Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX,TAMIL NADU
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
CITY MILLS DISTRIBUTORS (P) LTD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 05/02/1996
BENCH:
BHARUCHA S.P. (J)
BENCH:
BHARUCHA S.P. (J)
VERMA, JAGDISH SARAN (J)
MANOHAR SUJATA V. (J)
CITATION:
1996 SCC (2) 375 JT 1996 (3) 15
1996 SCALE (1)674
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
BHARUCHA.J.
This is a reference under Section 257 of the Income Tax
Act, 1961, made by the Income-Tax Appellate Tribunal
directly to this Court in view of the difference in the
views taken by the Allahabad and Calcutta High Courts upon
the same issue. The question to be answered reads thus :
"Whether, on the facts and in the
circumstances of the case, the
Appellate Tribunal was right in
holding that the pre-incorporation
profits of Rs.24,862/- cannot be
included in the assessment of the
assessee-company for the Assessment
Year 1974-75?"
The assessment year is the assessment year 1974-75. The
relevant accounting year ended on 3Oth September, 1973. The
assessee company was incorporated on 30th October, 1972. It
filed a return for AY 1974-75 disclosing an income of
Rs.1,79,690/-. The Income Tax Officer assessed the-assessee
company’s total income at Rs.2,04,530/-. In so doing, he
included, inter alia, the sum of Rs.24,862/- as the assessee
company’s pre-incorporation profit. He found that the
promoters of the assessee company had carried on business on
its behalf and had received the sum of Rs.80,534/- for the
period 1st October to 29th October, 1972. After deducting
expenses, the income in this behalf was Rs.24,862/-.
According to the ITO, this was the income of the assessee
company because its promoters had acted and carried on
business on its behalf and the assessee company had accepted
the act of the promoters after its incorporation.
The assessee company’s appeal to the Commissioner of
Income Tax (Appeals) was dismissed. The assessee company
then appealed to the Tribunal. The Tribunal observed that
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the real questions were : When did the pre-incorporation
profit accrue ? Did it accrue before incorporation ? If so,
who was the legal entity which carried on the business and
earned the income at the time of accrual ? The Tribunal held
that, in law, the promoters and the assessee company were
different legal persons and that the income which had
accrued on 29th October, 1972, was income that was earned by
the promoters. Accordingly, the appeal of the assessee
company was allowed.
The reference was made because of the decisions we now
cite.
In Commissioner of Income-Tax, U.P. and Ajmer-Merwara
vs.The Bijli Cotton Mills Ltd.. Agra, 23 ITR 278, the
respondent company was incorporated on 11th December, 1943.
Prior to that date the firm that promoted it had entered
into an agreement to purchase a mill for it and, on 10th
December, 1942, had obtained its possession. The sale deed
of the mill was executed in favour of the respondent company
after it had been incorporated. The respondent company chose
to accept the profits of the mill made before its
incorporation, but treated the promoters as accountable
therefor. The Allahabad High Court observed that it was true
that under the law the respondent company had come into
existence only upon its incorporation and it was not
possible to bold that the legal title in the business or its
profits had vested in it before its incorporation. It was,
however, well settled that if the promoters of a company
carried on business on behalf of a company which they
intended to float, the company, on its incorporation, had a
right to either accept what had been done on its behalf by
the promoters or repudiate the same. If the company accepted
what the promoters had done on its behalf it had a right to
claim from them the entire income for the period during
which the business was carried on for its benefit, Reliance
was placed upon the judgments of the Bombay High Court in
Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay vs. Abubaker Abdul
Rehman, 7 I.T.R. 139, and Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay
vs. Trustees of Sir Currimbhoy Ebrahim Baronetcy Trust,
A.I.R. 1932 Bom. 106, where it had been held that if the
income of trust property as it accrued was earmarked and had
to be handed over by the trustee to the beneficiary, the
beneficiary could be said to be in receipt of that income
and could be taxed directly. If, on the other hand, the
income came into the hands of the trustee and he had the
right to dispose of it and it was only the balance left over
that was payable to the beneficiary, then the income was
taxable in the hands of the trustee. The latter decision had
been upheld by the Privy Council. These decisions showed
that under not only legal ownership that had to be looked
into, but the court could also go into the question of
beneficial ownership and decide who should be held liable
for tax after taking into account the question as to who, as
a matter of fact, was in receipt of the income which was to
be taxed. The assessment proceedings in respect of the
respondent company had been started at a time when it had
already decided to accept what had been done on its behalf
by the promoters and take over the business and income
mate therefrom. It was, therefore, in the same position as a
beneficiary for whom the income was earmarked as payable to
it and the same could be legally assessed in its hands.
The aforesaid decision, it may be mentioned, was
followed in a subsequent decision of the Allahabad High
Court, Security Printers of India (P) Ltd. vs. Commissioner
Income Tax, U.P. 78 I.T.R. 766.
The Calcutta High Court has taken a different view in
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Commissioner of Income-tax, West Bengal vs. Tea Producing
Co. of India Ltd., 48 I.T.R. 200. The respondent company was
incorporated on 29th May, 1951 with, interalia, the object
of taking over a tea estate as a going concern. It commenced
business on 23rd June, 1751. In November, 1951 it purchased
the tea estate with effect from 1st January, 1951 and the
terms of the sale deed stated that all income and profits
from 1st January, 1951 would belong to the respondent
company and it would be liable for all tax dues from that
date. For
the accounting year ending 31st December, 1951, the
respondent company showed a loss. The Income-tax Officer
held that the assessee was not entitled to claim the whole
of 40 per cent of the loss but only the portion of the 40
per cent proportionate to the period from which it commenced
business, i.e., from 23rd June, 1951 to 31st December, 1951.
The Tribunal allowed the loss for the entire year. The-High
Court considered the judgment in the case of Bijli Cotton
Mills Ltd. and disagreed therewith. It said that under the
Income Tax Act an assessee meant a person by whom income tax
or any other sum of money was payable thereunder. Tax had to
be paid by an assessee under the head "profits and, loss of
business, profession or vocation" in respect of the profits
or gains of any business, profession or vocation carried on
by him. Therefore, before a person could be assessed, it fad
to be shown that it was he who had carried on the business,
profession or vocation. The Calcutta High Court could not
see how a person could be said to have carried on business
during a period when he was not born or how he could be
assessable to tax in respect thereof. As in the case of a
natural born person so in the case of a legal entity like a
company, the liability to pay tax could only arise after the
date of birth or incorporation. The liability of a company
to pay income-tax for business carried on by its promoter
could only be in respect of a period subsequent to its
incorporation. In the case of Bijli Cotton Mills Ltd., the
Allahabad High Court had placed reliance upon the judgment
of the Bombay High Court in the case of Abubaker Abdul
Rehman and has taken the view that under the Income Tax Act
it was not only legal ownership that had to be looked into
but the court could go into the question of beneficial
ownership and decide who should be held liable for tax after
taking into account the question as to who was, as a matter
of fact, in receipt of the income which was to be taxed. The
Calcutta High Court pointed out that the observations of the
Bombay High Court in this regard had been disapproved by the
Privy Council in Commissioner of Income-tax vs. Dewan
Bahadur Dewan Krishna Kishore, 9 I.T.R. 695.
In our view, the Tribunal was right in saying that the
relevant question was : what was the legal entity that had
carried on the business before the assessee company was
incorporated and earned the income at the time of its
accrual. A company becomes a legal entity in the eye of the
law only when it is incorporated. Prior to its
incorporation, it simply does not exist. The assessee
company did not exist when the income with which we are here
concerned was earned. It is, therefore, not the assessee
company which earned the income when it accrued and it is
not liable to pay tax thereon.
The same result is reached by a somewhat different
process of reasoning. A company can enter into an agreement
only after its incorporation. It is only after incorporation
that a company may decide to accept that its had to be
looked into but the court could go into the question of
beneficial ownership and decide who should be held liable
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for tax after taking into account the question as to who
was, as a matter of fact, in receipt of the income which was
to be taxed. The Calcutta High Court pointed out that the
observations of the Bombay High Court in this regard had
been disapproved by the Privy Council in Commissioner of
Income-tax vs. Dewan Bahadur Dewan Krishna Kishore, 9 I.T.R.
695.
In our view, the Tribunal was right in saying that the
relevant question was : what was the legal entity that had
carried on the business before the assessee company was
incorporated and earned the income at the time of its
accrual. A Company becomes av legal entity in the eye of the
law only when it is incorporated, Prior to its
incorporation, it simply does not exist. The assessee
company did not exist when the income with which we are here
concerned was earned. It is, therefore, not the assessee
company which earned the income when it accrued and it is
not liable to pay tax thereon.
The same result is reached by a somewhat different
process of reasoning. A company can enter into an agreement
only after its incorporation. It is only after incorporation
that a company may decide to accept that its promoters have
carried on business on its behalf and appropriate the income
thereof to itself. The question as to who is liable to pay
tax on such income cannot depend upon whether or not the
company after incorporation so decides. It is he who carried
on the business and received the income when it accrued who
is liable to bear the burden of tax thereon.
It may be that the transaction of appropriation by a
company to itself of income earned by its promoters before
its incorporation is also subject to tax; that is not in
issue before us and we do not express any view in that
behalf.
For the reasons aforestated, we answer the question in
the affirmative and in favour of the assessee.
There shall be no order as to costs.