Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX,MADRAS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
URMILA RAMESH ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 04/02/1997
BENCH:
B.P. JEEVAN REDDY, K.S. PARIPOORNAN
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
THE 4TH DAY OF FEBRUARY, 1997
Present:
Hon’ble Mr.Justice B.P.Jeevan Reddy
Hon’ble Mr.Justice K.S.Paripoornan
Dr.V.Gaurishankar, Sr.Adv., S.Rajappa and B.K.Prasad, Advs.
with him for the appellant
T.A. Ramachandran, Sr. Adv, and A.T.M. Sampath, Adv. with
him for the Respondent in C.A.No.2150-52/82
J.Ramamurthy, Sr.Adv. Ms.Janki Ramachandran, Adv.with
him for the Respondent in C.A.No.3274/84
O R D E R
The following order of the Court was delivered:
WITH
CIVIL APPEAL NOS. 2144-46/82, 2147-49/82, 2150-52/82,
2153-55/82, 4204/82 AND 3274/84.
O R D E R
In this batch of cases, the following two questions of
law arise for consideration:
(i) Whether, On the facts and in the Circumstances of the
case, the Appellate Tribunal was justified in
confirming the deletion of the income assessed as
deemed dividends under the Provisions of s. 2(22)(c) in
the assessees’ case?
(ii) Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances of the
case, the Appellate Tribunal was right in law in
holding that the sum of Rs.7,28,760 representing
profits assessed under section 41(2) in the preceding
years cannot form part of the accumulated profits for
the purpose of section 2(22)(c) of the Income-tax Act,
196?
2. The Revenue has preferred the appeals from the common
judgment rendered by the High Court of Madras dated 9.3.1979
reported as Commissioner of Income-tax.
Tamil Nadu I v. T.S. Rajam [(1980) 125 ITR 207].
3. We heard counsel at some length. The main facts are not
in dispute. The respondents ate assessees under the Income-
tax Act. They were shareholders of a company Known as
"Tinnevelly Motor Service Company Private Ltd.". The company
carried on transport business. Government took over all the
Vehicles owned by the company. The company went into
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liquidation. The Liquidator distributed the dividends from
time to time. Assessments were made for the years 1970-71,
1971-72 and 1972-73. The Income-tax officer assessed a sum
of Rs.7,28,760/-, as representing profits on sale of
company’s capital assets, which had been subjected to
depreciation and not trading or business profits, and the
company had shown it as a capital reserve. The plea of the
Revenue was that though the amount was shown as capital
reserve, it was purely the accumulation of profits, either
assessed or equal to the amounts assessed under Section
41(2) of the Act from 1962-63 to 1969-70. On this basis, it
was concluded that the said amount represented the income of
the shareholders under Section 2(24) read with Section
2(22)(c) of the Income-tax Act. The plea of the assessees
was that the amounts assessed under Section 41(2) of the Act
cannot be treated as ‘commercial profits’ at all in the real
sense and so, it cannot come within the mischief of Section
2(22)(c) of the Act.
4. The High Court of Madras held that Section 41(2) of the
1961 Act creates a legal fiction under which the balancing
charge is treated as "business income" Chargeable to tax.
The legal fiction should be limited for the purpose for
which it was created. The receipt of excess on written down
value on the sale of capital assets cannot be held to be
profit apart from the legal fiction created by Section 41(2)
of the Act. It cannot form part of commercial profit. So, it
cannot from part of "accumulated profits" within the meaning
of Section 2(22)(c) read with Section 2(24) of the Act and
any distribution out of such amount cannot be assessed in
the hands of shareholders as "deemed dividends". If at all,
it represents only a capital receipt. The above decision was
rendered placing reliance on the decisions of this Court
rendered in (1) CIT V. Bipinchandra Maganlal & Co Ltd.
[(1961 41 ITR 290 (SC)], (2) CIT V. Express Newspapers Ltd.
[(1964) 53 ITR 250 (SC)],(3) Cambay Electric Supply
Industrial Co Ltd. v. CIT [(1978) 119 ITR 113.]. The first
two decisions were rendered with reference to Section
10(2)(vii) of the Income-tax Act, 1922. The said provision
clearly created a legal fiction. The third decision was
rendered in the context of Section 41(2) of the Income-tax
Act, 1961.
5. Dr. Gaurishanker, Senior Counsel for Revenue submitted
as follow:-
The language of Section 41(2) of 1961 Act is different.
Under Section 41(2) of the Act, if the amount for which the
asset is sold exceeds the written down value, so much of the
excess as does not exceed the difference between the actual
cost and the written down value, shall be chargeable to
income-tax as income of the business or profession of the
previous year. There is no fiction, similar to the second
proviso to Section 10(2)(vii) of the Income-tax Act, 1922.
Even so, as stated in Cambay Electric Supply Industrial Co.
Ltd. V. Commissioner of Income-tax, Gujarat-II (113 ITR 84);
the fiction should be applied to its logical limit. If so
done, the receipt of excess on written down value of the
capital of assets, is "income" for all purposes under the
Act. There is no dichotomy in applying the above concept as
"profits simpliciter" and "commercial profits". The language
of Section 2(22)(c) "accumulated profits" taken along with
Section 2(24) and Section 2(45) of the Act defining "income"
and "total income" read with Section 5 of the Act, should be
given its plain meaning and the balancing charge assessed
under Section 41(2) of the Act, is "profit" and distribution
thereof to the shareholders should be assessed a "dividend".
Placing reliance on the decision in Bishop v. Smyrna and
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Cassaba Railway Company (No. 2) (1895 2 ch. 596), counsel
contended that the income brought to tax under section 41(2)
of the Act is one by way of restitution; what had been
written off (allowed) for the purpose of accounts, has later
been made good by the increase in value. In occuring at page
601 of the said decision:
"It is writing back what was before
written off; and I cannot for
myself see why, since the amount
written off was treated as a
deduction from profits in former
accounts, the amount that is now
written up should not be treated as
profits in the same way. It seems
to me to be not an accretion of
principal, but restitution of what
was before taken away-- taken away
from profits, and therefore a
restitution to profits."
On the other hand, counsel for the assessees, Mr. T. A.
Ramachandran and Mr. J. Ramamurthy, contended that there is
difference between "Profits" and "commercial profits", and
dividend can be declared only out of commercial profits. The
meaning to be given to the words "accumulated profits"
should be construed in that background. The balancing charge
in the instant case is merely a capital reserve and cannot
be treated as commercial profits and so, will not come
within Section 2(22)(c) of the Act. It was also contended by
Sri J. Ramamurty, that Section 41(2) of the Act contains
words which are similar or akin to a legal fiction and so it
is not correct to say that the language and import of
Section 10(2)(vii) proviso of 1922 Act and Section 41(2) of
1961 Act are different.
6. On hearing the rival pleas urged before us, we are
prima facie of the view that the language employed in
Section 10(2)(vii) of the Income Tax Act, 1922 and that
employed in Section 41(2) of the Income-tax Act, 1961, are
materially different. It is doubtful, whether the language
used in Section 41(2) of the 1961 Act is akin to a legal
fiction. The earlier decisions reported in CIT v.
Bipinchandra Maganlal & Co. Ltd. [(1961 41 ITR 290 (SC)] and
CIV v. Express Newspapers Ltd. [(1964) 53 ITR 250 (SC)]
were based on the relevant provisions of 1922 Act. The
decision in Cambay Electric Supply Industrial Co. Ltd. v.
Commissioner of Income-tax. Gujarat-II (113 ITR 84) was with
reference to Section 41(2) of the Income-tax Act, 1961. This
later decision was rendered mainly placing emphasis on
Section 80E of the Income-tax Act, 1961. Incidentally, the
language used in Section 41(2) of the Act has also been
referred to as a fiction. We are prima facie inclined to the
view that when once certain amount is treated as income
under the Act, it should be so for all intents and purposes-
and in all situations arising under the Act. Based on this
approach, it will be difficult to hold that the receipt of
excess on written down value on the sale of capital assets,
is a "fictional income" and cannot form part of the profits.
Once it is profit, it is so for all purposes, and any
distribution made out of such an amount should be assessed
in the hands of shareholders as dividends. Section 41(2) of
1961 Act plainly makes the "excess" amount "chargeable" as
"income". If it is so, it will be taken in by Section 2(24)
read with Section 2(22)(c) of the Act. An indepth analysis
of the provisions of the Income-tax Act, 1922, vis-a-vis the
provisions of the Income-tax Act, 1961, is called for in the
circumstances. The matter is not free from difficulty. The
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earlier decisions of this Court reported in CIT v.
Bipinchandra Maganlal & Co. Ltd. [(1961 41 ITR 290 (SC)] and
CIT v. Express Newspapers Ltd. [(1964) 53 ITR 250 (SC)] were
rendered by a Bench of three-judges while the later decision
in Cambay Electric Supply Industrial Co. Ltd. v.
Commissioner of Income-tax, Gujarat-II (113 ITR 84) was
rendered by a Bench of two-judges.
7. In the circumstances and in view of the importance of
the questions involved in this batch of cases. We think that
it is only appropriate that this batch of cases be heard and
disposed of by a larger Bench. Accordingly, We direct the
Registry to place the matter before the Hon’ble the Chief
Justice for appropriate orders in this behalf.