Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX, (CENTRAL) DELHI,NEW DELHI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BIJLI COTTON MILLS (P) LTD., HATHRAS., ALIGARH
DATE OF JUDGMENT07/11/1978
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, P.N.
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, P.N.
TULZAPURKAR, V.D.
CITATION:
1979 AIR 346 1979 SCR (2) 241
1979 SCC (1) 496
ACT:
Indian Income Tax Act. 1922 s. 4(3)(i) & s. 10(1)-
Assessee collected moneys on sale of goods under the head
"Dharmada"-Kept the amount in a separate account-Created a
trust-Utilised time money for charitable purposes-Whether
amount realised could be regarded as assessee’s income-
"Dharmada" Trust whether void as vague and uncertain.
Words & Phrases-"Dkarmada" meaning of.
HEADNOTE:
The assessee realised certain amounts of money on
account of Dharmada (charity) from its customers on sale of
yarn and bales of cotton which was its principal business.
The amounts so realised were shown in a separate column
headed "Dharmada" in the bills issued to customers. Without
taking them into its trading account, the assessee, credited
these amounts to a separate account known as "Dharmada"
account. The Board of Directors of the company created a
trust and declared that all moneys standing in the "Dharmada
Account", and realised on this account in future should be
treated as trust fund and utilised by the trustees for such
religious and charitable purposes as may be decided by them.
For the assessment years 1951-52, 1952-53 and 1953-54
the Income Tax officer addled the amounts realised under the
head "Dharmada" to the assessable income of the assessee.
The assessee’s appeals to the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner were dismissed. On further appeal the Appellate
Tribunal held that the trust was void for vagueness and
uncertainty and that the realisations partook of the
character of trade receipts.
On reference, the High Court held that the amounts were
never the income of the assessee, that the assessee was
merely acting as a clearing house for passing the amount to
the trust, that the fact that it was a compulsory levy did
not make it a trade receipt, that "Dharmada" was a customary
levy prevailing in some parts of the country and where it
was paid by the customers to a trading concern, the amount
was not paid as a price for the commodity sold to the
customer.
In appeal to this Court it was contended on behalf of
the Revenue that the realisations being a compulsory levy,
they must be regarded as a part of the consideration or
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price of the goods purchased by the buyers and that gift for
"Dharmada" was void for vagueness and uncertainty.
Dismissing the appeals,
^
HELD: 1. The impugned realisations made by the assessee
from ib customers for ’’Dharmada’’ being entirely earmarked
for religious or charitable
242
purposes would not be regarded as the assessee’s income
chargeable to income tax. [256F]
2. A gift to the "Dharmada" or "Dharmadaya" both in
common parlance as well as the customary meaning attached
thereto among the commercial and trading community cannot be
regarded as void or invalid on account of vagueness or
uncertainty. When the customers or the brokers paid the
impugned amounts to the assessee earmarking them for
"Dharmada" these payments were validly earmarked for
charitable purposes. In other words right from the inception
these amounts were received and held by the assessee under
an obligation to spend the same for charitable purposes
only, with the result that these receipts could not be
regarded as forming income of the assessee.
[253H-254B]
Though there is some justification for holding that a
gift to "Dharma" simpliciter would be invalid on grounds of
vagueness and uncertainty, a gift to "Dharmada" would be
definite, the object being certain viz., for religious or
chartiable purposes. In common parlance the expression
"Dharmada" or "Dharamadaya" cannot be said to be vague or
uncertain and as such a gift to "Dharmada" (Dharmadaya)
would not be invalid for vagueness or uncertainty. [251 E-F]
3. While the word "Dharma" is indefinite and equivocal,
the word ’Dharmadaya" is quite definite. The former means
either law or virtue or legal duty or moral duty, the latter
means an endowment or gift for religious or charitable
purpose. Similarly while the expression "Dharma" is
idefinite and equivocal the expression "Dharmarth" has only
one meaning viz., anything given for charitable or pious
purposes. [251C-D]
4. Apart from the fact that the concept of "Dharmada"
or "Dharmadaya" in common parlance means anything given in
charity or for religious or charitable purposes among the
trading or commercial community in various parts of this
country, a gift or payment for "Dharmada" is by custom
invariably regarded a gift to charitable purposes. [252C]
5. Since a gift or payment for "Dharmada" is by
commercial or trading custom invariably regarded as a gift
for charitable purposes there is no question of there being
any vagueness or uncertainty about the object for which such
gift or payment has to be utilized. [253]
6. Since the realisations are not a part of the price
or surcharge on the price but payments for a specific
purpose of being spent no charitable purposes, they cannot
be regarded as trading receipts of the assessee. [255g]
7. The amount of "Dharmada" is a payment which a
customer is required to pay in addition to the price of the
goods which he purchases from the trader but the purchase of
the goods by the customers would be the occasion and not the
consideration for the "Dharmada" amount taken from the
customer. Al though without payment of "Dharmada" amount the
customer may not be able to purchase the goods, but that
would not make the payment of "Dharmada" involuntary
inasmuch as it is out of his own volition that he purchases
the goods from the trader. The "Dharmada" amount is,
therefore, not a part of the price but a payment for the
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specific purpose of being spent on charitable purposes.
[255C-E]
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8. Even if the assessee had not kept these amounts in a
separate bank account, A admittedly a separate "Dharmada
Account" was maintained in the books of the assessee in
which every receipt was credited and payment made out on
charity was debited. The High Court had clearly found that
all these amounts were never credited in trading account nor
carried over to profit and loss statement. [256E]
Commissioner of Income-tax, West Bengal v. Tollygunge
Club Ltd., [1977] 107 ITR 776; followed.
Agra Bullion Exchange Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income
Tax, [1961] 41 ITR 473, Ranchordas v. Parvatibai, 26 IA 71;
Devshankar v. Moti Ram, ILR 18 Bom 136; Thakur Das Shyam
Sunder v. Additional Commissioner of Income-tax, U.P. &
Anr., [1974] 93 ITR 27; Commissioner of Income-tax, Amritsar
v. Gheru Lal Bal Chand, 111 ITR 134, Advocate General of
Bombay v. Jimbabai, ILR 41 C Bom. 181; Chaturbhuj Vallabhdas
v. Commissioner of Income-tax, 14 ITR 144 referred to.
Poosarla Sambamurthi v. State of Andhra, 7 STC 652; N.
S. Pandaria Pillai v. State of Madras, 31 STC 108
distinguished.
Prof. Wilson’s Glossary of Judicial and Revenue Terms:
Molesworth’s Dictionary (Marathi-English) Second Edition
(1975) referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal Nos. 1328
and 1329/73 & 2059/71.
(From the Judgments and orders dt. 18.11.69 and 21.1.70
of the Allahabad High Court in Income Tax-Reference Nos.
320/64 and 454 131 of 1965).
T. A. Ramachandran and A. Subhasini for the appellant.
C. S. Agarwal, R. A. Gupta, S. K. Jain and K. C. Dua
for the respondent in CA 2059/71.
C. S. Agarwal, R. A. Gupta, S. K. Jain, G. S.
Chatterjee and K. C. Dua for the respondent in CA 1328-
1329/73.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
TULZAPURKAR, J.-These three appeals are preferred on
certificates of fitness granted by the Allahabad High Court
under ss. 66-A of the Indian Income Tax Act, 1922. They
raise a common question whether the amounts realised by the
assessee-company from its customers as and l‘or ’Dharmada’
during the three assessment years 1951-52, 195253 and 1953-
54 are liable to be taxed as its income under the Act and
the question arises in the following circumstances.
The assessee is a private limited company having been
incorporated in the year 1943. It carries on the business of
manufacturing and selling yarn. Right from the inception it
used to reales certain amounts
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on account of ’Dharmada’ (charity) from its customers on
sales of yarn and bales of cotton. The rate was one anna per
bundle of 10 lbs. Of yarn and two annas per bale of cotton.
In the bills issued to the customers these amounts were
shown in a separate column headed ’Dharmada’. The assessee
did not credit the amounts of ’Dharmada’ so realised by it
in its trading account but it maintained a separate account
known as the "Dharmada Account" in which realisation on
account of ’Dharmada’ were credited and payments made out
were debited from time to time. It appears that at a meeting
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of the Board of Directors of the assessee-company held on
January 15, 1945, the Board passed a resolution that the,
moneys standing in the ’Dharmada Account" be treated as
trust fund of which Lala Nawal Kishore and Lala Ram
Babulal, two Directors of the company, be the trustees and
it was further declared that all the money realised in
future by the company on sale of yarn from the purchasers at
the rate of one Anna per bale or such rate as may be decided
in future be handed over to the trustees for being utilised
in such altruistic, religious and charitable purposes as may
be decided upon by them, and that the trustees shall in
particular utilise such funds for the advancement of
education and the alleviation of misery and sickness of the
public in general as it think fit. Subsequently, OH October
3, 1950 the said two Directors executed a Deed of
Declaration of Trust wherein it was stated that a sum of Rs.
85,000 had accumulated in the charity fund maintained by the
trustees and it was declared that the amount did not belong
to any individual but it was trust money of which the
executants were trustees and it will be utilised by them for
altruistic, religious or charitable purposes.
During the previous year (being the calendar year 1950)
relevant to the assessment year 1951-52, the total amount
received by the asses see-company in the "Dharmada Account"
as aforesaid amounted to Rs. 21,898/-; similarly during the
previous year (being the calendar year 1951) relevant to the
assessment year 1952-53 the company collected from its
customers a sum of Rs. 17,242/- on account of ’Dharmada’ and
a sum of Rs. 904/- for the same purpose from the brokers and
interest was also credited to this account amounting to Rs.
4,010/-, while during the previous year (being the calendar
year 1952) relevant to the assessment year 1953-54 the
assessee received a sum of Rs. 19,490/- as Dharmada’ from
its customers and a sum of Rs. 4578 was also credited on
account of interest in the "Dharmada Account". IN the
assessment proceedings for the assessment years 1951-52,
1952-53 and 1953-54 the assessee claimed that the aforesaid
amounts Lying to the credit of the "Dharmada Account" were
held in trust by it and were ear-marked for charity and as
such they were not its income from business liable to tax
and in support of this contention reliance was
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placed upon the resolution passed by the Board of Directors
on January A 15, 1945 and the Deed of Declaration of Trust
dated October 3, 1950. The Income-Tax officer rejected the
contention and added the said amounts to the assessable
income of the assessee-company in all the years. The appeals
before the Appellate Assistant Commissioner at the instance
of the assessee-company proved unsuccessful. Further appeals
to the Appellate Tribunal also proved futile. Before the
Tribunal it was contended on behalf of the assessee that
each customer who paid the ’Dharmada’ amount was a settlor
of the trust, that there were as many settlors as there were
customers and that the assessee had receive(’ these amounts
under an obligation to utilise the same for charity; it was
pointed out that the resolution of the Board of Directors
dated January 15, 1945 was merely a confirmation of the fact
that the, amounts were held in trust by the assessee and
that the deed dated October 3, 1950 was merely a declaration
of the acceptance of the trust by the two trustees mentioned
therein; in other words, it was contended that the customers
of the assessee created a trust by paying the amounts as
’Dharmada’ and the amounts having been ear-marked for
charitable purpose only they were not the assessee’s income
liable to tax. The Tribunal negatived the claim of the
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assessee on two grounds, first, that the amounts in question
could not be regarded as having been received or held by the
assessee under a trust for charitable purposes, the trust
being void for vagueness and uncertainty and, secondly that
the realisations partook of the character of trading
receipts. At the instance of the assessee the matter was
carried to the High Court by way of two References, Income-
tax Reference No. 329/1964 being in relation to the amounts
concerned in the two assessment years 1951-52 and 195753 and
Income-tax Reference No. 454/1965 being in relation to the
amount concerned in the assessment year 1953-54. In the
former Reference the High Court approached the question not
from the angle of deciding whether the assessee could claim
exemption from tax under s. 4(3) (i) of the Act in respect
of the impugned amounts but whether the impugned amounts
could be regarded as the profits or gains of the business
carried on by the assessee under s. 10(l) to the Act; in
other words in the opinion of the High Court the dispute
related to the initial character of the receipt itself and
the question was whether the amount paid by the customers
ear-marked for charity were the assessee’s income at all and
following an earlier decision of a Division Bench of that
very Court in the case of Agra Bullion Exchange Ltd. v.
Commissioner of Income tax,(l) the High Court held that the
impugned amounts we never the income of the assessee at all
and that the assessee was merely acting as a conduit pipe or
clearing house for passing on the amounts
(1) (1961) 41 I.T.R. 472.
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to the objects of charity. It took the view that the
Tribunal erred in holding that the levy for ’Dharmada’ was
in the nature of a surcharge on the price charged for sale
of yarn and cotton and that in its opinion the fact that it
was a compulsory levy ipso Facto did not impress the same
with the character of a trading receipt. the High Court
pointed out that the amounts realised by the assessee on
account of ’Dharmada’ were never treated as trading receipts
or as a surcharges on the sale price which was evident from
the fact that such realisations were never credited to their
trading account nor shown in the profits and loss statement
for any year. It further observed that it was well-known
that the "Dharmada" was a customary levy prevailing in
certain parts of the country and , where it was paid by the
customers to a trading concern the amount was not paid as
price for the commodity sold to the customer. In this view
of the matter the High Court answered the questions in
favour of the assessee and against the Revenue. Following
this decision, the High Court answered the question raised
in the latter Reference also in favour of the assessee. The
Commissioner of Income Tax, Delhi (Central), New Delhi has
challenged the aforesaid view of the High Court before us in
these appeals.
Counsel for the Revenue raised a two-fold contention in
support of these appeals. In the first place he contended
that since the realisation or recovery of ’Dharmada’ amounts
by the assessee from each of its customers was a compulsory
levy such payments from the customers’ point of view must be
regarded as a part of the consideration or price for the
goods purchased by them to from the assessee. He urged that
such compulsory levy would be in the nature of a premium or
surcharge on the price and as such will have to be regarded
as a trading receipt. In that behalf reliance was placed
upon two decisions, one of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in
Poosarla Sambamurthi v. State of Andhra,(’) and the other of
Madras High Court in N. S. Pandaria Pillai v. The State of
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Madras,(1) where similar amounts charged by the assessee as
and by way of ’Dharmam’ in the former case and ’Mahimai’ in
the latter case were held to be part of the price includible
in the taxable turnover of the assessee. Secondly, he
contended that it is well-settled that a gift for ’Dharma’
or ’Dharmada’ is void for vagueness and uncertainty and,
therefore, when the ’Dharmada’ amounts were paid by the
customers and received by the assessee these amounts could
not be regarded as "property held under trust or other legal
obligation for charitable purposes" within the meaning of s.
4(3) (i) of the Act and in this behalf strong reliance was
placed upon the meanings given to the expressions
(1) 7 S.T.C. 652.
(2) 7 S.T.C. 108.
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Dharma’ and ’Dharmada’ in Prof. Wilson’s Glossary of
Judicial & Revenue Terms, the decision of the Privy Council
in Ranchordas v. Parvatibai(ll) and the decision of the
Bombay High Court in Devshankar v. Moti Ram.(2)Apart from
this legal position he sought to support the Tribunal’s
finding that no trust could be said to have been created by
the customers on the basis of certain factual aspects-(a)
the customers paid the amounts not voluntarily but out of
compulsion, (b) the customers being illiterate did not
appreciate that they were paying the amounts with a view to
create trust, (c) there was no control over the assessee as
regards the manner in which and the time when it should
spend for ’Dharmada’ and (d) the assessee did not keep these
amounts in a separate bank account-separate from its
business assets. He therefore, urged that no trust of these
realisations could be said to have been created and as such
these realisations were rightly regarded by the. Tribunal as
part of the assessee’s trading receipts liable to be
included in its assessable income.
On the other hand, counsel for the assessee contended
that it was the initial character of the receipt in the
hands of the assessee that was important, that the amounts
when paid by the customers, over and above the price for the
goods purchased from the assessee, were paid for ’Dharmada’
(i.e. for charity) and were received by the assessee as
such; in other words, the receipts from the inception were
impressed with the obligation to spend the same only on
charitable objects. He contended that the two concepts of
’Dharma’ and ’Dharmada’ were distinct from each other and
though a gift to ’Dharma’ may be void on grounds of
vagueness and uncertainty, a gift to ’Dharmada’ would not be
void inasmuch as the concept of ’Dharmada’ was not vague or
uncertain especially when a gift to ’Dharmada’ was by
commercial or trading custom invariably regarded as a gift
to charitable purposes, and in this behalf strong reliance
was placed by him upon Full Bench decision one the Allahabad
High Court in Thakur Das Shyam Sunder v. Additional
Commissioner of Income-Tax, U.P. and Another(2) and the
decision of the Punjab Haryana High Court in Commissioner
of Income-tax, Amritsar v. Gheru Lal Bal Chand(’), where
such customary meaning of ’Dharmada’ among the trading
community has been judicially recognised. He further urged
that the compulsory nature of the payment, did not affect or
alter the initial character of the receipts which were
earmarked for charity and, therefore such receipts could not
be regarded as trading receipts,
(1) 26 I.A. 71.
(2) I.L.R. 18 Bom. 136.
(3) (1974) 93I.T.R. 27.
(4) 111 I.T.R. 134.
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248
not being any part of the price nor even a surcharge on the
price. I n support of his contentions counsel strongly
relied upon the decision of this Court i n Commissioner of
Income-tax, West Bengal v.Tollygunge Club Ltd.(1).
Having regard to the rival contentions noted above, it
seems to us clear that. there are two aspects that are
required to be considered fol determining the question
raised in these appeals but in a sense the two aspects are
so inter-related that they would represent the two sides of
the same coin. The one aspect is what is the true nature or
character these receipts, whether they constitute a part of
the price received by the assessee while effecting sales of
yarn or cotton and are, therefore, trading receipts of the
assessee ? The other aspect is whether these realisations
are property held under trust or other legal obligation for
charitable purposes or not ? And this depends upon whether
the ear-marking of these payments for ’Dharmada’ creates a
valid trust of obligation to spend the same only on
charitable objects ? But in the facts and circumstances of
the case it is obvious that these receipts would not be
trading receipts only if at the time these are received they
are held under a trust or other legal obligation to spend
the same for charitable purposes. In other words if the
legal obligation to spend the same for charitable purposes
is void and, therefore, non-existent the receipts or the
realisations may have to be regarded as trading receipts in
the hands of the assessee. That being the position, in our
view, the approach adopted by the High Court to determine
the question at issue cannot be regarded as correct. As
pointed out earlier, the High Court approached the question
from the angle of deciding whether the impugned amounts
realised by the assessee could be regarded as the Profits
and gains of the business carried on by the assessee under
s. 10(l) of the Act, impliedly suggesting that a claim for
exemption for such amounts under s. 4(3) (i) of the Act was
unnecessary or irrelevant and that the dispute merely
related to the initial character of the receipt itself and
following the decision in Agra Bullion Exchange case (supra)
it held that the amounts in question which were paid by the
customers ear-marked for charity were not trading receipts
and were never the income of the assessee at all It is clear
that the while making this finding the High Court assumed
that the customers while paying these amounts had validly
ear-marked them for charity. Since the Revenue had
specifically raised a dispute that the receipts of ’Dharmada
would neither create a valid trust nor a valid legal
obligation to spend the same for charitable purposes,
’Dharmada’ being a vague and uncertain concept, the High
Court could not, in our
(1) (1977) 107 I.T.R. 776.
249
view, come to the finding that these realisations were not
trading receipts unless it further found that ear-marking
for ’Dharmada was a valid ear-marking for charity. In our
view, therefore, both the aspects of the question are
required to be considered for the purpose of arriving at a
correct decision thereon.
Therefore, the first question that arises for our
consideration is whether a gift to Dharmada’ is void on
grounds of vagueness or uncertainly ? The answer to this
question will depend upon what is the true meaning of the
expression ’Dharmada’ and is the concept of ’Dharmada’ as
vague or uncertain as the concept of ’Dharma’ ? The two
allied concept of ’Dharma Anna Dharmada’ will have to the
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considered together. It is true that as early as in 1899 the
Privy Council in Runchordas Vandrawandas C. and others v.
Parvatibhai and others (Supra) declared a bequest or a gift
to ’Dharma’ (Dharm) simpliciter to be void, the concept
being vague and uncertain and in that behalf the Privy
Council relied upon the meaning of that expression given in
Prof. Wilson’s Glossary of Judicial and Revenue Terms, where
the expression is stated to mean ’law, virtue legal or moral
duty’" derived from the Sanskrit verb ’Dhri’ meaning ’to
hold’, that which keeps a man in the right path. Accepting
the aforesaid meaning of the expression ’Dharma’, the Privy
Council observed thus:
"In Wilson’s Dictionary "Dharam" is defined to be
law, virtue, legal or moral duty .. The object which
can be considered to be meant by that word are too
vague and uncertain for the administration of them to
be under any control."
By this decision the Privy Council gave its impramatur to
the view which prevailed in the Presidencies of Bombay and
Calcutta for the past 50 years that gifts to ’Dharma’
simpliciter were invalid. The reason for the decision was
the oft-quoted principle that all charities were the special
care and under the direct control of the Court of Equity and
that the Court must refuse to accept as "charity" any gift
which by reason of the vagueness in which it was expressed
left the Court m doubt as . to how it was to be applied.
However, in a later Bombay case, namely, the Advocate-
General of Bombay v. Jimbabai.(3) Beaman, J., felt that in
this country ’Dharma’ did mean roughly and almost invariable
in the cases which had come up for legal decisions just
"charity" and nothing else and observed:
"It is true that an oriental’s idea of charity
might be a little wider and looser than that of the
Lord Eldon, particularly amongst the lower and more
illiterate classes of Hindus and
(1) I.L.R. 41 Bom. 181.
17-817 SCI/78
250
Mahomedans; but a liberal use of the convenient
doctrine of cypress which is surely elastic enough to
reach almost anything which Judges wish to reach, might
have validated the technical defects and cured the
infirmity."
It may be stated that with a view to give effect to the
popular concept of the word ’Dharma’ a Bill was introduced
(being Bill No. 10 of 1938 published in the Gazette of India
Part V. dated 17.9.1938) but it was presumably dropped as it
fell under "Religious and Charitable Endowments" in List II
of the Government of India Act, 1935, which was a Provincial
subject. Thereafter the State of Bombay enacted(l Bombay
Public Trust Act being Act No. XXIX of 1950 which is now in
operation in the States of Maharashtra and Gujarat. By title
Explanation to s. 1() it has been enacted that a public
trust created for such objects as "Dharma, Dharmada,
Punyakarya or punyadan" shall not be void only on the ground
that the objects for which it is created are unascertained
or unascertainable; in other words, in the areas where
legislation similar to the Bombay Public Trust Act would be
in operation bequests or gifts for religious or charitable
purposes, expressed in terms for "Dharma, Dharmada,
Punyakarya, punyadan, etc." would not fail on ground of
vagueness or uncertainty. However, in areas where such
legislation is not in force bequests or gifts to ’Dharma’
simpliciter would continue to be void on ground of vagueness
or uncertainty.
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In the above context it will be interesting to point
out that in Chaturbhuj Vallabhadas v. Commissioner of
Income-Tax(l) the Bombay High Court has taken the view that
where instead of ’Dharma’ the testator used the English word
’Charity’ that word without any qualifications or
limitations denoted public charity and as such the bequest
was held to be a valid charitable bequest falling within the
definition of "charitable purposes" in s. 4(3) (i) of the
Act.
Turning to the concept of ’Dharmada’ (’which is the
same as ’Dharmadaya’) the question is whether that concept
could be said to be as vague as the concept of ’Dharma’. In
Prof. Wilson’s Glossary the expression ’Dharmada’ or
’Dharmadaya’ is stated to be the vernacular equivalent of
the Sanskrit expression ’Dharmada’ or ’Dharmadaya’ and the
expression ’Dharmada’ is explained thus:
"Dharmadeo, corruptly, Dharmadow, (from Dan or
Daya, donation) An endowment, grant of food, or funds
or funds, for religious or charitable purposes".
(1)14 I.T.R. 144
251
Two other allied expressions, namely, ’Dharmakhaten’ and
’Dharmarth’ are explained thus:
"Dharmakhaten, (Marathi) The head of accounts
under which pious or charitable gifts are entered."
Dharmarth, (Sanskrit) Any thing given for
charitable or pious purposes. "
In Molesworth’s Dictionary (Marathi-English), Second
Edition, reprinted 1975, the expression ’Dharmadaya’ or
’Dharmadav’ is stated to mean "an alms or a gift in
charity".
If the respective meanings of the two expressions
’Dharma’ and ’Dharmada’ as given in the above dictionaries
are compared, it will appear clear that that the former is
indefinite and equivocal whereas the latter is quite
definite; the former means either law, or virtue or legal
duty or moral duty but the latter only means an endowment or
gift for religious or charitable purpose. Similarly, if the
expression ’Dharma’ is compared with the expression
’Dharmarth’ it will be clear that the former is indefinite
and equivocal while the latter has only one meaning, namely,
anything given for charitable or pious purpose. The Marathi
expression ’Dharmakhaten’ means the head of accounts under
which pious or charitable gifts are entered. From the above
discussion it appears to us clear that though there is some
justification for holding that a gift to ’Dharma’
simpliciter would be invalid on ground of vagueness and
uncertainty, a gift to ’Dharmada’ (Dharmadaya) would be
definite, the object being certain, namely, for religious,
or charitable purposes. In common parlance, therefore, the
expression ’Dharmada’ or ’Dharmadaya’ cannot be said to be
vague or uncertain and as such a gift to ’D-harmada’
(Dharmadaya) would not be invalid for vagueness or
uncertainty
Counsel for the Revenue" however, strongly relied upon
the decision of the Bombay High Court in Devshankar v. Moti
Ram (supra) where that Court has taken the view that a
bequest in favour of ’Dharmada’ is void by reason of
uncertainty. After going through the arguments of counsel in
that case and the decision of the Court, it appears to us
clear that the Court has accorded a literal and derivative
meaning to the word ’Dharmada’ in that ’Dharmada’ means
property set apart for ’Dharma’ and having regard to such
derivative Meaning accorded to that expression, the Court
has taken the view that there is no real distinction between
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a bequest to be expended on ’Dharmada’ and a bequest for
’Dharma’. As against its literal and derivative meaning, the
expression ’Dharmada’ (Dharmadaya) in common parlance means,
as mentioned in Prof. Wilson’s Glossary and Molesworth’s
Dictionary, an endowment or gift for religious or charitable
purposes and we are inclined
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to accept the latter popular meaning that is invariably
accorded by Orientalists to the expression ’Dharmada’
(Dharmadaya) and as such in our view a gift to ’Dharmada’ or
payment for ’Dharmada’ must be regarded as a gift or payment
for religious or charitable purposes and such a gift or
payment would not be invalid for vagueness or uncertainty.
Apart from the fact that the concept of ’Dhramada’ or
’Dhramada in common parlance means anything given in charity
or for religious or charitable purposes, it cannot be
disputed that among the trading or commercial community in
various parts of this country a gift or payment for
’Dharmada’ is by custom invariably regarded as a gift to
charitable purposes. In Thakur Das Shyam Sundar v.
Additional Commissioner of Income-Tax U.P. and Another
(supra), a Full Bench decision of The Allahabad High Court,
the question was whether, when the assessee, who carried on
business as a commission agent, charged on every transaction
of sale of goods worth Rs. 100/- a sum of 15 paise from the
person to whom goods were sold and 10 paise from the person
whose goods were sold as ’Dharmada’ and credited the amounts
thus collected. in a separate ’Dharmada’ account which was
held by him, to be utilized specifically and exclusively for
charitable purposes, the amounts so collected by him were
liable to be included in his assessable income or not ? The
High Court held that the said amounts were not includible in
the assessable income and were not chargeable to income-tax.
The High Court took the view that in order to determine
whether a particular receipt, by whatever name it was
called, was or Was not the income. Of a4 assessee, its real
nature and quality had to be considered and if it was
received under a custom, the answer to the question depended
on the nature of the obligation created by the custom. The
assessee’s specific case was that in the District of
Shahjahanpur there was a custom according to which the
commission agents realised ’Dharmada’ from their
constituents and spent the same on charity and this specific
case was not controverted by the Revenue, presumably because
the Revenue was aware that such a custom did obtain in the
trading community. It was contended on behalf of the Revenue
that the ownership of the fund realised by way of Dharmada’
rested entirely in the assessee who was free to spend the.
amount according to his own discretion, and, therefore, the
assessee’s position qua the ’Dharmada’ account was not that
of a trustee. Rejecting this contention the Allahabad High
Court observed thus:
"We are unable to accept the submission that as the
owner, ship of the amounts credited to the ’dharmada’
account vests in the petitioner and it enjoys some
discretion with regard to its
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disposal it cannot be said that its position is
not that of a trustee. The question whether the
position of the petitioner, when he received the
amount, was that of a trustee or not will depend upon
the actual custom which obliged the constituents to pay
dharmada. As stated earlier, the petitioner’s case that
the amount realised as dharmada has got to be spent on
charity has not been controverted by the respondents.
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Under the law relating to trust, legal ownership over
the. trust fund and the power to control and dispose it
of always vests in the trus- tee. Accordingly, merely
because in this case the legal owner ship over the
amount deposited as dharmada vested in the peti tioner,
it cannot be said that its position was not that of a
trustee. Discretion vested in a trustee to spend the
trust amount over charities will not affect the
character of the deposit."
The above Full Bench decision of the Allahabad High
Court, it can fairly be said, amounts to a judicial
recognition of the custom of collecting ’Dharmada’ amounts
by traders from their customers or constituents which casts
an obligation on the traders to spend the same only on some
charitable purpose. In other words, a gift or payment for
’Dharmada’ is by commercial or trading custom invariably
regarded as a gift for charitable purposes and as such there
is no question of there being any vagueness or uncertainty
about the object for which such gift or payment has to be
utilized. Counsel for the Revenue sought to contend that the
custom referred to in Thakur Das Shyam Sunder’s case (supra)
should be regarded as being prevalent only in the District
of Shahjahanpur from which the case arose. It is not
possible to accept this contention, for, it is common
knowledge that such customary levy for ’Dharmada’ is
frequently collected by traders from their customers in
several parts of the country. similar custom creating the
obligation to spend the ’Dharmada’ amounts exclusively on
charitable purposes was invoked or resorted to by the Punjab
& Haryana High Court in the case of Commissioner of Income-
Tax, Amritsar v. Gheru Lal Bal Chand (supra) where the
assessee who carried on business in Districts of Abohar.
Hissar and Malaut in Punjab & Haryana realised ’Dharmada’
amounts from his constituents and the Court held that the
assessee was acting more or less as a trustee of such
amounts and as such these were not includible in his
assessable income.
Having regard to the above discussion, we are clearly
of the view that a gift to ’Dharmada’ or ’Dharmadaya’ both
in common parlance as well as by the customary meaning
attached thereto among the commer-
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cial and trading community cannot be regarded as void or
invalid on account of vagueness or uncertainty, and it is,
therefore, clear that when the customers or brokers paid the
impugned amounts to the assessee ear-marking them for
’Dharmada’ it must be held that these payments were validly
ear-marked for charitable purposes. In other words, right
from inception these amounts were received and held by the
assessee under an obligation to spend the same for
charitable purposes only, with the result that these
receipts cannot be regarded as forming any income ofthe
assessee.
The next aspect requiring consideration is whether
because of the compulsory nature of the levy the impugned
amounts charged to the customers and received by the
assessee Could be regarded as a part of the price or a
surcharge on the price as contended by the counsel for the
Revenue ? In our view, this question is covered by the
decision of this Court in Tollygounge Club case (supra). In
the case the respondent club conducted horse races with
amateur riders and charged fees for admission into the
enclosure of the club at the time of the races; a resolution
was passed in 1945 at the general body meeting of the club
for levying a surcharge; of eight annas over and above the
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admission fees, the proceeds of which were to go to the Red
Cross Fund; this resolution was varied by another resolution
dated January 30, 1950 to the effect that the surcharge
should be ear-marked "for local charities and not solely for
the Indian Red Cross"; every entrant was issued two tickets,
one, an admission ticket for admission to the enclosure of
the club, and the other, a separate ticket in respect of the
surcharge of eight annas for local charities; the question
was whether receipts on account of the surcharge were to be
treated as the respondent’s income for the assessment year
1960-61; the Appellate Tribunal and the High Court on a
reference held that the respondent’s receipts from the
surcharge levied on admission tickets for purposes of
charity could not be included in the respondent’s taxable
income. On further appeal, this Court held, confirming the
decision of the High Court, that the surcharge was not a
part of the price for admission but was a payment made for
the specific purpose of being applied to local charities. At
page 780 of the report this Court has observed thus:
"The surcharge is undoubtedly a payment which a race
goer is required to make in addition to the price of
admission ticket if he wants to witness the race from
the Club enclosure, but on that account it does not
become part of the price for add- mission. The
admission to the enclosure is the occasion and not the
consideration for the surcharge taken from the race
goer. It is true that but for this insistence on
payment of the
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surcharge at the time of admission to the enclosure,
the race-goer might not have paid any amount for local
charities. But that does not render the payment of the
surcharge involuntary, because it is out of his own
volition that he seeks admittance to the enclosure and
if he wants such admittance, he has to pay not only the
price of the admission ticket but also the surcharge
for local charities. The surcharge is clearly not a
part of the price for admission but it is a payment
made for the specific purpose of being applied to local
charities."
On parity of reasoning the ’Dharmada’ amounts paid by the
customers cannot be regarded as part of price or a surcharge
on price of goods purchased by the customers. The amount of
’Dharmada’ is undoubtedly a payment which a customer is
required to pay in addition to the price of the goods which
he purchases from the assessee but the purchase of the goods
by the customer would be the occasion and not the
consideration for the ’Dharmada’ amount taken from the
customer. It is true that without payment of ’Dharmada’
amount the customer may not be able to purchase the goods
from the assessee but that would not make the payment of
’Dharmada’ amount involuntary inasmuch as it is out of his
own volition that he purchases yarn and cotton from the
assessee. The ’Dharmada’ amount is, therefore, clearly not a
part of the price, but a payment for the specific purpose of
being spent on charitable purposes. The two decisions on
which reliance was placed by counsel for the Revenue,
namely, Poosarla Sambamurthi’s case (supra) and Pandaria
Pillai’s case (supra) are clearly distinguishable and
inapplicable to the facts of this case inasmuch,as both the
decisions were rendered under sales-tax legislation where
the question that was required to be considered was whether
the realisations for ’Dharmam’ (charitable purpose) in the
former case or ’Mahimai’ (religious purpose) in the latter
case would fall within the definition of ’turnover’ as
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contained in the concerned legislation and it was held that
such realisations were includible in the assessee’s
turnover. We do not wish to express any opinion on the
correctness of these decisions. Suffice it to state that
these ratio of these decisions cannot apply to the instant
case. Since! the realisation in question in the present case
are not a part of the price or surcharge on the price but
payments for the specific purpose of being spent on
charitable purposes, they cannot be regarded as trading
receipts of the assessee.
Dealing with the factual aspects on the basis of which
counsel for the Revenue sought to support the, Tribunal’s
finding that no trust could be said to have been created by
the customers it will be apparent from the above discussion
that none of the aspects are such as would lend support
256
to the inference drawn by the Tribunal. We have already
dealt with the alleged compulsory nature of the levy and
have pointed out that the ’Dharmada’ amounts cannot be said
to have been paid involuntarily by the customers and in any
case the compulsory nature of the payments, if there be any,
cannot impress the receipts with the character of being
trading receipts. Further, it is not possible to accept the
submission that the customers being illiterate did not
appreciate that they were paying the amounts with a view to
create a trust, especially when it has been found that such
payments were made pursuant,to a custom which obtained in
the commercial and trading community; indeed, being a
customary levy the constituents or customers whether
literate or illiterate would be knowing that the additional
payment over and above ;he price were meant for being spent
by the assessee for charitable purposes. Further, the fact
that the assessee would be having some discretion as regards
the manner in which and the time when it should spend the
’Dharmada’ amounts for charitable purposes would not
detract the position the assessee held qua such amounts,
namely, that it was under the obligation to utilize them
exclusively for charitable purposes. It is true that the
assessee did not keep these amounts in a separate bank
account but admittedly a separate ’Dharmada’ account was
maintained in the books in which every receipt was credited
and payment made there out on charity was debited and the
High Court had clearly found that these amounts were never
credited in the trading account nor were carried to the
profit and loss statement. Having regard to this position,
it seems to us clear that the Tribunal’s finding that no
trust could be said to have been created by the customers in
respect of the impugned amounts will have to be regarded as
erroneous.
In the result, after considering both the aspects, we
are of the view that the impugned realisations made by the
assessee from its customers for ’Dharmada’ being validly
ear-marked for charity or charitable purpose could not be
regarded as the assessee’s income chargeable to income-tax.
The ultimate. conclusion of the High Court, is, therefore,
confirmed and the appeals are dismissed with costs.
N.V.K. Appeals dismissed.
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