Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SHOORJI VALLABHDAS & CO., BOMBAY
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX/EXCESSPROFITS TAX, BOMBAY.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
19/04/1960
BENCH:
DAS, S.K.
BENCH:
DAS, S.K.
KAPUR, J.L.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
CITATION:
1960 AIR 1162 1960 SCR (3) 557
ACT:
Income-tax-Place of accrual of income-Business of transport-
ing cargo to Ports in and outside British India-Managing
Agency commission, a Percentage of freightage-Managing
agents services performed in British India-Liability to tax
of entire managing agency commission-Excess Profits Tax Act,
1940 (15 of 1940), s. 5, Proviso 3-Indian Income-tax Act,
1922 (II of 1922), s. 14 (2)(C).
HEADNOTE:
The appellant was the managing agent of a company which was,
at the relevant time, carrying on the business of
transporting cargo in boats which touched ports in British
India and in the Indian State of Cochin and other States.
Under the managing agency contract the remuneration payable
to the appellant was expressed in the following terms: "
That the managing agent shall as and by way of remuneration
for its services receive a commission of ten per cent. of
the gross freight charged to the shippers... Such
remuneration shall be payable to the managing agents at the
place where the same is earned by the company unless other-
wise requested by the managing agent." The Income-tax
Officer and the Excess Profits Tax Officer assessed the
appellant to tax in respect of the whole of the managing
commission received by it on the footing that the entire
commission accrued or arose in British India. The appellant
claimed that a part of the managing agency commission
accrued in the Indian States and not in British India and
that it would be entitled to an apportionment of the
managing agency commission and to claim exemption from tax
in respect of the commission which accrued outside British
India under s. 14(2)(c) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922,
and the third proviso to s. 5 of the Excess Profits Tax Act,
1940. The Appellate Tribunal found that except booking and
collecting some freight at Cochin, all other important and
responsible work of managing the company was done from the
head office at Bombay and not from Cochin:
Held, that normally the commission payable to the managing
agent of a company accrues at the place where the business
is actually done, that is, where the services of the
managing agent are performed, and as on the finding in the
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present case the appellant practically performed all the
services at Bombay, the commission which it earned though
computed on the percentage of freight, accrued or arose in
British India.
Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras v. K. R. M. T. T. Thia-
garaja Chetty and Co., [1950] S.C.R. 258, followed.
Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay v. Ahmedbhai Umarbhai and
Co., Bombay, [1950] S.C.R. 335 and Commissioner of Income-
tax, Bombay Presidency and Aden v. Chunilal B. Mehta, [1938]
6 I.T.R. 521, distinguished,
73
558
Sall and industries Agencies Ltd., Bombay v. Commissioner of
Income-tax, Bombay City, [1950] 18 I.T.R. 58, considered.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 305 of 1955.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
March 31, 1952, and March 2,1953, of the Bombay High Court,
in Income-tax Reference No. 48 of 1951.
R.J. Kolah, Sohrab N. Vakil and S. N. Andley, for the
appellant.
C.K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General of India, R. Ganapathy
Iyer and D. Gupta, for the respondent.
1960. April 19. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
S.K. DAS, J.-This is an appeal with special leave from
the judgment and orders dated March 31, 1952, and March 2,
1953, of the High Court of Bombay in an Income-tax Reference
No. 48 of 1951 made by the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal,
Bombay, under s. 66(1) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922,
and s. 21 of the Excess Profits Tax Act, 1940.
We may shortly state the relevant facts first. The
assessee, Messrs. Shoorji Vallabhdas and Company, Bombay,
appellant herein, is a firm registered under the Indian
Income-tax Act. It held the managing agency of three
companies, namely-(1) the Malabar Steamship Company Ltd.,
(2) the New Dholera Steamships Ltd., and (3) the New Dholera
Shipping and Trading Company Ltd., for the periods material
in this case. The appellant as also the aforesaid three
managed companies were resident in the taxable territories
within the meaning of the Indian Income-tax Act. The
business of the Malabar Steamship Company Ltd. and of the
New Dholera Steamships Ltd. was to carry cargo in cargo
boats which touched ports in British India, Cochin State,
Travancore State and ,Saurashtra, as they were then known.
The appellant became the managing agent of the Malabar
Steamship Company Ltd. with effect from April 1, 1943, and
the firm consisted of Shoorji Vallabhdas and his two sons.
Formerly, Shoorji Vallabhdas alone was the managing agent of
the Malabar Steamship Company Ltd. and a managing agency
agreement dated September 16,
559
1938, was executed between the managing agent and the
managed company, and that agreement as varied by two
subsequent deeds dated June 26, 1942, and December 7, 1943,
constituted the contract of managing agency between the
appellant and the managed company. Under the managing
agency contract the remuneration payable to the appellant
after September 1, 1943, was expressed in the following
terms:
" That the remuneration of the Managing Agents as and from
1st September one thousand nine hundred and forty-three
shall be ten per cent. (10%) on the freight charged to the
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shippers instead of annas fourteen per ton as mentioned in
clause (1) of the said first supplemental agreement dated
the 26th day of June, 1942."
The managing agency agreement dated June 8, 1946, between
the appellant and the second managed company, New Dholera
Steamships, Ltd., provided inter alia as follows:
" That the Managing Agents shall as and by way of
remuneration for their services in relation to the shipping
business of the Company receive a commission of ten per
cent. (10%) of the gross freight charged to the shippers
and/or passage money charged to the passengers. Such
remuneration shall be payable to the Managing Agents at the
place where the same is earned by the Company unless
otherwise requested by the Managing Agents. The
remuneration of the Managing Agents in relation to the
business of the Company other than the shipping business
shall be (10%) ten per cent. on the gross profits that may
be earned in such business."
It may be stated here, however, that no question arose as to
the remuneration of the Managing Agent in relation to
business other than shipping business, because no business
other than shipping business was carried on by the managed
company during the relevant period.
The third managed Company, viz., the New Dholera Shipping
and Trading Company Ltd., confined its business during the
relevant accounting period to stevedoring and trading only.
The managing agency agreement also dated June 8, 1946, with
the, third
560
managed company provided inter alia for the payment of
remuneration in the following terms:
" That the Managing Agents shall as and by way of
remuneration for their services receive a commission at the
rate of 25 per cent. of the net profits of the company.
Such remuneration shall be payable to the Managing Agents at
the place where the same is earned by the Managing Agents
unless otherwise requested by the Managing Agents."
The appellant was assessed to income-tax for three
assessment years, namely, 1945-1946, 1946-1947 and 1947-
1948, the previous years being the financial years 1944-
1945, 1945-1946 and 1946-1947 respectively. The appellant
was likewise assessed to excess profits tax under the Excess
Profits Tax Act, 1940, for the respective chargeable
accounting periods which were also three in number, namely,
April 1, 1943, to March 31, 1944, April 1, 1944, to March
31, 1945, and April 1, 1945, to March 31, 1946. The Income-
tax Officer and the Excess Profits Tax Officer assessed the
appellant to tax in respect of the whole of the managing
agency commission received from the three managed companies
on the footing that the entire managing agency commission
accrued or arose in British India. The appellant went up in
appeal to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner from the
assessment orders on the ground inter alia that a part of
the managing agency commission received from the three
managed companies accrued in the Cochin and Travancore
States and not in British India and was therefore exempt
from tax under the relevant provisions (as they stood at the
material time) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, and the
Excess Profits Tax Act, 1940. Thus, the dispute was about
the place of accrual of the in. come in question. As to the
managed companies, the Income-tax authorities accepted the
position that the profits of the three managed companies
partly accrued in British India and partly in the Indian
States; but they did not accept the claim of the appellant
that part of its managing agency commission from the three
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managed companies accrued or arose in the Cochin and
Travancore States. The Appellate Assistant Commissioner by
different orders all dated
561
May 4,1950, dismissed all the appeals. The Appellant went
in appeal to the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal. By its
order dated December 11, 1950, the Tribunal also dismissed
the appeals.
The appellant then made an application to the Tribunal to
refer certain questions of law which arose out of its order,
to the High Court of Bombay. The Tribunal referred two such
questions:
" (1) Did a part of the managing agency commission earned by
the assessee accrue or arise in the Cochin State inasmuch as
the managing agency commission is computed on the basis of
the freight earned by the managed company in the Cochin
State or otherwise?
(2)Did the whole or part of the dividend income accrue or
arise in the Cochin State ? "
The expression Cochin State in the questions obviously
referred to both Cochin and Travancore States. On March 31,
1952, the reference came up for consideration before the
High Court, and after hearing Counsel, the High Court
reformulated the first question as follows:
" Where the actual business of managing agency was done
which yielded the commission which is sought to be taxed? "
The High Court directed the Tribunal to submit a
supplemental statement of the case on the first question as
reformulated. The second question was not pressed by
learned counsel for the appellant and does
not now survive.
The Tribunal submitted a supplemental statement of the case
on August 29, 1952. The reference was finally heard on
March 2, 1953, and the High Court answered the question by
saying that the actual business of the managing agency which
yielded the commission was done at Bombay and not at Cochin.
In arriving at the conclusion the High Court proceeded on
the footing that the finding of the Tribunal in effect was
that barring freight and collecting it at Cochin, all other
important and responsible work of managing the managed
companies was done from the
head office at Bombay.
It has been argued on behalf of the appellant that the High
Court erroneously reformulated the question,
562
and that the real question of law is whether on the facts
and circumstances of the case, any part of the managing
agency commission accrued outside British India so that the
appellant would be entitled to an apportionment of the
managing agency commission and to claim exemption from tax
in respect of the commission which accrued outside British
India under s. 14(2)(c) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922
(as it then stood) and the third proviso to s. 5 of the
Excess Profits Tax Act, 1940. It has been further
contended, that in view of the findings of the Tribunal that
(a,) the commission earned was a percentage of the freight
and passage money received by two of the managed companies
in Cochin and Travancore States, (b) a part of the
commission was payable there and (c) a part of the services
was also rendered by the appellant as managing agent in
those States, the High Court was in error in coming to its
conclusion that the whole of the managing agency commission
accrued or arose in Bombay. While we agree with learned
counsel for the appellant that the real question in this
case is whether any part of the managing agency commission
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accrued outside British India, we do not agree with him that
the High Court was wrong in reformulating the question. The
Tribunal formulated the, question as though the computation
of the appellants remuneration on the basis of freight
determined the place of accrual; in this the Tribunal was in
error, and the High Court rightly pointed out that the test
to be applied was not how the remuneration was to be
computed or quantified, but where the services were
performed by the appellant, which yielded the profits sought
to be taxed. The High Court rightly reformulated the
question on that basis, and asked the Tribunal to submit a
supplemental statement of the case on the materials
available and placed before it by the appellant bearing on
the question as reformulated by the High Court.
What did the Tribunal find in this case as to the place
where the actual business was done, i.e., the services were
performed by the appellant as managing agent, which yielded
the commission ? After referring to the agreements relating
to the computation of remuneration, the Tribunal said in its
order dated
563
December 11, 1950, that (a) from time to time one of the
partners of the appellant firm went to Cochin to, attend to
the business, (b) the managed companies had an officer in
Cochin, and (c) the payments said to have been made to
certain employees at Cochin were fictitious. In the
supplementary statement, the Tribunal pointed out that it
was not known whether the’ partner who went to Cochin went
in his capacity as partner of the appellant firm or as a
director of one of the managed companies; the appellant firm
had rented a flat at Cochin on Rs. 20 per month and
maintained some employees at Cochin for securing freight;
and the local office of the appellant firm at Cochin rented
at Rs. 10 per month maintained only one book containing
cash, journal and ledger. The Tribunal concluded its
supplementary statement thus:
"As for the staff maintained at Cochin, it was alleged that
K. P. Joshi and subsequently G. H. Narechania were paid Rs.
18,000 each year. The so-called payment was disallowed by
the Appellate Tribunal. It observed that debit entries in
regard to the salaries paid by the asessee firm were
collusive and fictitious. As for the presence of the
partners of the assessee firm at Cochin, it appears from the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner’s order that it was
admitted before him that none of the partners of the firm
ever attended to the company’s business at Cochin or
Alleppey.
"There is no clear evidence on the record as to what the
assessee firm did as the managing agents of the three
managed companies; in other words, how the assessee firm was
carrying on the managing agency business. The partners of
the assessee firm (not necessarily all) were on the Board of
Directors of the managed companies. They held a large
number of shares in the managed companies. The Malabar
Steamship Co. Ltd. had an office of its own "to secure
freight ". The Cochin office of the assessee firm, as far as
one could make out, did practically nothing, except receive
10% of the gross freight at Cochin and retain the net,
income therefrom ",
564
fact reached by the Tribunal-where did the commission
payable to the managing agent accrue ? It is well to
remember that the problem in this case is not so much when
the commission accrued as where it accrued, though the
question as to where and when may be interlinked. We think
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that normally, the commission -payable to the managing
agents of a company accrues at the place where the services
are performed by the managing agents. It was so held by
this Court in K. R. M. T. T. Thiagaraja Chetty and Company
v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras, No. 2(1). The
assessee in that case, Thiagaraja Chettiar, claimed that a
portion of the commission or-edited to it in the company’s
accounts accrued to it in the Indian States where the
company had opened branches for selling yarn and as the
commission was not remitted to British India, it was not
assessable to tax. This Court observed:
"The short answer to this argument is that the business of
the company was carried on in British India, that the
commission earned by the firm on the profits made by the
company in the States arose out of one indivisible agreement
to charge the reduced commission of 5 per cent. on the
profits of the company and that the managing agents had been
doing the business of the agency in British India and not in
the States. It is not suggested that the managing agents
performed any functions in the States."
The same question of the place of accrual arose in a
somewhat different context in Commissioner of Income-tax,
Bombay Presidency and Aden v. Chunilal B. Mehta (2) where a
person resident in British India and carrying on business
there controlled transactions abroad, and the question was
it he was liable to pay tax upon profits derived by him from
contracts made for the purchase and sale of commodities in
various markets-Liverpool, London, New York, etc. The
assessee disputed his liability in respect of such profits
on the ground that they were not profits " accruing or
arising in British India ". It was held that the mere fact
that the profits made depended on the exercise in
(1) (1953) 24 I.T.R 535.
(2) [1938] 6 I.T.R. 521.
565
British India of knowledge, skill and judgment on the part
of the assessee did not mean that the profits arose or
accrued in British India, and there was no necessity &rising
out of the general conception of a business as an
Organisation that the profits of the business must arise
only at one place, namely, the place of central control of
the business. Delivering the judgment of the Privy Council
in that case, Sir George Rankin observed:
" The words "accruing or arising the British India" may be
taken, provisionally and in the first place, as an ordinary
English phrase which derives no special meaning from the
Act. The alternative " accruing or arising in" and the
antithesis between these words and the words " received in "
or " brought into " afford no safe inference of any special
meaning. " Profit accruing or arising in British India "
are words which in their ordinary meaning seem to require a
place to be assigned as that at ’which the result of trading
operation comes, whether gradually or suddenly, into
existence".........................................
" Their Lordships are not laying down any rule of general
application to all classes of foreign transactions, or even
with respect to the sale of goods. To do so would be nearly
impossible and wholly unwise. They are not saying that the
place of formation of the contract prevails against
everything else. In some circumstances it may be so, but
other matters-acts done under the contract, for example-
cannot be ruled out a priori. In the case before the Board
the contracts were neither framed nor carried out in British
India; the High Court’s conclusion that the profits accrued
or arose outside British India is well-founded."
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A similar view was expressed in two earlier decisions: (1)
In Re: The Aurangabad, Mills Ltd.(") where a reference was
made to Commissioner of Taxation v. Kirk, (1900) Appeal
Cases, page 588 and it was pointed out that the circumstance
that the affairs of the company were directed from Bombay
was not the determining test was the test was where the
processes
(1) [1921] I.L.R. 45 Bom. 1286,
74
566
which yielded the income were carried out and that was
outside British India; (2) The Commissioner of Income-tax,
Bombay Presidency v. Messrs. Sarupchand Hukamchand of
Bombay, a firm (1) where the assessees acted as the
secretaries, treasurers and agents of a mill company
registered at Indore, outside British India, and under the
terms of agreement, the assessees were entitled to charge
and receive as selling agents commission on the gross sale
proceeds of all cloth produced by the mill and the company
opened a shop in Bombay for the sale of cloth produced by
the mill which was managed by the assessees. The sale
proceeds were sent to Indore and the assessees were paid the
commission at Indore. The question arose whether the com-
mission was liable to be assessed to income-tax in Bombay,
and it was held that the income accrued in British India.
In Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay v. Ahmedbhai Umarbhai
and Co, Bombay (2) this Court dealt with a case where a firm
resident in British India carried on the business of
manufacturing and selling groundnut oil; it owned some oil
mills within British India and a mill in Raichur in the
Hyderabad State where oil was manufactured. One of the
questions for decision was whether the profits of that part
of the business, viz., the manufacture of oil at the mill in
Raichur accrued or arose in Raichur within the meaning of
the third proviso to s. 5 of the Excess Profits Tax Act,
1940. A majority of Judges held that the profits arose in
Raichur, and in a composite business, the profits need not
arise at one place only but may arise at more than one place
and an apportionment may be necessary. This was not,
however, a case of managing agency.
We now come to the decision in Salt and Industries Agencies
Ltd., Bombay v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay City(3) a
decision of the same learned Chief Justice, in respect of
which learned counsel for the appellant has made some very
serious comments. The facts of that case were these : the
assessees, a company incorporated in Bombay were the
managing agents of another company incorporated in Bombay
and having its salt works at Aden and at Kandla in the Kutch
(1) [1930] I.L.R. 55 Bom. 231 (2) [1950] S.C.R. 335.
(3) [1950) 18 I.T.R. 58.
567
where the board of directors met, the books of account were
maintained and various types of work connected with the
company were done. Under the managing agency agreement the
assessees were entitled to a commission at the rate of 12
1/2 per cent. per annum on the annual net profits of the
company and in any event a minimum of Rs. 30,000 per annum.
The agreement also provided that such portion of the
commission as was attributable to the net profits of the
company arising or accruing in the Indian State was to be
paid to the managing agents in such State and that with
regard to the minimum commission half of it was to be. paid
in the State. In pursuance of the assessees’ articles of
association the board of directors passed a resolution
delegating a particular director to guide the company’s
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operation in the State of Kutch and during the year of
account that director supervised the salt works at Kandla.
The question was whether the sum of Rs. 88,O65 representing
assessee’s commission attributable to the salt works at
Kandla accrued or arose at Kandla or in British India.
First, the learned Chief Justice referred to the test to be
applied in order to determine where the profits of the
assessee company accrued or arose, and he said that the test
was to find out where the actual business of the company was
done which yielded the profits sought to be taxed. In that
connexion he said:
" The work of the managing agents must be looked upon as a
unit and not as divided up into so many different
categories, to each one of which a certain portion of the
commission earned by the managing agents can be attributed
or allocated.".
He then went on to consider when the right to managing
agency commission arose in that case and came to the
conclusion, which was decisive in his opinion, that it arose
when all the accounts of the working of the company were
submitted to the head office in Bombay and the profits were
determined therefore, the sum of Rs. 88,065 accrued or arose
to the assessees in Bombay and not in the Indian State both
for purposes of income-tax and excess profits tax.
568
Now, learned counsel for the appellant has no quarrel with
the decision in so far as it laid down that (a) the test is
to find out where the business is actually done, i. e.,
where the services are performed, and (b) the right to
managing agency commission arose in that case when all the
accounts of the working of the company were submitted to the
head office in Bombay and the profits were determined.
Learned counsel has contended that in the case under our
consideration the services were performed partly in British
India and partly in Cochin and the right to managing agency
commission arose as soon as the freight was paid at least in
respect of two of the managed companies. He has submitted,
however, that the learned Chief Justice was in error if he
intended to lay down a rule of universal application that
the work of the managing agents must always be looked upon
as a unit and can never to be divided into categories. It
is contended that the services of a managing agent can be
performed at more than one place, and legally it is possible
to apportion the commission and attribute a part of it to
services rendered outside the taxable territories.
We consider it unnecessary in the present case to decide the
question of performance of services and resultant
apportionment, if any, on a theoretical or hypothetical
basis, because the case can be disposed of ’on the short
ground that on the findings of the Tribunal, the
remuneration of the managing agents accrued at Bombay. We
had referred earlier to the findings reached by the
Tribunal. These findings show that except for an attempt at
make-believe, no services were really performed by the
appellant at Cochin. No doubt, some freight was secured and
paid for at Cochin. But the managed company also had an
office at Cochin to secure freight. It has been argued that
under the terms of the managing agency agreements, the
managing agents employed the staff, etc., and for two of the
companies which carried on the cargo business, securing
freight was the principal part of the managing agency
business. The High Court, however, rightly. pointed out:
569
" In our opinion, it is not possible to read the managing
agency agreement in that light. All that clause 2 of the
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agreement does is to lay down the standard by which the
commission is to be computed and determined, and it lays
down two different standards, one with regard to the
shipping business and the other with regard to the other
businesses, but as far as the business of the managing
agency is concerned their responsibilities and their duties
are integrated duties and responsibilities which are set out
in the different clauses of the agreement. It is impossible
to contend that they had not to supervise, control and
manage the shipping business and, as we have already said
the business of a shipping company is vastly more detailed
and responsible than the mere task of finding people to go
by ship or send their goods by ship and for that purpose
paying freight. Freight is merely the resultant profit
which accrues to a shipping company. In order that that
profit should result the company has got to have ships, it
has got to have seaworthy ships, it has got to have sailors
and officers, it has got to look to the repairs of the
ships, the renovation of the ships and the replacements of
the ships. All this is part of the shipping company’s
business and all this business had to be attended to by the
managing agents and the question is, where did they attend
to this business. The finding on this question is clear.
The finding, in effect, is that barring booking freight, and
collecting freight at Cochin, all other important and
responsible work of managing the managed companies was done
from the head office at Bombay and not from Cochin."
On the findings reached, the position in law is quite clear.
The decisions to which we have referred clearly establish
that normally, the commission payable to the managing agents
accrues at the place where the business is actually done,
that is, where the services of the managing agents are
performed. In this case the appellant practically performed
all the services at Bombay, and therefore the commission
which it earned though computed on the percentage of freight
and/or passage money in respect of two of the managed
companies, accrued or arose in British
570
India. As to the third managed company whose business was
stevedoring and trading and the remuneration was payable at
25 per cent. of the net profits, there can be no doubt that
the remuneration accrued at Bombay. Therefore, the High
Court of Bombay correctly answered the question against the
appellant.
The appeal accordingly fails and is dismissed With costs.
Appeal dismissed.