Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M/S. CARBORANDUM CO.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
C.I.T., MADRAS
DATE OF JUDGMENT11/04/1977
BENCH:
UNTWALIA, N.L.
BENCH:
UNTWALIA, N.L.
BHAGWATI, P.N.
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
CITATION:
1977 AIR 1259 1977 SCR (3) 475
1977 SCC (2) 862
CITATOR INFO :
R 1981 SC 148 (12)
RF 1989 SC1707 (5)
ACT:
Income-tax Act, 1922---S. 4(1)(e)--Distinction between
concept of actual accrual and notion on deemed
accrual--Reference under Income-tax Act, 1922-- New facts
neither raised nor considered by the Tribunal cannot be
entertained by the High Court at reference stage.
Income-tax Act, 1922--S. 42--Scope and applicablity of
’business connecttion’.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant a foreign company within the meaning of s.
2(5A) of Income Tax Act, entered into an agreement with
M/s. Carborandum Universal Ltd., having its registered
office at Madras on June 22, 1955 and rendered certain
technical and knowhow services. In view of the said serv-
ices it was to ’receive from the Indian company an annual
service fee equal to 3 per centum of the net sale proceeds
of the products manufactured by the latter.
During the year of account relevant to the assessment
year 1957-58 the appellant company received a sum of Rs.
95,762/- from the Indian company as its service fee. A good
slab of it was deducted at source on account of incometax
and super-tax. The appellant company fried its return of
income for the year in question with an application for
refund of the entire tax deducted at source. The income tax
officer took the view in his assessment order that 5% of the
technical fee paid to the American company was earned by it
in India and only that small amount was assessable to in-
come-tax and directed the refund of major portion of the tax
deducted at source to the assessee company. The Commission-
er of Income-tax in exercise of his revisional powers under
s. 33B of the Act took the view that at least 75% of the
technical fee earned by the assessing company during the
year of account had accrued or .arisen in India even though
the technical information was supplied by the assessee
company from outside India and the technical personnel
furnished by the assessee company to the Indian company
although worked under the control of and was paid for by the
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latter inasmuch as the situs of the services so rendered was
in India. Treating the technical fee in the nature of
royalty paid, it directed the Income-tax Officer to revise
the assessment on the basis that 75% of it should be taken
as income accruing or arising in India to the assessee
company. On appeal, the Appellate Tribunal set aside the
said order and restored that of the Income-tax Officer even
though it was of the view that even 5% of the technical fee
could not be taken as income of the assessee. company taxa-
ble under the Act. The Tribunal held that the use of the
technical assistance and know-how given by the American
Company and made use of by the Indian Company in the taxable
territory could not make the former liable to payment of
income tax on the amount of technical fee received by it nor
was it any royalty. It also rejected a new stand taken by
the Revenue that the assessee company must be deemed to be
working in conjunction with the Indian Company in the manu-
facture of its products. On reference under s. 66( 1 ). of
the Act the Revenue. took another new plea that the agree-
ment clearly established a business connection between the
two companies and as such technical fee received by the
assessee company had accrued or arose from such business
connection assessable to income-tax under s. 4(1)(c) read
with s. 42 of the Act. The objection of the assessee.
company to the entertainment of the new point at the refer-
ence stage that it did not arise out of the Tribunal’s order
was over-ruled by the High Court on the ground that the
question referred to was in general terms and comprehensive
enough to embrace within its ambit the point of applicabili-
ty of s. 42(1) of the Act to the transactions in question.
Upholding the stand taken on behalf-of the Revenue the High
Court answered the question referred to it in its favour
against the assessee company. On appeal by certificate the
appellant contended:
476
(1) That the High Court could not go into
the matter of business connection between the
two companies when such a question was never
raised or in issue at any earlier stage;
(2) That the High Court was wrong in
rounding the tax liability of the assessee
company on the basis of the alleged business
connection. Its finding or view in that regard
is wholly erroneous.
(3) That even assuming that the High Court
was right in its view of basing the tax li-
ability of the assessee company on the alleged
business connection, it failed to examine the
question of apportionment under s. 42(3) of
the Act.
(4) That apportionment under s. 42(3) and
determination of the tax liability of the
assessee company in pursuance thereof could
not be more than the liability to pay tax on
5% of the total technical fee as found by the
Income-taxOfficer and upheld by the Tribunal,
HELD: (1) The technical service fee received by the assessee
company from the Indian company during the accounting year
relevant to the assessment year 1957-58 did not accrue or
arise in India. Since 5% of the technical service fee was
brought to tax by the I.T.O. and no appeal was filed against
it on behalf of the assessee company, the technical fee in
excess of 5% was not taxable. [484 B-D]
(2) The High Court did not keep in view the distinction
between the concept of actual accrual and the notion of
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deemed accrual evidenced from s. 4(1) (c) & s. 42 but mixed
the one with the other while answering the reference in
question. The income assessable to income tax u/s. 4(1)(c)
is of two kinds viz. (1) accruing or arising in the taxable
territories and (ii) deemed to accrue or arise to the non-
resident in the taxable territory. The concept of actual
accrual or arising of income in the taxable territories,
although not depending upon the receipt of the income in the
taxable territories is quite distinct and apart from the
notion of deemed accrual or arising of the income. [481 A-
B].
(3) The High Court was wrong in entertaining at the
reference stage on the basis of the alleged general and
compendious nature of the question referred to it by the
Tribunal the new point based upon the theory of business
connection, which was neither raised before the Tribunal nor
considered by it; nor did it arise on the findings of fact
recorded by it. [481 F-G]
Commissioner of Income Tax, Bombay v. Scindia Steam
Navigation Co. Ltd. 42 ITR 589, followed.
(4) The High Court went wrong in its approach to the
question raised before it and did not quite correctly appre-
ciate the scope and applicability of s. 42 of the Act. On a
plain reading of sub-sections (1) and (3) of section 42, it
would appear that income accruing or arising from any busi-
ness connection in the taxable territories-even though the
income may accrue or arise outside the taxable
territories--will be deemed to be income accruing or arising
in such territory, provided operations in connection with
such business, either all or a part, are carried out in the
taxable territory. If all such operations are carried out
in the taxable territory, sub-section (1.) would apply and
the entire income accruing or arising outside the taxable
territory but as a result of the operations in connection
with the business giving rise to the income would be deemed
to accrue or arise in the taxable territories. If, however,
all the operations are not carried out in the taxable terri-
tories, the profits and gains of the business deemed to
accrue or arise in the taxable territories shall be only
such ’profits and gains are reasonably attributable to that
part of the operations carried out in the taxable territo-
ries. Thus comes in the question of apportionment under
subsection (3) of s. 42. [482 C-F]
Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab v. R.D. Aggarwal & Co.
and Anr.56 ITR 20, referred to.
(5) In the instant case the High Court was wrong in its
view that activities of the foreign personnel lent or deput-
ed by the American company amounted to a business activity
carried on by that company in the taxable territory. The
service rendered by the American company in that connection
was wholly and
477
solely rendered in the foreign territory. No part of the
activity or operation could be said to have been carried on
by the American company in India, even if there was any
business connection between the earning of the income in
the shape of the technical fee by the American company and
the affairs of the Indian company. In the absence of such a
sustainable finding, the provisions of s. 42 either of sub-
section (1) or of sub-section (3):were not attracted at all.
In order to rope in the income of a non-resident under the
deeming provision it must be shown by the Department that
some of the operations were carried out in India in respect
of which the income is sought to be assessed. [483 E-H]
Commissioner of Income Tax, Madras I v. Carborandum Co.
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92 ITR 411 overruled.
C.I.T. Bombay City IV. Tata Chemicals Ltd. 94 ITR 85,
approved.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 89 of
1975.
(From the Judgment and Order dated the 4th May 1973 of
the Madras High Court in Tax Case No. 183 of 1967).
N.A. Palkhivala, R. Balasubramanian, LB. Dadachanji,
A.C. Moneses, Mrs. A.K. Verma, C.R. Dun, Ravinder Narain and
O.C. Mathur, for the appellant.
R.M. Mehta, and R.N. Sachthey, for the respondent.
K.R. Ramamani and 1. Ramamurthi, for the Intervener.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
UNTWALIA, J. This is an appeal by certificate from the
decision of the Madras High Court in a Reference made by
the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal under section 66(1) of the
Income Tax Act, 1922--hereinafter referred to as the Act.
M/s Carborandum Co..of the United States of
America--hereinafter called the American’ Company or the
Assessee Company, is: the appellant. The Central Board of
Revenue has declared it a Company under section 2(5A) of the
Act. It has specialized in the manufacture of bonded abra-
sive and coated abrasive products. For the improvement and
advancement in the line of its manufacture, it has a Re-
search Wing also. The results of the research are incorpo-
rated in pamphlets prepared from time to time.
The Assessee Company entered into an agreement dated
June 22, 1955 with M/s Carborandum Universal Ltd.--hereinaf-
ter called the Indian company, having its registered office
at Madras. As per the terms of the agreement the American
Company was to render and did render to the Indian Company
certain technical and know-how services of the following
nature :-
(i) furnishing of technical information
and know-how" with respect to the manufacture
of bonded abrasive and coated abrasive
products;
(ii) providing technical management
including factory design and lay out, plant
and equipment production, purchase of.. mate-
rials, manufacturing specifications and quali-
ty of product;
4--502 SCI/77
478
(iii) furnishing comprehensive technical
information of all developments in the manu-
facture of the special products;
(iv) providing the Indian company With a
resident factory manager for starting the
plant and superintending its operations during
its initial production stages, as also other
technical personnel necessary for the
operation of the plant;
(v) training Indian personnel to replace
the foreign technical personnel as quickly as
possible.
In lieu of all the services aforesaid, as per the agreement,
the American company was to receive from the Indian company
an annual service fee equal to 3 per centum on the net sale
proceeds of the products manufactured by the latter each
year.
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During the year of account relevant to the assessment
year 1957-58 the assessee company received a sum of Rs.
95,762/- from the Indian company as its service fee. A good
slab of it was deducted at source by the Indian company on
account of income-tax and super-tax payable .on the said
sum. The American company filed a Return of income for the
year in question with an application for refund of the
entire tax deducted at source. The Income-tax Officer took
the view in his assessment order that 5% of the technical
fee paid to the American company was earned by it in India
and Only that small amount was assessable to income-tax.
Consequently, he directed the refund of a major portion of
the tax deducted at source to the assessee company. The
Commissioner of Income-tax in exercise of his power under
section 338 of the Act revised the order of the Income-tax
Officer and took the view that at least 75 % of the techni-
cal fee earned by the assessee company during the year of
account had accured or arisen in India. In the main, the
basis of his order was that even though the technical infor-
mation was supplied by the assessee company from outside
India, the information received by the Indian company was
put to use only in the taxable territory and the technical
fee paid by it was mainly on account of such use. The
Commissioner was also of the view that the technical person-
nel furnished by the assessee company to the Indian company
although worked under the control of and was paid for by the
latter, the situs of the services so rendered was in India.
Treating the technical fee in the nature of royalty paid, it
directed the Income-tax Officer to revise the assessment on
the basis that 75% of it should be taken as income accruing
or arising in India to the assessee company.
The American company went up in appeal to the Appellate
Tribunal from the revisional order of the Commissioner. The
Tribunal Set aside the said order and restored that of the
Income-tax Officer, even though it seems to be of the view
that even 5% of the technical fee could not be taken as
income of the assessee company taxable under the Act. But
since the assessee company had not gone .in appeal because
of the smallness of the amount of tax payable on the basis
of 5%, the Tribunal was obliged to maintain the order of the
Income-tax Officer.
479
The Tribunal took some new materials into consider-
ation at the appellate stage in order to ascertain the true
nature of the service rendered by the American company to
the Indian company as per the term of the agreement and the
place of rendering such service. The findings of the Tribu-
nal are:
(1) The American company rendered
service to the Indian company for the starting
of the factory in India in the shape of exami-
nation of the factory design and lay out
prepared by the latter and sending its advice
by post. These services were not proved to
have been rendered in India.
(2) The pamphlets and bulletins
incorporating the results of research made by
the American company were also furnished to
the Indian company by post and thus. the said
service was also rendered outside India.
(3) That the services of the .foreign
technical personnel were made available to the
Indian company by the American company outside
the country. The former employed such person-
nel in India on the basis of the various
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agreements of employment entered between the
Indian company and such personnel. They
were the employees of the Indian company under
its Control for their day-today working.
(4) The training of the Indian per-
sonnel directly by the employees of the asses-
see company was imparted outside India.
The Tribunal did not agree with the views of the
Commissioner that the payment of the teChniCal fee of 3% was
dependent upon the use of the information in India or on
the volume and extent of such use. The use of the technical
assistance and knowhow given by the American Company and
made use of by the Indian Company in the taxable territory
could not make the former liable-to payment of income tax
on the amount of technical fee received by it nor was it any
royalty. A new stand taken before the Tribunal on behalf of
the Revenue that the assessee company must be deemed to be
working in conjunction with the Indian company in the
manufacture of the products in question was also rejected.
The Commissioner of Income-tax--the respondent in this
appeal, asked for a reference and the Tribunal referred the
following question of law for the opinion of the High Court:
"Whether on the facts and in the
circumstances of the case, the technical fee
in excess of 5 per cent received by the asses-
see company from the Indian company during the
account year relevant to the assessment year
1957-58 has accrued or arisen in India?"
Before the High Court on behalf of the Revenue the
point of conjunction between the American company and the
Indian company in the manufacture of abrasive products was
put in the fore-front.
480
Finding this stand unsustainable in face of the agreement
between the two companies and in absence of any other mate-
rial in support of it, the High Court rejected this stand
outright. It, however, felt persuaded to permit the Revenue
to change its stand even at the reference stage and to urge
that the agreement Clearly established a business connection
between the two companies; the technical fee received by the
assessee company had accrued or arose from such business
connection and hence it was assessable to income tax under
section 4(1 ) (c) read. with section 42 of the Act. The
objection of the assessee company to the entertainment of
the new point at the reference stage that it did not arise
out of the Tribunal’s order was over-ruled by the High Court
on the ground that the question referred was in general
terms and comprehensive enough to embrace within its ambit
the point of applicability of section 42(1) of the Act to
the ’transactions in question.1 Upholding this stand taken
on behalf of the Revenue the High Court answered the ques-
tion referred to’ it in its favour and against the assessee
company. Hence this appeal.
Mr. N.A. Palkhivala, learned counsel for the appellant
company urged the following four points in support of this
appeal :--
(1) That the High Court could not go into
the matter of business connection between the
two companies when .such a question was never
raised or in issue at any earlier stage.
(2) That the High Court was wrong in founding
the tax liability of the assessee company on
the basis of the alleged business connection.
Its finding or view in that regard is wholly
erroneous.
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(3) That even assuming that the High Court
was right in its view of basing the tax li-
ability of the assessee company on the alleged
business connection, it failed to examine the
question of apportionment under section 42(3)
of the Act.
(4) That apportionment under section 42(3)
and determination of the tax liability of the
assessee company in pursuance thereof could
not be more than the liability to pay tax on
5% of the total technical fee as found by the
Income-tax Officer and upheld by the Tribunal.
Certain other companies have intervened in this appeal
and some argument was advanced on their behalf too in sup-
port of the main argument of Mr. Palkhivala,
Section 4(1) of the Act provides :--
"Subject to the provisions of this Act,
the total income of any previous year of any
person includes all income, profits and gains
from whatever source derived which--
..................................
(c) if such person is not resident in the
taxable territories during such year, accrue
or arise or are deemed to. accrue or arise to
him in’ the taxable territories during such
year :"
481
The income assessable to income tax, therefore, is of two
kinds viz (i) accruing or arising in the taxable territories
and (ii) deemed to accrue or arise to the non-resident in
the taxable territory. The concept of actual accrual or
arising of income in the taxable territories, although not
dependent upon the receipt of the income in the taxable
territories, is quite distinct and apart from the notion of
deemed accrual or arising of the income. The High Court
does not appear to have kept this distinction inview and
mixed the one with the other while deciding the reference in
question. Section 42 of the Act concerns itself with a
deemed accrual or arising of the income within the taxable
territories. Under sub-section (1) "All income, profits or
gains accruing or arising, whether directly or indirectly,
through or from any business connection in the taxable
territories .................. shall be deemed to be income
accruing or arising within the taxable territories, and
where the person entitled to the income, profits or gains is
not resident in the taxable territories, shall be chargeable
to income-tax either in his name or in the name of his
agent, and in the latter case such agent shall be deemed to
be, for all the purposes of this Act, the assessee in re-
spect of such income-tax :" If the whole of the deemed
income can be roped in for the levy of tax under section (1)
of section 42, no question of any apportionment arises. If
not, sub-section ( 3 ) is attracted. It says. :-- .
"In the case of business of which all
the operations are not carried out in the
taxable territories, the profits. and gains of
the business deemed under this section to
accrue or arise in the taxable territories
shall be only such profits and gains as are
reasonably attributable to that part of the
operations carried out in the taxable territo-
ries."
In Commissioner of Income-Tax, Bombay v. Scindia Steam
Navigation Co. Ltd.(1) it has been pointed out that when a
question of law was neither raised before the Tribunal nor
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considered by it, it will not be a question arising out of
its order notwithstanding that it may arise on the findings
given by it. In the instant case the question of law
based upon the theory of business connection was neither
raised before the Tribunal nor considered by it, nor did it
arise on the findings of fact recorded by it. The High
Court, therefore, was wrong in entertaining this new point
at the reference stage on the basis of the allegedly general
and compendious nature of the question referred to it by the
Tribunal. But we do not propose to rest our judgment only on
this technical aspect of the matter as we find that even on
merits the assessee company has a good case to succeed
before us.
The High Court agreed with the Tribunal that the techni-
cal information furnished by the assessee company by post
was a.service which could not be said to have been rendered
in India; putting it to use in India is not relevant as
opined by the Commissioner. But in regard to the fact of the
foreign technicians having been l.employed by the
(1)42 I.T.R. 589.
482
Indian company on payment of salary in India, it took the
view that the service was rendered in India as foreign
technicians were deputed by the assessee company. In the
opinion of the High Court it did amount to some activity or
service in India. Then the High Court proceeds to say:"
Therefore, we are of the view that the assessee having
rendered at least some services in India which amounts to a
business activity the technical fee should be taken to have
accrued through or from its business Connection in India."
Even though, according to the High Court, the finding
aforesaid was sufficient to rope in the entire receipts of
the assessee company as income having accrued or arisen in
India as a result of its business connection, it felt
obliged to make the apportionment to the extent of 75%
because of the apportionment so made by the Commissioner.
In our judgment the High Court went wrong in its approach to
the question raised before it and did not quite correctly
appreciate the scope and applicablity of section 42 of the
Act.
On a plain, reading of sub-sections (1) and (3) of
section 42 it would appear that income accruing or arising
from any business connection in the taxable
territories---even though the. income may accrue or arise
outside the taxable territories--will be deemed to be income
accruing or arising in such territory provided operations in
connection with such business, either all or a part, are
carried out in the faxable territories. If all such opera-
tions are carried out in the taxable territories, sub-sec-
tion (1 ) would apply and the entire income accruing or
arising outside the taxable territories but as a result of
the operations in connection with the business giving rise
to the income would be deemed to accrue or arise in the
taxable territories. If, however, all the operations are
not carried out in the taxable territories the profits and
gains of the business deemed to accure or arise in the
taxable territories shall be only such profits and gains as
are reasonably attributable to that part of the operations
carried out in the taxable territories. Thus comes in the
question of apportionment under sub-section (3) of section
42. In Commissioner of Income-lax Punjab v. B.D. Aggarwal
and Co. and another,(1) Shall J, as he then was, speaking
for this Court said at page 24:
"A business connection in section 42
involves a relation between a business carried
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on by a non-resident which yields profits or
gains and some activity in the taxable ferri-
tories which contributes directly or indirect-
ly to the earning of these profits or gains.
It predicates an element of continuity. be-
tween the business of the non-resident and the
activity in the taxable territories: a stray
or isolated transaction is normally not to be
regarded as a business connection.Business.
connection may take several forms: it may
include carrying on a part of the main busi-
ness or activity incidental to the main busi-
ness of the non-resident through an agent, or
it may merely be a relation between the busi-
ness of the nonresident and the. activity in
the taxable territories, which facilitates or’
assists the carrying on of that business. In
each case the’ question whether there is a
business connection (1) 56 I.T.R. ,20.
483
from or through which income., profits or
gains arise or accrue to non-resident must be
determined upon the facts and circumstances of
the case."
The learned Judge says further
"A relation to be a "business connec-
tion" must be real and intimate, and through
or from which income must accrue or arise
whether directly or indirectly to the nonres-
ident. But it must in all cases. be remem-
bered that by section 42 income, profit or
gain which accrues or arises to a non-resident
outside the taxable territories is sought to
be brought within the net of the income-tax
law, and not income, profit or gain which
accrues or arises or is deemed to accrue or
arise within the taxable territories. Income
received or deemed to be received or accruing
or arising or deemed to be accruing or arising
within the taxable territories in the previous
year is taxable by section 4(1) (a) and (c) of
the Act, whether the person earning is a
resident or non-resident. If the agent of a
non-resident receives that income or is enti-
tled to receive that income, it may be taxed
in the hands of the agent by the machinery
provision enacted in section 40 (2). Income
not taxable under section 4 of the Act of a
non-resident becomes taxable under section 42
(1 ) if there subsists a connection between
the activity in the taxable territories and
the business of the non-resident, and if
throug or from that connection income directly
or indirectly arises."
The High Court was wrong in its view that activities. of
the foreign personnel lent or deputed by the American compa-
ny amounted to business activity .carried on by that company
in the taxable territory. The finding of the Tribunal in
that regard was specific and clear and was unassailable in
the reference in question. The American company has made
the services of the foreign personnel available to the
Indian company outside the taxable territory. The latter
took them as their employees, paid their salary and they
worked under the direct control of the Indian company. The
service rendered by the American company in that connection
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was wholly and solely rendered in the foreign territory.
Even assuming, however, that there was any business connec-
tion between the earning of the income in the shape of the
technical fee by the American company and the affairs of the
Indian company, yet no part of the activity or operation
could be said to have been carried on by the American compa-
ny in India. And in absence of such a sustainable finding
by the High Court the provision of section 42, either of
sub-section (1) or of sub-section (3), were not attracted at
all. The judgment of the High Court under appeal reported in
Commissioner of Income-Tax, Madras-J, v. Carborandum Compa-
ny(1) is not correct. It has rightly been pointed out by
the Bombay High Court in Commissioner of Income-Tax Bombay
City I v. Tara Chemicals Ltd.(2) with reference to the
similar or almost
( 92 I.T.R. 411.
94 I.T.R. 85
484
identical provisions in section 9(1) of the Income-tax Act,
1961 that in order to rope in the income of a non-resident
under the deeming provision it must be shown by the Depart-
ment that some of the operations ,were carried out in India
in respect of which the income is sought to be assessed.
The finding of fact recorded by the Tribunal being against
the department in that connection the Bombay High Court
refused to call for a reference.
For the reasons stated above we hold that on the facts
and in the circumstances of the case the technical service
fee received by the Assessee company from the Indian company
during the accounting year relevant to the assessment year
1957-58 did not accrue or arise in India nor could it be
deemed to have accrued or arisen in India. But since 5 % of
the technical service fee was brought to tax by the Income
Tax Officer and no appeal was filed against it ’on behalf of
the Assessee-Company, we cannot interfere with. the addition
of this 5% but if must be held that the technical leo in
excess of 5 % was not taxable. We accordingly allow the
appeal, set aside the judgment of the High Court and answer
the question referred by .the Tribunal in favour of the
assessee and against the Revenue. The Commissioner will pay
the costs of the appeal as also of the reference to the
assessee.
S.R. Appeal allowed.
485