Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 9
PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, U.P.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
NAINITAL BANK LTD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
25/09/1964
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
SHAH, J.C.
SIKRI, S.M.
CITATION:
1965 AIR 1227 1965 SCR (1) 340
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1965 SC1272 (6)
RF 1967 SC 453 (1)
R 1973 SC1032 (5,6)
R 1978 SC 278 (4,6,7,9)
ACT:
Income Tax-Deductible loss-Banking Company-Loss by
dacoity Whether incidental to business --Indian Income-tax
Act, 1922 (11 of 1922), s. 10(1).
HEADNOTE:
Cash and ornaments worth Rs. 1,06,000 were robbed by
dacoits from the Ramnagar branch of the Nainital Bank Ltd.,
a public limited company carrying on the business of
banking. The loss was claimed by the bank as a trading loss
for the assessment year 1952-53. The claim was disallowed
by the Income-tax Officer on the ground that the loss was
not incidental to the business. The finding being confirmed
by the Appellate Assistant Commissioner and the Incom-tax
Appellate Tribunal, a reference was made to the High Court
of Judicature at Allahabad which held that the loss by
dacoity was incidental to the banking business and was,
therefore a trading loss which the assessee could claim as a
deduction under s. 10(1) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922.
Appeal to this Court on behalf of the Revenue, came by way
of a certificate under Art. 133 of the Constitution of
India.
It was contended on behalf of the appellant that the risk of
burglary was not incidental to the business of banking, and
the loss in the present case fell on the assessee not as a
person carrying on the business of banking but as an owner
of funds.
HELD : Cash is the stock-in-trade of a banking company. and
its loss is therefore a trading loss. But every loss is not
deductible in computing the income of a business unless it
is incurred in the carrying out of the operation of the
business and is incidental to the operation. Whether in a
particular case an item of loss claimed as a deduction under
s. 10(1) of the Act is incidental to the operation of the
assessee’s business or not is a question of fact to be
decided on the facts of that case, having regard to the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 9
nature of the operations carried on and the nature of the
risk involved in carrying them out. The degree of risk or
its frequency is not of much relevance but its nexus to the
nature of the business is material. [344 A; 349 D-E].
It is an integral part of the business of banking that
sufficient moneys should be kept in the bank duly guarded to
meet the demands of the constituents. Retention of the
money in the bank is part of the operation of banking.
Retention of money in the bank carries with it the ordinary
risk of its being the subject of embezzlement, theft,
dacoity or destruction by fire and such other things. Such
risk of loss is incidental to the carrying on of the
operation of the business of banking. Loss incurred by
dacoity in the present case is incidental to the carrying on
of the business of banking. [349 F-G].
Case law discussed.
Motipur Sugar Factory Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax,
Bihar and Orissa, (1955) 28 I.T.R. 128 Charles Moore & Co.
(W.A.) Pvt. Ltd. v. Federal Commissioner of Taxation,
(1956) 95 C.L.R. 344 and Gold Band Services Ltd. v.
Commissioner of Inland Revenue, (1961) N.Z.L.R. 467, relied
on.
341
Badridas Daga v. Commissioner of Income-tax [1959] S.C.R.
690 distinguished.
Ramaswamy Chettiar v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras
I.L.R. (1930)53 Mad. 904, disapproved.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 938 of
1963.
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated December 19, 1960
of the Allahabad High Court in Income-tax Reference No. 1588
of 1956.
K. N. Rajagopala Sastri, R. H. Dhebar and R. N. Sachthey,
for the appellant.
A. V. Viswanatha Sastri and Naunit Lal, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Subba Rao J. This appeal by certificate raises the question
whether loss of cash by dacoity is an admissible deduction
under S. 10(1) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922,
hereinafter called the Act, in computing the assessee’s
income in a banking business.
The facts relevant to the question raised may be briefly
state . The assessee is the Nainital Bank Limited. It is a
puplic limited company which carries on the business of
banking. It has various branches and one of them is
situated at Ramnagar. In the usual course of its business
large amounts were kept in various safes in the premises of
the Bank. On June 11, 1951, at about 7 P.m. there was a
dacoity in the Bank and the dacoits carried away the cash
amounting to Rs. 1,06,000 and some ornaments etc. pledged
with the Bank. For the assessment year 1952-53 the Bank
claimed the said amount as a deduction in computing its
income from the banking business on the ground that it was a
trading loss. The Income-tax Officer disallowed the claim
on the ground that it was not a loss incidental to the
banking business. On appeal, the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner of Income tax, and on further appeal, the
Income-tax Appellate Tribunal, confirmed that finding. On a
reference to the High Court of Judicature at Allababad, a
Division Bench of that Court held that the loss by dacoity
was incidental to the banking business and was, therefore, a
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 9
trading, loss and that the assessee was entitled to a
deduction of the same under s. 10 (1 ) of the Act. Hence
the appeal.
Mr. Rajagopala Sastri, learned counsel for the appellant,
argued that the Bank lost the money by burglary not in its
capacity as a bank but only just like any other citizen,
that the risk of
L2Sup./64-9
342
burglary was not incidental to the business of banking and
that, therefore, the amount burgled could not be deducted as
a trading loss. Mr. A. V. Viswanatha Sastri, on the other
hand, contended that the money lost by burglary was the
stock in-trade of the banking business, that it was kept in
the Bank in the usual course of its business and that the
risk of its loss was incidental to the carrying on of the
said business and, therefore, the amount lost was a trading
loss liable to be deducted under s. 10(1) of the Act.
Before we consider the law on the subject, it would be con-
venient at the outset to notice briefly the scope of the
activities of banking business. Under S. 5 (1 ) (b) of the
Banking Companies Act, 1949, "banking" is defined to mean
"the accepting, for the purpose of lending or investment, of
deposits of money from the public, repayable on demand or
otherwise, and withdrawable by cheque, draft, order or
Otherwise"; and under s. 5 (1) (c), "banking company" means
any company which transacts the business of banking in
India; under S. 5(1) (cc), " ’branch’ or ’branch office in
relation to a banking company, means any branch or branch
office, whether called a pay office or sub-pay office or by
any other name, at which deposits are received, cheques
cashed or money lent, and for the purposes of section 35
includes any place of business where any other form of
business referred to in subsection (1) of section 6 is
transacted," Therefore, a banking business consists mainly
in receiving deposits, making advances, realizing them and
making fresh advances. It is a continuous process which
requires maintenance of ready cash in the bank premises.
The Nainital Bank Ltd., is a public limited company
incorporated for carrying on such banking business and
Ramnagar branch is one of its branches doing such business.
Unlike an individual, a limited company like a banking
company comes into existence for the purpose of carrying on
only the banking business and ordinarily there cannot be any
scope for attributing different characters to that business.
We therefore, start with the fact that the Ramnagar branch
of the Bank had kept large amounts in the Bank premises in
the usual course of its business in order to meet the
demands of its constituents.
It is settled law, and indeed it is not disputed, that cash
is the stock-in-trade of a banking company. In Arunachalam
Chettiar v. Commissioner of Income-tax Madras(1), the
Judicial Committee was considering the basis of the right of
an assessee to
((1) (1936) 4 I.T.R. 173, 83 (P.C.).
343
deduct irrecoverable loans before arriving at the profits of
moneylending, and in that context stated:
"The basis of the right to deduct
irrecoverable loans before arriving at the
profit of money-lending is that to the money-
lender, as to the banker, money is his stock-
in-trade or circulating capital; he is dealing
in money."
In Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras v. Subramanya
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 9
Pillai(1) a Division Bench of the Madras High Court, in
explaining the principle why in money-lending business
allowances for bad debts were given, observed:
"In the case of banking or money-lending
business .... allowance for bad and doubtful
debts was given for the reason that all the
moneys embarked in the moneylending business
and lent out for interest were in the nature
of stock-in-trade of the banker or money-
lender and the bad and doubtful debts
represented so much loss of the stock-in-
trade. Losses in respect of the stock-intrade
have always been regarded as trade losses and
allowed to be set off against the receipts."
The same view was expressed by the Full Bench of the Madras
High Court in Ramaswami Chettiar v. Commissioner of Income-
tax, Madras (2 ) and by the Patna High Court in Motipur
Sugar Factory, Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Bihar &
Orissa(3).
Under s. 10(1) of the Act loss of stock-in-trade is
certainly an admissible deduction in computing the profits.
Payment received from an insurance company for stock
destroyed by fire was taken into account as a trading
receipt in computing the profits assessable to income-tax;
see Green (H. M. Inspector of Taxes) v. J. Gliksten and
Son, Ltd. (4) ; and Raghuvanshi Mills Ltd. v. Commissioner
of Income-tax, Bombay City(5). If receipt from an insurance
company towards loss of stock was a trading receipt,
conversely to the extent of the loss not so recouped it
should be trading loss. Loss sustained by an assessee owing
to destruction of the stock-in-trade by enemy invasion was
held to be a trading loss which the assessee was entitled to
claim as a deduction: see Pohoomal Bros. v. Commissioner of
Income-tax, Bombay City(6). Loss incurred in stock-in-trade
by ravages of white-ants was allowed as trading loss in
computing the profit of a business; see Hira Lal Phoolchand
v. Commissioner of Income-
(1) (1950) 18 I.T.R. 85, 92.
(3) (1955) 28 I.T.R. 128.
(5) [1953] S.C.R. 177.
(2) I.L.R. (1930) 53 Mad. 904.
(4) (1928-29) 14 T.C. 364.
(6) (1958) 34 T.T.R. 64.
344
tax, C.P., U.P. and Berar(1). We, therefore, reach the
position that cash is a stock-in-trade of a banking business
and its loss in the course of its business under varying
circumstances is deductible as a trading loss in computing
the total income of the business.
But it is said that every loss of a stock-in-trade in
whatsoever way it is caused is not a trading loss, but the
said loss should have been caused not only in the course of
the business but also should have been incidental to it.
The leading case on the subject is that of this Court in
Badridas Daga v. Commissioner of Income-tax(2). There, the
appellant was the sole proprietor of a firm which carried on
the business of money-lending. The agent of the firm
withdrew large amounts from the firm’s bank account and
applied them in satisfaction of his personal debts. In the
firm’s account the balance of the amount not recovered from
the agent was written off at the end of the accounting year
as irrecoverable. This Court held that the loss sustained
by the appellant therein as a result of I misappropriation
by the agent was one which was incidental to the carrying on
of the business and should therefore, be deducted in
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 9
computing the profits under s. 10 (1) of the Act.
Venkatarama Ayyar J., speaking for the Court, observed:
,,The result is that when a claim is made for
a deduction for which there is no specific
provision in section 10(2), whether it is
admissible or not will depend on whether,
having regard to accepted commercial practice
and trading principles, it can be said to
arise out of the carrying on of the business
and to be incidental to it. If that is
established, then the deduction must be
allowed, provided of course there is no
prohibition against it, express or implied, in
the Act."
Applying the principle to the facts of the case before the
Court, the learned Judge proceeded to state:
"If employment of agents is incidental to the
carrying on of business, it must logically
follow that losses which are incidental to
such employment are also incidental to the
carrying on of the business."
The principle was clearly laid down and was, if we may say
so, correctly applied to the facts before the Court.
But there is a
(1) (1947) 15 I.T.R. 205.
(2) [1959] S.C.R. 690.
345
passage in the judgment on which strong reliance was placed
by the learned counsel for the appellant and it was
contended that the instant case clearly fell under the
illustration contained in the passage. It reads:
"At the same time, it should be empbasised
that the loss for which a deduction could be
made under section 10(1) must be one that
springs directly from the carrying on of the
business and is incidental to it and not, any
loss sustained by the assessee, even if it has
some connection with his business. If, for
example, a thief were to break overnight into
the premises of a money-lender and run away
with funds secured therein, that must result
in the depletion of the resources; available
to him for lending and the loss must, in that
sense, be a business loss, but it is not one
incurred in the running of the business, but
is one to which all owners of properties are
exposed whether they do business or not. The
loss in such a case may be said to fall on the
assessee not as a person carrying on business
but as owner of funds. This distinction,
though fine, is very material as on it will
depend whether deduction could be made under
section 10(1) or not."
It was said that the loss in the present case fell on the
assessee not as a person carrying on the business of banking
but as owner of funds.
That passage in terms refers to a money-lender and does not
deal with a public company carrying on banking business. In
the case of a money-lender the profits he made may form part
of the private funds kept in his house which he may or may
not invest in his business. It is indistinguishable from
his other moneys. But in the case of a bank the deposits
received by it form part of its circulating capital and at
the time of the theft formed part of its stock-in-trade. In
one case it cannot be posited that the amount robbed is part
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 9
of the stock-in-trade of the trader till he invests it in
his business; in the other it forms part of the stock-in-
trade without depending on the intention of the banking
company. There lies the distinction between the instant
case and the illustration visualized by this Court. We have
only suggested a distinction, but we are not expressing any
definite opinion on the question whether the loss incurred
in the case illustrated is or is not a trading loss. The
correctness or otherwise of the said observation may fall to
be considered when such a case directly arises for decision.
346
Before parting with this decision, it may be noticed that
this Court agreed with the decisions in Venkatachalapathy
lyer v. Commissioner of Income-tax(1), Lord’s Dairy Farm
Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax(2) , and Motipur Sugar
Factory Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax( 3 ). The
decision in Motipur Sugar Factory case(3), which was
accepted by this Court to be correct, takes us a step
further in the development of law. There, the assessee
company was carrying on business in the manufacture of sugar
and molasses out of sugarcane. It deputed an employee,in
compliance with the statutory rules, with cash for disburse
ment to sugarcane cultivators at the spot of purchase. The
cash was robbed on the way. The Division Bench of the Patna
High Court held that the loss of money was loss arising out
of the business of the assessee and sprang from the
statutory necessity of sending money to various purchasing
centres for disbursement and, therefore, the assessee was
entitled to deduct the loss in computing its taxable income
under S. 10(1) of the Act. It will be noticed that this is
not a case of misappropriation by a servant of the company,
but a case of loss to the company by reason of its cash
being robbed from its servant. In that case, cash was
entrusted to the employee under statutory rules. But there
may be cases where such entrustment may be made by custom or
practice. What is important to notice is that robbery of
cash from the hands of an employee is held to be incidental
to the business of the assessee. If that be so, why should
a different principle be adopted if the loss was not caused
by robbery from the hands of the employee on his way to a
particular place in discharge of his duty, but it was a loss
caused by dacoity from the premises of the bank itself. In
one case, the employee carried cash for disbursement to
sugarcane cultivators, and in the other, funds were lodged
in the Bank with reasonable safeguards for disbursement of
the same to its constituents. If the loss was incidental to
the business in one case, it should equally be so in the
other case. The judgment of the Special Bench of the Madras
High Court in Ramaswami Chettiar v. The Commissioner of
Income-tax, Madras(4) supports the case of the Revenue.
There, the loss was incurred by theft of money used in
moneylending business and kept in the business premises.
The Full Bench by majority held that the loss incurred
thereby should not be allowed in computing the income-tax,
as the theft was committed by persons who were not at the
time of commission employed as clerks or servants by the
assessee. This judgment,
(1) (1951) 20 I.T.R. 363.
(3) (1955) 28 I.T.R. 128.
(2) (1955) 27 I.T.R. 700.
(4) (1930) I.L.R. 53 Mad. 904.
347
if we may say so with respect, takes a narrow view of the
problem. Indeed in Motipur Sugar Factory case(1), which was
approved by this Court, the theft was committed not by the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 9
employee of the company but by robbers. To that extent the
correctness of the Madras decision is shaken. That apart
the judgment of Anantakrishna Ayyar J., who recorded a
dissent, contains a constructive criticism of the majority
view. We prefer the view of Anantakrishna Ayyar J., to that
of the majority.
The decision of the High Court of Australia in Charles Moore
and Co. (W. A.) Pvt. Ltd. v. Federal Commissioner of Taxa-
tion(2) throws considerable light on the subject. In that
case the assessee was carrying on business of a departmental
store and he banked the takings thereof daily. It was the
practice every business morning for the cashier accompanied
by another employee to take the previous day’s takings to
the bank some two hundred yards away and pay them to the
credit of the assessee. One day, while on their way to the
bank the two employees were held up at gun point and robbed
of a large amount which formed part of the receipts of the
assessee for the previous day. The Court held that the loss
was incurred in gaining or producing the assessable income
of the year in question within the meaning of s. 5 1 (I) of
the Income Tax and Social Services Contribution Assessment
Act, 1936-52 and was not a loss or outgoing of capital or of
a capital nature, and was consequently a deduction from
assessable income in such year. It was pointed out therein:
"Banking the takings is a necessary part of
the operations that are directed to the
gaining or producing day by day of what will
form at the end of the accounting period the
assessable income. Without this, or some
equivalent financial procedure, hitherto
undevised, the replenishment of stock-in-trade
and the payment of wages and other essential
outgoings would stop and that would mean that
the gaining or producing of the assessable
income would be suspended."
Then the Court proceeded to state
"The ’occasion of the loss’ in the present
case was the pursued in banking the
money . . . . There Is no difficulty in
understanding the view that involuntary
outgoings and unforeseen or unavoidable losses
should be allowed as deductions when they
represent that kind of casualty, mischance or
misfortune which is a natural or recognized
incident of a particular trade or
(1) (1955) 28 I.T.R. 128.
(2) (1956-57) 95 C.L.R. 344, 350.
348
business the profits of which are in question.
These are characteristic incidents of the
systematic exercise of a trade or the pursuit
of a vocation.(1) Even if armed robbery of
employees carrying money through the streets
had become an anachronism which we no longer
knew, these words would apply. For it would
remain a risk to which of its very nature the
procedure gives rise. But unfortunately it is
still a familiar and recognized hazard and
there could be little doubt that if it had
been insured against the premium would have
formed an allowable deduction. Phrases like
the foregoing or the phrase ’incidental and
relevant’ when used in relation to the
allowability of losses as deductions do not
refer to the frequency, expectedness or
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 9
likelihood of their occurrence or the
antecedent risk of their being incurred, but
to their nature or character. What matters is
their connection with the operations which
more directly gain or produce the assessable
income."
This decision laid down the following principles: (i)
banking the takings was a necessary part of the operations
of the business with which the court was dealing in that
case; (ii) the loss to the business caused by robbery was
incidental and relevant to that business as the procedure
involved in carrying on of the business carried with it the
risk of the cash being robbed on the way; (iii) the
expressions "incidental" and "relevant" in relation to
losses did not relate to the frequency of the happening of
the risk but to their nature and character, that is to say,
the loss must be connected with the operation to produce
income. The judgment of the Supreme Court of Newzealand in
Gold Band Services Limited v. Commissioner of Inland Revenue
( 2 ) applied the decision of the Australian High Court
cited above to a situation which comes very near to our
case. The appellant therein owned and operated a petrol
service station which was kept open continuously. It was
held up by an armed robber and a substantial sum of money
was stolen. The Court held that the sum lost as a result of
the robbery was a loss exclusively incurred in gaining or
producing the assessable income of the appellant and was
deductible from its’ gross income. Adverting to the argu-
ment very often advanced in courts based upon the robbery
being committed in the premises and that committed on the
way to a bank, Haslain J. observed
(1) Rich J. in Commissioner of Taxation (N.S.W.) v. Ash
(1938) 61 C.L.R. 263 at 277.
(2) [1961] N.Z.L.R. 467,470.
349
.lm15
I can see no valid distinction to be drawn in principle
between the robbery of trade receipts on the appellant’s
premises at an hour before banking was possible (but
intended to be banked at a time when the banks were open)
and the robbery of the same money when in the custody of the
employee on the way to the bank. In my opinion, the
occasion for the loss of the present appellant was the
operation of its business in the normal way, with the result
that the cash stolen was on the premises at that particular
time and that the possibility of such plunder constituted an
attraction to a certain type of criminal, including both the
safe-blower and the armed burglar."
The present case is a stronger one, for the money was kept
in the Bank as it was absolutely necessary to carry on the
operation of the banking business.
We may now summarize the legal position thus. Under s. 1O
(I ) of the Act the trading loss of a business is deductible
for computing the profit earned by the business. But every
loss is not so deductible unless it is incurred in carrying
out the operation of the business and is incidental to the
operation. Whether loss is incidental to the operation of a
business is a question of fact to be decided on the facts of
each case, having regard to the nature of the operations
carried on and the nature of the risk involved in carrying
them out. The degree of the risk or its frequency is not of
much relevance but its nexus to the nature of the business
is material.
In the present case the respondent was carrying on the busi-
ness of banking. It is an integral part of the process of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 9
banking that sufficient moneys should be kept in the bank
duly guarded to meet the demands of the constituents. The
retention of the money in the bank is a part of the
operation of banking. The retention of money in the bank
premises carries with it the ordinary risk of its being
subject of embezzlement, theft, dacoity or destruction by
fire and such other things. Such risk of loss is incidental
to the carrying on of the operations of the business of
banking. In this view, we are clearly of the opinion that
the loss incurred by dacoity in the present case is
incidental to the carrying on of the business of banking.
In the result, the order of the High Court is correct and
the appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.
350