax Act against an order made on 29th August, 1986 by
the High Court of Calcutta in Income Tax Reference No. 683
of 1979. The question that fell for consideration of the
High Court is as to deductibility of a sum of Rupees twenty
lakhs out of the assessee’s profits as sum was given by way
of advance to M/s Saksaria Cotton Mills Ltd. for
modernisation of its plants.
When Saksaria Cotton Mills Limited was in the process
of Liquidation the assessee-company which owned tea estates
filed a scheme in those proceedings and entered into a leave
and licence agreement with that company. Originally the
agreement was for a period of three years from 1st April.
19*63 to 31st March. 1966 which was extended by mutual
agreement upto 30th June, 1966. Clause 13 which is relevant
for our purpose in the agreement reads as follows:-
" In the event of any new and
complete unit or plant and/or
machinery and/or reequipment being
installed by the licence at the
licensee’s own costs within the
licensed premises no depreciation
will be paid by the licensee to the
licenser in respect there of and on
the expiry of the period of the
licence or its earlier
determination by the licensee, the
licensee will be entitled to remove
and take away at the licensee’s own
cost such new plant, machinery and
equipment provided that the
licensee will in that event restore
the licensed premises to the
contention in which they were at
the time of commencement of the
license and make good the damage,
if any, caused to the license and
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 5
make good the damage, if any,
caused to the licensed premises by
removal of such new plant,
machinery and equipment. Mills
machinery, plant, equipment,
fittings and fixtures being
provided by the licensee in
replacement of any existing part or
parts of such machinery, the
licensed will be entitled in lieu
thereof to retain such sold part or
parts of such machinery so replaced
and to deal with the same in such
manner as the licensee deems fit.
If the licensee desires that the
licensor shall bring any new plant,
machinery or equipment or unit it
will be in the absolute and
uncontrolled discretion of the
licensor whether to do so or not
and on such terms as may be agreed
to at that time."
The amount of Rupees twenty lakhs is said to have been given
by way of advance in terms of the said clause.
Before the Assessing Officer the assessee claimed the
advance of Rupees twenty lakhs as deductible on the ground
that it became irrecoverable on account of the incapacity of
M/s Saksaria Cotton Mills Limited to repay the same. The
Assessing Officer disallowed the claim stating that the
amount represented as advance to M/s Saksaria Cotter Mills
Limited for modernisation of its factory and the said amount
was not taken into consideration in computing the income of
the assessee in any assessment year. he also held that the
said sum did not represent the money lent in the ordinary
course of business. He further noticed that even otherwise
the said sum was not entitled to deduction because it had
not become a bad debt in the relevant year of account and
the assessee made no effort to recover the same. On appeal
against the assessment order, the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner held that the advance given by the assessee
Company could not be recovered from M/s Saksaria Cotton
Mills Limited and had to be allowed as a deduction as
revenue expenditure. He was of the view that assessee-
Company could not have removed the plant and machinery and
the debenture holders of M/s Saksaria Cotton Mills Limited
had lien over the entire plant and machinery. Thus, the said
amount represented loss incurred by the assessee in the
course of carrying on of its business and should be allowed
as deduction on account of ordinary commercial principles.
The matter was carried in appeal by the Department to the
Income Tax Appellate Tribunal. The Tribunal noticed that the
said amount of Rupees twenty lakhs which was advanced was to
be treated as capital investment as per the resolutions of
the Board of Directors of the assessee Company. Thus, the
assessee had acquired an advantage of enduring nature and
the claim of the assessee was not allowable as business
loss. The amount having been spent on the improvement of the
mill was not advance in the ordinary course of assessee
business nor was it incidental to such business.
Aggrieved by the order of the Tribunal on a reference
made to the High Court at the instance of the assessee, the
High Court at the instance of the assessee, the High Court
held that it is a settled principle that loss of money lent
or advanced would be a capital loss unless the loan was made
by a money lender for whom money was his stock-in-trade and
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 5
such a situation would arise in case of a banking or money
leading business where money is treated as stock-in-trade.
It was also noticed by the High Court that although assessee
had some money lending business, the amount of Rupees twenty
lakhs was not lent to M/s Saksaria Cotton Mills Limited as a
loan transaction, but pursuant to clause 13 of the
Agreement. It was also noticed by the High Court that it was
not a trade dept and the assessee advanced a sum of Rupees
Twenty lakhs so that new plants and machinery could be
bought by M/s Saksaria Cotton Mills Limited for the benefit
of the assessee during the period of the agreement. Thus,
the assessee had the advantage of using a new and more
modern profit-making aparatus. When the Company itself had
not treated the advance of Rupees twenty lakhs to M/s
Saksaria Cotton Mills Limited as by way of a loan
transaction and the amount had been treated by the assessee
as the capital advance as evidenced by the resolutions based
by the Board of Directors at the time of granting of loan,
the High Court held that the findings of the Tribunal should
be affirmed and answered the question referred for its
opinion against the assessee. It is against this order the
present appeal is filed by special leave.
Ms. Radha Rangaswami, learned counsel for the appellant
submitted that though the assessee had made a lumpsum
payment not in order to gain an anduring benefit, out only
to augment income in the course of its ordinary business and
sought exemption was not capital in nature being allowable
as revenue expenditure and in terms of Section 37 of the
Income Tax Act.
The learned counsel for the Department contended that
the view of the decision of this Court in Hasimara
Industries Limited vs. Commissioner of west Bengal and
Another (1998) 1 SCC 503 in the very case of the assessee
there was hardly any thing left for decision by us. He
submitted that the agreement which is subject matter of
consideration in these proceedings was also considered in
that decision and in the context of another transaction had
been interpreted.
Undaunted by the submission of the learned counsel for
the Department, Ms. Radha Rangaswami persisted in her
argument. She relied on Alembic Chemical Works Co. Ltd. Vs.
Commissioner of Income Tax, Gujarat 177 I.T.R. 377. That was
the case where the assessee who was engaged in manufacture
of antibiotics including penicillin acquired knowhow to
produce higher yield and sub-culture of strains of
penicillin and there was no evidence to indicate that this
was not in the line of existing manufacturing operations
and, therefore this Court took the view that the payment was
made in the course of carrying on an existing business and
the butlay was incurred for the purpose of acquiring the
technical knownow in relation to its business and
considering the rapid strides in science and technology is
to pigeonholing an outlay, such as in this case as capital.
It was on that basis the Court held that though lumpsum
payment had been made once for all it was not capital in
nature and attracted the deduction under Section 37 of the
Income Tax Act.
Again, the learned counsel for the assessee relied upon
the decision in Commissioner of Income Tax, Kerala vs.
Malayalam plantations Ltd. 53 I.T.R. 140 wherein estate duty
was paid on the death of non-domiciled shareholders and was
"for the purpose of the business" and "for the purpose of
earning profits" and therefore, allowable as business
expenditure. However that is not the position in the present
case wherein the assessee has given an advance in a sum of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 5
Rupees twenty lakhs for a purpose not in the line of its
business as found by the Tribunal which is the last fact
finding authority. In Empire Jute Co. Ltd. Vs. Commissioner
of Income Tax 124 I.T.R.1 certain loom hours were purchased
by one member of an assessee from another member and the
members in the Association had bound themselves to work
their mills for limited hours per week and in those
circumstances the price paid was held to be in the nature of
revenue expenditure in terms of Section 10(2) (xv) of the
Indian Income Tax Act, 1952 and not deductible. The test
adopted in that case is the nature of the advantage in a
commercial sense and where it is only the advantage in the
capital field, the expenditure cannot be allowed, but if the
advantage consists merely in facilitating the assessee’s
trading operations or enabling the management and conduct of
the assessee’s business to be carried or more efficiently or
more profitable while leaving the fixed capital untouched,
the expenditure would be on revenue account, even though the
advantage may endure for an indefinite future. The purchase
of loom hours did not create any new asset and there was no
addition to or expansion of the profit-making apparatus of
the assessee nor the permanent structure of which the Income
was the product remained the same. It was not enlarged nor
did the assessee acquire a source of profit of income when
it purchased the looms in question. The expenditure incurred
was primary and essentially related to the operation or
working of the looms which constituted the profit making
apparatus of the assessee and was expenditure laid out as
part of the process of profit earning. It was on that basis
the claim was allowed. Therefore that decision will not help
the assessee in the present case.
In Commissioner of Income Tax vs. Hashimara Industries
Limited. 175 I.T.R. 477 the very agreement with which we are
concerned itself was subject matter of consideration by the
High Court. Pursuant to the agreement amount was deposited
with the cotton mills for acquiring profit making apparatus.
Then there was closing down of the cotton mill and loss of
deposit constituted capital loss. It was held in that case
that the assessee’s ordinary business was manufacture and
sale or the tea and it started cotton manufacturing business
acquiring the right to operate the mill belonging to another
company for a specified period under a leave and licence
agreement after depositing certain sum in terms of the
agreements. After the expiry of the agreements M/s Saksaria
Cotton Mills Limited itself managed the cotton mills out
suffered loss and went into liquidation. consequently, the
sum deposited by the assessee remained unpaid. In those
circumstances, it was held that the loss of the deposit was
in the capital account and not business expenditure of
assessee. That matter was carried in appeal to this Court in
Hasimara Industries Limited. vs. Commissioner this Court
upheld the view taken by the High Court.
It is clear from the findings recorded by the Tribunal
and the High Court that the assessee’s business is
manufacture and sale of tea and is not engaged in cotton
manufacturing business at all; that while it intended to
enter into cotton manufacturing purposes did not set up a
cotton mill, but obtained operating rights from another
company under the leave and licence agreement for the
purpose of acquiring the profit making apparatus for a
duration of three years or a little more; that the business
of running a cotton mill was not its own, but was only
operating the said mill under leave and licence agreement;
that the amount of advance in a sum of Rupees of twenty
lakhs was given not for its own purpose by way of business
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 5
expenditure for modernishing the mill, but as capital to the
lessor who in turn had to modernise the mill. In the
resolutions made by the Board of Directors it was clear that
the transaction entered into was not in the nature of a loan
transaction or a money lending transaction and thus the loss
suffered by the assess was a capital loss and hence the
amount could not be deducted from the assessee a income as
business lose.
In the results, the view taken by the High Court
affirming the view of the Tribunal appears to us to be
correct and we dismiss this appeal. In the facts and
circumstances of the case, there shall be no order as to
costs.