Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX KERALA, ERNAKULAM
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
V. DAMODARAN, TRIVANDRUM
DATE OF JUDGMENT15/10/1979
BENCH:
PATHAK, R.S.
BENCH:
PATHAK, R.S.
UNTWALIA, N.L.
CITATION:
1980 AIR 478 1980 SCR (1) 944
1980 SCC (1) 173
ACT:
Indian Income Tax Act, 1922-Sections 2(6A) (e)-
Interpretation of "accumulated profits" if include current
profits-Section 256(i)-Scope of.
HEADNOTE:
The assessee was the Managing Director of a Company
originally assessed on a total income of Rs. 43407/- for the
assessment year 1959-60. Thereafter the Income-Tax Officer
came to know that the assessee had been withdrawing moneys
from the Company and that those amounts were liable to be
treated as dividend under section 2(6A)(e) of the Act, he
re-opened the assessment. In the assessment proceedings that
followed, the assessee claimed that the accumulated profits
of the Company amounted to Rs. 1050 only and that amount
alone could be considered as dividend under section 2(6A)(e)
of the Act. The figure was worked out on the basis that Rs.
11,000 as a provision for tax and Rs. 6,900 as a provision
for dividend had to be adjusted against the balance of Rs.
18,950 in the Profit and Loss Account. The Income Tax
Officer rejected the contention of the assessee. The
Appellate Assistant Commissioner dismissed the appeal filed
by the assessee. The Income Tax Appellate Tribunal in second
appeal, upheld the claim of the assessee that the words
"accumulated profits" in section 2(6A) (e) of the Act could
not be construed as including current profit but it rejected
the contention that the two sums of Rs. 11,000 and Rs. 6,900
had to be taken into account in determining the figure of
the "accumulated profits". It determined the "accumulated
profits" at Rs. 18,950. The Revenue obtained a reference to
the High Court on the question: "Whether the Appellate
Tribunal was legally correct in holding that the accumulated
profit will not include "current profits" for the purpose of
section 2(6A) of the Act."
A second question was referred to the High Court at the
instance of the assessee : "Whether the Tribunal was right
in holding that Rs. 18,950 constituted accumulated profits
for the purpose of section 2(6A) of the Act." The High Court
answered both the questions in favour of the assessee, the
first question in the affirmative and the second question in
the negative.
On appeal to this Court,
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^
HELD: 1. "Current profits" that is to say, profits
earned by the Company during the year in which the loans
were advanced to the assessee cannot be regarded as included
within the "accumulated profits" of a Company within the
meaning of section 2(6A) (e) of the Act. [947G-948E]
Commissioner of Income-Tax, Madras v. M. V. Murugappan
JUDGMENT:
2. The Appellate Tribunal was not competent to refer
the second question, and the reference to that extent must
be considered void. Section 256(1) of
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the Income Tax Act, 1961 entitles the assessee or the
Commissioner, as the case may be, to apply to the Appellate
Tribunal to refer to the High Court any question of law
arising out of the order made by the Appellate Tribunal
under section 254. It is clear that the statute expressly
contemplates an application in that behalf by a party
desiring a preference to the High Court. The application has
to be filed within a prescribed period of limitation. If the
application is rejected by the Appellate Tribunal, it is the
applicant thus refused who is entitled to apply to the High
Court. The form of reference application prescribed by rule
48 of the Income Tax Rules, 1962 specifically requires the
applicant to state the questions of law which he desires to
be referred to the High Court. In every case, it is only the
party applying for a reference who is entitled to specify
the questions of law which should be referred. Nowhere does
the statute confer a right in the non-applicant (a phrase
used here for convenience) to ask for a reference of
questions of law on the applicant. [950 A, C-D E, F-G and
952 E]
The party who is aggrieved and who desire a reference
to the High Court must file a reference application for that
purpose. It is not open to him to make a reference
application filed by the other party the basis of his claim
that a question of law sought by him should be referred. But
on a reference application filed by the aggrieved party it
is open to the non-applicant who is not aggrieved by the
result of the appeal, to ask for a reference of those
questions of law which arise on its submissions negatived in
appeal by the Appellate Tribunal. [951 A-B, C]
&
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2099 of
1972. From the Judgment and Order dated 18-1-1972 of the
Kerala High Court in I.T.R. No. 88/1969.
B. B. Ahuja and Miss A. Subhashini for the Appellant.
Nemo for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
PATHAK, J.-This is an appeal by certificate under
section 261 of the Income Tax Act, 1961 against the judgment
of the High Court of Kerala interpreting the words
"accumulated profits" in section 2(6A)(e) of the Indian
Income Tax Act, 1922.
The assessee is the Managing Director of a private
limited company called R. K. V. Motors & Timber (P) Limited.
The company maintains an accounts pertaining to him in its
books. The accounts showed that as on March 31, 1958 a sum
of Rs. 36,546.17 np. was due to him by the company. In
January, 1959 for the first time he became indebted to the
company in the sum of Rs. 3,757.04 np. His drawings
increased, and as on March 31, 1959 the total amount due by
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him stood at Rs. 25,107.22np. It is also relevant to state
that the Balance Sheet of the company as on March 31, 1958
showed a net profit of Rs. 18,950.98 np.
946
The assessee was originally assessed for the assessment
year 1959-60 (the relevant previous year being the year
ended March 31, 1959) on a total income of Rs. 43,407.
Thereafter, the Income Tax Officer came to know that the
assessee had been withdrawing moneys from the company, and
in the belief that those amounts were liable to be treated
as "dividend" under section 2(6A) (e) of the Indian Income
Tax Act, 1922, he reopened the assessment by virtue of
section 147 of the Income Tax Act, 1961. In the assessment
proceedings which followed, the assessee claimed that the
accumulated profits of the company amounted to Rs. 1,050
only, and that amount alone could be considered as
"dividend" under section 2(6A)(e). The figure was worked out
on the basis that a sum of Rs. 11,000 as a provision for tax
and of Rs. 6,900 as a provision for dividend had to be
adjusted against the balance of Rs. 18,950 in the Profit &
Loss Account. The Income Tax Officer rejected the contention
of the assessee and determined a sum of Rs. 25,107 as
dividend under section 2(6A) (e). He arrived at this figure
by including the current profits of the company for the
account year ending March 31, 1959. The Appellate Assistant
Commissioner dismissed an appeal filed by the assessee. The
Income Tax Appellate Tribunal, in second appeal, upheld the
claim of the assessee that the words "accumulated profits"
in section 2(6A)(e) could not be construed as including
current profits, but it rejected the contention that the two
sums of Rs. 11,000 and Rs. 6,900 had to be taken into
account in determining the figure of the accumulated
profits. Accordingly, it determined the accumulated profits
at Rs. 18,950.
The Revenue applied for a reference to the High Court
of Kerala, and at its instance the Tribunal referred the
following question to the High Court:
"Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances of
this case, the Appellate Tribunal was legally correct
in holding that the accumulated profit will not include
current profits for the purpose of section 2(6A) of the
Indian Income Tax Act, 1922 ?"
The assessee also requested the inclusion of a
question, and therefore the second question referred to the
High Court was:
"Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances of
the case, the Tribunal was right in holding that Rs.
18,950 constituted accumulated profits for the purpose
of section 2(6A) of the Indian Income Tax Act, 1922 ?"
947
The High Court, by its judgment dated January 18, 1972 has
answered the first question in the affirmative and the
second question in the negative, both questions being
answered in favour of the assessee. And now, the present
appeal by the Revenue.
We have heard Shri B. B. Ahuja, for the Revenue. No one
appears for the assessee.
The Indian Income Tax Act, 1922 did not originally
contain any definition of "dividend", and the meaning of
that word was confined to the connotation it held under the
law relating to companies. By section 2 of the Indian
Income-Tax (Amendment) Act, 1939, the Indian Legislature
inserted sub-section (6A) in section 2 of the Act and set
forth an inclusive definition. Certain clauses of the sub-
section were amended thereafter, and in their ultimate form
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section 2(6A)(c) and section 2(6A)(e) read as follows:
"6(A) "Dividend" includes-
(c) Any distribution made to the shareholders by
a company on its liquidation, to the extent
to which the distribution is attributable to
the accumulated profits of the company
immediately before its liquidation, whether
capitalised or not.
(e) Any payment by a company, not being a company
in which the public are substantially
interested within the meaning of section 23A,
of any sum (whether as representing a part of
the assets of the company or otherwise) by
way of advance or loan to a shareholder or
any payment by any such company on behalf or
for the individual benefit of a shareholder,
to the extent to which the company in either
case possesses accumulated profits."
The question is whether the profits earned by the
company during the year in which the loans were advanced to
the assessee, that is to say the current profits, can be
regarded as included within the accumulated profits of the
company. It will be noticed that the expression "accumulated
profits" occurs in section 2(6A) (c) of the Act. Construing
that clause in Girdhardas & Co. Ltd., v. Commissioner of
Income Tax, Ahmedabad, the Bombay High Court said : "The
limitation imposed by the Legislature is that the profits
must in the first place be accumulated in contradistinc-
948
tion to the profits being current...."...The Madras High
Court in Commissioner of Income Tax, Madras v. M. V.
Murugappan and Others and Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras
v. A. M. M. V. Valliammai Achi & Others took the same view.
It analysed the concept of "accumulated profits" and in that
connection particularly referred to the observations of
Isaacs and Rich JJ. in Hooper & Harrison Limited (In
Liquidation) v. Federal Commissioner of Taxation who relied
on Hollins v. Allen and Sproule v. Bouch and Commissioner of
Inland Revenue v. Blott where the distinction between
current profits and accumulated profits was graphically
brought out. The decision of the Madras High Court was
affirmed in appeal by this Court in Commissioner of Income
tax, Madras v. M. V. Murugappan & Ors. and it was observed
that "The profits of the year in the course of which the
company was ordered to be wound up not being accumulated
profits were not part of the dividend." Thereafter, the
Bombay High Court in Commissioner of Income Tax (Central)
Bombay v. P. K. Badiani, while interpreting section 2(6A)
(e) of the Act, applied the same construction and held that
the expression "accumulated profits" in that clause must
mean profits which had accumulated prior to the accounting
year of which the income profits and gains were being
assessed, while current profit would mean the profits of the
accounting year In a recent case, Commissioner of Income
Tax, Madras-II v. G. Sankaran, the Madras High Court has
reaffirmed that the expression "accumulated profits" in
section 2(6A) (e) cannot take in current profits.
The position appears to be well-settled. Except for T.
Sundaram Chettiar v. Commissioner of Income Tax, Madras and
T. Manickavasagam Chettiar v. Commissioner of Income-tax,
Madras, in which the ratio is far from clear, a long line of
judicial decisions has taken the view that the words
"accumulated profits" in section 6(2A) of the Indian Income
Tax Act, 1922 cannot be construed
949
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to include current profits. We are in agreement with that
view, being persuaded in that behalf by the reasoning which
has prevailed in the aforementioned cases. The distinction
between "accumulated profits" and "current profits" has long
held the field, and as the learned judges of the High Court
of Australia observed in Hooper & Harrison Ltd. (In
Liquidation) (supra), it has been well known in judicial
decision and in the mercantile world for well over a
century. Moreover, this Court in M. V. Murugappan (supra)
has also taken the view that current profits cannot be
included in accumulated profits. It appears to be now the
established law of the land. An attractive submission was
raised on behalf of the Revenue that in the Twelfth Report
of the Law Commission of India, the authors of the Report
consider that the intention of the Legislature was to
include current profits in the expression "accumulated
profits" in section 2(6A) and that the present definition of
"accumulated profits" by Explanation 2 to section 2(22) of
the Income Tax Act. 1961 only clarifies what the true intent
was all along. In the view which has found favour with us,
we are not persuaded by that submission.
Accordingly, we hold that the High Court was right in
answering the first question in favour of the assessee and
against the Revenue.
The second question is whether the provision for
payment of tax and dividend can be taken into account when
computing the accumulated profits as on March 31, 1958. The
Revenue contends that this question should not have been
referred by the Appellate Tribunal to the High Court at the
instance of the assessee because no reference application
was made by the assessee. The only reference application, it
is pointed out, before the Appellate Tribunal was the
reference application filed by the Commissioner of Income
Tax. We are of opinion that the Revenue is right. The
objection was taken by the Revenue before the Appellate
Tribunal when the statement of case was being prepared, but
the Appellate Tribunal overruled the objection, relying on
Girdhardas & Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income Tax,
Ahmedabad. It does not appear that the Revenue contended
before the High Court that the reference made to it by the
Appellate Tribunal was incompetent insofar as the second
question was concerned. Since, however, the objection
pertains to the competence of the reference to the extent
that it covers the second question and, therefore, relates
to the jurisdiction of the High Court to
950
consider and decide that question, we are of opinion that
the Revenue is entitled to raise that question before us.
Section 256(1) of the Income Tax Act, 1961 entitles the
assessee or the Commissioner, as the case may be, to apply
to the Appellate. Tribunal to refer to the High Court any
question of law arising out of the order made by the
Appellate Tribunal under section 254. A period of limitation
for making such application is prescribed. If the
application is rejected by the Appellate Tribunal the
applicant is entitled to apply to the High Court, again
within a prescribed period of limitation, and the High Court
may, if it is not satisfied of the correctness of the
decision of the Appellate Tribunal, require the Appellate
Tribunal to state the case and refer it. It is clear that
the statute expressly contemplates an application in that
behalf by a party desiring a reference to the High Court.
The application has to be filed within a prescribed period
of limitation. If the Application is rejected by the
Appellate Tribunal, it is the applicant thus refused who is
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entitled to apply to the High Court. If the Appellate
Tribunal allows the application made to it, s. 256(1)
requires it to draw up the statement of the case and refer
it to the High Court. The statement of the case is drawn up
on the basis of the application made by the applicant, who
in that application must specify the questions of law which,
he claims, arise out of the order of the Appellate Tribunal
made under s. 254. The form of reference application
prescribed by rule 48 of the Income Tax Rules, 1962
specifically requires the applicant to state the questions
of law which he desires to be referred to the High Court. He
may, in appropriate cases, be permitted by the Appellate
Tribunal, to raise further questions of law at the hearing
of the reference application. But in every case, it is only
the party applying for a reference who is entitled to
specify the questions of law which should be referred.
Nowhere in the statute do we find a right in the non-
applicant (a phrase used here for convenience) to ask for a
reference of questions of law on the application made by the
applicant.
In this connection, two categories of cases can be
envisaged. One consists of cases where the order of the
Tribunal under section 254 has decided the appeal partly
against one party and partly against the other. This may be
so whether the appeal consists of a single subject matter or
there are more than one independent claims in the appeal. In
the former, one party may be aggrieved by the grant of
relief, even though partial, while the other may be
aggrieved by the refusal to grant total relief. In the
latter, relief may be granted or
951
refused with reference to individual items in dispute, and
accordingly one party or the other will be aggrieved. In
either case, the party who is aggrieved and who desires a
reference to the High Court must file a reference
application for that purpose. It is not open to him to make
a reference application filed by the other party the basis
of his claim that a question of law sought by him should be
referred. The second category consists of cases where the
order made by the Appellate Tribunal under s. 254 operates
entirely in favour of one party, although in the course of
making the order the Appellate Tribunal may have negatived
some points of law raised by that party. Not being a party
aggrieved by the result of the appeal, it is not open to
that party to file a reference application. But on a
reference application being filed by the aggrieved party it
is open to the non-applicant, in the event of the Appellate
Tribunal agreeing to refer the case to the High Court, to
ask for a reference of those questions of law also which
arise on its submissions negatived in appeal by the
Appellate Tribunal. It is, as it were, recognising a right
in the winning party to support the order of the Appellate
Tribunal also on grounds raised before the Appellate
Tribunal but negatived by it.
There are, therefore, those two categories, one in
which a non-applicant can ask for the reference of questions
of law suggested by it and the other in which it cannot. To
the extent to which the Courts have omitted to consider the
distinction between these two categories, they have erred.
There are cases where it has been held that there is an
absolute bar against a non-applicant seeking a reference of
questions of law on a reference application made by the
other party. They include : Commissioner of Income Tax,
Madras v. S. K. Srinivasan and Commissioner of Income Tax,
Madras v. Ramdas Pharmacy. cases taking the opposite extreme
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view are : Commissioner of Income Tax v. Bantiah Bank Ltd.,
followed in Girdhar Das & Co. Ltd. (supra) and Educational &
Civil List Reserve Fund No. 1 through H. H. Maharana Bhagwat
Singhji of Udaipur & Ors. v. Commissioner of Income Tax,
Delhi and Rajasthan Smt. Dhirajben R. Amin v. Commissioner
of Income Tax, Gujarat II, Ahmedabad and Commissioner of
Wealth Tax, Gujarat II v. Mrs. Arundhati Balkrishna. The
judgment in the last case was affirmed by this Court in
Commissioner of Wealth Tax, Gujarat v. Arundhati
952
Balkrishna but the point raised before us does not appeal to
have been taken there. The observations in Bantiah Bank
Limited (supra) seem to show that the High Court was alive
to the possibility of a winning party being deprived of the
right to raise questions of law which could properly arise
as further questions because they would be intimately
involved in a decision on the questions referred at the
instance of the applicant, but it failed to classify such a
case separately from the case where a non-applicant seeks to
raise independent and unassociated questions of law. Cases
in which a distinction was noticed between the two
categories but no opinion was expressed on the right of a
winning party to raise questions of law without applying for
a reference are Commissioner of Income Tax v. Jiwaji Rao
Sugar Co. Ltd., followed in Commissioner of Income Tax, M.P.
v. Dr. Fida Hussain G. Abbasi and Commissioner of Income
Tax, Madras v. K. Rathnam Nadar. Some attention has been
given to the distinction between the two categories in
Commissioner of Income Tax, West Bengal v. A. K. Das.
In the present case, the question whether the provision
of Rs. 11,000 for tax and Rs. 6,900 for dividend can be
taken into account when determining the accumulated profits
as on March 31, 1958 is not relate to the question whether
accumulated profits can take in current profits. The two
questions involve the grant of separate and distinct reliefs
and the decision on one question does not affect the
decision on the other.
Accordingly, we hold that the Appellate Tribunal was
not competent to refer the second question, and the
reference to that extent must be considered void. In the
circumstances, it is not necessary to examine the second
question on its merits. The judgment of the High Court must
be set aside so far as it incorporates its opinion on the
second question.
Accordingly, the appeal is allowed to the extent that
the judgment of the High Court on the second question is set
aside while the appeal is dismissed in respect of the
judgment on the first question. There will be no order as to
costs.
N.K.A. Appeal allowed in part.
953