Judgment :- 1. The question is raised in both these petitions whether tax paid by a company which is a foreign company can be added on to the dividend paid by the company to a share-holder-assessee in computing his total income and whether such question can be raised in this course and for purpose of rectification proceedings under S.35 of the Income-tax Act 1922. 2. The common petitioner in these petitions was first assessed for 2 different years on the basis of his net dividends as derived from a Ceylon company. He was subsequently proceeded against under S.35 for revised assessment on basis of the gross dividends. Hence these O. Ps. challenging the respective orders And the point is raised that S.16 (2) of the Income-tax Act which provides for the grossing up as regards dividends does not apply to amounts paid by a foreign company towards income-tax to a foreign State and there was no provision in the Act either which allows the amount of such tax being converted as the income of the assessee. Further proceedings under S.35 cannot also appropriately apply to cases involving this question. 3. Now the definition of Company in S.2 (5A) confines it to Indian Companies and certain associations, Indian or foreign with which we are not concerned. This means clearly that S.16(2) with reference to grossing up of the net dividend paid to a share-holder before inclusion in the share-holder's total income cannot apply to dividend from a foreign company and therefore to the dividend from the Moulana (Ceylon) Ltd., with which we are concerned. This question specifically came up for consideration in Commissioner of Income-Tax v. Blundel Spencer Co. Ltd., (1952) 211. T. R.28 and Chagla, C. J. delivering the judgment of the court said: "Section 16 (2) can only apply to the income-tax paid by a company in India at the rate laid down by the Finance Act and it cannot apply to the tax paid by a company outside India. There is no provision in the Act for adding to the dividend of a share-holder the tax paid by the company outside India" and they held accordingly that in grossing up the dividends received by the assessee the Income-tax authorities were not entitled to take into consideration the tax paid by the company in the United Kingdom.
There is no provision in the Act for adding to the dividend of a share-holder the tax paid by the company outside India" and they held accordingly that in grossing up the dividends received by the assessee the Income-tax authorities were not entitled to take into consideration the tax paid by the company in the United Kingdom. Reference may also be made in this connection to Ramaswamy Naidu v. Commissioner of Income-tax (1959). 35 I. T. R.33 where the question was in regard to the deduction by the company of moneys paid by way of tax under the Ceylon Income-tax Ordinance and the learned judges held that at no point of time did the title to these amounts vest in the assesses, neither were the amounts received by nor did they accrue or arise to the assessee and so they were not liable to be included in the income of the assessee for purpose of Indian Income-tax. I hold therefore that the revision of assessment by way of grossing up dividend here was wrong and uncalled for. 4. This renders it unnecessary for me to decide the question of the maintainability of the instant proceedings under S.35. But 1 may indicate that if my decision was necessary I would have decided that there was nothing incompatible in these proceedings. 5. The result is that the O. Ps. here are both allowed with costs with counsel's fee Rs. 100/-. Allowed.