Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX, BOMBAY
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
FINLAY MILLS LTD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
01/10/1951
BENCH:
KANIA, HIRALAL J. (CJ)
BENCH:
KANIA, HIRALAL J. (CJ)
MAHAJAN, MEHR CHAND
AIYAR, N. CHANDRASEKHARA
CITATION:
1951 AIR 464 1952 SCR 11
CITATOR INFO :
F 1955 SC 89 (21)
RF 1973 SC 318 (12)
ACT:
Indian Income-tax Act (XI of 1922), s. 10(2)
(xv)--Expenditure incurred for registration of trade
mark--Whether business expenditure-Effect of registration.
HEADNOTE:
The expenditure incurred by a company carrying on the
manufacture and sale of textile goods in registering for the
first time its trade marks which were not in use prior to
the 25th January,
12
1937, is revenue expenditure and an allowable deduction
under Sec. 10 (2) (xv) of the Indian Income-tax Act. The
fact that a trade mark after registration could be sepa-
rately assigned and not as a part of the goodwill of the
business only, does not make the expenditure for registra-
tion capital expenditure. It is only an additional and
incidental facility given to the owner of the trade mark; it
adds nothing to the trade mark itself.
Judgment of the Bombay High Court affirmed.
Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay v. The Century Spin-
ning and Weaving and Manufacturing Co. Ltd. ([1947] 15
I.T.R. 105) approved. British Insulated and Helsby Cables
Ltd. v. Atherton ([1926] A.C. 205), Southern v. Borax Con-
solidated Ltd. ([1942] 10 I.T.R. Supp. 1), Henriksen v.
Grafton Hotel Ltd. ([1942] 2 K.B. 184) referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal
No. 103 of 1950.
Appeal from a Judgment of the Bombay High Court (Chagla
C.J. and Tendolkar J.) dated 25th March, 1949, in Income Tax
Reference No. 31 of 1948.
M. C. Setalvad, Attorney-General for India (G. N.
Joshi, with him) for the appellant.
R.J. Kolah, for the respondent.
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1951. Oct. 1. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
KANIA C.J.--This is an appeal from a judgment of the
High Court at Bombay and it arises out of the opinion ex-
pressed by the High Court in respect of a question submitted
to it by the Income-tax Tribunal. The material facts are
these. The respondent is a textile mills company carrying on
the business of manufacturing and selling textile goods. For
the assessment years 1943-44 and ’1944-45, covering the
accounting periods ending with the calendar years 1941, 1942
and 1943, the respondent claimed the expenditure incurred by
it in registering for the first time its trade marks which
were not in use prior to the 25th February, 1937, as revenue
expenditure and an allowable deduction out of its income for
the said periods, under section 10(2) (xv) of the Indian
Income tax Act. Following the decision of the Bombay High
Court in Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay v. The Century
Spinning
13
and Weaving and Manufacturing Co. Ltd.(1), the Tribunal
allowed the claim of the assessee. At the desire of the
appellant, the Tribunal submitted the following question for
the opinion of the High Court :-
"Whether, on the facts of the case, the expenditure
incurred by the assessee company in registering for the
first time its trade marks which were not in use prior to
the 25th February, 1937, is revenue expenditure and an
allowable deduction under section 10(2) (xv) of the Indian
Income-tax Act ?"
The High Court, following its previous decision and
finding that the fact of the trade marks having come into
use after the 25th of February, 1937, made no difference in
the result, answered the question in the affirmative. The
Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay, has come on appeal to
us.
It was argued on behalf of the appellant that the ques-
tion whether a certain disbursement was of a capital or
revenue nature, has to be decided according to the principle
laid down in British Insulated and Helsby Cables Ltd. v.
Atherton(2). In that case the company which carried on the
business of manufacturers of insulated cables established a
pension fund for its clerical and technical salaried staff.
The fund was constituted by a trust deed which provided that
members should contribute a percentage of their salaries to
the fund and that the company should contribute an amount
equal to half the contributions of the members; and further
that the company should contribute a sum of pound 31,784 to
form the nucleus of the fund and to provide the amount
necessary in order that past years of service of the then
existing staff should rank for pension. That sum was arrived
at by an actuarial calculation on the basis that the sum
would ultimately be exhausted when the object for which it
was paid was attained. The House of Lords held that this
payment was in the nature of capital expenditure and was
therefore not an admissible deduction. Although in the
opinions expressed by the different members of the House of
Lords
(1) [1917] 15 I.T.R. 105. (2) [1926] A.C. 205.
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the line of approach is not completely the same, the
principle stated by Lord Cave in his speech has been test
distinguish capital expenditure from revenue expenditure. It
was recognised that a sum of money expended, not of necessi-
ty and with a view to a direct and immediate benefit to the
trade, but voluntarily and on the grounds of commercial
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expediency, and in order indirectly to facilitate the carry-
ing on of business, may yet be expended wholly and exclu-
sively for the purposes of the trade. The Lord Chancellor
observed that the question appeared to be a question of fact
which was proper to be decided by the Commissioners upon the
evidence brought before them in each case. The test that
capital expenditure is a thing that is going to be spent
once and for all and income expenditure is a thing that is
going to recur every year was considered an useful element
in arriving at the decision but was not certainly the deci-
sive fact. The Lord Chancellor observed as follows:--"But
when an expenditure is made, not only once and for all, but
with a view to bringing into existence an asset or an advan-
tage for the enduring benefit of the trade, I think that
there is very good reason for treating such an expenditure
as properly attributable not to revenue but to capital."
In order to appreciate the true position here Correctly it
is next necessary to notice the relevant provisions of the
Indian Trade Marks Act, 1940. It may be noted that before
this Act there was no Trade Marks Act in India but it was
recognised that an action lay for infringement of a trade
mark independently of an action for passing off goods. The
Act opens with the preamble "whereas it is expedient to
provide for the registration and more effective protection
of trade marks ...... "Section 2(1) of the Act defines a
trade mark as meaning "a mark used or proposed to be used in
relation to goods for the purpose of indicating or so as to
indicate a connection in the course of trade between the
goods and some person having the right to use the mark,
whether with or without any indication of the identity of
that person." Section 14 permits the
15
proprietor of a trade mark to have the trade mark regis-
tered. The Attorney-General, on behalf of the appellant,
relied on sections 20, 21, 28 and 29 in support of his
contention. He argued that before the Trade Marks Act,
although the proprietor of a trade mark could maintain an
action for infringement of his trade mark and the cause of
action in such a case was quite different from the cause of
action in an action for passing off goods, by the Trade
Marks Act the right of the owner of the trade mark is in-
creased by section 21, and it is made assignable independ-
ently of the goodwill under sections 28 and 29 of the Trade
Marks Act. The question thus resolves itself into whether by
reason of these two incidents the case falls within the
principle laid down by Lord Chancellor Cave, as mentioned
above.
In our opinion, the contention urged on behalf of the
appellant must fail. It is not contended that by the Trade
Marks Act a new asset has come into existence. It was con-
tended that an advantage of an enduring nature had come into
existence. It was argued that just as machinery may attain
a higher value by an implementation causing greater produc-
tive capacity, in the present case the trade mark which
existed before the Trade Marks Act acquired an advantage of
an enduring nature by reason of the Trade Marks Act and the
fees paid for registration thereunder were in the nature of
capital expenditure. In our opinion, this analogy is falla-
cious. The machinery which acquires a greater productive
capacity by reason of its improvement by the inclusion of
some new invention naturally becomes a new and altered asset
by that process. So long as the machinery lasts, the im-
provement continues to the advantage of the owner of the
machinery. The replacement of a dilapidated roof. by a more
substantial roof stands on the same footing. The result
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however of the Trade Marks Act is only two-fold. By regis-
tration, the owner is absolved from the obligation to prove
his ownership of the trade mark. It is treated as prima
facie proved on production of the registration certificate.
It thus merely saves him the trouble of leading evidence, in
the event of a suit, in a court
16
of law, to prove his title to the trade mark. It has
been said that registration is in the nature of collateral
security furnishing the trader with a cheaper and more
direct remedy against infringers, Cancel the registration
and he has still his right enforceable at common law to
restrain the piracy of his trade mark. In our opinion, ’this
is neither such an asset nor an advantage as to make payment
for its registration a capital expenditure. In this connec-
tion it may be useful to notice that expenditure incurred by
a company in defending title to property is not considered
expense of a capital nature. In Southern (H. M. Inspector
of Taxes) v. Borax Consolidated Limited(1). it is there
stated that where a sum of money is laid out for the acqui-
sition or the improvement of a fixed capital asset it is
attributable to capital, but if no alteration is made in the
fixed capital asset by the payment, then it is properly
attributable to revenue, being in substance a matter of
maintenance, the maintenance of the capital structure or the
capital asset of the company. In our opinion, the advantage
derived by the owner of the trade mark by registration falls
within this class of expenditure. The fact that a trade
mark after registration could be separately assigned, and
not as a part of the goodwill of the business only, does not
also make the expenditure for registration a capital expend-
iture. That is only an additional and incidental facility
given to the owner of the trade mark. It adds nothing to the
trade mark itself.
In the judgment of the High Court some emphasis is laid
on the fact that by reason of registration the duration of
the trade mark is only for seven years, and it does not thus
possess that permanency which is ordinarily required of an
expenditure to make it a capital expenditure and in order to
prove the existence of a benefit of an enduring character.
The learned Attorney-General contended that the view that as
the benefit of registration lasted for seven years, i.e.,
for a limited period, it prevented the expenses of registra-
tion being treated as capital expenditure, is unsound
(1) [1942] 10 I.T.R. Suppl. 1.
17
and for that contention he relied on Henriksen (Inspector of
Taxes) v. Grafton Hotel Ltd.(1). In that case, tenants of
licensing premises by agreement with the landlord paid by
instalment the monopoly value fixed by the licensing jus-
tices when granting the licence under section 14 of the
Licensing (Consolidation) Act, 1910. These were sought to
be deducted as revenue expenditure but were disallowed by
the Court. Lord Greene M.R. first considered that the pay-
ment fell into the same class as the payment of a premium on
the grant of a lease or the expenditure on improvements to
the property which justices may require to be made as a
condition of granting a licence. Having reached that conclu-
sion he rejected the argument that the payment not being
made in one lump sum but by instalments made a difference in
the character of the payment. He observed as follows
:--"Whenever a licence is granted for a term, the payment is
made as on a purchase of a monopoly for that term. When a
licence is granted for a subsequent term, the monopoly value
must be paid in respect of that term and so on. The payments
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are recurrent if the licence is renewed, they are not peri-
odical so as to give them the quality of payments which
ought to be debited to revenue account. The thing that is
paid for is of a permanent quality although its permanence,
being conditioned by the length of the term, is shortlived.
A payment of this character appears to me to fall into the
same class as the payment of a premium on the grant of a
lease, which is admittedly not deductible." The Attorney-
General relied on these observations to point out that the
permanence of the advantage was thus not dependent on the
number of years for which it was to enure for the benefit of
the proprietor of the trade mark. In our opinion, these
observations have to be read in the context in which they
have been made. The learned Master of the Rolls was discuss-
ing only the question of payment being made by instalments
as not making any difference in the nature of the
(1) [1942] 2 K.B. 184.
3
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expenditure. It was first held by him that the payment in
question was of a capital nature and of the same character
as premium paid on the grant of a lease and was therefore
necessarily of a capital nature. Having come to that conclu-
sion, he only rejected the contention that because the
premium was paid in more instalments than one it lost its
character a capital expenditure. In our opinion, this is an
entirely different thing from stating that the fact of the
advantage being for a limited time altered the character of
the payment in any way. As observed by Viscount Cave L.C.
the question is always one of fact depending on the
circumstances of each case individually.
In our opinion, the decision of the High Court reported
in Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay v. The Century Spin-
ning and Weaving and Manufacturing Co. Ltd.(1) is correct
and in the present case also the contention of the appellant
must fail. The appeal therefore fails and is dismissed with
costs.
Appeal dismissed.
Agent for the appellant: P.A. Mehta.
Agent for the respondent: R.A. Govind.
(1) [1947] 15 I.T.R. 105.