Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
PINGLE INDUSTRIES LTD., SECUNDERABAD
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX, HYDERABAD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
26/04/1960
BENCH:
KAPUR, J.L.
BENCH:
KAPUR, J.L.
DAS, S.K.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
CITATION:
1960 AIR 997 1960 SCR (3) 669
CITATOR INFO :
R 1963 SC 683 (7,21,26,30)
R 1965 SC 360 (9)
D 1966 SC 798 (10,12)
RF 1968 SC 678 (2,4)
R 1969 SC 893 (9)
R 1971 SC1454 (9)
RF 1973 SC 637 (7)
ACT:
Income Tax-Business Expenditure-Right to extract stones
from quarries-Character of expenditure-Test, whether revenue
or capital in nature-Hyderabad Income Tax Act (Hyderabad
VIII Of 1357 F),S. 12(2)(xv)-Indian Income Tax Act, S.
10(2)(XV).
HEADNOTE:
Under a quolnama the assessee company was granted exclusive
rights in the nature of a monopoly to extract Shahabad Flag
Stones without limit to quantity or measurement from
quarries situated in six villages for a period of 12 years
on annual payment of Rs. 28,000 but not to manufacture
cement. The stones had to be extracted methodically and
skilfully before they could be dressed and sold. The
assessee company paid an initial sum of Rs. 96,000 as
security and the balance of Rs. 20,000 was payable each year
in monthly instalments of Rs. 1,666-10-8 each. The payments
were to be made even if no stones were extracted or could
not be extracted. The question was whether the amounts paid
were allowable as business expenditure under s. 12(2)(xv) of
the Hyderabad Income Tax Act:
Held (Per Kapur and Hidayatullah, jj. S. K. Das, J.,
dissenting), that under the quolnama the assessee acquired
by his long term lease a right to win stones and the lease
conveyed to him a part of land. The stones in situ were not
his stock-intrade in a business sense but a capital asset
from which after extraction he converted the stones into his
stock-in-trade. The payment though periodic in fact was
neither rent nor royalty but a lump sum payment in
instalments for acquiring a capital asset of enduring
benefit to his trade. The right acquired is to a source
from which the raw material was to be extracted. The
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expenditure was outgoings on capital account and was not
allowable as deductions under S. 12(2)(XV) Of the Hyderabad
Income Tax Act.
Per S. K. Das, J.-That on its true construction the trans-
action was the sale of raw materials coupled with a licence
to the assessee to come on the land and remove the materials
sold, the purchase price being paid partly in a lump sum and
partly in monthly instalments, that the object was the
procuring of the stones for making flag stones and not the
acquisition of an enduring asset or advantage, that the
payments made were the price of raw materials and that the
assessee was therefore entitled to claim them as business
expenditure under s. 12(2)(xv) of the Hyderabad Income Tax
Act.
Assam Bengal Cement Works Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income
Tax, West Bengal, [1955] 1 S.C.R. 972, distinguished.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE, JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 190 of 1955.
682
Appeal from the judgment and order dated July 31, 1953, of
the Hyderabad High Court in Reference Case No. 302/5 of
1951-52.
N. A. Palkhivala and B. Ganapathy Iyer, for the appellants’
H. N. Sanyal, Additional Solicitor-General of India,
H. J. Umrigar and D. Gupta, for the respondent.
1960. April 26. The Judgment of Kapur and Hidayatullah,
JJ., was delivered by Hidayatullah, J.S. K. Das, J.,
delivered a separate Judgment.
S.K. DAS, J.-This is an appeal by the assessee with leave of
the High Court of Hyderabad granted under s. 66A(2) of the
Indian Income-tax Act, 1922.
The short facts are these. The appellant is a private
limited company carrying on the business, inter alia, of
sale of Shahabad stones (flag stones) which had to be
extracted from quarries, dressed and then sold. For the
purpose of its business, the appellant took on contract the
right to excavate stones from certain quarries in six
villages in Tandur taluk for a period of twelve years under
a Quolnama dated 9th March, 1343F, from the then jagirdar of
the taluk, named Nawab Mehdi Jung Bahadur. The contract
provided that the jagirdar should be paid annually a sum of
Rs. 28,000 as consideration for extracting the stones till
the end of the contract period, as per a plan prepared,
within the six villages specified therein. The appellant
had no right or interest in the land; nor did he have any
other interest in the quarries apart from excavating stones
therefrom. The contract specifically provided that the
appellant, called the contractor, had no right to
manufacture cement from the stones; he had only the right to
excavate stones from the quarries till the end of the
contract period. I may here quote some of the relevant
provisions of the Quolnama as to how the annual
consideration of Rs. 28,000 was to be paid. It said:
" 1. The period of contract for excavating stones from the
quarries of the villages noted above is for 12 years from
1st Ardibehisht 1346 Fasli to the end of the Farwardi, 1358
Fasli and the contractor will be given possession from 1st
Ardibehisht 1346 Faisli.
683
2. The annual contract amount would be Rs. 28,000.
3. For the surety of the contract the sum of Rs. 96,000 0.
S. has been received and deposited in the treasury of the
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Jagir towards the advance and earnest money and the
security, a receipt for the same has been issued separately.
4.The remaining annual balance sum of Rs. 20,000 may be
deposited in the Jagir Treasury by instalment every month of
Rs. 1,667-10-8; if there be any default in paying the
instalment regularly, interest at the rate of one rupee per
cent. per mensem will be charged to the contractor till the
full payment.
There was another lease or contract taken from Government
for a period of five years for which the appellant was
required to pay Rs. 9,000 per year in monthly instalments of
Rs. 750. That was also in respect of stone quarries. The
terms of the said contract with Government have not been
printed in the paper book, presumably because they were
similar in nature to those of the Quolnama referred to
above. ,The Income-tax Appellate Tribunal found, and there
is no dispute as to this, that under the aforesaid two
contracts the appellant had merely the right to extract
Shahabad stones. The Tribunal said:
" Flag stones of required thickness are found in layers in
those mines or quarries. Before one gets these flag stones
of the required thickness, one has also to extract flag
stones of greater thickness. The assessee sells these flag
stones both of the usual thickness and thickness greater
than usual one, after working on them, if necessary." There
was no finding as to how deep the quarrying bad to be done
to extract the stones of required thickness.
According to the appellant’s books of account, it paid each
year of account Rs. 37,000 as lease or contract money to
extract the stones under the two contracts and it claimed an
allowance in respect thereof under s. 12(2)(xv) of the
Hyderabad Income-tax Act, corresponding to s. 10(2)(xv) of
the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922. The Tribunal stated that
the Income-tax Officer was under some misapprehension or
error while examining the appellant’s books of account, and
held for the assessment year 1357F that the expenditure
684
of Rs. 27,054 as lease or contract money was capital
expenditure, in respect of which the appellant was not
entitled to claim any allowance under the relevant provision
of the Hyderabad Income-tax Act. For the assessment year
1358F he similarly held that the sum of Rs. 28,158 was
capital expenditure and not revenue expenditure. There were
two appeals to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner who also
held that the expenditure was capital expenditure. Then,
there was an appeal to the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal,
Bombay. The Accountant member of the Tribunal held that the
payments in question stood on the same footing as royalties
and dead rent which are allowable as working expenses in
cases of mines and quarries. The President Of the Tribunal
expressed his finding thus:
" In the present case, the assessee purchased his stock-in-
trade. Instead of paying so much for so many cubit feet, he
pays a lump sum every year. Parties might as well agree
that the so called lessee shall pay a sum of money bearing a
proportion to the sales or quantum of material extracted or
a lump sum for the purpose of convenience. Because these
quarry leases are called leases, the assessee does not get
an asset of an enduring benefit. In fact, I find that the
leases are renewed from time to time. The lease money is,
therefore, in my opinion, not capital expenditure but
revenue expenditure and should be allowed in computing the
assessee’s income from the quarries."
In the result, the Tribunal allowed the claim of the
appellant that the payment of the two sums of Rs. 27,054 and
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Rs. 28,158 for the assessment years 1357F and 1358F
respectively was in its true nature a revenue expenditure
rather than capital expenditure. On being satisfied that a
question of law arose out of its order, the Tribunal stated
the following question for the decision of the High Court:
" Whether the lease money paid by the assessee company to
Nawab Mehdi Jung Bahadur and to Government is capital
expenditure or revenue expenditure."
The High Court answered the question against the appellant.
Hence the present appeal.
685
My learned brethren have come to the conclusion that the
expenditure in question was capital expenditure.
Reluctantly and much to my regret I have come to a different
conclusion, and I proceed now to state the reasons for my
conclusion as briefly as I can.
It is not disputed that if the expenditure was capital
expenditure, then the appellant was not entitled to the
benefit of s. 12(2)(xv) of the Hyderabad Income-tax Act in
the relevant years. It is equally undisputed that if the
expenditure was revenue expenditure, then the appellant
could claim an allowance in respect thereof. Therefore, it
is unnecessary to read the provisions of s. 12(2)(xv) of the
Hyderabad Income-tax Act or the corresponding provisions of
s. 10(2)(xv) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922. 1 plunge at
once in medias res to a consideration of the crucial
/question in this case: were the two payments in question of
the nature of capital expenditure or revenue expenditure ?
This distinction between capital and revenue, either on the
receipt or expenditure side, is almost a perennial problem
in Income-tax law. In general the distinction is well-
recognised and is based on certain principles which are easy
of application in some cases; but from time to time cases
arise which make the distinction difficult of application.
A large number of decisions were cited before us, but no
infallible criterion of universal application emerges
therefrom and each case must turn on its own facts, though
the decisions are useful as illustrations and as affording
indication of the kind of considerations which may
relevantly be borne in mind in approaching the problem. I
shall refer in this judgment to such decisions only as have
a bearing on the real controversy between the parties.
In view of the submissions made before us, the real
controversy in this case appears to me to be this : in the
context of the terms of the contract between the parties,
was the expenditure incurred intended to create or bring
into existence an asset or advantage of an enduring
character or was it intended to get only the stock-in-trade
or the raw materials for the business ? If it was the
former, then it was capital
89
686
expenditure; if latter, then revenue expenditure. There is
no doubt that receipts and payments in connexion with
acquiring or disposing of leaseholds of mines or minerals
are usually on capital account (Kamakshya Narain Singh v.
Commissioner of Income-tax (1)). The reason why the price
paid for the purchase of mining rights is a capital
expenditure as explained by Channel J., in Alianza Co. v.
Bell (2) ,in the, following words:
"In the ordinary case, the cost of the material worked up in
a manufactory is not a capital expendture; it is a current
expenditure and does not become a capital expenditure merely
because the material is provided by something like a forward
contract, under which a person for the payment of a lump sum
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down secures a supply of the raw material for a period
extending over several years.............. If it is merely a
manufacturing business, then the procuring of the raw
material would not be a capital expenditure. But if it is
like the working of a particular mine or bed of brick earth
and converting the stuff worked into a marketable commodity,
then the money paid for the prime cost of the stuff so dealt
with is as much capital as the money sunk in the machinery
or buildings."
Learned counsel for the Department has strongly relied on
these observations and has contended that the ,appellant had
no manufacturing business in the present case and the price
he paid for working the quarries was as much capital
expenditure as money sunk in machinery or buildings. But
this contention ignores the absence of one very important
circumstance in this case. The acquisition of a mine or a
mining right is an enduring asset, because it is not a mere
purchase of minerals but is ail acquisition of a source from
which flows the right to extract minerals; in other words,
the acquisition provides the means of obtaining the raw
material rather than the raw material itself ; therefore, it
relates to fixed capital, and in a business sense the
acquiring of a leasehold of a mine is not the purchase of
raw materials only. It is something more than that. In the
case before us except the stones, nothing else was acquired.
Clauses 5 and 7 of the Quolnama said:
(1) [1943] 11 I.T.R. 513.
(2) [1904] 2 H. B. 666.
687
" 5. The contractor shall have no right to excavate stones
from other places of the Jagir Ilaqa except the villages
specified within the prescribed period of contract. The
Jagir authorities will not allow any other person to
excavate these stones within the jurisdiction of villages
other than the villages specified above."
.....................................................
......................................................
7.The contractor shall have to excavate stones from the
quarries as per the plan. In case he requires a further
area of land in the village for excavation of stones, this
will be done on his application four months in advance. The
contractor will have no right to manufacture cement from the
stones in the villages noted above."
In view of these clauses and the recital in the Quolnama
that it was a quarry contract for excavating stones only, it
is in my view not reasonable to hold that what the appellant
acquired in the present case was the means of obtaining raw
material rather than the raw material itself.
It is, I think, an accepted position now that the expression
" capital expenditure " must normally be construed in a
business sense and emphasis should be placed upon the
business aspect of the transaction rather than on the purely
legal and technical aspect. It is not, therefore, necessary
to determine whether the Quolnama in the present case was in
law a lease, or a license, or a license coupled with a
grant. What we have to consider is the nature of the
transaction from the business point of view, and it seems to
me that having regard to the terms of the Quolnama, the
transaction in its true nature and quality was a sale of raw
materials coupled with a license to the appellant to come on
the land and remove the materials sold; the purchase price
was to be paid partly in a lump sum and partly in monthly
instalments. If that is the true nature of the transaction,
there is no difficulty in answering the question raised.
The only answer then is that the payments in question were
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revenue expenditure.
688
I now refer to four decisions which in my opinion come
closest to the controversy before us. (1) In re: Benarsi Das
Jagannath (1); (2) Mohanlal Hargovind of Jubbulpore v.
Commissioner of Income-tax, C. P. and Berar, Nagpur (2) ;
(3) Abdul Kayoom v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras (3 )
and (4) Stow Bardolph Gravel Co. Ltd. v. Poole (Inspector
of Taxes) (4). The first is a decision of the Full Bench of
the Lahore High Court, the second, a decision of the Privy
Council, the third, a decision of the Full Bench of the
Madras High Court and the last a decision of the Court of
Appeal in England. The facts in Benarsi Das Jagannath (1)
were these. The assessee, who was a manufacturer of bricks,
obtained certain lands on leases for the purpose of digging
out earth for the manufacture of bricks. Under the deeds he
had the right to dig earth up to three to three and a half
feet. He had no interest left in the lands as soon as the
earth was dug out and removed. The periods of the leases
varied from six months to three years. The Income-tax
authorities and the Appellate Tribunal held that the
consideration paid by the assessee to the owners of the
lands was a capital expenditure and was therefore not an
allowable deduction under s. 10(2)(xv) of the Indian Income-
tax Act. It was held by the Full Bench that the main object
of the agreement was the procuring of earth for
manufacturing bricks and not the acquisition of an advantage
of a permanent nature or of an enduring character, that the
payments made were the price of raw material and that the
assessee was therefore entitled to claim them as business
expenditure under s. 10(2)(xv). It was worthy of note that
this decision was approved by this Court in Assam Bengal
Cement Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax, West Bengal
(5). Bhagwati, J., delivering the judgment of this Court
said:
" This synthesis attempted by the Full Bench of the Lahore
High Court truly enunciates the principles which emerge from
the authorities. In cases where the expenditure is made for
the initial outlay or for
(1) [1946] I.L.R. 27 Lah. 307.
(3) I.L.R. [1953] Mad. 1133.
(2) [1949] L.R. 76 I.A. 235.
(4) [1955] 27 I.T.R. 146.
(5) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 972.
689
extension of a. business or a substantial replacement of the
equipment, there is no doubt that it is capital expenditure.
A capital asset of the business is either acquired or
extended or substantially replaced and that outlay whatever
be its source whether it is drawn from the capital or the
income of the concern is certainly in the nature of capital
expenditure. The question, however, arises for
consideration where expenditure is incurred while the
business is going on and is not incurred either for
extension of the business or for the substantial replacement
of its equipment. Such expenditure can be looked at either
from the point of view of what is acquired or from the point
of view of what is the source from which the expenditure is
incurred. If the expenditure is made for acquiring or
bringing into existence an asset or advantage for the
enduring benefit of the business it is properly attributable
to capital and is of the nature of capital expenditure. If
on the other hand it is made not for the purpose of bringing
into existence of any asset or advantage but for running the
business or working it with a view to produce the profits it
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is a revenue expenditure. If any such asset or advantage
for the enduring benefit of the business is thus acquired or
brought into existence it would be immaterial whether the
source of the payment was the capital or the income of the
concern or whether the payment was made once and for all or
was made periodically. The aim and object of the
expenditure would determine the character of the expenditure
whether it is a capital expenditure or a revenue
expenditure. The source or the manner of the payment would
then be of no consequence. It is only in those cases where
this test is of no avail that one may go to the test of
fixed or circulating capital and consider whether the
expenditure incurred was part of the fixed capital of the
business or part of its circulating capital. If it was part
of the fixed capital of the business it would be of the
nature of capital expenditure and if it was part of its
circulating capital it would be of the nature of revenue
expenditure. These tests are thus mutually exclusive and
have to be applied to the facts of each particular case in
the manner above indicated. It has been rightly
690
observed that in the great diversity of human affairs and
the complicated nature of business operations it is
difficult to lay down a test which would apply to all
situations. One has therefore got to apply these criteria
one after the other from the business point of view and come
to the conclusion whether on a fair appreciation of the
whole situation the expenditure incurred in a particular
case is of the nature of capital expenditure or revenue
expenditure in which latter event only it would be a
deductible allowance under section 10(2)(xv) of the Income-
tax Act. The question has all along been considered to be a
question of fact to be determined by the Income-tax
authorities on an application of the broad principles laid
down above and the Courts of law would not ordinarily
interfere with such findings of fact if they have been
arrived at on a proper application of those principles. "
I do not read these observations as merely indicating an
approval of certain general principles, but not necessarily
an approval of the actual decision in Benarsidas Jagannath
(1). In cases of this nature it is the application of the
principles to the facts of a case which presents
difficulties, and I do not think that this Court would have
made the observations it made, unless it was approving the
actual decision in Benarsidas Jagannath (1) in so far as it
applied the general principles to the facts of that case. I
see no significant distinction between that case and the one
before us. In both cases, what was acquired was raw
material-earth in one case and stone in the other-and the
payments made were the price of the raw material. The only
distinction pointed out is the difference in the period of
the contracts; that is a relevant factor but not
determinative of the problem before us. Even in our case
the contract in favour of Government was for five years
only. Surely, it cannot be argued that three years in one
case and five years in the other will make all the
difference. I think that the real test is, in the context
of the controversy before us, what was acquired-au enduring
asset or advantage, or raw materials for running the
business ? Judged by that test the present case stands on
the same footing as the case of Benarsidas Jagannath (1)
(1) (1946) I.L.R. 27 Lah. 307,
691
In Mohanlal Hargovind (1) the facts were these. The
assessees carried on business at several places as manu-
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factures and vendors of country made cigarettes known as
bidis. These cigarettes were composed of tobacco rolled in
leaves of a tree known as tendu leaves, which were obtained
by the assessees by entering into a number of short term
contracts with the Government and other owners of forests.
Under the contracts, in consideration of certain sum payable
by instalments, the assessees were granted the exclusive
right to pick and carry away the tendu leaves from the
forest area described. The assessees were allowed to
coppice small tendu plants a few months in advance to obtain
good leaves and to pollard tendu trees a few months in
advance to obtain better and bigger leaves. The picking of
the leaves however had to start at once or practically at
once and to proceed continuously. The Privy Council
distinguished Alianza Co. v. Bell (2) and overruling the
decision in Income-tax Appellate Tribunal v. Haji Sabumiyan
Haji Sirajuddin (3) held that the expenditure was to secure
raw material and was allowable as being on revenue account.
Lord Greene delivering the judgment of the Board said:
" It appears to their Lordships that there has been some
misapprehension as to the true nature of these agreements
and they wish to state at once what in their opinion is and
what is not the effect of them. They are merely examples of
many similar contracts entered into by the appellants wholly
and exclusively for the purpose of their business, that
purpose being to supply themselves with one of the, raw
materials of that business. The contracts grant no interest
in land and no interest in the trees or plants themselves.
They are simply and solely contracts giving to the grantees
the right to pick and carry away leaves, which, of course,
implies the right to appropriate them as their own
property."
" In the present case the trees were not acquired: nor were
the leaves acquired until the appellants had reduced them
into their own possession and ownership by picking them. If
the tendu leaves had been stored
(1) (1949) L.R. 76 I.A. 235. (2) [1904] 2 K.B. 666.
(3) [1946] 14 I.T.R. 447.
692
in a merchant’s godown and the appellants had bought the
right to go and fetch them and so reduce them into their
possession and ownership it could scarcely have been
suggested that the purchase price was capital expenditure.
Their Lordships see no ground in principle or reason for
differentiating the present case from that supposed. "
I also see no ground in principle or reason for
differentiating the present case from that of Mohanlal
Hargovind (1).
In K. T. M. T. M. Abdul Kayoom and Hussain Sahib v.
Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras (2 ) a Full Bench of the
Madras High Court dissenting from its earlier decisions held
that rent paid by a dealer in chank under an agreement in
the form of a ,lease" with the Government under which he had
an exclusive right " to fish for, take and carry away all
the chank shells in the sea off the coast line " of a
certain district, was allowable as revenue expenditure. It
was further held there that it made no difference whether
what was acquired was raw material for a manufacturing busi-
ness or stock-in-trade which was intended to be sold without
being subjected to any manufacturing process. This decision
is the subject of Civil Appeal No. 64 of 1956 which has been
heard along with this appeal. I do not see how the present
case can be distinguished from the Madras case without
holding that the Madras decision was incorrect.
Last, I come to Stow Bardolph Gravel Co. Ltd.(3) That was a
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case in which it was held that sums paid by a dealer in
gravel as consideration for the right to excavate and take
away deposits of gravel represented capital expenditure.
The decision rested on the fact that the subject matter of
the agreement consisted of a deposit of gravel living some
feet beneath the surface of the land and requiring to be won
from the land by a process of excavation. I find it
difficult to reconcile this decision with the decision in
Benarsidas Jagannath (4) and Abdul Kayoom (2) in both of
which also excavation or exploration was necessary to win
the raw material. If, as I hold, the decision in Benarsidas
Jagannath (4) was approved by this Court then we
(1) (1949) L.R. 76 I.A. 235. (2) I.L.R. [1953] Mad. 1133.
(3) [1955] 27 I.T.R. 146. (4) (1946) I.L.R. 27 Lah. 307.
693
must accept that decision as correct in preference to the
decision of the Court of Appeal in England. I may point out
here what Evershed, M. R., said in the course of his
judgment in that case:
" The Commissioners for the General Purpose of the Income
Tax were of opinion that these claims to make deductions
were not admissible, but Harman, J., was of opinion that the
deductions were admissible. I have myself reached a
different conclusion from that reached by Harman, J., and I
have reached it, I confess, with some slight feeling of
regret and misgiving on two grounds: first, I think the
result bears a little hardly on the taxpayers for reasons
which will, I think, emerge without any necessity for empha-
sis as I recite the facts; second, I am not for my own part
satisfied that if close investigation were made of the
method whereby the taxpayers and others in the same line of
business carry on their businesses, it might not emerge-I
say no more than that-that the Commissioners would find as a
fact, notwithstanding the apparent legal consequences of the
agreement to which I have referred, there was here in truth
such a taking possession of the deposit of gravel in
question that it could sensibly for tax purposes and rightly
and fairly be said that once the consideration money had
been paid under the agreement the deposit was in truth the
stock-in-trade of the taxpayer. However, I have felt
compelled to say that there is no finding of fact to support
such a conclusion, nor indeed is there before us any
evidence sufficient to warrant it. It is in that respect,
"apprehend, that I find myself at variance with Harman, J."
.....................................................
"If the facts were as the judge intimated, the General
Commissioners might find, and might justifiably find, that a
case such as this is not really distinguishable as a matter
of law and common sense from a sale of loose objects lying
on the surface of the ground, such as windfalls from apple
trees, or even from cases like those I have mentioned, which
are concerned with crops or leaves growing on trees. But my
difficulty is that I can find no justification for that
conclusion in the material before us."
90
694
In view of these observations I have considerable
hesitation, and I say this with great respect, in accepting
the decision as a decision on a general question of law.
The decision proceeded on the findings of the Commissioners
and on the basis that there were no materials for the
conclusion reached by Harman, J. If we proceed on the
findings of the Tribunal in the present case, there are
enough materials to support the finding that the appellant
acquired nothing but raw materials by the transactions in
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question.
I find nothing in the decision in Stow Bardolph Gravel Co.
Ltd. (1) which need lead me to the conclusion that the
decisions in Benarsidas Jagannath (2) and Abdul Kayoom (3)
were wrong and require reconsideration. If I may again say
so with great respect, the learned Master of the Rolls
distinguished the Privy Council decision in Mohanlal
Hargovind (4) by saying that decision rested upon the
particular circumstances of the case and upon the fact that
the Board was able to say that from the moment the contract
was entered into and before the leaves had actually been
picked, the tendu leaves were part of the raw material of
the appellant. He added that he could not say the same of
sand and gravel, which were part of the earth itself and
which could only become part of the stock-in-trade of the
gravel merchant’s business when it had, in the true sense,
been won, been excavated and been taken into their posses-
sion. I do not, however, think that the decision in
Mohanlal Hargovind (4) proceeded on the basis suggested by
the learned Master of the Rolls. In clear and express terms
Lord Greene said: "nor were the leaves acquired until the
appellant reduced them into their possession and ownership
by picking them." This shows that the decision of the Privy
Council did not proceed on the ground alleged, namely, that
even before the leaves had actually, been picked, they were
part of the raw material of the appellant of that case. The
decision proceeded on the footing that the leaves became
part of the raw material when they were reduced into
possession and ownership by picking
(1) [1955] 27 I.T.R. 146.
(3) [1953] 24 I.T.R. 116.
(2) (1946) I.L.R. 27 Lah. 307.
(4) (1949) L.R. 76 I.A. 235.
695 3 S.C.R. SUPREME COURT REPORTS
them. If that is the correct ratio of Mohanlal Hargovind
(1), then where is the distinction between that case and the
case of the gravel merchant in Stow, Bardolph Gravel Co.
Ltd. (2) and the stone merchant in the present case ? In my
opinion there is none.
In the result and for the reasons given above, I hold that
the expenditure in question was on revenue account and the
appellant was entitled to the allowance he claimed. The
answer given by the High Court was wrong and the appeal
should be allowed with costs.
HIDAYATULLAH, J.-This is an assessee’s appeal on a
certificate of the High Court granted under s. 66A(2) of the
Indian Income-tax Act.
Pingle Industries Ltd. (hereinafter called the assessee) is
a private limited Company which carries on, among other
businesses, the business of extracting stones from quarries,
which, after dressing, it sells as flag stones. In the year
1343 Fasli, the assessee obtained from Nawab Mehdi Jung
Bahadur of Hyderabad the right to extract stones from
certain quarries belonging to the Nawab. A quolnama (con.
tract) was executed, and it has been produced in the case.
Under this quolnama, the assessee was granted the right to
extract stones from quarries situated in six named villages
for a period of 12 years (1346 Fasli to 1358 Fasli) on
annual payment of Rs. 28,000. To safeguard payment Rs.
96,000 representing a part of the annual payments at Rs.
8,000 per year were paid in advance as security, and the
balance of Rs. 20,000 was payable each year in monthly
instalments of Rs. 1,666-10-8 each. In default of punctual
payment of these instalments, interest at Re.1 per cent was
to be charged. Some other conditions of the quolnama may
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also be briefly mentioned here. The assessee undertook not
to manufacture cement and also to be ,responsible for the
payment of the money in spite of " any celestial or
terrestrial or unexpected calamity or unforeseen event ",
while the Nawab on his part undertook not to allow any other
person to excavate stones in the area of the six villages.
It was agreed that in case of default of instalment, the
contract
(1) (1949) L.R. 76 I.A. 235. (2) [1955] 27 I T.R. 146.
696
would be re-auctioned after One month’s notice to the
contractor, who would be responsible for any shortfall but
would not have the benefit of any extra amount.
The assessee was assessed in the Fasli years 1357 and 1358
for the account years 1356 and 1357 Fasli. It claimed
deduction respectively of Rs. 27,054 and Rs. 28,159 paid to
the Nawab in those years, as expenditure under s. 12(2)(xv)
of the Hyderabad Income-tax Act, which is the same as the
corresponding pro. vision under the Indian Income-tax Act.
The claim for deduction was refused by the Income-tax
Officer, who held that the amount in each year represented a
capital expenditure though the whole sum was being paid in
instalments. The assessee appealed against the two orders
of assessment to the Appellate Officer of Income-tax, and
questioned this decision. The appeals involved other
matters also, with which we are not now concerned. The
appeals were dismissed. The assessee appealed further to
the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal, Bombay, and raised the
same contention. The Appellate Tribunal accepted the
appeals. Different reasons were given by the President and
the Accountant Member. According to the latter, the payment
of these sums was similar to the payment of royalties and
dead rent which is allowable as working expense in the case
of mines and quarries. The President relied upon Mohantal
Hargovind v. Commissioner of Income-tax (1), and held that
the payments represented the purchase of the stock-in-trade
of the assessee, and that the leases did not create an asset
of an enduring character.
The Commissioner of Income-tax, Hyderabad Division, then
asked for a reference of the case to the High Court at
Hyderabad, and the Appellate Tribunal referred the following
question of law under s. 66(1) of the Hyderabad Income-tax
Act:
" Whether the lease-money paid by the assessee Company to
Nawab Mehdi Jung Bahadur and to Government is capital
expenditure or revenue expenditure."
The reference to Government in the question arises in this
way. It appears that there was yet another
(1) (1949) L.R. 76 I.A. 235.
697
lease which was taken from Government for 5 year. and under
which the assessee was required to pay Rs. 9,000 per year in
instalments of Rs. 750 per month. It does not appear that
the terms of this lease were ascertained and the amount does
not figure in the order of assessment, though apparently it
was assumed that what applied to the payment to the Nawab
held equally good in regard to the payment to Government.
In any event, the books of the assessed kept in mercantile
system showed both the sums each year as lease money.
The High Court of Hyderabad after an examination of several
decisions rendered in India and the United Kingdom, held
that the payments in each year of account were of a capital
nature, and that no deduction could be given under s. 12(2)
(xv) of the Hyderabad Income-tax Act. The assessee then
applied, and obtained the certificate as stated, and this
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appeal has been filed.
The arguments in the case involved the interpretation of the
quolnama as to the right conveyed there and the nature of
the payments with reference to the provision of the law
under which the deduction was claimed. That section reads
as follows:
" 12 (1). The tax shall be payable by an assessee under the
head profits and gains of business, profession or vocation
in respect of the profits and gains of any business,
profession or vocation carried or by him.
(2) Such profits or gains shall be computed after making
the following allowances, namely:-
......................................................
(XV) Any expenditure (not being in the nature of capital
expenditure or personal expenses of the assessee) laid out
or expended wholly and exclusively for the purpose of such
business, profession or vocation."
While the Appellate Tribunal looked to the periodicity of
the payments, the High Court held that the amount payable-
was Rs. 3,36,000 divided into annual and redivided into
monthly instalments. The Tribunal also considered the
payments as of the nature of rent or royalty or as price for
raw materials. The High
698
court, on the other hand, disagreed, and held that here
being no manufacturing business, the money expended could
not be regarded as price of raw materials or even as rent
but as spent to acquire a capital asset of enduring benefit
to the assessee. The High court referred to numerous
decisions in which the question whether a receipt or
expenditure is on capital or revenue account has been
considered in India and the United Kingdom. Before us also,
many of them were again cited as illustrating, if not laying
down, certain general principles. We shall refer to some of
the leading cases later, but we may say at once that no
conclusive tests have been laid down which can apply to all
the cases. The facts of one case differ so much from those
of another that the enquiry is often somewhat fruitless.
If, however, the distinguishing features are not lost sight
of, the decided cases do afford a guide for the solution of
the problem in hand.
The arguments of Mr. Palkhivala for the assessee may be
shortly stated. He contends that the quolnama is a licence
and not a lease, because it creates no interest in land and
no premium is payable for the right, but what is paid is
periodic compensation corresponding to rent. He contends
that the payments can only be regarded as periodic
compensation or periodic royalty or licence fees and thus
revenue in character. He further argues that even if held
to be a lump sum payment broken up into instalments, it is
still allowable as expenditure because it represents the
price for the acquisition of raw materials, viewed from the
business angle. According to him, all cases of mines and
quarries fall into three classes which are:
(i) in which mines and quarries are purchased outright;
(ii)in which ownership is not acquired but only an interest
in land; and
(iii) in which there is not even an interest in land but
there is an arrangement in praesent and de futuro to ensure
supply of raw materials.
He contends that this being evidently not a case within the
first category, it matters not which of the other two
categories it belongs to, because in his submission, both
the remaining categories exclude a case
699
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of capital expenditure. He, however, seems inclined to put
his case in the third category.
The learned Additional Solicitor-General on his side
enumerates the tests which determine whether an expenditure
bears a capital or revenue character. According to him,
decided cases show that capital expenditure is ordinarily
once and for all and not of a periodic character, but
contends that even a single sum chopped up into instalments
is not a payment of a periodic character. He submits that
capital expenditure is one which brings into existence an
enduring advantage, which, he maintains, is the case here,
because the money was spent on the initiation of the
business and to obtain a permanent source of raw materials
and not only the materials.
The quolnama shows that the agreement was for 12 years. The
assessee paid an initial sum of Rs. 96,000 a,% security for
the whole contract. He was required to pay Rs. 28,000 per
year. The security which was given was being diminished at
the rate of Rs. 8,000 per year. It was a guarantee against.
failure to pay the monthly instalments, but there was no
condition that the short payments were to be debited to it.
It was rather a guarantee for the overall payment and to
reimburse the jagir for any loss occasioned by a re-auction
of the lease after default by the assessee. Further, the
payments were to be made even if no stones were extracted or
could not be extracted due to force majeure. There was no
limit to the quantity to be extracted. There was also a
condition that none but the assessee was allowed to work the
quarries, which means that the right was exclusive and in
the nature of a monopoly. The payment, though divided into
instalments of Rs. 1,666-10-8 per month, was really one for
the entire lease and of Rs. 3,36,000. Nothing, however,
turns upon it. It is pertinent to say that the assessee in
its petition for leave to appeal to this Court filed in the
High Court, viewed the amount as being Rs. 3,36,000 divided
into various parts. This is what it said:
" Under the terms of the said lease, the Company was
required to pay a sum of H. S. Rs. 28,000 per annum to the
lessor. The total amount payable for
700
the entire period amounted to IRS. 3,36,000 out of which a
sum of Rs. 96,000 was paid at the time of the execution of
the lease deed and the balance of Rs. 2,40,000 was agreed to
be paid at the rate of Rs. 20,000 per annum in twelve years.
It was also agreed that this sum of Rs. 20,000 per annum
should be paid in equal instalments of Rs. 1,66-10-8 every
month. On the expiry of the period of lease, it was renewed
for a further period of five years and seven months at an
annual rent of Rs. 35,000."
These being, the terms of the lease, the question is whether
the payments in the account years can be regarded as capital
or revenue expenditure.
The question whether an expenditure is capital or revenue in
character is one of common occurrence. Its frequency,
however, has not served to elucidate the tests with any
degree of certainty and precision. It has now become
customary to start with two propositions which appear to
have been received without much argument. The first was
laid down in Vallambrosa Rubber Co. Ltd. v. Farmer (1),
where Lord Dunedin observed that "in a rough way" it was "
not a bad criterion of what is capital expenditure as
against what is income expenditure to say that capital
expenditure is a thing that is going to be spent once and
for all and income expenditure is a thing which is going to
recur every year ". This proposition was further qualified
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by Lord Cave in Atherton v. British Insulated and Helsby
Cables Ltd. (2) in the following words:
" When an expenditure is made, not only once and for all,
but with a view to bringing into existence an asset or an
advantage for the enduring benefit of a trade, I think there
is very good reason (in the absence of special circumstances
leading to the opposite conclusion) for treating such an
expenditure as properly attributable, not to revenue, but to
capital."
The words " enduring benefit of a trade " have been further
explained as meaning not " everlasting ", but in the way
capital endures ", see Du Pareq, L. J., in
(1) (1910) S.T.C. 529.
(2) [1926] A.C. 205, 213
701
Henriksen v. Grafton Hotel Ltd. (1) and Rowlatt, J., in
Anglo-Persian oil Co. v. Dale (2).
Another test propounded by Viscount Haldane in John Smith &
Son v. Moore (3) is to distinguish, as economists do,
between fixed and circulating capital. This appears to have
appealed to Lord Hanworth, M. R.,, in Golden Horse Shoe
(New) Ltd. v. Thurgood (4); but in Van Den Berghs Limited v.
Clark (5), Lord Macmillan observed that he did not find it
very helpful. Often enough, where the character of the
expenditure shows that what has resulted is something which
is to be used in the way of business, the test may be
useful; but in cases close to the dividing line, the test
seems useless.
A third test was laid down by the Judicial Committee in Tata
Hydro-Electric Agencies Ltd., Bombay v. Commissioner of
Income-tax (6). There, it was stated that if the
expenditure was part of the working expenses in ordinary
commercial trading it was not capital but revenue. The
Judicial Committee observed:
"What is money wholly and exclusively laid out for the
purposes of the trade’ is a question which must be
determined upon the principles of ordinary commercial
trading. It is necessary, accordingly, to attend to the
true nature of the expenditure, and to ask oneself the
question, is it a part of the company’s working expenses; is
it expenditure laid out as part of the process of profit
earning ? "
In addition to these three tests, the last of which was
applied again by the Judicial Committee in Mohanlat
Hargovind’s case (7), there are some supplementary tests,
which have frequently been alluded to. Lord Sands in
Commissioners of Inland Revenue v. Granite City Steamship
Co. Ltd. charaeterised as capital an outlay made for the
initiation of a business, for extension of a business, or
for a substantial replacement of equipment. In that case,
there was extensive damage to a ship, and repairs were
necessary to resume trading, such expense being held to be
capital expend-
(1) (1942) 24 T.C. 453, 462, C A.(2) (1931) 16 T.C. 253,
262.
(3) [1920] 12 T.C. 266, 282.(4) (1933) 18 T.C. 280, 298.
(5) (1935) 19 T.C 390.(6) (1937) L.R. 64 I.A. 215.
(7) (1949) L.R. 76 I.A. 235.(8) (1927) 13 T.C. 1. 14.
91
702
iture. The questions which Lord Clyde posed in Robert Addie
& Sons Collieries Ltd. v. Commissioners of Inland
Revenue(1), namely:
" Is it part of the Company’s working expenses, is it
expenditure laid out as part of the process of profit
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earning ?-or, on the other hand, is it capital outlay, is it
expenditure necessary for the acquisition of property or of
rights of a permanent character, the possession of which is
a condition of carrying on its trade at all ? "
influenced the Privy Council in Tata Hydro-Electric Agencies
Ltd., Bombay v. Commissioner of Income-tax (2) (at p. 209),
and the latter part of the question is the test laid down by
Lord Sands, to which we have referred.
There is then the test whether by the expenditure the
taxpayer was ensuring supplies of raw material or purchasing
them. This test is adverted to by Channell, J., in Alianza
Co. Ltd. v. Bell (3 ) and approved by the House of Lords.
Says Channell, J.:
" In the ordinary case, the cost of the material worked up
in a manufactory is not a capital expenditure, it is a
current expenditure and does not become a capital
expenditure merely because the material is provided by
something like a forward contract, under which a person for
the payment of a lump sum secures a supply of the raw
material for a period extending over several years...... If
it is merely a manufacturing business, then the procuring of
the raw material would not be a capital expenditure. But if
it is like the working of a particular mine, or bed of brick
earth and converting the stuff into a marketable commodity,
then the money paid for the prime cost of the stuff so dealt
with is just as much capital as the money sunk in machinery
or buildings."
The application of this proposition finds an example in
Mohanlal Hargovind’s case (4), where tendu leaves were the
subject of expenditure. The firm in that case had paid for
purchasing a right to collect tendu leaves from forest,
which right included the right of
(1) (1924) 8 T.C. 671, 676.
(3) (1910) 5 T.C. 60.
(2) (1937) L.R. 64 I.A. 215.
(4) (1949) L.R. 76 I.A. 235.
703
entry and coppicing and pollarding. No right in the land or
the trees and plants was conveyed, and the Judicial
Committee laid emphasis on the nature of the business of the
firm, and equated the expenditure to one for acquiring the
raw materials for the manufacturing business.
The cases to which we have referred and many more of the
High Courts in India where the principles were applied with
the exception of the one last cited, were all considered by
this Court in Assam Bengal Cement Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner
of Income-tax(6). In that case, Bhagwati, J., referred to a
decision of the Punjab High Court in Benarsidas Jagannath,
In re (2), where Mahajan, J. (as he then was), summarised
the position and the various tests. This Court quoted with
approval this summary, and observe at p. 45:
" In cases where the expenditure is made for the initial
outlay or for extension of a business or a substantial
replacement of the equipment, there is no doubt that it is
capital expenditure. A capital asset of the business is
either acquired or extended or substantially replaced and
that outlay whatever be its source whether it is drawn from
the capital or the income of the concern is certainly in the
nature of capital expenditure. The question however arises
for consideration where expenditure is incurred while the
business is going on and is not incurred either for
extension of the business or for the substantial replacement
of its equipment. Such expenditure can be looked at either
from the point of view of what is acquired or from the point
of view of what is the source from which the expenditure is
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incurred. If the expenditure is made for acquiring or
bringing into existence an asset or advantage for the
enduring benefit of the business it is properly attributable
to capital and is of the nature of capital expenditure. If
on the other hand it is made not for the purpose of bringing
into existence any such asset or advantage but for running
the business or working it with a view to produce the
profits it is a revenue expenditure. If any such asset or
advantage for the enduring benefit of the business is
(1) [1935] 1.S.C.R. 972.
(2) (1046) I.L.R. 27 Lah. 307.
704
thus acquired or brought into existence it would be
immaterial whether the source of the payment was the capital
or the income of the concern or whether the payment was made
once and for all or was made periodically. The aim and
object of the expenditure would determine the character of
the expenditure whether it is a capital expenditure or a
revenue expenditure. The source or the manner of the
payment would then be of no consequence. It is only in
those cases where this test is of no avail that one may go
to the test of fixed or circulating capital and consider
whether the expenditure incurred was part of the fixed
capital of the business or part of its circulating capital.
If it was part of the fixed capital of the business it would
be of the nature of capital expenditure and if it was part
of its circulating capital it would be of the nature of
revenue expenditure. These tests are thus mutually
exclusive and have to be applied to the facts of each
particular case in the manner above indicated."
Learned counsel in the present case rested his case upon the
decision of the Punjab High Court in Benarsidas case (1),
and stated that after its approval by this Court, the
expenditure here could not but be held as on capital
account. He relied strongly also upon the decision of the
Judicial Committee in Mohanlal Hargovind’s case (2 ).
Reference was made to other decisions, which we will briefly
notice later.
In Benarsidas case (1), the person sought to be assessed was
a manufacturer of bricks. He obtained certain lands for
digging out earth for his manufacture. Under the deeds
which gave him this right, he could dig up to a depth of 3
feet. to 31 feet. He had no interest in the land, and as
soon as the earth was removed, his right was at an end. It
was held in that case that the main object of the agreements
was the procuring of earth as raw materials and by the
expenditure the-lessee had not acquired any advantage of a
permanent or enduring character. It is, however, to be
noticed that the duration of the leases was from six months
to three years. The Full Bench referred to
(1) (1946) I.L.R. 27 Lah. 307.
(2) (1994) L.R. 76 I.A. 235.
705
some other leases in which the duration was longer,and
observed:
" There are other agreements which are not before us and it
seems that the items mentioned in the question referred
relate to those agreements as well. We do not know the
nature of the agreements, but the question can be answered
by saying that expenses incurred during the year of
assessment for purchase of earth on basis of agreements of
the nature mentioned in the case of Benarsidas or of the
nature like Exhibit T. E. are admissible deductions, while
sums spent for obtaining leases for a substantially long
period varying from 10 to 20 years cannot be held to be
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valid deductions if they amount to an acquisition of an
asset of an enduring advantage to the lessee."
It appears that the Full Bench was persuaded to this view
from two considerations. The first was that what was
acquired was earth with no interest in land, and the other
was the short term of the leases.
The approval given to Benarsidas case (1) by this Court does
not extend beyond the summary of the tests settled in it,
and the tests have to be applied to the facts of each case
in the manner indicated by this Court. But the actual
decision was not before this Court, and cannot be said to
have been approved. The agreements in the present case are
long-term contracts. They give the right to extract stones
in six villages, without any limit by measurement or
quantity. They give the right exclusively to quarry for a
number of years. This case is thus very different on facts.
Further, the duration of the right which seems to have
weighed with the Full Bench in the Punjab High Court has
little to do with the character of the expenditure even if
it be a relevant factor to consider. In Henriksen’s case(2)
the right was only for 3 years, but monopoly value having
been paid for it, the result was a capital asset of an
enduring character.
In Mohanlal Hargovind’s case (3), the person assessed was a
bidi manufacturer who had obtained short-term
(1) (1946) I.L.R. 27 Lah. 307. (2) (1942) 24 T.C. 453, 462,
C.A.
(3) (1949) L.R. 76 I.A. 235.
706
contracts with Government and other forest owners to obtain
tendu leaves from the forests. These tendu leaves with
tobacco are used to roll into cigarettes. The contracts
gave a right of entry into forests to collect the leaves and
also to coppice the plants and to pollard the tendu trees,
but beyond this gave no interest in land. The Judicial
Committee held that these contracts were in a business sense
for the purpose of securing supplies to the manufacturers of
one of the raw materials of his business. They granted no
interest in land or the plants or trees. The small right of
cultivation and the exclusive nature of the grant were of no
significance. Then, the Judicial Committee observed as
follows:
" Cases relating to the purchase or leasing of mines,
quarries, deposits of brick earth, land with standing-
timber, etc. do not appear to their Lordships to be of
assistance."
The Board distinguished Alianza Co. Ltd. v. Bell which was
said to be a case analogous to purchase or leasing of a mine
and Kauri Timber Company’s case (2), which was a case of
acquisition of land or of standing timber which was an
interest in land. In either case, it was a capital asset.
Their Lordships finally observed:
" In the present case the trees were not acquired; nor were
the leaves acquired until the appellants had reduced them
into their own possession and ownership by picking them.
The two cases can, in their Lordships’ opinion, in no sense
be regarded as comparable. If the tendu leaves had been
stored in a merchant’s godown and the appellants had bought
the right to go and fetch them and so reduce. them into
their possession and ownership it could scarcely have been
suggested that the purchase price was capital expenditure.
Their Lordships see no ground in principle or reason for
differentiating the present case from that supposed."
It is to be noticed that the Privy Council case was not
applied but distinguished by the Court of Appeal in England
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in Stow Bardolph Gravel Co. Ltd. V. Poole (3).
(1) (1910) 5 T.C. 60.
(2) [1913] A.C. 771. (3) [1954] 35 T.C. 459.
707
In that ease, the Company was doing the business of selling
sand and gravel. It purchased two unworked deposits, and it
claimed that the payment should be deducted from its profits
as being expenditure for acquiring its trading stock. It
was held that the Company had acquired a capital asset and
not a stock-in-trade. Harman, J., before whom the appeal
came from the decision of the General Commissioners, said
that the case was indistinguishable from the Golden Horse
Shoe case (1), where the tailings were regarded as the
stock-in-trade of the taxpayer. He observed :
" Now, it is said here that the opposite conclusion should
be reached, and I think in substance the reason is because
this gravel had never been raked off the soil upon which it
was lying. There is no question, in any true sense, of
extracting gravel; there is no process, as I understand it,
gone through here. It is not even suggested that a riddle
or sieve is used; you merely dig it up or rake it up where
it lies, put it on the lorry and sell it wherever you can.
It is said what was bought was a mere right to go on the
place and win the gravel, but, in effect, in the Golden
Horse Shoe case (1) what was bought was the licence to go on
the land and take away the tailings, and ’myself think that
it is a distinction without difference to suggest that,
because nobody had ever applied a rake to this gravel
before, it should be treated as capital, whereas if somebody
had raked it into little heaps before the contract was made
then its purchase would constitute a different form of
adventure. It is the same situation; it is no more and-,.no
less attached to the land."
In dealing with this case on appeal, Lord Evershed, M. R.
(then Sir Raymond Evershed), felt that the case was a little
hard upon the taxpayer, and further that it might, if proper
enquiry bad been made, have been possible to hold that after
the price was paid, the sand and gravel become, in truth,
the stock-in-trade of the taxpayer. Taking the facts,
however, as found, he held that what was purchased was a
part of the
(1) (1933) 18 T.C. 280, 298.
708
land itself, namely, the gravel in situ. He held that there
was a distinction between the purchase of a growing crop or
leaves and the purchase of gravel. Lord Evershed then
analysed the agreement, and observed as follows:
" I think that, once it has to be conceded that there was no
sale of the gravel in the way the Judge said there was, then
it must follow that what was here acquired was the means of
getting the gravel by excavating and making it part of the
stock-in-trade."
Reference was then made by him to cases in which what was
purchased or taken on lease was land or an interest in land,
and Mohanlal Hargovid’s case (1) was distinguished on the
ground that in that case it was possible to say of tendu
leaves that they were acquired as the raw material for
manufacture. The argument of Mr. Magnus in the case
described as ail attempt to substitute sand and gravel for
tendu leaves was not accepted, Lord Evershed observing:
" But I cannot say the same of the sand and gravel, part of
the earth itself, which was the subject of the contract here
in question and which I think only could sensibly become
part of the stock-in-trade of this gravel merchants’
business when it had in the true sense been won, had been
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excavated and been taken into their possession."
We are in entire agreement that such a distinction is not
only palpable but also sensible. The present case is a
fortiori. Here, the stones are not lying on the surface but
are part of a quarry from which they have to be extracted
methodically and skilfully before they can be dressed and
sold. These deposits are extensive, and the work of the
assessee carries him deep under the earth. Such a deposit
cannot be described as the stock-in-trade of the assessee,
but stones detached and won can only be so described.
Before we deal with the other cases, we wish to state the
distinguishing features of the cases already mentioned, and
which have not often been viewed together. In the Alianza
case (2), the sale was not of the caliche as such but of the
right to win it from a
(1) (1949) L.R. 76 I.A. 235. (2) (1910) 5 T.C. 60,
709
deposit thereof, and it was treated as an expenditure of a
capital nature. In the Stow Bardolph case(,), the finding
was that sand and gravel had to be won, and it was held that
they could not be treated as stock-in-trade till they were
actually won. The doubt expressed by Lord Evershed was that
if the taking of sand and gravel involved merely taking them
up and putting them into trucks, the finding could have been
otherwise. Harman, J., made this distinction, but in view
of the finding, the Court of Appeal came to a different
conclusion. Indeed, Harman, J., himself would have decided
differently if there was, in any true sense, a question of
extracting gravel. He, therefore, thought that the case
resembled the Golden Horse Shoe case (2) where the "
tailings " were bargained for and paid for, and became the
stock-in-trade of the tax-payer. In Mohanlal Hargovind’s
case (3), there being no interest in land or trees or plants
and the right of cultivation and the exclusiveness of the
right to the leaves being insignificant, the contracts were
treated as leading to acquisition of the raw materials. The
leaves on trees were treated as equal to leaves in a shop.
It was on this ground that case was distinguished from the
Kauri Timber Company case (4), in which land and interest in
land in the shape of standing timber were involved. The
case in Hood-Barrs v. Commissioners of Inland Revenue (5)
was similar to the last cited. In the present case, the
assessee acquired a right to extract stones and his lease
included not only the stones on the top but also those
buried out of sight under Tons of other stones, which he
could only reach after extracting those above. This case is
thus within the rule of those cases in which the right
acquired is to a source from which the raw materials are to
be extracted. The doubt expressed by Lord Evershed does not
apply to the facts here, because the reasons given by
Harman, J., cannot be made applicable at all.
In Kamakshya Narain Singh v. Commissioner of Income-tax(6),
the case involved payment of certain annual sums by way of
salami for mining rights, and
(1) [1955] 27 I.T.R. 146.
(3) [1949] 17 I.T R. 473.
(5) [1958] 34 I.T.R. 238.
(2) (1933) 18 T.C. 280.
(4) [1913] A.C. 771.
(6) [1943] 11 I.T.R. 513. P.C.
710
these were regarded as capital income. There were also two
other payments, namely, royalty on coal raised and a
provision for minimum royalty. These were regarded as not
capital receipts but as assessable income. In dealing with
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the nature of the working of a mine, certain observations
were made. It was contended that the payments amounted to
conversion of a capital asset into cash. The argument was
repelled by the Judicial Committee in these words:
These are periodical payments, to be made by the lessee
under his covenants in consideration of the benefits which
he is granted by the lessor. What these benefits may be is
shown by the extract from the lease quoted above, which
illustrates how inadequate and fallacious it is to envisage
the royalties as merely the price of the actual tons of
coal. The tonnage royalty is indeed payable when the coal
or coke is gotten and despatched; but that is merely the
last stage. As preliminary and ancillary to that
culminating act, liberties #are granted to enter on the land
and search, to dig and sink pits, to erect engines and
machinery, coke ovens, furnaces and form railways and roads.
All these and the like liberties show how fallacious it is
to treat the lease as merely one for the acquisition of a
certain number of tons of coal, or the agreed item of
royalty as merely the price of each ton of coal. The
contract is in truth much more complex. The royalty is ’in
substance a rent; it is the compensation which the occupier
pays the landlord for that species of occupation which the
contract between them allows’ to quote the words of Lord
Denman in R. v. Westbrook (1). He was referring to leases
of coal mines, clay pits and slate quarries. He added that
in all these the occupation was only valuable by the removal
of portions of the soil. It is true that he was dealing
with occupation from the point of view of rating, but
compensation has the same meaning in its application to
matters of taxation such as are involved in this case."
Thus, the contention of the learned counsel for the assessee
that we should treat this quolnama as merely
(1) (1875) 10 Q.B. 178
711
showing a licence and not a lease creating interest in land
is not correct. A lease to take out sand was described in
Kanjee and Moolji Bros. v. Shanmugam Pillai (1) as amounting
to a transfer of interest in immovable property and also so,
in connection with the Registration Act in Secretary of
State for India v. Kuchwar Lime and Stone Co. (2). It is
thus clear that what the assessee acquired was land, a part
of which in the shape of stones he was to appropriate under
the covenants. He was not purchasing stones, and the price
paid could not in any sense be referable to stones as stock-
in-trade. The stones extracted might have become his stock-
in-trade, but the stones in situ were not so.
Nor do we agree that the periodicity of payments has any
significance. As was pointed out by Lord Greene, M. R., in
Henriksen’s case (3) :
"If the sum payable is not in the nature of revenue
expenditure, it cannot be made so by permitting it to be
paid in annual instalments. These payments by instalments
in respect of monopoly value have not the annual quality of
the payments for the grant of the annual excise licence, but
are of a different character altogether...... Here the
Appellants were minded to acquire as asset in the shape of a
licence for a term of years."
The learned Master of the Rolls added that the annual
payments gave " a false appearance of periodicity ".
Applying the above test to the present case, it is obvious
that the monthly payments of Rs. 1,666-10-8 did not
represent the lease amount for a month. This was a case in
which the assessee bad acquired an asset of an enduring
character for which he had to put his hand in his pocket for
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a very large sum indeed. He paid Rs. 96,000 down, but for
the rest he asked for easy terms. The amount paid every
month was not in any sense a payment for acquisition of the
right from month to month. It was really the entire sum
chopped into small payments for his convenience. Nor can
the amount be described as a business expense, because the
outgoings every month were not
(1) (1933) I.L.R. 56 Mad. 169. (2) (1937) L.R. 65 I.A. 45,
5,
(3) (1942) 24 T.C. 453.462, C.A,
712
to be taken as spent over purchase of stones but in
discharge of the entire liability to the jagir.
Some of the cases to which we were referred may now be
briefly noted. Hakim Ram Prasad, In re (1) was a case of
renting of a cinema projector for 10 years. The amount paid
was thus hire for the machine. ’In Commissioner of
Income-tax v. Globe Theatres Ltd. (2) the assessee advanced
Rs. 10,000 to a company for the construction of a cinema
house which was never built. Since the amount was not
salami or premium but only advance rent, it was held deduct-
ible. Commissioner of Income-tax v. Kolhia Hirdagarh Co.
Ltd. (3) was a case of commission on every ton of coal
raised, and it was held to be revenue expenditure. These
cases are entirely different, and can be of no authority for
payments, such as we have.
Reliance was also placed upon Parmanand Haveli Ram In re
(4), Nand Lal Bhoj Raj, In re (5) and Commissioner of
Income-tax v. Tika Ram & Sons (6). In the first two,
expenditure to acquire lands bearing certain salts in the
earth, which could be converted into potassium nitrate,
sodium chloride or saltpetre, was regarded as revenue
expenditure. They follow the line of reasoning which the
same Court adopted in the Full Bench case of Benarsidas (7),
which we have considered in detail earlier. They involved
shortterm contracts, and in the Full Bench case it was
stated that the case of long-term leases was on a different
footing, though, in our opinion, the decisive factors in
such cases will be the nature of the acquisition and the
reason for the payment. Cases on the other side-of the line
where payments were regarded as capital expenditure are
Commissioner of Income-tax v. Chengalroya Mudaliar (8) and
Chengalvaroya Chettiar v. Commissioner of Income-tax (9).
There the expenditure was for a lease for excavation of lime
shells. Since the lease conferred exclusive privilege and a
new business regarded not as the right to win shells.
(1) [1936] 4 I.T.R. 104.
(3) (1949) 17 I.T.R. 545.
(5) [1946] 14 I.T.R. 181.
(7) [1947] 15 I.T.R. 185.
(2) [1950] 18 I.T.R. 403.
(4) [1945] 13 I.T.R. 157.
(6) [1937] 5 I.T.R. 544.
(8) [1935] I.L.R. 58 Mad. 1.
(9) [1937] 5 I.T.R. 70.
713
All these cases turned on different facts, and it is not
necessary to decide which of them in the special
circumstances were correctly decided. This enquiry will
hardly help in the solution of the case in hand. We are,
however, satisfied that in this case the assessee acquired
by his long-term lease a right to win stones, and the leases
conveyed to him a part of land. The stones in situ were not
his stock-in-trade in a business sense but a capital asset
from which after extraction he converted the stones into his
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stock-in-trade. The payment, though periodic in fact, was
neither rent nor royalty but a lump payment in instalments
for acquiring a capital asset of enduring benefit to his
trade. In this view of the matter, the High Court was right
in treating the outgoings as on capital account.
In the result, the appeal fails, and will be dismissed with
costs.
BY COURT: In accordance with the majority judgment of the
Court, the appeal is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.