Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, WEST BENGAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ROYAL CALCUTTA TURF CLUB
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
28/11/1960
BENCH:
KAPUR, J.L.
BENCH:
KAPUR, J.L.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
SHAH, J.C.
CITATION:
1961 AIR 1028 1961 SCR (2) 729
CITATOR INFO :
R 1964 SC1722 (9)
F 1972 SC 159 (4)
R 1972 SC 397 (5)
ACT:
Income Tax-Expenditure for preservation of business--If
wholly and exclusively laid out for the Purpose of
business--Indian Income Tax Act, 1922 (XI of 1922), S. 10
(2)(XV).
HEADNOTE:
The business of the respondent club was to run race meetings
on a commercial scale. The club did not own any horse, and
therefore did not employ jockeys. it was a matter of some
importance to the club that there were jockeys of requisite
skill and experience in sufficient numbers who would be
available to the owners and trainers because otherwise the
running of the race meetings would not be commercially
profitable and its interest would suffer and it might have
had to abandon its business if it did not take steps to make
jockeys of the necessary calibre available. Therefore it
established a school for the training of Indian boys as
jockeys and claimed the sums spent on the running of the
school as deductable amount under s. 10 (2)(XV) of the
Indian Income Tax Act.
The question was whether in the circumstances of the case
the expenditure claimed was one which was wholly and
exclusively laid out for the purpose of the respondent’s
business.
Held, that any expenditure which was incurred for preventing
the extinction of a business would be expenditure wholly and
exclusively laid opt for the purpose of the business of the
assessee and would be an allowable deduction.
In the instant case the amount in dispute was laid out
wholly and exclusively for the purpose of the respondent’s
business, because if the supply of jockeys of requisite
efficiency and skill failed, the business of the respondent
would no longer be possible.
Eastern Investments Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax, West
Bengal, [1951] S. C. R. 594 and Commissioner of Income-tax
v. Chandulal Keshavlal & Co., [1960] 38 I.T.R. 601; relied
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on,
British Insulated and Helsby Cables v. Atherton, [1926] A.
C. 205, Morgan v. Tate & Lyle Ltd., [1955] A. C. 21 and
Boarland v. Kramat Pulai Ltd., [1953] 2 All, E. R. 1122,
discussed.
Strong & Co. v. Woodifield, [1906] A. C. 448 and Smith v.
Incorporated Council of Law Reporting, [1914] 3 K.B. 674,
referred to.
Ward & Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Taxes, [1923] A. C. 145,
distinguished.
730
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 419 of 1958.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
August 20, 1957, of the Calcutta High a Court in Income-tax
Reference No. 1 of 1956.
Hardyal Hardy and D. Gupta, for the appellant.
N. C. Chatterjee, Dipak Choudhri and B. N. Ghosh, for the
respondent.
1960. November 28. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
KAPUR, J. - This is an appeal by special leave against the
judgment and order of the High Court of Judicature at
Calcutta in a reference made by the Income-tax Appellate
Tribunal under s. 66(1) of the Income-tax Act. The
following question was referred:
"Whether in the facts and circumstances of this case, the
Appellate Tribunal was right in holding that Rs. 61,818
spent by the assessee to train Indian boys as jockeys, did
not constitute expenses of the business of the assessee
allowable under s. 10(2)(xv)?" which was answered in favour
of the respondent. The Commissioner is the appellant before
us and the assessee is the respondent.
The respondent is an association of persons whose business
is to hold race meetings in Calcutta on a commercial basis.
It holds two series of race meetings during the two seasons
of the year. The respondent does not own any horses and
therefore does not employ jockeys but they are employed by
owners and trainers of horses which are run in the races.
It is a matter of some importance to the respondent that
there should be jockeys available to the owners with
sufficient skill and experience because the success of races
to a considerable extent depends upon the experience and
skill of a jockey who rides a horse in a race. Because it
was of the opinion that there was a risk of the jockeys
becoming unavailable and that such unavailability would
seriously affect its business which might result in its
closing
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down the business, the respondent considered it expedient to
remedy that defect. Therefore in 1948, it, established a
school for the training of Indian boys as jockeys so that
after their training they might be available for purposes of
race meetings held under its auspices. The school, however,
did not prove a success and after having been in existence
for three years it was closed down.
During the year ending March 31, 1949, the respondent spent
a sum of Rs. 62,818 on the running of its school and claimed
that amount as a deduction under s. 10(2)(xv) of the Income-
tax Act and also in the assessment under the Business
Profits Tax for the chargeable accounting period ending
March 31, 1949. This claim was disallowed by the Income Tax
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Officer and on appeal by Appellate Assistant Commissioner
and also by the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal. At the
instancc of the respondent the question already quoted was
referred to the High Court and was answered in favour of the
respondent. This appeal is brought by special leave against
that judgment.
The decision under the Business Profits Tax Act will be
consequential upon the decision of the deduction under the
Income-tax Act. The Tribunal found that it was not the
business of the respondent to provide jockeys to owners and
trainers, that the jockeys trained in the respondent’s
school were not bound to ride only in the races run by the
respondent and that the benefit, if any, which accrued was
of an enduring nature. It also found that the respondent
had been conducting race meetings since long, that it was
not the case of the assessee that if it did not train
jockeys they would become unavailable and that the mere
policy of producing efficient Indian jockeys was not a
sufficient consideration for treating the expenditure as one
incurred for the business of the respondent. For these
reasons the expenditure was disallowed.
Before the Appellate Assistant Commissioner, it was
contended by the respondent, that the reason for incurring
the expenditure was "to promote efficient Indian jockeys"
and it was in the interest of the respondent to see that the
races are not abandoned on
732
account of the scarcity of jockeys. In the order of the
Tribunal it is stated that this was not the case of the
respondent, and therefore when the respondent wanted
paragraph 5 of the statement to be substituted by the
following:
"It was the case of the assessee that unless it trained
Indian Jockeys, time may come when there may not be
sufficient number of trained jockeys to ride horses in the
races conducted by the assessee." the Tribunal did not agree
to do so.
Counsel for the appellant raised three points before us; (1)
The question as to whether an item of expenditure is wholly
and exclusively laid out for the purposes of business or not
is a question of fact; (2) the connection between an
expenditure and profit-earning of the assessee should be
direct and substantial and not remote and (3) to be
admissible as revenue expenditure it should not be in the
nature of a capital expense, i.e., it should not bring into
existence an asset of an enduring nature.
As to the first question this court has held in Eastern
Investments Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax, West Bengal
(1) that "though the question must be decided on the facts
of each case, the final conclusion is one of law". In
Commissioner of Income Tax v. Chandulal Keshavlal & Co. (2),
this Court said:-
"Another test is whether the transaction is properly entered
into as a part of the assessee’s legitimate commercial
undertaking in order to facilitate the carrying on of its
business; and it is immaterial that a third party also
benefits thereby. (Eastern Investment Ltd. v. Commissioner
of Income-Tax, (1951) 20 I.T.R.
1). But in every case it is a question of fact whether the
expenditure was expended wholly and exclusively for the
purpose of trade or business of the assessee. In the present
case the finding is that it was laid out for the purpose of
the assessee’s business and there is evidence to support
this finding."
But those observations must be read in the context. In that
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case the assessee firm was the Managing Agent of a Company
and at the request of the Directors of
(1) [1951] S.C.R. 594, 598. (2) [1960] 38 I.T.R. 601, 610.
733
the latter agreed to accept a lesser commission for the year
of account than it was entitled to. It was found, by the
Appellate Tribunal there that the amount was expended for
reasons of commercial expediency and was not given as a
bounty but to strengthen the managed company so that if its
financial position became strong the assessee would benefit
thereby, and an the evidence the Tribunal came to the
conclusion that the amount was wholly and exclusively for
the purpose of such business. It was on this evidence that
the expense was held to be wholly and exclusively laid out
for the purpose of the assessee’s business and this was the
finding referred to. In that case the Tribunal had not
misdirected itself as to the true scope and meaning of the
words "wholly and exclusively laid out for the purpose of
the assessee’s business". In the present case the Income-
tax Appellate Tribunal had misdirected itself as to the true
scope and meaning of these words. In our opinion, in the
circumstances of this case, it cannot be said that the
finding of the Tribunal was one of fact.
The question as to whether the expenses of running the
school for jockeys is deductible has to be decided taking
into consideration the circumstances of this case. The
business of -the respondent was to run race meetings on a
commercial scale for which it is necessary to have races of
as high an order as possible. For the popularity of the
races run by the respondent and to make its business
profitable it was necessary that there were jockeys of
requisite skill and experience in sufficient numbers who
would be available to the owners and trainers because
without such efficient jockeys the running of race meetings
would not be commercially profitable. It was for this
purpose that the respondent started the school for training
Indian jockeys., If there were not sufficient number of
efficient Indian jockeys to ride horses its interest would
have suffered, and it might have had to abandon its business
if it did not take steps to make jockeys of the necessary
calibre available. Therefore any expenditure which was
incurred for preventing the extinction
93
734
of the respondent’s business would, in our opinion, be
expenditure wholly and exclusively laid out for the purpose
of the business of the assessee and would be an allowable
deduction. This finds support from decided cases. In
Commissioner of Income-tax v. Chandulal Keshavlal & Co. (1),
this Court held that in order to justify a deduction the
disbursement must be for reasons of commercial expediency;
it may be voluntary but incurred for the assessee’s
business; and if the expense is incurred for the purpose of
the business of the assessee it does not matter that the
payment also enures to the benefit of a third party.
Another test laid down was that if the transaction is
properly entered into as a part of the assessee’s legitimate
commercial undertaking in order to facilitate the carrying
on of its business it is immaterial that a third party also
benefits thereby. In British Insulated and Helsby Cables v.
Atherton (2), Viscount Cave L. C. held that a Bum of money
expended, not of necessity and with a view to a direct and
immediate benefit to the trade, but voluntarily and on the
ground of commercial expediency and in order indirectly to
facilitate the carrving on of the business may yet be
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expended wholly and exclusively for the purpose of the
trade. In a case more recently decided Morgan v. Tate &
Lyle Ltd. (3) the assessee company was engaged in sugar
refining business and it incurred expenses in a propaganda
campaign to oppose the threatened nationalisation of the
industry. It was held by the House of Lords by a majority
that the object of the expenditure being to preserve the
assets of the company from seizure and so to enable it to
carry on its business and earning profits, the expense was
an admissible deduction being wholly and exclusively laid
out for the purpose of the company’s trade. Lord Morton of
Henryton said:
"Looking simply at the words of the rule I would ask:"If
money so spent is not spent for the purpose of the company’s
trade, for what purpose is it spent?"
If the assets are seized, the company can no longer
(1) (1960) 38 I.T.R. 601, 610. (2) [1926] A.C. 205.
(3) [1955] A.C. 21.
735
carry on the trade which has been carried on by the use of
these assets. Thus the money is spent to preserve the very
existence of the company’s trade".
See also Strong & Co. v. Woodifield(1), the observations of
Lord Davey; and Smith v. Incorporated Council of Law
Reporting (2).
Counsel for the appellant relied upon the judgment of the
Privy Council in Ward & Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Taxes (3
), but that decision proceeds on a different statute where
the words were of a very restrictive character, the words
being:
"..................... Expenditure or loss of any kind not
exclusively incurred in the production of the assessable
income derived from that source............... This case was
distinguished in Morgan v. Tate & Lyle(4) on the ground that
the language of the Now Zealand statute was much narrower
than the language of r. 3A in England.
Reference was also made by the appellant to Boarland v.
Kramat Pulai Ltd. (5). In that case Directors of three
Companies engaged in tin mining in Malaya incurred
expenditure on printing. and circulating to shareholders a
pamphlet containing remarks of the Chairman of the Company.
The pamphlet was an attack on the policy and acts of the
Socialist Government and it was held that the question
whether the money was wholly and exclusively laid out or
expended for the purpose of trade within the meaning of
rules applicable to the question was one of law but on a
consideration of the question it was held that the
expenditure was not solely incurred with that object. It is
not necessary to discuss that case at any length because
what was held in that case was that the pamphlet was not
wholly and exclusively for the purpose of the company’s
trade.
Applying the law, as laid down in those cases, to the
present case the conclusion is that the amount in dispute
was laid out wholly and exclusively for the purpose of the
respondent’s business because if the
(1) [1906] A C. 448. (2) [19I4] 3 K.B. 674.
(3) [1923] A.C 145. (4) [1955] A.C. 21.
(5) [1953] 2 All E.R. 1122.
736
supply of jockeys of efficiency and skill failed the
business of the respondent would no longer be possible.
Thus the money was spent for the preservation
of the respondent’s business.
As to the third point there is no substance in the
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submission that the expenditure was in the nature of a
capital expense because no asset of enduring nature was
being created by this expense.
In our opinion the High Court has rightly held that the
expenditure claimed was one which was wholly and exclusively
laid out for the purpose of the respondent’s business. It
was to prevent the threatened extinction of the business of
the respondent. In the result this appeal is dismissed with
costs.
Appeal dismissed.