Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
INDORE MALWA UNITED MILLS LTD., INDORE
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF MADHYA BHARAT AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
01/10/1964
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
SHAH, J.C.
SIKRI, S.M.
CITATION:
1965 AIR 1272 1965 SCR (1) 559
ACT:
Indore Industrial Tax Rules, 1927, s. 3-Large amounts
borrowed by Managing Agents from outsiders on behalf of the
company and invested with themselves-Managing Agents
authorised by company resolution to do so -Debt not paid
back by Managing Agents claimed as bad debt by company-
Whether allowable as trade loss-Indian Income-tax Act, 1922,
s. 10(2).
HEADNOTE:
The appellant company which carried on the business of
manufacturing textiles was allowed by its Memorandum of
Association to borrow money for the purpose of its business
and to invest it inter alia in loans to others. Its Board
of Directors passed a resolution to the effect that the
company would invest its surplus funds in current account
with the Managing Agents on interest. The Managing Agents
borrowed large sums from outsiders, entered the borrowings
in the books of the company and invested large sum with
themselves in current account. Before the Annual General
Meeting they would bring back the money into the company’s
accounts to satisfy the General Body that they had paid off
their debts, and afterwards would again withdraw large sums
for their own purposes. In 1933 the Managing Agents’
company went into liquidation and it large debt was due from
them to the company. In 1941 the debt having been found to
be irrecoverable, the appellant company claimed it as a bad
debt and trading loss for the purpose of computing its
income under the Indore Industrial Tax Rules, 1927, the
provisions of which, in this regard, were similar to those
of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922. The assessing authority
did not allow the claim, nor did the Appellate Authority.
The High Court also held that the losses incurred by the
company were really dehors the business of the company. The
company thereupon appealed to the Supreme Court.
It was contended on behalf of the appellant that the
employment of the Managing Agents was incidental to the
carrying on of the appellant’s business, that,as the
Managing Agents had the power to borrow funds for the
company and invest the surplus in loans to themselves, the
loss such investment was also incidental to the carrying on
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the appellant’s business, and therefore the said loss was
deductible in arriving at the, trading profits of the
company.
HELD: The appeal must be allowed.
The Managing Agents had borrowed the money from outsiders
and invested it with themselves in accordance with the
company’s resolution. The money borrowed from outsiders
became part of the funds of the company, and the creditors
could have sued the company for it. Similarly the company
could have sued the Managing Agents for the sums invested
with them. Both the borrowing by the company and the
investment with the Managing Agents created legal
obligations. Appropriate entries were made in the company’s
accounts in accordance with commercial practice. The
amounts invested with the Managing Agents were entered as
debts which became bad debts on becoming irrecoverable. In
the circumstances the loss arising from the bad debts was
incidental to the appellant’s business,
560
and deductible in computing the profits of the appellant
company for the ,assessment year in question. [563 F-H; 564
B-E].
Badridas Daga v. Commissioner of Income-tax, [1959] S.C.R.
690 and Commissioner of Income-tax, U.P. v. M/s. Nainital
Bank Ltd., [1965] 1 S.C.R. 340.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1013 of 1963.
Appeal from the judgment dated November 9, 1960, of the
Madhya Pradesh High Court in Civil Miscellaneous Appeal No.
40 of 1955.
A. V. Viswanatha Sastri and Rameshwar Nath, for the appel-
lant.
B. Sen, Balwan Singh Johar and 1. N. Shroff, for the
respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Subba Rao J. This appeal by certificate preferred against
the order of the High Court of Madhya Pradesh, Indore Bench,
raises the question whether an item of Rs. 42,63,090-14-7
should have been allowed as a trading loss in computing the
profits of the appellant-company under S. 3 of the Indore
Industrial Tax Rules, 1927.
The facts may be briefly stated. The appellant, Indore
Malwa United Mills Ltd., is a public limited company
incorporated and registered under the Indore Companies Act,
1914. Since the incorporation it has been carrying on
business of manufacturing cloth. Under the Memorandum of
Association of the said company, for the purpose of the
textile business it was authorized to raise or borrow money
from time to time and to invest its funds, inter alia, in
loans to others. For the purpose of carrying on the
business, the appellant-company originally appointed M/s.
Karimbhai Ibrahim & Co. Ltd. as its Managing Agents. On
June 8, 1926, the Board of Directors of the appellant-
company passed a resolution to the following effect :
"Resolved that Surplus Fund of the company be
invested with the agents in current account
with the company at the same rate of interest
viz., 6%."
On November 28, 1929, the appellant-company entered into an
agreement with M/s. Karimbhai Ibrahim & Sons Ltd. where-
under they were appointed as the Managing Agents of the
appellant-company in place of M/s. Karimhai Ibrahim & Co.
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Ltd.
561
On July 19, 1932, the Board of Directors reaffirmed the
resolution of June 8, 1926. Pursuant to the power conferred
on the Managing Agents under the said agency agreement and
the said resolution, Karimbhai Ibrahim & Sons Ltd. borrowed
large sums of money from outsiders, entered them in the
appellant-company’s accounts and invested large sums with
themselves "in current account with the company" in terms of
the said resolution and utilised the same for their own
purposes. Before the Annual General Body Meeting they used
to bring large amounts into the accounts of the company and
show that they had paid off their debts. After satisfying
the General Body they would again withdraw large sums for
their purposes. ’Me General Body was also aware of the
loans and indeed it approved the said transactions. In the
year 1933 the Managing Agency company went into liquidation.
For the assessment year 1941, the appellant-company
submitted its return of income and claimed thereunder a
deduction, among other items, a sum of Rs. 49,13,316 under
the head of bad debt and trading loss written off in the
profits and loss account of the appellant-company-we are
only concerned in this appeal with this item and, therefore,
it is not necessary to notice any other particulars of the
assessment. ’Me Assessing Authority allowed only Rs.
6,41,913-2-0 as bad debt and disallowed the amount due from
Karimbhai lbrahim & Sons Ltd. on the ground that the said
borrowings were not made for the purpose of the business of
the company. On appeal the Appellate Authority also took
the same view. On further appeal, the High Court confirmed
the finding of the Appellate Authority on the ground that
the losses incurred by the company were really dehars the
business of the company, though they might involve
fraudulent conduct of the Managing Agents. Hence the
present appeal.
Mr. A. V. Viswanatha Sastri, learned counsel for the appel-
lant, contended that the employment of the Managing Agents
was incidental to the carrying on of the appellant’s
business, that, as the Managing Agents had the power to
borrow funds for the appellant-company and invest the
surplus in loans to themselves the loss caused by such
investment was also incidental to the carrying on of the
appellant’s business and, therefore, the said loss was
deductible in arriving at the trading profits of the appel-
lant-company.
Mr. Sen, learned counsel for the respondents, raised before
us two contentions, namely, (1) the assessment in question
was made under the Indore Industrial Tax Rules, 1927, that
under
562
the said Rules tax was payable only in respect of the
profits or gains of any cotton mill industry and that
profits or loss pertaining to the money-lending activity of
the appellant-company could not possibly be subject to tax
or deduction under the said Rules; and (2) the debt due by
the Managing Agents was not a trading debt inasmuch as the
Managing Agents borrowed moneys not necessary for the
business of the appellant-company and lent to themselves the
said amount and, therefore, it was a loss incurred by the
appellant dehors the business of the company.
The first question raised by Mr. Sen is based upon the dis-
tinction between the Indore Industrial Tax Rules and the
corresponding, provisions of the Indian Income-tax Act. It
is said that the Indore Industrial Tax Rules are only
concerned with the cotton mill industry and the tax payable
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thereunder is in respect of the said industry, while under
the Income-tax Act the tax is payable in respect of the
income of the business of the assessee. But a perusal of
the proceedings during all the stages does not disclose that
any such argument was advanced at any time. Assuming that
the contention was correct, if it had been raised before,
the assessee might have been in a position,to establish by
relevant evidence that the particular amount borrowed by the
Managing Agents was from and out of the amounts borrowed for
the purpose of the said industry. We cannot allow a
question which at its best is a mixed question of fact and
law to be raised for the first time before us. We do not
propose to express our opinion on the same one way or other.
We shall proceed with the appeal on the basis that for the
purpose of deducting trading losses in computing trading
profits there is no difference between the Income-tax Act
and the relevant Indore Industrial Tax Rules.
The only question, therefore, is whether the loss claimed in
the present case was a trading loss which is deductible in
computing the profits of the company. The relevant
principle of law has been laid down by this Court in
Badridas Daga v. Commissioner of Income-tax(1). There,
after considering the relevant decisions on the subject,
this Court laid down the following test :
"The result is that when a claim is made for a
deduction for which there is no specific
provision in S. 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
(1) (1959] S.C.R. 690, 695.
563
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."
Where an agent employed by the appellant for the purpose of
carrying on his business in exercise of the powers conferred
on him operated on the bank accounts, withdrew moneys from
it and used them for discharging his personal debts, this
Court in the said decision found no difficulty in holding
that the amount misappropriated and found irrecoverable was
an allowable deduction under the Income-tax Act. The only
difference between that case and the present one is that the
Agent misappropriated the amount in, that case, whereas in
the present case the Managing Agents in exercise. of the
powers conferred by the appellant borrowed the moneys, but
failed to return the same. If embezzlement of moneys
entrusted to an agent is incidental to a business, by the
same token moneys legally utilized by the agent must more
appropriately be incidental to the business. In a recent
decision in The Commissioner of Income-tax, U.P. v. M/s.
Nainital Bank Ltd. (1) this Court held that an amount lost
to the bank by dacoity was a loss incidental to the business
of banking. There, in the course of the business large
amounts were, kept in the bank premises, and this Court held
that the risk of loss by dacoity was incidental to a banking
business. If that be so, the fact that the Managing Agents
brought into the company’s till larger amounts than the
company’s business demanded at a particular point of time
would not make the borrowings or the lending of money to
themselves any the less incidental to the sanctioned
business operations.
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The question is not whether the Managing Agents committed a
fraud on the company, but whether the amounts ’borrowed were
the funds of the company. If the creditors had filed a suit
against the company, could it have resisted the suit on the
ground that the Managing Agents had no power to borrow the
amounts for the reason that at the time they borrowed, the
amounts were in excess of the requirements of the business ?
Decidedly not. There would not have been any defence to
such a suit. After the borrowing the money became the
company’s money. That apart, there was no question of fraud
in this case, for the profit and loss account and the
balance-sheet placed before the General Body Meeting of the
Company every year brought to its notice the total amount
the company borrowed through the Managing Agents and the
General Body approved of it. The only fraud,
(1) [1965] 1 S.C.R. 340.
564
if any, consisted in the practice followed by the Managing
Agents in bringing into the accounts of the company the
entire amount lent to them in order to satisfy the
shareholders that nothing was going wrong.
The next step is the borrowing of money by the Managing
Agents from the company. Under the memorandum of associa-
tion as well as under the express power conferred by the
said resolution, the company, through the Managing Agents,
could invest its funds by way of loans. If there was no
mishap the Managing Agents would have paid the entire amount
and if they did not, the company could have recovered the
entire amount from them. ’Me result, therefore, was that
both the borrowing by the Managing Agents on behalf of the
company from third parties and the lending to themselves
created legal obligations. They were obligations created in
the course of the business. The money lent would be a debit
item in the accounts of the company in accordance with the
accepted commercial practice and if the amount was realized
it would be a credit item. Both would be proper items of
accounts for ascertaining the profit and loss of the
company. If the debt became irrecoverable, it would be a
bad debt.
We, therefore, find no difficulty in holding that the said
debt which had become irrecoverable was a trading loss
deductible in computing the profit of the appellant-company
in the assessment year. It was a loss incidental to the
appellant’s business and is certainly sanctioned by
commercial practice and trading principles. We, therefore,
hold that the High Court went wrong in holding that the said
amount represented loss incurred by the appellant dehors its
business.
In the result, the appeal is allowed. The appellant will
have its costs here and in the High Court.
Appeal allowed.
565