Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
METTUR CHEMICAL AND INDUSTRIAL CORPORATION LIMITED
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TEX, MADRAS-1
DATE OF JUDGMENT16/11/1995
BENCH:
KIRPAL B.N. (J)
BENCH:
KIRPAL B.N. (J)
JEEVAN REDDY, B.P. (J)
CITATION:
1995 SCC Supl. (4) 732 1995 SCALE (6)468
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
KIRPAL. J.
This is an appeal by way of special leave having been
granted against the judgment of the Madras High Court which
had answered the three questions of law referred to it by
Income Tax Tribunal under Section 256(1) of the Income Tax
Act, 1961 (hereinafter referred to as ‘the Act’) in favour
of the respondent.
The facts as found by the Tribunal are that the
appellant was manufacturing coustic soda utilising billiter
cells and up to the year 1956, its production capacity was
13.5 tons per day. The appellant felt the need to expand its
capacity and obtained a licence which permitted it to
manufacture 20 tons of caustic soda per day.
In order to increase the capacity, the appellant
gradually replaced billiter cells with hooker cells. Thirty
hooker cells were installed by 31.3.1957 and thirty more
were installed in February, 1958. The installation of the
hooker cells required a change over in the power system and
the installation of a rectifier was completed only in the
year ended 31.3.1959. However, the hooker cells were
utilised for the production as and when they were installed
by a suitable adjustment in the power system even before the
rectifier was installed. The position, thus, was that the
production for the year 31.3.1957 included certain
production attributable to the use of thirty hooker cells.
All the sixty hookers cells were installed by the end of
1958 and the installation of the unit together with the
rectifier was also completed in the year ended 31.3.1959. It
was clear that the capacity of the unit gradually increased
from the stage of the installation of the hooker cells,
though full capacity was reached only with the installation
of all the hooker cells.
Claim was made by the appellant before Income Tax
Officer to the effect that it was entitled to the relief
under Section 84 of the Act in respect of assessment year
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1962-63 on the ground that such relief is admissible for
five assessment years starting from the year in which the
industrial undertaking begins to manufacture or produce
articles. The contention of the appellant was that it had
not claimed any relief in respect of assessment year 1957-
58, when thirty of the sixty hooker cells had been installed
and, therefore, the period of five years should commence
only with effect from the year 1958-59 by which time the
installation of the sixty hooker cells, as well as the
rectifier, had been completed. In the alternative, it was
also contended that the appellant was entitled to relief
atleast in relation to production of the thirty hooker cells
which were installed for the first time in the assessment
year 1958-59, as the fifth year for these hooker cells from
the commencement of the production is the assessment year
1962-63.
The claim had been disallowed by the Income Tax Officer
and in appeal by the Appellate Assistant Commissioner. The
Income Tax Tribunal, on the further appeal, rejected the
claim of the appellant by holding that though the industrial
unit ultimately consisted of sixty hooker cells and the
rectifier but it had commenced commercial production in the
year ended 31.3.1957 and, therefore, the five years had to
be reckoned from the year 1957-58 and not 1953-59.
Another contention which was raised before the Revenue
Authorities and the Tribunal was with regard to the
deduction of development rebate, which was allowable in
respect of a new industrial undertaking in computing the
profits and gains for the purpose of relief under Section 84
of the Act. In respect of assessment year 1962-63, the
profits and gains from the new industrial unit had been
computed at Rs. 1,08,282 before adjustment for development
rebate. The total amount of development rebate had been
determined at Rs.13,69,487/-. Adjusting the development
rebate towards this profit of Rs. 1,08,282/-, the Income Tax
Officer and the Appellate Assistant Commissioner held that
there was no income from the new industrial undertaking on
which relief was admissible under Section 84(1) of the said
Act. The contention of appellant was that in arriving at the
business income of industrial undertaking on which the
relief under Section 84(1) of the Act was admissible, the
development rebate was not to be deducted. This claim was
not accepted by the Appellate Tribunal. It came to the
conclusion that on the correct interpretation of Section 84
of the Act, the relief under the said provision was
allowable only in case where there was a positive income of
the industrial undertaking after the allowance of
development rebate.
On an application being filed by the appellant, the
Tribunal referred the following three questions of law to
the High Court:
"(1) Whether the first year in which the
assessee was entitled to relief in
respect of the new industrial
undertaking was the assessment year
1957-58 and whether the assessee was
entitled to relief in respect of the
assessment for 1962-63 under Section 84
?
(2) "Even if the assessee is not
entitled to the full relief in respect
of 60 hooker cells claimed in respect of
the assessment for 1962-63 whether it is
entitled to relief in respect of the
thirty hooker cells completed during the
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previous year for 1958-59 ?
(3) "Whether development rebate in
respect of the new industrial
undertaking established during the
previous year for 1962-63 should be
deducted in computing the profits and
gains for the purpose of section 84 and
whether the assessee is entitled to any
relief under the assessee is entitled to
any relief under that section in respect
of this undertaking ?"
The High Court agreeing with the Tribunal, answered the
aforesaid questions of law in favour of the respondent. On
leave to appeal being refused, this Court granted special
leave to appeal. Hence, this appeal.
Taking the first two questions together, it was
contended by Shri Ramachandran, learned counsel for the
appellant, that the new industrial undertaking was entitled
to the benefit of the provisions of Section 84 of the Act
corresponding to Section 15(c) of the Income Tax Act, 1922
in the year 1962-63 because the new industrial undertaking
consisted of sixty hooker cells and rectifier and the same
were installed only in the year 1958-59. It was also
contended that in respect of the year 1957-58, no claim was
made under the said provision because the assessee had by
then not completed the installation.
According to Section 84 of the Act, income tax is not
payable by an assessee on so much of the profits and gains,
inter alia, derived from any industrial undertaking to which
the Section applies, as does not exceed 6% per annum on the
capital employed in such undertaking. Sub-section (2) of
Section 84 provides the conditions which should be specified
so as to enable the assessee to enjoy the benefit of the
said provision. It is not in dispute that these conditions
are satisfied but what we are concerned in this case is with
regard to the applicability of sub-section (7) of Section 84
of the Act which reads as follows:
"The provisions of this section shall,
in relation to an industrial
undertaking, apply to the assessment--
(i) for the assessment year relevant to
the previous year in which the
undertaking begins to manufacture or
produce articles or, as the case may be,
operate the cold storage plant or
plants, and
(ii) where the assesee is a co-operative
society, for the six assessment years
immediately succeeding, and where the
assessee is any other person, for the
four assessment years immediately
succeeding."
It is found as a fact that the appellant had begun to
manufacture or produce articles in the previous year ended
on 31.3.1957 with the help of thirty hooker cells. It is
true that rectifier had not been installed in the year 1957-
58 but it not in dispute that with suitable adjustment being
made to the power system, the thirty hooker cells which had
been installed were utilised. The use of these new hooker
cells had resulted in the capacity of the unit gradually
increasing and the production so made was not experimental
but was commercial. This being so, the appellant’s
undertaking must be regarded as having been newly
established when it had begun to manufacture or produce
articles by 31.3.1957. As 1957-58 was the first assessment
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year in which the relief under Section 15(C) of the Income
Tax Act, 1922 corresponding to Section 84 of the Act could
have been claimed, the four succeeding years would end by
1961-62 with the result that the appellant would not be
entitled to any relief in the year 1962-63 which was rightly
regarded as the sixth assessment year. In answer to question
No. 1, the High Court, therefore, rightly come to the
conclusion that the first year in which the relief could be
claimed was the assessment year 1957-58.
As regards question No. 2 is concerned, it was
alternatively submitted that thirty hooker cells and the
rectifier were installed in the year 1958-59 and, therefore,
benefit under Section 84 of the Act with regard to these
thirty hooker cells should be available in the year 1962-63.
This is a case where the manufacturing capacity of the
appellant was increased on a licence being granted from 13.5
tons per day to 20 tons per day. In other words, these
hooker cells were installed and the billiter cells were
gradually replaced. The new industrial undertaking came into
existence when the initial lot of thirty hooker cells were
installed in the year 1957-58 which had resulted in enhanced
commercial production. The Tribunal and the High Court, in
our opinion, rightly came to the conclusion that the
undertaking could function with thirty hooker cells in the
year 1957-58 and further numbers were added in the
subsequent year. The undertaking having, thus, started the
commercial manufacture in the year 1957-58 could not claim
the benefit of provisions of Section 84 of the Act because
the unit as such had commenced in the year 1957-58
notwithstanding the fact that there had been an expansion
thereto in the subsequent year. There was no scope for
allowing a partial relief or splitting up of the relief as
and when fresh cells came to the added. The question No. 2,
therefore, was thus rightly answered in the negative and in
favour of the revenue.
Coming to the third question, the relevant fact as
already stated is that the profit with reference to the
additional unit of sixty hooker cells which was called
caustic soda plant No. 2 was worked out by the appellant at
Rs. 1,08,282/- before allowing the allowing the development
rebate. The development rebate pertaining to this second
plant came to Rs. 12,15,055/-. If the development rebate was
adjusted against the sum of Rs. 1,08,282/- then the net
result would be a loss of Rs. 11,06,773/-. There would, thus
be no profit which would be eligible for the relief under
Section 84 of Act. In order to avail of this relief, the
submission of the appellant is that the development rebate
should not be deducted in arriving at the business income
because it had no bearing on the business profits of the
industrial undertaking.
In view of the decision of this Court in the case of
Cambay Electric Supply Industrial Co. Ltd. Vs. Commissioner
of Income-tax, Gujarat-II, 113 ITR 84, this question is no
longer res integra. Dealing with a similar provision i.e.80
E of the Act prior to its amendment by the Finance (No. 2)
Act, 1967, this Court came to the conclusion that in
computing the profits of the assessee for the purpose of the
special deduction provided under Section 80 E, items of
unabsorbed depreciation and unabsorbed development rebate,
carried forward from earlier years, will have to be deducted
before arriving at the figure from which the 8% contemplated
by Section 80E is to be deducted.
In an effort to distinguish the aforesaid decision, it
was submitted by Mr. Ramachandran that under Section 33(2)
of the Act, development rebate is deducted from the total
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income of an assessee and it is not a component or a
ingredient for determining profits and gains. In other
words, in Computing the profits and gains under Section
84(5) of the Act, there must first be a deduction under
Section 84(1) of the Act of 6% per annum an the capital
employed on the caustic soda plant No. 2 and it is only
thereafter the development rebate should be deducted from
the total income. In support thereof, reliance was placed on
the judgment of the Punjab & Haryana High Court in
Commissioner of Income-tax, Patiala-I Vs. Patiala Flour
Mills Co. P. Ltd., 127 ITR 301. As already observed in
Cambay Electric Supply Industrial Company"s case (supra)
while interpreting a provision similar to Section 84(5) of
the Act, this Court has held that the profits and gains from
an industrial undertaking to which Section applies, have to
be computed in accordance with the provisions contained in
Chapter IV(d) of the Act and development rebate has first to
be deducted from the total income and it is only thereafter,
if any profits and gains remain from this business, that the
benefit under Section 84(1) of the Act would be applicable.
It appears that the aforesaid decision of this Court in
Cambay Electric Supply Industrial Company’s case (supra) was
not brought to the notice of Punjab & Haryana High Court in
the aforesaid case of Patiala Flour Mills case (supra). It
is clear that the decision of Patiala Flour Mills case
(supra) is no longer a good law. We, accordingly, hold that
the third question of law was also rightly answered in
favour of the Revenue.
For the aforesaid reasons, this appeal is dismissed,
but in the circumstances, parties are left to bear their won
costs.