Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, MADRAS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
PRITHVI INSURANCE CO. LTD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
26/10/1966
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
RAMASWAMI, V.
CITATION:
1967 AIR 853 1967 SCR (1) 943
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1969 SC 946 (7)
F 1970 SC1379 (3,5)
R 1978 SC1320 (11,14,16)
ACT:
Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, s. 24(2)-Insurance company
carrying on life insurance business as well as general
insurance business-Such businesses whether one business for
purpose of section.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent company carried on business of life and
general insurance. In assessment proceedings for the year
1951-52, the Income-tax Officer held that the life insurance
business and the general insurance business carried on by
the company were ’distinct and separate’ and the loss
carried forward from the Previous year in respect of life
insurance business could not be set off under s. 24(2)
against the profit from the general insurance business. The
Appellate Assistant Commissioner and the Tribunal confirmed
the view of the Income-tax Officer. The Tribunal based its
decision primarily on the provisions of the Income-tax Act
which provided different methods of computation of the
taxable income of life insurance business and of general
insurance business. In reference the High Court decided in
favour of the company, and the Revenue appealed. The test
suggested on behalf of the Revenue for determining whether
the two businesses were one business within the meaning of
s. 24(2) was whether one of them could be closed without
affecting the conduct of the other.
HELD : (i) The test suggested on behalf of the Revenue could
not be accepted. If one business cannot conveniently be
carried on after the closure of the other, there would be -a
strong indication that the two business constitute "the same
business", but no decisive inference may be drawn from the
fact that after the closure of one business another may
conveniently be carried on. [948 D]
(ii) Whether two or more lines of business may be regarded
as the "same business" or different business depends not
upon the special methods prescribed by the Income-tax Act
for computation of the taxable income, but upon the nature
of the lines of business, the nature of their organisation,
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management, the source of the capital fund utilised, methods
of book keeping and a host of other related circumstances
which stamp the lines of business as same or distinct. [947
H]
Scales v. George Thompson & Co. Ltd., 13 T.C. 89, ’referred
to.
(iii) In the present case there was little doubt that
the two businesses constituted one composite business : the
company was entitled to carry on the life insurance business
and the general insurance business under its Memorandum of
Association, and the business were attended to by the Branch
Manager and the Agents without any distinction, there was
one common administrative Organisation and the expenses
incurred in connection with business both for administration
and for heads of expenditure such -as salary of the staff,
postage, staff welfare fund and general charges, were
common. [948 B]
The High Court was therefore fight in holding that the life
insurance business and the general insurance business
constituted the same business within the meaning of s. 24(2)
of the Act. [949 B]
944
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION Civil Appeals Nos. 729-732 of
1965.
Appeals by special leave from the judgment and order dated
May 3, 1963 of the Madras High Court in Tax Case No. 196 of
1960.
R. M. Hazarnavis, Gopal Singh and R. N. Sachthey, for the
appellant (in all the appeals).
S. Swaminathan and M. S. Narasimhan, for the respondent
(in all the appeals).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shah, J. The respondent, a public limited company, carried
on in the relevant years of account business of insurance-
life and general. In each of the calendar years 1944 to
1948 relating to the assessment years 1945-46 to 1950-51,
the Company suffered loss in the life insurance section, and
made profit in the general insurance section. Till the
assessment year 1950-51 the loss suffered in the life
insurance section was allowed by the Revenue authorities to
be carried forward and set off under s. 24(2) of the Indian
Income-tax Act, 1922, against profits from the general
insurance section in the subsequent year. In proceedings
for assessment for the assessment year 1951-52 the Income-
tax Officer held that the life insurance business and the
general insurance business carried on by the Company were
’,’distinct and separate" and the loss carried forward from
the previous year in respect of life insurance business
could not be set off under s. 24(2) against the profit of
the general insurance business. The Appellate Assistant
Commissioner and the Tribunal confirmed the view of the
Incometax Officer. The Tribunal referred the following
question to the High Court of Madras under s. 66(1) of the
Income-tax Act:
"Whether the unabsorbed losses incurred by the
assesse’e in the earlier years in its life
insurance business are available to be set off
against its profits from general insurance
business for the assessment years 1951-52 to
1954-55?"
The High Court answered the question in the affirmative.
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With certificate granted by the High Court, these appeals
have been preferred by the Commissioner of Income-tax.
The order of the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal summarises
the reasons which persuaded the Departmental authorities to
reject the claim of the Company. The Tribunal states:
"The business of life insurance possesses
peculiar characteristics which do not exist in
respect of other insurance businesses.
Firstly, the life insurance policies are not
contracts of indemnity; they are forms of
investments. Other classes of insurance
business are contracts of in-
945
demnity. Secondly, the contract in the
general insurance is generally annual while in
the case of life business the risk continues
until death. Unlike general insurance con-
tracts, the life contract, is made once and
for all. The general insurance contracts, are
in law, fresh contracts entered into at the
time of each renewal. Thirdly, life business
is controlled by principles essentially
variant from those which control the general
insurance business. Fourthly, the life premia
do not represent the life profits nor can the
total amount of claims arising in one year be
set off as a deduction. Fifthly, the law
under which life business is carried on is
quite different from the laws governing
general business’ and lastly, assessable
profits of life business shall be computed
separately from those of the general business,
the consequence of which would be that the
carry forward of loss of life business cannot-
be had against the profit of general
business."’
Tax payable by an assessee under the head "Profits and gains
of business, profession or vocation" is normally computed
under s. 10(1) of the Income-tax Act, 1922, after making
allowances mentioned in sub-s. (2) of s. 10. But sub-s. (7)
of s. 10 provides that notwithstanding anything to the
contrary contained in ss. 8, 9, 10, 12 or 18 of the Act, the
profits and gains of any business of insurance and the tax
payable thereon shall be computed in,, accordance with the
rules contained in the Schedule to the Act. The Schedule is
headed "Rules for the computation of the Profits. and Gains
of Insurance Business". By r. it is provided that in the
case of any person who carries on, or at any time in the
preceding year carried on, life insurance business, the
profits and gains of such person from that business shall be
computed separately from his income, profits or gains from
any other business. By r. 2 it is, provided:
"The profits and gains of life insurance shall-be taken be
to either:-
(a) the gross external incoming of the
preceding year from, that business less the
management expenses of that year, or
(b) the annual average of the surplus
arrived at by adjusting the surplus or
deficit, disclosed by the actuarial valuation
made in accordance with the insurance Act,
1938 (IV of 1938), in respect of the last
’inter-valuation period ending before the year
for which the assessment is to be made, so as
to exclude from it any surplus or deficit
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included therein which was made in any earlier
inter-valuation period and any expenditure
other than expenditure which may.,
946
under the provisions of section 10 of this Act
be allowed for the computing the profits and
gains of a business, whichever is the greater:
Provided................................"
Rules 3 and 4 lay down the methods of computing the surplus
for the purpose of T. 2. Rule 5 is a definition clause.
Rule 6 deals with the computation of profits and gains of
any business of insurance other than life insurance, and
provides that the profits and gains of any business of
insurance other than life insurance shall be taken to be the
balance of the profits disclosed by the annual accounts,
copies of which are required under the Insurance Act, 1938,
to be furnished to the Controller of Insurance after
adjusting such balance so as to exclude from it any
expenditure other than expenditure which may under the
provisions of S. 10 of the Act be allowed for in computing
the profits and gains of a business. Rule 7 deals with the
computation of profits and gains of companies carrying on
dividing societies or assessment business. Rule 8 deals
with the computation of profits of non-resident insurance
companies having branches in the taxable territory. Rule 9
provides that the profits of any business carried on by a
mutual insurance association or by a co-operative society
shall be computed in accordance with the rules.
Computation of the assessable income of an assessee carrying
on business of life insurance or general insurance has
therefore to be made in accordance with the rules and not by
determining the profits under sub-s. (1) of S. 10 after
making allowances under sub-s. (2).
Where an assessee sustains a loss of profits or gains in any
year under any of the heads mentioned in s. 6, he is
entitled to have the amount of the loss set off against his
income, profits or gains under any other head in that year:
[s. 24(1)]. Therefore in determining the taxable profits,
the net balance under the same head mentioned in s. 6 has to
be taken into account, and if there be loss under a head of
income (subject to the special exception relating to
admissibility of loss from speculative business), that loss
has to be set off against the income, profits or gains under
any other head. Sub-s. (1) does not however deal with carry
forward to the following year of loss suffered by the
assessee as a result of computing ,the total income from all
the heads. That is dealt with under sub-s.
(2). Section 24(2) as it stood at the material time
provided:
"Where any assessee sustains a loss of profits
or gains in any year, being a previous year
not earlier than the previous year for the
assessment for the year ending on the 31st day
of March, 1940, in any business, profession or
vocation, and the loss cannot be wholly set
off under sub-section (1),
947
so much of the loss as is not so set off or
the whole loss where the assessee had no other
head of income shall be carried forward to the
following year and set off against the profits
and gains, if any, of the assessee from the
same business, profession or vocation for that
year;
The words italicised were substituted by the Income Tax
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Amendment Act 25 of 1953, for the words "under the head
Profits and gains of business, profession or vocation"’, and
"the portion not so set off " respectively. At the relevant
time loss which could not be set off in the year of account
may be carried forward to the following year, but it could
be set off against the profits and gains of the assessee
from "the same business, profession or vocation". If the
loss carried forward from the previous year and sought to be
set off was not from the same business, profession or
vocation, it could not be set off under s. 24(2). If there
was no income or profits from the same business in the
subsequent year the loss could not be set off, but had to be
carried forward in the next year following, subject to the
restriction placed in that sub-section.
The question whether the business of life insurance and the
business of general insurance could be regarded as the same
business assumes importance in this case, since the right to
carry forward the loss suffered in the life insurance
business and to set it off against the profit of the company
in the general insurance business of the subsequent year is
clearly in issue. If the life insurance business and the
general insurance business were not "the same business"
within the meaning of s. 24(2), loss in the life insurance
business which could not be set off against income from
other businesses of the Company and sources of income, could
not be carried forward and set off in the year following
against the income from the general insurance business.
Counsel for the Commissioner contended that life insurance
business and general insurance business were separate
businesses and he relied in support of that contention
primarily upon the method of computation of taxable income
of the life insurance business and of the general insurance
business. Both in respect of the life insurance business
and general insurance business, there are, as already
mentioned, special methods of computation of income. But
because there are distinct methods of computation of taxable
income of the insurance business, and the general provisions
of the Income-tax Act relating to computation of profits and
gains of a business in s. 10 and the related sections are
inapplicable, it does not follow that the two businesses
cannot be the "same ’business" within the meaning of s.
24(2). Whether two or more lines of businesses may be
regarded as the "same business" or different businesses
depends not upon’ the special, methods pres-
948
cribed by the Income-tax Act for computation of the taxable
income, but upon the nature of the businesses, the nature of
their organisation, management, the source of the capital
fund utilised, methods of book-keeping and a host of other
related circumstances which stamp the businesses as same or
distinct.
In the present case, there is little doubt that the two
businesses constituted one composite business: the Company
was entitled to carry on the life insurance business and the
general insurance business under its Memorandum of
Association, and the businesses were attended to by the
Branch Managers and the Agents without any distinction,
there was one common administrative organization and the
expenses incurred in connection with the business both for
administration and for heads of expenditure such as salary
of the staff, postage, staff welfare fund and general
charges, were common.
We are unable to agree with counsel for the Commissioner
that the test whether one of the businesses can be closed
without affecting the conduct of the other business, is a
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decisive test in determining whether the two constitute the
same business within the meaning of s. 24(2). If one
business cannot conveniently be carried on after the closure
of the other, there would be a strong indication that the
two businesses constitute "the same business", but no
decisive inference may be drawn from the fact that after the
closure of one business another may conveniently be carried
on.
In the present case the Tribunal’s judgment proceeds not
upon any special circumstances governing the distinctive
organization, management, account, methods of book-keeping
or the peculiarities of the two businesses, but primarily
upon the provisions of the Income-tax Act which provide
different methods of computation of the taxable income of
the life insurance business and- of the general insurance
business. We are unable to agree with the Tribunal, that
because in respect of the life insurance business and
general insurance business there are special methods of
computation of income for the purpose of levying income-tax,
they are not the "same business" within the meaning of s.
24(2). A fairly adequate test for determining whether the
two constitute the same business is furnished by what
Rowlatt, J. said in Scales v. George Thompson & Co. Ltd:
"Was there any inter-connection, any
interlacing, any inter-dependence, any unity
at all embracing those two businesses ?"
That inter-connection, interlacing, inter-dependence and
unity are furnished in this case by the existence of common
management,
(1) 13 T.C. 83, 89.
949
common business Organisation, common administration, common
fund and a common place of business.
in our view therefore the High Court was right in’ holding
that the life insurance business and the general insurance
business constitute the same business within the meaning of
s. 24(2) of the Act.
The appeals therefore fail and are dismissed with costs.
One hearing fee.
G.C.
Appeal dismissed.
950