Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
Rm. Ar., Ar. Rm. Ar. RAMANATHAN CHETTIAR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, MADRAS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
27/10/1966
BENCH:
RAMASWAMI, V.
BENCH:
RAMASWAMI, V.
SHAH, J.C.
BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA
CITATION:
1967 AIR 657 1967 SCR (1) 965
ACT:
Income-tax Act (11 of 1922), s. 4(3)(vii)-Interest under
decree Whether capital receipt or income of a recurring
nature--casual receipt What is-Jurisdiction of High Court
hearing reference under S. 65 Limits.
HEADNOTE:
On the death of two male members of a family which owned
extensive properties in India and Ceylon, disputes arose
between their widows and a suit was filed for partition- of
the estate. When each of the two members died, the Estate
Duty Authorities of Ceylon levied estate duty. The re-
ceivers appointed in the partition suit paid the estate
duties under protest and filed a suit questioning the
validity of the duties. The suit -was dismissed by the
trial Court but was decreed by the Supreme Court of Ceylon
on appeal. In consequence of the decision of the Supreme
Court of Ceylon, confirmed by the Judicial Committee, the
Estate Duty Authorities had to refund the estate duty
collected with interest thereon. The partition suit ended
in a compromise and the assessee (the appellant’s branch of
the family) took one third share of the estate. For the
assessment year 1958-59, the total income of the assessee
was assessed and it included the amount received by the
assessee as its share of the interest paid by the Estate
Duty authorities of Ceylon. The assessee objected to the
inclusion of that amount, but the Department, the Appellate
Tribunal and the High Court on a reference, held against the
assessee.
In appeal to this Court,
HELD : (1) The interest paid to the assessee under the
decree of the Supreme Court of Ceylon on the amount of
estate duty directed to be refunded was income liable to be
taxed under the Indian Income-tax Act, and there is no
warrant for treating the amount as a capital receipt being
in the nature of damages for wrongful retention of money.
The Supreme Court of Ceylon ordered the refund of the estate
duty with legal interest thereon; under s. 192 of the Ceylon
Ordinance II of 1889, and the expression "interest" in that
section should be given its natural meaning. [969 E, F; 970
B]
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Dr. Shamlal Narula v. C.I.T., Punjab [1964] 7 S.C.R. 668,
followed.
(2) The receipt was not of a casual or non-recurring nature
(i) It is true that the assessee received the amount as a
lump-sum payment. But that does not mean, that the receipt
is not of a recurring nature. The interest was granted
under the decree of the Court from the date of institution
of the proceedings in the trial court and was calculated
upon the footing that it accrued de die in diem and hence
has the essential quality of recurrence which is sufficient
to bring it within the scope of the Act. [971 F-H]
(ii) A receipt of interest which is foreseen and anticipated
cannot be regarded as casual even if it not likely to recur
again. When the action was commenced it was well within the
contemplation and anticipation of the receivers-plaintiffs
that a successful termination of the action would not merely
result in a decree for the estate duty illegally collected,
but would also make the defendants liable to pay interest on
that amount. [972 A-B]
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(3) It is of the essence of the jurisdiction of the High
Court under s. 66 of the Act, that in hearing a reference,
it can decide only questions which are referred to it or
arise out of the order of the Tribunal. [972 H]
C.I.T., Bombay v. Scindia Steam Navigation Co. Ltd. [1962] 1
S.C.R. 788, followed
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 728 of 1965.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
September 24, 1962 of the Madras High Court in T.C. No. 144
of 1960.
A.K. Sen and R. Ganapathy Iyer, for the appellant.
Sen, A.N. Kirpal and R.N. Sachthey, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Ramaswami J. This appeal is brought by special leave on
behalf of Ramanathan Chettiar (herinafter called the
’assessee’) from the judgment of the High Court of Madras
dated September 24, 1962 in T.C. No. 144 of 1960.
Arunachalam Chettiar (senior) was a resident of Devakottai,
Ramanathapuram District who owned extensive properties in-
cluding properties in Ceylon. He married three wives viz.,
Valami Achi, Lakshimi Achi and Nachiar Achi. Valami Achi
died in 1913 leaving behind her a son Arunachalam Chettiar
(junior) and three daughters. Lakshimi Achi and Nachiar
Achi did not have natural born sons. Arunachalam Chettiar
(junior) died July 9, 1934. Arunachalam Chettiar (senior)
died on February 23, 1938. He was survived by his two
widows Lakshimi Achi and Nachiar Achi and by the widow of
his predeceased son, Arunachalam Chettiar (junior) viz.,
Umayal Achi. After the death of Arunachalam Chettiar
(senior) disputes arose between his two widows and the widow
of Arunachalam Chettiar (junior) Umayal Achi, in respect of
the estate of Arunachalam Chettiar (senior). Umayal Achi
filed O.S. No. 93 of 1938 in the Subordinate Judge’s Court
of Devakottai for administration and partition of the estate
of deceased Arunachalam Chettiar (senior). She claimed a
half-share in the properties under the provisions of the
Hindu Women’s Rights to Property Act. During the pendency
of the suit the Subordinate Judge appointed two Advocates as
Receivers for the administration of the estate. On the
death of Arunachalam Chettiar (junior) the Estate Duty
Authorities of Ceylon levied Estate Duty on what was
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described as the "deceased’s half -share of the assets of
the business carried on by the family in Ceylon". Estate
Duty was also levied on the death of Arunachalam Chettiar
(senior) in 1938. The two Advocate Receivers who were
administering the estate paid under protest to the
Commissioner of Estate Duty in
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Ceylon the Estate Duty claimed from them. The
administrators subsequently filed a suit in the court of the
District Judge, Colombo questioning the validity of the
Estate Duties. The District Judge upheld the levies, but
the Supreme Court of Ceylon allowed the appeal of the
administrators and ordered the refund of the Estate Duty
together with interest. The Attorney-General of Ceylon took
the matter in appeal to the Judicial Committee in P.C.A.
Nos. 16 and 17 of 1955. By its judgment dated July 10, 1957
the Judicial Committee affirmed the Judgment of the Supreme
Court of Ceylon and dismissed the appeals. In consequence
of this decision the Estate Duty Authorities of Ceylon bad
to refund a sum of Rs. 7,97,072/- as interest payable on the
amount of Estate Duty formerly collected. Meanwhile, the
litigation in O.S. 93 of 1938 filed in the Subordinate
Judge’s Court of Devakottai had also reached the Judicial
Committee and at that stage the parties compromised. In
pursuance of this compromise the two widows of Arunachalam
Chettiar (senior) took a boy each in adoption on June 17,
1945, Lakshmi Achi taking in adoption one Arunachalam
Chettiar and Nachiar Achi taking in adoption one Ramanathan
Chettiar. The widow of Arunachalam Chettiar (junior) Umayal
Achi also adopted a son to her deceased husband, a boy
called Veerappa Chettiar on June 17, 1945. The estate was
divided into three equal shares, Lakshimi Achi and her
adopted son taking one-third share Nachiar Achi and her
adopted son taking another one-third share, and Umayal Achi
and her adopted son Veerappa taking the balance of one-third
share.
Ramanathan, the adopted son of Arunachalam Chettiar (senior)
taken in adoption by Nachiar Achi was assessed to income-tax
for the assessment year 1958-59, the relevant previous year
being the year ending March 31, 1958. He was assessed in
the status of a Hindu undivided family on a total income of
Rs. 2,53,828/- and a total tax of Rs. 1,79,412-12 nP was
levied. The assessment included a sum of Rs. 1,93,328/-
which was received by the assessee as his share of the
amount of interest paid by the Estate Duty Authorities of
Ceylon consequent to the judgment of the Supreme Court of
Ceylon ordering the refund of the amount. The assessee
objected to the inclusion of this amount on the ground that
it was not a revenue receipt assessable to income-tax and
that, in any event, the receipt was of a casual and non-
recurring nature falling within the exemption under s. 4(3)
(vii) of the Indian Incometax Act, 1922 (hereinafter
referred to as the Act). The Incometax Officer overruled
the objection and his order was affirmed in appeal by the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner and by the appellate
Tribunal. Before the appellate Tribunal the assessee
contended that the amount of Rs. 1,93,328/- received from
the Estate Duty Authorities, Ceylon was not income, but was
only damages received for the unlawful retention of money,
and even assuming that
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it was a revenue receipt, it was of a casual and non-
recurring nature and, therefore, was not liable to
assessment. The contentions of the assessee were over-ruled
by the appellate Tribunal. At the instance of the assessee
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the appellate Tribunal referred the following questions of
law to the High Court :
"1. Whether the aforesaid interest receipt
constitutes income ?
2. If so, whether it is exempt under s.
4(3) (vii) , of the Income-tax Act as a
receipt of a casual and nonrecurring nature ?"
By its judgment dated September 24, 1962 the High Court an-
swered the Reference against the assessee and held that the
receipt in question was a revenue receipt and could not be
held to be receipt of a casual and non-recurring nature and
the amount was rightly assessed in the year of assessment.
The first question to be considered in this appeal is
whether the amount of Rs. 1,93,328/- received by the
assessee as his one-third share of the amount of interest
paid by the Estate Duty Authorities of Ceylon can be taxed
as income. It was contended on behalf of the appellant.
that the amount constituted damages for unlawful retention
of money by the Estate Duty Authorities of Ceylon and the
amount received by the assessee was therefore, capital
receipt. We do not think there is any justification for
this argument. The amount was paid by the Ceylon Estate
Duty Authorities under the. judgment and decree of the
Supreme Court of Ceylon the relevant portion of which reads
as follows :
"I would therefore, set aside the order under
appeal and substitute a decree (a) declaring
that no Estate Duty was -payable under Estate
Duty Ordinance (Cap. 187) in respect of the
estate of Arunachalam Chettiar (Senior) and
(b) ordering the Crown to refund to the
appellants the sum of Rs. 7,00,402.65 with
legal interest thereon from the date on which
these proceedings were instituted in the
District Court. The appellants are also
entitled to -their costs in this court and in
the court below".
Under the provisions of the Estate Duty Act of Ceylon, as it
stood at the material time, any person aggrieved by the
assessment of estate duty could appeal to the appropriate
District Court naming the Attorney-General as the
respondent. After the Attorney-General is served in the
matter the appeal is proceeded with as an action between the
assessee as plaintiff and the Crown as defendant. The
statute specifically provides that the provisions of the
Civil Procedure Code and of the Stamp Ordinance shall apply
to the proceedings. The petition of appeal should be
stamped as though
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it were a plaint filed for the purpose of originating the
action, and if it is not stamped with the requisite stamps
it may be dealt with in the same manner as if it is a plaint
which is insufficiently stamped. Any party aggrieved by any
decree or order of the District Court may further appeal to
the Supreme Court in accordance with the provisions of the
Civil Procedure Code. The relevant provision under the
Ceylon Civil Procedure Code empowering the Court to award
interest is contained in s. 192 of Ordinance 11 of 1889
which is to the following effect:
"When the action is for a sum of money due to
the plaintiff, the Court may in the decree
order interest according to the rate agreed on
between the parties by the instrument sued on,
or in the absence of any such agreement at the
rate of nine per cent per annum to be paid on
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the principal sum adjudged from the date of
the action to the date of the decree, in
addition to any interest adjudged on such
principal sum, for any period prior to the
institution of the action, with further
interest at such rate on the aggregate sum so
adjudged from the date of the decree to the
date of payment, or to such earlier date as
the Court thinks fit..........."
This provision corresponds to s. 34 of the Civil Procedure
Code in India. Section 192 of the Ceylon Ordinance II of
1889 expressly uses the word ’interest’ in contrast to
’principal sum adjudged’ and we do not see any reason why
the expression should not be given the natural meaning it
bears. In its judgment dated October 12, 1953, the Supreme
Court of Ceylon acted under this section and ordered the
Crown to refund to the appellant the sum of Rs. 7,00,402.65
with legal interest thereon from the date of the institution
of the proceedings in the District Court. We see no warrant
for accepting the submission of the appellant that the
interest awarded by the Supreme Court of Ceylon under s. 192
of Ordinance 11 of 1889 should be taken to be a capital
receipt being in the nature of damages for wrongful
retention of money. In Westminster Bank, Ltd. v. Riches,(1)
the question at issue was whether the amount of interest
awarded by the Court in exercise of its discretionary power
under s. 3 of the Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act,
1934 was-’interest of money’ within the meaning of Sch. ’D’
and General Rule 21 of the Income-tax Act, 1918 and whether
incometax was accordingly deductible therefrom. It was
contended in that case on behalf of the respondent that the
amount though awarded under a power to add interest to the
amount of debt and though called interest in the judgment,
was not really interest such as attracts income-tax but was
damages. This argument was rejected by the House of Lords
and it was held that there was no incompatibility between
the two conceptions and that the amount
(1) 28 T.C. 159.
117 Sup. C. 1.166-17
970
was taxable as interest of money within Sch. ’D’ and
General Rule 21 of the Income-tax Act, 1918. It was pointed
out that the real question in cases of this type was not
whether the amount received was interest proper or damages
but whether it had the quality of income or it was a capital
sum estimated in terms of interest. In the course of his
judgment, Lord Wright observed at page 189 of the Report as
follows:
"The contention of the Appellant may be
summarily stated to be that the award under
the Act cannot be held to be interest in the
true sense of that word because it is not
interest but damages, that is, damages for the
detention of a sum of money due by the
Respondent to the Appellant, and hence the
deduction made as being required under Rule 21
is not justified because the money was not
interest. In other words the contention is
that money awarded as damages for the
detention of money is not interest and has not
the quality of interest. Evershed, J., in his
admirable judgment rejected that distinction.
The Appellant’s contention is in any case
artificial and is, in my opinion, erroneous,
because, the essence of interest is that it is
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a payment which becomes due because the
creditor has not had his money at the due
date. It may be regarded either as
representing the profit he might have made if
he had had the use of the money, or conversely
the loss he suffered because he had not that
use. The general idea is that he is entitled
to compensation for the deprivation. From
that point of view it would seem immaterial
whether the money was due to him under a
contract express or implied, or a statute, or
whether the money was due for any other reason
in law. In either case the money was due to
him and was not paid or, in other words, was
withheld from him by the debtor after the time
when payment should have been made, in breach
of his legal rights, and interest was a
compensation, whether the compensation was
liquidated under an agreement or statute, as
for instance under section 57 of the Bills of
Exchange Act, 1882, or was unliquidated and
claimable under the Act as in the present
case. The essential quality of the claim for
compensation is the same, and the compensation
is properly described as interest."
This passage was quoted with approval by this Court in Dr.
Shamlal Narula v. Commissioner of Income-tax Punjab, Jammu &
Kashmir, Himachal Pradesh and Patiala(1) in which a question
arose whether the statutory interest paid under s. 34 of the
Land Acquisition Act, 1894, on the amount of compensation
awarded for the period from the date the Collector has taken
possession of land compulsorily
(1) [1964] 7 S.C.R. 668 : 53 I.T.R. 151.
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acquired is interest paid for the delayed payment of the
compensation and is therefore a revenue receipt liable to
tax under the Act. It was held that the amount was not
compensation for land acquired or for depriving the claimant
of his right to possession but was paid to the claimant for
the use of his money by the State and the statutory interest
paid was, therefore, a revenue receipt liable to incometax.
The principle of this decision applies to the present case
also and we are of opinion that the interest paid to the
assessee under the decree of the Supreme Court of Ceylon on
the amount of Estate Duty directed to be refunded was income
liable to be taxed under the Act.
We shall proceed to consider the next question whether the
receipt of interest, even if it constituted income, was
exempt under s. 4(3) (vii) of the Act as receipt of a casual
and non-recurring nature. Section 4(3)(vii) of the Act is
in the following terms:
"4. (3). Any income, profits or gains falling
within the following classes shall not be
included in the total income of the person
receiving them:
(vii) Any receipts not being capital gains
chargeable according to the provisions of
section 12B and not being receipts arising
from business or the exercise of a profession
vocation or occupation, which are of a casual
and non-recurring nature, or are not by way of
addition to the remuneration of an employee."
It was argued on behalf of the appellant that the amount in
question was a lump-sum payment awarded under the decree of
the Court and there was no quality of recurrence about it.
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We do not think that this submission is correct. It is true
that the appellant received lump-sum payment on account of
interest. That does not, however, necessarily mean that the
amount of interest is not a receipt of a recurring nature.
On the other hand, the interest was granted under the decree
of the Court from the date of the institution of the
proceedings in the District Court and was calculated upon
the footing that it accrued de die in diem, and hence it has
the essential quality of recurrence which is sufficient to
bring it within the scope of the Act. It was also contended
that the receipt of interest was casual in its character.
The expression ’casual’ has not been defined in the Act and
must therefore be construed in its plain and ordinary sense.
According to the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary the word
’casual’ is defined to mean:
972
"(i) Subject to or produced by chance; accidental,
fortuitous, (ii) Coming at uncertain times; not to be
calculated on, unsettled". A receipt of interest which is
forseen and anticipated cannot be regarded as casual even if
it is not likely to recur again. When the action was
commenced by way of a petition in the District Court of
Ceylon, it was well within the contemplation and
anticipation of the persons representing the estate that a
successful termination of the action would not merely result
in a decree for the tax illegally collected, but would also
make the Crown liable to pay interest on that amount from
the date of the petition till the date of the payment. The
receipt of interest in the present case by virtue of the
decree of the Supreme Court of Ceylon bears no semblance,
therefore, to a receipt of a casual character. It is not
therefore possible to accept the argument of the appellant
that the receipt of interest obtained under the decree of
the Supreme Court of Ceylon was of a casual or non-recurring
nature. We accordingly reject the submission of the
appellant on this aspect of the case.
It was lastly submitted on behalf of the appellant that the
payment of interest . under the decree of the Supreme Court
of Ceylon was made by the Ceylon Estate Duty Authorities to
the estate of Arunachalam Chettiar (senior) and what was
received by the appellant for his one-third share, namely,
Rs. 1,93,328/- was a share in the estate of the deceased and
therefore was received by the appellant as part of the
estate. In other words, the contention of the appellant was
that the receipt was a capital receipt and was not
assessable in his hands. It is not, however, open to the
appellant to advance this argument at this stage because the
question did not arise out of the order of the Tribunal and
no such question ;was referred by the appellate Tribunal for
the decision of the High Court. Mr. A. K. Sen for the
appellant also referred to the decision of the Madras High
Court in Commissioner of Revenue, Madras v. Veerappa
Chettiar(1) which dealt with a share of the same income by
another branch of the family. It was decided by the Madras
High ,Court in that case that the receipt of interest prior
to February 17, 1947 should be regarded as capital and the
rest should be regarded :as income receipt. But the
question of the disruption of the status of joint family on
February 17, 1947 and the effect of that disruption upon the
character of the interest receipt was never raised before
the appellate Tribunal and was not decided by it in the
appeal before us. In Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay v.
Scindia Steam Navigation Co. Ltd.(2) it was pointed out by
this Court that in hearing a reference under s. 66 of the
Act the High Court acts purely in an advisory capacity, and
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it is of the essence of such a jurisdiction that the court
can decide only questions which are referred to it and not
any other questions. In the present case, the High Court
has rightly
(1) 61 I.T.R.256.
(2) [1962] 1 S.C.R. 788 :42 I.T.R. 589.
pointed out that the question did not arise out of the,
order of the Tribunal and was not the subject-matter of
reference to the High Court.
For the reasons already expressed we hold that the judgment
of the High Court is right and this appeal must be dismissed
with costs.
V.P.S. Appeal dismissed.
974