Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX,BOMBAY CITY, BOMBAY
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BIPINCHANDRA MAGANLAL AND CO. LTD.,BOMBAY
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
17/11/1960
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
DAS, S.K.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
CITATION:
1961 AIR 1040 1961 SCR (2) 493
CITATOR INFO :
R 1965 SC1977 (11)
RF 1966 SC 870 (11)
R 1973 SC1034 (21)
F 1977 SC 560 (7)
R 1978 SC1099 (4,7)
ACT:
Income-tax-Profit and assessable income-Difference between
-Smallness of profit--How determined-Indian Income-tax Act,
1922 (11 of 1922), SS. 10 (2) (VII) second proviso, 66(1).
HEADNOTE:
The respondent company purchased certain machinery for Rs.
89,000 and sold it for the same value, but in the books of
account the written down value of the machinery was shown in
the year of account as Rs. 73,392. The Income Tax Officer
in computing the assessable income of the company added the
difference, i.e. Rs. 15,608, between the actual value and
the written down value to the profit of the company. The
Income Tax Officer also passed an order under S. 23A of the
Income Tax Act, and directed that the undistributed portion
of the assessable income, shall be deemed to have been
distributed amongst the shareholders as dividend. Appeals
against the order of the Income-tax Officer proved
unsuccessful and the Appellate Tribunal referred the
following question to the High Court under s. 66(1):-
"Whether the sum of Rs. 15,608 should have been included in
the assessee company’s "profit" for the purpose of deter-
mining whether the payment of a larger dividend than that
declared by it would be unreasonable."
The High Court answered the question in the negative. On
appeal by special leave,
Held, that the view taken by the High Court was correct.
494
By the fiction in S. 10(2)(Vii) second proviso, read with
s.2(6C), what is really not income is, for the purpose of
computation of assessable income, made taxable income: but
on that account, it does not become commercial profit, and
if it is not commercial profit, it is not liable to be taken
into account in assessing whether in view of the smallness
of profits a larger dividend would be unreasonable.
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"Smallness of profit" should not be equated with "smallness
of assessable income" but should be determined in accordance
with commercial principles.
Sir Kasturchand Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay
City, (1949) XVII I.T.R. 493, Ezra Proprietary Estates Ltd.
v. Commissioner of Income-tax, West Bengal, (1950) XVIII
I.T.R. 762 and Commissioner of Income-tax Bombay City v. F.
L. Smith & Co. (Bombay) Ltd., (1959) XXXV I.T.R. 183,
referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 761 of 1957.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
February 24, 1955, of the former Bombay High Court in I.T.R.
48/X of 1954.
Hardayal Hardy and D. Gupta, for the appellant.
N. A. Palkhivala and I. N. Shroff, for the respondent.
1960. November 17. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
SHAH, J.-The Income Tax Appellate Tribunal, Bombay Bench
"A", referred under s. 66(1) of the Indian Income Tax Act,
1922-hereinafter referred to as the Act-the following
question:
"Whether the sum of Rs. 15,608 should have been included in
the assessee Company’s "profit" for the purpose of
determining whether the payment of a larger dividend than
that declared by it would be unreasonable ?"
The High Court answered the question in the negative.
Against the order of the High Court, with special leave
under Art. 136 of the Constitution, this appeal is
preferred.
M/s. Bipinchandra Maganlal & Co., Ltd.-hereinafter referred
to as the Company-is registered under the Indian Companies
Act, The Company is one in
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which the public are not substantially interested within the
meaning of s. 23A Explanation of the Act. Its paid-up
capital at the material time was Rs. 20,800 made up as
follows:
20 shares of Rs. 50 each fully paid up and 1980 shares of
Rs. 50 each, Rs. 10 being paid up per share.
In December 1945, the Company purchased certain machinery
for Rs. 89,000 and sold it sometime in March, 1947, for the
price for which it was originally purchased. In the books
of account of the Company, the written down value of the
machinery in the year of account 1946-47 (April 1, 1946 to
March 31, 1947) was Rs. 73,392. The trading profits of the
Company as disclosed by its books of account for the year
194647 were Rs. 33,245. At the General Meeting held on
October 21, 1947. the Company declared a dividend of Rs.
12,000 for the year of account. In assessing tax for the
year of assessment 1947-48, the Income Tax Officer computed
the assessable income of the Company for the year of account
1946-47 at Rs. 48,761 after adding back to the profit of Rs.
33,245 returned by the Company, Rs. 15,608 realised in
excess of the written down value of the machinery sold in
March, 1947. The Income Tax Officer passed an order under
s. 23A of the Act that Rs. 15,429 (being the undistributed
portion of the assessable income of the Company as reduced
by taxes payable) shall be deemed to have been distributed
as dividend amongst the shareholders as at the date of the
General Meeting, and the proportionate share of each
shareholder shall be included in his total income. Appeals
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preferred against his order to the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner and the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal proved
unsuccessful, but the Appellate Tribunal at the instance of
the Company referred the question set out hereinbefore to
the High Court at Bombay under a. 66(1) of the Act.
Section 23A(1) of the Act as it stood at the relevant time
(in so far as it is material) was as follows:
"Where the Income Tax Officer is satisfied that in respect
of any previous year the profits and gains distributed as
dividends by any company upto the end
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of the sixth month after its accounts for that previous year
are laid before the company in general meeting are less than
60% of the assessable income of the company of that previous
year, as reduced by the amount of income-tax and super-tax
payable by the company in respect thereof, he shall, unless
he is satisfied that having regard to losses incurred by the
company in earlier years or to the smallness of the profit
made, the payment of a dividend or a larger dividend than
that declared would be unreasonable, make with the previous
approval of the Inspecting Assistant Commissioner an order
in writing that the undistributed portion of the assessable
income of the company of that previous year as computed for
income-tax purposes and reduced by the amount of income-tax
and super-tax payable by the company in respect thereof
shall be deemed to have been distributed as dividends
amongst the share-holders as at the date of the general
meeting aforesaid..............
Clearly, by s. 23A, the Income Tax Officer is required to
pass an order directing that the undistributed portion of
the assessable income of any company (in which the public
are not substantially interested) shall be deemed to have
been distributed as dividends amongst the shareholders if he
is satisfied that (i) the company has not distributed 60% of
its assessable income of the previous year reduced by the
Income-tax and super-tax payable, (ii) unless payment of a
dividend, or a larger dividend than that declared, having
regard to (a) losses incurred by the company in the earlier
years or (b) the smallness of the profits made in the
previous year, be unreasonable. The total assessable income
of the Company for the year of account was Rs. 48,761 and
the tax payable thereon was Rs. 21,332: 60% of Rs. 27,249
(assessable income reduced by the income tax and super-tax
due) exceeded the dividend declared by Rs. 4,458. The first
condition to the exercise of jurisdiction by the Income Tax
Officer under S. 23A was therefore indisputably fulfilled.
But the Income Tax Officer had
497
still to be satisfied whether having regard to the smallness
of the profit (there is no evidence in this case that loss
was incurred by the Company in earlier years), it would be
unreasonable to distribute dividend larger than the dividend
actually declared. The Income Tax Officer did not expressly
consider this question: he rested his decision on the
rejection of the contention raised by the Company that the
difference between the price of the machinery realised by
sale and the written down value in the year of account could
not be taken into account in passing an order under S.
23A. He, it seems, assumed that if that difference be taken
into account, distribution of larger dividend was not
unreasonable, and the Tribunal proceeded upon the footing
that the assumption was correctly made.
Counsel for the Revenue submits in support of the appeal
that the expression " smallness of profit " means no more
than smallness of the assessable income, and that in any
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event, in the computation of profits, the amount realised by
sale of the machinery in the year of account in excess of
its written down value was liable to be included in
considering whether the condition relating to "smallness of
profit" was fulfilled.
At the material time, s. 2(6C) of the Act defined "income"
as inclusive amongst others of any sum deemed to be profits
under the second proviso to cl. (vii) of sub-s. (2) of s.
10. By s. 10, in the computation of profits or gains of an
assessee under the head "Profits and gains of business,
profession or vocation" carried on by him, the amount by
which the written down value of any building, machinery or
plant which has been sold, discarded or demolished. or
destroyed exceeds the amount for which the building,
machinery or plant is actually sold or its scrap value is to
be allowed as a deduction. This allowance is however
subject to an exception prescribed by the second proviso to
el. (vii) sub-s. (2) of s. 10 that where the amount for
which any building, machinery or plant is sold exceeds the
written down value, so much of the
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excess as does not exceed the difference between the
original cost and the written down value shall be deemed to
be profit of the previous year in which the sale took place.
In computing the profits and gains of the Company under s.
10 of the Act, for the purpose of assessing the taxable
income, the difference between the written down value of the
machinery in the year of account and the price at which it
was sold (the price not being in excess of the original
cost) was to be deemed to be profit in the year of account,
and being such profit, it was liable to be included in the
assessable income in the year of assessment. But this is
the result of a fiction introduced by the Act. What in
truth is a capital return is by a fiction regarded for the
purposes of the Act as income. Because this difference
between the price realized and the written. down value is
made chargeable to income tax, its character is not altered,
and it is not converted into the assessee’s business
profits. It does not reach the assessee as his profits: it
reaches him as part of the capital invested by him, the
fiction created by s. 10(2)(vii) second proviso
notwithstanding. The reason for introducing this fiction
appears to be this. Where in the previous years, by the
depreciation allowance, the taxable income is reduced for
those years and ultimately the asset fetches on sale an
amount exceeding the written down value, i.e., the original
cost less depreciation allowance, the Revenue is justified
in taking back what it had allowed in recoupment against
wear and tear, because in fact the depreciation did not
result. But the reason of the rule does not alter the real
character of the receipt. Again, it is the accumulated
depreciation over a number of years which is regarded as
income of the year in which the asset is sold. The
difference between the written down value of an asset and
the price realized by sale thereof though not profit earned
in the conduct of the business of the assessee is nationally
regarded as profit in the year in which the asset is sold,
for the purpose of taking back what had been allowed in the
earlier years.
A company normally distributes dividends out of its business
profits and not out of its assessable income.
499
There is no definable relation between the assessable income
and the profits of a business concern in a commercial sense.
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Computation of income for purposes of assessment of income
tax is based on a variety of artificial rules and takes into
account several fictional receipts, deductions and
allowances. In considering whether a larger distribution of
dividend would be unreasonable, the source from which the
dividend is to be distributed and not the assessable income
has to be taken into account. The Legislature has not
provided in s. 23A that in considering whether an order
directing that the undistributed profits shall be deemed to
be distributed, the smallness of the assessable income shall
be taken into account. The test whether it would be
unreasonable to distribute a larger dividend has to be
adjudged in the light of the profit of the year in question.
Even though the assessable income of a company may be large,
the commercial profits may be so small that compelling
distribution of the difference between the balance of the
assessable income reduced by the taxes payable and the
amount distributed as dividend would require the company to
fall back either upon its reserves or upon its capital which
in law it cannot do. For instance, in the case of companies
receiving income from property, even though tax is levied
under s. 9 of the Act on the bona fide annual value of the
property, the actual receipts may be considerably less than
the annual value and if the test of reasonableness is the
extent of the assessable income and not the commercial
profit, there may frequently arise cases in which companies
may have to sell off their income producing assets. The
Legislature has deliberately used the expression "smallness
of profit" and not "smallness of assessable income" and
there is nothing in the context in which the expression
"smallness of profit" occurs which justifies equation of the
expression "profit" with "assessable income". Smallness of
the profit in s. 23A has to be adjudged in the light of
commercial principles and not in the light of total
receipts, actual or fictional. This view appears to have
been taken by the High Courts in India without any
dissentient
500
opinion, see Sir Kasturchand Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income
Tax, Bombay City (1), Ezra Proprietary Estates Ltd. v.
Commissioner of Income Tax, West Bengal (2) and Commissioner
of income Tax, Bombay City v. F. L. Smith & Co., (Bombay)
Ltd. (3).
By the fiction in s. 10(2)(vii) second proviso, read with s.
2(6C), what is really not income is, for the purpose of
computation of assessable income, made taxable income: but
on that account, it does not become commercial profit, and
if it is not commercial profit, it is not liable to be taken
into account in assessing whether in view of the smallness
of profits a larger dividend would be unreasonable. In our
judgment, the High Court was right in holding that the
amount of Rs. 15,608 was not liable to be taken into account
in considering whether having regard to the smallness of the
profit made by the Company, it would be unreasonable to
declare a larger dividend.
The appeal therefore fails and is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.
(1) (1940) XVII I.T.R. 493.
(2) (1950) XVIII I.T.R. 762.
(3) (1959) XXXV I.T.R. 183.
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