Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX,CALCUTTA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
M/S. PARK HOTEL (P) LTD.,15, PARK STREET, CALCUTTA-16.
DATE OF JUDGMENT05/01/1995
BENCH:
B.P. JEEVAN REDDY, S.B. MAJMUDAR
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
B.P. JEEVAN REDDY J.
1. Leave granted. Heard the counsel for both the parties.
2. The Commissioner of Income Tax, Calcutta, has preferred
this appeal against the judgment of the Calcutta High Court
in Income Tax Reference No.88/1986, answering the question
referred at the instance of the assessee, in favour of the
assessee. The question referred under Section 256(1) of the
Income Tax Act is "Whether on the facts and in the
circumstances of the case, the Tribunal was justified in law
in holding that the income as received by M/s. Surrendra
Overseas Limited, be assessed as the income of the assessee
from business from lease-hold interest?"
3. Under a deed of assignment, dated 3rd September, 1966,
the assessee obtained the leasehold interest, for the
unexpired period of lease, in respect of premises
Nos.3,5,7,9,11,13 & 15, Park Street, Calcutta, from Credit
Transactors. In the accounting year relevant to the
Assessment Year 1971-72, the assessee executed a sub-lease
in respect of a portion of its leasehold interest in favour
of M/s.Surrendra Overseas Limited, another limited company
"associated with the assessee". The deed of sub-lease was,
however, not registered though it is said that M/s.
Surrendra Overseas Limited, paid a premium of Rs.63,13,000/-
and was also paying a rent of Rs.15,000/- p.a. in
consideration of the said sub-lease. M/s. Surrendra Overseas
Limited, was receiving the rental income from the property
subleased to it. The income so received by M/s. Surrendra
Overseas Limited was sought to be taxed in its hands as
‘income from house property’, to which Surrendra Overseas
objected. The matter was carried to the Tribunal, which held
in I.T.A. No.519(Cal.)/1976-77, that since M/s. Surrendra
Overseas Limited, is not the owner of the said house
property, the income from that house property cannot be
taxed in its hands. An application for making a reference
under Section 256(1) of the Act filed by the Revenue was
rejected by the Tribunal.
For the assessment years in question i.e., 1975-76 to
1979-80, the Income Tax Officer sought to include the rental
income received by M/s. Surrendra Overseas in the assessment
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of the assessee. The assessee objected to the same
contending that inasmuch as it has transferred a portion of
its leasehold interest in favour of M/s. Surrendra Overseas,
the income received from the properties so transferred to
M/s. Surrendra Overseas Limited cannot be included in its
total income. The Income Tax Officer rejected the objection
relying upon Sri Ganesh Properties Ltd. v. Commissioner of
Income-Tax, West Bengal (44 I.T.R. (1962) 606), Sakarchand
Chhaganlal v. Controller of Estate Duty, Gujarat (73 I.T.R.
(1969) 555) and Bengal Jute Mills Co., Ltd., Calcutta v.
Commissioner of Income-Tax, Central, Calcutta (17 I.T.R.
(1949) 308).
4. The assessee appealed to the Commissioner of Income Tax
(Appeals) who recorded a finding that "the income from the
leasehold property should be assessed under the head
‘business’". He did not give any specific direction with
respect to the quantum of income. Pursuant to the appellate
order, the Income Tax Officer passed an order under Section
251 of the Act giving effect to the appellate order. He
assessed the income from leasehold property as income from
business.
Against the order of the Commissioner of Income Tax
(Appeals) aforesaid (dated 5.10.1982) the Revenue filed an
appeal before the Tribunal contending that the Commissioner
(Appeals) was not justified in directing the income from
leasehold property to be assessed as income from business.
According to Revenue, it was liable to be assessed as income
from house property. The Tribunal dismissed this appeal.
The assessee preferred an appeal against the aforesaid
orders of the Income Tax Officer passed under Section 251 of
the Act. The Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) while
affirming his earlier order that the said income should be
assessed as income from business, held that the income
received by M/s. Surrendra Overseas Limited from the
properties sub-leased to it, should not be included in the
total income of the assessee. Against this order, the
Revenue preferred an appeal to the Tribunal. The Tribunal
referred to its aforementioned orders in the appeal
preferred by M/s. Surrendra Overseas Limited and held that
in the absence of a registered deed of sub-lease, the
assessee continued to be liable to tax on the income
received from the said property. It rejected the contention
of the assessee that the said income was only a notional one
and not actual or real income. The Tribunal directed that
(i) the income from leasehold property should be assessed as
income from business and (ii) that the income which has to
be assessed as income from business from leasehold interest,
should be the income as received by M/s. Surrendra Overseas
Limited. The assessee thereupon applied for and obtained the
reference of the above question for the opinion of the High
Court.
5. We must pause here and mention a fact to clear the
ground. While setting out the facts in its judgment, the
High Court has stated a new fact which we are not able to
find either in the order of the Tribunal or in the order of
the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals). The High Court has
observed that "a multi-storeyed building had been
constructed in the said portion under sub-lease and M/s.
Surrendra Overseas Limited, had let out the same to various
tenants and has been collecting rent from such tenants". In
the context in which the said observation occurs, it gives
an impression as if the High Court was saying that the
multi-storeyed building was constructed by M/s. Surrendra
Overseas Limited in the premises sub-leased to it, though
not so stated specifically. We are, however, of the opinion
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that in the absence of any specific statement to that
effect, it would not be proper to read the said observation
as stating that the multi-storeyed complex was constructed
by M/s. Surrendra Overseas. None of the orders of the
authorities under the Act say that Surrendra Overseas had
constructed a multi-storeyed structure in the premises
subleased to it by the assessee. We shall, therefore proceed
on the footing that the multi-storeyed building referred to
by the High Court was constructed by the assessee itself and
that the sub-lease in favour of M/s. Surrendra Overseas
Limited was of certain premises including the said multi-
storeyed building. We are saying so also because in a
reference under Section 256(1), no new facts can be
introduced by the High Court.
Now coming to the merits, we are of the opinion that
the matter must go back to the High Court for more than one
reason. Firstly, it is not clear to us whether the question
referred pertains only to one issue viz., whether the income
received by Surrendra Overseas should be included in the
total income of the assessee or does it also comprehend the
other issue viz., whether the said income should be assessed
under the head "income from house property" or under the
head "profits and gains of business or profession". The
question as framed is capable of being construed both ways.
In this connection, a fact to be noted is that on an earlier
occasion the Tribunal had opined that the said income should
be assessed as income from business. Whether that issue got
concluded then itself or was it also in issue in the present
proceedings? If it was not in issue in the present
proceedings, then why did the High Court refer to the
decision in S.G. Mercantile Corporation Private Limited v.
Commissioner of Income-Tax, Calcutta (83 I.T.R. 91972) 700
)which deals with this issue only? This matter requires to
be clarified.
Secondly, we find that the High Court has not addressed
itself to the main issue upon which the Tribunal had allowed
the Revenue’s Appeal viz., inasmuch as the sub-lease was not
effected under a registered document, interest in the
property does not pass and, therefore, the income in
question continues to be the income of the assessee. It has
also not dealt with the reasoning of the Tribunal that by
accepting the assessee’s plea, the income in question would
go untaxed altogether inasmuch as the said income has been
held not taxable in the hands of M/s. Surrendra Overseas
Limited.
For these reasons, the appeal is allowed the judgment
of the High Court is set aside and the matter is remitted to
the High Court for a fresh disposal of the reference in
accordance with law and in the light of the observation made
herein.