Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX, DELHI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
DELHI SAFE DEPOSIT CO. LTD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT12/01/1982
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
PATHAK, R.S.
CITATION:
1982 AIR 757 1982 SCR (3) 1
1982 SCC (1) 364 1982 SCALE (1)6
ACT:
Income Tax Act, 1961-Section 37-Scope of-Assessee,
partner of a managing agency firm-Managed company advanced
loan to another firm at the instance of a partner of the
firm-Loan turned out to be a bad debt-Loss of managed
company partly made good by assessee-Reimbursed amount, if
could be claimed as deduction under section 37.
HEADNOTE:
The assessee was a partner of a firm of managing
agents. At the instance of one of the partners of the
managing agency firm the managed company advanced to another
firm a large sum of money as loan. Eventually by reason of
the failure of the borrower to repay the loan the managed
company suffered loss which was made good partly by the
assessee and partly by one of its partners. Later, the
managing agency firm had been reconstituted.
When the assessee in its returns claimed as a deduction
the sum paid by it in that year in partial discharge of its
liability, the Income Tax Officer disallowed it holding that
the assessee was not legally bound to make the payment and
therefore it was not a business expenditure which could be
allowed as a deduction.
The Appellate Assistant Commissioner affirmed the order
of the Income Tax Officer on the grounds that (a) the loss
was actually the loss of a firm which was no more in
existence; (b) the loss had been borne by the assessee on
personal considerations and (c) the loss was a loss of the
managing agency and not of the partners concerned.
Accepting the assessee’s appeal the Tribunal held that
even if there was a change in the constitution of the
managing agency firm the assessee’s liability as a partner
had not ceased, that the payment could not be treated as one
made on personal considerations and that the assessee had
made the payment in question purely on business
considerations with the sole object of maintaining its
business connection which was yielding profit.
The High Court answered the reference in favour of the
assessee.
Dismissing the appeal,
^
HELD : The true test of expenditure laid out wholly and
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exclusively for the purposes of trade or business is that it
is incurred by the assessee as incidental to its trade for
the purpose of keeping the trade going and of making it pay
and not in any other capacity than of a trader. [6 D-E]
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In the instant case the expenditure was rightly held to
be deductible under s. 37 of the Act. The assessee incurred
the expenditure to avoid any adverse effect on its
reputation, to protect the managing agency which was an
income earning apparatus and for retaining it with the
reconstituted firm in which the assessee’s interest was the
same as before. It was likely that but for the expenditure,
the fair name of the assessee would have been tarnished and
the managing agency would have been terminated. The
expenditure incurred on the preservation of a profit earning
asset of a business has always been held to be a deductible
expenditure. The expenditure incurred by the assessee was
neither gratuitous nor one incurred outside the trading
activities of the assessee. [7 C-E]
Ushers’s Wiltshire Brewery Ltd. v. Bruce, [1915] A. C.
433, British Insulated & Helsby Cables Ltd. v. Atherton,
[1926] A. C. 205, Mitchell v. B. W. Noble Ltd. [1927] 1 K.
B. 719, referred to.
Commissioner of Income tax, Kerala v. Malayalam
Plantation Ltd., [1964] 7 S.C.R. 693, followed.
The fact that the firm has not claimed the expenditure
as its own does not affect the right of the assessee to
claim deduction in respect of the amount in question in its
assessment proceedings. [7 H, 8 A]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1235 of
1974.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order
dated the 22nd March, 1973 of the Delhi High Court in Income
Tax Reference No. 65 of 1968.
S.C. Manchanda, J. Ramamurthy and Miss A. Subhashini
for the Appellant.
S.T. Desai and Bishambar Lal for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
VENKATARAMIAH, J. This appeal by special leave is
directed against the judgment and order dated March 22, 1973
of the Delhi High Court in Income-tax Reference No. 65 of
1968 made by the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal, Delhi
pursuant to an order made by the High Court under section
256(2) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1961 (hereinafter
referred to as ’the Act’).
The facts of the case are these : The assessee (the
respondent herein) is a public limited company. The assessee
was a partner of a firm of managing agents known as M/s.
Morari Lal Batra & Co.
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(hereinafter referred to as ’the managing agency firm’)
which was managing another public limited company called
M/s. Bharat Carbon & Ribbon Manufacturing Co. Ltd.
(hereinafter referred to as ’the managed company’). There
were in all three partners in the managing agency firm, the
two other partners being V.K. Batra and Lal Balwant Roy who
held 50% share and 25% share respectively in that firm. The
assessee held the remaining 25% share. At the instance of
V.K. Batra who held the major share in the managing agency
firm, a large sum was advanced by the managed company to a
firm known as M/s. H.K. Sinha & Sons at Calcutta. When a
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demand for repayment was made, M/s. H.K. Sinha & Sons
repudiated the claim except to the extent of Rs. 11,409 and
ultimately the managed company suffered a loss to the extent
of Rs. 1,90,092 on account of the said transaction.
Consequently it became necessary for the managing agency
firm to make good the said loss. Thereupon the assessee and
Lal Balwant Roy together undertook to pay to the managed
company Rs. 95,092 out of which the share of the assessee
was Rs. 47,500. The balance of the amount was undertaken to
be paid by R.K. Batra, brother of V.K. Batra. The managing
agency firm was also reconstituted with the assessee, Lal
Balwant Roy and R.K. Batra as partners, R.K. Batra taking
the place of V.K. Batra. During the previous year
corresponding to the assessment year 1962-63, the assessee
paid a sum of Rs. 9,500 to the managed company in partial
discharge of its liability of Rs. 47,500 referred to above
and claimed it by way of deduction in the assessment year in
question in the assessment proceedings under the Act before
the Income-tax Officer. The Income-tax Officer disallowed
the said claim on the ground that the assessee was not
legally bound to make the payment and hence it was not a
business expense that could be allowed under the Act. The
Appellate Assistant Commissioner of Income-tax before whom
the order of assessment was questioned by the assessee
affirmed the order of assessment on the above question on
three grounds : (a) the amount in question was actually the
loss of a firm which was no more in existence; (b) the loss
in question had been borne by the assessee on personal
considerations, and (c) the loss was the loss of the
managing agency firm and not of the partners concerned and
since the managing agency firm had not claimed that loss in
its return, none of its partners could claim it. When the
matter was taken up in appeal before the Income-tax
Appellate Tribunal, the claim of the assessee was accepted.
The
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Tribunal held inter alia that even if there was a change in
the constitution of the managing agency firm, the liability
of the assessee as a partner had not ceased, the assessee
being a company, the payment could not be treated as one
made on personal considerations and that the assessee had
made the payment in question purely on business
considerations with the sole object of maintaining its
business connection which was yielding profit. The Tribunal
was also of the view that there was no bar to the assessee
claiming the loss in question in its own assessment even
though it could have been first claimed by the firm and then
in the hands of the partner. An application under section
256(1) of the Act having been rejected by the Tribunal, the
appellant moved the High Court under section 256(2) of the
Act. The High Court thereupon passed an order directing the
Tribunal to refer the following question for its
consideration :
"Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances of
the case, the assessee was entitled to any allowance on
account of the share of loss made good by it to the
managed company ?"
After the reference was made to it, the High Court
answered the question in the affirmative and in favour of
the assessee. Dissatisfied with the judgment of the High
Court, the appellant has come up in appeal to this Court by
special leave, as stated above.
The first question which needs to be examined is
whether the amount in question can be treated as an
expenditure laid out or expended wholly and exclusively for
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the purposes of the business of the assessee which is
admissible as a deduction under section 37 of the Act. It is
no doubt true that the solution to a question of this nature
sometimes is difficult to arrive at. But, however difficult
the task may be, a decision on that question should be given
having regard to the decisions bearing on the question and
ordinary principles of commercial trading and of commercial
expediency. The facts found in the present case are that the
assessee was carrying on business as a partner of the
managing agency firm and it also had other businesses. The
managing agency agreement with the managed company was a
profitable source of income and that the assessee had
continuously earned income from that source. But on account
of the negligence on the part of one of its partners, there
arose a serious dispute which could have ordinarily resulted
in a long drawn out
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litigation between the managing agency firm and the managed
company affecting seriously the reputation of the assessee
in addition to any pecuniary loss which the assessee as a
partner was liable to bear on account of the joint and
several liability arising under the law of partnership. The
settlement arrived at between the parties prevented
effectively the hazards involved in any litigation and also
helped the assessee in continuing to enjoy the benefit of
the managing agency which was a sound business proposition.
It also assisted the assessee in retaining the business
reputation unsullied which it had built up over a number of
years. It is also material to notice here that it was not
shown that the settlement was a gratuitous arrangement
entered into by the assessee to benefit the defaulting
partner exclusively even though he might have been
benefitted to some extent. It is no doubt true that it was
voluntary in character but on the facts and in the
circumstances of the case whether it would make any
difference at all is the point for consideration.
Dealing with the question whether an expenditure
incurred by a brewery in aid of their tenants of tied houses
as a necessary incident of the profitable working of the
brewery business was an admissible expenditure in the
computation of the income-tax liability of the brewery, Lord
Summer upholding the above claim observed in Usher’s
Wiltshire Brewery Ltd. v. Bruce thus :
"Where the whole and exclusive purpose of the
expenditure is the purpose of the expender’s trade, and
the object which the expenditure serves is the same,
the mere fact that to some extent the expenditure
enures to a third party’s benefit, say that of the
publican, or that the brewer incidentally obtains some
advantage, say in his character of landlord cannot in
law defeat the effect of the finding as to the whole
and exclusive purpose."
In British Insulated and Helsby Cables Ltd. v. Atherton
Lord Cave observed.
"It was made clear in the above cited cases of
Usher’s Wiltshire Brewery v. Bruce, [1915] A.C. 433 and
Smith v. Incorporated Council of Law Reporting for
England and
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Wales, [1914] 3 K.B. 674 that a sum of money expended,
not of necessity and with a view to a direct and
immediate benefit to the trade, but voluntarily and on
the grounds of commercial expediency, and in order
indirectly to facilitate the carrying on the business,
may yet be expended wholly and exclusively for the
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purposes of the trade."
Rowlatt, J. in Mitchell v. B.W. Noble Ltd. held that
the money spent on getting rid of a director and saving the
company from scandal was deductible. Affirming the above
view, the Court of Appeal (whose judgment appears at page
731) held that as the payment was not made to secure an
actual asset so as effectually to increase the capital of
the company but was made in order to enable the directors to
carry on the business of the company as they had done in the
past unfettered by the presence of the retiring director,
which might have had a bad effect on the credit of the
company, it must be treated as the income and not as capital
expenditure and was deductible as such for income-tax
purposes.
The true test of an expenditure laid out wholly and
exclusively for the purposes of trade or business is that it
is incurred by the assessee as incidental to his trade for
the purpose of keeping the trade going and of making it pay
and not in any other capacity than of a trader. In
Commissioner of Income-tax, Kerala v. Malayalam Plantation
Ltd. Subba Rao, J. (as he then was) summarised the legal
position at page 705 thus :-
"The aforesaid discussion leads to the following
result: The expression "for the purpose of the
business" is wider in scope than the expression "for
the purpose of earning profits". Its range is wide : it
may take in not only the day to day running of a
business but also the rationalization of its
administration and modernization of its machinery; it
may include measure for the preservation of the
business and for the protection of its assets and
property from expropriation, coercive process or
assertion of hostile titles; it may also comprehend
payment of statutory dues and taxes imposed as a pre-
condition to commence or for carrying on of a business;
it may comprehend many other acts incidental to the
carrying on of a business.
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However wide the meaning of the expression may be, its
limits are implicit in it. The purpose shall be for the
purpose of the business that is to say, the expenditure
incurred shall be for carrying on of the business and
the assessee shall incur it in his capacity as a person
carrying on the business."
In the instant case, the assessee incurred the
expenditure in question to avoid any adverse effect on its
reputation, to protect the managing agency which was an
income earning apparatus and for retaining it with the
reconstituted firm in which the interest of the assessee was
the same as before. It was likely that but for the
expenditure, the fair name of the assessee would have been
tarnished or rendered suspicious and the managing agency
would have been terminated. The expenditure incurred on the
preservation of a profit earning asset of a business has
always been held to be a deductible expenditure by courts.
In the circumstances, it is difficult to hold that the
expenditure incurred by the assessee was either gratuitous
or one incurred outside the trading activities of the
assessee. The expenditure was, therefore, rightly held to be
deductible under section 37. We, therefore, reject the
contention of the Revenue that the amount in question could
not be claimed as a deduction under section 37 of the Act.
The next contention of the Department is that the
payment in question should have been first assessed as a
loss in the assessment proceedings of the firm and in the
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absence of any claim made in the course of such proceedings
by the firm, it was not possible to allow its deduction in
the assessment of the assessee. Reliance is placed on
sections 187 and 67 of the Act in support of this
submission. It is seen that the expenditure in question had
not been incurred by the firm. Even if the amount had been
paid through the firm by the assessee, it would not be
payment of the firm’s funds. In the accounts of the firm,
there would be a credit and debit entry cancelling each
other showing a receipt from the assessee and a payment to
the managed company, not in any way affecting the capital
structure of the firm. If the amount had been paid by the
assessee directly to the managed company which appears to be
more probable then the expenditure is obviously one incurred
by the assessee itself though on account of the firm. In any
view of the matter, the fact that the firm has not claimed
the
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expenditure as its own does not affect the right of the
assessee to claim deduction in respect of the amount in
question in its assessment proceedings which it is
legitimately entitled to do. It is not shown how in the
peculiar circumstances of the case there is any statutory
bar to the claim made by the assessee.
We are satisfied that in the circumstances of the case
the decision of the High Court does not call for
interference.
For the foregoing reasons, the appeal is dismissed with
costs.
P.B.R. Appeal dismissed.
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