Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MARSHALL SONS & CO. [INDIA] LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
INCOME TAX OFFICER
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 27/11/1996
BENCH:
B.P.JEEVAN REDDY, SUHAS C.SEN
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
B.P. JEEVAN REDDY, J.
These appeals are preferred by Marshall Sons and
Company [India] Limited [hereinafter referred to as the
"Holding Company"] as successors to Marshall Sons and
Company [Manufacturing] Limited [hereinafter referred to as
the "Subsidiary Company"] against the judgment and order of
the Madras High Court dismissing the writ petitions filed by
them. The matter arises under the Income Tax Act.
The Holding Company had its registered office at 33-A,
Chowranghee Road, Calcutta while the Subsidiary Company had
its registered office at Madras. For the purposes of
assessment under the Income Tax Act, while the accounting
year of the Holding Company was the year ending on 30th
June, the accounting year of the Subsidiary Company was the
calendar year. On 1st December, 1982, two letters were
addressed by the Subsidiary Company to the Income Tax
Officer stating that the company is desirous of effecting a
change in the accounting year. They stated that they would
wish to close their accounts on June 30, 1983 for the
eighteen months’ period [January 1, 1982 to June 30, 1983]
instead of closing the accounts on December 31, 1982. It was
also stated that since the accounting year of the Holding
Company ends on June 30, they too would like to follow the
same practice. In response to said letters, the Income Tax
Officer asked for certain particulars which were supplied.
On February 3, 1983, the Income Tax Officer permitted the
Subsidiary Company to change the accounting year from
December 12, 1982 to June 30, 1983 subject to the conditions
mentioned therein, viz.:
"As a consequence to the change,
the income of the period of 18
months from 1.1.82 to 30.6.83 will
be assessed for the asstt. year
1984-85. Any relief that may be
withdrawn in the future legislation
with effect from asstt. year 1984-
85 will be made applicable to the
entire income for the asst. year
1984-85 and depreciation will be
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allowed proportionately as per
rules.
The asstt. year 1983-84 which is
slipped on account of the change of
the previous year will, however, be
treated as one assessment year for
the purposes of set off of carried
forward losses, relief u/s.80J of
the Income Tax Act, 1961, if any."
In December, 1982, the Subsidiary Company passed a
resolution proposing to amalgamate with the Holding Company
with effect from January 1, 1982. An application was made to
the Company Court and pursuant to the orders of the Court, a
meeting of the shareholders was held on February 11, 1982
whereat a resolution was passed approving the amalgamation
of the Subsidiary Company with the Holding Company, similar
resolution was passed by the shareholders of the Holding
Company on May 7, 1983. The Company Court [Madras High
Court] sanctioned the scheme of amalgamation by its order
dated November 21, 1983 in C.P. No.23 of 1983. On a similar
application filed before the Calcutta High Court, C.P.
No.284 of 1983, that High Court [Company court] to
sanctioned the scheme of amalgamation by its order dated
January 11, 1984. In both the orders,it was directed that
certified copies of the said orders shall be delivered to
the Registrars of Companies at Madras and Calcutta within
thirty days therefrom. Accordingly, certified copies of the
orders were filed before the Registrars of Companies on
January 29, 1984 at Madras and on February 24, 1984 at
Calcutta. The name of the Subsidiary Company was struck off
the register of Companies, maintained by the Registrar of
Companies at Madras, on January 21, 1986.
On November 25, 1984, a notice under Section 139(2) of
the Income Tax Act was issued to the Subsidiary Company
calling upon it to file a return of its income for the
Assessment Years 1984-85 [for the year ending June 30, 1983]
and for 1985-86 [year ending June 30, 1984]. The Subsidiary
Company replied stating that inasmuch as the Subsidiary
Company has been amalgamated with the Holding Company under
a scheme of amalgamation sanctioned by the Company Courts of
Madras and Calcutta and because the said amalgamation was
with effect from January 1, 1982, there was no question of
the Subsidiary Company filing a return for the said two
assessment years. There was exchange of notices/replies
thereafter, which it is not necessary to mention at this
stage Ultimately, the Income Tax Officer issued a notice
under Section 142(1) asking for compliance with it by
February 7, 1986. At that stage, the appellant-company filed
writ petitions in the Madras High Court questioning the
aforesaid notices.
In the writ petitions filed by the appellant, the main
ground urged was that inasmuch as the amalgamation has taken
effect on and from January 1, 1982, the Income Tax Officer
had no authority to call upon the Subsidiary Company to file
a return for any period subsequent thereto. It was submitted
that the scheme of amalgamation has been sanctioned by the
Company Courts at Madras and Calcutta and that, therefore,
any business which may have been carried on by the
Subsidiary Company subsequent to January 1, 1982 was as an
agent of the Holding Company and not on its own account. It
was submitted that the Subsidiary Company had no income of
its own - indeed no existence of its own in law on or after
January 1, 1982. In the counter-affidavit filed by the
Income Tax Officer, he submitted that the amalgamation
became effective only when it was sanctioned by the Court
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and after certified copies of the orders of the Courts were
filed with the Registrars of Companies. His case was that
only when the name of the Subsidiary Company was struck off
the register by the Registrar of Companies, Madras that the
Subsidiary Company can be said to have ceased to exist. The
respondent also stated that, as a matter of fact, the
relevant clauses in the scheme of amalgamation themselves
indicate that the scheme was to take effect only when
sanctioned by the court and only when the shares of the
Holding Company are allotted to members of the Subsidiary
Company. He submitted that this allotment of shares took
place only in June, 1984. The Income Tax Officer further
submitted in his counter affidavit that the said
amalgamation was a device adopted to evade the tax
legitimately due from the Subsidiary Company. He submitted
that while the Holding Company was incurring losses, the
Subsidiary Company was making substantial profits and that
the scheme of amalgamation was merely a device to avoid
paying taxes on the income earned by the Subsidiary Company.
The idea behind the amalgamation, according to him, was to
set off the accumulated losses of the Holding Company
against the profits of the Subsidiary Company. He also
raised objection with respect to the maintainability of the
writ petition on the ground inter alia that the Income Tax
Act provides adequate remedies to agitate all the
contentions urged in the said writ petition.
The High Court dismissed the writ petition with the
following findings:
(1) The date of amalgamation [January 1, 1982] specified in
the scheme of amalgamation is "totally artificial and
arbitrary". Till the beginning of December 1982, the
amalgamation was not even in the contemplation of either
company. Only in December 1982, was the resolution of the
Directors passed proposing amalgamation. The shareholders
meeting took place sometime in February 1983. The scheme
itself contemplates that it is subject to and conditional
upon the scheme being sanctioned by the court under Section
391 of the Act and appropriate orders being made for
implementation of the said scheme under Section 394. The
scheme also provides that its implementation is conditional
upon the shareholders holding not less than 9/10th in value
of the shares in the Subsidiary Company becoming
shareholders of the transferee company. In this view of the
matter, specifying the date of amalgamation as January 1,
1982 has no relevance or meaning. The amalgamation becomes
effective only when the Court approves the scheme of
amalgamation and not at any earlier point of time. In other
words, the operative dates would be January 20, 1984 and
February 24, 1984, on which dates the Madras and Calcutta
High Courts approved the scheme. There is nothing in the
orders of Courts to show that the said orders were to be
effective from January 1, 1982.
(2) From the counter-affidavit, it appears that the
Subsidiary Company was borne on the register of companies
upto January 21, 1986. This shows that the company was in
existence till that date and that it did not cease to exist,
as a fact, on January 1, 1982.
(3) In view of the aforesaid findings, it is not necessary
to go into or express any opinion on the plea of the Income
Tax Officer that the said amalgamation was merely a device
to evade the payment of taxes legitimately due on the income
of the Subsidiary Company. For the same reason, no opinion
need be expressed on the objection of the Income Tax Officer
with respect to the maintainability of the writ petition.
Sri N.K. Poddar, learned counsel for the appellant,
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urged a number of grounds in support of his attack upon the
validity of the judgment under appeal. He submitted that the
view taken by the Madras High Court in United India Life
Assurance Company v. Commissioner of Income Tax [(1963) 49
I.T.R. 956], which has been followed in the judgment under
appeal does not represent the correct view of law. He
submitted that the contrary view taken by the Bombay High
Court in Commissioner of Income Tax, Pune v. Swastik Rubber
Products Limited [(1983) 140 I.T.R.304) (and followed in
later decisions of that Court) represents the correct view.
In other words, the contention is that inasmuch as both the
Madras and Calcutta High Courts [Company Courts] had
approved the scheme of amalgamation as it stood, it means
that the scheme of amalgamation is effective from January 1,
1982. No doubt, the scheme states that it is conditional
upon being sanctioned by the Court but that only means that
whenever it is sanctioned by the Court, the scheme as
approved takes effect. The scheme specifically states that
the scheme of amalgamation is effective from January 1,
1982. Learned counsel submitted that according to the well-
accepted practice prevailing in this country, all schemes of
amalgamation specify a particular date of amalgamation and
unless the court specifies otherwise, the date provided in
the scheme of amalgamation is taken as the actual date of
amalgamation. Counsel submitted that subsequent to January
1, 1982, the Subsidiary Company may have carried on business
awaiting the orders of the Court but it could not do
otherwise and that the business so carried on by it was as
an agent of and for and on behalf of the Holding Company and
not on its own account. Learned counsel also submitted that
no balance-sheet was drawn for any period subsequent to
January 1, 1982 for the Subsidiary Company. No Annual
General Body Meeting of shareholders was held of the
Subsidiary Company after the said date and that, to all
intents and purposes, the Subsidiary Company ceased to exist
as an independent entity on and from January 1, 1982.
Counsel relied upon the language of Sections 391 and 394 and
on certain decisions in support of his contention. Sri
Poddar raised an alternate contention too, viz., if for any
reason, it is held that the amalgamation is not effective
with effect from February 1, 1982, it must be held to be
effective from February 11,1983/May 7, 1983 [the date on
which the shareholders’ meetings were held]. Both these
dates are prior to June 30, 1983 - the last day of the
accounting year [as sanctioned by the Income Tax Officer];
since the income of the company can be said to accrue only
at the end of the year when the accounts are made up - and
not from day to day - it must be held that no income accrued
to Subsidiary Company at the end of the said accounting year
[January 1, 1982 to June 30, 1983]; the income accrued only
on June 30, 1983 and it accrued only to the Holding Company.
On the other hand, Dr. R.R. Misra, learned counsel for
the Revenue, supported the reasoning and conclusion of the
High Court. Learned counsel further submitted that the
scheme of amalgamation was a mere device to evade the
payment of taxes lawfully due according to law and that this
is a good ground on which the Income Tax authorities can
ignore the alleged amalgamation even if for any reason it
can be held that it is effective from January 1, 1982.
Counsel also submitted that the writ petition filed by the
appellant ought to have been dismissed summarily on the
ground that it was premature and that the appellant should
have been directed to pursue the remedies provided by the
Income Tax Act according to law. The High Court, he submits,
ought not to have entered into the merits of several
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contentions raised by the appellant, all of which can be
more satisfactorily gone into after the assessments are made
wherein all the relevant facts could have been gathered.
Let us first examine the position obtaining in this
behalf under the Companies Act. Sub-sections (1). (2) and
(3) of Section 391 (relevant for our purpose) and Section
394 read:
"S. 391. Power to compromise or
make arrangements with creditors
and member.- (1) Where a compromise
or arrangement is proposed--
(a) between a company and its
creditors or any class of them; or
(b) between a company and its
members or any class of them;
the Court may, on the application
of the company or of any creditor
or member of the company, or in the
case of a company which s being
wound-up, of the liquidator, order
a meeting of the creditors or class
of creditors, or of the members or
class of members, as the case may
be, to be called, held and
conducted in such manner as the
Court directs.
(2) If a majority in number
representing three-fourths in value
of the creditors, or class of
creditors, or members, or class of
members, as the case may be,
present and voting either in person
or, where proxies are allowed under
the rules made under section 643,
by proxy, at the meeting, agree to
any compromise or arrangement, the
compromise or arrangement shall, if
sanctioned by the Court, be binding
on all the creditors, all the
creditors of the class, all the
members, or all the members of the
class, as the case may be, and also
on the company, or, in the case of
a company which is being wound-up,
on the liquidator and
constributories of the company:
Provided that no order sanctioning
any compromise or arrangement shall
be made by the Court unless the
Court is satisfied that the company
or any other person by whom an
application has been made under
sub-section (1) has disclosed to
the Court, by affidavit or
otherwise, all material facts
relating to the company, such as
the latest financial position of
the company, the latest auditor’s
report on the accounts of the
company, the pendency of any
investigation proceedings in
relation to the company under
sections 235 to 251, and the like.
(3) An order made by the Court
under sub-section (3) shall have no
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effect until a certified copy of
the order has been filed with the
Registrar.
S.394. Provisions for facilitating
reconstruction and amalgamation of
companies.--(1) Where an
application is made to the Court
under section 391 for the
sanctioning of a compromise or
arrangement proposed between a
company and any such persons as are
mentioned in that section, and it
is shown to the Court--
(a) that the compromise or
arrangement has been proposed for
the purposes of, or in connection
with, a scheme for the
reconstruction of any company or
companies or the amalgamation of
any two or more companies; and
(b) that under the scheme the whole
or any part of the undertaking,
property or liabilities of any
company concerned in the scheme (in
this section referred to as a
‘transferor company’) is to be
transferred to another company (in
this section referred to as ‘the
transferee company’);
the Court may, either by the order
sanctioning the compromise or
arrangement or by a subsequent
order, make provision for all or
any of the following matters:-
(i) the transfer to the transferee
company of the whole or any part of
the undertaking, property or
liabilities of any transferor
company;
(iii) the allotment or
appropriation by the transferee
company of any shares, debentures,
policies, or other like interests
in that company which, under the
compromise or arrangement, are to
be allotted or appropriated by that
company to or for any person;
(iii) the continuation by or
against the transferee company of
any legal proceedings pending by or
against any transferor company:
(iv) the dissolution, without
winding-up of any transferor
company;
(v) the provision to be made for
any persons who, within such time
and in such manner as the Court
directs, dissent from the
compromise or arrangement; and
(vi) such incidental, consequential
and supplemental matters as are
necessary to secure that the
reconstruction or amalgamation
shall be fully and effectively
carried out:
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Provided that no compromise or
arrangement proposed for the
purposes of, or in connection with,
a scheme or the amalgamation of a
company, which is being wound-up,
with any other company or
companies, shall e sanctioned by
the Court unless the Court has
received a report from the Company
Law Board or the Registrar that the
affairs of the company have not
been conducted in a manner
prejudicial to the interests of its
members or to public interest:
Provided further that no order for
the dissolution of any transferor
company under clause (iv) shall be
made by the Court unless the
Official Liquidator has, on
scrutiny of the books and papers of
the company, made a report to the
Court that the affairs of the
company have not been conducted in
a manner prejudicial to the
interests of its members or to
public interest.
(2) Where an order under this
section provides for the transfer
of any property or liabilities,
then, by virtue of the order, that
property shall be transferred to
and vest in, and those liabilities
shall be transferred to and become
the liabilities of, the transferee
company; and in the case of any
property, if the order so directs,
freed from any charge which is, by
virtue of the compromise or
arrangement, to cease to have
effect.
(3) Within thirty days after the
making of an order under this
section, every company in relation
to which the order is made shall
cause a certified copy thereof to
be filed with the Registrar for
registration.
If default is made in complying
with this sub-section, the company,
and every officer of the company
who is in default, shall be
punishable with fine which may
extend to fifty rupees.
(4) In this section--
(a) ‘property’ includes property,
rights and powers of every
description; and ‘liabilities’
includes duties of every
description; and ‘liabilities’
includes duties of every
description; and
(b) ‘transferee company’ does not
include any company, other than a
company within the meaning of this
Act; but ‘transferor company’
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includes any body corporate,
whether a company within the
meaning of this Act or not."
Section 394-A provides that on every application under
Section 391 or Section 394, the Court shall give notice of
such application to the Central Government and shall take
into consideration the representations, if any, made to it
by that government before passing any order under any of the
said sections. Rules 67 to 87 of the Companies [Court]
Rules, 1959 deal with matters provided by Sections 391 to
394. The form in which several notices contemplated by
Sections 391 and 394 and Rules 67 to 87 are to be issued are
prescribed in Forms 33 to 42 appended to the Companies
[Court] Rules.
The effect and scheme of the above provisions, insofar
as it is relevant to the facts of the case before us, may be
summarised thus:
(a) Where an amalgamation of two or more companies is
proposed, an application has to be made to the Court for the
purpose. Thereupon, the Court may call the meeting of
members of the companies concerned. The order of the Court
shall be in Form 35 prescribed by the Rules;
(b) Such notice of the meeting has to be sent individually
to all the members. (The notice and the explanatory
statement under Section 393 are settled by the officer of
the Court.)
(c) Apart from individual notices, the notice of the
meeting has also to be published in such newspapers as may
be directed by the Court.
(d) Only when a majority of the members representing three-
fourths of the value of the members present and voting,
either in person or by proxy, approves the scheme, would the
Court proceed to sanction the amalgamation arrangement. Such
an order shall bind all concerned. Of course, the Court
shall not sanction any such arrangement unless it is
satisfied that the applicants have disclosed all material
facts fully and truly;
(e) the application for confirmation made under Section
391(2) and 394 is also required to be advertised in the same
newspapers in which the notice of the meeting was advertised
and the notice is also required to be served on the Central
Government as provided by Section 394-A.
(f) If the Court is satisfied that the statutory
formalities have been duly complied with and the scheme is
fair and a reasonable one and beneficial to the interests of
the companies and its members, the Court may sanction the
scheme. While sanctioning the scheme, the Court may also
provide for all or any of the matters specified in clauses
(i) to (vi) of sub-section (1) of Section 394. The two
provisos appended to said sub-section provide for certain
pre-conditions which too have to be observed by the Court.
Sub-section (2) provides that where the order sanctioning
the amalgamation provides for any of the matters in clauses
(i) to (vi) aforesaid, they shall take effect as provided in
the order.
(g) Within 30 days of the order sanctioning the
amalgamation arrangement, the company concerned shall file a
certified copy of the order before the Registrar for
registration. This is made mandatory by the second limb of
sub-section (3) of Section 394.
(h) The order sanctioning the scheme is required to be
drawn up in accordance with Forms 41 and 42 of the companies
[Court] Rules.
We may now refer to the scheme of amalgamation as
passed at the meetings of the shareholders of both the
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Holding and the Subsidiary Companies. "Transferor company"
is defined to mean the "Subsidiary company" and the
expression "Transferee Company" is defined to mean the
"Holding Company". The expression "this scheme" is defined
to mean "this scheme in the present form or with any
modifications approved or imposed by the High Court of
Judicature at Tamil Nadu and/or by the High Court of
Judicature at Calcutta". The expression "the transfer date"
is defined to mean "1st January, 1982" and the expression
"the operative date" means the date on which the certified
copies of the orders of the High Courts of Tamil Nadu and
Calcutta under Sections 391(2)/394(2) of the Act shall have
been filed with the Registrars of Companies in Tamil Nadu
and Calcutta respectively. The expression "terminal date" is
defined to mean the date immediately preceding the operative
date. The scheme refers to the capital structure of the
Transferor and the Transferee Companies, the object of the
scheme underlying the agreement between the parties and then
states:
"1. The undertaking of the
Transferor company shall, with
effect from and including the
transfer date and without further
act or deed, be transferred to the
Transferee Company pursuant to
Sections 391(2) and 394(2) of the
Act and vest in the Transferee
Company with all the estate and
interest of the Transferor Company
but subject, nevertheless, to all
charges affecting the same and on
the charges affecting the same and
on the said date, the Transferor
Company shall be amalgamated with
the Transferee Company.
6. (a) The excess of the value of
the net assets of the Transferor
Company, based on the Balance Sheet
of the Transferor Company as at the
date immediately proceeding the
transfer date over its Subscribed
and Paid Up Capital shall, to the
extent of the amount appearing as
Development Rebate Reserve,
Investment Allowance Reserve and
Investment Allowance Reserve
(Utilised) in such Balance Sheet of
the Transferor Company, be the
Development Rebate Reserve
Investment Allowance Reserve and
Investment Allowance Reserve
(Utilised) to the Transferee
Company.
(b) The Transferor company shall,
with effect from the Transfer Date,
be deemed to have carried on its
business for and on behalf of the
Transferee Company, and accordingly
the Profits and Losses of the
Transferor Company for the period
commencing from the Transfer Date
shall be deemed to be the profits
or losses of the Transferee Company
and shall be available to the
Transferee Company for disposal in
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any manner including the
declaration of any dividend by the
Transferee Company after the
Operative Date, subject to the
provisions of the Act.
7. The implementation of this
scheme is conditional upon this
Scheme being sanctioned under
Section 391 of the Act and the
appropriate orders for
implementation of this Scheme being
made under Section 394 of the Act
by the High courts of Tamil Nadu
and Calcutta.
8. The implementation of this
Scheme is conditional also upon
shareholders holding not less than
nine-tenths in value of the shares
in the Transferor Company (other
than shares already held therein
immediately before the amalgamation
by the Transferee Company) becoming
shareholders of the Transferee
Company by virtue of the
amalgamation."
A reading of the above clauses of the scheme shows that
according to the scheme, the entire undertaking of the
Subsidiary Company shall be transferred to the Holding
Company with effect from the transferred date and that the
Subsidiary Company shall be amalgamated with the Holding
Company with effect from the said date. Clause (6) states
clearly that the implementation of the said scheme "is
conditional upon the scheme being sanctioned under Section
391 of the Act and the appropriate orders for the
implementation of this scheme being made under Section 394
of the Act by the High Courts of Tamil Nadu and Calcutta".
Clause (8) further provides that the implementation of the
said scheme "is conditional also upon shareholders holding
not less than nine-tenths in value of the shares in the
Subsidiary company becoming shareholders of the Holding
Company by virtue of the amalgamation". It is one the basis
of the language of clauses (7) and (8) that the High Court
has opined that the scheme takes effect only on and from the
date it was sanctioned by the High Courts of Madras and
Calcutta coupled with the date on which the shareholders of
the Subsidiary Company becomes the shareholders of the
Holding Company as provided in the sub-clauses. The High
Court has opined that the transfer date mentioned in the
scheme viz., January 1, 1982 is "totally artificial and
arbitrary" [for the reason that on the said date neither the
company nor their shareholders had even thought of
amalgamation] and that it has no legal significance.
According to the High Court, therefore, the date on which
the amalgamation should be deemed to have come into being is
not January 1, 1982 but January 20, 1984/February 24, 1984,
on which dates the Madras and Calcutta High Courts
respectively approved the scheme. In other words, the High
Court has taken the view that in the absence of any date
being specified in the order of the High Court as the date
of amalgamation, the date of the order of the High Court
[Company Courts] shall be taken as the date of amalgamation.
For arriving at the said view, the High Court followed an
earlier Full Bench decision of that Court in Sahayanidhi
(Virudhnagar) Ltd. v. A.R.S. Subramanivam Nadar [(1950) 20
Company Cases 214]. The High Court also opined that the
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decision of the Bombay High Court in Swastik Rubber Products
Ltd. is of no assistance to the appellant. On this basis,
the High Court has upheld the validity of the notices issued
by the Income Tax Officer, which notices were impugned in
the writ petition, and dismissed the writ petition. The
question is whether the view taken by the High Court is
correct.
Every scheme of amalgamation has to necessarily provide
a date with effect from which the amalgamation/transfer
shall take place. The scheme concerned herein does so
provide viz., January 1, 1982. It is true that while
sanctioning the scheme, it is open to the Court to modify
the said date and prescribe such date of
amalgamation/transfer as it thinks appropriate in the facts
and circumstances of the case. If the Court so specifies a
date, there is little doubt that such date would be the date
of amalgamation/date of transfer. But where the Court does
not prescribe any specific date but merely sanctions the
scheme presented to it - as has happened in this case - it
should follow that the date of amalgamation/date of transfer
is the date specified in the scheme as "the transfer date".
It cannot be otherwise. It must be remembered that before
applying to the Court under Section 391(1), a scheme has to
be framed and such scheme has to contain a date of
amalgamation/transfer. The proceedings before the court may
take some time; indeed, they are bound to take some time
because several steps provided by Sections 391 to 394-A and
the relevant Rules have to be followed and complied with.
During the period the proceedings are pending before the
Court, both the amalgamating units, i.e., the Transferor
Company and the Transferee Company may carry on business, as
has happened in this case but normally provision is made for
this aspect also in the scheme of amalgamation. In the
scheme before us, clause 6(b) does expressly provide that
with affect from the transfer date, the Transferor Company
(Subsidiary Company) shall be deemed to have carried on the
business for and on behalf of the Transferee Company
(Holding Company) with all attendant consequences. It is
equally relevant to notice that the Courts have not only
sanctioned the scheme in this case but have also not
specified any other date as the date of transfer
amalgamation. In such a situation, it would not be
reasonable to say that the scheme of amalgamation takes
effect on and from the date of the order sanctioning the
scheme. We are, therefore, of the opinion that the notices
issued by the Income Tax Officer (impugned in the writ
petition) were not warranted in law. The business carried on
by the Transferor Company (Subsidiary Company) should be
deemed to have been carried on for and on behalf of the
Transferee Company. This is the necessary and the logical
consequence of the court sanctioning the scheme of
amalgamation as presented to it. The order of the Court
sanctioning the scheme, the filing of the certified copies
of the orders of the court before the Registrar of
Companies, the allotment or shares etc. may have all taken
place subsequent to the date of amalgamation/transfer, yet
the date of amalgamation in the circumstances of this case
would be January 1, 1982. This is also the ratio of the
decision of the Privy Council in Raghubar Dayal v. The Bank
of Upper India Ltd. [A.I.R.1919 P.C.9].
Counsel for the Revenue contended that if the aforesaid
view is adopted when several complications will ensue in
case the Court refuses to sanction the scheme of
amalgamation. We do not see any basis for this apprehension.
Firstly, an assessment can always be made and is supposed to
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be made on the Transferee Company taking into account the
income of both the Transferor and Transferee Company.
Secondly, and probably the more advisable course from the
point of view of the Revenue would be to make one assessment
on the Transferee Company taking into account the income of
both of Transferor or Transferee Companies and also to make
separate protective assessments on both the Transferor and
Transferee Companies separately. There may be a certain
practical difficulty in adopting this course inasmuch as
separate balance-sheets may not be available for the
Transferor and Transferee Companies. But that may not be an
insuperable problem inasmuch as assessment can always be
made, on the available material, even without a balance-
sheet. In certain cases, best-judgment assessment may also
be resorted to. Be that as it may, we need not purpose this
line of enquiry because it does not arise for consideration
in these cases directly.
In the light of the view taken by us on the principal
question, it is not necessary to consider the alternate
submission urged by Shri Poddar.
For the above reasons, the appeals are accordingly
allowed. The writ petitions filed by the appellant in the
High Court shall be deemed to have been allowed. We,
however, make it clear that we have not expressed any
opinion on the plea of the learned counsel for the Revenue
that the amalgamation itself is a device designed to evade
the taxes legitimately payable by the subsidiary company. If
the Income Tax authorities think that, they are entitled to
raise this question in the proceedings under the Income Tax
Act, it is open to them to do so by way of a separate
proceeding according to law.
No costs.