Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
S. N. A. S. A. ANNAMALAI CHETTIAR
DATE OF JUDGMENT27/09/1972
BENCH:
HEGDE, K.S.
BENCH:
HEGDE, K.S.
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
DUA, I.D.
KHANNA, HANS RAJ
CITATION:
1973 AIR 1032 1973 SCR (2) 460
1973 SCC (3) 339
ACT:
Income Tax Act, 1922--S. 10 (1)--Business loss--Business
carried on in war zone--Damage to property during war--If
could be given deduction to as business loss.
HEADNOTE:
The assessee, who was carrying on business in Malaya which
was within the war zone, suffered damages to property during
the war on account of bombing. The loss in question was
loss of stock-in-trade. On the question whether the loss
could be given deduction to as a business loss in computing
the net income of assessee under s. 10 (1) of the Income-tax
Act, 1922.
HELD : On the facts and circumstance of the case the loss
occurred must be taken to be a loss incidental to the
business carried on by the assessee during the war. If the
assessee had earned any profits cut of his business during
the war the department undoubtedly have to consider those
profits as assessable income. When loss had occurred in
such situation the department cannot contend that the loss
in question must not be a business loss. A loss of
stock-in-trade occasioned by enemy action must be considered
as a trade loss. [461 F]
Bombay High Court in Pohoomal Bros. v. Commissioner of
Income-tax, Bombay City, 34 I.T.R. 64, Commissioner of
Income-tax, U.P. v. Nainital Bank Ltd., 55 I.T.R. 707, Green
v. J. Glikstan, 14 Tax Cases 364 and London Investment and
Mortgage Co. Ltd, v. Inland Revenue Commissioners [1957] 1
All England Reports. 377, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2016 of 1969.
Appeal by Special Leave from the judgment and order dated
April 27, 1967 of the Madras High Court in Tax Case No. 75
of 1963.
S. C. Manchanda, B. D. Sharma and R. N. Sachthey, for the
appellant.
M. C. Chagla, Janendra Lal and B. R. Agarwala, for the
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respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Hegde, J. This appeal by special leave arises from a
decision of the Madras High Court in a reference under
section 66 (1) of the Indian Income Tax, 1922 (to be
hereinafter referred to as the Act). As demanded by the
assessee the Tribunal submitted the statement of the case to
the High Court seeking its opinion on the question "whether
on the facts and in the circumstances of the case, the loss
of Rs. 1,93.750/- was an allowable deduction under section
10 of the Income-tax Act?"
461
Material facts are these
The assessee respondent was a member of a Hindu undivided
family which carried on money lending business in India and
abroad. In the course of such money lending business,
properties were taken over in settlement of debts as and
when occasion arose. The family was disrupted on March 28,
1939. The assessee received some shares in some companies,
properties and gardens and certain other items in Malaya.
Even after the partition the assesses continued the money
lending business in Malaya. During the war, in general with
others, the assessee suffered damages to these properties on
account of Japanese bombing. This loss occurred on account
of bombing in December, 1941, a date falling within the
accounting period ending on April 12, 1942, relevant for the
assessment year 1942-43. This loss was claimed as a
business loss. The Income Tax Officer rejected that claim.
The Appellate Assistant Commissioner affirmed the order of
the Income Tax Officer-. The assessee did not succeed
before the Tribunal as well. The Tribunal rejected the
claim of the assessee on the sole ground that bombing, which
caused the loss, was not incidental to the business of the
assessee. The Tribunal held that the loss in question was a
loss of stock-in-trade. That finding of the Tribunal has
not been challenged. Hence we have to proceed on the basis
that the loss caused to the assessee was a loss of stock-in-
trade.
It was contended on behalf of the department that the loss
in question cannot be given deduction to, as a business
loss, in computing the net income of the assessee under
section 10(1). According to the department that was not a
loss incidental to the business carried on by the assessee.
We are unable to appreciate the contention of the
department. It is established that the assessee was
carrying on business in Malaya when the war was going on.
Malaya was within the war zone and, therefore, there was
every possibility of that area being bombed. If the
assessee had earned any profits out of his business during
the war, the department undoubtedly would have considered
those profits as assessable income. It is strange that when
loss had occurred in such a situation the department should
contend that the loss in question was not a business loss.
In our opinion, taking into consideration the facts and
circumstances of the case, the loss occurred must be held to
be a loss incidental to the business carried in by the
assessee in Malaya during the war.
We are fortified in our conclusion by the decision of the
Bombay High Court in Pohoomal Bros. v. Commissioner of
Income-Tax, Bombay City(1). The facts of that case are
some-
(1) 34 I.T.R. 64.
462
what similar to the facts before us. The assessee therein,
which had its head office in Bombay and branches in various
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parts of the world, claimed deduction of the losses
resulting from the destruction of its stock in trade in
three foreign branches, at Manila, Saigon and Kuala Lumpur,
by enemy invasion, in computing its profits and gains for
the purpose of income-tax. The department resisted that
claim but the High Court held that the losses in question
were trading losses. This decision of the High Court was
cited with approval by this Court in Commissioner of Income
Tax, U.P. v. Nainital Bank Ltd. (1), In this connection we
may also refer to two English decisions. The first case is
Green v. J. Gliksten(2). The facts of that case were as
follows :
A fire occurred on the company’s premises in August, 1921,
and destroyed timber the written down value of which in the
company’s books was pound 160,824; the company’s valuation
of its stock based on cost or market value whichever was the
lower, had been accepted for purposes of taxation. The
timber had ’been insured for many years and the company had
been allowed to deduct the insurance premises in computing
its assessable profits. In due course the company received
from the insurers a sum of pound 477,838 representing the
replacement value of the destroyed timber, but only a small
part of this timber was in fact replaced because the current
demand was for timber of a different character. The company
accordingly credited in its profit and loss account as a
trading receipt only pound 160,824 of the insurance payment;
the balance did not appear in the profit and loss account
but was entered as a reserve in the balance sheet. The
Special Commissioners held that no part of the sum of pound
477,838 recovered from the insurers was a trading receipt.
But the House of Lords held that the whole sum recovered was
trading receipt to be taken into account in computing the
profits assessable to Income Tax under case 1 of Schedule D
and to Corporation Profits Tax. This court in Nainital
Bank’s case (supra) quoting that decision with approval
observed. "If receipt from an insurance company towards
loss of stock was a trading receipt, conversely to the
extent of the loss not so recouped it should be trading
loss."
Next we shall refer to the decision of the Court of Appeal
in London Investment and Mortgage Co., Ltd. v. Inland
Revenue Commissioners.(3) The facts of that case were as
follows :
The assessee were paying compulsory war damage contributions
during the war in respect of the properties in which they
were dealing. They received payments under the War Damage
Act, 1943, in respect of the properties damaged by enemy
action.
(1) 55 I.T.R. 707 (2) 14 Tax Cases 364.
(3) [1957] 1 All England Reports 377.
463
They disposed of some of the properties but retained others
as part of their stock-in-trade and either were having them
rebuilt or would have them rebuilt. Under the War Damage
Act, 1943, contributions made and indemnities given under
Part I were to be treated for all purposes as outgoings of a
capital nature and expenditure on making good war damage was
not deductible in computing profits for income tax purposes.
On the question whether the value payments should be
included in the receipts of the taxpayers’ trade for the
purpose of their assessments to income under Case 1 of
Schedule D and to profit tax, the Court of Appeal held that
the value payments should properly be treated as part of the
taxpayers’ trading receipts, since they were money into
which their stock-in-trade had been converted. This
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decision is an authority for the proposition that the
compensation received in lieu of loss, of stock-in-trade as
a result of enemy action is a trading receipt conversely a
loss of stock-in-trade occasioned by enemy action must be
considered, as a trading loss.
For the reasons mentioned above we agree with the conclu-
sions reached by the High Court and see no merit in this
appeal. It is accordingly dismissed with costs.
K.B.N. Appeal dismissed.
464