Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 2243-2249 1993
PETITIONER:
THE COMMISSIONER OF AGRICULTURAL INCOME-TAX. KERALA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE PLANTATION CORPORATION OF KERALA LTD., KOTTAYAM
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 29/11/2000
BENCH:
S.P.Bharucha, Doraswamy, Ruma Pal
JUDGMENT:
Raju, J.
The correctness of a decision of the Full Bench of the
Kerala High Court construing Explanation 2 to Section 5 of
the Agricultural Income-Tax Act, 1950, inserted by Kerala
Act 9 of 1961, to be confined in its application only to
Clause (j) of Section 5 and not to Section 5 as a whole is
put in issue in these appeals. Section 5 of the
Agricultural Income-Tax Act reads as follows: 5.
Computation of agricultural income. - The agricultural
income of a person shall be computed after making the
following deductions, namely :-
(a) any sums paid in the previous year on account of -
(i) land revenue or any tax in lieu thereof due to the
Government, the Sreepandaravagai or the Sreepadam;
(ii) Jenmikaram;
(iii) Thiruppuvaram; and
(iv) local rates and cesses and municipal taxes, in
respect of the land from which the agricultural income is
derived.
(b) any rent paid in the previous year to the landlord
or superior landlord, as the case may be, in respect of
land, from which the agricultural income is derived;
(c) any expense incurred in the previous year on the
maintenance of any irrigation or protective work constructed
for the benefit of the land from which the agricultural
income is derived;
Explanation - Maintenance includes current repairs
and includes also, in the case of protective dykes and
embankments all such work as may be necessary from year to
year for repairing any damage or destruction caused by flood
or other natural causes.
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(d) any expenses incurred in the previous year on
repairs in respect of any capital asset which was purchased
or constructed for the benefits of the land from which the
agricultural income is derived;
(e) any interest paid in the previous year on any
amount borrowed and actually spent on any capital
expenditure incurred for the benefit of the land from which
the agricultural income is derived;
(f) where land from which the agricultural income is
derived is subject to a mortgage or other capital charge,
any interest paid in the previous year in respect of such
mortgage or charge;
(g) any interest paid in the previous year on any
debt, whether secured or not, incurred for the purpose of
acquiring the land from which the agricultural income is
derived;
(h) any sum paid in the previous year as interest in
respect of agricultural loans taken and expended on the land
from which agricultural income is derived;
(i) interest paid on any amount borrowed and actually
spent for the purpose of re-claiming, improving or
cultivating the property from which agricultural income is
derived;
(j) any expenditure (not being in the nature of
capital expenditure or personal expenses of the assessee)
laid out or expended wholly and exclusively for the purpose
of deriving the agricultural income;
(k) such other deductions as may be prescribed
generally or in particular cases;
(l) in respect of depreciation of buildings,
machinery, plant and furniture which are the property of the
assessee and are required for the purpose of deriving the
agricultural income, a sum equivalent to such percentage on
the written down value, thereof as may in any case or class
of cases be prescribed and where the buildings have been
newly erected or the machinery or plant newly installed a
further sum subject to such conditions as may be prescribed:
Provided that full particulars have been duly
furnished:
Provided further that the aggregate of all such
allowances made under this Act shall in no case exceed the
original cost to the assessee of the buildings, machinery,
plant or furniture, as the case may be;
(m) in the case of agricultural income under the head
rent or revenue derived from land referred to in sub-clause
(1) of clause (a) of section 2 - (agricultural income from
rent or revenue) :-
(i) any expenses actually incurred in the previous
year in the collection of agricultural income;
(ii) any expenses incurred in the previous year on
repairs in respect of any capital asset used in connection
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with the collection of rent due in respect of the land from
which the agricultural income is derived;
(n) in the case of agricultural income referred to in
sub-clause (2) of the clause (a) of section 2 -
(agricultural income from agriculture) :-
(i) the expenses other than capital expenditure
incurred in the previous year of cultivating the crop from
which the agricultural income is derived and of transporting
such crop to market, including the maintenance of
agricultural implements and cattle required for such
cultivation and transport or both;
(ii) any tax, cess or rate paid on the cultivation or
sale of the crop from which such agricultural income is
derived;
(iii) the cost incurred in the previous year in the
purchase of replacement of cattle or implements, which are
necessary for cultivation, to such extent as may be
prescribed, less the amount realized by sale of the cattle
or implements replaced or their estimated value;
(iv) any sum paid in the previous year in order to
effect an insurance against loss or damage of crops or
property from which the agricultural income is derived or
insurance against loss or damage in respect of building,
machinery, plant and furniture necessary for the purpose of
deriving the agricultural income: Provided that any amount
received in respect of such insurance in any year shall be
deemed to be agricultural income for the purposes of this
Act, and shall be liable to agricultural income-tax after
deducting the portion, thereof, if any, which has been
assessed to income-tax under the Indian Income-tax Act,
1922;
(v) any expenses incurred in the previous year on the
maintenance of any capital asset if such maintenance is
required for the purposes of deriving the agricultural
income:
Provided that no deduction shall be made under this
section if it has already been made in the assessment under
the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922.
Explanation 1 - For the purpose of this section paid
means actually paid or incurred according to the method of
accounting upon the basis of which agricultural income is
computed under this section;
Plant includes vehicles and Scientific apparatus
purchased for the purpose of deriving the agricultural
income; and written down value means-
(i) in the case of assets acquired in the previous
year, the actual cost to the assessee and
(ii) in the case of assets acquired before the
previous year the actual cost to the assessees less such sum
as may be prescribed.
Explanation 2 - Nothing contained in this section
shall be deemed to entitle a person deriving agricultural
income to deduction of any expenditure laid out or expended
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for the cultivation, upkeep or maintenance of immature
plants from which no agricultural income has been derived
during the previous year.
The appeals before us relate to three Assessment Years
1975- 76, 1976-77 and 1977-78. Revisions came to be filed
before the High Court in respect of the three assessment
years against the original remand orders and orders
subsequently passed by the Tribunal on appeals filed before
it against orders giving effect to earlier orders of remand.
The respondent-assessee projected claims for deduction of
the rent paid to its landlord in respect of the entire
estate including the area covered by immature oil palm
plants, which did not as also could not yield any income and
interest paid on the loan obtained and utilised for the
purpose of cultivation etc. in respect of the entire estate
comprising both mature yielding as well as unyielding
immature oil palm plants. It is in adjudicating the
tenability or otherwise of these claims that the High Court
has chosen to consider the role of Explanation 2 to Section
5 and held that Explanation 2 is to be an Explanation to
only Section 5 (j) and not to the other sub-clauses of
Section 5. The High Court has chosen to come to such a
conclusion despite the opening words used, nothing in this
section.. in Explanation 2 by adopting and applying what
it chose to describe as internal as well as external aids of
construction. In the opinion of the High Court, its
conclusion about the limited role and applicability of
Explanation 2 only to Section 5 (j) arrived at on the basis
of internal aids gets confirmed by construction with
reference to external aids also.
Heard the learned senior counsel for the
appellant-State and the learned counsel for the
respondent-assessee. Section 5 in providing for computation
of agricultural income for the purposes of the Act
stipulates that the agricultural income of a person shall be
computed after making the various deductions enumerated in
Clauses (a) to (n) to the extent mentioned and also in the
manner specified therein. It is an admitted position and
the High Court also proceeded on such basis only having
regard to some of the decisions of this Court as well as of
the Kerala High Court that Clause (j) of Section 5 of the
Act is in the nature of a residuary provision, in which
event in our view, it necessarily means that the other
clauses are in relation to a few of the enumerated items of
expenditure envisaged for deduction and the mere fact that
some alone are illustrated specifically do not render those
provisions to be read in a truncated or disjointed manner
from the residuary clause ignoring the avowed object of
Section 5 as a whole, viz., computation of agricultural
income, as defined in Section 2 (a) of the Act after making
the deductions to which an assessee is found eligible.
Thus, viewed when Explanation 2 specifically use the words,
nothing contained in this section shall be expressing a
specific intention to encompass the entire Section 5 of the
Act reading it otherwise and to confine its relevance and
application to only clause (j) of Section 5 would amount to
not only rewriting the statutory provision by the Court, but
also doing violence to the plain and simple language used.
When an Explanation or Proviso was to apply to any one
clause or limb alone of Section 5, the legislature has
chosen to incorporate it even in the very Section 5 below
the specific or particular clause which it was meant to
explain or except as in clause (c) or (l) and (n). The fact
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that instead of doing so the Explanation 2 has been
incorporated at the end of Section 5 along side Explanation
1, which also use the words for the purpose of this
section.., the intention of the legislature must be
considered to have been made certain, positive and
unambiguous, leaving no room or scope whatsoever for having
recourse to either internal or external aids for
interpretation or construction of the said provision.
The High Court appears to have been carried away by
the fact of some assumed similarity of the purpose of
expenditure envisaged in Section 5 (j) and those covered by
Explanation 2 and from the further fact of retrospective
effect having been given to the said Explanation with effect
from 1.4.51, to presume that in doing so the legislative
intention indicated was to avoid refunds being made on
account of the Supreme Court judgment reported in (1961) 41
ITR 751 SC: Travancore Rubber & Tea Co. Ltd. case which,
in turn, concerned Section 5 (j) of the Act. This in our
view is fallacious and cannot be so presumed. The decision
of the Supreme Court declaring the position of law on the
scope of Section 5 (j) might have been the occasion for the
legislature to enact Explanation 2, and that too with
retrospective effect but the said occasion would have
equally enlightened and served as an eye opener about the
need for enacting the Explanation in such a manner as to
avoid similar claims being projected in respect of
expenditure or deductions envisaged in the various other
limbs of Section 5 as well, apart from clause (j) alone.
This Court has always been reiterating that if the
intendment is not in the words used it is nowhere else and
so long as there is no ambiguity in the statutory language
resort to any interpretative process to unfold the
legislative intent becomes impermissible and the need for
interpretation arises only when the words in the statute are
on their own terms ambivalent and do not manifest the
intention of the legislature. (vide 1988 (2) SCC 299 (M/s
Doypack Systems Pvt. Ltd. etc. vs. Union of India & Ors.
etc.) and 1990 (2) SCC 231 (M/s Keshavji Ravji & Co. & Ors.
vs. Commissioner of Income Tax). That apart an Explanation
is intended to either explain the meaning of certain phrases
and expressions contained in a statutory provision or
depending upon its language it might supply or take away
something from the contents of a provision and at times even
to, by way of abundant caution, clear any mental cobwebs
surrounding the meaning of a statutory provision spun by
interpretative process to make the position beyond
controversy or doubt.
Consequently, we are unable to approve the reasoning
of the High Court as to the need for having recourse to
internal or external aids to interpret the Explanation 2 to
Section 5 as well as its ultimate conclusion to whittle down
the otherwise wide range and area of operation and
application of Explanation 2 to the entirety of Section 5 of
the Act. In our view, Explanation 2 to Section 5 of the
Act, therefore explains generally as to what are not
deductible as expenditure for the purpose of computing the
agricultural income in the light of the various clauses of
Section 5 of the Act, as a whole.
The appeals pertaining to all the assessment years
involve in common the question of deduction of rent and the
further question of deduction of interest arises only in
respect of the appeals for the assessment years 1975-76 and
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1976-77. The claims of the respondent, be it in respect of
rent or interest paid to the creditors by the assessee on
the loans obtained and utilised for the purpose of
cultivation etc. shall not be eligible for deduction so far
as it relates to the respective portions spent in respect of
land or the bringing up of the immature oil palm plantation.
The appeals, therefore, have to be and are allowed. Cost on
parties.