Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
DISTRIBUTORS (BARODA) PVT. LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA AND TWO ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT01/07/1985
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, P.N.
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, P.N.
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
SEN, AMARENDRA NATH (J)
MADON, D.P.
THAKKAR, M.P. (J)
CITATION:
1985 AIR 1585 1985 SCR Supl. (1) 778
1986 SCC (1) 43 1985 SCALE (1)1216
CITATOR INFO :
D 1986 SC1565 (9)
RF 1992 SC 803 (21)
ACT:
Income Tax Act 1961 Sections 80M(1) and 80AA:
Income by way of inter-corporate dividends-Deduction-
Whether to be made with reference to full amount of dividend
received or dividend computed in accordance with the
provisions of the Act-Section 80AA-Whether retrospective in
operation.
Constitution of India 1950, Article 141:
Supreme Court-Declaration of law-To be certain,
definite and correct-Judicial decisions-Continuity and
consistency-Essentiality-Pointed out-Earlier ruling of
Court-Manifestly wrong, proceeds upon mistaken assumption
with regard to existence or continuance of statutory
provision, contrary to another decision of Court-Doctrine
of stare decisis-No bar to over-ruling such decision-
Decision of Court in fiscal matters-Interference in
exceptional cases-Necessity of.
Interpretation of Statutes:
Statutory provision-Meaning of-Interpretation on
earlier statutory provision in different language and
structurally different-Reference to and reliance on-Whether
permissible.
Words and Phrases-Meaning of:
’Such income by way of dividends’-Meaning of-Section
80M Income Tax Act 1961.
HEADNOTE:
The earliest provision granting exemption from super
tax in respect of inter-corporate dividend was made as far
back as 9th December, 1933 in a Notification issued by the
Governor General in Council and it provided as follows:-
"The Governor General in Council is pleased to exempt
from super tax:
779
(i) So much of the income of any investment trust
company as is derived from dividends paid by any other
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company which has paid or will pay super-tax in respect of
the profits out of which such dividends are paid".
This provision came up for consideration before a
Division Bench of the High Court of Bombay in CIT v.
Industrial Investment Trust Co. Ltd. (1968) 67 I.T.R. 437.
The High Court guided by a decision of this Court in CIT v.
South India Bank (1966) 59 ITR 763 held that the dividend
income which was exempted under the notification would be
the dividend income received by the assessee and not the
said income less any further amounts" because the
notification must be regarded a self-contained one and not
controlled by any other provisions of the Act and there was
no warrant to construe the word income’ in the notification
as total income nor to qualify the dividend computed under
Section 12 of the Act.
A provision of a similar kind granting exemption from
super tax in respect of certain specified categories of
inter-corporate dividend was introduced as Section 56A of
the Income Tax Act 1922 by the Finance Act, 1953.
When the Indian Income Tax Act, 1922 was repealed and
the Income Tax Act, 1961 was enacted with effect from 1st
April, 1902, Section 99, subsection (i) was introduced in
the new Act exempting certain categories of income from
super tax and one such category was that set out in clause
(iv) of Section 99 sub-section (1) which read as follows:
"99. (1) Super-tax shall not be payable by an assessee
in respect of the following amounts which are included
in his total income- (iv) if the assessee is a company,
any dividend received by it from an Indian company,
subject to the provisions contained in the fifth
Schedule."
This provision continued in force upto Ist March, 1965
subject to a minor inconsequential amendment made by the
Finance Act, 1964.
This provision did not come up for interpretation
before this Court only in Cloth Traders Case, but it came to
be considered by some of the High Courts.
The three High Courts of Bombay, Calcutta and Madras
C.I.T v. New Great Insurance Company Ltd. (1963) 90 ITR 348,
C.I.T v. Darbhangha Marketing Company Ltd. 1971 80 ITR 72
and Madras Auto Service v. I.T.O. (1975) 101 I.T.R. 589] on
a construction of clause (iv) of sub-section (1) of section
99, took the view that the entire amount of dividend
received by the assessee from an Indian Company was exempt
from super tax and the exemption was not limited to dividend
income computed in accordance with the provisions of the Act
and forming part of the total income.
780
Section 99 sub-section (i) remained in force only upto
the close of the assessment year 1964-65 and by an amendment
made by the Finance Act, 1965, Section 99 sub-section (1)
was omitted and chapter IVA and section 85A were introduced
in the present Act with effect from Ist April, 1965. Chapter
IVA comprised section 80A to 80D providing for certain
specified deductions to be made in computing total income,
while Section 85A provided for deduction of tax on
incorporate dividends.
This Section was also considered by the Bombay High
Court in New Great Insurance Company’s Case. The High Court
observed that except for some minor verbal changes, section
85A was almost in the same terms as section 99 sub-section
(1) clause (iv), the only real difference being that the
exemption granted under section 99 sub-section (i) clause
(iv) was in regard to super-tax, while the deduction allowed
under section 85A was in regard to income tax, and held that
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under section 85A also, the deduction admissible was in
respect of the entire dividend received by the assessee from
an Indian Company and not in respect of dividend income
minus deductions allowable under the provisions of the Act
in computing ’total income’
The spate of legislative changes did not come to an end
with the enactment of section 85A. The Original Chapter VIA
and certain other sections including section 85A were
deleted from the present Act by Finance (No 2) Act, 1967
with effect from Ist April, 1968 and replaced by the new
Chapter VIA which contains a fasciculus of sections from s.
80A to s. 80VV. Section 80A sub-section (1) provides that in
computing the total income of an assessee there shall be
allowed from his gross total income, in accordance with and
subject to the provisions of Chapter VIA the deduction
specified in Section 80C to Section 80VV and sub-section (2)
of that Section imposed a ceiling on such deductions by
enacting that the aggregate amount of such deduction shall
not in any case, exceed the gross total income of the
assessee. The expression "gross total income" is defined in
clause (V) of Section 80B to mean the total income computed
in accordance with the provisions of the Act before making
any deduction under Chapter VIA or under Section 280D.
Section 80M is the new section which corresponds to the
repealed Section 85A and it provides for deduction in
respect of certain categories of inter-corporate dividends.
Several amendments were made subsequently in this section
but they relate primarily to the percentage of the income to
be allowed as a deduction.
One amendment that was made by the Finance Act, 1968
was that the words "received by it" occurring in sub-section
(1) of Section 80M were omitted with effect from Ist April,
1968, so that right from the date of its enactment, section
80M sub-section (1) was to be read as if the words "received
by it" were not in the opening part of that provision.
Petitioner No. 1 was incorporated as a Limited Company
and Petitioner No. 2 a Director and shareholder therein.
Petitioner No 1 received dividends on shares held by it in
different domestic companies and paid interest on monies
borrowed for the purpose of investment in such shares. In
the course of its assessment for the assessment years 1970-
71 up to 1980-81,
781
Petitioner No. 1 claimed that the deduction permissible
under Section 80M must be calculated with reference to the
full amount of dividends received by Petitioner No. 1 from
the domestic companies and not with reference to the
dividends as computed in accordance with the provisions of
the Income Tax Act, 1961. The assessments of Petitioner No.
1 were actually completed on the basis of his claim and the
view taken by this Court in Cloth Traders Case in regard to
the construction of Section 80M. The Revenue preferred
appeals against such assessments and these appeals were
pending at different stages at the time of filing the Writ
Petition.
The Petitioner No. 1 was entitled to succeed in the
appeals as well as in the original assessments which were
pending before the different authorities, so long as the
decision in Cloth Traders Case stood unaffected by any
constitutionally valid legislative amendment.
However, with a view to overriding the decision in the
Cloth Traders case with retrospective effect, Parliament
enacted Section 80AA and since this section was deemed to
have been introduced in the Income Tax Act, 1961 with effect
from 1st April, 1968, and it provided that the deduction
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required to be allowed under Section 80M shall be computed
not with reference to the gross amount of dividend received
by the assessee from a domestic company but with reference
to the dividend income as computed in accordance with the
provisions of the Act, the claim of petitioner No. 1 for
deduction on the basis of the full amount of dividend
received by it from domestic companies was liable to be
rejected and deduction could be allowed to Petitioner No. 1
only with reference to the dividend income computed in
accordance with the provision of the Act.
The introduction of Section 80AA thus had the effect of
enhancing the tax liability of Petitioner No. 1 and the
petitioners filed a Writ Petition challenging the
Constitutional validity of Section 80AA on the ground that
it enhanced the tax burden with retrospective effect going
back for a period of almost 12 years and consequently
imposed an unreasonable restriction on the right of
petitioner No. 1 to carry on its business in breach of
Article 19 (1) (g) of the Constitution.
Dismissing the writ petition,
^
HELD-(By the Court)
1. The deduction envisaged by sub-section (1) of
Section 80 is required to be made with reference to the
income by way of dividends computed in accordance with the
provisions of the Income Tax Act and not with reference to
the full amount of dividend received by the assessee. [802F,
809A]
2. Section 80AA in its retrospective operation is
merely declaratory of the law as it always was since Ist
April, 1968 and no complaint can validly be made against it.
[807E, 809D]
782
Cloth Traders Ltd. v. Additional Commissioner of Income
Tax, 118 ITR 243, over-ruled and Cambey Electrical Supply
Industrial Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-Tax, (1970)
113 84, approved.
(Per Chandrachud C.J., P.N. Bhagwati, D.P. Madon and
M.P. Thakkar, JJ).
The Inquiry is not whether the view taken by the Bombay
High Court in New Great Insurance Company’s case is correct.
It must be conceded that it has been held to be correct in
the decision in Cloth Traders Case. However another view in
regard to the interpretation of Section 85A is possible. It
is not at all unreasonable to construe the words "income so
included" as meaning the quantum of income by way of
dividends included in the total income of the assessee.
These words in the context in which they occur have
obviously reference to quantum of the income by way of
dividends to which the average rate of income tax is to be
applied. That quantum is defined by these words and in order
to determine it, the question is what is the income by way
of dividends included in the total income and the answer can
only be that is income computed in accordance with the
provisions of the Act. It is not necessary to consider
whether the construction placed on Section 85A by the Bombay
High Court in New Great Insurance Company Case is correct or
not, because interpretation of Section 85A is not concerned.
It is section 80M which has to be construed and this
section, is materially different from Section 85A. Section
80M cannot be construed in the light of the interpretation
placed on its predecessor section by the Bombay High Court
particularly when Section 80M is admittedly worded
differently from its predecessor section. Section 80M must
be construed on its own language and its true interpretation
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arrived at according to the plain natural meaning of the
words used by the Legislature. [795 D-H]
2. Section 80M is the new Section which corresponds to
the repealed Section 85A and it provides for deduction in
respect of certain categories of inter-corporate dividends.
It is the interpretation of this section which constitutes
the subject-matter of controversy between the parties. [796
D]
3. What is the object behind grant of relief under
Section 80M. The main object of the relief under Section 80M
is to avoid taxation once again in the hands of the
receiving company of the amount which has already borne full
tax in the hands of the paying company. Now when an amount
by way of dividend is received by the assessee from the
paying company the full amount of such dividend would have
suffered tax, in the assessment of the paying company in
order to encourage inter-company investments. In order to
encourage investments the Legislature intended that this
amount should not bear tax once again in the hands of the
assessee either its entirety or to a specified extent. But
the amount by way of dividend which would otherwise suffer
tax in the hands of the assessee, would be the amount
computed in accordance with the provisions of the Act and
not the full amount received from the paying company.
Therefore, it is reasonable to assume that in enacting
Section 80M the Legislature intended to grant relief with
reference to the amount of dividend computed in accordance
with the provisions of the Act and not with reference to the
full amount of dividend received from the paying
783
company. The Legislature could certainly be attributed the
intention to prevent double taxation but not to provide an
additional benefit which would go beyond what is required
for saving the amount of dividend from taxation once again
the hands of the assessee. [799 A-E]
4. Section 80M sub-section (1) opens with the words
"where the gross total income of an assessee.........
includes any income by way of dividends from a domestic
company" and proceeds to say that in such a case, there
shall be allowed in computing the total income of the
assessee, a deduction "from such income by way of dividends"
of an amount equal to the whole of such income or 60% of
such income as the case may be, depending on the nature of
the domestic company from which the income by way of
dividends is received. The opening words describe the
condition which must be fulfilled in order to attract the
applicability of the provision contained in sub-section (1)
of Section 80M. The condition is that the gross total income
of the assessee must include income by way of dividends from
a domestic company "Gross total income" is defined in
Section 80B clause (v) to mean "total income computed in
accordance with the provisions of the Act before making any
deduction under Chapter VIA or under Section 280D". Income
by way of dividends from a domestic company included in the
gross total income would therefore obviously be income
computed in accordance with the provisions of the Act, that
is after deducting interest on monies borrowed for earning
such income. If income by way of dividends from a domestic
company computed in accordance with the provisions of the
Act is included in the gross total income, or in other
words, form part of the gross total income, the conditions
specified in the opening part of sub-section (1) of Section
80M would be fulfilled and the provision enacted in that
sub-section would be attracted.
[799G-800C]
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5. The words "such income by way of dividends" must
have reference to the income by way of dividends mentioned
earlier and that would be income by way of dividends from a
domestic company which is included in the gross total
income. Consequently, in order to determine what is "such
income by way of dividends", the question to be asked is
what is the income by way of dividends from a domestic
company included in the gross total income and that would
obviously be the income by way of dividends computed in
accordance with the provisions of the Act. It is difficult
to appreciate how, when interpreting the words "such income
by way of dividends" a dichotomy can be made between the
category of income and the quantum of the income by way of
dividends so included. [800H-801C]
6. There is also another strong indication in the
language of sub-section (1) of Section 80M which clearly
compels taking the view that the deduction envisaged by that
provision is required to be made with reference to the
income by way of dividends computed in accordance with the
provisions of the Act and not with reference to the full
amount of dividend received by the assessee. The indication
was also unfortunately lost sight of by the Court in Cloth
Traders case presumably because it was not brought to the
attention of the Court. The Court observed in Cloth Traders
case that the whole of the income by way of dividends from a
domestic company or 60% of such income as the same may be,
would be deductible from the gross total income for
784
striving at the total income of the assessee. This
observation appears to have been made under some
misapprehension, because what sub-section (1) of Section 80M
required is that the deduction of the whole or a specified
percentage must be made from "such income by way of
dividends" and not from the gross total income. Now when in
computing the total income of the assessee, a deduction has
to be made from "such income by way of dividends" it is
elementary that "such income by way of dividends" from which
deduction has to be made must be part of gross total income.
It is difficult to see how the language of this part of sub-
section (1) of Section 80M can possibly fit in it if "such
income by way of dividends" were interpreted to mean that
full amount of dividend received by the assessee. The full
amount of dividend received by the assessee would not be
included in the gross total income, what would be included
would only be the amount of dividend as computed in
accordance with the provisions of the Act. If that be so it
is difficult to appreciate how for the purpose of computing
the total income from the gross total income any deduction
should be required to be made from the full amount of the
dividend. The deduction required to be made for computing
the total income from the gross total income can only be
from the amount of dividend computed in accordance with the
provisions of the Act which would be forming part of the
gross total income. Whatever might have been the
interpretation placed on clause (iv) of sub-section (1) of
Section 99 and Section 85A the correctness of which is not
in issue, so far as sub-section ( ) of Section 80M is
concerned, the deduction required to be allowed under that
provision is liable to be calculated with reference to the
amount of dividend computed in accordance with the
provisions of the Act and forming part of the gross total
income and not with reference to the full amount of dividend
received by the assessee. [801G-802F]
7. Structurally there is hardly any difference between
Section 80E sub-section (1) and Section 80M sub-section (1)
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and the reasoning which appealed to the Court in the
interpretation of sub-section (1) of Section 80E in Cambay
Electric Supply Industrial Company Ltd. v. C.I.T. must apply
equally in the interpretation of sub-section (1) of Section
80M. [803 B]
8. Ordinarily this Court would be reluctant to overturn
a decision given by a Bench of this Court, because it is
essential that there should be continuity and consistency in
judicial decisions, and law should be certain and definite.
It is almost as important that the law should be settled
correctly. But there may be circumstances where public
interest demands that the previous decision be reviewed and
reconsidered. The doctrine of stare decisis should not deter
the Court from overruling an earlier decision, if it is
satisfied that such decision is manifestly wrong or proceeds
upon a mistaken assumption in regard to the existence or
continuance of a statutory provision or is contrary to
another decision of the Court. [805G-806A]
9. There are over-riding considerations which compel
reconsideration and review of the decision in Cloth Traders
Case. In the first place, the decision in Cloth Traders case
was rendered by this Court on 4th May, 1979 and immediately
thereafter, with in a few months, Parliament introduced
Section 80AA with retrospective effect from Ist April, 1968
with a view to over-riding the interpretation placed on
Section 80M in Cloth Traders case. The decision
785
in Cloth Traders case did not therefore hold the field for a
period of more than a few months and it could not be said
that any assessee was misled into acting to its detriment on
the basis of that decision. There was no decision of this
Court in regard to the interpretation of sub-section (1) of
Section 80M prior to the decision in Cloth Traders case and
there was therefore no authoritative pronouncement of this
Court on this question of interpretation on which an
assessee could claim to rely for making its fiscal
arrangements. Another circumstance which makes is necessary
to reconsider and review the decision in Cloth Traders Case,
is the decision in Cambay Electric Supply Company case. The
decision in Cloth Traders case is inconsistent with that in
Cambay Electric Supply Company’s case Both cannot stand
together. If one is correct, the other must logically be
wrong and vice-versa. It is therefore necessary to resolve
the conflict between these two decisions and harmonise the
law and that necessitates an inquiry into the correctness of
the decision in Cloth Traders Case, and having considered
and reviewed the decision in Cloth Traders case come to the
conclusion that the decision in Cloth Traders Case is
erroneous and must be over turned. [806C-807D]
(Per A.N. Sen, J. concurring)
The authority and jurisdiction of a larger Bench of
this Court to override and over-rule any decision of a
smaller Bench cannot be questioned. However, a decision of
this Court on any fiscal legislation involving the question
of financial benefit and liability should not normally be
interfered with and should be interfered with only in very
rare cases. On the basis of the decision of this Court on
any fiscal legislation and any matter involving financial
arrangements and adjustments, parties are entitled to
arrange their financial affairs and in fact they so arrange
and adjust the financial affairs on the basis of the law
laid down by this Court. Unsettling a position settled by
the decision of this Court may lead to the confusion and
result in financial instability, causing serious prejudice
not only to the parties concerned but also to the economic
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growth of the country as a whole. [808 C-E]
2. If on interpretation of any provision of any fiscal
legislation two views may be reasonably possible, a larger
Bench of this Court may not interfere with a view taken by a
smaller Bench by this Court mainly on the ground that the
other view appears to the larger Bench to be the better view
and may commend itself to the larger Bench. If, however, a
decision of the smaller Bench has necessarily to interfere
with the decision, as this Court will not permit a wrong
decision to operate as good law of the land. [808 F]
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition No. 2043 of 1981.
Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India
K.H. Kaji and M.N. Shroff for the Petitioners.
K. Parasaran, Attorney General and K.S. Gurumoorthy for
the Respondents.
786
The following Judgments were delivered
BHAGWATI, J. This writ petition raises an interesting
question of construction of Section 80 M of the Income Tax
Act, 1961. This question would appear to be concluded in
favour of the assessee by the decision of this Court in
Cloth Traders Limited v. Additional Commissioner of Income
Tax, 118 ITR 243, but the correctness of the view taken in
that case has been challenged in the present writ petition.
Since the decision in Cloth Traders Case (supra) was given
by a Bench of three Judges, it is obvious that its validity
can be canvassed before this Bench which consists of five
Judges. If this Bench too takes the same view in regard of
the construction of Section 80M as that taken in Cloth
Traders case (supra), it would become necessary to consider
the question of constitutional validity of Section 80AA
which was introduced in the Income Tax Act, 1961 by Section
12 of the Finance (No. 2) Act 1980 with a view to overriding
with retrospective effect the construction placed on Section
80M by this in Cloth Traders case (supra). If on the other
hand, this Bench disagrees with the view taken in Cloth
Traders case (supra) and hold that even before the
introduction of Section 80AA, Section 80M, on a true
interpretation of its language, meant exactly what Section
80AA now retrospectively declares it to mean, no question of
constitutional validity of Section 80AA would arise since
Section 80AA would then be merely declaratory of the law as
it always was and would not be imposing any new tax burden
with retrospective effect. The first question that we must
therefore consider is as to what is the true construction of
Section 80M unaided by the subsequent legislative
interpretation imposed upon it by the enactment of Section
80AA: do we affirm the view taken in Cloth Traders case
(supra) or do we dissent from it.
We have given our most anxious consideration to this
question, particularly since one of us, namely, P.N.
Bhagwati, J. was a party to the decision in Cloth Traders
case (supra). But having regard to various considerations to
which we shall advert in detail when we examine the
arguments advanced on behalf of the parties, we are
compelled to reach the conclusion that Cloth Traders case
must be regarded as wrongly decided. The view taken in that
case in regard to the construction of Section 80M must be
held to be erroneous and it must be corrected. To perpetuate
an error is no heroism. To rectify it is the compulsion of
judicial conscience. In this we derive comfort and strength
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from the wise and inspiring words of
787
Justice Bronson in Pierce v. Delameter A.M.Y. at page 18: "a
Judge ought to be wise enough to know that he is fallible
therefore everyday to learn: great and honest enough to
discard all mere pride of opinion and follow truth wherever
it may lead: and courageous enough to acknowledge his
errors".
We may begin our discussion by referring to the
legislative history of the provision enacted in Section 80M
but before we do so, a brief statement of facts may help to
provide the back-drop against which the question of
construction of Section 80M arises for consideration.
Petitioner No. 1 was incorporated as a limited company on
10th November 1941 under the Baroda Companies Act, 1918 and
at all material times it carried on business of an
investment company. Petitioner No. 2 is a Director and
shareholder of Petitioner No. 1. Throughout the material
period with which we are concerned in this writ petition,
Petitioner No. 1 received dividends on shares held by it in
different domestic companies and paid interest on monies
borrowed for the purpose of investment in such shares. In
the course of its assessments for the assessment years 1970-
71 upto 1980-81, Petitioner No. 1 claimed that the deduction
permissible under Section 80M must be calculated with
reference to the full amount of dividends received by
Petitioner No. 1 from domestic companies and not with
reference to the dividend income as computed in accordance
with the provisions of the Income Tax Act, 1961. This claim
was liable to succeed if the view taken in Cloth Traders
case (supra) in regard to the construction of Section 80M
was correct and some of the assessments of Petitioner No. 1
were actually completed on the basis that this claim was
justified. The Revenue preferred appeals against such
assessments and these appeals were pending at different
stages at the time of filing of the present writ petition.
The assessments for some of the assessment years were also
pending before the Income tax Officer. So long as the
decision in Cloth Traders case (supra) stood unaffected by
any Constitutionally valid legislative amendment, Petitioner
No. 1 was entitled to succeed in the appeals as well as in
the original assessments which were pending consideration
before different authorities. But with a view to overriding
the decision in Cloth Traders case (supra) with
retrospective effect, Parliament enacted Section 80AA and
since this section was deemed to have been introduced in the
Income Tax Act, 1961 with effect from Ist April, 1968 and it
provided that the deduction required to be allowed under
Section 80M shall be computed not with reference to the
gross amount of dividend received by the assessee from a
788
domestic Company but with reference to the dividend income
as computed in accordance with the provisions of the Act,
the claim of petitioner No. 1 for deduction on the basis of
the full amount of dividend received by it from domestic
companies was liable to be rejected and deduction could be
allowed to petitioner no. 1 only with reference to the
dividend income computed in accordance with the provision of
the Act. The introduction of Section 80AA thus had the
effect of enhancing the tax liability of petitioner No. 1
and the petitioners accordingly filed the present writ
petition challenging the constitutional validity of Section
80AA on the ground that it enhanced the tax burden of
petition No. 1 with retrospective effect going back for a
period of almost 12 years and thus imposed unreasonable
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restriction on the right of petitioner No. 1 to carry on its
business in breach of Article 19(1)(g) of the Constitution.
We may first set out the history of the legislation
preceding the enactment of Section 80M, since considerable
reliance was placed on this history both in the decision in
Cloth Traders case (supra) as also in the course of the
arguments in the present writ petition. The earliest
provision granting exemption from super tax in respect of
inter-corporate dividends was made as far back as 9th
December 1933 in a notification issued by the Governor
General in Council and it provided as follows:
"The Governor General in Council is pleased to
exempt from super tax-(i) so much of the income of any
investment trust company as is derived from dividends
paid by any other company which has paid or will pay
super-tax in respect of the profits out of which such
dividends are paid."
This provision came up for consideration before a
Division Bench of the High Court of Bombay in C.I.T. v.
Industrial Investment Trust Co. Ltd. (1968) 67 I.T.R. 437
and the question was whether the dividend income exempted
from super tax the entire income by way of dividend received
by an investment trust company or the dividend income as
computed in accordance with the provisions of the Act, i.e.
after deducting the expenses incurred in earning it. The
High Court of Bombay held that the "dividend income which
was exempted under the notification would be the dividend
income received by the assessee and not the said income less
any further amounts" because "the notification must be
regarded as a self-contained one
789
and not controlled by any other provisions of the Act" and
there was "no warrant to construe the word ’income’ in the
notification as total income nor to qualify the dividend
income specified in the said notification as the dividend
income computed under Section 12 of the Act." It was thus
held that the entire amount of dividend received by an
investment trust company would be exempt from super tax and
not the amount of dividend minus the expenses incurred in
earning it. It may be noticed, and this aspect was
emphasised by the Bombay High Court, that what was exempted
from super tax under the notification was "so much of the
income of any investment trust company as is derived from
dividends paid by any other company" and there was no
reference to ’total income’ in the notification nor was any
indication given in the notification that the income derived
from dividends which was sought to be exempted from super
tax was dividend income forming part of ’total income’ and
that is why the Bombay High Court came to the conclusion
that the dividend income exempted under the notification was
the entire income by way of dividend received by the
assessee and not the dividend income as computed in
accordance with the provisions of the Act.
The High Court of Bombay in taking this view in
Industrial Investment Trust Company’s case was guided by the
decision of this Court in C.I.T. v. South Indian Bank (1966)
59 I.T.R. 763. Since the decision in South Indian Bank case
(supra) is the only decision of this Court respecting an
allied provision prior to the decision in Cloth Traders case
(supra), it is necessary to refer to it in some detail in
order to see whether it really supports the conclusion
reached in Cloth Traders case (supra). The question which
arose in South Indian Bank case (supra) was in regard to the
true interpretation of a notification issued by the Central
Government under Section 60A of the Indian Income Tax Act,
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1922. This notification was subsequent in point of time to
the notification which came to be considered by the High
Court of Bombay in the Industrial Investment Trust Company’s
case, but it came up for construction before this court
earlier in South Indian Bank case (supra). This notification
was in the following terms:
"No income-tax shall be payable by an assessee on
the interest received on the following income-tax free
loans issued by the former Government of Tranvancore or
by the former Government of Cochin, provided that such
790
interest is received within the territories of the
State of Travancore Cochin and is not brought into any
other part of the taxable territories to which the said
Act applies. Such interest shall, however, be included
in the total income of the assessee for the purpose of
section 16 of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922......."
The argument of the Revenue was that the exemption from
income tax granted under this notification was in respect of
interest receivable on securities minus the expenses
incurred in earning it and not in respect of the entire
amount of interest because it was only that amount of
interest arrived at after computation in accordance with
Section 8 of the old Act which was includible in the total
income and liable to bear tax and the exemption from the tax
could, therefore only be in respect of such amount. This
argument was negatived by the court and it was pointed out
by Subba Rao, J. that (p. 766):
"....this notification does not refer to the
provision of section 8 of the Income-tax Act at all. It
gives a total exemption from income-tax to an assessee
in respect of the interest receivable on income-tax
free loans mentioned therein. It gives that exemption
subject two conditions, namely (i) that the interest is
received within the territories of the State of
Travancore-Cochin, and (ii) that it is not brought to
any other part of the taxable territories. It includes
the said exempted interest in the total income of the
assessee for the purpose of section 16 of the Income-
tax Act. Shortly stated, the notification is a self-
contained one; it provides an exemption from income-tax
payable by an assessee on a particular class of income
subject to specified conditions. Therefore, there is no
scope for controlling the provisions of the
notification with reference to section 8 of the Income
tax Act. The expression ’interest receivable on income-
tax free loans’ is clear and unambiguous. Though the
point of time from which the exemption works is when it
is received within the territories of the State of
Travancore-Cochin, what is exempted is the interest
receivable. ’Interest receivable’ can only mean the
amount of interest calculated as per the terms of the
securities. It cannot obviously mean interest
receivable minus the amount spent in receiving the
same."
791
It will be noticed that the entire basis of the judgment of
the Court was that the notification was a self-contained one
and it gave exemption from income tax in respect of interest
receivable on certain categories of income tax free loans,
without any reference to total income, or to "the provisions
of section 8 of the Income tax Act at all." That is why the
judgment pointed out that there was no scope for controlling
the provisions of the notification with reference to section
8 of the Income Tax Act and proceeded to hold that what was
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exempted from income tax under the notification was
"interest receivable" that is, "the amount of interest
calculated as per the terms of the securities" without
deduction of the "amount spent in receiving the same". There
was nothing in the notification to indicate that what was
sought to be exempted was the amount of interest included in
the total income’.
Thereafter a provision of a similar kind granting
exemption from super tax in respect of certain specified
categories of inter-corporate dividends was introduced as
Section 56 in the Indian Income Tax 1922 by the Finance Act,
1953. It is however not necessary to make any detailed
reference to this provision since there is no decided case
which has considered this provision or expressed any opinion
upon it.
When the Indian Income Tax Act 1922 was repealed and
the Income Tax Act 1961 was enacted with effect from Ist
April, 1962, section 99 sub-section (i) was introduced in
the new Act exempting certain categories of income from
super tax and one such category was that set out in clause
(iv). Section 99 sub-section (1) clause (iv) read as
follows:
"99. (1) Super-tax shall not be payable by an
assessee in respect of the following amounts which are
included in his total income .... (iv) if the assessee
is a company, any dividend received by it from an
Indian company, subject to the provisions contained in
the Fifth Schedule."
This provision continued in force upto Ist March, 1965
subject to a minor inconsequential amendment made by the
Finance Act 1964. Now this provision did not at any time
come up for interpretation before this Court prior to the
decision in Cloth Traders case but it
792
did came to be considered by some of the High Courts. The
question in regard to the interpretation of this provision
which arose before the High Court of Bombay in C.I.T. v. New
Great Insurance Company Ltd. (1963) 90 I.T.R. 348 was
whether the exemption granted under this provision was in
regard to the entire amount of dividend received by the
assessee from an Indian Company or it was limited to the
dividend income computed in accordance with the provisions
of the Act and forming part of ’total income’. The High
Court of Bombay accepting the contention of the assessee
held that on a plain reading of clause (iv) sub-section (1)
of Section 99, it was clear that the exemption from super
tax was granted in respect of "any dividend received by it
from an Indian Company" and these last words, according to
their plain grammatical construction, could mean only one
thing, namely, the entire amount of dividend received by the
assessee from an Indian Company and nothing less. The Bombay
High Court emphasised the word ’received’ following
immediately upon the word ’dividend’ and observed that the
use of this word also showed that the exemption was in
regard to the dividend received and not in regard to the
dividend received minus the expenses. The High Court of
Bombay pointed out that the words "amounts which are
included in his total income" in the opening part of section
99 sub-section (1) did not have any limitative effect but
they were used merely as a convenient mode of describing the
different items of income set out in clauses (i) to (v) of
that sub-section. Clauses (i) to (v) referred to different
items of income which were sought to be exempted from super
tax under sub-section (1) of Section 99 and it was only if
these items of income were included in the total income of
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the assessee that the question of exemption from super-tax
would arise and hence the legislature used the general words
"amounts which are included in his total income" in the
opening part of sub-section (1) of section 99 as an omnibus
formula to cover these different items. These words,
according to the Bombay High Court, were descriptive of the
items of income a included in the computation of the total
income and were not indicative of the quantum of the amounts
of the different items included in such computation and they
did not, therefore, have the effect of cutting down the
plain natural meaning of the words "any dividend received by
it from an Indian company" which represented the quantum of
income in respect of which exemption from super-tax was
granted under the section. It may be pointed out that the
same view in regard to the construction of clause (iv) of
sub-section (1) of Section 99 was taken by the Calcutta High
Court in C.I.T. v.
793
Darbhanga Marketing Company Limited and this decision of the
Calcutta High Court was noted with approval by the High
Court of Bombay in New Great Insurance Company’s case
(supra). The same view was also taken by the Madras High
Court in C.I.T. v. Madras Motor and General Insurance
Company and it was approved in a later decision of the same
High Court in Madras Auto Service v. I.T.O. It would thus be
seen that, on a construction of clause (iv) of sub-section
(1) of Section 99, three High Courts, namely, Bombay,
Calcutta and Madras took the view that the entire amount of
dividend received by the assessee from an Indian company was
exempt from super tax and the exemption was not limited to
dividend income computed in accordance with the provisions
of the Act and forming part of the ’total income’.
This view taken by the three High Courts was strongly
relied upon by the petitioners in support of the
construction of Section 80M canvassed on their behalf and in
fact the decision in Cloth Traders case (supra) sought to
derive some strength from this view. But on further
reflection we do not see how this view taken by the three
High Courts in regard to the construction of clause (iv) of
sub-section (1) of Section 99 can assist in the
interpretation of an entirely new section, namely, Section
80M which, as we shall presently point out, is different in
its structure, language and content from clause (iv) sub-
section (1) of Section 99. We may point out that some doubt
was raised on behalf of the Revenue in regard to the
correctness of this view taken by the three High Courts but
we do not think it necessary to consider whether this doubt
is well founded or not because we are of the view that even
if the construction placed on clause (iv) of sub-section (1)
of Section 99 by the three High Courts were correct, it
cannot necessarily lead to the conclusion that a similar
construction must also be placed on Section 80M which is
different in material respects from clause (iv) of sub-
section (1) of Section 99. It is most unsafe to try to
arrive at the true meaning of a statutory provision by
reference to an interpretation which. might have been placed
on an earlier statutory provision which is not only couched
in different language but is also structurally different We
must therefore construe the language of Section 80M on its
own terms uninhibited by any interpretation which may have
been placed on clause (iv) of sub-section (1) of Section 99
by any High Court.
794
We may, proceeding further with the narration of the
history of the legislation, point out that Section 99 sub-
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section (1) remained in force only upto the close of the
assessment year 1964-65 and by an amendment made by the
Finance Act No. 10 of 1965 Section 99 sub-section (1) was
omitted and Chapter VI A and Section 85A were introduced in
the present Act with effect from Ist April, 1965. Chapter VI
A comprised Section 80A to 80D providing for certain
specified deductions to be made in computing total income,
while Section 85 A in so far as material provided as
follows:
"85A. Deduction of tax on inter-corporate
dividends where the total income of an assessee being
company includes any income by way of dividends
received by it from an Indian company or a company
which has made the prescribed arrangements for the
declaration and payment of dividends (including
dividends on preference shares ) within India, the
assessee shall be entitled to a deduction from the
income tax with which it is chargeable on its total
income for any assessment year of so much of the amount
of income tax calculated at the average rate of
income-tax on the income so included (other than any
such income on which no income-tax is payable under the
provisions of this Act) as exceeds an amount of twenty
five per cent thereof..
This section too came to be considered by the Bombay High
Court in New Great Insurance Company’s case (supra) because
two of the assessment years with which the Bombay High Court
was concerned in that case were assessment years 1965-66 and
1966-67 when Section 85A was in force. The Bombay High Court
pointed out that except for some minor verbal changes,
Section 85A was almost in the same terms as Section 99 sub-
section (1) clause (iv), the only real difference being that
the exemption granted under Section 99 sub-section (1)
clause (iv) was in regard to super-tax, while the deduction
allowed under Section 85A was in regard to income-tax. The
same interpretation was, therefore, placed on Section 85A as
in the case of Section 99 sub-section (1) clause (iv) and it
was held that under Section 85A the assessee would be
entitled to deduction of income-tax in respect of the whole
of the dividend received from an Indian company. The
expression "where the total income...... includes any income
by way of dividends" in the opening part of Section 85A was
construed as referring to the
795
category of income by way of dividends received from an
Indian company. so that if this particular category of
income is included in the computation of total income, the
assessee would be entitled to a deduction of so much of the
amount of income-tax calculated at the average rate of
income-tax on the "income so included" as exceeds an amount
of twenty-five per cent of such income. The words "income so
included" were read to mean not the quantum of the "income
by way of dividends" included in the total income but the
income falling within the category of "income by way of
dividends from an Indian company" included in the total
income. Thus, the view taken by the Bombay High Court was
that under Section 85A also, the deduction admissible was in
respect of the entire dividend ’received by the assessee
from an Indian company and not in respect of dividend income
minus deductions allowable under the provisions of the Act
in computing ’total income’.
But here again we are not concerned to inquire whether
the view taken by the Bombay High Court in New Great
Insurance Company’s case (Supra) is correct, though it must
be conceded that it has been held to be correct in the
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decision in Cloth Traders Case (Supra). We do feel, however,
that another view in regard to the interpretation of Section
85A is possible. It is not at all unreasonable to construe
the words "income so included" as meaning the quantum of
income by way of dividends included in the total income of
the assessee. These words in the context in which they occur
have obviously reference to quantum of the income by way of
dividends to which the average rate of income tax is to be
applied. That quantum is defined by these words and in order
to determine it, we have to ask the question: what is the
income by way of dividends included in the total income and
the answer can only be that it is income computed in
accordance with the provisions of the Act. But, as we have
pointed out above, it is not necessary to consider whether
the construction placed on Section 85A by the Bombay High
Court in New Great Insurance Company’s case (supra) is
correct or not, because we are not concerned here with the
interpretation of Section 85A. It is Section 80M which has
to be construed and this Section as we shall presently show,
is materially different from Section 85A. We cannot construe
Section 80M in the light of the interpretation placed on its
predecessor section by the Bombay High Court particularly
when Section 80M is admittedly worded differently from its
predecessor section. We must construe Section 80M on its own
and arrive at its true interpretation according to the plain
natural language meaning of the words used by the
legislature.
796
It seems that the spate of changes in this legislative
provision did not come to an end with the enactment of
Section 85A. The original Chapter VI A and certain other
section including Section 85 A were deleted from the present
Act by the Finance (No. 2) Act, 1967, with effect from Ist
April 1968, and replaced by a new Chapter VI A which
contains a fasciculus of sections from Section 80A to 80VV.
Section 80A, sub-section (1) provides that in computing the
total income of an assessee there shall be allowed from his
gross total income, in accordance with and subject to the
provisions of Chapter VI A, the deductions specified in
Section 80C to Section 80VV and sub-section (2) of that
Section imposes a ceiling on such deductions by enacting
that the aggregate amount of such deductions shall not, in
any case, exceed the gross total income of the assessee. The
expression "gross total income" is defined in clause (v) of
Section 80B to mean the total income computed in accordance
with the provisions of the Act before making any deductions
under Chapter VI A or under Section 280 D. Section 80M is
the new Section which corresponds to the repealed Section
85A and it provides for deduction in respect of certain
categories of inter-corporate dividends. It is the
interpretation of this section which constitutes the
subject-matter of controversy between the parties and hence
it would be desirable to set it out in extenso. This Section
has under-gone changes from time to time since the date of
its enactment and we will therefore reproduce it in the form
in which it stood when originally enacted:
"80M. Deduction in respect of certain inter-
corporate dividends- (1) Where the gross total income
of an assessee being a company includes any income by
way of dividends received by it from a domestic
company, there shall in accordance with and subject to
the provisions of this section, be allowed, in
computing the total income of the assessee, a deduction
from such income by way of dividends of an amount equal
to-
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(a) Where the assessee is a foreign company-
(i) in respect of such income by was of dividends
received by it from an Indian company which
is not such a company as is referred to in
Section 108 and which is mainly engaged in a
priority industry
80% of such income;
797
(ii) in respect of such income by way of dividends
other than the dividends referred to in sub-
clause (i)
65% of such income;
(b) where the assessee is a domestic company-
in respect of any such income by way of
dividends
60% of such income"
There were several amendments made subsequently in this
Section but they relate primarily to the percentage of the
income to be allowed as a deduction and do not have any
bearing on the question of interpretation posed before us.
One amendment is however material and that was made by the
Finance Act 1968 by which the words "received by it"
occurring in sub-section (1) of Section 80M were omitted
with effect from 1st April 1968 so that right from the date
of its enactment, Section 80M sub-section (1) was to be read
as if the words "received by it" were not in the opening
part of that provision.
Soon after the enactment of Section 80M a question
arose before the Gujarat High Court in Addl. C.I.T. v. Cloth
Traders Private Limited whether on a true construction of
that Section, the permissible deduction is to be calculated
with reference to the full amount of dividends received by
the assessee from a domestic company or with reference to
the dividend income computed in accordance with the
provisions of the Act, that is, after deducting the interest
paid on monies borrowed for earning such income. The Gujarat
High Court in a Judgment delivered on 28th November 1973,
held that the deduction permissible under Section 80M is
liable to be calculated with reference to the dividend
income computed in accordance with the provisions of the Act
and not with reference to the full amount of dividends
received by the assessee. The assessee being aggrieved by
this judgment preferred an appeal to this Court and this
appeal was allowed by the judgment delivered in Cloth
Traders Case (supra). This Court over-ruled the view taken
by the Gujarat High Court and held that the deduction
required to be allowed under Section 80M must be calculated
"with reference to the full amount of dividends received
from a domestic company and
798
not with reference to the dividend income as computed in
accordance with the provisions of the Act, that is, after
making deductions provided under the Act." This decision was
given by the Court on 4th May 1979.
Now, according to Parliament, this interpretation
placed on Section 80M by the summit court was not in
conformity with the legislative intent and it resulted in
considerable unjustified loss of revenue. Parliament
therefore immediately proceeded to set right what, according
to it was an interpretation contrary to the legislative
intent and with a view to setting at naught such
interpretation. Parliament, by Section 12 of Finance (No. 2)
Act 1980, introduced in the Income Tax Act, 1961, Section
80AA with retrospective effect from 1st April 1968, that is
the date when Section 80M was originally enacted, providing
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that the deduction required to be allowed under Section 80M
in respect of inter-corporate dividends "shall be computed
with reference to the income by way of such dividends as
computed in accordance with the provisions of this Act
(before making any deduction under this Chapter) and not
with reference to the gross amount of such dividends". It is
the validity of this new Section 80AA which is challenged in
the present writ petition. But we may make it clear that
what is challenged is not the prospective operation of
Section 80AA. That would clearly be unexceptionable because
the Legislature can always impose a new tax burden or
enhance an existing tax liability with prospective effect.
But the complaint of the assessee was against retrospective
effect being given to Section 80AA, because that would have
the effect of enhancing the tax burden on the assessee by
setting at naught the interpretation placed on Section 80M
by the decision in Cloth Traders case and reducing the
amount of deduction required to be allowed under Section
80M. However, as pointed out at the commencement of this
judgment, it would become necessary to examine this
complaint against the constitutional validity of
retrospective operation of Section 80AA only if we affirm
the interpretation placed on Section 80M by the decision of
this Court in Cloth Traders case. If we do not agree with
the decision of this Court in Cloth Traders case (supra) and
take the view that the Gujarat High Court was right in the
interpretation placed by it on Section 80M in Addl. C.I.T.
v. Cloth Traders Private Limited no question of
constitutional validity of the retrospective operation of
Section 80AA would remain to be considered, because in that
event Section 80AA in its retrospective operation would be
merely clarificatory in nature and would not involve
imposition of any new tax burden.
799
We may therefore first examine the language of Section
80M for arriving at its true interpretation. But before we
do so, let us consider what is the object behind grant of
relief under Section 80M. It was common ground between the
parties that the main object of the relief under Section 80M
is to avoid taxation once again in the hands of the
receiving company of the amount which has already borne full
tax in the hands of the paying company. Vide the written
submission under the heading "Object of relief on inter-
corporate dividends" filed by the learned counsel on behalf
of the assessee in the course of the arguments. Now when an
amount by way of dividend is received by the assessee from
the paying company, the full amount of such dividend would
have suffered tax in the assessment of the paying company
and it is obvious, that, in order to encourage inter-company
investments, the Legislature intended that this amount
should not bear tax once again in the hands of the assessee
either its entirety or to a specified extent. But the amount
by way of dividend which would other-wise suffer tax in the
hands of the asseesee, would be the amount computed in
accordance with the provisions of the Act and not the full
amount received from the paying company. Therefore it is
reasonable to assume that in enacting Section 80M the
Legislature intended to grant relief with reference to the
amount of dividend computed in accordance with the
provisions of the Act and not with reference to the full
amount of dividend received from the paying company. It is
difficult to imagine any reason why the Legislature should
have intended to give relief with reference to the full
amount of dividend received from the paying company when
that is not the amount with is liable to suffer tax once
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again in the hands of the assessee. The Legislature could
certainly be attributed the intention to prevent double
taxation but not to provide an additional benefit which
would go beyond what is required for saving the amount of
dividend from taxation once again in the hands of the
assessee. Bearing in mind these prefatory observations in
regard to the legislative object, we may now proceed to
construe the language of Section 80M.
Section 80M sub-section (1) opens with the words "where
the gross total income of an assessee........includes any
income by way of dividends from a domestic company" and
proceeds to say that in such a case, there shall be allowed
in computing the total income of the assessee, a deduction
"from such income by way of dividends" of an amount equal to
the whole of such income or 60% of such income, as the case
may be, depending on the nature of the domestic company from
which the income by way of dividends is
800
received. The opening words describe the condition which
must be fulfilled in order to attract the applicability of
the provision contained in sub-section (1) of Section 80M.
The condition is that the gross total income of the assessee
must include income by way of dividends from a domestic
company. "Gross total income" is defined in Section 80B
clause (v) to mean "total income computed in accordance with
the provisions of the Act before making any deduction under
Chapter VIA or under Section 280D." Income by way of
dividends from a domestic company included in the gross
total income would therefore obviously be income computed in
accordance with the provisions of the Act, that is, after
deducting interest on monies borrowed for earning such
income. If income by way of dividends from a domestic
company computed in accordance with the provisions of the
Act in included in the gross total income, or in other
words, forms part of the gross total income, the condition
specified in the opening part of sub-section (1) of section
80M would be fulfilled and the provision enacted in that
sub-section would be attracted.
Now it was urged on behalf of the assessee that the
words "Where the gross total income of an assessee..........
includes any income by way of dividends from a domestic
company" in the opening part of sub-section (1) of Section
80M refer only to the inclusion of the category of income
and not to the quantum of such income and therefore the
words "such income by way of dividends" following upon the
specification of this condition, cannot have reference to
the quantum of the income included but must be held
referable only to category of the income included, that is,
income by way of dividends from a domestic company. This was
the same argument which found favour with the Court in Cloth
Traders case (supra), but on fuller consideration, we do not
think it is well founded. We may assume with the Court in
Cloth Traders case that the words "where the gross total
income of an assessee............. includes any income by
way of dividends from a domestic company" are intended only
to provide that a particular category of income, namely,
income by way of dividends from a domestic company should
form a component part of gross, total income, irrespective
of what is the of quantum income so included but it is
difficult to see how the factor of quantum can altogether be
excluded when we talk of any category of income included in
the gross total income. What is included in the gross total
income in such a case is a particular quantum of income
belonging to the specified category. Therefore the words
"such income by way of dividends" must be referable not only
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to the cate-
801
gory of income included in the gross total income but also
to the quantum of the income so included. It is obvious, as
a matter of plain grammer that the words "such income by way
of dividends" must have reference to the income by way of
dividends mentioned earlier and that would be income by way
of dividends from a domestic company which is included in
the gross total income. Consequently, in order to determine
what is "such income by way of dividends", we have to ask
the question: what is the income by way of dividends from a
domestic company included in the gross total income and that
would obviously be the income by way of dividends computed
in accordance with the provisions of the Act. It is
difficult to appreciate how, when we are interpreting the
words "such income by way of dividends", we can make a
dichotomy between the category of income by way of dividends
included in the gross total income and the quantum of the
income by way of dividends so included. This Court observed
in Cloth Traders case that the words "such income by way of
dividends" as a matter of plain grammer must be substituted
by the words "income by way of dividends from a domestic
company" in order to arrive at a proper construction of the
section, but there is a clear fallacy in this observation,
because in making the substitution it stop short with the
words "income by way of dividends from a domestic company"
and does not go the full length to which plain grammer must
dictate us to go, namely, ’income be way of dividends from a
domestic company included in the gross total income"
(emphasis supplied). Otherwise we would not be giving to the
word ’such’ its full meaning and effect. The word ’such’ in
the context in which it occurs can only mean that income by
way of dividends from a domestic company which is included
in the gross total income and that must necessarily be
income by way of dividends computed in accordance with the
provisions of the Act.
There is also one other strong indication in the
language of sub-section (1) of Section 80M which clearly
compels us to take the view that the deduction envisaged by
that provision is required to be made with reference to the
income by way of dividends computed in accordance with the
provisions of the Act and not with reference to the full
amount of dividend received by the assessee. This indication
was also unfortunately lost sight of by the Court in Cloth
Traders case presumably because it was not brought to the
attention of the Court. The Court observed in Cloth Traders
case that the whole of the income by way of dividends from a
domestic company or 60% of such income as the case may be?
would be deductible from the gross
802
total income for arriving at the total income of the
assessee. We are afraid this observation appears to have
been made under some misapprehension, because what sub-
section (1) of Section 80M requires is that the deduction of
the whole or a specified percentage must be made from "such
income by way of dividends" and not from the gross total
income. Sub-section (1) of Section 80M provides that in
computing the total income of the assessee there shall be
allowed a deduction from "such income by way of dividends"
of an amount equal to the whole or a specified percentage of
such income. Now when in computing the total income of the
assessee, a deduction has to be made from "such income by
way of dividends", it is elementary that "such income by way
of dividends" from which deduction has to be made must be
part of gross total income. It is difficult to see how the
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language of this part of sub-section (1) of Section 80M can
possibly fit in if "such income by way of dividends" were
interpreted to mean the full amount of dividend received by
the assessee. The full amount of dividend received by the
assessee would not be included in the gross total income:
what would be included would only be the amount of dividend
as computed in accordance with the provisions of the Act. If
that be 50 it is difficult to appreciate how for the purpose
of computing the total income from the gross total income
any deduction should be required to be made from the full
amount of the dividend. The deduction required to be made
for computing the total income from the gross total income
can only be from the amount of dividend computed in
accordance with the provisions of the Act which would be
forming part of the gross total income. It is therefore
clear that whatever might have been the interpretation
placed on clause (iv) of sub-section (1) of Section 99 and
Section 85A, the correctness of which is not in issue before
us, so far as sub-section (1) of Section 80M is concerned,
the deduction required to be allowed under that provision is
liable to be calculated with reference to the amount of
dividend computed in accordance with the provisions of the
Act and forming part of the gross total income and not with
reference to the full amount of dividend received by the
assessee.
This view which we are taking in regard to the
construction of sub-section (1) of Section 80M is also
supported by the decision of a Bench of this Court
consisting of one of us, Chandrachud, C.J. and Tulzapurkar,
J. in Cambay Electric Supply Industrial Company Limited v.
C.I.T. This decision was rendered by the Court on
803
11th April 1978 at least a year before the decision in Cloth
Traders case, but, unfortunately, it appears, it was not
brought to the attention of the Court when the Cloth Traders
case was argued, because we have no doubt that if it had
been cited, the Court would have certainly made a reference
to it in the judgment in Cloth Traders case. The Section
which came up for consideration before the Court in Cambay
Electric Supply Company’s case was undoubtedly a different
one, namely, Section 80E, but the reasoning which prevailed
with the Court in placing a particular interpretation on
sub-section (1) of Section 80E would equally to applicable
in the interpretation of sub-section (1) of Section 80M.
Section 80E as it stood at the material time provided inter
alia as follows in subsection (1):
"80E(1). Deduction in respect of profits and gains
from specified industries in the case of certain
companies. -(1) In the case of a company to which this
section applies, where the total income (as computed in
accordance with the other provisions of this Act)
includes any profits and gains attributable to the
business of generation or distribution of electricity
or any other form of power or of construction,
manufacture or production of any one or more of the
articles or things specified in the list in the Fifth
Schedule, there shall be allowed a deduction from such
profits and gains of an amount equal to eight per cent
thereof, in computing the total income of the Company."
The question which arose in Cambay Electric Supply Company’s
case was whether unabsorbed depreciation and unabsorbed
development rebate were liable to be deducted in arriving at
the figure of profits and gains exigible to deduction of 8
per cent contemplated in sub-section (1) of Section 80E. The
argument of the assessee was precisely the same as the one
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advanced in the present case, namely, that the words "such
profits and gains" in the later part of sub-section (1) of
Section 80E were intended to refer only to the category of
profits and gains referred to in the earlier part of that
provision, namely, "profits and gains attributable to the
business of generation or distribution of electricity or any
other form of power or of construction, manufacture or
production of any one or more of the articles or things
specified in the list in the Fifth Schedule" and not to the
quantum of the profits and gains included in the total
income, so
804
that the profits and gains exigible to the deduction of 8
per cent were the profits and gains attributable to the
specified business in their entirety and not the profits and
gains as computed in accordance with the provisions of the
Act. The assessee contended that, in the circumstances,
unabsorbed depreciation and unabsorbed development rebate
were not liable to be deducted from the profits and gains
attributable to the specified business for arriving at the
figure exigible to the deduction of 8%. This argument of the
assessee was rejected by the Court and the Court held that
the profits and gains exigible to the deduction of 8 per
cent were profits and gains computed in accordance with the
provisions of the Act and forming part of the total income
and hence unabsorbed depreciation and unabsorbed development
rebate were liable to be excluded from the profits and gains
attributable to the specified business in arriving at the
figure exigible to 8 per cent deduction. Tulzapurkar, J.
speaking on behalf of the Court analysed the provisions of
sub section (1) of Section 80E in the following words:
"On reading sub-section (1) it will become clear
that three important steps are required to be taken
before the special deduction permissible thereunder is
allowed and the net total income exigible to tax is
determined. First, compute the total income of the
concerned assessse in accordance with the other
provisions of the Act, i.e., in accordance with all the
provisions except section 80E; secondly, ascerta what
Part of the total income so computed represses the
profits and gains attributable to the business of the
specified industry (here generation and distribution of
electricity); and, thirdly, if there be profits and
gains so attributable, deduct 8 per cent thereof from
such profits and gains and then arrive at the net total
income exigible to tax."
The learned Judge then proceeded to apply this
interpretation of sub-section (1) of Section 80E to the
facts of the case before him and observed:
"As indicated earlier, sub-section (1)
contemplates three steps being taken for computing the
special deduction permissible thereunder and arriving
at the net income exigible to tax find the first two
steps read together contain the legislative mandate as
to how the total income of which the profits and gains
attributable to the busi-
805
ness of the specified industry forms a part-of the
concerned assessee is to be computed and according to
the parenthetical clause, which contains the key words,
the same is to be computed in accordance with the
provisions of the Act except section 80E and since in
this case it is income from business the same will have
to be computed in accordance with sections 30 to 43A
which would include section 32(2) (which provides for
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carry forward of depreciation) and section 33(2) (which
provides for carry forward of development rebate for
eight years). In other words, in computing the total
income of the concerned assessee, items of unabsorbed
depreciation and unabsorbed development rebate will
have to be deducted before arriving at the figure that
will become exigible to the deduction of 8 per cent
contemplated by Section 80E (1).
It will thus be seen that according to this decision, the
words "such profits and gains" in the later part of sub-
section(1) of Section 80E were referable to the quantum of
the profits and gains attributable to the specified business
included in the total income as referred to in the earlier
part of the provision. If this decision lays down the
correct interpretation of sub-section (1) of Section 80E the
same interpretation must also govern the language of sub-
section (1) of Section 80M. Structurally there is hardly any
difference between Section 80E sub-section (1) and Section
80M sub-section (1) and the reasoning which appealed to the
Court in the interpretation of subsection (1) of Section 80E
must apply equally in the interpretation of sub-section (1)
of Section 80M. We find ourselves wholly in agreement with
the view taken by the Court in Cambay Electric Supply
Company’s case and we must therefore dissent from the
interpretation placed on sub-section (1) of Section 80M by
the decision in Cloth Traders case (supra).
But, even if in our view the decision in Cloth Traders
case is erroneous, the question still remains whether we
should over-turn it. Ordinarily we would be reluctant to
over-turn a decision given by a Bench of this Court, because
it is essential that There should be continuity and
consistency in judicial decisions and law should be certain
and definite. It is almost as important that the law should
be settled permanently as that it should be settled
correctly. But there may be circumstances where public
interest demands that the previous decision be reviewed and
reconsidered. The doctrine of stare
806
decisis should not deter the Court from over-ruling an
earlier decision, if it is satisfied that such decision is
manifestly wrong or proceeds upon a mistaken assumption in
regard to the existence or continuance of a statutory
provision or is contrary to another decision of the Court.
It was Jackson, J. who said in his dissenting opinion in
Massachusetts v. United States: "I see no reason why I
should be consciously wrong today because I was
unconsciously wrong yesterday". Lord Denning also said to
the same effect when he observed in Ostime v. Australian
Mutual Provident Society: "The doctrine of precedent does
not compel Your Lordships to follow the wrong path until you
fall over the edge of the cliff". Here we find that there
are over-riding considerations which compel us to reconsider
and review the decision in Cloth Traders case. In the first
place, the decision in Cloth Traders case was rendered by
this Court on 4th May 1979 and immediately thereafter,
within a few months, Parliament introduced Section 80AA with
retrospective effect from 1st April 1968 with a view to
over-riding the interpretation placed on Section 80M in
Cloth Traders case. The decision in Cloth Traders case did
not therefore hold the field for a period of more than a few
months and it could not be said that any assessee was misled
into acting to its detriment on the basis of that decision.
There was no decision in regard to the interpretation of
sub-section (1) of Section 80M given by any High Court prior
to the decision in Cloth Traders case and there was
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therefore no authoritative pronouncement of this Court on
this question of interpretation on which we assessee could
claim to rely for making its fiscal arrangements. The only
decision in regard to the interpretation of sub-section (1)
of Section 80M given by any High Court prior to the decision
in Cloth Traders case, was that of the Gujarat High Court in
Addi. C.I.T. v. Cloth Traders Private Limited and that
decision took precisely the same view which we are inclined
to accept in the present case. It is therefore difficult to
see how any assessee can legitimately complain that any
hardship or inconvenience would be caused to it if the
decision in Cloth Traders case was over-turned by us. If
despite the decision of the Gujarat High Court in Addl.
C.I.T. v. Cloth Traders Private Limited (supra) the assessee
proceeded on the assumption, now found to be erroneous, that
the Gujarat High Court decision was wrong and the deduction
permissible under sub-section (1) of Section 80M was liable
to be calculated with reference to the full amount of
dividend
807
received by the assessee, the assessee can have only itself
to blame. Knowing fully well that the Gujarat High Court had
decided the question of interpretation of sub-section (1) of
Section 80M in favour of the Revenue and there was no
decision of this Court taking a different view, no prudent
assessee could have proceeded to make its financial
arrangements on the basis that the decision of the Gujarat
High Court was erroneous. Moreover, we find, for reason we
have already discussed that the decision in Cloth Traders
case is manifestly wrong because it has failed to take into
account a very vital factor, namely, that the deduction
required to be made under sub-section (1) of Section 80M is
not from the gross total income but from "such income by way
of dividends". There is also another circumstance which
makes it necessary for us to reconsider and review the
decision in Cloth Traders case and that is the decision in
Cambay Electric SUPPLY Company’s case. The decision in Cloth
Traders case is inconsistent with that in Cambay Electric
Supply Company’s case. Both cannot stand together. If one is
correct, the other must logically be wrong and vice versa.
It is therefore necessary to resolve the conflict between
these two decisions and harmonise the law and that
necessitates an inquiry into the correctness of the decision
in Cloth Traders case. It is for this reason that we have
reconsidered and reviewed the decision in Cloth Traders case
and on such reconsideration and review, we have come to the
reconsideration that the decision in Cloth Traders case in
erroneous and must be over-turned.
It is obvious that, ON this view, it becomes
unnecessary to consider the question of constitutional
validity of the retrospective operation of Section 80AA.
Section 80AA in its retrospective operation is merely
declaratory of the law as it always was since 1st April 1968
and no complaint can validly be made against it.
We accordingly dismiss the writ petition but, in the
peculiar circumstances of the case, we direct that each
party shall bear and pay its own costs.
AMARENDRA NATH SEN, J. I have had the benefit of
reading the judgment of my learned brother Bhagwati, J. MY
learned brother in his judgment has set out all the material
facts and circumstances of the case. He has referred to the
relevant statutory provisions and to the legislative history
of Section 80M of the Income-Tax Act. He has also considered
the earlier decisions of various Courts including
808
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the decisions of this Court in Cloth Traders Ltd. v.
Additional Commissioner of Income tax and in Cambay
Electrical Supply Industrial Co. Ltd v. Commissioner of
Income-Tax. He has analysed the provisions of Section 80M
and has proceeded to interpret the same. As I am in broad
agreement with what have been stated by my learned brother,
I do not propose to reproduce the same. I, however, wish to
make some observations of my own.
The authority and jurisdiction of a larger Bench of
this Court to over-ride and over-rule any decision of a
smaller Bench cannot be questioned. I am, however, of the
opinion that the decision of this Court on any fiscal
legislation involving the question of financial benefit and
liability should not normally be interfered with and should
be interfered with only in very rare cases. On the basis of
the decision of this Court on any fiscal legislation and any
matter involving financial arrangements and adjustments,
parties are entitled to arrange their financial affairs and
in fact they so arrange and adjust their financial affairs
on the basis of the law laid down by this Court. Unsettling
a position settled by the decision of this Court may lead to
confusion and result in financial instability, causing
serious prejudice not only to the parties concerned but also
to the economic growth of the country as a whole. If on
interpretation of any provision in any fiscal legislation
two views may be reasonably possible, a larger Bench of this
Court may not interfere with the view taken by a smaller
Bench of this Court merely on the ground that the other view
appears to the larger Bench to be the better view and may
commend itself to the larger Bench. If, however, the
decision of the smaller Bench is erroneous, the larger Bench
has necessarily to interfere with the decision, as this
Court will not permit a wrong decision to operate as good
law of the land.
On a careful consideration of all the relevant facts
and circumstances of this case and the earlier decisions
which have all been noted in the judgment of my learned
brother, I have no hesitation in coming to the conclusion
that the decision arrived at by my learned brother for the
reasons stated by him in his judgment is sound and correct.
My learned brother has properly analysed the provisions of
Section 80M and has correctly construed the same, applying
the well settled principles of construction, I agree
809
with my learned brother and the reasons given by him for
coming to the conclusion that the decision of this Court
Cloth Traders Ltd. v. Additional Commissioner of Income Tax
is erroneous. In my opinion, it cannot be said that in
deciding the case of Cloth Traders Ltd. this Court had taken
one of two reasonably possible views. As my learned brother
in his judgment has aptly pointed out on a proper
interpretation of Section 80M that the view taken by this
Court in Cloth Traders case is fallacious and wrong. I am in
entire agreement with the interpretation of Section 80M made
by my learned brother for reasons stated in his judgment.
It may be noted that as soon as the decision of this
Court in Cloth Traders case was given, the Parliament to
clearly manifest the legislative intent and to indicate that
the decision did not reflect the true intention of the
Legislature introduced by amendment Section 80AA with
retrospective effect. In view of the proper interpretation
of Section 80M in the judgment of my learned brother with
which I agree, it cannot be said that Section 80AA has the
effect of imposing any fresh tax with retrospective effect.
Section 80AA is clearly declaratory in nature and merely
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declares what the correct position has always been. No
question of imposition of any fresh tax with retrospective
effect falls for consideration in this case. It may also be
pointed out that the decision in Cloth Traders case cannot
be said to have held the field for any length of time to
cause any serious prejudice to an assessee. The decision of
the Gujarat High Court in Cloth Traders case which was upset
by this Court was against the assessee and the Parliament
had intervened as soon as this Court reversed the decision
of the Gujarat High Court in Cloth Traders case. This aspect
has also been fully dealt with in the judgment of my learned
brother.
With these observations I am in entire agreement with
the judgment of my learned brother and I agree with the
order proposed by him.
N.V.K. Petition dismissed.
810