Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
C.I.T. BOMBAY CITY
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BOMBAY BURMAH TRADING CORPORATION, BOMBAY
DATE OF JUDGMENT16/07/1986
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
SINGH, K.N. (J)
CITATION:
1987 AIR 500 1986 SCR (3) 269
1986 SCC (3) 709 1986 SCALE (2)277
ACT:
Income-tax Act, 1922, s. 10(2)(vii) Income-tax Act,
1961: 8. 41(2)
Assessee-Nationalisation of business-Compensation
received from Government-Whether capital or revenue receipt-
Compensation in kind in respect of deprecialble assets-
Whether liable to tax-Fixed capital and circulating capital-
distinction between.
HEADNOTE:
The assessee-Company, carrying on business of selling
timber in India and abroad, entered into contracts in the
nature of forest leases with the Government of Burma, under
which it was authorised to fell teak trees, convert them
into logs, and remove them after payment of royalty. These
leases, which were made first in the year 1862, had been
continuously renewed from time to time. Clause 27 of the
agreement authorised the assessee-company even after the
expiry of the lease period of 15 years to remove the logs in
respect whereof extraction had been completed, upon payment
of royalty during the next three years. At the relevant time
the assessee-company was the owner of fifteen such forest
leases. The last of these leases commenced on Ist January
1926 and 31st December, 1940 was the due date of expiry.
However, before the expiry of the period, the Second World
War started and the Government of Burma extended them until
such time as it became possible to resume forest operations.
After formation of the Union of Burma, the ownership of the
forest leases of the assessee-company was taken over by the
Government of Burma in 1948-49; a third of the total teak
area on June 1, 1948 and the rest on or about June 10, 1949.
In terms of an agreement dated 10th June, 1949 between the
parties the assessee made over to the Burmese Government its
residuary rights under the forest leases together with the
non-duty paid logs, wherever found, and also all the assets
viz. buildings, dwelling houses, etc. pertaining to the
forest leases and received 28,847 tons of teak logs in
substitution of non-duty paid logs, 2,946 tons against
depreciable assets and stores and 12,067 tons against
livestock. The logs so received by the assessee com-
270
pany were sold off by it from time to time in the accounting
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years 1949, 1950, 1951 and 1952.
The Income-tax Officer sought to bring these sale
proceeds to tax by allocating them amongst the various
assessment years. The questions that arose were: (i) whether
the realisation in respect of substituted logs was exempt
from tax as being a receipt of capital nature, and (ii)
whether the sale proceeds in respect of logs received in
lieu of depreciable assets, stores and livestock were liable
to tax under the Act or were altogether free from liability.
The Income-tax Officer, the Appellate Assistant Commissioner
and the Tribunal held against the assessee. The High Court,
however, answered the questions in favour of the assessee.
In these appeals by certificate under s. 66A(2) of the
Income-tax Act, 1922 it was contended for the Revenue that
the contracts entered into by the assessee company for
obtaining its stock-in-trade in timber were trading
contracts, that under cl. 27 of the agreements the assessee
had no interest in land as such, it had only a right to
collect and take away logs, its stock-in-trade, and it could
not fell any fresh trees, that 28,847 tons of logs received
by the assessee under the agreement were in substitution of
the logs that it had already cut and had not been able to
remove from the forests, merely as a recompense for its
rights in the stock-in-trade, and that the excess
realisation in respect of logs received against depreciable
assets, stores and livestock were profits and liable to tax
under s. 10(2)(vii) of the Income-tax Act, 1922.
For the assessee-respondent it was contended that the
forest leases constituted the income producing capital
assets of the company in which it had invested large funds
in building dams, canals, roads, railways, buildings etc.,
that the forest leases were not ordinary commercial
contracts made in the course of carrying on their trade or
for the disposal of their products, these related to the
whole structure of the assessee’s profit making apparatus,
that the consideration for the logs received was the
surrender of the residuary rights under the forest leases
and acquisition of assets of the business under the take-
over agreement, that the assessee was prevented from
carrying on business upon the nationalisation of forest
resources and acquisition of residuary rights and assets
pertaining to the forest leases. It was further submitted
that the compensation paid to the assessee was the
sterilisation of the company’s business and thus a capital
receipt, not subject to tax.
Dismissing the appeals, the Court,
271
^
HELD: 1.1. The forest leases constituted capital assets
of the assessee. The payments made for cancellation or
sterilization of the rights under these leases were,
therefore, capital receipts and not liable to tax. [290E]
1.2. Whether in a particular case payments were capital
receipts or not depends upon the facts and circumstances of
the case. The basic principles are: if there was any capital
asset and if there was any payment made for acuisition of
that capital asset, such payment would amount to a capital
payment in the hands of the payee. Secondly, if any payment
was made for sterilization of the very source of profit
making apparatus of the assessee, or a capital asset, then
that would also amount to a capital receipt in the hands of
the recipient. If on the other hand, the leases were merely
stock-in-trade and payments were made for taking over the
stock-in-trade then no question of capital receipt comes.
The sum would represent payments of revenue nature or
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trading receipts. Compensation received for immobilisation,
sterilization, destruction or loss, total or partial, of a
capital asset would, therefore, be capital receipt. If a sum
represented profit in a new form then that would be income
but where the agreement related to the structure of
assessee’s profit-making apparatus and affected the conduct
of business, the sums received for cancellation or variation
of such agreement would be capital receipt. [286H; 287A-D]
In the instant case, the forest leases affected the
very structure of the operation of the assessee. The
compensation received for the cancellation of assessee-
Company’s activities could not be regarded as an income
receipt, nor the legal character of the payment misjudged by
the magnitude of the payment. [289A; 290C-D]
Glenboig Union Fireclay Co. Ltd. v. The Commissioner of
Inland Revenue, 12 Tax Cases 427; Senairam Doongarmall v.
Commissioner of Income-tax, Assam, 42 I.T.R. 392 at 406;
Commissioner of Income-tax, U.P. v. Gangadhar Baijnath, 86
I.T.R. 19; Commissioner of Income-tax, Poona v. Manna Ramji
and Co., 86 I.T.R. 29; Van Den Berghs Ltd. v. Clark (H.M.
Inspector of Taxes), 3 I.T.R. 17 (English case): British
Insulated & Helsby Cables Ltd. v. Atherton, [1926] A.C. 205;
Hood Barrs v. Commissioners of Inland Revenue (No.2), 37 Tax
Cases 188; Commissioner of Income-tax, Hyderabad-Deccan v.
Vazir Sultan & Sons, 36 I.T.R 175, referred to.
2. For levy of a balancing charge under s. 10(2)(vii)
of the Income-tax Act, 1922 it was absolutely necessary that
the depreciable
272
assets should have been sold at a price agreed to between
the parties. The agreement under which the assessee-company
received logs by way of compensation in lieu of depreciable
assets did not involve any transaction of sale between it
and the Union of Burma. The assessee company never paid any
money by way of a price in respect of assets delivered to it
by the Government. Therefore, the sale proceeds of these
logs could not be brought to tax against the assessee
company under the second proviso to s. 10(2)(vii) of the
Income-tax Act, 1922. [29 ID-F]
Commissioner of Income-tax v. Motors & General Stores
(P) Ltd., 66 I.T.R. 692, referred to.
3. The logs delivered to the assessee company in
respect of the depreciable assets, stores and livestock came
into possession of the assessee in consequence of the
agreement against surrender of all outstanding or residuary
rights of the assessee to the Government. The arrangement
was in consequence of nationalisation of forest operations.
The fact is that the assessee company did not mix up these
logs with any of the stock-in-trade held by it in its
ordinary course of business. The sale proceeds of these logs
could not, therefore, be held to have been received by the
assessee company on revenue account. Consequently, the
excess realisation received over the cost incurred in
getting delivery of these logs was not liable to tax under
the Act. [29 IG-H; 292A-C]
4. Nothing was paid by the Government to the assessee
company in connection with 1/3rd area of the forest leases
taken over from the assessee company. The assessee company
had filed a suit in connection with the timber logs and
stores taken over by the Government and succeeded in
obtaining a decree. The sum awarded in the decree in lieu of
the rights which the assessee company had under cl. 27 of
the agreement could not, therefore, be taxed. [292F-G]
5. Normally in trade, there are two types of capital,
one circulating and the other fixed. Fixed capital is what
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the owner turns to profit by keeping it in his own
possession, circulating capital is what he makes profit of
by parting with it and letting it change hands. What is
capital assets in the hands of one person may be trading
assets in the hands of the other. The determining factor is
the nature of the trade in which the asset was employed.
[287A-C]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 1 of
1974 and 1355-1356 of 1973.
273
From the Judgment and Order dated 22/24.4.1970 of the
Bombay High Court in I.T.R. No 111 of 1963
B.B. Ahuja and Miss A.Subhashni for the Appellant.
F N Kaka, S.N. Talwar, Y. Chaudhary and H.S. Parihar
for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SABYASACHI MUKHARJI, J. These appeals are from the
judgment and order of the High Court of Bombay dated
22nd/24th April, 1970. These are by certificate granted by
the High Court under section 66A(ii) of the Indian Income-
tax Act, 1922. The judgment under appeal is reported in 81
I.T.R. at page 777.
The familiar yet not always easy to answer question
whether a particular receipt is capital or revenue looms
large in these appeals arising out of the assessment to
income-tax for the assessment years 1950-51, 1951-52 and
1953-54, the accounting years respectively ending on 31st
May, 1950,31st May, 1951 and 31st May, 1953.
The assessee is a public limited company limited by
shares. It derived income from several sources including
certain business operations. These operations were carried
out in India and abroad and used to be carried out, inter
alia, in Burma and Siam. The assessee company carried on
business in Burma from 1862 onwards. In connection with its
business of selling timber, the assessee-company had to
enter into contracts which are mentioned as ’forest leases’
with the Government of Burma. In the year of account ending
on 31st May, 1950 the assesseecompany was the owner of about
15 forest leases. The agreed position between the parties
was that all the forest leases contained provisions and
clauses exactly similar to the speciman copy dated 28th
October, 1925, which was taken into consideration by the
High Court. It may be mentioned, however, that the forest
leases were for the duration of 15 years and in respect of
large areas. Under these leases, the assesseecompany was
authorised to fell the teak trees and convert them into the
logs and, upon completion of the extraction thereof, to
remove the logs after payment of royalty to the Government
of Burma for its own purposes. Clause 27 in these leases
authorised the assessee-company even after the expiry of the
period of 15 years of the lease to remove the logs in
respect whereof extraction had been completed upon pay-
274
ment of royalty. The period for such removal under clause 27
was fixed at three years after the expiry of the lease
period mentioned in clause 4. These leases contained renewal
clauses. The forest leases of the assessee-company did not
commence on the same date and related to different parts of
the forests in Burma. These leases were made as mentioned
hereinbefore, in 1862 first and had been continuously
renewed from time to time.
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It was stated that five similar business organisations
obtained forest leases from the Government of Burma for
their business in timber. Before the period of 15 years
mentioned in these leases expired, the Second World War
started and the Japanese army overran Burma. The then
Government of Burma then extended the periods of current
leases until such time as it became possible to resume
forest operations and for such further periods as might be
required for settlement of the new forest leases to be
executed between these business organisations and the
Government. Upon termination of the hostilities, in
connection with the resumption of the forest operations, the
Government made provisional arrangements in terms of what is
referred to in paragraph 7 of the statement of the case as
"weight agreement". The Union of Burma came into existence
from 4th January, 1948. Under section 44(2) of the
Constitution of Burma, there was a directive for
nationalisation, inter alia, of the forest exploitations.
Thereafter correspondence took place, inter alia, between
five European companies who were exploiting forests in Burma
under the various leases and the Government in connection
with the taking over of the exploitation by the Government
of Burma. The High Court noted the relevant correspondence
dealing with such arguments.
On 1st June, 1948, a third of the total teak area
mentioned in the 15 forest leases of the ownership of the
assessee-company was taken over by the Government of Burma.
Forest exploitation in respect of the rest of the 2/3rds
area was also taken over by the Government on or about 10th
June, 1949. In that connection, certain correspondence had
been addressed by the assessee-company to the Government.
The Union of Burma on the one hand and the assessee-company
and Steel Brothers & Company Ltd. on the other executed an
agreement dated 10th June, 1949 on the footing that the
forest leases had already been terminated. The agreement
provided for making over by the assesseecompany to the
President of the Government of Burma of the assessee-
company’s ’residuary rights’ under the forest leases
together with the non-duty paid logs wherever found and also
for making over
275
of all the assets pertaining to the forest leases, viz.,
headquarters, elephants, cattle, stores, buildings,
dewelling houses, motor transport, tractors, launches, etc.
and for certain other incidental matters. The agreement
provided for handing over by the President of the Government
of Burma the assessee-company of 50,000 tons of teak logs of
the specified qualities mentioned in clause 7 of the said
agreement. There was no dispute between the parties that in
pursuance of the agreement the assessee-company had made
over to the Government of Burma the assets mentioned in
clause 1 of the agreement. There was also no dispute that in
pursuance of the agreement the Government of Burma handed
over in all 43,860 tons of logs to the assessee-company.
There was no dispute that those 43,860 tons of logs were
delivered against three kinds of assets in the following
quantities:
(1) 28,847 tons against non-duty paid logs handed over
by the asseessee-company to the Government.
(2) 2,946 tons against depreciable assets like land and
buildings, launches, furniture and stores.
(3) 12,067 tons against livestock like elephants, etc.
The account of these 43,860 tons of logs delivered by
the Government was maintained by the assessee-company in
what is described in the Income-tax Officer’s report as
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"Burma forests assets realisation reserve account". These
43,860 tons of logs were sold off by the assessee-company
from time to time in the accounting years 1949, 1950, 1951
and 1952. The aggregate sale proceeds during the above four
years came to Rs.1,35,55,611 as appears from the assessment
order which is annexed to the statement of the case. In
connection with these sale proceeds, the Income-tax Officer
stated that, as the receipts and sales of logs had taken
place over a period of four years, the amount realised had
to be allocated amongst the various years. He further stated
that the basis of the allocations was agreed to by the
assessee. He proceeded to make the allocation on the footing
that the assessee had incurred costs for getting delivery of
these logs at the rate of Rs.225 per ton on 10th June, 1949.
He then considered the proceeds realised and made the
allocations for the assessment years 1950-51 and 1951-52 in
the manner appearing in paragraph 9 of the statement of the
case submitted to the High Court. Upon allocation made in
the above manner, the Income-tax Officer’s finding was that
in the year ending 31st May, 1950, the assessee had received
18,676 tons of logs. The sale
276
proceeds of Rs.65,52,153 were received in respect of non-
duty paid logs delivered to the assessee-company. The sale
proceeds of Rs.31,980 were received in respect of logs
received against depreciable assets, stores and livestock.
For the accounting year ending 31st May, 1951, the Income-
tax Officer held that the assessee had received in all
16,299 tons of logs. The sale proceeds of those logs were
allocated as follows:
"Rs.5,78,896 in respect of non-duty paid logs handed
over by the assessee-company to the Government, Rs.2,69,975
in respect of the logs delivered against handing over of
depreciable assets, stores and livestock." (81 I.T.R. p.
785.)
The question that arose upon such allocations having
been made in the manner indicated was as to whether the
receipt of Rs.65,52,153 in the accounting year ending 31st
May, 1950, and Rs.5,78,896 in the accounting year ending
31st May, 1951 was exempt from tax as being a receipt of
capital nature as contended by the assessee-company.
Similarly, the further question which arose was as to
whether sale proceeds amounting to Rs.31,980 in the
accounting year ending 31st May, 1950, and Rs.2,69,975 in
the accounting year ending 31st May, 1951, in respect of
depreciable assets were liable to tax under the Act or were
altogether free from such liability. The Income-tax Officer
as well as the Appellate Assistant Commissioner made
findings against the assessee companies in connection with
these amounts. On behalf of the assessee-company it was
urged before the Appellate Tribunal that the entire receipt
and delivery of the 43,860 tons of logs were on capital
account. The submission was that the assessee’s business of
dealing in timber in Burma had got sterilized and the above
quantity of logs was received only in respect of the said
sterilization or loss of the capital asset. In connection
with that submission, the Appellate Tribunal held against
the assessee-company that the assessee’s business had not
stopped and there was no question of sterilization of its
business. The forest leases owned by the assessee-company
had expired and were not bound to be renewed and the
"residuary rights" available to the assessee-company under
clause 27 of the forest leases were merely rights to remove
the extracted logs within a period of three years from the
forest areas. The assessee-company had no interest in land
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of the forest areas.
The Tribunal, however, observed that though the
agreement referred to certain residuary rights under clause
27 of the agreement
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there was nothing to show that any compensation was paid in
respect of any rights available to the assessee under clause
27 of the lease agreement.
The contention that the realisations were in respect of
capital assets was rejected. It was further held that the
realisation in respect of logs received against depreciable
assets, stores and livestock were profits and liable to tax.
In calculating the profits it was held that the logs
received by the assessee-company were received by it at the
cost value of Rs.225 per ton.
After having recorded the findings in the aforesaid
manner, the Tribunal referred to the High Court concerned,
i.e., the High Court of Bombay, certain questions of law for
the assessment year 1950-51 and 1951-52. The High Court felt
that question No. 1 in both these assessment years need not
be answered and this position was agreed to by the parties.
The following questions for these two assessment years were
really considered by the High Court:
"I. Assessment year 1950-51:
............
2. Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances
of the case, the amount of Rs.65,52,153 or any
part thereof was exempt from tax as being a
receipt of a capital nature?
3. Whether on the facts and in the circumstances
of the case, the amount of Rs.1,41,156 was liable
to tax under the second proviso to section
10(2)(vii) of the Income-tax Act, and whether
there was any evidence that the conditions of the
application of that proviso were all satisfied?
4. Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances
of the case, the amounts of Rs.5,250, Rs.1,025 and
Rs.25,705, being the excess realisations over
Rs.225 per ton for logs received in respect of
depreciable assets, stores and livestock,
respectively, were liable to tax under the Act?"
"II. Assessment year 1951-52:
1.....................................
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2. Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances
of the case, the amount of Rs.5,18,896 or any part
thereof was exempt from tax as being a receipt of
a capital nature?
3. Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances
of the case, the amounts of Rs.44,407, Rs.8,639
and Rs.2,16,929, being the excess realisations
over Rs.225 per ton for logs received in respect
of depreciable assets, stores and livestock,
respectively, were liable to tax under the Act?"
Similarly for the assessment year 1953-54, the
questions referred by the Tribunal to the High Court were as
follows:
"1. Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances
of the case, the amount of Rs.5,58,188 or any part
thereof was exempt from tax as being a receipt of
a capital nature?
2. Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances
of the case, the amount of Rs.9,493, being the
amount of compensation received for stores
acquired by the Burmese Government, was liable to
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tax under the Act?"
The High Court answered all these questions in favour
of the assessee. The High Court answered for the assessment
year 1950-51 the question 2 in the affirmative for the
entire amount, questions 3 & 4 in the negative, for the
assessment year 1951-52 the second question in the
affirmative and question no. 3 in the negative. For the
assessment year 1953-54 both the questions were answered in
the affirmative. The revenue has come up in appeals.
In order to appreciate the controversy, broad features
of the facts, some of which have been noted before, have to
be borne in mind. The business in question of the assessee
started in Burma in 1861. There were 15 agreements with the
Government of Burma for exploitation of forests at the
relevant time. The agreements were entered into at different
times and provided for expiry of leases on different dates.
At page 27 of the Paper Book a typical agreement dated 28th
October, 1925 is indicated. Similar agreements were entered
into for other leases. The terms provided, inter alia, as
follows:
General rights "1. The Contractor shall within the series of
of contractor: coupes into which the forest area described
in Schedule I and hereinafter
279
referred to as "the Concession Area" shall be
subdivided as provided in clause 5 and during
the periods for extraction there from
prescribed in clause 6 and subject to such
further conditions, limitations and
restrictions as are hereinafter prescribed
have the sole right and license to-
(a) fell the teak trees gridled or
marked in that behalf by the officers of the
Forest Department in accordance with the
directions contained in clause 8 and any
naturally dead standing teak trees;
(b) convert into logs all such trees all
naturally felled teak trees and all felled
teak timber left unloged from former
operations; and
(c) remove all such logs and all logs
were left unextracted from former operations:
PROVIDED that is any area
to which a scheme for concentrated
exploitation accordance with any sanctioned
working Plan has been applied the Contractor
shall have no rights in standing teak trees
under five feet six inches in girth measured
at breast height from the ground.
Grant of other 2. The Government acting on behalf of the
rights in Con- Secretary of State reserves to itself the
cession Area. right to enter into agreements with other
parties for the extraction of timber other
than that which the Contractor is entitled to
extract under this Agreement from the whole
or from any part of the Concession Area."
The proviso to that clause need not be set out.
Clause 4(1) was as follows:
Period during 4. (1) This Agreement shall come into force
which Agreementon the 1st day of January, 1926 and shall
is in force unless previously terminated under clause 26
or clause 29 terminated after the expiry of a
period of fifteen years; viz. on the 31st day
of December, 1940;
PROVIDED that in respect of the rights
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conferred by
280
clause 27 or by sub-clause (2) of this clause
and in respect of very liability incurred
under this Agreement it shall continue in
force for such further period as is necessary
for the enjoyment of such rights and the
enforcement of such liabilities."
Clause 15 of the agreement authorises the assessee
company to cut canals, make water courses, build bridges and
other railway works etc. on certain conditions.
Clause 16 dealt with control of such private railways.
Clause 18 dealt with the inspection etc.
Other relevant clauses were,
General respo- 19. Nothing herein contained shall be deemed
nsibilities to relieve the Contractor, his agents and
of Contractor. servants of the duty of complying with any
Act of the legislature and of the rules
thereunder at the time being in force and
applying to the Concession Area.
20. With thirty days from the dates
respectively on which measurement statements
of timber have been furnished to the
Contractor by the Forest Department the
Contractor shall pay or to be paid into such
Government Treasury as the Government may
appoint royalty in respect thereof according
to the following rate namely:
.............................................
............................................
Clause 21 read as follows:
Marking of 21. The Contractor shall be entitled to have
timber after the timber which has been measured for
Measurement royalty marked at the time of measurement
with a Government hammer-mark denoting that
the timber has been so measured and after
payment of such royalty the timber thus
marked shall become the property of the
Contractor."
Clause 23 was as follows:
"23. Until teak timber has been marked and
royalties have
281
Teak timber been paid thereon in accordance with the
Goverment pro- preceding clause it shall be deemed to be
perty up to property of the Government and the the
payment Contractor shall have no right to sell
of royalty. mortgage or hypothecate it or create any
charge or lien thereon."
Clause 27 of the agreement provides as
follows:
"27. On the conclusion of the period
specified in clause 4 or on the termination
of this agreement under clause 26 or clause
29, as the case may be,-
(a) the contractor shall be allowed a
further period of three years for delivering
at a measuring station and removing therefrom
after payment of royalty on or otherwise
dealing as provided in clause 20 with any
timber bearing his authorised hammer-marks
the extraction of which has in accordance
with the terms of this agreement been
completed before the date such conclusion or
termination and on the expiry of such further
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period he shall cease to have any rights
whatever in timber not yet so delivered:
Provided that the rates of royalty
payable under this clause shall be the same
as the rates fixed for the concession area
under any new agreement whether with the
present contractor or with other parties
subsequent to this agreement or in the event
of no new agreement being entered into at the
rates of royalty set out in clause 20 of this
agreement;
(b) the contractor shall be given such
reasonable time as in the opinion of the
Government may be necessary to allow him to
dispose of such of his buildings, mills,
railways or other structures erected for the
purposes of his business under this agreement
as are standing on land at the disposal of
the Government."
Under clause 29 the Contractor was given the rights to
terminate the agreement at any time by giving two years
notice in writing.
On the 1st January, 1926, there was commencement of the
agreement. 31st December, 1940 was the due date of expiry of
the agreement. On 7th April, 1942, there was extension by
the Government of Burma of the long term agreement till such
time as it became possible H
282
to resume forest operations and for such further period as
might be required for settlement of new agreements. On 24th
January, 1948, there was a letter by the Government of Burma
to the assessee and others in connection with ending of
joint working arrangements between consortium of 5
contractors on the one hand and Government of Burma on the
other hand for exploitation of forests. On 4th February,
1948, there was the assessee’s letter to the Government of
Burma indicating their specific rights under the Forest
Agreement in respect of logs in the course of extraction on
termination of agreements.
on 10th February, 1948, the Burmese Government replied
to the assessee’s letter dated 4th February, 1948 informing
that the normal period of currency of agreement had already
expired, and the life of the agreement had been prolonged
under letter dated 7th April, 1942 and also under the Weight
Agreement which expired on 1st May, 1947. Government’s
decision to terminate long term pending lease negotiations
and to terminate on 31st May, 1948 joint operations in the
area intended to be taken over by Government and the
Government’s intention to consider any claims of residuary
rights under the expiring agreements was also indicated to
the assessee. On 10th June, 1949, there was an agreement
between the President of Union of Burma and the assessee and
Steel Bros., inter alia, dealing with the residuary rights
under clause 27 of the 1925 agreement and the settlement to
be made in respect thereof.
The agreement, inter alia, reiterated that whereas
under lease under clause 27, there were certain residuary
rights as we have noted hereinbefore, whereas certain
questions had arisen in the settlement being made by the
Government as regards the said rights as well as the assets
of the lessees in the forest areas which the lessees desired
to surrender to the Government, the parties had agreed to
resolve this question indicated under clause 1 therein. It
is not necessary to set out the details here. These have
been set out at pages 80-81 of the Paper Book.
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We have set out the relevant portions of the material
documents relied before the High Court. It may be mentioned
that the High Court in its judgment has set out the
discussion at page 793 of the report (81 I.T.R. 777) between
the Government of Burma and the assessee company. The said
discussion recorded is as follows:
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"The Government of Burma was always the grantor.
Apparently this was so because the forests were
always of the ownership of the Government. The
Government was the single owner of all the
forests. These forests were never intended to be
transferred to any grantee at any time. The forest
leases were always of duration of 15 years or
more. They always related to extremely large areas
which were sub-divided into large coupes. These
coupes were also not to be worked at the same
time, but according to schedule fixed in respect
thereof. Each specified group of coupes was to be
worked within three years. The extraction of the
trees was to be completed within the fixed period
of three years. The schedule fixed was
compulsorily to be adhered to. The work of
extraction was to be done in accordance with the
rules prescribed for felling, logging and removal.
The Government was accordingly not a seller of any
stock in-trade and the assessee was not a
purchaser of any stock in-trade. The assessee
undertook the obligations of various kinds so as
to complete the work of extraction as indicated in
the contract. The assessee had to maintain
extremely large establishments and headquarters at
various places and had in that connection put up
various permises including dwelling houses and
buildings. It had to maintain diverse sorts of
mechanical appliances and had, inter alia, owned
motor transport, tractors, launches, elephants,
cattle and diverse assets for the purposes of
working these forest leases. The Government was
not concerned in any part of the operations,
relating to the extractions done by the assessee
from the contract area. It is of importance that
the right of extraction and/or to fell, convert
and remove that was given to the assessee was to
be exercised in respect of the growing forest
trees and/or uncut timber. There was a further
right to log all felled teak timber left unlogged
from former operations. The consideration that was
charged by the Government was only the royalty
agreed to be paid to the Government. G
The main question, is, whether the acquisition of
forest leases by the assessee was capital asset or stock-in-
trade. The next question which arises for the first two
years is whether there is any scope of application of
section 10(2)(vii) of Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 in respect
of the amount of R.S.. 1,41,156 for the assessment year
1950-51
284
and for 1951-52 whether the amounts of R.S.. 44,407, R.S..
8,639 and R.S.. 2,16,929. being the excess realisations over
R.S.. 225 per ton for logs received in respect of
depreciable assets, stores and livestock were liable to tax
under the Act. The two questions relevant for the assessment
year 1953-54 will be dealt with separately.
The main submission by Shri B.B. Ahuja on behalf of the
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re venue was that the assessee was operating on a wide field
in more than one country for obtaining its stock-in-trade in
timber. The fresh con tracts entered into by the assessee
(15 at the material time which commenced and expired at
different times, were contracts entered in the course of its
business. It was, therefore, submitted that these were
trading contracts. The assessee’s right under the contract
of 1925, according to Shri Ahuja, was to (i) fell teak
trees. The assessee was trading in teak; (ii) convert them
into logs; and (iii) remove them on payment of royalty.
Under clause 27 of the Agreement, the assessee had no
interest in land as such, it had only a right to collect and
take away logs, its stock-in-trade, it could not fell any
fresh trees. The agreement dated 10th June, 1949 was entered
into by the assessee, according to the learned counsel for
the revenue, in the course of its business. He further
submitted that 28,847 logs received by the assessee under
the agreement dated 10th June, 1949, were in substitution of
the logs that it had already cut and had not been able to
remove from the forests. It was urged, it was merely a
recompense for its rights in the stock-in-trade.
It has to be borne in mind that though the assessee had
several sources of income including income from business
operation, the assessee’s company’s main income was from
felling the trees and carried on the said business on an
extensive scale.
On behalf of the assessee, it was submitted that forest
leases constituted the income producing assets of the
company. Mr. Kaka submitted that these involved the setting
up of the entire business and investment of large funds in
building dams, canals, roads, railways, buildings, etc. He
drew our attention to clause 15 of the lease agreement which
has been set out at page 40 of the Paper Book in Statement
of case. Mr. Kaka further reiterated that the leases were
for a long duration with a first right to refusal to any
subsequent leases. Reference was made in this connection to
clause 4(2) of the lease agreement appearing at page 30 of
the Paper Book. The Forest leases. it was
285
urged by him, were not ordinary commercial contracts made in
the A course of carrying on their trade or for the disposal
of their products. These leases related to the whole
structure of the assessee’s profit making apparatus. It was
further submitted that these regulated the assessee’s
activities, defined what they might or might not do and
affected the whole conduct of the assessee’s business.
According to him the forest leases, therefore, constituted
the capital assets of the assessee’s business. He relied on
a decision in Van-Den Berghs Ltd. v. Clark, 3 I.T.R. 17 at
25 and also Hood Bars v. Commissioner of Inland Revenue No.
2. 87 Tax Cases, 188.
Shri Kaka, therefore, submitted that the rights
acquired under the contract were three-folds viz. (1) to
fell trees (2) to convert the felled trees into logs and (3)
to remove the logs. He referred us to clause 1 of the lease
Agreement which appears at page 27 of the Paper Book.
Detailed provisions were made in clauses 9, 10 and 11
regarding each of these operations.
It was further submitted that during the initial period
of 15 years the assessee had the right to carry on all the
three operations while under the residual rights the
assessee could only carry on the operations of logging and
removal of logs already felled by him.
Under clause 27, the assessee had no rights in the
felled logs but only had the right to log and remove them
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and acquire the same after payment of royalty. It was his
submissions that in the absence of clause 27 the assessee
would have no right to the felled trees which would have
remained the property of the Government of Burma. We are of
the opinion that he is right. It was further submitted that
the assessee had not rights to felled trees which were not
logged and removed within 3 years according to the terms of
clause 27 of the lease agreement.
The consideration for the 43,860 tons of logs agreed to
be handed over to the assessee was the surrender to the
residuary rights under the Forest leases and the acquisition
of the assets pertaining to the Forest Leases. He referred
to us in this connection to clause 1 of the Take over
Agreement which has been set out at page 80 of the Paper
Book.
Mr. Kaka further submitted that one lump sum
consideration was paid for both the surrender of the
residuary rights and acquisition of assets of the business
under clause 7 of the Take over Agreement at H
286
p. 82. The splitting up of the consideration, according to
him, in clause 10 was merely for the implementation of the
agreement as Schedule provided in the manner of handing over
the logs to the assessee in exchange of certain assets. If
the residuary rights and assets had not been acquired by the
Government the assessee would have carried on his business
for another 3 years and logged and removed the felled trees.
The assessee was prevented from carrying on this business
upon the nationalisation of the forest resources and the
consequential acquisition of the residuary rights and assets
pertaining to the forest leases belonging to the assessee.
Mr. Kaka urged that compensation therefore paid for
acquisition of the residuary rights and assets was for the
sterilization of the Company’s business and therefore a
capital receipt. He relied on the observations of Lord
Buckmaster at page 463 and Lord Wrenbury at page 465 in
Glenburg Union Fireclay Co. Ltd. v. The Commissioner of
Inland Revenue, 12 Tax Cases 427. It was further urged that
once it was held that the forest leases constituted the
capital assets of the assessee, compensation paid for the
sterilization of even part of a capital asset must be
regarded as a capital receipt. Furthermore, according to
him, it made no difference whether there was a sale of an
asset out and out or it was a means of preventing the
acquisition of profits that would otherwise be gained. He
urged that in either case the asset of the company was
sterilized or destroyed. Reliance was placed on the
observations of this Court in Commissioner of Income Tax v.
Vazir Sultan & Sons, 36 I.T.R. 175 at 191 and Godrej & Co.
v. Commissioner of Income-Tax, 37 I.T.R. 381.
It is, therefore, necessary as mentioned hereinbefore
to examine whether the acquisition of forest leases by
assessee were acquisitions of capital assets. Though we will
refer to some of the decisions to which our attention was
drawn and which were referred to by the High Court, it is
well to bear in mind the basic principles. These are: if
there was any capital asset, and if there was any payment
made for the acquisition of that capital asset, such payment
would amount to a capital payment in the hand of the payee.
Secondly, if any payment was made for sterilization of the
very source of profit making apparatus of the assessee, or a
capital asset, then that would also amount to a capital
receipt in the hand of the recipient. On the other hand if
forest leases were merely stock-in-trade and payments were
made for taking over the stock-in-trade, then no question of
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capital receipt comes. The sum would represent payments of
revenue nature or trading receipts. Whether in a particular
case, for the contracts of the type with which we are
concerned, payments were capital receipts or not would
depend upon the facts and circumstances of the case. In this
287
connection it is important to bear in mind that normally in
trade there A are two types of capital, one circulating
capital and the other fixed capital. Fixed capital is what
the owner turns to profit by keeping it in his own
possession; circulating capital is what he makes profit of
by parting with it and letting it change hands. Therefore,
circulating capital is capital which is turned over and in
the process being turned over, yields profits or loss. It is
well-settled as the High Court observed in the judgment
under appeal that what is capital assets in the hands of one
person may be trading assets in the hands of the other. The
determining factor is the nature of the trade in which the
asset was employed. Compensation received for
immobilisation, sterilization, destruction or loss, total or
partial of a capital asset would be capital receipt. If a
sum represented profit in a new form then that was income
but where the agreement related to the structure of
assessee’s profit making apparatus and affect the conduct of
the business, the sums received for cancellation or
variation of such agreement would be capital receipt.
In Senairam Doongarmall v. Commissioner of Income-lax,
Assam, 42 I.T.R. 392 at 406, this Court observed as follows
after discussing several authorities:
"All these cases were decided again on their
special facts. Though they involved examination of
other decisions in search for the true principles,
it cannot be said that they resulted in the
discovery of any principle of universal
application. To summarise them: South India
Pictures’ case (29 I.T.R. 910) was so decided
because the money received was held to be in lieu
of commission which would have been earned by the
business which was still going, and the receipt
was treated as the fruit of the business. The same
reason was given in Jairam Valiji’s case (35
I.T.R. 148), and the Shamsher Printing Press case
(39 I.T.R. 90). In Vazir Sultan’s case (36, I.T.R.
175), the compensation was held to replace loss of
capital, and in Godrej’s case (37 I.T.R. 381), the
compensation was said not to have any relation to
the likely income or profits but to loss of
capital. Each case was thus decided on its facts.
We have so far shown the true ratio of each
case cited before us, and have tried to
demonstrate that these cases do no more than
stimulate the mind, but none can serve as a H
288
precedent, without advertence to its facts. The
nature of the business, or the nature of the
outlay or the nature of the receipt in each case
was the decisive factor, or there was a
combination of these factors. Each is thus an
authority in the setting of its own facts."
All these cases have been discussed in the judgment
under ap peal at page 795 of 81 I.T.R. As Hidayatullah, J.
as the Chief Justice then was observed in 42 I.T.R. at page
392, each case depended upon the facts of each case.
This Court had occasion to consider some of these
aspects in Commissioner of Income-tax, U.P. v. Gangadhar
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Baijnath, 86 I.T.R. 19 whereas at page 25 of report
referring to several authorities it noted:
"The question whether a receipt in capital or
income has frequently come up for determination
before the courts. Various rules have been
enunciated as furnishing a key to the solution of
the question, but as often observed by the highest
authorities, it is not possible to lay down any
single test as infallible or any single criterion
as decisive in the determination of the question,
which must ultimately depend on the facts of the
particular case, and the authorities bearing on
the question are valuable only as indicating the
matters that have to be taken into account in
reaching a decision: vide Van Den Berghs Ltd. v.
Clark (1935 A.C. 431: 19 T.C. 390: 3 I.T.R. (Eng.
Case) 17 (H.L.). That, however, is not to say that
the question is one of fact, for, as observed in
Davies (H.M. Inspector of Taxes) v. Shell Company
of China Ltd. (32 T.C. 133; 22 I.T.R. (suppl.) 1
(C.A.), ’these questions between capital and
income, trading profit or no trading profit, are
questions which, though they may depend no doubt
to a very great extent on the particular facts of
each case, do involve a conclusion of law to be
drawn from those facts’."
Similar observations were made in Commissioner of
Income-tax, Poona v. Manna Ramji and Co., 86 I.T.R. 29. The
Court reiterated the same principle.
We have referred to the discussion which took place
with the
289
Government of Burma on 28th October, 1925. Having regard to
all A these, the forest leases, in our opinion, affected the
very structure of the operation of the assessee. In this
connection we may remind ourselves of the decision of the
House of Lords in Van Den Berghs Ltd. v. Clark (H.M.
Inspector of Taxes), 3 I.T.R. 17 (English case). In that
case a Dutch company and the assessee who were competitors
in the manufacture and dealing in margarine, in order to end
the competition entered into an agreement in 1908, by which
they bound themselves to work in friendly alliance and to
share their profits and losses in accordance with an
elaborate scheme therein specified; further, it was stated
that they would promote the commercial, pecuniary, buying
and selling and other interests of the two companies. In
1913 another agreement was entered into modifying the
original basis of ascertaining and sharing profits, and,
subject thereto, continued in force the provisions of the
agreement of 1908 until December, 1940. During the war the
agreements were not operated, but in 1920 a third agreement
was made modifying the two previous agreements as to the
basis of profit-sharing, extending the branches of the
business, and again continuing the principal agreement of
1908 till December, 1940. In 1927, three agreements were
made, under which the appellants agreed to determine the
agreements of 1908, 1913 and 1920 in consideration of the
payments to them of $ 450,000. The Special Commissioners
held that that sum was paid in respect of the pooling
agreements, and must be brought in for the purposes of
arriving at the balance of the profits of the appellants for
the year ending December, 1927, and consequently that the
sum was an income receipt. Finlay, J., held that the
cancelled agreements were capital asset of the appellants
and that the sum of 450,000 was not an income receipt at
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all. The Court of Appeal restored the decision of the
Commissioners, who had held that the sum was not received by
the appellants in consideration of the surrender of a fixed
capital asset, but arose from a transaction attributable to
circulating capital, and therefore an income receipt. By the
House of Lords it was held that $ 450,000 was not an item of
profit arising to the appellants from the carrying on of
their trade, as the agreements which were cancelled were not
ordinary commercial contracts made in the course of trading
nor merely agreements as to how trading profits should be
distributed, but affected the whole conduct of their
business. It was held that money laid out in the
cancellation of so fundamental an organisation of a trader’s
activities could not be regarded as an income receipt of
disbursement. The agreements formed the fixed framework
within which their circulating capital operated, and were
not incidental to the working of their profit-making
machine. The Court reiterated H
290
the observations and principles laid down by Lord Cave in
British Insulated & Helsby Cables Ltd. v. Atherton, [1926]
A.C. 205. The observations of Lord Macmillan at page 25 of 3
I.T.R. (English case) are apposite to the facts before us.
The three agreements which the appellants in that case had
consented to cancel were not ordinary commercial contracts
made in the course of carrying on their trade; they were not
contracts for the disposal of their products or for the
engagement of agents or other employees necessary for the
conduct of their business. These regulated the appellant’s
activities, defined what the appellants might and what might
not do and affected the whole conduct of the appellant’s
business. Accordingly, Lord Macmillan found it in that case,
difficult in seeing how money laid out to secure, I or money
received for the cancellation of, so fundamental an
organisation of a trader’s activities could be regarded as
an income disbursement or an income receipt. Lord Macmillan
noted that the legal character of the payment should not be
mis-judged by the magnitude of payment-for the magnitude is
a relative term. But the magnitude of a transaction is not
an entirely irrelevant consideration. With respect we accept
this approach of Lord Macmillan to the facts of the present
case before us, which appears to be basically similar.
The forest lease therefore constituted, in our opinion,
capital assets of the assessee. The same conclusion is
fortified by the observations of House of Lords in the case
of Hood Barrs v. Commissioner of Inland Revenue (No. 2), 37
Tax Cases l 88.
In Commissioner of Income-tax, Hyderabad-Deccan v.
Vazir Sultan & Sons, 36 I.T.R. 175, this Court held that in
considering whether compensation paid to an agent on the
cancellation of his agency was a capital receipt or a
revenue receipt, the first question considered was whether
the agency agreement in question was a capital asset of the
assessee’s business and constituted its profit making
apparatus and was in the nature of its fixed capital, or it
was a trading asset or circulating capital or stock-in-trade
of its business. If it was the former compensation received
would be a capital receipt, if the agency was entered into
by the assessee in the ordinary course of his business and
for the purpose of carrying on that business it would fall
into the latter category and the compensation received would
be a revenue receipt.
Having regard to the nature of the forest leases which
we have discussed before, in our opinion, the payments made
for cancellation
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291
Or sterilisation of the rights under these leases would be
capital receipts. See in this connection the observations of
Lord Buckmaster in the decision of House of Lords in The
Glenboig Union Fireclay Co. Ltd. v. The Commissioner of
Inland Revenue (supra). The observations of Lord Wrenbury
are at page 465.
We have discussed the facts regarding the cancellation
and circumstances under which it was entered, and we may
refer to the facts stated in the judgment of the High Court
at pages 798-799. As a result of the above findings the High
Court came to the conclusion that sum of Rs.65,52,153
mentioned in question No. 2 for the assessment year 1950-51
and the sum of Rs.5,18,896 mentioned in question No. 2 for
the assessment year 1951 -52 were related to the 28, 847
tons of logs which are exempt from tax as being receipt of a
capital nature on the background of the facts found by the
High Court. Question No. 3 really does not arise because for
levy of a balancing charge under section 10(2)(vii) of
Income-tax Act, 1922, it is absolutely necessary that the
depreciable assets should have been sold at a price agreed
to between the parties. See in this connection also the
observations of this Court in Commissioner of Income-tax v.
Motors & General Stores (P) Ltd., 66 I.T.R. 692. But in
exchange there is a reciprocal transfer of interest in
movable property, a corresponding transfer of interest in
another movable property which is often denoted as ’barter’.
The agreement of 10th June, 1949 had resulted from the
enforcement of the Government’s policy of nationalisation of
forest operation and the agreement does not involve any
transaction of sale between the assessee and the Union of
Burma. The assessee company never paid any money by a price
in respect of assets delivered to it by the Government,
therefore, this amount of Rs.1,41,156 could not be brought
to tax against the assessee company under the second proviso
to section 10(2)(vii) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922.
The question accordingly was rightly decided in favour of
the assessee.
Regarding question No. 4 in the assessment year 1950-51
and the question No. 3 in the assessment year 195l-52, these
related to the delivery of 2,946 and 12,067 tons of logs to
the assessee-company in respect of the depreciable assets,
stores and livestock mentioned in sub-clause (b) of clause 1
of the agreement dated 10th June, 1949. The High Court was
right in holding that logs came into possession of the
assessee company in consequence of the agreement made on
10th June, 1949 against delivery of all outstanding or
residuary rights of the assets to the Government. The
arrangement was in consequence of
292
nationalisation of forest operations in Burma. The whole of
the quantity of 43,860 tons of logs delivered to the
assessee-company was in lieu of the asset of the forest
leases and the other diverse assets which were handed over
by the assessee-company to the Government on 10th June,
1949. These logs were not received by the assessee-company
on revenue account at all. The fact that the assessee-
company did not mix up these logs with any of the stock-in-
trade held by it in its ordinary course of business is an
indication of the fact that the assessee did receive these
as stock-in-trade. These logs were received by the assessee-
company for four years and held by it in the account which
is described as ’Burma forest assets realisation reserve
account’. The sale proceeds of these logs could not be held
to have been received by the assessee-company on revenue
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account. The High Court was right. T he question No. 4 in
the first year and the question No. 3 in the second year
must be answered in the negative and against the revenue.
We have set out hereinbefore the questions relating to
assessment year 1953-54. It appears from the facts that
nothing was paid by the Government to the assessee-company
in connection with 1/3 area of the forest areas which the
Government had taken over from the assessee-company on 1st
June, 1948. The assessee-company had filed a suit against
the Government in connection with the timber logs and stores
taken over by the Government on 1st June 1948. The facts in
connection with the delivery of these goods appeared in the
letter of the Government to the assessee-company dated 24th
January, 1948. In the suit filed by it, the asessee-company
succeeded in obtaining a decree for Rs.5,58, 188. The
Tribunal held that the timber taken over by the Government
in respect of 1/3rd area was stock-in-trade and the proceeds
were taxable. Mr. Kaka was right in his submission that the
timber taken over was towards the residuary rights in
respect of the assets lying within 1/3rd area taken over on
1st June, 1948. The price of the timber as such was never
paid by the Government. In the decree, this sum was awarded
in lieu of the rights which the assessee-company had under
clause 27 in respect of 1/3rd area taken over by the
Government. To these facts, the terms of the agreement dated
10th June, 1949 would be applicable. This sum cannot
therefore be taxed.
On the question No. 2 for the assessment year 1953-54
no argument was advanced before the High Court on behalf of
the assessee and the High Court answered the question in the
affirmative.
293
In view of the principles involved and the nature of
the transactions, we are of the opinion that the High Court
was right in answering the question in the manner it did. In
the premises these appeals fail and are dismissed with
costs.
P.S.S. Appeals dismissed.
294