Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MEENAKSHI MILLS, MADURAI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX,MADRAS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
26/09/1956
BENCH:
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
BENCH:
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN (CJ)
IMAM, SYED JAFFER
CITATION:
1957 AIR 49 1956 SCR 691
ACT:
Income-tax-Reference to High Court-Question of law-Inference
from findings of fact, when a question of law-Test-Profits
earned by the assessee Company by sale of goods entered in
the names of dummy firms and Companies-Benami, Meaning of-
Finding of the status of such firms and Companies, if and
when material-Accrual of liability-Manner of dealing with
the profits by a registered Company, if affects its
liability-Apportionment of profits between place of
manufacture and place of sale, if a question of law-Indian
Income-tax Act, (XI of 1922), ss. 66(1), 42(1), 42(3).
HEADNOTE:
A finding of fact, even when it is an inference from other
facts found on evidence, is not a question of law within the
meaning of s. 66(1) of the Indian Income Tax Act that can be
referred to the High Court for its decision. Such an
inference can be a question of law only when the point for
determination is a mixed question of law and fact. On the
principles established by authorities, only such questions
as relate to one or other of the following matters can be
questions of law under the section:-
(1) the construction of a statute or a document of title;
(2) the legal effect of the facts found where the point for
determination is a mixed question of law and fact;
(3) a finding of fact unsupported by evidence or
unreasonable and perverse in nature.
Although a finding of fact which is not supported by any
evidence or is unreasonable and perverse may be challenged
as an error of law, where there is evidence to consider the
finding of the Tribunal does not cease to be final simply
because the Court may be inclined to take a view different
from that of the Tribunal.
Great Western Railway Co. v. Bater, ([1922] 8 T. C. 231),
followed.
The soundness of a conclusion based on a number of facts
found on evidence must be judged by the cumulative effect of
all the facts and it is altogether a wrong approach to
consider them individually in an isolated manner in order to
explain them and show that inferences other than those drawn
by the Tribunal could be drawn from them.
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90
392
Edwards (Inspector of Taxes) v. Bairstow, ([1955] 28 I.T.R.
579), referred to.
Misappreciation of evidence does not amount to want of evi-
dence and unless the evidence can be shown to be irrelevant
or inadmissible, the conclusion of the Tribunal cannot be
challenged on the ground that it is based on no legal
evidence.
The test as to whether a question is one of fact or one of
mixed law and fact is this that while in determining a
question of fact no application of any principle of law is
required in finding either the basic facts or arriving at
the ultimate conclusion, in a mixed question of law and fact
the ultimate conclusion has to be drawn by applying the
relevant principles of law to the basic findings.
Herbert v. Samuel Fox and Co. Ltd., ([1916] 1 A.C. 405) and
The Queen v. Special Commissioners of Income-tax ([1894] 3
T. C. 289), followed.
The view expressed in a number of English decisions that an
inference from facts is a question of law has reference
really to questions of mixed law and fact.
Edwards (Inspector of Taxes) v. Bairstow, ([1955] 28 I.T.R.
679), Bam ford v Osborne, ([1942] A.C. 14), Thomas Fattorini
(Lancashire) Ltd. v. Commissioners of Inland Bevenue,
([1942] A.C. 643), and Cameron v. Prendergast, ([1940] A.C.
549), referred to and explained.
The Gramaphone and Typewriter Company Ltd. v. Stanley
([1908] 2 K.B. 89), held inapplicable.
The American Thread Company v. Joyce, ([1911] 6 T.C. 1) and
The American Thread Company v. Joyce, ([1913] 6 T.C. 163),
relied on.
Nor do the observations made by the Privy Council in a
number of cases lend any support to the broad contention
that inferences from facts are always and necessarily
questions of law.
Ram Gopal v. Shamskhaton, ([1892] L.R. 19 I.A. 228), Nafar
Chandra Pal v. Shukur ([1918] L.R. 45 I.A. 183), Dhanna Mal
v. Moti Sagar, ([1927] L.R. 54 I.A. 178), Wali Mohammad v.
Mohammad Baksh, (E-1929] L.R. 57 I.A. 86), Secretary of
State for India in Council v. Bameswaram Devasthanam,
([1934] L.R. 61 I.A. 163) and Lakshmidhar Misra v. Bangalal,
([1949] L.R. 76 I.A. 271), referred to and explained.
Consequently, in a case where, as in the present, the
Appellate Tribunal, on the basis of certain findings of
fact, amply supported by the evidence and eminently
reasonable, came to the conclusion that certain sales
entered in the books of-the assessee Company in the names of
certain intermediaries, firms and Companies, which were
brought into existence by the assessee solely for the
purpose of concealing its own profits, and appeared to have
done no other business except the sales in question, were
fictitious and the profits ostensibly earned by those firms
and Companies were, in fact,
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earned by the assesses which had itself sold the goods to
the real purchasers and received the prices, -and should be
added to the amounts shown as profits in its accounts, no
question of law arose for reference under s. 66(1) of the
Act.
The question of benami is purely a question of fact and not
a mixed question of law and fact as it does not involve the
application of any legal principle for its determination.
Gangadhara Ayyar v. Subramania Sastrigal, (A.I.R. 1949 F.C.
88) and Misrilal v. Surji, (A.I.R. 1950 P.C. 28), referred
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to.
The word ’benami’ is used to denote two classes of
transactions which differ from each other in their legal
character and incidents. In one, the usual class, the sale
is genuine and title is transferred but the real transferee
is not the ostensible transferee but another and in the
other, where the term is inaccurately applied, the sale to
the benamidar is fictitious and the title of the transferor
is not intended to pass. The fundamental difference between
these two classes is that while in the former title vests in
the transferee, in the latter it remains with the
transferor, and when a dispute arises the question as to who
paid the consideration becomes relevant only with respect to
the former class while in the latter the only question is
whether any consideration was paid at all.
The point actually in issue in the instant case, therefore,
was a benami in the second sense and what the Tribunal had
to decide was whether any price had at all been paid by the
intermediaries for the goods ostensibly sold to them by the
assessee. It was not necessary for it to decide whether
apart from the sales the intermediaries had an independent
existence of their own, for such a decision could not in any
way affect the liability of the assessee to pay the tax.
Smith, Stone and Knight v. Birmingham corporation, ([1939] 4
All E.R. 116), distinguished and held inapplicable.
Under the Indian Income-tax Act liability to pay the tax
arises as soon as the income accrues, whether the assessee
be an individual or a registered Company, and the manner in
which such a Company chooses to deal with the profits-cannot
in any way affect its liability. The provisions of the
Indian Companies Act, designed to protect the interests of
the share-holders, cannot in any way affect the right of the
state to levy the tax. Although the point involved was -a
question of law appropriate for reference under S. 66(1),
since the assesses had failed to raise it in his application
under that section, this Court would not direct a fresh
reference in exercise of its powers under Art. 136 of the
Constitution as the point was no longer in doubt in view of
the decision of this Court.
Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras v. K.B.M.T.T. Thiagaraja
Chetty, ([1954] S.C.R. 258), referred to and followed.
The Tribunal was entirely right in refusing to refer the
question as to- whether ss. 42(1) and 42(3) of the Indian
Income-tax Act
694
applied only to non-residents as was urged on behalf of the
assessee. These sections apply both to residents and non-
residents.
Commissioner of Income-tax v. Ahmedbhai Umarbhai and Co.,
([1950] S.C.R. 335), referred to and followed.
The question of apportionment of the profits between the
place of manufacture and the place of sale and correctness
of the ratio fixed by the Tribunal is a pure question of
fact and cannot be referred to Court. under s. 66(1) of the
Act.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE, JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 124 to 126
of 1954.
Appeals by special leave from the judgment and order dated
the 10th day of March 1952 of the Madras High Court in
C.M.P. Nos. 10427, 10425 and 10426 of 1951 arising gut of
the order dated the 23rd day of February 1951 of the Income
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Tax Appellate Tribunal, Madras Bench in Reference
Applications Nos. 312, 310 and 311 of 1950-51.
P. R. Das, B. Sen, V. Sethuraman and S. Subramaniam for
the appellant.
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor-Generalfor India, Porus A. Mehta
and R. H. Dhebar for P. G. Gokhale for the respondent.
1956. September 26. The judgment of the Court was
delivered by
VENKATARAMA AYYAR J.-These appeals arise out of orders of
assessment made on the appellant by the Appellate Tribunal,
Madras Bench, for the years of account 1941-42, 1942-43 and
1943-44. The appellant applied under section 66(1) of the
Indian Income-tax Act (hereinafter referred to as the Act)
to refer to the High Court certain questions which according
to it arose out of the orders; but the Tribunal rejected the
applications. The appellant then moved the High Court under
section 66(2) of the Act for an order requiring the Tribunal
to refer those questions to the court, but the learned
Judges held that the questions on which reference was sought
by the appellant were pure questions of fact, and dismissed
the applications. The matter now comes before us by way of
special appeal.
695
The facts material for the purpose of these appeals may
shortly be stated. The assessee is a public company
registered under the Indian Companies Act, and its Managing
Agents are the firm of Messrs K. R. Thyagaraja Chettiar and
Co., whose partners are Mr. Thyagaraja Chettiar and his two
sons. The company is resident and ordinarily resident in
British India, its head office being at Madurai in the
Madras State. It carries on business in the manufacture and
sale of yarn, and for the purpose of that business it
purchases cotton and occasionally sells it. Its profits
arise for the most part from the sale of yarn and to some
extent from the re-sale of cotton. According to the account
books of the company, its profits from business for the
account year 1941-42 were Rs. 9,25,364, for 1942-43 Rs.
24,09,832 and for 1943-44 Rs. 29,13,88 1. In its returns,
the appellant showed these amounts as its income chargeable
to tax for the respective years. The Department did not
accept the correctness of the figures as shown in the
accounts. It contended that the Company had earned more
profits than were disclosed in its accounts, and that it had
contrived to suppress them by resort to certain devices.
According to the Department, the scheme evolved by the
appellant for this purpose was this: Suppose the Company
sold 25 bales of yarn to X for. Rs. 50,000 at the then
market rate and received the full amount of the price. The
books of the Company would show neither the sale to X nor
its receipt of Rs. 50,000. Instead, there will be an entry
in its books showing the sale of these very bales to A for
Rs. 20,000 which will be about the cost price and in the
books of A these goods will be shown as sold by it to X for
Rs. 50,000. If the sale by the Company to A and the
connected sale by A to X were genuine, the Company would
have made no profit on the sale, whereas A would have made a
profit of Rs. 30,000 on it. But in fact,both these sales
were sham transactions; the only sale that took place was
that by the Company to X and the price actually received by
it was not Rs. 20,000 but Rs. 50,000. As a result of these
paper transactions and manipulations, the
696
profit of Rs. 30,000 made by the Company was suppressed.
This process was reversed when the Company purchased cotton.
The appellant purchased, let us say, 100 bales of cotton
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from X for a price of Rs. 5,000, and paid that amount to X.
Neither this purchase from X nor the payment of Rs. 5,000 to
him would appear in the books of the Company. Instead, the
books of A will show these goods as purchased by it from X
for Rs. 5,000, and the books of the appellant will show a
purchase from A of those very goods for Rs. 8,000. Both
these sales were fictitious, the only real transaction was
the sale by X to the Company and the price actually paid
therefor by the Company was only Rs. 5,000. By the device
of sale by X to A and by A to the Company, the cost price
had been inflated by Rs. 3,000, and the real profit had been
concealed to that extent. The accounts of the Company,
therefore, did not reflect the true position as to the
profits actually made by the appellant. The names of the
intermediaries who according to the Department played the
role of A in the above illustration-and they will hereafter
be referred to simply as intermediaries-are given below with
the amount of profits made on the sale of yarn in their
names and concealed, or the extent of the cost price
inflated on the purchase of cotton from them, as found by
the Tribunal:
1941-42
1. Meenakshi & Co. Sale of yarnRs. 35,830
2. Sivagami & Co. do. Rs. 35,443
3. Mangayarkarasi & Co. do. Rs. 34,579
4. Alagu & Co. Purchase of
cotton Rs. 34,003
1942-43
1. Meenakshi & Co. Sale of yarnRs. 53,635
2. Sivagami and Co. do. Rs. 58,103
3. Rukmani & Co. Ltd. & Sale of yarn Rs. 3,97,467
4. Sivagami & Co. Ltd.
5. Rukmani & Co., Ltd. Purchase of
cotton Rs. 33,533
697
1943-44
1. Pudukottah&Co.,Ltd. Sale of yarn Rs. 18,99,488
Do. Purchase of
cotton Rs. 12,703
2. Rukmani & Co., Ltd. do. Rs. 22,504
3. Rajendra Ltd. Sale of yarn Rs. 1,06,436
The contention of the Department was that the amounts shown
as profits made by the intermediaries and mentioned above
represented in fact the profits actually earned by the
appellant, and that they should be added to the figures
shown in its accounts as its profits. The appellant
contested this position, and maintained that the state of
affairs disclosed by its accounts was true, that its sales
in favour of the intermediaries were genuine, and that, in
fact, little or no profits were made by it in those
transactions, that it purchased cotton only from the
intermediaries and, did pay them the amounts as shown in the
accounts. These contention were closely examined by the
Income-tax Officer in the first instance, then again by the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner on appeal, and finally by
the Appellate Tribunal, and on an elaborate consideration of
the materials placed before them, they held that the
following facts were established:
1. The sale of yarn by the appellant to the intermediaries
mentioned above was for a price very much below the market
rate, often for the cost price and some times for even less.
No acceptable explanation had been given for this unusual
feature. The yarn -was in that period a scarce commodity,
and it was a seller’s market. The amounts lost by the
Company on these transactions during the three years, if
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they were genuine, would far exceed Rs. 25 lakhs. The sales
therefore were not bonafide.
2. The firms of Meenakshi and Co., Sivagami and Co.
Mangayarkarasi and Co., and Alagu and Co., who were the
intermediaries for the year 1941-42 were all newly started
for the first time in 1941. The partners of the firm were
men of no means, and were all relations of Mr. Thyagaraja
Chettiar, the chief
698
partner of the Managing Agents firm and a dominant figure in
charge of the Company’s affairs. None of them had done any
business in yarn before. The personnel of these firms was
drawn in different combinations from a group of half a dozen
persons who were all the creatures of Mr. Thyagaraja
Chettiar.
3. During the year 1942-43, two of the’ firms,
Mangayarkarasi and Co., and Alagu and Co., were closed, and
their place was taken by two private limited companies
called Rukmani and Co., Ltd. and Sivagami and Co., Ltd. The
shareholders of these companies were again drawn from the
small group of persons who were partners of the firms, and
they were all Mr. Thyagaraja Chettiar’s men. These
companies declared no dividends, even though they made con-
siderable profits and the shareholders received no dividends
nor even statements of accounts. In truth, they had no
beneficial interest in the concerns.
4. The business of the intermediaries, both firms and the
companies, consisted solely in the purchase of yarn from the
appellant and not from any other person, and the entirety of
the yarn purchased was sold by them en bloc to constituents
of the appellant. Thus, the business of the intermediaries
was, in fact, only a part of the business carried on by the
appellant.
5. The sales by the appellant in favour of these
intermediaries were of large quantities of yarn and
sometimes on a scale far higher than other genuine
commercial transactions, as for example, the sale of 1850
bales on 17-4-1942 to Rukmani and Co. No securities were
taken from the intermediaries for this transaction. Having
regard to the magnitude of the business, the capital of the
intermediaries even on paper was negligible.
6. The intermediaries bad most of them no offices of their
own. Even when they had offices, these were arranged by the
officers of the appellant. The concerns had no godowns, and
their staff was meagre and recruited from the employees and
servants of the appellant. Apart from signing the
contracts, the intermediaries did nothing.
699
7. The profits earned by the firms were shown in their
books as cash in their possession, but on a surprise raid
the authorities were unable to discover any cash with them.
The amount shown as profits in their accounts was, in fact,
in the possession of the appellant Company.
8. The intermediaries had, in fact, never to pay to the
appellant for any of the purchases made by them, the course
of the business being that they sold the goods purchased
from the appellant to its old customers, who paid therefor.
9. The intermediaries did not issue any delivery orders on
the appellant in favour of the customers to whom they
ostensibly sold the goods, but the goods were despatched
directly by the appellant to the customers and delivered to
them.
10. The customers to whom the goods were delivered by
the appellant as aforesaid paid the full price for which
they purchased them from the intermediary firms not to those
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firms with whom alone they had privity of contract but to
the appellant direct, and these payments appear as receipts
in the books of the appellant.
11. After the Limited Companies were started in 1942-43 and
1943-44, the course of business adopted by the appellant
showed a further mystification. There was firstly a sale of
certain quantity of yarn by the appellant to company A,
which sold it in turn to company B which in turn sold it to
C, which ultimately sold it to the usual customers of the
appellant. In spite of the number of links between the
appellant and the customers, the goods were directly
despatched by the former to the latter, who paid by cheques
the full amount due by them to their seller C, who
straightaway endorsed them, in favour of the appellant. The
intermediaries A and B did no act, and took no part in the
ultimate payment of the price by the purchasers.
12. Some of the intermediaries, firms and companies had
been’ formed in Pudukottah State. At that time, that Sta
was foreign territory, and the profit
700
earned there would become taxable only if it was remitted to
British India. Pudukottah is neither a cotton producing
area, nor was a market for cotton there. The object with
which the intermediaries had been set up in Pudukottah was
obviously to screen portions of the profit earned by the
appellant.
On these facts, the Tribunal came to the conclusion that the
contentions of the Department had been fully established,
namely-, that the intermediaries were dummies brought into
existence by the appellant for concealing its profits, that
the sales standing in their names were sham and fictitious,
and that the, profits ostensibly earned by them on those
transactions were, in fact, earned by the appellant, and
should be added ,to the amounts shown as profits in its
accounts. The point for decision is whether there arises
out of the order of the Tribunal any question which can be
the subject of reference under section 66(1) of the Act.
Under that section, it is only a question of law that can be
referred for decision of the court, ’and it is impossible to
argue that the conclusion of the Tribunal is anything but
one of fact. It has been held on the corresponding
provisions in the English Income-tax statutes that a finding
on a question of fact is open to attack as erroneous in law
only if it is not supported by any evidence, or if it is
unreasonable and perverse, but that where there is evidence
to consider, I the decision of the Tribunal is final even
though the court might not, on the materials, have come to
the same conclusion if it had the power to substitute its
own judgment. In Great Western Railway Co. v. Bater(1),
Lord Atkinson observed:
"Their (Commissioners’) determination of questions of pure
fact are not to be disturbed, any more than are the findings
of a jury, unless it should appear that there was no
evidence before them upon which they, as reasonable men,
could come to the conclusion to which they have come: and
this even though the Court of Review would on the evidence
have come to a conclusion entirely different from theirs".
(1) [1922] 8 T.C. 231, 244.
S.C.R. SUPREME COURT REPORTS 701
There is no need to further elaborate this position, because
the law as laid down in these observations is well settled
and has been adopted in the construction of section 66 of
the Act. Now, the determination of the Tribunal in the
present proceedings being, one of fact, it is open to review
by the court only on the ground that it is not supported by
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any evidence or that it is perverse. The appellant
understood this position quite correctly, and in its
application under section 66(1) it stated the only question
which it wanted the Tribunal to refer to the court with
reference to the present controversy in the following terms:
"Whether on the facts and in the circumstances of the case
there is any legal evidence to support the finding that the
four firms, Meenakshi and Co., Sivagami and Co.,
Mangayarkarasi and Co., and Alagu and Co., were benamidars
for the appellant and that the profits made by these firms
were profits made by the appellant".
This was for the accounting year 1941-42. The question was
similarly worded for the subsequent years also except that
the names of the intermediaries were different for the
different years. The question as framed assumes, it will be
noted, that the Tribunal had held that the intermediaries
were benamidars for the appellant, and on this assumption
were grounded several contentions which were pressed on
behalf of the appellant. Whether this assumption and
the contentions based thereon are well-founded is a
different matter, and will be considered in due course.
But apart from that, it will be seen that the only ground of
attack which was directed against the finding of the
Tribunal was that there was no legal evidence. This is of
course a contention open to the appellant; but has that been
substantiated? Mr. P. R. Das, learned counsel for the
appellant, did, at the start, put his contention as high as
that. But it became abundantly clear when his argument
began to unfold itself that it amounted to no more than this
that the conclusion drawn by the Tribunal from the facts
found by it was unsound and erroneous. He did not, it must
be stated, dispute the facts them-
702
selves, but he took them one after another, and contended
that they were susceptible of inferences other than those
drawn by the Tribunal. He next offered explanations for
them which would ’Make them consistent with the contention
of the appellant. And he finally wound up by saying that
the conclusion reached by the Tribunal was not justified.
This clearly is an erroneous approach to the whole question.
When a conclusion has been reached on an appreciation of a
number of facts established by the evidence, whether that is
sound or not must be determined not by considering the
weight to be attached to each single fact in isolation, but
by assessing the cumulative effect of all the facts in their
setting in the picture as a whole. In Edwards (Inspector of
Taxes) v. Bairstow(1). Lord Radcliffe stated:
I think that it is rather misleading to speak of there being
no evidence to support a conclusion when in cases such as
these many of the facts are likely to be neutral in
themselves, and only to take their colour from the
combination of circumstances in which they are found to
occur".
This furnishes the corrective to the course adopted by
counsel for the appellant in his argument.
And a more serious objection to it, and one of substance is
that it relates merely to matters of appreciation of
evidence, and does not support the position that there is no
legal evidence in support of the finding of the Tribunal.
For example, one of the facts on which the Tribunal relied
for its conclusion was that the partners of the intermediary
firms were new to yarn business and came on the scene for
the first time in 1941. The appellant contends that no
significance could be attached to this, as the partners
belonged to the Nattukkottai Chetti caste, which was a
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trading community. But surely this does not render the evi-
dence irrelevant or inadmissible. It only affects the
weight to be attached to it.’ Then again, the Tribunal has
made a point of it that the goods were sold by the appellant
to the intermediaries for a price far below the market
price, sometimes even below the
(1) [1955] 28 I.T.R. 579.
703
cost price. The answer of the appellant to this was that
they were forward contracts and that the price of yarn on
the dates of those contracts was low. But the Tribunal
declined to accept this explanation for the reason-and that,
a good one-that there were no contract registers from which
the dates on which the contracts were entered into could be
verified, and that the contract notes themselves were not
serially numbered. If this is not a matter of pure appre-
ciation of evidence, it is difficult to see what else is.
The Tribunal also referred to the fact that the only
business which the intermediaries did was to purchase yarn
from the appellant and sell it to its own constituents. The
answer of the appellant to this was that there was no need
for the intermediaries to purchase from other manufacturers
when all their needs were met by the appellant and that
there was nothing unusual in their selling all their yarn to
its customers. it is unnecessary to say anything about the
worth of this contention, for that is a matter exclusively
for the Tribunal to assess. What has now to be considered
is whether this circumstance on which the Tribunal relied is
or is not cogent evidence in support of its conclusion. It
will be preposterous to contend that it is not. No useful
purpose will be served by examining the contentions of the
appellant with reference to the other facts on which the
Tribunal relied for its conclusion. They are of the same
pattern as the above, and bear, at their best, on the weight
to be attached to the facts and not to their relevancy or
admissibility, and there is no question of want of legal
evidence in support of the conclusion of the Tribunal.
Reference should also be made in this connection to another
contention which wag pressed by Mr. P. R. Das at a later
stage of the argument. He contended that the facts found
showed that the intermediaries were benamidars not for the
appellant but for Mr. Thyagarajan Chettiar of the Managing
Agents firm. The significance of this contention lies in
this that it grants-and Mr. P. R. Das was quite frank about
it -that the facts found did point to the fact that the
704
intermediaries were dummies, leaving outstanding for
decision only the question whether on the evidence they were
benamidars for the appellant or for Mr. Thyagarajan
Chettiar. That is a question which will be separately
considered. But it is manifest that this argument is
destructive of the contention of the appellant that there is
no legal evidence to support the conclusion of the Tribunal
that the intermediaries were mere dummies. The result then
is that the finding of the Tribunal viewed as one of fact,
which in truth it is supported by evidence, and is not
unreasonable and is not open to attack on any of the grounds
on which such a finding could be assailed in a reference
under section 66(1).
It was next contended for the appellant that inference from
facts was a question of law, and that as the conclusion of
the Tribunal that the intermediaries were dummies and that
the sales standing in their names were sham and fictitious-
was itself an inference from several basic facts found by
it was a question of law and that the appellant had the
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right under section 66(1) to have the decision of the court
on its correctness, and support for this position was sought
from certain observations in Edwards (Inspector of Taxes) v.
Bairstow(1), Bomford v. Osborne(2), Thomas Fattorini
(Lancashire), Ltd. v. Commissioners of Inland Revenue(3),
Cameron v. Prendergast(" and The Gramophone and Typewriter
Company, Ltd. v. Stanley(5). At the first blush, it does
sound somewhat of a contradiction to speak of a finding of
fact as one of law even when that finding is an inference
from other facts, the accepted notion being that questions
of law and of fact form antithesis to each other with
spheres distinct and separate. When the Legislature in
terms restricts the power of the court to review decisions
of Tribunals to questions of law, it obviously intends to
shut out questions of fact from its jurisdiction. If the
contention of the appellant is
(1) [1955] 28 I.T.R. 579.
(2) [1942] A.C. 14: 1942 I.T.R. Supplt, 27.
(3) [1942] A.C. 643: 24 T.C. 328.
(4) [1940] A.C. 549: 8 I.T.R. Supplt. 75.
(5) [1908] 2 K.B. 89; 5 T.C. 358.
correct., then a finding of fact must, when it is an
inference from other facts, be open to consideration not
only on the ground that it is not supported by evidence or
perverse but also on the ground that it is not a proper
conclusion to come to on the facts. In other words, the
jurisdiction in such cases is in the nature of a regular
appeal on the correctness of the finding. And as a
contested assessment-and it is only such that will home up
before the Tribunal under section 33 of the Act, must
involve disputed questions of fast, the determination of
which must ultimately depend on findings on various
preliminary or evidentiary facts, it must result that
practically all orders of assessment of the Tribunal could
be brought up for review before courts. That will, in
effect, be to wipe out the distinction between questions of
law and questions of fact and to defeat the policy
underlying sections 66(1) and 66(2). One should hesitate to
accept a contention which leads to consequences so
startling, unless there are compelling reasons therefor.
Far from that being the case, both principle and authority
are clearly adverse to it.
Considering the question on principle, when there is a,
question of fact to be determined it would usually be
necessary first to decide disputed facts of a subsidiary or
evidentiary character, and the ultimate conclusion will
depend on an appreciation of these facts. Can it be said
-Chat a conclusion of fact, pure and simple, ceases to be
that when it is in turn a deduction from other facts? What
can be the principle on which a question of fact becomes
transformed into a question of law when it involves an
inference from basic facts? To take an illustration, let us
suppose that in a suit on a promissory note the defence
taken is one of denial of execution. The court finds that
the disputed signature is unlike the admitted signatures of
the defendant. It also finds that the attesting witnesses
who speak to execution were not, in fact, present at the
time of the alleged execution. On a consideration of these
facts, the court comes to the conclusion that the promissory
note is not genuine,
706
Here, there are certain facts which are ascertained, and on
these facts, a certain conclusion is reached which is also
one of fact. Can it be contended that the finding that the
promissory note is not genuine is one of law, as it is an
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inference from the primary facts found? Clearly not. But
it is argued against this conclusion that it conflicts with
the view expressed in several English decisions, some of
them of the highest authority, that it is a question of law
what inference is to be drawn from facts. The fallacy
underlying this contention is that it fails to take into
account the distinction which exists between a pure question
of fact and a mixed question of law and fact, and that the
observations relied on have reference to the latter and not
to the former, which is what we are concerned with in this
case.
In between the domains occupied respectively by questions of
fact and of law, there is a large area in which both these
questions run into each other, forming so to say, enclaves
within each other. The questions that arise for
determination in that area are known as mixed questions of
law and fact. These questions involve first the
ascertainment of facts on the evidence adduced and then a
determination of the rights of the parties on an application
of the appropriate principles of law to the facts
ascertained. To take an example, the question is whether
the defendant has acquired title to the suit property by
adverse possession. It is found on the facts that the land
is a vacant site that the defendant is the owner of the
adjacent. residential house and that he has been drying
grains and cloth and throwing rubbish on the plot. The
further question that has to be determined is whether the
above facts are sufficient to constitute adverse possession
in law. Is the user continuous or fugitive? Is it as of
right or permissive in character? Thus, for deciding
whether the defendant has acquired title by adverse
possession the court has firstly to find on an appreciation
of the evidence what the facts are. So far, it is a
question of fact. It has then to apply the principles of
law regarding acquisition of title by adverse possession,
and decide whether on the facts
707
established by the evidence, the requirements of law are
satisfied. That is a question of law. The ultimate finding
on the issue must, therefore, be an inference to be drawn
from the facts found, on the application of the proper
principles of law, and it will be correct to say in such
cases that an inference from facts is a question of law. In
this respect, mixed questions of law and fact differ from
pure questions of fact in which the final determination
equally with the finding or ascertainment of basic facts
does not involve the application of any principle of law.
The proposition that an inference from facts is one of law
will be correct in its application to mixed questions of law
and fact but not to pure questions of fact. The following
observations of Lord Atkinson’ in Herbert v. Samuel Fox and
Co., Ltd.(1) clearly bring out the principle above stated:
".... Your Lordships were pressed with the usual argument,
that as the County Court judge though a judge of law and
facts, is the sole judge of fact, his findings cannot be
disturbed if there was any evidence before him upon which
he, as a reasonable man, could find as he has found. That
argument is quite sound if it be applied to pure findings of
fact. It is utterly unsound if it be applied either to
findings on, pure questions of law or on mixed questions of
law and fact .... It is wholly illegitimate, in my view, in
cases such as the present, by finding in the words of the
statute to endeavor to secure for ’a finding on a pure
question of law, or on a mixed question of law and fact,
that unassailability which properly belongs only to a
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finding on a question of pure fact".
These observations were made in a case under the Workmen’s
Compensation Act, 1904. But the same principles have been
applied to revenue cases, and it has consistently been held
that inferences from facts may themselves be inferences of
fact and not of law, and that such inferences are not open
to- review by the court.
In the Queen v. Special Commissioners of Income-tax(2) Esher
M. R. observed:
(1) [1916] 1 A.C. 405, 413. (2) [1894] 3 T.C. 289, 290-291.
92
708
"..... it seems to me that is a question of fact. It is a
question of the true inference which they (Commissioners)
had to draw as a matter of evidence upon the facts which
they had in evidence before them. But to draw an inference
of fact from evidence before you is not a question of law at
all. The inference is a question of fact just as much as
the direct evidence of fact, and it would be an appeal
against facts, which we are not entitled to entertain and
consequently there can be no Mandamus".
A clearer and- more, emphatic refutation of the appellant’s
contention cannot be found. The law is thus summed up in
Simon’s Income Tax, 1952 Edition, Volume I, page 281:
"There can be no doubt that it is for the Commissioners, and
for the Commissioners alone, to discover and state the basic
or ’primary’ facts of the case .... From the primary facts
the Commissioners will almost always need to draw some
inference or inferences by the exercise of reasoning, and it
is this process of inference which may, according to its
nature, be a finding of law or of fact, or mixed finding of
law and fact".
The result of the authorities then is that inference from
facts would be a question of fact or of law according as the
point for determination is one of pure fact or mixed
question of law and fact.
Is there anything in the authorities cited by the appellant
which militates against this conclusion? In Edwards
(Inspector of Taxes) v. Bairstow(1), the point for
determination was whether the transaction entered into by
the assessee was an adventure in the nature of trade. The
finding of the Commissioner was that it was not. But that
was reversed by the House of Lords who held that on the
facts found it was an adventure in the nature of trade. The
very expression "in the nature of trade" requires that the
adventure should possess certain elements which in law would
invest it with the characteristics of a trade. The question
is, therefore, one of a mixed law and fact. That is
precisely how the matter is dealt with by
(1) [1965] 28 I.T.R. 579.
709
Lord Radcliffe. He observes at page 589:
"My Lords, I think that it is a question of law what meaning
is to be given to the words of the Income Tax Act ’trade,
manufacture, adventure or concern in the nature of trade’
and for that matter what constitutes ’profits or gains’
arising from it. Here we have a statutory phrase involving
a charge of tax and it is for the courts to interpret its
meaning having regard to the context in which it occurs and
to the principles which they bring to bear upon the meaning
of ’income’ ".
Lord Somervell agreed with the opinion expressed by Lord
Radcliffe. The Lord Chancellor, dealing with this aspect of
the case, referred to the decisions in Cooper v. Stubbs(1)
and Jones v. Leeming(2), where it had been held that whether
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trading activities amounted to carrying on business was a
pure question of fact, and observed at page 587:
"Yet it must be clear that to say that such an inference is
one of fact postulates that the character of that act which
is inferred is a matter of fact. To say that a transaction
is or is not an adventure in the nature of trade is to say
that it has or has not the characteristics which distinguish
such an adventure. But it; is a question of law, not of
fact, what are those characteristics, or in other words,
what the statutory language means-".
In the view of Viscount Simonds, therefore, the question was
one of mixed law and fact. But be was also prepared to
decide the case on the footing that it was a question of
fact and observed at pp. 585-586:
"This appeal must be allowed and the assessments must be
confirmed, - For it is universally conceded that though it
is a pure finding of fact, it may be set aside on grounds
which have been stated in various ways but are, I think,
fairly summarised by saying that the court should take that
course if it appears that the Commissioners have acted
without any evidence or upon a view of the facts which could
not reasonably be entertained".
That is to say, even if the question was one of pure
(1) [1925] 2 K.B. 753. (2) [1930] A.C. 415.
710
fact, the finding of the Commissioners was liable to be set
aside on the ground that there was no evidence in support of
it or that on the evidence it was perverse. What is of
significance in this is that the Lord Chancellor dealing
with the question whether the adventure was in the nature of
trade as one of fact does not hold that the ultimate finding
was one of law by reason of its being one of inference from
facts but treats it only as a finding of fact and open to
attack as such. This decision, therefore, is no authority
for the position that where a findig is given on a question
of fact based upon an inference from facts, that is always a
question of law, and the following observation of Lord
Radcliffe at page 592 is directly against it:
"I do not think that inferences from other facts are
incapable of being themselves findings of fact although
there is value in the distinction between primary facts and
inferences drawn from them".
In Bomford v. Osborne(1), the Commissioners had held that
230 acres out of a plot of 550 acres belonging to the
assessee should be separately assessed as "gardens for the
sale of produce", while the remaining lands should be taxed
on the basis of their annual value. The assessee disputed
the correctness of this finding, and contended that the 230
acres in question were not gardens as contemplated by Rule 8
of Schedule B of the Income-tax Act, 1918. The House of
Lords agreed with this contention, and discharged the
assessment. One of the points raised on behalf of the Crown
was that the finding of the Commissioner was one of fact and
was therefor& final. This contention was repelled on the
ground that whether the lands were gardens within rule 8 was
not a pure question of fact. The following observations in
the speech of Lord Wright at page 38 may be quoted:
"It has been strenuously contended as a main argument on
behalf of the Crown that the questions here to be discussed
are questions of ’fact and degree’. But, in my opinion, the
true effect of the facts found cannot be ascertained until
the true construction of
r. 8 has been examined and its true application to
(1) [1942] A.C. 14: [1942] I.T.R. Supplt. 27.
711
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the facts ascertained. There are, in addition to incidental
questions, two main questions of law, namely, what is the
meaning of "gardens for the sale of produce" and how is that
meaning to be applied to acreage which is worked as a single
mixed farm in one unit".
Thus, the basis of the judgment was that the question
decided by the Commissioners was one of mixed law and fact,
and that their determination was open to review by the
courts. There is nothing in this decision again which
supports the contention of the appellant that findings on
questions of fact based on inference from other facts should
be regarded as questions of law. On the other hand, the
following observations of Viscount Simon at page 22 are
really against this contention:
"No doubt, there are many cases in which Commissioners,
having bad proved or admitted before them a series of facts,
may deduce therefrom further conclusions which are
themselves conclusions of pure fact, but in such cases the
determination in point of law is that the facts proved or
admitted provide evidence to support the Commissioner’s
conclusions". These observations clearly establish that
inferences from facts found need not necessarily be
inferences of law but may be conclusions of fact, and such
conclusions of fact could be attacked on grounds on which
findings of fact could be attacked, namely, there is no
evidence to support them as for example, if the conclusion
does not follow even if all the facts found are accepted.
That does not certainly support the contention of the
appellant.
In Thomas Fattorini (Lancashire), Ltd. v. Inland Revenue
Commissioners(1), the point for decision was whether the
appellant company bad failed to declare within a reasonable
time dividend out of the profits earned by it, in which case
under section 21 of the Finance Act, 1922 the income is
deemed to be income of the members and chargeable to super-
tax. The finding of the Board of Referees was that
distribution of profits had not been made within a
reasonable time,
(1) [1942] A.C. 643; 24 T.C. 328.
712
but their decision was reversed by the House of Lord& on the
ground that there was no evidence in support of it. Thus,
there is nothing in the decision itself which has any
bearing on the present controversy. The appellant, however,
relies on the following observations in the speech of Lord
Porter at page 667:
"I.... think that the final conclusion is not a fact but an
inference from facts previously set out, and that,
therefore, that conclusion is not binding upon the tribunal
to which the case is referred unless it appears from the
previous findings that there are facts which support it. In
the present case I cannot find such support."
In the context, what these remarks mean is that when the
final conclusion is one of fact and is itself an inference
from other facts, it is open to attack on the ground that
the basic facts themselves do not constitute evidence in
support of the final conclusion -a position which does not
arise here.
Then there is the observation of Lord Maugham in Cameron v.
Prenderga8t(1) that "inferences from facts stated by the
Commissioners are matters of law and can be questioned on
appeal". Does this remark mean that inferences from facts
found are questions of law in all cases, whether these
inferences are inferences of facts or of law? There. being
nothing in the observation to throw any light on this
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question, we must examine the facts of the case to ascertain
its true import. There, the assessee who had been a
Director in a building company for 44 years wanted to resign
his office, but be was persuaded to continue as an advisory
Director on a reduced remuneration and a payment of C45,000,
and this arrangement was embodied in a deed. The question
was whether these amounts were taxable as profits arising
from an office. The Commissioners had held that the
consideration for the payments was the promise of the
assessee not to resign his office, and that therefore they
were not profits arising from any office. The House of
lords held, affirming the judgment of the majority of the
Court of Appeal that the amounts were paid to
(1) [1940] A.C. 549: 8 I.T.R. Supplt. 75, 81.
713
the assessee in consideration of his continuing as a
Director, and were therefore taxable. Thus, the only point
for determination in the case was as to the character of the
payments made to the appellant, and that depended on the
true interpretation to be put on the agreement, and that
really was a question of law. There was no question of the
Commissioners recording findings on primary facts and then
of drawing further inferences therefrom. The dictum relied
on by the appellant therefore could have no reference to the
question now under consideration. It is possible that
having regard to the observations follow’ing the one quoted
above that "the same remark is true as to the construction
of documents", what was meant to be conveyed was that the
legal effect of facts stated in the deed of agreement was a
question of law. In the context, it is impossible to
construe the observation as an authority in support of the
present contention of the appellant, and it should be
mentioned that there is nothing about this in take judgments
of the other members of the court.
One other argument advanced on behalf of the appellant must
now be considered. This is based on the following
observations of Cozens-Hardy M.R. in The Gramophone and
Typewriter Ltd. v. Stanley(1):
"It is undoubtedly true that if the Commissioners find a
fact, it is not open to this court to question that finding
unless there is no evidence to support it. If, however, the
Commissioners state the evidence which was before them, and
add that upon such evidence they hold that certain results
follow, I think it is open, and was intended by the
Commissioners that it should be open, to the court to say
whether the evidence justified what the Commissioners held.
I am satisfied that the case stated by- the Commissioners
falls under the latter head".
On. these observations, the argument of the appellant was
that whenever the Tribunal found certain basic facts and
stated its conclusions thereon,, its determination was open
to review by court, and that it was immaterial whether these
conclusions were of fact or
(1) (1908) 2 K.B. 89: 5 T.C. 358.
714
of law. The answer to this contention is furnished -by the
decision in The American Thread Company v. Joyce(1), wherein
the true scope of these observations has been fully
considered and authoritatively settled. There, Hamilton J.
pointed out that what the observations meant was Chat if the
Commissioners merely stated certain findings of fact and
while expressing what according to them was their effect,
did not intend that the expression should be taken as their
finding thereon, then it must be taken that they had
referred to the decision of the court the question as to
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what inference should be drawn from the basic findings, but
that if they had not merely stated the basic findings but
had also stated their conclusions thereon intending that
they should be their determinations on the question, then
those determinations, if conclusions of fact, would be
binding on the court and that the assessee would then have
been stated out of court. Dealing with the statement of the
Commissioners which was under reference before him, the
learned Judge observed at page 22:
"It appears to me, therefore, that it is quite clear that
the Commissioners have done this: they have stated their
determination, with which the appellants are dissatisfied;
they have stated the facts as found upon which they so
determined. The facts as found they have stated in the
first part of paragraph 17, and then they have stated in the
previous paragraphs the materials on which they so found,
and in so doing they have invited, and only invited, the de-
termination in point of law of the question whether there
was evidence upon which they could reasonably arrive at the
conclusion at which they did arrive".
The decision in. The Gramophone and Typewriter Company Ltd.
v. Stanley(2) is thus really not a pronouncement on what is
a question of law but on what construction was to be put on
the statement of the Commissioners which was before the
court. It should be added that the situation envisaged by
Cozens-Hardy
M. R. in The Gramophone and Typewriter Company
(1) [1911] 6 T.C. 1.
(2) [1908] 2 K.B. 89: 5 T.C, 358.
715
Ltd. v. Stanley(1) cannot arise under section 66 of the Act,
as the Tribunal is itself charged with the duty to decide
whether a question of law arises out of its order, and it
cannot therefore merely pass it on for the determination of
the court.
The decision in The American Thread Company v. Joyce (2) was
taken on appeal and confirmed by the Court of Appeal, of
which it may be noted two of the members, Fletcher Moulton
L.J. and Buckley L.J. were. parties to the decision in The
Gramophone and Typewriter Company Ltd. v. Stanley(1), and
they expressed themselves in agreement with the view taken
by Hamilton J. There was a further appeal to the House of
Lords, which in confirming the decision of the courts below
expressly approved of the observations of Hamilton J. The
Earl of Halsbury observed:
"It is enough to say that they (the Commissioners) have
found it and that there was evidence upon which they might
find it, and if they did find it and if there was evidence
upon which they might find it, there is no question of
appeal here at all .... I should have been contented
absolutely to say that I entirely agree with every word of
Mr. Justice Hamilton’s iudgment". (The American Thread
Company v. Joyce).
This decision is particularly important as the finding in
that case was itself, as appears from the judgment of
Hamilton J., an inference from facts found and,
nevertheless, it was decided that it was a question of fact
on which the finding of the Commissioners was final.
I must now refer to another catena of cases relied on by the
appellant in support of its contention that inferences from
facts are questions of law. They are decisions of the Privy
Council as to when a court of second appeal having authority
to review decisions of the lower appellate court on a
question of law could interfere with its findings of fact.
In Ramgopal v. Shamskhaton(4), one Daud Rao was sought to be
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made liable on a mortgage to which he was not a
(1) [1908] 2 K. B. 89; 5 T. C. 358.
(3) [1913] 6 T. C. 163, 165.
93
(2) [1911] 6 T. C. 1.
(4) [1891]-921 19 I. A. 228,
716
party on the ground that be had knowledge of it and had
accepted it. In holding that the acts found did not
establish any ground of liability, Sir Richard Couch
observed:
"A finding that the bond shewed that the mortgage deed was
accepted by the defendant, as binding obligation upon him,
would be an inference of law, an inference which, in their
Lordships’ opinion is not a just one from the facts which
the Commissioner held to be proved. The knowledge of the
mortgage and saying that the money due upon it was
repayable, do not amount to an agreement by him to be bound
byit. As the mortgage did not purport to be made in any way
on behalf of Daud Rao it was not a case for ratification. A
new agreement was necessary to bind him".
Then, after referring to the observations of Lord Watson in
Ramratan Sukal v. Mussumat Nandu(1) that "it has now been
conclusively settled that the third Court, which was in this
case the court of the Judicial Commissioner, cannot
entertain an appeal upon any question as to the soundness of
findings of’ fact by the second court; if there is evidence
to be considered, the decision of the second Court, however
unsatisfactory it might be if examined, must stand final",
Sir Richard Couch continued:
"........ the present case does not come within that rule.
The facts found need not be questioned. It is the soundness
of the conclusion from them that is in question, and this is
a matter of law".
It is this last observation that is relied upon for the
appellant. But when read along with the other passages
quoted above, it clearly recognises the distinction between
findings of pure questions of fact and of mixed question of
law and fact.
In, Nafar Chandra Pal v. Shukur(2), Lord Buckmaster
observed:
"Questions of law and of fact are sometimes difficult to
disentangle. The proper legal effect of a proved fact is
essentially a question of law, so also is the question of
admissibility of evidence and the
(1) [1891-92] 19 I.A. 1.
(2) [1917-18] 45 I.A. 183, 187.
717
question of whether any evidence has been offered by one
side or the other; but the question whether the fact has
been proved, when evidence for and against has been properly
admitted, is necessarily a pure question of fact".
The expression "the proper legal effect of a proved fact" is
itself indicative that inferences from facts are not all of
them questions of law open to consideration in second appeal
but only those which involve the application of some legal
principle. The actual decision in that case was that the
question as to the character of land was one of fact not
open to consideration in second appeal.
In Dhanna Mal v. Motisagar(1), the point for determination
was whether the facts proved were sufficient to establish a
right of permanent occupancy. Discussing how far a finding
on that question by the lower appellate court could be
disturbed in second appeal, Lord Blanesburgh observed at
page 185:
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"It is clear, however, that the proper effect of a proved
fact is a question of law, and the question whether a
tenancy is permanent or precarious seems to them, in a case
like the present, to be a legal inference from facts and not
itself a question of fact. The High Court has described the
question here as a mixed question of law and fact-a phrase
not unhappy if it carries with it the warning that, in so
far as it depends upon fact, the finding of the court of
first appeal must be accepted".
These observations again emphasise the distinction between
inferences which are themselves questions of fact and
inferences on mixed questions of law and fact.
This question was the subject of further consideration by
the Privy Council in Wali Mohammad v. Mohammad Baksh(2),
Secretary of State for India in Council v. Rameswaram
Devasthanam(3) and Lakshmidhar Misra v. Rangalal(1). In,
Wali Mohammad v. Mohammad Baksh(2), Sir Benod Mitter
(1) [1927] L.R. 54 I.A. 178.
(2) [1929] L.R. 57 I.A 86:59M.L.J. 53.
(3) [1984] L.R. 61 I.A. 163: 66 M.L.J. 595.
(4) [1949] L.R. 76 I.A. 271: 1951 M.L.J. 100.
718
exhaustively reviewed the authorities on the questions and
stated the law in the following terms:
"No doubt questions of law and fact are often difficult to
disentangle, but the following propositions are clearly
established:
(1) There is no jurisdiction to entertain a second appeal
on the ground of erroneous finding of facts, however gross
the error may seem to be. (See Musumat Durga Choudrain v.
Jawahir Singh Choudhri(1)).
(2) The proper legal effect of a proved fact is essentially
a question of law, but the question whether a fact has been
proved when evidence for and against has been properly
admitted is necessarily a pure question of fact. (Nafar v.
Shukur(2)).
(3) Where the question to be decided is one of fact, it
does not involve an issue of. law merely because documents
which were not instruments of title or otherwise the direct
foundation of rights but were really historical matters,
have to be construed for the purpose of deciding the
question. (See Midnapur Zamindary Co. v. Uma Charan
Mandal(3)).
(4) A second appeal would not lie because some portion of
the evidence might be contained in a document or documents
and the first appellate court had made a mistake as to its
meaning. (See Nowbutt Singh v. Chutter Dharee Singh(4)).
Great reliance was placed by the appellants counsel on
Dhanna Mal v. Moti Sagar(5) but there, the tenancy was
admitted and the question was whether it was permanent or
not, and the solution of it depended upon what was the legal
inference to be drawn from proved facts, or in other words,
the question was what was the legal effect. of proved
facts".
In Secretary of State for India in Council v. Rameswaram
Devasthanam(6) where a finding of fact reached by the lower
appellate court on a consideration of the documentary
evidence was reversed in second appeal, Sir John Wallis in
holding that the High Court had, in interfering with the
finding of
(1) [1889-90] 17 I.A. 122. (2) [1917-18) 45 I.A. 183.
(3) [1918] 45 M.L.T. 663 P.C.; 29 C.W.N. 131. (4) 19 W.R.
222.
(5) [1927] L.R. 54 I.A. 178.
(6) [1934] L.R. 61 I.A. 163.
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719
fact, acted in excess of its powers under -section 100
observed-
"The question is mainly one of fact, and it is well settled
that under section 100 of the Code of Civil Procedure the
High Court has no jurisdiction to reverse the findings of
fact arrived at by the lower appellate court however
erroneous, unless they are vitiated by some error of law.
Subsequently to the date of the judgments under appeal the
Board has had occasion to emphasis the fact that this rule
is, equally applicable to cases such as this in which the
findings of the lower appellate court are based on
inferences drawn from the documents exhibited in evidence".
If an inference from documents exhibited in evidence is a
question of fact, an inference from facts found on the
evidence must equally be so.
There is one more decision of the Privy Council bearing on
this question. In Lakshmidhar Misra v. Rangalal(1), the
question was whether the finding of the Subordinate Judge in
appeal that there had been a dedication of certain lands as
cremation ground could be reversed in second appeal. In’
holding that the finding was open to review by the High
Court, Lord Radcliffe observed:
"Issue No. 5, (whether the land was a cremation ground) is
essentially a mixed question of law and fact. There are
findings of fact by the Subordinate Judge which must indeed
be accepted as binding in any consideration of this matter
on further appeal: but his actual conclusion that there had
been a dedication or lost grant is more properly regarded as
a proposition of law derived from those facts than as a
finding of fact itself".
These observations lend no support to the broad contention
of the appellant that inferences from facts are of necessity
and always questions of law.
We have discussed the authorities at great length, as some
of the observations contained therein appear, at first
sight, to render plausible the contention of the appellant,
and it seems desirable that the true
(1) [1949] L.R. 76 I.A. 271,
720
meaning of those observations Should be clarified, lest
error and misconception should embarrass and fog the
administration of law. The position that emerges on the
authorities may thus be summed up:
(1)When the point -for determination is a pure question of
law such as construction of a statute or document of title,
the decision of the Tribunal is open to reference to the
court under section 66(1).
(2)When the point for determination is a mixed question of
law and fact; while the finding of the Tribunal on the facts
found is final its decision as to the legal effect of those
finding is a question of law which can be reviewed by the
court.
(3) A finding on a question of fact is open to attack, under
section 66(1) as erroneous in law when there is no evidence
to support it or if it is perverse.
(4) When the finding is one of fact, the fact that it is
itself in inference from other basic facts will not alter
its character as one of fact.
Applying these principles, admittedly there is no question
here of construction of any statutory provision or document
of -title. The issues which arise for determination whether
the sales entered in the books of the appellant in the names
of the intermediaries were genuine and if not, to whom the
goods were sold and for what price are all questions of
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fact. Their determination does not involve the application
of legal principles to facts established in the evidence.
The findings of the Tribunal are amply supported by evidence
and are eminently reasonable. It should, therefore, follow
that there is no question which could be referred to the
court under section 66(1).
it was argued for the appellant that what the Tribunal had
found was that the intermediaries, firms and companies were
benamidars for the appellant, that a question of benami was
one of mixed law and fact, and that accordingly a finding
thereon was open to review under section 66(1). Whether
that is a correct reading of what the Tribunal bad found
will presently be considered. Assuming that such is the
finding, what is the ground for holding that a finding of
benami is one of mixed law and fact? The only basis
721
for such a contention is that the finding that a transaction
is benami is a matter of inference from various primary
basic facts such as who paid the consideration, who is in
enjoyment of the properties and the like. But that is not
sufficient to make the question one of mixed law and fact
unless, as already stated, there are legal principles to be
applied to the basic findings before the ultimate conclusion
is drawn. But no such principles arise for application to
the determination of the question of. benami, which is
purely one of fact, and none has been suggested by the ap-
pellant.
In Gangadara Ayyar v. Subramania Sastrigal(1), the Federal
Court had to consider whether concurrent findings of benami
by the courts below could be reviewed by it, and it was held
that it could not be clone as the practice of the court was
not to interfere with concurrent findings of fact unless
there were exceptional grounds therefor and that there were
none such in that case. It should be noted that the finding
of benami in that case was a matter of inference from
primary facts found which are set out at page 573. But it
was nevertheless held to be a question of fact. In Misrilal
v. Surji(2), it was held by the Privy Council that a finding
of benami was one of fact not open to attack in second
appeal. This contention of the appellant must accordingly
be rejected.
It was next contended that the finding of the Tribunal that
the intermediaries, firms and companies were benamidars. for
the appellant was bad for the following reasons:
(1)It had been reached without due consideration of several
matters relevant for such a determination.
(2)The finding of benami in so far as it related to the
companies was bad for not considering the tests laid down in
Smith, Stone and Knight v. Birmingham Corporation(3) as
material for a decision on the point.
(1) [1949] 1 M.L.J. 568: A.I.R. 1949 F.C. 88
(2) A.I.R. 1950 P.C. 28: [1950] 1 M.L.J. 294.
(3) [1939] 4 A.E.R. 116.
722
(3) On the facts found,, the proper conclusion to come to
was that the intermediaries were benamidars not for the
appellant but for Mr. Thyagarajan Chettiar of the Managing
Agents firm.
These contentions will now be considered. As regards the
first contention, the argument on behalf of the appellant
was this:- An important test for determining whether a
transaction is benami is to discover the source of
consideration for the transfer. When the question is
whether firms and companies are benamidars for another
person, what has to be found is whether it was the latter
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who found the capital of those concerns. The firms and
companies had according to their books their own capital,
and there is no finding that the appellant subscribed it.
Another important test of benami is to find who has been in
enjoyment of the benefits of the transaction. It has not
been shown that the profits of the intermediaries had been
utilised by the appellant. Therefore, the finding that the
intermediaries were benamidars of the appellant could not
stand.
Now, the assumption underlying this argument is that the
Tribunal had found in its order that the intermediaries were
benamidars for the appellant, but there is no basis for this
in the order. In this connection, it is necessary to note
that the word ’benami’ is used to denote two classes of
transactions which differ from each other in their legal
character and incidents. In one sense, it signifies a
transaction which is real, as for example when A sells
properties to B but the sale deed mentions X as the
-purchaser. Here the sale itself is genuine, but the real
purchaser is B, X being his benamidar. This is the class of
transactions which is usually termed as benami. But the
word ’benami’ is also occasionally used, perhaps not quite
accurately, to refer to a sham transaction, as for example,
when A purports to sell his property to B without intending
that his title should cease or pass to B. The fundamental
difference between these, two classes of transactions is
that whereas in the former there is an operative transfer
resulting in the vesting of title in the transferee, in the
latter there is none
723
such, the transferor continuing to retain the title
notwithstanding the execution of the transfer deed. It is
only in the former class of cases that it would be
necessary, when a dispute arises as to whether the person
named in the deed is the real transferee or B, to enquire
into the question as to who paid the consideration for the
transfer, X or B. But in the latter class of cases, when the
question is whether the transfer is genuine or sham, the
point for decision would be, not who paid the consideration
but whether any consideration was paid. Therefore, there
will be force in the contention of the appellant that a
finding as to who furnished the capital for the
intermediaries was requisite before they could be held to be
benamidars, if the Tribunal had held them to be benamidars
in the former sense but not in the latter. We must.,
therefore, examine what it is that the Tribunal has actually
found. Now, the Tribunal has not held that any of the
transactions with which the assessment proceedings are
concerned are benami. Indeed, the word ’benami’ does not
find a place anywhere in its order. It is only in the
question which the appellant framed for reference to the
court in its application under section 661) that it has
chosen for the first time to introduce the word ’benamidar’.
That apart, looking at the substance of the finding, the
point that arose for determination before the taxing
authorities was what profit the appellant had made on
certain sales standing in its books in the names of the
intermediaries. If the sales were true, the amounts shown
in the books as price received therefor would be the basis
for working out the profits, and that was the stand of the
appellant; but the authorities held that those sales were
sham and the entries relating to the payment of price
therefor fictitious. Then, they found that the concerned
goods were sold by the appellant directly to its own
constituents, that the price paid by them was actually
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received by it, and that should be the basis for calculating
its profits. Thus, the point which was actually in issue in
the proceedings was a question of benami in the second sense
and not in the first, and to decide that, the Tribunal bad
only to
724
find whether any price was paid by the intermediaries for
the sales and not who paid the price for them. It is
scarcely necessary to add that no question arises as to
whether the intermediaries are benamidars for the ultimate
purchasers, because the claim of the former is that they had
sold the goods to the latter under fresh contracts at
different prices. Nor could there be a question of benami
in the first sense, as that could arise only between a party
to a deed and another who is economic not a party to it but
claims to be beneficially entitled to the properties
conveyed by the deed. Therefore, on the findings of the
Tribunal, the question whether the intermediaries were
benamidars for the appellant could not arise, and the
further question as to who found the capital for the
intermediaries is altogether irrelevant. Likewise, on the
finding that the yarn was really sold by the appellant not
to the intermediaries but to its own constituents and that
they paid the price therefor to the appellant, the question
who had the benefit of the transaction could not arise
either.
(2)It is next contended that some of the intermediaries were
private limited companies registered in accordance with the
provisions of the Companies Act and were in law distinct
legal entities as held in Solomon v. Solomon & Company(1),
and that they could not be held to be benamidars for the
appellant without deciding the matters mentioned by Atkinson
J. in Smith, Stone and Knight v. Birmingham Corporation
(2) . The learned Judge observed at page 121:
"It seems therefore to be a question of fact in each case,
and those cases indicate that the question is whether the
subsidiary was carrying on the business as the company’s
business or as its own. I have looked at a number of cases-
they are all revenue cases to see what the courts regarded
as of importance for determining that question. There is
San Paulo Brazilian Rly. Co.v. Carter(3), Apthorpe v. Peter
Schoenhofen Brewery Co. Ltd. (4), Frank Jones Brew-
(1) [1897] A.C. 22. (2) [1939] 4 A.E.R. 116.
(3) [1896] A.G. 31: 8 T.C. 407. (4) [1899] 4 T.C. 41.
725
ing Co. v. Apthorpe(1), St. Louis Breweries v. Apthorpe(2),
and I find six points which were deemed relevant for the
determination of the question: who was really carrying on
the business? In all the cases, the question was whether
the company, an English company here, could be taxed in
respect of all the profits made by some other company, a
subsidiary company, being carried on elsewhere. The first
point was: Were the profits treated as the profits of the
Company?-wben I say ’the company’ I mean the parent company-
secondly, were the persons conducting the business appointed
by the parent company? Thirdly, was the company the head
and the brain of the trading venture? Fourthly, did the
company govern the adventure, decide what should be done and
what capital should be embarked on the venture? Fifthly,
did the company make the profits by its skill and direction?
Sixthly, was the company in effectual and constant control?"
The contention of the appellant is that before the
intermediaries could be held to be benamidars for the
appellant, findings ought to have been recorded on the six
points mentioned in the judgment of Atkinson, J. This
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 23 of 28
contention proceeds on a misapprehension as to the true
scope of the above observations and of the decisions
referred to therein. In those cases, the question was
whether the profits earned by a subsidiary company X could
be held -to be profits earned by the parent company A and
taxed in the hands of company A. It was held that the fact
that X was a legal entity did not stand in the way of its
profits being treated as profits of A, if, as observed by
Lord Sterndale in Inland Revenue Commissioners v. Samson(3),
X was doing the business of A and not its own, and various
tests were laid down for ascertaining whether it was A who
was running the business of X. But here, no such question
arises. The true scope of the assessment proceedings is to
discover what profits were really made on certain sales
effected by the appellant, and the intermediaries came into
(1) [1898] 4 T.C. 6. (2) [1898] 4 T.C. 111.
(3) [1921] 2 K. B. 492; 8 T. C. 20.
726
the picture only as the persons in whose names the sales
were made. The question whether apart from those sales the
intermediaries were genuine commercial bodies having
existence independent of the appellant did not arise for
determination, as a finding that they were such bodies would
have had no effect on the chargeability of the appellant to
tax on the profits made by it on the sales in question.
The question of the true status of the intermediaries would
have assumed practical importance if they had done business
other than the sales in question and had made profits
thereon, and those profits were sought to be taxed as
profits made by the appellant. It would then be a
legitimate contention for the appellant to advance that
could not be done unless the intermediaries were found to
have been really benamidars for it. In that case, it would
have been important to consider who found the capital for
the concerns and who was running them. But here, the tax is
levied only on the profits ostensibly earned by the
intermediaries on the sales which stand in the books of the
appellant in their names. If those sales are sham, then the
order of assessment must stand even if the intermediaries
were real concerns, which had found their own capital and
earned their own profits in other transactions. If an
individual A carrying on his own business lends his name to
the business transaction of B. the latter cannot escape the
obligation to pay the tax on these transactions on the
ground that A had also his own genuine business. Likewise
if companies doing their own business lend their names to
business transactions of other persons, those other persons
cannot be heard to say that they are not taxable on the
profits of these transactions for the reason that the
companies were also carrying on their own business.
Therefore, on the finding that the sales were sham, no
question arises as to the constitution or status of the
intermediaries. It is true that the Tribunal has directed
that all the profits earned by the intermediaries should be
added to the profits of the appellant but that is because it
has found that the intermediaries
727
did no business of her than the transactions of the
appellant. And this finding clearly reveals how hollow and
unsubstantial the contentions of the appellant are as to the
sources of capital for the intermediaries and the
application of the tests laid down in Smith, Stone and
Knight v. Birmingham Corporation(1). It is a most unreal
question to raise of firms and companies whose only business
consists of sham transactions as to who found the capital
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for them or who was running them.
(3) It is next contended that though the facts proved might
justify a finding that the intermediaries were benamidars,
they did not necessarily lead to the conclusion that they
were benamidars for the appellant. It is argued that on the
findings of the Tribunal that it was Mr. Thyagaraja
Chettiar, the Managing Agent of the appellant, that had
setup the intermediaries, that it was his relations and men
who had been put up as partners and shareholders of these
concerns, and that it was he that generally had the control
of the business, the proper inference to draw was that the
intermediaries were benamidars for Mr. Tbyagaraja Chettiar,
and that in consequence their profits were liable to be
added to his and not to those of the appellant. This
argument again proceeds on the assumption that the profits
of the intermediaries have been taxed in the hands of the
appellant on the ground that they are its benamidars. But,
as already stated, that is not the true position. What are
sought to be taxed in these proceedings are the profits made
on certain sales and not the profits made by the
intermediaries as distinct entities chargeable to tax under
section 3 of the Act, and the only relevant points for
decision are, what profits were made on those sales and by
whom. On the finding that the appellant sold the goods
direct to the ultimate purchasers and recovered the price
therefor, it is only the appellant that could -be taxed for
the profits made thereon and not the Managing Agent. It is
of no consequence that in form the order is that the profits
of the intermediaries should be added to-those of the
(1) [1939] 4 A.E.R.116.
728
appellant, because, as pointed out in discussing the
previous contention of the appellant of which the present is
but a repetition in another form, the intermediaries did no
other business than the sales concerned in this assessment,
so that the profits of the business mean the same thing as
profits made on the concerned sales.
There is another aspect of the matter, which calls for
notice. - If the contention of the appellant that the
intermediaries were benamidars for Mr. Thyagaraja Chettiar
is accepted, it means that he had, by availing himself of
his position as Managing Agent, unjustly enriched himself at
the expense of the shareholders to the tune of over Rs. 25
lakhs. Now, Mr. Thyagaraja Chettiar is the dominant member
of the firm of Managing Agents. It is this firm that has
been in management of the affairs of the company at all
times and has been representing it in the assessment
proceedings at all stages, and it is through this firm that
the appellant speaks in the present appeals. The position
then is that Mr. Thyagaraja Chettiar as Managing Agent of
the appellant charges himself in his individual capacity
with conduct which is grossly fraudulent and infamous, so
that the company might escape its liability to tax. This,
to our minds, is a most surprising position to take. But we
are not concerned here with the ethics of it and must
consider it on its merits so long as the law does not bar
it. But what are its merits The position which the
appellant took up with reference to this matter at the
several stages of the assessment has been neither uniform
nor even consistent. Thus, before the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner its argument was that the Managing Agent had
been the protector of the interests of the’ company at all
times, that he had "Stood by it in its lean years" and
should "not therefore be presumed to have acted against the
interests of the company" and that therefore the
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transactions in the names of the intermediaries should be
accepted as genuine. Before. the Tribunal, the contention
was that even if -the intermediaries were bogus concerns "it
might be that some other individual got the bene-
730
fit and not the company". Thus, the contention now advanced
was not thought of in the earlier stages and was still
nebulous and in the making, when the matter was before the
Tribunal, and it is only in the, argument that it has
assumed a definite and concrete shape.
Dealing with the contention as advanced before it,. the
Tribunal referred to several facts such as that the sales in
favour of the intermediaries were for unusually large
quantities and for prices far below the market rate and even
the cost of production, that the appellant was a public
company with a Board of Directors in-charge of its business,
and that they must have known all about these transactions.
Is it likely that the Directors would have accepted these
sales involving such huge loss to the company and carried on
regularly from month to month and year to year during the
whole of this period as proper and genuine, unless they
considered that it was the company and not Mr. Thyagaraia
Chettiar who was to have the benefit of them? it was argued
by the learned Solicitor-General for the respondent that if
on the facts two inferences were possible and the Tribunal
chose to draw one and not the other, it was not a matter in
which the court could interfere, if the inference is one of
fact. That is a proposition of law well settled, and has
not been disputed. Now, on the facts, two inferences are
possible. One is that the object of the Managing Agent was
to defraud the shareholders by purchasing goods himself at a
low valuation for his own benefit and that the
intermediaries were set up by him for that purpose. The
other is that they were set up for the purpose of concealing
portions of the profits earned by the company so as to
reduce the tax to which it was liable to be assessed. The
former involves cheating the shareholders; the latter, evad-
ing the tax due to the State. Is it an unreasonable
inference for the Tribunal to draw that the motive by which
the Managing Agent was actuated was the latter and not the
former? Is it not more legitimate to presume that the
Managing Agent wanted to benefit the shareholders by
reducing the
730
tax rather than he wanted to defraud them by himself
purchasing the goods for a low price in the names of the
intermediaries? If the Tribunal came to the former
conclusion and it is one which could reasonably be come to
on the materials, it is not one which the court can review,
being one of fact. This ground. of attack also must be
rejected. In the result, all the contentions of the
appellant based on the assumption that the intermediaries
had been held to be benamidars for the appellant must be
overruled on the ground that on the findings of the Tribunal
they do not really arise.
Lastly, it was contended that the profits earned by the
intermediaries bad not been brought into the books of the
company_ as its income, had not been included in its
balance-sheet and had not been distributed as dividends or
added to its reserves, and, not having been treated as its
income or profits, could not be taxed. The decisions in St.
Lucia Usines and Estates Co. v. St. Lucia (Colonial
Treasurer) (1), Commissioner of Taxes v. Melbourne Trust(2)
and Commissioner of Income-tax, Bihar and Orissa v. Maha-
rajadhiraja of Darbhanga(3) were quoted in support of this
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contention. This question is, however, no longer res
integral and is covered by the decision of this Court in
Commissioner of Income-tax v. K. B. M. T. T. Thyagaraja
Chetty(1). There, the assessee which was no other than the
firm of Messrs K.R.M.T.T. Thyagaraja Chettiar and Co., the
Managing Agents of the present appellant, failed to bring
into its profit and loss account a certain amount which it
had earned as commission, and the point for decision was
whether that amount was liable to tax. The contention of
the assessees was that it was not liable as it had not been
treated as profits by the assessee and the decisions in St.
Lucia Usines and Estates Co. v. St. Lucia (Colonial
Treasurer)(1), Commissioner of Taxes v. Melbourne Trust(2)
and Commissioner of Income-tax, Bihar and Orissa v.
Maharajadhiraja of Darbhanga(3) were relied on in support of
this position. But this Court disagreed with this
contention, and
(1) [1924] A.G. 508. (2) [1914] A.C. 1001.
(3) 60 I.A. 146. (4) 24 I.T.R. 525.
731
held that the liability to pay tax on the income arose when
it had arisen or accrued and that how the assessee dealt
with it subsequently did not affect that liability, and
distinguished the decisions in St. Lucia Usines and Estates
Co. v. St. Lucia (Colonial Treasurer) (1) and Commissioner
of Taxes v. Melbourne Trust(2) on the ground that they were
pronouncements on the particular statutes there under con-
sideration and were not authorities on the question of
assessment of profits and gains under the Indian Income-tax
Act. Applying this decision, the appellant having been
found to have sold its goods to the ultimate purchasers and
received the prices, there can be no question but that the
profits had- accrued to it both in the business and in the
legal sense and that liability to tax had arisen. If an
individual were to sell goods and receive the price
therefor, that would be income accrued or arisen liable to
tax in his hands even though he should have failed to enter
it in his accounts. A party cannot avoid tax by adopting
the simple expedient of not disclosing its receipt in his
books. That will be a case of income accrued or arisen but
concealed and not of income not accrued or arisen. This is
conceded by the appellant. But it is argued that different
considerations arise in the case of companies registered
under the Indian Companies Act, because there are provisions
in the Act as to how the profits are to be disposed of, such
as distribution of dividends or adding to the reserve and
until that was done, there was no accrual of income or of
profits under the statute. This is to confuse accrual of
income with the disposal of it. Income which has accrued to
an assessee might remain undisposed of by him, but the
liability to tax attaches to it under the provisions of the
Indian Income-tax Act as soon as it accrues. It is no
concern of the revenue how and when profits are disposed of
by the assessees, and for this purpose it makes no
difference whether the assessee is an individual or a
company, both of them being equally liable to tax ’on income
and profits when they have arisen or accrued. The
(1) (1924] A.C. 508.
95
(2) [1914] A.C. 1001.
732
provisions of the Companies Act as to the disposal of
profits are designed to protect the interests of the
shareholders and have no effect on the right which the State
has under the provisions of the Act to impose a tax on
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income when it arises or accrues. It should also be
mentioned that though the decision in Commissioner of
Income-tax, Madras v. K. R. M. T. T. Thyagaraja Chetty(1)
relates to a firm and not a company, the decisions in St.
Lucia Usines and Estates Co. v. St. Lucia (Colonial
Treasurer) (2) an(? Commissioner of Taxes v. Melbourne
Trust(3) which were held to be inapplicable to the
imposition of a charge under the Indian Income-tax Act
related to companies, and the argument and the decision pro-
ceeded on the footing that principles applicable were the
same both to firms and companies. The decision in
Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras v. K. R. M. T. T.
Thyagaraja Chetty(1) must accordingly be held-to conclude
this question against the appellant.
It must be said of this contention that it was raised before
the Tribunal and negatived. Being a question of law, the
appellant bad a right to have it referred to the court under
section 66(1). But the question as framed by the appellant
in its application under section 66(1) did not specifically
raise this point; nor does it appear to have been argued in
the High Court. As the matter is now concluded by
authority, it will be an idle formality to direct the
Tribunal to refer the question for the decision of the
court. The powers of this Court in appeal under article 136
are not intended to be exercised for such a purpose. That
disposes of the main and substantial questions that have
been agitated in these proceedings.
There is one other matter in respect of which the appellant
sought reference to the court in its application under
section 66(1). The facts relating to this matter are that
during the periods of assessment with which the appeals are
concerned, the appellant opened branches in the States of
Travancore, Cochin, Pudukkottah and Mysore, and sold yarn to
its consti-
(1) [1964] S.C.R. 258: [1953] 24 I.T.R. 525.
(2) [1924] A.C. 508,
(3) [1914] A.C. 1001.
733
tuents in those States through these branches. The point in
dispute is whether the profits made by the appellant on
those sales are chargeable to tax. The contention of the
appellant before the Tribunal was that the matter was
governed by section 14(2) (c), and that the profits could be
taxed only if they were remitted to British India. That was
not disputed by the Department, but they contended that as
the appellant sold in the States goods manufactured by it in
British India, the governing provisions were sections 42(1)
and 42(3), and that under these provisions, the appellant
was liable to be taxed on such portions of the profits as
were apportionable to the manufacture of the goods in
British India. That was accepted by the Tribunal, and the
profits were apportioned in the ratio of 85:15. In its
application under section 66(1), the appellant raised the
contention that sections 42 (1) and 42 (3) applied ’only to
nonresidents, and that it was only section 14(2) (c) that
would apply to residents and applied to have that question
referred to the decision of the court. But the Tribunal
held that the decision of this Court in Commissioner of
Income-tax, Bombay v. Ahmedbhai Umarbhai and Co.(1) had
settled that sections 42(1) and 42(3) applied both to
residents as well as nonresidents and consequently declined
to refer the question’
The correctness of this decision does not appear to have
been contested before the High Court, the only point dealt
with in the judgment of the learned Judges being as to the
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correctness of the ratio in which the apportionment was
made. Even in this Court, it was only this question that
was pressed on the strength of the decision in Commissioner
of Income-tax and Excess Profits Pax v. S. Sen(2), Section
14 was mentioned in the course of the argument, but no
contention was advanced that sections 42(1) and 42(3) ap-
plied only to non-residents, and the decision in Com-
Missione; of Income-tax v. Ahmedbhai Umarbhai and Co.(1) was
not even so much as referred to in the
(1) [1950] S.C.R. 335: [1950] I.T.R. 472.
(2) [1949] I.T.R. 355.
734
course of the argument, and the appellant did not even ask
for this question being referred. That apart,in view of
the decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Ahmedbhai
Umarbhai and Co.(1), no purpose would be served by
directing a reference of this question,and the Tribunal was
right in observing that "it is not even of academic interest
to refer the said question to the High Court". On the
question whether the fixation of ratio was correct, we are
of opinion that it is a pure question of fact, and is not
open to reference under section 66(1).
In the result, the appeals fail, and are dismissed with
costs.