Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
WORKMEN
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MANAGEMENT OF SIJUA (JHERRIAH) ELECTRIC SUPPLY CO. LTD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT25/09/1973
BENCH:
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
BENCH:
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
DWIVEDI, S.N.
GOSWAMI, P.K.
CITATION:
1973 AIR 2766 1974 SCR (1) 760
1974 SCC (3) 473
ACT:
Bonus Act--Three items, the rebate payable to consumers
under Electricity Supply Act 1948, Development Rebate and
Development Reserve under Income Tax Act 1961, whether to be
deducted from profits for the purpose of ascertaining bonus.
HEADNOTE:
The dispute between the respondent company and the workmen
arose in respect of the permissible additions and deductions
to be made to the profits for the purpose of ascertaining
the bonus payable to the workmen under the provisions of the
Bonus Act. The controversy between the Company and its
workmen was in relation to three items mentioned in the
profit and loss account which were also the subject matter
of the reference. The first item related to a sum
representing the rebate payable to the consumers under
paragraph 11(l) of the VI Schedule to the Electricity Supply
Act 1948. The second one related to a sum on account of
Development Rebate under Income Tax Act 1961 and the third
one related to a sum in respect of Development Reserve. The
appellants, however, challenged the first and the third
items before this Court.
Partly allowing the appeal,
HELD : (i) The computation and payment of bonus under the
Bonus Act is provided on unit-wise basis in accordance with
the formula laid down under the Act. In the present case,
the payment of bonus is related to the profits of the year
subject to the maximum bonus and the amount available by way
of set-on. As, the Company is not a Banking Company, the
method of computation of gross profits is laid down in the
If Schedule of Bonus Act. S. 6 enumerates the deductions
that have to- be made out of the gross profits in order to
arrive at the available surplus.
The sums liable to be deducted from gross profits under
Section 6 are : (a) Any amount by way of depreciation
according to s. 32(l) of the Income Tax Act or according to
the provisions of the Agricultural Income-Tax law.
(b)Any amount by way of development rebate which the
employer is entitled to deduct from his income.
(c) Any direct tax which the employer is liable to pay, and
(4) Such further sums as specified in respect of the
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employer in the 3rd Schedule etc.
The appellants contended that rebate payable to the
consumers cannot be deducted so as to reduce the net profit
share in the profit and loss account. [764G-765G]
(ii)According to the workmen, a rebate payable to the
consumers of electricity cannot be deducted so as to reduce
the net profit shown in the profit and loss account because
entry I of the second Schedule to the Bonus Act is " not
profit as per profit and loss account". Para 11(i) of the
VI Schedule to the Electricity Supply Act provides that if
the clear profit of a licensee exceeds the amount of
reasonable return, the excess has to be divided into three
equal portions and one portion has to be given as a rebate
to the consumers. If rebate is given to the consumers in
respect of the electricity consumed by them, and for which
payment has already been made, it is apparent that the price
of electricity which the consumers will pay after receiving
the rebate, would be the actual price paid by them for the
electricity consumed. Therefore, any amount in the hands of
the undertaking liable to be returned to the consumers as
rebate cannot be taken into account in computing the gross
profits of the
7 61
undertaking. It is only after deducting this amount that
the actual revenue of the undertaking could be computed.
Therefore, the amount to be returned as rebate to the
consumers is a deductible item. [766B]
Poona Electric Supply Ltd. v. C.I.T. Bombay, [1965] 3 S.C.R.
878 and Jabulpur Bijilighar Karmachari Panchayat V. Jabalpur
Electric Supply Company Ltd. and Another [1972] 1 S.C.R. 60,
referred to.
(iii)As regards the sum of the development reserve
which the workmen disputed, and which was deducted under
item 6 of the III Schedule to the Bonus Act, it appears from
the Affidavit filed in the High Court by the Company that
theparticulars of development reserve incurred in
preceding 4 years included the 1964-65. According to
the workmen, only a sum of Rs. 10,555 being the
proportionate development reserve calculated on the
development rebate for the year 1964-65 was permissible, but
no addition could be made for the proportionate development
reserve in respect of the years 1961-62, 1962-63, and 1963-
64 and as under the proviso to Sub-Paragraph (i) of
Paragraph 5-A of the VI Schedule to the Act, "reasonable
return had to be provided for the company" in each year
which could not be provided because there was no sufficient
fund available for development reserve from 1961-62 to 1963-
64. All the sums which should have been appropriated in the
years of account preceding the year in question, were
appropriated in the year 1964-65. Item 6 of the III
Schedule to the Bonus Act provides that any "employer
falling under item No. 1, 3, 4 and 5 etc., in addition to
the sums deductible under any of the aforesaid items such
items as are required to be appropriated by the licencee in
respect of the accounting year to a reserve, under the Sixth
Schedule to that Act. shall also be deducted." The words,
’required to be appropriated" indicate that the Company
should be obliged under the Sixth Schedule to appropriate an
amount to the development reserve funds. The words "in
respect of" have a wide connotation. The first requirement
for the applicability of item 6 of the Sixth Schedule to the
Act is a legal obligation on the company to appropriate the
amount to the development reserve fund. The second
requirement is that the appropriation made must be connected
with or related to the accounting year. [767 D-F; 768 F-H]
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(iv)Sub-paras (1) and (2) of paragraph V-A of the Act
provides that there shall be a Development Reserve to which
shall be appropriated in respect of each accounting year, a
sum equal to the amount of Income-tax and Supertax etc..
provided that if in any accounting year, a clear profit
etc., falls-short of the reasonable return. the sum to be
appropriated to the Development Reserve in respect of such
accounting year shall be reduced by the amount of the short
fall, and under sub para (2), any such amount may be
appropriated in annual instalments spread over a period not
exceeding five years. [769C]
(v)The words "that accounting year" refer to the year of
account in respect of which appropriation to the Reserve and
the deduction under the Bonus Act is being considered. In
the present case, the deductions for the years 1961-62,
1962-63 and 1963-64 are not being considered, nor have there
been. any appropriations in terms of paragraph VA of the
Sixth Schedule to the Act in the respective accounting
years. There is nothing in sub-paragraphs (1) or (2) of
paragraph VA of the Sixth Schedule to the Act which
justifies the submission that what has not been appropriated
for the earlier years could be appropriated in the year of
account. In this view, the only amount that is deductible
on account of development reserve as contended by the
appellants is Rs. 10.5551- in respect of the accounting year
1964-65. [770A]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeals Nos. 2446 &
2447 of 1967.
From the Judgment and Order dated the 26th March, 1968 of
the Patna High Court in C. W. J. C. Nos. 121 and 137 of
1967.
A . B. N. Sinha and A. K. Nag, for the appellants.
7 62
Lal Narain Sinha, Solicitor General of India, Alok Kumar
Verma ;and B. P. Singh, for respondent No. 1.
R. C. Prasad, for respondent No. 2.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
JAGANMOHAN REDDY, J. The Management of Sijua (Jherriah)
Electric Supply Company Ltd.-the respondents-had initially
offered only 4 per cent. bonus to all the employees of its
establishment because the allocable surplus which was
available was less than 4 per cent. Subsequently, having
regard to the decision of the Madras High Court it revised
the calculations of allocable surplus and offered to
distribute to its employees under the Payment of Bonus Act,
1965 (hereinafter termed ’the Bonus Act’), a sum of Rs.
34,492/-. The workmen (Appellants) refused to accept this
amount as the management had failed to furnish the details
or the basis of computing the amount which was being offered
to them. A dispute was thus raised, and it was referred to
conciliation. It appears that during these conciliation
proceedings, both the parties agreed to the following terms
of settlement :
" (1) The Union agree to accept the present
offer of the management purely on provisional
basis without prejudice to their claim for.
higher bonus for the year 1964-65. The
management agree to distribute this amount as
early as possible.
(2)Both the parties agree to refer to the
Industrial Tribunal for adjudication the
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following points of difference in respect of
calculation of available surplus for the year
1964-65 to settle the issue of payment of
bonus for that year.
(a) Whether a sum of Rs. 18,086/- provided
for in the profit and loss account as
provision for rebate to consumers in
accordance with 6th Schedule of the Elec-
tricity Supply Act, 1948 should be added back
to arrive at the gross profit for the said
accounting year in accordance with the Payment
of Bonus Act? If so, whether this amount
should also be deducted from the gross profit
to arrive at available surplus ?
(b) Whether deduction of following amounts
from the gross profit is in accordance with
the provisions of the Payment of Bonus Act.
(i) Rs. 23,455/- on account of
development rebate allowable under the Income-
tax Act.
(ii) Rs. 35,682/- on account of development
reserve."
Pursuant to the above agreement, the Governor of Bihar
referred for adjudication of the Industrial Tribunal the
disputes referred to in sub-clauses (a), (b) (i) and (b)
(ii) of clause (2) of the said agreement. Before the
Tribunal it was contended on behalf of the appellants that
the amount in sub-clause (a) of the reference cannot be
,deducted from the gross profits because it is a rebate to
consumers and
763
is paid from out. of profits. It cannot, therefore, be
shown in the revenue accounts of the company as an item of
expenditure and must be added back for the purpose of
calculation of bonus. In respect of the amount in sub-
clause (b) (i) of the reference the contention is that it
cannot be deducted as a rebate and if it has to be deducted,
it has to be added back also. It was lastly contended in
respect of the amount in sub-clause (b) (ii) of the
reference that the deduction is not contemplated by item 6
of the Third Schedule to the Bonus Act.
On January 16, 1967, the Tribunal gave the following award
(1) Inrespect of the sum of Rs. 18,086/-
it held-
(a) that although the aforesaid sum
represented the amount of rebate payable to
the consumers and not to be retained by the
company, nonetheless it was a profit for the
purpose of computation in order to arrive at
the amount which the workers should get as
bonus;
(b) that the aforesaid amount of Rs.
18,086/- which has been retained by the
management to be returned to the consumers
later on, must be taken as a reserve within
the meaning of Item 2(c) of the Second
Schedule of the Bonus Act, 1965, and has to be
added back; and
(c) that the sum of Rs. 18,086/- which was
deemed to be a reserve and had to be added
back under item 2(e) of the Second Schedule of
the Bonus Act was not an amount to be deducted
as a reserve under
s. 6(d) of the Bonus Act and, therefore,
could not be deducted for the purposes of the
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computation of profits for payment of bonus.
(2)That in regard to the amount of Rs.
23,455/- the Tribunal held that merely because
the company has, for some reason or the other,
omitted to mention the aforesaid amount in the
profit and loss account that would not prevent
the same being added back particularly when
the same is being claimed as deducti
on under
the provisions of the Bonus Act. Accordingly
it came to the conclusion that the deduction
of Rs. 23,455/- on account of the development
rebate allowed under the Income-tax Act from
the gross profits without adding back to it is
not in accordance with the Bonus Act.
(3)In so far as the sum of Rs. 35,682/-
which has been both added and deducted, the
Tribunal held that the amount has been rightly
deducted under clause (d) of s. 6 of the Bonus
Act for the purpose of arriving at the
available surplus.
By a writ petition the respondents challenged the validity
of the award which was against them, and the workmen by a
separate writ petition contested the validity of the award
which was against them. The High Court which heard both
these petitions together came to the
76 4
conclusion that the decision of the Tribunal on item (1) (a)
of the reference directing the respondents to add back Rs.
18,086/- for calculating the gross profits was wrong and it
was accordingly quashed. The remaining portion of the award
which disallowed the deduction of the said sum from the
gross profits was maintained. As regards item (b) (i) of
the reference relating to the sum of Rs. 23,455/- shown as
development rebate, it held that the portion of the award
which directed that it should be added back to the net
profits to calculate the gross profits under clause (2) (d)
of the Second Schedule of the Bonus Act was also wrong and
it was accordingly quashed. In respect of the award on
clause (b) (ii) of the reference it maintained the award of
the Tribunal. In the result of respondents’ petition was
allowed and the appellants’ petition dismissed.
Against the aforesaid decision, these appeals are by
certificate granted by the High Court.
The dispute between the company and the workmen, as already
stated, arose in respect of the permissible additions and
deductions to be made to the profits for the purpose of
ascertaining the bonus payable to the workmen under the
provisions of the Bonus Act. The balance-sheet of the
company for the year ending March 31, 1965, showing the
profit and loss account was duly published, and there was a
controversy between the company and its workmen as regards
three items mentioned in the profit and loss account which
were also the subject-matter of the reference. The first
item related to a sum of Rs. 18,086/- representing the
rebate payable to the consumers under paragraph II(i) of the
Sixth Schedule to the Electricity (Supply) Act, 1948-
hereinafter called ’the Electricity (Supply) Act’; the
second one related to a sum of Rs. 23,455/- on account of
development rebate allowable under the Income-tax Act, 1961;
and the third one related to a sum of Rs. 35,682/- in
respect of development reserve.
The learned Advocate for the appellants, however, at the
outset indicated that he was not challenging the decision of
the High Court in respect of the second item of Rs. 23,455/-
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deducted under the Income-tax Act, 1961, as development
rebate. This leaves the first and the third items, one in
respect of Rs. 18,086/- which has been directed by the High
Court to be deducted on account of rebate payable to the
consumers under Paragraph II(i) of the Sixth Schedule to the
Electricity (Supply) Act, and the third item in respect of
Rs. 35,682/- on account of development reserve.
It may be mentioned that the computation and payment of
bonus under the Bonus Act is provided on unit-wise basis in
accordance with the formula laid down under that Act. As
far as this case is concerned, the payment of bonus is
related to the profits of the year subject to the maximum
bonus and amount available by way of set-on. As the company
is not a banking company to which the First Schedule is
applicable, the method of computation of gross profits is
laid down in the Second Schedule to the Bonus Act. Section
6 enumerates the deductions that have to be made out of the
gross profits in order to arrive at the available surplus.
The deductions consist of depreciation development rebate,
direct taxes and items mentioned in the
765
Third Schedule. It may be observed that rehabilitation
grant is left over as an item of deduction from gross
profit, which is a departure from what was required to be
deducted under the Full Bench formula of the Labour
Appellate Tribunal. The amount of depreciation and
development rebate are to be arrived at as provided under
the Income-tax Act. In case of depreciation, however, it
one employer has been paying bonus to his employees under an
award, agreement, or settlement made before the commencement
of the Bonus Act and subsisting at such commencement after
deducting from the gross profits, then the depreciation
deducted, at the option of the employer, shall be the
notional normal depreciation. Section 2(4) defined
"allocable surplus" as meaning "(a) in relation to an
employer, being a company (other than a banking company)
which has not made the arrangements prescribed under the
Income-tax Act for the declaration and payment within India
of the dividends, payable out of its profits in accordance
with the provisions of Section 194 of that Act, sixty-seven
per cent, of the available surplus and includes any amount
treated as such under sub-section (2) of section 34."
"Available surplus" is defined in s. 2(6) as meaning "the
available surplus computed under Section 5." Section 4
provides for computation of gross profits in the manner
provided by the First Schedule in the case of a banking com-
pany and in other cases in the manner provided by the Second
Schedule. By s. 5 the available surplus’ in respect of any
accounting year is the gross profit for that year after
deducting therefrom the sums referred to in s. 6. The sums
liable to be deducted from gross profits under s. 6 are :
(a) any amount by way of depreciation
admissible in accordance with the provisions
of sub-s. (1) of s. 32 of the Income-tax Act
or in accordance with the provisions of the
agricultural income-tax law, as the case may
be;
(b) any amount by way of development rebate
or development allowance which the employer is
entitled to deduct from his income under the
Income Tax Act;
(c) any direct tax which the employer is
liable to pay for the accounting year in
respect of his income, profits and gains
during that year; and
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(d) such further sums as are specified in
respect of the employer in the Third Schedule.
Counsel for the workmen says that the Company has shown a
certain amount as its net profit in the profit and loss
account. Rebate payable to the consumers of electricity
cannot be deducted so as to reduce the net profit shown in
the profit and loss account, because entry I of the Second
Schedule to the Bonus Act is "net profit as per profit and
loss account". It may be mentioned that Paragraph II(i) of
the Sixth Schedule to the Electricity (Supply) Act provides
that if the "clear profit" of a licensee exceeds the amount
of reasonable return, the excess has to be divided into
three equal portions. One portion has to be given as a
rebate to the consumers; another portion is set apart as
Tariffs and Dividends Control Reserve; and the third
7 66
portion is kept apart for distribution as a proportionate
rebate on the amounts collected from the sale of electricity
and meter rentals or carried forward in the accounts of the
licensee for distribution to the consumers in future in such
manner as the State Government may direct. A perusal of
Paragraph 11(i) of the Sixth Schedule to the Electricity
(Supply) Act would show that the portion that is set apart
as a rebate to the consumers has not been described as a
reserve in the same manner as the other portions have been
described, for the simple reason, that the amount has to be
returned to the consumers in the form of a rebate. If
rebate is given to the consumers in respect of the
electricity consumed by them and for which payment has
already been made, it is apparent that the price of
electricity which the consumers will in fact pay, after
receiving the rebate, would be the actual price paid by them
for the electricity consumed. To put it differently the
charges paid by the consumers of electricity before the
rebate is given to them would be treated as payments on
account or provisional payments, and it is only after the
end of the year when rebate is ascertained and paid to them
in accordance with the provisions of the Electricity
(Supply) Act that the charges recovered for supply of
electricity could be said to be finalised. On this
assumption it would appear that any amount in the hands of
the undertaking liable to be returned to the consumers as
rebate cannot be taken into account in computing the gross
profits of the undertaking. It is only after deducting this
amount that the actual revenue of the supply undertaking
could be computed. If this assumption is correct, and we
think it is, then the amount to be returned as rebate to the
consumers is a deductible item. We cannot accept the
contention of the learned Advocate that this item, not being
an expenditure necessary for earning a profit, is not
deductible. The basic assumption underlying the contention
that consumers’ rebate has been deducted as an expenditure
has no validity. In Poona Electric Supply Co. Ltd. v. Com-
missioner of Income-fax, Bombay(’), this Court, while
dealing with the Income-tax Act, considered the effect of
Paragraph II(i) of the Sixth Schedule to the Electricity
(Supply) Act and held that the amounts set apart for rebate
and for which deduction was claimed were a part of the
excess amount paid to the assessee company and reserved for
being returned to the consumers. They did not form part of
the assessee’s real profits and, therefore, to arrive at the
taxable income of the assessee from the business under s.
10(l) of the Income-tax Act, the said amounts had to be
deducted from its total income. Even thought this case was
decided under the Income-tax Act, the provision of the
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Electricity (Supply) Act which we have interpreted was also
interpreted by this Court in that case. In Jabalpur
Pijlighar Karamchari Panchayat v. Jabalpur Electric Supply
Co. Ltd. & Anr.(2) the question was again considered by a
Bench of this Court to which one of us (Jaganmohan Reddy,
J.,) was a party. At P. 75, it was observed by reference to
what the Tribunal had held:
"This goes to show that the rebate to the
consumers is not to be utilised by the company
except for distribution to the consumers as
may be directed. If the company cannot
(1) [1965] 3 S. C. R. 8 1 8.
(2) [1972] 1 S. C. R. 60,
767
have the benefit of it, it stands to reason
that the _worker cannot ask for a share and
the claim of the appellant for inclusion of
this sum must be rejected."
In our view there is no doubt that the amount payable as
consumers’ rebate under the Electricity (Supply) Act has to
be deducted before profits could be compulted and has been
rightly held to be deductible by the High Court.
The last item of reference is whether the sum of Rs.
35,682/can be legally appropriated by the licensee to the
development reserve in respect of the accounting year 1964-
65 and deducted under item 6 of the Third Schedule to the
Bonus Act. It appears that before the High Court an
affidavit was filed by the company which gave particulars of
the break up of the development reserve of Rs. 35,682/as
having been incurred in the four years including and
preceding the year 1964-65 for which the bonus was being
considered. The proportionate development reserve for the
year 1961-62 was Rs. 4,864/-; for the year 1962-63 Rs.
1,671/-; for the year 1963-64 Rs. 18,602/and for the year
1964-65 Rs. 10,5551-. On behalf of the workmen it was urged
that only a sum of Rs. 10,5551- being the proportionate
development reserve calculated on the development rebate for
the year 1964-65 was permissible, but no addition could be
made for the proportionate development reserve in respect of
the years 1961-62, 1962-63 and 1963-64. The argument on
behalf of the company which was accepted by the learned
Judges of the High Court was that the funds in the hands of
the company did not permit of any sum being appropriated as
development reserve in the years 1961-62, 1962-63 and 1963-
64, and as under the proviso to sub-paragraph (1) of
paragraph VA of the Sixth Schedule to the Electricity
(Supply) Act "reasonable return had to be provided for the
company". which could not be provided because there were not
sufficient funds available for development reserve, all the
sums which should have been appropriated in the years of
account preceding the year in question were appropriated in
the year 1964-65. The High Court thought that the
development reserve had to be calculated for each year in
the manner indicated in sub-paragraph (1) of paragraph VA of
the Sixth Schedule to the Electricity (Supply) Act, but the
actual appropriation may be spread over a period of five
years in order to ensure that the reasonable return to the
licensee is not impaired. Though normally the "annual
instalments" specified in sub-paragraph (2) of paragraph VA
of the Sixth Schedule to the Electricity (Supply) Act may
indicate that some amount must be appropriated every year,
but on a strict construction of sub-paragraph (2) along with
the proviso to sub-paragraph (1) of paragraph VA, it was of
the view that in order to secure a reasonable return, no
amount may be available for appropriation to the development
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reserve in some years, and that in such contingencies, there
seems to be no legal bar if the instalments for some of the
years are reduced to zero, and the entire sum is
appropriated in a succeeding year, provided that the maximum
period of five years is not exceeded. It was also pointed
out by the learned Judges that the actual language used by
the Legislature in item 6 of the Third Schedule to the Bonus
Act shows that any sum which is "required to be appropriated
by the
768
LIcensee in respect of the accounting year to a reserve
under the Sixth Schedule to that Act shall also be deducted"
showed that the emphasis was on the sum "required to be
appropriated" in respect of the accounting year and not the
sum calculated in respect of the accounting year. Hence,
the various sums calculated as development reserve. for
preceding years also, if permitted by sub-paragraph (2) of
paragraph VA of the Sixth Schedule to the Electricity
(Supply) Act to be appropriated in the accounting year 1964-
65 will come within the scope of item 6 of the Third
Schedule to the Bonus Act and hence deductible.
The arguments before us have also followed the same
contentions which found favour with the High Court, but, in
our view, those contentions are not supported by the
language of item 6 of the Third Schedule to the Bonus Act.
That item is as follows
Item No. 6
Category of employer
Any employer falling under Item No. 1 or Item No. 5 and
being a licensee within the meaning of the Electricity
Supply Act, 1948.
Further sums to be deducted
In addition to the sums deductible under any of the
aforesaid items, such sums as are required to be
appropriated by the licensee in respect of the accounting
year to a reserve under the Sixth Schedule to that Act shall
also be deducted (emphasis added).
The view of the High Court would have been correct, if the
words in Item 6 were "such sums as are appropriated by the
licensee in the accounting year to a reserve under the Sixth
Schedule to that Act." If these words were there, it may be
that the allocations of development reserve in respect of
the previous years in the accounting year would have also
become deductible. But the High Court has overlooked the
expressions "required to be appropriated .... under the
Sixth Schedule to that Act" and "in respect of". The words
"required to be appropriated" indicate that the Company
should be obligated under the Sixth Schedule to the
Electricity Supply Act to appropriate an amount to the
development reserve funds. The words "in respect of" have a
wide connotation and being colourless are generally intended
to convey a connection or relation between the two subject
matters to which they refer. In the context in which they
have been used, they mean "connected with" or " relating
to". The first requirement for the applicability of Item 6
of the Sixth Schedule to the Electricity (Supply) Act
should, therefore, be a legal obligation on the Company to
appropriate an amount to the development reserve fund. The
second requirement is that the appropriation made must be
connected with or related to the accounting year. Clause 5
(a) (i) of the Sixth Schedule to that Act also speaks of
appropriation to the development reserve "in respect of each
and every accounting year". The phrase "accounting year"
does not appear to have been defined
769
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in that Act. Instead, the expression "the year of account"
is defined in s. 2(14) of that Act. It means the financial
year in relation to a licensee. The expression "accounting
year" has been defined in s. 2(l) of the Bonus Act. In
respect of the Company, it would mean "the period in respect
of which any profit and loss account of the Company laid
before it in annual genera, meeting is made up, whether that
period is a year or not." The Company prepared its profit
and loss account in 1964-65. So for purposes of Item 6 in
the Third Schedule, the accounting year of the Company would
be 1964-65. Section 5 of the Bonus Act provides that the
available surplus "in respect of any accounting year" shall
be the gross profits for that year, after deducting
therefrom the sums referred to in section 6. The amount
which could be deducted is the amount which is required to
be appropriated by the licensee in respect of the
accounting year 1964-65. A reference to sub-paragraphs (1)
and (2) of paragraph VA of the Sixth Schedule to the
Electricity (Supply) Act does not justify the submission
that the sums which could have been appropriated for the
years 1961-62, 1962-63 and 1963-64 were the amounts required
to be appropriated in the accounting year 1964-65.
Paragraph VA, in our view, deals only with appropriation to
a development reserve for the year of account, which in this
case would be 1964-65, and if in that year the whole of the
development reserve could not be appropriated to the
reserve, sub-paragraph (2) of paragraph VA permits the
appropriation in annual instalments spread over a period not
exceeding five years from the commencement of that
accounting year. Sub-paragraphs, (1) and (2) of paragraph
VA of the Electricity (Supply) Act which are relavant are as
follows :
"VA. (1) There shall be created a reserve to
be called the Development Reserve to which
shall be appropriated in respect of each
accounting year a sum equal to the amount of
income-tax and super-tax calculated at rates
applicable during the assessment year for
which the accounting year of the licensee is
the previous year, on the amount of
development rebate to which the licensee is
entitled for the accounting year under clause
(vi) (b) of sub-section (2) of section 10 of
the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922.
Provided, that if in any accounting year, the
clear profit [excluding the special
appropriation to be made under item (va) of
clause (c) of sub-paragraph (2) of paragraph
XVII] together with the accumulations, if any,
in the Tariffs and Dividends Control Reserve
less the sum calculated as aforesaid falls
short of the reasonable return, the sum to be
appropriated to the Development Reserve in
respect of such accounting year shall be
reduced by the amount of the short-fall.
(2) Any sum to be appropriated towards the
Development Reserve in respect of any
accounting year under subparagraph (1), may be
appropriated in annual instalments spread over
a period not exceeding five years from the
commencement of that accounting year."
770
As we have noticed earlier, the words "that accounting year"
refer to the year of account in respect of which
appropriation to the reserve and the deduction under the
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Bonus Act is being considered. In this case, the deductions
for the year 1961-62, 1962-63 and 1963-64 are not being
considered, nor have there been any appropriations in terms
of paragraph VA of the Sixth Schedule to the Electricity
(supply) Act in the respective accounting years. There is
nothing in subparagraphs (1) and (2) of paragraph VA of the
Sixth Schedule to the, Electricity (Supply) Act which
justifies the submission that what has not been appropriated
for the earlier year could be appropriated in the year of
account. In this view, the only amount that is deductible
on account of development reserve as contended by the appel-
lants is Rs. 10,555/- in respect of the accounting year
1964-65. The award of the Tribunal and the judgment of the
High Court directing the deduction of Rs. 35,682/- cannot be
sustained and are set aside. Instead we direct the
deduction of Rs. 10,555/- only.
The result is that the appeals are partly allowed, but in
the circumstances each party will bear their own costs.
S.C. Appeals
partly allowed.
771