Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE COMMISSIONER OF EXCESS PROFITS TAX, WEST BENGAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE RUBY GENERAL INSURANCE CO. LTD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
24/04/1957
BENCH:
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
BENCH:
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
KAPUR, J.L.
CITATION:
1957 AIR 669 1957 SCR 1002
ACT:
Excess Profits Tax--Insurance company--Premium receipts-
Reserve for unexpired risks on pending Policies--Whether
"accruing liability"--Whether could be deducted as a debt-
Excess Profits Tax Act, 1940 (XV of 1940), ss. 4, 6, rr. 1,
2 of Sch. II--Indian Income--tax Act, 1922 (XI Of 1922), s.
1O(7), r. 6 of the Sch.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent was a company carrying on life, fire,
marine and general insurance business, and the question for
determination related to the assessment of excess profits
tax on its income other than life insurance. The method
adopted by the company with respect to fire insurance
policies was that while the premiums received were all of
them included in the assets of the year, a portion thereof,
40 per cent., was treated as reserve for unexpired risks on
the outstanding policies, and shown as a liability. The
appellant, the Commissioner for Excess Profits Tax, claimed
that the sum set apart as reserve for unexpired risks was
liable to be deducted under r. 2 of Sch. II of the Excess
Profits Tax Act, 1940, from out of the capital employed in
business for that year. The respondent, while maintaining
that all the premiums received must be treated as capital
under r. 1 of Sch. II to the Act, contended that the
provision for unexpired risks was only a contingent
liability and that a liability under a contract of insurance
where under risk had not materialised could not be held to
be a debt and was therefore not an accruing liability within
r. 2 of Sch. II to the Act.
Held, that the reserve liability for unexpired risk,
unlike borrowed money and debts, cannot be treated as part
of the real trading assets of the business so as to have an
effect on the running of the business or the earning of
profits, and consequently, as it cannot be included as
capital under r. i, it cannot be deducted as an accruing
liability within r. 2 of Sch. II of the Excess Profits Tax
Act, 1940.
Sun Insurance 0Office v. Clark, (1912) A.C. 443 and
Southern Railway of Peru Ltd. v. Owen, (1956) 2 All E.R.
728, distinguished.
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Northern Aluminium Co., Ltd. v. Inland Revenue Commis-
sioners, (1946) All E.R. 546 and Inland Revenue
Commissioners v. Northern Aluminium Co. Ltd. (1947) 1 All E.
R. 608, relied on.
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 12 of
1955.
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated September 10,
1953, of the Calcutta High Court (Original Side) in I. T.
Reference No. 8 of 1947.
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General for India, G. N. Joshi
and B. H. Dhebar, for the appellant.
K. P. Khaitan, Rameshwar Nath, S. N. Andley and J. B.
Dadachanji, for the respondents.
1957. April 24. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
VENKATARAMA AIYAR J.-This appeal raises a question of
importance as to whether amounts shown by an insurance
company as reserves for unexpired risks on pending policies
are liable to be deducted under r. 2 of Sch. II to the
Excess Profits Tax Act (XV of 1940) hereinafter referred to
as the Act.
The respondent is a company carrying on life, fire, marine
and general insurance business, and the present dispute
relates to the assessment of excess profits tax on its
income from business other than life insurance for the
chargeable accounting periods ending December 31, 1940, and
December 31, 1941. To appreciate the contentions raised, it
is necessary to state that the policies of insurance with
which these proceedings are concerned, are, unlike life
insurance policies, issued in general for short periods or
ad hoc in relation to a specified voyage or event. To take
the most important of them, fire insurance policies, they
are issued normally for one year, and the whole of the
premium due thereon is received when the policies are
actually issued. In any given year, while the premiums due
on the policies would have been received in full, the risks
covered by them would have run only in part and a, part will
be outstanding for the next year. The companies have to
prepare annual statements of profit and loss for the purpose
of ascertaining their profits and distributing their
dividends. They have also to prepare revenue statements to
be sent to the authorities under the provisions of the
Insurance Act, 1938. The method
1004
adopted by the respondent in preparing the above statements
has been that while the premiums received are all of them
included in the assets of the year, a certain proportion’
thereof, usually 40 per cent., is treated as the reserve for
unexpired risks, and that is shown as a liability. To take
a concrete example, if in the year 1939 the respondent
issued annual fire insurance policies and received a sum of
Rs. 1,00,000 as premiums thereof, the whole of it would be
shown as income in the statement for the year 1939, and a
sum of Rs. 40,000 will be shown as a reserve for unexpired
risks. In the profit and loss statement, the former will be
shown as part of the assets and the latter as liability, and
it is only the balance that will be included in the net
profits. In 1940, the policies issued in 1939 would all of
them have expired, and the sum of Rs. 40,000 shown as
reserve in 1939 would be treated as -part of the assets in
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1940. There will, of course, be fresh policies issued in
1940, and in the statement of that year, the premiums
received on those policies would be shown as part of the
income, and 40 per cent. thereof would be set apart as
reserve for unexpired risks. This’ method of account-
keeping is what is ’usually adopted by insurance companies,
and is in accordance with well-recognised and approved
practice of accountancy.
Now, the question is whether in the illustration given
above, the sum of Rs. 40,000 which is set apart in 1939 as
reserve for unexpired risks is liable to be deducted under
r. 2 of Sch. II to the Act from out of the capital employed
in business for that year, which would, of course, include
the whole of Rs. 1,00,000 received as premiums. The
contention of the appellant is that if all the premiums
received are to be treated as capital under r. 1, Sch. 11,
then the sums which represent the outstanding liability in
respect of the unexpired period of the policies-in the
illustration given above, Rs. 40,000-should be deducted as a
liability under r. 2 of Sch. II. The respondent, while
claiming that all the premiums received mu-,it be treated as
capital, maintains that the provision for unexpired risks
is- a contingent liability, and that that
1005
is not within r. 2 of Sch. II. The Tribunal decided the
question against the respondent, but on reference under s.
66(1) of the Indian Income-tax Act read with s. 21 of the
Act, the High Court of Calcutta answered the question
adversely to the appellant, but granted a certificate under
s. 66-A, and that is how the appeal comes before us.
The relevant statutory provisions may now be noticed.
Under s. 4 of the Act, the charge is on the " amount by
which the profits during any chargeable accounting period
exceed the standard profits ". I Standard profits’ are
defined in s. 6, sub-s. (1), and the respondent having
exercised his option under the second proviso thereto, they
have to be calculated "by applying the statutory percentage
to the average amount of capital employed in the business
during such chargeable accounting period Schedule II enacts
rules for the determination of the average capital employed.
Under r. 1(c), the capital employed will include the value
of all assets "I when they became assets of the business ".
Rule 2(1) enacts that any borrowed money and debts shall be
deducted from out of the value of the assets. There is a
further provision in r. 2(1), which is what is material for
the purposes of the present appeal, and it runs as follows:
" The debts to be deducted under this sub-rule shall
include any such sums in respect of accruing liabilities as
are allowable as a deduction in computing profits for the
purposes of excess profits tax ; and the said sums shall be
deducted notwithstanding that they have not become payable."
For this clause to apply, two conditions must be satis-
fied. The sums to be deducted should be allowable as a
deduction in computing the profits for the purposes of the
Act, and further they should be in respect of accruing
liabilities. Rule 1 of Sch. 1 enacts that,
" The profits of a business .......... during any
chargeable accounting period ....... shall, subject to the
provisions of this Schedule, be computed on the principles
on which the profits of a business are computed for the
purposes of income-tax under s. 10 of the Indian Income-tax
Act, 1922."
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Section 10(7) of the Indian Income-tax Act provides that,
" Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained in
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sections 8, 9, 10, 12 or 18, the profits and gains of any
business of insurance and the tax payable thereon shall be
computed in accordance with the rules contained in the
Schedule to this Act."
Rule 6 of the Schedule provides:
"The profits and gains of any business of insurance other
than life insurance shall be taken to be the balance of the
profits disclosed by the annual accounts, copies of which
are required under the Insurance Act, 1938, to be furnished
to the Controller of Insurance after adjusting such balance
so as to exclude from it any expenditure other than
expenditure which may under the provisions of section 10 of
this Act be allowed for in computing the profits and gains
of a business."
It is common ground that the statements furnished to the
Controller of Insurance by the respondent for the relevant
periods did disclose 40 per cent. of the premiums received
as reserve for unexpired risks on the outstanding policies
and that the same has been treated as a liability in its
profits and loss statements and allowed in the assessment of
income-tax. Thus, one of the conditions required by r. 2
has been satisfied. The whole controversy between the
parties relates to the other condition whether the reserve
of 40 per cent. can be regarded as a sum in respect of
accruing liability. The contention of the learned Solicitor
General is that it must be so regarded, and his argument in
support of it may thus be stated: A contract of insurance is
complete as soon as the policy is issued. From that time,
the risk begins to attach to it, and there is a liability
incurred. Rule 2 does not require that the liability should
have actually accrued; it is sufficient that it is accruing.
Liability under a policy must be held to be accruing so long
as the policy is in force, because it can ripen into actual
liability at any time during the life of the policy on the
happening -of the specified event. When the assessee shows
a certain amount as the value of that
1007
liability,-it is a sum in respect of an accruing liability
and must be deducted under r. 2.
In support of this contention, the decision in Sun Insurance
Office v. Clark (1) was relied on. The facts of that case
were as follows: A fire insurance company which had been
following the practice of entering in its annual statements
40 per cent. of the total premium receipts as reserve for
unexpired risks claimed a deduction therefor in the
assessment of its annual profits. The validity of the claim
having been disputed, the question as to its admissibility
was referred to the decision of the court. Bray J., who
heard the reference, held that the amounts reserved for
unexpired risks should be deducted firstly on the ground
that the premium which had been paid in respect of a risk
for a whole year could not be said to have been wholly
earned, when a portion of the period covered by the policy
was still to run, and that the reserve therefore was not
income earned, and secondly and in the alternative, on the
ground that as the premium had been received burdened with a
liability which had been only partially discharged in the
year of account, the portion of the liability still
outstanding should be valued on the analogy of unpaid price
due in respect of property purchased and included in the
trading assets. This decision was taken in appeal, and was
reversed by the Court of Appeal, the learned Judges holding
that though the reasoning of Bray J. was sound, the question
was concluded against the assessee by the decision of the
House of Lords in The General Accident Fire and Life
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Assurance Corporation v. McGowan (2 ). The case came on
further appeal before the House of Lords which agreed with
Bray J.that the deduction was admissible, and distinguished
the decision in The General Accident Fire and Life Assurance
Corporation v. McGowan (2 ) as one turning on the facts of
that case and as not laying down that, as a matter of law,
the deduction could not be made. Lord Haldane stated the
ground of his decision thus:
".. ...... the case is analogous to one in which if goods
are bought their value cannot be treated as
(1) [1912] A.C. 443; 6 T.C. 59. (2) (1908) 5 T.C. 308.
1008
profit without deducting the value of the liability to pay
for them which the buyer has incurred." Lord Alverstone
expressed the reasoning on which he based his conclusion as
follows:
"Premiums are not profits or gains, they are receipts
which must be brought into account and out of which, after
proper deduction for losses, profits will accrue."
Lord Atkinson also rested his decision on the same ground,
and observed:
" That case (Gresham Life Assurance Society v. Styles) (1)
clearly decided that the receipts of a business are not in
themselves profit and gains within the meaning of the Income
Tax Acts, but that it is what remains of those receipts
after there has been deducted from them the cost of earning
them which constitute the taxable profits and gains. Now
what is the service which a Fire Insurance Company renders
to each insurer in consideration for the premium it receives
? It is only, by rendering this service in each case it
earns these receipts. The service consists in indemnifying
the insurer against loss by fire during the continuance of
his policy......... Yet until that time has expired the
service for which the Company has been paid has not been
completely performed. If the accounts of the Company are to
be rendered before the date of expiry, then some division of
the premium must be made, and the proportion to be
appropriated to the service which is to be performed
thereafter. I think the description ’unearned premium’
which has been used to describe this latter portion is a
very appropriate and accurate description."
It is also material to note that one of the authorities
relied on for the Crown was the decision in Scottish Union
and National Insurance Company V. Smiles (2) wherein,
discussing how the reserve for unexpired risk in fire
policies is to be dealt with in computing the profits, the
Lord President observed:
" Seeing that fire insurance policies are contracts for
one year only, the premiums received for the year
(1) [1892] A.C. 3o9. (2) [1889] 2 T.C. 551.
1009
of assessment, or on an average of three years, deducting
losses by fire during the same period and ordinary expenses,
may be fairly taken as profits and gains of the Company
without taking into account or making any allowance for the
balance of annual risks unexpired at the end of the
financial year of the Company." Referring to this and to
another decision, Lord Haldane observed that they " are not,
when carefully examined in the light of what appears to be
the true principle, reliable as authorities for the
proposition which would run counter to the practice and good
sense of the commercial community."
On the strength of the observations quoted above, the
argument has been advanced by the learned Solicitor-General
that the obligation which an insurance company contracts
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when it issues a policy is to be treated, in computing its
profits for the purposes of taxation, as a liability in
praesenti. Mr. K. P. Khaitan, learned counsel for the
respondent, disputes the correctness of this contention. He
argues that whatever the position under the English law, a
contract of insurance is under the Indian Contract Act
merely a contingent contract, that until the event specified
in the policy happens, there is no enforceable liability,
and that accordingly unexpired risks in pending policies
cannot be treated as present liabilities. He also urges a
further contention based on the history of the enactment of
r. 2 of Sch. II to the Act. That rule as originally passed
mentioned only borrowed money and debts, and it was by s. 10
of the Excess Profits Tax (Amendment) Act (XLII of 1940)
that accruing liabilities were brought within that rule.
And when they were brought in, they did not come as
something independent of and distinct from borrowed money
and debts. They came in under a provision, which enacted
that the debts to be deducted under the rule included sums
in respect of accruing liabilities. Relying on this
circumstance, counsel for the respondent contends that
however liberally the expression " accruing liabilities "
might be construed, it cannot be interpreted so as to take
in liabilities which do not bear the character of debts, and
that a liability under a contract of
130
1010
insurance where under risk had not materialised, cannot be
held to be a debt, and is therefore not an accruing
liability within the rule. In support of this position, he
relies on the decisions in Webb v. Stenton (1) and Israelson
v. Dawson (Port of Manchester Insurance Co., Ltd.,
Garnishees) (2).
In Webb v. Stenton (1), the question was whether a sum
which was payable to the judgment-debtor under a trust deed
but which had not become due could be attached in the hands
of the trustees as a debt owing or accruing within 0. 45, R.
2 of the English Rules of Practice. In holding that it
could not be, Lindley L.J. observed:
" I should say, apart from any authority, that a debt
legal or equitable can be attached whether it be a debt
owing or accruing; but it must be debt, and a debt is a sum
of money which is now payable or will become payable in the
future by reason of a present obligation, debitum in
praesenti, solvendum in futuro. An accruing debt,
therefore, is a debt not yet actually payable, but a debt
which is represented by an existing obligation."
Israelson v. Dawson (Port of Manchester Insurance Co.,
Ltd., Garnishees) (2) was again a decision on 0. 45, R. 2,
the Court holding that the amount which became payable under
a policy as the result of the accident specified therein
having occurred was, nevertheless, not a debt which could be
attached under this rule, before the compensation had been
determined by the arbitrator in accordance with the
conditions of the policy.
The argument of the respondent based on the above
decisions is that until the risk specified in the policy
materialises and, consequent thereon, the compensation
payable thereunder is ascertained, there is only a
contingent liability and not a debt, and that such liability
is not within r. 2 of Sch. II to the Act. In answer, the
learned Solicitor-General contends that the decisions quoted
above are not in point, they having been given on a
different statute, that the decision in
(1) (1883) 11 Q.B.D. 518, 527. (2) [1933] 1 K.B. 301.
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Sun Insurance Office v. Clark(1) which dealt with the
question of assessment for purposes of taxation was directly
applicable, and that according to that decision, the amounts
reserved for unexpired risks would be sums in respect of
accruing liabilities.
That a contract of insurance is a contingent contract does
not admit of argument. That is so under s. 31 of the Indian
Contract Act, and that is also the law in England where it
is termed " conditional contract". (Vide Pollock on
Contracts, 13th Edn., p. 222). This, however, is not
material for the purpose of the present discussion which is
how such contracts are to be dealt with in assessing, the
taxable profits of an insurance company. That is a matter
which must be determined on the provisions of the taxing
statutes and their application to the facts found with
reference to the particular assessment. And it is in this
view that the decision in Sun Insurance Office v. Clark (1)
becomes important. Now, what is the ratio of this decision?
The law is well settled that a liability which is purely
contingent cannot be allowed as a deduction in computing the
profits of a business. And in holding that unexpired risks
in respect of pending policies could be estimated and
deducted out of the gross premium receipts, the House of
Lords must be held to have decided that the obligation of an
insurer under such risks was a liability in praesenti.
Reference might be made in this connection to the recent
decision of the House of Lords in Southern Railway of Peru
Ltd. v. Owen (2). There, the appellant Company operated a
railway in Peru under a statutory scheme under which its
employees were entitled to receive from it a lump sum
payment on retirement, death or other termination of
service. The Company claimed that it was entitled to value
this liability in accordance with "accountancy practice" and
to deduct the same from out of its annual profits. And
support for this contention was sought in the decision in
Sun Insurance Office v. Clark (1). In rejecting this claim
it was observed by the House of Lords that the accountancy
valuation was not necessarily the correct
(1) [1912] A.C. 443; 6 T.C. 59. (2) [1956] 2 All E.R. 728.
1012
valuation for purposes of income-tax, and that the real
point for decision was whether the claim was to be regarded
as an -essential charge against the trade receipts during
the year. In distinguishing the decision -in Sun Insurance
Office v. Clark (1), Lord Oaksey made the following
observations, which are pertinent to the present discussion:
" Reliance was placed, during the argument, on Sun
Insurance Office v. Clark (1), in which this House held that
a percentage of the premium income of an insurance company
might be deferred as a receipt to a future year because it
was paid as consideration for future liability, but the
principle of that decision is not, in my opinion, applicable
to the present case. The premium income was only deferred
and would suffer tax in a future year, whereas, in the
present case, if the appellant is permitted to deduct
compensation, Which it has not paid and which it may never
have to pay, that compensation will escape tax altogether.
There is, in my opinion, a fundamental distinction between a
contingent liability and a payment dependent on a
contingency. When a debt is not paid at the time it is
incurred its payment is, of course, contingent on the
solvency of the debtor but the liability is not contingent.
Similarly, the liability in Sun Insurance Office v. Clark
(1) was not, in my opinion, contingent but remained in force
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throughout the period of the insurance, though payment in
pursuance of that liability might, or might not, have to be
made."
The decision in Sun Insurance Office v. Clark (1) and the
observations in Southern Railway of Peru, Ltd. v. Owen(1)
quoted above do support the contention of the appellant that
in computing the profits of an insurance company for
purposes of income-tax, the unexpired risks are to be
treated as a present liability.
But even so, on the footing that r. 6 in the Schedule to
the Indian Income-tax Act has adopted the law as laid down
in Sun Insurance Office v. Clark (1), the question still,
remains whether unexpired risk in an outstanding policy is
an accruing liability within r. 2 of Sch. II to the Act.
It is contended for the
(1) [1912] A.C. 443: 6 T.C. 59. (2) [1956] 2 All E.R. 728.
1013
appellant that if that liability is a present liability for
purposes of assessing the taxable profits for purposes of
income-tax, it must logically be the same for purposes of
excess profits tax, and must therefore be deducted under r.
2 of Sch. II to the Act. That would be so, if the scheme
and framework of the Excess Profits Tax Act were the same as
those of the Income. tax Act. But the fact is that the
Excess Profits Tax Act differs, in material respects from
the Income-tax Act, and the principles applicable in the
assessment of profits under s. 10 of the latter enactment
cannot necessarily be held to be applicable in the
ascertainment of the capital employed under rr.1 and 2 of
Sch. II to the former Act. The object of the Excess
Profits Tax Act is to tax profits of a business when they
overflow a certain level. That level is determined thus: A
certain,period called the standard period is taken; the
capital invested and the profits made in the business during
that year are ascertained, and the standard profits are
worked out in relation to those two factors. Then, the
capital actually employed in business during the chargeable
accounting period is ascertained. If the capital is the
same as that employed in the standard period, then there is
no further problem; but if it is more, then the standard
profits are increased, and if it is less, they are reduced
pro tanto. Thus, the whole scheme of the Act is to tax
profits above a certain level, and that level will move
upwards or downwards as the capital employed may be more or
less. It is this that constitutes the distinguishing
feature of the Excess Profits Tax Act, and it is the
determination of the capital actually employed in business
that forms one of the most important and arduous tasks in
the ascertainment of taxable profits under the Act.
Rule 1 of Sch. II to the Act enumerates three categories
of properties, which are to be included in the computation
of capital. It is to be noted that this rule does not adopt
any legalistic or conventional notion of what is technically
termed ’capital’; but it proceeds on a factual basis to
include whatever is utilised in business, :whether it be
tangible property or intangible
1014
property. The object of the provision is clearly to confer
a benefit on the assessee by enabling him to retain at least
in part the profits realised by him by investment of
additional capital. Then there is r. 2, which provides for
certain deductions being made out of capital. Omitting for
the present "accruing liabilities", which form the subject
of the present controversy, the other two items mentioned
therein are borrowed money and debts, and the reasons for
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their exclusion from capital falling within r. 1 would
appear to be this: Money borrowed and debts incurred for the
purpose of the business must have been utilised in it, and
would be included in the capital employed as defined in r.
1. The policy of the law being to give some relief to an
assessee who invests additional capital in his business, the
reason of it requires that that should be limited to capital
contributed by the assessee himself. Otherwise, the benefit
intended to be given to him might be abused, and the object
of the legislation defeated by large scale employment of
borrowed capital. Borrowed money and debt are therefore to
be deducted out of what is capital within r. 1.
We now come to the expression "accruing liabilities".
What does it precisely import ? To decide that, we must have
regard to the scope and purpose of rr. 1 and 2 of Sch. II
to the Act and to the context and setting of the expression.
It has been already pointed out that the object of the Act
is to tax profits which overflow a certain line indicated by
what is termed " standard profits ", that the location of
that line varies with the capital employed, that the scheme
of r. I is on a factual basis to treat as capital all assets
tangible and intangible which are thrown into a business and
contribute to the earning of profits and to exclude
therefrom under r. 2 that part of it which came in as a
result of borrowing. Now, obviously. a deduction under r. 2
can only relate to what is capital under r. 1, and that must
be a really profit-earning asset, whether tangible or not-.
Borrowed money to be deducted under r. 2 is money borrowed
for the purpose of the business, and which has gone to swell
the capital under r. 1. That is also the position as
regards debts. And
1015
accruing liabilities which are liable to be deducted under
r. 2 must also be of the same character as borrowed money
and debts with which they are associated on the principle of
noscitur a sociis. They must be such as can be said to have
been utilised in the business and formed part of the really
effective trading assets during the chargeable accounting
period.
If that is the correct approach, as we conceive it is, the
question to be considered is neither, on the one hand,
whether the liability amounts in law to a debt-for if it is
capable of being utilised in business and is so utilised, it
will fall under r. 2, even though it is not strictly
speaking a debt; nor, on the other hand, whether it is a
liability which has been treated as one for the purpose of
assessing income-tax. In assessing income from business
under s. 10 of the Income-tax Act, what is allowed as a
deduction is any liability incurred solely and exclusively
for the purpose of the business, and when that has not
matured, its value is to be determined according to rules of
accountancy and deducted. But when a deduction is claimed
under r. 2, what has to be seen is whether the obligation is
such that it could be regarded as an asset used in the
business, such as could conceivably contribute to its
profits. If that is not established, then it cannot be
included as capital under r. 1, and cannot be deducted
therefrom under r. 2 as an accruing liability. It should
not be overlooked that a deduction under s. 10 of the
Income-tax Act and that under r. 2 of Sch. 11 to the Act
proceed on totally different lines and have different
objects in view. Under s. 10, the deduction is claimed by
the assessee, and that has the effect, when allowed, of
reducing the taxable profits. Under r. 2, it is claimed by
the department, and if allowed, it will enhance the
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liability of the assessee by reducing the capital under r.
1. Incidentally, how inappropriate the principle laid down
in Sun Insurance Office v. Clark (1) would be if it is
applied for determining the question of capital employed in
business for the purpose of Excess Profits Tax Act will be
seen from
(1) [1912] A.C. 443 ; 6 T.C. 59.
1016
the fact that one of the grounds on which the decision
therein was based was that 40 per cent. of the premiums
received and set apart as reserve for unexpired risks was
unearned income, and could not therefore be regarded as
profits for the purpose of the Act. If that were the true
position under the Excess Profits Tax Act, then the reserve
could not be included in the capital of the business, and,
indeed, that was one of the contentions urged by the learned
Solicitor-General. But that was not the stand taken by the
department before the Tribunal and that is directly opposed
to the plain language of r. I of Sch. II, under which all
the premiums thrown into the business would be capital
employed in the business. That clearly shows how unsafe it
will be to adopt the principles laid down for the purpose of
assessing business profits under the Income-tax Act to a
determination of the question of the capital employed under
the Excess Profits Tax Act.
In this view, is the reserve for unexpired risks an
"accruing liability " within r. -2 ? The decision in. Sun
Insurance Office v. Clark(1) that it should be allowed as a
deduction was based on two grounds. One was that it should
be regarded as " unearned income ", and for the reasons
already stated, it cannot avail when the question is one of
determining capital under the Act. And the other was that
the reserve represents a liability in the nature of unpaid
price of property included in the trading assets. But apart
from the fact that we have to strain the analogy in applying
it to the present situation, can that liability be held to
be of the character contemplated by r. 2 ? Can it be said
that the reserve for unexpired risk was, like borrowed money
and debt, part of the real trading assets of the business ?
The answer must clearly be in the negative. The reserve
liability could not factually be said to have contributed to
the running of the business or the earning of profits. It
was some. thing in the air, and could have had no effect in
the working of the concern, during the chargeable accounting
period. It cannot therefore be held to be an is accruing
liability " within r. 2 of Sch. 11 to the Act.
(1) [1912] A.C. 443; 6 T.C. 59.
1017
A case very much in point is the decision in Northern
Aluminium Co. Ltd. v. Inland Revenue Commissioners(1).
There, the question arose whether a conditional liability
under a contract was an " accruing liability " within the
corresponding provision in the English Excess Profits Tax
Act. The facts were that on December 16, 1939, an agreement
was entered into between the Ministry of Aircraft Production
and a company engaged in manufacturing aluminium products
and supplying them to manufacturers of aircraft for the
Government, wherein it was provided that the prices which
the latter was then charging to its customers should be
reduced for the period July 1, 1939, to June 30, 1940, and
that the amount by which the prices paid to the company were
in excess of the reduced prices should be paid by the
company to the Ministry. The agreement further provided
that negotiations should be started not later than June 30,
1940, for determining the rates to be charged for the
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periods following June 30, 1940. The agreement was, in
fact, concluded only on October 12, 1942, whereby the prices
to be charged by the company were fixed for the years 1941,
1942 and 1943. In accordance with the agreement entered
into on October 12, 1942, a sum of pound 2,743,469 was
repaid by the company to the Ministry in 1943 being the
difference between the price paid by the customers and that
fixed in the agreement. This amount was actually allowed as
a deduction in the assessment of the business income for
purposes of income-tax, and the dispute related to the
question whether it could be deducted in assessing the
excess profits tax as an "accruing liability" of the company
for the chargeable accounting period which was January 1 to
December 31, 1941. It was held by the Court of Appeal that
there was, in fact, no agreement between the parties during
the chargeable accounting period, and that therefore no
liability was incurred. In the alternative, it was held
that even if the agreement dated December 16, 1939, could be
construed as amounting to a conditional agreement for the
period subsequent to June 30, 1940, the obligation created
thereby could not be
(1) [1946] 1 All E.R. 546, 554.
1018
regarded as an accruing liability within the rule in
question. Lord Greene M.R. stated the reason thus:
" A purely conditional liability, which may or may not
mature, is not one which falls within that language, for
this reason: Quite apart from the actual words, it would be
contrary to the whole conception underlying these capital
provisions because a purely conditional liability, which may
or may not eventuate, is not a thing which affects a
company’s capital position, any more than a conditional
receipt can affect its capital position. A receipt which
may or may not be received, according as some event does or
does not happen, is not a thing with which you can earn
profits. It is the possibility of earning profits on your
real capital that these capital provisions are concerned
with. Therefore, in my opinion, even if one could spell
such a hypothetical and conditional contract out of these
words, the result would not give rise to an accruing
liability within the meaning of the section. "
This decision was taken in appeal to the House of Lords
and was affirmed. Vide Inland Revenue Commissioners v.
Northern Aluminium Co. Ltd. (1).
This decision establishes that a conditional liability under
a concluded contract-it is on that footing that the second
point arose for decision-was not an accruing liability for
the purposes of the Excess Profits Tax Act, as the same had
no effect on the actual capital position of the company, and
the fact that it was allowed for purposes of income-tax did
not affect the position under the Excess Profits Tax Act.
The learned Solicitor-General sought to distinguish this
decision on the ground that it did not relate to an
insurance business, whereas it was contended that Sun
Insurance Office v. Clark (2 ) directly dealt with the
question now under consideration whether reserves for
unexpired risks in pending policies were liabilities which
could be deducted. We do not see how it makes any
difference in the construction of r. 2 of Sch. II to the
Act that the liability sought to be deducted arises under an
insurance policy and not under some other contract.
(1) [1947] 1 All E.R. 608. (2) [1912] A.C. 443; 6 T.C. 59,
1019
We are of opinion that the principles laid down in Northern
Aluminium Co., Ltd. v. Inland Revenue Commissioners (1) and
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Inland Revenue Commissioners v. Northern Aluminium Co., Ltd.
(2 ) are applicable to the decision of the present case, and
that a contingent liability in respect of unexpired risk is
not an "accruing liability" within r. 2 of Sch. II to the
Act.
The decision appealed from is correct, and this appeal must
accordingly be dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.