Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, TAMIL NADU II, MADRAS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MADRAS AUTO SERVICE (P) LTD. ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 12/08/1998
BENCH:
SUJATA V. MANOHAR, S. RAJENDRA BABU
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
THE 12TH DAY OF AUGUST, 1998
Present :
Hon’ble Mrs. Justice Sujata V. Manohar
Hon’ble Mr. Justice S. Rajendra Babu
K.N. Shukla, Sr. Adv., (S. Rajappa,) Adv. for B.K. Prasad,
Adv. with him for the appellant
T.A. Ramachandran, Sr. Adv. Mrs. Janaki Ramachandran, Ms. H
. Wahi, Advs. with him for the Respondents
J U D G E M E N T
The following Judgment of the Court was delivered :
[With C.A. Nos. 6066-67 (NT) of 1983]
Mrs. Sujata V. Manohar. J.
The assessee is a limited company carrying on the
business of sale of motor parts. Its head-office is at
Madras. It has a branch at Bangalore. Under an agreement of
lease dated 1st of February, 1966, the assessee obtained
from M/S. Hajira Comer and Mrs. Rabia Bai Razack a lease of
premises Nos. 64 and 64/1 situated at Sri Narasimharaja
Road, Bangalore for a period of 39 years commencing from 1st
of January, 1966. Under the terms and conditions of the
lease, the lessee (that is to say the assessee), had the
right to demolish at its own expense the existing premises
and appropriate to itself all the material thereof without
paying to the lessors any compensation and construct a new
building thereon to suit the purpose of their business as
per the plan approved by the lessors. Under Clause 2 of the
lease deed, the lessee was required to pay a rent of Rs.
1000/- per month for the first fifteen years, Rs. 1500/- per
month for the next ten years, Rs. 1650/- per month for the
next ten years and Rs. 2000/- per month for the remaining
years. The lease deed further provided that the new
construction shall, right from t he commencement of the
work, be the property of the lessors; and upon completion of
the work of construction the lessee will have only the
right to be a tenant for a period of 39 years under the
existing lease subject to the payment of rent and
observation of other terms and conditions of the lease. The
lessee shall not be entitled under any circumstances for
any compensation whatsoever on account of its putting up
the new construction in the place of the old.
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Acting under the lease agreement the assessee invested
a sum of Rs. 1,62, 835/- in the previous year relevant to
the assessment year 1968/69 and Rs. 50, 937/- during the
succeeding year in constructing a new building on the said
land. The assesee claimed before the Income-tax Officer the
expenditure of the said sums of Rs. 1, 62,835/- and Rs. 50,
937/- in the relevant assessment years as capital loss. In
the alternative, the assessee claimed depreciation on
capital investment; in the alternative, the assessee claimed
deduction of the payments as business expenditure or as
extra rent for the lease. Ultimately, the Income-tax
Tribunal has held that the expenditure of the said two
amounts for the construction of a new building is in the
nature of business expenditure for proper carrying on of the
business of the assessee. The Tribunal has, therefore,
treated these amounts as revenue expenditure and allowed a
deduction in that regard to the assessee. The claim of the
department that the expenditure was capital expenditure and
was, therefore, not deductible was negatived by the
Tribunal.
On the application of the department the Tribunal
referred the following question to the High Court for its
determination under Section 256(1) of the Income-tax Act,
1961 :
"Whether on the fact and in the
circumstances of the case the
Appellate Tribunal was right in
holding that the building expenses
of Rs. 1,62,835/- are not liable to
be taken into account as deductible
expenditure in arriving at the real
income of the assessee fro the
assessment year 1968-69?"
For the next assessment year, a similar question was
raised in regard to the second sum of Rs. 50,937/-. The High
Court has, by the impugned judgment, upheld the view of the
Tribunal and has held that the two amounts constitute
revenue expenditure for the concerned assessment years and
are deductible in order to arrive at the income of the
assessee for the said assessment years. The present appeals
are filed by the department from the impugned judgment of
the High Court.
The assessee in the present case has spent the amounts
in question in order to construct a new building after
demolishing the old building. The new building, however,
from inception was to belong to the lessor and not to the
assessee. The assessee, however, had the benefit of the
existing lease in respect of the new building at the agreed
rent for a period of 39 years. The Tribunal has found, as a
fact, that the rent as stipulated in the lease was extremely
low. It rental rate for the area in which the building was
situated was much higher and would be not less than Rs.
12,000/- as against which the maximum rent the assessee
would be paying was only Rs. 2,000/-. This concessional rent
was on account of the fact that the new building was
constructed by the assessee at its own cost.
In order to decide whether this expenditure is revenue
expenditure or capital expenditure, one has to look at the
expenditure from a commercial point of view. What advantage
did the assessee get by constructing a building which
belonged to somebody else and spending money for such
construction? The assessee got a long lease of a newly
constructed building suitable to its own business at a very
concessional rent. The expenditure, therefore, was made in
order to secure a long lease of new and more suitable
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business premises at a lower rent. In other words, the
assessee made substantial savings in monthly rent for a
period of 39 years by expending these amounts. The saving in
expenditure was saving in revenue expenditure in the form
of rent. Whatever substitutes for revenue expenditure should
normally be considered as revenue expenditure. Moreover,
assessee in the present case did not get any capital asset
by spending the said amounts. The assessee, therefore, could
not have claimed any depreciation. Looking to the nature of
the advantage which the assessee obtained in a commercial
sense, expenditure appears to be revenue expenditure.
The test for distinguishing between capital expenditure
and revenue expenditure in our country was laid down by this
Court in Assam Bengal Cement Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of
Income-tax, West Bengal (27 ITR 34). In that case, the
appellant-company had acquired from the Government of Assam
lease of certain lime-stone quarries for a period of 20
years for the purpose of manufacture of cement. The lessee
had, inter alia, agreed to pay an annual sum during the
whole period of the lease as a protection fee and in
consideration of that payment, the lessor undertook not to
grant to any person any lease, permit or prospecting licence
for lime-stone. This Court examined tests laid down in
various cases for distinguishing between capital expenditure
and revenue expenditure. One of the standard tests now in
use was laid down in the case of Atherton v. British
Insulated and Helsby Cables Ltd. ([1925] 10 Tax. Cases 155).
It said : "When an expenditure is made, not only once and
for all but with a view to bringing into existence an asset
or an advantage for the enduring benefit of a trade, I think
that there is very good reason (in the absence of special
circumstances leading to an opposite conclusion) for
treating such an expenditure as properly attributable not to
revenue but to capita." Whether by spending the money any
advantage of an enduring nature has been obtained or not
will depend upon the facts of each case. Moreover, as the
above passage itself provides, this test would not apply if
there are special circumstances pointing to the contrary.
This Court in the above case summarised the tests as follows
:(p. 44) :
1. Outlay is deemed to be capital
when it is made for the
initiation of a business, for
extension of a business, or
for a substantial replacement
of equipment.
2. Expenditure may be treated as
properly attributable to
capital when it is made not
only once and for all, but
with a view to bringing into
existence an asset or an
advantage for the enduring
benefit of a
trade...........If what is got
rid of by a lump sum payment
is an annual business expense
chargeable against revenue,
the lump sum payment should
equally be regarded as a
business expense, but if the
lump sum payment brings in a
capital asset, then that puts
the business on another
footing altogether.
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3. Whether for the purpose of the
expenditure, any capital was
withdrawn, or, in other words,
whether the object of
incurring the expenditure was
to employ what was taken in as
capital of the business.
Again, it is to be seen
whether the expenditure
incurred was part of the fixed
capital of the business or
part of its circulating
capital.
(underlining ours)
Relying upon the second test enumerated above, learned
counsel for the appellant has submitted that the assessee
got enduring benefit of a capital nature by spending the
amount because the assessee obtained a new building for a
period of 39 years. The difficulty, however, in the present
case, arises from the fact that this building was never to
belong to the assesseee. Right from inception, the building
was of the ownership of the lessor. Therefore, by spending
this money, the assessee did not acquire any capital asset.
The only advantage which the assessee derived by spending
the money was that it got the lease of a new building at a
low rent. From the business point of view, therefore, the
assessee got the benefit of reduced rent. The High Court
has, therefore, rightly considered this as obtaining a
business advantage. The expenditure is, therefore, to be
treated as revenue expenditure.
Although there are a number of cases dealing with this
question, we will limit ourselves to examining a few cases
where the assessee, by expending money, created and asset of
an enduring nature. However, the asset so created did not
belong to the assessee. In such a situation the courts have
held that the expenditure was for better carrying on of the
business of the assessee and could be allowed as revenue
expenditure, looking to the circumstances of each of those
cases. Thus in Lakshmiji Sugar Mills Co. P. Ltd. v.
Commissioner of Income-tax, New Delhi (82 ITR 376) the
assessee company was carrying on the business of manufacture
and sale of sugar. It paid to the Cane Development Council
certain amounts by way of contribution for the construction
and development of roads between various sugarcane-producing
centres and the sugar factories of the assessee. The roads
remained the property of the Government. This Court held
that the expenditure was not of a capital nature and had to
be allowed as an admissible deduction in computing the
profits of the assessee’s business. The expenditure was
incurred for the purpose of facilitating the running of the
assessee’s motor vehicles and other means employed for
transportation of sugarcane to its factories.
In the case of L.H. Sugar Factory and Oils Mills (P)
Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax, U.P. (125 ITR 293), the
assesee was carrying on the business of manufacture and sale
of sugar. It has its factory in U.P. The assessee paid a
contribution towards meeting the cost of construction of
roads in the area around its factory under a sugarcane
development scheme. The question was whether this amount was
deductible in computing the assessee’s profits. The Court
held that it was. Because although the advantage secured was
of long duration, it was not an advantage in the capital
field because no tangible or intangible asset was acquired
by the assessee; nor was there any addition to or expansion
of the profit making apparatus of t he assessee. The amount
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was contributed for the purpose of facilitating the business
of the assessee and making it more efficient and profitable.
It was, therefore, revenue expenditure.
In the case of Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay City-
I v. Associated Cement Companies Ltd. (172 ITR 257) the
respondent-company entered into an agreement to supply water
to the municipality and provide water pipelines as also to
supply electricity for street lighting and put up a
transmission line for that purpose. The assessee also agreed
to concrete the main road from the factory to the railway
station. The amounts expended for these purposes were held
to be revenue expenditure since the installations and
accessories were the assets of the municipality and not of
the assessee. The expenditure, therefore, did not result in
creating any capital asset for the company. The advantage
secured by the respondent was immunity from liability to pay
municipal rates and taxes for a period of 15 years. This
Court said that had these liabilities been paid, the
payments would have been on revenue account. Therefore, the
advantage secured was in the field of revenue and not
capital.
In the case of Commissioner of Income-tax v. Bombay
Dyeing and Manufacturing Co. Ltd. (219 ITF 521) the company
contributed to the State Housing Board certain amounts for
construction of tenements for its workers. The tenements
remained the property of the Housing Board. It was held that
the expenditure was incurred wholly and exclusively on the
welfare of the employees and, therefore, constituted
legitimate business expenditure. As the assessee company
acquired no ownership rights in the tenements, this Court
said that the expenditure was incurred merely with a view to
carry on the business of the company more efficiently by
having a contented labour force.
All these cases have looked upon expenditure which did
bring about some kind of an enduring benefit to the company
as a revenue expenditure when the expenditure did not bring
into existence any capital asset for the company. The asset
which was created belonged to somebody else and the company
derived an enduring business advantage by expending the
amount. In all these cases, the expense has been looked upon
as having been made for the purpose of conducting the
business of the assessee more profitably or more
successfully. In the present case also, since the asset
created by spending the said amounts did not belong to the
assessee but t he assessee got the business advantage of
using modern premises at a low rent, thus saving
considerable revenue expenditure for the next 39 years, both
the Tribunal as well as the High Court have rightly come to
the conclusion that the expenditure should be looked upon as
revenue expenditure.
In the premises, the appeals are dismissed with costs.