Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE AGGARWAL CHAMBER OF
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
M/s GANPAT RAI HIRA LAL
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
11/11/1957
BENCH:
KAPUR, J.L.
BENCH:
KAPUR, J.L.
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.
CITATION:
1958 AIR 269 1958 SCR 938
ACT:
Income-tax--Assessment of agent in respect of profits held
for non-resident Principal--Agent’s right to claim deduction
for payment made-Ultimate liability of principal to income-
tax on basis of his world income, if a relevant
considaration--Indian it Income-tax Act, (XI Of 1922), ss.
40(2), 42(1).
HEADNOTE:
The appellant company and the respondent firm were carrying
on business in the erstwhile patiala State, and were non-
residents in British India. The appellant, acting as
commission agent for the respondent, entered into several
forward transactions with a Hapur firm of commission agents.
The profits accruing on these transactions amounted to Rs.
29,275-2-6 on which the Hapur firm paid a sum Of Rs. 9,314-
13-4 as income. tax. In 1943 the appellant was ordered to
be wound up and the respondent was placed on the list of
contributories. The Official Liquidator applied to the
Liquidation judge for a payment order for a sum which
included the amount of income-tax paid by the Hapur firm for
and on behalf of the respondent. The main contention raised
on behalf of the respondent was that it had no taxable
income in the year in dispute and was not liable to pay any
income-tax and that, consequently, it was not liable for the
income-tax paid by the Hapur firm.
Held, that the Liquidator was entitled to claim from the
respondent the amount of income-tax paid by the Hapur firm
irrespective of the consideration whether its world income
was taxable or not. Under the law the Hapur firm was an
agent of the respondent for the business of the agency which
was entrusted to it, and was as such liable under ss- 40(2)
and 42(1) Income-tax Act, as an assessee for income-tax on
the profits made on the respondent’s transactions at Hapur
and was entitled to retain the estimated amount of income-
tax payable on the amount of the respondent’s profits. As
the Hapur firm had rightly paid the tax on the profits, the
respondent could not be allowed to challenge the liability
on the ground that his total world income was not taxable
and he was entitled to his profits without deductions. That
was a question which must be agitated by the non-resident
assessee at the time of his assessment. As between the
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parties the tax paid by the agent had to be taken into
account irrespective of the result of the assessment on the
non-resident.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 79 of 1954.
938
Appeal from the judgment and order dated March 10, 1953, of
the former Pepsu High Court in Letters Patent Appeal No. 493
of Samvat 2005 arising out of the judgment and order dated
January 18, 1949, of the said High Court in E. As. Nos. 78-
96 of Samvat 2001.
Naunit Lal, for the appellants.
Mohan Behari Lal, for the respondents.
1957. November 11. The following Judgment of the Court was
delivered by
KAPUR J.-This is an appeal brought pursuant to a certificate
under Art. 133(1)(c) of the Constitution from the judgment
and order of the Division Bench of the erstwhile Pepsu High
Court pronounced on March 10, 1953, modifying in appeal the
order of the Liquidation Judge.
The facts are fully recited in the judgments of the courts
below and comparatively a brief recital will be sufficient
for the purpose of this judgment. The appellant company was
incorporated in 1934 under the Companies Act of the
erstwhile Patiala State. It carried on the business of
commission agency for dealing in forward transactions in
various kinds of grain and other commodities. The
respondent- firm Ganpat Rai Hira Lal of Narnaul-besides
being a shareholder of the appellant company had dealings
with it and entered into several forward transactions of
sale and purchase of grain and other commodities. The
appellant, acting as a commission agent of the respondent
and its other constituents entered into several transactions
of forward delivery at Hapur with Firm Pyarelal Musaddi Lai,
who were carrying on commission agency business at Hapur
(and will hereinafter be termed the Hapur firm). The total
profits of the transactions entered into by the appellant
with the Hapur firm was Rs. 48,250 on which the Hapur firm
paid Rs. 14,730-8 as income-tax. The profits accruing on
the transactions entered into on behalf of the respondent
amounted to Rs. 29,275-2-6 on which the proportionate
income-tax claimed to have been paid was
939
Rs. 9,314-13-4. On May 20, 1943, the appellant was ordered
to be wound up and Udmi Ram Aggarwal, a pleader of the old
Patiala High Court was appointed its liquidator. The list
of contributories was settled on October 21, 1943, and the
respondent was placed on that list. Though this matter was
challenged in the appeal before the High Court it is no
longer in controversy between the parties.
The Official Liquidator on March 18, 1944, applied under s.
186 of the Patiala Companies Act, for a payment order for
Rs. 12,204-12-3 against the respondent and in support of his
claim he filed, with this application, copies of the
respondent’s account in the books of the appellant showing
how the amount claimed was due from the respondent. This
amount included the sum of Rs. 9,476-13-0, on account of
income-tax paid by the Hapur firm for and on behalf of the
respondent on the profits of the forward transactions at
Hapur and the commission of the Hapur firm. The respondent
raised several objections and pleaded inter alia that the
Hapur firm with whom the appellant had entered into forward
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transactions had no right to demand any income-tax from the
appellant as no profit had accrued to the appellant which
was acting as a commission agent and " was only entitled to
the commission ". It was also pleaded that as on the total
number of transactions entered into between the respondent
and the appellant there was a loss, the respondent was not
liable to pay any income-tax and that the respondent had no
taxable income in the year under dispute or in any other
year. On May 23, 1944, the respondent filed an application
in which it was submitted that the Hapur firm, who were
agents of the appellant at Hapur, had retained Rs. 14,730-8-
0, " which was in trust with them under s. 42 of the Income
Tax Act " and prayed that the Official Liquidator be
directed to apply to the Income Tax authorities for a refund
of the amount retained and paid by the Hapur firm, as no tax
was really due on the transactions entered into by the
appellant with the Hapur firm and none was payable by the
respondent.
940
After evidence was led by both parties the payment order was
made by the learned Liquidation Judge on January 18, 1949,
for a sum of Rs. 8,191-0-9 which included a sum of Rs.
6,867-9-6 the proportionate amount of income-tax due on the
profits accruing on the respondent’s transactions. Against
this order the respondent took an appeal to the Division
Bench and canvassed two points: (1) that the respondent
could not be settled on the list of contributories and (2)
that it was not liable for the amount retained for payment
of income-tax from out of profits on the transactions
entered into on its behalf by the appellant with the Hapur
firm and subsequently paid by the latter. The court
negatived the former contention and held that the respondent
had rightly been settled on the list of contributories and
upheld the latter contention and held, following a judgment
of the Judicial Committee of the Ijlas-khas of Patiala in
Panna Lal Mohar Singh v. Aggarwal Chamber (1), that the
Official Liquidator of the appellant was riot entitled to
claim the amount of income-tax paid by the Hapur firm. The
Judicial Committee ljlas-khas had held :
" Before the liability of the contributory can be fixed it
must be shown that his income was such on which income was
assessable......... It is not denied that the contributory
was carrying on other transactions in India a,-, it stood
before partition through other person. It was therefore his
entire income that was to be taken into consideration to
assess his liability to income-tax."
The appellant then applied for a certificate to appeal under
Art. 133(1)(c) which was granted in the following terms:
" The first question is whether a decision given by one
Judge of the Judicial Committee can be regarded in law as a
decision of the Committee. The second is whether the
principle laid down by the learned Judge of the Judicial
Committee that the Aggarwal Chamber of Commerce was not
entitled to recover from its clients the proportionate share
of the income-tax paid by it unless it was shown that the
total amount
(1) C. A. 60 Of 2005 S.
941
of income of the clients was assessable to income-tax, was
sound.
Accordingly we allow the petition and grant the
certificate."
The first point has not been canvassed before us and in the
view that we have taken it would be unnecessary to go into
that matter. The sole point for decision is whether the
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respondent is liable for income-tax, which has been paid by
the Hapur firm on the transactions, which were entered into
by the appellant with the Hapur firm for and on behalf of
the respondent? There is no finding by the High Court that
the respondent had entered into any forward transactions in
British India or at Hapur with any firm other than the Hapur
firm and this matter was not agitated before us, nor is
there any finding as to the total world income of the
respondent and there is no material on the record from which
it could be determined.
The appellant is a non-resident company and the respondent
is a non-resident, residing at Narnaul in what was the
Indian State of Patiala. The appellant entered into forward
transactions on behalf of the respondent at Hapur in which
there was a considerable amount of profit. The High Court
has found that the Hapur firm paid Rs. 6,867-9-0 on account
of income-tax which was payable on the profits made on the
transactions entered into with the Hapur firm for and on
behalf of the respondent. The respondent challenged its
liability to pay income-tax on the ground that it was
liable:
" only on his total earnings during the year under
assessment and since, as is clear even from the books of the
respondent, he had suffered heavy losses in his business at
Narnaul, his total income was not assessable to any income-
tax."
The learned Liquidation Judge held the respondent liable for
the amount of the income-tax by applying s. 69 of the
Contract Act. The Division Bench on appeal disallowed this
item on the ground that it had not been shown that the "
total earnings" of the respondent were taxable under the
Act. Neither of the
942
courts below have discussed the relevant provisions of the
Act, not even s. 42 which was mentioned by the respondent in
his application of May 23, 1944, nor have they given a
finding as to the jural relationship of the Hapur firm with
the respondent. The agency of the Hapur firm was not
seriously disputed before us nor repudiated. The case seems
to have proceeded on the basis of this agency in the courts
below. The Hapur firm was employed by the appellant for
forward transaction business of the respondent who has
accepted the transactions entered into as also the amount of
the profit accruing on those transactions and is only
disputing the amount of income-tax deducted, retained and
paid on those profits. Under the law the Hapur firm would
be an agent of the respondent for that part of the business
of the agency as was entrusted to it and " privity of
contract arises between the principal and the substitute ".
Section 194 of the Contract Act; De Bussche v. Alt (1).
It is now necessary to refer to the relevant provisions of
the Income-tax Act in force in the assessment year 1942-43
(hereinafter termed the Act). It is not clear as to what
was the signification of the words " total earnings " used
by the High Court because it is not used in the Income Tax
Act which uses two expressions ; " total income " and "
total world income " in sub-s. 15 of s. 2 of the Act. The
definition of " total income " comprises two things (i) the
total amount of income, profits and gains referred to in s.
4(1) and (ii) computation in the manner laid down in the
Income Tax Act. " Total world income " includes all income,
profits and gains wherever accruing or arising except income
to which under the provisions of s. 4(3) the Act does not
apply.
Thus in the case of the respondent who is a " nonresident"
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"total income" would comprise income, profits and gains
received or accrued in British India or deemed to be
received or to accrue in British India. Section 17 of the
Act which was relied upon by the respondent’s counsel occurs
in Chapter III dealing with
(1)(1878) 8 Ch, D. 286, 311,
943
Taxable income ". It provides for the determination of tax
payable in certain special cases of which the, case of a
non-resident is one. It provided:
" Where a person is not resident in British India and is a
British subject as defined in section 27 of the British
Nationality and Status of Aliens Act, 1914 (4 & 5 Geo. V.
Ch. 17) or a subject of a State in India or Burma, or a
native of a Tribal Area, the tax, including super-tax,
payable by him or on his behalf on his total income shall be
an amount bearing to the total amount of the tax including
super-tax which would have been payable on his total world
income had it been his total income the same proportion as
his total income bears to his total world
income.............. Section 17 does not deal with or affect
the rights and liabilities of persons required under the Act
to make deductions of income-tax from sums payable to non-
residents or the consequences of failure to make such
deductions.
The very next chapter (Chapter IV) deals with deductions
which the Act requires to be made in regard to different
heads of income. Section 18 provides for deduction at the
source. Sub-s. 3 A of this section was as under:-
S.18(3A) " Any person responsible for paying to a person not
resident in British India any interest not being " interest
on securities", or any other sum chargeable under the
provisions of this Act, shall, at the time of payment,
unless he is himself liable to pay income-tax thereon as an
agent, deduct income-tax at the maximum rate."
The proviso to this sub-section made provision for payment
of monies without deduction if there was a certificate of
the Income Tax Officer to that effect. Under s. 18(7) of
the Act a person making the deduction was required to pay
the amounts so deducted to the Income Tax authorities. In
default of such deduction such person became an assessee in
respect of the tax.
Chapter V of the Act deals with " Liability in Special
Cases" which includes agents. Section 40(2)
120
944
dealing with the case of trustees or agents of a person non-
resident in British India; provided
S.40 (2) "Where the trustee or agent of any person not
resident in British India and not being a minor, lunatic or
idiot (such person being herein after in this such section
referred to as a beneficiary). is entitled to receive on
behalf of such beneficiary, or is in receipt on behalf of
such beneficiary of, any income, profits or gains chargeable
under this Act, the tax, if not levied on the beneficiary
direct, may be levied upon and recovered from such trustee
or agent, as the case may be, in like manner and to the same
amount as it would be leviable upon and recoverable from the
beneficiary if in direct receipt of such income, profits or
gains, and all the provisions of this Act shall apply
accordingly."
Thus under this section which is essentially a machinery and
an enabling section the tax to be realised from a non-
resident could be levied upon the agent in the same manner
as it could have been leviable upon and recoverable from a
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non-resident. Section 42(1) of the Act provided:
" All income, profits or gains accruing or arising, whether
directly or indirectly, through or from any business
connection in British India, or through or from any property
in British India, or through or from any asset or source of
income in British India, or through or from any money lent
at interest and brought into British India in cash or in
kind, shall be deemed to be income accruing or arising
within British India, and where the person entitled to the
income, profits or gains is not resident in British India,
shall be chargeable to income-tax either in his name or in
the name of his agent, and in the latter case such agent
shall be deemed to be, for all the purposes of this Act, the
assessee in respect of such income."
In proviso 2 to this sub-section any such agent who
apprehended that he might be taxed as such agent could
retain out of any money payable to such non. resident a sum
equal to the estimated liability under the sub-,section and
in the event of any disagreement between the non-resident
and such agent a certificate
945
could be obtained from the Income Tax Officer as to the
amount to be retained which shows that the Act had a
provision for the determination of the question. As was
observed by Viscount Cave in Williams v. Singer (1):
"The fact is that, if the Income Tax Acts are examined, it
will be found that the person charged with tax is neither
the trustee nor the beneficiary as such, but the person in
actual receipt and control of the income which it is sought
to reach. The object of the Acts is to secure for the State
a proportion of the profits chargeable, and this end is
attained (speaking generally) by the simple and effective
expedient of taxing the profits where they are found."
See also Archer Shee v. Baker (2 ), Executors of Estate of
Dubash v. Commissioner of Income Tax (3).
This has rightly been stated to be the underlying principle
of the deduction under ss. 40, 41 and 42. Section 48 of the
Act deals with refunds and if the respondent thought that it
was not liable to the payment of any tax it could apply to
the Income Tax Officer for refund.
Thus the Hapur firm being an agent could be held liable
under ss. 40(2) and 42(1) of the Act as an assessee for
income-tax on the profits made on the respondent’s
transactions at Hapur and was therefore entitled under the
proviso to s. 42(1) to retain the estimated amount of
income-tax payable on the amount of the respondent’s profits
which in this case was deducted, retained and actually paid.
This fact has not been challenged before us. The ground on
which this liability is attacked is that the total world
income of the respondent was not taxable and therefore, on
the profits made on the Hapur transactions, the British
Indian Tax authorities could not levy any tax. This
contention disregards the provisions of and liability
arising under ss. 40(2) and 42(1) and the proviso thereto.
It also is contrary to the principle of taxing statutes that
the profits are " taxed where they are found." In this case
they were in the hands of the Hapur firm
(I) (1920) 7 T. C. 387, 411 (H.L.). (2) (1927) i i T.C.
749, 770 (H.L.).
(3) [1951] 19 I.T.R. 182, 189 (S.C.).
946
which was in receipt and control of the income. The agent
at Hapur, having lawfully and properly paid the tax under
the Act that amount has been rightly deducted from the
profits accruing on the Hapur transactions.
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The Judgment of the Judicial Committee of the ljlas-i-khas
on which the High Court has based its decision suffers from
the infirmity that it ignores both the provisions of and
principle underlying ss. 40(2) and 42(1) of the Act and the
proviso thereto relating to the liability of an agent under
the Act and the law of Agency relating to employing of sub-
agents by agents. If the Hapur firm rightly paid the tax on
the profits, the respondent cannot be allowed to challenge
the amount on the ground that his total world income was not
taxable and he was entitled to his profits without
deductions. That is a question which ha,,; to be agitated
by the non-resident assessee at the time of his assessment.
Those persons who are bound under the Act to make deduction
at the time of payment of any income, profits or gains are
not concerned with the ultimate result of the assessment.
The scheme of the Act is that deductions are required to be
made out of " salaries ", " interest on securities " and
other heads of " income profits and gains " and adjustments
are made finally at the time of assessment. Whether in the
ultimate result the amount of tax deducted or any lesser or
bigger amount would be payable as income-tax in accordance
with the law in force would not affect the rights,
liabilities and powers of a person under s. 18 or of the
agent under ss. 40(2) and 42(1). As to what would be the
effect and result of the application of s. 17 if and when
any appropriate prceedings are taken is not a matter which
arises in this appeal between the appellant and the
respondent nor can that matter be adjudicated upon in these
proceedings. That is a matter which would be entirely
between the respondent and the Income Tax authorities seized
of the assessment.
Our attention was drawn to two cases (1) Commissioner of
Income-tax v. Currimbhoy Ebrahim & Sons(1)
(1) (1935) 3 I.T.R. 325 (P.C.)
947
In that case the assessee company had been treated as an
agent of the Nizam of Hyderabad who had lent to the assessee
company a sum of Rs. 50 lakhs. The assessee company had
paid in the assessment year a, sum of Rs. 3 lakhs on account
of interest and it was held that the interest earned by the
Nizam did not accrue or arise to the Nizam through or from
any business connection with the assessee company in British
India or from any property within British India and there-
fore s. 42 was not applicable. No question of "business
connection" was raised in the court below and the argument
there proceeded on the basis that the respondent was not
liable for this amount on account of income-tax because the
" entire income " was not assessable to income tax. The
argument of isolated transactions based on the Anglo-French
Textile Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras(1) is
not available to the respondent nor was the foundation for
any such argument laid in the courts below or raised in the
statement of the case filed by the respondent in this court.
Another case on which reliance was placed is Greenwood v. F.
L. Smidth and Company(2 ). That was a case of a Danish firm
resident in Copenhagan. It manufactured and dealt with
cement making machinery which it exported to other
countries. It had an office in London in charge of a
qualified engineer who received enquiries for machinery such
as the firm could supply, sent to Denmark particulars of the
work which the machinery was required to do and when the
machinery was supplied he was avilable to give English
purchaser the benefit of his experience in erecting it. The
contracts between the firm and their customers were made in
Copenhagan and the goods were shipped F. 0. B. Copenhagan.
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It was held in that case that the firm did not exercise a
trade within the United Kingdom within the meaning of Sch.
D of s. 2 of the Income Tax Act 1853 and was therefore not
assessable to income-tax. This decision is not relevant to
the case now before us as the facts were different and the
dicision was under a different statute.
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 454.
(2) (1922) 1 A.C. 417.
948
In our opinion the Judicial Committee of Ijlas-i-khas was in
error in holding that before fixing the liability of a
contributory to tax paid by an agent in British India for
and on behalf of the non-resident contributory, his
liability to pay tax on his "entire income " really total
world income had to be established. Therefore the finding
of the High Court that the Liquidator cannot claim from the
respondent the amount of tax paid by the Hapur firm on
transactions entered into by the appellant for and on behalf
of the respondent unless it was shown that his total world
income was taxable is unsustainable. As between the parties
the tax paid by the agent had to be taken into account
irrespective of the ultimate result of the assessment on the
non-resident.
In the result this appeal is allowed and the judgment and
order of the Division Bench of the Pepsu High Court set
aside and the order of the learned Liquidation Judge
restored but in the circumstances of this case the parties
will bear their own costs in this court and in the courts
below.
Appeal allowed.