Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX, CALCUTTA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
KARAM CHAND THAPAR AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 14/08/1996
BENCH:
SEN, S.C. (J)
BENCH:
SEN, S.C. (J)
JEEVAN REDDY, B.P. (J)
CITATION:
JT 1996 (7) 280 1996 SCALE (5)843
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
SEN, J.
The Income Tax Appellate Tribunal referred the
following question of law arising out of its order to the
High Court for its opinion :-
"Whether, on the facts and in the
circumstances of the case, the
Tribunal was right on holding that
the amounts received by the
assessee by way of under charges,
do not constitute its trading
receipts, and that accordingly
neither the surplus of the receipts
remaining unpaid nor the amounts
transferred by the assessee to the
profit and loss accounts could be
assessed as the income of the
assessee in the years 1953-54,
1956-57, 1957-58, 1958-59, 1959-60,
1960-61, 1961-62 and 1962-63 ? "
At all material times, Karam Chand Thapar & Others, the
assessee herein, carried on business as del credere agent of
the collieries and also a agent of the purchasers of coal.
It acted, so to speak, as a double agent. The coal sold by
the collieries were sent by wagon to various purchasers FOR.
The purchasers paid for the freight. Even if the wagons were
not filled to its full capacity, the practice of the
railways was to charge for the full wagon-load. In other
words, the purchasers did not get any rebate from the
railways for the wagons not being loaded to its full
capacity. In such a situation, the assessee used to claim
from the colliery companies, what was described as "under-
charges". These amounts were realised by the assessee even
without any claim being made by the purchasers. As and when
demanded by the purchasers, the assessee used to pay off
their claims on account of underloading of wagons out of the
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moneys obtained from the colliery companies. But every year,
there was an excess if receipts over payments. The surplus
amount was assessed as assessee‘s income, year after year,
till the assessment year 1953-54. For the first time, in its
assessment for the assessment year 1953-54, the assessee
claimed that these amounts of surplus receipts on account of
"under-charges" were not its income at all. The assessee’s
contention was dealt with by the Income Tax Officer in the
assessment order as under :-
"The assessee had claimed exemption
in respect of Rs.50,294/-
Rs.65,994/- out of Rs.68,267/-
unclaimed credit balances written
off during the year. In the return
exemption was claimed in respect of
Rs. 53,537/- but at the assessment
stage, the claim was enhances to
Rs. 65,994/-. This amount of Rs.
65,994/- consists of credit
balances in the names of various
parties. Rs. 6,625/- credit balance
in the banks Rs. 4,171/- and under
charges Rs. 55,197/-. It may be
mentioned here that last year
exemption in respect of under
charges was not pressed for at the
assessment stage nor it was claimed
in appeal. The assessee has written
that under charges are in respect
of freight of under loaded wagons
which their customers had to pay
under the railway rules in spite of
the fact that the full capacity by
the various suppliers. These
charges it is stated were claimed
on behalf of their customers which
remained unclaimed with the
assessee. No evidence was produced
in support of this contention. The
under charges do not stand credited
to the account of the customers. In
the absence of any evidence it is
not proved that these were not in
the nature of trading receipt and
the contention of the assessee
company fails......"
The Appellate Assistant Commissioner in appeal upheld
the order of the Income Tax Officer with the following
observations :-
"the appellant claims to act as
brokers for supply of coal to the
permit holders by placing orders
thereon with the various
collieries. the collieries supply
the coal directly to the permit
holders "with railway freight to
pay: at the destination but it
raised a debit note against the
appellant from the permit holders.
It sometimes happens, more often
than not, that the collieries for
not load the wagons to its full
carrying capacity but the railways
charges the full freight as if the
wagon is full loaded. The appellant
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immediately prefers a claim with
the collieries for the excess
freight paid in respect of coal
actually not supplied and realised
the same. The payments are made to
the ultimate buyers from these
receipts as and when claims are
preferred by them. Transactions of
the appellant by way of purchase
and sale of coal amount to several
crores of rupees and the excess
freight charges by the railways for
the coal actually not supplied by
the collieried and realised by the
appellant from collieries comes to
a very sizable figure of the order
of 1 or 2 lacks of rupees. The same
is paid over to the permit holder,
when a claim is preferred by them
and after meeting this claim there
is always a sizable balance left
whcih is transferred to the profit
& loss account under the head
miscellaneous receipts. The I.T.O.
taxed the same as the appellant’s
income from business inasmuch as
the same has arisen in the course
of the appellant’s trading activity
and in view of the treatment given
by the appellant itself treating
these amounts as income in its
accounts. At the time of hearing
the learned Advocate contended that
these unclaimed balances
transferred to the profit & loss
account could not be treated as the
appellant’s income since they did
not have the characteristics of
income at the time of receipt and
reliance was placed on the decision
on Morley V, Tattersall (22 Tax
Cases page 51). Reference was made
to this passage "The money which
was received was money which had
not got any profit making quality
about is; is was money which, in a
business was the client’s money ans
nobody else’s. It was money for
which they were liable to account
to the clients, and the fact that
they paid it into their own
account, do they clearly did, and
the fact that it remained in their
assets until paid out do not alter
that circumstances". In a nutshell
his argument was that if the
receipt did not partake of the
nature of a trading receipt it
could not be taxed merely because
the appellant treated the same as
income in its accounts.
6. I have heard the argument of the
learned Advocate. In my opinion the
case does not fall within the ratio
of the above decision. first of all
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the appellant prefers a claim on
the collieries and gets if by its
won right and what if transmits or
pays out to the constituents may
form a legitimate item of outgoing,
but is cannot be said that the
receipt by the appellant was merely
a receipt for and on behalf of the
third parties. The appellant has
not treated these receipts as
liabilities in its accounts an in
my opinion it was clearly an income
receipt arising in the course of
appellant’s trade. But the same
should be taxed in the manner which
the I.T.O. has done by taxing them
in the year when the assessee had
transferred certain portions from
this account received during this
year are Rs.208913/59 and the
amounts paid are Rs.109049/10.
there is thus a net surplus of
Rs.99863/11/9 or in round figures
Rs.99864/- which should be taxes as
income of this year in the place of
Rs.55197/- which is the amount
which has been transferred by the
appellant to the profit and loss
account and which has been taxed by
the I.T.O. The amount to be taxed
is the higher figure of Rs.99864/-
and in that view of the matter
there will be an enhancement on
this account to the extent of
Rs.44667/-."
The assessee made a further appeal to the tribunal. The
tribunal after referring to a larger number of decisions
including three English cases - Morley (H.M.Inspector of
Taxes) V. Messrs Tattersall (22 Tax Cases 51), Jay’s-The
Jewellers Ltd. V. Commissioners of Inland Revenue (29 Tax
Cases 274) and Elson (Inspector of Taxes) V. Prices Tailors
Ltd. (1963) 1 A.E.R. 231 - concluded that the amounts
received by the assessee from the colliery companies on
account if under-charges were not its trading receipts. The
tribunal strongly relied on the observations of Calcutta
High Court in the case of C.I.T.V. Sandersons & Morgans (AIR
1969 Cal. 211) wherein it was held that the amounts received
by a firm of solicitors on behalf of its clients was not its
income when it was received and will not be treated as its
income later on merely because the amount remained with the
firm and was utilised by the firm in its business. The
tribunal strongly relied on the following observations of
the Court :-
".....The Solicitor is the agent of
the client.... We are of opinion
that when a solicitor receives
money from his client, he does not
do so as a trading receipt but he
receives the money of the principal
in his capacity as an agent and
that also in a fiduciary capacity.
The money so received does not have
any profit making quality about it
when received.... The solicitor
remains liable to account by this
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money to his client.
We think these observations full
apply to the facts of the present
case. It was then contended for the
Revenue that since the solicitor
did not stand in the position of a
trustee to the client and since the
Limitation Act applied, the remedy
of the clients to recover by
limitation. This contention was
rejected, their Lordships observing
"We do not think that this
consideration in any way alters the
legal position... Thus even though
the remedy of some of the clients
may have become barred by
limitation, even then the batted
debt did not become the income of
the assessee." These observations
apply with equal force here and
make it clear that the transfer of
some of the balances to the Profit
& Loss Account by the assessee done
not convert it into a trading
receipt, even if such transfer is
based on the ground of limitation.
We may only add that, on this
aspect of the case, it is true that
their Lordships were not asked to
consider Jay’s case but their
decision is binding on us. We see
no difference between the character
of the assesee’s receipts in that
case and here except that the
amounts involved are larger."
On the application of the Department, the aforesaid
question of law was referred by the Tribunal to the High
Court. The High Court upheld the order of the Tribunal.
Hence this appeal to this Court.
It has been argued that the character of the trading
receipt is finally decided once for all as soon as the
amount of money is received by a trader. If the money is
received as his trading profit, it is taxable as his income.
But, if the amount is received for and on behalf of somebody
else, then is does not become a trading receipt. The money
in such a case, did not belong the assessee. In this case
the money which was received by the assessee was really for
and on behalf of the purchasers of coal and it was being
held for and on behalf of the purchasers. It may be that
some of the purchasers did not demand their dues as result
of which the assessee was left with a surplus. But, since
the true character of the surplus when the amount was
received was not trading receipts, it could not be impressed
with character later on merely because some of the
purchasers were not paid their dues for one reason or
another.
We are unable r uphold this contention made on behalf
of the assessee. first of all, from the facts narrated
above, it is difficult to hold that the money on account of
under-charges was received by the assessee for and on behalf
of the their customers. Even before the customers made any
demand, the assessee lodged its claim with the colliery
companies and received payments. It has been noted in the
order of the Tribunal, "It is not clear whether the terms of
the contract between the colliery and the consignee entitle
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the latter to call upon the former to refund to him the
excess freight charged on the ground that such excess
freight was charges because of the colliery’s negligence in
loading the wagon to full capacity. It is not also clear
whether in the absence of a contract to that effect the
colliery will have valid defence against such claim, if
made." It has not been established by producing the contract
or any other evidence that the colliery was bound to supply
coal in such quantity as would load a railway wagon to its
full capacity. Freight was payable by the purchaser. That
was a matter between the purchaser and the railways. The
onus lies on the assessee to prove facts which entitle his
it claim a deduction. The tribunal has noted that is not
clear upon the seller (colliery company) to refund to him
the excess freight charges. It is difficult to see how the
tribunal without the facts being clear came to the
conclusion that the colliery companies were under legal
obligation to reimburse to the consignee for underloading of
the wagons.
In any event, the finding of fact is that only some of
the consignees demanded reimbursement of excess freight
paid. But even if no specific demand was made, the assessee
use to realised large amounts every year on account of
under-charges. For example, the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner has noted that during the year appeal, the
assessee realised Rs.208913/59 as under-charges but paid out
only Rs.99863/11/9. The surplus amount was ultimately taken
to assessee’s profit and loss account as miscellaneous
receipts. The assessee did not contest assessment of these
amounts as profits from its agency business till the
assessment year 1953-54. The departure from the long
standing practice was justifies on the ground that the
amount received as under-charges from the collieries were
held in trust by the assessee for and on behalf of the
purchasers of coal. Mr. Verma, appearing on behalf of the
assessee, has contended that the assessee may have committed
breach of trust in treating the amounts as its own but the
fact remains that the money was held in trust for the
consumers of coal. The character of receipt will not change
merely because of the accounting practice of the assessee.
As has been noted earlier, the case of the assessee’s
conduct. The assessee has brought the surplus amounts as
miscellaneous receipts to is profit and lass account year
after year. A trustee normally should not mingle his own
money with money held in trust. The conduct of the assessee
does not indicate that the assessee was treating the amount
as nothing but his own. It was using it as part of its
profits of business. The natural presumption from such a
conduct will be that these amounts were the assessee’s own
profits from its coal agency. The sum and substance for the
case is that the assesssee without any demand from the
purchasers of coal, claimed from the colliery companies
large amounts of money year after year as under-charges.
Some of the purchasers demanded payment on account possibly
as del credere agent of the collieries. But the fact remains
that this was the mode in which the assessee was doing its
business and year after year, surplus was generated which
was taken by the assessee to its profit and loss account.
There is nothing in trust. Even if a purchaser demands
reimbursement for underloading of coal, any payment by the
assessee will be entitled to usual deduction. But that facts
brought on record and the conduct of the assessee belies the
case of any entrustment of money for and on behalf of some
purchasers of coal. There are actual four findings of fact
made by the tribunal in this regard. The first is that the
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freight charges have to be paid the consignees and not by
the colliery nor by the assessee who was only an agent. The
second finding of fact is that the assessee has realised
from the colliery company in course of its business from
time to time various amounts on account of under-charges.
The third finding is that only a portion of the amount thus
realised by the assessee was utilised to pay the consignees.
The fourth fact found by the tribunal is that the surplus
amounts, year after year, has been taken by the assessee to
its profit and loss account and had been assesses to tax
without contest as its income from business in the earlier
years of assessment.
The case of the assessee that it paid the consignees
from time to time some amounts on account of under-charges
has been accepted by the tribunal. But there is nothing to
indicate that the amounts which the assessee received from
the collieries in usual course of business were not on its
own account but on behalf of unspecified consignees who had
not even made any claim. The agency contract under which the
business was carried in was not produced before the
tribunal. But the tribunal has recorded the fact that the
assessee has a dual role to play in these transactions. He
was a del credere agent for the colliery companies. So far
as the consignees were concerned, he arranged for delivery
of coal FOR. There is nothing to indicate that he has
guranteed that the railway wagons would be fully loaded by
the colliery companies. The only argument of the assessee
was that payment of under-charges by the colliery companies
in such cases was customary. It may be that the collieries,
according to trade practice, had to pay the consignees for
underloading the wagon. But from this it does not follow
that what the del credere agent received from his principal
in course of his trade was not his trading receipt. He
collected money on account of under-charges not on the basis
if on a demand made by the purchasers, but as a matter of
routine irrespective of any demand by the consignees. If and
when any purchaser made demand for payment, some payments
were made. The surplus balance was taken to the profit &
loss account. It must be presumed that money taken to the
profit and loss account of the assessee will be its trading
receipt. No fact had been brought on record to the contrary.
The amount was not kept in a suspense account or shown as a
liability. It should also not be readily inferred that the
assessee mingled the moneys which he held in trust with his
own profits and utilised it as profit if his business. On
the contrary, the inference should be that the assessee
acted in accordance with law and not contrary to law. Mr.
Verma’s contention that the assessee may have acted in
breach of trust but that will not alter the character of the
receipt cannot be upheld in the facts and circumstances of
this case.
Mr. Verma strongly relied on the decision in the case
of Morley (H.M.Inspector of Taxes) V. Messrs. Tattersall (22
Tax Cases 51) and contended that the unclaimed balances of
the assessee in the instant case was of the same nature as
unclaimed balances in the case of Tattersall and could not
be treated as revenue receipts for the purpose of taxation.
Messrs. Tattersall were auctioneers who sold horses on
behalf of their clients. From the purchase price, the
deducted commission and other expenses. The balance amount
was payable to the vendors on the Monday week following the
sale. At the foot of the printed conditions of the
contract, it was stated in bold type "No money paid, or
remittance sent by post, without a written order". On a
number of occasions, the vendors did not immediately call
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for payment of their money. Consequently, moneys remained in
the hands of the firm to the credit of the vendors. Many of
these balances remained unclaimed for cosiderable number of
years but the position in law admitted by the revenue was
that vendors were entitled to claim the payment of money at
any time unaffected by the statue of limitation because of
the absence of a written order as required by the conditions
of sale for making payment. the Court pointed out that "we
are dealing, therefore, with obligation which, as a matter
of law are existing obligations which the form can be called
upon to perform at any moment. That is a matter not without
importance in the examination of this case."
The other important features of Tattersall’s case was
that the unclaimed balance was never taken to the Profit and
Loss Account. The business was initially carried on by
Tattersall alone. He took a partner on 23.2.1922. Thereafter
a third partner was taken on 23.3.1936. When the first
partner was taken to the partnership, the unclaimed balance
which was shown under the heading "Auction Sales Suspense
Account" in the books of the firm was transferred to E.S.
Tattersall Capital Account. When the third partner Mr.
Needham was brought into the partnership, out of the
unclaimed balance, some amount was transferred to the
personal current account of Tattersall and some to the
personal account Mr. Deane the other partner. The
partnership deed provided that such liabilities as subsisted
on respect of the unclaimed balances should be assumed by
the partnership and any payments actually made in respect
thereof should be borne by the partners in proportion to
their shares of profits at the time when the payment was
made. In view of the said facts, it could not be argued that
the receipts arising out of the sale of horses belonging to
the clients were trading receipts of the firm of
acutioneers. In fact, it was recorded in the judgment by Sit
Wilfrid Greene, M.R. that -
"Both arguments proceeded on the
footing that it was impossible to
say that the sums when received
were trade receipts . . . It might,
I think, be more convenient to deal
with Mr. Hill’s argument first,
because that is the one which
starts off with this perfectly
clear admission, that the money
when received from the purchasers
was not a trade receipt. That
proposition, I should have
thought, in any case was quite
incontestable. ................I
invited Mr. Hills to point to any
authority which in any way
supported the proposition that a
receipt which at the time of its
receipt was not a trading receipt
could by some subsequent operation
ex post facto be turned into a
trading receipt, not be it
observed, as at the date of
receipt, but as at the date of the
subsequent operation. It seems to
me, with all respect to that
argument, that it is based on a
complete misapprehensions of what
is meant by a trading receipt in
Income Tax law. No case has been
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cited to is in which anything like
that proposition appears. It seems
to me that the quality and nature
of a receipt for Income Tax
purposes is fixes once and for all
when it is received."
Mr. Verma has laid great emphasis on this passage in
the judgment of Greene, M.R. and had argued that in the
instant case the money in the hand of the assessee was the
client’s money and was not a trading receipt when it came
into the hand of the assessee, it could not thereafter
change its character and become trading receipt by some
subsequent operation.
In our judgment, the observations made by Greene, M.R.
will have to be understood in the special facts of that case
and nothing more should be read into than what has been laid
down. Tattersall sold horses on behalf of his clients. He
was an auctioneer. The money arising out of the sale of the
horses was of his clients. Although the amount remained for
a considerable period with the form, the claim was not
barred by limitation because no money was payable by
Tattersall without a written order. Greene, M.R. emphasised
that he was dealing with a case where the form had an
existing dealing with a case where the form had an existing
obligation to pay.
In the instant case, the assessee collected the amounts
of under-charges in advance even before any claim was
lodged. He realised the amounts from the Colliery Company
not because any demand was made against him, but possibly,
in order to protect himself from the eventuality of any
demand being made against him as the del credere agent of
the seller. The second important feature is that there is no
finding as in the case of Tattersall that when the
assessment was made, there was still an existing liability
to pay. Greene, M.R. has emphasised that this was an
important feature in the Tattersall’s case. The third
feature which has not been explained is why the assessee
year after year, brought these payment on account of under-
charges into the profit and loss account. The onus lies in
the assessee to explain his conduct. Usually what is entered
into the profit and loss account is the profit or loss of
the business. The assessee usually will not enter into
profit and loss account something which is not profit or
loss of his business at all.
The other contention of Mr. Verma is that an amount
which is not initially received as a trading receipt, cannot
become a trading receipt by influx of time. This proposition
which was stated in Tattersall’s case has to read in the
context of the facts of that case. It cannot be laid down
that, as a matter of law, any amount which was initially not
received as a trading receipt, can never become a trading
receipt. There are two English decisions after Tattersall’s
case in which amounts which were not received initially as
trading receipts were eventually regarded as business
income.
In Jay’s-The Jewellers, Ltd V. Commissioners of Inland
Revenue (29 Tax Cases 274), the assessee-Company carried in
business of Jewellers and pawnbrokers. In course of its
business of pawnbroking, it sold unredeemed pledges. The
Company used to make loans to pawners of three classes - (a)
pledges pawned for a sum of ten shillings or under; (b)
pledges pawned for a sum exceeding ten shillings and not
exceeding ten pounds; and (c) pledges pawned for a sum
exceeding ten pounds. The business of pawnbroking was
controlled by the Pawnbrokers Act, 1872. Under Section 17 of
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the said Act, it was provided that a pledge pawned for ten
shillings or under, if not redeemed within the year
redemption and days of grace shall, at the end of the days
of grace, become the pawnbrokers absolute property. There
was not dispute about the assessability of the same realised
on sale of pledges under class (a). The Company admitted
that any profit realised by it on sale of pledge property
was taxable receipt of its trade.
Under the provisions of the Act, the Company was able,
in cases of pledges exceeding ten shillings but not
exceeding forty shillings, to dispose of the property
pledged by public auction. In cases where pledges were sold
for more that the amount of the land and interest due at the
time of sales, the excess had to be paid to the Pawnee on
demand provided the demand was made within there years after
the sale. In the case of goods pledged for a sum ten pounds
or more in terms of a special contract, the Company was
entitled to dispose of the property pledged as security
either by public auction or private contract and out of the
proceeds to pay all expenses of and incidental to such sale
and to retain the amount of the said loan and interest. No
time limit was laid down within which the surplus money had
to be paid to the pawner or within which the Pawnee might
demand from the Company to pay the surplus on any sale.
Before the Court, two types of cases came up for
consideration: (1) where the load was over the shillings and
three-year period did not applied and (2) where the three-
year period did not apply and the pledger’s rights were not
barred by limitation of six years. The Court noted that for
various reasons, the grater part of the surplus realised by
sale of pledges was never demanded by the pledger and
ultimately became the property of the pawnbroker. The
question was : Were these surplus receipts in the
pawnbroker’s trade assessable profits and if so, when? The
contention of the assessee-Company was that is was entitled
to leave the surplus out of their trading accounts
altogether. There was no doubt that these surpluses were
debts owed to the customers and that for three years or six
years as the case may be, the Company could be called upon
to pay the amount to the customers. The whole amount was a
legal liability. The Court held that the surpluses were not
trading receipts in the year in which they were received. On
this aspect of the matter, the case was completely governed
by Tattersall Case (supra).
Atkinson, J. thereafter dealt with the issue thus:
"Then comes the more difficult question: Can a surplus be
treated as a trade receipt of the year in which, it not
having been claimed by the pledger, the pawnbroker becomes
entitled to retain it as his own?" On the strength of
Tattersall, it was argued by the assessee-Company that
either the receipts were trade receipts or they were not at
the time of the receipt. If they were not trade receipts at
the time of the receipts nothing that happen afterwards
could make them trade receipts. The question was answered in
the following manner:-
"The true accountancy view would, I
think, demand that these sums
should be treated as paid into a
suspense account, and should so
appear in the balance sheet. The
surpluses should not be brought
into the annual trading account as
a receipt at the time they are
received. Only time will show what
their ultimate fate and character
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will be. After three years that
fate is such, as to one class of
surplus, that in so far as the
suspense account had not been
reduced by payments to clients,
that part of it remaining becomes
by operation of law a receipt of
the Company, and ought to be
transferred from the suspense
account and appear in the profit
and loss account for that years as
a receipt and profit. That is what
it in fact is. In that year Jays
become the richer by the amount
which automatically becomes theirs,
and that asset arises out of an
ordinary trade transaction. It
seems to me to be the commonsense
way of dealing with these matters."
Distinguishing Tattersall Case on facts, it was states
that -
"But here the position is quite
different. Here, at the end of
three years, the money in question,
the three-years-old surplus, did
attain totally different quality; a
different quality was imprinted on
surpluses three year old. I think
there was then a definite trade
receipt. At the end of three
transaction, and it seems to me
that what the Master of the Rolls
was dealing with in that case was s
situation quite different from that
which exists here."
It was further pointed out by Atkinson, J. that even in
Tattersall’s case Greene, M.R., dealing with the argument
that the quality of the transaction had changed, had
observed that if this argument was to be made, it was
essential that some act which was effected by the turning
into a trading asset of something which was not a trading
assets, should have taken place within the accounting year.
Distinguishing the facts of the Tattersall’s case Atkinson,
J. pointed out :-
"There, no asset was created. A
mere change in the method of book-
keeping created no asset. In this
case, a new asset was created
automatically by operation of law
at the end of the three years, and
common sense would seem to demand
that should br entered in the
profit and loss account for the
year and be treated as taxable."
Atkinson, J. pointed out that Tattersall’s case was
distinguishable because in that case there had been no
change whatsoever in the character and nature of the money
held by the auctioneer. The money was payable only upon
instruction of the client. The Satatue of Limitations had
not commenced to run and the Court was dealing merely with
the effect of a change in the method by which the sums were
dealt with in the firm’s book. In the case of Jays-The-
Jewellers, Atkinsin, J. fisrt held that Commissioners were
right in holding that the surplus amount could not be deemed
to be trade receipt of the year in which they were received.
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However, thereafter, Atkinson, J. wnet on to say that a
surplus could treated as a trade receipt of the year in
which it not having been claimed by pledger, the pawnbroker
became entitled to retain it as his own. Atkinson, J.,
therefore, concluded that after lapse of the period of three
years the debtors lost their right and the money became the
pawnbroker’s money. It having been received in the course of
the trade will have to be treated as trade receipt after the
end of third year of sale and therefore, should be brought
to assessment as such.
The next category of case were pledges for 10 Pounds or
more. At the end of sixth year the customer’s remedy became
barred by laws of limitation. It was held:-
"But, from the business point of
view, I think, the position ought
to be treated as the same. In
practice those amounts would be
dealt with and properly dealt with
by the firm as their own. They
could not get into difficulties by
so doing; they cannot be called
upon to pay, and I do not think any
distinction ought to be drawn
between the three-yearly surpluses
and the six-yearly surpluses...."
The scope of Morley (H.M.Inspector of Taxes) V. Messrs
Tattersall was also examined in the case of Elson (Inspector
of Taxes) V. Prices Tailors Ltd., (1963) 1 All England Law
Reports 231. The facts were that when taking an order for
made-to-measure garments the appellants, who carried on
business as bespoke and ready-to-wear tailors, recorded a
customer’s measurement on an order form. The customer would
then be asked for a deposit. After the customer has paid the
deposit, its amount was recorded on the order form, from
which a slip detached and given to the customer. This slip
showed the price, and the balance; the difference being the
amount of the deposit. If, subsequently, the customer
declined to take the garment, the appellants refunded his
"deposit", but where, as often happened, neither garment,
nor "deposit" was claimed after several reminders, they
transferred the sums to an unclaimed deposits account, from
which they assessed to income tax in respect of unclaimed
deposits as trading receipts of their business in the year
in which they were paid.
It was held by Ungoed-Thomas, J. that the sums called
’deposits’ were the property of the appellants from the
moment of receipt, though subject to certain contingencies;
accordingly each deposit was a trading receipt of the year
in which it was received by the appellants.
The case of Tattersall and Jays-The Jewellers were
distinguished in the following manner:-
"In Morley V. Tattersall, the
vendors’ unclaimed balanced of
proceeds of sale of horses were
held not to be trading receipts;
and in Jay’s. The Jewellers, Ltd.
V. Inland Revenue Comrs.., Inland
Revenue Comrs. V. Jay’s. The
Jewellers, Ltd., a pawner’s
unclaimed balance in the hands of a
pawnbroker of the proceeds of sale
o fan unredeemed pledge, after
satisfying the amounts due under
the pledge, was held not to be a
trading receipt until the pawner’s
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claim was statue-barred. In these
cases, the balances in the trader’s
hands were not their at all but
were held for others, and this fact
is fundamental to the decisions.
The traders had no beneficial
interest in them at the relevant
time, and although it was because
they were not receipts of their
trade at all."
Ultimately, Ungoed-Thomas, J. concluded that the
deposits received by the taxpayer was a trading receipt and
not the less so because they might or might not have to be
debited again.
In the case of Jays the Jewellers, it has been
categorically laid down that the money which belonged to the
customers and which arose out of sale of customer’s property
could become a trading receipt when the customers did not or
could not make any claim against that money in law and the
amount was taken by the assessee to its profit and loss
account. In fact, it was emphasized that was the correct
accounting practice. Atkitson, J. pointed out that a new
asset could come into existence automatically by operation
of law. When no demand for payment was made commonsense
requires that such amount should have entered into profit
and loss account for the year and be treated as taxable.
In the case before us, in the words of Atkinson, J.,
money in question arose from trading operations. The surplus
had arisen out of trading transactions and taken to profit
and loss account. It has a definite quality of trading
receipt. The money was not received by the assessee by
selling properties of the customers. There is nothing to
show that the money obtained by the assessee in course if
his usual course of business from the colliery company
actually belonged to the consignees. There is not factual or
legal foundation for this proposition. The finding of fact
is that as and when the consignees demanded payment on
account of underloading, the assessee made such payments.
Such payments must have been on behalf of the collieries.
But the assessee had received more that it spent. Neither
the colliery not the assessee has any obligation the seek
out the consignees and pay them on account of underloading
of wagons. The amount received by the assessee from the
collieries was not on account of any claim actually lodged
by the consignees. Mr. Verma strenuously argued that the
amount in the hands of the assessee belonged to the
consignees. The Tribunal has found that the amount was paid
to the agents out of sale proceeds of the coal. The
consignees could not claim that a portion of the sale
proceeds in the hands of the assessee belonged to the
consignees were their own money. Till they were paid, the
money did not belong to them nor were held on trust for
them. Similarly, when the del credere agent was paid, the
consignees could not claim that the money belonged to them
even before making any claim. The money was the agent‘s
money till the consignee made his claim when consignee was
paid, it became his money and the agent‘s expenditure. The
Appellate Assistant Commissioner on his order compiled the
following table to show how the amount was treated in the
balance sheet of the assessee year after year,
-----------------------------------------------------------
Assessment Credit Debit Net* Transfer to
P.L. A/C.
Year Rs. Rs. Rs. Rs.
1953-54 2,08,913 1,09,049 99,863 55,197
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1956-57 1,48,927 85,898 63,029 1,06,509
1957-58 1,79,048 99,860 79,188 83,137
1958-59 ...........details not available...........
1959-60 do 97,551
1960-61 do 1,02,832
------------------------------------------------------------
This chart reveals that year after year, large sums of
money were received by the assessee from the Collieries
(credit side). Various sum of moneys were also paid out from
time to time to meet the claims of the customers. But the
fact remains that every year, the assessee was left with a
substantial amount as surplus and that surplus arose every
year for the last ten years.
To our mind, the case is very simple one. The assessee,
in course of his business collected every year substantial
amounts on account of under-charges. The sums so collected
were the property of the assessee subject to certain
contingencies. It did not cease to be a trading receipt
because, in the words of Ungoed Thomas, J., they might or
might not have to be debited again. The assessee‘s account
all along showed a steady surplus in this account. The
claims made by the consignees made their claims, they were
paid. These payments will have to be treated as trading
expenses. We do not see the case as a case of transaction on
capital account. On the contrary, this is a simple case
where trading receipts were more than expenditure. The
balance will have to be drought to tax as profits of
business. As pointed out by Atkinson, J. in the case of Jays
the Jewellers, a common sense view will have to be taken in
such case.
We shall now refer to some of the other cases that were
cited.
In Bijli Cotton Mill (P.) Ltd. V. Commissioner of
Income-Tax, Lucknow (1971) 81 ITR 400, the finding was that
from the outset, the excess of the price was impresses with
the character of trust money to be held by the assessee on
behalf of the quotaholders. The assessee was a cotton mill
who manufactured and supplied yarn which they sold. These
dealers were known as quotaholders. Subsequently, the
arrangement was modified and the manufacturers could sell
the stock directly to the wholesalers with the result that
the quotaholders were excluded from the business altogether.
In order to prevent hardship caused to the quotaholders, an
order was issued by the Textile Commissioner requiring the
manufacturer to recover from the wholesale dealer price of
the yarn at the controlled rate and pay to the quotaholders
that part of the sum which represent the excess over the ex-
mill price. The sale was deemed to be by the manufacturer on
behalf of the quotaholders. The amounts due to the
quotaholders were credited to an account called
"quotaholders margin account". The Court found that under
the order dated 13.9.1945 issued by the Textile
Commissioner, the sale to the wholesalers were deemed to
have been made by the manufacturers on behalf of the
quotaholders. In this context of facts, the Court held that
if there was any excess left in the account of the
quotaholders, that could not be treated as income of the
assessee. It was held that the amounts standing in the
"quotaholders margin account" did not belong to the assessee
but to the quotaholders because the sale was deemed to have
been made on behalf of quotaholders.
In the instant case, the assessee had lodged a claim
and the Colliery Company paid the amount claimed in usual
course of business. At that stage, none of the consignees
had made any claim. There is no deeming clause or any scheme
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by which it can be said that the amount was deemed to have
been collected on behalf of the consignees. The money
belonged to the assessee. It arose out of a trading
transaction. The entire amount is Assessee’s income. If any
disbursement has to be made on account of the railway wagon
not having been fully loaded that will be a business
expenditure. The expenditure may have to be set off from the
receipt but the money had been given in the instant case by
the collieries to the assessee as deposit to be held in
behalf of the purchasers.
In the case of Commissioner Income Tax, West Bengal-I
V. Sandersons and Morgans (1970) 75 ITR 433, it was held
that the assessee-firm of solicitors had credited as sum of
Rs.4,078/- being the aggregate of unclaimed balances in as
many as 83 personal ledger accounts of the assessee in
connection with the cases conducted by the assessee for a
few years. It was held by the Court that the amount was not
taxable as the money belonged to the assessee’s clients. I
do not see how this case helps the respondents in this case.
In this case, it was found that he money was entrusted to
the assessee by the clients. The money was their money and
after deducting of expenses, the balance amount continued to
be held by the assessee in behalf of various parties. Since
the money belonged to the clients of the firm of solicitors
from the very beginning, it could not be equated with the
money of the solicitors in the relevant year of account.
Nothing had happened in this particular year to convert the
clients’ money into income of the solicitors.
The surplus amount in this case was generated in course
of carrying on business by the assessee. The assessee had
not been entrusted with the amount in question by anybody.
He claimed and obtained money from the colliery in the usual
course of business. This money he obtained not because the
consignee had demanded it. Irrespective of may demand by
the consignees, he got this money from the colliery
companies. If no demand came from any of the consignees, he
would have kept the entire amount himself. As a matter of
fact, it had been found that only some of the consignees
demanded payment and were paid by the assessee. This was the
manner in which the assessee conducted his business and the
surplus arose in regular course of business year after year.
The conduct of the assessee also goes to show that the
assessee himself did not treat the amount as trust money.
The amount was not shown as a liability nor was it kept in a
suspense account. It was taken as miscellaneous receipt to
the profit and loss account. He mingled the money with his
other profits of business and treated the money as hid own.
There is nothing in the facts of the case to suggest that
the money received by the assessee from the colliery
companies actually belonged to the consignees and were not
the assessee’s own money.
We are of the view that the question referred by the
tribunal should have been answered in the negative and in
favour of the Revenue and we answer it accordingly. The
appeals are allowed. The parties to bear their own costs.