Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX,MEERUT, ETC. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
M/S VIRMANI INDUSTRIES PRIVATE LIMITED, ETC. ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT12/10/1995
BENCH:
JEEVAN REDDY, B.P. (J)
BENCH:
JEEVAN REDDY, B.P. (J)
MAJMUDAR S.B. (J)
CITATION:
1995 SCC (6) 466 JT 1995 (7) 322
1995 SCALE (5)718
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
B.P. JEEVAN REDDY, J.
A common question arises in these three appeals. It
relates to the meaning and interpretation of sub-section (2)
of Section 32 of the Income-Tax Act. I would be enough if we
state the facts in Civil Appeal No.1052 of 1976.
The respondent-assessee, Virmani Industries Private
Limited, was engaged in the manufacture of soap and oil
during the previous year relevant to the Assessment Year
1956-57. The business was stopped in that year whereafter
the factory was let out on hire. Ten years later, i.e., in
the previous year relevant to Assessment Year 1965-66, the
assessee started the business of manufacture of steel pipes.
For the purpose of this business a part of the old machinery
used i the manufacture of soap and oil was utilised.
In the assessment proceedings relating to Assessment
Year 1956-57, depreciation under Section 32(1) (ii) was
found to be more than the profits and gains of the assessee
for that assessment year. In the assessment proceedings
relating to Assessment Year 1965-66, the assessee claimed
that the unabsorbed depreciation, to the extent it pertained
to the old machinery utilised in the new business, should be
brought forward and set off against the profits of the new
business. This claim was rejected by the Income Tax Officer
and by the Appellate Assistant Commissioner on the ground
that such a set off is permissible only where the business
carried on in the subsequent assessment year is the same
business which was carried on in the earlier assessment
year. The Income Tax Appellate Tribunal, however, disagreed
with the said view and upheld the assessee’s. At the request
of the Revenue, the Tribunal referred the following question
to the Allahabad High Court under Section 256(1) of the
Income-Tax Act, 1961:
"Whether on the facts and in the
circumstances of the case the unabsorbed
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depreciation in respect of a part of the
machinery used in the soap and oil
manufacturing business which was again
used for the new business of manufacture
of steel pipes should be allowed to be
set off against the profits of the new
business of manufacture of steel pipes
carried on by the assessee in the
accounting period relevant to the
assessment year 1965-66 ?".
The High Court answered the question in the
affirmative, i.e., in favour of the assessee. The High Court
understood Section 32(2) to mean:
1. in computing the net income from the business,
deduction is to be allowed on account of depreciation of
buildings, plants and machinery, etc. used in the business
at the prescribed rate. If such depreciation allowance
cannot be completely absorbed by the "profits and gains
chargeable to tax" - which expression includes profits and
gains arising not only under the head "business" but also
under other heads - Then the unabsorbed depreciation is
treated to be the depreciation allowance for the next year
and so on until it is completely wiped out.
2. there is a distinction between business loss and
unabsorbed depreciation. The limitations applicable to
carrying forward of unabsorbed depreciation. In other words,
it is not necessary that the same business should be
continued in the following assessment year nor is it
necessary that the machinery which earned the depreciation
in the previous year should also be used for the purpose of
the business in the following year. All that is necessary is
that the assessee must carry on some business in the
succeeding year in which the set off of the unabsorbed
depreciation is claimed. If there is no business, there can
be no depreciation allowance but it does not follow that the
business in the succeeding year should have some depreciable
assets. Even if there are no depreciable assets, yet the
unabsorbed depreciation of the previous year has to be
carried forward and deemed to be the depreciation allowance
for the succeeding year. Similarly there is no limitation
that the unabsorbed depreciation can be carried forward only
for eight years.
In view of the above understanding of Section 32(2),
the High Court held that the assessee was entitled to set
off the unabsorbed depreciation allowance relating to the
assessment Year 1956-57 against the income of the Assessment
Year 1965-66. The High Court disagreed with the view taken
by the Bombay High Court in Sahu Rubber Private Limited v.
Commissioner of Income-tax [(1963) 48 I.T.R.464]. It was of
the opinion that the view taken by it is supported by the
decision of this Court in Commissioner of Income-tax v.
Jaipuria China Clay Mines (P) Limited {(1966) 59 I.T.R.555].
While it is not necessary to state the facts in Civil
Appeal No.2849 of 1977, it is sufficient to state that in
this decision the Bombay High Court followed the decision of
the Allahabad High Court in Commissioner of Income Tax v.
Virmani Industries (P) Ltd. [(1974) 97 I.T.R. 461]. It
distinguished its earlier decision in Sahu Rubbers Private
Limited as one rendered with reference to the proviso to
Section 10(2) (vi) of the Indian Income-Tax Act, 1922. The
Court held that though the said proviso corresponds to
Section 32(2) of the present Act, even so the fact that it
was only a proviso, and not a substantive provision, did
colour the decision in Sahu Rubber Private Limited. The
Court pointed out that under the present Act Section 32(2)
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is an independent and a substantive provision.
It is brought to our notice by Dr. Gauri Shankar,
learned counsel for the appellant-Revenue that there has
been a divergence of opinion among the High Courts in the
country as to the meaning and interpretation of Section
32(2). He referred to the decision of the Madras High Court
in East Asiatic Company Private Limited v. Commissioner of
Income-Tax [(1986) 161 I.T.R. 135] taking the view that for
claiming the benefit of Section 32(2), it has to be
established that the assessee was carrying on the same
business as in the previous year and that if the business is
not in existence in the following year, the unabsorbed
depreciation of the previous year cannot be adjusted in such
following year. It accepted the decision of the Bombay High
Court in Sahu Rubber Limited as laying down the correct law
and disagreed with the basis and reasoning on which the said
decision was distinguished in the later decision of that
Court in Commissioner of Income Tax v. Estate and Finance
Limited [(1978) 111 I.T.R. 119]. Dr Gauri Shankar brought to
our notice that Madras High Court had indeed taken the said
view even earlier in Commissioner of Income Tax v. Dutt’s
Trust, Calicut [(1942) 10 I.T.R. 477] and Tube Suppliers
Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income Tax [(1985) 152 I.T.R. 694].
Counsel further pointed out that in yet another decision of
the Bombay High Court in Hindustan Chemical Works Ltd. v.
Commissioner of Income Tax [(1980) 124 I.T.R. 561], a
similar view has been expressed. Dr. Gauri Shankar has
fairly brought to our notice that besides the Allahabad High
Court in Virmani and the Bombay High Court in Estate and
Finance Limited, the Calcutta High Court in Commissioner of
Income Tax v. Kishanlal and sons (Udyog) Pvt. Ltd. {(1985)
154 I.T.R. 735], Andhra Pradesh High Court in Hyderabad
Construction Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income Tax [(1981)
129 I.T.R. 81] and Karnataka High Court in Additional
Commissioner of Income Tax v. Kapila Textiles (P) Ltd.
[(1981) 129 I.T.R. 458) have taken a view similar to the one
taken by the Allahabad High Court in Virmani.
The provision in Section 10(2) (vi) of the Indian
Income Tax Act, 1922 owes its origin to the U.K. Income Tax
Act, which was prior to its consolidation in 1952,
administered through the provisions made in the Annual
Finance Acts. The Finance Act of 1918, read with some
changes made in 1925, dealt with this specific provision.
This provision (which appeared later as Section 323(2) of
the U.K. Income Tax Act, 1952) was as follows:
"Where full effect cannot be given to
any such allowance as aforesaid in any
year owing to there being no profits or
gains chargeable for that year, or owing
to the profits or gains chargeable being
less than the allowance, the allowance
or part of the allowance to which effect
has not been given, as the case may be,
shall, for the purpose of making the
assessment for the following year, be
added to the amount of such allowances,
or, if there are no such allowances for
that year, be deemed to be the
allowances for that year, and so on for
succeeding years."
This provision was adopted almost verbatim in the
Indian Income Tax Act, 1922. As in the U.K. Act, the Indian
Act also did not place any limit regarding the number of
years upto which unabsorbed depreciation could be claimed
for set off.
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In 1936, an Income Tax Inquiry Committee, headed by
J.B. Vacha, looked into the provision and made
recommendation that as the allowance for depreciation is on
account of loss in the value of land and machinery, such
loss should only be regarded as an expense of the year in
which it occurred and, therefore, depreciation should be
allowed each year as expense in determining profit or loss
of the year along with the other items of expenditure, as
for instance, rent, insurance charges, etc. and the
resultant loss, if any, should be carried forward and dealt
with in the general section on carry forward. The Committee
recommended that the special provision for carry forward of
depreciation without limit of time should be abolished. This
recommendation along with some others, was incorporated in
this Bill introduced in the Assembly, but the Select
Committee did not approve of the recommendation and retained
the original clause as it stood, thus placing the carry
forward of depreciation on a different footing from carry
forward of loss. [See Para 454 of the Indian Income Tax Act,
Vol.II by A.C. Sampath Iyengar, IVth Edn., 1952].
The provision in the Income Tax Act, 1922 remained
unamended till 1961. The provision as it stood in 1937 was
as follows:
"Where full effect cannot be given to
any such allowance in any year owing to
there being no profits or gains
chargeable for that year, or owing to
the profits or gains chargeable being
less than the allowance, the allowance
or part of the allowance to which effect
has not been given, as the case may be,
shall be added to the amount of the
allowance for depreciation for the
following year and deemed to be part of
that allowance, or, if there is no such
allowance for that year, be deemed to be
the allowance for that year, and so on
for succeeding years."
The above provision was enacted in the 1961 Act as
Section 32(2). The additional word "previous" after the word
"following" is the result of a drafting change suggested by
the XIIth Report of the Law Commission, which gave the draft
for a new enactment of the Income Tax law. [This draft Bill
given by the Law Commission was the basis of the Income Tax
Act, 1961].
Let us now turn to Section 32(2) and also note certain
other relevant provisions. Section 32(1) of the Income-Tax
Act provides for depreciation on buildings, machinery,
plant, etc. owned by the assessee and used for the purpose
of the business or profession. The rates of depreciation
vary. Sub-section (2) of Section 32, as it stood at the
relevant time, read thus:
"32(2) where, in the assessment of the
assessee or, if the assessee is a
registered firm (or an unregistered firm
assessed as a registered firm, in the
assessment of its partners) full effect
cannot be given to any allowance under
clause (i) or clause (ii) or clause (iv)
or clause (v) or sub-section (1) in any
previous year owing to there being no
profits or gains chargeable for that
previous year, or owing to the profits
or gains chargeable being less than the
allowance then, subject to the
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provisions of sub-section (2) of section
72 and sub-section (3) of section 73,
the allowance or part of the allowance
to which effect has not been given as
the case may be, shall be added to the
amount of the allowance for depreciation
for the following previous year and
deemed to be part of that allowance, or
if there is no such allowance for that
previous year, be deemed to be the
allowance for that previous year, and so
on for the succeeding previous years."
(Emphasis added)
Section 57 provides for deductions out of income from
other sources chargeable under Section 56. One of the
deductions provided by Clause (ii) of Section 57 is the
depreciation provided by sub-section (1) as well as sub-
section (2) of Section 32.
Inasmuch as Section 32(2) refers to sub-section (2) of
Section 72 and sub-section (3) of Section 73, it would be
appropriate to reproduce the said provisions. Sub-section
(2) of Section 72 says:
"(2) Where any allowance or part thereof
is, under sub-section (2) of section 32
or sub-section (4) of section 35, to be
carried forward, effect shall first be
given to the provisions of this
section."
(One of the reasons for providing this preference in
favour of business loss may be the time-limit of eight years
applicable thereto besides the other limitation that for
availing of the said benefit, the business carried on in the
subsequent year should be the same business as was carried
on in the preceding year.)
Sub-section (3) of Section 73 reads:
"(3) In respect of allowance on account
of depreciation or capital expenditure
on scientific research, the provisions
of sub-section (2) of section 72 shall
apply in relation to speculation
business as they apply in relation to
any other business."
We may first consider the meaning of the expression
"profits or gains chargeable". On first impression, the said
expression appears to refer only to profits or gains of
business or profession chargeable under Section 28. But this
court has repeatedly held that the said expression is not so
confined and that it refers to income under all the heads of
income specified in Section 14. In Jaipuria China Clay Mines
(P) Limited, the facts were these: the total income of the
respondent-assessee for the Assessment Year 1952-53 before
charging depreciation was Rs.14,041/-. After deducting
depreciation of Rs.5,360/-, the Income Tax Officer computed
the profit at Rs.8,681/-. Against this profit, he set off
the losses of an earlier year. Having done this, the Income
Tax Officer computed the income of the assessee from
dividends at Rs.2,01,130/- and levied tax on it. The
assessee claimed that the unabsorbed depreciation
aggregating to Rs.76,857/- should be deducted from the
dividend and if it is so done, the total income would get
reduced to Rs.1,32,955/-. The Income Tax Officer rejected
the claim. When the matter was ultimately carried to this
Court, it took note of the opening words of sub-section,
viz., "where, in the assessment of the assessee or if the
assessee is a registered firm, in the assessment of its
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partners, full effect cannot be given to any such
allowance....." and held on that basis that the expression
"profits or gains chargeable" in the said sub-section is not
confined to profits and gains from business or profession
but takes within its ambit all heads of income. This Court
was of the opinion that while amending Section 10(2) (vi) of
the Indian Income Tax Act, 1922 by the Amendment Act 25 of
1953, the Parliament has accepted the interpretation placed
upon the said expression by several High Courts to the above
effect. It referred to the decisions of Lahore High Court in
Karam Ilahi Mohammad Shafi v. Commissioner of Income Tax
[(1929) 3 I.T.C. 456], Madras High Court in A. Suppan
Chettiar & Co. v. Commissioner of Income Tax [(1929) 4
I.T.C. 211], East Punjab High Court in Laxmichand Jaipuria
Spg. & Wvg. Mills. In re. [(1950) 18 I.T.R. 919] and Bombay
High Court in Ambika Silk Mills Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of
Income Tax [(1952) 22 I.T.R. 58] besides the judgment of the
Judicial Commissioner, Nagpur in Ballarpur Collieries v.
Commissioner of Income Tax [(1929) 4 I.T.C. 255]
interpreting the said expression as covering all heads of
income. The Court further pointed out that even after the
said amendment, the Bombay and Gujarat High Courts have
taken the same view in Commissioner of Income Tax v. Ravi
Industries Ltd. [(1963) 49 I.T.R. 145] and Commissioner of
Income Tax v. Girdharlal Harivallabhadas Mills Company
Limited [(1064) 51 I.T.R. 693] respectively. The contrary
view taken by the Madras High Court in Commissioner of
Income Tax v. B. Nagi Reddy [(1964) 51 I.T.R. 178] was
disapproved. The court then observed:
"Bearing these two considerations in
mind, if one looks at the language of
proviso (b) to section 10(2) (v), the
first question that arises is: What is
the meaning of the expression "in the
assessment of the assessee or if the
assessee is a registered firm, in the
assessment of the partners, full effect
cannot be given to any such allowance in
any year?" Taking the case of the
partners of a registered firm, the
assessment must be their individual
assessment, i.e, assessments in which
the profits from the firm and other
sources are pooled together. The
legislature is clearly assuming that
effect can be given to depreciation
allowance in the assessment of a
partner; the only way effect can be
given in the assessment of a partner is
by setting it of against income, profits
and gains under other heads. The learned
counsel for the revenue tried to meet
this inference by suggesting that what
the legislature contemplated was an
assessment of those partners who were
carrying on other business. But in our
opinion this suggestion is unsound. What
would happen if a partnership consists
of four partners, two carrying on other
business, Mr. Sastri was unable to
explain. Now, if this is the inference
to be drawn from these words, it is
quite clear that the words "no profits
or gains chargeable for that year" are
not confined to profits and gains
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derived from the business whose income
is being computed under section 10."
To the same effect is the decision in Rajapalayam Mills
Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income Tax. Madras [(1978) 115
I.T.R. 777]. The Court observed that when the profits or
gains of a business for a particular assessment year are to
be computed under Section 10 (of 1922 Act), the current
depreciation allowance for the assessment year in question
is deductible under clause (vi) of Section 10(2), but the
depreciation allowance of the preceding years would be
liable to be taken into account only if, and to the extent
to which, it is not absorbed by the total income of the
assessee computed under different heads and chargeable to
tax for those assessment years. The Court observed:
"Now, it is well settled, as a result of
the decision of this court in CIT v.
Jaipuria China Clay Mines (P) Ltd.,
[1966] 59 ITR 555 (SC), that the words
‘no profits or gains chargeable for that
year’ are not confined to profits and
gains derived from the business whose
income is being computed under s.10, but
they refer to the totality of the
profits or gains computed under the
various heads and chargeable to tax."
and added:
"It is, therefore, clear that effect
must be given to depreciation allowance
first against the profits or gains of
the particular business whose income is
being computed under s.10 and if the
profits of that business are not
sufficient to absorb the depreciation
allowance, the allowance to the extent
to which it is not absorbed would be set
off against the profits of any other
business and if a part of the
depreciation allowance still remains
unabsorbed, it would be liable to be set
off against the profits or gains
chargeable under any other head and it
is only if some part of the depreciation
allowance still remains unabsorbed that
it can be carried forward to the next
assessment year..... But where any part
of the depreciation allowance remains
unabsorbed after being set off against
the total income chargeable to tax, it
can be carried forward under prov. (b)
to cl. (vi) to the following year and
set off against the year’s income and so
on for succeeding years. The method
adopted by the statute for achieving
this result is that the carried forward
depreciation allowance is deemed to be
part of and stands on exactly the same
footing as the current depreciation for
the assessment year and is thus
allowable as a deduction under cl.(vi)."
Both these decisions are rendered by a Bench of three
learned Judges and are binding upon us.
The next question is whether for availing the benefit
of Section 32(2), is it necessary that the business carried
on in "the following previous year" should be the same
business as was carried on in the preceding previous year as
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has been held by the Madras High Court in East Asiatic
Company Private Limited. We are of the opinion that in the
absence of any words to that effect, no such requirement
ought to be read into the said sub-section. A look at
Section 72 shows that where the Parliament intended to
provide such a limitation, it did so expressly. Section 72
deals with carry-forward and set off of business loss. The
proviso to clause (1) of sub-section (1) of Section 72
expressly provides that such a course is permissible only
where "the business or profession for which the loss was
originally computed continued to be carried on by him in the
previous year relevant for that assessment year". In the
absence of any words to that effect, it must be held that
for availing the benefit of Section 32(2), it is not
necessary that the business carried on in the following year
is the same business as was carried on in the previous year.
The other question is whether the assets which earned
the depreciation in the preceding year should exist and
should continue to be used for the purpose of business in
the following year. In the absence of any words in the said
sub-section to that effect, we cannot read this requirement
also into the said sub-section. This is evident from the
words "or if there is no such allowance for that previous
year, be deemed to be the allowance for the previous year"
occurring in the sub-section.
Yet another question which has to be answered before we
can answer the question concerned in this appeal is whether
it is necessary that in the following year the assessee must
carry on business, i.e., some or other business, to avail of
the benefit of the said sub-section? Two views are possible
in this behalf, viz., (1) since the sub-section speaks of
unabsorbed depreciation being carried forward to the next
year and "added to the amount of the allowance for
depreciation for the following previous year and deemed to
be part of that allowance" the sub-section necessarily
contemplates existence of a business in the following year
and (2) inasmuch as the sub-section not only speaks of
adding the unabsorbed depreciation to the depreciation
allowance allowed in the following year but also says that
in the absence of such allowance, the carried forward
depreciation allowance shall be the allowance for that year,
it means that in the following year the assessee need not
carry on any business or profession for availing the benefit
of sub-section (2) of Section 32. We are inclined to adopt
the second of the above two views having regard to the
decisions of this Court in Jaipuria China Clay Mines (P)
Limited and Rajapalayam Mills Limited. We have extracted the
relevant observations from both the judgments hereinabove,
which say that the unabsorbed depreciation allowance has not
only to be set off against other heads of income in the
relevant previous year but where it is carried forward, it
"stands on exactly the same footing as the current
depreciation".
Now, coming back to the facts of this case, the
assessee had carried on a business in the accounting year
relevant to the Assessment Year 1956-57. Then there was a
gap of about eight years whereafter he started a new
business in the accounting year relevant to the Assessment
Year 1965-66. In the intervening years, he was in receipt of
income from property only. The assessee did not claim that
the unabsorbed depreciation relating to the Assessment Year
1956-57 should be set off against the property income in the
said intervening years. He made such a claim only when he
commenced another business in the accounting year relevant
to the Assessment Year 1965-66, i.e., in the assessment
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proceedings relating to Assessment Year 1965-66. Probably,
the assessee was under the impression that he was not
entitled to set off the unabsorbed depreciation until and
unless he had income from business in the following year.
(He seems to have been under yet another impression, viz.,
not only should he have business income in the following
year to claim the benefit of Section 32(2) but also that the
very same assets should also be used for the business in the
following year. This is evident from the fact that his claim
for setting off the unabsorbed depreciation allowance was
confined to the extent it pertained to the old machinery
utilised in the new business.) In the light of the
interpretation of sub-section (2) of Section 32 affirmed by
us in this judgment, however, what should have been done is
this: the unabsorbed depreciation allowance relating to the
Assessment Year 1956-57 should have been set off against the
income (income from property) in the following year, i.e.,
in the following previous year (relevant to assessment Year
1957-58) and if the income in that year was not sufficient
to absorb the entire depreciation allowance so carried
forward, it had to be carried forward to the next following
year and so on. Only if some depreciation allowance still
remained to be absorbed, it could have been set off against
the total income for the Assessment Year 1965-66.
It is true that the question which was referred to the
Tribunal under Section 256(1) of the Income Tax Act merely
raises the question whether the unabsorbed depreciation
pertaining to the Assessment Year 1956-57 can be carried
forward and set off against the income for the accounting
year relevant to the Assessment Year 1965-66, yet we thought
it necessary to clarify the true position of law. We answer
the aforesaid question in the following words:
If after setting off the unabsorbed depreciation
allowance relating to the Assessment Year 1956-57 against
the income for the following assessment years, any
depreciation allowance still remained unabsorbed it could
have been set off against the income for the accounting
period relevant to the Assessment Year 1965-66.
In the light of the views expressed by us hereinabove,
it is not necessary to go into the question raised by Dr.
Gauri Shankar, learned counsel for the Revenue with respect
to the meaning of the words "the following previous year".
The contention of the learned counsel was that the said
expression means literally what it says and it does not mean
any following previous year. His submission was that if the
chain of setting off snaps for the reason that there is no
income in any of the following years, it snaps once for all
and that the process of setting off cannot be restarted.
For the above reasons, Civil Appeal No. 1052 of 1976 is
disposed of in the above terms and the question referred by
the Tribunal under Section 256(1) of the Income Tax Act,
1961 is answered in the terms aforesaid. No costs.
The question referred to the High Court in Civil Appeal
No. 2840 of 1977 runs thus:
"Whether on a proper interpretation of
sections 56, 57(ii) and 32(2) of the
Income-Tax Act, 1961, the unabsorbed
depreciation of Rs.70,700/- brought
forward since 1952-53 could be set off
against the business income assessed in
the assessment year 1963-64 when the
source in respect of which the
depreciation was computed has ceased to
exist"?
Since the facts of this appeal are rather involved and
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we did not have the assistance of the counsel for the
assessee (the assessee remained unrepresented), we think it
appropriate to remand the matter to the High Court for
disposal afresh in accordance with law and this judgment.
This appeal is allowed accordingly. No costs.
CIVIL APPEAL NO.7372 OF 1995:
The High Court has refused to answer the reference,
made at the instance of the Revenue, on the ground that the
Revenue has failed to file the paper-book inspite of a
period of ten years having elapsed since the reference. At
the same time, the Court noted the submission of the learned
counsel for the Revenue that the question referred herein is
concluded by the decision of the said Court (Bombay High
Court) in Estate and Finance Limited. In view of our
judgment in Estate and Finance Limited, we allow this appeal
also and remit the same to the High Court with a request to
dispose it of according to law and in the light of this
judgment. No costs.