Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAJA RAMESWARA RAO
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX,HYDERABAD
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
04/04/1963
BENCH:
SARKAR, A.K.
BENCH:
SARKAR, A.K.
DAS, S.K.
WANCHOO, K.N.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
CITATION:
1967 AIR 290 1964 SCR (2) 847
CITATOR INFO :
D 1972 SC 260 (19,21,22)
E&D 1992 SC1495 (13,18,26,28,29,30,32)
ACT:
Income Tax-Interim maintenance allowances and commutation
sum-Distinction-Interim maintenance allowances, whether
income or capital-Hyderabad (Abolition of Jagirs)
Regulation, 1358F-Hyderabad Jagirs (Commutation) Regulation,
1359F-Income-tax Act, 1922 (11 of 1922).
HEADNOTE:
The Hyderabad (Abolition of Jagirs) Regulation, 1358F, which
abolished Jagirs, provided by s. 14 that the amount payable
to the Jagirdars under the Regulation "shall be deemed to be
interim maintenance allowances payable until such time as
the terms of the commutation for the Jagirs are determined."
The Hyderabad Jagirs (Commutation) Regulation, 1359F, by s.
3 laid down that commutation sum for a Jagir would be a
certain multiple of its basic annual revenue and by s. 6,
that the commutation sum for each Jagir would be
distributable between the Jagirdar and Hissedars in certain
proportions. Sub-section (2) of s. 7 of the latter
Regulation stated that "payment to a Jagirdar of the commu-
tation sum of the Jagir shall constitute the final
commutation as from the 1st April 1950, of his rights in the
Jagir and if any payment by way of an interim maintenance
allowance under the said Regulation," that is, the
-Regulation of 1358F., "is made in respect of a ’period
subsequent to the said date, the amount of such payment
shall be recovered from the recipient thereof by deduction
from .... his share in the commutation sum for the Jagir."
Held that the interim maintenance allowances paid under s.
14 of the earlier Regulation in respect of a period prior to
April 1, 1950, were revenue receipts on which incometax can
be imposed. They were intended to be quite distinct from
the commutation sum, mentioned in it which sum was ad-
mittedly a capital receipt. The words "final commutation"
in s. 7 (2) of the Latter Regulation did not show that the
interim allowances were part of the commutation sum and,
therefore,
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848
of the nature of capital receipts but they only meant that
the final commutation was the only commutation that the
Jagirdar was to get in respect of his rights in the Jagir.
The observation in Commissioner of Inland Revenue v.
Butterley & Co. Ltd. that such interim allowances were sui
generis and were neither income from property nor from
investment nor did it arise from the right to compensation
but arose from the statute itself which directed it to be
paid, approved.
Shanmugha R Rajeswara Sethupathi v. Income-tax officer,
Karaikudi, [1962] 44 I.T.R. 853. Commissioner of Income-
tax v. Shaw Wallace & Co. (1932) L. R. 59 I. A. 206 and
Commmissioner of Inland Revenue v. Butterley & Co. Ltd.,
(1956) 36 T. C. 411, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION :Civil Appeal No. 420 of 1962.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated April 3,1959 of the
Andhra-Pradesh High Court in Writ Petition No. 17 of 1956
(Referred Case).
C. Krishna Reddy, A. V. V. Nair and P. Ram Reddy, for the
appellant.
K. N. Rajagopal Sastri and R. N. Sachthey, for the
respondent.
1963. April 4. The judgment of the Court was delivered by
SARKAR J.-The appellant was the proprietor of the Wanaparthy
Jagir in the former Indian State of Hyderabad. Certain
payments described as interim maintenance allowances were
made to him under the Hyderabad (Abolition of Jagirs)
Regulation 1358 F, hereafter called the Abolition
Regulation. These payments were brought to tax under the
Income-tax Act, 1922 as income. The appellant contended
that they were capital and not liable to be taxed. He took
various proceedings and eventually
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a case was stated to the High Court of Andhra Pradesh for
decision of the following question :
"Whether the interim maintenance allowances
received by the assessee under the Hyderabad
(Abolition of Jagirs) Regulation, 1358 Fasli,
are income and therefore liable to tax."
The question was answered against the appellant by the High
Court and hence this appeal.
The point at issue is whether these payments constituted
capital or income. The answer to this question will have to
be found in the Abolition Regulation under which the
payments were made and another Regulation called the
Hyderabed jagirs (Commutation) Regulation, 1359F (hereafter
called the Commutation Regulation) which was intended to be
supplementary to the earlier Regulation. The material
provisions of these Regulations may, therefore, be referred
to at once.
We shall first take up the Abolition Regulation. Under s. 6
of this Regulation, the jagirs were included in "Diwani"
(Government) as from the "appointed day" to be fixed under
s. 5 and thereupon the powers, rights and liabilities of the
Jagirdars in relation to the Jagirs ceased to be exercisable
by or against them. Section 3 provided for the appointment
of an officer called the Jagir Administrator. Section 8
provided for payment to Government of a specified percentage
of the gross revenue, which for practical purposes may be
taken to be the total realisation or income of the Jagir,
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for meeting the administration expenses. Section 13
required a separate account in respect of each Jagir to be
kept by the Jagir Administrator. Section 10 provided for
payment to the Jagirdar out of the income of the jagir of a
sum equivalent to half of
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what he was getting before the commencement of the
Regulation, as remuneration for managing the Jagir and for
distribution of a like sum among the Hissedars (sharers in
the Jagir income with the Jagirdar) in a certain proportion.
Section 11 provided that the net income of the Jagir
calculated in the manner prescribed, would be distributed
between the Jagirdar and Hissedars in the proportion in
which they were entitled to the income under the law in
force before the commencement of the Regulation. Section 14
provided that the amounts payable to jagirdars under
Regulation "shall be deemed to be interim maintenance
allowances payable until such time as the terms for the
commutation of Jagirs are determined." These are the interim
maintenance allowances with regard to which the question has
arisen in this case.
We turn now to the Commutation Regulation. Section 3 of
this Regulation provided that the commutation sum for a
Jagir would be a certain multiple of its basic annual
revenue, the method of calculation of which was laid down in
s. 4. Section 5 stated that the commutation sum for every
Jagir would be determined by the Jagir Administrator.
Section 6 said that the commutation sum for each Jagir would
be distributable between the jagirdar and Hissedars in like
proportion as the income was distributable between them
under s. 1 1 of the Abolition Regulation subject to certain
deductions to which it is unnecessary to refer.
It is not in dispute that as a result of the Regulations the
appellant’s rights in his Jagir were extinguished. The
appellant contends that he was divested of the Jagir as from
the "appointed day" fixed under s. 5 which was, it is said,
September 15, 1949. It appears that a somewhat different
view was taken in Shanmugha Rajeswara Sethupathi v. Income-
tax officer, Karaikudi (1). We do not think
(1) [1962] 44 I,T.R. 853,
851
it necessary in the present case to fix the precise point of
time when the Jagir was taken away from the appellant and we
will proceed on the basis that the appellant’s contention is
the correct one.
As we have earlier said, the real point for decision is
whether the payments were of income nature or of the nature
of capital. If they were made as compensation for the
deprivation of the Jagir, they would undoubtedly be capital.
It may be stated that it is common case of the parties that
,-the commutation sum payable under the Commutation
Regulation was paid as such compensation.
The first thing that we wish to observe is that the two
Regulations made a clear distinction between the interim
maintenance allowances and the commutation sum. The
allowances were paid under the Abolition Regulation which
said nothing about the right to the payment of the
commutation sum; that right was created only by the
Commutation Regulation. The allowances were measured as a
fraction of the current income while the commutation was a
multiple of annual revenue. The allowances were recurring
payments for a certain time while the Commutation sum was a
fixed sum payable at once or by instalments. Then we find
that under s. 14 of the Abolition Regulation the interim
maintenance allowances were "payable until such time as the
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terms for the commutation of Jagirs are determined". In
other words, after the terms for commutation are determined,
the interim maintenance allowances are to cease to be
payable. It follows that when compensation begins to be
paid, the payments of the maintenance allowances have to
stop.
Lastly, we find this distinction emphasised in sub-sec. (2)
of S. 7 of the Commutation Regulation. That provision is in
these terms :
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"The payment to a Jagirdar or Hissedar of his
appropriate share in the commutation sum of
the Jagir shall constitute the final
commutation as from April 1, 1950, of his
rights in the Jagir and if any payment by way
of an interim maintenance allowance under the
said Regulation is made in respect of a period
the whole or part of which is subsequent to
the said date, the amount of such payment or,
as the case may be, the appropriate proportion
of such amount shall be recovered from the
recipient thereof by deduction from the first
payment made to him on account of his share in
the commutation sum for the Jagir".
The words "said Regulation" in this subsection refer to the
Abolition Regulation.
It seems to us that though somewhat cumberously worded, the
intention behind the sub-section is not in any serious
doubt. Its object was to provide that the date of
determination of the terms of commutation mentioned in s. 14
of the Abolition Regulation would be April 1, 1950 and no
interim maintenance allowances would be paid in respect of
any period after that date but thereafter only commutation
sum would be paid. Now this commutation sum is the sum
determined as provided in ss. 3 and 4 of the Commutation
Regulation. The interim maintenance allowances are no part
of the commutation sum so determined. Furthermore, the sub-
section expressly provides that if any interim maintenance
allowance is paid in respect of a period subsequent to April
1, 1950, that payment is to be recovered out of the
commutation sum payable under this, Regulation. Quite
clearly, therefore, only what was paid in respect’ of the
period prior to April 1, 1950 was to be interim maintenance
allowance, and what was thereafter paid was towards the
commutation SUM.
853
It was contended on behalf of the appellant that the words
""final commutation" in the subsection showed that the
interim maintenance allowances were also part of the
commutation sum. It seems to us impossible to accept this
contention for that would make the two the same, which, as
we have shown earlier, they could not be. "’Final
commutation" meant the only commutation that the Jagirdar
was to get in respect of his rights in the Jagir, that is to
say, he was to get no other commutation. In fact, as
already stated, if any interim maintenance allowance was
paid after the commutation became payable, that was to be
recovered from and not added to the commutation.
We have earlier said that it is not in dispute that the
commutation sum was paid as compensation for the loss of the
Jagir and was, therefore, capital which was not liable to be
taxed. We thus find that the Regulations make a clear
distinction between the commutation sum or compensation and
the interim maintenance allowances. These allowances were
obviously not intended to be compensation.
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The question then arises, if these allowances were not paid
as compensation for the loss of the Jagir and were not of
the nature of capital as such, what was their nature ? We
think that if we have regard to the provisions of the
Regulations under which they were paid, as we must, there is
no doubt that they were of the nature of income. No doubt
they were not income of any of the kinds that are commonly
found, but are, as Lord Radcliffe said in a case to which we
shall later refer, Sui generis. We proceed now to discuss
why we think they were income.
These allowances, we notice, were treated by the Regulations
as something other than the compensation for the loss of the
Jagir. They were, therefore,
854
not treated as capital as representing compensation for the
Jagir. If they were not capital for the reason that they
were not compensation for the loss of the Jagir, we find no
ground on which we can say they were capital. It would
follow that they must be income and taxable as such. They
were certainly not windfall for a right to them was created
by, the Abolition Regulation, a right which under s. 21
could be enforced in a civil court. Then we find that these
allowances were payable with a regularity and were of a
recurring nature, both of which are recognised as
characteristic of income : see the Commissioner of Income-
tax v. Shaw Wallace & Co. (1). Next. we observe that the
Regulation advisedly called the payments "maintenance allow-
ances," a nomenclature peculiarly suited to payments of the
nature of income. Lastly, it may be pointed out that the
payments were made for the interim period between the time
when the income of the Jagir began to be collected by the
Government through the Jagir Administrator and April 1,
1950, when the compensation for the loss of the Jagir first
became payable. The payments were, therefore, by way of
compensation for the loss of income in the interim period.
In the words of Jenkins L. J. as will appear later, they
were "income-compensation" and therefore of the income
nature.
We think for all these reasons the interim maintenance
allowances were taxable income. If a source had to be found
for them, the Regulation had to be held to be the source.
A case very near to the one in hand and a case that throws a
great deal of light on the problem that faces us in the
Commissioner of Inland Revenue v. Butterley Co. Ltd. (2).
We think a detailed reference to it can be very profitably
made. That case was concerned with the English Coal
Industry
(1) (1932) L.R. 59 I.A, 206.
(2) (1936) SOT,(], 411,
855
Nationalisation Act, 1946, which nationalised the collieries
and divested all owners of them and the businesses
concerning them. Under this Act and the Coal Industry (No.
2) Act, 1949, the assessee company became entitled to
compensation for the assets transferred to the Government
and to certain payments called "revenue payments" and
"interim income" for the period between what was called the
primary vesting date and the date on which compensation for
the assets taken away was fully satisfied. The question was
with regard to these payments. The assessee company had
contended in the beginning that the payments were not of
income nature at all. In the Court of appeal however that
contention was abandoned and it was conceded that the
payments were of income nature. The only dispute was
whether they were income chargeable to profits tax as
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profits of a trade or business carried on by the assessee
company. The decision was that the payments were not income
or profit of any trade or business.
We will first read from a part of the judgment of Jenkins L.
J. in the Court of Appeal. He said (p. 437), "The Act of
1946 studiously avoids describing the interim income as
interest on or income of the compensation." Then the learned
Lord justice pointed out that the payments were to be
calculated by reference to the past earning of the concern
and bore no relation at all to the amount of the
compensation and proceeded to observe, (p. 438), ,,I find it
difficult to hold that the interim income payable under
these Acts, defined and measured in the way it is, can
properly be described as income of the compensation and
there is, I think, much to be said for the view that, albeit
itself in the nature of income, it is not income, of the
compensation but rather income-compensation, if I may use
that expression, that is to say, a series of periodical
payments an independent right to
856
which is conferred by the Act by way of compensation for the
loss of income sustained in respect of the period between
the primary vesting date and the ascertainment and
satisfaction of the compensation." We think these
observations can be applied in all their force to the
payments with which the present case is concerned. Here
also the interim payments had no relation to the commutation
sum, that is, compensation for the loss of the Jagir. It is
clear that Jenkins L. J. was treating the payment as a
species of income and we also think that the payments in the
present case cannot be treated otherwise.
There are some observations in speech of Lord Radcliffe when
he dealt with this case on appeal to the House of Lords
which we think may be usefully quoted here. He observed,
(p. 449-50), "The Coal Industry Nationalisation Act, 1946,
legislated for a revolution in the coal industry of this
country.................. These interim income payments
which are now in question are the product of that
disturbance and adjustment, and it does not seem to me at
all surprising that they cannot well be related to any of
those other kinds of receipt which normally come into the
accounts of a company conducting a trade or business. They
are sui generis and it would, I think, lead to confusion if
they were described in any terms except those which are
strictly applicable to their own special circumstances.
Thus, they were paid because the nationalisation Statute
decreed that they should be paid. They would not have been
payable to the Respondents if they had not been conducting a
colliery business at the vesting date, and in that sense, of
course, they were paid to and received by the Respondents
for no other reason than that they had been owners of
colliery assets and had been in the colliery trade. Equally
of course, the interim income payments that the Respondents
got were fixed either as a
857
proportion of the profits which they had been earning in the
colliery trade before the date of vesting or by a
computation of interest at varying rates upon sums received
from time to time by way of capital compensation. But, when
all that is said, the fact remains that the only
identifiable origin of the payments was the Statute which
authorised them and at the same time defined their terms and
methods of computing. It is natural enough that moneys paid
in this way, described by their instrument of creation as
’interim income’, should be regarded as inherently of an
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income nature when the question arises of subjecting them to
any tax that bears upon income as a chargeable subject. But
I do not think that in any proper use of the words can they
be said to arise from a source of income, in the sense that
income or profits’ for the moment I am not concerned with
any difference between the two terms can be said to arise
from a trade or a business or an investment or some other
piece of property that admits of use or enjoyments." He also
observed, (451-52), "I have already explained why they were
not income from investments. By a similar process of
reasoning they were not, in my view, income from property.
It does not clear up the matter to say that the right to
compensation-and, for that matter, the right to interim
income--was a chose in action. The interim income payments
did not arise from the right to compensation as income
arises from income-producing property. They arose from the
Statute itself which decreed that they were to be paid."
We venture to think that the observations that we have read
from the English case in the preceding paragraphs give the
correct picture of the nature of the payments. It was found
unarguable that the interim payments under the English Acts
were not of income nature. The payments with which we are
concerned were made under statutory provisions
858
completely parimateria with those under consideration in the
English case. We, therefore, hold that the interim payments
to the appellant were income and liable to tax.
It appears that there were in this case four payments
totalling Rs. 1,47,857-4-0 of which the first was made on
January 25, 1950 and the other three on April 10, 1950, July
3, 1950 and August 3, 1950, respectively. It does not
appear to have been found whether the last three payments,
which it will be noticed had been made after April 1, 1950,
were in respect of the commutation sum or interim
maintenance. It was for that reason that the Tribunal
directed the Income-tax officer concerned to institute an
enquiry as to the nature of these three payments.
Apparently, the High Court approved of that order. We also
take the same view. We think that the question was answered
correctly by the High Court by saying that the interim
maintenance allowance received by the assessee which do not
form part of the commutation amount are income and are
liable to be taxed and that the payments made subsequent to
April 1, 1950, towards commutation amount are not income and
not liable to be taxed.
The result is that this appeal fails and is accordingly
dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.
859