Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, MADRAS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
URMILA RAMESH
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 23/01/1998
BENCH:
S.C. AGRAWAL, B.N. KIRPAL, S. RAJENDRA BABU
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
[with C.A. Nos. 2144-46, 2147-49,2150-52,2153-55, 4204-
9/1982, 3274/84, 5915/83, 2337/84 and 1239-45/86]
J U D G M E N T
KIRPAL.J.
These appeals arise by virtue of a certificate having
been granted by the Madras High Court under Section 261 of
Income Tax Act, 1961 and the common questions of law
referred relate to the interpretation of Section 2(22) of
Income Tax Act, 1961 (hereinafter referred to as "the Act").
Briefly stated, the facts are that the respondents-
assesses were share-holders of Tinnevely Motor Service
Company Private Limited. The road transport business of the
respondents was taken over by the then State of Madras as
arousal of which the said company went into voluntary
liquidation on 28.3.1970. After the sale of its assets the
liquidator distributed the first dividend on 31.3.1970 at
the rate of Rs. 100/- per share, the second dividend on
17.4.1970 at the rate of Rs.40/- per share and the third
dividend on 20.10.1971 at the rate of Rs. 25/- per share. In
the assessment of several share-holders, the income-tax
Officer held, inter alias, that the accumulated profits of
the company on the date of liquidation amounted to Rs.
6,61,065/-. Based on this figure, the income-tax officer
treated 17.5% per share as dividend for the year 1970-
71,57.75% of the dividend of Rs. 40/- per share for the year
1971.72 and 57.5% of the dividend of Rs.25/- per share for
the year 1972-73 as the income of the respective share-
holder under-section 2(22) (c) of the Act.
The respondents filed appeals against the order of
assessment and contended before the appellate Assistant
Commissioner that the sun of Rs. 7,28,760/-, which was the
profit assessed under Section 41(2) of the Act in the
preceding years, and had ben taken into consideration by the
Income Tax Officer in determining the accumulated profit at
the aforesaid figure of Rs. 6,61,065/-, could not be treated
as accumulated profits under Section 2(22)(c) of the Act.
The submission was that there were, in fact, no accumulated
profits in the commercial sense on the date of liquidating.
The Appellate Assistant Commissioner accepted the contention
of the respondents and allowed their appeals. The Income-Tax
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Tribunal upheld the said decision and, thereupon, at the
instance of Revenue, it referred the following questions of
law of the High Court of Madras.
(i) Whether, on the facts and in
the circumstance of the case,
the appellate Tribunal was
justified in confirming the
deletion of the Income
assessed as deemed dividends
under the provisions of
Section 2(22) (c) in the
assesses’s case?
(ii) Whether the Appellate Tribunal
was right in law in holding
that the sum of Rs. 7,28,760/-
representing profits assessed
under Section 41(2) in the
preceding years cannot form
part of the accumulated
profits for the purpose of
Section 2(22) (c) of the
Income Tax Act, 1961 ?
The High Court, by its judgment dated 9.3.1979,
answered the aforesaid questions of law in the affirmative
and against. Revenue. It came to the conclusion that the
profits assessed under Section 41(2) of the Act could not
form par to the accumulated profits for the purpose of
Section 2(22) (c) of the act and in coming to this
conclusion, it followed the ratio of decision of this Court
in Commissioner of Income-Tax, Bombay City Vs. Bipinchandra
Maganlal & Co. Ltd (41 ITR 290). As already noticed, these
appeals arise pursuant to certificate having been granted by
the High Court from the aforesaid judgment.
On behalf of the appellant, it has been submitted by
the learned counsel that if the amount, for which the assets
were sold, exceeds the written down value, then the amount
which is assessed under Section 41 (2) of the Act represents
accumulated profits and on it’s distribution amongst the
share-holders it should be assessed as dividend. Reliance
was placed on the decision in Bishop Vs. Smyrna and Cassaba
Railway Company (No.2) (1895 2 Ch.596) and certain
observations of this Court in Commissioner of Income-Tax,
Madras Vs. Express Newspapers Ltd. (53 ITR 250) and it was
contended that this amount of excess realized over the
written down value was profits and, therefore, was rightly
taken into consideration by the Income Tax Officer in
computing the amount of accumulated profits. There being no
dispute that when accumulated profits are distributed among
the share-holders by the official liquidator during the
winding up proceedings, the amount to the extent of the
accumulated profits is deemed to be dividend and, therefore,
taxable in the hands of share-holders, Therefore the Income
Tax Officer, it was contended, rightly regarded the
aforesaid sum of Rs. 7,28,760/-. which had been assessed as
profit under Section 41(2) of the Act, as being liable to be
taken into consideration in determining the accumulated
profits within the meaning of that expression in Section
2(22) (c) of the Act.
Repelling the aforesaid contention, the submission of
the learned Counsel for the respondents was that the amount,
which was realized by the liquidator on the sale of the
assets, was admittedly less than the purchase price. The
amount, so realized, only represent the return of capital
and the excess of realization over the written down value
could not be regarded as profit under Section 22(2) (c) of
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the Act. It was contended that it is only by legal fiction
that this excess amount of Rs. 7,28.7,60/- received by the
official liquidator is deemed to be income and taxed by
virtue of provision of Section 41(2) of the Act. It cannot
be regarded as profit or capital gain. The learned counsel
for the respondents did not dispute that if any amount had
been received in excess of the purchase price, then to the
extent of that excess amount, the provision of Section 22(2)
(c) of the Act could have been attracted. But, here infact
the company had suffered a capital loss, as the amount
realized by it on the sale of the assets was less than the
purchase price thereof.
These appeals came up for hearing before a Bench of two
Judges of this Court who, by order dated 4.2.1997 9
(reported as 224 ITR 301), were prima face of the view that
the language employed in Section 10(2) (vii) of the Income
Tax Act, 1922 and that employed in Section 41(2) of the Act
was materially different and that it was doubtful whether
the language used in Section 41(2) of the Act was akin to a
legal fiction. It was observed that the decision in
Bipinchandra’s case (supra) was based on the relevant
provisions of 1922 Act while a later decision in Cambay
Electric Supply Industrial Co. Ltd. Vs. Commissioner of
Income-Tax, Gujarat-II (113 ITR 84) was with reference to
Section 41(2) of the Act. This decision was rendered by
mainly placing emphasis on Section 80(E) of the Act. As the
matter was regarded as not being free from difficulty, this
batch of cases was referred to a larger Bench.
In order to appreciate the rival contentions, we may
now
refer to the relevant profusions of Income Tax Act. 1961
with which we are concerned in the present case and the
corresponding provisions of Income Tax Act, 1922 which were
considered in the earlier cases of Bipinchandra and Express
Newspapers cases (supra).
"1922 Act
Section 2(6-A) (a) any
distribution by a company of
accumulated profits, whether
capitalised or not, if such
distribution entails the release by
the company to its shareholders of
all or any part of the assets of
the company;
(b) any distribution by a company
of debentures, debenture-stock
or deposit certificates in any
form, whether with or without
interest, to the extent to
which the company possess
accumulated profits, whether
capitalised or not;
(c) any distribution made to the
shareholders of a company on its
liquidation, to the extent to which
the distribution is attributable to
the accumulated profits of the
company immediately before its
liquidation whether capitalized or
not;
(d) any distribution by a
company on the reduction of its
capital to the extent to which the
company possesses accumulated
profits which arose after the end
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of the previous year ending next
before the 1st day of April, 1933,
whether such accumulated profits
have been capitalised or not;
(e) any payment by a company,
not being a company in which the
public are substantially interested
within the meaning of section 23-A,
of any sun (whether as representing
a part of the assets of the company
or otherwise) by way of advance or
loan to a shareholder or any
payment by such company on behalf
or for the individual benefit of a
shareholder, to the extent to which
the company in either case
possesses accumulated profits;
but "dividend" does not
include-
(i) a distribution made in
accordance with sub-clause @
or sub-clause (d) in respect
of any share issued for full
cash consideration where the
holder of the share is not
entitled in the event of
liquidation to participate in
the surplus assets;
(ii) any advance or loan made to a
shareholder by a company in
the ordinary course of its
business where the lending of
money is a substantial part of
the business of the company;
(iii) any dividend paid by a
company which is set off by
the company against the whole
or any part of any sum
previously paid by it and
treated as a dividend within
the meaning of clause (e), to
the extent to which it is so
set off.
Explanation:- The expression
"accumulated profits" wherever it
occurs in this clause, shall not
include capital gains arising
before the Sit day of April, 1964,
or after the 31" day of March,
1948, and before the 1st of April,
1956.
10. (2) Such profits or gains shall
be computed after making the
following allowances, namely-
(vi) In respect of deprecating of
such buildings, machinery,
plant or furniture being the
property of the assesses, a
sum equivalent, where the
assets a re ships other than
ships plying ordinarily in
inland waters, to such
percentage on the original
cost thereof to the assesses
as may in any case or class of
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cases be prescribed and in any
other case, to such percentage
on the written down value
thereof as may in any case or
class of cases be prescribed.
*
provided that-
a) the prescribed particulars have
been duly furnished;
(vii) in respect of any such
building, machinery or plant
which has been sold or
discarded or demolished or
destroyed, the amount by which
the written down value thereof
exceeds the amount for which
the building machinery or
plant, as the case-may be, is
actually sold or its scrap
value;
Provided that such amount is
actually written off in the books
of the assessee;
Provided further that where
the amount for which any such
building, machinery or plant is
sold, whether during the
continuance of the business or
after the cessation thereof,
exceeds the written down value, so
much of the excess as does not
exceed the difference between the
original cost and the written down
value shall be deemed to be the
profits of the previous year in
which the sale took place.
1961 Act:
S2(22)(a) any distribution by
a company of accumulated profits,
whether capitalised or not, if such
distribution entails the release by
the company to its shareholders of
all or any part of the assets of
the company:
(b) any distribution to its
shareholders by a company of
debentures, debenture-stock or
deposit certificates in any
form, whether with or without
interest, and any distribution
to its preference shareholders
of shares by way of bonus to
the extent to which the
company possesses accumulated
profits, whether capitalised
or not;
(c) any distribution made to the
shareholders of a company on
its liquidation, to the extent
to which the distribution is
attributable to the
accumulated profits of the
company immediately before its
liquidation, whether
capitalised or not;
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(d) any distribution to its
shareholders by a company on
he reduction of its capital,
to the extent to which the
company possesses accumulated
profits which arose after the
previous year ending next
before the 1st day of April,
1933, whether such accumulated
profits have been capitalised
or not;
(e) any payment by a company, not
being a company in which the
public are substantially
interested, of any sum
(whether as representing a
part of the assets of the
company or otherwise) by way
of advance or loan to a
shareholder, being a person
who has a substantial interest
in the company, or any payment
by any such company on behalf,
or for the individual benefit,
of any such shareholder, to
the extent to which the
company possesses in either
case accumulated profits;
but "dividend" does not include-
(i) a distribution made in
accordance with sub-clause @
or sub-clause (d) in respect
of any share issued for full
cash consideration, where the
holder of the share is not
entitled in the event of
liquidation to participate in
the surplus assets.
(i-a) a distribution made in
accordance with sub-clause @
or sub-clause(d) in so far as
such distribution is
attributable to the
capitalised profits of the
company representing bonus
shares allotted to its equity
shareholders after the 31st
day of March, 1964, and before
the 1st day of April, 1965;
(ii) any advance or loan made to a
shareholder by a company in
the ordinary course of its
business, whether the lending
of money is a substantial part
of the business of the
company;
(iii) any divided paid by a company
which is set off by the
company against the whole or
any part of any sum previously
paid by it and treated as a
dividend within the meaning of
sub-clause (e) , to the extent
to which it is set off.
Explanation 1- The expression
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"accumulated profits", wherever it
occurs in this clause, shall not
include capital gains arising
before the 1st day of April, 1946,
or after the 31st day of March,
1948, and before the 1st day of
April, 1956.
Explanation 2- The expression
"accumulated profits" In sub-
clauses (a), (b), (d) and (e),
shall include all profits of the
company up to the date of
distribution or payment referred to
in those sub-clauses, and in sub-
clauses (e) shall include all
profits of the company up to the
date of liquidation, but shall not,
where the liquidation is consequent
on the compulsory acquisition of
its undertaking by the Government
or a corporation owned or
controlled by the Government under
any law for the time being in
force, include any profits of the
company prior to three successive
previous years in which such
acquisition tool place;.
32.(1) In respect of
depreciation of buildings,
machinery, plant or furniture owned
by the assesses and used for the
purposes of the business or
profession, the following
deductions shall, subject to the
provisions of section 34, be
allowed-
*
(ii) In the case of buildings,
machinery, plant or furniture,
other than ships covered by
clause (i(, such percentage on
the written down value
thereof as may in any class of
class of cases be prescribed.
Provided that where the actual
cost of any machinery or plant does
not exceed seven hundred any fifty
rupees, the actual cost shall be
allowed as a deduction in respect
of the previous year in which such
machinery or plant is first put to
use by the assesses for the
purposes of his business or
profession ;
(iii) In the case of any building,
machinery, plant or furniture
which is sold, discarded,
demolished or destroyed in the
previous year (other than the
previous year in which it is
first brought into use), the
amount by which the moneys
payable in respect of such
building, machinery, plant or
furniture, together with the
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amount of scrap value, if any,
fall short of the written down
value thereof.
Provided that such deficiency
is actually written off in the
books of the assesses.
*
41.(2) Where any building,
machinery, plant or furniture which
is owned by the assesses and which
was or has been used for the
proposes of business or profession
is sold, discarded, demolished or
destroyed and the moneys payable in
respect of such building,
machinery, plant or furniture, as
the case may, together with the
amount of scrap value, if any,
exceed the difference between the
actual cost and the written down
value shall be chargeable to
income-tax as income of the
business or profession of the
previous year in which the money’s
payable for the building,
machinery, plant or furniture
became due;
*
Explanation- Where the moneys
payable in respect of the building,
machinery, plant of furniture
referred to in this sub-section
become due in a previous year in
which the business or profession
for the purpose of which the
building, machinery, plant or
furniture was being used is no
longer in existence, the provisions
of this sub-section shall apply as
if the business or profession is in
existence in theat previous year"
It will be appropriate to first consider whether
Section 41(2) of the act contains any legal fiction or not.
The second proviso to Section 10(2)(vii) of the Income Tax,
1922
clearly provides that where the amount for which the
building, machinery or plant is sold, exceeds the written
down value, then so much of the excess as would not exceed
the difference between the original cost and written down
value "shall be deemed to be the profit of previous year in
which the sales took place". Section 41(2) of the Act does
not, however, use the expression "shall be deemed.....",
This, however, In our opinion would make no difference,
Section 41(2) of the Act is a special provision whereby the
amount received in excess of written down value becomes
chargeable to income-tax as income of the business or
profession of the previous year in which the money payable
for the building, machinery, plant or furniture become due.
But for this specific provision, this amount would not have
been taxed as income from business. Building, machinery,
plant or furniture, on which depreciation has been allowed,
would be the capital asset of the assesses. Any sum received
in respect thereof would ordinarily represent a capital
receipt. But Section 41(2) regard this amount as income from
business or profession and of the year in which the amount
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becomes due. Even though the word "deemed" is not used in
Section 41(2) of the Act, as has been used in Section
10(2)(vii) second proviso of 1922 Act, nevertheless this
provision orates a legal fiction whereby an amount received
in excess of the written down values is firstly treated as
income and secondly regarded as income from business or
profession and thirdly it is considered to be the income of
the previous year in which the money payable became due.
That this section creates a legal fiction has been held by
this Court in Cambay Electric Case (supra) where at page 93
of the report, it was observed as under:
"It is true that by a legal fiction
created under Section 41(2) a
balancing charge arising from sale
of old machinery or building is
treated as deemed income and the
same is brought to tax; in other
words, the legal fiction enables
the revenue to take back what it
had given by way of depreciation
allowance in the preceding years
since what was given in the
proceeding years was in excess of
that which ought to have been
given. This shows that the fiction
has been created for the purpose of
computation of the assessable
income of the assesses under the
head "Business income". It was
rightly pointed out by the learned.
Solicitor General that legal
fictions are created only for a
definite purpose and they should be
limited to the purpose for which
they are created and should not be
extended beyond their legitimate
field. But, as indicated earlier,
the fiction under Section 41(2) is
created for the purpose of
computation of assessable income of
the assesses under the head
"Business Income" and under Section
80E(1), in order to compute and
allow the permissible special
deduction, computation of total
income in accordance with the other
provisions of the Act is required
to be done and after allowing such
deduction the net assessable income
chargeable to tax is to be
determined, in other words, the
legal fiction under Section 41(2)
and the grant of special deduction
in case of specified industries are
so closely connected with each
other that taking into account the
balancing charge (i.e. deemed
profits) before computing the 8%
deduction under Section 80E(1)
would amount to extending the legal
fiction within the limits of the
purpose for which the said fiction
has been created."
We are variable to agree with the submissions of Shri
Ranbir Chandra that reference to the language of Section
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41(2) in Cambay Electric case (supra) was only incidental.
It is evident from the reading of the aforesaid passage that
this Court was called upon to construe the meaning and
effect of Section 41(2) of the Act in that case, which it
did. The two provisions namely Section 10(2)(vii) second
proviso of the 1922 Act and Section 41(2) of the Act both
create a legal fiction, difference in language
notwithstanding.
As has been already observed out of the amount
distributed by the liquidator of a company to the extent
that said amount is attributable to accumulated profits is
deemed to be dividend. As to how this determination takes
place has been dealt with by this Court in Commissioner of
Income-Tax, Gujarat vs. Girdhardas and Co. Private Limited
(63 ITR 300) where at page 305, while considering Section
2(6A) (c), it observed as follows:
"There is in the hands of the
liquidator only one fund. When a
distribution is made out of the
fund, for the purpose of
determining tax liability, and only
for that purpose, the amount
distributed is disintegrated into
its components-capital and
accumulated profits--as they
existed immediately before the
commencement of liquidation. In any
distribution made to the
shareholders of a company by the
liquidator, that part which is
attributable to the accumulated
profits of the company immediately
before its liquidation, whether
such profits have been capitalized
or not, would be treated as
dividend and liable to tax under
the Act."
While undertaking this exercise of separating capital
from the accumulated profits, the Income Tax Officer has in
the present case determined Rs. 6,61,065/- as representing
accumulated profits on the basis that the amount of Rs.
7,28,760/-, taxable under Section 41(2), forms part of the
accumulated profits. But does this conclusions follow from
the language of Section 2(22) of the Act, is the question.
Section 2(22) of the Act has used the expression
‘accumulated profits’ Whether capitalised or not". This
expression tends to show that under Section 2(22) it is only
the distribution of the accumulated profits which are deemed
to be dividends in the hands of the share-holders. By using
the expression "whether capitalised or not" the legislative
intent clearly is that the profits which are deemed to be
dividend would be those which were capable of being
accumulated and which would also be capable of being
capitalised. The amounts should, in other words, be in the
nature of profits which the company could have distributed
to its share-holders. This would clearly exclude return of
part of a capital to the company, as the same cannot be
regarded as profit capable of being capitalised, the return
being of capital itself. In this connection, it is important
to examine the decision of this Court in Bipinchandra
Maganlal’s case (supra) that where this Court had the
occasion to deal with the concept of balancing charge. That
company was one in which the public was not substantially
interested within the meaning of Section 23A of the Income
Act, 1922. It computed its trading profits at Rs. 33,245/-
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in the year of account 1946-47, and distributed dividend
according. The Income Tax Officer was, however, of the view
that a sum of Rs, 15,608/-, being the amount realized by the
company on the sale of machinery in excess of the written
down value which had been included in computing its
assessable income, should also be taken into a consideration
and on that basis, the Income Tax Officer passed an order
under Section 23A of the Income Tax Act, 1922 to the effect
that the sum of Rs. 15.529/- being the undistributed portion
of the assessable income of the company, shall be deemed to
have been distributed as dividend. The assessee had
contended that this amount of Rs, 15529/- not being in the
nature of commercial profit, but being a balancing charge
includible in the assessable income by virtue of second
proviso to Section 10(2)(vii), could not be taken into
account in considering whether in view of smallness of the
profits a larger dividend would be unreasonable. In this
context, while considering Section 2(6C) and the second
proviso to clause (vii) of Section 10(2) of 1922 Act, this
Court at page 295=296 observed as follows:
"In computing the profits and gains
of the company under Section 10 of
the Act, for the purpose of
assessing the taxable income, the
difference between the written down
value of the machinery in the year
of account and the price at which
it was sold (the price not being in
excess of the original cost) was to
be deemed to be profit in the year
of account, and being such profit,
It was liable to be included in the
assessable income in the year of
assessment. But this is the result
of a fiction introduced by the Act.
What is truth is a capital return
is by a fiction regarded for the
purposes of the Act as income.
Because this difference between the
price realised and the written down
value is made chargeable to income-
tax, its character is not altered,
and it is not converted into the
assesses business profits. It does
not reach the assessee as his
profits: it reaches him as part of
the capital invested by him, the
fiction created by section
10(2)(vii), second proviso,
notwithstanding. The reason for
introducing this fiction appears to
be this. Where in the previous
years, by the depreciation
allowance, the taxable income is
reduced for those years and
ultimately the asses fetches on
sale an amount exceeding the
written down value, i.e, the
original cost less depreciation
allowance, the Revenue is justified
in taking back what it had allowed
in recoupment against wear and
tear, because in fact the
depreciation did not result. But
the reason of the rule does not
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alter the real character of the
receipt. Again, it is the
accumulated depreciation over a
number of years which is regarded
as income of the year in which the
asset is sold. The difference
between the written down value of
an asset and the price reached by
sale thereof though not profit
earned in the conduct of the
business of the assessee is
nationally regarded as profit in
the year in the which the asset is
sold, for the purpose of taking
back what i had been allowed in the
earlier years."
We are in respectful agreement with the aforesaid
observations and the sense will apply even to Section 41(2)
of the Act. There are cases where this Court had to consider
situations relating to distribution of dividend by company
and it has consistently maintained that profits meant only
commercial profits. In Commercial of Income-Tax, West Bengal
Vs. Gangadhar Banerjee and Co. (Private) Ltd. (57 ITR 176),
the question arose in connection with the payment of
dividend by a company to whom Section 23A of the income Tax
Act, 1922 was applicable. While considering the question of
smallness of profit, the Court after referring to the
observations in Bipinchandra Maganlal’s case (supra) at page
183 observed "that in arriving at the assessable profits,
the Income Tax Officer may disallow many expenses actually
incurred by the assessee; and in computing this income, he
may include many items on notional basis. But the commercial
of accounting profits are the actual profits earned by an
assessee calculated on commercial principles."
Again in P.K. Badiani Vs. Commercial of Income-Tax,
Bombay (105 ITR 642), a three Judges Bench of this Court
while considering the question of "deemed dividend" observed
at page 647 as follows:
"We think that the term "profits"
occurring in Section 2(6A)(e) of
the 1922 Act means profits in the
commercial sense, that is to say,
the profits made by the company in
the real and true sense of the
term."
When, as in the present case, the assets have been sold
at price less than the purchase price, the amounts so
received, apart from being in the nature of return of
capital, cannot represent profits of the company. If the
sale proceeds had been more than the original cost, then to
the extent of the excess amount received it could have been
said that profits had been made by the company on the sale
of its assets. But merely because the amount realized by the
liquidator is more than the written down value but less than
the original cost, it is not possible to hold that the
company has made any actual or commercial profit.
The decision in the case of Bishop’s (supra) can be of
little assistance to the appellant for the reason that the
facts in the present case and in Bishop’s case (supra) are
entirely different. Here, we are concerned with the sale of
capital assets where the amount received is less that the
original cost and the a question is whether the excess over
the written down value can, in such circumstances, be
regarded as profit, whereas in Bishop’s case (supra), amount
of depreciation had been debited to the Revenue account an
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entry which was subsequently reversed and it was held that
the amount subsequently credited must be treated as income
and not capital. More over in Bipinchandra’s case (supra),
this Court has in no uncertain terms stated that the amount
so realized, though taxable under the second proviso to
Section 10(2)(vii) of 1922 Act as deemed income, is nothing
else but a return of capital and we see no reason as to why
we should take a different view in the present case. Express
Newspaper’s case (supra) again was not concerned with a
question which we have to consider in the he present case,
namely, whether the amount received in excess of written
soon value can be regarded as accumulated received in excess
of written down value can be regarded as accumulated profits
under Section 2(6-A) of the income Tax Act, 1922
corresponding to Section 2(22) of the Act. Merely because of
page 254 of the report, it is stated in passing that "the
second proviso, therefore, in substance, brings to charge an
escaped profits or gains of the business carried on by the
assessee" cannot persuade us to hold that this Court had
considered and decided that the amount received on the sale
of the assets does not represent capital but represents
profits to the extent that it is an excess of the written
down value. The Court, in Express Newspaper’s case (supra)
was concerned only with the question whether the amount
could be taxed under second proviso to Section 10(2)(vii),
as then stood, if the sale took place after the close of the
assesses business. This Court came to the conclusion that in
such a case the case the second proviso did not apply. This
decision, therefore, has no application to the present case
granted by the statute and the rules, on percentages not
necessarily related to the actual wear and tear and which
are not capable of accurate determination. In any year, so
long as the asset is in use, the amount of depreciation
allowed would not only be correct but also be legitimate and
legal and the allowance would be strictly in accordance with
the provisions of the act and the rules.
When the asset is sold, on which depreciation had been
allowed in the earlier years as per the act and the rules,
the actual amount of depression of appreciation in fact
becomes known. That calls for adjustment being made to the
depreciation which had earlier been allowed as per the
formula contained in the act and the rules. This adjustment
is made, in the year of sale, by virtue of balancing charge
or balancing allowance. If the realisation of the sale
proceeds and the capital asset is more than the written down
value it would mean that the assesses had been allowed
depreciation in excess of the actual wear and tear of the
asset. It is to withdraw the excess depreciation allowed
that the balancing charge is provided for by Section 41(2)
OF THE 1961 Act. A fiction is created that the excess above
the written down value upto the actual cost of the asset is
deemed to be profit or income of the year in which the asset
is deemed to be profit or income of the year in which the
asset is sold. In actual fact this is neither income or
profit nor a capital gain. The deeming under Section 41(2)
is solely for the purpose of withdrawing the excess
depreciation allowance which had been allowed to the
assessee in the earlier years. Similarly the act also
provides a corresponding allowance called the balancing
allowance where the asset on sale fetches less than the
written down value. By this, more allowance or deduction is
given to the assessee in the year in which the asset was
sold inasmuch as the actual wear and tear was more than the
depreciation allowed as per the act and the rules.
Merely because Section 41(2) and Section 32(1) (ii)
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recognize the extent to which the actual wear and tear and
the capital asset had taken place ant permits, by a fiction,
to make adjustment does not mean that in actual fact, in the
case of balancing charge, and profit has been made. As far
as share-holders are concerned the company had sold the
assets at a price less than the actual cost and the amount
taxable under Section 41(2), from their point of view, can
never be considered to be profit which is or could be
distributed as dividend.
The counsel for the appellant also sought to contend
that by virtue of Section 50 the written down value of the
assesses became the actual cost of acquisition and the
amount realised in excess thereof was capital gain and on
its distribution it could be taxed as deemed dividend. We do
not think that learned counsel can be permitted to raise
this contention for the first time in this Court especially
when the questions of law, s referred, do not cover this
aspect of the case at all. In any event as this amount has
already been assessed in the hands of the company obviously
the same amount cannot also be regarded as capital gains. In
other words both Section 41(2) and Section 50 of the 1961
Act cannot apply to the same amount.
For the aforesaid reason, we hold that the amount
received by the company, which was taxed under Section 41(2)
of the Act did not represent "accumulated profits" within
the meaning of that expression in Section 2(22) of the Act.
This being so, the High Court was right in answering the
questions of law referred to it in affirmative and in favour
of the assessee. We accordingly, dismiss these appeals with
costs.