Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 9
PETITIONER:
TURNER MORRISON & CO., LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX,.WEST BENGAL.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
16/01/1953
BENCH:
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
BENCH:
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
MAHAJAN, MEHR CHAND
BOSE, VIVIAN
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
CITATION:
1953 AIR 140 1953 SCC 520
CITATOR INFO :
C 1954 SC 198 (10A)
R 1954 SC 470 (39)
D 1956 SC 634 (12)
D 1960 SC1279 (8)
R 1962 SC 977 (5,7)
E 1965 SC1343 (7)
RF 1968 SC 75 (6)
ACT:
Indian Income-tax Act (XI of 1922), ss. 4 (1) (a), 4 (1)
(c), 42, 43-Non-resident company-Sale in India of goods
manufactured outside India-Person effecting sales in India-
Whether agent of non-resident-Profits received in India from
sales-Whether assessable under s. 4 (1) (a) or s. 42-
Liability of agent-Scope of s. 43.
HEADNOTE:
The Port Said Salt Association Ltd., a company incorporated
in the United Kingdom carried on business in Egypt and had
its headquarters in Egypt. It manufactured salt in Egypt
and part of the salt so manufactured was consigned to Turner
Morrison and Co. Ltd., (the assessee) for sale in India.
The assessee effected sales in India through brokers at
prices approved by the Association, collected the sale
proceeds and received a commission of 21//2% generally on
all sales. After deducting the expenses and commission the
balance was remitted to the Association in Egypt. On these
facts the assessee was treated as agents of the Association
under s. 43 of the Indian Income-tax Act and assessed to
incometax under s. I (1) (a) or alternatively under s. 4-(r)
(c) of the Act on the income derived by the Association from
the sale of salt in India. The High Court of Calcutta held
that the income in question was chargeable to income-tax
under s. 4 (1) (a) as income received in India and not under
s. 42 of the Act:
Held, (i), that, as the assessee was entrusted with the
selling of goods consigned to them for sale, handling the
cargoes, issuing delivery orders, collecting the proceeds
etc., they were agents of the Association, and did not act
merely as a post office;
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 9
Pondicherry Railway Co. v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Mad-
ras (1931) I.L.R. 54 Mad. 691 referred to.
(ii) as the goods were neither imported nor sold by the
assessees on their own account but on account of the
Association the income received by the assessees were
received by them on behalf of the Association and not on
their own account.
Ex parte White (L.R. 6 Ch. A. 397) distinguished.
(iii) As the assessees were authorised not only to sell
but to collect the price from the purchasers, the income was
received by the assessee as agents of the Association.
Butwick v. Grant (L.R. [19241 2 K.B. 483) distinguished,
521
(iv) The fact that the assessors as agents had a right to
retain the expenses incurred by them and their commission
out of the proceeds could not make the sale proceeds
received by them- as agents any the less the property of
their principals.
Colquhoun v. Brooks (2 Tax Cas. 490) and Saiyid Ali Imam v.
King Emperor ([1925] I.L.R. 4 Pat. 210) referred to.
(v) When the gross sale proceeds were received by the
agents in India they necessarily received whatever profits
and gains were lying dormant in them. If on taking accounts
there were income, profits or gains, then the proportionate
part thereof attributable to the sale proceeds received by
the agents in India was income, profits and gains received
by them at the moment the gross sale proceeds were received
by them in India, and s. 4 (1) (a) of the Income-tax Act was
immediately attracted and the income, profits and gains so
received became chargeable to tax under s. 4 (1) (a) read
with s. 3.
Grainger & Son v. ’William Lane Gough (L.R. [1896] A.C. 325)
relied on.
(vi) Where income, profits and gains are actually received
in India s. 4 (1) (a) applies and it is no longer necessary
for the revenue to resort to the fiction introduced by s.
42, and the assessees were properly assessed under s. 4 (1)
(a) and not under s. 4
(1) (c), Section 4 (1) (a) applies to all categories of
assessees including non-residents.
Hira Mills v. Income-tax Officer, Cawnpore ([1946] 14 I.T.R.
417), Burugu Nagayya v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras
([1949] 17 I.T.R. 194) and Pondicherry Railway Co. v.
Commissioner ’of Income-tax, Madras ([1931] I.L.R. 54 Mad.
691) relied on.
(vii) The mere fact that the assessors were treated as
agents under s. 43 of the Act did not make it compulsory on
the part of the revenue authorities to assess under s. 42,
for an appointment as agent under s. 43 is for all the
purposes of the Act and not only for the purposes of s. 42.
imperial Tobacco Co. of India Ltd. v. Secretary of State for
India ([1922] I.L.R. 49 Cal. 721), Commissioner of Income-
tax, Bombay v. Metro Goldwyn Mayer (India) Ltd. ([19391 7
I.T.R. 176), Caltex Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax,
Bombay City ([1952] 21 I.T.R. 278) explained.
Judgment of the Calcutta High Court affirmed.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 41 of 1952.
Appeal from a Judgment and Decree dated 25th July, 1950, of
the High Court of Judicature at Calcutta (Sen and Chunder
JJ.) exercising Special Jurisdiction (Income-tax) in Income-
tax Reference No. 31 of 1949,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 9
522
S. Mitra (S. N. Mukherjee, with him) for the appellant.
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General for India (P. A. Mehta,
with him) for the respondent.
1953. January 16. ’The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
DAS J.-This appeal arises out of six references made by the
Calcutta Bench of the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal under
section 66(1) of the Indian Income-tax Act, two of them
relating to the incometax assessment years 1943-44 and 1944-
45 and the remaining four relating to excess profits tax for
the chargeable accounting periods ending on the 31st
December of each of the years 1940, 1941 1942 and 1943
respectively.
The relevant facts appearing in the statements of the case
are as follows: Messrs. Port Said Salt Association Ltd ,
(hereinafter referred to as "the Association") is a company
incorporated in the United Kingdom and has its registered
office there. The Association, however, carries on business
in Egypt and its head office is situate in Alexandria where
the annual general meetings of its shareholders are held.’
Not being resident in the United Kingdom the Association
pays no British income-tax on its profits. For the purposes
of assessment under the Indian Income-tax Act the
Association has been considered to be a non-resident. The
association manufactures salt in Egypt where it has certain
concessions and the salt as manufactured is sent for sale in
any country where there is a suitable market. Part of the
salt so manufactured by the Association is consigned to
Messrs. Turner Morrison & Company Ltd. for sale in India.
All shipping operations, ie., chartering of steamer,
loading, insurance etc., are effected in Egypt by the
Association who sends the documents to Messrs. Turner
Morrison & Company Ltd. Messrs. Turner Morrison and
Company Ltd. effect sales in India through brokers at the
best price
523
obtainable at or above the prices approved by the
Association. Turner Morrison& Company Ltd.are -.paid
commission at the rate of 2 1/2 per cent. generally on -all
the sales except in some cases where 1 1/4 per cent. is
paid. All handling of the cargoes when they’ arrive at
Calcutta and the necessary disbursements in connection
therewith are carried out and made by Turner Morrison, &
Company Ltd. The sale proceeds are collected by Turner
Morrison & Company Ltd. and credited to the account kept in
their own name with the Hongkong and Shanghai Banking
Corporation. After deducting the expenses including their
commission the balance is remitted by Turner Morrison &
Company Ltd. to the Association in ;Egypt. On these facts
the Income-tax Officer treated Turner Morrison & Company
Ltd. as the agents of the Association under section 43 of
the Indian Income-tax Act and assessed them to income-tax
for the two assessment years mentioned above under section 4
(1) (a) or, alternatively, under the first part of section 4
(1) (c). They were also assessed to excess profits tax for
the four chargeable accounting periods herein before
mentioned.
Turner Morrison & Company Ltd. (hereinafter referred to as
the Agents) preferred appeals against the aforesaid
assessment orders to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner
who, however, dismissed the appeals. The Agents -took a
further appeal to the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal. The
submission of the Agents before the Tribunal was that the
assessment under section 4(1) (a) was bad and that the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 9
assessment should have been made under section 42 of the
Act. The Tribunal, on a consideration of the facts, came to
the conclusion that. the assessment was properly made under
section 4(1) (a) and incidentally the Tribunal also came to
the conclusion that the alternative contention of the
Income-tax authorities that the assessment should be made
under the first- part of section 4(1) (c) was also well-
founded and that section 42 had no application to the case
524
The result was that the Tribunal confirmed the findings of
the Income-tax Officer and the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner and dismissed the appeals.
On the application of the Agents made under section 66 (1)
of the Act the Appellate Tribunal referred the following
questions to the High Court:" (1) Whether, in the facts and
circumstances of this case, the Tribunal was right in
holding that the income, profits and gains derived from the
sale of salt in British India are assessable to tax as
income, profits and gains received or deemed to be received
under section 4(1)(a) ?
And if the answer to the first question is in the negative,
(2) Whether, in the facts and circumstances of this case,
the Tribunal was right in accepting the contention of the
Department that the income accrued or arose or is deemed to
accrue or arise in India and is assessable to tax as
contemplated by section 4 (1) (c)?
(3) Whether the Tribunal was right in the circumstances of
this case in rejecting the contention of the assessee
(applicant) that the income, profits and gains are
chargeable to tax from the sale of salt in British India
under section 42 only?"
The reference came up for disposal before a Bench of the
Calcutta High Court Consisting of Sen and Chunder JJ. The
learned Judges gave the following answers to the questions
:-
" Question (1). The answer is in the affirmative so far as
income-tax is assessed. Excess profits tax, however, cannot
be levied on this basis.
Question (2). The Tribunal was wrong in accepting the
contention of the department that the income accrued or
arose in India. The Tribunal did not hold that the income
is income which should be deemed to accrue or arise in
India. The part of the question which states that the
Tribunal did so is not in accordance with fact. We find
that the income,
525
profits and gains must be deemed to have arisen or accrued
in India so far as excess profits tax is concerned and that
section 42(3) of the Income-tax., Act applies to the levy of
excess profits tax by virtue of section 21 of the Excess
Profits Tax Act.
Question (3). - The Tribunal was right in rejecting the
contention that the income, profits and gains are chargeable
to tax under section 42 only. They are also chargeable to
income-tax as falling within the purview of section 4 (1)
(a) of the Income-tax Act as income received in India on
behalf of the assessee company. In such a case section 42
of the Income-tax Act would have no application."
It will be noticed that the Agents succeeded in their
contentions so far as they related to the assessment of
excess profits tax. The answers given by the High Court,
however, went against them in so far as they related to the
assessment of income-tax for both the assessment years.
The Agents thereafter made two applications to the High
Court under section 66A for leave to appeal to this Court in
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 9
respect of the income-tax assessments for each of the two
assessment years. The High Court certified that the cases
were fit for appeal to this Court and granted leave to
appeal and directed that the two appeals be consolidated.
The Commissioner of Income-tax, West Bengal, however, has
not preferred any appeal from that part of the judgment of
the High Court which sets forth its opinion on the questions
in so far as they relate to the assessment of excess profits
tax. This appeal is, therefore, concerned only with the
answers given by the High Court to the questions in so far
as they relate to the assessments of income-tax only.
The first main contention urged by Mr. S. Mitra appearing in
support of this appeal is that no income, profits and gains
were received in India by or on behalf of the Association.
He seeks to make good this contention on a variety of
reasons all of which are not quite consistent with each
other and some of
526
which way even be mutually destructive. Relying on the
decisions in Narasammal v. The Secretary of State for
India(1) and Pondicherry Railway Company Ltd. v.
Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras(2). Mr. Mitra urges that
no income, profits and gains were "received" in India at
all, for the Agents were nothing but "an animated Post
Office". We are bound to reject this reasoning as unsound
on the same grounds on which the Privy Council rejected a
similar contention in the case of Pondicherry Railway
Company Ltd.(2). In the language of ford Macmillan the
functions of the Agents far transcended the mere mechanical
act of transmitting the sums collected by them to the
Association in Egypt. They were entrusted with important
duties on behalf of the Association, namely, selling of the
goods consigned to them for sale, handling the cargoes,
issuing delivery orders, collecting the sale proceeds and
then to remit the same after deducting the expenses incurred
by them and their own commission. The description of "an
animated Post Office" can hardly. apply to an agent of this
description.
Mr. Mitra thereupon shifts his ground and urges that even if
income, profits and gains were received in India, the
receipt was not by or on behalf of the Association. The
contention is that though the Agents are described as
agents, they were not so in fact or in law and reliance is
placed on the well known case of Ex parte White(3). A
perusal of that case will clearly show that there the person
to whom goods were consigned, together with a price list,
was, by their course of dealings, entitled to sell the goods
at any price he liked and that he remitted to the consignor
of the goods only the listed price, In other words, although
the parties looked upon their dealings as constituting an
agency. the consignee did not in fact sell the goods as
agent of the consignor but did so on his own account and any
price realised in excess of the listed price was his own
(1) [1916] I.L.R. 39 Mad. 885.
(2) [1931] I.L.R. 54 Mad. 691; L.R. 58 I.A. 239.
(3) L R. 6 Ch. A. 397.
527
profit. On the facts found by the Tribunal, which the
learned counsel is not entitled to challenge for the
purposes of’ these proceedings, it is quite: clear that the
goods were not imported by the Agents on their own account
and they never became a purchaser at any stage. They could
not sell the goods at any price they liked, for they had to
sell them at or above the price approved by the Association.
If the sale was at a rate above the approved price the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 9
excess was never retained and appropriated by the Agents as
their -own profits. Mr. Mitra thereupon contends that
assuming that the, Agents had sold the goods as agents of.
the Association they did not necessarily have the authority
to receive payment of the price. Reliance is placed on
Butwick v. Grant(1) in support of the proposition that an
authority to sell does not of necessity imply an authority
to receive payment of the price. The argument is then
formulated that as the Agents had no authority /to receive
the price, it cannot be said that the receipt was by or on
behalf of the Association. This argument again overlooks
the course-of business as found by the Tribunal which
clearly implies that the Agents were not only agents for
selling the salt but also for collecting the sale proceeds.
The third ground urged in support of the first main
contention is that the entire amounts collected by the
Agents were not receivable by the Association, for the
agents were entitled to a portion of it, namely, the amount
spent by them in meeting the handling charges and their own
commission. On the authority of Colquhoun v. Brooks(2) and
Saiyid Ali Imam v, King Emperor(3) Mr. Mitra contends that
the sale proceeds collected by the Agents were not so
completely under the control of the Association that it
could by an act of its own have the entire sale proceeds
actually transferred to it in Egypt. This argument is
obviously fallacious. The concession that the Agents were
(1) [I924] 2 K.B. 483.
(2) 2 Tax Cas. 400.
(3) (1925) I.L.R. 4 Pat. 210; A.I.R. 1925 Pat, 381.
528
entitled to deduct their disbursements and their commission
out of the-sale proceeds clearly implies that the sale
proceeds belonged to the Association, for the ’Agents could
not deduct the dues by the Association from something which
did not belong to the Association. Section 217 of the
Indian Contract Act gives to an agent the right to retain,
out of any sum received on account of the principal in the
business of the agency,all moneys due to himself in respect
of advances made or expenses properly incurred by him in
conducting such business and such remuneration as maybe
payable to him for acting as agent. Section 221 also
confers a right on the agent to retain the goods, papers and
other property of the principal received by him until the
amount due to him for commission, disbursements and services
in respect of the same has been paid or accounted for to
him. The right of retainer and lien conferred on the agent
does not make the amount received by the agent on behalf of
the principal any the less the property of the principal.
The principal is the full -owner and has complete control
over his properties in the hands of the agent subject only
to the latter’s statutory right of retainer and lien. It
follows, therefore, that the entire sale proceeds received
by the Agents in the case before us were received on behalf
of the Association and belonged to it subject to the rights
of the Agents.
Finally, Mr. Mitra urges that the gross sale proceeds were
not really income, for they were only credit items in the
account and that several amounts were to be debited in the
same account and if there remained any credit balance, such
balance alone could be regarded as stamped with the formal
impress of the character of income, profits and gains and
capable of being dealt with as such and income, profits and
gains could be said to have been received only at that
stage. We have been referred, in support of this
contention, to certain observations in the cases, of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 9
Commissioner of Taxes v. The Melbourne Trust Ltd.(1),
Russell v. Aberdeen Town and County Bank(2), Be Rogers Pyatt
Shellac
(1) [1914] A.C. 1001 at p. 1011.
(2) 2 Tax Cas. 321 at p. 327.
529
& Co. v. Secretary of State for India(1), Commissioner of
Income-tax, Bombay City v. Agarwal & Company Bombay(2), In
re Govind Ram Tansukh Rai() and other cases. The
observations in those several cases have to be read in the
light of the facts of those cases and the subject which was
then under discussion. So read those observations can have
no application to the facts of this case. The case Morley
v. Tattersall(4) also relied on by Mr. Mitra is clearly
distinguishable because the liability for the sale proceeds
received by the auctioneers continued to exist even after
the unclaimed balances were transferred to the account of
the partners and, therefore, they could not be regarded as
trade receipts. On the other hand, the case of Grainger &
Son v. William Lane Gough(5) will clearly show that the
moneys received by an agent on behalf his foreign principal
could be regarded as including trade profits within the
meaning of section 41 of the English Income Tax Act of 1842
(See per Lord Herschell at p. 337 and Lord Morris at p.
345). The several passages quoted in the judgment under
appeal from the cases of Neilson Anderson & Company v.
Collins and Taru v. Scanlan(6) clearly indicate that the
"net sale proceeds are included in the gross sale proceeds.
The same principle, as pointed out in Bangalore Woollen,
Cotton & Silk Mills Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax,
Madras(7) is implicit in the decisions of the Privy Council
in Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay Presidency and Aden v.
Chunilal B. Mehta(8) and Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras
v. S. L. Mathias(9). There can, therefore, - be no question
that when the gross sale proceeds were received by the
Agents in India they necessarily received whatever income,
profits and gains were lying dormant or hidden, or otherwise
embedded in theni. Of course, if on the taking of accounts
it be found that there was no
(1) [1925] I.L R. 52 Cal. 1 at P. 31.
(2) [1952] 21 I.T.R. 293. (6) 13 Tax Cas 91.
(3) [1944] 12 I.T.R. 450. (7) [1950] IS I.T.R. 423 at
P. 438.
(4) [1938] 3 All E.R. 296. (8) (1938) 65 I.A. 332.
(5) [1896] A.C. 325. (9) I.L.R. [19391 Mad. 178; 7
I.T.R. 48.
530
profit during the year then the question of receipt of
income, profits and gains would not arise but if there were
income profits and gains, then the proportionate part
thereof attributable to the sale proceeds received by the
Agents in India were income, profits and gains received by
them at the moment the gross sale proceeds were received by
them in India and that ,being the position the provisions of
section 4 (1) (a) were immediately attracted and the income,
profits and gains so received became chargeable to tax under
section 3 of the Act. In our -opinion there is no substance
in the first main contention a umbrated by Mr. S. Mitra.
Mr. Mitra’s second main point is that, assuming that there
was receipt of income, profits and gains within India, such
income, profits and gains clearly arose through or from a
business connection in India and, therefore, the provisions
of section 42( 1) would apply and such income, profits and
gains should be dealt with income, profits and gains deemed
to accrue or arise in India and consequently the inclusion
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 9
of such income, profits and gains in the total income should
be under section 4 (1) (c) for the Association is non-
resident. Mr. Mitra urges that the charging under section 3
is to be " in accordance with and subject to the provisions
of this Act". Likewise, section 4 (1) is also " subject to
the provisions of this Act." This, according to Mr. Mitra,
at once attracts section 42 and such income, profits and
gains being within section 42 must be included in section 4
(1) (c) and the other alternative, i.e., section 4 (1) (a),
is no longer applicable. In other words, according to Mr.
Mitra’s contention, section 4 (1) (a) becomes a dead letter
so far as income, profits and gains arising or accruing to
a. non-resident are concerned. We are unable to accede to
this contention. Section 42 only speaks of deemed income.
The whole object of that section is to make certain income,
profits and gains to-be deemed to arise in India so as to
bring them to charge. The receipt of the income, profits,
and gains being one of the tests of liability
531
where the income, profits and gains are actually received in
India it is no longer necessary for the revenue authorities
to have recourse to the fiction and this has been held quite
clearly in Hira Mills Ltd. v.Income-tax Officer, Cawnpore(1)
and in Burugu, Nagayya and Rajanna v. Commissioner of
Income-tax, Madras (2). This is also implicit in the
decision of the Privy Council in Pondicherry Railway Company
Ltd., v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras(5), to which
reference has already been made. Section 4(1) (a) in terms
is, unlike section 4 (1) (b) or 4 (1) (c), not confined in
its application to any particular category of assessees.
’Section 4 (1) (a is general and applies to a resident or a
non-resident person. The second proviso to section 4 (1),
although it relates to the case of a person not ordinarily
resident, also indicates that income, profits and gains
which accrue or arise to such a person without the taxable
territories can be included in his total income if they are
brought into or received in the taxable territories and
become chargeable to fax under section 3 read with section 4
(1) (a). For reasons hereinbefore stated this contention of
-Mr. Mitra must be rejected. It may be that the
construction we are, adopting in agreement with the High
Court may operate harshly against nonresidents in that
income, profits and gains attributable to business
operations outside India may also be brought to charge as
having been received in India and such consequence may deter
non-resident merchants from doing business in India. These
indeed are serious considerations but the Courts have to
construe the statute according to the plain’ language and
tenor thereof and if any untoward consequences result
therefrom it is for authority other than this Court to
rectify or prevent the same.
The last main point urged by Mr. Mitra is that as soon as
Turner Morrison & Co. Ltd., were treated as agent’s under
section 43, the provisions of section 42 were immediately
attracted. In support of this contention Mr. Mitra relies
on the decisions in Imperial
(1) [1946] 14 I.T.R. 417 at P. 423. (2) [I949] 17 I.T.R.
194.
(3) (193I) I.L.R. 54 Mad. 69i ; L.R. 58 I.A. 239.
69
532
Tobacco Company of India Ltd. v. The Secretary of State for
India (1), Commissioner of Income-tax, ,Bombay v. Metro
Goldwyn Mayer (India) Ltd.(2) and Caltex (India) Ltd. v.
Commissioner of. Income-tax, Bombay City(3), where it has
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 9
been held that section 43 is only a machinery for giving
effect to section 42. To say that section 43 is really only
machinery for giving effect to section 42 is not to say that
section 43 has no other purpose. Section 42 refers to
income, profits or gains accruing or arising directly or
indirectly through or from (i) any business connection in
India, (ii) any property in India or (iii) any assets or
sources of income in India, or (iv) any money lent at
interest and brought into India in cash or in kind or (v)
the sale, exchange or transfer of a capital asset in India.
All these incomes by virtue of this section have to be
deemed to be income accruing or arising within India and
where the person entitled to such income, profits :or gains
is a non-resident such income, profits and gains are made
chargeable to income-tax either in his name or in the name
of his agent who is to be deemed to be for all the purposes
of this Act the assessee in respect of such income-tax.
Section 43, however, refers to a person (a) employed by or
on behalf of, a non-resident, (b) having any business
connection with such non-resident or (c) through whom such
non-resident is in receipt of any income, profits or gains.
A person who comes within one or other of these three
categories, may, under this section, be treated by the
Income-tax Officer as agent of the non-resident and such
person is for all the purposes of this Act to be deemed to
be such agent. The third category refers to a person
through whom the non-resident is in receipt of any income,
profits or gains. The portion of section 43 which refers to
the person through whom the non-resident is in receipt of
any income, profits or gains does not necessarily attract
the provisions of section 42, for the income, profits and
gains received by the person
(1) (1922) I.L.R. 49 Cal. 721.
(2)[1939] 7 I.T.R. 176.
(3) [1952]21 I.T.R. 278,
533
who is treated as agent under section, 43 may not fall
within any of the several categories of income, profits or,
gains referred to in section 42. The languages of section
43 will also attract the provisions of section 40, for that
section also contemplates a person who is entitled to
receive on behalf of the# non-resident any income, profits
and gains chargeable under this Act and may even attract the
provisions of section 4(1)(a). In our opinion there is no
warrant for the contention that an appointment of a person
as a statutory agent under section43 only attracts section
42 for, such appointment is for all purposes of the Act and
not only for the purposes of section 42.
In our judgment, for reasons stated above, the answers given
to the questions by the High Court, in so far as they relate
to the assessment of incometax with which alone we are now
concerned, are correct and this appeal must be dismissed
with costs.
Appeal dismissed.
Agent for the appellant: P. K. Mukherji.
Agent for the respondent: G. H. Rajadhyaksha.