Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
JAGDISH SUGAR MILLS LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE C.I.T LUCKNOW
DATE OF JUDGMENT16/07/1986
BENCH:
PATHAK, R.S.
BENCH:
PATHAK, R.S.
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
CITATION:
1986 AIR 1742 1986 SCR (3) 198
1986 SCC (3) 578 JT 1986 214
1986 SCALE (2)90
ACT:
Income Tax Act, 1961: s. 41(2) Income Tax Act, 1922, s.
10(2) (vii)-Auction sale of properties of the assessee for
failure to pay cane cess-Whether compulsory sale-Excess
amount over different between the original and written down
value-Whether gain from business chargeable to Tax.
U.P. Zamindari Abolition & Land Reforms Act, 1950: ss.
279 & 341/U.P. Zamindari Abolition & Land Reforms Rules,
1952: rr. 281 & 285-M-Attachment of property and sale by
auction-sale certificate- Whether itself operates as
effecting transfer of property.
Code of Civil Procedure: s. 65-Applicability of to
proceedings under the U.P. Zamindari Abolition & Land
Reforms Act 1950.
HEADNOTE:
Section 279 of the U.P. Zamindari Abolition and Land
Reforms Act specifies the modes for the recovery of an
arrear of land revenue. Rule 281 of the Rules framed under
the Act, authorises the Collector to sell the attached
immovable property of a defaulter by auction, and provides
for confirmation of the sale by an order of the
Commissioner. Rule 285-M requires the Collector to grant the
purchaser a certificate that he has purchased the property
and provides that such certificate shall be deemed to be a
valid transfer of such property.
A certain amount was payable by the assessee to the
State on account of arrears of cane cess which was
recoverable as arrears of land revenue. In proceedings for
its recovery the Collector attached the assesse’s mills and
put them to auction sale on November 10, 1955. The entire
amount of purchase money had been paid on December 8, 1955.
However, the requisite sale certificate under r. 285-M could
not be issued till July 4, 1956 on account of the objections
raised by the assessee.
In assessment proceedings for the assessment year 1957-
58, the
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Income-tax officer called upon the assessee to explain why
the excess amount which he had received on sale of the
buildings, machinery and plant over the difference between
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the original and the written down value should not be
subjected to tax under cl. (vii) of sub-s. (2) of s. 10 and
under s. 12B of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922. The
assessee contended (i) that an auction sale being a
compulsory sale was not a sale within the meaning of cl.
(vii) of sub-s. (2) of s. 10; and (ii) that the sale having
been completed prior to March 31, 1956, it did not attract
the provisions of s. 12B relating to capital gains, which
became effective from April 1, 1956 only. The Income-tax
officer rejected the aforesaid contentions and computed the
profits under s. 10 (2) (vii) at Rs.10,07,000 and the
capital gains under s. 12B at R.S.. 10, 23, 210. The matter
ultimately went before the High Court which decided in
favour of the Revenue.
In the assessee’s appeal to this Court it was contended
(i) that cl. (vii) of sub-s. (2) of s. 10 of the Income-tax
Act, 1922 had no application because an auction sale was not
a voluntary sale; and (ii) that the sale must be regarded as
having taken place on November 10, 1985 when the auction was
held and not on July 4, 1956 when the sale certificate was
issued, for the property should be deemed to have vested in
the purchaser from the time when it was sold and not from
the time when the sale became absolute and that being so, s.
12B did not extend to the sale.
Dismissing the appeal, the Court
^
HELD: 1. The sale of the properties of the assessee
falls within the scope of cl. (vii) of sub-s. (2) of s. 10
of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1322. it cannot be said that
the element of consent essential to the character of a sale
was absent altogether from the transaction. The levy of cane
cess was imposed under a statute in respect of an activity
carried on voluntarily by the assessee. When entering upon
and carrying out that activity the assessee was fully
conscious that he did so subject to the provisions of the
statute, and that in the event of default of payment of
cane-cess it was exposing itself to recovery proceedings as
arrears of land revenue. The assessee was also aware that
recovery could be affected by an auction sale of its
property. The assessee thereby agreed to be bound by the
structural framework imposed by the statute around the
activity. and, therefore, agreed to an auction sale of its
properties in the event of its failure to pay the cane-cess.
[205C-; 204G-H; 205A-C]
Calcutta Electric Supply Corporation Ltd. v.
Commissioner of
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Income-tax, West Bengal, [1951] 19 ITR 406; Indian Steel &
Wire Products Ltd. v. State of Madras, [1968] 1 SCR 479; and
R.B. Lachman Das Mohanlal & Sons v. Commissioner of Income-
tax, U.P., [1964] 54 ITR 315, referred to
2. The date on which the sale certificate was issued
should be the date on which the sale must be regarded as
having taken place. It is only when the property is
transferred that it can be deemed to nave vested in the
purchaser. Rule 285-M of the U.P. Zanmindari Abolition and
Land Reforms Act, is explicit in its terms. When the sale
certificate itself operates as effecting the transfer of the
property, no question arises of relating the transfer back
to the date of auction. [205E; 260A-B]
The procedure incorporated in the U.P. Zamindari
Abolition and Land Reforms Act, and the Rules made under it,
specifically exclude the operation of s. 65 of the Code of
Civil Procedure. Section 341 of that Act applies the Code
only so far it is consistent with the provisions of the Act
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and not in derogation of it. [206B-C]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1348
(NT) of 1974
From the Judgment and order dated 7.1.1974 of the
Allanabad High Court in I.T.R. No. 364 of 1971.
S.C. Manchanda, V.J. Francis, N.M. Popli and Ujjal
Singh for the Appellant.
V. Gouri Shankar and Miss A. Subhashini for the
Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
PATHAK, J. This appeal is directed against the judgment
of the Allahabad High Court answering the following question
in the negative:
"1. Whether on the facts and in the circumstances
of the case, the Tribunal was justified in
holding that the provisions of sections 10(2)
(vii) of the Income-tax Act, 1922 were not
attracted?
2. Whether on the facts and in the circumstances
of the
201
case, the Tribunal was justified in holding that
the sale had taken place before 1.4.1956 and,
therefore, the provisions of section 12B of the
Income-tax Act 1922 were not attracted?"
The assessee, a public limited company, was put into
liquidation under the orders of the Allahabad High Court. An
amount of Rs. 8,58,893/5/6 was payable by the assessee to
the State of Uttar Pradesh on account of arrears of cane-
cess. In proceedings for recovery of that amount as arrears
of land revenue, the Collector of Deoria attached the
assessees mills and put them to auction sale on November 10,
1955. The land, building, machinery and parking grounds were
sold for Rs. 24,00,000 while the moveable properties
including mill stores, spare parts, tools and equipment were
sold for Rs. 1,80,000. All the properties were purchased by
the Kanpur Sugar Works (P) Ltd., Although the sale was held
on November 10, 1955, the sale certificate under rule 285 M
of the U.P. Zamindari Abolition and Land Reforms Rules, 1952
could not be issued till July 4, 1956 on account of
objections raised by the assessee, in spite of the fact that
the entire amount of purchase money of Rs.25,80,000 had been
paid by the purchasers on December 8, 1955. During the
period in which the objections were pending, i.e., November
10, 1955 to July 2, 1956, the Government of India appointed
an Authorised Controller to run the sugar mills by a
notification dated November 25, 1955.
After possession of the mills was given to the
purchasers, a suit was filed by them against the assessee
claiming damages for loss of profits on account of the
possession of the mills not having been delivered to them
immediately after the auction sale. In the suit the
purchasers claimed, in the alternative, compensation for
loss of interest on Rs.25,80,000 from the date of deposit of
the sale price to the date of delivery of the mills. The
claim of the purchasers was ultimately settled by compromise
for a sum of Rs.1,25,000.
In assessment proceedings for the assessment year 1957-
58, the relevant accounting period being the year ended
October 31, 1956, the Income-tax Officer called upon the
assessee to explain why the excess amount which the assessee
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had received on sale of the building, machinery and plant
over the difference between the original and the written
down value should not be subjected to tax under cl. (vii) of
sub-s. (2) of s. 10 and under s. 12B of the Indian Income
Tax Act, 1922. The assessee replied stating that (1)
simultaneous computation
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of income under cl. (vii) of sub-s. (2) of s. 10 and of
capital gains under s. 12B amounted to double taxation and
was against the principles of natural justice and the
legislative intention; (2) the sale being a compulsory sale
was not a sale within the meaning of cl. (vii) of sub-s. (2)
of s. 10; (3) moveable property was exempt from capital
gains tax; and (4) as the sale was complete before April 1,
1956 it did not attract the provisions relating to capital
gains which became effective from April 1, 1956 only.
Alternatively, it was claimed that the value of the mills as
on January 1, 1954 was much higher than that determined and
the assessee was not liable to tax on capital gains. The
Income-tax Officer rejected the contentions raised by the
assessee, and completed the assessment under sub-s. (3) of
s. 23 read with sub-s. (1A) of s. 34 of the Indian Income-
tax Act, 1922 on March 29, 1965, computing the profits under
cl. (vii) of sub-s. (2) of s. 10 at Rs. 10,07,000 and the
capital gains at Rs. 10,23,210. The Income-tax Officer did
not find any substance in the assessee’s contention that the
value of the fixed assets of the mills was Rs. 18,50,000 as
on January 1, 1954 and that there was no justification for
initiating the assessment proceedings under sub-s. (1A) of
s. 34 of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922.
On appeal by the assessee the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner, by his order dated May 1, 1968, agreed with
the Income-tax Officer that the sale attracted cl. (vii) of
sub-s. (2) of s. 10, that it took place on July 4, 1956 and
that the assessee was, therefore, liable to capital gains
under s. 12B. But contrary to the view taken by the Income-
tax Officer, the Appellate Assistant Commissioner held that
the assessee was entitled to substitute the market value of
the machinery as on January 1, 1954 in place of its cost
price under cl. (iii) of s. 12B, and accordingly reduced the
capital gains from Rs. 10,23,210 to Rs.4,89,343.
Both the Revenue and the assessee filed appeals before
the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal. Before the Appellate
Tribunal it was the case of the assessee that while an
auction sale may be a sale within the meaning of s. 12B it
was not a sale as contemplated under cl. (vii) of sub-s. (2)
of s. 10. It was urged that a compulsory sale was not a sale
for the purposes of cl. (vii) of sub-s. (2) of s. 10. It was
also urged that as the auction sale had taken place prior to
March 31, 1956 the assessee was not liable to tax on capital
gains at all. The Appellate Tribunal by its order dated
January 31, 1970 allowed the assessee’s appeal and dismissed
the Revenue appeal. It accepted both the contentions of the
assessee and did not find it necessary to go into the
question whether
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the Appellate Assistant Commissioner was right in
substituting the market value of the machinery as on January
1, 1954 in place of its cost price under cl. (iii) of s.
12B.
At the instance of the Commissioner of Income-tax,
Lucknow the Appellate Tribunal referred the two questions of
law set out earlier to the High Court for its opinion. On
January 7, 1974, the High Court pronounced judgment in the
reference in favour of the Revenue. And now this appeal.
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Shri S.C. Manchanda, appearing for the assessee, has
raised two points before us. The first contention is that
cl. (vii) of sub-s. (2) of s. 10 of the Indian Income-tax
Act 1922 has no application because a sale effected for
recovering arrears of cane-cess as an arrear of land revenue
is not a voluntary sale and does not fall within the terms
of the relevant statutory provisions. The second contention
is that the sale must be regarded as having taken place on
November 10, 1955 when the auction was held and not on July
4, 1956 when the sale certificate was issued, and that being
so s. 12B which took effect from April 1, 1956 does not
extend to the sale. These are the only two contentions
before us, and in our opinion, they can be disposed of
shortly.
Clause (vii) of sub-s. (2) of s. 10 of the Indian
Income-tax Act, 1922 provides for the computation of profits
and gains chargeable to tax under the head ’business’ after
making the following allowances:
"(vii) in respect of any such building, machinery
or plant which has been sold or discarded or
demolished or destroyed, the amount by which the
written down value thereof exceeds the amount for
which the building, machinery or plant, as the
case may be, is actually sold or its scrap value:
Provided that such amount is actually written
off in the books of the assessee:
Provided further that where the amount for
which any such building, machinery or plant is
sold, whether during the continuance of the
business or after the cessation thereof, exceeds
the written down value, so much of the excess as
does not exceed the difference between the
original cost and the written down value shall be
deemed to be
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profits of the previous year in which the sale took
place:
xxx xxxx xxxxx"
The argument for the assessee is that the word "sold" in the
clause refers to a sale transaction affected on the free
volition of the seller and not where it is in the nature of
a compulsory transfer for recovering an arrear of land
revenue. Reliance is placed on Calcutta Electric Supply
Corporation Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax, West Bengal,
[1951] 19 ITR 406, where the Calcutta High Court laid down
that the word "sale" in its ordinary meaning, was a
transaction entered into voluntarily between two persons,
the buyer and the seller, and that, therefore, the
requisition of an electricity generating plant by the
Government under sub-rule (1) of rule 83 of the Defence of
India Rules, not being a voluntary sale, did not fall within
the mischief of cl. (vii) of sub-s. (2) of s. 10. Our
attention has also been drawn to Indian Steel & Wire
Products Ltd v. State of Madras, [1968] 1 S.C.R. 479. In
that case this Court was called upon to consider whether the
supplies by the appellant of certain steel products to
various persons in the State of Madras under the Iron and
Steel (Control of Production and Distribution) Order, 1941
could be regarded as sales for the purposes of the Madras
General Sales Tax Act. The Court observed that the
transactions must be treated as sales because the element of
mutual assent was not excluded altogether from the
transactions. Learned counsel seeks support from that case
in support of his submission that the element of consent is
essential to the character of a sale. A third case, R.B.
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Lachman Das Mohanlal & Sons v. Commissioner of Income-tax,
U.P., [1964] 54 ITR 315 has been placed before us but
nothing said therein is truly apposite to the limited
question before us. We have given the matter careful
consideration and we think, for the reasons which follow,
that there is no escape from the conclusion that the
transaction in this case constitutes a sale for the purposes
of cl. (vii) of sub-s. (2) of s. 10.
The levy of cane-cess was imposed under a statute in
respect of an activity carried on voluntarily by the
assessee. When entering upon and carrying out that activity
the assessee was fully conscious that he did so subject to
the provisions of the statute. The statute provided for the
levy of cane-cess and its recovery, in the event of default
of payment, as arrears of land revenue. What was done in the
present case
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was to recover the arrears of cane-cess as arrears of land
revenue. All along, therefore, the assessee was aware that
when it entered upon and carried out an activity attracting
cane-cess it was exposing itself to recovery proceedings as
arrears of land revenue. The assessee was aware that
recovery could be affected by an auction sale of its
properties. It can be inferred from the circumstance that by
embarking upon the activity which attracted cane-cess the
assessee agreed to be bound by the structural framework
imposed by the statute around that activity, and, therefore,
agreed to an auction sale of its properties as arrears of
land revenue in the event of its failure to pay the cane-
cess. We are not satisfied that the element of consent is
absent altogether from the transactions considered in this
case. We are clearly of opinion that the sale of the
properties of the assessee fall within the scope of cl.
(vii) of sub-s. (2) of s. 10 of the Indian Income-tax Act,
1922 and therefore, the first contention must be rejected.
Turning to the second contention, the question is
whether the sale can be said to have taken place when the
properties were auctioned or on the date when the sale
certificate was issued. The recovery of an arrear of land
revenue in Uttar Pradesh is governed by the provisions of
the U.P. Zamindari Abolition and Land Reforms Act and the
Rules made thereunder. We have been taken through the
pertinent provisions, of that Act and its Rules. The High
Court, in the judgment under appeal, has made detailed
reference to them and, in an admirable exposition of the
law, has demonstrated that the date on which the sale
certificate was issued is the date on which the sale must be
regarded as having taken place. We have no hesitation in
endorsing that view. Section 279 of the U.P. Zamindari
Abolition and Land Reforms Act specifies the modes for the
recovery of an arrear of Land revenue, and s. 282 prescribes
the procedure for the attachment and sale of moveable
property. Section 286 empowers the Collector to proceed
against other immoveable property belonging to the
defaulter. Rule 281 authorises the Collecter to sell
immovable property and upon the property being auctioned
under the Rules, and the objections, if any, thereto having
been considered and disposed of, provides for confirmation
of the sale by an order of the Commissioner. Rule 285-M
provides that the Collector shall thereupon put the person
declared to be the purchaser into possession of the
property, and shall grant him a certificate to the effect
that he has purchased the property to which the certificate
refers, and that such certificate shall be deemed to be a
valid transfer of such property. It is apparent that it is
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only after the sale is confirmed and a certificate is
granted that the
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property stands transferred and the purchaser becomes the
owner of the property. Rule 285-M is explicit. The
certificate operates as a transfer of the property. As
before the High Court, learned counsel for the assessee
relies on s. 65 of the Code of Civil Procedure in support of
his submission that the property shall be deemed to have
vested in the purchaser from the time when the property is
sold and not from the time when the sale becomes absolute.
The application of s. 65 turns upon the scope of s. 341 of
the U.P. Zamindari Abolition and Land Reforms Act, which
applies the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure to the
proceedings taken under that Act. S. 341, however, applies
the Code only so far as it can be applied consistently with
the Act and not in derogation of it. As is clear, the
procedure incorporated in the U.P. Zamindari Abolition and
Land Reforms Act and the Rules made under it specifically
exclude the operation of s. 65. When the sale certificate
itself operates as effecting the transfer of the property,
no question arises of relating the transfer back to the date
of auction. It is true that the order of the Commissioner
confirming the sale refers back to the auction which has
already taken place, but that is hardly of any moment in
view of the terms of Rule 285M. We see no force in the
second contention.
In the result the appeal fails and is dismissed with
costs.
P.S.S. Appeal dismissed.
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