Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SHREE CHANGDEO SUGAR MILLS, LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX, BOMBAY
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
07/12/1960
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
KAPUR, J.L.
SHAH, J.C.
CITATION:
1961 AIR 1154 1961 SCR (2) 990
ACT:
Income-tax--Undistributed income--Company in which Public
are substantially interested--Powers to assess Super
Tax--Test--Part B States (Taxation Concession) Order, 1950,
cl. 14--Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 (11 of 1922), S. 23A(1).
HEADNOTE:
During the assessment year, the company had not distributed
dividends to the extent of 60% of its profits and an order
under S. 23A(1) of the Act was passed by the Income-tax
Officer. The question referred by the Tribunal to the High
Court was whether at the relevant time the assessee company
could be deemed to be a company in which the public were
substantially interested, i.e., held 25% of the voting
power, was answered in the negative.
Held, that the test that no holding by the Directors of a
company could be regarded as one in which the public were
substantially interested was not the correct test to apply.
The test as laid down in Raghuvanshi Mills v. Commissioner
of Income-tax, [1961] 2 S.C.R. 978, would apply to this
Case.
Held, further, that the paramount condition in applying the
proviso and the explanation of S. 23A(1) was that the public
should be beneficially interested in 25% of the voting
power., The explanation to S. 23A required that shares held
by the company should be considered as held by the public,
only if S. 23A did not apply to it. The concession order in
cl. 14 of the; Part B States (Taxation Concession) Order,
1950, did not seek to negative that test, it only conferred
a benefit on a company,
991
to which cl. 14 applied, and the company could avail that
concession, and still might fall within s. 23A for other
purposes.
The Raghuvanshi Mills Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax,
SI’ Bombay, [1961] 2 S.C.R. 978, applied.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal c, No. 380 of
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1957.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated March 8, 1956, of
the Bombay High Court in Income-tax Reference No. 4 of 1956.
N. A. Palkhivala, S. N. Andley, Rameshwar Nath,
J. B. Dadachanji and P. L. Vohra, for the appellant.
A. N. Kripal and D. Gupta, for the respondent.
1960. December 7. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
HIDAYATULLAH, J.-This appeal, on a certificate by the High
Court, has been filed by Shree Changdeo Sugar Mills, Ltd.,
to which s. 23A of the Income-tax Act (prior to its
amendment by the Finance Act, 1955) was applied in respect
of the assessment year, 1948-49. The question which was
referred to the High Court was whether at the relevant time
the assessee Company could be deemed-to be a Company, in
which the public were substantially interested. This
question was answered in the negative by the High Court.
During the assessment year, the Company had not distributed
dividends to the extent of 60 per cent. of its profits, and
an order under s. 23A(1) of the Indian Income-tax Act was
passed by the Income-tax Officer. The Company appealed to
the Appellate Assistant Commissioner, who dismissed the
appeal. It next appealed to the Tribunal, but was
unsuccessful. The Tribunal, however, referred the above
question which, as already stated, was answered in the
negative by the High Court.
The issued, subscribed and paid-up capital of the assessee
Company consisted of 60,000 shares, which were distributed
as follows:
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(1) 11 Directors of the Company 41,500 shares.
(2) The Managing Agency Firm 2,300 shares.
(3) Mysore Merchants Ltd. 11,880 shares.
(4) Others..... 4,320 shares.
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60,000 shares.
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The question arose in determining whether the public were
substantially interested in the Company, that is to say,
held 25 per cent. of the voting power. The Bombay High
Court in determining this point followed its decision in
Raghuvanshi Mills V. Commissioner of Income-tax (1), and
held that no holding by the Directors of a company could be
regarded as one in which the public were substantially
interested. We have heard Civil Appeal No. 30 of 1957 from
the decision of the Bombay High Court in the Raghuvanshi
Mills case (1), in which judgment has been pronounced today,
and have held that that is not the correct test to apply.
We have remanded the said appeal, after setting out the
correct test to apply. What we have said there applies
equally here.
There is yet another question, which arose in this appeal
but not in the appeal of the Raghuvanshi Mills. As we have
already stated, Mysore Merchants Ltd., held 11,880 shares of
the assessee Company. If these shares could be said to be
held by the public along with 4,320 shares, the public would
be holding 25 per cent of the voting power, whether or not
the Directors of the Company held the rest of the shares.
It was., therefore, necessary for the High Court to consider
whether the shares held by Mysore Merchants ’Ltd., could be
said to be held by the public. The High Court held against
the assessee Company that they could not be counted as part
of the holding by the public, and, in our judgment, the High
Court has reached the correct conclusion.
The matter has to be judged under the third proviso to s.
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23A(1), which read as follows:
"Provided further that this sub-section shall not apply to
any company in which the public are
(1) [1953] 24 I.T.R. 338.
993
substantially interested or to a subsidiary company of such
a company if the whole of the share capital of such
subsidiary company is held by the parent company or by the
nominees thereof.
Explanation.-For the purpose of this sub-section, a company
shall be deemed to be a company in which the public are
substantially interested if shares of the company (not being
shares entitled to a fixed rate of dividend, whether with or
without a further right to participate in profits) carrying
not less than twenty-five per cent of the voting power have
been allotted unconditionally to, or acquired unconditio-
nally by, and are at the end of the previous year
beneficially held by, the public (not including a company to
which the provisions of this sub-section apply), and if any
such shares have in the course of such previous year been
the subject of dealings in any stock exchange in British
India or are in fact freely transferable by the holders to
other members of the public."
In applying the proviso and the Explanation, we have to give
effect to the words "not including a company to which the
provisions of this sub-section apply", and have to determine
whether Mysore Merchants Ltd., is a Company, to which the
provisions of s. 23A can be said to be applicable. Learned
counsel for the assessee Company contends that in deciding
this, we have to be satisfied on three points, which he
summarises as follows:
(a)The public should not be substantially interested in
that Company;
(b)It must have assessable profits for the relevant
assessment year; and
(c)It must not have distributed 60 per cent of its net
assessable profits.
He contends that unless these three conditions are fulfiled,
s. 23A will not apply to Mysore Merchants Ltd., and that the
shares held by it will be deemed to be held by the public.
He points out that Mysore Merchants Ltd., had no assessable
income in the corresponding assessment year and had suffered
a loss, that conditions (b) and (c) did not, therefore,
apply, and
994
that s. 23A is not applicable to that Company. In our
opinion, the paramount condition is that even in that
Company the public should be beneficially interested in 25
per cent. of the voting power, and it was admitted before us
that it was not a public Company at all but a private
Company, and that, therefore, the public were not interested
in that Company. The shares held by Mysore Merchants Ltd.,
cannot at all be counted as a holding in which the public
are beneficially interested, in view of the exclusion
contained in the Explanation. This point will not,
therefore, be open for the determination of the High Court,
when the question is reconsidered by the High Court in the
light of our observations in The Raghuvanshi Mills.Ltd. v.
Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay (1), decided today.
Learned counsel for the assessee Company also contended that
in view of cl. 14 of the Part B States (Taxation
Concessions) Order, 1950, the provisions of s. 23A could not
be applied to Mysore Merchants Ltd. That clause reads as
follows:
" 14. Requiring distribution of dividends by private
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companies.-
The provisions of section 23A of the Act shall not be
applied in respect of the profits and gains of any previous
year ending before the appointed day unless the State law
contained a provision corresponding thereto."
This Concession would be open to Mysore Merchants Ltd., if
it satisfied the terms of Cl. 14. That, however, cannot
detract from the application of s. 23A to determine whether
the shares hold by it can be described as those in which the
public are beneficially interested in another company. The
Explanation requires that the shares held by a company
should be considered as held by the public, only if s. 23A
does not apply to it. The Concessions Order does not seek
to negative this test; it only confers a benefit on a
company, to which cl. 14 applies. Mysore Merchants Ltd.,
may be able to avail of that concession, and still fall
within
(1) [1961] 2 S.C.R. 978.
995
s. 23A for other purposes. This contention has no force.
The appeal is allowed, and the case is remitted to s the
High Court for deciding the question in the light of the
observations in our decision in the Raghuvanshi Mills case
(1). As the case is remanded, the costs of this appeal
shall be paid by the respondent, but the costs in the High
Court will abide the result.
Appeal allowed.