Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
ANGLO-FRENCH TEXTILE CO. LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, MADRAS,
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
22/12/1952
BENCH:
MAHAJAN, MEHR CHAND
BENCH:
MAHAJAN, MEHR CHAND
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
BOSE, VIVIAN
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
CITATION:
1953 AIR 105 1953 SCR 454
CITATOR INFO :
C 1954 SC 198 (10,10A)
R 1958 SC 269 (14)
R 1958 SC 861 (15)
RF 1965 SC1526 (15)
ACT:
Income-tax Act, 1922, ss. 4 (1) (a), 4A (c) (b), 42 (1) and
(3) -Foreign company-Manufacture of goods outside British
India -Sale of goods and receipt of sale proceeds in British
India Assessment under s. 4 (1) (a)-Applicability of s. 42
(1)Determination of residence of company-Allocation of
income between operations carried on within and outside
British India Whether permissible.
HEADNOTE:
The assessee, a company incorporated in the United Kingdom
and having its registered office in London, manufactured
yarn and cloth in their,mill at Pondicherry. The assessee
had appointed another company in Madras as their agents.
The manufactured goods were sold mostly in British India and
partly outside British India. All the contracts in respect
of the sales in British India: were entered into in British
India and deliveries were made and payments were received in
British India. In regard to sales outside British India
also, payments were received in Madras
69
524
through the agents and it was found as a fact that, the
entire profits were received in India:
Held, (i) that in view of the finding of fact that the
entire profits were received in India and the assessee was
liable to tax under s. 4 (1) (a), the provisions of s. 42
(1) had no relevancy ;
(ii)that the income received in British India could not be
said to wholly arise in British India within the meaning of
s. 4A (c) (b) and that there should be allocation of the
income between the various business operations of the
assessee demarcating the income arising in the taxable
territories in the particular year from the income arising
without the taxable territories in that year for the
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purposes of s. 4A (c) (b) of the Act.
Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay v. Ahmedbhai Umarbhai &
Co. ([1950] S.C.R. 335), Pondicherry Railway Company v.
Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras [1931] (58 I.A. 239),
Turner Morrison and Co. v. Commissioner of Income-tax [1951]
(19 I.T.R. 451 ; [1953] 23 I.T.R. 152), referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Appeal No. 1 1 of 1952.
Appeal from the Judgment and Order dated January 18, 1950,
of the High Court of Judicature at Madras (Satyanarayana Rao
and Viswanatha Sastri JJ.) in Case Referred No. 25 of 1947.
O.T.G. Nambiar (Samarendra Nath Mukherjee, with him I for
the appellant.
M. C. Setalvad, Attorney-General for India, and C. K
Daphtary, Solicitor-General for India (G. N. Joshi and P.A.
Mehta, with them) for the respondent.
1952. December 22. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
BHAGWATI J.-This is an appeal from the judgment and order of
the High Court of Judicature at Madras upon a reference made
by the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal under section 66(1) of
the Indian Incometax Act, 1922. The appellant company, the
assessee, is incorporated in the United Kingdom under the
English Companies Act and has it registered office in
London. It owns a spinning and weaving mill at Pondicherry
in French India where it manufactures yarn and cloth.
Messrs. Best and Co. Ltd., Madras, have been appointed
525
the agents of the assessee under an agreement dated, the
11th July, 1939, and have been invested with full powers in
connection with the business of the assessee in the matter
of purchasing stock, signing bills and other negotiable
instruments and receipts and settling, compounding or
compromising any claim by or against the assessee. The yarn
and cotton manufactured in Pondicherry were sold mostly in
British India and partly outside British India. In the
accounting year 1941 and 1942 all the contracts in respect
of the sales in British India were entered into in British
India and the deliveries were made and payments received in
British India. In regard to the sales outside British India
also, payments in respect of such sales were received in
Madras through the said agents.
The total sales of the goods in the assessment year 1942-43
were Rs. 69,69,145 and for the assessment year 1943-44 were
Rs. 93,48,822. The value of the sales in British India
amounted to Rs. 57,07,431 for the assessment year 1942-43
and to Rs. 67,98,356 for the assessment year 1943-44. The
value of the total sales outside British India amounted to
Rs. 12,61,714 for the year 1942-43 and Rs. 25,50,472 for the
year 1943-44. Out of the said amounts received in respect
of the foreign sales the amounts received in British India
were Rs. 9,62,434 for 1942-43 and Rs. 75,230 for 1943-44 and
the amounts received outside British India were Rs. 2,99,280
for 1942-43 and Rs. 24,75,242 for 1943-44.
On these facts the Income-tax Officer found that the
assessee was resident in British India within the meaning of
section 4-A (c) (b) of the Act by reason of its income
arising in British India in the year of account exceeding
its income arising without British India and on that basis
he assessed the company for the two assessment years 1942-43
and 1943-44 as - resident in British India on the profits
and gains which had accrued to the company both within and
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without British India under section 4 (1) (b) (i) and (ii)
of the Act. The order of the Income-tax Officer was
confirmed by the Appellate Assistant Commissioner and, the
order
526
of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner was confirmed by the
Appellate Tribunal on the 15th May, 1946.
The assessee applied to the Appellate Tribunal under section
66 (1) of the Act for reference to the High Court of certain
questions of law arising out of its order. The,
Commissioner of Income-tax in his reply suggested the
following two questions for reference
(1)Whether on the facts and in the circumstances of the
case, the Appellate Tribunal was right in holding that
section 42 (1) and (3) of the Income-tax Act has no
application to income accruing or arising to the assessee
company in British India or to income received by it in
British India during the previous year?"
" (2) Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances of the
case, the Appellate Tribunal was right in holding that the
entire income of the assessee company during the accounting
year ended 31st December, 1941, was assessable under section
4(1) of the Incometax Act, and that no portion of such - in
come was entitled to be exempted under section 42(3) of the
Act ?
The Appellate Tribunal however referred the following
questions to the High Court:-
" (1) Whether on the facts and in the circumstances of the
case, section 42 (1) and (3) of the Act alone and not
section 4 of the Act have application to the income accruing
or arising to the assessee company in British India and to
the income attributable to the sale proceeds received by it
in British India during the previous year?"
" (2) Whether on the facts and in the circumstances of this
case the entire profits and gains arising to the assessee
company in British India should be taken into account for
the purpose of applying the test laid down under section 4-A
(c) (b) or only that part of the profits which should be
determined after the application of sectioin 42(3) of the
Act as reasonably be attributable to that part of the
operations carried on in British India ?" and
" (3) Whether on the facts and in the circumstances’ of the
case, the provisions. of the Indian Income-tax
527
Act contained in section 4 (1) with the subsections and
section 4-A (c) (b) are not ultra vires in so far as they
seek to assess foreign income of the company registered
outside British India ?"
The third question was concluded by the decision of their
Lordships of the Privy Council in the case of Wallace Bros.
& Co. Ltd. (1) and was therefore not argued before the High
Court and the High Court answered it by stating that the
provisions of section 4 (1) and section 4-A (c) (b) of the
Act were not ultra vires the Indian Legislature. The
question No. (1) was further amended by agreement between
the learned counsel for the revenue authority and the
assessee and it was reframed as under:
" (1) Whether on the facts and in the circumstances of the
case section 42 (1) and (3) of the Act alone and not section
4 of the Act have application to the income accruing or
arising by reason of sales in British India of manufactured
goods where the manufacturing process took place outside
British India?"
The question (2) was retained in the form in which it had
been referred by the Appellate Tribunal. Both these
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questions were answered against the assessee by the High
Court. The assessee obtained the necessary certificate from
the High Court for leave to appeal to this court and hence
this appeal.
It may be observed that in reply to the. notice under
sections 22(2) and 38 of the Act for the assessment year
1942-43 the agents of the assessee had on the 1st June,
1943, submitted a return under protest and had claimed that
the income shown in the return should be apportioned under
section 42(3) of the Act as between the operations carried
on in British India and operations carried on outside
British India. They had further declared that the company
was non-resident in British India during the previous year
for which the return was made. In the statement enclosed
-therewith the total world income for the year ended 31st
December, 1941, had been shown at Rs. 10,23,907. Profit at
10 per cent. on British Indian sales which
(1) (1948) 76 I.A. 86.
528
aggregated to Rs. 57,07,431 was shown at Rs. 5,70,743 and
after deduction of the proportionate expenses relating to
sales in British India and sundry charges was put down at
the net figure of Rs. 4,58,026 which was shown as the
British Indian income. It was thus contended that the
income arising in British India in the year of account did
not exceed its income arising without British India and that
therefore the assessee was non-resident in British India.
This calculation of profits at the rate of 10 per cent. on
British Indian sales did not make any allocation between
manufacturing profits and merchanting profits and all the
profits arising out of British Indian sales were shown in
one lump sum. The Income-tax Officer took it as settled law
that the profits arose in the country in which the sales
took place and as the bulk of the sales had taken place in
British India the bulk of the profits accrued or arose in
British India. He held that the provisions of section 42(3)
would apply only where the profits arose outside British
India but which by virtue of section 42(1) were deemed to
accrue or arise in British India, and that it did not apply
where the profits actually arose in British India by the
sale of goods in British- India. He therefore held that the
entire profits on "Sales made in British India actually
arose in British India and were liable to tax under section
4 (1) (c). On a calculation of the figures he came to the
conclusion that the income of the assessee arising in
British India in the accounting year exceeded its income
arising without British India and that the assessee was
resident in British India under section 4-A(c). The
assessee was also held ordinarily resident in British India
under section 4-B(c) and he assessed the company accordingly
on that basis. The Appellate Assistant Commissioner also
proceeded on that basis and confirmed the order of the
Income-tax Officer. He was however further of the opinion
that the entire profits were received where the sale pro-
ceeds were received and the assessee was therefore. liable
to tax under section 4(1)(a) also. This conclusion was
arrived at by him relying upon two decisions of their
Lordships of the Privy Council: (1)
529
Pondicherry Railway Company V. Commissioner of Income-tax,
Madras(1) and Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras v. Diwan
Bahadur Mathias(2), in the first of which at page 369 Lord
Macmillan observed as follows : Their Lordships accordingly
are of the opinion that the income derived by the
Pondicherry Railway Company from the payment made to them by
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the South Indian Railway Company is on the facts stated
received in British India within the meaning of the Act by
the Agent of the Pondicherry Railway Company there on their
behalf " It is unnecessary to go on to consider whether the
business is carried on in British India, which is the form
which question (c) takes, for it is enough if the profits of
a business carried on by the assessee are received in
British India and the place where the business is carried on
is not material." The Appellate Tribunal adverted to the
fact that the whole income of the company, so far as 1942-43
is concerned was received in British India and so far as
1943-44 is concerned a major part of it in this way was
received in British India, but did not base its decision on
this aspect of the case. It held that the scope of section
42(3) was circumscribed by confinement to those cases where
profits were deemed to accrue or arise under section 42
alone and there was no warrant for extending the principle
of apportionment to other cases where the profits and gains
were made taxable under other sections of the Act. It also
held that section 42 dealt with " deemed " income whereas
section 4-A (c) dealt with income that arose in British
India. Therefore, it could not be said that for the purpose
of section 4-A (c) a proportionate "deemed " income should
be taken as income that arose in British India. When the
application for reference was made to the Appellate Tribunal
the Commissioner of Income-tax in the question (1) which he
suggested included within its ambit this aspect of the
income having been received by the assessee in British India
during the previous year. But when the Appellate Tribunal
refrained the question (1) it merely
(1) (1931) 5 I.T.C. 363-
(2) [1939] 7 I.T.R- 48.
530
confined it to income accruing and arising to the assessee
in British India and to the income attributable to the sale
proceeds received by it in British India during the previous
year. The question (1) as finally framed by the High
Court adverted to the income accruing or arising by reason
of sales in British India on manufactured goods where
manufacturing process took place outside British India and
the aspect of the income having been received by the
assessee in British India was absolutely ignored.
When the questions were originally referred to the High
Court the position in law as then understood was that
profits arose in the country in which the sales took place.
This position was however negatived, particularly in the
case of manufacturing businesses, in a decision of this
court. in Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay v. Ahmedbhai
Umarbhai & Co., Bombay(1).
After hearing at considerable length the arguments urged
before us on behalf of the assessee as well as the Income-
tax authorities we feel that in view of that decision the
questions framed by the Tribunal and the High Court do not
bring out the real point in controversy between the parties
and it is agreed that the following two questions truly
represent I and bring out the matter on which the parties
are at issue. We therefore resettle the questions
originally framed and reframe them as below:
(1) Whether in view of the finding of fact in this case
that the entire profits were received in India and the
company is liable to tax under section 4 (1) (a) of the Act,
the provisions of section 42(1) have any relevancy ?
(2) Can the income received in India be said to arise in
India within the meaning of section 4-A(c)(b) of the Act ?
If not, should only those profits determined under section
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42(3) as attributable to the operations carried out in India
be taken into account for applying the test laid down in
section 4-A (c) (b) ?
(1) [1950] S.C.R. 335; 18 I.T.R. 472.
531
The case is remanded to the High Court with the direction
that it should give its opinion on, these two questions and
submit the case to this court within three months.
S. N. Mukherjee, for the appellant.
Porus A. Mehta, for the respondent.
1953. December 8. BHAGWATI J.-By our judgment dated the
22nd December, 1952, we reframed the questions as below:
(1) Whether in view of the finding of fact, in this case
that the entire profits were received in India and the
company is liable to tax under section 4 (1) (a) of the Act,
the provisions of section 42 (1) have any relevancy;
(2) Can the income received in India be said to arise in
India within the meaning of section 4A (c) (b) of the Act ?
If not, should only those profits determined under section
42 (3) as attributable to the operations carried out in
India be taken into account for applying the test laid down
in section 4A (c) (b),
and remanded the case to the High Court with the direction
that it should give its opinion on these two questions. The
High Court has accordingly considered these two questions
which were referred to it for opinion and has answered the
question No. I in the negative and against the assessee and
question No. 2 in the manner following, i.e., the income
received in British India cannot be said to wholly arise in
India within the meaning of section 4A (c) (b) of the Act
and that there should be allocation of the income between
the various profit producing operations of the business of
the company in the light of the principle contained in the
judgments in Ahmedbhai Umarbhai’s case(1) and in Anglo-
French Textile Company v. Income-tax Commissioner(2)
relating to the same assessee.
When the matter came up for further arguments before us on
this opinion of the High Court,Shri S. N. Mukherjee, the
learned counsel for the appellant
(1) (1950] 18 I.T.R. 472,
(2) A.I.R, 1953 SCR 105
70
532
did not contest the correctness of the answer to question
No. I in view of the decision of this court in Turner
Morrison & Co., Ltd. v. Commissioner of Incometax, West
Bengal(1). It may be noted that even before the High Court
the learned counsel appearing for both the parties agreed
that the matter was concluded by this decision against the
assessee and question No. I was answered accordingly by the
High Court.
In regard to the question No. 2 however Shri Porus A. Mehta,
learned counsel for the respondent, contended before us that
the matter was not concluded by the judgment of the majority
in Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay v. Ahmedbhai Umarbhai
& Co., Bombay(1) and that the High Court was wrong in the
answer which it gave to this question. He contended that
the decision in the case of Commissioner of Income-tax,
Bombay v. Ahmedbhai Umarbhai & Co., Bombay("), turned on the
statutory provisions of the Excess Profits Tax Act read with
section 42 (3) of the Indian Income-tax Act which was
expressly incorporated therein by virtue of section 21 of
the Act and not on any general principles of apportion. ment
of income, profits or gains enunciated therein. He took us
in extensover the portions of the majority judgments and
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tried to demonstrate that the decision there was based
purely on the applicability of section 42 (3) of the Indian
Income-tax Act, but for the applicability of which,
according to his submission, there was no room for the
apportionment of the income, profits or gains of the
business, in the manner contended by the appellant. We do
not accept this contention of the respondent. Section 4A(c)
(b) is concerned with the income arising in the taxable
territories in a particular year exceeding the income
arising without the taxable territories in that year and the
very words of the section are capable of being construed as
also contemplating a state of affairs where there may have
to be a division or apportionment between the income arising
in the taxable territories and the income arising without
the taxable territories
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 520.
(2) [1950] S.C.R 335.
533
in the particular year. The whole of the argument urged
before us on behalf of the respondent was aimed at
establishing that the scheme of the Indian Income-tax Act
was not to tax the source of income but the income, profits
or gains from whatever source derived which were received or
were deemed to be received in the taxable territories or
which accrued or arose or were deemed to accrue or arise in
the taxable territories during the particular year and that
it was immaterial whether the income, profits or gains were
derived from business operations carried on in the taxable
territories or without the taxable territories. This
argument was possible when the decisions which held that
income, profits or gains arose or accrued at the places
where the sales took place were good law, because then there
was no question of apportionment of income, profits or gains
arising from the business operations carried on in the
taxable territories ’and income, profits or gains arising
from the business operations carried on without the taxable
territories. The moment however it was held, as it was done
in Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay v. Ahmedbhai Umarbhai
& Co., Bombay(1), that though profits may not be realised
until a manufactured article was sold profits were not
wholly made by the act of sale and did not necessarily
accrue at the place of sale and to the extent profits were
attributable to the manufacturing operations profits accrued
at the place where business operations were carried on,
these decisions went by the board. The question whether a
particular part of the income, profits or gains arose or
accrued within the taxable territories or without the
taxable territories would have to be decided having regard
to the general principles as to where the income, profits or
gains could be said to arise or accrue. Section 42 of the
Indian Income-tax Act has no relevance to the determination
of this question because it is mainly concerned with income
Which is deemed to have arisen, or accrued and not with
income which actually arises or. accrues within the taxable
Territories. Section 42 (3) also is a part of the’ scheme
which is enacted in section 42 and cannot help
(1) (1950)S.C.R. 335.
534
in the determination of the question before us As a matter
of fact the use of the words "under section 42(3)" used in
the question No. 2 as reframed by us was not appropriate and
the only question which should have been sent to the High
Court was "If not, should only those profits determined as
attributable to the operations carried out in India be taken
into account for applying the test laid down in section 4A
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(c) (b)."
If, therefore, section 42(3) has nothing to do with the
determination of the income arising in the taxable
territories as distinguished from the income arising without
the taxable territories as understood in section 4A(c) (b)
of the Act what we have got to consider is whether there is
anything in the Act which prevents the application of the
general principle of apportionment of income, profits or
gains between those which are derived from business
operations carried on within the taxable territories and
those which are derived from business operations carried on
without the taxable territories. The contention which was
advanced by Shri Porus A. Mehta on behalf of the respondents
in this behalf, viz., that the word ,arise " was the only
word used in section 4A (c) (b) and the word "accrue" did
not find any place therein, that there was a distinction
between the conception of arising and the conception of
accrual and that the apportionment of the income was
appropriate only in cases where the income arose and was
inappropriate in cases where the income accrued, was
sufficiently repelled in the judgment in Commissioner of
Income-tax, Bombay v. Ahmedbhai Umarbhai &.Co., Bombay(1),
where it was observed:
" Whether the words ’derive’ and ’Produce’ are or are not
synonymous with the words’accrue’ or arise it can be said
without hesitation that the words ’accrue’ or " arise’
though not defined in the Act are certainly synonymous and
are used in the sense of ’bridging, in as a natural result’.
Strictly speaking, the word ’accrue’ is not synonymous with
’arise’, the former connoting idea of growth or accumulation
and the
(1) [1950] S.C.R. 335 at p. 364.
535
latter of the growth or accumulation with a tangible shape
so as to be receivable. There is a distinction in the
dictionary meaning of these words, but throughout the Act
they seem to denote the same idea or ideas very similar and
the difference only lies in this that one is more
appropriate when applied to a particular case. In the case
of a composite business, i.e., in the case of a person who
is carrying on a number of businesses, it is always
difficult to decide as to the place of the accrual of
profits and their apportionment inter se. For instance,
where a person carries on manufacture, sale, export and
import, it is not possible to say that the place where the
profits accrue to him is the place of sale. The profits
received relate firstly to his business as a manufacturer,
secondly to his trading operations, and thirdly to his
business of import and export. Profit or loss has to be
apportioned between these businesses in a businesslike
manner and according to well-established principles of
accountancy. In such cases it will be doing no violence to
the meaning of the words accrue’ or ’arise’ if the profits
attributable to the manufacturing business are said to arise
or accrue at the place where the manufacture is being done
and the profits which arise by reason of the sale are said
to arise at the place where the sales are made and the
profits in respect of the import and export business are
said to arise at the place where the business is conducted.
This apportionment of profits between a number of businesses
which are carried on by the same person at different places
determines a so the place of the accrual of profits."
The phraseology of section 42(3) of the Act’also repels the
contention in so far as the profits and gains of the
business which are referred to therein and which are capable
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of apportionment as therein mentioned are deemed to accrue
or arise in the taxable territories thus using the words
"accrue" and "arise" as synonymous with each other.
The above passage is also sufficient in our opinion to
establish that the apportionment of income, or gains between
those arising from business opinion
536
carried on in the taxable territories and those arising from
business operations carried on without the taxable
territories is based not on the applicability of section
42(3) of the Act but on general principles of apportionment
of income, profits or gains. That was really the ratio of
the judgment of the majority in Commissioner of Income-tax,
Bombay v. Ahmedbhai Umarbhai & Co., Bombay(1), and any
attempt to distinguish that ’ease from the present one by
having resort to the statutory provisions of the Excess
Profits Tax Act is really futile. We are accordingly of the
opinion that the answer given by the High Court to the
question No. 2 also was correct.
The appeal before us will accordingly be allowed and the
answers to the questions Nos. 1 and 2 refrained by us will
be as under:-
Question No. 1-In the negative; and
Question No. 2-The income received in British India cannot
be said to wholly arise in India within the meaning of
section 4A (c) (b) of the Act and that there should be
allocation of the income between the various business
operations of the assessee company demarcating the income
arising in the taxable territories in the particular year
from the income arising without the taxable territories in
that year for the purposes of section 4A (c) (b) of the Act.
In so far as the appellant has failed in one part of the
case and succeeded in another part we think that the proper
order for cost should be that each party bears and pays his
own costs of this appeal including ,the costs of the remand
before the High Court.
Appeal allowed.
Agent for the appellant: P. K.. Mukherjee.
Agent for the respondent: G. H. Rajadhyaksha.
537