Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
HOSHIARPUR ELECTRIC SUPPLY CO.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX, SIMLA
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
06/12/1960
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
KAPUR, J.L.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
CITATION:
1961 AIR 892 1961 SCR (2) 956
ACT:
Income Tax--Assessee’s receipts for installing new
electricity installations--If "Profit" or capital--Indian
Electricity Act, 1910 (9 of 1910), Schedule c. 6
(1)(b)--Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 (11 of 1922), s. 66(1).
HEADNOTE:
The assessee, an electricity supply undertaking, received
certain sum of money for new service connections granted to
its customers. Part of this amount was spent for laying
mains and service lines. The Income-tax Officer treated the
entire amount as trading receipt. In appeal the Appellate
Assistant Commissioners excluded the cost of laying service
lines and the mains and treated the balance as taxable
income. The Appellate Tribunal agreed with the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner and held that the service connection
receipts were trading receipts and the "profit element"
therein was taxable income in the hands
(1)[1929] A.C. 386; (1929) 14 T.C. 433.
957
of the assessee. In a reference under s. 66(1) of the
Income-tax Act, the High Court substantially agreed with the
view of the Tribunal. On appeal by the assessee,
Held, that the High Court erred in holding that the excess
of the receipts over the amount spent by the assessee for
installation of service lines was a trading receipt. The
receipts though related to the business of the assessee as
distributors of electricity were not incidental to nor in
the course of the carrying on of the assessee’s business.
They were receipts for bringing into existence capital of
lasting value. The total receipts being capital receipts
the balance remaining after a part thereof was expended for
laying service lines and mains, could not be regarded as
’profit’ in the nature of a trading receipt.
Commissioner of Income-tax v. Poona Electric Supply Co.
Ltd., [1946] 14 I.T.R. 622 and Monghyr Electric Supply Co.
Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Bihar and Orissa, [1954]
26 I.T.R. 15, discussed and applied.
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 328 of 1960.
Appeal from the order dated March 4, 1958, of the Punjab
High Court, Chandigarh, in Civil Reference No. 29 of 1952.
A. V. Viswanatha Sastri, R. Ganapathy Iyer and
G. Gopalakrishnan, for the appellant.
Hardyal Hardy and D. Gupta, for the respondent.
1960. December 6. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
SHAH, J.-The Income Tax Appellate Tribunal, Delhi Bench,
stated under s. 66(1) of the Indian Income Tax Act the
following question for decision of the High Court of
Judicature at Chandigarh:
"Whether the assessee’s receipts from consumers for laying
service lines, (that is, not distributing mains) were
trading receipts and whether the profit element therein,
viz., service connection receipts minus service connection
cost was taxable income in the assessee’s hands?"
The High Court answered the question as follows:
"...... the company’s receipts from the consumers for
laying the service lines are trading receipts and
958
the profit element therein being the difference bet ween
the service connection receipts and the service connection
costs is taxable income in the hands of the company."
With certificate granted under s. 66A(2) of the Income Tax
Act, this appeal is preferred by the Hoshiarpur Electric
Supply Company hereinafter referred to as the assessee.
The assessee is a licensee of an electricity undertaking.
In the year of account, April 1, 1947March 31, 1948, the
assessee received Rs. 12,530 for new service connections
granted to its customers. Out of this amount, Rs. 5,929
were spent for laying the service lines, and Rs. 1,338 were
spent for laying certain mains. The Income Tax Officer
treated the entire amount of Rs. 12,530 as trading receipt.
In appeal to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner, the cost
incurred for laying service lines and mains was excluded and
the balance was treated as taxable income. In appeal, the
Appellate Tribunal agreed with the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner and held that the service connection receipts
were trading receipts and that the "profit element" therein
was taxable income in the hands of the assessee. In a
reference under s. 66(1) of the Income Tax Act, the High
Court substantially agreed with the view of the Tribunal.
The assessee has installed machinery for producing
electrical energy and has also laid mains and distributing
lines for supplying it to its customers. The assessee makes
no charge to the consumers for laying service lines not
exceeding 100 ft. in length from its distributing main to
the point of connection on the consumer’s property in
accordance with cl. 6(1)(b) of the Schedule to the Indian
Electricity Act, 1910. But where the length of a service
line to be installed exceeds 100 ft., the cost is charged at
certain rates by the assessee. The charge consists usually
of cost of wiring copper as well as galvanised iron, service
and other brackets, insulators, meter wiring, poles and
appropriate labour and supervision charges. In the year of
account, the assessee gave 229 new connections
959
and received Rs. 12,530 out of which Rs. 5,929 have been
regarded as taxable income. In the forms of account
prescribed under the Indian Electricity Rules framed under
s. 37 read with s. 11 of the Indian Electricity Act, the
assessee credited service connection receipts to the revenue
account and debited the Inc, corresponding cost of laying
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service lines to the capital account. But the
classification of the receipts in the form of accounts is
not of any importance in considering whether the receipt is
taxable as revenue.
The assessee contended that the service lines when installed
became the property of the assessee, because they were in
the nature of an extension of the assessee’s distributing
mains. On behalf of the Revenue, it was urged relying upon
the judgment of the High Court that the service lines which
are paid for by the consumers do not become the property of
the assessee. We do not think that it is open to us in an
appeal from an order under s. 66 of the Indian Income Tax
Act to enter upon this question. The Tribunal did not
record a finding on the question whether the assessee was
the owner of the service lines. Undoubtedly, contributions
were made by the consumers towards the cost of the service
lines installed by the assessee which exceeded 100 ft. in
length. Normally, a person who pays for installation of
property may be presumed to be the owner thereof; but such a
presumption cannot necessarily be made in respect of a
service line, which so long as it is used for supplying
electrical energy remains an integral part of the distri-
buting mains of an electrical undertaking. The High Court
was exercising advisory jurisdiction, and the question as to
who was the owner of the service lines after they were
installed could be adjudicated upon only by the Tribunal.
It was for the Tribunal to record its conclusion on that
question, but the Tribunal has recorded none. In our
judgment, the High Court was in error in assuming to itself
jurisdiction substantially appellate in character and in
proceeding to decide the question as to ownership of the
service lines which is a mixed question of law and fact, on
which the Tribunal has given no finding.
960
The assessee contended that the amount paid by the consumers
for new connections is capital receipt and not liable to
tax, because the amount is paid by the consumers towards
expenditure to be incurred by the assessee in laying new
service lines-an asset of a lasting character. This
question falls to be determined in the light of the nature
of the receipt irrespective of who remained owner of the
materials of the service lines installed for granting
electrical connections to new customers.
The assessee only spends a part of the amount received by it
from the consumers. It is not clear from the statement of
the case whether amongst the 229 new connections given,
there were any which were of a length less than 100 ft.
Payments received by the assessee must of course be for
service lines installed of length more than 100 ft., but it
is not clear on the, record whether the expenditure of Rs.
5,929 incurred by the assessee is only in respect of service
lines which exceeded 100 ft. in length or it is expenditure
incurred in respect of all service lines. It is however not
disputed that a part of the amount received from the
consumers remains with the assessee after meeting the
expenses incidental to the construction of the service
lines. But an electric service line requires constant
inspection and occasional repairs and replacement and
expenses in this behalf have to be undertaken by the
assessee. The amount contributed by the consumer for
obtaining a new connection would of necessity cover all
those services. The amount contributed by the consumer is
in direct recoupment of the expenditure for bringing into
existence an asset of a lasting character enabling the
assessee to conduct its business of supplying electrical
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energy. By the installation of the service lines, a capital
asset is brought into existence. The contribution made by
the consumers is substantially as consideration for a joint
adventure; the service line when installed becomes an
appanage of the mains of the assessee, and by the provisions
of the Electricity Act, the assessee is obliged to maintain
it in proper repairs for ensuring efficient supply of
energy. The assumption made by the
961
Department that the excess remaining in the hands of the
assessee, after defraying the immediate cost of installation
of a service line must be regarded as a trading profit of
the company is not correct. The assessee is undoubtedly
carrying on the business of distributing electrical energy
to the consumers. Installation of service lines is not an
isolated or casual act; it is an incident of the business of
the assessee. But if the amount contributed by the
consumers for installation of what is essentially
reimbursement of capital expenditure, the excess remaining
after expending the cost of installation out of the amount
contributed is not converted into a trading receipt. This
excess-which is called by the Tribunal "profit element"-was
not received in the form of profit of the business; it was
part of a capital receipt in the hands of the assessee, and
it was not converted into a trading profit because the
assessee was engaged in the business of distribution of
electrical energy, with which the receipt was connected.
In Commissioner of Income-tax v. Poona Electric Supply Co.
Ltd. (1), it was held by a Division Bench of the Bombay High
Court that the amount received from the Government of Bombay
by the Poona Electric Company in reimbursement of expenses
incurred for constructing new supply lines for supplying
energy to new areas not previously served, was a capital
receipt and not a trade receipt. The question of the
taxability of the "profit element" in the contribution
received from the Government was not expressly determined;
but the court in that case held that the entire amount
received by the Poona Electric Company from the Government
as contribution was a capital receipt.
In Monghyr Electric Supply Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of
Income-tax, Bihar and Orissa (2), it was held that the
amount paid by consumers of electricity for meeting the cost
of service connections was a capital receipt in the hands of
the electricity undertaking and not revenue receipt and the
difference between the amount received on account of service
connection charges and
(1) [1946] 14 I.T.R, 622.
(2) [1954] 26 I.T.R. 15.
962
the amount immediately not expended was not taxable as
revenue.
The receipts though related to the business of the assessee
as distributors of electricity were not inciden t nor in the
course of the carrying on of the assessee’s business; they
were receipts for bringing into existence capital of lasting
value. Contributions were not made merely for services
rendered and to be rendered, but for installation of capital
equipment under an agreement for a joint venture. The total
receipts being capital receipts, the fact that in the
installation of capital, only a certain amount was
immediately expended, the balance remaining in hand, could
not be regarded as profit in the nature of a trading
receipt. On that view of the case, in our judgment, the
High Court was in error in holding that the excess of the,
receipts over the amount expended for installation of
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service lines by the assessee was a trading receipt.
The appeal is allowed and the question submitted to the High
Court is answered in the negative. The assessee is entitled
to its costs in this court as well as in the High Court.
Appeal allowed.