Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 2600-03 of 1994
Appeal (civil) 3788 of 1999
PETITIONER:
THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BOMBAY BURMAH TRADING CORPORATION
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 15/02/2000
BENCH:
D.P.Wadhwa, S.S.M.Quadri
JUDGMENT:
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J U DG M E N T
SYED SHAH MOHAMMED QUADRI,J.
In these five appeals the parties are common; the
Revenue is the appellant and the assessee is the respondent.
C.A.Nos.2600-03 of 1994, which relate to the assessment
years 1967-68 to 1970-71, arise from the judgment and order
of the Division Bench of the High Court of Judicature at
Bombay in Income-Tax Reference No.242 of 1976 dated December
12, 1988. Following that judgment the Division Bench
disposed of Income Tax Reference No.10 of 1987 which
pertains to the assessment year 1974- 75 on July 30, 1998
which is under challenge in Civil Appeal No.3788 of 1999.
The common substantial question of law, which arises in
these appeals, is question No.2 noted below. Briefly
stated, the facts giving rise to these appeals are as
follows : The respondent-assessee is an Indian resident
company. It is carrying on the business of exporting tea.
In the aforementioned assessment years it claimed weighted
deduction under Section 35-B of the Income-tax Act (for
short the Act) in respect of the expenditure of
Rs.1,95,935/- incurred on export of tea from East Africa to
the United Kingdom. The claim was disallowed by the
Income-tax Officer on the ground that Section 35-B would
apply only if the exports were made from India. That view
was upheld by the Appellate Assistant Commissioner and the
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Income-tax Appellate Tribunal. Among others, the following
two questions in Income Tax Reference No.242 1976 and
question No.2. in Income Tax Reference No.10 of 1987 were
referred to the High Court of Judicature at Bombay by the
Income-tax Appellate Tribunal under Section 256(1) of the
Act : (1) Whether on the facts and in the circumstances of
the case, the provisions of Section 40(c)(iii)/40(a)(v)
applied in the case of the employees of the Assessee in its
overseas branches?
(2) Whether on the facts and in the circumstances of
the case, the assessee is entitled to weighted deduction
under Section 35-B in respect of the expenditure of
Rs.1,95,935/- incurred on export of tea from East Africa to
the United Kingdom?
The first question was answered in the negative i..e.
in favour of the assessee and against the Revenue following
the judgment in the case of the respondent-assessee for the
earlier assessment years in Bombay Burmah Trading
Corporation Ltd. vs. Commissioner of Income Tax, Bombay
City-IV [(1984) 145 ITR 793]. It is conceded by the learned
counsel for the parties that this question is covered
against the Revenue by the judgment of this Court in
Commissioner of Income Tax vs. Continental Construction
Ltd. [(1998) 230 ITR 485] affirming the judgment in
Continental Construction Ltd. vs. Commissioner of Income
Tax [(1990) 185 ITR 178]. Adverting to the second question,
the High Court answered it in the affirmative i.e. in
favour of the assessee and against the Revenue. It will be
apt to refer to Section 35-B of the Act, which is the
subject-matter of debate in all the five appeals.
35-B. Export Markets developments allowance --
(1)(a). Where an assessee, being a domestic company or a
person (other than a company) who is resident in India, has
incurred after the 29th day of February, 1968, but before
the 1st day of March, 1983, whether directly or in
association with any other person, any expenditure (not
being in the nature of capital expenditure or personal
expenses of the assessee) referred to in clause (b), he
shall, subject to the provisions of this section, be allowed
a deduction of a sum equal to one and one-third times the
amount of such expenditure incurred during the previous
year;
(b) The expenditure referred to in clause (a) is that
incurred wholly and exclusively on
(i) advertisement or publicity outside India in
respect of the goods, services or facilities which the
assessee deals in or provides in the course of his
business..;
*
(viii) performance of services outside India in
connection with, or incidental to, the execution of any
contract for the supply outside India of such goods,
services or facilities.
On a plain reading of the provision of sub-section
(1), extracted above, it is clear that to claim the benefit
of this section the following conditions have to be
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satisfied : (i) the assessee must be a domestic company
which is resident in India; (ii) it must have incurred
expenditure after February 29, 1968 but before March 1,
1983; (iii) such expenditure should not be in the nature of
capital expenditure or personal expenses of the assessee;
(iv) the expenditure might have been incurred either
directly or in association with any other person; and (v)
the nature of the expenditure must answer the description
referred to in any one of the sub-clauses of clause (b). On
these requirements being satisfied the assessee-company
becomes entitled to the weighted deduction under Section
35-B. It is not necessary that the export should be
directly ex-India (from India). The Tribunals reading of
the section that the export should be ex-India is not
supported by the language of the provision or any authority.
The High Court has, therefore, rightly concluded that to
avail the benefit of weighted deduction the provision does
not require that the export should be ex-India. It must be
observed in fairness to Mr.M.L.Verma, learned senior counsel
appearing for the Revenue, that he does not seriously
dispute this proposition. Once this position is accepted,
the order under challenge has to be sustained. However,
what Mr.Verma contends is that the respondent claims the
expenditure under sub-clause (viii) for which there is no
factual finding by the Tribunal. The High Court, submits
Mr. Verma, has gone wrong in recording a fresh finding --
the expenditure was incurred with regard to the performance
of the service outside India i.e. from East Africa to
United Kingdom in connection with the execution of contract
for supply of tea in the United Kingdom -- and on that
basis upholding the claim of the respondent under Section
35-B; his further submission is neither the High Court nor
this Court can do so without calling for a supplementary
statement from the Tribunal on this aspect of the fact.
Mr.Ranjit Kumar, learned counsel appearing for the
respondent- assessee company, invited our attention to the
orders passed by the Income-Tax Officer, the Commissioner
and the Tribunal and contended that there was no dispute
with regard to the nature of the expenditure and therefore
Mr.Vermas contention has to be rejected. We have perused
the orders of the Income Tax Officer, the Commissioner, the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner and the Tribunal as also
the order under appeal passed by the High Court. Though a
copy of the return containing details of the expenditure
claimed by the respondent under the above provision has not
been placed on record, the orders of the departmental
authorities as well as of the Tribunal and of the High Court
leave us in no doubt that the weighted deduction under
Section 35-B was claimed in respect of the expenditure
incurred with regard to the performance of the services
outside India i.e. in East Africa and United Kingdom in
connection with the execution of the contract for the supply
of tea in the United Kingdom. Indeed, the said fact is
embodied in question No.2 itself. In view of the position,
pointed out above, we find no illegality in the orders under
challenge in these appeals. The appeals are accordingly
dismissed with costs.