Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SAROJ KUMAR MAZUMDAR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, WESTBENGAL, CALCUTTA.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
04/05/1959
BENCH:
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.
BENCH:
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
KAPUR, J.L.
CITATION:
1959 AIR 1252 1959 SCR Supl. (2) 846
ACT:
Incometax-Assessment-Single transaction of Purchase and sale
of land-If a venture in the nature of trade or capital
investment -Test-Dominant intention-Onus-Indian Income-tax
Act, 1922 (XI Of 1922), SS. 2(4), 1O.
HEADNOTE:
The question for decision in this appeal was whether a
single transaction of sale of land measuring about three
quarters of an acre was an adventure in the nature of trade
so as to make it liable to income-tax. The assessee
appellant, an Engineer by profession, was engaged in various
business activities including that of an engineering firm
but, admittedly, had no dealing, except the one in question,
in respect of land. In 1946 be entered into an agreement
with the Hindusthan Co-operative Insurance Society Ltd. for
the purchase of the land in question and paid a sum of Rs.
32,748 in two instalments, being 25% of the estimated total
price of the land. As his construction activities declined
and the Government, who had requisitioned the land, were not
immediately releasing it, the appellant sold his rights
under the agreement to a third party in 1947 and thereby
received a sum of Rs. 74,000 odd in excess of the amount
paid by him to the Society. The land, however, was not
released by the Government until 1949. The Income-tax
Officer held that the transaction was an adventure in the
nature of trade and the said sum was a profit therefrom,
taxable under s. 10 of the Incometax Act, and included it in
the assessable income. The Appellate Assistant
Commissioner, in appeal, held that the assessee, a man of
means, had intended to purchase the land for his own use,
and that the motive of profit was entirely absent when the
purchase was made and that as it was a case of appreciation
of capital, he was liable to pay Capital Gains tax. The
Appellate Tribunal on appeal by the Department, reversed the
findings and the decision of the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner and affirmed that of the Income-tax Officer.
After the assessee had obtained from this Court special
leave to appeal, he made an application to the High Court
under s. 66(2) of the Income-tax Act, which that Court
dismissed as being barred by limitation.
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Held, (per Bhagwati and Sinha, JJ., Kapur, J., dissenting)
that admittedly the transaction in question being a single
instance of its kind, and not in the line of the business of
the assessee, it was for the Department to prove that the
dominant intention of the appellant, when he entered into
the agreement with the Society, was to embark on a venture
in the nature of
847
trade as distinguished from a capital investment, and they
having failed to do so, the appeal must succeed.
Commissioners of Inland Revenue v. Reinhold, 34 T. C. 389,
applied.
There could be no doubt, as held by the Court, that the
question for decision involved in such cases was one of law
or a mixed question of fact and law.
G. Venkataswami Naidu and Co. v. The Commissioner of I
come-tax, A.I.R. 1959 S.C. 359, referred to and
distinguished.
The line of demarcation, however, between an isolated trans-
action and a venture in the nature of trade was very thin
and each case had to be decided on the total impression all
its facts and circumstances made on the mind of the judge.
Case-law reviewed.
KAPUR, J.--Even though the powers of this Court under Art.
I36 of the Constitution were very wide, they had to be
exercised within the limits imposed by its own decisions and
one such limitation was that this Court would not ordinarily
interfere on questions of fact. Since the question involved
in the instant case was a mixed question of law and fact,
the facts should properly be found by the body whose
exclusive function under the Income-tax Act was to do so.
G. Venkataswami Naidu & Co. v. The Commissioner of Income-
tax, A.I.R. 1959 S.C. 359 and Dhakeswari Cotton Mills v. The
Commissioner of Income-tax, [1955] i S.C.R. 94I, referred
to.
Nor could an assessee be allowed to by-pass the procedure
prescribed by ss. 66(1), 66(2) of the Income-tax Act to have
question of law determined.
Since, however, the Appellate Tribunal had, in the instant
case, failed to consider certain essential facts, the case
should be remitted to it for a proper decision in the light
of the observations made by this Court.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 347 of 1955.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
March 26, 1954, of the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal,
Calcutta, in Income-tax Appeal No. 5263 of 1953-54.
A. V. Viswanatha Sastri and Sukumar Chosh, for the
appellant.
G. K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General of India, B. Ganapathy,
R. H. Dhebar and D. Gupta, for the respondent.
1959. May 4. The Judgment of Bhagwati and Sinha, JJ., was
delivered by Sinha, J. Kapur, J. delivered a separate
Judgment.
848
SINHA, J.-The only question for determination in this appeal
by special leave, is whether the solitary transaction in
respect of about three quarters of an acre of land in the
suburbs of Calcutta, was an adventure in the nature of trade
and, therefore, liable to income-tax. The assessee is the
appellant. He challenges the correctness of the order of
the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal, Calcutta Bench, Calcutta,
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dated March 26, 1954, passed in I.T.A. 5263 of 1953-54, in
respect of the Assessment year 1948-49, reversing that of
the Appellate Assistant Commissioner of Incometax, Range " C
", Calcutta, dated September 5, 1953.
The facts of this case leading upto this appeal are as
follows: The appellant is engaged in various types of
business activities, being a share-holder and Director or
Managing Director of several limited liability concerns, and
is also a partner in the firm known as " Pioneer Engineering
Works ". In respect of his income during the previous two
assessment years, the appellant was assessed to income-tax
on the sums of Rs. 53,000/-(1946-47) and Rs. 59,000/- (1947-
48). The appellant holds investments in shares of the value
of Rs. 2,45,000/-, out of which, according to the assessee,
shares of the value of Rs. 1,95,000/-, though standing in
his name, belong to other members of his family, including
his father and his wife.
The Hindusthan Co-operative Insurance Society Limited, of
Calcutta, (hereinafter referred to as " the Society "),
acquired a block of about 578 bighas of land lying between
Diamond Harbour Road and Tolly’s Nullah, within the
Municipal limits of the Corporation of Calcutta, between the
years 1940 and 1942. The Society decided to level the land
thus acquired and to open out roads and after developing the
same, it subdivided it into small plots and sites in
different blocks suitable for residential purposes under its
scheme called " The New Alipore Land Development Scheme No.
XV ". The Society offered such plots for sale. One -such
plot, being plot No. 77 in block " E " of the said Scheme,
was agreed, by an agreement dated January 10, 1946, to be
sold to the assessee at the rate of Rs. 2,550/- per katha.
In pursuance of the said agreement, the assessee paid to the
Society, a sum of
849
Rs. 13,099/- being 10% of the estimated price of the plot
with an approximate area of 51 kathas, which subsequently,
on exact measurement, was found to be 45-56 kathas.
Subsequently, on the acceptance of his offer, the appellant
paid another SUM of Rs. 19,649 (omitting annas), being 15%
of the estimated price. Thus, in all, a sum of Rs. 32,748/-
being 25% of the estimated total price of the land, was paid
by the assessee to the Society. All this area which the
Society had undertaken to develop and sell to different
purchasers in small plots, was in occupation of the
Government, which had requisitioned it for purposes
connected with the prosecution of the Second World War.
Hence, one of the terms of the transaction between the
assesee and the Society, was that the transaction of
purchase would be completed within six months of the lands
being released from Government occupation. It was further
stipulated that the assessee would be entitled to apply,
within three months of the receipt of the notice of de-
requisition, for extension of time not exceeding one year,
for the completion of the transaction on the condition that
he paid interest at the rate of 7% per annum on the
outstanding amount, during the extended period. If the
assessee, as purchaser, paid to the Society another sum
which, together with Rs. 32,748/-, already paid, would
amount to 50% of the total price of the plot in question
(within six months of the notice of de-requisition), he
could get a conveyance of the property on his executing an
English Mortgage for the remaining 50% of the price carrying
interest at the rate of 7%, on the expiry of these aforesaid
six months. As there was an apprehension that the
Government might acquire the whole property for its own
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purpose, it was further stipulated that in the event of such
an acquisition by Government, the agreement for sale would
stand rescinded, and the assessee, in that event, would be
entitled to re-payment of the amounts paid by him to the
Society by way of advance for the completion of the
transaction. The assessee’s case is that as the terms of
the payment of purchase-price in several instalments, as
aforesaid, were convenient to him,
107
850
he agreed to take the plot on the conditions aforesaid, with
a view to building a residential house for himself and
constructing a workshop in connection with his business
activity. At the end of the Second World War, the
assesee’s construction activities began to decline, and
there was no immediate prospect of the land in question
being de-requisitioned by Government. In those
circumstances, the assessee negotiated for the assignment of
his rights under the agreement with the Society, to Rani
Yuddha Rajya Devi of Nepal. The Rani appeared to have taken
a fancy to the plot and to have made an attractive offer to
the appellant. Hence, after exchange of letters between the
parties, it was agreed between them that a sum of Rs.
1,07,000 odd would be deposited by the Rani with the
assessee on suspense account until the transaction of sale
between the Society as the vendor and the Rani or her
nominee, as the vendee, would be executed and the
transaction of purchase finalised upon her undertaking to
pay the sum of Rs. 98,000 odd to the Society, which was the
outstanding amount of the sale-price in respect of the plot
agreed by the assessee to be purchased by him from the
Society. After a good deal of correspondence, on December
27, 1950, the Society executed a deed of conveyance in
respect of the said plot, to the daughter of the said Rani
as the vendee. The aforesaid vendee executed a deed of
mortgage in favour of the Society for the outstanding amount
of Rs. 50,900/-, after payment of Rs. 32,700 odd to the
Society. In the result, the assessee received, on April 3,
1947, a sum of Rs. 1,07,000 odd from the Rani, in pursuance
of the agreement between her and the assessee. Until the
execution of the sale-deed between the Society and the
Rani’s nominee, as aforesaid, the assessee continued to be
liable to the Society in respect of the agreement of January
10, 1946. The assessee, thus, received from the Rani a sum
of Rs. 74,000 odd in excess of the amount paid by him to the
Society. The property, including the plot in question, was
not de-requisitioned until some time in 1949.
In respect of the assessment year 1948-49, the assessee
filed a return of his income to the Income-tax
851
Department, showing a loss of Rs. 2,000 odd for the
financial year 1947-48. In pursuance of the notice under s.
23(2) of the Income-tax Act, the assessee appeared before
the Income-tax Officer, Calcutta, and produced all his books
of account, including his bank accounts. The Income-tax
Officer, on an examination of the accounts, and after
questioning the assessee, came to the conclusion that the
assessee had made a profit of Rs. 74,000 odd from the
transaction in -question, which, according to him, was an
adventure in the nature of trade. Hence, on an examination
of the assessee’s accounts, the Income-tax Officer included
the sum of Rs. 74,485/- as profit from an " adventure in the
nature of trade "-taxable under s. 10 of the Income-tax Act-
as one of the items of income accrued to the assessee during
the assessment year 1948-49.
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The assessee went up in appeal to the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner of Income-tax, and challenged the conclusion of
the Income-tax Officer that the sum of Rs. 74,000 odd was
profit from an adventure in the nature of trade. It was
also taken as one of the grounds of appeal by him that in
any event, the receipt accrued to the assessee only in 1950,
after the transaction of sale had been completed as between
the Rani’s nominee and the Society. The Appellate Assistant
Commissioner did not agree with the Income-tax Officer that
the assessee was not in a position either to complete the
transaction of purchase by paying the full amount of
consideration, or to erect a building thereon, or to use the
land in any other way. He pointed out that under the
Scheme, the Society had offered terms of purchase on
instalments and on execution of a mortgage in respect of the
vended property to the extent of 50% of the consideration
money. He also pointed out that the assessee bad
considerable investments to the extent of Rs. 2,45,000/- in
shares of different limited concerns. He, therefore, came
to the conclusion that the assessee was a man of means, and
that it could not be said that he had not intended to
purchase the plot for his own use. He further hold that the
motive of making a profit at the time of the purchase, had
not been established by the Department,
852
and that it was a " solitary transaction ". On these
findings, he found himself unable to confirm the finding of
the Income-tax Officer that the profit was from an adventure
in the nature of trade. He took the view that the appellant
had made an investment which had appreciated considerably in
value, and that it was undoubtedly a case of appreciation of
capital. Treating it as a " Capital Gain ", he came to the
conclusion that as the payment bad been made in 1947, the
gain accrued in that year and not in the year 1950, as
contended on behalf of the assessee. In the result, he made
him liable to pay Capital Gains tax.
The Department went up in appeal to the Incometax Appellate
Tribunal, which, by its judgment dated March 26, 1954,
allowed the appeal. The Tribunal pointed out that the
assessee was not a man of such large means as to think of
acquiring the plot for his own residential or business
purposes. The admitted shares worth Rs. 2,45,000/- standing
in his name, the Tribunal pointed out, were held by the
assessee, in respect of the major portion, on behalf of
other members of his family. The Tribunal also observed
that Rs. 32,748/- paid by the assessee to the Society had
been paid out of borrowed money. This conclusion does not
appear to have been well-founded in fact. The accounts do
show credits in favour of the assessee of a larger amount.
The Tribunal also pointed out that undoubtedly the "
assessee is a keen businessman and has a number of varied
business interests. Admittedly, he is a director of about a
dozen concerns and managing director of two or three. Her
is -/8/- annas partner in an Engineering concern which is
carrying out a number of construction and other contract
works. He is an Engineer by profession and a resident of
Calcutta." The Tribunal based its conclusion that the sale
was an adventure in the nature of trade, and that the
profits, thus made, were assessable to income-tax, on the
following grounds:---
That the payment by the assessee to the Co. operative
Society, of Rs. 32,748/-, came out of a loan taken for the
purpose from a company (which conclu. sion, as already
pointed out, is not borne out by the entries in the books of
account of that company);
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853
2. That the assessee could not have paid the balance of
Rs. 98,000 odd, the outstanding amount of the purchase-
money, to the Insurance Company ;
3. That the assessee had no means to construct a house on
the land, and lastly,
4. That the site itself fetched no income, thus, showing
that it could not be an investment but only an excursion
into the realm of trade.
Against this decision of the Appellate Tribunal, the
assessee moved this Court and obtained special leave to
appeal.
Before we deal with the main question in controversy in this
appeal, we would like to make some general remarks on the
nature of the questions involved in this case. It is not
disputed on behalf of the respondent that the question now
before us, is a question of law, or a mixed question of fact
and law, as has been recently laid down by this Court in the
case of G. Venkataswami Naidu and Co. v. The Commissioner of
Income-tax (1). Speaking for the Court, Gajendragadkar, J.,
after a detailed discussion of the decisions of this Court
Meenakshi Mills, Madurai v. Commis. sioner of Income-tax,
Madras (2) and The Oriental Investment Co.,, Ltd. v.
Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay (3), and of the House of
Lords, in Edwards v. Bairstow (4), came to the conclusion
that the question arising in the case, is a mixed question
of law and fact, and, therefore, open to examination by this
Court. In G. Venkataswami Naidu and Co. v. The Commissioner
of Income-tax (supra), the question raised, was exactly
similar to the question now before us, though in a different
setting of facts. His conclusion may be stated in his own
words as follows:-
" In other words, in reaching the conclusion that the
transaction is an adventure in the nature of trade, the
tribunal has to find primary evidentiary facts and then
apply the legal principles involved in the expression "
adventure in the nature of trade " used by s. 2, sub-s. (4).
It is patent that the clause ’in the nature of trade’
postulates the existence of certain elements in
(1) A.I.R. 1959 S.C. 359.
(2) [1956] S.C.R. 691
(3) [1958] S.C.R. 49.
(4) 36 T.C. 207.
854
the adventure which in law would invest it with the
character of a trade or business;. and that would make the
question and its decision one of mixed law and fact."
"In that view of the matter, this Court further pointed out
that the more proper form of the question is " whether, on
the facts and circumstances proved in the case, the
inference that the transaction in question is an adventure
in the nature of trade is in law justified." The recent
decision of this Court has examined almost all the relevant
cases decided in Indian as also English and Scotch Courts,
and thus, our task in the present case, has been very much
simplified. It has further been observed in that case, more
than once, that judicial opinion was unanimous that no
general principles or universal tests could be laid down,
which could govern the decision of all cases in which the
question for determination is similar to the one now before
us. Each case must be determined on the total impression
created on the mind of the Court by all the facts and
circumstances disclosed in that particular case. Hence, no
decided case can, strictly speaking, be a precedent which
could govern the decision of a later case, involving a
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similar question. Those decisions can be used only by way
of illustrations of the different view-points which have a
bearing on the decision of the case in hand. It has also
not been disputed that in a case where a transaction under
examination, is not in the line of the business of the
assessee, and is ail isolated or a single instance of a
transaction like that, the burden lies on the Revenue to
bring the case within the words of the statute, .namely,
that it was an adventure in the nature of trade. That the
onus is on the Department, has been clearly laid down by
Lord Garmount in the case of Commissioners of Inland Revenue
v. Reinhold (1). That was a case in which the respondent,
the assessee, was a director of a company carrying on the
business of WarehousemeD, and had bought four houses in
January, 1945, and sold them at a profit in December, 1947.
He admitted that he had bought the property with a
(1) 34 T. C. 389, 393.
855
view to resale, and had instructed his agents to sell the
same whenever a suitable purchaser was forthcoming. The
assessee was made liable for tax in respect of the profit
made by him on the resale. On an appeal by the assessee
before the General Commis- 7 sioners, it was contended on
his behalf that the profit on the resale was not taxable.
On behalf of the Crown, it was contended that the
transaction of purchase and sale in question, constituted an
adventure in the nature of trade, and that, therefore, the
profits arising out of the transaction, were chargeable to
income-tax. The General Commissioners, being eqally
divided, allowed the appeal. It was held by the Court of
Session (First Division) that the fact that the property was
purchased with a view to resale, did not, of itself,
establish that the transaction was an adventure in the
nature of trade, and that, therefore, the determination by
the Commissioners was justifiable in law. The Court, in
coming to that conclusion, took into account the con-
siderations that the respondent was not a property agent,
and that his business was not, in any way, associated with
the purchase and sale of estates. It was an isolated
transaction, even though the assessee had purchased a hotel
and sold it again ten years previously. The Court made a
reference to the following observations of Lord Buckmaster
in the case of Leeming v. Jones (1):-
"............ an accretion to capital does not become income
merely because the original capital was invested in the hope
and expectation that it would rise in value; if it does so
rise, its realization does not make it income."
Placing that decision along-side of the present case, let us
see what its salient features are. Though the appellant is
engaged in various types of business as a share-holder or a
director in limited liability concerns, as also in building
contracts, dealing in landed estates is not in the line of
his business. If such a transaction were in the line of his
business, it would not matter much whether, in the
assessment year, he had several such transactions or only
one. Even a single
(1) (1930) A. C. 4I5, 420.
856
transaction of dealing in landed estates, being a part of
his business, would be liable to income-tax, if a profit is
made in that transaction. But., admittedly, the transaction
in question is the only one of its kind, ,rout of which the
appellant has made a considerable profit which appears to
have been in the nature of a windfall. When he entered into
the agreement with the Society for the purchase of the plot,
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in January, 1946, he had expected that at the end of the
World War, the Government would release the property from
its requisition, and that the Society will develop the land
by laying the necessary roads and providing other amenities
to the plot-holders. But as the Government did not release
the property, and as the appellant was a businessman, who
was interested in return from his capital, and as he had
already paid Rs. 32,000 odd by way of advance towards the
purchase price, and as in 1947, at the end of the Second
World War, his business in contracts for building con-
structions, began to decline, he, naturally, thought of
making the best of the bargain. If he did not get out of
the transaction, his financial difficulties in meeting his
further liabilities under the agreement, as a result of
slump in his main line of business, might lead to the
forfeiture of the advance of Rs. 32,000 odd, he would
naturally be on the lookout for a good purchaser. He was
lucky to find a lady with a lot of money to spare, who had,
as he alleged, taken a fancy to the plot in question. Thus,
he could assign to her the benefit of his agreement with the
Society on terms which were highly profitable to him. There
is no clear evidence in support of the inference of the
Appellate Tribunal that the land was purchased with the sole
intention of selling it later at a profit. The Tribunal
considered two alternatives in relation to this transaction-
one, that the land was purchased in order to build a
residential house, and the second, that it was purchased in
hope of selling it later for a profit. The first alterna-
tive, the Tribunal rejected on the ground that " be does not
seem to have very much of means at his disposal." That
itself is a statement which does not bear close scrutiny.
During the two years previous to the year under assessment,
the appellant had
857
been assessed to income-tax on Rs. 53,000/- and Rs. 59,000/-
, as already indicated. That does not lend countenance to
the surmise that the appellant was not a man of means.
Admittedly, he held marketable shares of the value of about
2 1/2 lacs of rupees, though all those shares standing in
his name, were not claimed by him as his omn. Apparently,
he was carrying on a lucrative business during the
immediately preceding years. It is true that in the year of
assessment, on his own showing in his income-tax return, he
had suffered a loss, but that may have been a turning point
in his fortunes, and that would not necessarily lead to the
inference that he was not in a sound financial position on
the date of the agreement with the Society. It may be that
his hopes of flourishing in his business in the years to
come, were not realized after the conclusion of the Second
World War. But even assuming that the Tribunal was right in
its conclusion as to the second alternative, namely, that
the purchase was made in the hope of making a profit after
re-sale, the matter is not concluded. In this connection, a
reference may be made again to the decision in Commissioners
of Inland Revenue v. Reinhold (supra), at p. 392, where it
was argued on behalf of the Revenue that a profit made in a
transaction which was in the nature of an investment in the
hope and expectation of a rise in price, may be an accretion
of capital, but that if at the time of the purchase, the
purchaser had resolved to sell the property in the event of
a profit being made, and instructions had been issued to his
agents accordingly, the transaction could not have been
treated as an investment, but was truly an adventure in the
nature of trade, and the profit thus made, must be treated
as income. This argument was not accepted as valid. In
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that connection, reference was made to the following
observations of Lord Dunedin, in the case of Jones v.
Leeming (1) :-
"............ The fact that a man does not mean to hold an
investment may be an item of evidence tending to show
whether he is carrying on a trade or
(1) (1930) A. C. 415, P. 423.
108
858
concern in the nature of trade in respect of his invest-
ments, but per se it leads to no conclusion whatever."
The decision of the House of Lords in the case afore. said,
which is also reported in 15 T. C. 333, is rather ins.
tructive. In that case, the appellant was a member of a
syndicate of four persons, formed to acquire an option over
a rubber estate, with a view to selling at a profit. The
option was secured, but the estate was considered to be too
small for re-sale. An option over another joint estate was
accordingly secured, and it was decided to resell the two
estates to a public company to be formed for the purpose.
Another member of the syndicate undertook to arrange for
promotion of the company. The syndicate’s rights were
transferred to a company. This company floated another
company to which the properties were sold. The syndicate’s
profits were divided between the members, and the appellant,
as one of the members of the syndicate, was assessed to
income-tax in respect of his shares of the profits. The
General Commissioners, on appeal, were of the opinion that
the interest in the property in question had been acquired
with the sole object of making a profit, and that there was
no intention of holding it as an investment. Hence, the
assessment to income-tax was affirmed. The King’s Bench
Division, at the first hearing, remitted the case to the
General Commissioners for a finding as to whether there was
a concern in the nature of trade, and the Commissioners
found that the transaction was not such a concern. It was
held by the House of Lords that the profits were not liable
to tax on the basis that they were income from an adventure
in the nature of trade. Viscount Dunedin, in the course of
his opinion, referred, with apparent approval, to the dictum
in Ryall v. Noare (1), to the following effect:
" A casual profit made on an isolated purchase and sale,
unless merged with similar transactions in the carrying on
of a trade or business is not liable to tax."
He also approved of the following dictum of Lawrence, L. J.,
in the case of Leeming v. Jones (2) :_
(1) (1923) 2 K. B. 447, 454.
(2) (1930) 1 K.B. 270, 302,
859
" It seems to me in the case of an isolated transaction of
purchase and re-sale of property there is really no middle
course open. It is either an adventure in the nature of
trade, or else it is simply a case of sale and re-sale of
property."
Lord Warrington of Clyffe, in the course of his opinion in
the case of Jones v. Leeming (1), made the following
observations, which apply with full force to the facts and
circumstances of the present case:’
" Here we have a case of the acquisition of an item of
property and a profit made by the transfer thereof to
another. In this I can find nothing but a profit arising
from an accretion in value of the item of property in
question and the realization of such enhanced value. There
is in this nothing in the nature of revenue or income. The
fact that the parties intended from the first to make a
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profit if they could does not in my opinion affect the
question we have to determine."
As already indicated, the line of demarcation between cases
of isolated transactions of purchase and sale being ventures
in the nature of trade, and those which are not such
ventures, if any, is very thin. The cases in which single
transactions have been held not to belong to the class of
ventures in the nature of trade, have been noticed above,
and the considerations which led those courts to hold that
such ventures were not liable to income-tax, apply to the
case in hand. On the other side of the line, there is a
series of cases in which single transactions have been held
to have been ventures in the nature of trade, for reasons
which do not apply to the present case. We may notice some
of the typical cases which illustrate the reasons for which
a single transaction was brought within the ambit of a
venture in the nature of trade. The case of Californian
Copper Syndicate (Limited and Reduced) v. Harris (Surveyor
of Taxes) (2), related to the purchase and sale of a mining
property. In that case, a company had been formed for the
purpose, inter alia, of acquiring and re-selling a mining
property. That company acquired some mining property
(1) (1930) A.C. 415, 425.
(2) 5 T.C. 159.
860
and sold the same to a second company, consideration for the
sale being paid-up shares of the latter company. It was
held by the Court of Exbhequer (Scotland) Second Division,
that the difference between the purchase price and the value
of shares for which the property was exchanged was a profit
assessable to incometax. It was pointed out by the Court
that the case involved a deal which was a "proper trading
transaction, one within the Company’s power under their
Articles, and contemplated as well as authorised by their
Articles ". The ratio of the decision in that case appears
to have been that though it was a single transaction in
which profit was made, it was an adventure in the nature of
trade, being in the line of the business adopted by the
company. The next case of Martin v. Lowry (1) is another
instance of a single transaction of purchase of property
being treated as a venture in the nature of trade, on
account of the very nature and magnitude of the commodity
dealt in by a person whose usual line of business was wholly
outside the scope of the new venture. That was a case in
which a wholesale agricultural machinery merchant, who never
had any dealings in linen trade, purchased from the
Government its surplus stock of aeroplane linen (some 44
million yards). In order to dispose of this huge stock of
linen purchased by him, the assessee embarked upon an
extensive advertising campaign, rented offices and engaged
expert staff to organize the sales. The number of
transactions of sale of that huge stock of linen, ran into
thousands. The House of Lords affirmed the determination of
the courts below, holding that the transaction amounted to
the carrying on of a trade of which the profits were
chargeable to income-tax and Excess Profits Duty. Another
case in the same volume, is The Commissioners of Inland
Revenue v. Livingston and others (2). In that case, the
persons sought to be taxed were, a ship repairer, a
blacksmith and a fish salesman’s employee, who joined in the
venture of purchasing a cargo vessel with a view to
converting it into a steam-drifter, and selling it. That
was a new line of business for them.
(1) 11 T.C. 297.
(2) 11 T.C. 538.
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861
Extensive repairs and alterations to the ship were carried
out, and the result was a sale of the converted vessel at a
profit. It was held that the transaction, though an
isolated one, was a venture in the nature of trade, and
thus, liable to income-tax. The ratio of the decision was
stated in the following words of the Lord President:-
" If the venture was one consisting simply in an isolated
purchase of some article against an expected rise in price
and a subsequent sale it might be impossible to say that the
venture was ’in the nature of trade’ ; because the only
trade in the nature of which it could participate would be
the trade of a dealer in such articles, and a single
transaction falls as far short of constituting a dealer’s
trade, as the appearance of a single swallow does. of making
a summer. The trade of a dealer necessarily consists of a
course of dealing, either actually engaged in or at any rate
contemplated and intended to continue."
The case of Rutledge v. The Commissioners of Inland Revenue
(1), is another illustration of a case in which a single
transaction of purchase and sale, was held to be an
adventure in the nature of trade for the reason that the
commodity purchased was of such a nature and of such a vast
magnitude that it could not have possibly been intended for
the consumption of the purchaser himself or his family. In
that case, the assessee was a money-lender who was also
interested in a cinema company. In the interest of his
cinema business, he happened to be in Berlin, and there took
the opportunity of purchasing, for a very cheap price, a
very large quantity (one million rolls) of toilet paperfor
pound 1,000-and realised pound ,12,000 by sale of that com-
modity. He was taxed on the nett profit of pound 10,895.
It was held by the Court of Session, Scotland (First
Division), that it was certainly an adventure, because the
assessee made himself liable for the purchase of that vast
quantity of toilet paper, obviously for no other conceivable
purpose than that of re-selling it for a large profit. As
regards the question whether the adventure was in the nature
of trade, it was contended
(1) 14 T.C. 490.
862
on behalf of the assessee that it was essential to the idea
of trade that there should be a continuous series of trading
operations. The Court rightly pointed out that the question
was not whether it was a trade but ‘ Whether it was a
venture in the nature of trade. Hence, though the single
transaction of purchase and sale, may not have amounted to
what is ordinarily understood by trade in the sense of a
series of transactions, it was certainly a venture in the
nature of trade, because from the very beginning, the
intention was manifest that the purchase was made not with a
view to utilizing the commodity for the personal use of the
purchaser, but with a view to making profit by a resale,
which was apparent from the very nature and magnitude of the
commodity purchased. Another illustration of the same rule
is to be found in the case of The Balgownie Land Trust, Ltd.
v. The Commissioners of Inland Revenue (1). That was the
case of a landed estate which was left by the owner to.
trustees with a direction to sell it. The trustees, being
unsuccessful in their efforts to sell the estate, formed a
company with general powers to deal in real property, and
transferred the estate to this company. The company made
certain other purchases of property by way of accretions to
the original estate. The property was sold in parts during
the years 1921, 1924, 1926 and 1927. The company was
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assessed to income-tax for the profits from the sales of
those lands. The Court, confirming the assessment of the
company to income-tax on the profits made on those sales,
held that the company was doing precisely what it meant to
do, namely, carrying on business of a company dealing in a
real estate. The case of Commissioners of Inland Revenue v.
Fraser (2), is another illustration of the rule that if a
person enters into a single transaction outside his ordinary
avocation of life, with the sole object of making a profit
by re-sale, it may amount to an adventure in the nature of
trade. In -that case, a wood-cutter bought, for re-sale,
whisky in large quantities, and without taking delivery of
the whisky, sold it at a profit. It was the assessee’s sole
(1) 14 T.C. 684.
(2) 24 T.C. 498.
863
dealing in whisky, but all the same, it was held to be
liable to income-tax on the ground that the nature of the
transaction, with reference to the commodity dealt in in
large quantities, which would not ordinarily be meant for
personal or family consumption, may indicate that it was an
adventure in the nature of trade.
We have set out the illustrative cases on the two sides of
the thin line of demarcation that may possibly be said to
distinguish one class of case from the other. The question
still remains, on which side of the line, the present case
should be placed ? The learned Solicitor-General placed
strong reliance on the recent decision of this Court in G.
Venkataswami Naidu & Co. v. The Commissioner of Income-tax
(supra). The question, therefore, is whether the present
case falls on the same side of the line as the recent
decision of this Court, which had to deal with a similar
question, as already indicated. In that case, the assessee
had purchased four plots under four different deeds. During
the time that the assessee was in possession of those plots,
he made no efforts to put up any structures, or to utilize
them in other ways. The assessee was in a fiduciary
position with the Mills contiguous to which the plots
purchased, were; and it was also found that the assessee was
in a position to influence the Mills to purchase those plots
at a price favourable to him. It was in that setting of the
facts, that this Court made the following obser-
vations
"When s. 2, sub-s. (4) refers to an adventure in the nature
of trade it clearly suggests that the transaction cannot
properly be regarded as trade or busi. ness. It is allied
to transactions that constitute trade or business but may
not be trade or business itself It is characterized by some
pB‘= of the essential features that makeup trade or business
but not by all of them; and so, even an isolated transaction
can satisfy the description of an adventure in the nature of
trade."
Can it be said, in the setting of the facts and
circumstances of the present case, set out above, that the
transaction in question has such characteristics-as
864
to point to the conclusion that itwas a venture in the
nature of trade ? It was suggested that the area of the land
in question, namely, three quarters of an acre in the
suburbs of Calcutta, was large enough to indicate that the
assessee would not have intended to take it for his own use
and occupation. In the first place, the area is not so
large as to lead necessarily to the inference that it could
not have been meant to be used by him in -the way of his
business or for his own residence. Certainly, the Society,
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having acquired more than 500 bighas of land in a lot, could
not claim that the land was meant for its own use. On the
other side, it was meant to be developed into small building
sites, as they actually did. But the Society had, without
developing the area, sub-divided it into building sites, one
of which was sought to be acquired by the appellant. He was
carrying on an engineering concern, and it is not,
therefore, unlikely that he may have intended, as he
alleged, to put up a small workshop on a portion of the land
to be acquired, and to build his own residential house on
the other portion. It was not suggested that the appellant
had his own house in Calcutta, and was, therefore, not in
need of a building site. At the time he entered into the
agreement of purchase with the Society, he was doing good
business, as is shown by the large amounts on which he was
assessed to income-tax. It was not unnatural for him to
look forward to continue his business in as prosperous a way
as he had been doing in the recent past, and thus, to raise
sufficient funds to build his own residential house, or to
construct a workshop for his own engineering business.
Hence, the possibility or the probability that the site may
appreciate in value, would not necessarily lend itself to
the inference that the transaction was a venture in the
nature of trade, as distinguished from a capital investment.
In all the circumstances of this case, the total impression
created on our mind, is that it has not been made out by the
Department that the dominant intention of the appellant was
to embark on a venture in the nature of trade, when he
entered into the agreement which resulted in the profits
sought to be taxed.
865
For the aforesaid reasons, we would allow this appeal, and
set aside the orders of the Tribunal below with costs.
KAPUR, J.-I regret I am unable to agree. that the appeal in
the present -case should be allowed and my reasons are
these: On the facts which were proved the Income-tax
Appellate Tribunal came to the conclusion that the purchase
of land by the appellant was an adventure in the nature of
trade and profit arising therefrom was assessable to income-
tax. In coming to this conclusion the Appellate Tribunal
took into consideration certain facts; (1) that the only
payment the appellant made for the purchase of the land was
of a sum of Rs. 32,748 which he borrowed from his company
and he was not in a position to pay the balance of Rs.
98,246; (2) the appellant had no money available at all, to
pay the part of the purchase price of Rs. 1,30,994 and be
had no means to construct the house ; (3) that his financial
resources were such as not to justify the purchase of the
plot of land for the construction of a house; (4) the site
itself fetched no income but it was a kind of investment
with the hope of making a profit out of it and the land was
purchased only for the purpose of sale; (5) that the
appellant being a keen businessman had intimate knowledge of
the trend of the rise in prices of land and therefore the
purpose for which he made the purchase was in order to make
profit and not merely an investment.
As against these circumstances various facts were brought to
our notice which it has argued militate against the findings
of the Tribunal : (1) that the appellant was carrying on an
engineering concern and therefore it was not unlikely that
he intended, as he alleged, to put up a small workshop on
that portion of land; (2) that the appellant did not have
his own house in Calcutta and therefore he could have been
in need of a piece of land on which he could build a house
and (3) that at the time -he entered into an agreement of
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purchase he had a prosperous business which is ,shown by the
amount of income-tax which he paid for
109
866
two years and he could legitimately expect that his business
would continue to remain prosperous; (4) that these facts
could not lead to the necessary consequence that the
transaction was a venture in the nature of trade and that
it was not the dominant intention of the appellant at the
time when he entered into the transaction to embark upon a
venture in the nature of trade.
Under the Income-tax law it is the exclusive function of the
Appellate Tribunal to find facts. Even though the powers of
this Court under Art. 136 are very wide yet they have to be
exercised within the limits imposed by the decisions of this
Court and one such limitation is that this Court will not
ordinarily interfere with findings of fact. It has been
held by this Court that the question whether an adventure is
in the nature of a trade or not is a mixed question of law
and fact. The facts have to be found by the fact-finding
authority and to those facts the law has to be applied and
whenever it is necessary to get a correct finding on a
question of fact it is the fact finding authority which is
called upon to consider the evidence and give its finding.
(See G. Venkataswami Naidu & Co. v. The Commissioner of
Income-tax (1)). Therefore if there arose a question of law
out of the order of the Appellate Tribunal then the
appellant could have had the case stated to the High Court
under s. 66(1) and if the Appellate Tribunal refused to
state the case it was open to the appellant to have the case
stated under s. 66(2) of the Indian Income-tax Act. No
doubt he did make an application to the Appellate Tribunal
to state the case under s. 66(1) but he did not make any
application to the High Court till 1957, after he had
obtained special leave in this Court and the High Court
dismissed the petition on the ground that it was barred by
time. The position comes to this that the tribunal refused
to state the case under s. 66(1) of the Income-tax Act and
the appellant did not apply to the High Court under s. 66(2)
till long after the period of limitation had expired. In
the circumstances the courses open to this
(1) A.I.R. (1959) S.C. 359.
867
Court would be (1) to set aside the order of the Appellate
Tribunal and remit the case to the Tribunal for decision in
accordance with the observations made by this Court as was
done in the case of Omar Saly Mohammed Sait v. The
Commissioner of Income-tax (1) or it may be open to this
Court to direct a reference as was done in Jagta Coal
Company v. The Commissioner of Income-tax (2). Then in
Dhakeswari Cotton Mills v. The Commissioner of Income-tax
(3) this Court only remitted the case to the Appellate
Tribunal to proceed in accordance with law on the ground
that certain principles of natural justice had been violated
and the assessee was not given an opportunity to rebut the
evidence against him.
The Income-tax law has prescribed a procedure to have
questions of law determined and an assessee cannot byepass
the various steps prescribed under that law. The position
therefore comes to this that if there is no evidence to
support the finding the question is one of law which would
fall under ss. 66(1) and 66(2) of the Income-tax Act; (2) if
in giving its finding the Appellate Tribunal disregards
certain pieces of evidence or proceeds in a manner which is
violative of natural justice the finding will be vitiated
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but if there is evidence to support the finding of fact and
these findings are properly arrived at then it will be a
pure question of fact which this Court will not ordinarily
interfere with ; (3) if there is an error of law arising as
above or because of misinterpretation of the Income-tax law
then the case has to be stated to the High Court in the
manner provided in the Income-tax Act and if the assessee
does not choose to follow the procedure prescribed then he
cannot come to this Court disregarding the remedy provided
by the Income-tax law and (4) the legal effect of facts
found where the point for determination is a mixed question
of law and fact would fall under s. 66(1) & (2) of the
Income-tax Act. (See G. Venkataswami Naidu & Co. v. The
Commissioner of Income-tax (4) ).
This is a case in which certain essential facts have
(1) C.A. No. 15 Of 1958
(2) C. A. NO. 337 Of 1956.
(3) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 941.
(4) A.I.R. (1959) S.C. 359.
868
not been considered by the Appellate Tribunal and therefore
it is a case which should be remitted to the Income-tax
Appellate Tribunal to determine the facts in accordance with
the observations made by this ,,Court and in the light of
those findings to determine whether the transaction was an
adventure in the nature of a trade or not.
I would order accordingly.
ORDER OF THE COURT
In view of the opinion of the majority, the appeal is
allowed with costs.