Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MISS DHUN DADABHOY KAPADIA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, BOMBAY
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
31/10/1966
BENCH:
BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA
BENCH:
BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA
SHAH, J.C.
RAMASWAMI, V.
CITATION:
1967 AIR 614 1967 SCR (2) 1
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1966 SC 368 (16)
RF 1986 SC1695 (32)
ACT:
Income-tax Act (11 of 1922), s. 12B(2)-Renouncement of right
shares for money value-Depreciation in value of original
shares-Capital gain how calculated.
HEADNOTE:
The assessee was holding ’as an investment 710 shares in a
company. She became entitled to receive 710 new shares
issued by the company, with an option to renounce them. She
renounced her right to receive the new shares by, sale
in the open market and realised a sum of Rs.
45,262.50.Income-Tax officer sought to tax the entire
amount as a capital gain. Immediatelybefore the
renouncement, the old share, were valued at Rs. 253.00 per
share. After renouncement the price of the old shares fell
to Rs. 198.75as a result of which, the assessee suffered a
capital loss of about Rs. 38,000. ’Me assessee claimed a
set off of this loss against the capital gain of Rs.
45,262.50. The plea was rejected by the Income-tax
Authorities, the Appellate Tribunal and the High Court.
In appeal to this Court,
HELD : The claim of the assessee that her net capital gain
was not represented by Rs. 45,262.50 was correct. The net
capital gain could only be properly computed after deducting
the sum which approximately represented the loss incurred
simultaneously, by the assessee, in her original asset of
710 old shares as a result of the depreciation in their
value.
[4 E, H]
In working out capital gain or loss, the principles that
have to be applied are those which an ordinary man of
business will resort to when making computation for his
business purposes, or which are a part of the commercial
practice. [5 G]
Immediately before the assessee, renounced her right to take
the new shares, the capital asset she possessed consisted of
her old 710 shares valued at Rs. 253.00 per share plus the
right to take the new 710 shares. After renouncement her
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capital assets were 710 old shares valued at Rs. 198,75 per
share together with the sum of Rs. 45,262.50. Therefore.,
the value of the capital asset after renouncement would be
Rs. 710 x 198.75 plus Rs. 45,262.50 while the value of the
asset, immediately before renouncement, would be Rs. 710 x
253.00, there being no cash value, at the time of the right
to receive the new shares, to be taken into account; and,
the net capital gain of the assessee would be the difference
between the two. [4 C-G]
Alternatively, at the time of the issue of new shares the
assesee possessed 710 shares and the right to obtain the new
shares allotted. When she sold that right and realised Rs.
45,262.50, she capitalized that right and converted it into
money. A concomitant of the acquisition of the, right was
the depreciation in the value of the old shares, and the
depreciation, is, in a commercial sense, the value of the
right which she subsequently transferred. The net capital
gain by her would, therefore, be resented, only by the
difference between the money realised on transfer the right,
and the amount which she lost in the form of depreciation of
her original shares in order to acquire that right. [5 A-E]
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C.I.T,. Bihar v. Dalmia Investment Co. Ltd. [1964] 7 S.C.R.
210 followed.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 757 of 1965.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated August 24/25, 1962
of the Bombay High Court in Income-tax Reference No. 12 of
1961.
R. J. Kolah and O. C. Mathur, for the appellant.
S. K. Aiyar and R. N. Sachthey, for the respondent.
S. T. Desai, O. C. Mathur, for interveners.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Bhargava, J. This appeal by certificate granted by the High
Court of Bombay under section 66A(2) of the Indian Income-
tax Act, 1922 (hereinafter referred to as "the Act") is
directed against the answer returned by the High Court to
the following question referred to it by the Income-tax
Appellate Tribunal under s. 66(1) of the Act:-
"Whether having regard to the provisions of
section 12B(ii), the assessee is entitled to
claim a deduction from the full value of the
consideration of Rs. 45.262.50 nP. received
for the capital asset, the sum of Rs. 37,630
or any similar sum?"
The case arose out of proceedings for assessment of the ap-
pellant for the assessment year 1957-58, the corresponding
previous year being the financial year 1956-57. The
appellant was holding 710 ordinary shares of the Tata Iron
and Steel Company Ltd. (hereinafter referred to as "the
Company"), which she had inherited some time prior to Ist
January, 1954, as an investment.It was admitted that
she was not a dealer in shares. Under aspecial resolution
passed at an Extraordinary General Meetingof the Company
on 12th March, 1956, the appellant, as holderof 710
ordinary shares, became entitled to purchase new ordinary
shares issued in the ratio of one new ordinary share for one
existing ordinary share as held on 26th April, 1956. In
pursuance of this resolution, an; offer was made to the
appellant by the Company by its circular letter dated 15th
May, 1956, that she was, in terms of the resolution,
entitled to apply for 710 new ordinary shares to be paid for
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at the rate of Rs. 105 per new ordinary share. This payment
was to represent Rs. 75 as the face value of the share and
Rs. 30 as premium. She was also given the option of either
taking the shares wholly or partly, or renouncing them
either wholly or partly, in favour of any other person or
persons. The appellant chose to- renounce her right to all
the 710 ordinary shares instead of taking the shares
herself, and when renouncing the shares, she sold them in
the open market on 12th June, 1956, as a result
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of which she actually realised a sum of Rs. 45,262/50 nP.
It was common ground before the Income-tax authorities as
well as the Tribunal that this amount received by her was a
capital gain and the whole of this amount was sought to be
taxed as capital gain received by the appellant. On behalf
of the appellant, the, plea was that, on the issue of the
new ordinary shares, the value of her old ordinary shares
depreciated, because the assets of the Company remained
stationary, while the number of shares increased. It was in
consideration of this depreciation in her original holdings
that she was given the right to purchase these new ordinary
shares, or to renounce them in favour of some other person
and make up the loss which she would suffer on her original
shares. The Board of Directors of the Native Stock and
Share Association Ltd. had passed a resolution that the
transactions in these shares were to be cum-right up to and
including Ist June, 1956, and were to be ex-rights from 4th
June, 1956, onwards. The intervening days, 2nd and 3rd
June, being official holidays, there were to be no
transactions on those days. The market quotation of the old
Tata ordinary shares was Rs. 253 per share on I st June,
1956, and fell to Rs. 198/75 nP on 4th June, 1956. There
was thus, a fall in the market quotation of old shares of
Rs. 54/25P per share. It was claimed by the appellant that,
as a result of this depreciation in the price of her old
ordinary shares, she suffered a capital loss in those shares
to the extent of Rs. 37,630, and she was entitled to set off
this loss against the capital gain of Rs. 45,262/ 50P which
she realised on selling her right to take the new ordinary
shares. In the alternative, the case was put forward on the
basis that the right to receive these new ordinary shares
was a right which was embedded in her old ordinary shares,
and consequently, when she realised the sum of Rs.
45,262/50P by selling her right, the capital gain should be
computed after deducting from this amount realised the value
of the embedded right which became liquidated. The value of
that right, according to the appellant, should be calculated
in accordance with the principles of Accountancy as laid
down by various authors on the subject to be applied in such
situations. Even if this principle be accepted, the amount
taxable as capital gain in her hands would have to be
reduced by at least a sum of Rs. 37,630, if not more. This
plea put forward on behalf of the appellant was rejected by
the Income-tax Authorities as well as by the Income-tax
Appellate Tribunal. Thereupon, the question, reproduced by
us above, was referred to the High Court by the Tribunal and
the High Court also answered it against the appellant. The
appellant has, therefore, come up to this Court in this
appeal.
In order to answer the question referred to the High Court,
it appears to us that the nature of the transaction, which
resulted
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in this receipt of Rs. 45.262/50P by the appellant, must be
analysed and properly understood. The amount, it is the
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agreed case of the parties, was a capital gain. The capital
asset which the appellant originally possessed consisted of
710 ordinary shares of the Company. There was already a
provision that, if the Company issued any new shares, every
holder of old shares would be entitled to such number of
ordinary shares as the Board may, by resolution, decide.
This right was possessed by the appellant because of her
ownership of the old 710 ordinary shares, and when the Board
of Directors of the Company passed a resolution for issue of
new shares, this right of the appellant matured to the
extent that she became entitled to receive 710 new shares.
This right could be exercised by her by actually purchasing
those shares at the prescribed rate, or by renouncing those
shares in favour of another person and obtaining monetary
gain in that transaction. At the time, therefore, when the
appellant renounced her right to take these new shares, the
capital asset which she actually possessed consisted of her
old 710 shares plus this right to take 710 new shares. At
the time of her transaction, her old shares were valued at
Rs. 253 per share, so that the capital asset in her
possession can be treated to be the cash value of 710
multiplied by Rs. 253 of the old shares plus this right to
obtain new shares. After she had transferred this right to
obtain new shares, the capital assets that came into her
hands were the 710 old shares, which became valued at Rs.
198/75P per share, together with the sum of Rs. 45,262/50P.
The net capital gain or loss to the appellant obviously
would be the difference between the value of the capital
asset and the cash in her hands after she had renounced her
right and realised the cash value in respect of it, and the
value of the capital asset including the right which she
possessed before those new shares were issued and before she
realised any cash in respect of the right by renouncing it
in favour of some other person. As we have indicated above,
the value of the capital asset, after renouncement, would be
710 multiplied by Rs. 198/75P plus the sum of Rs. 45,262/
50P, while the value of the asset, immediately before the
renouncement, would be 710 multiplied by Rs. 253, there
being no cash value at that time of the right to be taken
into account. Thus, the capital gain or loss would be
worked out at Rs. 45,262/50P after deducting from it the sum
worked out at 710 multiplied by the difference between Rs.
253 and Rs. 198/75P. This last amount comes to a little
more than the sum of Rs. 37,630 which the appellant claimed
should be deducted from Rs. 45,262/50P in computing her
capital gain. The claim made by the appellant was thus
clearly justified, because the net capital gain by her in
the transaction, which consisted of issue of new shares
together with her renouncement of the right to receive new
shares and make some money thereby, could only be properly
computed in the manner indicated by us above.
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In the alternative, the case can be examined in another
aspect. At the time of the issue of new shares, the
appellant possessed 710 old shares and she also got the
right to obtain 710 new shares. When she sold this right to
obtain 710 new shares and realised the sum of Rs.
45,262/50P, she capitalised that right and converted it into
money. The value of the right may be measured by setting
off against the appreciation in the face value of the new
shares the depreciation in the old shares, and consequently,
to the extent of the depreciation in the value of her
original shares, she must be deemed to have invested money
in acquisition of this new right. A concomitant of the
acquisition of the newright was the depreciation in the
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value of the old shares, and the depreciation may, in a
commercial sense, be deemed to be the value of the right
which she subsequently transferred. The capital gain made
by her would, therefore, be represented only by the
difference between the money realised on transfer of the
right, and the amount which she lost in the form of
depreciation of her original shares in order to acquire that
right. Looked at in this manner also, it is clear that the
net capital gain by her would be represented by the amount
realised by her on transferring the right to ’receive new
shares, after deducting therefrom the amount of depreciation
in the value of her original ’shares, being the loss
incurred by her in her capital asset in the transaction in
which she acquired the right for which she realised the
cash. This method of looking at the transaction also leads
to the same conclusion which we have indicated in the
preceding paragraph.
The view that we have taken finds support from the principle
laid down by this Court for valuation of bonus shares issued
by a company to holders of original shares in the case of
Commissioner of income-tax, Bihar v. Dalmia Investment Co.
Ltd.(1)
The High Court, in dealing with this question, had expressed
the view that principles of Accountancy applicable to
valuation of such right to receive new shares issued by a
company are not applicable when computation has to be made
for purposes of taxation; but we are unable to accept this
proposition. In working out capital gain or loss, the
principles that have to be applied are those which are a
part of the commercial practice or which an ordinary man of
business will resort to when making computation for his
business purposes. The principles of accounting indicated
by us above are clearly the principles that must be applied
in order to find out the net capital gain or loss arising
out of a transaction of the nature with which we are
concerned. The application of those principles indicates
that the claim of the appellant that the net capital gain by
her is not represented by the whole amount of Rs. 45,262/50P
realised by her on renouncement of her right to
(1) [1964]7S.C.R.210;521.T.R.567.
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receive the new shares was correct and that the net capital
gain can only be properly computed after deducting the sum
of Rs. 37,630 which approximately represents the loss
incurred simultaneously by the appellant in her original
asset of 710 old shares as a result of the depreciation in
their value. The question referred to the High Court must,
therefore, be answered in favour of the appellant. The
appeal is, consequently, allowed, the answer returned by the
High Court is set aside, and the question is answered in the
affirmative. The appellant will be entitled to her costs in
this Court as well as in the High Court.
V.P.S.
Appeal allowed.
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