Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 2335 of 2003
PETITIONER:
Commissioner of Income Tax, Mumbai
RESPONDENT:
D.P. Sandu Bros. Chembur (P) Ltd.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 31/01/2005
BENCH:
Ruma Pal,Arijit Pasayat & C.K. Thakker
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
RUMA PAL, J.
The primary question involved in this appeal is whether
the amount received by the respondent-assessee on surrender
of tenancy rights is liable to capital gains tax under Section 45
of the Income tax Act, 1961. The assessment year in question
is 1987-88. The lease agreement was entered in 1959 for 50
years under which an annual rent was paid by the lessee to the
lessor. The lease would have continued till 2009. During the
relevant previous year, in March 1986, the respondent
surrendered its tenancy right to its lessor prematurely. In
consideration for such premature termination, the lessor paid
the lessee a sum of Rs. 35 lakhs.
In the assessee’s return the sum of Rs.35 lakhs had been
credited to its reserve and surplus account. This was disallowed
by the Assessing Officer who held that the amount of
Rs.35 lakhs was taxable as "income from other sources" under
Section 10(3) read with Section 56. The assessee appealed to
the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) who came to the
conclusion that the assessee was liable to pay capital gains on
the amount of Rs. 35 lakh after deducting an amount of Rs.7
lakhs as the cost of acquisition. The Commissioner had
determined the cost of acquisition at Rs. 7 lakhs on the basis of
the market value of the property as on 1.4.1974. Both the
Department and the assessee challenged the decision of the
Commissioner before the Tribunal.
The Tribunal relied upon the decision of this Court in
Commissioner of Income Tax V. Srinivasa Setty 128 ITR
294 = (1981) 2 SCC 460 as well as the amendment to Section
55(2) of the Act in 1995 and held that the assessee did not
incur any cost to acquire the leasehold rights and that if at all
any cost had been incurred it was incapable of being
ascertained. It was therefore held that since the capital gains
could not be computed as envisaged in Section 48 of the
Income Tax Act, therefore capital gains earned by the assessee
if any was not exigible to tax.
The Department preferred an appeal before the High
Court. The High Court dismissed the appeal. Being aggrieved
by the decision of the High Court, this further appeal has been
preferred by the Department.
The Department has contended that the surrender value
of the tenancy rights was chargeable to capital gains under
Section 45 of the Act. If not, it was liable to be taxed as
’income from other sources’ under Section 10(3) read with
Section 56 of the Act.
Section 2(24)(vi) defines ’income’ as including "any
capital gains chargeable under Section 45". Section 45
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provides that any profits or gains arising from the transfer of a
capital asset effected in the previous year is chargeable to
income tax under the head ’capital gains’ and is deemed to be
the income of the previous year in which the transfer took
place, subject to certain exceptions which are not material in
this case. Section 48 provides for the mode of computation of
income chargeable under the head ’capital gains’. The method
of computation prescribed is by deducting from the full value of
the consideration received or accruing as a result of the transfer
of the capital asset, certain prescribed amounts including the
cost of acquisition of the assets and the cost of any
improvement thereto.
That the tenancy right is a capital asset, the surrender of
the tenancy right is a "transfer" and the consideration received
therefore a capital receipt within the meaning of Section 45 has
not been questioned before us and must in any event be taken
to be concluded by the decision of this Court in A. Gasper v.
Commissioner of Income Tax . Normally the consideration
would therefore be subjected to capital gains under Section 45.
In 1981 this Court in Commissioner of Income Tax V.
B.C. Srinivasa Setty held that all transactions encompassed
by Section 45 must fall within the computation provisions of
Section 48. If the computation as provided under Section 48
could not be applied to a particular transaction, it must be
regarded as "never intended by Section 45 to be the subject of
the charge". In that case, the Court was considering whether a
firm was liable to pay capital gains on the sale of its goodwill to
another firm. The Court found that the consideration received
for the sale of goodwill could not be subjected to capital gains
because the cost of its acquisition was inherently incapable of
being determined. Pathak J. as his Lordship then was,
speaking for the Court said:
"What is contemplated is an asset in the
acquisition of which it is possible to envisage
a cost. The intent goes to the nature and
character of the asset, that it is an asset which
possesses the inherent quality of being
available on the expenditure of money to a
person seeking to acquire it. It is immaterial
that although the asset belongs to such a
class it may, on the facts of a certain case, be
acquired without the payment of money."
In other words, an asset which is capable of acquisition at
a cost would be included within the provisions pertaining to the
head ’capital gains’ as opposed to assets in the acquisition of
which no cost at all can be conceived. The principle
propounded in Srinivasa Setty has been followed by several
High Courts with reference to the consideration received on
surrender of tenancy rights. [See: Among others Bawa Shiv
Charan Singh Vs. Commissioner of Income Tax, Delhi (1984)
149 ITR.29; The Commissioner of Income Tax Vs. Mangtu Ram
Jaipuria (1991) 192 ITR 533(Cal.); Commissioner of Income
Tax Vs. Joy Ice Cream (Bang) Pvt. Ltd. (1993) 2001 ITR
895(Kar.) Commissioner of Income Tax Vs. Markapakula
Agamma (1987) 165 ITR 386 (A.P.); Commissioner of Income
Tax Vs. Merchandisers (P) Ltd. (1990) 182 ITR 107) (Ker.)] . In
all these decisions the several High Courts held that if the cost
of acquisition of tenancy rights cannot be determined, the
consideration received by reason of surrender of such tenancy
rights could not be subjected to capital gains.
According to a Circular issued by the Central Board of
Direct Taxes it was to meet the situation created by the
decision in Srinivasa Setty and the subsequent decisions of
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the High Court that the Finance Act 1994 amended Section 55
(2) to provide that the cost of acquisition of inter-alia a tenancy
right would be taken as nil. By this amendment, the judicial
interpretation put on capital assets for the purposes of the
provisions relating to capital gains was met. In other words the
cost of acquisition would be taken as determinable but the rate
would be nil.
The amendment took effect from 1st April 1995 and
accordingly applied in relation to the assessment year 1995-96
and subsequent years. But till that amendment in 1995, and
therefore covering the Assessment Year in question, the law as
perceived by the Department was that if the cost of acquisition
of a capital asset could not in fact be determined, the transfer of
such capital asset would not attract capital gains. The
appellant now says that Srinivasa Setty’s case would have no
application because a tenancy right cannot be equated with
goodwill. As far as goodwill is concerned, it is impossible to
specify a date on which the acquisition may be said to have
taken place. It is built up over a period of time. Diverse factors
which cannot be quantified in monetary terms may go into the
building of the goodwill, some tangible some intangible. It is
contended that a tenancy right is not a capital asset of such a
nature that the actual cost on acquisition could not be
ascertained as a natural legal corollary.
We agree. A tenancy right is acquired with reference to
a particular date. It is also possible that it may be acquired at a
cost. It is ultimately a question of fact. In A.R. Krishnamurthy
and Ors. v. Commissioner of Income Tax, Madras (1989)
176 ITR 417 this Court held that it cannot be said conceptually
that there is no cost of acquisition of the grant of the lease. It
held that the cost of acquisition of leasehold rights can be
determined. In the present case however, the Department’s
stand before the High Court was that the cost of acquisition of
the tenancy was incapable of being ascertained. In view of the
stand taken by the Department before the High Court, we
uphold the decision of the High Court on this issue.
Were it not for the inability to compute the cost of
acquisition under Section 48, there is, as we have said, no
doubt that a monthly tenancy or leasehold right is a capital
asset and that the amount receipt on its surrender was a capital
receipt. But because we have held that Section 45 cannot be
applied, it is not open to the Department to impose tax on such
capital receipt by the assessee under any other Section. This
Court, as early as in 1957 had, in United Commercial Bank
Ltd. V. Commissioner of Income Tax Ltd., West Bengal
(1957) 32 ITR 688, held that the heads of income provided for
in the Sections of the Income Tax Act, 1922 are mutually
exclusive and where any item of income falls specifically under
one head, it has to be charged under that head and no other.
In other words, income derived from different sources falling
under a specific head has to be computed for the purposes of
taxation in the manner provided by the appropriate Section and
no other. It has been further held by this Court in East India
Housing and Land Development Trust Ltd. V.
Commissioner of Income Tax, West Bengal (1961) 42 ITR
49 that if the income from a source falls within a specific head,
the fact that it may indirectly be covered by an another head
will not make the income taxable under the latter head. (See
also: Commissioner of Income Tax Vs. Chugandas and
Co.(1964) 55 ITR 17).
Section 14 of the Income Tax Act 1961 as it stood at the
relevant time similarly provided that "all income shall for the
purposes of charge of income tax and computation of total
income be classified under six heads of income," namely;
(A) Salaries;
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(B) Interest on Securities;
(C) Income from house property;
(D) Profits and gains and business or profession;
(E) Capital gains;
(F) Income from other sources unless otherwise, provided in
the Act.
Section 56 provides for the chargeability of income of
every kind which has not to be excluded from the total income
under the Act, only if it is not chargeable to income tax under
any of the heads specified in Section 14 items A to E.
Therefore, if the income is included under any one of the
heads, it cannot be brought to tax under the residuary
provisions of Section 56.
There is no dispute that a tenancy right is a capital asset
the surrender of which would attract Section 45 so that the
value received would be a capital receipt and assessable if at
all only under Item E of Section 14. That being so, it cannot be
treated as a casual or non recurring receipt under Section 10(3)
and be subjected to tax under Section 56. The argument of the
appellant that even if the income cannot be chargeable under
Section 45, because of the inapplicability of the computation
provided under Section 48, it could still impose tax under the
residuary head is thus unacceptable. If the income cannot be
taxed under Section 45, it cannot be taxed at all. (See: S.G.
Mercantile Corporation (P) Ltd. Vs. Commissioner of Income
Tax, Calcutta (1972) 83 ITR 700).
Furthermore, it would be illogical and against the
language of Section 56 to hold that everything that is exempted
from capital gains by statute could be taxed as a casual or non
recurring receipt under Section 10(3) read with Section 56. We
are fortified in our view by a similar argument being rejected in
Nalinikant Ambalal Mody Vs. S.A.L. Narayan Row CIT
(1966) 61 ITR 428,432,435.
The appeal is accordingly dismissed without any order as
to costs.