Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
KESHAV MILLS LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, BOMBAY
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
30/01/1953
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
MAHAJAN, MEHR CHAND
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
BOSE, VIVIAN
CITATION:
1953 AIR 187 1953 SCR 950
CITATOR INFO :
E&D 1959 SC 82 (8)
F 1959 SC1165 (11)
D 1961 SC 921 (9,11,20,21)
R 1964 SC1766 (10)
R 1965 SC1636 (7)
R 1965 SC1862 (28)
RF 1966 SC 870 (5)
RF 1977 SC1802 (14)
ACT:
Indian Income-tax Act (XI of 1922), ss. 4 (1) (a) and (c),
13 Non-resident-Accounts in mercantile system-Sale of goods
in British India through agents-Assessability of profits
derived from such sale-Provision of law applicable to such
cases-Income-tax authorities, whether bound to compute
income according to mercantile system-Applicablity of s.13
to non-residents.
HEADNOTE:
A non-resident company manufactured textile goods at P out-
side British India and sold the goods ex-mills. A firm, R &
Co., guaranteed the sale-price of goods sold ex-mills by the
company to purchasers at Ahmedabad within British India. As
the company maintained its accounts according to the
mercantile system, the company debited R & Co., with the
price of goods sold and credited the sales account with the
amount of the bills. R & Co., collected the amounts of the
bills from the purchasers on behalf of the company and
credited the sums realised in the company’s account with
banks at Ahmedabad and also disbursed them to creditors of
the company in British India. These payments were credited
by the company to R & Co. During the relevant accounting
year the company thus received Rs. 12,68,480. The company
also received Rs. 4,40,878 from sales to purchasers in
British India. The amount of the sales bills for which
hundis were drawn on the purchasers in favour of banks were
debited by the company to the accounts of the respective
merchants and credited to the sales account and the sums
received by the banks from the purchasers against delivery
of the railway receipts were credited by the company to the
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accounts of the respective purchasers. In either case there
was no change in the relationship of vendor and purchaser
between the company and the purchasers by reason of the
entries made in the company’s books. The question as re-
framed by the High Court was whether these two sums were
sale proceeds of the goods sold by the assesses to merchants
in British India and whether they were received in British
India and could be included in the assessable income of the
company in British India:
Held, per Mehr Chand Mahajan, S. B. Das and Bhagwati J.J.,
(Vivian Bose J. dissenting) that the two amounts in question
were sale proceeds of the goods sold and delivered by the
company to merchants in British India ; that they were
neither received by the company nor could be deemed to have
been received by it when the entries were made in the books
of account at P but had
951
merely accrued or arisen to it there; that they were first
received by R & Co. and by the banks through whom the
railway receipts were negotiated on behalf of the company in
British India; and that they were therefore liable to tax
under s. 4(l) (a) of the Indian Income-tax Act as having
been received in British India on its behalf.
Though it is true that in the case of residents, if the
assessee employs the mercantile system regularly it is
obligatory on the income-tax authorities to compute the
income according to that system, it is doubtful whether that
position would be available to a non-resident who maintains
his books of account outside British India according to the
mercantile system.
Section 13 would only be relevant where the total profits of
the assessee have to be computed and in that event the
assessee would be entitled to claim that they should be
computed according to the system of accounts maintained by
him; it would not be relevant when stray items of income are
sought to be assessed in the taxable territories as received
in the taxable territories by a non resident.
Bose J.-In the case of accounts kept in the mercantile
system, the profit or loss at the end of the accounting year
is based not on a difference between what was actually
received and what was actually paid out, but on the
difference between the right to receive and the liability to
pay. The taxation in such cases is not on income, profits
or gains which were received but on profits which "accrued
or arose" to the assessee in the accounting year. This view
excludes s. 4(l) (a) and this means that a resident is taxed
in such cases under s. 4(l)(b) and a non-resident under s.
4(l) (c). Applying s. 4(l) (c) to the present case, in the
case of the Rs. 4 lakhs odd the profits accrued or arose in
British India where the right to take delivery of the goods
accrued and where the price was actually paid, but what is
really taxable under s. 4 (1) (c) is not the Rs. 4 lakhs
odd, but the figures entered in the accounting year -as the
price of the various transactions which the Rs. 4 lakhs
represented. Similarly, in the case of Rs. 12 lakhs odd, it
is the figure entered in the books in the accounting year
relating to the transactions which is taxable.
By the Full Court.-The expression "deemed to be received" in
s. 4 (1) (a) means deemed by the provisions of the Act to be
received.
Subramaniyan (Chettiar v. Commissioner of Income-tax (2 I.
T. C. 365), Ahmed Din Alladitta v. Commissioner of Income-
tax, Punjab (2 I.T.R. 369), Kanwal Yayan Hanir Singh v.
Commissioner of Income-tax, Ajmer-Merwara (6 I.T.R. 675),
Commissioner- of Incometax v. Singari Bai (13 l.T.R. 224)
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distinguished.
B.M. Kamdar, In re (1946 I.T.R. 14), Pondicherry Railway
Co. v. Commissioner of Income-tax (58 I.A. 239) and
Commissioner of
952
Income-tax v. Mathias (66 I.A. 23), Commissioner of Income-
tax v. Kameswar Singh (1933 I.T.R. 94), Commissioner of
Income-tax v. Chunilal Mehta (1938 I.T.R. 521) referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal ,#No. 151 of
1951.
Appeal from a Judgment and Order dated 14/15th September,
1949, of the High Court of Judicature at Bombay (Chagla C.J.
and Tendolkar J.) in Income-tax Reference No. 2 of 1949.
R. J. Kolah and N. A. Palkiwalla for the appellant.
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General for India (P.A Mehta,
with him) for the respondent.
1953. January 30. The judgment of Mehr Chand Mahajan J.,
Das J. and Bhagwati J. was delivered by Bhagwati J. Bose J.
delivered a separate judgment.
BHAGWATI J.-This is an appeal from the judgment and order of
the High Court of Judicature at Bombay upon a reference by
the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal under Section 66 (1) of
the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, whereby the High Court
upheld the decision of the Appellate Tribunal that two
amounts of Rs. 12,68,480 and Rs. 4,40,878 were the sale
proceeds of goods sold by the appellant to merchants in
British India, were received in British India and were
liable to income-tax in British India.
The appellant is a company registered in the Baroda State,
as it then was, prior to its merger with India. It
manufactures textile goods in Petlad in the Baroda State and
after the goods are manufactured they are sold by the
company ex-mills. The company employs Messrs. Jagmohandas
Ramanlal & Co. as guaranteed brokers. That firm guarantees
the sale price of goods sold by the company ex-mills to the
purchasers from Ahmedabad and receives commission as
consideration for the guarantee and the work which it does
for the company. The company is a non-resident and its
accounts are maintained according to the mercantile system.
953
In the assessment year 1942-43 (the previous year being the
calendar year 1941) the total sales of the goods by the
company amounted to Rs. 29,68,808. In making the assessment
on the company for that assessment year the following three
amounts were considered for the purpose of determining the
company’s liability to British Indian tax.
(a) Sale proceeds recovered
through Messrs. Jagmohandas
Ramanlal & Co.......................Rs. 12,68,480
(b) Sale proceeds through British
Indian banks and shroffs rec
eived by means of drafts or hu
ndies drawn by the company...........Rs. 4,40,878
(Railway receipts handed over
to British Indian merchants by
the banks on payment).
(c) Sale proceeds received by cheques on British Indian
banks and hundies on British Indian shroffs and merchants,
and collected by the banks and
shroffs .................................. Rs. 6,719735
Total Rs. 23,81,093
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As regards item (a) the company debited the account of the
firm of Messrs. Jagmohandas Ramalal & Co. with Rs.
13,41,744 which represented sales made by the company to
merchants of Ahmedabad whose payments were guaranteed by
that firm, and credited the sales account with the amount of
the bills. Messrs. Jagmohandas Ramanlal & Co. collected
the amounts of the bills from the merchants at Ahmedabad and
credited the sums recovered in the company’s accounts with
banks and/or shroffs at Ahmedabad and also made dis-
bursements under instructions of the company to the
creditors of the company in British India. All these
payments were credited by the company to the account of
Messrs. Jagmohandas Ramanlal & Co. and during the relevant
accounting year the company thus
954
received Rs. 12,68,480 against the total debits of Rs.
13,41,744.
As regards item (b) the company received Rs. 4,40.878 by
drawing hundies or drafts for the amounts of its sales bills
(including the forwarding charges and the cost of transit
from the mills premises to the station) on the merchants in
favour of recoginised banks and shroffs in British India, by
sending the same to those banks or shroffs with the railway
receipts duly endorsed in favour of the merchants and by
instructing the banks or shroffs to recover the amounts
including the costs of transmitting the same to them. The
amounts of these sales bills were debited by the company to
the accounts of the respective merchants and credited to the
sales account and the sums recovered by the banks or shroffs
from the merchants in British India against the delivery of
the relative railway receipts were on receipt of the same by
the company credited to the accounts of the respective
merchants in their books of account.
As regards item (c), the company received Rs. 6,71,735 from
the merchants by cheques and hundies drawn on banks and
shroffs in British India in favour of the company. These
cheques and hundies were negotiated by the company in Petlad
and sent back for credit to its accounts with those banks
and shroffs. The said cheques and hundies were cashed in
British India and the sale proceeds remitted by the banks
and shroffs to the company. The amounts of the sales bills
were debited to the accounts of the merchants in the books
of the company when the goods were invoiced to the merchants
and these accounts were credited with the moneys thus
received by the company from the merchants.
The Income-tax Officer brought to tax the profits derived by
the company represented by the said three items in the
assessment year on the basis that the sale proceeds having
been received in British India the profits were received in
British India. The Appellate Assistant Commissioner on
appeal held that profits
955
from items (a) and (c) were exempt from British Indian tax
while those represented by item (b) were rightly taxed. The
Department filed an appeal to the Appellate Tribunal against
the decision of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner in
regard to items (a) and (c) and the company filed an appeal
in respect of item (b). The Appellate Tribunal held in
regard to item (a) that the merchants in British India were
not absolved either in law or in fact from their
responsibility to pay to the company its dues by virtue of
the debit entries in the account of Messrs. Jagmohandas
Rainanlal & Co. and in regard to item (b) that the payment
of the amounts due was a condition precedent to’ the
delivery of goods by the banks in British India on behalf of
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the company. The Tribunal therefore held that profits
arising from items (a) and (b) were rightly subjected to
tax. As regards item (c) the Tribunal held that Rs.
6,71,735 "were received by the assessee company directly
from the merchants in British India by cheques and hundies
drawn on banks and shroffs in British India in favour of the
company but were negotiated in Petlad and sent for credit to
the company’s account. The amounts were received at Petlad
and once they were received there, they could not be held to
have been received again in British India ".
The Department asked the Tribunal to refer to the High Court
the question of law arising on item (c) and the company
asked the Tribunal to refer to the High Court the question
of law arising on items (a) and (b) and the Tribunal
therefore referred the following question of law to the High
Court:-
" Whether on the facts and in the circumstances of the case,
the sums of Rs. 12,68,480, Rs. 4,40,878 and Rs. 6,71,735, or
any of them, which, represents receipts by the assessee
company of its sale proceeds in British India, include any
portion of its income in British India?"
The High Court held that Rs. 12,68,480 were received in
British India and included the profits and gains of the
business of the assessee company. It held that Rs. 4,40,878
also were received in British India
956
and the company was liable in respect of that amount. In
regard to the item of Rs. 6,71,735, the High Court found
that the facts stated by the Tribunal were not sufficient to
enable it to reach a decision and therefore directed that
the Tribunal should submit a supplementary statement of case
setting out the several aspects set out in the judgment.
The High Court reframed the question in regard to the two
items of Rs. 12,68,480 and Rs. 4,40,878 in the manner
following:-
(1)Whether the sums of Rs. 12,68,480 and Rs. 4,40,878 were
sale proceeds of the goods sold by the assessee to merchants
in British India or were debts due by the said merchants ?
(2)Whether if they were sale proceeds, they were received in
British India ?
and answered them by stating that they were sale proceeds
and they were received in British India. There was also a
third question which was comprised in the reference and that
question was framed as under:-
Whether the profits of the assessee’s business are included
in the sums of Rs. 12,68,480 and Rs. 4,40,878 ?
This question was also answered by stating that they were
included in these two sums. The company obtained leave from
the High Court to appeal against the decision in regard to
the two sums of Rs. 12,68,480 and Rs. 4,40,878 and hence
this appeal.
It is common ground that the company is a nonresident and
its accounts have been regularly kept according to the,
mercantile system. Its balance sheets were also prepared on
that basis. The company was assessed to tax in British
India on the basis that these two sums of money were
received in British India by or on behalf of the company.
In regard to the item of Rs. 12,68,480, even though the
amounts of the sales bills were in the first instance
debited by the company in its books to the account of
Messrs. Jagmohandas Ramanlal & Co. the sale proceeds in
accordance with
957
the terms of the sales bills were paid by the respective
merchants to Messrs. Jagmohandas Ramanlal & Co. in British
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India and were either credited by Messrs. Jagmohandas
Ramanlal & Co. in the company’s accounts with banks or
shroffs in British India or were disbursed by them in
accordance with the instructions of the company in British
India. In regard to the item of Rs. 4,40,878 even though
the amounts of the sales bills were debited in the first
instance by the company to the accounts of the respective
merchants in the books of account at Petlad the relative
railway receipts were sent by the company to banks or
shroffs in British India together with drafts or hundies in
connection with the same with instructions that delivery of
the railway receipts should be given to the respective
merchants against payment and the amounts of the sales bills
were thus paid by the respective merchants to the banks or
shroffs in British India and were transmitted under the
instructions of the company by the banks and shroffs in
British India to the company at Petlad. Prima facie
therefore the amounts of the sales bills in both the cases
whether they were paid to Messrs. Jagmohandas Ramanlal &
Co. or to the banks or shroffs, through whom the railway
receipts were negotiated were paid by the merchants in
British India and were received by Messrs. Jagmohandas
Ramanlal & Co. and the banks or shroffs on behalf of the
company,in British India. The receipt of these amounts thus
fell within section 4 (1) (a) of the Act and the profits or
gains of this business thus were received in British India
by or on behalf of the company.
The company however sought exemption from liability to tax
on the grounds (a) that the accounts of the company were
kept on the mercantile or book profit basis under which the
accrual of profit as shown in the account was the criterion
of taxability and section 4(l) (a) had no application at
all; (b) that it was obligatory on the authorities under
section 13 of the Act to accept that system of maintaining
accounts except under the proviso to that section and that
the method of computation there was made the very basis of
124
958
chargeability and section 10 read with section 13 operated
to save these amounts from chargeability and (c) that the
amounts having been treated as received when credit entries
were made in the books of account, and chargeability having
crystallised on the date when the income accrued or was
treated as received, there was no further scope for a charge
when the amounts were subsequently actually received and the
subsequent handling of the amounts by the company and the
receipt thereof in British India were of no consequence.
The mercantile system of accounting or what is otherwise
known as the double entry system is opposed. to the cash
system of book keeping under which a record is kept of
actual cash receipts and actual cash payments, entries being
made only when money is actually collected or disbursed.
That system brings into credit what is due, immediately it
becomes legally due and before it is actually received and
it brings into debit expenditure the amount for which a
legal liability has been incurred before it is actually
disbursed. The profits or gains of the business which are
thus credited are not realised but having been earned are
treated as received though in fact there is nothing more
than an accrual or arising of the profits at that stage.
They are book profits. Receipt being not the sole test of
chargeability and profits and gains that have accrued or
arisen or are deemed to have accrued or arisen being also
liable to be charged for income-tax, the assessability of
these profits which are thus credited in the books of
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account arises not because they are received but because.
they have accrued or arisen.
Mr. Kolah appearing for the company drew our attention to
the following cases:-
Subramaniyan Chettiar v. Commissioner of Incometax(1), Ahmed
Din Alladitta v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Punjab(2),
Kanwal Nayan Hamir Singh v. Commissioner of Income-tax,
Ajmer-Merwara(3) and
(1)(1927) 2 I.T.C. 365.
(2)[1934] 2 I.T.R. 369.
(3) [1938] 6 I.T.R. 675.
959
Commissioner of Income-tax v. Shrimati Singari Bai(1).
The assessees there were all residents in British India and
maintained their books of account according to the
mercantile system. Except in the case of Commissioner of
Income-tax v. Singari Bai(1) where the assessment was in
respect of the total income or profits, stray items of
income treated as received in British India were sought to
be charged for tax and they were all assessed for tax not on
the basis of actual receipts in British India but on the
basis of their having accrued or arisen in British India.
The cases were decided with reference to the law as it stood
before the amendment in 1939 which under section 4(l)
rendered liable to tax all income, profits or gains from
whatever source derived, accruing or arising or received in
British India or deemed under the provisions of the Act to
accrue, arise or to be received in British India. The
question that arose for the determination of the courts was
whether under the mercantile system, profits which were
credited in the books could be taxed even though they had in
fact not been received and the conclusion reached by the
courts was that these profits credited in the books of
account were earned and could be charged as having accrued
or arisen within British India even though they were in fact
not received. In none of these cases were the courts con-
cerned with a non-resident claiming to have received profits
or gains outside British India under the mercantile system
of accounting and claiming exemption from liability to tax
under section 4 (1) (a) in respect of profits actually
received in British India.
It follows from the above that the mercantile system of
accounting treats profits or gains as arising or accruing at
the date of the transaction notwithstanding the fact that
they are not received or deemed to be received and under
that system, book profits are, assessed as liable to tax.
If an assessee therefore regularly adopts the mercantile
system of accounting he would be liable to tax on the
profits thus credited by
(1)..[1945] 13 I.T.R. 224.
960
him in his books of account subject to all deductions for
bad debts as provided in section 10 (2) (xi). Section 4 (1)
(a) has nothing to do with this basis of taxation. Section
13 which is an integral part of the computation of the total
income of the assessee and is compulsory on the income-tax
authorities as well when computing the total income (vide
section 2 (15) ) does not lay down any exemption from
liability. It only sets up a mode of computation of the
income which is liable to assessment and imposes upon the
income-tax authorities an obligation to accept the mode of
accounting regularly adopted by the assessee except in the
cases where the proviso to that section comes into
operation. The profits earned and credited in the books of
account being thus taken as the basis of computation, the
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system of accounting postulates the existence of debts in so
far as moneys re ain due and payable by the parties to whom
they have been debited and when it is realised that these
debts are not recoverable the assessee gets a deduction for
the bad debts under section 10 (2) (xi). This however does
not mean that the transaction as it has been recorded in the
books of account under the mercantile system of accounting
or the double entry system is metamorphosed or the
relationship between the parties assumes a different
character. What was in its inception a transaction of sale
and purchase is not converted into another transaction as
between creditor and debtor. The relationship as between
vendor and purchaser still subsists and there does not come
into existence a new relationship as between creditor and
debtor with all its necessary consequences. The transaction
as it has been recorded in the books of account has got to
be worked out to its fullest extent. Merely because the
goods have been supplied and the price thereof has been de-
bited to the purchaser the rights and obligations of the
vendor and purchaser inter se are not in any manner
affected. The vendor is bound to fulfil all his obligations
under the contract and continues to be liable for all the
consequences of his default including rejection of his goods
by the purchaser or a claim for damages
961
for breach of warranty by him. The purchaser is equally
entitled to reject the goods or to claim the damages as on
breach of warranty by the vendor and all these rights and
obligations have got to be worked out in spite of the fact
that the entries ’are made in the books of account by the
vendor in accordance with the mercantile system of
accounting adopted by him. The vendor could not say that he
is under no further obligation to the purchaser and that the
purchaser must pay the price of the goods debited to him as
a debt arising out of the book entry. The count in any
action filed by the vendor against the purchaser would be a
count for the price of goods sold and delivered and would
not be a count on an assumpsit for recovery of a debt due by
the debtor to him.
It is clear that under these circumstances there is no
receipt of the moneys at all, either actual or constructive,
in cash or in kind, by actual payment or by adjustment or
settlement of accounts. There is also no scope for the
argument that even though these sums may not be said to be
either actually or constructively received they should be
"deemed to be received". The expression "deemed to be
received" only means deemed by the provisions of the Act to
be received. The phrase statutory receipt might be con-
veniently employed to cover income which is ’deemed to be
received’ and instances of such statutory receipts are to be
found in the provisions of the Act, e.g., section 18 (4),
section 58 (E), section 58 (J) (3), section 7(2), section
16(1) (c) and sections 19 (2) (vii) and 16(2). (See the
observations of Beaumont C.J. in Commissionei, of Income-
tax, Bombay v. New India Assurance Co. Ltd.(1). An amount
cannot be "deemed to be received" merely by the volition or
sweet will of an individual. In all the cases which we have
mentioned above the profits earned which were credited in
the books of account according to the mercantile system of
accounting were at best "treated as having been received"
which is neither "received" nor "deemed to be received" and
therefore not within the purview of section 4 (1) (a).
(1) [1938] 6 I.T.R. 603 at p. 614.
962
If then profits which have been thus credited cannot be said
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to be received nor deemed to have been received when the
entries were made in the books of account, the contention
urged before us by Mr. Kolah that there could not be a
second receipt of the amount in British India does not
survive. It is true that the words used in section 4(l) (a)
relate to the first receipt after the accrual of the income.
Once it is received by the party entitled to it, in respect
of any subsequent dealing with the said amount it cannot be
said to be " received" as income on that occasion. [Per
Kania J. in B. M. Kamdar (1)]. The "receipt" of income
refers to the first occasion when the recipient gets the
money under his own control. Once an amount is received as
income, any remittance or transmission of the amount to
another place does not result in "receipt", within the
meaning of this clause, at the other place. This was
definitely established by the Privy; Council in Pondicherry
Railway Co. v. Commissioner of IncomeTax 2) and in
Commissionei, of Income-tax v. Mathias (3). If, therefore,
the income, profits or gains have been once received by the
assessee even though outside British India they do not
become chargeable by reason of the moneys having been
brought in British India, because what is chargeable is the
first receipt of the moneys and not a subsequent dealing by
the assessee with the said amount. In that event they are
brought, by the assessee as his own moneys which he has
already received and had control over and they cease to
enjoy the character of income, profits or gains.
This ratio however does not apply to the facts of the
present case before us. The moneys were neither received by
the company nor could be deemed to have been received by it
when the entries were made in the books of account at
Petlad. They had merely accrued or arisen to it and so far
as the receipt thereof is concerned they were first received
in British India when they were received by Messrs.
Jagmohandas Ramanlal
(1)[1946] 14 I.T.R. 14 at P. 39,
(2)[1931] 58 I.A. 239.
(3) [1939] 66 I.A. 23.
963
& Co. or by the various banks or shroffs in British India
through whom the railway receipts were negotiated. The
first receipt of the moneys was therefore when they were
paid as such by. the merchants to Messrs. Jagmohandas
Ramanlal & Co. or to the various banks or shroffs as above.
Whatever paid by the merchants to these several parties were
the sale proceeds of the goods which had been sold and
delivered by the company to them and they were received
within the meaning of section 4 (1) (a) of the Act by these
several parties on behalf of the company in British India at
the time when these payments were made by the merchants to
them.
Mr. Kolah pressed into service the argument based on section
13 of the Act that the mercantile system of accounting
regularly adopted by the assessee was obligatory on the
income-tax authorities for computation of his income. While
agreeing generally with that submission in case of
residents, we doubt whether that position would be available
to a non-resident, who maintains his books of account
outside British India according to the mercantile system.
The section would only be relevant where the total profits
of the assessee have to be computed, in which event he would
be entitled to claim that they should be computed according
to the system of accounts maintained by him. But the
section would hardly be relevant where stray items of income
are caught in taxable territories as received in taxable
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territories by a nonresident. The entries in the present
case were put in merely to prove that the sale proceeds were
received outside British India where the entries were made.
That contention however could not be sustained, as section 4
(1) (a) is concerned with cases of actual receipt and not
with cases of paper receipts.
Having regard to the observations made above we have come to
the conclusion that the High Court ",as right in holding
that the two sums of Rs. 12,68,480 and Rs. 4,40,878 were the
sale proceeds of the goods sold and delivered by the
appellant to merchants in British India, that they were
received by Messrs,
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Jagmohandas Ramanlal & Co. and by the banks and shroffs
through whom the railway receipts were negotiated, on behalf
of the appellant in. British India, that they were liable
to tax under section 4 (1) (a) of the ,*Act as having been
received in British India on its behalf, that there is
nothing either in the facts and circumstances of the case or
in law why they should be exempted from such liability, that
the answers given to the questions which were ultimately
considered by the High Court were correct, and the appellant
was rightly held liable for the tax on these two amounts
subject to all just deductions and allowances. - The appeal
therefore fails and must stand dismissed with costs.
BOSE, J.-I respectfully disagree.
Section 3 of the Indian Income-tax Act provides that the "
total income " is to be charged in accordance with the
provisions of the Act. We have therefore to see what "
total income " means.
" Total income " is defined in section 2(15). It means (not
" includes " but means) the total amount of income, profits
and gains "referred to in sub-section (1) of section 4
computed in the manner, laid down in this Act." Therefore,
the computation of all income refeffed to in section 4(l.)
has to be "in the manner laid down in the Act ".
Section 4 (apart from the provisos and explanations is
divided into three clauses, (a), (b) and (c). Clause
(b) deals with residents and (c) with nonresidents. As (a)
is general, it is legitimate to infer that it refers to
both. Therefore, the words " received" and " deemed to be
received " must be construed in the same sense in both cases
except of course where it is otherwise provided in the Act,
for sub-section (1) is made subject to the provisions of the
Act.
Now the words "deemed to be received" can be excluded from
consideration at once because I agree that they are
confined, and are intended to be confined to what I may call
the deeming sections in the Act, that is to say, to cases
where the deeming must be done
965
under the express provisions of the Act. That leaves us
with the word "received" (I am of course only deal ing with
section 4(l) (a) which deals with " receipts’ and not with
section 4(l) (c) which refers to "accruals" and "arisals"
and to that which is deemed to "accrue" or "arise").
Now this, in my opinion, is to be contrasted with the words
"accrue" and "arise" which are used in clauses (b) and (c).
Though there may be overlapping in some cases, I do not
think the three are intended to mean the same thing. The
Privy Council thought in Commissioner of Income-tax v.
Mathias(1) that there is some variation in meaning between
them and in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Chunilal B.
Mehta(2) they drew attention to the antithesis between
"accruing and arising in" and "received in", though they
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also said in the earlier case that there is not a complete
disjunction between them and that they are not three
mutually exclusive qualifications (page 56); that is, that
there may be some overlapping in certain cases.
Next, we turn to section 6 which divides the various sources
of income under various heads for the purposes of
computation and chargeability and states that each head
shall be " chargeable" "in the manner hereinafter
appearing". It is to be observed that the word "shall" has
been used and not " may " thereby implying that there is no
option in the matter. So far as business is concerned, the
head is No. (iv) "Profits and gains of business etc."
That carries us on to sections 10 and 13 which prescribe the
method of computation. Here again, the language is
imperative and in the case of a business the method of
computation has to be in accordance with the method of
accounting regularly employed by the assessee: see
Commissioner of Income-tax v. Kameshwar Singh(3).
Now in the present case, the method of accounting was the
mercantile system. The essential difference
(1) [1939] 7 I.T.R. 48 at 56. (3) [1933] 1 I.T.R. 94 at 100
and 101.
(2) [1938] P I.T.R. 521 at 527,
125
966
between this and the cash basis system is that in the latter
actual receipts and disbursements are taken into account.
In the former, sums which are due to the business are
entered on the credit side immediately they are legally due
and before they are actually received and expenditures are
entered the moment a legal liability to pay arises and
before the actual disbursements. The profit or loss at the
end of the accounting year is therefore based, not on a
difference between what was actually received and what was
actually paid out, but on the difference between the right
to receive and the liability to pay. I find it impossible
in such a case to say that the taxation -is on income, or
profits and gains which were "received". It can only be oil
profits which " accrued " or "arose" to the assessee in the
accounting year: see the Privy Council in Feroz Shah v.
Commissioner of Income-tax(’). That, in my opinion,
excludes section 4(l) (a) and that in turn means that in
such a case a resident is taxed under section 4(l) (b) and a
non-resident under section 4(l) (c).
Now, this to my mind is of vital importance. The primary
object of the Income-tax Act is to tax and not merely to
ascertain an income. The computation of the income is
subsidiary and is only for the purposes of ascertaining the
quantum of the tax: see Commissioner of Income-tax v.
Kameshwar Singh(2). Therefore, if the legislature chooses
to lay down different methods of computation and say that
the taxation shall be on the amount so computed, it is
essential that these methods be adhered to. In some cases
this may be to the advantage of the assessee and in others
it may operate to his disadvantage. But that is immaterial.
The importance lies in this. All that can be taxed in a
given year are the profits and gains which are received or
which arise or accrue in the " previous year", and if the
Act directs that the profits are to be computed in a given
case on "accruals" or "arisals" and not on actual receipts
it is essential that that be
(1) [1933] 1 I.T.R. 219at 224 and 225. (2) [1933] 1 I.T.R.
94 at 100.
967
done; and it follows from that that the tax in such a case
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can only be on the accruals or arisals and not on the actual
receipts, for clearly you cannot tax on that which you are
forbidden to compute in a case where the tax can only be
levied on what is computable. under the Act.
It is important to draw the distinction for this reason.
The rate of tax varies from year to year, therefore if the
book profits which are directed to be taxed in a given year
are, say, Rs. 10,000 and the actual receipts only Rs. 100,
it makes a lot of difference which figure is taken; nor does
it even itself out in the long run, for if the rate of
taxation increases in the following year and the state of
the business is just the reverse, namely that the book
profits are only Rs. 100 whereas the actual receipts arising
from the previous year’s transactions are Rs. 10,000, it
will make a considerable difference to the assessee in the
aggregate of tax payable over the years, whether he pays oil
the basis of book profits or actual receipts in the two
years.
I am not able to draw a distinction between a resident and a
non-resident in these matters. I can find no ground for
holding that in the case of a resident the mercantile system
must be adopted for computing the profits if that is the
system of accounting regularly employed but that that need
not be done in the case of a non-resident. If the assessee
had been a resident company, the taxation would, in my
opinion, have been under section 4(l) (b) on profits and
gains which had accrued or arisen and not under section 4
(1) (a) on profits which had been received. The same
principle must, in my opinion, be applied in the case of a
nonresident and therefore section 4 (1) (c) is attracted,
provided the profits and gains have actually accrued or
arisen in the taxable territories or they can, because of
section 42, be deemed to have accrued or arisen there. If
section 4 (1) (c) is not attracted, then the tax cannot be
levied.
Now, applying section 4 (1) (c), the question is where do
the profits and gains arise or accrue, in a case
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like the present ? This is not free from difficulty and
various views have been, and can be, taken. But as these
expressions have not been defined and as they are not words
of art, I think they should be construed in their ordinary
meaning which businessmen would ordinarily and easily
understand in a business transaction. When goods are sold
it is to my mind evident that the profit or the loss on any
particular transaction arises out of the sale, for until
there is a sale there can be no profit. - The profit may not
be wholly attributable to the sale but that is another
matter. It is to my mind unquestionable that they arise, in
part, at any rate, out of the sale. Therefore, if the goods
are sold in the taxable territories, then, to my mind, the
profits, or a portion of them, arise there. As the Privy
Council pointed out in Commissioner of Income-tax v.
Chunilal B. Mehta(1), in determining where the profits arise
the place of the formation of the contract is not the sole
criterion, other matters, as for example acts done under the
contract are also material.
I am not here attempting to go behind the decision of the
Supreme Court to the effect that the place of sale is not
necessarily the place of the receipt of the profits. I am
construing the word "arise " and not "receive".
That brings me to the next question, where were the goods in
the present ease sold ? That is a, mixed question of fact
and law and must vary in each case and must, in my opinion,
be answered in a commonsense way and not necessarily in the
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artificial manner laid down by the Sale of Goods Act to
determine where and when the property passes. What are the
facts here ? In the case of the Rs. 4 lakhs odd, the control
over the corpus of the goods was retained by the assessee
right up to the moment the price was paid; and the price was
paid not outside British India but to his nominees in this
country, namely, to the assessee’s banks in British India.
These banks retained the documents of title and had the
right to refuse
(1) [1938]61.T.R.521 at533.
969
delivery until the money was actually handed over.
Therefore, the right to get possession of the goods and to
take delivery accrued or arose in British India where the
money was actually paid, and that to my mind must be taken
to be the place where the profits accrued and arose for
income-tax purposes, not because the money was received
there, for we are not concerned with actual receipts, but
because the right which accrued at the date of the
transaction was to receive the money in British India and
hand over the goods there on the receipt of the money. As I
have said, the substance of the transaction must be viewed
and that cannot be made to depend upon the method of book-
keeping. Even if there are no books the profits on such a
transaction would accrue in the place where the money is to
be paid and the goods are to be handed over. I cannot see
how that can alter by reason of the method of accounting
employed. Accordingly, I agree that the method of
accounting adopted by the assessee cannot affect the
substance of the transactions between the parties or affect
their nature. The rights and liabilities of the parties
inter se cannot be made to depend on the way in which one of
them chooses to keep its books. But that is not the case
when we come to the question of taxation for income-tax
purposes. There the method of accounting is vital. But
even there the substance of the transaction must be viewed,
for the substance cannot alter by a mere method of
accounting. It is evident that if the assessee had been
resident in British India and these transactions had been
omitted from tile books, the sums which ought to have been
entered would be taxable as items which had escaped
assessment even if there had been no actual receipts in that
or in any following year. Therefore, it is not the entry in
the books which attracts the taxation but the profits on the
transaction itself, and when the mercantile system is used
the profits arise when the right to receive them accrues and
not when the entry is made. If the system is properly
employed the entry is made as soon as the right to receive
the price arises and so for all practical
970
purposes that is the date ordinarily referred to, but a man
cannot manipulate the amount of his tax by choosing to enter
or not to enter items which ought to be entered on a
particular date, as and when he pleases.
Now, the Rs. 4 lakhs odd represent actual receipts but that
is not what is taxable -when the computation is based on the
mercantile system. What should be taxed, or rather taken
into account for the purposes of taxation, are the figures
entered in the accounting year as the sale price of the
various transactions which the Rs. 4 lakhs represent. The
profits which arise out of these transactions do not, on my
view, escape tax because the profits accrue or arise in the
taxable territories. But the figure on which the tax is to
be computed is not the 4 lakhs odd which represent the
actual receipts but another figure which unfortunately we
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have not been given. I am of course assuming that the
figures were duly entered in the books at the proper time in
accordance with the mercantile system of accounting. If
they were not, then the Income-tax authorities have power to
tax income which, for one reason or another, has escaped
assessment
Turning to the Rs. 12 lakhs. We know that the figure
entered in the books relating to these transactions was Rs.
13,41,744. i am not clear whether that was entered in the
accounting year with which we are concerned, though I
gathered that that was the case. The actual receipts, which
followed later, amounted to only Rs. 12,68,480. In my
opinion, if anything is computable for the purposes of tax,
it is the former figure (assuming all the entries are in the
accounting year) and not the latter. But in order to
determine whether the profits on these transactions are
taxable at all, we must examine the transactions.
In these cases the sales were to merchants resident in
Ahmedabad. But according to the assessee’s affidavit,
" In respect of buyers from Ahmedabad, the apllicant Mills
have no account of such buyers. The
971
price is debited to the account of the said Jagmohandas
Ramlal and company and credited to the sales account in the
books of the applicant:"
and later, Jagmohandas
" discharges its debts by making payments to the applicants
from time to time towards the balance in their said account
in the books of the applicant Mills. The said amounts are
paid by the said firm by paying the same to the credit of
the applicant Mills with British Indian banks or shroffs."
Now, it is evident from this that Jagmohandas & Company do
not merely guarantee payment by the Ahmedabad buyers but
actually make the payments, or the equivalent of payments,
to the assessee company. So little do the ’buyers matter
that their transactions are not even reflected in the
accounts. All we have is Jagmohandas. It does not, in my
opinion, matter whether the actual buyers remained primarily
and legally responsible to the assessee or not. The fact
remains that in practice Jagmohandas & Company actually met
the obligations of the buyers and discharged their
liabilities to the assessee. it is, equally clear that
Jagmohandas & Company must have recouped themselves in some
way from the buyers. The question is how. If the whole of
the transactions occurred outside British India and the
buyers or their agents went to Petlad and received the goods
there and paid Jagmohandas & ’Company outside British India,
then I am clear that the profits and gains did not accrue or
arise in British India, simply be-cause the (foods were
ultimately brought there. But if Jagmohandas & Company or
their agents were paid in British India, the profits and
gains, in my opinion, arose there in the same way as in the
4 lakhs case. If Jagmohandas & Company were the actual
agents of the assessee as were the banks in the other case,
and the payments were made in the taxable territories, then
the accrual and arising was direct. If, however, they were
not the agents in the strict sense of the term, then I am of
opinion that section 42 would be attracted because at the
very least there would be a "business connection",
972
provided of course the payments were made in the taxable
territories.
Now, here again., I am looking to what was actually done in
order to determine what the rights were, for it is evident
that what was done was done in pursuance of some agreement,
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express or implied, between the parties which agreement
regulated their rights, and those rights in turn determine
the place where the profits accrued or arose, or must,
because of section 42, be deemed to have accrued or arisen.
In my view, the question referred by the Incometax Appellate
Tribunal in its statement of the case does not reflect the
true position because it concentrates on the actual
receipts. If the cash basis system of accounting was
germane here, then I would agree that the Rs. 4,40,878 was
part of the assessee’s income in British India, and so also
in the other case, provided the payments were made in
British India. But it is misleading to enquire what would
have happened in circumstances which are not material in
this case because of the mercantile system of accounting
which was employed.
As regards the High Court. The learned Judges refrained the
question and answered it without sending the case back to
the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal for a further statement of
the case. That was not strictly proper. But, in my
opinion, the refrained questions suffer from the same
defect.
In my opinion, the case should be sent back to the Income-
tax Appellate Tribunal for a refraining of the questions
along the lines I have indicated and for a further statement
of the case.
Appeal dismissed.
Agent for the appellants: Rajinder Narain.
Agent for the respondents: G. H. Rajadhyaksha,
973