Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX, KERALA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
AMBAT ECHUKUTTY MENON
DATE OF JUDGMENT06/09/1979
BENCH:
UNTWALIA, N.L.
BENCH:
UNTWALIA, N.L.
PATHAK, R.S.
CITATION:
1980 AIR 71 1980 SCR (1) 539
1979 SCC (4) 298
ACT:
Income Tax Act 1961-Capital Receipt & Revenue Receipt-
Sale of trees of spontaneous growth-Purchaser to cut and
remove trunks of trees only-Stumps and roots embedded in
soil not to be disturbed-Proceeds of sale whether liable to
be taxed as ’income’.
HEADNOTE:
On a vast area of agricultural land owned by the
assessee there were about 772 trees some of which were of
spontaneous growth.
Clauses 12 and 13 of the agreement by which the
assessee sold some trees provided that the trees should be
cut without pulling the stumps.
The Income Tax Officer, held that the trees were of
spontaneous growth and assessed the whole of the income from
the sale of trees to income-tax.
The Appellate Assistant Commissioner allowed the
assessee’s appeal in part holding that only the amount
actually received during the accounting year, was assessable
to income-tax.
Appeals preferred by the assessee as well as the
department to the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal were
dismissed but references were made to the High Court on the
question whether the receipts from the sale of trees of
spontaneous growth were assessable to tax and if so, whether
assessable under the head ’other sources’.
The High Court held that the receipts from the sale of
the trees were of a capital nature, and decided the
references in favour of the assessee and against the
department.
Dismissing the appeals the Court,
^
HELD: (per Untwalia, J.)
(1) The High Court rightly distinguished the decision
in V. Venugopala Varma Rajah v. Commissioner of Income-tax,
Kerala, 76 ITR 460 and applied the ratio of that in A. K. T.
K. M. Vishnudatta Antharjanam v. Commissioner of
Agricultural Income Tax, Trivandrum, 78 ITR 58. [549F]
(2) In Venugopala Varma Rajah v. Commissioner of Income
Tax, Kerala, 76 ITR 460, this Court held that if a person
sells merely leaves or fruit of the trees or even branches
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of the trees it would be difficult to hold that the
realization is not of the nature of income. Where the trunks
are cut so that the stumps remain intact and capable of
regeneration, receipts from sale of the trunks would be in
the nature on income. By selling a part of the trunk, the
assessee does not necessarily realise a part of his capital.
[546A, D-E]
540
(3) In A. K. T. K. M. Vishnudatta Antharjanam v.
Commissioner of Agricultural Income Tax, Trivandrum, 78 ITR
58, a case of sale of trees with roots, this Court applied
the test laid down by the Privy Council in the Commissioner
of Income Tax, Bengal v. M/s. Shaw, Wallace and Co., 6 ITC
178 and held that, "the source is not necessarily one which
is expected to be continuously productive, but it must be
one whose object is the production of a definite return
excluding anything in the nature of a mere windfall. Once
the teak trees were removed together with their roots and
there was no prospect of regeneration or of any production
of a return therefrom, it could well be said that the source
ceased to be one which could produce any income." Although
the test laid down by the Privy Council has been whittled
down by subsequent pronouncements, yet in the matter of sale
of trees when this Court applied the same test in
Vishnudatta’s case it was for the purpose of laying stress
on the object of the felling of trees. [546G, 547A-C]
(4) If the object of felling the trees leaving the
roots and stumps intact is for regeneration of income, then
whether income is regenerated or not is immaterial. But in a
case, where the trees are sold by uprooting the roots nobody
can say that there could be any object of regeneration of
income from the trees growing again as there was no question
of a second growth at all. Similarly when the trees are sold
and allowed to be felled by leaving the roots and stumps
intact then in case of trees of spontaneous growth there is
a likelihood of fresh sprouting and further growth of trees
on the left out roots and stumps. The presumption in such
cases would be that the owner did it with the object of
regenerating the income. There can be cases like the instant
one, where the roots and stumps were not allowed to be
uprooted and cut by the licensee or the lessee, yet the
object was not the regeneration of the trees, but a
protection of the land eventually to be used for the purpose
of cultivation. [547D-F]
In the instant case, the agreement dated 28-11-1960
indicates that the transaction was not a sale of trees with
roots and stumps, for clauses 12 and 13 of the agreement
impose a prohibition that after the cutting, sprouts were
not to be cut. The object of the assessee was to protect the
land falling vacant after the cutting of the trees from
being damaged by the licensee by at random cutting of the
stumps and uprooting of the roots. [547G, 548B-C]
(5) In order to net the receipt as a revenue receipt it
is for the department to reject the assessee’s stand and to
hold that the object of the assessee in not allowing the
licensee to cut the stumps and uproot the roots was a
regeneration of the income. By the time the assessment was
completed by the Income Tax Officer an area of ten acres had
been converted into cultivable land. [549 E-F]
(per Pathak, J. concurring)
1. The instant case does not fall either within V.
Venugopala Varma Rajah v. Commissioner of Income Tax,
Kerala, 76 ITR 460 or A. K. T. K. M. Vishnudatta Antharjanam
v. Commissioner of Agricultural Income Tax, Trivandrum, 78
ITR 58. It is a case where although the stumps and roots
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remained after the trees were felled and removed by the
purchaser, the regeneration of the trees was not to be
allowed and, therefore, a profit-making activity could not
be spelled out. [550G]
2. Where trees are felled and removed, the stumps and
roots are allowed to remain on the land with a view to
regeneration of the trees, the intention of the
541
owner would be to indulge in a profit-making activity. The
receipt from the sale of the trunks would be revenue
receipts. [550B]
3. There was no intention in this case to reserve the
stumps and roots for the purpose of allowing regeneration of
the trees, and the intention and subsequent conduct of the
assessee established that the stipulation against removal of
the stumps and roots was intended to protect the surface of
the land from indiscriminate injury because the land was to
be applied to cultivation. Intention is a material factor in
such cases, and each case has to be decided on its
particular facts. Without evidence of the intention or
object behind such a stipulation the mere fact that the
trees were sold without stumps and roots cannot lead to the
necessary inference that a profit making activity was
involved. [550C-D]
4. Where the evidence shows that the land has been
acquired for the purpose of cultivation, and that the
prohibition on the purchaser against removing the stumps and
roots was intended to prevent undue interference with the
soil, and the assessee did not intend to permit regeneration
of the trees, and that he had in fact later put the land to
cultivation, the payments received on sale of the trunks
cannot be regarded as taxable income. [550E]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 2242-
2247 of 1972.
Appeals by special leave from the Judgment and Order
dated 1-12-1971 of the Kerala High Court in Income Tax Ref.
No. 29/70, 30/70, 71, 92, 97 and 98/69.
P. A. Francis, G. A. Shah and Miss A. Subhashini for
the Appellant.
S. T. Desai, Mrs. S. Vaidyalingam, J. B. Dadachanji,
Mrs. A. K. Verma and Monjel Kumar for the Respondents.
The following Judgments were delivered:
UNTWALIA, J.-These six appeals by special leave
preferred by the Commissioner of Income-tax from the
judgments of the Kerala High Court are all inter-connected
and arise out of different proceedings in relation to one
assessment year only. They have, therefore, been heard
together and are being disposed of by this judgment.
The assessee-respondent is a Hindu undivided family
owning large agricultural lands in the State of Kerala. In
1905 the family purchased in court auction some lands
covering an area of about 200 acres. There were two
irrigational channels in the land drawing water from a
river. According to the Sanad, there were about 772 trees of
various kinds like Karimpana, coconut trees, jack trees,
tamarind trees, Maruthu etc. There were other trees of
spontaneous growth but they were not in one block. They were
interspersed among the paddy fields as the land aforesaid
was meant for paddy
542
cultivation. By an agreement dated November 28, 1960 the
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assessee sold to one Velappa Rowther trees from about 60
acres of land forming part of the 200 acres aforesaid. Since
the original term stipulated in connection with the payment
of money by Rowther could not be adhered to by him, further
agreements were entered into deferring and spreading the
payments over some years. The assessee under the impression
that the money which it received from Rowther on account of
sale of trees was not chargeable to income-tax under the
Indian Income-Tax Act did not file any voluntary return. On
February 28, 1963 the Income-Tax Officer, Palghat wrote to
the Karanavan of the assessee family pointing out that he
had information that the assessee had leased certain private
forests to Velappa Rowther for cutting timber; and that the
assessee had received Rs. 75,000/- during the relevant year.
The corresponding assessment year would be 1961-62. The
assessee was asked to explain why no voluntary return had
been filed. In reply to the letter of the Income-Tax Officer
the assessee wrote a letter dated the 3rd April, 1963
stating therein that there was no lease but an out and out
sale of the entire standing timber trees except certain
specified varieties and that the sale was affected with a
view to extend wet or dry cultivation in its fields in the
area; the receipt therefrom were of a capital nature or in
any event it was an agricultural income. The assessee,
however, concluded its letter by stating that he had no
deliberate intention of avoiding to file any return. If the
Income-Tax Officer so desired, he was ready to comply with
his direction.
Thereafter the Income-Tax Officer served a notice on
the assessee under section 148 of the Income-Tax Act, 1961,
hereinafter called the Act. In response to the same the
assessee filed a return on 25.3.1966 showing a total net
income of Rs. 626.63 paise for the previous year ending on
31.3.1961. The Income-Tax Officer held that out of the total
number of trees numbering 772 four varieties were not sold
and roughly speaking the number of trees sold and allowed to
be cut as per the agreement came to 367. The trees were of
spontaneous growth and the whole of the amount of Rs.
1,75,000/-, although the whole of it was not paid during the
accounting year, represented the assessee’s income which had
accrued as per the terms of the agreement in that very year.
He accordingly assessed the whole of the amount to income-
tax.
The Appellate Assistant Commissioner allowed the appeal
of the assessee in part and held that only a sum of Rs
75,000/-, the amount actually received during the accounting
year, was assessable to income-tax in the assessment year
1961-62. The assessee as well as
543
the department both preferred appeals before the Income-Tax
Appellate Tribunal from the order of the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner. The Tribunal by its order dated the 16th
November, 1968 dismissed both the appeals.
At the instance of the assessee the Tribunal stated a
case which was numbered as Reference No. 30 of 1970 and
referred the following question of law to the High Court for
its opinion:-
"Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances of
the case, the receipts from the sale of trees of
spontaneous growth were assessable to tax and if so,
whether assessable under ’Other Sources’?"
The High Court by its judgment, since reported in Ambat
Echukutty Menon v. Commissioner of Income-Tax, Ernakulam(1)
has answered the question in the negative, in favour of the
assessee and against the department. Civil Appeal No. 2247
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arises out of Reference No. 30 of 1970.
At the instance of the Revenue also the Tribunal made a
Reference being Reference No. 29/1970 and the question of
law referred to the High Court is in the following terms:-
"Whether on the facts and in the circumstances of
the case, the whole of the sum of Rs. 1,75,000/- was
not assessable to tax in the previous year ending on
31.3.1961 relevant for the assessment year 1961-62."
Since the High Court in the main Reference opined that the
receipt from the sale of the trees were of a capital nature
this Reference was also answered in favour of the assessee.
Civil Appeal No. 2242 arises out of Reference No. 29 of
1970.
The Income-Tax Officer initiated penalty proceedings
against the assessee, one under section 271 (1) (a) of the
Act and the other under section 273 (b), the former being
for the alleged failure of the assessee to furnish the
return for the period in question and the latter for its
alleged failure to furnish an estimate of the advance tax
payable. In relation to the penalty proceeding under section
271(1)(a) of the Act, two References were made to the High
Court, one at the instance of the Revenue and the other at
the assessee’s instance and two
544
References were similarly made in relation to the penalty
proceeding under section 273(b). As a consequence of the
main judgment of the High Court in Reference No. 30 of 1970
all these four References also had to be disposed of in
favour of the assessee. Civil Appeals 2243 to Civil Appeals
2246 have been preferred by the department in these penalty
proceedings.
Since, in our view, for the reasons to be stated
hereinafter the judgment of the High Court in the main
Reference giving rise to Civil Appeal 2247 is correct and
the said appeal has to fail on that account, it is plain
that the other five appeals fail as a corollary to the same
and have got to be dismissed as such. I now proceed to
discuss and decide the relevant question of law in the main
appeal.
Before I notice and advert to some special facts of
this case it would be better to have a resume of some
decisions of the High Courts and this Court taking one view
or the other in relation to the sale of trees, some cases
holding that it is a capital receipt and some cases
concluding in different situations and on different facts
that it is a revenue receipt. In Commissioner of Income-tax,
Madras v. T. Manavedan Tirumalpad(1) a Full Bench of the
Madras High Court held that the receipts from the sale of
timber trees by the owner of unassessed forest lands in
Malabar were chargeable to income-tax. Such trees were
treated as usufruct from the land like paddy from land and
minerals from mines. Similarly the Oudh Chief Court
expressed the view in Maharaja of Kapurthala v. Commissioner
of Income-Tax, C.P. & U.P.(2) that the net receipts from the
sale of forest trees are income liable to income-tax even
though the forest would be gradually exhausted by fellings.
This was a case of forest trees of spontaneous growth
growing on land which was assessed to land revenue. The
Patna case viz. Raja Bahadur Kamakshya Narain Singh v.
Commissioner of Income-Tax, Bihar and Orissa(3) was also a
case of the receipts from the sale of forest trees. In
Fringford Estates Ltd., Calicut v. Commissioner of Income-
Tax, Madras(4) the sale of timber comprised in the trees
from the forest was on a business line and the profits
derived from the same were held to be assessable to income-
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tax on the principle that profits derived from capital which
is consumed or exhausted in the process of realization are
nonetheless the taxable income.
545
The other cases taking the view that money received by
sale of trees is a capital receipt are of the nature where
trees have not been treated as usufruct of the land. They
were treated as part of the capital assets and the receipts
from the sale of such trees retained the same character. In
Commissioner of Income-Tax, Bombay South v. N. T.
Patwardhan(1) the Bombay High Court was dealing with a case
of the sale once for all of the trees with roots even though
they were of the spontaneous growth. The receipts from such
sales were held to be capital in nature. The Kerala High
Court in State of Kerala v. Karimtharuvi Tea Estate Ltd.(2)
was concerned with the sale of firewood of gravelia trees
grown and maintained in tea gardens for the purpose of
affording shade to tea plants. Even sale proceeds of forest
trees failed for the purpose of coffee plantation in the
land were held to be capital receipts by the Mysore High
Court in the case of Commissioner of Income-Tax, Mysore v.
H. B. Van Ingen(3) and the Madras High Court in the case of
Commissioner of Income-Tax, Madras v. M. S. P. Nadar
Sons(4). Similarly sale of dead and wind-fallen trees and
trees planted for shades were held to be bringing receipts
of capital nature vide Flixir Plantations Ltd. v.
Commissioner of Income-Tax(5) and Consolidated Coffee
Estates (1943) Ltd. v. Commissioner of Agricultural Income-
Tax, Mysore(6).
In Commissioner of Income-Tax, Kerala v. Venugopala
Varma Raja(7) the Kerala High Court was concerned with the
trees of spontaneous growth. Obviously the income was not
agricultural income. The owner of a forest had derived
income from a lease of the forest which came within the
ambit of the Madras Preservation of Private Forests Act,
1949. The lease was for "clear felling" which had a definite
and specific meaning under Rule 7 framed under the said Act.
It did not permit a removal of the trees along with their
roots. The felling of the trees had to be done in such a way
as to permit the regeneration and future growth of the trees
concerned. "In other words, what is contemplated by the
clear felling method is not the sterilisation of an asset
but the removal of a growth above a particular height,
leaving intact the roots and the stamps in such a manner as
to ensure regeneration, future growth, further felling and a
subsequent income" (page 803). On that account it was held
that it was a revenue receipt and
546
not a capital one. The case came up to this Court and the
view of the High Court was eventually upheld. The decision
of this Court is reported in V. Venugopala Varma Rajah v.
Commissioner of Income-Tax, Kerala(1). A supplementary
statement of the case was called for by this Court but
ultimately the decision turned round the true import of the
expression "clear felling". Some of the earlier decisions of
the various High Courts noticed by me above were referred
and it was thought that there was some conflict between
them, yet finally without resolving the conflict, the view
expressed at page 466 by this Court with reference to the
facts of the case was in these terms:-
"It is not necessary for the purpose of this case
to enter upon a detailed analysis of the principle
underlying the decisions and to resolve the conflict.
On the finding in the present case it is clear that the
tress were not removed with roots. The stumps of the
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trees were allowed to remain in the land so that the
trees may regenerate. If a person sells merely leaves
or fruit of the trees or even branches of the trees it
would be difficult [subject to the special exemption
under section 4(3) (viii) of the Income-tax Act, 1922]
to hold that the realization is not of the nature of
income. Where the trunks are cut so that the stumps
remain intact and capable of regeneration, receipts
from sale of the trunks would be in the nature of
income. It is true that the tree is a part of the land.
But by selling a part of the trunk, the assessee does
not necessarily realise a part of his capital. We need
not consider whether in case there is a sale of the
trees with the roots so that there is no possibility of
regeneration, it may be said that the realisation is in
the nature of capital. That question does not arise in
the present case."
The question, however, of sale of trees with roots
arose before this Court shortly after in A. K. T. K. M.
Vishnudatta Antharjanam v. Commissioner of Agricultural
Income-Tax, Trivandrum(2). Shah J., as he then was, who had
delivered the judgment in Venugopala’s case (supra) was a
party in this case also, the judgment of which was delivered
by Grover J. The test laid down by the Privy Council in The
Commissioner of Income-tax, Bengal v. Messrs Shaw Wallace
and Company(3) was applied and it was said at page 61:-
"According to that test, income connotes a
periodical monetary return coming in with some sort of
regularity or
547
expected regularity from definite sources. The source
is not necessarily one which is expected to be
continuously productive, but it must be one whose
object is the production of a definite return excluding
anything in the nature of a mere windfall. Once the
teak trees were removed together with their roots and
there was no prospect of regeneration or of any
production of a return therefrom, it could well be said
that the source ceased to be one which could produce
any income."
I am aware that the test laid down by Sir George
Lowndes in Shaw Wallace case has been whittled down to a
very large extent by subsequent pronouncements of the Privy
Council e.g. in Gopal Saran Narain Singh v. C.I.T.(1) and
Kamakshya Narain Singh v. C.I.T.,(2) yet in the matter of
sale of trees when this Court applied the same test in
Vishnudatta’s case it was for the purpose of laying stress
on the object of the felling of the trees. The return may be
one and only one. But if the object of felling the trees
leaving the roots and stumps intact is for regeneration of
income, then whether income is regenerated or not is
immaterial. But in a case where the trees are sold by
uprooting the roots no body can say that there could be any
object of regeneration of income from the trees growing
again as there was no question of a second growth at all.
Similarly, ordinarily and generally, when the trees are sold
and allowed to be felled by leaving the roots and stumps
intact then in case of trees of spontaneous growth there is
a likelihood of fresh sprouting and further growth of trees
on the left out roots and stumps. The presumption in such
cases generally would be that the owner did it with the
object of regenerating the income. But there may be case,
although few and far between, like the one with which we are
concerned here where the roots and stumps were not allowed
to be uprooted and cut by the licensee or the lessee yet the
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object was not the regeneration of the trees but a
protection of the land eventually to be used for the purpose
of cultivation. In this background of the law, I now proceed
to refer to the special facts of this case.
Clauses 12 and 13 of the agreement dated 28.11.1960
entered into between the assessee and Velappa Rowther are as
follows:-
"(12) The trees in the reared forest have to but
cut neatly and the relative stumps should not be either
pulled out or cut out.
548
(13) No. 3 should not enter on the lands from
where trees are cut or on the sprouts coming up from
there. After the cuttings sprouts are not to be cut."
No. 3 referred in clause (13) is the said Rowther. On
the face of the agreement, therefore, the transaction was
not a sale of trees with roots and stumps. Rather there was
a prohibition that after the cutting, sprouts were not to be
cut. The agreement, however, did not indicate as to what was
the object of the assessee in incorporating clauses (12) and
(13) in the agreement. Was it the regeneration of the trees
for earning more income or was it something else ? The
subsequent conduct of the assessee as appeared from the
facts placed before the Income-tax authorities without
anything more will indicate that the object of the assessee
was to protect the land falling vacant after the cutting of
the trees from being damaged by the licensee by at random
cutting of the stumps and uprooting of the roots. The trees
sold were spread in an area of 60 acres of land only. Even
in that area the trees were not in any thick or continuous
forest. They were interspersed by paddy fields. In its very
first communication to the Income-Tax Officer sent on 3-4-
1963 the assessee perhaps was made aware of the decision of
the Kerala High Court in Commissioner of Income-Tax, Kerala
v. Venugopala Varma Raja (1) which was a case of private
forest governed by the Madras Act. The assessee, therefore,
claimed that there were no private forests in Cochin area of
Kerala where the land was situated. The assessee asserted
that in substance and in effect the sale was of the entire
standing timber i.e. totality of the trees and "the sale was
effected with a view to extend wet or dry cultivation to
that area as well since the standing trees were a hindrance
for such extensions." In this very letter the assessee also
asserted-"This is the very first time that our Thavazhi has
sold the trees. The trees, the subject matter of the sale
contract, were there at the time of the purchase of the
agricultural lands by our Thavazhi in 1080 M.E. The trees
were old trees. No tree had been sold after our Thavazhi
became the owner of the agricultural lands. A large extent
of agricultural lands was purchased and these trees formed
part and parcel of such holdings. None of us know when the
trees began to grow. After purchase of the lands we had
developed the same and in the process we sold the trees with
the object mentioned above. The present sale has been the
only sale and it will be the last one also since our idea is
to extend cultivation to this area as well."
The Tribunal in its appellate order noticed the
argument of the assessee that its sole occupation was
agriculture and the attraction in
549
the purchase of the land in the year 1905 was two
irrigational channels contained therein. It also noticed the
other facts stated in the letter aforesaid of the assessee
and finally concluded on the basis of clauses (12) and (13)
of the agreement-"It is clear from these that the assessee
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was reserving to itself the results of the future growth and
a source of income." The case was squarely covered, in its
opinion, by the decision of the Kerala High Court in
Venugopala’s case. It further observed that the assessee was
claiming exemption and it was upto him to furnish all the
information as to what trees would not regenerate, what kind
of trees were sold etc. The assessee had failed to furnish
these details. Yet it would be noticed that without
rejecting the assessee’s stand that the transaction in
question was the first and the last sale of trees by the
assessee and without finding that the object of the assessee
was not to convert the land for cultivation but to earn
income by regeneration of trees, it upheld the view of the
departmental authorities that the receipt was a revenue
receipt assessable to income-tax. It should be noted that
the assessment made was not for default of the assessee to
produce any relevant material but a regular assessment on
consideration of such materials as were produced by it. It
was not asked to produce any other evidence or material to
substantiate the stand taken by it. Nor was the stand
rejected. In such a situation it was not a question of
assessee’s claiming any exemption and failing to get it for
its alleged failure to furnish any more details. But it was
a case where in order to net the receipt as a revenue
receipt it was for the department to reject the assessee’s
stand and to hold that the object of the assessee in not
allowing the licensee to cut the stumps and uproot the roots
was a regeneration of the income. The High Court has also
noticed the fact as found mentioned in the order of the
Tribunal that by the time the assessment was completed by
the Income-Tax Officer an area of 10 acres had been
converted into cultivable land. In our opinion, therefore,
the High Court rightly distinguished the decision in
Venugopala’s case (supra) and applied the ratio of that of
Vishnudatta’s case (supra). As I have observed above the
facts of this case were on a line which on the surface was
blurred and indistinct, yet, on a careful examination of the
matter I find that the dividing line, though thin,
nonetheless, is distinct enough to make this case fit for
application of the ratio of the decision of this Court in
Vishnudatta’s case. I accordingly uphold the view of the
High Court.
In the result all the six appeals are dismissed but on
the special facts and circumstances of this case we make no
order as to costs in any of them.
PATHAK, J. I agree with my learned brother that the
appeals should be dismissed. And I shall set out my reasons.
550
The case is one where trees of spontaneous growth were
sold on condition that the purchaser would cut and remove
the trunks without disturbing the stumps and roots embedded
in the soil. Where trees are so felled and removed, and the
stumps and roots are allowed to remain in the land with a
view to regeneration of the trees, the intention of the
owner would be to indulge in a profit-making activity, and
the case would fall within V. Venugopala Varma Rajah v.
Commissioner of Income-Tax, Kerala(1). The receipts from
sale of the trunks would be revenue receipts. But in the
present case there was no intention to reserve the stumps
and roots for the purpose of allowing regeneration of the
trees. The intention and subsequent conduct of the assessee
establishes that the stipulation against removal of the
stumps and roots was intended to protect the surface of the
land from indiscriminate injury because the land was to be
applied to cultivation. Intention is a material factor in
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such cases, and each case has to be decided on its
particular facts. Without evidence of the intention or
object behind such a stipulation, the mere fact that the
trees were sold without stumps and roots cannot lead to the
necessary inference that a profit making activity was
involved. Where the evidence shows that the land had been
acquired for the purpose of cultivation, and that the
prohibition on the purchaser against removing the stumps and
roots was intended to prevent undue interference with the
soil, and the assessee did not intend to permit regeneration
of the trees, and that the had in fact later put the land to
cultivation, the payments received on sale of the trunks
cannot be regarded as taxable income. And yet the case is
distinguishable from the facts in A.K.T.K.M. Vishnudatta
Antharjanam v. Commissioner of Agricultural Income-Tax,
Trivandrum.(1) That was a case where the trees were sold
with their roots, and it was held by this Court that by
removal of the roots the source from which the fresh growth
of trees could take place had also been removed and,
therefore, the sale of such trees effected the capital
structure, and could not give rise to a revenue receipt. In
my opinion, the present case does not fall either within V.
Venugopala Varma Rajah (supra) or A.K.T.K.M. Vishnudatta
Antharjanam (supra). It is a case where although the stump
and roots remained after the trees were felled and removed
by the purchaser, the regeneration of the trees was not to
be allowed and, therefore, a profit-making activity could
not be spelled out.
The appeals are dismissed, but there is no order as to
costs.
N.V.K. Appeals dismissed.
551