Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX,MADHYA PRADESH AND BHOPAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MESSRS. VYAS & DOTIWALA
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
03/10/1958
BENCH:
SARKAR, A.K.
BENCH:
SARKAR, A.K.
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
CITATION:
1959 AIR 90 1959 SCR Supl. (1) 39
CITATOR INFO :
R 1961 SC1261 (7)
ACT:
Income-tax-Assessees financing cloth distribution scheme-
Profits, if accrue to assessees-Agreement to utilise Profits
for charitable Purposes-Such Profits, if exempt from
taxation-lndian Income-tax Act, 1922 (XI Of 1922), s. 4(3)
(i-a).
HEADNOTE:
The Deputy Commissioner of Amraoti, evolved a scheme for the
distribution of standard cloth. The assessees agreed to
finance the scheme without charging any interest and were
appointed financiers and distributors. The orders for the
cloth were placed by the Government with the mills and the
cloth was delivered to the assessees upon their paying the
value of the cloth together with 6-1/4% of the ex-mill
price. The Deputy Commissioner paid 4-1/2% of the ex-mill
price to the asses-sees for contingent expenses of working
the scheme. The assessees distributed the cloth at prices
fixed by the Deputy Commissioner through the Tehsildars and
the Deputy Commissioner was responsible to the assessees for
the sale proceeds receivable from the Tehsildars. Out of
the sale proceeds the Deputy Commissioner paid to the
assessees whatever they had advanced on the cloth. The
profits from the scheme were agreed to be utilised for such
charitable purposes as might be decided by the Deputy
Commissioner. The assessees contended that the income was
not their income and that it was exempt from taxation under
s. 4(3) (i-a) of the Income-tax Act.
Held, that the profits were income which accrued to the
assessees. The assessees worked the scheme and such working
produced the profits. The fact of the control of the Deputy
Commissioner could not prevent the working of the scheme by
the assessees from being a business carried on by them. The
provisions in the agreement that the Deputy Commissioner
guaranteed the payment by the Tehsildars of the price due
from them, and that the profits would be devoted to charity
decided by the Deputy Commissioner and the claim for
exemption under s. 4(3) (i-a) all indicated that the
assessees were the owners of the business.
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Held further, that the profits were not exempt from taxation
under s. 4(3) (i-a), as the business was not carried on
behalf of any religious or charitable institution.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 222 of 1956.
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Appeal by special leave from the judgment and decree dated
December 8, 1953, of the former Nagpur High Court in Misc.
Civil Case No. 55 of 1950.
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General of India, K. K.
Rajagopala Sastri, R. H. Dhebar and D. Gupta, for the
appellant.
The respondent did not appear.
1958. October 3. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SARKAR J.-This is an appeal brought by special leave against
the judgment of the High Court at Nagpur, delivered on a
reference under s. 66(1) of the Income-tax Act. The appeal
is by the Commissioner of Income-tax, Madhya Pradesh and
Bhopal. The respondents are the assessees Vyas & Dotiwala.
The respondents have not appeared in this appeal. We shall
presently set out the facts but before we do that, we wish
to state that the assessment years concerned were 1945-46
and 1946-47. Though there were two separate assessment
orders in respect of these years, ultimately when they came
up before the Appellate Tribunal they were consolidated into
one appeal. The appeal before us likewise concerns both
these assessment years.
It appears that in or about July 1943 when considerable
difficulty was being felt about cloth, the Deputy
Commissioner, Amraoti, evolved a scheme to solve that
difficulty. Under that scheme Kisanlal Vyas and a firm
called Edulji Framji Dotiwala who have in these proceedings
been referred to as Dotiwala, undertook to finance the
scheme without charging any interest or profit and were
appointed as financiers and also distributors of a variety
of cloth called standard cloth for the town and camp of
Amraoti and certain areas in the interior It is not
necessary to set out the various details of the scheme and
it will be sufficient to state that Vyas and Dotiwala, who
as an association of persons are the assessees concerned,
agreed to open an account in the Imperial Bank of India to
be operated by them out of which the purchases
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of the cloth were to be financed. The orders for the cloth
were to be placed by the Government with the mills and on
the arrival of a consignment of cloth, the assessees were to
pay to the Deputy Commissioner, Amraoti, the value of the
consignment together with 6-1/4 per cent. of the ex-mill
price. The consignment was thereupon to be opened and its
contents checked by the assessees and the officials and
delivered to the assessees on their granting a receipt for
the same. The Deputy Commissioner would pay 4-1/2 per cent.
of the ex-mill price to the assessees out of the amount paid
by the latter as aforesaid for contingent expenses of
working the scheme. The scheme provided that the contingent
expenses were not to exceed 3 percent. of the ex-mill price.
The cloth coming to the hands of the assessees was to be
distributed in Amraoti town and camp through a shop to be
opened by the assessees and in the interiors of the area
concerned through Tehsildars with Patils under them. The
substance of the arrangement of distribution appears to have
been that it would be entirely under the control of the
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Deputy Commissioner who made himself responsible to the
assessees for the sale proceeds receivable from the
Tehsildars. The Deputy Commissioner was to decide the price
for which the cloth was to be sold to the consumers and also
the persons entitled to buy the cloth. Out of the sale
proceeds the Deputy Commissioner was to pay to the assessees
whatever they had advanced on account of the cloth. The
most important provision in this scheme is para. 14 which is
set out below.
Profits resulting from the scheme shall be utilised for such
charitable purposes as may be decided on by the Deputy
Commissioner in consultation with the advisory committee
appointed to supervise the scheme.
It appears that the books of the assessees showed Rs.
34,737/- for the assessment year 1945-46 and Rs. 17,682/-
for the assessment year 1946-47 as profits earned in working
the scheme. The Income-tax Officer assessed the assessees
to tax on the profits so earned.
6
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The assessment orders made by this officer would appear to
show that the only point urged by the assessees before him
against the assessment was that the income was exempt from
taxation under s. 4(3)(i-a) of the Indian Income-tax Act,
1922. The officer rejected this contention. The assessees
went up in appeal to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner,
before whom the same -contention appears to have been
repeated. The Appellate Commissioner confirmed the order of
the Income-tax Officer. The assessees then appealed to the
Appellate Tribunal. The Tribunal held-that the assessees
had objected to the assessment before the Income-tax Officer
on two grounds, namely, that the income was Dot the income
of the assessees and that the income was exempt from
taxation under s. 4(3)(i-a), as appeared from their letter
dated January 22, 1947. One of these alone had been dealt
with by that officer, as appears from his order earlier
referred to. The Appellate Tribunal agreed with the conten-
tion of the assessees that they were not liable to be taxed
on the profits because these did not form their income. The
Tribunal was of the view that the scheme was the scheme of
the Deputy Commissioner and completely under his control;
that the assessees were merely the financiers and also
managers under the Deputy Commissioner to carry out the
scheme and that the assessees only helped to work the
scheme. The Tribunal held that the profits that may have
resulted from such working were not therefore theirs nor
represented their income and the assessees could not be
assessed to income-tax thereon. In this view of the matter
the Tribunal set aside the orders of assessment.
Thereafter, on the application of the revenue authorities
the Tribunal referred the following question to the High
Court under s. 66(1) of the Act:
Whether on the facts of this case any income accrued to
Messrs. Vyas and Dotiwala as the result of their
associating themselves as financiers in the scheme for the
distribution of standard cloth; and, if so whether such
income was assessable in their hands.
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On that reference the High Court held that under the
charging section in the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, namely,
s. 4, it was necessary for the revenue authorities to prove
that the assessees received or should be deemed to have
received income or profit from the scheme during the
relevant period. It held that the asseess had not actually
received any such income and further that the expression "
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deemed to be received " in that section only meant deemed by
the provision of the Act to be received, and no such
provisions of the Act had been relied upon on behalf of the
revenue authorities. In this view of the matter the High
Court answered the question framed, in the negative.
The learned Solicitor-General contends that the High Court
failed to appreciate the real question. He says that the
question was not whether income was received or deemed to be
received but whether income had accrued and the point for
decision was, as appeared from the judgment of the Tribunal,
whether the profits formed the income of the assesses. We
agree with this criticism of the judgment of the High Court.
On the point that arises from the question framed, we think
that the Tribunal went wrong. It is not disputed that the
assessees worked the scheme and such working produced the
profits as found in the assessment orders. The Tribunal
thought that since the scheme was completely under the
control of the Deputy Commissioner, the assessees could not
be said to have carried on business by working the scheme.
We are unable to see that the fact of the control of the
Deputy Commissioner can prevent the working of the scheme by
the assessees from being a business carried on by them. In
our view, it only comes to this that the assessees had
agreed to do business in a certain manner. The fact that
the Deputy Commissioner guaranteed the payment by the
Tehsildars of the price due from them, to the assessees
would indicate that the assessees were treated as the owners
of the business. It would indicate that if there had been
no such guarantee, the loss due to the failure of the
Tehsildars to pay their dues would have to be borne
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by the assessees. Again the claim, may be in the
alternative, by the assessees for exemption under s. 4(3)(i-
a) would not arise unless the assessees were carrying on a
business. Lastly, para. 14 of the scheme which we, have
earlier set out, clearly contemplates profits resulting from
the scheme. The provision that the profits would be devoted
to charity to be decided by the Deputy Commissioner, would
indicate that without it the profits would have been
utilisable by the assessees. The profits belonged to the
assessees and hence the necessity for this agreement so that
the assessees might be made to spend them on charity. If,
as the Tribunal thought, the profits were of the Government,
there was no necessity for the Government providing for the
profits being expended on charity, for the Government if
minded to do so, could have done it without such a
provision. The fact remains that the working of the scheme
produced profits and apart from para. 14 such profits
undoubtedly belonged to the assessees. If they chose to
agree by para. 14 to devote the profits to charity, that was
their business; the profits made by them would not change
their character and cease to be the assessees’ income
because they agreed to devote their income to charity. We
might also say that there is nothing in the scheme which
shows that the assessees had undertaken not to make any
profits on the distribution work under the scheme; they had
only agreed to finance the scheme without receiving any
interest or profit. Furthermore, since the assessees
actually made the profits, they are liable to pay tax
thereon whether they agreed not to make any profits or not.
We wish also to point out that it is not the assessees’ case
that they have been made to pay out the profits for any
charity. For these reasons we think that the profits were
the profits of the assessees and they are liable to pay tax
on them.
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With regard to the assessees’ claim for exemption under s.
4(3)(i-a), they are clearly not entitled to any. That claim
of the assessees has not been accepted by any of the Courts
below. Section 4(3)(i-a) applies to income derived from
business carried on on behalf of a religious and charitable
institution when the income
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is applied solely to the purpose of the institution and the
business is carried on in the manner provided. It is enough
to say that the scheme, considered as a business, was not
carried on on behalf of any religious or charitable
institution. Once it is held that the assessees made the
profit, how they use it would not matter.
In the result, we would answer both parts of the question
framed, in-the affirmative. We hold that the profits were
the income which accrued to the assessees and such income is
assessable to income-tax and is not exempt from taxation
under s. 4(3)(i-a). The appeal is allowed with costs here
and below.
Appeal allowed.