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1960 DIGILAW 268 (KER)

A. v. Thomas And Co. Ltd. Alleppey VS Commissioner Of Income Tax Bangalore

1960-07-08

M.A.ANSARI, T.C.RAGHAVAN

body1960
JUDGMENT T.C. Raghavan, J. 1. The question of law that is referred to us in this reference under Section 66(2) of the Indian Income Tax Act is:- "Whether on the facts and circumstances of the case, the Tribunal was correct in holding that the amount of Rs. 4,05,071-8-5 claimed by the assessee company as a deduction was not admissible either under section 10(2)(xi) or 10(2)(xv)?" 2. The assessee is a public limited company carrying on business as promoters and financiers of companies, as managing agents of companies and estates and as forwarding, clearing and steamer agents. It has a few trading lines also. The directors of the company are A. V. Thomas, S. Sankara Narayana Iyer and J. Thomas. There is another private limited company by name the Southern Agencies, Pondicherry, Ltd., with the three directors A. V. Thomas, S. S. Natarajan and C. S. Ramakrishna Karayalar. This company, hereinafter referred to as the Agencies, was carrying on business on lines similar to those of the assessee company. A. V. Thomas, as is clear from the above, is a director of both the above said companies and he has controlling powers in both of them. 3. Between 14th September, 1948, and 31st December, 1948, A.V.Thomas advanced large sums of money amounting to Rs. 6,05,071-8-5 out of the funds of the assessee company to the Agencies and these payments were later approved by the directors on 1st September, 1950. This amount has been shown in the books of the assessee company in the ledger accounts for the year 1948 relating to the Rodier Textile Mills Limited as amounts paid towards purchase of shares. It may be mentioned at this stage that the Agencies promoted the above company, the Rodier Textile Mills Limited and the above amount of Rs. 6,05,071-8-5 was for purchasing shares of the said Rodiers. The Rodiers was not successful and was not put into commission. Hence, on the failure of the issue of the shares of the Rodiers, a sum of Rs. 2,00,000/- was repaid by the Agencies to the assessee company on 7th December, 1951. The balance of Rs. 4,05,071-8- 5 was written off in the accounts of the assessee company on 3ist December, 1951 and was shown as a deduction from the profits for that year. This write off was approved by the directors at their meeting held on 28th October, 1952. The balance of Rs. 4,05,071-8- 5 was written off in the accounts of the assessee company on 3ist December, 1951 and was shown as a deduction from the profits for that year. This write off was approved by the directors at their meeting held on 28th October, 1952. The chairman of the Board of Directors at the annual general body meeting of the assessee company held on 15th December, 1952, made a reference to this debt and said that the advance was made to the Agencies to acquire shares in the Rodiers for the assesses company, with a view to gain by securing their agency for handling their goods. He also observed that since the advance became partially irrecoverable, it was a trade loss sustained in the ordinary course of business of the company and hence it might be written off. 4. The assessee company claimed this amount of Rs. 4,05,072/- as a bad debt in its income tax return for the assessment year 1952-53. The Income Tax Officer disallowed the claim holding that the writing off was premature, for, according to him, the first instalment of Rs. 2,00,000/- was received only on 7th December, 1951, and hence it was too early to write off the whole amount in the accounts for the year ending on 31st December, 1951. The assessee company appealed to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner, who dismissed the appeal holding that the advance was not the business debt of the company but one made with a view to acquire capital assets and hence the loss was a capital loss. In view of this finding the Appellate Assistant Commissioner held that the question regarding the claim of bad debt was premature or did not arise. Thereupon, the assessee company again appealed to the Appellate Tribunal. The Tribunal dismissed the appeal on the ground that the full settlement of the debt, on receipt of Rs. 2,00,000/-, was guided purely by personal and not business motives, as there was no reason why the assessee should have received so much less than the other creditors who had been paid much more. According to the Tribunal the advance was not one made in the usual course of business but was paid only for personal motives brought about by the common ownership and management of the assessee company and the Agencies. According to the Tribunal the advance was not one made in the usual course of business but was paid only for personal motives brought about by the common ownership and management of the assessee company and the Agencies. The assessee company applied to the Tribunal for referring a question of law under Section 66(1), which was dismissed. Under Section 66(2) the assessee company filed O. P. No. 171 of 1956 and the High Court directed the Tribunal to refer the above question of law and hence this reference. 5. The claim for deduction is made fay the assessee company under, sections 10(2)(xi) and 10(2)(xv) of the Act. Before we discuss the facts and circumstances of the case we would note the ingredients of these two sub-sections. For claiming relief under section 10(2)(xi) the bad or doubtful debt should be in respect of the assessee's business or trading activity. To sustain the claim under section 10(2)(xv) the expenditure must be laid out wholly and exclusively for the purposes of the business of the assesses and secondly it should not be in the nature of a capital expenditure or personal expenses of the assessee. At the outset we would dispose of one argument advanced by the learned Advocate General appearing for the assessee. The learned Advocate General urges that the view of the Appellate Tribunal that the settlement was guided by personal motives should not be sustained, as the assessee involved in this case is a limited liability company and the personal motives, if at all, of the Managing Director could not be the personal motives of the assessee company. We consider that this argument has some force and therefore, if the Advocate General is able to convince us that the expenditure has been laid out wholly and exclusively for the purposes of the business and is not in the nature of a capital expenditure, the assessee is entitled to succeed under section 10(2)(xv). He is also entitled to succeed under section 10(2) (xi), if the learned Advocate General convinces us that the amount claimed as a bad or doubtful debt was really expended or incurred in respect of the assessee company's business or trading activity. The learned Advocate General has invited our attention to several clauses of the object clauses of the memorandum of association of the assessee company. The learned Advocate General has invited our attention to several clauses of the object clauses of the memorandum of association of the assessee company. He argues that the assessee company was established, among other things, (1) to be interested in, promote and undertake the formation and establishment of such institutions,(2) to subscribe for, purchase hold, under write, etc., shares, stocks and debentures and (3) to assist any company financially or otherwise by issuing or subscribing for or guaranteeing the capital shares, etc. The argument of the learned Advocate General is that, because the assessee company had the above objects in its memorandum of association, the present transaction should be considered as one falling within the usual course of its business. But we would make it clear that the test is not whether the transaction is authorised by the memorandum of association but whether it is performed in the course of its business and thus it is in the nature of a business or trading activity of the company. We would respectfully adopt the reasoning of their Lordships of the Patna High Court in The Sitalpore Sugar Works Ltd. v Commissioner of Income Tax (25 ITR 548.) Their Lordships observe: "It is of course true that every transaction which is covered by the memorandum of association of the company cannot be said to be necessarily performed in the course of its business, see, for example, the opinion of Lord Clyde in Commissioner, Inland Revenue v Hyndland Investment Co. Ltd. ((1929) 14 Tax Cases 694 at 699). The question is not whether the transaction is within the powers of the company but the question is whether the transaction is in the nature of a business or trading activity. In dealing with this question it is of course a relevant circumstance that the transaction is authorised by the articles of association but that circumstance is not a conclusive circumstance. It must be further shown that the transaction has a proximate connection with the normal business of the company and that the connection is so proximate that the transaction can be takes to have been performed in the ordinary course of the business of the company. It must be further shown that the transaction has a proximate connection with the normal business of the company and that the connection is so proximate that the transaction can be takes to have been performed in the ordinary course of the business of the company. To put it in other words, it is the nature of the company's transaction which must determine whether it is carrying on the trade or not; it is not sufficient to demonstrate that the transaction is within the company's powers. See the opinion of Lord Justice Atkin in the Korean Syndicate's case ((1921) 12 Tax Cases, 181)." In Kishan Prasad & Co. Ltd. v Commissioner of Income Tax, Punjab (27 ITR 49), their Lordships of the Supreme Court observe: "The circumstance whether a transaction is or is not within its powers has no bearing on the nature of the transaction, or on the question whether the profits arising therefrom are capital accretion or revenue income". Hence the question before us is not whether the company was competent to do a particular business under the object clauses of its memorandum of association but the real question is as to what was the nature of the transaction actually done by the company. So we have to find out the nature of this expenditure from the facts and circumstances of the present case, Of course, the memorandum of association is a relevant circumstance in that enquiry, but it is by no means a conclusive circumstance. There is no evidence, much less a finding, in the case that the company was actually buying and selling agencies or that the attempt in the present case was to get such an agency of the Rodiers with a view to re-sell the same. Therefore, it has to be held that the attempt of the assesses company to get the agency of the Rodiers was not a trading activity but was an attempt to acquire a capital asset with a view to make profits by operating such agency and not by re-selling the same. Therefore, it has to be held that the attempt of the assesses company to get the agency of the Rodiers was not a trading activity but was an attempt to acquire a capital asset with a view to make profits by operating such agency and not by re-selling the same. In such circumstances the observations of their Lordships of the Supreme Court in Kishan Prasad's case (27 ITR 49, at page 53): "It seems that the object of the assessee company in buying the shares was purely to obtain the managing agency of the third mill which no doubt would have been an asset of enduring nature and would have brought them profits but there was from the inception no intention whatever on the part of the assessee company to re-sell the shares cither at a profit or otherwise deal in them", will apply to the present case also. 6. On the contrary, it is in evidence in the case that the amount now 3 claimed to be deducted as a trade or business loss or as a bad or doubtful debt was advanced to secure the agency of the Rodiers with a view to make profits by handling their goods. The minutes of the 17th annual general meeting of the assessee company dated 15th December, 1952, discloses the following in the speech of the chairman : "Yon are aware that an advance was made to the Southern Agencies (Pondicherry) Ltd., to acquire lot us shares in Rodier Textile Mills Ltd. It was felt that when the promotion and working of Rodier Textile Mills Ltd. became a fait accompli, our company stood considerably to gain by securing their agency for handling their goods". This clearly shows that the object of advancing the amount was to secure the agency of the Rodiers for handling their goods. The question before us is whether this advance was made in the course of business or trade activity of the assessee company or was only for the purpose of acquiring a capital asset. In this connection we would extract a passage from the judgment of Lawrence J. in the King's Bench Division, in Henderson (H. M. Inspector of Taxes) v Meade-King Robinson & Co. Ltd., (22 Tax Cases 97). In this connection we would extract a passage from the judgment of Lawrence J. in the King's Bench Division, in Henderson (H. M. Inspector of Taxes) v Meade-King Robinson & Co. Ltd., (22 Tax Cases 97). The learned Judge observes at page 105 : "It is found in the Case that the loan was made solely for the purpose of obtaining a continuance of the selling agency and that there was no other motive, and the question is whether the selling agency was in the nature of capital or of revenue". Later on the learned Judge observes :-- "The question in every case is : what is the object of the expenditure. The object in the present case was to secure a continuance of the Respondent Company's agency for the whaling companies, just as the object of the payment by the company in Atherton's case was to secure a consented staff. In both cases the object might have failed, but the question is : was the object of the payment of a capital nature? It was not part of the business of the Respondent Company to buy and sell agencies. It follows that money expended in securing agencies or the continuation of agencies was not the capital which the company turned over in its business, but the capital which it utilised to be the source of income which would accrue to it for its activities in the agency. Such expenditure is not, in my opinion, an allowable deduction under the Income Tax Acts". In Commissioner of Income Tax, Hyderabad-Deccan v Vazir Sultan & Sons (36 ITR 175), his Lordship, Bhagwati J. observes as follows at page 187 :- "In the case before us the agency agreement in respect of territory outside the Hyderabad State was as much an asset of the assessee's business as the agency agreement within the Hyderabad State and though expansion of the territory of the agency in 1939 and the restriction thereof in 1950 could very well be treated as grant of additional territory in 1939 and the withdrawal thereof in 1950, both these agency agreements constituted but one employment of the assessee as the sole selling agents of the company. There is nothing on the record to show that the acquisition of such agencies constituted the assesses's business or that these agency agreements were entered into by the assessee in the carrying on of any such business. The agency agreements in fact formed a capital asset of the assessee's business worked or exploited by the assessee by entering into contracts for the sale of the CHARM1NAR cigarettes manufactured by the company to the various customers and dealers in the respective territories. This asset really formed part of the fixed capital of the assessee's business. It did not constitute the business of the assessee but was the means by which the assessee entered into the business transactions by way of distributing those cigarettes within the respective territories. It really formed the profit making apparatus of the assessee's business of distribution of the cigarrettes manufactured by the company. If it was thus neither circulating capital nor stock in trade of the business carried on by the assessee it could certainly not be anything but a capital asset of its business and any payment made by the company as and by way of compensation for terminating or cancelling the same would only be a capital receipt in the hands of the assessee". This observation of the Supreme Court directly applies to the present case. In the present case, as we have already observed, the object of the advance was to secure the agency for handling the goods of the Rodiers not with a view to re-sell it and make a profit thereby, but with a view to make profits by operating the agency. It is also clear, as we have already indicated, that though the articles of association of the assessee company authorised the company to buy and sell agencies, it had no such trade or business of buying and selling agencies. Therefore, the advance made for securing the agency for handling the goods of the Rodiers was only an attempt to acquire a capital asset and not any step taken in the doing of a business or trade activity. 7. If that be so, the deduction claimed by the assessee company cannot be brought under either section 10(2)(xi) or 10(2)(xv). Therefore, our answer to the question referred to us is in the negative, against the assessee and this answer will be sent to the department. 7. If that be so, the deduction claimed by the assessee company cannot be brought under either section 10(2)(xi) or 10(2)(xv). Therefore, our answer to the question referred to us is in the negative, against the assessee and this answer will be sent to the department. The assessee will pay the costs of the department which we fix at Rs. 250/-.