Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF EXCESS PROFITS TAX,BOMBAY CITY
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SRI LAKSHMI SILK MILLS LTD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
18/09/1951
BENCH:
MAHAJAN, MEHR CHAND
BENCH:
MAHAJAN, MEHR CHAND
FAZAL ALI, SAIYID
MUKHERJEA, B.K.
CITATION:
1951 AIR 454 1952 SCR 1
CITATOR INFO :
D 1955 SC 176 (14)
D 1965 SC1974 (5)
D 1969 SC1062 (7)
RF 1988 SC 460 (5,7)
ACT:
Excess Profits Tax Act (XV of 1940), s. 2 (5)--"Income
from business "--Manufacturing company--Rent of plant and
machinery let out to others--Whether income from business.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent, a company formed for the purpose of
manufacturing silk cloth, installed a plant for dyeing silk
yarn as a part of its Business. During the chargeable
accounting period (last January, 1943, to 31st December,
1943) owing to difficulty in obtaining silk yarn on account
of the war, it could make no use of this plant and it re-
mained idle for some time. In August, 1943, the plant was
let out to another company on a monthly rent. The question
being whether the income received by the respondent company
in the year 1948 by way of rent of this plant was income
from business and assessable to excess profits tax, the High
Court of Bombay held that, as the assessee was not able to
use the plant as a commercial asset, it had ceased to be a
commercial asset in the assessee’s hands and the rent re-
ceived was not income from business. On appeal:
Held, that an asset which was acquired and used for the
purpose of the business by a company formed for carrying on
business and earning profits, does not cease to be a commer-
cial asset of that business as soon as it is temporarily put
out of use or let out to another person for use in his
business or trade; the income from the asset would be profit
of the business irrespective of the manner in which that
asset is exploited by the owner, and the rent in question
was therefore income from business and assessable to excess
profits tax. No general principle, however, can be laid down
which is applicable to all cases. Each ease has to be decid-
ed on its own circumstances.
Sutherland v. Commissioners of Inland Revenue [1918] 12
Tax Cas. 63 relied on.
Inland Revenue Commissioners v. lies [1947] 1 A.E.R.
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798, Croft v. Sywell Aerodrome Co., Ltd. [1942] 1 A.E.R.
110, Inland Revenue Commissioners v. Broadway Car Co., Ltd.
[1946] 2A.E.R. 609 distinguished.
Judgment of the Bombay High Court reversed.
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal
No. 46 of 1950.
Appeal by special leave from a judgment of the High Court
of Judicature at Bombay dated 23rd March, 1948, (Chagla C.J.
and Tendolkar J.) in Income Tax Reference No. 16 of 1947.
M.C. Setalvad, Attorney-General for India (Gopal Singh,
with him) for the appellant.
N.C. Chatterjee (B. Sen, with him)for the respondent.
1951. September 18. The Judgment of the Court was deliv-
ered by
MAHAJAN J.--The sole controversy in this appeal centres
round the point as to whether or not excess profits tax is
payable on the sum of Rs. 20,005 received by the respondent
from Messrs Parakh & Co. by way of rent for the dyeing plant
let out to them during the chargeable accounting period.
The respondent (Sri Lakshmi Silk Mills Ltd.) is a manu-
facturer of silk cloth, and as a part of its business it
installed a plant for dyeing silk yarn. During the charge-
able accounting period (1st January, 1943, to 31st December,
1943) owing to difficulty in obtaining silk yarn on account
of the war it could make no use of this plant and it re-
mained idle for some time. On the 20th August, 1943, it
was let out to Messrs E. Parakh & Co. on a rent of Rs. 4,001
per month. The Excess Profits Tax Officer by his assessment
order dated 11th June, 1945, included the sum of Rs. 20,005
realized as rent for five months, in the profits of the
business of the respondent and held that excess profits tax
was payable on this amount. This order was confirmed on
appeal by the Appellate Assistant Commissioner and on fur-
ther appeal by the Income-tax Tribunal. The Tribunal,
however, on being asked referred the following question of
law to the High Court for its opinion:
"Whether in the circumstances of the case, the asses-
see’s income of Rs. 20,005 is profits from business
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within the meaning of section 2 (5) of the Excess Profits
Tax Act and therefore or otherwise liable to pay excess
profits tax ?"
The High Court answered the question in the negative.
This is an appeal by special leave from this decision.
It was contended on behalf of the Commissioner before
the High Court that the dyeing plant was a commercial asset
of the assessee’s business for the purpose of earning profit
and if this commercial asset yielded income to him in any
particular manner, it was income from the assessee’s busi-
ness for the purpose of the Excess Profits Tax Act. It was
said that it was immaterial whether a commercial asset
yields income by use of the assessee himself or its being
used by someone else. This contention was disposed of by
the learned Chief Justice in these words :-
"Mr. Joshi seems to be right but with this qualification
that the commercial asset must be at the time it was let out
in a condition to be used as a commercial asset by the
assessee. If it has ceased to be a commercial asset, if its
use as a commercial asset has been discontinued, then if the
assessee lets it out, he is not putting to use something
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which is a commercial asset at the time.
"Now, on the facts found by the Tribunal, it is clear
that when the assessee let out this dyeing plant, it had
remained idle for some time. He could not obtain silk yarn
on account of the war and therefore it was not possible to
make use of it as a commercial asset as far as the assessee
himself was concerned and it was only for that reason that
he let it out to Messrs E. Parakh & Co. I can understand
the principle for which Mr. Joshi is contending that it
makes no difference what an assessee does with a commercial
asset belonging to him. He may use it as he likes. So long
as it yields income it is the income of his business. Var-
ious cases have been cited at the Bar and I think that those
cases though apparently conflicting are reconcilable if we
accept this principle to be the correct principle
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and apply this ratio as the ratio emerging from these cases
and I will state the principle and the ratio again that if
an assessee derives income from a commercial asset which is
capable at the time of being used as a commercial asset,
then it is income from his business, whether he uses that
commercial asset himself or lets it out to somebody else to
be used. But if the commercial asset is not capable of
being used as such, then its being let out does not result
in an income which is the income of the business."
Mr. Justice Tendolkar concurred in this view and ob-
served as follows :--
"The ratio of all these cases to my mind is that if
there is a commercial asset which is capable of being worked
by the assessee himself for the purpose of earning profits
and the assessee instead of doing so, either voluntarily
allows someone else to use it on payment of a certain sum or
is compelled by law to allow it to be used in such manner,
then what he receives is income from business. But if the
commercial asset has ceased to be a commercial asset in the
hands of the assessee and thereafter he gets what he can out
of it by letting it out to be used by others, then the rent
he receives is not income from any business that he carries
on."
The learned Attorney-General pointed out that the
nature of a commercial asset is not changed because a par-
ticular person is unable to use it. The inability of the
assessee to make use of it in certain circumstances does not
in any way’ affect the nature of the asset and cause an
infirmity in the asset itself. It was contended that when
the dyeing plant became idle for a short time during the
chargeable accounting period it did not cease to be a com-
mercial asset of the respondent for it had no other busi-
ness; that all the assets of the respondent including the
dyeing plant were the assets of the business, that whatever
income was derived by the use of these assets including the
income that an asset fetched by its being let out was the
business income of the assessee, and that there was no
warrant
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in law for the proposition that a commercial asset which
yields income must be used as an asset by the respondent
himself before its income becomes chargeable to tax.
The learned counsel for the respondent urged that as
soon as the assessee found difficulty in obtaining yarn the
dyeing plant became redundant for its business and ceased to
be an asset of its business and any income derived from the
rent by letting out this asset was income received by the
assessee from other sources and therefore was not charge-
able to excess profits tax.
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In our opinion, the contention raised by the learned
Attorney-General is sound. The High Court was in error in
engrafting a proviso on the rule deduced by it from the
authorities considered by it, to the effect that a commer-
cial asset of a business concern which yields income must at
the time it was let out be in a condition to be used as a
commercial asset by the assessee himself. We respectfully
concur in the opinion of the learned Chief Justice that
if the commercial asset is not capable of being used as
such, then its being let out to others does not result in an
income which is the income of the business, but we cannot
accept the view that an asset which was acquired and used
for the purpose of the business ceased to be a commercial
asset of that business as soon as it was temporarily put out
of use or let out to another person for use in his business
or trade. The yield of income by a commercial asset is the
profit of the business irrespective of the manner in which.
that asset is exploited by the owner of the business. He is
entitled to exploit it to his best advantage and he may do
so either by using it himself personally or by letting it
out to somebody else. Suppose, for instance, in a manufac-
turing concern the use of its plant and machinery can advan-
tageously be made owing to paucity of raw materials only for
six hours in a working day, and in order to get the best
yield out of it, another person who has got the requisite
raw materials is allowed to use it as a licensee on payment
of certain
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consideration for three hours; can it be said in such a
situation with any justification that’ the amount realized
from the licensee is not a part of the business income of
the licensor. In this case the company was incorporated
purely as a manufacturing concern with the object of making
profit. It installed plant and machinery for the purpose of
its business, and it was open to it if at any time it found
that any part of its plant "for the time being" could not be
advantageously employed for earning profit by the company
itself, to earn profit by leasing it to somebody else. It is
difficult to hold that the income thus earned by the commer-
cial asset is not income from the business of the company
that has been solely incorporated for the purpose of doing
business and earning profits. There is no material whatever
for taking the view that the assessee company was incorpo-
rated with any other object than of carrying on business or
trade. Owning properties and letting them was not a purpose
for which it was formed and that being so, the disputed
income cannot be said to fall under any section of the
Indian Income-tax Act other than section 10. Cases of
undertakings of this nature stand on an entirely different
footing and are distinguishable from cases of individuals or
companies acquiring lands or buildings and making income by
letting them on hire. These latter cases may legitimately
fall under the specific provisions of section 9 or section
12, though the High Courts in this country are by no means
unanimous on this subject; but for the purpose of this case
it is unnecessary to resolve that conflict.
It may be observed that no general principle can be laid
down which is applicable to all cases, and each case has to
be decided on its own circumstances. Decisions of the Eng-
lish courts given under the Finance Acts, the scheme of
which is different from the Indian Income-tax statutes, are
not always very helpful in dealing with matters arising
under the Indian law and analogies and inferences drawn from
those decisions are at times misleading. We, however, are in
respectful agreement with the observations of Lord
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President Strathclyde in Sutherland v. The Commissioners of
Inland Revenue(1) that if a commercial asset is susceptible
of being put to a variety of different uses in which gain
might be acquired, whichever of these uses it was put to by
the appellant, the profit earned was a user of the asset of
the same business. A mere substituted use of the commercial
asset does not change or alter the nature of that asset.
Whatever the commercial asset produces is income of the
business of which it is an asset, the process by which the
asset makes the income being immaterial.
Mr. Chatterjee for the respondent stressed the point
that as the dyeing plant in the present case could not be
made use of by the assessee in its manufacturing business
owing to the non-availability of yarn, it ceased to be a
commercial asset of the business of the assessee and became
redundant to that business and that being so, any income
earned by this asset which had ceased to be a commercial
asset was not an income of the business but must be held to
have been derived from a source other than business and fell
within the ambit of section 12 of the Indian Income tax Act,
and on this income excess profits tax was not payable. He
contended that the facts of this case were analogous to the
case of Inland Revenue Commissioners v. lies(2) and it
should be similarly decided. In that case the taxpayer
carried on the business of sand and gravel merchant on
certain land and at the same time he granted licences to
three firms to enter his land and win gravel for themselves
in return for which he received from them a royalty for
each cubic yard of gravel taken away. It was held that the
royalties were not part of the profits of the business
because, in granting the licences, the taxpayer was exploit-
ing his rights of ownership in the land and was not carrying
on his business of a sand and gravel merchant. The income
was held taxable as an income from an investment and did not
fall under Schedule D which concerns profits earned from a
trade. Mr. Chatterjee also laid emphasis on the observations
of Lord
(1) (1918) 12 Tax Cas. 63. (2) [1947] 1 A.E.R.
798.
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Greene M.R. in Croft v. Sywell Aerodrome Ltd. (1),
wherein the learned Master of the Rolls observed as fol-
lows:
"I cannot myself see that a person who leases the land
to others, or grants licences to others to come upon it,
is doing anything more than exploiting his own rights of
property, even if the tenant or licensee is, by the
terms of the lease or licence, entitled himself to carry
on a trade on the land."
It was urged that what the assessee was doing in this
case was exploiting his rights of property by letting the
dyeing plant to other persons precisely in the same manner
as the owner of land in the case cited above was exploiting
his own rights to property by granting a licence to another
to come on his land. The argument, in our opinion, though
attractive, is fallacious. The analogy between the case of
land and of a dyeing plant for the purpose of taxing stat-
utes is inappropriate. The distinction becomes apparent from
the following passage which occurs in Atkinson J.’s judgment
in I les’s case(2) :--
"Then it was suggested by counsel for the Crown that
the case was like the Desoutter case(3), where it was held
that, if you make use of a patent in your business and also
receive royalties from the use of the patent by others
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licensed to use it, those royalties cannot be regarded as
receipts from an investment. In other words, the door has to
be either open or shut. A patent is either an investment or
it is not. The suggestion was that freehold land is in the
same position, and if you carry on business on part of it,
whatever you do with the rest by way of licensing or letting
cannot be regarded as producing income from investment.
That, however, is dead in the teeth of the judgment in the
Broadway Car Co. case(4). The same argument was tried there,
but Tucker L.J. said he thought the Desoutter case(3) had
very little to do with it, as there was a great difference
between land
(1) [1942] 1 A.E.R. 110. (3) [1946] 1
A.E.R. 58.
(2) [1947] 1 A.E.R. 798 (4) [1946] 2
A.E.R. 609.
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and a patent, and he did not think the Desoutter case(1)
threw any light on the matter ...... A patent is quite
different from freehold land."
These observations appositely apply to the case of a
company incorporated for the purpose of doing business and
earning profit by the process of manufacture. Letting out
a part of its machinery in a certain situation in order to
make the business advantageous as a whole does not alter the
nature of the income. The case of an owner of land letting
out his land and carrying on exploitation of part of that
land by selling gravel out of it, as at present advised, in
our opinion, would fall under section 9 of the Indian In-
come-tax Act, as income earned, no matter by whatever meth-
od, from land, and specifically dealt with by that section.
The observations therefore made in I les’s case(2) can have
no apposite application to the case of a manufacturing
concern letting out a part of its machinery temporarily
which it cannot advantageously use itself.
Mr. Chatterjee also laid stress on the decision of the
Court of Appeal in Inland Revenue Commissioners v. Broadway
Car Co. Ltd.(3). In this case the company carried on the
business of motor car agents and repairers on land held on
lease from 1935 to 1956 at an annual rent of pound 750. By
1940 the company’s business had dwindled under war condi-
tions to such an extent that no more than one third of the
land was required. In those circumstances the remainder was
sublet for fourteen years at an annual rent of pound 1,150.
The general commissioners of income-tax decided that the
difference of pound 400 between the outgoing of pound 750
for the land retained and the incoming of pound 1,150 for
the land disposed of was "income received from an invest-
ment," and, the business not being one within the special
categories mentioned in the Finance Act, 1939, that pound
400 was not taxable. It was held that the word "investment"
must be construed in the ordinary, popular sense of the word
as used by businessmen and not as a
(1) [1946] 1 A.E.R.58. (3) [1946] 2 A.E.R.
609.
(2) [1947] 1 A.E.R. 798.
2
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term of art having a defined or technical meaning and that
it was impossible to say that the commissioners had erred in
law in coming to the conclusion that the transaction result-
ed in an investment. Scott L.J. in delivering his judgment
laid emphasis on the point that after the business of the
company had dwindled, it partitioned part of the land from
the rest and sublet it by installing a heating apparatus for
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the sub-lessee. It was found that war conditions had reduced
the company’s business to very small proportions and they
cut their loss by going out of business in respect of the
major part of their land and put it out of their power for
14 years to resume business there. In this situation it was
observed that in that case they were dealing with part of
the property of the company which had come redundant and was
sublet purely to produce income--a transaction. quite apart
from the ordinary business activities of the company. It was
pointed out that the question whether a particular source of
income was income or not must be decided, as it could be,
according to ordinary commonsense principles.
The short question to decide in this case is whether on
the facts found, it could be said reasonably that the dyeing
plant had become redundant for its business as a silk manu-
facturing concern, simply by the circumstance that for the
time being it could not be used by it personally for the
purpose of dyeing silk yarn owing to the non-availability of
yarn. It is difficult to conceive that the company would
not have immediately started dyeing yarn as soon as it
became available. Instead of dyeing yarn, another person was
allowed to dye jute (we are told), the assessee company
making income out of its use as a commercial asset. In this
situation it is not possible to hold that the income thus
earned was not a part of the income of the business and was
not earned for the business by its commercial asset or that
this commercial asset had become redundant to the company’s
business of manufacture of silk. The analogy of Broadway Car
Co. Ltd. (1) therefore does not hold good for the decision
of the present matter,
(1) [1946] 2 A.E.R. 609.
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We are therefore of the opinion that it was a part of
the normal activities of the assessee’s business to earn
money by making use of its machinery by either employing it
in its own manufacturing concern or temporarily letting it
to others for making profit for that business when for the
time being it could not itself run it. The High Court
therefore was in error in holding that the dyeing plant had
ceased to be a commercial asset of the assessee and the
income earned by it and received from the lessee, Messrs
Parakh & Co., was not chargeable to excess profits tax. The
result therefore is that we hold that the answer returned by
the High Court to the question referred to it by the Tribu-
nal was wrong and that the correct answer to the question
would be in the affirmative and not in the negative.
The appeal is allowed, but in the circumstances of the
case we make no order as to costs. We have not thought it
necessary to refer to all the cases cited at the Bar as
none of them really is in point on the short question that
we were called upon to decide and analogies drawn from them
would not be helpful in arriving at our decision.
Appeal allowed.
Agent for the appellant. P.A. Mehta.
Agent for the respondent: P.K. Chatterjee.