Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MUNICIPAL CORPORATION OF GREATER BOMBAY
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ROYAL WESTERN INDIA TURF CLUB
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
13/09/1967
BENCH:
SHELAT, J.M.
BENCH:
SHELAT, J.M.
SHAH, J.C.
SIKRI, S.M.
CITATION:
1968 AIR 425 1968 SCR (1) 625
CITATOR INFO :
D 1974 SC1779 (16)
ACT:
Bombay Municipal Corporation Act III of 1888, s. 154-Scope-
of-Determination of annual rateable value-Nature of
deductions that can be allowed when profits basis method
used.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent club ran a race course and had built certain
structures on land in Bombay which it had leased from the
appellant corporation at an annual rent of Rs. 3.75 lakhs.
It had obtained a licence from the State Government to hold
race meetings on its course in Bombay as well as on another
course owned by it in Poona for which ’it had paid a licence
fee of Rs. 13 lakhs for the relevant I year and had
apportioned the fee in the ratio of 2: 1 between the Bombay
and the Poona courses.
For assessment of the correct rateable value of the property
for the rating year 1954-55 the assessing authority made an
assessment by the profits basis method on the basis of the
Club’s accounts for the year 1953-54 and, in doing so,
disallowed certain expenses claimed by the Club in
determining the net rateable value at Rs. 11,90,187. The
respondent club thereupon’ filed an appeal before the small
Causes Court under s. 217 of the Act and although that Court
made a few adjustments, it held the Club had failed to prove
that the net rateable value determined by the assessing
authority was excessive. The High Court however, in appeal,
upheld the Club’s objections as regards the disallowance of
several items of expenditure and held that the gross annual
value of the property would, after the deductions to be
allowed, come to Rs. 2,15,750; and after deducting therefrom
the statutory allowance of 10 percent under s. 154 on
account of allowances for repairs etc., the net annual value
would come to Rs. 1,94,175.
In the appeal to this Court it was contended on behalf of
the appellant, inter alia, (i) that the 10 percent statutory
deduction allowed by s. 154(1) covers all expenses for
repairs and therefore deduction of costs of repairs and
upkeep of the course, if allowed, would mean a duplicate
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deduction; (ii) that the totalisator maintained by the Club
being ’machinery, its value was not to be included in rating
under s.154(2); (iii) that the Club wag entitled to a
deduction of-only half of the licence fee apportioned to the
Bombay Course because that fee covered dual purpose i.e. for
the premises as a race course and for permission to conduct
race meetings on the race course; for the first the burden
would be on the lessor and for the second on the tenant;
that this was borne out by the scheme of the Bombay Race
Courses Licencing Act 3 of 1912 which was to licence the
premises and then to licence the person who runs races on
such premises; and (iv) that if the expenses claimed were
allowed to be deducted, the net rateable value arrived at
would be less than the actual rent of Rs. 3,75,000 payable
by the Club to the Corporation and that such a result cannot
be contemplated under any method of assessing the rateable
value.
HELP:Dismissing the appeal:
(i)The expenses in question were for the
maintenance in good repair of the race-track
which is the source of
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receipts earned by teh Club. Disbursements for the upkeep
of the course and all its adjuncts consequently are proper
out-goings incurred for earning the receipts. They are not
the landlord’s obligation and are not part of or included in
teh statutory deduction of 10 percent in s. 154(1), which
is, in lieu of, the cost of repairs, insurance, etc.
incurred by,the lessor. The High Court was therefore right
in deducting such expenses from the gross receipts.
(ii) Similarly the expenses incurred for the upkeep and re-
pair of the totalisator were incurred on an adjunct neces-
sary to an efficient race course and must necessarily be
regarded as the outgoings of the business. The contention
that as it was machinery its value could not be included in,
rating tinder s. 154(2) had no merit.
(iii) The High Court had rightly allowed the deduction of
the entire amount of expenditure in connection with the cost
of sand and morum, salaries and charges of empolyees, motor
lorry expenses, stores and charges for maintenance of horses
’and bullocks, manure and garden expenses, spares of
tractors and other machinery and the wheel tax and water
tax. The distribution of these expenses between the tenant
and the landlord made by the assessing authority and the
small Cause Court could not be sustained on the ground that
race meetings were held in Bombay only for Part of the year.
There was nothing to show that the lessor had to maintain
the track during the time when race meetings were not held
in Bombay.
The measure in arriving at the net rateable value under s.
154(1) is what a hypothetical tenant would pay as rent and
that would depend upon the amount of profits earned from
race-meetings held on the race course. To arrive at the
correct amount of such profit all expenses reasonably and
properly incurred which go to the making of the receipts
have to be deducted from the gross-receipts.
[533D]
(iv) The licence obtained by the Club was clearly permission
to run race meetings on the two race-courses and not an
instrument licensing the premises as a race course. Since
it is the tenant who would hold the race meetings, the fee,
payable for the licence is his burden and not that of the
lessor. Furthermore there was no provision in Bombay Act 3
of 1912 to warrant the construction that the licence
obtained under s. 4 had a dual purpose as contended. [533H-
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534D]
(v) The rateable value need not always be equal to the
actual rent. The measure is what a hypothetical tenant is
expected to pay for a lease from year to year taking the
property as it exists with all its advantages and burdens.
In view of the fact that the Club was only in exclusive
possession of some portions of the land and the remainder
’had to be kept open to the public except on race days, it
was not surprising that the rateable value came to less than
the actual rent. [534H; 535C]
R.v. Verall [1875] Q.B.D. 9, Sanddown Park CAse [1954] 47 R.
T. 351 (CA). (quoted in Ryde on Rating, 11th ed. 523);
Port of London Authority v. Assessment Committee, [1920] A
C. 273 at p. 281, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 15 of 1965.
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated April 15 / 16,1963
of the Bombay High Court in Appeal No. 216of 1961 from
Original Decree.
S. T Desai, 0. P. Malhotra and 0. C. Mathur for the
appellant.
S. V. Gupte, Solicitor-General and Rameshwar Nath, for the
respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shelat, J. This appeal by certificate obtained from the High
Court at Bombay involves the question as to the true meaning
of s. 154 of the Bombay Municipal Corporation Act, III of
1888 and the correct rateable value to be assessed
thereunder.
The respondent-Club runs two race courses, one in Bombay and
the other at Poona. We are concerned in this appeal with
the Bombay race-course which is comprised of land and
certain structures standing thereon. The said land is the
property of the appellant-corporation given on lease to the
Club for a period of 30 years commencing from June 1, 1944
at an annual rent of Rs. 3,75,000. The said structures
thereon have been built by and belong to the Club. The Club
has obtained a licence from the Government of Maharashtra,
permitting the Club to hold racemeetings at both the Courses
and for which it paid a sum of licence fees between the two
Courses in the ratio of 2: 1 and thus licence fees between
the two Courses in the ratio of 1: 2 and thus the share of
the Bombay Course came to Rs. 8,66,666. The rating year in
question is 1954-55. The assessment was made on the basis
of the Club’s accounts for the year 1953-54 that being the
year concluded before the assessment. According to these
accounts the gross receipts of the Club came to Rs. 117 lacs
and odd and the expenses . to Rs. 124 lacs and odd; the
accounts thus showed a loss of Rs. 7 lacs and odd. The
Deputy Municipal Commissioner who is the assessing authority
disallowed expenses totalling Rs. 22 lacs and odd as having
been wrongly included in the working expenses add
’determined. 13,22,430 as the gross annual rent and
deducting therefrom the 10 percent deduction allowable under
s. 15.4 of the Act assessed the net rateable value at Rs,
11,90,187. The respondent-Club thereupon filed an appeal
before the Small Cause Court, Bombay, under s. 217 of the
Act. The Club claimed in all 19 items of expenses which
according to it ought to have been allowed. The Club,,
however, conceded that items 1, 2, 4, 5, 15, 16 and 18 were
rightly disallowed. The remaining items were:
3. Bombay Course upkeep and repairs
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6. Track sand and Murum
7. Legal charges
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8. Licence fee
9. Totalisator upkeep and repairs
10. Bombay Course salaries and wages,
11. Motor lorry expenses
12, Grass and charges for maintenance of horses and bullocks
13. Insurance and garden,expenses
14. Spares for tractors and machinery parts
19. Painting.
Out of these, items 3, 9 and 19 were wholly disallowed by
the Deputy Municipal Commissioner while the rest were
partially allowed. As regards Item 19, that is, painting,
Counsel for the Club stated before us that he would not
press that item. We are therefore no longer concerned with
that item. The Small Cause Court agreed with the Deputy
Municipal Commissioner in totally disallowing expenses under
Items 3 and 9. It allowed however item 7, that is, legal
charges which were disallowed by the Deputy Municipal
Commissioner. Regarding Item 6, the view of the Small Cause
Court was that only 7/12th and not 50 per cent deducted by
the assessing authority ought to have been allowed. It was
also of the view that only 7/12th and not 50 per cent of the
expenses under Items 10, 11, 12, 13 and 14 ought to have
been allowed by the assessing authority. As regards the
licence fees the Club had, as aforesaid, allotted Rs.
8,66,666 to the Bombay Race Course. The Small Cause Court
confirmed the deduction of 50 per cent only of this amount
allowed by the assessing authority. So far as water tax and
wheel tax were concerned the, Small cause Court-confirmed
the deduction of 3/4th of the these taxes made by the
authority The Small Cause Court held that the pro fits basis
method employed by the assessing authority was properly
employed and further held that the Club had failed to prove
that the net rateable value of Rs. 11,90,185 determined by
the assessing authority was excessive.
Before the High Court the Club agitated the same objections.
The High Court was of the view that considering the unique
nature of the use of the premises by the Club, the proper
method for determination of the annual rent was the profits
basis method but upheld the Club’s objections as regards the
disallowance of the several items of expenditure. The High
Court held that the gross rateable ’value of the :property
would after these deductions be Rs. 2,15,750 and after
deducting therefrom the statutory deduction of 10 percent.
the net rateable value would come to Rs. 1,94,175 a figure,
no doubt, less than the actual annual rent of Rs. 3,75,000
payable by the Club under the said lease. The appellant-
corporation challenges the correctness of these deductions
allowed by the High Court.
529
Before we proceed to consider the contentions urged before
us on behalf of the Corporation, we may first look at some
of the provisions of the Act. Under s. 139 the Corporation
is required to levy property taxes, tax on vehicles and
animals, theatre tax and octroi. Section 140 provides that
property taxes mean water tax, halalkhor-tax and general tax
of not less than 8 per cent. and not more than 26 per cent.
of the rateable value of lands and buildings, education cess
and betterment charges. Section 154 is concerned with the
valuation of property assessable to property taxes and
provides how the rateable value of such property is to be
determined. Sub-section (1) runs as follows:-
"In order to fix the rateable value of any
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building or land assessable to a property tax,
there shall be deducted from the amount of the
annual rent for which such land or building
might reasonably be expected to let from year
to year a sum equal to ten percentum of the
said annual rent and the said deduction shall
be in lieu of all allowances for repairs or on
any other account whatever."
The section provides only for the determination of the
annual rent (not the actual rent paid by the tenant) for
which such land or building might reasonably be expected to
let from year to year and then to fix the rateable value
after deducting therefrom 10 percent. of such annual rent in
lieu of all allowances for repairs or any other account
whatever. The annual rent has to be worked out on the basis
of what a hypothetical tenant would be willing to pay ’as
rent for the premises to a hypothetical landlord who is
prepared to let the premises from year to year as they stand
having regard to all the advantages and disadvantages
relating lo Such premises, such as, the situation, the
nature of the property, the obligations and liabilities
attached thereto and other features, if any, which enhance
or decrease their value to such a, tenant. The section
simply enjoins upon the Municipal Corporation to determine
the annual rent and the rateable value of the property
therefrom but does not provide for any particular method of
rating out of the several well known methods usually
followed in such assessments, such as the comparative
method, the contractor’s method, the unit method and profits
basis method, that is, profit-making capacity or valuation
by reference to receipts and expenditure. (See Ryde on
Rating 11th ed., 398 and Faraday on Rating, 5th ed. p. 24)
The profits basis method which the assessing authority has
adopted in the present case consists in ascertaining the net
annual value -of the premises which has to be worked out
from the profits which are made or which are capable of
being made out of the premises. The gross receipts form the
starting point of the calculation and they are those shown
in the assessee’s accounts for the account year concluded
last before the making of the proposal. When these have
been ascertained, the next step is to deduct therefrom the
expenses of earning those receipts, the cost
530
Of repairs, insurance and other expenses necessary to
maintain the premises in a state to command the hypothetical
rent. The remaining balance is divisible between the
tenant, that is,, the tenant’s share, the landlord, that is,
the hypothetical rent or net annual value and rates. The
tenant’s share is often estimated by applying a percentage
to the tenant’s capital or it may be directly taken as a
proportion of the divisible balance or by applying a
percentage to the receipts. (See Halsbury’s Laws of England,
(3rd ed.), Vol. 32, 87-88). It must be remembered that it
is not the profits which are rateable; they serve to
indicate the rent at which the premises might reasonably be
expected to let, particularly where profit is the motive of
the hypothetical tenant in taking the hereditament. This
method at one stage used to be adopted in the case of public
utilities only. But there are a number of decisions which
show that at a later stage it began to be employed to other
premises also such as foot ball stadia, markets, race-
courses, etc. One of the earliest cases where this method
was applied to undertakings which are not public utilities
is the case of R. v. Verall(1) which was a case of a race-
course. In Sanddown Park Case(2) the Court of Appeal held
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that in cases where actual receipts and expenditure are
accepted as relevant factors for the ascertainment of cross
value, sums reflecting the tenant’s reasonable profit. risk
and interest on capital should be together treated as a
charge on the divisible profits in priority to other
deductions. The profits basis method has also been applied
to such premises as grey hound race tracks. Briefly stated,
the profits basis method is no more than a calculation based
on the profit earning capacity of the premises and as stated
by Lord Birkenhead L.C. in Port of London Authority v.
Assessment Committee(3):
"By this reckoning the amount of the gross
receipts is ascertained, and from such amount
are deducted the expenses of earning such
receipts, the deductions provided, for by
statute, interest on tenant’s capital and the
estimated amount of tenant’s profit. The
figure so ascertained would give the rating
authority a valuable indication as to the rent
which the hypothetical tenant would be likely
to give for the right to occupy the
hereditament in question and therefore would
enable them to form an opinion as to the
correct amount of the net annual value for the
purpose of rating."
In the instant case, the profits basis method has been
adopted for the last several years and approved by the Small
Causes Court in several appeals by the respondent-Club. It
appears that at one stage the respondent-Club raised an
objection regarding its application to the present case. We
need not go into the comparative merits of the different
methods or into the question whether
(1) [1875] Q.B.D. 9.
(2) (1954) 47 R&T 351 (CA) (quoted in Ryde on Rating. 11th
ed.523
(3) [1920] A.C. 273 at p, 281.
531
it can suitably be applied in the present case-or not, as
Counsel for the Club stated before us that he was not
pressing that objection. We therefore proceed on the
footing that this method was properly adopted by the
assessing authority. But that does not end the controversy,
for, even. though the principles on which the profits basis
method is worked out are fairly well-understood, there is
nevertheless bound to be controversy in regard to actual
working expenses shown in the assessee’s accounts. A
question would often arise whether these expenses are the
hypothetical landlord’s burden or that of the hypothetical
tenant. If they are of the former class, they cannot
obviously be claimed as deductible expenses for the
hypothetical tenant would not take them into account while
offering the rent at which he would take the premises on
lease.
We now proceed to examine the contentions in regard to the
items of expenses in controversy in the light of these
principles. The first of these items is Item No. 3 of Rs.
1,07,414 for expenses for upkeep and repairs of the race-
course. The contention on behalf of the Municipal
Corporation was that the 10 per cent statutory deduction
allowed by s. 154(1) covers all expenses for repairs and
therefor deduction of costs of repairs and upkeep, if
allowed, would mean a duplicate deduction. Even if 10%
statutory deduction were considered inadequate looking to
the present rate of prices, the legislature has fixed that
percentage as a matter of policy and if it is found to be
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inequitable or otherwise it is for the legislature and not
for the Court to alter it. The question, however, is not
the inadequacy of deduction allowed in section 154(1) but as
to which are the costs of repairs contemplated by the sub-
section. Under s. 108(m) of the Transfer of Property Act
the lessee is required to use the leased premises as a
person of ’ordinary prudence would use them if they were his
own and must keep them in as good a condition as he found
them and must yield them up in the same condition subject
only to fair wear and tear and irresistible force. There
would thus be two implied covenants in a lease: (1) to keep
in repair and (2) to restore in repair. It would therefore
be the obligation of the tenant to maintain the premises in
good repair and in the same condition at all times during
the term of the lease. The. lessor-bears the burden only in
respect of dilapidation to the premises caused by reasonable
wear and tear and extraordinary causes such as storm, flood
or accidental fire. It will however be seen that the deed
of lease under which the respondent-Club took the land on
lease expressly excludes the applicability of cl. (in) of
section 108. That being so the question as to whether it is
the lessor or the lessee who would be liable to pay for
repairs cannot be resolved by the provisions of section
108(m). But the expenses in question are not expenses for
the upkeep and repairs of either the land or the structures
standing on it which have been put up by the Club. Costs of
these repairs may conceivably be the land-
532
lord’s burden. Item 3 represents expenses for the
maintenance in good repair of the track which is the source
of receipts earned by the Club. it is manifest that the
track together with all its fitments has to be maintained
properly if the Club were to earn the receipts and secure
the largest possible attendance of persons willing to bet at
the races and to attract likewise as many horses and their
owners to participate in the race meetings held by the Club.
A well maintained track is obviously one of the principal
attractions inducing as large an attendance as possible.
Therefore it would be in the interest of the tenant who
takes on lease a race course with profit-making motive to
maintain the course efficiently and in good order.
Disbursements for the upkeep of the course and all its
adjuncts consequently are proper outgoings incurred for
earning the receipts. They are thus not the landlord’s
liability and are not part of or included in the statutory
deduction of 10 percent. The statutory deduction in section
154(1) is in lieu of the cost of repairs, insurance, etc.
incurred by the lessor. There is therefore no question of
any duplication if expenses incurred by the Club for the
maintenance of the Course were to be allowed as a proper
deduction. The High Court was therefore right in deducting
those expenses from the gross receipts.
Next is Item 9 which comprises expenses for the upkeep and
repairs of the totalisator set up by the Club. The
totalisator is an apparatus or a mechanical device for
registering and showing the total operations and the number
of tickets sold to betters on each horse in a race.
Obviously it is maintained to ensure efficient and
expeditious working of the races. It does mechanically the
work which if done by human labour would necessitate
employment of a large number of persons. It is almost an
indispensable adjunct of a modern race course and is
necessary to declare within the short time available to the
betters which are the horses on which heavy betting has been
done in a particular race and the total amount of betting on
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each of the competing horses in that race. The expenses
incurred in the upkeep and repair of such an adjunct
necessary to an efficient race course must necessarily be
regarded as the outgoings of the business. The
Corporation’s contention that it is a, machinery and its
value therefore is not to be included in rating under S.
154(2) has no merit as it is part of the necessary
-equipment of a good race course and its upkeep goes to the
making of receipts.
The next items in controversy are items 6, 10, 11, 12, 13
and 14, that it cost of sand and moorum, salaries and
charges of employees, motor lorry expenses, stores and
charges for maintenance of horses and bullocks, manure and
garden expenses, spares of tractors and other machinery and
lastly the wheel tax and water tax. The only ground on
which the Small Cause Court partially ,allowed these
expenses was that since race-meetings were held .in Bombay
for 6 months in a year only, these expenses would partly be
borne by the Club and partly by the lessor. The High
533
Court disagreed with this view and rightly allowed the
deduction of the entire amount. In our view, it is not
possible to find any Principle on which it would be possible
to hold that if the race meetings are held for 6 months only
in Bombay the burden of these disbursements would be on the
tenant for 6 months and -for the remainder on the lessor.
There is nothing in the lease which would show that the
lessor had to maintain the track during the time that race
meetings were not held in Bombay. Since it is the Turf Club
which ran the race meetings it would be the Club’s
obligation and not that of the lessor to look after the
track’s upkeep and maintenance and therefore it would be the
Club which would bear the costs of its maintenance even
during the period when race meetings were not held in
Bombay. The distribution of these expenses between the
tenant and the landlord made by the assessing authority and
the Small Cause Court cannot therefore be supported on any
principle nor can it be sustained on the mere ground that
race meetings were held in Bombay only for part of the year.
The measure in arriving at the net rateable value under s.
154(1) is what a hypothetical tenant would pay as rent and
that would depend upon the amount of profits earned from
race-meetings held on the race-course. To arrive at the
correct amount of such profit all expenses reasonably and
properly incurred which go to the making of the receipts
have to be deducted from the grossreceipts. There was no
challenge at any stage that these expenses were not properly
incurred for the upkeep and maintenance of the race course.
The High Court therefore was right in allowing the deduction
of these expenses also.
For the relevant year the Club had allotted Rs, 8,66,666 out
of the licence fee of Rs. 13 lacs to the Bombay race-course.
Counsel urged that the Club was entitled to a deduction of
Rs. 4,33,333 only as the licence was for a dual purpose,
viz., for the premises as a race course and for permission
to conduct race meetings on. the race-course. It was argued
that for the first the burden would be on the lessor and for
the second on the tenant. The licence Ex. B shows that it
was granted to the Committee of the respondent Club. The
licence is not a joint licence in favour of the Corporation
and the Club. The application for it was made by the
Committee on behalf of the Club and not by the Municipal
Corporation. If the licence was for a dual purpose prima
facie the landlord would either apply separately or join the
Club in the application. The licence shows that the
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application was for "horse racing in the race courses leased
by them" at Mahalaxmi, Bombay and in the Cantonment at
Poona. The licence is "granted to the
licencees............. to hold horse races on the said race
courses." Condition I of the licence prescribes that the
Club could hold only 36 race meetings in a year out of which
not more than 16 should be allotted to the Poona racecourse.
The licence is clearly permission to run race meetings on
the two race-courses and not an instrument licensing the
premises as a race-course. It is manifest that since it is
the tenant who would hold the race-meetings the fees payable
for the licence is his burden
534
and not that of the lessor. Mr. Desai. however, contended
that the’ scheme of the Bombay Race-Courses Licensing Act,
III of 1912 is to license the premises and then to licence
the person who runs races on such premises. He relied
strongly on the long title of the. Act which states that it
was an Act to provide for the licensing of race-courses in
the State of Bombay. Reliance was also placed on, section
3(i) which provides that no horse’-race shall be held on a
race-course for which there is no licence for horse-racing
in force. But the charging section is section 4 under which
the owner, the lessee or the occupier of a racecourse can
apply for a licence for horse racing on a race-course. The
licence for horse racing and the obligation to obtain it and
to pay the fee therefor is on the person who conducts the
business of running the race-course for horseracing. Such a
person can be either the owner, the lessee or the occupier
of such a racecourse. What section 3 does is to prohibit
horse racing on a racecourse unless a licence for horse
racing has been obtained in accordance with the provisions
of the Act. There is no provision in the Act which Mr.
Desai could point out which lays down any licence fee for a
race-course. There is therefore nothing in the Act to
warrant the construction that the licence obtained under
section 4 has a dual purpose as contended. Therefore there
can be no justification for dividing the burden of the
licence fees between the tenant and the landlord. Mr.
Desai, however, argued that even so, the respondent Club was
not entitled to claim the deduction of the licence fees
because it was not the Club but its Committee which applied
for and obtained the licence. The Articles of Association
empower the Committee to act in all matters ,on behalf of
the Club. The Committee applied for and obtained the
licence on behalf of and as the agent of the Club. The fees
were expended on behalf of the Club and as expenses of its
business and it is the Club and not the Committee which is
licensed to run horse racing on the race-course. The Club
was therefore entitled to treat the licence fees as its own
expenses and claim deduction therefor on the footing that
the fees were expenses incurred by it to earn the receipts.
As regards the wheel tax and the water tax there is no
justification in distributing them on the ground that during
the time racemeetings were not held in Bombay it would be
the landlord’s obligation to pay those taxes. In our view
there is no basis for disallowing a part of these taxes.
These again were expenses incurred by the Club in the
ordinary course of its business and were as necessary .as
other expenses in connection with its business.
Counsel for the Corporation lastly urged that if these
expenses -were allowed to be deducted the net rateable value
arrived at would be less than the actual rent of Rs.
3,75,000 payable by the Club to the Corporation and that
such a result cannot be contemplated under any method of
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assessing the rateable value. It is true -that the net
rateable value as calculated by the High Court comes to Rs.
1,94,175 but the rateable value need not always be equal
535
to the actual rent. As aforesaid the measure is what a,
hypothetical tenant is expected to pay for a lease from year
to Year taking the property as it exists with all its
privileges, advantages and burdens. The leased premises no
doubt consist of a large track of land but it must be
remembered that under cl. (i)(f) of the lease the Club is in
exclusive possession of only certain portions and the
remainder has to be kept open to the public except on race
days and when training of horses is held. A large portion
of the land has thus to be kept open for being used as
playgrounds for the public. It is therefore not surprising
that the rateable value as determined by the High Court
comes to an amount less than the actual rent payable by the
Club.
The appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
R.K.P.S.
Appeal dismissed.
536