Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MESSRS. CALCUTTA COMPANY LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX,WEST BENGAL
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
12/05/1959
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN (CJ)
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
CITATION:
1959 AIR 1165 1960 SCR (1) 185
ACT:
Income-tax-Assessment of land-developing Company-Mercantile
method of accounting adopted by assessee and accepted by
Incometax Officer-Accrued liability for future development
expenses, if an allowable deduction in the accounting year-
lndian Income-tax Act (XI Of 1922), S. 1O(1).
HEADNOTE:
The appellant company carried on land-developing business
and sold land after development on a profit. The whole of
the development was not carried out before the land was sold
nor the whole of the sale price received in cash at the time
of the sale. In the accounting year in question the
appellant sold a number of plots and received a portion of
the sale price but as it maintained its accounts in the
mercantile method it entered the whole price receivable,
viz., Rs. 43,692-11-9, in credit side though only Rs.
29,392-11-9 was actually received and debited a sum of Rs.
24,809, being the estimated expenditure for the developments
it had, by terms incorporated in the deeds of sale, under-
taken to carry out within six months thereof, although no
part of it was actually spent during that year. The
appellant claimed a deduction of the said sum of RS. 24,809
in computation of the profits and gains of its business
during the assessment year. The Income-tax Officer, while
accepting the method of accounting adopted by the appellant,
disallowed the ’claim on the ground that no expenses had
actually been incurred and the estimate was only a probable
one. The Appellate Assistant Commissioner as well as the
Income-tax Appellate Tribunal confirmed the disallowance on
appeals and the High Court, on a reference under S. 66(1) of
the Income-tax Act held against the appellant. The question
was whether the deduction claimed was a legally allowable
expense of the year in question.
Held, that the liability which was undertaken by the appel-
lant under the deeds of sale was an accrued liability and
not a contingent one. Although the time of six months was
not of the essence of the contract, the undertaking it had
given was unconditional and absolute in terms and the
liability must be held to have accrued on the execution of
the deeds of sale though it was to be discharged at a future
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date.
Keshav Mills Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay,
[1953] S-C.R. 950, referred to.
Peter Meychant Ltd. v. Stedeford (Inspector of Taxes),
(1948) 30 T.C. 496. distinguished.
24
186
The difficulty in estimating such a liability for purposes
of debit under the mercantile system of accounting could be
no ground for treating an accrued liability as a conditional
one, since it was always open to the Income-tax authorities
to arrive a proper estimate thereof having regard to all the
circumstances of the case.
Gold Coast Selection Trust Ltd. v. Humnphrey (Inspector
Taxes), [19481 A.C. 459, referred to.
Regard being had, therefore, to the accepted commercial
practice and trading principles, the estimated deduction,
even if it did not come under any of the specific provisions
Of S. 10(2) of the Act, was certainly an allowable deduction
under s. 10(1) of the Act, there being no prohibition,
either express or implied, against it in the Act and,
consequently, the question must be answered in the
affirmative.
Badridas Daga v. The Conimissioncr of Income-tax, (1958) 34
I.T.R. 10 ; Russel v. Town and Country Bank Ltd., (1888) 13
App. Cas. 418 ; Gyesham Life Assurance Society, v. Styles,
(1892) 3 T.C. 185; Pondichcry Railway co Ltd. v.
Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras, (1913) L.R. 58 .A. 239
and Income-tax Commissioner v. Chitnavis, (1932) L.R. 59
I.A. 290, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
Civil, APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 213 of 1955.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated June 26, 1953 of
the Calcutta High Court in I.T.R. No. 34 of 1952.
A.V. Viswanatha Sastri, Y. C. Talukdar and Sukumar Ghose,
for the appellant.
K.N Rajagopal Sastri and. D. Gupta, for the respondent.
1959. May 12. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
BHAGWATI J.-This appeal with a certificate under Art. 135 of
the Constitution read with s. 66A(2) of the Indian Income-
tax Act raises the question as to whether the appellant ",as
entitled to a deduction of Rs. 24,809 in the computation of
its profits and gains for the assessment year 1948-49.
The appellant deals in land and property and carries on land
developing business and in the course of the said business,
it buys land, develops it so as to make it fit for building
purposes and sells it at a profit in plots. The
developments undertaken are in the main,
187
that roads are to be laid out, a drainage system to be
provided and street lights installed and they are to be
maintained till the sample are taken over by the
Muncipality. The whole of the development is not carried
out before the land is sold, nor the whole of the sale price
received in cash at the time of the sales. The procedure
followed is that when a plot is sold, the purchaser pays
about 25 % of the purchase price in cash and undertakes to
pay the balance with interest at a certain rate in ten
annual installments which he secures by creating a charge on
the land purchased. The appellant, in its turn, undertakes
to carry out the developments within six months from the
date of the, sale but this time is not of the essence of the
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contract and what the appellant undertakes is to carry out
the ’developments within a reasonable time. The tinderbox
is incorporated in the deed of sale itself, whereas the
security is given by the purchaser by means of a separate
document.
In the accounting year relating to the assessment year 1948-
49 the appellant sold a number of plots and received a
portion of the sale price from the purchasers according to
the scheme mentioned above. The appellant maintains its
accounts in the mercantile method under which money not
actually received but only treated as received on the basis
that it was due and receivable is entered in the books of
account on the credit side. Even though the appellant did
not receive the whole of the price, viz., Rs. 43,692-11-9,
it entered in the credit side of its books of account the
whole of that sum representing the full sale price of the
lands sold during the accounting year though only a sum of
Rs. 29,392-11-9 was actually received in cash from the
purchaser and the balance of Its. 14,300 represented the
unpaid balance retained by the purchasers the payment of
which was secured by creating charge on the said lands as
also the interest received or receivable in the year of
account tinder the deeds of charge. The whole of this sum
of Rs. 43,692-11-9 was, however, credited in the books of
account by the appellant according to the mercantile system
of accounting adopted by it.
188
In so far as under the terms of the deeds of sale the
appellant had undertaken to carry out the developments
within six months from the date of sale it estimated a sum
of Rs. 24,809 as the expenditure for the developments to be
carried out in respect of the plots which had been sold
during the year and debited the same in its books of account
on the ground that the liability for the said sum of Rs.
24,809 had actually arisen, the appellant being bound to
provide the facilities it had undertaken to do, even though
no part of that amount represented any expenditure actually
made during that year.
In the course of its assessment to income-tax for the year
1948-49, the appellant claimed a deduction of the said sum
of Rs. 24,809 in the computation of the profits and gains of
its business. The Income-tax Officer disallowed that claim
on the ground that the expenses had not been actually
incurred in the year of account and also on the ground that
the estimate had not been proved to be based on a
consideration of the real expenses which the Company would
have to incur for the purpose. The Appellate Assistant
Commissioner, on appeal, confirmed the disallowance by the
I.T.O. on the ground that there was as yet no accrued
liability and on the further ground that as the development
would be carried out in the future, the expenditure
estimated at current prices could not be allowed.
On appeal taken by the appellant before the Income. tax
Appellate Tribunal, the Tribunal, held that it was by no
means certain what the actual cost would be when the
developments were carried out and that although the
appellant had undertaken to carry out certain developments,
it could bring expenses into account only when the expenses
were actually incurred. The Tribunal accordingly dismissed
the appeal.
The appellant thereafter made an application before the
Tribunal requiring it to refer to the High Court under s.
66(1) of the Income-tax Act certain questions of law arising
out of its order. The Tribunal thereupon stated a case and
referred the following question to the High Court for its
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decision:-
189
Whether on the facts and circumstances stated above, the sum
of Rs. 24,809 can legally be allowed as an expense of the
year under consideration."
The statement of case drawn by the Tribunal was severely
criticized by the High Court as under: -
" Unfortunately, the treatment of the question by the
authorities below has been of a somewhat summary character,
presumably because it was raised and argued before them in a
superficial form. But even if such was the case, there is
hardly any justification for the Tribunal failing to realise
it least what facts were required to be found and stated.
The statement of case is sketchy and bare and like most of
the statements we have to deal with during this session, has
hardly any appearance of a case seriously stated."
In spite of the above observations the High Court dealt with
the question and after dealing exhaustively with the
arguments which were urged be-fore it by the learned Counsel
for the appellant answered the question in the negative. On
an application made by the appellant, however, the High
Court granted the requisite certificate under Art. 135 of
the Constitution to appeal to this Court and lience, this
appeal.
The question which really arises for our determination in
this appeal is whether having regard to the fact that the
appellant’s method of accounting, viz., the Mercantile
method was accepted by the Income Tax Officer and the
receipts appearing in the books of account included the
unpaid balance of the sale price of the plots in question,
the amount of liability undertaken by the appellant to earn
those receipts was to be deducted even if there had not been
actual disbursement made by it during the accounting year.
Put in other words, the question was whether in view of the
fact that the sum of Rs. 43,692-11-9 had been entered on the
credit side in the books of account even though it was not
money actually received but only money treated as received
on the basis that it. was due and receivable, the sum of Rs.
24,809 which had been entered as debit, being the liability
of the appellant
190
undertaken by it to earn those receipts, should be deducted
in determining the taxable profits and gains of the
appellant.
The mercantile system of accounting is well-known and this
method has been explained in a judgment of this Court in
Keshav Mills Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay (1).
" 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 main ground on which the claim of the appellant for
deducting this sum of Rs. 24,809 ",as disallowed by all the
authorities below was that the expenditure was not actually
incurred in the year of account, it was by no means certain
what the actual cost would be when the developments "-are
carried out and that there was as yet no accrued liability
but only a contingent liability undertaken by the appellant,
even though the undertaking was incorporated in the deeds of
sale themselves.
The following were the developments undertaken to be carried
out by the appellant as appears from the order of the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner:-
" There was a condition in the Conveyance deeds that the
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appellant does hereby covenant with the purchaser that the
appellant shall complete the construction of roads, drains,
provide suitable pucca surface drains on both sides of the
roads and shall also make arrangements for lighting up the
said roads and shall maintain the said roads, drains, lights
till the same are taken over by the Municipal
Besides provision for roads, drains, etc., t˜he ˜Deed
provides for filling u˜p of low lands and there is a clause
in the Conveyance Deed which shows that the ˜appellant’s
shall at his own cost ˜fi.11 the low lands and tank with
earth and bring the same to road level. "
(˜1) II9531 ˜S.C.R. ˜95o, 958˜-
191
This undertaking having been incorporated in the deeds of
sale themselves there was certainly a liability undertaken
by the appellant to carry out these developments within six
months from the dates of those deeds. Time was of course
not of the essence of the contract and the appellant
therefore was at liberty to carry out that undertaking
within a reasonable time. That, however, did not absolve it
in any manner whatever from carrying out the undertaking and
the purchasers were in a position to enforce the undertaking
by taking appropriate proceedings in that behalf.
Reliance was placed on behalf of the Revenue on the case of
Peter Merchant Ltd. v. Stedeford (Inspector of Taxes) (1) in
which a distinction was drawn between an actual i.e., legal
liability, which is deductible, and a liability which is
future or contingent and for which no deduction can be made.
The facts of that case were that the Company which carried
on the business of managing factory canteens, had contracted
with a factory owner to maintain the crockery, cutlery and
utensils used in the canteen otherwise known as the light
equipment in its original quantity and quality. The cost of
replacement was admittedly a proper deduction in computing
profits, as was also any sum paid to a factory owner in
settlement of the value of shortages on termination of the
contract. Owing to war and. other circumstances it was
impossible or impracticable for the Company to obtain
replacements in some cases, and the obligations under the
contracts with the factory owners in those cases still
remained to be performed. in the accounts for the year
deductions had been made both of the amounts actually
expended on replacements and the amounts which the company
was liable to expend when the equipment became available.
The Company claimed to be entitled to deduct in computing
its profits amounts representing at current prices, the
liability to effect replacements as soon as the required
equipment became obtainable. The former amounts were
allowed as deductions, and the latter the Court of Appeal
(reversing the decision
(1) (1948) 30 T.C. 496.
192
of the Court below) held not to be deductible. The basis of
the decision was that the real liability under the contract
was contingent, not actual, since the obligations of the
company were not such that it might be sued for the cost of
’replacements at current prices, but only for possible
damages for breach of contract in the event of the factory
owner preferring a claim under the contract, and since no
legal liability could arise until such a claim was made, the
liability had-to be regarded as contingent and not
deductible.
It is clear from the above that on the facts and
circumstances of that case the Court held that it was not an
accrued liability but was merely a contingent one and if
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that was the case only the sums actually expended could be
deducted and not those which the company was liable to
expend in the future.
Simon in his " Income-tax ", Second Edition, Vol. II, at p.
204 under the caption " Accrued Liability " observes as
under, after citing the case mentioned above:-.
"In cases, however, where an actual liability exists, as is
the case with accrued expenses, a deduction is allowable;
and this is not affected by the fact that the amount of the
liability and the deduction will subsequently have to be
varied. A liability, the amount of which is deductible for
income-tax purposes, is one which is actually existing at
the time of making the deduction, and is distinct from the
type of liability accruing in Peter Merchant8 Ltd. v.
Stedeford (lnspector of Taxes) which although allowable on
accountancy principles, is not deductible for the purpose of
income-tax. "
Approaching the question before us in the light of the
observations made above we have got to determine what was
the nature of the liability which was undertaken by the
appellant in regard to the development of the lands in
question, whether it was an accrued liability or was one
which was contingent on the happening of a certain event in
the future.
There is no doubt that the undertaking to carry out the
developments within six months from the dates of
193
the deeds of sale was incorporated therein and that
undertaking was unconditional, the appellant binding itself
absolutely to carry out the same. It was not dependent on
any condition being fulfilled or the happening of any event,
the only condition being that it was to be carried out
within six months which in view of the fact that the time
was not of the essence of the contract meant a reasonable
time. Whatever may be considered a reasonable time under
the circumstances of the case, the setting up of that time
limit did not prescribe any condition for the carrying out
of that undertaking and the undertaking was absolute
interms. If that undertaking imported any liability on the
appellant the liability had already accrued on the dates of
the deeds of sale, though that liability was to be
discharged at a future date. It was thus an accrued
liability and the estimated expenditure which would be
incurred in discharging the same could very well be deducted
from the profits and gains of the business.
Inasmuch as the liability which had thug accrued during the
accounting year was to be discharged at a future date the
amount to be expended in the discharge of that liability
would have to be estimated in order that under the
mercantile system of accounting the amount could be debited
before it was actually disbursed.
The difficulty in the estimation thereof again would not
convert an accrued liability into a conditional one, because
it is always open to the Income-tax authorities concerned to
arrive at a proper estimate thereof having regard to all the
circumstances of the case. That it can be so done is
illustrated by Gold Coast Selection Trust Ltd. v Humphrey
(Inspector of Taxes) (1) where a particular asset which
could not be immediately realised in a commercial sense was
valued in money for income-tax Purposes in the year of its
receipt and it was observed by Viscount Simon:-
" It seems to me that it is not correct to say that an
asset, such as this block of shares, cannot be valued in
money for income-tax purposes in the
(1) [1948] A.C. 459, 469.
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25
194
year of its receipt because it cannot, in a commercial
sense, be immediately realized. That is no reason for
saying that it is incapable of being valued, though, ’if its
realization cannot take place promptly, that may be a reason
why the money figure set against it at the earlier date
should be reduced in order to allow for an appropriate
interval. Supposing, for example, the contract conferring
the asset on the taxpayer included a stipulation that the
asset should not be realized by the transferee for five
years, and that if an attempt was made to realise it before
that time, the property in it should revert to the
transferor. This might seriously reduce the value of the
asset when received, but it is no reason for saving that
when received it must be regarded as having no value at all.
The Commissioners, as its seems to me, in fixing what money
equivalent should be taken as representing the asset, must
fix an appropriate money value as at the end of the period
to-which the appellant’s accounts are made up by taking all
the circumstances into consideration."
As in the case of assets received during the accounting year
which could not be immediately realized in a commercial
sense, so in the case of liabilities which have already
accrued during the accounting year, though they may not have
to be discharged till a later date. It will be always open
to the Income-tax authorities to fix an appropriate money
value of that liability as at the end of the accounting
period by taking all the circumstances into consideration
and the estimate of expenses given by the assessee would be
liable to scrutiny at their hands having regard to all the
facts and circumstances of the case.
The High Court was, therefore, clearly in error
when it stated:-
" In view of all the circumstances of the case it must in my
opinion, be held that the amounts of sale-price, not
received in cash, were also received and for the purpose of
earning the receipts the assessee spent, besides giving the
lands, nothing more than a promise. Since the whole amount
was actually received in the year of account before and
195
without making the promised expenditure, no question of
allowing a deduction of any expenditure from such receipts
of the year arises."
If then the estimated expenses which would have to be
incurred in duly discharging that liability which was
undertaken by the appellant and was incorporated in the
deeds of sale could be deducted in accordance with the
mercantile system of accounting adopted by the appellant and
accepted by the I.T.O., is there anything in the Income-tax
Act which would prevent this debit being allowed as a
deduction in the computation of the profits and gains of the
appellant’s business? The appellant, had, it appears,
claimed this deduction as and by way of expenditure wholly
laid out for the purposes of its business under s. 10(2)(xv)
of the Income-tax Act. On an interpretation of that
provision, the-High Court was inclined to hold, though it
did not decide the question, that to the extent that a
definite liability had accrued about which all preliminary
proceedings causing the accrual of the liability in a
concluded form had already been gone through although the
actual disbursement had not yet taken place, s. 10(2)(xv)
would cover accrued liabilities though the amount may not
actually have been expended on the footing that the
liability being certain, the amount was as good as spent and
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on that basis there would be room in the clause for debits
which are proper debits under the mercantile system of
accounting. It, however, distinguished the present case on
the ground that the liability here was a floating liability,
the measure of which depended upon the will of the appellant
and the discharge of which rested only in a promise and that
the expenses were entirely at large and the development work
itself merely so.
Apart, however, from the question whether s. 10(2) (xv) of
the Income-tax Act would apply to the facts of the present
case, the case is in our opinion, well within the purview of
s. 10 (1) of the Income-tax Act. The appellant here is
being. assessed in respect of the profits and gains of its
business and the profits and gains of the business cannot be
determined unless and until he expenses or the obligations
which have been
incurred are set off against the receipt’s The expression
profits and gains has to be understood in its commercial
sense and there can be no computation of such profits and
gains until the expenditure which is necessary for the
purpose of earning the receipts is deducted therefrom-
whether the expenditure is actually incurred or the
liability in respect thereof has accrued even though it may
have to be discharged at some future date. As was observed
by Lord Herschell in Bussel v. Town and County Bank,
Ltd.(’):
" The duty is to be charged upon I a sum not less than the
full amount of the balance of the profits or gains of the
trade, manufacture, adventure, or concern’; and it appears
to me that that language implies that for the purpose of
arriving at the balance of profits all that expenditure
which is necessary for the purposes of earning the receipts
must be deducted, otherwise you do not arrive at the balance
of profits, indeed, otherwise you do not ascertain, and’
cannot ascertain, whether there is such a thing as profit or
not. The profit of a trade or business is the surplus by
which the receipts from the trade or business exceed the
expenditure necessary for the purpose of earning those
receipts. That seems to me to be the meaning of the word "
profits " in relation to any trade or business. Unless and
until you have ascertained that there is such a balance,
nothing exists to which the name " profits can properly be
applied."
A similar opinion was expressed in the Gresham Life
Assurance Society V. Styles (2) :-
" When we speak of the profits or gains of a trader we mean
that which he had made by his trading. Whether there be
such a thing as profit or gain can only be ascertained by
setting against the receipts the expenditure or obligations
to which they have given rise."
These are no doubt observations from the English cases
dealing with English statutes of Income-tax, but the general
principles which can he deduced therefrom
(1) (1888) 13 App. Cas. 418, 424
(2) (1892) 3 T. C. 185
197
are, nevertheless, applicable here and it was stated by Lord
Macmillan in Pondicherry Railway Co., Ltd. v. Commissioner
of Income-tax, Madras (1)
" English authorities can only be utilised with caution in
the consideration of Indian Income-tax cases owing to the
difference in the relevant legislation, but the principle
laid down by Lord Chancellor Halsbury in Gresham Life
Assurance Society v. Styles (supra), is of general
application unaffected by the specialities of the English
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Tax system. " The thing to be taxed", said his Lordship,
"is the amount of profits or gains ". The word " profits ",
I think, is to be understood in its natural and proper sense
in a sense which no commercial man would misunderstand."’
It may be useful to observe at this stage that prior to the
amendment of the Indian Income-tax Act in 1939, bad and
doubtful debts were not treated as deductible allowance for
the purpose of computation of profits or gains of a
business, The Privy Council in the Income-tax Commissioner
v. Chitnavis observed:-
" Although the Act nowhere in terms authorises the deduction
of bad debts of a business, such a deduction is necessarily
allowable. What are chargeable to income-tax in respect of
a business are the profits and gains of a year; and in
assessing the amount of the profits and gains of a year
account must necessarily be taken of all losses incurred
otherwise you would not arrive at the true profits and
gains."
The High Court in disallowing the claim of the appellant in
the present case only considered the provisions of s. 10
(2)(xv) of the Act and came to the conclusion that on a
strict interpretation of those provisions the sum of Rs.
24,809 was not an allowable deduction. Its attention was
drawn by the learned Counsel for the appellant to the
provisions of s. 10(1) of the Act also but it negatived this
argument observing that under the Indian Act, the profits
must be
(1) (193i) L. R. 58 1. A. 239, 252.
(2) (1932) L. R. 59 I. A. 290, 296.
198
determined by the method of making the statutory deductions
from the receipts and any deduction from the business
receipts, if it was to be allowed, must be brought under one
or the other of the deductions mentioned in s. 10(2) and
that there was no scope for any preliminary deduction under
general principles. It was, however, held by this Court in
Badridas Daga v. The Commissioner of Income-tax(1)
" It is to be noted that while s. 10(1) imposes a charge on
the profits or gains of a trade, it does not provide how
those profits are to be computed. Section 10(2) enumerates
various items which are admissible as deductions, but it is
well settled that they are not exhaustive of all allowances
which could be made in ascertaining profits taxable under S.
10(1)."
Venkatarama Aiyar, J., who delivered the Judgment of this
Court then proceeded to discuss the cases of Commissioner of
Income-tax v. Chitnavis(2), Gresham Life Assurance Society
v. Styles (3) and Pondicherry Railway Co. v. -Income-tax
Commissioner(4), and observed:"
The result is that when a claim is made for a deduction for
which there is no specific provision in s. 10(2), whether it
is admissible or not will depend on whether, having regard
to accepted commercial practice and trading principles, it
can be said to arise out of the carrying on of the business
and to be incidental to it. If that is established, then
the deduction must be allowed, provided of course there is
no prohibition against it, express or implied, in the Act.
Turning now to the facts of the present case, we find that
the sum of Rs. 24,809 represented the estimated expenditure
which had to be incurred by the appellant in discharging a
liability which it had already undertaken under the terms of
the deeds of sale of the lands in question and was an
accrued liability which according to the mercantile system
of accounting the appellant was entitled to debit in its
books of account
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(1) (1958) 34 I.T.R. 10, 14.
(2) (1932) L.R. 59 I.A. 290, 296.
(3) (1892) 3 T.C. 185.
(4) (1931) L.R. 58 I.A. 239, 252.
199
for the accounting year as against the receipts of Rs.
43,692-11-9 which represented the sale proceeds of the said
lands. Even under s. 10(2) of the Income-tax Act, it might.
possibly be urged that the word " expended was capable of
being interpreted as " expendable "or to be expended " at
least in a case where a liability to incur the said expenses
had been actually incurred by the assessee who adopted the
mercantile system of accounting and the debit of Rs. 24,809
was thus a proper debit in the present case. We need not
however base our decision on any such consideration. We are
definitely of opinion that the sum of Rs. 24,809 represented
the estimated amount which would have to be expended by the
appellant in the course of carrying on its business and was
incidental to the same and having regard to the accepted
commercial practice and trading principles was a deduction
which, if there was no specific provision for it under
section 10(2) of the Act was certainly allowable deduction,
in arriving at the profits and gains of the business of the
appellant under section 10(1) of the Act, there being no
prohibition against it, express or implied in the Act.
It is to be noted that the appellant had led evidence before
the Income-tax authorities in regard to this estimated
expenditure of Rs. 24,809 and no exception was taken to the
same in regard to the quantum, though the permissibility of
such a deduction was questioned by them relying upon the
provisions of s.10(2) of the Act.
It therefore follows that the conclusion reached by
the High Court in regard to the disallowance of Rs. 24,809
was wrong and it should have answered the referred question
in the affirmative.
Before we conclude, we are bound to observe that having
accepted- the receipts of Rs. 43,692-11-9 in their totality
even though a sum of Rs. 29,392-11-9 only was actually
received by the appellant in cash, thus making the’
appellant liable for income-tax on a sum of Rs. 14,300 which
had not been received by it during the accounting year, it
was hardly open to the Revenue to urge that the sum of Rs.
24,809 should not have been allowed as a permissible
deduction before
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arriving at the profits or gains-of the appellant which were
liable to tax. Consistently enough with this attitude, the
Revenue ought to have expressed its willingness to treat
only a sum of Rs. 29,392-11-9 as the actual receipt of the
appellant during the accounting year and made up the
computation of the profits and gains of the appellant’s
business on that basis. The Revenue, however, did nothing
of the sort and insisted upon having its pound of flesh,
asking us to delete the whole of the item of Rs. 24,809 from
the debit side of the account which it was certainly not
entitled to do.
We accordingly allow the appeal, set aside the judgment of
the High Court and answer the referred question in the
affirmative. The respondent will of course pay the
appellant’s costs throughout.
Appeal allowed.