Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
HOSHIARPUR CENTRAL CO-OPERATIVE BANK LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, SIMLA.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
02/08/1960
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
DAS, S.K.
SHAH, J.C.
CITATION:
1960 AIR 1303
ACT:
Income-tax--Co-operative Society--Profits earned in business
with non-members--Whether exempt from tax--Income-tax Act,
1921 (IX of 1921), s. 60, notification.
HEADNOTE:
The assessee Bank, which was a co-operative society, did
business is controlled commodities with the approval of the
Registrar of Co-operative Societies and earned profits. it
claimed that these profits were also exempt from taxation
under F. D. (C. R.) Notification R. Dis. NO. 291-1. T./25
dated August 25, 1925, as subsequently amended, issued under
s. 60 of the income-tax Act. This notification exempted
"the profits of any co-operative society " from tax. It was
urged for the Department that these words referred to
profits made by a co-operative society in its business as a
pure co-operative society, i.e., in business with its own
members within the four corners of the Cooperative Societies
Act, 1912, and the bye-laws made thereunder.
Held, that the said profits were exempt from tax. The words
of the Notification were wide enough to include profits of
business of a co-operative society in transactions with non-
members also. It was always open to the appropriate Govern-
ment to allow a society to extend its business operations to
trading with persons other than its members. Once there was
such
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extension, the profits of the society from such business
fell within the general words of the Notification and it
required more than a supposed underlying intention to
negative the exemption.
The Madras Central Urban, Bank Ltd. v. Commissioner of
Income-tax, (1929) I.L.R. 52 Mad. 640, F. B., The Madras
Provincial Co-operative Bank Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-
tax, (1933) I.L.R. 56 Mad. 837 F. B. and Commissioner of
Income-tax, Burma v. The Bengalee Urban Co-operative Credit
Society Ltd., (1933) I.L.R. 11 Ran. 521, distinguished.
JUDGMENT:
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CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 238 of 1955.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated May 27, 1953, of
the Punjab High Court in Civil Reference No. 3/1952.
Deva Singh Bandhava and K. L. Mehta, for the appellant.
M. C. Setalvad, Attorney-General for India, K. N.
Rajagopal Sastri and D. Gupta, for the respondent.
1960. August 2. The Judgment of the court was delivered by
HIDAYATULLAH J.-This is an appeal against the judgment and
order of the High Court of Punjab with the certificate of
the Court granted under s. 66A(2) of the Indian Income-tax
Act.
The Hoshiarpur Central Co-operative Bank, Ltd., Hoshiarpur,
hereinafter referred to as the Bank, is the appellant., and
the Commissioner of Income-tax, Simla, is the respondent.
For the assessment years 1948-49 and 1949-50, the Income-tax
Officer included in the assessment of the Bank certain
income which had accrued to the Bank as profits from trading
in controlled commodities like sugar, cloth, kerosene, etc.,
which the Bank was allowed to deal in, with the approval of
the Registrar of Co-operative Societies conveyed in a letter
dated September 28, 1954. The Bank claimed exemption under
a notification issued Under s. 60 of the Income-tax Act, but
the contention was not accepted. On appeal, the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner reversed the decision, which, on
further appeal, was reversed by the Appellate Tribunal,
Delhi Branch. The Appellate Tribunal, however, raised,
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and referred the following question to the High Court under
s. 66(1) of the Income-tax Act:
" Where a co-operative Bank deals in sugar and standard
cloth with special permission of the authorities and earns
income from such activities, is such income exempt from tax
under item 2 of the Government of India Notification F. D.
(C. R.) Notification R. Dis. No. 291-1. T/25 dated 25th
August, 1925, as subsequently amended (Income-tax Manual,
10th Edition, Part II, pages 257-258) ?"
The High Court answered the question against the Bank, but
certified the case as fit for appeal to this Court, and
hence this appeal.
It is admitted on all bands that the profits were made from
trading in certain commodities with the approval of the
Registrar of Co-operative Societies. The quantum and the
manner in which those profits were made, are not in dispute.
The short question in this appeal is whether the exemption
granted by the notification covers the case. The
notification reads as follows:
" Income included in total income but exempt from both
income-tax and super-tax:
The following classes of income shall be exempted from the
tax payable under the said Act, but shall be taken into
account in determining the total income of an assessee for
the purposes of the said Act:-
1..................
2. The profits of any Co-operative Society other than the
Sanikatta Saltowners’ Society in the Bombay Presidency for
the time being registered under the Co-operative Societies
Act, 1912 (11 of 1912), the Bombay Co-operative Societies
Act, 1925 (Bombay Act VII of 1925), the Burma Co-operative
Societies Act, 1927 (Burma Act VI of 1927) or the Madras Co-
operative Societies Act, 1932 (Madras Act VI of 1932), or
the dividends or other payments received by the members of
any such society out of such profits.
Explanation:For this purpose the profits of a Co-operative
Society shall not be deemed to include any income, profits
or gains from:-
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(1) Investment in (a) securities of the nature
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referred to in Section 8 of the Indian Income-tax Act, or
(b) property of the nature referred to in Section 9 of that
Act;
(ii) dividends, or
(iii) the other sources’ referred to in Section 12 of
the Indian Income-tax Act."
The Income-tax Officer held that the profits made by the
Bank were not the profits in a co-operative venture but from
trading with outsiders, and that, therefore, para 2 of the
notification did not cover them. He also held that this
income fell within it other sources " referred to in item
(iii) of the Explanation. The Appellate Assistant
Commissioner held that these were profits of a Co-operative
Society, and were within para 2, and were, therefore,
excempt from tax. Both the Tribunal and the High Court
accepted the reasoning of the Income-tax Officer with regard
to para 2, but the High Court did not express any opinion as
to whether the third item of the Explanation applied to the
case or not.
Before us, the learned Attorney-General appearing for the
Department did not put his case on the Explanation, and
nothing more need be said about it. It may, however, be
mentioned that " other sources " there has reference to the
scheme of s. 6 of the Indian Income-tax Act, and profits
from business of whatever kind, are dealt with under s. 10
of the Act. The short question thus is whether para 2 is
confined only to profits made by a Co-operative Society from
transactions with its own members and does not cover profits
made in business with outsiders.
It may be pointed out that there are some cases to be found,
in which it was held, before the notification was amended by
the addition of the Explanation, that the second para
exempted profits made by a Cooperative Society in
transaction with its members and not to profits made in any
other way. The question is whether such a restricted
meaning can be imputed to the very wide and general terms in
which para 2 is couched.
The question is plainly one of construction of the
notification. In support of the case of the Department,
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the learned Attorney-General relies on two arguments. He
first refers to the opening words of the second para of the
notification, viz., " The profits of any Cooperative Society
". These words, it is argued, refer to profits made by a Co-
operative Society in its business as a pure Co-operative
Society, or, in other words, in business with its own
members within the four corners of the Co-operative
Societies Act, 1912 and the byelaws made under that Act.
No doubt, a Co-operative Society primarily exists for
business with members and not for business with non-members;
but the words of the notification and even those more
specifically relied upon, are wide enough to include any
business whether of the one kind or other. It cannot be
denied that the Bank is a Co-operative Society and is
claiming the exemption only as such, and further that it is
claiming the exemption in respect of profits from a business
carried on by it. It was for this reason that the attempt to
bring the profits within " other, sources " covered by s. 12
of the Indian Income-tax Act was rightly abandoned in this
Court. If this is the obvious position, it follows that the
words " the profits of any Co-operative Society " are wide
enough to cover profits-from any business, and there is
nothing to show that the profits there mentioned are only
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the profits from business with members.
It is next argued that a Co-operative Society exists for
business with members, and that the Co-operative Societies
Act and the bye-laws of the Bank reflect this character of
the business undertakings. This intention underlying the
Co-operative Societies Act and the bye-laws, it is urged, is
the key to the interpretation of the notification, and it
must, therefore, be limited to profits from business with
members only. In support of this argument, reference is
made to observations in The Madras Central Urban Bank Ltd.
v. Commissioner of Income-tax (1), The Madras Provincial Co-
operative Bank Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax(2) and
Commissioner of Income-tax, Burma v. The Bengalee Urban
(1) (1929) I.L.R. 52 Mad. 640 F.B.
(2) (1933) I.L.R. 56 Mad. 837 F.B.
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Co-operative Credit Society, Ltd. (1), where it was pointed
out that the notification covered only profits from business
with members. The first two cases were of interest derived
from moneys invested in Government Securities to comply with
orders of Government to the Societies to keep 40 per cent of
the total liabilities always ready at hand, and it was said
that the profits were not from business with members. In
the last of the three cases, it was pointed out that the
exemption was grounded on the principle that a person cannot
make a loss or profits out of himself’, and strictly
speaking, only such profits as were made in business with
members were exempt.
The position since these cases were decided has been
materially altered by the addition of the Explanation. The
Explanation now takes us back to the kinds of income to be
found in s. 6 of the Indian Income-tax Act where business
profits are, in a category by themselves, more exhaustively
treated in s. 10. There are other heads of income of
distinct characteristics which are treated separately, and
then there is a residuary head which includes income from
,other sources" which for that reason are innominate. The
Explanation cannot be said to imply a general approval of
the earlier decisions. Such a conclusion does not neces-
sarily follow, because if the paragraph of the notification
was clear enough there was hardly any need for the
Explanation. The addition of the Explanation clears once
for all any doubt that might have arisen as to the ambit of
the word " profits". After the addition of the Explanation
and even before it, the word denoted profits from business
and not income which arose, apart from business.
It must not be overlooked that at the time when the
notification was first issued and also when it was amended,
it was not even contemplated that Co-operative Societies
would be permitted to deal in commodities in short supply
with a view to ensuring their equitable distribution among
the consumers. It was, however, always open to the
appropriate Government to allow a Society to extend its
business operations to
(1) (9133) I.L.R. 11 Ran. 521
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trading with persons other than its members subject to
conditions and restrictions, vide s. 31 of the Co-operative
Societies Act. This has, in fact, been done here.
Once there is this extension of the business of a Co-
operative Society, the general words of the notification
include the profits from such business within the exemption,
and it would require more than a supposed underlying
intention to negative the exemption. To gather the meaning
of the notification in the light of an alleged intention is
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to reverse the well-known canon of interpretation. In our
opinion, the profits were exempt under the notification, and
the answer to the question ought to have been in the
affirmative.
In the result, we allow the appeal with costs here and in
the High Court.
Appeal allowed.