Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
UKHARA ESTATE ZAMINDARIES (PVT.) LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, WEST BENGAL, CALCUTTA
DATE OF JUDGMENT19/09/1979
BENCH:
TULZAPURKAR, V.D.
BENCH:
TULZAPURKAR, V.D.
BHAGWATI, P.N.
PATHAK, R.S.
CITATION:
1980 AIR 340 1980 SCR (1) 711
1980 SCC (1) 540
ACT:
Income Tax Act, 1961-Assessee incorporated to take over
certain zamindari properties-Gave sub-leases and received
salami-Also received compensation for kind acquired-Amounts
received whether income or capital-Tests for deciding
whether a receipt is income or capital.
HEADNOTE:
The assessee was incorporated for the purpose of taking
over cf certain zamindari properties. By an indenture the
assessee took a lease of extensive zamindari properties for
a term of 999 years and also took an assignment OF
moveables. In consideration of the lease and assignment,
fully paid shares worth Rs. 4.08 lakhs were issued in the
new company to the lessors. The quit rent receivable by the
lessors was a nominal amount of Rs. 100 per annum. Clause
(3) (a) of the Memorandum of Association showed that the
assessee was primarily incorporated for the purpose of
taking over the assets of the lessor’s family, while cl. (b)
empowered the assessee to purchase, take on lease or
otherwise acquire and to traffic in land and generally deal
in or traffic by way of sub-lease with land and house
property. The assessee thereafter started giving out on sub-
lease various parcels of land to colliery companies for
various terms of long duration.
Rejecting the assessee’s contention that the total
amount of salami premia and compensation received by the
assessee in three assessment years were of a capital nature,
the Income Tax officer treated the amounts as income from
business and taxed them. The Appellate Assistant
Commissioner as well as the Appellate Tribunal held in
favour of the assessee on the ground that She transactions
of granting sub-leases were by way of management of the
property by the assessee and receipts on account of salami
premia and compensation on acquisition of land were of
capital nature not liable to be taxed as income.
On reference the High Court was of the view that the
assessee could not be regarded as a purely family concern
incorporated for the preservation and management of the
family assets but was a trading concern which dealt with the
lease hold rights in the lands as trading assets by using
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them to earn income and, therefore, salami, premia and
compensation were trading receipts.
Allowing the appeal,
^
HELD: 1. Having regard to the nature of the various
transactions it is clear that the receipts on account of
salami etc., must be regarded as receipts of a capital
nature. Similarly the amounts of compensation received by
the assessee for compulsory acquisitions of portions of land
partake the character of capital receipt in as much as
compulsory acquisition could not be said to be a voluntary
transaction, and compensation received would be a substitute
for the capital asset lost by the assessee. [722D]
712
2. Ownership of property and leasing it out may be done
as part of a business or it may be done as land owner.
Whether it is the one or the other must necessarily depend
upon the object with which the act is done. Where a company
is formed with the specific object of acquiring properties
not with the view to leasing them as property but to selling
them or turning them to account even by way of leasing them
out as an integral part of its business, it can be said that
the company has treated them as trader and not as land
owner. In deciding whether a company dealt with its
properties as owner one must see not to the form which it
gave to the transactions but to the substance of the matter.
[717 H]
3. On the other hand incidental sale of uneconomic or
inconvenient plots of land could not convert what was
essentially an investment into a business transaction in
real estate. The purposes or objects for which a limited
company was incorporated has no decisive bearing on the
question whether the income is of capital nature or a
revenue receipt. The circumstance that a single plot of land
was acquired and was thereafter sold as a whole or in plots
is not decisive either. Nor is profit motive in entering
into a transaction decisive. The question whether in
purchasing and selling land the tax payer entered into a
business activity has to be determined in the light of the
facts and circumstances of each case. [719 C-D]
P.K.N. Company v. Commissioner of Income Tax, 60 R 65.
Karapura Development Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-Tax,
West Bengal. 44 I.T.R. 622, discussed.
In the instant case the High Court had erroneously
treated the assessee as a trading concern qua its lease-hold
interest in the zamindari estate without actually examining
the real nature and object of the transactions of sub-leases
entered into by the assessee with several colliery
companies. In coming to this conclusion the High Court was
influenced by three factors: (a) existence of power in the
memorandum of association enabling the company to indulge in
trafficking in land by way of sub-leases of land; (b)
declaration of dividend at a high rate and (c) creation of
reserve fund by the assessee pursuant to certain articles of
association. The special features of declaration of dividend
and creation of a reserve fund are not features peculiar to
a trading concern because a non-trading incorporated entity
like an investment company can declare dividends and create
a reserve fund. These special features are not decisive of
the question whether the incorporated entity is a trading
concern or not. What is of importance is how it has dealt
with its assets or properties.
4. The assessee, which had been incorporated for the
purpose of preservation and management of the family estate
of the lessors had dealt with Its leasehold interest as a
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land owner and not as a trader. This was clear from the
Memorandum and Articles of Association and the draft
agreement in accordance with which the indenture was
executed. Nominal rent of Rs. 100 p.a. and the assignment of
moveables in favour of the assessee also point to the same
conclusion. Secondly, since its inception the assessee had
not taken lease of any other property from anyone else.
Thirdly, the transaction of granting subleases of coal-
bearing and other lands were by way of management of the
estate as land owner. Fourthly, though the memorandum of
association authorised the assessee to do business in
collieries it did not work any colliery of its own not did
it do any business as miners or coal dealers. [720 F-H]
713
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 13-15
of 1973.
Appeals by Special Leave from the Judgment and order
dated 12th/13th August, 1970 of the Calcutta High Court in
Income-Tax Reference No 69/66
P. Burman, Subrata Ghosh and S. Ghosh for the
Appellant.
B.B. Ahuja and Miss A. Subhashini for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
TULZAPURKAR, J.-These appeals by special leave involve
a common question regarding the taxibility of certain
amounts received by the appellant company (hereinafter
referred to as "the assessee ’) during the three accounting
years, namely, 1359 B.S., 1360 B.S. and 1361 B.S. relevant
to the assessment years 1953-54. 1954-55 and 1955-56 and the
question is whether those amounts represented business
income or receipts of a capital nature ?
The facts giving rise to the question may briefly be
stated: The assessee was incorporated on July 3, 1920 for
the purpose of taking over the Zamindari properties
pertaining the Ukhara Estate which belonged to Rai Pullin
Behari Singha Bahadur and the late Gosta Behari Lal Singha.
Therefore, on incorporation, by an Indenture dated July 5,
1920 the assessee took a lease of the extensive Zamindari
pertaining to the said Estate for a term of 999 years and
also took an assignment of movables, including Government
promissory notes and jewellery belonging to the members of
the lessor’s family and the arrears of rents and cesses,
debts, decrees, etc. due by the tenants of the said Estate,
the properties passing to the assessee being specified in
the schedule appended thereto. The consideration for the
said lease and assignment was fixed at Rs. 4,08,000/- which
was paid and satisfied by the assessee by allotting and
issuing its 4,080 fully paid up shares to the lessors. The
quit rent receivable by the lessors for the lessors Rs.
100/- per annum and the assessee also undertook to pay the
revenue and cesses payable to the superior landlords in
respect of the Zamindari. Clause 3 of the Memorandum of
Association set out the various objects for which the
assessee was formed and though sub-cl. (a) thereof showed
that the assessee was primarily incorporated for the purpose
of taking over the assets of the lessors family upon the
terms and conditions set forth in the Draft Agreement
referred to in Article 3 of the Articles of Association,
sub-cl. (b) of cl. 3 of the Memorandum empowered the
assessee "to purchase, take on lease or otherwise acquire
and to traffic in land, house and other property ....,...
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and generally to deal in or traffic by way of sub-lease,
exchange or otherwise with land and house property..... "
The Estate taken on lease comprised substantial
714
coal bearing lands and mines which the assessee started
giving on sub-lease in various parcels to well-known
colliery companies for various terms of long duration.
During the three accounting years in question the assessee
granted several sub-leases for which it received salami and
premia and there were also acquisitions of the portions of
the Estate by the Land Acquisition Collector for which it
received compensation. The total amount of salami, premia
and the compensation received by the assessee in the three
accounting years were respectively Rs. 22,197/-, 188,417/-
and 73,327/- and the question arose whether these receipts
were business income or receipts of a capital nature. The
Income-tax officer rejected the contention of the assessee
that the receipts were of a capital nature aud he included
the said amounts in the total income of the assessee in each
year as its business income holding that the assessee
carried on business in leasehold rights and real property.
On appeal by the assessee, however, the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner reversed the finding of the Income Tax officer
and excluded the amounts in question from the total income
of the assessee following the decision of the Tribunal
rendered on June 7, 1960, in the assessee’s case for the
earlier assessment year 1946-47, 1947-48 and 1948-49. The
matter was carried by the Income-tax Officer in further
appeals to the Tribunal, but the Tribunal by its common
order dated June 29, 1963 dismissed the departmental appeals
holding that the receipts were of a capital nature not
liable to be included in the taxable income of the
assessee. In coming to that conclusion the Tribunal mainly
relied upon cl. 3 (a) of the Memorandum of Association,
Article 3 of the Articles of. Association and the terms and
conditions set forth in the Draft Agreement (in accordance
with which the Indenture dated July 5, 1920 was executed)
which showed that the assessee had been primarily
incorporated for the purpose of the conservation and
management of the Family Estate of the lessors, that, in
fact, the assessee was not carrying on the business of
taking leases and granting sub-leases inasmuch as it had not
taken on lease any other property from any one else since
1920 upto date and that the transactions of granting sub-
leases of long duration to various colliery companies were
by way of management of real property by the assessee as
owner of lease-hold interest and as such the receipts on
account of salami, premia and compensation were of a capital
nature. The Tribunal relied upon and applied the ratio of
the decision of the Madras High Court in P. K. N. Company v.
Commissioner of Income Tax which has since been confirmed by
this Court in 60 I.T.R. 65.
715
At the instance of the Revenue the Tribunal referred to the
High Court for his opinion the following questions:
"Whether on the facts and in the circumstances of
the case, the Tribunal was justified in excluding the
sums of Rs. 22,197/-, Rs. 1,88,417/- and Rs. 73,327/-
from the total income of the assessee for the years
1953-54, 1954 55 and 1955-56 ?"
The High Court answered the question in favour of the
Revenue by holding that the receipts were not of a capital
nature and were includible in the total income of the
assessee as its business income. The High Court took the
view that the assessee could not be regarded as a purely
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family concern incorporated for the preservation and
management of the family assets for maintenance of the
lessor’s family especially as no provision had been made in
its Memorandum of Association or Articles of Association
conferring any right or share on new members that may be
born in the coparcenery, it being admitted that Ukhara
Zamindars constituted a Mitakshara Joint Family. Relying
upon the several objects set out in the Memorandum of
Association, particularly the one indicated in cl. 3(b)
(which permitted trafficking by way of sub-leases) and
further relying on what it called two special features of
the assessee, namely, declaration of dividend and creation
of reserve fund by it, the High Court held the assessee to
be a trading concern and that it had dealt with its lease-
hold rights in the lands as trading assets by using them to
earn income? rent, royalty, salami, premia, etc. and,
therefore, the receipts by way of salami or premia were
trading receipts and profits thereform were business income.
In other words, the High Court held that the assessee as a
trading concern had dealt with its lease-hold interest in
Zamindari property not as an owner but as a trader and,
therefore, the receipts in question were includible in the
total income of the assessee as business income. The High
Court relied upon the decision of this Court in Karnapura
Development Co. ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-Tax, West
Bengal. It is this view of the High Court that has been
challenged before us by the counsel for the assessee in
these appeals.
In support of the appeals counsel for the assessee
raised two or three contentions. In the first place he
contended that the High court was in error in coming to the
conclusion that the assessee was a trading concern and that
it had dealt with its leasehold interest in the Zamindari
property as a trading asset by using the same to earn
income, rent, royalty, salami, premia, etc. He pointed out
that in
716
coming to that conclusion the High Court had wrongly allowed
itself to be considerably influenced by the three factors:
(a) existence of several objects set out in cl. 3 of its
Memorandum of Association, (b) declaration of dividend by it
and (c) creation of reserve fund by it, as according to him
none of these factors would show that the assessee had
actually dealt with its leasehold interest in the Zamindari
property as a trader. Secondly, he contended that the real
question was whether after incorporation and after acquiring
the lease of the Zamindari Estate, which included
substantial coal bearing lands and mines, the assessee had
dealt with its leasehold interest as a landowner or not and
he urged that the manner in which the assessee granted sub-
leases of the lands in different parcels to various well-
known colliery companies for various terms of long duration
extending over 900 years clearly showed that such
transactions of granting sub-leases were transactions in the
nature of management of the estate as owner of the land and,
therefore, the receipts by way of salami, premia and
compensation will have to be regarded as receipts of a
capital nature and in that behalf he placed reliance upon
cl. 3(a) of the Memorandum, Article 3 of Articles of
Association and the terms and conditions of the Draft
Agreement in accordance with which the Indenture dated July
5, 1920 was executed, which showed that the assessee had
been primarily incorporated for the purpose of preservation
and management of the family Estate of the lessors. He also
pointed out that admittedly it was not the business of the
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assessee to run collieries nor did it in fact run any
colliery on its own but it merely granted sub-leases of
various parcels of land to colliery companies which were
transactions by way of management of the family Estate in
fulfillment of the primary object for which it was
incorporated. In support of his contentions he relied upon
this Court’s decision in P. K. N. Co’s case (supra).
On the other hand, counsel for the Revenue pressed for
our acceptance the view taken by the High Court. In
particular, he invited our attention to cl. 3(b) of the
Memorandum of Association which conferred power on the
assessee not merely to purchase, take on lease or otherwise
acquire and to traffic in land, house and other property but
also "generally to deal in or traffic by way of sub-lease,
exchange or otherwise with land and house property etc." and
urged that the several transactions of granting subleases of
coal bearing lands and mines to various colliery companies
on payment of rent, royalty, salami and premia must be
regarded as business transactions entered into in pursuance
of its trading object and, therefore, the High Court was
right in coming to the conclusion that the assessee had
dealt with its rights in leasehold land as stock-in-trade or
trad-
717
ing assets and the receipts by way of salami, premia or
compensation were its business income. For the reasons which
we shall indicate presently it is impossible to accept the
High Court’s view in the matter and we have to uphold the
conclusion reached by the Appellate Tribunal.
The legal principle or the test which should govern the
question of the type that has arisen in these appeals has
been clearly enunciated by this Court in Karnapura
Development Co. Ltd. case (supra). The assessee in that case
was a company formed with the object, inter alia, of
acquiring and disposing of underground coal mining rights in
certain coal fields. The Memorandum of Association of the
company enumerated other objects, such as coal raising, but
the assessee restricted its activities to acquiring coal
mining leases over large areas, developing them as coal
fields and then sub-leasing them to collieries and other
companies. The leases were acquired for a term of 999 years
and were sublet for the balance of the term of the
respective leases minus two days. The company never worked
the coal fields with a view to raising coal, nor did it
acquire or sell coal raised by the sub-lessees. As against a
salami of Rs. 40/- per bigha which the assessee had paid, it
realised from the sub-lessees Rs. 400/- per bigha as salami.
In addition, the assessee charged certain royalties at rates
higher than those it had agreed to pay under the head
leases. The company admitted that the income from the
royalties was taxable. The question was whether the amounts
received by the assessee as salami for granting the sub-
leases constituted trading receipts in its hands and the
profit therefrom was assessable to tax under the Indian
Income-Tax Act, 1922. Having regard to the objects for which
the company was formed as well as the nature of operations
which the company indulged in, this Court held that the
transactions of acquiring leases and turning them to account
by way of sub-leases were in the nature of trading activity
within the objects of the company and not enjoyment of
property as land owner and the amounts received by way of
salami were trading receipts and the profits therefrom were
liable to income-tax. Observing that the dividing line
between the two types of operations was difficult to. find
and after referring to a number of decisions both English
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and Indian, this Court at page 377 of the report enunciated
the principle in the following words:
"Ownership of property and leasing it out may be
done as a part of business, or it may be done as land
owner. Whether it is the one or the other must
necessarily depend upon the object with which the act
is done. It is not that no company can own property and
enjoy it
718
as property, whether by itself or by giving the use of
it to another on rent. Where this happens, the
appropriate head to apply is "income from property"
(section 9), even though the company may be doing
extensive business otherwise. But a company formed with
the specific object of acquiring properties not with
the view to leasing them as property but to selling
them or turning them tc account even by way of leasing
them out as an integral part of his business cannot be
said to treat them as land owner but as trader. The
cases which have been cited in this case both for and
against the assessee company must be applied with this
distinction properly borne in mills. In deciding
whether a company dealt with its properties as owner,
one must see not to the form which it gave to the
transactions but to the substance of the matter "
The other decision of this Court in P. K. N. Cos case
(supra) is equally important, for, certain aspects and their
significance in determining the question in the instant case
have been clarified. In that case the partners of a firm,
known as ’P.K.N.’ formed a private company and transferred
to it all their assets and properties consisting of 3000
acres of rubber and coconut plantations besides vacant sites
and houses. The membership of the company was restricted to
the members of PKN firm and in consideration of the transfer
of all the assets and properties of the aggregate value of
16,50,000 dollars to the company, the partners, of the firm
were allotted shares of the face value of 6,60,000 dollars,
the balance remaining outstanding as a debt due to the firm.
Limitations on the admission of the members to the company
and other attendant features indicates an intention of
conserving the properties of the members of the firm The
Memorandum of Association of the company specified, inter
alia the following objects: (i) to purchase or acquire and
to sell, turn to account, dispose of and deal with property
and rights of any kind, and (ii) to sell, manage, develop or
dispose of or otherwise deal with any part of the
properties, rights and privileges of the company. Large
amounts of money were spent on cultivation and development
of rubber and coconut plantations and substantial in come
was derived therefrom but certain uneconomical and
inconvenient plots were sold by the company in 1940 and
1941. Between the years 1942 and 1945, when Malaya was under
Japanese occupation, some further plots of land were sold.
Thereafter, in 1948, 1949 and 1950, lands were sold from
time to time at profit. As a result of these disposals, the
total holding of the company was reduced to about 2,000
acres of rubber estates. some houses and the
719
Lee estate. The question was whether the profits realised by
the company during the accounting year relevant to the
assessment year 1951-52 from the sale of the properties to
the tune of 1,41,326 Malayan dollars could be brought to tax
? on these facts this Court Id that the primary object of
the company was to take over the sets of the firm, to carry
on the business of planters and to earn profits by the sale
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of rubber: the acquisition of the estates was not for the
purposes of carrying on business in real estate. This Court
further held that the incidental sale of uneconomical or
inconvenient plots of land could not convert what was
essentially an investment into a business transaction in
real estate. The amount of 1,41,326 Malayan dollars being
capital accretion was not chargeable as income. Such
conclusion was reached notwithstanding that the Memorandum
of Association of the company conferred power on it to sell
or turn to account, dispose of or deal with the properties
and rights of all kinds. This Court clarified the
significance of three aspects thus: (a) the purposes or
object for which a limited company was incorporated had no
decisive bearing on the question at issue, (b) the
circumstance that a single plot of land was acquired and was
thereafter sold as a whole or in plots was not decisive and
(c) nor was profit motive in entering into a transaction
decisive, but the question whether in purchasing and selling
land the tax-payer entered upon a business activity had to
be determined in the light of the facts and circumstances.
In the instant case also the main question that arises
for determination is whether, after acquiring leasehold
interest in Zamindari Estate in granting the several sub-
leases of coal bearing lands and mines and receiving the
salami and premia and in receiving compensation for
compulsory acquisition of its lands the assessee dealt with
its leasehold interest in the lands as a land owner or
carried on business with it treating it as its stock-in-
trade or trading asset ? It is obvious that if the case
falls within the former category the receipts by way of
salami, premia and compensation will be capital receipts but
if it falls within the latter the receipts will be trading
receipts and profits therefrom business income. Having
regard to the ratio of the decision in Karanpura Development
Co’s. case (supra) it is clear that for deciding that
question regard must be had to the real nature and object or
purpose of the transactions entered into by the assessee
over the years. Before we proceed to examine the nature and
object or purpose of the transactions we would like to point
out how and where the High Court has gone wrong in answering
the issue against the assessee. In the first place the High
Court has erroneously treated the assessee as a trading
concern qua its leasehold interest in the Zamindari/estate
without actually examining the real nature and object of the
transac-
720
tions of sub-leases entered into by the assessee with
several colliery companies. Secondly, in arriving at that
conclusion the High Court has been greatly influenced by
three factors (a) existence of the power in its Memorandum
of Association enabling the assessee to indulge in
trafficking in land by way of sub-leases of the land, (b)
declaration of dividend at a high rate of 25% by the
assessee for the relevant years and (iii) creation of
reserve fund by the assessee pursuant to certain Articles of
Association and the High Court has given such undue weight
to these factors that it was almost regarded them as
decisive factors. P.K.N. Co’s case (supra) has clearly laid
down that the existence of the power in the Memorandum of
Association to traffic in sub-leases of lands though
relevant would clearly be not decisive. In our view,
declaration of dividends and creation of a reserve fund are
not features peculiar to a trading concern, for, it is
equally conceivable that a non-trading incorporated entity
like an investment company can declare dividends and may
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also create a reserve fund and, therefore, these so-called
’special features’ are not decisive of the question whether
the incorporated entity is a trading concern or not. In
deciding that question what is of importance is how it has
dealt with its assets or properties, whether as a land owner
or a trader treating the assets or properties as its stock-
in-trade and it is the manner of dealing with its assets,
the real nature of the operations pertaining to them and the
object with which such operations are done that assume
importance. This aspect has not been properly considered by
the High Court.
Looking at the issue from the aforesaid angle there are
several facts and circumstances emerging from the record
which clearly show that the assessee has been dealing with
its leasehold interest in Zamindari property as a land-owner
and not as a trader. In the first, place, as has been
rightly found by the Tribunal, the assessee was primarily
incorporated for the purpose of preservation and management
of the family estate of the lessors. This is clear from cl.
3 (a) of the Memorandum of Association, Article 3 of the
Articles of Association and the terms and conditions set
forth in the Draft Agreement in accordance with which the
Indenture dated July S, 1920 was executed. That this was the
primary object also becomes clear from the facts that a
nominal quit rent of Rs. 100/- per year was payable by
the assessee to the lessors for the lease of the Zamindari
Estate obtained by it for 999 years and that alongwith the
lease the assessee also obtained an assignment of moveables
including Government promissory notes and jewellery
belonging to the members of the lessors’ family; assignment
of Government promissory notes and jewellery could only be
for preservation and better management. The High
721
Court felt what militated against the concept of the
assessee being purely a family concern incorporated for the
purpose of preservation and management of family assets for
the maintenance of lessors’ family was that no provision has
been made in its Memorandum of Association and Articles of
Association conferring any right or share on new members
that may be born in the Mitakshara Joint Family of the
lessors but it is difficult to appreciate this view. On the
other hand, allotment of shares of the assessee to a few
members of the lessors’ family and absence of a provision
conferring any right or interest in the shares on the new
arrivals in the family would be more conducive to
preservation and proper management of the family assets.
Secondly, admittedly since 1920 up to date the assessee
had not taken lease of any other property from any one else
except the lease of the Zamindari Estate under the Indenture
dated July S, 1920, a pointer to the fact that the assessee
did not indulge in any business of acquiring other lands.
Thirdly,-and this is vital-the manner in which the
assessee dealt with the leasehold interest in Zamindari
Estate obtained under the Indenture dated July 5, 1920, over
the years clearly shows that the transactions of granting
sub-leases of coal bearing lands and mines ere by way of
management of the Estate as land-owner. The Tribunal in its
earlier order dated June 7, 1960 for the assessment years
1946-47, 1947-48 and 1948-49 a copy of which had been made a
part or the record of the case, has brought out certain
relevant facts in that behalf. The Tribunal has pointed out
that during the first 11 years of its incorporation the
assessee did not grant any sub-lease of land to any one. In
1339 B.S. the assessee received a sum of Rs. 7,500/- on
account of salami or premia from Burrakur Coal Co. Ltd., a
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party who was already a lessee under the predecessors of the
assessee in respect of coal mining right in mouza Bankola;
in 1340 B.S. there was another lease granted to the said
coal company where the premium was 2,893-7-0. Thereafter for
several years there was no lease granted to anybody. In 1349
B.S. another lease was granted to the same Burrakur Coal.,
the premium being Rs. 2268-12-0. In 1350 B.S. there was no
lease granted to anybody. Then between 1351 B.S. and 1354
B.S. several sub-leases of different parcels of coal bearing
lands and mines were granted by the assessee to well-known
companies for varying terms of long duration extending over
900 years for which the assessee received salami and premium
but the fact that such sub-leases were for long duration
extending to over 900 years dearly shows that the same
parcel of land had been dealt with only once for granting
the sub-leases. In the three accounting years relet to the
assessment years in question in the instant case also sub
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leases had been granted of different parcels for long
duration of over 900 years. Such manner of dealing with
lease hold interest by the assessee over the years clearly
shows that these transaction of granting sub-leases were in
the nature of acts done in the management of the Estate. The
object in granting such sub-leases was not to deal with the
lease-hold interest as a stock-in-trade or trading asset.
The dealings cannot be regarded as business transactions in
real property.
Fourthly, though the Memorandum of Association
empowered the assessee to do business in collieries,
admittedly it did not in fact run or work any colliery on
its own nor did any business as miners or coal dealers or
coke manufacturers, mica dealers, etc.
Having regard to the above facts it seems to us clear
that the receipts on account of salami, and premia received
by the assessee during the accounting years in question,
must be regarded as receipts of a capital nature. So far as
the amounts of compensation received by the assessee for
compulsory acquisition or portions of land are concerned,
the same would obviously partake the character of capital
receipt inasmuch as compulsory acquisition could not be said
to be a voluntary transaction or a voluntary deal entered
into by the assessee with the Land Acquisition Collector and
the compensation would be a substitute for the capital asset
lost by the assessee.
In our view, therefore, the High Court had erred in
answering the question in favour of the Revenue and the
Tribunal’s view that the receipts in question were receipts
of a capital nature and. therefore, not includible in total
income of the assessee, was correct.
In the results the appeals are allowed and the Revenue
will pay the costs of the appeals to the assessee.
P.B.R. Appeal allowed.
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