Tax Syllabus
Tax Syllabus
Statutory Provisions.
(a) any salary due from an employer or a former employer to an assessee in the
previous year, whether paid or not;
(b) any salary paid or allowed to him in the previous year by or on behalf of an
employer or a former employer though not due or before it became due to him;
(c) any arrears of salary paid or allowed to him in the previous year by or on
behalf of an employer or a former employer, if not charged to income-tax for any
earlier previous year.
Explanation 1.—For the removal of doubts, it is hereby declared that where any
salary paid in advance is included in the total income of any person for any
previous year it shall not be included again in the total income of the person when
the salary becomes due.
Facts.
The assessee and his wife owned a large number of shares in a private limited
company engaged in the business of running hotels.
By virtue of Article 109 of the Articles of Association of the said company, the
assessee became the first Managing Director on terms and conditions agreed to
and embodied in an agreement, dated November 20, 1955, between himself and
the company.
Under the said agreement, the assessee was ,to receive Rs 2.000/- per month,
fixed sum of Rs 500/-per month as car allowance, 10% of gross profits of the
company and he and his wife were entitled to free board and lodging in the hotel.
For the assessment year 1956-57 , the assessee was assessed in respect of
Rs.53,913/-payable to him as 10% of the gross profits of the company which he
gave up soon after the accounts were finalised but before they were passed by the
general meeting of the shareholders.
The above amount was given up by him because the company would not be
making net profits if the stipulated commission was paid to him.
The assessee claimed that the amount given up by him was not liable to be
included in his total income because the amount had not accrued to him at all, at
any rate, in the relevant accounting year.
Even assuming that it had accrued in the relevant accounting year , it is not
taxable under the Income-Tax Act.
The Income-tax Officer, the Appellate Assistant Commissioner, the Tribunal and
on a reference, the High Court have all held that the 10% commission on gross
profits amounting to Rs 53,913/- was taxable as ‘salary’ and that the income had
accrued to the assessee during the previous year.
Against the judgment of the High Court, this appeal is by special leave, raising
the following questions.
(1) Whether the sum of Rs 53,913/- was a revenue receipt of the assessee of the
previous year which is chargeable under Salary or business income?
‘Salary’ under the Income tax Act includes also commission, wages,
perquisites, etc.
A servant acts under the direct control and supervision of his master.
An agent, on the other hand, in the exercise of his work is not subject to the direct
control or supervision of the principal, though he is bound to exercise his
authority in accordance with all lawful orders and instructions which may be
given to him from time to time by his principal.
But this test is not universal in its application and does not determine in every -
case, having regard to the nature of employment, that he is a servant.
A doctor may be employed as a medical officer and though no control is exercised
over him in respect of the manner he should do the work nor in respect of the day
to day work, he is required to do, he may nonetheless be a servant if his
employment creates a relationship of master and servant.
A person who is engaged to manage a business may be a servant or an agent
according to the nature of his service and the authority of his employment.
Generally it may be possible to say that the greater the amount of direct control
over the person employed, the stronger the conclusion in favour of his being a
servant.
Similarly the greater the degree of independence the greater the possibility of the
services rendered being in the nature of principal and agent.
It is not possible to lay down any precise rule of law to distinguish one kind of
employment from the other.
The nature of the particular business and the nature of the duties of the employee
will require to be considered in each case in order to arrive at a conclusion as to
whether the person employed is a servant or an agent.
In each case the principle for ascertainment remains the same.
Though an agent as such is not a servant, a servant is generally for some purposes
his master’s implied agent, the extent of the agency depending upon the duties or
position of the servant.
It is again true that a director of a company is not a servant but an agent inasmuch
as the company cannot act in its own person but has only to act through directors
who qua the company have the relationship of an agent to its principal.
A Managing Director may have a dual capacity. He may both be a Director as
well as employee. It is therefore evident that in the capacity of a Managing
Director he may be regarded as having not only the capacity as persona of a
director but also has the persona of an employee, as an agent depending upon the
nature of his work and the terms of his employment.
Where he is so employed, the relationship between him as the Managing Director
and the Company may be similar to a person who is employed as a servant or an
agent for the term ‘employed’ is facile enough to cover any of these relationships.
The nature of his employment may be determined by the articles of association
of a company and/or the agreement if any, under which a contractual relationship
between the Director and the company has been brought about.
if the the Director is designated an employee of the company, his remuneration
will be assessable as salary.
In other words, whether or not a Managing Director is a servant of the company
apart from his being a Director can only be determined by the article of
association and the terms of his employment.
Referred Case .
But this test also does not apply to all cases, e.g. in the case of ship’s master, a
chauffeur or a reporter of a newspaper .....
In certain cases it has been laid down that the index of a contract of service are:
(a) the master’s power of selection of the servant;
(b) the payment of wages or other remunerations;
(c) the master’s right to control the method of doing the work; and
(d) the master’s right to suspension or dismissal.
In Lakshminarayan Ram Gopal v. Government of Hyderabad. [25 ITR 449 (SC)]
the functions which were inconsistant with being a servant were specified. They
were:
(1) The power to assign the agreement .
(2) The right to continue in employment as the agents of the company .
(3) The remuneration by way of commission of the amount of sale proceeds of
the produce of the company; and
(4) The power of sub-delegation of functions given to the agent .
A perusal of the articles and terms and conditions of the agreement definitely
indicates that the assessee was appointed to manage the business of the company
in terms of the articles of association and within the powers prescribed therein.
The very fact that apart from his being a Managing Director he is given the liberty
to work for the company as an agent is indicative of his employment as a
Managing Director not being that of an agent.
Several of the clauses of the agreement specifically empowered the Board of
Directors to exercise control over the Managing Director:
for instance to accept the title of the property to be sold by the company,
providing for the welfare of the employees,
the power to appoint attorneys as the Directors think fit, etc.
Under the terms of’ the agreement the assessee can be removed within the period
of 20 years for not discharging the work diligently or if he is found not to be
acting in the interest of the company as Managing Director.
These terms are inconsistent with the plea of the assessee that he is an agent of
the company and not a servant.
The control which the company exercises over the assessee need not necessarily
be one which tells him what to do from day to day.
That would be a too narrow view of the test to determine the character of the
employment.
Nor does supervision imply that it should be a continuous exercise of the power
to oversee or superintend the work to be done.
The control and supervision is exercised and is exercisable in terms of the articles
of association by the Board of Directors and the company in its general meeting.
As a Managing Director he functions also as a member of the Board of Directors
whose collective decisions he has to carry out in terms of the articles of
association and he can do nothing which he is not permitted to do.
Since the Board of Directors are to manage the business of the Company they
have every right to control and supervise the assessee’s work whenever they deem
it necessary.
Every power which is given to the Managing Director therefore emanates from
the articles of association which prescribes the limits of the exercise of that power.
The powers of the assessee have to be exercised within the terms and limitations
prescribed thereunder and subject to the control and supervision of the Directors
which is indicative of his being employed as a servant of the company.
Under these circumstances the remuneration payable to the assessee is salary and
is taxable as such under the Income Tax Act.
2. C.I.T. v. L.W. Russel AIR 1965 SC 49.
Facts.
The respondent, L.W. Russel, is an employee of the English and Scottish Joint
Cooperative Wholesale Society Ltd., Kozhikode, hereinafter called “the Society”,
which was incorporated in England.
The Society established a superannuation scheme for the benefit of the male
European members of the Society’s staff employed in India, Ceylon and Africa
by means of deferred annuities.
The terms of such benefits were incorporated in a trust deed .
Every European employee of the Society shall become a member of that scheme
as a condition of employment.
Under the terms of the scheme the trustee has to effect a policy of insurance for
the purpose of ensuring an annuity to every member of the Society on his attaining
the age of superannuation or on the happening of a specified contingency.
The IncomeTax Officer, included the said amount in the taxable income of the
respondent for the year 1956-57 under Section 17 of the Act.
The appeal preferred by the respondent against the said inclusion to the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner of Income Tax, was dismissed.
The further appeal preferred to the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal received the
same fate.
(1) Whether the contributions paid by the employer to the assessee under the
terms of a trust deed in respect of a contract for a deferred annuity on the life of
the assessee is a ‘perquisite’ as contemplated by Section 17 of the Indian Income
Tax Act?
(2) Whether the said contributions were allowed to or due to the applicant by or
from the employer in the accounting year?
On the first question the High Court held that the employer’s contribution under
the terms of the trust deed was not a perquisite as contemplated by Section 17 of
the Act.
On the second question it came to the conclusion that the employer’s
contributions were not allowed to or due to the employee in the accounting year.
Against this the Commissioner of Income Tax has preferred the present appeal ,
questioning the correctness of the said answers.
The amount contributed by the Society under the scheme towards the insurance
premium payable by the trustees for arranging a deferred annuity on the
respondent’s superannuation is a perquisite within the meaning of Section 17 of
the Act .
The fact that the respondent may not have the benefit of the contributions on the
happening of certain contingencies will not make the said contributions
nonetheless a perquisite.
The employer’s share of the contributions to the fund earmarked for paying
premiums of the insurance policy, vests in the respondent as soon as it is paid to
the trustee and the happening of a contingency only operates as a deferment of
the vested right.
The trust deed and the rules embody the superannuation scheme. The scheme is
described as the “English and Scottish Joint Cooperative Wholesale Society
Limited Overseas European Employees’ Superannuation Scheme ”.
It is established for the benefit of the male European members of the Society’s
staff employed in India, Ceylon and Africa by means of deferred annuities.
The Society itself is appointed thereunder as the first trustee.
The trustees shall act as agents for and on behalf of the Society and the members
respectively; they shall effect or cause to be effected such policy or policies as
may be necessary to carry out the scheme and shall collect and arrange for the
payment of the moneys payable under such policy or policies and shall hold such
moneys as trustees for and on behalf of the person or persons entitled thereto
under the rules of the Scheme.
The object of the Scheme is to provide for pensions by means of deferred
annuities for the members upon retirement from employment on attaining certain
age under the certain conditions .
The Trustees are enjoined to take out policies of insurance securing a deferred
annuity upon the life of each member, and funds are provided by contributions
from the employer as well as from the employees.
The Trustees realise the annuities and pay the pensions to the employees.
Under certain contingencies , an employee would be entitled to the pension only
after superannuation.
If the employee leaves the service of the Society or is dismissed from service or
dies in the service of the Society, he will be entitled only to get back the total
amount of the portion of the premium paid by him, though the trustees in their
discretion under certain circumstances may give him a proportion of the
premiums paid by the Society.
The entire amount representing the contributions made by the Society or part
thereof, as the case may be, will then have to be paid by the Trustees to the
Society.
Under the scheme the employee has not acquired any vested right in the
contributions made by the Society. Such a right vests in him only when he attains
the age of superannuation.
Till that date that amount vests in the Trustees to be administered in accordance
with the rules that is to say, in case the employee ceases to be a member of the
Society by death or otherwise, the amounts contributed by the employer with
interest thereon, subject to the discretionary power exercisable by the trustees,
become payable to the Society.
Till a member attains the age of superannuation the employer’s share of the
contributions towards the premiums does not vest in the employee.
At best he has a contingent right therein. In one contingency the said amount
becomes payable to the employer and in another contingency, to the employee.
The issue to be ascertained in the present case is whether such a contingent right
is hit by the provisions of section 17 .
Section 17 (2) : “perquisite” includes—
(v) any sum payable by the employer, whether directly or through a fund, other
than a recognised provident fund or an approved superannuation fund or a
Deposit-linked Insurance Fund , to effect an assurance on the life of the assessee
or to effect a contract for an annuity;
A reading of the substantive part of Section 1 7(2 ) (v) makes it clear that if a
sum of money is allowed to the employee by or is due to him from or is paid to
enable the latter to effect an insurance on his life, the said sum would be a
perquisite within the meaning of Section1 7(2) of the Act and, therefore, would
be liable to tax.
But before such sum becomes taxable , it shall either be paid to the employee or
allowed to him by or due to him from the employer.
So far as the expression “paid” is concerned, there is no difficulty, for it takes in
every receipt by the employee from the employer whether it was due to him or
not.
The expression “due” followed by the qualifying clause “whether paid or not”
shows that there shall be an obligation on the part of the employer to pay that
amount and a right on the employee to claim the same.
The expression “allowed”, it is said, is of a wider connotation and any credit
made in the employer’s account is covered thereby.
The said expression in the legal terminology is equivalent to “fixed, taken into
account, set apart, granted”.
It takes in perquisites given in cash or in kind or in money or money’s worth and
also amenities which are not convertible into money.
Under the Income Tax Act, 'Profits and Gains of Business or Profession' are also
subjected to taxation. The term "business" includes any (a) trade, (b)commerce,
(c)manufacture, or (d) any adventure or concern in the nature of trade, commerce
or manufacture. The term "profession" implies professed attainments in special
knowledge as distinguished from mere skill; "special knowledge" which is "to be
acquired only after patient study and application". The words 'profits and gains'
are defined as the surplus by which the receipts from the business or profession
exceed the expenditure necessary for the purpose of earning those receipts. These
words should be understood to include losses also, so that in one sense 'profit and
gains' represent plus income while 'losses' represent minus income.
The following types of income are chargeable to tax under the heads profits and
gains of business or profession:-
In the following cases, income from trading or business is not taxable under
the head "profits and gains of business or profession":-
1. Rent of house property is taxable under the head " Income from house
property". Even if the property constitutes stock in trade of recipient of rent or
the recipient of rent is engaged in the business of letting properties on rent.
2. Deemed dividends on shares are taxable under the head "Income from
other sources".
3. Winnings from lotteries, races etc. are taxable under the head "Income
from other sources".
Profits and gains of any other business are taxable, unless such profits are
subjected to exemption.
General principals governing the computation of taxable income under the
head "profits and gains of business or profession:-
4. It is not only the legal ownership but also the beneficial ownership that has
to be considered.
8. Any sum recovered by the assessee during the previous year, in respect of
an amount or expenditure which was earlier allowed as deduction, is taxable as
business income of the year in which it is recovered.
10. The Income tax act is not concerned with the legality or illegality of
business or profession. Hence, income of illegal business or profession is not
exempt from tax.
Business :
“Business” simply means any economic activity carried on for earning profits.
Sec. 2(3) has defined the term as “ any trade, commerce, manufacturing activity
or any adventure or concern in the nature of trade, commerce and manufacture”.
Profession :
“Profession” may be defined as a vacation, or a job requiring some thought, skill
and special knowledge like that of C.A., Lawyer, Doctor, Engineer, Architect etc.
So profession refers to those activities where the livelihood is earned by the
persons through their intellectual or manual skill.
(i) the profits and gains of any business or profession which was carried on by
the assessee at any time during the previous year;
(iv) the value of any perquisite or benefit arising from business or profession ,
whether convertible into moneyor not,;
(vi) any sum received under a Keyman insurance policy including the sum
allocated by way of bonus on such policy.
(vii) any sum, whether received or receivable, in cash or kind, under an agreement
for—
(b) not sharing any know-how, patent, copyright, trade-mark, licence, franchise
or any other business or commercial right of similar nature
(viii) any profit on the transfer of the Duty Free Replenishment Certificate
(ix) any profit on the transfer of the Duty Entitlement Pass Book Scheme
(x) profits on sale of a license granted under the Imports (Control) Order, 1955,
made under the Imports and Exports (Control) Act, 1947 (18 of 1947)
Business Income not Taxable under the head “Profits and Gains of Business
or Profession” :
In the following cases, income from trading or business is not taxable under Sec.
28, under the head “Profits and Gains of Business or Professions” :
The following amounts shall not be deducted in computing the income chargeable
under the head “Profits and gains of business or profession”,—
1. Any interest, royalty, fees for technical services or other sum chargeable
under this Act, which is payable,—
on which tax is deductible at source and such tax has not been deducted or,
after deduction, has not been paid during the previous year, or in the subsequent
year before the expiry of the time.
(B) to a non-resident,
and if the tax has not been paid thereon nor deducted therefrom.
9. Where the assessee incurs any expenditure in respect of which payment has
been or is to be made to any person is of opinion that such expenditure is
excessive or unreasonable having regard to the fair market value of the goods,
services or facilities for which the payment is made shall not be allowed as
a deduction.
In any of the earlier years a deduction was allowed to the taxpayer in respect of
loss, expenditure or trading liability incurred by the assessee and subsequently
during any previous year,—
(a) the Taxpayer has obtained, whether in cash or in any other manner
whatsoever, any amount in respect of such loss or expenditure or some benefit in
respect of such trading liability shall be deemed to be profits and gains of business
or profession and accordingly chargeable to income-tax as the income of that
previous year, whether the business or profession in respect of which the
allowance or deduction has been made is in existence in that year or not.
Set-Off means adjustment of certain losses against the income under other
sources in the same assessmentyear. Carrying Forward of unadjusted losses to
be set-off in subsequent years is called Carry Forward.
If there is a loss in the business, the same can be adjusted against profits made in
any other business of the same tax payer. The Loss, if any, still remaining, can be
adjusted against Income from any Other Source.
From A/Y 2005-2006 loss from Business cannot be set off against Salary Income.
However, for claiming the benefit of carry forward of losses, the tax payer has to
invariably file his returns withindue date.
While one endeavors to derive income, the possibility of incurring losses cannot
be ruled out. Based on the principles of natural justice, a set-off should be
available for loss incurred. The income tax laws in India recognise this and
provide for adjustment and utilisation of the losses. However, there are conditions
which have been introduced to prevent misuse of such provisions.
A) Set off of loss under the same head of income.(section 70) (Intra-head set
off)
Income of a person is computed under five heads. ‘Sources’ of income derived
by an individual may be many but yet they could be classified under the same
head. For instance, an individual may have a dual employment, yet the income
would be classified under the head ‘Salaries’. However, given the mechanism of
computing taxable salary income, it would be safe to say that an individual cannot
incur losses under this head of income.
Consider a situation where assesse A has two properties – one, occupied by him
and the other, let out. A pays interest on loan of Rs 1.50 lakh on the property
occupied and derives net rental income of Rs 1.50 lakh from the let-out property.
In case of a self-occupied property, income is computed as nil and interest
expenditure results in loss. The loss of Rs 1.50 lakh can be set off against
rent income of Rs 1.50 lakh; the income chargeable under the head ‘House
property’ will be ‘Nil’.
An exception to intra head set off is loss under the head ‘Capital gains’, which
may arise from transfer of any capital asset. Long-term capital loss (LTCL) arises
from transfer of shares or units where holding period is more than 12 months and
in respect of other assets holding period is more than 36 months prior to sale.
Transfer of assets held for less than prescribed period results in short-term capital
loss. Long-term capital loss cannot be set off against short term capital gains
(STCG).
Further, loss incurred from speculation loss (eg. from shares or commodities)
cannot be set off against any other income.
Also, it is unlikely that the benefit of set off of loss under an activity or source
will be available, where the income from an activity or source is exempt from
taxation.
Summary of exceptions to Intra-head set off:
1. Loss from speculation business cannot be set of against profit from a non
speculation business
2. LTCL can only be set off against LTCG and cannot be set off against STCG
3. No loss can be set-off against casual income i.e. Income from lotteries, cross
word puzzles, betting gambling and other similar games.
4. No expenses can be claimed against casual income
5. Loss from the activity of owning and maintaining race horses cannot be set
off against other incomes
6. Loss from an exempted source cannot be set off
(e.g. Share of loss of firm, agricultural losses, cultivation expenses)
B) Set off Loss from one head against Income from another Head .
Amortization.
1. The paying off of debt with a fixed repayment schedule in regular instalments
over a period of time. Consumers are most likely to encounter amortization with
a mortgage or car loan.
2. The spreading out of capital expenses for intangible assets over a specific
period of time (usually over the asset's useful life) for accounting and tax
purposes. Amortization is similar to depreciation, which is used for tangible
assets, and to depletion, which is used with natural resources. Amortization
roughly matches an asset’s expense with the revenue it generates.
Written-Down Value.
Under Section 43(6) in The Income- Tax Act, " written down value" means-
(a) in the case of assets acquired in the previous year, the actual cost to the
assessee;
(b) in the case of assets acquired before the previous year, the actual cost to the
assessee less all depreciation actually allowed to him under this Act.
Facts.
The first working time agreement entered into was for a duration of five years
and on its expiration, the second and thereafter the third working time
agreements, each for a period of five years and in more or less similar terms, were
entered into .
The third working time agreement was about to expire in 1954 and since it was
felt that the necessity to restrict the number of working hours per week still
continued, a fourth working time agreement was entered into between the
members of the Association on December 9, 1954 and it was to remain in force
for a period of five years .
Some of the relevant provisions of the fourth working time agreement are as
follows:
Clause 4 provided that, no signatory to the agreement shall work more than
forty-five hours of work per week and such restriction of hours of work per week
shall continue in force until the number of working hours allowed shall be altered
in accordance with the provisions of Clauses 7(1),(2) and (3).
Clause 5 provided that the number of working hours per week mentioned in the
working time agreement represented the extent of hours to which signatories were
in all entitled in each week to work their registered looms . on the basis that they
used the full complement of their loomage as registered with and certified by the
committee.
This clause also contained a provision for increase of the number of working
hours per week allowed to a signatory in the event of any reduction in his
loomage.
It was also stipulated in this clause that the hours of work allowed to be utilised
in each week shall cease at the end of that week and shall not be allowed to be
carried forward.
A joint and several agreement could be made providing that throughout the
duration of the working time agreement, members with registered complements
of looms shall be entitled to work up to 72 hours per week.
Clause 6(b) provided that the signatories to the agreement shall be entitled to
transfer in part or wholly their allotment of hours of work per week to any one or
more of the other signatories; and upon such transfer being duly effected and
registered and a certificate issued by the committee, the signatories to whom the
allotment of working hours has been transferred shall be entitled to utilise the
allotment of hours of work per week so transferred.
There were certain conditions precedent subject to which the allotment of hours
of work transferred by one member to another could be utilised by the latter .
The consequence of such transfer was that the hours of work per week transferred
by a member were liable to be deducted from the working hours per week allowed
to such member under the working time agreement.
The member in whose favour such transfer was made was entitled to utilise the
number of working hours per week transferred to him in addition to the working
hours per week allowed to him under the working time agreement
It was under this clause that the assessee purchased loom hours from four
different jute manufacturing concerns which were signatories to the working time
agreement, for the aggregate sum of Rs 2,03,255 during the year August 1, 1958
to July 31, 1959.
In the course of assessment for relevant , the assessee claimed to deduct this
amount of Rs 2,03,255 as revenue expenditure on the ground that it was part of
the cost of operating the looms which constituted the profit-making apparatus of
the assessee.
The claim was disallowed by the Income Tax Officer but on appeal, the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner accepted the claim and allowed the deduction .
The Appellate Assistant Commisssionber ttok the view that the assessee did not
acquire ‘any capital asset when it purchased the loom hours and the amount spent
by it was incurred for running the business or working it with a view to producing
day-to-day profits and it was part of operating cost or revenue cost of production.
The Revenue preferred an appeal to the Tribunal but the appeal was unsuccessful
.
The tribunal held that the expenditure incurred by the assessee was in the nature
of revenue expenditure and hence deductible in computing the profits and gains
of business of the assessee.
At the instance of the revenue, the Tribunal referred the matter to the High Court.
The High Court relying on the decision in C. I. T. v. Maheshwari Devi Jute Mills
Ltd. [(1965) 57 ITR 36]
Decided in favour of the revenue and on that view it overturned the decision of
the tribunal and held that the amount paid by the assessee for purchase of the
loom hours was in the nature of capital expenditure and was, therefore, not
deductible under the Income Tax Act as operating expenses .
Against the dcision of the High Court the assessee company preferred the
present appeal to the Supreme Court by special leave .
The question which therefore arises for determination in the appeal is whether
the sum of Rs. 2,03,255 paid by the assessee represented capital expenditure or
revenue expenditure.
The question whether sum of Rs. 2,03,255 paid by the assessee for buying loom
hours under working time agreement is capital expenditure or revenue
expenditure has to be decided on principle .
Before answering the question raised in the present appeal, decision of the
supreme Court in Maheshwari Devi Juts Mills case needs to be mentioned.
That is the decision which weighed heavily with the High Court and in fact,
compelled it to negative the claim of the assessee and hold the expenditure to be
on capital account.
The question in Maheshwari Jute Mills case was whether an amount received by
the assessee for sale of loom hours was in the nature of capital receipt or revenue
receipt.
The view taken by the Supreme Court was that it was in the nature of capital
receipt and hence not taxable.
Relying on this decision, it was contended on behalf of the Revenue, that just as
the amount realized for sale of loom hours was held to be capital receipt, so also
the amount paid for purchase of loom hours must be held to be of capital nature.
But this argument on part of the Revenue suffers from a double fallacy.
In the first place it is not a universally true proposition that what may be capital
receipt in the hands of the payee must necessarily be capital expenditure in
relation to the payer.
The fact that a certain payment constitutes income or capital receipt in the hands
of the recipient is not material in determining whether the payment is revenue or
capital disbursement in respect of the payer.
Therefore, the decision in Maheshwari Devi Jute Mills case cannot be regarded
as an authority for the proposition that payment made by an assessee for purchase
of loom hours would be capital expenditure.
But, more importantly, Maheshwari Devi Jute Mills case proceeded on the basis
that loom hours were a capital asset and the case was decided on that basis.
It was common ground between the parties throughout the proceedings, that the
right to work the looms for the allotted hours of work was an asset capable of
being transferred and the Court therefore did not allow counsel on behalf of the
Revenue to raise a contention that loom hours were in the nature of a privilege
and were not an asset at all.
Since it was a commonly accepted basis that loom hours were an asset of the
assessee, the only argument which could be advanced on behalf of the Revenue
was that when the assessee transferred a part of its hours of work per week to
another member, the transaction did not amount to sale of an asset belonging to
the assessee, but it was merely the turning of an asset to account by permitting
the transferee to use that asset and hence the amount received by the assessee was
income from business.
It is quite possible that if the question had been examined fully on principle, the
court might have come to a different conclusion.
It is quite clear from the terms of the working time agreement that the allotment
of loom hours to different mills constituted merely a contractual restriction on the
right of every mill under the general law to work its looms to their full capacity.
If there had been no working time agreement, each mill would have been entitled
to work its looms uninterruptedly for twenty-four hours a day throughout the
week.
Such a situation would have resulted in production of jute very much in excess
of the demand in the world market, leading to unfair competition and precipitous
fall in jute price and in the process, prejudicially affecting all theMills.
Therefore with a view to protecting the interest of the mills who were members
of the Association the working time agreement was entered into restricting the
number of working hours per week for which each mill could work its looms.
The allotment of working hours per week under the working time agreement was
clearly not a right conferred on a mill, signatory to the working time agreement.
It was rather a restriction voluntarily accepted by each mill with a view to
adjusting the production to the demand in the world market and this restriction
could not possibly be regarded as an asset of such mill.
This restriction necessarily had the effect of limiting the production of the mill
and consequentially also the profit which the mill could otherwise make by
working full loom hours.
But a provision was made in Clause 6(i) of the working time agreement that the
whole or a part of the working hours per week could be transferred by one mill
to another for a period of not less than six months .
If such transfer was approved and registered by the Committee of the Association,
the transferee mill would be entitled to utilise the number of working hours per
week transferred to it.
This was in addition to the working hours per week allowed to it under the
working time agreement, while the transferor mill could cease to be entitled to
avail of the number of working hours per week so transferred and these would be
liable to be deducted from the number of working hours per week otherwise
allotted to it.
The purchase of loom hours by a mill had therefore the effect of relaxing the
restriction on the operation of looms to the extent of the number of working hours
per week transferred to it, so that the transferee mill could work its looms for
longer hours than permitted under the working time agreement and increase its
profitability.
The amount spent on purchase of loom hours thus represented consideration paid
for being able to work the looms for a longer number of hours.
It is difficult to see how such payment could possibly be regarded as expenditure
on capital account.
The decided cases have, from time to time, evolved various tests for
distinguishing between capital and revenue expenditure but no test is paramount
or conclusive.
There is no all embracing formula which can provide a ready solution to the
problem; no touchstone has been devised.
Every case has to be decided on its own facts keeping in mind the broad picture
of the whole operation in respect of which the expenditure has been incurred.
But a few tests formulated by the courts may be referred to as they might help to
arrive at a correct decision of the controversy between the parties.
Case Laws.
In Atherton v. British Insulated and Halsby Cables Ltd. [1926 AC 205] it was laid
down that:
“When an expenditure is made, not only once and for all, but with a view to
bringing into existence an asset or an advantage for the enduring benefit of a
trade, there is very good reason (in the absence of special circumstances leading
to an opposite conclusion) for treating such an expenditure as properly
attributable not to revenue but to capital.”
There may be cases where expenditure, even if incurred for obtaining advantage
of enduring benefit, may, nonetheless, be on revenue account and the test of
enduring benefit may break down.
Therefore the test of enduring benefit is therefore not a certain or conclusive test
and it cannot be applied blindly and mechanically without regard to the particular
facts and circumstances of a given case.
But even if this test were applied in the present case, it does not yield a conclusion
in favour of the Revenue, for the following reasons:
It is, therefore, not possible to say that any advantage of enduring benefit in the
capital field was acquired by the assessee in purchasing loom hours and the test
of enduring benefit cannot help the Revenue.
Another test which is often applied is the one based on distinction between fixed
and circulating capital.
In John Smith & Son v. Moore [(1921) 2 AC 13] distinction between fixed capital
and circulating capital has been explained.
It was laid down that:
“Fixed capital is what the owner turns to profit by keeping it in his own
possession; circulating capital is what he makes profit of by parting with it and
letting it change masters.
Now so long as the expenditure in question can be clearly referred to the
acquisition of an asset which falls within one or the other of these two categories,
such a test would be a critical one.”
But this test also sometimes breaks down because there are many forms of
expenditure which do not fall easily within these two categories and this happens
quite frequently.
The line of demarcation is difficult to draw and leads to subtle distinctions
between profit that is made “out of” assets and profit that is made “upon” assets
or “with” assets.
The permanent structure of which the income is to be the produce or fruit remains
the same; it is not enlarged.
It is not sure whether loom hours can be regarded as part of circulating capital
like labour, raw material, power etc., but it is clear beyond doubt that they are not
part of fixed capital and hence even the application of this test does not compel
the conclusion that the payment for purchase of loom hours was in the nature of
capital expenditure.
The Revenue however contended that by purchase of loom hours the assessee
acquired a right to produce more than what it otherwise would have been entitled
to do and this right to produce additional quantity of goods constituted addition
to or augmentation of its profit-making structure.
According to the Revenue, the assessee acquired the right to produce a larger
quantity of goods and to earn more income and this amounted to acquisition of a
source of profit or income which though intangible was nevertheless a source or
‘spinner’ of income and the amount spent on purchase of this source of profit or
income therefore represented expenditure of capital nature.
The source of profit or income was the profit-making apparatus and this remained
untouched and unaltered.
There was no enlargement of the permanent structure of which the income would
be the produce or fruit.
What the assessee acquired was merely an advantage in the nature of relaxation
of restriction on working hours imposed by the working time agreement, so that
the assessee could operate its profit-earning structure for a longer number of
hours.
It was an expenditure for operating or working the looms for longer working
hours with a view to producing a larger quantity of goods and earning more
income and was therefore in the nature of revenue expenditure.
In law and particularly in the field of taxation law, analogies are apt to be
deceptive and misleading, but in the present context, the analogy of quota right
may not be inappropriate.
Take a case where acquisition of raw material is regulated by quota system and
in order to obtain more raw material, the assessee purchases quota right of
another.
Now it is obvious that by purchase of such quota right, the assessee would be able
to acquire more raw material and that would increase the profitability of his
profit-making apparatus, but the amount paid for purchase of such quota right
would indubitably be revenue expenditure, since it is incurred for acquiring raw
material and is part of the operating cost.
Similarly, if payment has to be made for securing additional power every week,
such payment would also be part of the cost of operating the profit-making
structure and hence in the nature of revenue expenditure, even though the effect
of acquiring additional power would be to augment the productivity of the profit-
making structure.
On the same analogy payment made for purchase of loom hours which would
enable the assessee to operate the profit-making structure for a longer number of
hours than those permitted under the working time agreement would also be part
of the cost of performing the income-earning operations and hence revenue in
character.
When dealing with cases of this kind where the question is whether expenditure
incurred by an assessee is capital or revenue expenditure, it is necessary to bear
in mind what has been laid down in Hallstrom’s Property Ltd. v. Federal
Commissioner of Taxation, [72 CLR 634]:
The same test was formulated in Robert Addie and Son’s Collieries Ltd. v. I. R,
[(1924) SC 231] .
Where it was laid down that :
“Is it part of the company’s working expenses, is it expenditure laid out as part of
the process of profit-earning? –
or, on-the other hand, is it a capital outlay, is it expenditure necessary for the
acquisition of property or of rights of a permanent character, the possession of
which is a condition of carrying on its trade at all?”
Therefore it is clear from the cited cases that the payment made by the assessee
for purchase of loom hours was expenditure laid out as part of the process of
profit-earning.
It was an outlay of a business “in order to carry it on and to earn a profit out of
this expense as an expense of carrying it on”.
It was part of the cost of operating the profit earning apparatus and was clearly in
the nature of revenue expenditure.
If this method is applied , the case closest to the present case is Nchanga
Consolidated Copper Mines case.
Consequently this group decided voluntarily to cut its production by 10 per cent
which for the three companies together meant a cut of 27,000 tons for the year in
question.
It was agreed between the three companies that for the purpose of giving effect
to this cut, company B should cease production for one year and that the assessee-
company should pay compensation to company B for the abandonment of its
production for the year.
The decision in Commissioner of Taxes v. Canon Company [45 TC 10] also bears
comparison with the present case.
The old charter contained certain antiquated provisions and also restricted the
borrowing powers of the assessee-company and these features severely
handicapped the assessee-company in the development of its trading activities.
The House of Lords held that the expenditure incurred for obtaining the revised
charter eliminating these features which operated as impediments to the profitable
development of the assessee-company’s business was in the nature of revenue
expenditure since it was incurred for facilitating the day-to-day trading operations
of the assessee-company and enabling the management and conduct of the
assessee-company’s business to be carried on more efficiently.
The expenditure was incurred by the assessee-company “to remove antiquated
restrictions which were preventing profits from being earned” and on that account
held the expenditure to be of revenue character.
Therefore the payment of Rs 2,03,255 made by the assessee for purchase of loom
hours represented revenue expenditure and was allowable as a deduction under
the Income Tax Act.
The appeal is allowed in favour of the assessee and against the Revenue
Facts.
The dispute in the present appeal relates to two items of expenditure incurred by
the assessee .
The assessee is a private limited company carrying on business of manufacture
and sale of crystal sugar in a factory situated in Pilibhit in the State of Uttar
Pradesh.
In the year 1952-53, a dam was constructed by the State of Uttar Pradesh at a
place called Deoni and a road Deoni Dam- Majhala was constructed connecting
the Deoni Dam with Majhala.
The Collector requested the assessee to make some contribution towards the
construction of the Deoni Dam and the Deoni Dam-Majhala Road and pursuant
to this request of the Collector, the assessee contributed a sum of Rs. 22,332/-
during the accounting year 1955.
The assessee also contributed a sum of Rs. 50,000/- to the State of Uttar Pradesh
during the same accounting year towards meeting the cost of construction of
roads in the area around its factory under a Sugar-cane Development Scheme
promoted by the Uttar Pradesh Government as part of the Second Five Year Plan.
It was provided under the Sugar-cane Development Scheme that one third of the
cost of construction of roads would be met by the Central Government, one third
by the State Government and the remaining one third by Sugar factories and
sugar-cane growers.
It was under this scheme that the sum of Rs. 50,000/- was contributed by the
assessee.
In the course of its assessment to Income-tax for the assessment year 1956-57,
the assessee claimed to deduct these two amounts of Rs. 22,332/- and Rs. 50,000/-
as deductible revenue expenditure under the Income-tax Act.
The Income-tax Officer disallowed the claim for deduction on the ground that the
expenditure incurred was of capital nature and was not allowable as a deduction
under Section 37 of the Income tax Act.
The assessee preferred an appeal to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner but the
appeal failed and this led to the filing of a further appeal before the Tribunal.
The tribunal did not go into the question whether the expenditure incurred by the
assessee was in the nature of capital or revenue expenditure but took a totally
different line and held that the contributions were made by the assessee as a good
citizen just as any other person would and it could not be said that the expenditure
was laid out wholly and exclusively for the purpose of the business of the
assessee.
The Tribunal theefore held that both the amounts of Rs. 22,332/- and Rs.
50,000/- were not allowable as deductible expenditure under Section 37.
On appeal the High Court held that “ the expenditure could not be said to have
been incurred by the assessee in the ordinary course of its business and it could
not be “classified as revenue expenditure on the ground of commercial
expediency.”
The view taken by the High Court was that since “the expenditure was not related
to thembusiness activity of the assessee as such, the Tribunal was justified in
concluding that it was not wholly and exclusively laid out for the business and
that the deduction claimed by the assessee therefore did not come within the ambit
of Section 37.”
The High Court accordingly answered the question referred to it in favour of the
revenue and against the assessee.
The assessee thereupon came in appeal to the Supreme Court with the following
contention.
“On the facts and circumstances of the case the sums of Rs. 22,332/- and Rs.
50,000/- were admissible deduction in computing the taxable profits and gains of
the company’s business.”
“When an expenditure is made, not only once and for all, but with a view to
bringing into existence an asset or an advantage for the enduring benefit of a
trade, there is very good reason (in the absence of special circumstances leading
to an opposite conclusion) for treating such an expenditure as properly
attributable not to revenue but to capital.”
This test is undoubtedly a well known test for distinguishing between capital and
revenue expenditure, but it must be remembered that this test is not of universal
application and it must yield where there are special circumstances leading to a
contrary conclusion.
In Empire Jute Co. Ltd. v. C.I.T. (1980) 4 SCC 25 .
It was laid down that:
“There may be cases where expenditure, even if incurred for obtaining advantage
of enduring benefit, may, nonetheless, be on revenue account and the test of
enduring benefit may break down.
It is not every advantage of enduring nature acquired by an assessee that brings
the case within the principle laid down in this test.
What is material to consider is the nature of the advantage in a commercial sense
and it is only where the advantage is in the capital field that the expenditure would
be disallowable on an application of this test.”
“If the advantage consists merely in facilitating the assessee’s business operations
or enabling management and conduct of the assessee’s business to be carried on
more efficiently or more profitably while leaving the fixed capital untouched the
expenditure would be on revenue account, even though the advantage may endure
for an indefinite future.”
On the facts of the present case, it is clear that by spending the amount of
Rs.50,000/-, the assessee did not acquire any asset of an enduring nature.
The roads which were constructed around the factory with the help of the amount
of Rs. 50,000/- contributed by the assessee belonged to the Government of Uttar
Pradesh and not to the assessee.
Moreover, it was only a part of the cost of construction of these roads that was
contributed by the assessee, since under the Sugar-cane Development Scheme
one third of the cost of construction was to be borne by the Central Government,
one third by the State Government and only the remaining one third was to be
divided between the sugar-cane factories and sugar-cane growers.
These roads were undoubtedly advantageous to the business of the assessee as
they facilitated the transport of sugar-cane to the factory and the outflow of
manufactured sugar from the factory to the market centres.
There can be no doubt that the construction of these roads facilitated the business
operations of the assessee and enabled the management and conduct of the
assessee’s business to be carried on more efficiently and profitably.
It is no doubt true that the advantage secured for the business of the assessee was
of a long duration inasmuch as it would last so long as the roads continued to be
in motorable condition, but it was not an advantage in the capital field, because
no tangible or intangible asset was acquired by the assessee nor was there any
addition to or expansion of the profit making apparatus of the assessee.
The amount of Rs. 50,000/- was contributed by the assessee for the purpose of
facilitating the conduct of the business of the assessee and making it more
efficient and profitable and it was clearly an expenditure on revenue account.
In Nchanga Consolidated Copper Mines Ltd. Case [(1965) 58 ITR 241 (PC)] it
was held that:
“In considering allocation of expenditure between the capital and income
accounts, it is almost unavoidable to argue from analogy.”
There are always cases falling indisputably on one or the other side of the line
and it is a familiar argument in tax courts that the case under review bears close
analogy to a case falling in the right side of the line and must, therefore, be
decided in the same manner.
If we apply this method, the case closest to the present one is that in Lakshmiji
Sugar Mills Co. P. Ltd. v. C.I.T. [AIR 1972 SC 159].
The facts of this case were very similar to the facts of the present case.
The assessee in this case was also a limited company carrying on business of
manufacture and sale of sugar in the State of Uttar Pradesh and it paid to the Cane
Development Council certain amounts by way of contribution for the
construction and development of roads between sugarcane producing centres and
the sugar factory of the assessee and the question arose whether this expenditure
was allowable as revenue expenditure under Section 37.
No doubt, in this case, there was a statutory obligation under which the amount
in question was contributed by the assessee, but the Court did not rest its decision
on the circumstance that the expenditure was incurred under statutory obligation.
The Court analysed the object and purpose of the expenditure and its true nature
and held that it was a revenue and not capital nature.
The Court observed that:
“In the present case, apart from the element of compulsion, the roads which were
constructed and developed were not the property of the assessee nor is it the case
of the revenue that the entire cost of development of those roads was defrayed by
the assessee.
It only made certain contribution for road development between the various cane
producing centres and the mills. The apparent object and purpose was to facilitate
the running of its motor vehicles or other means employed for transportation of
sugarcane to the factory.
From the business point of view and on a fair appreciation of the whole situation
the assessee considered that the development of the roads in question could
greatly facilitate the transportation of sugarcane.
This was essential for the benefit of its business which was of manufacturing
sugar in which the main raw material admittedly consisted of sugarcane.
These facts would bring it within the part of the principle , namely, that the
expenditure was incurred for running the business or working it with a view to
produce the profits without the assessee getting any advantage of an enduring
benefit to itself.
These observations are directly applicable in the present case and it must be held
that on the analogy of this decision that the amount of Rs. 50,000 was contributed
by the assessee “for running the business or working it with a view to produce the
profits without the assessee getting any advantage of an enduring benefit to
itself.”
The decision in Lakshmiji Sugar Mills case fully supports the view that the
expenditure of the amount of Rs. 50,000 incurred by the assessee was on revenue
account.
Decision of the Supreme Court in Travancore-Cochin Chemicals Ltd. v. C.I.T.
[AIR 1977 SC 991] must also be referred to as strong reliance was placed on
behalf of the Revenue on this case .
The facts of this case are undoubtedly to some extent comparable with the facts
of the present case.
But ultimately in case of this kind, where the question is whether a particular
expenditure incurred by an assessee is on capital account or revenue account, the
decision must ultimately depend on the facts of each case.
No two cases are alike and quite often emphasis on one aspect or the other may
tilt the balance in favour of capital expenditure or revenue expenditure.
The supreme Court in the course of its judgment in Travancore- Cochin
Chemicals Ltd. case distinguished the decision in Lakshmiji Sugar Mills case on
the ground that “on the facts of the case, this court was satisfied that the
development of the roads was meant for facilitating the carrying on of the
assessee’s business. Lakshmiji Sugar Mills’ case is quite different on facts from
the one before us and must be confined to the peculiar facts of that case.”
Facts.
The assessee is an Insurance Company which has four subsidiaries.
For Assessment Year 1991-92 the assessee filed a return of income of Rs.
58,52,80,850 along with the audit report.
The respondent assessee had during the accounting year, incurred expenditure
separately for:
(i) the increase of its authorised share capital, and
(ii) the issue of bonus shares.
The Revenue thereafter filed an appeal before the High Court of Bombay.
The High Court in its judgment affirmed the Tribunal’s judgment by following
its earlier decision in Bombay Burmah Trading Corpn.
Against this , the CIT has come in appeal to the Supreme Court raising the
following questions of law.
“Whether the expenditure incurred in connection with the issuance of bonus
shares is a capital expenditure or revenue expenditure.” and,
“Whether on the facts and in the circumstances of the case and in law the
Tribunal and the High Court were right in holding that the expenditure incurred
on account of share issue is allowable expenditure?”
The GIC contended that though increase in share capital by the issue of fresh
shares leads to an inflow of fresh funds into the company which expands or adds
to its capital employed, resulting in expansion of its profit-making apparatus, but
the issue of bonus shares by capitalisation of reserves is merely a reallocation of
a company’s funds.
There is no inflow of fresh funds or increase in the capital employed, which
remains the same.
The issue of bonus shares leaves the capital employed unchanged and, therefore,
does not result in conferring an enduring benefit to the company and the same has
to be regarded as revenue expenditure.
In support of its contention, the GIC He relied upon the judgment of the Supreme
Court in: CIT v. Dalmia Investment Co. Ltd. [AIR 1964 SC 1464],
And Judgements of the Bombay High Court in:
Bombay Burmah Trading Corpn. Ltd. v. CIT,
Richardson Hindustan Ltd. v. CIT .
and of the Calcutta High Court in,
Wood Craft Products Ltd. v. CIT [(1993) 204 ITR 545 (Cal)].
The Supreme Court has laid down the test for determining whether a particular
expenditure is revenue or capital expenditure in Empire Jute Co. Ltd. v. CIT
[(1980) 4 SCC 25].
It has been held in this case is that if the expenditure is made once and for all
with a view to bringing into existence an asset or an advantage for the enduring
benefit of a trade then there is a good reason for treating such an expenditure as
properly attributable not to revenue but to capital. This is so, in the absence of
special circumstances leading to an opposite conclusion.
Decisions of the Supreme Court in Punjab State Industrial Development Corpn.
Ltd. andBrooke Bond India Ltd. are of not much assistance .
All these cases relate to the issue of fresh shares which lead to an inflow of fresh
funds into the company which expands or adds to its capital employed in the
company resulting in the expansion of its profit-making apparatus.
Effect of issuance of bonus share has been explained by the Supreme Court in
Dalmia Investment Co. Ltd. v CIT[AIR 1964 SC 1464]
where the question of valuation of bonus share was considered.
In such cases the result may be stated by saying that what the shareholder held
as a whole rupee coin is held by him, after the issue of bonus shares, in two 50
np. coins. The total value remains the same, but the evidence of that value is not
in one certificate but in two.”
“It follows that though profits are profits in the hands of the company, when they
are disposed of by converting them into capital instead of paying them over to the
shareholders, no income can be said to accrue to the shareholder because the new
shares confer a title to a larger proportion of the surplus assets at a general
distribution.
The floating capital used in the company which formerly consisted of subscribed
capital and the reserves now becomes the subscribed capital.”
The bonus shares are not different from rights shares as, in the case of bonus
shares a bonus is first paid to the shareholders who pay it back to the company to
get their bonus shares.
“It is clear that when bonus shares are issued, two things take place:
(i) bonus is paid to the shareholders; and
(ii) wholly or partly paid-up shares are issued against the bonus payable to the
shareholders.
The shareholders invest the bonus paid to them in the shares and that is how the
bonus shares are issued to them.
Therefore, it would not make any difference whether paid-up share capital is
augmented by issuance of right shares or bonus shares to the shareholders as
bonus shares are not different from rights shares.”
The view of the Gujarat High Court is completely contrary to the judgment of
the Supreme Court in Dalmia Investment Co. Ltd.
In Dalmia Investment Co. Ltd. It was held that floating capital used in the
company which formerly consisted of subscribed capital and the reserves now
becomes the subscribed capital.
The conversion of the reserves into capital did not involve the release of the
profits to the shareholder; the money remains where it was, that is to say,
employed in the business.
In the face of these observations, the reasoning given by the Gujarat High Court
cannot be upheld.
The view taken by the Gujarat High Court that increase in the paid-up share
capital by issuing bonus shares may increase the creditworthiness of the company
cannot mean that increase in the creditworthiness would be a benefit or advantage
of enduring nature resulting in creating a capital asset.
The view of the Andhra Pradesh High Court has in Vazir Sultan Tobacco Co. Ltd.
v. CIT , that the expenditure incurred on the issue of bonus shares was capital in
nature because the issue of bonus shares led to an increase in the company’s
capital base, is erroneous.
The observations and conclusions of the AP High Court in Vazir Sultan Tobacco
case run contrary to the observation made by the Supreme Court in Dalmia
Investment Co. Ltd.
The capital base of the company prior to or after the issuance of bonus shares
remains unchanged.
Issuance of bonus shares does not result in any inflow of fresh funds or increase
in the capital employed, the capital employed remains the same.
Issuance of bonus shares by capitalisation of reserves is merely a reallocation of
the company’s fund.
Therefore the issue of bonus shares by capitalisation of reserves is merely a
reallocation of the company’s funds.
There is no inflow of fresh funds or increase in the capital employed, which
remains the same.
If that be so, then it cannot be held that the company has acquired a benefit or
advantage of enduring nature.
The total funds available with the company will remain the same and the issue of
bonus shares will not result in any change in the capital structure of the company.
Issue of bonus shares does not result in the expansion of capital base of the
company.
The case Wood Craft Products Ltd. of the Calcutta High Court is similar to the
case of the GIC.
In that case as well there was increase of authorised share capital by the issue of
fresh shares and a separate issue of bonus shares.
The Calcutta High Court drew a distinction between the raising of fresh capital
and the issue of bonus shares and held that expenditure on the former was capital
in nature as it changed the capital base.
On the other hand, in the case of bonus shares, was held to be revenue expenditure
following the decision of the Supreme Court in Dalmia Investment Co. Ltd. on
the ground that there was no change in the capital structure at all.
Therefore the view taken by the Bombay and the Calcutta High Courts is correct
to the effect that the expenditure on issuance of bonus shares is revenue
expenditure.
The contrary judgments of the Gujarat and the Andhra Pradesh High Courts are
erroneous and do not lay down the correct law.
For these reasons stated above, the appeal of the CIT is rejected in favour of the
assessee and against the Revenue.
Facts.
The assesse company , Bikaner Gypsums Ltd. , acquired a lease from the State of
Rajasthan , for mining of gypsum for a period of 20 years over an area of 4.27
square miles at Jamsar.
the Bikaner Gypsums Ltd., a company wherein the State Government owned 45
per cent share.
The assessee’ carried on the business of mining gypsum in accordance with the
terms and conditions stated in the lease. Under the lease, the assessee was
conferred the liberties and powers to enter upon the entire leased land and to
search for, win, work, get, raise, convert and carry away the gypsum for its own
benefits in the most economic, convenient and beneficial .
However the lease agreement imposed certain restrictions on the company . It
provided that the lessee shall not enter upon or occupy surface of any land in the
occupation of any tenant or occupier without making reasonable compensation to
such tenant or occupier.
It also provided restriction on mining operation within 100 yards from any
railway, reservoir, canal or other public works. This clause had been incorporated
in the lease to protect the railway track and railway station which was situated
within the area demised to the lessee.
The assessee company exclusively carried on the mining of gypsum in the entire
area demised to it. The railway authorities extended the railway area by laying
down fresh track, providing for railway siding. The railways further constructed
quarters in the lease area without the permission of the assessee company.
The assessee company filed a suit in civil court for ejecting the railways from the
encroached area but it failed in the suit. However after negotiations between the
assesse company and Railway authorities, the Railway Board agreed to shift the
railway station, track and yards to another place or area offered by the assessee.
Under the agreement the railway authorities agreed to shift the station and all its
establishments to the alternative site offered by the assessee on the condition that
the assessee company shall pay Rs 3 lakhs to the Railways towards the cost of
shifting of the railway station and other constructions.
The assessee company claimed deduction of Rs 3 lakhs paid to the Railway for
the shifting of the railway station for the relevant assessment year .
The Income Tax Officer rejected the assessee’s claim on the ground that it was a
capital expenditure. On appeal ,the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal held that the
payment of Rs 3 lakhs by the assessee company was not a capital expenditure,
instead it was a revenue expenditure.
On reference from the Tribunal, the High Court held that since on payment of Rs
3 lakhs to the railways the assessee acquired a new asset which was attributable
to capital of enduring nature, the sum of Rs 3 lakhs was a capital expenditure and
it could not be a revenue expenditure.
On these findings the High Court answered the question in the negative in favour
of the revenue against the assessee and it set aside the order of the Tribunal by
the impugned order.
The assesse company came in appeal to the Supreme Court against the order of
the High Court.
In Abdul Kayoom v. CIT [(1962) 44 ITR 589] the Supreme Court after
considering a number of English and Indian authorities held that each case
depends on its own facts, and a close similarity between one case and another is
not enough, because even a single significant detail may alter the entire aspect.
The court observed that what is decisive is the nature of the business, the nature
of the expenditure, the nature of the right acquired, and their relation inter se, and
this is the only key to resolve the issue in the light of the general principles, which
are followed in such cases.
In Kayoom’s case the assessee claimed deduction of Rs 6111 paid by it to the
government as lease money for the grant of exclusive rights to fish and carry away
all shells in the sea off the coast line of a certain area specified in the lease for a
period of three years. The court held that the amount of Rs 6111 was paid to
obtain an enduring benefit in the shape of an exclusive right to fish; the payment
was not related to the shells , instead it was an amount spent in acquiring an asset
from which it may collect its stock-in-trade. It was, therefore, an expenditure of
a capital nature.
In Bombay Steam Navigation Co. Pvt. Ltd. v. CIT [(1965) 1 SCR 770] the
assessee purchased the assets of another company for purposes of carrying on
passenger and ferry services, it paid part of the consideration leaving the balance
unpaid.
Under the agreement of sale the assessee had to pay interest on the unpaid
balance of money. The assessee claimed deduction of the amount of interest paid
by it under the contract of purchase from its income. The court held that the claim
for deduction of amount of interest as revenue expenditure was not admissible.
The court observed that while considering the question the court should consider
the nature and ordinary course of business and the object for which the
expenditure is incurred. If the outgoing or expenditure is so related to the carrying
on or conduct of the business, that it may be regarded as an integral part of the
profit-earning process and not for acquisition of an asset or a right of a permanent
character, the possession of which is a condition for the carrying on of the
business, the expenditure may be regarded as revenue expenditure. But, on the
facts of the case, the court held that the assessee’s claim was not admissible, as
the expenditure was related to the acquisition of an asset or a right of a permanent
character, the possession of which was a condition for carrying on the business.
In Moolchand Suganchand v. CIT [(1972) 86 ITR 647] the assessee was carrying
on a mining business and had paid a sum of Rs 1,53,800 to acquire lease of
certain areas of land bearing mica for a period of 20 years.
In addition , the assesse also had paid a sum of Rs 3200 as fee for a licence for
prospecting for emerald for a period of one year.
The assessee claimed the expenditure of Rs 3200 paid by it as fee to the
government for prospecting licence as revenue expenditure. The assessee further
claimed that the appropriate part of Rs 1,53,800 paid by it as lease money was
allowable as revenue expenditure.
The court held that while considering the question in relation to the mining leases
an empirical test is that where minerals have to be won, extracted and brought to
surface by mining operations, the expenditure incurred for acquiring such a right
would be of a capital nature.
But, where the mineral has already been gotten and is on the surface, then the
expenditure incurred for obtaining the right to acquire the raw material would be
a revenue expenditure.
The court held that since the payment of tender money for lease right was for
acquisition of capital asset, the same could not be treated as a revenue
expenditure. As regards the claim relating to the prospecting licence fee of Rs
3200 the court held that since the licence was for prospecting only and as the
assessee had not started working a mine, the payment was made to the
government with the object of initiating the business. The court held that even
though the amount of prospecting licence fee was for a period of one year, it did
not make any difference as the fee was paid to obtain a licence to investigate,
search and find the mineral with the object of conducting the business, extracting
ore from the earth necessary for initiating the business.
In the present case , the assessee never claimed any deduction with regard to the
licence fee or royalty paid by it, instead, the claim relates to the amount spent on
the removal of a restriction which obstructed the carrying of the business of
mining within a particular area in respect of which the assessee had already
acquired mining rights.
The payment of Rs 3 lakhs for shifting of the railway track and railway station
was not made for initiating the business of mining operations or for acquiring any
right, instead the payment was made to remove obstruction to facilitate the
business of mining. The principles laid down in Suganchand case do not apply to
the instant case.
In British Insulated and Helsby Cables Ltd. case [1926 AC 205], the test laid
down therein has almost universally been accepted. It was observed that: When
an expenditure is made, not only once and for all, but with a view to bringing into
existence an asset or an advantage for the enduring benefit of a trade, there is
very good reason (in the absence of special circumstances leading to an opposite
conclusion) for treating such an expenditure as properly attributable not to
revenue but to capital.
This dictum has been followed and approved by the Supreme Court in the cases
of Assam Bengal Cement Co. Ltd., Abdul Kayoom and Seth Suganchand and
several other decisions .
But, the test laid down In British Cables case has been explained in a number of
cases which show that the tests for considering the expenditure for the purposes
of bringing into existence, as an asset or an advantage for the enduring benefit of
a trade is not always true . Therefore, the test laid down was not a conclusive one
and it was recognised that special circumstances might very well lead to an
opposite conclusion.
In Gotan Lime Syndicate v. CIT [(1966) 59 ITR 718] the assessee which carried
on the business of manufacturing lime from limestone, was granted the right to
excavate limestone in certain areas under a lease. Under the lease the assessee
had to pay royalty of Rs 96,000 per annum. The assessee claimed the payment of
Rs 96,000 to the government as a revenue expenditure.
The Supreme Court held that the royalty paid by the assessee has to be allowed
as revenue expenditure as it had relation to the raw materials to be excavated and
extracted. The court observed that the royalty payment had relation to the lime
deposits. Although the assessee did derive an advantage and further even though
the advantage lasted at least for a period of five years , only an annual royalty
was paid. The court held that the royalty was not a direct payment for securing
an enduring benefit, instead it had relation to the raw materials to be obtained. In
this decision expenditure for securing an advantage which was to last at least for
a period of five years was not treated to have enduring benefit.
In M.A. Jabbar v. CIT [(1968) 2 SCR 413], the assessee was carrying on the
business of supplying lime and sand, and for the purposes of acquiring sand he
had obtained a lease of a river bed from the State Government for a period of 11
months. Under the lease he had to pay large amount of lease money for the grant
of an exclusive right to carry away sand within, under or upon the land. The
assessee claimed deduction with regard to the amount paid as lease money. The
court held that the expenditure incurred by the assessee was not related to the
acquisition of an asset or a right of permanent character instead the expenditure
was for a specific object of enabling the assessee to remove the sand lying on the
surface of the land which was stock-in-trade of the business, therefore, the
expenditure was a revenue expenditure.
Whether payments made by an assessee for removal of any restriction or obstacle
to its business would be in the nature of capital or revenue expenditure, has been
considered by courts. In Commissioner of Inland Revenue v. Canon Company
[(1966-69) 45 Tax Cas 18] the assessee carried on the business of iron founders
which was incorporated by a Charter granted to it in 1773. The Charter of the
company placed restriction on the company’s borrowing powers. The company
decided to petition for a supplementary Charter providing for the removal of the
limitation on company’s borrowing powers . The company’s petition was
contested by dissenting shareholders in court. The company settled the litigation
under which it had to pay the cost of legal action and buy out the holdings of the
dissenting shareholders and in pursuance thereof a supplementary Charter was
granted.
In assessment proceedings, the company claimed deduction of payments made
by it towards the cost of obtaining the Charter, the amounts paid to the dissenting
shareholders and expenses in the action. The House of Lords held that since the
object of the new Charter was to remove obstacle to profitable trading, and
removal of restrictions on borrowing facilitated the day-to-day trading operation
of the company, the expenditure was on revenue account. The House of Lords
considered the test laid down in British Cables case and held that the payments
made by the company, were for the purpose of removing of disability of the
company’s trading operation which prejudiced its operation. This was achieved
without acquisition of any tangible or intangible asset or without creation of any
new branch of trading activity. From a commercial and business point of view
nothing in the nature of additional fixed capital was thereby achieved. The court
pointed out that there is a sharp distinction between the removal of a disability on
one hand payment for which is a revenue payment, and the bringing into existence
of an advantage, payment for which may be a capital payment. Since, in the case
before the court, the company had made payments for removal of disabilities
which confined their business under the out of date Charter of 1773, the
expenditure was on revenue account.
In Empire Jute Company v. CIT [(1980) 124 ITR 1], the Supreme Court held
that expenditure made by an assessee for the purpose of removing the restriction
on the number of working hours with a view to increase its profits, was in the
nature of revenue expenditure. The court observed that if the advantage consists
merely in facilitating the assessee’s trading operations or enabling the
management and conduct of the assessee’s business to be carried on more
efficiently or more profitably while leaving the fixed capital untouched, the
expenditure would be on revenue account even though the advantage may endure
for an indefinite future.
The view taken in the Canon Company and Empire Jute case is correct.
Where the assessee has an existing right to carry on a business, any expenditure
made by it during the course of business for the purpose of removal of any
restriction or obstruction or disability would be on revenue account, provided the
expenditure does not acquire any capital asset. Payments made for removal of
restriction, obstruction or disability may result in acquiring benefits to the
business, but that by itself would not acquire any capital asset.
In the instant case the assessee had been granted mining lease under which he
had right to quarry and extract mineral i.e. the gypsum and in that process he had
right to dig the surface of the entire area leased out to him.
However the lease agreement placed a restriction on his right to mining
operations from the Railway Area, but that area could also be operated by it for
mining purposes with the permission of the authorities. The assessee had under
the lease acquired full right to carry on mining operations in the entire area
including the Railway Area.
The payment of Rs 3 lakhs was not made by the assessee for the grant of
permission to carry on mining operations within the Railway Area, instead the
payment was made towards the cost of removing the construction which
obstructed the mining operations. The presence of the railway station and railway
track was operating as an obstacle to the assessee’s business of mining, the
assessee made the payment to remove that obstruction to facilitate the mining
operations. On the payment made to the railway authorities the assessee did not
acquire any fresh right to any mineral nor he acquired any capital asset instead
the payment was made by it for shifting the railway station and track which
operated as hindrance and obstruction to the business or mining in a profitable
manner. The assessee had already paid tender money, licence fee and other
charges for securing the right of mining in respect of the entire area including the
right to the minerals under the Railway Area.
The High Court failed to appreciate that the lease agreement only placed
restrictions on mining in railway area and it did not destroy the assessee’s right
to the minerals found under the Railway Area. The restriction operated as an
obstacle to the assessee’s right to carry on business in a profitable manner. The
assessee paid a sum of Rs 3 lakhs towards the cost of removal of the obstructions
which enabled the assessee to carry on its business of mining in an area which
had already been leased out to it for that purpose. There was, therefore, no
acquisition of any capital asset.
Therefore the High Court’s view that the benefit acquired by the assessee on the
payment of the disputed amount was a benefit of an enduring nature is not
sustainable in law.
As already observed, there may be circumstances where expenditure, even if
incurred for obtaining advantage of enduring benefit may not amount to
acquisition of asset. The facts of each case have to be borne in mind in considering
the question having regard to the nature of business its requirement and the nature
of the advantage in commercial sense.
In considering the cases of mining business ,the nature of the lease the purpose
for which expenditure is made, its relation to the carrying on of the business in a
profitable manner should be considered.
The payment made by the assessee was for removal of disability and obstacle and
it did not bring into existence any advantage of an enduring nature. The Tribunal
rightly allowed the expenditure on revenue account. The High Court in our
opinion failed to appreciate the true nature of the expenditure.
Therefore the appeal is allowed and the order of the High Court is set aside.
CAPITAL GAINS.
LEADING CASE.
Statutory Provisions.
Section. 2(14) “Capital Asset” means property of any kind held by an assessee,
whether or not connected with his business or profession, but does not include—
(i) any stock-in-trade, consumable stores or raw materials held for the purposes
of his business or profession ;
(ii) personal effects, that is to say, movable property (including wearing apparel
and furniture) held for personal use by the assessee or any member of his family
dependent on him, but excludes— (a) jewellery; (b) archaeological collections;
(c) drawings; (d) paintings; (e) sculptures; or (f) any work of art.
(iii) agricultural land in India.
(1) Notwithsatnding anything contained in section 45, where the assets of the
company are distributed to its shareholders on its liquidation, such distribution
shall not be regarded as transfer by the company for the purposes of section 45.
(2) Where the shareholder on the liquidation of the company receives any money
or assets from the company, he shall be chargeable to income – tax under the head
“Capital Gains” in respect of the money so received or the market value of the
other assets on the date of distribution , as reduced by the amount assessed as
dividends , and the sum so arrived at shall be deemed to be the full value of the
consideration .
(viii) Any transfer of agricultural land in India effected before the 1st day of
March , 1970.
The income chargeable under the head “Capital Gains” shall be computed by
deducting from the full value of the consideration received or accruing as a result
of the transfer of the capital asset namely ;
(i) expenditure incurred wholly and exclusively in connection with such transfer.
(ii) the cost of acquisition of an the asset and cost of improvement thereto.
Section 147. Income escaping assessment.-
If the Assessing Officer has reason to believe that any income chargeable to tax
has escaped assessment for any assessment year, he may, assess or reassess such
income and also any other income chargeable to tax which has escaped
assessment and which comes to his notice subsequently in the course of the
proceedings , or recompute the loss or the depreciation allowance or any other
allowance, as the case may be, for the relevant assessment year:
Facts.
The assessee appellants are sisters. They were share holders in M/s. Palkulam
Estate (Private) Ltd., Nagercoil. The company went into liquidation in
1964.Pursuant to a compromise decree dated 22nd December 1969 in litigation
between the assessees and their brother (who was also a share holder in the
company), and the company represented by the liquidator, the assets of the
company which included agricultural lands were distributed to the appellants and
eight others. The appellants thereby received 479.89 acres of the agricultural
lands prior to the end of the relevant accounting year that was 31.3.70. The
assessment in respect of the year 1970- 71 had been completed on 27.2.71. The
Income Tax Officer reopened the assessments under the relevant provisions of
the Income Tax Act. The appellants filed their returns in respect of the two notices
under the relevant provisions for reassessment. The assessing officer did not
acccept the contention of the assessee appellants that in terms of the definition
of ‘assets’ in section 2(14), agricultural lands were entitled to be excluded while
computing capital gains on assets received by the shareholder from a company in
liquidation under section 46(2) .
According to the assessing officer, section 46(2) refers only to money received
on liquidation or the market value of the assets on the date of distribution and it
was immaterial whether the asset was agricultural lands or otherwise. The value
of the share of agricultural lands transferred to each appellant was, therefore,
included as income subject to capital gains and subjected to tax. The assessees’
appeals before the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) were allowed by
holding that the scope of section 46(2) would have to be read in the light of the
definition of the word ‘capital asset’ in section 2(14) and that “having exempted
agricultural lands from capital gains under the general provision , it was difficult
to interpret section 46(2) as including agricultural land.” The action of the Income
Tax Officer in charging the income of the distribution of agricultural lands as
capital gains under section 46(2) of the Act was accordingly set aside. The
revenue appealed before the tribunal. The tribunal dismissing the revenue’s
appeal held that : On a combined reading of section 45, 46(2) and 48 it will be
clear, according to our opinion, that assets mentioned in section 46(2) would
mean capital assets. In as much as section 47(viii) exempts transfer of agricultural
land from capital gain tax under section 45, we agree with the Commissioner of
Income Tax (Appeals) in coming to the conclusion that it is difficult to interpret
section 46(2) as including agricultural lands which is outside the scope of the
Income Tax. At the instance of the CIT , the Tribunal referred the following
question for the consideration of the High Court.
“Whether on the facts and in the circumstances of the case, the appellate tribunal
is right in law in holding that the assets mentioned in section 46(2) would mean
‘capital asset’ as defined in section 2(14) and that consequently, the value of
agricultural lands received by the assessee on the liquidation of Palkulam Estate
(P) Ltd. cannot be charged to be tax under section 46(2) of the Income Tax Act,
1961?”
The High Court answered the question against the assessees and in favour of
the revenue. The High Court construed the provisions of section 46(2) and held,
reversing the decision of the CIT(A) and the tribunal, that the definition of ‘capital
assets’ under section 2(14) of the Act is not of any relevance for the purpose of
construing section 46(2) of the Act, and the fact that agricultural lands to the
extent provided in section 2(14)(iii) of the Act are excluded from the definition
did not have any impact on the taxability of the market value of the agricultural
land received by the assessee on the distribution of the assets of a company in
liquidation. Against this the assessees have come in appeal to the Supreme Court
. “Whether the word ‘assets’ in section 46(2) of the Income Tax Act, 1961 must
be understood and construed according to the definition of the word ‘capital
assets’ in section 2(14) of the Act.”
Reasoning of the Court
Before considering the correctness of the decision of the High Court the context
in which section 46(2) came to be part of the Income Tax Act needs to be
considered. Section 12-B of the Income Tax Act, 1922 provided for payment of
tax under capital gains “in respect of any profits or gains whatsoever from the
sale, exchange, relinquishment or transfer of a capital asset effected after 31st day
of March 1956, and such profits and gains shall be deemed to be income of the
previous year in which the sale, exchange, relinquishment or transfer took place.”
In Commissioner of Income Tax, Madras v. Madurai Mills Co. Ltd. [1973 (89)
ITR 45] Construing section 12-B of the Income Tax Act, 1922, the Supreme
Court in had held that: When a shareholder receives money representing his
share on distribution of the net assets of the company in liquidation, he receives
that money in satisfaction of the right which belonged to him by virtue of his
holding the shares and not by operation of any transaction which amounts to sale,
exchange, relinquishment or transfer within the meaning of section 12-B of the
Act. Section 45(1) of the 1961 Act which substantially corresponds with section
12-B of the 1922 Act provides that: “Any profits or gains arising from the
transfer of a capital asset effected in the previous year shall be chargeable to
income tax under the head ‘capital gains,’ and shall be deemed to be the income
of the previous year in which the transfer took place.” The words ‘capital assets’
has been defined in section 2(14) of the Act which provides that:
(14) ‘Capital assets’ means property of any kind held by an assessee, whether or
not connected with his business or profession, but does not include
(iii) agricultural land in India.
It has been held by the Supreme Court that the principle of Madurai Mills that a
distribution of assets of a company in liquidation does not amount to a transfer
continues to apply to the 1961 Act. The view in Madurai Mills Co. Ltd. has also
been statutorily affirmed in Section 46(1) which provides: “46.(1)
Notwithstanding anything contained in section 45, where the assets of a company
are distributed to its shareholders on its liquidation, such distribution shall not be
regarded as a transfer by the company for the purposes of section 45.” In other
words, a distinction is drawn between a “transfer” of assets and a distribution of
assets of the company on liquidation. Where there is “transfer” of assets and not
a “distribution” on liquidation then having regard to section 47(viii) which
provides that:
“Nothing contained in section 45 shall apply to the following transfers:
(viii) any transfer of agricultural land in India effected before the 1st day of March
1970”
it may have been argued at least on behalf of the company that the ‘transfer’
having been concluded in 1969 was exempt from capital gains.
This argument, however, is not available to the shareholders who receive assets
from the company on distribution consequent upon liquidation because of section
46(2) which was introduced to make the receipts of assets from a company
liquidation by its share holders a taxable event for the first time.
Section 46(2) provides:
“46(2). Where a shareholder on the liquidation of a company receives any money
or other assets from the company, he shall be chargeable to income tax under the
head ‘capital gains’ in respect of the money so received or the market value of
the other assets on the date of distribution, as reduced by the amount assessed as
dividend and the sum so arrived at shall be deemed to be the full value of the
consideration.
The question is “does the words ‘assets’ in section 46(2) mean ‘capital assets’ as
defined in section 2(14) of the Act?”
If it does then, it is conceded by the revenue, there is no question of subjecting
the agricultural lands received by the assessees from the company in liquidation
to capital gains. Indisputably, the object in introducing section 46(2) was to
overcome the reasoning in Madurai Mills by broadening the base of the incidence
of capital gains and expressly providing for receipt of assets of a company in
liquidation by a shareholder as a taxable event. Section 46(2) is in terms of an
independent charging section.
It also provides for a distinct method of calculation of capital gains. It was
mentioned in C.I.T. v. R.M. Amin that:
Section 46 (2) , was enacted both with a view to make shareholders liable for
payment of tax on capital gains as well as to prescribe the mode of calculating the
capital gains to the shareholders on the distribution of assets by a company in
liquidation. But for that sub-section , it would have been difficult to levy tax on
capital gains to the shareholders on distribution of assets by a company in
liquidation. However Section 46 (2) does not make any reference to capital
assets either in connection with the imposition of capital gains tax nor its
computation. Having referred to ‘capital asset’ in section 45(1), 47 and 48, the
Parliament appears to have deliberately chosen to use the word ‘asset’ in section
46(1) and (2), the ostensible intention being to bring assets of all kinds within the
scope of the charge. It is not necessary to refer to a dictionary to hold that capital
assets are a species of the genus ‘assets.’ If the words ‘capital assets’ and ‘assets’
as used in sections 45(1) and 46 respectively did not overlap then there was no
need to provide for a non obstante clause in section 46(1) with reference to section
45.
Therefore the High Court correctly held that , agricultural land would have been
a ‘capital asset’ but for the exclusion from the definition of ‘capital asset’ and
what is not a capital asset may yet be an asset for the purposes of section 46(2).
Therefore, to the extent that a shareholder assessee receives assets whether capital
or any other from the company in liquidation, the assessee is liable to pay tax on
the market value of the assets as on the date of the distribution as provided under
section 46(2). That appears to be the plain meaning of the section and there is no
reason to construe it in any other fashion. The invocation of section 2(14) of the
Act which defines “capital asset” is as such unnecessary for the purpose of
construing section 46(2).
LEADING CASE.
Facts:
The assessee had borrowed monies for the purpose of making investment in
shares of certain companies and during the assessment year 1965-66 for which
the relevant accounting year ended on 10th April 1965, the assessee paid interest
on the monies borrowed but did not receive any dividend on the shares purchased
with those monies. The two assessee made a claim for deduction of the amount
of interest paid on the borrowed monies but this claim was negatived by the ITO
and Appelate Assistant Commissioner . The ground for rejection of assessee’s
claim was that during the relevant assessment year the shares did not yield any
dividend and, therefore, interest paid on the borrowed monies could not be
regarded as expenditure laid out or expended wholly and exclusively for the
purpose of making or earning income chargeable under the head “Income from
other sources” so as to be allowable as a permissible deduction under s. 57(iii).
The Tribunal, however, on further appeal, disagreed with the view taken by the
taxing authorities and upheld the claim of the assessee for deduction under s.
57(iii).
On an application by the Revenue , the Tribunal referred the following question
of law, to the Supreme Court namely:
“Whether interest on moneys borrowed for investment in shares is allowable
expenditure under s. 57(iii) when the shares have not yielded any return in the
shape of dividend during the relevant assessment year.”
Statutory Provision: Section : 57. Deductions.-
The income chargeable under the head “Income from other sources” shall be
computed after making the following deductions, namely :—
(iii) Any other expenditure (not being in the nature of capital expenditure) laid
out or expended wholly and exclusively for the purpose of making or earning
such income;
Question For Consideration:
What is the true interpretation of section 57 of the Income Tax Act.
S. 57(iii) occurs in a bunch of sections under the heading, “Income from other
sources.”
S. 56, which is the first in this group of sections, enacts in sub-s. (1) that income
of every kind which is not chargeable to tax under any of the heads specified in
Section . 14, shall be chargeable to tax under the head “Income from other
sources”. Section 56 (2) includes in such income various items, one of which is
“dividends.” Dividend on shares is thus income chargeable under the head
“Income from other sources.”
S. 57 provides for certain deductions to be made in computing the income
chargeable under the head “Income from other sources” and one of such
deductions is that set out in cl. (iii), which reads as follows:
Any other expenditure (not being in the nature of capital expenditure) laid out or
expended, wholly and exclusively for the purpose of making or earning such
income.
The expenditure to be deductible under s. 57(iii) must be laid out or expended
wholly and exclusively for the purpose of making or earning such income. The
Revenue contends that unless the expenditure sought to be deducted resulted in
the making or earning of income, it could not be said to be laid out or expended
for the purpose of making or earning such income. The making or earning of
income, is essential for the admissibility of the expenditure under Section .
57(iii) and, therefore, if in a particular assessment year there was no income, the
expenditure would not be deductible under that section. The Revenue stated that
the legislature had deliberately used words of narrower import in granting the
deduction under Section . 57(iii). Deductions under Section 37 and Section 57 are
different. The Revenue pointed out that S. 37(1) provided for deduction of
expenditure laid out or expended wholly and exclusively for the purpose of the
business or profession in computing the income chargeable under the head
“Profits or gains of business or profession.”
The language used in s. 37(1) was “laid out or expended – for purpose of the
business or profession” and not “laid out or expended – for the purpose of making
or earning such income” as set out in s. 57(iii).
The revenue contended the words in s. 57(iii) being narrower,, they cannot be
given the same wide meaning as the words in s. 37(1) and hence no deduction of
expenditure could be claimed under s. 57(iii) unless it was productive of income
in the assessment year in question.
Reasoning of the Court:
What s. 57(iii) requires is that the expenditure must be laid out or expended
wholly and exclusively for the purpose of making or earning income. It is the
purpose of the expenditure that is relevant in determining the applicability of s.
57(iii) and that purpose must be making or earning of income. S. 57(iii) does not
require that this purpose must be fulfilled in order to qualify the expenditure for
deduction. It does not say that the expenditure shall be deductible only if any
income is made or earned. There is in fact nothing in the language of s. 57(iii) to
suggest that the purpose for which the expenditure is made should fructify into
any benefit by way of return in the shape of income. The plain natural
construction of the language of Section 57(iii) irresistibly leads to the conclusion
that to bring a case within the section, it is not necessary that any income should
in fact have been earned as a result of expenditure.
An identical view was taken by the Supreme Court in Eastern Investments Ltd.
v. CIT [(1951) 20 ITR 1, 4 (SC)]. In Eastern Investment case , interpreting the
corresponding provision in Section 12(2) of the Indian I.T. Act, 1922, which is
in the same terms as Section 57(iii), It was observed that:“It is not necessary to
show that the expenditure was a profitable one or that in fact any profit was
earned.”
Therefore there is no scope for any controversy as regards interpretation of
Section 57 (iii) i.e. to bring a case under this section it is not necessary that any
income should in fact have been earned as a result of expenditure.
According to the revenue, the expenditure would disqualify for deduction only if
no income results from such expenditure in a particular assessment year.
However if there is some income, howsoever small or meagre, the expenditure
would be eligible for deduction. This means that in a case where the expenditure
is Rs. 1000, if there is income of even Re. 1, the expenditure would be deductible
and there would be resulting loss of Rs. 999 under the head “Income from other
sources.”
But if there is no income, then, on the argument of the revenue, the expenditure
would have to be ignored as it would not be liable to be deducted. This would
indeed be a strange and highly anomalous result and it is difficult to believe that
the legislature could have ever intended to produce such illogical situation.
Moreover when a profit and loss account is cast in respect of any source of
income, what is allowed by the statute as proper expenditure would be debited as
an outgoing and income would be credited as a receipt and the resulting income
or loss would be determined. It would make no difference to this process whether
the expenditure is X or Y or nil; whatever is the proper expenditure allowed by
the statute would be debited.
Equally, it would make no difference whether there is any income. Since
whatever is the income be it , X or Y or nil, it would be credited. And the ultimate
income or loss would be found.
It is very difficult to accept the contention that expenditure which is otherwise a
proper expenditure can cease to be such merely because there is no receipt of
income. Whatever is a proper outgoing by way of expenditure must be debited
irrespective of whether there is receipt of income or not.
That is the plain requirement of proper accounting and the interpretation of s.
57(iii) cannot be different. The deduction of the expenditure cannot, in the
circumstances, be held to be conditional upon the making or earning of the
income. It is true that the language of s. 37(1) is a little wider than that of s. 57(iii),
but that cannot make any difference to the true interpretation of s. 57(iii).
The language of s. 57(iii) is clear and unambiguous and it has to be construed
according to its plain natural meaning and merely because a slightly wider
phraseology is employed in another section which may take in something more,
it does not mean that s. 57(iii) should be given a narrow and constricted meaning
nor warranted by the language of the section and, in fact, contrary to such
language.
This view is clearly supported by the observations in Hughes v. Bank of New
Zealand [(1938) 6 ITR 636, 644 (HL)], where it was stated that : “Expenditure in
course of the trade which is unremunerative is none the less a proper deduction,
if wholly and exclusively made for the purposes of the trade. It does not require
the presence of a receipt on the credit side to justify the deduction of an expense.”
This view is eminently correct as it is not only justified by the language of s.
57(iii) but it also accords with the principles of commercial accounting. Therefore
the question referred is decided in favour of the assessee and against the revenue.
International Trade
Permanent Esablishment.
Leading Cases
RULING .
(1) Whether, on the facts and circumstances of the case, the payments
received/receivable by the Applicant in connection with the provision of services
of technical/professional personnel to Booz & Company (India) Private Limited
(”Booz India”) is chargeable to tax in India as “Fees for Technical Services”(in
short“FTS”) /Royalty under the provisions of Article 12 and its sub articles of the
relevant India – and the country concerned Double Taxation Avoidance
Agreement (“the Tax Treaty”) in the absence of Permanent Establishment(“PE”)
in
India?
(2) Whether, on the facts and circumstances of the case, the payments
received/receivable by the Applicant in connection with the provision of services
of technical/professional personnel to Booz India is chargeable to tax in India as
FTS under section 9(1)(vii) read with section 115A as well as Section 44DA of
the Act in the absence of fixed place PE in India?
The basic premise of the applicants is that in the absence of a PE in India, the fee
receivable by them from Booz India is not taxable as business income and
accordingly, being wholly in the nature of FTS, is taxable @ 10% in terms of
115A of the Act. This proposition is misplaced. The various terms and conditions
governing the relationship between the applicants and Booz India, the global
character and profile of the Booz Group, the interdependence amongst the various
companies of the Booz Group, the nature of the services rendered and exchanged
between the companies of the Booz Group and the location of Booz India’s office
in India combine to give rise to a case for Booz India being a PE in India from
multiple angles. Following signature features of the business model of the Booz
Group as mentioned in the various applications are listed below which will
indicate that Booz India can be simultaneously/alternatively a service PE, an
agency PE and also a fixed place PE:
iii) Booz India would execute the client’s project using its own employees and
to the extent required, procure services of technical/professional/personnel from
the applicant/and other affiliates of the group. )Para B 1.5 of Annexure 1 of the
applications) This combine of professionals would work together as one team to
execute the projects (third bullet of Para B 2.2 of Annexure 1 of the applications.
iv) The applicants will have the power to recall its technical / professional/
personnel and replace them with other technical / professional / personnel. (Para
B 3.3 of Annexure 1 of the applications)
vii) Any financial and/or other responsibility in respect of any claim made by
the third party on Booz India for an actual or alleged infringement of any
industrial or other rights of third parties vice versa usage by Booz India of
Technical information, data, etc made available by the applicant to Booz India
will be borne by the applicant. (Para B 3.16 of Annexure 1 of the applications).
viii) The applicant will also impart on the job training to the employees of India.
(Para B 3.17 of Annexure 1 of the applications). This can be treated as one
primary contention.
The above terms and conditions and the business model between the applicants
and Booz India bring out a strong case of Booz India being a dependant agent of
the applicants. This is the primary submission of the Revenue. As it is, the
global business model of the group is such that all the entities in the group are
interdependent as they cannot attain optimal efficiency without receiving services
from each other. Booz Group thus has, what in the corporate and taxation
parlance is known as, a blurred identity in which the close intra group
interdependence blurs the identity of individual entities to third parties. Thus,
the applicant’s stand that Booz India is an independent entity does not find
support from the business model of the group.
This apart, on facts also Booz India is exclusively dependent on the applicants in
various ways. Booz India cannot optimally function without the expertise of the
group entities in giving consultancy in the fields in which the group operates, the
brand equity the group enjoys, the capabilities the group has developed across the
globe and services from the group professionals and experts. Importantly, the
group’s business is manpower centric in which the only important asset is human
resources. In this context, Booz India is exclusively dependent on other group
entities in getting the services of appropriate personnel from other entities and job
training of these personnel deployed to Booz India. Further, these employees are
also under overall control of the applicants. The other group entities are also
legally liable in case of third party liabilities. The employees deputed are also
contracted by the applicants only. All these inherent and specific dependencies
of Booz India make it very clear that it is a dependent agent of the applicants.
The assertion of the applicant that no PE exists in the cases is devoid of merit.”
The Revenue has submitted that even otherwise the number and high level of
qualification of personnel deployed by the applicants to Booz India clearly
establishes that Booz India is a service PE. It has been further submitted that
there can be no doubt that on the facts of the case i.e. the access given by Booz
India client/Booz India to the technical and professional personnel deployed to
work in a given space also renders that place as a fixed place PE.
“Permanent Establishment”
Under the Double Tax Conventions, right of the contracting States to tax the
business profits of an enterprise of other contracting State arises only if the
enterprise carries on its business in the first mentioned State through a
“Permanent Establishment” (‘PE’) situated therein. PE is generally classified into
five categories:
1. Fixed Palce PE.
2.Construction PE.
3. Installation PE.
4.Service PE.
5. Dependent PE.
One of the sine qua non of a fixed place PE is that the fixed place
of business through which the business is carried on should be ‘at the disposal’
of the taxpayer which is called the “disposal test”.
It is of significance, that Organisation for Economic Co-operation and
Development (in short “OECD’) does not expressly define what constitutes the
place to be ‘at the disposal’ of the taxpayer and instead gives examples wherein
it may or may not tantamount to ‘right of disposal’. Conducting trading operations
generally require a fixed place which the taxpayer uses on a continuous basis.
However, taxpayers rendering service usually do not require a place to be at their
constant disposal and therefore application of ‘disposal test’ is generally more
complex in such cases. In some jurisdictions the ‘disposal test’ is satisfied by the
mere fact of using a place. In some other jurisdictions it is stressed that something
more is required than a mere fact of use of place.
In the case of Rolls Royce Plc v. DIT (2011)339 ITR 147 the taxpayer
(RRPlc) supplied aero engines and spare parts to Indian customers. The taxpayer
had a UK incorporated subsidiary. Rolls Royce India Limited (RRIL) having
office in India, which provided support services to RRPlc. RRPlc reimbursed
RRIL for all of the costs incurred in India in the provision of its support services,
including but not limited to the salaries and expenses of its employees, the cost
of operating its office premises. RRIL received service fees from RRPlc in the
amount of a fixed percentage of the reimbursed expenses. RRPlc’s employees
visited India frequently and occupied and used RRIL’s premises during these
visits. It was held on the facts of the case that RRPlc had a fixed place PE in India
because RRIL’s premises were ‘available’ to all of RRPlc’s employees and
RRPlc paid all of RRIL’s expenses in maintaining its premises.
In the case of Seagate Singapore International Headquarters Pvt. Ltd., in re.
(2010) 322 ITR 650 (AAR) Seagate was engaged in the business of manufacture
and supply of Hard Disk Drive (HDD) to Original Equipment Manufacturers
(OEM). Seagate entered into an agreement with Independent Service Provider
(ISP) to stock HDD on Seagate’s behalf and deliver the same to the OEM on a
‘Just-in Time’ basis. On the receipt of purchase order from OEM, Seagate
supplied HDD to ISP who in turn supplied the goods to OEM. The payment for
the supply of HDD was directly made by OEM to Seagate, and the services
rendered by the ISP were remunerated by Seagate on an arm’s length basis. In the
aforesaid factual scenario, this Authority ruled that Seagate’s restricted right to
access the premises of the independent service providers satisfied the requirement
of “disposal test”.
A taxpayer who is obliged to perform independent personal services without
having a PE of his own, is deemed to have a PE where he performs his services.
How a factual distinction can bring about a different approach is highlighted
below.
In Motorola Inc. vs. DCIT Motorola and Ericsson carried out certain
telecommunications work in India through its Indian subsidiary. In each case the
parent, from time to time as required, sent employees to India, where they used
the subsidiary’s Indian offices. In Ericsson appeal, the Special Bench of the Delhi
Income-tax Appellate Tribunal held that mere use of the subsidiary’s offices by
the parent’s employees, without anything more, was not sufficient to create a
fixed PE, because the employees did not have any right of disposal over the
subsidiary’s space – that is, they had no right to enter the space at will, and could
do so only with the subsidiary’s permission. However, Same Bench reached the
opposite conclusion in the Motorola’s appeal on the ground that the parent’s
employees worked for parent as well as subsidiary and because they worked for
the subsidiary, they must have had the right to enter and use the subsidiary’s
offices. The three appeals were heard and decided by the Special Bench. The
decision is reported in (2005) 147 Taxman 39.
In our view various factors have to be taken into account to decide a Fixed place
PE which inter alia includes a right of disposal over the premises. No strait jacket
formula applicable to all cases can be laid down.
Generally the establishment must belong to the Employer and involve an element
of ownership, management and authority over the establishment. In other words
the taxpayer must have the element of ownership, management and authority over
the establishment.
In the case of Western Union Financial Services, Vs. Asstt. DIT (2007) 104 ITD
34 (Delhi) the taxpayer (US parent) engaged in money transfer business,
appointed agents in India for liaison and related activities. The agents operated
from their premises with the display to demonstrate the agency of Western Union
Financial Services. The Delhi Bench of ITAT observed that the taxpayer had a
‘business connection’ in India. It, however, held that there was no PE of any kind
in India because the taxpayer had no right to enter and make use of the agents’
offices.
In DIT (International Taxation) v. Morgan Stanley and Co. Inc.[2007]292
ITR 0416(SC) inter alia it was held as follows:
“Article 5(2)(l) of the DTAA applies in cases where the MNE furnishes services
within India and those services are furnished through its employees. In the present
case we are concerned with two activities namely stewardship activities and the
work to be performed by deputationists in India as employees of MSAS. A
customer like an MSCo who has world wide operations is entitled to insist on
quality control and confidentiality from the service provider. For example in the
case of software P.E. a server stores the data which may require confidentiality.
A service provider may also be required to act according to the quality control
specifications imposed by its customer. It may be required to maintain
confidentiality. Stewardship activities involve briefing of the MSAS staff to
ensure that the output meets the requirements of the MSCo. These activities
include monitoring of the outsourcing operations at MSAS. The object is to
protect the interest of the MSCo. These stewards are not involved in day to day
management or in any specific services to be undertaken by MSAS. The
stewardship activity is basically to protect the interest of the customer. In the
present case as held hereinabove the MSAS is a service P.E. It is in a sense a
service provider. A customer is entitled to protect its interest both in terms of
confidentiality and in terms of quality control. In such a case it cannot be said that
MSCo has been rendering the services to MSAS. In our view MSCo is merely
protecting its own interests in the competitive world by ensuring the quality and
confidentiality of MSAS services. We do not agree with the ruling of the AAR
that the stewardship activity would fall under Article 5(2)(l). To this extent we
find merit in the civil appeal filed by the appellant (MSCo) and accordingly its
appeal to that extent stands partly allowed.
As regards the question of deputation, we are of the view that an employee of
MSCo when deputed to MSAS does not become an employee of MSAS. A
deputationist has a lien on his employment with MSCo. As long as the lien
remains with the MSCo the said company retains control over the deputationist's
terms and employment. The concept of a service PE finds place in the U.N.
Convention. It is constituted if the multinational enterprise renders services
through its employees in India provided the services are rendered for a specified
period. In this case, it extends to two years on the request of MSAS. It is important
to note that where the activities of the multinational enterprise entails it being
responsible for the work of deputationists and the employees continue to be on
the payroll of the multinational enterprise or they continue to have their lien on
their jobs with the multinational enterprise, a service PE can emerge. Applying
the above tests to the facts of this case we find that on request/requisition from
MSAS the applicant deputes its staff. The request comes from MSAS depending
upon its requirement. Generally, occasions do arise when MSAS needs the
expertise of the staff of MSCo. In such circumstances, generally, MSAS makes a
request to MSCo. A deputationist under such circumstances is expected to be
experienced in banking and finance. On completion of his tenure he is repatriated
to his parent job. He retains his lien when he comes to India. He lends his
experience to MSAS in India as an employee of MSCo as he retains his lien and
in that sense there is a service PE (MSAS) under Article 5(2)(l). We find no
infirmity in the ruling of the ARR on this aspect. In the above situation, MSCo is
rendering services through its employees to MSAS. Therefore, the Department is
right in its contention that under the above situation there exists a Service PE in
India (MSAS). Accordingly, the civil appeal filed by the Department stands partly
allowed.
To conclude, we hold that the AAR was right in ruling that MSAS would be a
Service PE in India under Article 5(2)(l), though only on account of the services
to be performed by the deputationists deployed by MSCo and not on account of
stewardship activities. As regards income attributable to the PE (MSAS) we hold
that the Transactional Net Margin Method was the appropriate method for
determination of the arm's length price in respect of transaction between MSCo
and MSAS. We accept as correct the computation of the remuneration based on
cost plus mark-up worked out at 29% on the operating costs of MSAS. This
position is also accepted by the Assessing Officer in his order dated 29.12.06
(after the impugned ruling) and also by the transfer pricing officer vide order
dated 22.9.06. As regards attribution of further profits to the PE of MSCo where
the transaction between the two are held to be at arm's length, we hold that the
ruling is correct in principle provided that an associated enterprise (that also
constitutes a PE) is remunerated on arm's length basis taking into account all the
risk-taking functions of the multinational enterprise. In such a case nothing
further would be left to attribute to the PE. The situation would be different if the
transfer pricing analysis does not adequately reflect the functions performed and
the risks assumed by the enterprise. In such a case, there would be need to
attribute profits to the PE for those functions/risks that have not been considered.
The entire exercise ultimately is to ascertain whether the service charges payable
or paid to the service provider (MSAS in this case) fully represents the value of
the profit attributable to his service. In this connection, the Department has also
to examine whether the PE has obtained services from the multinational
enterprise at lower than the arm's length cost? Therefore, the Department has to
determine income, expense or cost allocations having regard to arm's length
prices to decide the applicability of the transfer pricing regulations.” (Underlined
for emphasis)
In Aramex International Logistics Pvt.Ltd., 248 ITR 159 (AAR)
Aramex International Pvt.Ltd. (AIPL) is a 100% subsidiary of Aramex
International Bermuda. Aramex group has admittedly business in various
countries all over the world including India. Its business in India is conducted by
it through AIPL. No doubt, AIPL has been formed as a subsidiary and has an
identity under the Companies Act, 1956. The fact remains that the business is that
of Aramex group and the reputation and appealability is that of the Aramex group.
As far as “inward business‟ is concerned, Aramex group companies in various
parts of the world contact the customers, take delivery of the articles to be
delivered to various cities and towns in India and deliver them at a chosen
destination. The business is completed by delivery of the consignments to the
concerned addressees in India. For that, the Aramex group has created a
subsidiary, in India, AIPL. Without the association of AIPL, the business of
Aramex group as regards the articles sent to India, cannot be performed. It is the
case of the applicant that the goods are brought to a common destination and
delivered to AIPL and AIPL ensures that the articles are delivered to the
concerned parties in various parts of India.
Aramex group thus cannot successfully conduct its business of transporting and
delivering articles from and in India without AIPL performing its role in India.
Does AIPL became a permanent establishment of the applicant because of this,
is the question.
Both e-Fund Inc. and e-Fund Corporation have entered into international
transactions with e-Fund India.
. e-Fund India being a domestic company and resident in India was taxed on the
income earned in India as well as its global income in accordance with the
provisions of the Act.
The international transactions between the Assessees and e-Fund India and the
income of e-Fund India were made subject matter of arms length pricing
adjudication by the Transfer Pricing Officer (TPO, for short) and the Assessing
Officer (AO, for short) in the returns of income filed by e-Fund India.
We are not primarily concerned with the merits of the computation of income
declared and assessed in the hands of e-Fund India in the present appeals, though
the factum that e-Fund India was assessed to tax on its global income as per law
or on arms length pricing in relation to associated transactions and the basis of
the said computation of income earned by e-Fund India, as noticed below, is a
relevant and an important fact.
Contention of the Revenue before the ITAT and High court.
1.Income of the two Assessees were attributable to India because the two
Assessees had PE in India and should be taxed in India, irrespective of whether
the said Assessees had paid taxes in USA.
2. Income earned and taxed in the hands of e-Fund India was different from the
income attributable to the two Assessees. Thus the balance or differential amount,
i.e., income attributable to the two Assessees, which was not included in income
earned and taxed in the hands of e-Fund India, should be taxed in India.
• eFunds Corp has call centers and software development centers only in India.
• eFunds Corp is essentially doing marketing work only and its contracts with
clients are assigned, or sub-contracted to eFunds India.
• The master services agreement between the American and the Indian entity
gives complete control to the American entity in regard to personnel employed
by the Indian entity.
• It is only through the proprietary database and software of eFunds Corp, that
eFunds India carries out its functions for eFunds Corp.
Applying the above facts, it is submitted that the Assessees satisfy the
requirements of a fixed place PE.
4.So far as the service PE is concerned, under Article 5(2)(l), it is necessary that
the foreign enterprises must provide services to customers who are in India, which
is not Revenue's case as all their customers exist only outside India.
5.The entire personnel engaged in the Indian operations are employed only by the
Indian company and the fact that the US companies may indirectly control such
employees is only for purposes of protecting their own interest. There are four
businesses that the Assessees are engaged in, namely, ATM Management
Services, Electronic Payment Management, Decision Support and Risk
Management and Global Outsourcing and Professional Services. Since all these
businesses are carried on outside India and the property through which these
businesses are carried out, namely ATM networks, software solutions and other
hardware networks and information technology infrastructure were all located
outside India, the activities of e-Funds India are independent business activities
on which, as has been noticed by the High Court, independent profits are made
and income assessed to tax under the Income Tax Act.
Statutory Provisions.
Section 90(1) and 90(2) of the Income Tax Act, read as under:
1) The Central Government may enter into an agreement with the Government of
any country outside India--
(i) income on which have been paid both income-tax under this Act and income-
tax in that country; or
(ii) income-tax chargeable under this Act and under the corresponding law in
force in that country to promote mutual economic relations, trade and investment,
or
(b) for the avoidance of double taxation of income under this Act and under the
corresponding law in force in that country, or
(c) for exchange of information for the prevention of evasion or avoidance of
income-tax chargeable under this Act or under the corresponding law in force in
that country, or investigation of cases of such evasion or avoidance, or
(d) for recovery of income-tax under this Act and under the corresponding law in
force in that country,and may, by notification in the Official Gazette, make such
provisions as may be necessary for implementing the agreement.
(2) Where the Central Government has entered into an agreement with the
Government of any country outside India under Sub-section (1) for granting relief
of tax, or as the case may be, avoidance of double taxation, then, in relation to the
Assessee to whom such agreement applies, the provisions of this Act shall apply
to the extent they are more beneficial to that Assessee.
We are directly concerned with Article 5 of the DTAA, which reads as under:
(b) a branch;
(c) an office;
(d) a factory;
(e) a workshop;
(f) a mine, an oil or gas well, a quarry, or any other place of extraction of natural
resources;
(i) activities of that nature continue within that State for a period or periods
aggregating more than 90 days within any twelve-month period; or
(ii) the services are performed within that State for a related enterprise [within the
meaning of paragraph 1 of Article 9 (Associated Enterprises)].
(a) the use of facilities solely for the purpose of storage, display, or occasional
delivery of goods or merchandise belonging to the enterprise;
(d) the maintenance of a fixed place of business solely for the purpose of
purchasing goods or merchandise, or of collecting information, for the enterprise;
(e) the maintenance of a fixed place of business solely for the purpose of
advertising, for the supply of information, for scientific research or for other
activities which have a preparatory or auxiliary character, for the enterprise.
Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraphs 1 and 2, where a person--other than
an agent of an independent status to whom paragraph 5 applies-is acting in a
Contracting State on behalf of an enterprise of the other Contracting State, that
enterprise shall be deemed to have a permanent establishment in the first-
mentioned State, if:
(b) he has no such authority but habitually maintains in the first-mentioned State
a stock of goods or merchandise from which he regularly delivers goods or
merchandise on behalf of the enterprise, and some additional activities conducted
in the State on behalf of the enterprise have contributed to the sale of the goods
or merchandise; or
Article 7 has also been referred to, by which the profits of an enterprise of a
contracting State may be taxed in the other State only to the extent of so much of
the business as is attributable to a permanent establishment in the other State.
The Income Tax Act, in particular Section 90 thereof, does not speak of the
concept of a PE. This is a creation only of the DTAA. By virtue of Article 7(1)
of the DTAA, the business income of companies which are incorporated in the
US will be taxable only in the US, unless it is found that they were PEs in India,
in which event their business income, to the extent to which it is attributable to
such PEs, would be taxable in India.
Article 5 of the DTAA set out hereinabove provides for three distinct types of
PEs with which we are concerned in the present case:
(i)fixed place of business PE under Articles 5(1) and 5(2)(a) to 5(2)(k);
(ii)service PE Under Article 5(2)(l) and
(iii) agency PE Under Article 5(4). Specific and detailed criteria are set out in the
aforesaid provisions in order to fulfill the conditions of these PEs existing in
India.
The burden of proving the fact that a foreign Assessee has a PE in India and
must, therefore, suffer tax from the business generated from such PE is initially
on the Revenue.
With these prefatory remarks, let us analyse whether the assesees can be brought
within any of the sub-clauses of Article 5.
Transfer Pricing.
Leading Case.
Chapter X of the Act in the present form replaced the erstwhile Section 92 of the
Act by Section 92 to 92F of the Act with effect from A.Y. 2002-03. Erstwhile
Section 92 of Chapter X of the Act did deal with cross border transactions
permitting adjustments of profits made by a resident in case of transactions with
non-resident (two entities having close connection) if the profits of the resident
were understated.
This and Section 40A(2) of the Act which governed all assessee, did give some
power to the AO to ensure the correct profits are brought to tax in case of cross
border transactions. However, in the light of Indian Economy opening up and
becoming part of the global economy, leading to a spate of foreign companies
(Multinational Enterprises) establishing business in India either by itself or
through its subsidiaries or joint ventures. Similarly, Indian Companies ventured
abroad, operating either by itself or through its subsidiaries or joint venture
companies. These multinational enterprises had transaction between themselves
and these transactions not being subject to market forces, the consideration were
fixed within the group to ensure transfer of income from one tax jurisdiction to
another as appeared profitable to them. Thus, the new Sections 92 to 92F of the
Act were introduced with effect for A.Y. 2002-03 as a part of Chapter X of the
Act. The aim being to have well defined rules to tax transactions between AEs
and not left to the discretion of the A.O. and bring out uniformity in treatment to
tax of International Transaction between AEs. The Explanatory Notes to the
Finance Act, 2001 brings out the objectives as indicated in the Circular No. 14 of
2001 which read as under:-
"55.3:-With a view to provide a detailed statutory framework which can lead to
computation of reasonable, fair and equitable profits and tax in India. In the case
of such multinational enterprises, the Act has substituted section 92 with a new
section and has introduced new sections 92A to 92F in the Income-tax Act,
relating to computation of income from an International Transaction having
regard to the arm's length price, meaning of associated enterprise, meaning of
International Transaction, computation of arm's length price, maintenance of
information and documents by persons entering into International Transactions,
furnishing of a report from an accountant by persons entering into International
Transactions and definitions of certain expressions occurring in the said sections.
55.4:-The newly substituted section 92 provides that income arising from an
International Transaction between AE shall be computed having regard to the
arm's length price. Any expense or outgoing in an International Transaction is
also to be computed having regard to the arms length price. Thus in the case of a
manufacturer, for example, the provisions will apply to exports made to the AE
as also to imports from the same or any other associated enterprise. The provision
is also applicable in a case where the International Transaction comprises only an
outgoing from the Indian assessee.
55.5:-The new section further provides that the cost or expenses allocated or
apportioned between two or more AE under a mutual agreement or arrangement
shall be at arm's length price. Examples of such transactions could be where one
associated enterprise carries out centralized functions which also benefit one or
more other AE, or two or more AE agree to carry out a joint activity, such as
research and development, for their mutual benefit.
55.6:-The new provision is intended to ensure that profits taxable in India are not
understated (or losses are not overstated) by declaring lower receipts or higher
outgoings than those which would have been declared by persons entering into
similar transactions with unrelated parties in the same or similar circumstances.
The basic intention underlying the new transfer pricing regulations is to prevent
shifting out of profits by manipulating prices charged or paid in International
Transactions thereby eroding the country's tax base. The new section 92 is,
therefore, not intended to be applied in cases where the adoption of the arm's
length price determined under the regulations would result in a decrease in the
overall tax incidence in India in respect of the parties involved in the International
Transaction."
Thus to get over transfer mis-pricing/manipulation/abuse that the market based
transfer pricing was introduced, known as ALP. Therefore, it is clear that Chapter
X of the Act now existing was to ensure that qua International Transaction
between AEs, the profits are not understated nor losses overstated by abuse of
either showing lesser consideration or higher expenses between AEs than would
be the consideration between two independent entities, uninfluenced by
relationship.
Constitutional Provisions.
The Constitution (One Hundred And First Amendment) Act for introduction of
The Goods And Services Tax Act.
Insertion of new article 246A. Special provision with respect to goods and
services tax.
After article 246 of the Constitution, the following article shall be inserted,
namely:—
"246A. (1) Notwithstanding anything contained in articles 246 and 254,
Parliament, and, subject to clause (2), the Legislature of every State, have power
to make laws with respect to goods and services tax imposed by the Union or by
such State. (2) Parliament has exclusive power to make laws with respect to goods
and services tax where the supply of goods, or of services, or both takes place in
the course of inter-State trade or commerce.
The provisions of this article, shall, in respect of goods and services tax referred
to in clause (5) of article 279A, take effect from the date recommended by the
Goods and Services Tax Council.’’
. 3. In article 248 of the Constitution, in clause (1) "Subject to article 246A.
Article 268 of the Constitution, in clause (1), the words "and such duties of excise
on medicinal and toilet preparations" shall be omitted.
Article 268A of the Constitution, as inserted by section 2 of the Constitution
(Eighty-eighth Amendment) Act, 2003 shall be omitted.
Article 269A. (1) Goods and services tax on supplies in the course of inter-State
trade or commerce shall be levied and collected by the Government of India and
such tax shall be apportioned between the Union and the States in the manner as
may be provided by Parliament by law on the recommendations of the Goods and
Services Tax Council.
Explanation.—For the purposes of this clause, supply of goods, or of services,
or both in the course of import into the territory of India shall be deemed to be
supply of goods, or of services, or both in the course of inter-State trade or
commerce. (2) The amount apportioned to a State under clause (1) shall not form
part of the Consolidated Fund of India. (3) Where an amount collected as tax
levied under clause (1) has been used for payment of the tax levied by a State
under article 246A, such amount shall not form part of the Consolidated Fund of
India. (4) Where an amount collected as tax levied by a State under article 246A
has been used for payment of the tax levied under clause (1), such amount shall
not form part of the Consolidated Fund of the State. (5) Parliament may, by law,
formulate the principles for determining the place of supply, and when a supply
of goods, or of services, or both takes place in the course of inter-State trade or
commerce.’’.
Article 270 of the Constitution. (1), the following clauses shall be inserted,
namely:— ‘‘(1A) The tax collected by the Union under clause (1) of article 246A
shall also be distributed between the Union and the States in the manner provided
in clause (2). (1B) The tax levied and collected by the Union under clause (2) of
article 246A and article 269A, which has been used for payment of the tax levied
by the Union under clause (1) of article 246A, and the amount apportioned to the
Union under clause (1) of article 269A, shall also be distributed between the
Union and the States in the manner provided in clause (2).’’.
Goods and Services Tax Council
After article 279 of the Constitution, the following article shall be inserted,
namely:—
‘‘279A. (1) The President shall, within sixty days from the date of
commencement of the Constitution (One Hundred and First Amendment) Act,
2016, by order, constitute a Council to be called the Goods and Services Tax
Council. (2) The Goods and Services Tax Council shall consist of the following
members, namely:— (a) the Union Finance Minister........................ Chairperson;
(b) the Union Minister of State in charge of Revenue or Finance.................
Member; (c) the Minister in charge of Finance or Taxation or any other Minister
nominated by each State Government....................Members. (3) The Members of
the Goods and Services Tax Council referred to in sub-clause (c) of clause (2)
shall, as soon as may be, choose one amongst themselves to be the Vice-
Chairperson of the Council for such period as they may decide. (4) The Goods
and Services Tax Council shall make recommendations to the Union and the
States on— (a) the taxes, cesses and surcharges levied by the Union, the States
and the local bodies which may be subsumed in the goods and services tax; (b)
the goods and services that may be subjected to, or exempted from the goods and
services tax; (c) model Goods and Services Tax Laws, principles of levy,
apportionment of Goods and Services Tax levied on supplies in the course of
inter-State trade or commerce under article 269A and the principles that govern
the place of supply; (d) the threshold limit of turnover below which goods and
services may be exempted from goods and services tax; (e) the rates including
floor rates with bands of goods and services tax; (f) any special rate or rates for a
specified period, to raise additional resources during any natural calamity or
disaster; (g) special provision with respect to the States of Arunachal Pradesh,
Assam, Jammu and Kashmir, Manipur, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Nagaland, Sikkim,
Tripura, Himachal Pradesh and Uttarakhand; and (h) any other matter relating to
the goods and services tax, as the Council may decide. (5) The Goods and
Services Tax Council shall recommend the date on which the goods and services
tax be levied on petroleum crude, high speed diesel, motor spirit (commonly
known as petrol), natural gas and aviation turbine fuel. (6) While discharging the
functions conferred by this article, the Goods and Services Tax Council shall be
guided by the need for a harmonised structure of goods and services tax and for
the development of a harmonised national market for goods and services. (7) One-
half of the total number of Members of the Goods and Services Tax Council shall
constitute the quorum at its meetings. (8) The Goods and Services Tax Council
shall determine the procedure in the performance of its functions. Insertion of
new article (9) Every decision of the Goods and Services Tax Council shall be
taken at a meeting, by a majority of not less than three-fourths of the weighted
votes of the members present and voting, in accordance with the following
principles, namely:— (a) the vote of the Central Government shall have a
weightage of onethird of the total votes cast, and (b) the votes of all the State
Governments taken together shall have a weightage of two-thirds of the total
votes cast, in that meeting. (10) No act or proceedings of the Goods and Services
Tax Council shall be invalid merely by reason of— (a) any vacancy in, or any
defect in, the constitution of the Council; or (b) any defect in the appointment of
a person as a Member of the Council; or (c) any procedural irregularity of the
Council not affecting the merits of the case. (11)The Goods and Services Tax
Council shall establish a mechanism to adjudicate any dispute — (a) between the
Government of India and one or more States; or (b) between the Government of
India and any State or States on one side and one or more other States on the other
side; or (c) between two or more States, arising out of the recommendations of
the Council or implementation thereof.’’.
Article 366 of the Constitution,— (i) after clause (12), the following clause shall
be inserted, namely:— ‘(12A) “goods and services tax” means any tax on supply
of goods, or services or both except taxes on the supply of the alcoholic liquor for
human consumption;’; (ii) after clause (26), the following clauses shall be
inserted, namely:— ‘(26A) “Services” means anything other than goods; (26B)
“State” with reference to articles 246A, 268, 269, 269A and article 279A includes
a Union territory with Legislature;’.
In List II—State List,— (i) entry 52 shall be omitted; (ii) for entry 54, the
following entry shall be substituted, namely:— "54. Taxes on the sale of
petroleum crude, high speed diesel, motor spirit (commonly known as petrol),
natural gas, aviation turbine fuel and alcoholic liquor for human consumption,
but not including sale in the course of inter-State trade or commerce or sale in the
course of international trade or commerce of such goods."; (iii) entry 55 shall be
omitted; (iv) for entry 62, the following entry shall be substituted, namely:— "62.
Taxes on entertainments and amusements to the extent levied and collected by a
Panchayat or a Municipality or a Regional Council or a District Council.".
Parliament shall, by law, on the recommendation of the Goods and Services Tax
Council, provide for compensation to the States for loss of revenue arising on
account of implementation of the goods and services tax for a period of five years.
If any difficulty arises in giving effect to the provisions of the Constitution as
amended by this Act, the President may,Compensation to States for loss of
revenue on account of introduction of goods and services tax.
Distribution of Revenue.
Though various taxes have been separately included in List I or List II and there
is no overlapping in the matter of taxation between the two Lists and there is no
tax provided in the Concurrent List except stamp duties (Item 44), the constitution
embodies an elaborate scheme for the distribution of revenue between the Union
and the States in Part XII, with respect to taxes imposed in List I.
The scheme of the Constitution with respect to financial relations between the
Union and the States, devised by the Constitution makers, is such as to ensure an
equitable distribution of the revenue between the center and the States.
All revenue received by the Government of India normally form part of the
Consolidated Fund of India, and all revenues received by the Government of a
State shall form part of the Consolidated Fund of the State.
This general rule is subject to the provision of the Chapter I of Part XII in which
occur Arts. 266 to 277. Though stamp duties and duties of excise on medicinal
and toilet preparations which are covered by the Union List are to be levied by
the Government of India, they have to be collected by the States within which
such duties are leviable and are not to form part of the Consolidated Fund of India,
but stands assigned to the State which has collected them (Art. 268).
Similarly, duties and taxes levied and collected by the Union in respect of
Succession Duty, Estate Duty, Terminal Taxes on goods and passengers carried
by Railway, sea or air, taxes on rail fares and freights, etc. as detailed in Art. 269
shall be assigned to the States and distributed amongst them in accordance with
the principles of distribution as may be formulated by Parliamentary legislation,
as laid down in clause (2) of Art. 269.
Art. 270 provides that taxes on income, other than agricultural income shall be
levied and collected by the Government of India and distributed between the
Union and the States.
The taxes and duties levied by the Union and collected by the Union or by the
States as contemplated by Arts. 268, 269 and 270 and distributed amongst the
States shall not form part of the Consolidated Fund of India.
Further Excise duties which are levied and collected by the Government of India
and which form part of the Consolidated Fund of India may also be distributed
amongst the States, in accordance with the principles laid down by Parliament in
accordance with the provisions of Art. 272.
Express provision has been made by Article 273 in respect of grants-in-aid of the
revenue of the States of Assam, Bihar, Orissa and West Bengal in lieu of
assignment of any share of the net proceeds of export duty on jute and jute
products.
Further a safeguard has been laid down in Art. 274 that no bill or amendment
which imposes or varies any tax or duty in which States are interested or which
affects the principles of distribution of duties or taxes amongst the States as laid
down in Arts. 268 - 273 shall be introduced or moved in either House of
Parliament except on the recommendation of the President.
Parliament has also been authorised to lay down that certain sums may be charged
on the Consolidated Fund of India in each year by way of grants-in-aid of the
revenues of such States as it may determined to be in need of assistance. This aid
may be different for different States, according to their needs, with particular
reference to schemes of development for the purposes indicated in Art. 275(1).
Provision has also been made by Art. 280 for the appointment by the President
of a Finance Commission to make recommendations to the President as to the
distribution amongst the Union and the States of the net proceeds of taxes and
duties as aforesaid, and as to the principles which should govern the grants-in-aid
of the revenue of the States out of the Consolidated Fund of India.
Part XII of the Constitution therefore has made elaborate provisions as to the
revenues of the Union and of the States, and as to how the Union will share the
proceeds of duties and taxes imposed by it and collected either by the Union or
by the States.
Sources of revenue which have been allocated to the Union are not meant entirely
for the purposes of the Union but have to be distributed according to the principles
laid down by Parliamentary legislation as contemplated by the Articles aforesaid.
Thus all the taxes and duties levied by the Union and collected either by the Union
or by the States do not form part of the Consolidated Fund of India but many of
those taxes and duties are distributed amongst the States and form part of the
Consolidated Fund of the States.
Even those taxes and duties which constitute the Consolidated Fund of India may
be used for the purposes of supplementing the revenues of the States in
accordance with their needs. The question of the distribution of the aforesaid
taxes and duties amongst the States and the principles governing them, as also the
principles governing grants-in-aid of revenues of the States out of the
Consolidated Fund of India, are matters which have to be decided by a high-
powered Finance Commission, which is a responsible body designated to
determine those matters in an objective way.
The financial arrangement and adjustment suggested in Part XII of the
Constitution has been designed by the Constitution-makers in such a way as to
ensure an equitable distribution of the revenues between the Union and the States,
even though those revenues may be derived from taxes and duties imposed by the
Union and collected by it or through the agency of the States.
The powers of taxation assigned to the Union are based mostly on considerations
of convenience of imposition and collection and not with a view to allocate them
solely to the Union; that is to say, it was not intended that all taxes and duties
imposed by the Union Parliament should be expended on the activities of the
center and not on the activities of the States.
Sources of revenue allocated to the States, like taxes on land and other kind of
immovable property, have been allocated to the States alone. The Constitution
makers realised the fact that those sources of revenue allocated to the States may
not be sufficient for their purposes and that the Government of India would have
to subsidise their welfare activities out of the revenues levied and collected by the
Union Government.
Realising the limitations on the financial resources of the States and the growing
needs of the community in a welfare State, the Constitution has made, specific
provisions empowering Parliament to set aside a portion of its revenues, whether
forming part of the Consolidated Fund of India or not, for the benefit of the States,
not in stated proportions but according to their needs. It is clear, therefore, that
considerations which may apply to those Constitutions which recognise water-
tight compartments between the revenues of the federating States and those of the
federation do not apply to our Constitution which does not postulate any conflict
of interest between the Union on the one hand and the States on the other. The
resources of the Union Government are not meant exclusively for the benefit of
the Union activities; they are also meant for subsidising the activities of the States
in accordance with their respective needs, irrespective of the amounts collected
by or through them. In other words, the Union and the States together form one
organic whole for the purposes of utilisation of the resources of the territories of
India as a whole.
Nature of Indirect Taxes.
Leading Case.
In Re: The Bill To Amend The Sea Customs Act. 1964 3 SCR 787
The main question, on this reference by the President of India under Art.143(1)
of the Constitution depends upon the true scope and interpretation of Art. 289. of
the Constitution relating to the immunity of States from Union taxation.
The reference is in these terms :
" It is proposed to amend Customs Act so as to levy customs duties on import
or export , in respect of all goods belonging to the Government of a State and
used for the purposes of a trade or business of any kind carried on by, or on behalf
of, that Government, or of any operations connected with such trade or business
as they apply in respect of goods not belonging to any Government;
It is also proposed to amend Section 3 of the Central Excises and Salt Act, 1944
so as to levy of duties of excise on all excisable goods which are produced or
manufactured in India , on behalf of, the Government of a State and used for the
purposes of a trade or business of any kind carried on by, or on behalf of, that
Government, or of any operations connected with such trade or business as they
apply in respect of goods which are not produced or manufactured by any
Government;
Governments of certain States have expressed the view that the amendments as
proposed in the said draft of the Bill may not be constitutionally valid as the
provisions of article 289. read with the definitions of 'taxation' and 'tax' in clause
(28) of article 366 of the Constitution of India preclude the Union from imposing
or authorising the imposition of any tax, including customs duties and excise
duties; or in relation to any property of a State ;
Government of India is on the other hand is of the view that -
(i) that the exemption from Union taxation granted by clause (1) of article 289
is restricted to Union taxes on the property of a State and does not extend to Union
taxes in relation to the property of a State.
(ii) that customs duties are taxes on the import or export of property and not taxes
on property as such and further that excise duties are taxes on the production or
manufacture of property and not taxes on property as such; and
(iii) that the union is not precluded by the provisions of article 289 of the
Constitution of India from imposing or authorising the imposition of customs
duties on the import or export of the property of a State and other Union taxes on
the property of a State which are not taxes on property as such;
In exercise of the powers conferred by clause (1) of article 143 of the Constitution
of India, President of India, hereby refer the following question to the Supreme
Court of India for consideration and report of its opinion thereon;
"(1) Do the provisions of article 289. of the Constitution preclude the Union from
imposing, or authorising the imposition of, customs duties on the import or export
of the property of a State ?
(2) Do the provisions of article 289 of the Constitution of India preclude the
Union from imposing, or authorising the imposition of, excise duties on the
production or manufacture in India of the property of a State ?
(3) Will the proposed amendments in the Customs Act and Central Excise Act
be inconsistent with the provisions of article 289. of the Constitution of India ?"
Contentions of the Union.
That clause (1) of Art. 289. properly interpreted would mean that the immunity
from taxation granted by the Constitution to the States is only in respect of tax on
property and on income, and that the immunity does not extend to all taxes; the
clause should not be interpreted so as to include taxation in relation to property;
a tax by way of import or export duty is not a tax on property but is on the fact of
importing or exporting goods into or out of the country; similarly, an excise duty
is not a tax on property but is a tax on production or manufacture of goods;
In essence import or export duties or excise duty re not taxes on property,
including goods, as such, but on the happening of a certain event in relation to
goods, namely, import or export of goods or production or manufacture of goods;
the true meaning of Art. 289. is to be derived not only from its language but also
from the scheme of the Indian Constitution distributing powers of taxation
between the Union and the States in and the context of those provisions;
Parliament has exclusive power to make laws with respect to trade and
commerce with foreign countries and with respect to duties of customs, including
export duties and duties of excise on certain goods manufactured or produced in
India, the Union is competent to impose or to authorise the imposition of custom
duties on the import or export of goods by a State which may be its property or
excise duty on the production or manufacture of goods by a State; if clause (1) of
Art. 289. were to be interpreted as including the exemption of a State in respect
of customs duties or excise duty, it will amount to a restriction on the exclusive
competence of Parliament to make laws with respect to trade and commerce - a
restriction which is not warranted in view of the scheme of the Constitution;
Contention of the States.
While interpreting Art. 289. of the Constitution, it has to be borne in mind that
our Constitution does not make a distinction between direct and indirect taxation;
that trade and commerce and industry have been distributed between the Union
and the States;
that the power of taxation is different from the power to regulate trade and
commerce;
that the narrower construction of the Article, contended for and on behalf of the
Union, will seriously and adversely affect the activities of the States and their
powers under the Constitution;
that customs duties and duties of excise affect property and are, therefore, within
the immunity granted by Art. 289(1). ; properly construed Art. 289(1). grants
complete immunity from all taxation on any kind of property; and any kind of tax
on property or in relation to property is within the immunity; therefore, the
distinction sought to be made on behalf of the Union between tax on property and
tax in relation to property is wholly irrelevant;
Statutory Provisions.
The Goods and Services Tax Act levies GST on Goods and Services. According
to the provisions of Entry 84 of List 1 of the VIIth Schedule of the Constitution ,
all goods produced and manufactured in India is subject to levy of duty of Excise.
However after coming into force of GST Act , the power to levy GST is now a
concurrent powers between the Union and the States.
The Central Excise Act, 1944 did not provide a definition of Goods but the
Courts have tried to define the goods for the purpose of levy of excise duty .
In South Bihar Sugar Mills Ltd. Etc . vs Union Of India . AIR 1968 SC 922.and
Union Of India vs Delhi Cloth & General Mills 1963 SCR Supl. (1) 586, the
word goods was interpreted in its ordinary meaning . It was laid down that
As the Central Excise Act does not define goods, the legislature must be taken
,to have used that word in its ordinary, dictionary meaning.
The dictionary meaning is that to become goods it must be something which can
ordinarily come to the market to be bought and sold and is known to the market.
That it would be such an article which would attract duty under the Excise Act.
The excise duty is leviable on "'goods“ but the Excise Act itself does not define
"goods" but defines "excisable goods" as meaning "goods specified in 'the First
Schedule as being, subject to a duty of excise ."
Therefore the ordinary meaning of “goods” must be considered to determine
whether excise can be levied .
The Permanent Edition, Words and Phrases, on meaning of the word "goods"
states that:
The word 'goods' in Bailey's Large Dictionary is defined as 'Merchandise'-, and
in Johnson’s , it is defined to be movables in a house; personal or immovable
estates; freight; merchandise,,"
Webster defines the word "'goods" as –
(1) movables; household, furniture;
(2) Personal or movable estate, as horses, cattle, utensils, etc.,
(3) Wares; merchandise; commodities bought and sold by merchants and traders.
These definitions make it clear that to become "goods" an article must be
something which can ordinarily come to the market to be bought and Sold.
This consideration of the meaning of the word "goods" an provides strong support
for the view that "manufacture" which is liable to excise duty under the Central,
Excises Act must be the "bringing into existence of a new substance known, to
the market."
The GST Act defines goods under Section 2 (52) as “goods” means every kind
of movable property other than money and securities but includes actionable
claim, growing crops, grass and things attached to or forming part of the land
which are agreed to be severed before supply or under a contract of supply;
Moveability of Goods.
Leading Case.
The drilling machine as well as the mudgun are erected on a concrete platform
which is at a height of 25 feet above the ground level.
The various components of the mudgun and drilling machine are mounted piece
by piece on a metal frame, and are brought to site and physically lifted by a crane
and landed on the concrete platform.
The weight of the mudgun is approximately 19 tons and the weight of the drilling
machine approximately 11 tons.
Having regard to the volume and weight of these machines there is nothing like
assembling them at ground level and then lifting them to a height of 25 feet to
the platform over which it is mounted and erected.
These machines cannot be lifted in an assembled condition.
So explaining the nature of the processes involved, the appellant contended that
the mudgun and the drilling machine came into existence as identifiable units
only after assembly on the metal frame, and once assembled they were no longer
"goods" within the meaning of the Central Excise Act.
If the machines are to be removed from the blast furnace, they have to be first
dismantled into parts and brought down to the ground only by using cranes and
trolley ways considering the size, and also considering the fact that there is no
space available for moving the machines in assembled condition due to their
volume and weight.
In that case the facts were that the respondent had taken on lease land over which
it had put up, apart from other structures and buildings, six oil tanks for storage
of petrol and petroleum products.
Each tank rested on a foundation of sand having a height of 2 feet 6 inches with
four inches thick asphalt layers to retain the sand.
The steel plates were spread on the asphalt layer and the tank was put on the steel
plates which acted as bottom of the tanks which rested freely on the asphalt layer.
There were no bolts and nuts for holding the tanks on to the foundation. The
tanks remained in position by its own weight, each tank being about 30 feet in
height 50 feet in diameter weighing about 40 tons.
The question arose in the context of ascertaining the rateable value of the
structures under the Bombay Municipal Corporation Act.
The High Court held that the tanks are neither structure nor a building nor land
under the Act.
On appeal , the Supreme Court held that :
"The tanks, though, are resting on earth on their own weight without being fixed
with nuts and bolts, they have permanently been erected without being shifted
from place to place.
Permanency is the test.
The chattel whether is movable to another place of use in the same position or
liable to be dismantled and re-erected at the later place?
If the answer is yes to the former it must be a movable property and thereby it
must be held that it is not attached to the earth.
If the answer is yes to the latter it is attached to the earth.
Applying the permanency test laid down in the aforesaid decision, the appellant
contended that having regard to the facts of this case, it must be held that what
emerged as a result of the processes undertaken by the appellant was an
immovable property.
It can not be moved from the place where it is erected as it is, and if it becomes
necessary to move it, it has first to be dismantled and then re-erected at another
place.
The evidence brought on record as to the nature of processes employed in the
erection of the machine, the manner in which it is installed and rendered
functional, and other relevant facts leads to the
Conclusion that what emerged as a result was not merely a machine but
something which is in the nature of being immovable, and if required to be
moved, cannot be moved without first dismantling it, and then re-erecting it at
some other place.
In Quality Steel Tubes (P) Ltd. Vs. CCE 1995 (75) ELT 17 (SC). the facts were
that a tube mill and welding head were erected and installed by the appellant, a
manufacturer of steel pipes and tubes by purchasing certain items of plant and
machinery in market and embedding them to earth and installing them to form a
part of the tube mill .
“The twin tests of exgibility of an article to duty under the Excise Act are that it
must be a goods and must be marketable. The word "goods" applied to those
which can be brought to market for being bought and sold and therefore, it
implied that it applied to such goods as are movable.
The basic test, therefore, of levying duty under the Act is two fold.
One, that any article, must be a goods and second, that it should be marketable
or capable of being brought to market.
Goods which are attached to the earth and thus become immoveable do not
satisfy the test of being goods within the meaning of the Act nor it can be said to
be capable of being brought to the market for being bought and sold.
Therefore, both the tests were not satisfied in the case of appellant as the tube
mill or welding head having been erected and installed in the premises and
embedded to earth they ceased to be goods within meaning of Section 3 of the
Act".
This Court held that marketability was a decisive test for dutiability.
It meant that the goods were saleable or suitable for sale, that is to say, they
should be capable of being sold to consumers in the market, as it is, without
anything more.
After considering the material placed on the record it was held that the mono
vertical crystalliser has to be assembled, erected and attached to the earth by a
foundation at the site of the sugar factory.
It is not capable of being sold as it is, without anything more.
Therefore it was held that mono vertical crystallisers are not "goods" within the
meaning of the Act and, therefore, not exigible to excise duty.
In Triveni Engineering & Indus Ltd. Vs. CCE 2000 (120) ELT 273. a question
arose regarding excisability of turbo alternator.
In the facts of that case, it was held that installation or erection of turbo alternator
on a concrete base specially constructed on the land cannot be treated as a
common base.
Therefore, it follows that installation or erection of turbo alternator on the
platform constructed on the land would be immovable property, as such it cannot
be an excisable goods falling within the meaning of of “goods” under the Central
Excise Act.
The facts in Mittal Engineering and Quality Steel Tubes cases and the principles
underlying those decisions must apply to the facts of the case in hand. It cannot
be disputed that such drilling machines and mudguns are not equipments which
are usually shifted from one place to another, nor it is practicable to shift them
frequently.
Once they are erected and assembled they continue to operate from where they
are positioned till such time as they are worn out or discarded.
They really become a component of the plant and machinery because without
their aid a blast furnace cannot operate.
As suchthey do not answer the description of "goods" within the meaning of the
term in the Excise Act.
In the result the appeal is allowed.
The appellant is not liable to pay excise duty on the manufacture and removal
of the mudgun and drilling machines in question which have been installed in
the Bhilai Steel Plant.
Concept of Manufacture.
Statutory Provisions.
Section 2 (f) Of the Central Excise Act, 1944 defines manufacture as:
(ii) which is specified in relation to any goods in the Section or Chapter notes of
the First Schedule to the Central Excise Tariff Act, 1985 (5 of 1986) as amounting
to manufacture;
or
(iii) which, in relation to the goods specified in the Third Schedule, involves
packing or repacking of such goods in a unit container or labelling or re-labelling
of containers including the declaration or alteration of retail sale price on it or
adoption of any other treatment on the goods to render the product marketable to
the consumer, and the word “manufacturer” shall be construed accordingly and
shall include not only a person who\ employs hired labour in the production or
manufacture of excisable goods, but also any person who engages in their
production or manufacture on his own account;
Ujagar Prints Etc vs Union Of India & Ors. 1989 AIR 516.
Through an amendment called the Central Excises and Salt and Additional Duties
of Excise (Amendment) Act, 1980. , Section 2 (f) of the Excise Act was amended
by adding three sub-items in the definition of `manufacture' so as to include
activities like bleaching, dyeing, printing etc. The amendment was applied
retrospectively.
Against this, a batch of writ petitions under Article 32 of the Constitution of
India were filed , involving common questions of law concerning the validity of
the levy of duties of excise by treating as `manufacture' the process of bleaching,
dyeing, printing, sizing, mercerising, water-proofing, rubberising, shrink-
proofing, etc. done by the processors who carry out these operations in their
factories on job-work basis in respect of `cotton-fabric' and `Man-made fabric'
belonging to their customers. The correctness of the judgement in Empire
Industries case which held that printing, dyeing , etc. amounts to manufacture
also came up for consideration.
Facts.
The petitioners carry out the operations of bleaching dyeing, printing sizing,
finishing etc. of grey fabric on job-work against payment of processing charges
to it by the customers who are the owners of the grey-fabric. The man-made grey-
fabricis manufactured in mills and on power looms and that latter is exempt from
excise duty on its manufacture.
Contention of the Petitioners.
That the processing of the grey-fabric is not a part, a continuation, of the process
of manufacture in the manufacturing-stream, but is an independent and distinct
operation carried out in respect of the Grey-fabric, after it has left manufacturing-
stage and has become part of the common-stock of goods in the market.
That processing operations do not amount to "manufacture" as the petitioners do
not carry out any spinning or weaving operations; that what they receive from
their customers for processing is otherwise fully manufactured man-made fabric
and that what is returned to the customers after processing continues to remain
man-made fabric.
The imposition of excise duty on the processor on the basis of the full-value of
the processed material, which reflects the value of grey-fabrics, the processing-
charges, as well as the selling profits of the customers is, at once unfair and
anamolous, for, in conceivable cases the duty itself might far exceed the
processing-charges that the processors stipulate and get.
Questions for consideration.
(A) Whether the process of bleaching, dyeing, printing, sizing, shrink-proofing
etc. carried on in respect of cotton or man-made `grey-fabric' amount to
`manufacture' for purposes, and within the meaning of Section 2(f) of the Central
Excises and Salt Act 1944 prior to the amendment of the said Section 2(f) by the
Amending Act of 1980.
(B) Whether the amendment brought about by the Act of 1980 of Section 2(f)
and of the Central Excise Act is ultra-vires Entry 84 List 1 and, therefore, beyond
the competence of the Union Parliament.
(C) Whether the retrospective operation of the Amending Act is an unreasonable
restriction on the fundamental right of the `processors' under Article 19(1)(g) of
the Constitution.
Question A. Whether "processing" of the kind concerned in these cases amounts
to manufacture",
Contention of the Petitioners.
When the said fabrics are received in the factory of the petitioner company the
same are fully manufactured and are in a saleable condition and are commercially
known as grey fabrics i.e. unprocessed fabrics which are cleared after payment of
the excise duty under.
The grey fabrics i.e. unprocessed, undergo various processes in the factory . The
grey fabrics are boiled in water mixed with various chemicals and the grey fabric
is washed and thereafter the material is taken for the dyeing process, that is
imparting of required shades of colours.
The next stage is printing process, i.e. putting the required designs on the said
fabrics by way of screen printing on hot tables. The final stages the finishing
process, that is to give a final touch for better appearance.
The petitioner’s mills , do not carry out any spinning or weaving of the said
fabrics.
The petitioner’s case is that the petitioner company begins with man-made or
cotton fabrics before it starts the said processes and also ends with man-made or
cotton fabrics after subjecting the fabrics to the various processes.
The petitioner’s company receives fully manufactured man-made fabrics and
cotton fabrics from its customers only for the purpose of carrying out one or more
of the aforesaid processes thereon as per the requirement and instructions of the
customers and after the necessary processes are carried out, the same are returned
to the customers.
The petitioner’s company states that it has no discretion or choice of shades or
colours or designs and the same are nominated or prescribed by the customers.
The finally processed fabric is not and cannot be sold by the petitioners in the
market as the petitioner company's product. The petitioner company merely
collects from its customers charges only for job work of processing done by it.
The petitioner company further states that it has no proprietary interest in the
fabrics either before or after the same is processed. The manufacture of the fabrics
and sale in the market of the processed fabrics are effected by the petitioner
company's customers and not by the petitioners. Further the processed as well as
the unprocessed fabric, whether cotton or man-made, can be put to the same use.
Reasoning of the Court.
Before its amendment , Section 2(f) of the Central Excise Act, defined
'manufacture' in its well accepted legal sense .
Section "2(f) ' defines manufacture as ' including any process, incidental or
ancillary to the completion of a manufactured product;
The essential condition to be satisfied to justify the levies, is that there should
be 'manufacture' of goods and in order that the concept of 'manufacture' in Entry
84 List I is satisfied there should come into existence a new article with a
distinctive character and use, as a result of the processing.
It is contended that nothing of the kind happens when 'Grey fabric' is processed;
it remains 'grey fabric'; no new article with any distinctive character emerges
The prevalent and generally accepted test to ascertain that there is 'manufacture'
is whether the change or the series of changes brought about by the application
of processes take the commodity to the point where, commercially, it can no
longer be regarded as the original commodity but is, instead, recognised as a
distinct and new article that has emerged as a result of the processes.
The principles are clear. But difficulties arise in their application in individual
cases. There might be border-line case where either conclusion with equal
justification be reached. Insistence on any sharp or intrinsic distinction between
processing' and 'manufacture, results in an over simplification of both and tends
to blur their interdependence in cases such as the present one.
Classification of Goods.
Leading Cases.
In Delhi Cloth and General Mills Co. Ltd. v. State of Rajasthan 1980 :
1980(6)ELT383(SC) it was laid down that :
“In determining the meaning or connotation of words and expressions describing
an article one principle fairly well-settled it is that the words or expression must
be construed in the sense in which they are understood in the trade, by the dealer
and the consumer. It is they who are concerned with it, and it is the sense in which
they understand it that constitutes the definitive index of the legislative intention
when the statute was enacted.
Classification by Indian Standards Institution :
The contention that glass mirrors have been classified by the Indian Standards
Institution as "glass and glass ware" in the glossary of terms prepared by it in
respect of that classification cannot be accepted to classify glass mirrors as
glassware. This furnishes a piece of evidence only as to the manner in which the
product has been treated for the purpose of the specifications laid down by the
Indian Standards Institution.
In Union of India v. Delhi Cloth & General Mills [1963] Supp. (1) S.C.R. 586,
classification by Indian Standards Institution was regarded as supportive material
only for the purpose of expert opinion furnished by way of evidence in that case.
In Union Carbide Co. Ltd. v. CCE [1978] E.L.T. 180, the description set forth in
the publications of the Indian Standards Institution was regarded as a piece of
evidence only.
Therefore the glass mirrors cannot be classified as 'other glass and glass ware'
under Central Excise Tariff Act .
In the result, the writ petition is allowed and direction is issued to the Revenue
that the glass mirrors manufactured by the petitioner be treated to excise duty
under a different classification than “other glass and glass ware”.
Facts.
The Central Excise Tariff Act (CETA) came to be amended with the effect that
a new Sub-heading was inserted which provided levy of nil duty in respect of
the medicaments manufactured exclusively in accordance with the formulae
described in the authoritative books in the First Schedule to the Drugs and
Cosmetics Act, 1940.
The factual position is that the product DML is manufactured by Baidyanath in
accordance with the formulae mentioned in the book `Ayurved Sar Sangraha'
which is notified in the First Schedule appended to Drugs and Cosmetics Act,
1940 and that the product is sold in the name which is specified in that.
The Revenue sought to impose excise duty in respect of DML claiming that it is
not a medicament but a tooth powder and it is understood as such by the people
in trade and the consumers.
Baidyanath disputes this claim .
Contentions of Baidyanath.
(i) that the product DML falls under classification of medicament because it
comprises of two or more constituents which have been mixed together for
medicinal use.
(ii) It is manufactured exclusively in accordance with the formulae described
in `Ayurved Sar Sangraha' which is an authoritative text on the Ayurvedic System
of treatment and is notified in the First Schedule to the Drugs and Cosmetics Act,
1940. Moreover, in accordance with the provisions of the Drugs and Cosmetics
Act, 1940, the said product is manufactured by Baidyanath under a drug licence
issued by the concerned competent authority.
(iii) Further, the product is sold under the name of `Dant Manjan Lal' which is
the name specified for the said product in `Ayurved Sar Sangraha',
(iv) The people in trade and consumers may recognise the product as a tooth
powder and not a medicament but that is not a valid ground for classifying the
product as tooth powder and not an ayurvedic medicine.
(v) Once there is a definition provided in the Tariff Act, that definition alone
shall prevail and common trade parlance test is not applicable. The common trade
parlance test is to be applied only in the absence of definition;
Facts.
(50) “fixed establishment” means a place (other than the registered place of
business) which is characterised by a sufficient degree of permanence and
suitable structure in terms of human and technical resources to supply services,
or to receive and use services for its own needs;
(52) “goods” means every kind of movable property other than money and
securities but includes actionable claim, growing crops, grass and things attached
to or forming part of the land which are agreed to be severed before supply or
under a contract of supply;
(62) “input tax” in relation to a registered person, means the central tax, State
tax, integrated tax or Union territory tax charged on any supply of goods or
services or both made to him and includes—
(a) the integrated goods and services tax charged on import of goods;
(b) the tax payable under the provisions of sub-sections (3) and (4) of section 9;
(c) the tax payable under the provisions of sub-section (3) and (4) of section 5 of
the Integrated Goods and Services Tax Act;
(d) the tax payable under the provisions of sub-section (3) and sub-section (4) of
section 9 of the respective State Goods and Services Tax Act; or
(e) the tax payable under the provisions of sub-section (3) and sub-section (4) of
section 7 of the Union Territory Goods and Services Tax Act,
but does not include the tax paid under the composition levy;
(70) “location of the recipient of services” means,—
a) where a supply is received at a place of business for which the registration has
been obtained, the location of such place of business; (b) where a supply is
received at a place other than the place of business for which registration has been
obtained (a fixed establishment elsewhere), the location of such fixed
establishment;
(c) where a supply is received at more than one establishment, whether the place
of business or fixed establishment, the location of the establishment most directly
concerned with the receipt of the supply; and (d) in absence of such places, the
location of the usual place of residence of the recipient;
(71) “location of the supplier of services” means,— (a) where a supply is made
from a place of business for which the registration has been obtained, the location
of such place of business;
(b) where a supply is made from a place other than the place of business for
which registration has been obtained (a fixed establishment elsewhere), the
location of such fixed establishment;
(c) where a supply is made from more than one establishment, whether the place
of business or fixed establishment, the location of the establishment most directly
concerned with the provisions of the supply; and (d) in absence of such places,
the location of the usual place of residence of the supplier;
(72) “manufacture” means processing of raw material or inputs in any manner
that results in emergence of a new product having a distinct name, character and
use and the term “manufacturer” shall be construed accordingly;
(85) “place of business” includes––
(a) a place from where the business is ordinarily carried on, and includes a
warehouse, a godown or any other place where a taxable person stores his goods,
supplies or receives goods or services or both; or
(b) a place where a taxable person maintains his books of account; or
(c) a place where a taxable person is engaged in business through an agent, by
whatever name called;
(98) “reverse charge” means the liability to pay tax by the recipient of supply of
goods or services or both instead of the supplier of such goods or services or both
under sub-section (3) or sub-section (4) of section 9, or under sub-section (3) or
subsection (4) of section 5 of the Integrated Goods and Services Tax Act;
(102) “services” means anything other than goods, money and securities but
includes activities relating to the use of money or its conversion by cash or by
any other mode, from one form, currency or denomination, to another form,
currency or denomination for which a separate consideration is charged;
7. (1) For the purposes of this Act, the expression “supply” includes––
(a) all forms of supply of goods or services or both such as sale, transfer, barter,
exchange, licence, rental, lease or disposal made or agreed to be made for a
consideration by a person in the course or furtherance of business;
(b) import of services for a consideration whether or not in the course or
furtherance of business;
(c) the activities specified in Schedule I, made or agreed to be made without a
consideration; and
(d) the activities to be treated as supply of goods or supply of services as referred
to in Schedule II.
SCHEDULE II
[Section 7]
ACTIVITIES TO BE TREATED AS SUPPLY OF GOODS OR SUPPLY OF
SERVICES
1. Transfer
(a) any transfer of the title in goods is a supply of goods;
(b) any transfer of right in goods or of undivided share in goods without the
transfer of title thereof, is a supply of services;
(c) any transfer of title in goods under an agreement which stipulates that property
in goods shall pass at a future date upon payment of full consideration as agreed,
is a supply of goods.
2. Land and Building
(a) any lease, tenancy, easement, licence to occupy land is a supply of services;
(b) any lease or letting out of the building including a commercial, industrial or
residential complex for business or commerce, either wholly or partly, is a supply
of services.
3. Treatment or process
Any treatment or process which is applied to another person's goods is a supply
of services.
4. Transfer of business assets
(a) where goods forming part of the assets of a business are transferred or
disposed of by or under the directions of the person carrying on the business so
as no longer to form part of those assets, whether or not for a consideration, such
transfer or disposal is a supply of goods by the person;
(b) where, by or under the direction of a person carrying on a business, goods
held or used for the purposes of the business are put to any private use or are used,
or made available to any person for use, for any purpose other than a purpose of
the business, whether or not for a consideration, the usage or making available of
such goods is a supply of services;
(c) where any person ceases to be a taxable person, any goods forming part of the
assets of any business carried on by him shall be deemed to be supplied by him
in the course or furtherance of his business immediately before he ceases to be a
taxable person, unless—
(i) the business is transferred as a going concern to another person; or
(ii) the business is carried on by a personal representative who is deemed to be a
taxable person.
5. Supply of services
The following shall be treated as supply of service, namely:—
(a) renting of immovable property;
(b) construction of a complex, building, civil structure or a part thereof, including
a complex or building intended for sale to a buyer, wholly or partly, except where
the entire consideration has been received after issuance of completion certificate,
where required, by the competent authority or after its first occupation, whichever
is earlier.
(2) the expression "construction" includes additions, alterations, replacements or
remodelling of any existing civil structure;
(c) temporary transfer or permitting the use or enjoyment of any intellectual
property right;
(d) development, design, programming, customisation, adaptation, upgradation,
enhancement, implementation of information technology software;
(e) agreeing to the obligation to refrain from an act, or to tolerate an act or a
situation, or to do an act; and
(f) transfer of the right to use any goods for any purpose (whether or not for a
specified period) for cash, deferred payment or other valuable consideration.
SCHEDULE III
[Section 7]
ACTIVITIES OR TRANSACTIONS WHICH SHALL BE TREATED
NEITHER AS A SUPPLY OF GOODS NOR A SUPPLY OF SERVICES
1. Services by an employee to the employer in the course of or in relation to his
employment.
2. Services by any court or Tribunal established under any law for the time being
in force.
3. (a) the functions performed by the Members of Parliament, Members of State
Legislature, Members of Panchayats, Members of Municipalities and Members
of other local authorities;
(b) the duties performed by any person who holds any post in pursuance of the
provisions of the Constitution in that capacity; or
(c) the duties performed by any person as a Chairperson or a Member or a
Director in a body established by the Central Government or a State Government
or local authority and who is not deemed as an employee before the
commencement of this clause.
4. Services of funeral, burial, crematorium or mortuary including transportation
of the deceased.
5. Sale of land and, subject to clause (b) of paragraph 5 of Schedule II, sale of
building.
6. Actionable claims, other than lottery, betting and gambling.
Leading Cases.
Caltech Polymers Pvt. Ltd.. Before Authority on Advance Rulings. (AAR) .
1. M/s. Caltech Polymers Pvt. Ltd., Malappuram (hereinafter called the applicant
or the Company) has preferred an application for Advance Ruling on whether
recovery of food expenses from employees for the canteen service provided by
the applicant / company comes under the definition of outward supplies and are
taxable under Goods & Service Tax Act.
2. The applicant is a Private Limited Company engaged in the manufacture and
sale of footwear. It is submitted that they are providing canteen services
exclusively for their employees. They are incurring the canteen running expenses
and are recovering the same from its employees without any profit margin.
3. The applicant has further submitted that the service provided to the employee
is not being carried out as a business activity. It is according to the provisions of
the Factories Act, 1948. As per section 46 of the said Act, any factory employing
more than 250 workers is required to provide canteen facility to its employees.
The applicant detailed the work as follows:-
a) The space for the canteen is provided by the Company, inside the factory
premises.
b) The cook is employed by the Company and is paid monthly salary.
c) The vegetables and other items required for preparing the food items are
purchased by the Company directly from the suppliers.
d) The number of times, the Canteen facility is availed, each day, by the
employees is tracked on a daily basis.
e) Based on the details above, the expenditure incurred by the Company on the
vegetables and other items required for preparation of food is recovered from the
employees, as a deduction from their monthly salary, in proportion to the foods
consumed by them.
f) The company does not make any profit while recovering the cost of the food
items, from the employees. Only the actual cost incurred for the food items is
recovered from the employees.
4. The company is of the opinion that this activity does not fall within the scope
of ‘supply’, as the same is not in the course or furtherance of its business. The
company is only facilitating the supply of food to the employees, which is a
statutory requirement, and is recovering only the actual expenditure incurred in
connection with the food supply, without making any profit.
5. The company also referred to the Mega Exemption Notification No. 25/2012 –
ST dated 20.06.2012 issued by the Government of India whereby services in
relation to supply of food or beverages by a canteen maintained in a factory
covered under the Factories Act, 1948 was exempted under the Service Tax Law.
6. The applicant, in their application dated 30-12-2017, raised the following
questions to be determined by the authority for Advance Ruling.
“Whether reimbursement of food expenses from employees for the canteen
provided by company comes under the definition of outward supplies as taxable
under GST Act.”
7. The authorised representative of the applicant was heard in the matter and the
contentions raised were examined.
8. It is true that in the pre-GST period, vide Sl No. 19 and 19A of Notification
No. 25/2012 ST dated 20.60.2012as amended by Notification No. 14/2013-
Service Tax dated 22.10.2013 the ‘services provided in relation to serving of food
or beverages by a canteen maintained in a factory covered under the Factories
Act, 1948 (63 of 1948), including a canteen having the facility of air-conditioning
or central air-heating at any time during the year’ was exempted from service tax.
But, there is no similar provision under the GST laws.
9. The term “business” is defined in Section 2(17) of the GST Act, which reads
like this:-
“business” includes:- (a) any trade, commerce, manufacture, profession,
vocation, adventure, wager or any other similar activity, whether or not it is for a
pecuniary benefit:
(b) any activity or transaction in connection with or incidental or ancillary to sub-
clause (a); …
From the plane reading of the definition of “business”, it can be safely concluded
that the supply of food by the applicant to its employees would definitely come
under clause (b) of Section 2(17) as a transaction incidental or ancillary to the
main business.
10. Schedule II to the GST Act describes the activities to be treated as supply of
goods or supply of services. As per clause 6 of the Schedule, the following
composite supply is declared as supply of service.
“supply, by way of or as part of any service or in any other manner whatsoever,
of goods, being food or any other article for human consumption or any drink
(other than alcoholic liquor for human consumption), where such supply or
service is for cash, deferred payment or other valuable consideration.”
Even though there is no profit as claimed by the applicant on the supply of food
to its employees, there is “supply” as provided in Section 7(1)(a) of the GST Act,
2017. The applicant would definitely come under the definition of “Supplier” as
provided in sub-section (105) of Section 2 of the GST Act, 2017.
11. The term ‘consideration’ is defined in Section 2(31) of the GST Act, 2017
which is extracted below:
`consideration’ in relation to the supply of goods or services or both includes,-
a) any payment made or to be made, whether in money or otherwise, in respect
of, in response to, or for the inducement of, the supply of goods or services or
both, whether by the recipient or by any other person but shall not include any
subsidy given by the Central Government or a State Government;
(b) the monetary value of any act or forbearance, in respect of, in response to, or
for the inducement of, the supply of goods or services or both, whether by the
recipient or by any other person but shall not include any subsidy given by the
Central Government or a State Government:
Provided that a deposit given in respect of the supply of goods or services or•
both shall not be considered as payment made for such supply unless the supplier
applies such deposit as consideration for the said supply.
Since the applicant recovers the cost of food from its employees, there is
consideration as defined in Section 2(31) of the GST Act, 2017.
12. In the light of the aforesaid circumstances, we rule as under.
RULING
It is hereby clarified that recovery of food expenses from the employees for the
canteen services provided by company would come under the definition of
‘outward supply’ as defined in Section 2(83) of the Act, 2017, and therefore,
taxable as a supply of services under GST.
Concept of Tax on Services .
Definitions:
“Import” with its grammatical variations and cognate expressions, means
bringing into India from a place outside India - 2(23)
“imported goods” means any goods brought into India from a place outside India
but does not include goods which have been cleared for home consumption–
2(25)
“India” includes the territorial waters of India - 2(27)
“Indian Customs Waters” means the waters extending into the sea upto the limit
of contiguous zone of India under section 5 of the Territorial Waters Continental
Shelf, Exclusive Economic Zone and other Maritime Zones Act, 1976 and
includes any bay, gulf, harbour, creek or tidal river –2(28) jurisdiction of the Act
“Goods” includes-
(a) vessels, aircrafts and vehicles;
(b) stores;
(c) baggage;
(d) currency and negotiable instruments; and
(e) any other kind of movable property 2(22)
Levy of duty
Section 12. Dutiable goods
(1) Except as otherwise provided in this Act, or any law for the time being in
force, duties of customs shall be levied at such rates as may be specified under
the Customs Tariff Act, 1975 or any other law for the time being in force, on
goods imported into, or exported from, India
India is presently following the provisions of the WTO Agreement on Customs
Valuation (ACV) for determination of value on imported goods where Customs
duty is levied with reference to value (ad-valorem rates).
India is a founding Member of the GATT (presently WTO) and was actively
involved in the GATT negotiations (Tokyo Round, 1973-79), which developed
the Agreement on Customs Valuation (ACV). India implemented the ACV in
August 1988.
A common valuation law at international level applies only to imported goods
and its basic principles are laid down in Article VII of General Agreement on
Tariffs and Trade (GATT), 1948, currently known as GATT 1994 (administered
by the World Trade organization, WTO).
The Indian valuation law under Section 14(1) of the Indian Customs Act is based
on the principles of Article VII of the GATT.
The Agreement on Customs Valuation (ACV), which came into force on 1st
January 1981, lays down well defined methods of valuation to be strictly followed
so as to ensure uniformity and certainty in valuation approach and to avoid
arbitrariness.
Section 2(41) of the Customs Act, 1962 defines ‘Value’ in relation to any goods
to mean the value thereof determined in accordance with the provisions of sub-
section (1) of Section 14 thereof.
Section 14
- (1) For the purposes of the Customs Tariff Act, 1975 , or any other law for the
time being in force,
the value of the imported goods and export goods shall be the transaction value
of such goods, that is to say, the price actually paid or payable for the goods when
sold for export to India for delivery at the time and place of importation
or as the case may be , for export from India for delivery at the time and place of
exportation,where the buyer and seller of goods are not related and price is the
sole consideration for the sale subject to conditions as may be specified in the
rules made in this behalf
Provided that such transaction value shall include, in addition to the price, any
amount paid or payable for
costs and services, including commissions and brokerage, engineering, design
work, royalties and licence fees, costs of transportation to the place of
importation, insurance, loading, unloading and handling charges to the extent and
in the manner specified in the rules in this behalf
Provided further that the rules in this behalf may provide for:
The circumstances in which the buyer and seller are deemed to be related
The manner of determination of value when there is no sale or the buyer and seller
are related or price is not the sole consideration for sale or in any other case, the
manner and acceptance or rejection of value declared by the importer or exporter
, where the proper officer has reason to doubt the truth and accuracy of of such
value, and determination of value for the purpose of this section.
Provided also that such price shall be calculated with reference to the rate of
exchanges as in force on the date on which a bill of entry is presented under
section 46, or a shipping bill or bill of export, as the case may be, is presented
under section 50;
(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-section (1), if the Board is
satisfied that it is necessary or expedient so to do it may, by notification in the
Official Gazette,
fix tariff values for any class of imported goods or export goods, having regard
to the trend of value of such or like goods, and where any such tariff values are
fixed, the duty shall be chargeable with reference to such tariff value.
Explanation - For the purposes of this section-
(a) "rate of exchange" means the rate of exchange-
(i) determined by the Board , or
(ii) ascertained in such manner as the Board may direct, for the
conversion of Indian currency into foreign currency of foreign currency into
Indian currency;
(b) foreign currency" and "Indian currency" have the meanings respectively
assigned to them in the Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999 .
Case Laws
Customs Act
S.15(1), Proviso - CUSTOMS - Import duty - Rate of - Determination - Relevant
date - Import for home consumption –
It is date on which Bill of Entry is presented - Bill of entry, however, presented
before date of entry inwards of vessel - Bill of Entry is deemed to have been
presented on date of entry inwards.
15. Date for determination of rate of duty and tariff valuation of imported goods:
(1) The rate of duty and tariff valuation, if any, applicable to any imported goods,
shall be the rate and valuation in force,-
(a) in the case of goods entered for home consumption , on the date on which a
bill of entry in respect of such is presented under that section;
(b) in the case of goods cleared from a warehouse , on the date on which the goods
are actually removed from the warehouse;
(c) in the case of any other goods, on the date of payment of duty:
Provided that if a bill of entry has been presented before the date of entry inwards
of the vessel or
the arrival of the aircraft by which the goods are imported, the bill of entry shall
be deemed to have been presented on the date of such entry inwards or the arrival,
as the case may be.
(2) The provisions of this section shall not apply to baggage and goods imported
by post
The petitioners entered into a contract with foreign sellers for the supply of edible
oils. The consignment of edible oils was sent by the ocean going vessel which
arrived and registered in the Port of Bombay on 11 July, 1981.
Port Authorities at Bombay were unable to allot a berth to the vessel, and as she
was under heavy pressure from the parties whose goods she was carrying she left
Bombay for Karachi for unloading other cargo intended for that port.
The vessel set out on its return journey from Karachi and arrived in Bombay port
on 23 July 1981 and waited for a berth.
On 4 August, 1981 she was allowed to berth and the Customs Authorities made
the" final entry" on that date.
The petitioners point out that when the vessel made its original journey to
Bombay and was waiting in the waters of the Port , the petitioners presented the
Bill of Entry to the Customs Authorities on 9 July 1981, that the Bill of Entry was
accepted by the Import Department and an order was passed by the Customs
Officer on the Bill of Entry on 18 July 1981 directing the examination of the
consignment.
It is stated that the Customs Authorities have imposed customs duty on the import
of the edible oils at the he rate of 150 per cent on the footing that the import was
made on 31 July 1981, the date of "'Inward Entry".
The case of the petitioners is that the rate of duty leviable on the import should
be that ruling on 11 July 1981, when the vessel actually arrived and registered in
the Port of Bombay, and that but for the fact that a berth was not available the
vessel would have discharged its cargo at Bombay and would not have left that
Port and proceeded to Karachi to return to Bombay towards the end of July 1981.
The rate of duty and tariff valuation applicable to the imported goods is governed
by Cl. (a) of S. 15(l). In the case of good,, entered for home consumption under
S. 46. it is the date on which the Bill of Entry in respect of such goods is presented
under that section. S. 46 provides that the importer of any goods shall make entry
thereof by presenting to the proper officer a Bill of Entry for home consumption
in the prescribed form, and it is further provided that a Bill of Entry may be
presented at any time after delivery of the Import Manifest or an Import Report.
The Bill of Entry may be presented even before the delivery of such Manifest if
the vessel by which the goods have been shipped for importation into India is
expected to arrive within a week from the date of such presentation.
S. 47 empowers the proper officer, on being satisfied that the goods entered for
home consumption are not prohibited goods and that the importers had paid the
import duty assessed thereon as well as charges in respect of the same, to make
an order permitting clearance of the goods for home consumption.
According to the petitioners, the cargo of edible oil could not be unloaded in
Bombay during the original entry of the ship into the Port for want of an available
berth, and it is for no fault of the petitioners that the vessel had to proceed to
Karachi for unloading other cargo.
S. 15, the petitioners contend, is arbitrary and vague and therefore
unconstitutional because it provides no definite standard or norm for determining
the rate of duty and tariff valuation and does not take into account situations
which are uncertain and beyond the control of an importer.
The petitioners contend that the rate of customs duty chargeable on the import of
goods in India is the rate in force on the date when the vessel carrying the goods
enters the territorial waters of India.
The petitioners point out that S. 12(l) declares that customs duty will be levied at
the rates in force on goods imported into India, and the expression 'India', they
urge, is defined by S. 2(27) as including the territorial waters of India. In other
words, the petitioners contend that when the vessel entered the territorial waters
on 11 July, 1981 the rate of customs duty at 12.5 percent ruling on that date was
is the rate which was attracted to the import.
In any event, the petitioners contend, the rate should not have been more than
42.5 per cent because that, was the rate of customs duty ruling on 23 July, 1981
when the vessel entered the port of Bombay.
To preserve the validity of S. 15 the petitioners urge, we must read the expression
"the date of entry inwards" in the proviso to, S. 15(l) as the date on which the
vessel enters the territorial waters of India.
The rate of duty and tariff valuation has to be determined in accordance with S.
15(l) of the Customs Act.
Under S.15(l)(a), the rate and valuation is the rate and valuation in force on the
date on which the Bill of Entry is presented under S. 46.
According to the proviso, however, if the Bill of Entry has been presented before
the entry inwards of the vessel by which the goods are imported, the Bill of Entry
shall be deemed to have been presented on the date of such entry inwards.
In the present case the Bill of Entry was presented on 9 July, 1981.
Question which arises for consideration is :
What is "the date of entry inwards" of the vessel?
In M/s. Omega Insulated Cable Co. (India) Limited v. The Collector of Customs,
the Madras High Court addressed itself to the question whether the words in S.
15(l)(a) of the Act. viz. "date of entry inwards of the vessel by which the goods
are imported"' mean "the actual entry of the vessel inwards or the date of entry in
the Register kept by the department permitting the entry inwards of the vessel".
It was held that the date of entry inward for the purpose of S.. 15(l)(a) and the
proviso thereto is the date when the entry is made in the Customs Register.
Held that
"the date of entry inwards of the vessel" is the date recorded as such in the
Customs register.
In the present case, "the date of inwards entry" is mentioned as 31 July, 1981. In
the absence of anything else, it may be assumed that the entry was recorded on
that date itself.
Accordingly, the rate of import duty and the tariff valuation shall be that in force
on 31 July, 1981.
The appellants had, between 4th of April, 1977 and 20th September, 1978
imported acrylic polyster fibre. The imported articles were placed in the bonded
warehouse after they had landed in India.
3. On 3rd of October, 1978. The Additional Duty of Excise (Textiles and Textile
Articles) Ordinance, 1978 was promulgated which came into force w.e.f. 19th
October, 1978. In terms of the Ordinance articles were charged with an additional
duty of excise equal to 10 per cent of the basic excise duty payable on such articles
under the Central Excise and Salt Act, 1944
The articles which were imported by the appellants were cleared from the bonded
warehouse after 4th October, 1978. The Customs Authorities demanded an
additional duty at the rate of 10 per cent 'under the aforesaid Ordinance. The
appellants paid the amount demanded under the protest but thereafter filed an
application for refund of the amount so paid. After being unsuccessful before the
Authorities under the Act and the Tribunal the appellants have come up in appeals
to the SC.
Held that
Section 15 of the Customs Act , provides that the rate of duty which will be
payable would be on the day when the goods are removed from the bonded
warehouse.
That apart, the SC has held in Sea Customs Act, (1964) 3 SCR 787
“that in the case of duty of customs the taxable event is the import of goods within
the customs barriers. In other words, the taxable event occurs when the customs
barrier is crossed. In the case of goods which are in the warehouse the customs
barriers would be crossed when they are sought to be taken out of the customs
and brought to the mass of goods in the country.
Admittedly this was done after 4th of October, 1978. As on that day when the
goods were so removed additional duty of excise under the said Ordinance was
payable on goods manufactured after 4th October, 1978
It is not possible to accept the contention that what has to be seen is whether
additional duty of excise was payable at the time when the goods landed in India
or they had crossed into the territorial waters.
Import being complete, when the goods entered the territorial waters is the
contention which has already been rejected by the SC in Union of India v. Apar
Private Ltd. : AIR 1999 SC 2515.
The import would be completed only when the goods are to cross the customs
barriers and that is the time when the import duty has to be paid and that is what
has been termed by this Court in In Re : The Bill to amend Section 20 of the Sea
Customs Act (1964) 3 SCR 787, as being the taxable event.
The taxable event, therefore, being the day of crossing of customs barrier, and not
on the date when the goods had landed in India or had entered the territorial
waters, we find that on the date of the taxable event the additional duty of excise
was leviable under the said Ordinance and, therefore, additional duty under
Section 3 of the Tariff Act was rightly demanded from the appellants.
Ratio is
- that import would commence when the goods cross into territorial waters
but is completed only when the goods become part of the mass of goods within
the country.
- Taxable event when goods reach customs barriers and that is the time when
bill of entry is filed – as per section 15.
2. Kiran Spinning Mills v. Collector of Customs AIR 2000 Supreme Court 3448
Taxable event is day of crossing of customs barrier, and not on the date when the
goods had landed in India or had entered the territorial waters - Warehoused
goods imported between April 1977 and September, 1978 - Customs barrier is
crossed on date when they are sought to be taken out of customs and brought to
mass of goods in the country - Goods crossed customs barrier after 4th Oct, 1978
- On said date additional duty of exercise was leviable under Additional Duty of
Excise (Textiles and Textile Articles) Ordinance which came into force w.e.f.
19th Oct, 1978 - Levy of additional duty in terms of ordinance,
The short question that arises for consideration relates to the levy of additional
duty under the Customs Tariff Act, 1975.
The appellants had, between 4th of April, 1977 and 20th September, 1978
imported acrylic polyster fibre. The imported articles were placed in the bonded
warehouse after they had landed in India.
On 3rd of October, 1978.
The Additional Duty of Excise (Textiles and Textile Articles) Ordinance, 1978
was promulgated which came into force w.e.f. 19th October, 1978. In terms of
the Ordinance articles were charged with an additional duty of excise equal to 10
per cent of the basic excise duty payable on such articles under the Central Excise
and Salt Act.
Correspondingly under the Customs Tariff Act, 1975 additional duty on such
articles which were imported became payable equivalent to the additional excise
duty levied under the said Ordinance.
The articles which were imported by the appellants were cleared from the bonded
warehouse after 4th October, 1978.
The Customs Authorities demanded an additional duty at the rate of 10 per cent
'under the aforesaid Ordinance.
The appellants paid the amount demanded under the protest but thereafter filed
an application for refund of the amount so paid.
After being unsuccessful before the Authorities under the Act and the Tribunal
the appellants have come up in appeals in this Court.
Contention of the appellants.
At the time when the goods were imported into India the Ordinance had not been
promulgated and no additional duty of excise was payable on like articles.
Thereafter, additional duty under the Customs Tariff Act could not be imposed.
The contention was that at the time when the goods had landed in India additional
duty of excise was not payable on a similarly manufactured goods in India even
if they were placed in a bonded warehouse in India and, therefore, no additional
duty could be charged under the Excise Act similarly under Section 3 of the Tariff
Act, no additional duty should be charged.
Reasoning of the Court.
In Hyderabad Industries Ltd. v. Union of India, (1999) 4 JT (SC) 95 : it was laid
down that for the purpose of levy of additional duty, Section 3 of the Tariff Act
is a charging section which makes the provisions of the Customs Act applicable.
This would bring into play the provisions of Section 15 of the Customs Act
which, inter alia, provides that the rate of duty which will be payable would be
on the day when the goods are removed from the bonded warehouse.
That apart, in Sea Customs Act, (1964) 3 SCR 787 it was laid down that in the
case of duty of customs the taxable event is the import of goods within the
customs barriers. In other words, the taxable event occurs when the customs
barrier is crossed.
In the case of goods which are in the warehouse the customs barriers would be
crossed when they are sought to be taken out of the customs and brought to the
mass of goods in the country.
This was done after 4th of October, 1978.
As on that day when the goods were so removed additional duty of excise under
the said Ordinance was payable on goods manufactured after 4th October, 1978.
It is difficult to accept the contention that what has to be seen is whether
additional duty of excise was payable at the time when the goods landed in India
or they had crossed into the territorial waters.
In Union of India v. Apar Private Ltd. AIR 1999 SC 2515 it was laid down that
import is not complete, when the goods entered the territorial waters of India.
The import would be completed only when the goods are to cross the customs
barriers and that is the time when the import duty has to be paid and that is what
has been termed as being the taxable event.
The taxable event, therefore, will be the day of crossing of customs barrier, and
not on the date when the goods had landed in India or had entered the territorial
waters.
On the date of the taxable event the additional duty of excise was leviable under
the said Ordinance and, therefore, additional duty under Section 3 of the Tariff
Act was rightly demanded from the appellants.