Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, KERALA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MALAYALAM PLANTATION LTD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
10/04/1964
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
SHAH, J.C.
SIKRI, S.M.
CITATION:
1964 AIR 1722 1964 SCR (7) 693
CITATOR INFO :
R 1965 SC 321 (15)
R 1966 SC1053 (17)
R 1966 SC1250 (6)
F 1967 SC 444 (12)
R 1979 SC1291 (8)
F 1982 SC 757 (8)
ACT:
Income Tax-Assessee treated as agent - Estate duty of non-
resident paid by assessee-If an allowable deduction-Ex-
pression "for the purpose of the business"-Meaning of Indian
Income-tax Act, 1922 (11 of 1922), s. 10(2)(xv)-Estate Duty
Act, 1953 (34 of 1953), s. 34.
HEADNOTE:
For the two accounting periods the assessee, a resident
company, incorporated outside India paid -estate duty
payable on the death of its certain share holders not
domiciled in India and debited the said amounts to revenue
in its accounts in ascertaining the profits and gains of its
business for the said years. The Income-tax Officer
included the said amounts so paid towards estate duty in the
profits and gains of the company for the said two accounting
periods and assessed the company to income-tax for 1955-56
and 1956-57 on that basis. The appeals by the assessee to
the Appellate Assistant Commissioner were dismissed but on
further appeal, the Appellate Tribunal set aside the said
orders and held that the assessee was entitled to deduct the
said amount in computing its profits. On an application by
the Commissioner of Income-tax, the Tribunal stated a case
under s. 66(1) of the Act to the High Court and referred the
following question of law for its opinion: "Whether on the
facts and in the circumstances ,of the case, the estate duty
paid by the company under s, 84 ,of the Estate Duty Act,
1953, is a revenue expenditure deductible in computing the
assessee’s business income for the ,assessment years in
question." The High Court agreed with the view of the
Tribunal and answered the question in the affirmative. On
appeal by special leave it was urged on behalf of the
appellants, (1) that the sum paid by the assessee under s.
84 of the Estate Duty Act were not expenditure of the
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assessee company and therefore, they could not be deducted
from its profits in computing its assessable income under s.
10(2)(xv) of the Act; and (2) that even if it was revenue
expenditure, it was not laid out or expended wholly or
exclusively for the purpose of the assessee’s business
within the meaning of the said sub-clause.
Held: (i) There was nothing on the record to show whether in
England, where the concerned share holders died, the
resident company could recover the amount representing the
estate duty paid by it in India from the legal
representative of the deceased share holders. Therefore,
the assessee who, as a statutory agent paid to the State the
estate duty, could not recover the same from the legal
representative of the deceased non-resident share holders.
In that situation the company would be out of pocket to the
extent it paid the estate duty of the said persons.
Therefore, it cannot be held that the amounts paid by the
assessee towards estate duty were not expenditure incurred
by it, but only amounts paid by it on account with a right
to recover the same from the persons on whose behalf it
paid.
(ii)The expression" for the purpose of the business"in
s.10(2) (xv) of the Act is wider in scope than the
expression "for the purpose of earning profits". Its range
is wide: it may
694
take in not only the day to day running of a business but
also the rationalization of its administration and
modernization of its machinery; it may include measures for
the preservation of the business and for the protection of
its assets and property from expropriation, coercive process
or assertion of hostile title; it may also comprehend
payment of statutory dues and taxes imposed as a pre-
condition to commence or for carrying on of a business; it
may comprehend many other acts incidental to the carrying on
of a business. However wide the meaning of the expression
may be, its limits are implicit in it. The purpose shall be
for the purpose of the business, that is to say, the
expenditure incurred shall be for carrying on the business
and the assessee shall incur it in his capacity as a person
carrying on the business. It cannot include sums spent by
the assessee as agent of a third party, whether the origin
of the agency is voluntary or statutory; in that event, he
pays the amount on behalf of another and for a purpose
unconnected with the business.
In the present case, the amounts in question were paid by
the assessee as a statutory agent to discharge a statutory
duty unconnected with the business, though the occasion for
the imposition arose because of the territorial nexus
afforded by the accident of its doing business in India.
Therefore, it must be held that the estate duty paid by the
respondent was not an allowable deduction under s. 10(2)(xv)
of the Act.
Case law reviewed.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 384 and 385
of 1963. Appeals by special leave from the judgment and
Decree dated January 19, 1961, of the Kerala High Court in
Income-tax Referred case No. 20 of 1959.
K. N. Rajagopal Sastri and R. N. Sachthey, for the
appellant.
Bishan Narain, G. B. Pai, T. A. Ramachandran, J. B.
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Dadachanji, 0. C. Mathur and Ravinder Narain, for the res-
pondents.
April 10, 1964. The judgment of the Court was delivered by
SUBBA RAO, J.-These two appeals by special leave raise the
question whether the estate duty paid by the resident
Company, hereinafter called the assesses, incorporated
outside India, on behalf of members not domiciled in India
is deductible from its profits in computing its assessable
income under s. 10(2)(xv) of the Indian Income-tax Act,
1922, hereinafter called the Act.
The material facts are not in dispute and they may be
briefly stated. The assesses is a resident Company incorpo-
rated outside India. Most of its shareholders are in the
United Kingdom. During the accounting period ending March
31, 1955, it paid pound 1,302-9-4 and pound 1,303 towards
estate duty which was payable on the death of certain share-
holders who were not domiciled in India. The assessee
debited the said amounts to revenue in its accounts in
ascertain-
695
ing the profits and gains of its business for the said year.
Similarly, for the accounting year ending March 31, 1956, it
paid a sum of pound 3,809-1-5 towards estate duty payable on
the death of certain shareholders and debited the said
amount to revenue in its accounts in ascertaining the
profits and gains of its business for that year. The
Income-tax Officer included the said amounts so paid towards
estate duty in the profits and gains of the company for the
said two accounting periods and assessed the company to
income-tax for 1955-56 and 1956-57 on that basis. The
appeals preferred by the assessee to the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner were dismissed. On further appeal to the
Appellate Tribunal it held that the assessee was entitled to
deduct the said amount in computing its profits; and on that
finding it set aside the orders of the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner. On an application made by the Commissioner of
Income-tax, the Appellate Tribunal stated a case under s.
66(1) of the Act to the Kerala High Court, and referred the
following question of law for its opinion:
"Whether on the facts and in the circumstances
of the case, the estate duty paid by the
Company under Section 84 of the Estate Duty
Act, 1953, is a revenue expenditure deductible
in computing the assessee’s business income
for the assessment years in question?"
The High Court agreed with the view expressed by the
Appellate Tribunal and answered the question referred to it
in the affirmative. The present appeals by special leave
have been filed against the said order of the High Court.
Mr. Rajagopala Sastri, learned counsel for the Commissioner
of Income-tax, raised before us the following two points;
(1) The sums paid by the assessee under s. 84 of the Estate
Duty Act, 1953, are not expenditure of the assesseeCompany
and, therefore, they cannot be deducted from its profits in
computing its assessable income under s. 10(2)(xv) of the
Act; and (2) even if it is revenue expenditure, it is not
laid out or expended wholly or exclusively for the purpose
of the assessee’s business within the meaning of the said
sub-clause.
Mr. Bishan Narain, learned counsel for the respondent,
supported the judgment of the High Court and contended that
the said estate duty was revenue expenditure incurred by the
assessee as it was put out of pocket to that extent and that
it had not been proved that the assessee could legally
recover the said amounts from the legal representatives of
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the deceased shareholders. He further argued that
696
he said expenditure was wholly and exclusively for the pur-
pose of the assessee’s business within the meaning of
s.10(2)(xv) of the Act inasmuch as it discharged its statu-
tory obligation in order to preserve the assets of the com-
pany.
The question raised turns upon the provisions of s. 10(2)
(xv) of the The act. It reads :
Section 10. Business-The tax shall be payable
by an assessee under the head "Profits and
gains of business, profession or vocation" in
respect of the profits and gains of any
business, profession or vocation carried on by
him.
(2) Such profits or gains shall be computed
after making the following allowances,
namely:-
(xv) any expenditure (not being an allowance
of the nature described in any of the clauses
(1) to (xiv) inclusively, and not being in the
nature of capital expenditure or personal
expenses of the assessee) laid out or expended
wholly or exclusively for the purpose of such
business, profession or vocation."
The first facet of the argument turns upon the question
whether the estate duty paid by the assessee is an expendi-
ture incurred by it within the meaning of the said
provision. Under s. 5 of the Estate Duty Act the property
of every person dying after the commencement of the said
Act shall be liable to a duty called "estate duty" at the
rates fixed in accordance with s. 35 thereof. Under s. 21
of the said Act there shall not be included in the property
passing on the death of the deceased, inter alia, movable
property situated outside the territories to which the said
Act extends at the time of the death of the person. Under
s. 53 of the said Act, where any property passes on the
death of the deceased, every legal representative to whom
such property so passes for any beneficial interest in
possession or in whom any interest in the property so
passing is at any time vested and others mentioned in the
section shall be accountable for the whole of the estate
duty on the property passing on the death. Section 84
thereof is aimed to reach the property of a member of a
company dying outside India: the section before amendment
read:
Section 84. Company to furnish particulars of deceased
inemberrs to the Controller-
Where a company incorporated outside India
carried on business in the territories to
which this Act extends and has been, treated
for the
697
purposes of the Indian income-tax Act, 1922
(Xi of 1922),as resident for two out of three
completed assessments immediately preceding,
such company shall, within three months of the
receipt of intimation of the death of a member
dying after the commencement of this Act, fur-
nish to the Controller such particulars as may
be prescribed in respect of the shares of the
deceased member in the company, and shall be
liable to pay estate duty at the rates
mentioned in Part III of the Second Schedule,
on the principal value of the shares held by
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the deceased in the company except in cases
where the deceased member was a person
domiciled in India and the person accountable
has obtained a certificate from the Controller
showing that either the estate duty in respect
thereof has been paid or will be paid or that
none is due, as the case may be."
Under this section in the circumstances mentioned therein a
company is liable to pay estate duty in respect of the
shares of the deceased member of the company on the princi-
pal value of the share held by the deceased in the company:
under this section a statutory obligation is imposed on the
company to pay the estate duty on the shares of a deceased
non-resident member. If such a member of the company had
died in India, subject to the conditions mentioned in the
section, the company would not be liable to pay the estate
duty payable on the shares held by the deceased. In
substance the company is made a statutory agent to pay the
said duty payable in respect of property belonging to
another. Section 77 of the Estate Duty Act enables a person
authorised or required to pay estate duty in respect of any
property to transfer the said property for the purpose of
paying the duty. This section cannot have extra-territorial
operation. Prima facie the company cannot transfer the
shares or the property of a person domiciled in a country
outside India. Nor sub-s. (2) of s. 77, which says that a
person having an interest in any property, who pays the
estate duty in respect of that property, shall be entitled
to the like charge, as the estate duty in respect of that
property had been raised by means of a mortgage to him, has
application, for it cannot be said that the company has any
legal interest in the shares owned by a third party. That
apart, -the said sub-section also cannot have extra-
territorial operation. Nothing has been placed before us to
enable us to ,.come to the conclusion whether in England,
where the concerned shareholders died, the resident company
could recover the amount representing the estate duty paid
by it in
698
India from the legal representatives of the deceased share-
holders. We, therefore, assume that the assessee who, as a
statutory agent pays to the State the estate duty, cannot
recover the same from the legal representatives of the
deceased non-resident shareholders. In that situation the
company would be out of pocket to the extent it paid the
estate duty of the said persons. We cannot, therefore,
accede to the contention of the learned counsel for the
appellant that the amounts paid by the assessee towards
estate duty were not expenditure incurred by it, but only
amounts paid by it on account with a right to recover the
same from the persons on whose behalf it paid.
The next question is whether the said expenditure was
expended wholly and exclusively for the purpose of the
business of the assessee within the meaning of s. 10(2)(xv)
of the Act. The crucial words of the section relevant to
the present enquiry are "for the purpose of such business."
Subsection (2) cl. (xv) is a residuary clause which provides
for allowing the items of business expenditure not covered
by the other clauses of sub-s. (2) of s. 10 of the Act.
Beforethe Amending Act of 1939, the language of the
predecessor of this clause read thus:
" not being in the nature of capital gains
incurred solely, for the purpose of earning
such profits or gains."
The Amending Act of 1939 substituted the present clause and
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made it more comprehensive by using the expression "for the
purpose of such business". Some of the decisions cited at
the Bar, both English and Indian, throw some light on the
construction of the said expression and we would, therefore,
briefly notice them.
The House of Lords in Strong and Company of Romsey, Limited
v. Woodifield(1) construed a corresponding provision in the
Income-tax Act of the United Kingdom, the, relevant part
whereof read: "money wholly and exclusively laid out or
expended for the purposes of such concern."’ There, a
brewing company, which also owned licensed houses in which
it carried on the business of innkeepers, incurred damages
and costs to the amount of pound 1,490 on account of
injuries caused to a visitor staying at one of its houses by
falling in of a chimney. The House of Lords held that the
damages and costs were not allowable as a deduction in
computing the company’s profits for income-tax purposes.
The learned Lord Chancellor said:
"They cannot be deducted if they are mainly
incidental to some other vocation, or fall on
the-,
(1) (1906) 5 T.C. 215, 219, 220.
699
trader in some character other than that of a
trader."
Lord Davey, whose dictum was the basis for some of the
subsequent decisions in that country, referring to the
expression "for the purpose of trade" observed as follows:
It is not enough that the disbursement is made
in the course of, or arises out of
, or is
connected with, the trade or is made out of
the profits of the trade. It must be made for
the purpose of earning the profits."
Lord Davey’s definition appears to be much narrower than
that of the Lord Chancellor, for the former restricts the
expression to mean that the expenditure should have been
made only for the purpose of earning profits. Finlay, J.,
in Allen v. Farquharson Brothers Limited(1), noticed that
the qualifictaion "for the purpose of earning profits" was a
slight expansion of the words of the statute, though he ex-
pressed the view that it brought out the real import of the
relevant section. In Rowntree and Company, Ltd. v. Curtis
(H.M. Inspector of Taxes)(2), in disallowing the deduction
claimed by a company of a sum set aside for the relief of
,the invalid employees, Rowlatt, J., applied the test
whether the said expenditure incurred by the company was for
the purpose of earning profits. In Cooke v. Quick Shoe
Repair Service(3), the court allowed a deduction in respect
of sums paid by the respondent-firm in discharging the
liabilities of the business outstanding at the date of the
said respondent purchased the business from a third party on
the ground that the said expenditure, having been incurred
for the purpose of preserving the goodwill and for ensuring
the continuity of supply of raw-material and labour, was
wholly and exclusively laid out for the purpose of its
business. After referring to earlier decisions, Croom-
Johnson, J., made the following observation:
Here is a payment made in the circumstances of
this case in order to ensure a supply of
leather for the business, a payment made in
order to ensure a continuance of labour
willing to be employed in this business, and
payment for rent in order to ensure that the
landlord’s consent to assignment of the
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premises, of the premises in which the
business was carried on, should not be re-
fused. I find it quite impossible to say that
there is no evidence to justify those
findings."
(1) 17 T.C. 59. 65. (2) (1924) 8 T.C. 678.
(3) (1949) 30 T.C. 460. 466.
700
Here it will be noticed that the learned Judge went beyond
the limited scope given by Lord Davey to the expression in
the statute and did not confine it to the amounts spent only
for earning profits, but to expenditure incurred in connec-
tion with the business. Where a company incurred an ex-
penditure in defending its title to property, it was held in
Southern (H.M. Inspector of Taxes) v. Borax Consolidated,
Ltd.(1) that the said amount was spent wholly and exclu--
sively for the purpose of the company’s trade and was,
therefore, an allowable deduction for the purpose of com-
puting the profits of the company for income-tax purposes.
This decision gives a more liberal meaning to the expression
"for the purpose of the trade" than that given by Lord
Davey. "Purpose" of the trade includes the purpose to pro-
tect the assets of the company carrying on the trade. The
House of Lords resurveyed the legal position in Morgan
(Inspector of Taxes) v. Tate and Lyle Ltd.(2) in the context
of the questions whether the expenditure incurred by a com-
pany engaged in sugar refining in a propaganda campaign to
oppose the threatened nationalization of the industry was,
an admissible deduction. Lord Morton, after referring to
the relevant case-law and to Lord Davey’s formula, made the
following observations:
"..........this seeems to me to be an
assumption wholly unwarranted by the
evidence. There is no evidence that a
transfer of the assets to a national body or
authority would not destroy or adversely
affect the company’s business.................
It is clear on the authorities that Lord
Davey’s formula includes expenditure for the
purpose of’ preventing a person from being
disabled from carrying on and earning profits
in the trade."
Lord Reid laid down the relevant test thus:
"A general test is whether the money was spent
by the person assessed in his capacity of
trader or in some other capacity-whether on
the one hand the expenditure was really
incidental to the trade itself or on the other
hand it was mainly incidental to some other
vocation or was made by the trader in some
other capacity than that of trader."
This decision also restated the two tests namely (i) that
the expenditure should be for carrying on the business to
earn profits in the trade, and (ii) that the expenditure
shall’ be incurred by the assessee in his capacity of a
person
(1) (1942) 10 T.T.R. (Suppl.) 1, S.
(2 ) (1954) 26 I.T.R. 195, 205, 206, 219.
701
carrying on the business. Lord Greene, M.R., in Rushden
Heel Co., Ltd. v. Keene(1) reaffirmed the second test in the
following words:
"I find, however, in Strong and Company’s
case(2) what appears to me to be a clear
answer to the present appeal. It is, I think,
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a matter not of dictum but of decision in that
case that an expense is not deductible if it
falls on a trader in some character other than
that of a trader. This was the ground of the
opinion of Lord Loreburn, L.C., with which
Lords Macnaghten and Atkinson agreed. Their
Lordships held that the expense there in
question fell upon the appellants in their
character not of traders but of householders."
In Smith v. Lion Brewery Co., Ltd.(3), the question was
whether a brewery company, which was owner and lessee of a
number of licensed premises where business was carried on on
the tide-house basis, was entitled to deduct for the
purposes of income tax its liability in respect of
compensation fund charges under the, Licensing Act, 1904.
It was contended by the Crown that the liability to which
the Company became subject was in its capacity as landlord
of the property and not as trader carrying on the trade of
brewer. When the case ultimately came up before the House
of Lords, the House was equally divided. The view of two of
the members who agreed with the view of the Court of Appeal
prevailed. The basis of the judgment was that the liability
was wholly and exclusively related to the carrying on of the
company’s business, because on the facts of that case the
company had assumed the position of landlord for the purpose
of its trade. If the finding was that the company paid the
tax in its capacity as landlord as opined by the learned
Lords who dissented, the result would have been the other
way. In Harrods (Buenos Aires) Ltd. v. TaylorGooby (H.M.
Inspector of Taxes)(4), Buckley, J., covered the entire
ground over again in the context of a question whether the
appellant-company therein which was incorporated and
resident in the United Kingdom and carrying on the business
of a large general stores in Buenos Aires, having paid in
Argentina a tax known as the "substitute tax" to which it
was liable, could claim deduction under the Income-tax Act,
1952 (15 and 16 Geo. VI and 1 Eliz. 1, c. 10, s.137 (a)).
The learned judge held on the facts of that case
(1) (1947) 30 T.C. 298, 316. (2) (1905) 5 T.C. 215.
(3) (1910) 5 T.C. 568.
(4) Appeal No. 2048 (Ch. D.) decided on 25th March, 1963
(unreported).
702
that incurring liability for that tax was a pre-condition of
the Company’s earning profits in the Argentina, for without
incurring liability for that tax the Company could not carry
on business in the Argentina at all. On that finding the
learned Judge came to conclusion that it was a liability
which the Company had undertaken for the purpose of its
trade, and was, therefore, a payment made wholly and ex-
clusively for the purpose of the company’s trade. It will
be seen that in that case the tax was paid by the Company in
its capacity as company doing business and unless that tax
was paid the company could not carry on its business. The
two tests laid down are satisfied.
Pausing here, we shall briefly recapitulate the legal posi-
tion in England. The relevant wordings of section with which
the English Judges were concerned are, in effect, similar to
the terms of s. 10(2)(xv) of the Indian Income-tax Act,
1922. The test laid down by Lord Davey in Strong and
Company of Ramsey, Ltd. v. Woodifield(1), namely, the
disbursement must be made for the purpose of earning
profits, has been accepted and followed throughout, though
the content of that test has been expanded to meet diverse
situations. Broadly, the English courts applied two tests
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to ascertain whether a deduction was permissible or not,
namely. (i) whether the expenditure was incurred for the
purpose of carrying on of the business and for removing
obstacles and impediments in the conduct of the business,
and (ii) whether the assessee paid the amount in his
capacity as businessman or in his personal capacity.
Now coming to the Indian decisions, a Devision Bench of
the Bombay High Court in Tata Sons Ltd. v. Commissioner of
Income-tax, Bombay (2 ) held that the share of bonus
voluntarily paid by a company, which held the managing
agency of another company, to some of the officers of the
managed company was a permissible deduction under
s.10(2)(xv) of the Act. The reason for the conclusion is
stated thus:
"But having considered the whole case and the
question submitted to us I am satisfied that
looking purely at it from the point of view of
commercial principles what the assessee
company has done is something which had as its
object increasing the profits of the Tata Iron
and Steel Co. nd thereby increasing its own
share of the commission."
(1) (1906) 5 T.C. 215.
(2) (1950) 18 I.T.R. 460, 472.
703
In Badridas Daga v. Commissioner of Income-tax(1), where the
agent of the assessee misappropriated his money and the
assessee claimed the part of the amount misappropriated and
not recovered from the agent as a deduction under s.
10(2)(xv) of the Act for the purpose of income-tax, this
Court held that it was not allowable under s. 10(2)(xi) or
s.10(2)(xv) of the Act. Venkatarama Ayyar ,j., observed :
"The result is that when a claim is made for a
deduction for which there is no specific
provision in section 10(2), whether it is
admissible or not will depend, on whether
having regard to accepted commercial practice
and trading principles, it can be said to
arise out of the carrying on of the business
and to be incidental to it."
This decision, though not direct in point, lays down the
principle that an expenditure can be deducted only if it
arises out of the carrying on of the business and is
incidental to it. In Indian Molasses Co. (Pvt.) Ltd. v.
Commissioner of Income-tax, W.B. (2), this Court held that
s. 10(2) (xv) of the Act enacted affirmatively what was
stated in the negative form in the English statute and was
substantially in pari materia with the English enactment and
the courts might consider the English authorities as aids to
the interpretation thereof. The decision of this Court in
Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay v. Abdullabhai
Abdulkadar(3), though, turns upon the provisions of s. 10(1)
of the Act, gives some assistance in deciding the question
raised. One of the questions raised was whether the tax
paid by the assessee-firm as an agent of the non-resident
principle could be claimed as a bad debt or a trading loss.
In the words of Kapur, J., "the loss which the appellant has
incurred is not in its own business but the liability arose
because of the business of another person and that is not
permissible deduction within s. 10(1) of the Act". It is
true that this decision did not arise under s. 10(2)(xv) of
the Act, but the principle that the expenditure incurred by
the assessee in his capacity as agent of another is not a
deductible item equally applies to the present case. This
Court in The Commissioner of Income tax, W.B. v. Royal
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Calcutta Turf Club(1) had to consider the question whether
an expenditure incurred by a race club for the purpose of
training jockeys of the club was an allowable deduction
within the meaning of s. 10(2)(xv) of the Act.
(1) [1959] S.C.R. 690.
(2) (1959) 37 I.T.R. 66.
(3) [1961] 2 S.C.R. 949.
(4) [1961] 2 S.C.R. 729, 735-736.
704
Kapur,j., speaking for the Court , after considering the
relevant decisions, concluded thus:
"Applying the law, as laid down in those
cases, to the present case the conclusion is
that the amountn dispute was laid out wholly
and exclusively for the purpose of the
respondent’s business because if the supply of
jockeys of efficiency and skill failed the
business of the respondent would no longer be
possible. Thus the money was spent for the
preservation of the respondent’s business."
This decision gives a liberal interpretation to the relevant
expression. -In M/s. Haji Aziz and Abdul Shakoor Bros. v.
The Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay City II(1), this
Court disallowed deduction of the amount paid by a firm as
penalty to release the consignment confiscated by the
Customs authorities. In coming to the conclusion, Kapur,
J., speaking for the Court, observed:
"The words "for the purpose of such business"
have been construed in Inland Revenue v. Anglo
Brewing Co., Ltd.(2) to mean "for the purpose
of keeping the trade" going and of making it
pay.,,
After considering the relevant decisions, the learned Judge
proceeded to state thus:
"They cannot be deducted it they fall on the
assessee in some character other than that of
a trader. Therefore, where a penalty is
incurred for the contravention of any specific
statutory provision, it cannot be said to be a
commercial loss falling on the assessee as a
trader the test being that the expenses which
are for the purpose of enabling a person to
carry on trade for making profits in the
business are permitted but not if they are
merely connected with the business."
No doubt this judgment is really based upon the fact that an
expense which is paid by way of penalty for breach of law
cannot be said to be an amount wholly and exclusively laid
out for the purpose of the business; but the observations in
the decision go further and indicate that the expenditure,
if incurred by the trader in some character other than that
of a ,trader, is not an allowable deduction.
(1) [1961] 2 S.C.R. 651, 657, 663.
(2) [(1925] 12 T.C. 803. 813.
705
The expression "for the purpose of the business" is wider in
scope than the expression "for the purpose of earning
profits". Its range is wide: it may take in not only the
day to day running of a business but also the
rationalization of its administration and modernization of
its machinery; it may include measure for the preservation
of the business and for the protection of its assets and
property from expropriation, coercive process or assertion
of hostile titles; it may also comprehend payment of
statutory dues and taxes imposed as a pre-condition to
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commence or for carrying on of a business; it may comprehend
many other acts incidental to the carrying on of a business.
However wide the meaning of the expression may be, its
limits are implicit in it. The purpose shall be for the
purpose of the business, that is to say, the expenditure
incurred shall be for carrying on of the business and the
assessee shall incur it in his capacity as a person carrying
on the business. It cannot include sums spent by the
assessee as agent of a third party, whether the origin of
the agency is voluntary or statutory; in that event, he pays
the amount on behalf of another and for a purpose
unconnected with the business. In the present case, the
company, as a statutory agent of the deceased owners of the
shares, paid the sums payable by the legal representatives
of the deceased shareholders. The payments have nothing to
do with the conduct of the business. The fact that on his
default, if any, in the payment of the dues the Revenue may
realise the amounts from the business assets is a conse-
quence of the default of the assessee in not discharging his
statutory obligation, but it does not make the expenditure
any the more expenditure incurred in the conduct of the
business. It is manifest that the amounts in question were
paid by the assessee as a statutory agent to discharge a
statutory duty unconnected with the business, though the
occasion for the imposition arose because of the territorial
nexus afforded by the accident of its doing business in
India. We, therefore, hold that the estate duty paid by the
respondent was not an allowable deduction under s. 10(2)(xv)
of the Act. We answer the question in the negative. The
order of the High Court is wrong and is set aside.
In the result, the appeals are allowed with costs. One set
of hearing fees.
Appeal allowed
706