Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX,BOMBAY AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MAHINDRA AND MAHINDRA LIMITED & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT02/09/1983
BENCH:
TULZAPURKAR, V.D.
BENCH:
TULZAPURKAR, V.D.
MADON, D.P.
CITATION:
1984 AIR 1182 1983 SCR (3) 773
1983 SCC (4) 392 1983 SCALE (2)236
CITATOR INFO :
R 1988 SC1737 (89)
ACT:
Judicial Review-Courts’ power to interfere and review
administrative or executive decisions and actions-Conditions
precedent.
Loss-Accumulated loss and unabsorbed depreciation-
Conditions requisite for carrying forward and setting off,
by an amalgamating company of such loss-Whether the
recommendation of a specified authority and the Central
Government’s decision. thereon allowing the amalgamated
Company to carry forward and set off losses is open to
judicial review-Income Tax Act, 1961 section 72A as
introduced by Finance Act No. 2 of 1977 scope of:
HEADNOTE:
Section 72A of the Income Tax Act, 1961 enables an
Amalgamated Company to carry forward and set off accumulated
loss and unabsorbed depreciation allowance in certain cases
of amalgamation on the fulfilment of three conditions viz;
(a) that the amalgamating company was, immediately before
its amalgamation financially non-viable by reason of its
liabilities, losses and other relevant factors; (b) that the
amalgamation was in the public interest; and (c) such other
conditions as central government may by notification in the
official Gazette specify, to ensure. that the benefit under
the section is restricted to amalgamation which would
facilitate the rehabilitation. Or revival of the business of
amalgamating company. The Central Government’s satisfaction
in respect of the three conditions is to be based on the
recommendation of the specified Authority, referred to in
Section 72A. The Central p Government then has to make a
declaration to that effect and the effect and consequence of
such a declaration is that notwithstanding anything
contained in any other provision of the Act, the accumulated
loss and unabsorbed depreciation of amalgamating company is
deemed to be the loss or as the case may be, allowance for
depreciation of the amalgamated company for the previous
year in which the amalgamation was effected. For claiming
the benefit of the section, the certificate issued by the
specified authority under sub-section 2(ii) of section 72A
to the effect that adequate steps have been taken by the
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amalgamated company for the rehabilitation or revival of the
business of the amalgamating company must be submitted
alongwith the return of the income for the said assessment
year.
Mahindra and Mahindra Ltd. was incorporated under the
Indian Companies Act 1913 and is thus duly registered under
the Act of 1956. Its share capital has been widely held, the
principal share holders being the public
774
financial institutions to the extent of about 40% of its
equity share capital; it is engaged in the manufacture of
jeeps, motor vehicles etc. One M/s. Inter national Tractor
Company of India Ltd. incorporated on April 15, 1963 under
the Indian Companies Act, 1956 as a public company for the
manufacture of essential commodities like agricultural
tractors was commercially insolvent at the close of the
financial year ending October 31, 1977. Therefore, proposal
for amalgamating ITCI with M & M was considered and approved
by the Boards of Directors of both the companies by two
resolutions dated 4.10.76 since it was felt that it would be
advantageous to both if their operations could be
rationalized for better and more efficient utilisation of
their existing capacities and facilities.
A scheme of Amalgamation effective from 1.11.1977 was
prepared and finalised and, after obtaining the approval of
the Central Government to the scheme of amalgamation as
required under section 23(2) of the Monopolies and
Restrictive Trade Practices Act, 1969, the Bombay High Court
was moved under sections 391 and 394 of the Companies Act,
1956 seeking its sanction which was granted.
On April 27, 1978, M & M, moved an application under
Section 72A of the Income Tax, 1961 Act for the grant of
relief of the requisite declaration v from the Central
Government which was received by the Central Government on
May 3 of 1978. As the amalgamation had been effected from
November 1, 1977 M & M filed the said application so as to
enable the authorities to investigate the requisite factual
pre-conditions for the grant of the relief and to arrive at
a decision in order to enable it to file its return of
income for the assessment year 1979-80 (the relevant
previous year being 1.11.1977 to 31.10.1978 during which the
amalgamation was effected) alongwith the requisite
certificate of the Specified Authority before the due date
June 30, 1979. Later M & M also furnished the latest audited
financial position of ITCI together with other particulars
as desired. By a notification No. S.O. 710(E) dated
11.10.1977 the Central Government constituted and notified
the Specified Authority consisting of respondent Nos. 6 to
10 under S. 72A of the Act and at the suggestion of the
Specified Authority the Central Government also set up a
separate Screening Committee of experts to investigate as to
whether the requisite statutory conditions were present or
not. After considering the particulars furnished in the
application made by M & M, further correspondence and
evidence produced in that behalf and after hearing M & M the
Specified Authority by its order dated May/June 2, 1980
recommended that the amalgamation of ITCI with M & M did not
satisfy the condition specified in cl. (a); in other words,
it opined that amalgamating company was financially viable
and not non-viable immediately before its amalgamation with
M & M. The Central Government, adopting the reasons recorded
by the specified Authority for its opinion, accepted the
recommendation made by it and passed an order on December 1,
1980 whereby it refused to issue the declaration under
Section 72A of the Act to M & M.
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The aforesaid recommendation of the Specified Authority
and the Central Government’s decision based thereon were
challenged by M & M by filing a writ petition in the Delhi
High Court; the challenges was principally
775
met by raising a contention that the Central Government had
refused the relief to M & M on the basis of its subjective
decision about the non-fulfilment of the condition specified
in cl. (a) of S. 72A (1) and for relevant and cogent reasons
and hence the decision could not be reviewed or interfered
with by the Court and with a view to show that both the
Specified Authority and the Central Government had
considered all the relevant factors and that M & M had been
fairly treated in the matter great reliance was placed on
the minutes of the several meetings held by the Specified
Authority which were produced before the Court. On a
consideration of the entire material placed before it as
well as the rival submissions made by counsel for the
parties the High Court came to the conclusion that the view
taken by the Specified Authority and the Central Government
in the impugned orders was just not possible to be formed
and that no reasonable authority much less the Specified
Authority or an expert body of the Central Government could
have reasonably come to the conclusion that IICI was,
immediately before its amalgamation with M&M, financially
viable. The High Court quashed the impugned recommendation
dated May, June 2, 1980 of the Specified Authority as well
as the Central Governments decision dated December 1, 1980
and directed (i) them to deal with M & M’s application and
dispose it of within a period of six months from the date of
its order in light of its judgment; (ii) the specified
Authority to consider and issue, the requisite statutory
certificate under Section 72A (2)(ii) of the Act within one
month of the declaration made by the Central Government; and
(iii) the Income Tax officer concerned to treat the
statutory certificate when furnished by the M&M, as if It
was filed by M & M with its Return for the concerned year.
Hence the appeal by Special Leave
Dismissing the appeal the Court
^
HELD: 1. By now, the parameters of the Court’s power of
judicial review of administrative or executive action or
decision and the grounds on which the Court can interfere
with the same are well settled. If the action or decision is
perverse or is such that no reasonable body of persons,
properly informed, could come to or has been arrived at by
the authority misdirecting itself by adopting a wrong
approach or has been influenced by irrelevant or extraneous
matters, the Court would be justified in interfering with
the same. [786 F-H]
Barium Chemicals Ltd. v. Company Law Board [1966] Supp.
SCR 311; Smt. Shalini Soni etc, v. Union of India and ors.
etc. [1981] 1 SCR. 962 referred to.
2:1. The budget speech of the Finance Minister and the
Notes on clauses of the Finance Bill (No. 2) of 1977
explaining the provision of the said Bill, make it clear
that sickness among industrial undertakings was regarded as
a matter of grave national concern inasmuch as closure of
any sizable manufacturing unit in any industry entailed
social costs in terms of loss of production and unemployment
as also waste of valuable capital assets, and experience had
shown that taking over of such sick units by Government was
not always a satisfactory or economical solution; and that a
more effective
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method would be to facilitate amalgamation of sick
industrial units with sound ones by providing incentives and
removing impediments in the way of such amalgamation which
would not merely relieve the Government of uneconomical
burden of taking over and running sick units but save the
Government from social costs in terms of loss of production
and unemployment. With such objective in view, in order to
facilitate the merger of sick industrial units with sound
ones and as and by way of offering an incentive in that
behalf s. 72A was introduced in the Act where under by a
deeming fiction the accumulated loss or unabsorbed
depreciation of the amalgamating company is treated to be a
loss or, as the case may be, allowance for depreciation of
the amalgamated company in the previous year in which the
amalgamation was effected; but the amalgamated company,
although a successor in interest, would be entitled to carry
forward and set-off the accumulated loss and unabsorbed
depreciation of the amalgamating company only where the
amalgamating company was not, immediately before such
amalgamation, financially viable and the amalgamation, was
in public interest. [789 H, 790 A-E]
2:2. The expression "financial non-viability" has not
been defined in the Income Tax Act, 1961. However, the
Finance Minister’s speech, the notes on clauses of the Bill
and the Memorandum explaining the provisions thereof make it
clear that the financial non-viability of an undertaking has
been equated with the ’sickness’ of such undertaking and
obviously in the context of its revival by a sound
undertaking the sickness must be of a temporary character
and not any basic or permanent sickness. An undertaking
which is basically or potentially non viable will ordinarily
be incapable of revival and would face a closure; in other
words, the financial non-viability spoken of by the section
must refer to sickness brought about by temporary adverse
financial circumstances that disables the unit to stand and
work on its own. This is also made clear by the provisions
contained in cl. (a) of sub-sec. (1) which states that the
financial non-viability of the amalgamating company has to
be judged by reference to "its liabilities, losses and other
relevant factors". [790 F-H]
Moreover, since the expression is occurring in a taxing
statute in the P context of amalgamation of companies it
will have to be understood in its popular sense, that is to
say, the sense or meaning that is attributed to it by men of
business, trade or commerce and by persons or institutions
interested in or dealing with companies. [790 H, 791 A]
2:3. The true concept of financial non-viability as
understood by men of business and commence and by financial
institutions may be discerned. While announcing its scheme
of merging sick units with healthy ones (Finance Act, 1977)
Government of India had classified "those units where the
losses, past and present, have eroded 50% of capital and
reserves as sick’. According to the Reserve Bank of India,
commercial banks consider a unit to be sick "if it has
incurred cash loss for one year and in their judgment is
likely to continue to incur cash losses for the current year
as well as the following year and which has an imbalance in
its financial structure, such as current ratio of less than
1:1 an worsening debt-equity ratio (total outside
liabilities to net worth)". While the commercial banks
follow these criteria for banking purposes, the
777
State Bank of India defines a sick unit as one "which fails
to generate internal surplus on a regular basis and depends
for its survival on the constant infusion of funds from
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outside. According to National Council of Applied Economic
Research, where all the three parameters-profitability,
liquidity and solvency show positive figures the unit’s
financial viability will be sound; where one of the three
parameters shows a negative figure the unit could be
regarded as ’tending towards-sickness’; when two of the
three parameters show negative figures, it would be a case
of ’incipient sickness’ and when all the three parameters
show negative figures the unit is ’sick’. It is by reference
to these several tests or criteria adopted by them that the
question has to be decided whether a particular undertaking
is financially non-viable at a given point of time. [791 B-
F, 792 A-B]
3:1. A careful and close scrutiny of para 3 of the
Central Government’s order comprising three aspects which
constitute the substratum of the reasoning behind the
conclusion will show that both had misdirected themselves in
law by adopting a wrong approach and proceeding on a wrong
assumption about the possibility of financial assistance
from M & M which did not exist either i fact or in law:- (i)
Section 72A does not require the undertaking to be basically
non-viable, but merely financially non-viable which must of
necessary be of a temporary character, (ii) further the
close link between the two companies referred to by both,
divorced from financial assistance would be an irrelevant
factor; (iii) the provisions of Sections 370 and 371 o. the
companies Act, 1956 have been completed ignored.
Indisputably at the relevant time having regard to the
provisions of S. 370 of the Companies Act, 1956 the maximum
limit up to which M & M could lend and advance was Rs. 120
lakhs and in view of the advances already made to various
parties to the tune of Rs. 70 lakhs it could have advanced
only Rs. 50 lakhs to ITCI as against its requirement of over
ten times that amount namely, Rs. 5 crores and odd, moreover
any financial help in excess of Rs. 50 lakhs would have
visited M & M and its directors or officers with penal
consequences under S. 371 of the Companies Act.; (iv) the
fact that during the year 1977-78 following the amalgamation
M & M took adequate steps for the revival of ITCI’s
undertaking by making repayments to its creditors to the
tune of Rs. 4 crores and by making investment of Rs. 0.7
crore on maintenance, replacement of machinery etc. thereby
enabling the undertaking to earn a cash profit of Rs. 3.9
crores could not be regarded as a factor showing the
financial viability of ITCI prior to 1.11.1977 as was
wrongly done by the Specified Authority and the Central
Government. All this shows that the impugned conclusion was
the result of an entirely wrong approach being adopted as
regards the true concept of financial non-viability. On the
other hand, at the material time namely, immediately before
its amalgamation with M & M which took place on 1.11.1977
ITCI, having regard to its financial position, was
commercially insolvant and that all the three parameters of
profitability, liquidity and solvency, by reference to which
its sickness (financial non-viability) is required to be
judged, showed negative figures. Admittedly, during the two
years 1974-75 and 1976-77 it had Made huge losses to the
tune of Rs. 253 lakhs and Rs. 433 lakhs respectively and the
nominal profits of Rs. 70 lakhs (or for that matter even Rs.
208 lakhs) earned by it in 1975-76 did not convert it into a
profitable concern as on 31st of October, 1977.. (v) As
regards solvency, admittedly, cheques and bill issued by
ITCI had bounced,
778
suppliers had stopped supply of raw materials financial
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institutions had stopped further monetary help and legal
actions including winding up proceedings had been
threatened. Further, the excess of liabilities (including
loans) over the assets (share capital plus free reserves)
was to the tune of Rs. 61 lakhs and odd as on 31st October,
1977 and as such the entire share capital plus free reserves
had been eroded (and not merely 50% as per the test of
Government of India) and the ’current ratio was extremely
strained at 40:60 (being less than 1:1 as required by the
test adopted by commercial Banks). In other words according
to the tests or criteria adopted by men of business or
commerce and financial institutions ITCI, immediately before
its amalgamation with M & M, was clearly and blatantly
financially non-viable. In spite of such situation that
obtained and which was brought to the notice of the
Specified Authority and the Central Government an almost
perverse conclusion was arrived at; at any rate it was a
conclusion which no reasonable body of persons, properly
informed, could come to; (vi) The so called statement at
para 14 of ITCI’s company petition No. 789177 could not be
given any significance at all; (vii) Admittedly the poor
performance and losses incurred by ITCI were due to factors
such as mechanics of price control and the sluggishness in
the market over which it had no control: (viii) The share
exchange ratio fixed under the Amalgamation scheme does not
passes the negative, effect, but it would only be a neutral
factor. After all several aspects and considerations weigh
with the share-holders of the companies concerned in the
amalgamation while approving the proposed share exchange
ratio and since in the instant case all the concerned share
holders of M & M including the public financial institutions
had, with full knowledge of all the facts including the
commercially insolvent position of ITCI, agreed to the ratio
and which was not disturbed by the High Court in spite of
objection being raised by the Regional Director Company Law
Board, it cannot be said that tile exchange ratio so fixed
possesses probative value of negative character; and (ix)
According to well settled principles and practice of
Commercial Accounting, the concept of "Net Worth" of ITCI as
per the books of account was negative on the date of
amalgamation and therefore when the Specified Authority and
the Central Government took into consideration the market
value of the assets of the ITCI as on the date of
amalgamation for coming to the conclusion that the company
was a viable unit, they were clearly influenced by
irrelevant and extraneous material vitiating the impugned
conclusion.
[792 G-H, 793 A-H, 794 A-H 79; A-H, 796 A-E]
3:2. That the amalgamation was in public interest is
clear. There is a specific averments made to it in the writ
petition itself. But that apart, the admitted facts are (a)
ITCI was engaged in the manufacture of agricultural tractors
which have been declared as an essential commodity under the
Essential Commodities Act, 1955, (b) the production had
declined to 2000 tractors as against its licensed and
installed capacity of 10,000 tractors during the period
1.10.76 to 31.10.1977, (c) because of its adverse financial
position it was facing the prospect of immediate closure
entailing social costs in terms of loss of production of an
essential commodity and loss of employment to over 2000
workers employed by it, (d) the closure of ITCI would have
rendered idle a large investment in productive capacity
which would not have been in the national interest, and (e)
the amalgamation forestalled the necessity for the State
Government to take over that unit and conduct it as a relief
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undertaking,
779
thereby avoiding a heavy burden falling on the public
exchequer. In Act M & M had taken adequate steps for the
revival of ITCI and had carried on the same business without
any modification or reorganisation during the relevant
previous year. [796 H, 797 A-G]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 3685 of
1982.
Appeal by Special Leave from the judgment and order
dated the 7th May, 1982 of the Delhi High Court in Civil
Writ Petition No. 99 of 1981.
S. T. Desai, Miss A. Subhashini and M. N. Tandon, for
the Appellant.
F. S. Nariman, F. H. J. Talya Khan, R. K. Kulkarni,
Ravinder Narain, J. B. Dadachanji, O. C. Mathur, D. N.
Mishra and Miss Rainuwalia, for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
TULZAPURKAR, J. This appeal by special leave raises the
question whether on the facts and in the circumstances of
the case the recommendation of a statutory body (specified
Authority under sec. 72 A of the Income-tax Act, 1961) and
the Central Government’s decision based on it-a matter of
subjective satisfaction-were open to judicial review and
whether the High Court was justified in interfering with the
same ?
The facts giving rise to the aforesaid question may be
stated: Mahindra and Mahindra Limited (for short ’M & M’)
was incorporated under the Indian Companies Act 1913 and is
thus duly registered under the Companies Act, 1956; its
share capital has been widely held, the principal
shareholders being the public financial institutions to the
extent of about 40 per cent of its equity share capital; it
is engaged in the manufacture inter alia of jeeps and other
motor vehicles on a large scale.
M/s. Inter-national Tractor Company of India Limited
(for short ’ITCI’) was incorporated on April 15, 1963 under
the Companies Act, 1956 as a public company and was carrying
on the business of manufacture and sale of agricultural
tractors and implements which are an essential commodity
under the Essential
780
Commodities Act, 1955. Though it commenced production within
three years of its incorporation, ITCI incurred a loss of
Rs. 253 lacs in the year 1974-75; with the financial
assistance received from M & M, ITCI was able to improve its
operating picture and its working results for the year 1975-
76 showed a profit of Rs. 70 lacs (Rs. 208 lacs according to
the Central Government but that was without providing for
depreciation to the extent-of Rs. 138 lacs) but again in the
financial year 1976-77 (ending October 31, 1977) for various
reasons its working was not satisfactory and it made a huge
loss to the tune of Rs. 433 lacs. Cheques issued by ITCI
bounced, suppliers had stopped the supplies of raw materials
to it and financial institutions were not willing to help it
any more. During the period of 13 months, (1.10.1976 to
31.10.1977) its production had declined to 2004 tractor
units as against the licensed and installed capacity of
10,000 tractor units and on a turn-over of Rs. 9. 94 crores
it had incurred an operational loss of Rs. 4.33 crores and
it had received several notices threatening legal actions
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including winding up proceedings. At at 31st of October 1977
the accumulated losses were to the tune of Rs. 555 lacs and
the excess of liabilities (including loans) over the assets
(share capital Rs. 306.99 lacs plus free reserves Rs. 184 95
lacs=Rs. 491.94 lacs) was to the tune of Rs. 63 lacs and odd
In short as at the close of the financial year ending 31 st
of October, 1977 ITCI was commercially insolvent.
In October 1976 a proposal for amalgamating ITCI with
M&M was considered by the Boards of Directors of the two
companies since it was felt that it would be advantageous to
both if their operations could be rationalized for better
and more efficient utilisation of their existing capacities
and facilities and by two resolutions dated 4.10.1976 passed
by the Boards of Directors of both the Companies the
proposal was approved and a scheme of Amalgamation effective
from 1.11.1977 was prepared and finalised. As both the
companies were ’undertakings’ to which Part. A of Chapter
III of Monopolies and Restrictive Trade Practices Act, 1969
(for short MRTP Act) was applicable, M & M made an
application on October 30, 1976 under sec. 23 (2) of the Act
seeking approval of the Central Government to the Scheme of
Amalgamation. At the hearing given by the Central Government
under the MRTP Act it was brought to the notice of the
Central Government-and this is so mentioned in the Approval
order-that ITCI was not doing well for want of sufficient
working Capital, that production by ITCI had declined and if
that state of affairs continued for another two to three
years it
781
would lead to the closure of its entire undertaking and
consequent unemployment of about 2, 400 employees. By its
order dated August 10, 1977 passed under sec. 23 (2) read
with sec. 54 of MRTP Act and communicated to M&M and ITCI,
the Central Government accorded its approval to the
amalgamation as per the scheme subject to the condition that
the exchange ratio of the shares proposed in the scheme was
approved by 3/4th majority of the equity share-holders of
both the companies. It was however, specifically stated that
this order was not to be construed as conveying any approval
of the Central Government that may be required under any
other law.
Thereafter ITCI and M&M preferred Company Petitions
(No. 789 of 1977 by ITCI and No. 2 of 1978 by M&M) in the
Bombay High Court under secs. 391 and 394 of the Companies
Act, 1956 seeking the Court’s sanction to the scheme of
Amalgamation; and during the pendency of the Petitions
pursuant to the interim directions given by the learned
Company judge meetings of the shareholders of both the
companies were held at which the scheme of amalgamation was
approved by them and ultimately by its order dated March 9,
1978 the Bombay High Court sanctioned the Scheme of
Amalgamation effective from 1.11.1977. It needs to be stated
that at the hearing before the Company Judge the Regional
Director, Company Law Board (representing the Central
Government to whom E notice is statutarily required to be
issued and was issued) appearing through Counsel raised a
specific contention that the exchange ratio of the shares
fixed under the scheme (two shares of M&M in exchange for
three shares of ITCI) was not fair to the share-holders of
M&M considering the ITCI’s very bad financial position; the
Company Judge took this contention into account but after
considering the fact that all concerned parties, namely, the
share-holders including the public financial institutions
had considered the ratio so fixed as fair and equitable
decided not to disturb the said ratio. Subsequently, on
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receipt of the requisite report under the second proviso to
sec. 394 (1) of the Companies Act, 1956 from the official
Liquidator based on the findings of an independent firm of
chartered accountants (M/s. Batliboi & Purohit) to the
effect that the affairs of ITCI had not been conducted in a
manner prejudicial to the interests of the members or to
public interest, the learned Company judge passed an order
under sec 394 (1) (v) for the dissolution of ITCI without
winding up. Upon amalgamation the undertaking of ITCI became
a division of M&M known as International Tractor Division
which is being continued without modification or re-
organization as a separate
782
division and it is carrying on the same business as ITCI
carried on prior to amalgamation, namely manufacture and
sale of agricultural tractors and allied implements.
Section 72A of the Income tax Act, 1961 (herein-after
referred to as the Act) was inserted therein by Finance Act
No. 2 of 1977 with effect from 1.4.1978. This section
enables an amalgamated company to carry forward and set off
accumulated loss and unabsorbed depreciation allowance in
certain cases of amalgamation on fulfilment of the
conditions mentioned in clauses (a), (b) and (c) of sub-sec.
(1) and the Central Government’s satisfaction in respect
thereof, which satisfaction is to be based on the
recommendation of the specified Authority referred to in the
section. The conditions required to be fulfilled are: (a)
that the amalgamating company was, immediately before its
amalgamation, financially non-viable by reason of its
liabilities, losses and other relevant factors, (b) that the
amalgamation was in the public interest and (c) such other
conditions as Central Government may, by notification in the
official Gazette, specify, to ensure that the benefit under
this section is restricted to amalgamation which would
facilitate the rehabilitation or revival of the business of
amalgamating company. In other words, sub-sec. (1) of sec.
72A provides that if the Central Government, on the
recommendation of the specified Authority, is satisfied that
the aforesaid conditions are fulfilled in a given case of
the amalgamation then the Central Government has to make a
declaration to that effect and the consequence of such
declaration is that notwithstanding anything contained in
any other provision of the Act, the accumulated loss and the
unabsorbed depreciation of the amalgamating company is
deemed. to be the loss or as the case may be, allowance for
depreciation of the amalgamated company for the previous
year in which the amalgamation was effected. An additional
statutory function of the Specified Authority under sub-sec.
(2) (ii) of sec. 72A is to issue a certificate to the effect
that adequate steps have been taken by the amalgamated
company for the rehabilitation or revival of the business of
the amalgamating company, which certificate is required to
be furnished along with its return of the income for the
said assessment year by the amalgamating company for
claiming the benefit of the section.
On April 27, 1978, M&M made an application in the
approved form under sec. 72A of the Act for the grant of
relief of the requisite declaration from the Central
Government which was received by the
783
Central Government on May 3 of 1978. As the amalgamation had
been effected from November 1, 1977 M&M filed the said
application so as to enable the authorities to investigate
the requisite factual pre-conditions for the grant of the
relief and to arrive at a decision in order to enable it to
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file its return of income for the assessment year 1979-80
(the relevant previous year being 1.11.1977 to 31.10.1978
during which the amalgamation was effected) along with the
requisite certificate of the Specified Authority before the
due date June 30, 1979. Later M&M also furnished the latest
audited financial position of ITCI together with other
particulars as desired. By a notification No. S.O. 710 (E)
dated 11.10.77 the Central Government constituted and
notified the Specified Authority consisting of respondent
Nos. 6 to 10 under s. 72A of the Act and at the suggestion
of the Specified Authority the Central Government also set
up a separate screening Committee of experts to investigate
as to whether the requisite statutory conditions were
present or not. It may be stated that admittedly no other
condition had been specified by the Central Government under
cl. (c) of sub-sec. (1) of s. 72A and the grant of the
relief of declaration depended only on the fulfilment of the
two conditions mentioned in cls. (a) and (b) of sub-s. (1).
After considering the particulars furnished in the
application made by M & M, further correspondence and
evidence produced in that behalf and after hearing M & M the
Specified Authority by its order dated May/June 2, 1980
recommended that the amalgamation of ITCI with M&M did not
satisfy the condition specified in cl. (a); in other words,
it opined that amalgamating company was financially viable
and not non-viable immediately before its amalgamation with
M & M. The Central Government, adopting the reasons recorded
by the specified Authority for its opinion, accepted the
recommendation made by it and passed an order on December 1,
1980 whereby it refused to issue the declaration under s.
72A of the Act to M & M.
The aforesaid recommendation of the Specified Authority
and the Central Government’s decision based thereon were
challenged by M & M by filing a writ petition in the Delhi
High Court, the challenge was principally met by raising a
contention that the Central Government had refused the
relief to M & M on the basis of its subjective decision
about the non-fulfilment of the condition specified in cl.
(a) of s. 72A (1) and for relevant and cogent reasons and
hence the decision could not be reviewed or interfered with
by the Court and with a view to show that both the Specified
Authority and the Central Government had considered all the
relevant factors
784
and that M & M had been fairly treated in the matter great
reliance was placed on the minutes of the several meetings
held by the Specified Authority which were produced before
the Court. On a consideration of the entire material placed
before it as well as the rival submissions made by counsel
for the parties the High Court came to the conclusion that
the view taken by the Specified Authority and the Central
Government in the impugned orders was just not possible to
be formed and that no reasonable authority much less the
Specified Authority or an expert body of the Central
Government could have reasonably come to the conclusion that
ITCI was, immediately before its amalgamation with M & M,
financially viable and, therefore, the orders were liable to
be struck down. The High Court further found from the
proceedings of the Specified Authority that it had accepted
the position that the amalgamation was in the public
interest and that the Central Government had also declined
the relief to M & M only on the ground that the condition in
cl. (a) had not been fulfilled. In the circumstances the
High Court quashed the impugned recommendation dated
May/June 2, 1980 of the Specified Authority as well as the
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Central Government’s decision dated December 1, 1980 and
directed them both to deal with M & M’s application and to
dispose it of within a period of six months from the date of
its order in accordance with the provisions of s. 72A (1) of
the Act in light of its judgment. The High Court further
directed the Specified Authority to consider and issue the
requisite statutory certificate under s. 72A (2) (ii) of the
Act within one month of the declaration made by the Central
Government under s. 72A (1) of the Act; the High Court gave
the further direction that the statutory certificate when it
will be furnished by M & M to the concerned Income Tax
officer shall be deemed to have been filed by M & M with its
Return of Income for the concerned assessment year. The
appellants have challenged the High Court’s view and its
directions in this appeal.
Counsel for the appellants mainly raised two
contentions before us in support of the appeal. In the first
place relying upon the words "... and the Central
Government, on the recommendation of the Specified
Authority, is satisfied that the following conditions are
fulfilled" occurring in sec. 72A (1) of the Act, counsel
contended that the issuance of the declaration under the
section by the Central Government depended upon its
subjective satisfaction about the fulfilment or otherwise of
the conditions mentioned therein and if such subjective
satisfaction of the Central Government was based on relevant
and cogent materials on record its decision was not open
785
to judicial review and could not be interfered with by any
Court. Elaborating the contention counsel pointed out that
in this case the Central Government’s decision was based on
the recommendation of a statutory body namely, the Specified
Authority which in its turn had on relevant and cogent
materials opined that the condition specified in cl. (a) of
sub-sec. (1) was not satisfied in the case of the instant
amalgamation. It was further pointed out that both the
Specified Authority as well as the Central had inter alia
relied upon two conspicuous factors that emerged from the
materials on record, (a) the exchange ratio of shares fixed
under the Scheme of Amalgamation (two shares of M & M in
exchange for three shares of ITCI) and (b) the admission on
the part of ITCI about its sound financial position
contained in para 14 of its Company Petition No. 789 of
1977, for coming to the conclusion that the amalgamating
company (ITCI) was financially viable immediately before its
amalgamation with M & M and since the opinion of the
statutory body as well as the decision of the Central
Government were based on the aforesaid relevant and cogent
materials the High Court was in error in interfering with
the same. Secondly, Counsel contended that neither the
Specified Authority in its order of recommendation dated
May/June 2, 1980 nor the Central Government in its order
dated December 1, 1980 had indicated that the second
condition mentioned in cl. (b) of sub-sec. (1) (about the
amalgamation being in public interest) had been fulfilled
nor was it clear on the record that the relief sought by M&M
was denied only on the ground of non-fulfilment of the
condition specified in cl. (a) of sub-sec. (1) and therefore
the High Court was wrong in presuming that the condition in
cl. (b) had been fulfilled in the instant case and as such
if at all the matter was to be remanded for reconsideration
this aspect ought to have been left open for being
considered by the Central Government. In these circumstances
counsel urged that the several directions given by the High
Court were improper and its entire decision was liable to be
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set aside.
On the other hand counsel for the contesting respondent
(M & M Ltd.) tried to support the judgment of the High Court
on more than one ground; according to him even assuming,
without admitting, that the impugned decision of the Central
Government was based on the aforesaid two factors said to be
relevant and cogent (which is disputed), the said decision,
being a result of subjective satisfaction, would be liable
to be quashed or set aside if it could be shown that the
same was arrived at by taking into consideration extraneous
or irrelevant materials, for, it would not be known how
786
far and to what extent such vitiating materials had
influenced the mind of the Central Government and in the
instant case some of the other factors admittedly taken into
consideration for arriving at the decision were extraneous
and irrelevant. Counsel urged that apart from the aspect
that the conclusion arrived at by the Specified Authority
and the Central Government about the non-fulfilment of the
condition specified in cl. (a) of sub-sec. (1) was such that
no reasonable body of persons, properly informed, would come
to, the same was also vitiated by (a) the adoption of a
wrong approach to the true concept of "financial non
viability", and (b) having taken into account irrelevant and
extraneous matters. Counsel further urged that the
proceedings before the Specified Authority clearly showed
that it was fully satisfied that the condition mentioned in
cl. (b) of sub-sec. (1) (about the amalgamation being in
public interest) was fulfilled and if the Central Government
had disagreed with that opinion of the Specified Authority
its refusal of relief would have been based on the non
fulfilment of both the conditions instead of one and
therefore the inference was irresistable that both the
Specified Authority as well as the Central Government had
refused relief to M & M only on the ground that the
condition specified in cl. (a) had not been fulfilled and if
that conclusion was vitiated on any of the aforesaid grounds
the High Court was right in striking down the impugned
orders and remanding the matter to Central Government for
doing the needful in the light of its judgment; and the High
Court was also right in issuing the directions which it did.
By now, the parameters of the Court’s power of judicial
review of administrative or executive action or decision and
the grounds on which the Court can interfere with the same
are well settled and it would be redundant to recapitulate
the whole catena of decisions of this Court commencing from
Barium Chemicals Ltd. v. Company Law Board(1) case on the
point. Indisputably, it is a settled position that if the
action or decision is perverse or is such that no reasonable
body of persons, properly informed, could come to or has
been arrived at by the authority misdirecting itself by
adopting a wrong approach or has been influenced by
irrelevant or extraneous matters the Court would be
justified in interfering with the same. This Court in one of
its later decisions in Smt. Shalini Soni etc. v. Union of
India and Ors. etc.(2) has observed thus: "It is an
unwritten rule of
787
the law, constitutional and administrative, that whenever a
decision-making function is entrusted to the subjective
satisfaction of a statutory functionary, there is an
implicit obligation to apply his mind to pertinent and
proximate matters only, eschewing the irrelevant and the
remote." Suffice it to say that the following passage
appearing at pages 285-86 in Prof. de Smith’s treatise
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’Judicial Review of Administrative Action’ (4th Edn.)
succinctly summarises the several principles formulated by
the Courts in that behalf thus:
"The authority in which a discretion is
vested can be compelled to exercise that
discretion, but not to exercise it in any
particular manner. In general, a discretion must
be exercised only by the authority to which it is
committed. That authority must genuinely address
itself to the matter before it: it must not act
under the dictation of another body or disable
itself from exercising a discretion in each
individual case; In the purported exercise of its
discretion it must not do what it has been
forbidden to do, nor must it do what it has not
been authorised to do. It must act in good faith,
must have regard to all relevant considerations
and must not be swayed by irrelevant
considerations must not seek to promote purposes
alien to the letter or to the spirit of the
legislation that gives it power to act, and must
not act arbitrarily or capriciously. Nor where a
judgment must be made that certain facts exist can
a discretion be validly exercised on the basis of
an erroneous assumption about those facts. These
several principles can conveniently be grouped in
two main categories; failure to exercise a
discretion, and excess or abuse of discretionary
power. The two classes are not, however, mutually
exclusive. Thus, discretion may be improperly
fettered because irrelevant considerations have
been taken into account; and where an authority
hands over its discretion to another body it acts
ultra vires. Nor, is it possible to differentiate
with precision the grounds of invalidity contained
within each category."
As stated earlier the issuance of the requisite
declaration in R favour of M & M by the Central Government
under sec. 72A depended in the instant case on the
fulfilment of only two conditions mentioned in sub-sec. (1)
namely, (a) that ITCI was not, immediately
788
before its amalgamation with M & M, financially viable and
(b) that the amalgamation was in the public interest. Both
the Specified Authority as well as the Central Government,
on the materials before them, came to conclusion that ITCI
was, immediately before its amalgamation with M & M,
financially viable and ’ as such the first condition
mentioned in cl. (a) of sub-sec. (1) had not been fulfilled.
In its order of negative recommendation dated May/June 2,
1980 the Specified Authority has set out six reasons that
led it to form the aforesaid conclusion and it is undisputed
that substantially the same six reasons have been given by
the Central Government, though couched in better language
and compressed in four paragraphs of its order dated
December 1, 1980 while upholding the recommendation of the
Specified Authority and declining the relief to M & M. These
reasons for the impugned conclusion as appearing in the four
paragraphs (paras 3 to 6) of the Central Government’s order
are:
3. It has been claimed by Messrs. M & M that
having regard to the losses incurred by ITCI, the
company was financially non-viable immediately
before the amalgamation. The amalgamation with M&M
took place with effect from 1.11.1977. ITCI
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suffered losses for two years i.e. 1974-75 and
1976-77 while it earned a profit of 208 lakhs in
1975-76. It cannot be denied that the large losses
incurred in one year viz. 1976-77 had created
certain financial difficulties for ITCI. This
however, does not mean that the undertaking of
ITCI was non-viable. The problem was one of
temporary liquidity, all that was needed was a
doze of liquidity to nurse it back to health. This
is borne out by the events subsequent to
amalgamation. After the repayment of liabilities,
ITCI actually earned a cash profit of 3.9 crores
in the year after amalgamation. There is also no
reason to think that without amalgamation, the
liquidity problem would have remained unsolved. In
this connection, the close link between the two
companies and the possibility of continued
financial support even without amalgamation cannot
be ignored. (same as Reasons (i), (v) and (vi) of
the Specified Authority).
4. The statement made by ITCI in the petition
filed before the Bombay High Court as late as
December, 1977
789
that though the Company had sustained losses, it
was in a sound financial position and its assets
were more than sufficient to meet the liabilities,
cannot just be ignored. (same as Reason (iv) of
the Specified Authority).
5. It is also pertinent to mention that the
reports presented by ITCI to its shareholders for
the year 1975 and 1976 attributed the poor
performance of the company to the mechanics of
price control which did not take into account the
cost increase and also sluggishness in the demand
for tractors, principally because of the stringent
credit restrictions imposed by the Government from
time to time. Thus, admittedly the poor
performance of ITCI for the years of losses are
due to short term difficulties existing in the
relevant years. Once the short term difficulties
were got over, the company was expected to take
profits. (same as Reason (ii) of the Specified
Authority).
6. Note has been taken that the share
exchange ratio fixed under the scheme of
amalgamation was two shares of M & M for every
three shares of ITCI in the case of equity shares
and one share of M & M for one share of ITCI in
the case of preference shares. This share
exchange ratio does not indicate any sickness or
non-viability on the part of ITCI. Moreover,
although as per accounts the net worth of ITCI on
the date of amalgamation was negative, if the
market value of the assets is taken into account,
the assets exceeded the liabilities by 790 lakhs.
This shows that the company was a viable unit.
(same as Reason (iii) of the Specified
Authority).
Before undertaking a scrutiny of these reasons for
ultimately deciding whether the impugned conclusion of the
Specified Authority and the Central Government is liable to
be interfered with or not it will be useful to indicate
briefly the object with which this new provision of s. 72A
was introduced in the Act as it will throw light on what was
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the mischief or situation that was intended to be remedied
by its introduction as also the true concept of financial
Don- viability. From the budget speech of the Finance
Minister, the Notes on Clauses of the Finance Bill (No. 2)
of 1977 and the Memorandum explaining to provisions of the
said Bill it will appear clear that
790
sickness among industrial undertaking was regarded as a
matter of grave national concern inasmuch as closure of any
sizable manufacturing unit in any industry entailed social
costs in terms of loss of production and unemployment as
also waste of valuable capital assets, and experience had
shown that taking over of such sick units by Government was
not always a satisfactory or economical solution; it was
felt that a more effective method would be to facilitate
amalgamation of sick industrial units with sound ones by
providing incentives and removing impediments in the way of
such amalgamation which would not merely relieve the
Government of uneconomical burden of taking over and running
sick units but save the Government from social costs in
terms of loss of production and unemployment. With such
objective in view, in order to facilitate the merger of sick
industrial units with sound ones and as and by way of
offering an incentive in that behalf s. 72A was introduced
in the Act where under by a deeming fiction the accumulated
loss or unabsorbed depreciation of the amalgamating company
is treated to be a loss or, as the case may be, allowance
for depreciation of the amalgamated company in the previous
year in which the amalgamation was effected; but the
amalgamated company, although a successor in interest, would
be entitled to carry forward and set-off the accumulated
loss and unabsorbed depreciation of the amalgamating company
only where the amalgamating company was not, immediately
before such amalgamation, financially viable and the
amalgamation was in public interest. The expression
"financial non-viability" had not been defined in the Act
but the Finance Minister’s speech, the notes on Clauses of
the Bill and the Memorandum explaining the provisions
thereof make it clear that the financial non-viability of an
undertaking has been equated with the ’sickness’ of such
undertaking and obviously in the context of its revival by a
sound undertaking the sickness must be of a temporary
character and not any basic or permanent sickness. An
undertaking which is basically or potentially non-viable
will ordinarily be incapable of revival and would face a
closure; in other words, the financial non-viability spoken
of by the section must refer to sickness brought about by
temporary adverse financial circumstances that disables the
unit to stand and work on its own. This is also made clear
by the provision contained in cl. (a) of sub-s. (1) which
states that the financial non-viability of the amalgamating
company has to be judged by reference to "its liabilities,
losses and other relevant factors". Moreover, since the
expression is occurring in a taxing statute in the context
of amalgamation of companies it will have to be
791
understood in its popular sense, that is to say, the sense
or meaning that is attributed to it by men of business,
trade or commerce and by persons or institutions interested
in or dealing with companies. In this behalf counsel for the
contesting respondent invited our attention to the several
criteria adopted by various bodies like the Government of
India, financial institutions and commercial banks on what
could be regarded as a sick unit. For instance, while
announcing its scheme of merging sick units with healthy
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ones (Finance Act, 1977) Government of India had classified
"those Units where the losses, past and present, have eroded
50% of capital and reserves as sick". According to the
Reserve Bank of India, commercial banks consider a unit to
be sick "if it has incurred cash loss for one year and in
their judgment is likely to continue to incur cash losses
for the current years as well as the following year and
which has an imbalance in its financial structure, such as
current ratio of less than 1:1 and worsening, debt-equity
ratio (total outside liabilities to net worth)". Counsel
pointed out that while the commercial banks follow these
criteria for banking purposes, the State Bank of India
defines a sick unit as one "which fails to generate internal
surplus on a regular basis and depends for its survival on
the constant infusion of funds from outside". Counsel
further pointed out that the National Council of Applied
Economic Research (for short ’NCAER.) an approved research
association, having senior Government officials on its
governing body and which has a large number of research
projects to its credit, had undertaken a study of
’industrial sickness’ in 1979 and in its Report, after
noting the aforesaid criteria adopted by various bodies for
deciding whether a unit could be regarded as sick it has
expressed its own conclusion on the concept of financial
viability thus:
"Financial viability: Sickness is "defined in
terms of financial viability since this is the
only known indicator of he health of a unit.
Financial viability consists of three
interdependent elements, of equal emphasis and
weight, viz. profitability, liquidity and solvency
which are represented by cash profit or loss, net
working capital and net worth respectively. Viewed
in another way, solvency and liquidity are the two
vital organs of financial viability and
profitability its life blood."
NCAER has further observed that where all the three
parameters-profitability, liquidity and solvency show
positive figures the unit’s
792
financial viability will be sound; where one of the three
parameters shows a negative figure the unit could be
regarded as ’tending towards sickness’; when two of the
three parameters show negative figures, it would be a case
of ’incipient sickness’ and when all the three parameters
show negative figures the unit is ’sick’. This being the
true concept of financial non-viability as understood by men
of business and commerce and by financial institutions it is
by reference to these several tests or criteria adopted by
them that the question has to be decided whether a
particular undertaking is financially non-viable at a given
Point of time.
lt may be stated that by a Press-Note issued by the
Government (Ministry of Industry) on 23rd February, 1981
certain guidelines for approval of amalgamation under s. 72A
in regard to the fulfilment of the condition specified in
cl. (a) of sub-s. (1) were laid down but for the purpose of
deciding the issue raised in this appeal those guide-lines
would not be of any avail for the simple reason that those
did not exist when the Specified Authority as well as the
Central Government arrived at its impugned conclusion.
Suffice it to say that the factors which these guide-lines
lay down as being required to be taken into account for
deciding the question of non-viability of the amalgamating
company are more or less similar to and in accord with
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aforesaid tests or criteria adopted by men of business,
trade or commerce and financial institutions and Counsel for
the contesting respondent claimed that those guide-lines had
been more than fulfilled in the instant amalgamation.
However, for the purpose of this appeal we would rather
ignore the said guidelines contained in the Press Note dated
23rd February, 1981 and decide the question whether the
impugned conclusion of the Specified Authority as well as
the Central Government is liable to be interfered with or
not by having regard to the true concept of financial non-
viability as discussed above and applying the several tests
or criteria mentioned in that behalf earlier.
Turning now to the reasons that prompted the Specified
Authority and the Central Government to come to the impugned
conclusion, a careful and close scrutiny of paragraph 3 of
the Central Government’s order, comprising three aspects
which constitute the substratum of the reasoning behind the
conclusion, will show that both had misdirected themselves
in law by adopting a wrong approach and proceeding on a
wrong assumption about the possibility of financial
assistance from M & M which did not exist either in fact
793
or in law. That the undertaking of ITCI had incurred huge
losses in the relevant years was admitted but that has been
explained away by both by observing that ’it merely created
a temporary problem of liquidity and did not mean that the
undertaking was basically nonviable’ (vide reason (v) of the
Specified Authority)- clearly a wrong approach, for the
section does not require the undertaking to be basically
non-viable but merely financially non-viable which, as
stated earlier, must of necessity be of a temporary
character. Further, the ’close link’ between the two
companies referred to by both, divorced from financial
assistance, would be an irrelevant factor and on the
prospect or possibility of financial assistance from M & M a
wrong assumption in fact and law had been made by the
Specified Authority and the Central Government. Indisputably
at the relevant time having regard to the provisions of s.
370 of the Companies Act, 1956 the maximum limit up to which
M & M could lend and advance was Rs. 120 lakhs and in view
of the advances already made to various parties to the tune
of Rs. 70 lakhs it could have advanced only Rs. 50 lakhs to
ITCI as against its requirement of over ten times that
amount namely, Rs. 5 crores and odd, moreover any financial
help in excess of Rs. 50 lakhs would have visited M & M and
its directors or officers with penal consequences under s.
371 of the Companies Act. These legal provisions were
completely ignored and both the Specified Authority and the
Central Government observed that the problem of temporary
liquidity faced by ITCI could be solved by receiving a doze
of liquidity from M & M. In fact, in the circumstances
further financial assistance worth the name could be
rendered by M & M to ITCI only after amalgamation. It is
thus clear that both of the Specified Authority as well as
the Central Government had come to the impugned conclusion
by wrongly equating financial non-viability with basic non-
viability and in complete disregard of the provisions of ss.
370 and 371 of the Companies Act. Further the fact that
during the year 1977-78 following the amalgamation M & M
took adequate steps for the revival of ITCI’s undertaking by
making repayments to its creditors to the tune of Rs. 4
crores and by making investment of Rs. 0.7 crore on
maintenance, replacement of machinery etc. thereby enabling
the undertaking to earn a cash profit of Rs. 3.9 crores
could not be regarded as a factor showing the financial
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viability of ITCI prior to 1.11.1977 as was wrongly done by
the Specified Authority and the Central Government. All this
shows that the impugned conclusion was the result of an
entirely wrong approach being adopted as regards the true
concept of financial non-viability. On the other hand, while
stating the facts
794
in the earlier part of our judgment we have pointed out that
at the material time namely, immediately before its
amalgamation with M & M which took place on 1.11.1977 ITCI,
having regard to its financial position, was commercially
insolvent and that all the three parameters of
profitability, liquidity and solvency, by reference to which
its sickness (financial non-viability) is required to be
judged, showed negative figures. Admittedly, during the two
years 1974-75 1976-77 it had made huge losses to the tune of
Rs. 253 lakhs and Rs. 433 lakhs respectively and the nominal
profits of Rs. 70 lakhs (or for that matter even Rs. 208
lakhs) earned by it in 1975-76 did not convert it into a
profitable concern as on 31st of October, 1977. As regards
the liquidity even the Specified Authority and the Central
Government have observed that the large losses incurred in
the year 1976-77 had made ITCI face the problem of temporary
liquidity. As regards solvency, admittedly, cheques and
bills issued by ITCI had bounced, suppliers had stopped
supply of raw materials, financial institutions had stopped
further monetary help and legal actions including winding up
proceedings had been threatened. Further, as stated earlier,
the excess of liabilities (including, loans) over the assets
(share capital plus free reserves) was to the tune of Rs. 63
lakhs and odd as on 31st October, 1977 and as such the
entire share capital plus free reserves had been eroded (and
not merely 50% as per the test of Government of India); and
the ’current ratio’ was extremely strained at 40: 60 (being
less then 1:1 as required by the test adopted by commercial
banks). Tn other words according to the tests or criteria
adopted by men of businesses or commerce and financial
institutions ITIC, immediately before its amalgamation with
M & M, was clearly and blatantly financially non-viable. In
spite of such situation that obtained and which was brought
to the notice of the Specified Authority and the Central
Government it is surprising how the impugned conclusion was
reached by them and the same appears to us to be almost
perverse; at any rate it was a conclusion which no
reasonable body of persons, properly informed, could come
to.
In paragraph 4 of the Central Government’s order
reliance has been placed on the so called admission on the
part of ITCI about its sound financial position contained in
para 14 of its Company Petition No. 789/1977. The relevant
statement runs thus: "Although the petitioner company has
sustained a loss it is in a sound financial position and its
assets are more than sufficient to meet its liabilities"
Torn out of context it might support the suggested inference
but if.
795
paragraph 14 is read as a whole it will appear clear
that the said statement was based on the latest audited
accounts for the year ending 30th September, 1976 referred
to in the same paragraph and as such it referred to the
company’s position as on 30th September, 1976 and not as on
31st October, 1977 (i.e. immediately prior to the
amalgamation). Admittedly the balance-sheet as at 31st
October, 1977 was ready only in May, 1978 and was furnished
to the Specified Authority in July, 1978. Obviously,
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therefore, the so-called admission was referable to the
position as on 30th September, 1976 and it cannot be
forgotten that at the close of that year the working results
of ITCI had shown a profit of Rs. 70 lakhs, though in the
following year it again made a huge loss. Further, all these
facts were clearly stated in para 6 of M & M’s petition
seeking Court’s sanction for amalgamation and averments in
both the petitions, (which were heard together by the High
Court) will have to be read together. So read the so-called
admission on the part of the ITCI could not be given any
significance as has been done by the Specified Authority and
the Central Government. - D
Paragraph S of the Central Government’s order merely
refers to the poor performance of the lTCI during the
relevant years and points out that the same was due to
factors such as the mechanics of price control and the
sluggishness in the demand for tractors over which the ITCI
had no control but these factors were no pointers to - the
financial position of the ITCI one way or the other. If
anything they showed that for the poor performance and
losses incurred by ITCI which were admittedly due to short
term difficulties, no blame could attach to the management,
Lastly paragraph 6 of the Central Governments order
mentions to factors that were taken into account for coming
to the impugned conclusion (a) share exchange ratio fixed
under the amalgamation scheme and (b) net worth of ITCI on
the date of amalgamation. The former, according to the
Specified Authority and the Central Government negatively
showed that ITCI was not sick or non-viable and as regards
the latter it is stated that "although as per accounts the
net worth of ITCI on the date of amalgamation was negative,
if the market worth of the assets is taken into account, the
assets exceeded the liabilities by 790 lakhs and this shows
that the company was a viable unit". In our view the former
does not possess the negative effect as suggested but would
be a neutral factor.
After all several aspects and considerations weigh with
the share-
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holders of the companies concerned in the amalgamation while
approving the proposed share exchange ratio and since in the
instant case all the concerned share-holders of M & M
including the public financial institutions had, with full
knowledge of all the facts including the commercially
insolvent position of ITCI, agreed to the ratio and which
was not disturbed by the High Court in spite of objection
being raised by the Regional Director, Company Law Board, it
cannot be said that the exchange ratio so fixed possesses
probative value of negative character as suggested. As
regards the latter, according to well-settled principles and
practice of commercial accountancy (vide Cost and Management
Accounting by J. Batty) the concept of ’Net Worth’ always
denotes the excess of the book value of all assets over
liabilities and market value of the assets is never taken
into consideration in fact the market value of assets which
gives the ’current worth’ becomes a relevant factor when in
liquidation the question has to be considered whether the
company possesses assets which would be sufficient to meet
all its creditors or not. Admittedly the ’Net worth’ of ITCI
as per the books of account was negative on the date of
amalgamation and therefore when the Specified Authority and
the Central Government took into consideration the market
value of the assets of the ITCI as on the date of
amalgamation for Coming to the conclusion that the company
was a viable unit, they were clearly influenced by
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irrelevant and extraneous material vitiating the impugned
conclusion.
Having regard to the above discussion the High Court,
in our view, was right in holding that the impugned
conclusion of the Specified Authority and the Central
Government on the aspect of non-fulfilment of the condition
specified in cl. (a) of sub-s. (1) of s. 72A being vitiated
was liable to be set aside and that consequently the
Recommendation of the Specified Authority and the order of
the Central Government based thereon deserved to be quashed.
The second contention of counsel for the appellants
need not detain us very long, for, having regard to the
materials that are available on record it will be difficult
to accept it. In the first place in the writ petition
respondent No. 1, after referring to several facts which
tended to show that the amalgamation was in the public
interest, had specifically averred that the amalgamation was
in the public interest as required by cl. (b) of sub-s. (1)
of s. 72A (vide para 18B) and these averments were not
specifically denied in the counter affidavit where it was
merely stated that reference was invited to the
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proceedings and order of the Specified Authority. But that
apart, the admitted facts are (a) ITCI was engaged in the
manufacture of agricultural tractors which have been
declared as an essential commodity under the essential
Commodities Act, 1955, (b) the production had declined to
2000 tractors as against its licensed and installed capacity
of 10,000 tractors during the period 1.10.76 to 31.10.1977,
(c) because of its adverse financial position it was facing
the prospect of immediate closure entailing social costs in
terms of loss of production of an essential commodity and
loss of employment to over 2000 workers employed by it, (d)
the closure of ITCI would have rendered idle a large
investment in productive capacity which would not have been
in the national interest, and (e) the amalgamation
forestalled the necessity for the State Government to take
over that unit and conduct it as a relief undertaking,
thereby avoiding a heavy burden falling on the public
exchequer. Further, the proceedings of the Specified
Authority, particularly the minutes of the Third Meeting
held on July 19, 1978 clearly show that it was in the light
of the aforesaid factors that the Specified Authority
expressed a clear opinion that it would be difficult to take
the view that the test of public interest was not met and
the said opinion was substantially reiterated in its
Thirteenth Meeting held on July 11, 1979. Therefore, the
Specified Authority made a negative recommendation in its
order dated May/June 2, 1980 that the condition specified in
cl. (a) of sub-s. (I) of s. 72A had not been fulfilled It is
also clear that it was on the basis of such recommendation
that the Central Government passed its order where the
relief was refused to M & M on the ground that the condition
specified in cl. (a) of sub-s. (1) had not been fulfilled
and no other ground was given. In this view of the matter it
is difficult to accept the contention that the High Court
was wrong in presuming that the condition in cl. (b) had
been fulfilled in the instant case. In our view, From the
aforesaid material on record an irresistible inference
arises that relief under s. 72A was refused by the Central
Government to M & M only on the ground that condition
specified in cl. (a) of sub-s. (1) had not been fulfilled.
It is also clear from the record that M & M had taken
adequate steps for the revival of ITCI and had carried on
the same business without any modification or reorganisation
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during the relevant previous year.
In the result we confirm the High Court’s decision as
also the several directions issued by it in the operative
part of its order subject
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to one modification that the Specified Authority and the
Central Government should dispose of M & M’s application
within three months from the date hereof (instead of six
months as directed by the High Court) in light of our
Judgment, Assessment proceedings for the years 1979-80 and
1980-81 will proceed only after the declaration is issued by
the Central Government and the Certificate is issued by the
Specified Authority. We dismiss the appeal with costs in
favour of the contesting respondent, namely, M & M.
S. R. Appeal dismissed,
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