Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE NATIONAL STEEL WORKS LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, BOMBAY
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
03/05/1962
BENCH:
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
BENCH:
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
DAS, S.K.
KAPUR, J.L.
SARKAR, A.K.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
CITATION:
1966 AIR 1356 1963 SCR (2) 937
ACT:
Income-tax--Agreement by quota-holder to supply steel to
manufacturer at a certain royalty per ton--Receipt of lump
sum in lieu of royalty--Assessment on amount received--If
according to law--Capital receipt and revenue
receipt--Distinction--Indian Income-tax Act, 1922,(11 of
1922),s. 66A (2).
HEADNOTE:
The assessee company was receiving quota of coal and steel
from the Government but had no factory. It entered into a
partnership with a person who had a factory but no quota.
The latter agreed to pay a royalty of Rs. 50 per ton of
steel supplied to the firm under the quota. A few years
later, that agreement was modified and the assessee agreed
to receive a lump sum of Rs. 60,000 in consideration of
waiving the royalty.
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In assessing the income-tax on the assessee, the Incometax
Officer brought the amount of Rs. 60,000 to tax. When the
matter went to the High Court, that court held that the
amount was a revenue receipt, and hence liable to tax. On
appeal to this Court,
Held, that the amount of Rs. 60,000 represented capitalised
profits of the assessee company on account of its transfer-
ring or selling the steel which the assessee company
purchased under the authority given by the quota allowed to
it. The assessee company purchased the goods in its own
name and delivered them to the partnership. The sum of Rs.
60,000 represented the capitalised value of the profits the
assessee company was to have on supplying all the steel it
had under the quota at net price. No right to the quota
itself was transferred, and hence it could not be said that
the sum of Rs. 60,000 was paid in lieu of the transfer of
the rights in the quota of steel. The description of the
amount as goodwill in consideration of waiving royalty from
partnership account did not convey the real nature of the
amount. There was no question of goodwill in waiving a
royalty.
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 544 of 1961.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated July 1, 1959, of
the Bombay High Court in Incometax Reference No. 58 of 1958.
C.B. Agarwala, A. D. Mathur for K. P. Gupta, for the
appellant.
K.N. Rajagopala Sastri and D Gupta for respondent.
1962. May S. The Judgment of the the Court was delivered by
J.RAGHUBAR DAYAL, J.-This is an appeal under s. 66 A (2)
of the Indian Income-Tax Act.
The appellant, the National Steel Works Ltd., Bombay, a
limited liability company, hereinafter referred to as the
assessee, carried on the business of a ’Rolling Mill’ prior
to the partition of the country in the territory now in
Pakistan. It was a member of the Steel Rolling Mills
Association of.
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India and as such was receiving a quota of coal and steel
from the Government of India. After the Partition, its
registered office was shifted to Bombay. It had no factory
there for carrying on the business of a rolling mill.
Though possibly not entitled to receive the quota of coal
and steel,. it however continued its membership of the Steel
Rolling Mills Association of India and continued to receive
the quota of coal and steel. In order to utilise the coal
and steel so received, it entered into a partnership with
one K. P. Irani who had put a factory in Bombay called the
New Era Iron & Steel Works but had no quota of steel and
coal. The agreement of partnership entered into between
Irani and the assessee on September 29, 1948 provided that
the partnership would continue so long as the, quota system
regarding steel continued in the Dominion of India or till
the expiry- of the then,’ lease of the factory premises, and
that the capital of the firm would be subscribed by the
partners in equal shares. Paragraphs 12 and 13 of this
agreement are of importance and are quoted below.
"12. In the consideration of Company taking
the said Mr. Irani as partner in the
partnership it is agreed that a sum of Rs.
50/- per ton on all steel received by the
partnership from the Company, through the
Steel Re-Rolling Mills Association of India,
Calcutta or Iron and Steel Controller,
Calcutta shall be paid to the Company by this
partnership calculated every mouth, and
after deducting all the other expense
incidental to the business of the partnership
the not profit of the partnership after provi-
ding for. outgoings and interest on the
current loans, if any, shall be paid over to
the partners in equal shares.
13. All the quota of steel and coal that
Company may receive from the Iron & Steel
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Controller, the Government of India and from
the Provincial Iron & Steel Controller, Bombay
or from the Steel Re-Rolling Mills Association
of India, Calcutta or any such other body
under the quota system that may be in force
from time to time for Steel re-rolling mills
of the company at Bombay shall be utilised
solely for the purposes of the business of the
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part. nersbip who shall pay for the same.
Thereafter, in 1954, the assessee and Irani entered into an
agreement where by the terms of the agreement of September
29, 1954, were modified. The amendments to clause 12 are
important and they are quoted below:
"IT IS HEREBY AGREED THAT in clause 12 of the
Partnership Agreement dated 29.9.48, the
Royalty by which is fixed at Rs. 50/- per ton
shall be reduced in the manner following from
1st October, 1953."
(a) Royalty of Rs. 25/- per ton shall be
charged from 1/10/53 on all rollable materials
received up to 30,6.54 except semis and
perfect billets on which royalty will be
charged at Rs. 1O/- per ton on all the said
materials received upto 30/6/54.
(b) That cess charges payable to Steel Re.
Rolling Mills Association of India, Calcutta,
will be paid by the partnership till the
partnership exists.
(c) Mr. K. R. Irani hereby agrees to pay a
lump sum of Rs. 60,000./- a good-will in
consideration of waiving the Royalty from the
partnership Account on the quota. of re-
rollable scrap materials received after
30.5.54.
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(d) Mr. K. R. Irani here agrees that the
said amount of Rs. 60,000/- be debited to his
capital account in the books of partnership,
bearing interest at 6% per annum from 1st
July, 1954.
(e) No Royalty will be charged on any kind
of rollable materials received after 30th
June, 1954, by the Company from the
partnership.
(f) The partnership shall pay to the Company
Rs. 500/- per month as office allowance from
1/10153 till the partnership exists.
In assessing the income-tax on the’ assessee, the Income-tax
Officer brought the amount of Rs. 60,000/- mentioned in sub-
cl. (d) of amended paragraph 12 of the agreement to tax.
The assessee’s appeal to’ the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner failed and so did its appeal to the Income-tax
Appellate Tribunal. On an application by the assessee, the
Income-tax Appellate Tribunal stated a case to the High
Court for the decision of the question whether the sum of
Rs. 60,000/received by the assessee company from Irani is a
revenue receipt and liable to Income-tax. The High Court
decided that it was a revenue receipt and liable to tax. It
is against this order that this appeal has been filed after
obtaining the certificate of fitness from the High Court.
The contention for the appellant is that the sum of Rs.
60,000/- was paid by Irani to the assessee company in view
of the partnership getting the rights under the quota which
the assessee company possessed and that therefore the sum
represented a capital receipt and not a revenue receipt. We
do not agree.
It is clear from the facts stated in the statement of the
case that this amount represents capitalised profits of the
assessee company on account
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of its transferring or selling the steel which the assessee
company purchased, under the authority given by the quota
allowed to it. It is the assessee company which purchases
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the goods in its own name and delivers them to the
partnership at cost price. Under the original agreement of
1948, the. partnership was to pay to the assessee company
Rs. 50/per ton on all steel it received from the assessee
company. Clearly, therefore, the sum of Rs. 50/per ton
represented the profit which the assessee company was
getting per ton from the. partnership. Under the terms of
the amended agreement, no such profit was to be paid to the.
assessee company for the steel received from it after June
30, 1954, and it was to receive Rs. 60,000/- in a lump sum.
This amount, therefore, represents the capitalised value of
the profits, the assessee company was to have on supplying
all the steel it receives under its quota at net price. No
right, to the quota itself has been transferred to Irani or
the partner ship under the agreement and therefore there
could be no basis for considering that this amount of Rs.
60,000/- was paid in lieu of the transfer of rights in the
quota of steel to Irani or the pertnership. The description
of the amount as goodwill in consideration of waiving
royalty from the partnership account on the quota of re-
rollable scrap materials received after June 30, 1954, does
not convey the real nature of this amount and is really an
expression which conveys no meaning. There is no question
of goodwill in waiving a royalty.
We are, therefore, of opinion that the- High Court came to a
correct conclusion that the sum of Rs. 60,000/- was a
revenue receipt and liable to tax. We accordingly dismiss
the appeal with costs
Appeal dismissed.
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