Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, MADRAS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
V. MR. P. FIRM, MUAR
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
26/10/1964
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
SHAH, J.C.
SIKRI, S.M.
CITATION:
1965 AIR 1216 1965 SCR (1) 815
CITATOR INFO :
R 1989 SC 611 (6)
D 1989 SC1654 (15)
RF 1992 SC 224 (11)
ACT:
Income Tax-Debtor and Creditor (Occupation Period) Ordinance
(Malaya Ord. No. XLII of 1948)-Scope of-Liability to tax on
principle of estoppel.
HEADNOTE:
The Japanese currency introduced into Malaya during the
Japanese occupation began to depreciate after January 1963,
so that debts paid off and received in that currency
resulted in loss to the creditors. The Government of India,
by a notification issued in 1947, propounded a scheme to
give relief to Indian nationals carrying on business in
Malaya, and the Central Board of Revenue issued further
instructions on the scheme. One of the instructions was
that if any creditors opted to accept the scheme, a recovery
subsequently made by them, with respect to the debt due to
them was to be taken as their income. In 1948, the Debtor
and Creditor (Occupation Period) Ordinance No. XLII of 1948,
of Malaya was passed by the Malaya Legislature. Under that
Ordinance, payments made in Japanese currency were to be
valued and scaled down in accordance with its Schedule, so
that a payment in Japanese currency would be a valid
discharge of a debt only to the extent of such revaluation.
A creditor could enforce his debt to the extent not
discharged and the debtor was under an obligation to
discharge it to that extent. On the questions as to (i)
whether amounts, recovered by creditors who had accepted the
scheme, from their debtors, in terms of the Ordinance, were
liable to income-tax; and (ii) whether the debtors could
claim the payments made by them as deductions, the High
Court held, (i) that the assessees who had received payments
would not he liable to tax in respect of amounts they had
received towards principal, but they would be so liable in
respect of moneys which they had received towards interest;
and (ii) that those assessees who had made payments towards
the debts, would be entitled to deduct from their income,
and claim exemption from tax only such amounts as they had
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paid on account of interest, but they would not be entitled
to deduct any payment made on account of principal. The
High Court also gave directions that open payments should be
appropriated according to the law of appropriation of
payments. The Commissioner and a debtor-assessee appealed
to the Supreme Court.
HELD : The appeals should be dismissed.
(i) The creditor-assessees were not’ precluded on the
principle of "approbate and reprobate" from pleading that
the income they derived subsequently, by realisation of the
revived debts, was not taxable income. The doctrine was
only a species of estoppel and cannot operate against the
statute. If a particular income is not taxable under the
Income-tax Act, it cannot be taxed on the basis of estoppel
or any other equitable doctrine. [822 F-H]
(ii) Under the Ordinance, the discharged debts became
enforceable to the extent of the balance of the amount due
after the scaling down of the
816
payments, and the contention of the Revenue that the State
provided for compensation for the loss incurred by the
creditor-assessees could not be accepted. [825 B-E]
(iii) The Income-tax Officer could only impose income
tax on the income recovered by the assessees thereafter
towards their debts if such income was taxable under the
provisions of the Act. So too in regard to the payments
made by the Assessees towards such debts, they could claim
relief by way of deduction only if such deductions were
permissible under the Act. [825 F-G]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 55, 888 and
889 of 1962 and 518 to 520, 722, 724, 725, 727 to 729 & 732
to 735 of 1963.
Appeals from the judgment dated August 19, 1958, of the
Madras High Court in Referred Case No. 52, R. C. No. 90, 43
and 82, 33, 58 to 60, 64 and 65 of 1955 and 97, 98, 102,
112, 113 and 115 of 1956, respectively.
C. K. Daphtary, Attorney-General, S. V. Gupte,
Solicitor-General, Gopal Singh, R. H. Dhebar and R. N.
Sachtliey, for the appellant (in C. A. No. 55 of 1962).
C. K. Daphtary, Attorney-General, S. V. Gupte,
Solicitor-General, N. D. Karkhanis, R. H. Dhebar and R. N.
Sachthey, for the appellant (in C. As. Nos. 888-889 of 1962
and 722, 724, 725, 728 to 729 and 732 to 735 of 1963) and
for the respondents (in C. As. Nos. 415 of 1962, 518 to 520
of 1963).
R. Ganapathy Iyer, for the appellants (in C. A. Nos.
518 to 520 of 1963) and for the respondents (in C. As.
Nos. 55 of 1962, 888 to 889 of 1962 and 729, 732 and 735 of
1963).
K. Srinivasan and R. Gopalakrishnan, for the
respondent (in C.A. Nos. 733 to 734 of 1963).
K. R. Chaudhuri, for the respondent (in C.A. No. 724
of 1963).
A. V. Viswanatha Sastri, K. Parasaran, K. Rajendra
Chaudhuri and K. R. Chaudhuri, for the respondent (in C.A.
No. 722 of 1963).
S. Swaminathan and M. S. Narasimhan, for the
respondents ,(in C.A. Nos. 725 and 728 of 1963).
817
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Subba Rao J. These 16 appeals are filed against the Judg-
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ment of the High Court of Judicature at Madras and raise the
question of the effect of the Debtor and Creditor
(Occupation Period) Ordinance No. XLII of 1948 of Malaya,
hereinafter called the Ordinance, on the liability of the
assessee to pay income-tax in respect of pre-occupation
debts revived thereunder.
During the last World War Japan occupied Malaya. During
the period of their occupancy i.e., from February 1942 to
September 1945, they introduced their own currency in
dollars. During that period both the currencies were in
vogue though there was a progressive depreciation of
Japanese currency in its relation to Malayan currency. On
September 5, 1945, the British Government re-occupied Malaya
and introduced the Malayan currency as legal tender in place
of Japanese currency. The Indian nationals, who were
carrying on business in Malaya during the; period of
Japanese occupation, were hit adversely and suffered losses.
The Government of India came to their rescue and by
Notification dated August 14, 1947, they propounded a scheme
to give them relief by allowing them to set off the losses
incurred by them during the 5 years relevant to the
assessment years 1942-43 to 1946-47 against the profits of
the assessment years 1942-43 and 1941-42. We shall consider
the scheme in some detail at a later stage of the judgment.
On December 16, 1948, the Malayan Legislature passed the
Ordinance declaring that payments made in Japanese currency
by debtors to their creditors in respect of debts incurred
prior to and during the Japanese occupation were to be
valued and scaled down in accordance with the schedule
appended to the Ordinance. We shall deal with Ordinance in
some detail at the appropriate place but the broad effect of
the Ordinance was that though a debt had been discharged
fully by paying the amount due in Japanese currency, the
debt was revived in proportion to the depreciation of
Japanese currency in relation to the Malayan currency as
laid down by the schedule. The creditor’s right to recover
the debt to the said extent and the liability of the debtor
to pay the same revived.
As the question raised is one of law and does not depend
upon the peculiar facts of each case, we think it is enough
if we
818
state briefly the facts of two cases, one illustrating the
claim of an assessee against the imposition of income-tax in
respect of the income he realized by the revival of the
debts and the other illustrating that of an assessee to an
allowance on the ground that he paid the scaled down debts
over again.
The respondent in Civil Appeal No. 722 to 735 of 1963 is
a firm carrying on business of money-lending in Kampar in
Federated Malaya State. It applied for relief under the
special scheme. It incurred loss for the aforesaid four
years of Rs. 1,33,125. For the years 1941-42 and 1942-43 it
had a profit of Rs. 53,010 and Rs. 35,753 respectively. The
said profits were set off against the losses and the taxes
paid by it for the years 1941-42 and 1942-43 were refunded
to it. After the Ordinance was passed, in terms of that
Ordinance the respondent recovered 6,437 dollars during the
previous year ending April 12, 1952 corresponding to the
assessment year 1952-53.
Civil Appeals Nos. 518 to 520 of 1963 deal with the
converse case. The appellant therein is a Hindu undivided
family carrying on, inter alia, a money-lending business in
its own village in Kaula Kubbu Bharu and Parit Buntar in the
Federated Malaya States. In the course of its business it
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had taken moneys as deposits from various persons before
April 12, 1942. During the period of occupation it
discharged its liability to various creditors but after the
publication of the Ordinance it had to pay again to
creditors 6,214.58 dollars in the previous year ending April
12, 1950; 28,586 dollars for the previous year ending April
12, 1951; and 11,547 dollars for the previous year ending
April 12, 1952. The aforesaid amounts were claimed by the
appellant as deductions respectively for the assessment
years 1950-51, 1951-52 and 1952-53.
The following tabular form at a glance gives the claims
of the assessees as creditors or debtors, as the case may be
819
1. civil Appeal No.
2. R.C. No.
3. appellant
4. Respondent
5. Assessment year
6. Claim
7. Issue for determination
1. 722 t0 735 of 1963 & 55 of 1962
2. 33 of 1955
3. Comm. of I.T., Madras
4. O. RM SP. SV. Firm.
5. 1951-52
6. $ 57395-69
7. Creditor claims that the receipt is capital and not
revenue.
1. Nil
2. 52 of 1955
3. do
4. V. MR. Firm Muar
5. 1951-52
6. $39,851
7. do
1. Nil
2. 58 of 1955
3. do
4. VP.AL. CT. Chidambaram chettiar
5. 1951-52
6. $9889
7. do
1. Nil
2. 59 of 1955
3. do
4. RM. P. Alagappa Chettiar
5. 1951-52
6. $355000
7. do
1. Nil
2. 60 of 1955
3. do
4. M. RM. SP. V. Venkatachalam Chettiar
5. 1951-52
6. $9006
7. do
1. Nil
2. 64 of 1955
3 do
4. RM. P. Alagappa Chettiar.
5. 1951-52
6. $$35500
7. do
1. Nil
2. 65 of 1955
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3. do
4. M. RM. SP. SM. Swaminathan Chettiar
5. 1951-52
6. $ 9006
7. do
1. Nil
2. 97 of 1956
3. do
4. M/s A.L.A. Firm
5. 1951-52
6. $8388
7. do
1. nil
2. 98 of 1956
3. do
4. AR. M. M. Firm
5. 1951-52
6. 6770
7. do
1. Nil
2. 102 of 1956
3. do
4. S.M. RM. Meyyappa Chettiar & sons
5. 1950-51, 1951-52
6. $1119, $3214
7. do
1. Nil
2. 112 of 1956
3. do
4. AR. M. M. Firm (Penang) AR. M. M. Arunachalam
5. 1953-54
6. $2445
7 do
1. Nil
2. 113 of 1956
3. do
4. P. S. R. M. Annamalai Subramaniam Chettiar
5. 1951-52
6. $ 12004
7. do
1. Nil
2. 115 of 1956
3. do
4. M/s L. AR. Firm
5. 1951-52
6. $1979.62
7. do
1. 518 to 520 of 1963
2. 115 of 1956
3. O. V. R. SV. AP. Arunachalam Chettiar
4. Commissioner of Income-tax, madras
5. 1951-52, 1952-53
6. $ 28, 586 $11, 574
7. Debtor claims deduction , On account of this payment
1. 888 & 889 of 1962
2. 90 of 1955
3. Commissioner of Income Tax, madras
4. O. R. M. O. M. A. M. Chidambaram Chettiar
5. 1951-52 & 1952-53
6. $ 6, 746 $664
7. Creditor claims that the receipt is capital and not
revenue.
Supp/64-9
820
The Income-tax Officers held that during the period of
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Japanese occupation the debts were discharged and that the
receipt of additional amounts under the Ordinance was in
fact assessable to tax. They also held that in the case of
an assessee who was a debtor no deduction was permissible on
the ground that the amounts paid represented only repayment
of capital and not business expenditure. On appeal the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner held that the receipts by
the assessee in respect of the revived debts were only
realization of the original amounts lent and, therefore,
could not be regarded as income. In the case of the claim
for deduction, he agreed with the view of the Income-tax
Officer. On further appeal to the Tribunal, in the case of
receipts it held that the assessee by claiming benefits
under the scheme and in including all its cash and Bank
balances in the Malayan business as part of the losses
incurred therein in effect indirectly wrote off the debts
due to them and, therefore, the recoveries under the Ordin-
ance were only a subsequent realization of the written off
bad debts and, therefore, assessable to income-tax. In
those appeals relating to deductions, the Tribunal confirmed
the orders of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner.
The High Court answered the questions referred to it as
follows:
(1) Where an assessee has received
repayments, he will not be liable to tax in
respect of amounts he has received as or
towards principal, but he will be so liable in
respect of moneys which he has received as or
towards interest.. Where only part of the debt
has been recovered, the assesse will be at
liberty, subject to the law relating to
appropriation of payments, to appropriate the
money he has received either towards principal
or interest. The assessment in respect of
such receipts will proceed on this basis, that
is to say, if the payment has been lawfully
appropriated towards interest, will be liable
to pay tax thereon. But if he has lawfully
appropriated it towards principal, he will not
be liable to pay tax on it.
(2) Where an assessee has made payments, he
will be entitled to deduct them from his
income and claim exemption from tax for only
such amounts as he has paid on account of
interest. He will not be entitled to deduct
any payments on account of principal.
821
The Tribunal was directed to review the assessment in the
light of the said directions. The main reason given by the
High Court for giving the said answers was that the result
of the Ordinance was to revive the old debts and the
question of the exigibility of the said income to tax can
only be decided on the provisions of the Income-tax Act and
not by the terms of the scheme of the Ordinance. Hence the
appeals.
The learned Solicitor-General, appearing for the Revenue,
raised before us the following three points: (1) Sub-s. (2)
of s. 4 of the Ordinance on which reliance was placed by the
High Court applies only to pre-occupation capital debts and
the debts with which the appeals are concerned are not pre-
occupation capital debts and, therefore, they are not
revived thereunder. (2) The assessees having taken benefit
under the scheme propounded by the Government of India which
contained a condition that if any recoveries subsequently
made would be taken as income,, they are now precluded from
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contending that the, amounts realized towards the revived
debts are not taxable on the principle of approbate and
reprobate. And (3) on a reasonable construction of the
relevant sections of the Ordinance it should be held that
there was no revival of the debts but only that the State
had provided for compensation for the losses incurred during
the occupation period by the assessees.
The first question had not been raised at any stage of the
proceedings before the Tribunal and the High Court. Nor
does it find a place in the statement of case. We cannot,
therefore, allow the learned Counsel to raise it for the
first time before us.
Nor has the second question been raised in the High Court in
the form in which it is presented before us. The scheme
propounded by the Government of India, inter alia, contains
the following provisions :
(i) No assessee was under any obligation to
accept the scheme. If he desired to opt for
the scheme be was required to give option with
one month after he was informed of the scheme.
(ii) An assessee was permitted to include in
his expenses certain items which would be
inadmissible under the Indian Income-tax Act.
(iii) The losses suffered by an assessee
during the five years relevant to the
assessment years 1942-43 to 1946-47 were to be
aggregated.
822
(iv) An assessee was permitted to carry the
aggregated loss backward and set it off
against his profits for the assessment year
1942-43.
(v) Any loss still unabsorbed could be
carried backward to the year 1941-42.
(vi) Any excess tax found to have been paid
after recomputing the income of an assessee by
carrying his loss backward could be refunded
to him.
(vii) The loss could not be carried forward.
The Central Board of Revenue issued further instructions on
the above scheme by its letter dated December 1, 1947. One
of the instructions was that debts due to the assessee if
paid in Japanese currency would be taken to have been
satisfied to that extent and excluded from the asset side in
the balance sheet, provided that if any recovery was
subsequently made, it was to be taken as income. Briefly
stated, under the scheme the losses suffered by an assessee
during the assessment years 1942-43 to 1946-47 were set off
against his profits for the assessment years 1942-43 and
1941-42 and any unabsorbed loss could not be carried
forward. The debts discharged in Japanese currency were
excluded from the assets side in the balance sheet but the
authority reserved for itself the right to treat any
recoveries subsequently made as income. The contention is
that the assessees having opted to accept the scheme,
derived benefit thereunder, and agreed to have their
discharged debts excluded from the asset side in the balance
sheet subject to the condition that subsequent recoveries by
them would be taxable income, they are now precluded, on the
principle of "approbate and reprobate", from pleading that
the income they derived subsequently by realization of the
revived debts is not taxable income. The doctrine of
"approbate and reprobate" is only a species of estoppel; it
applies only to the conduct of parties. As in the case of
estoppel, it cannot operate against the provisions of a
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statute. If a particular income is not taxable under the
Income-tax Act, it cannot be taxed on the basis of estoppel
or any other equitable doctrine. Equity is out of place in
tax law; a particular income is either exigible to tax under
the taxing statute or it is not. If it is not the Income-
tax Officer has no power to impose tax on the said income.
The decision in Amarendra Narayan Roy v. Commissioner of
Income-tax, West Bengal(1) has no bearing on the question
raised
(1) A.I.R. 1954 Cal. 271.
823
before us. There the concessional scheme tempted the
assessee to disclose voluntarily all his concealed income
and he agreed to pay the proper tax upon it. The agreement
there related to the quantification of taxable income but in
the present case what is, sought to be taxed is not a
taxable income. The assessee in such a case can certainly
raise the plea that his income is not taxable under the Act.
We, therefore, reject this plea.
To appreciate the third argument it is necessary to notice
the relevant terms of the Ordinance. The Ordinance was
issued by the Malayan Government to regulate the
relationship between the debtor and creditor in respect of
debts incurred prior to and during the period of the enemy
occupation of the territories comprising the federation of
Malaya. The relevant sections of the Ordinance read:
Section 4. Discharge during occupation period
of preoccupation debts :
(1) Subject to the provisions of sub-s. (2)
of this section, where any payment was made
during the occupation period in Malayan
currency or occupation currency by a debtor or
by his agent or by the Custodian or a
liquidation officer purporting to act on
behalf of such debtor, to a creditor, or to
his agent or to the Custodian or a Liquidation
Officer purporting to act on behalf of such
creditor, and such payment shall be a valid
discharge of such pre-occupation debt to the
extent of the face value of such payment.
(2) In any case-
(a) where the acceptance of such payment in
occupation currency was caused by duress or
coercion; or
(b) where such payment was made after the
thirtyfirst day of December 1943, in
occupation currency in respect of a pre-
occupation capital debt, exceeding two hundred
and fifty dollars in amount, which-
(i) was not due at the time of such payment;
or
(ii) if due, was not demanded by the creditor
or by his agent on his behalf and was not
payable within the occupation period under a
time essence contract;
824
(iii) if due and demanded as aforesaid was not
paid within three months of demand or within
such extended period as was mutually agreed
between the creditor or his agent and the
debtor or his agent; or
(c)......... such payment shall be revalued in
accordance with the scale set out in the
Schedule to this Ordinance and shall be a
valid discharge of such debt only to the
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extent of such revaluation.
THE SCHEDULE
1. (a) : Where any such payment as it
mentioned in sub-section (2) of section 4 of
this Ordinance was made in occupation currency
during any month or on any day mentioned in
the first column of the scale set out in
paragraph 3 of this Schedule, such payment
shall be revalued by taking the number of
dollars in occupation currency set out
opposite such month or day in the second
column of the said scale as equivalent to one
hundred dollars Malayan currency, and so in
proportion for any portion of such payment
amounting when revalued, to less than one
hundred dollars Malayan currency.
(b) Where any such payment was made in
occupation currency on or after the thirteenth
day of August 1945, the value of such payment
shall be taken to be nil.
2. (a) : In the case of an unsatisfied
occupation debt or part thereof which falls to
be revalued under section 6 of this Ordinance
such debt or part thereof shall be revalued at
the appropriate date as provided in the said
section or sub-section by taking the number of
dollars in occupation currency mentioned
opposite such month or day in the second
column of the scale set out in paragraph 3 of
this Schedule as equivalent to one hundred
dollars Malayan currency, and so in proportion
for any portion of such debt amounting, when
revalued to less than one hundred dollars
Malayan currency.
(b)When any such debt or part of a debt fell
due for payment on or after the thirteenth day
of August 1945,its value shall be taken to be
nil.
3. Sliding scale of the value of occupation
currency 1942-45.
We have not allowed the Solicitor-General to contend that
sub-s. (2) of S. 4 of the Ordinance does not apply to the
debts in
825
question as throughout the proceedings of this case it was
assumed that it applies to the said debts. During the
Japanese Occupation both the Japanese currency and the
Malayan currency were in vogue. In January 1943 the
Japanese currency began to depreciate and by August 13,
1945, it ceased to be of any value. During that process of
devaluation debts were paid off and received in Japanese
currency which resulted in loss to the creditors. To
regulate the relationship between creditors and debtors.
during that period the said Ordinance was passed by the
Malayan Legislature on December 16, 1948. Under the said
Ordinance payments in Japanese currency were to be valued
and scaled down in accordance with the Schedule appended to
the Ordinance. If a debtor had paid his debt in depreciated
Japanese currency, he was required to pay over again a
certain amount to be ascertained by the application of the
provisions of the Schedule. In terms sub-s. (2) says that
the payment in Japanese currency shall be a valid discharge
of such debt only to the extent of such revaluation. When
the payments made towards debts were scaled down, the debts
were revived in regard to the balance of the debt. After
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the making of the Ordinance, the creditor could enforce his
debt to the extent not discharged and the debtor had the
obligation to discharge the same. On the express terms of
the Ordinance it is impossible to accept the contention that
the State provided for compensation for the losses incurred
bY the assessees. indeed the State did not pay any
compensation at all. The legal relationship of the creditor
and debtor was not created by the Ordinance but it was
regulated on the basis of the pre-existing relationship.
We, therefore, hold, agreeing with the High Court, that
under the Ordinance the discharged debts became enforceable
to the extent of the balance of the amount due after the
scaling down of the payments. If so, the Income-tax Officer
could only impose tax on the income recovered by the
assessees thereafter towards their debts if such income was
taxable under the provisions of the Act.
So too, in regard to the payment made by the assessees
towards such debts they could claim relief by way of
deductions only if such deductions were permissible under
the Act.
The High Court held that the assessees who had received
repayments would not be liable to tax in respect of amounts
they had received towards principal but they would be so
liable in respect of moneys which they had received towards
interest. It further held that those assessees who had made
payments towards the
826
debts would be entitled to deduct from their income and
claim exemption from tax only such amounts as they had paid
on account of interest but they would not be entitled to
deduct any payment made on account of principal. The High
Court also gave a direction that in the case of open
payments the respective amounts paid towards principal or
interest should be ascertained in accordance with the law of
appropriation of payments. Neither the learned Solicitor-
General, who appeared for the Revenue, nor the learned
counsel, who appeared for the assessees, questioned the
correctness of the said directions if the construction we
placed on the Ordinance was correct. The directions given
by the High Court will, therefore, stand. In our view, the
High Court gave correct answers to the questions referred to
it.
In the result the appeals are dismissed with costs. One
hearing fee.
Appeals dismissed
827