31 March 1989
Supreme Court
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ALEMBIC CHEMICAL WORKS CO. LTD. Vs COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX, GUJARAT

Bench: VENKATACHALLIAH,M.N. (J)
Case number: Appeal Civil 43 of 1975


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PETITIONER: ALEMBIC CHEMICAL WORKS CO. LTD.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX, GUJARAT

DATE OF JUDGMENT31/03/1989

BENCH: VENKATACHALLIAH, M.N. (J) BENCH: VENKATACHALLIAH, M.N. (J) PATHAK, R.S. (CJ)

CITATION:  1989 AIR 1913            1989 SCR  (2) 302  1989 SCC  (3) 329        JT 1989 (2)   122  1989 SCALE  (1)885

ACT: Income Tax Act, 1961: Section 37--Tests to determine whether Capital or Revenue Expenditure--’Once for all’ and ’enduring benefit’  tests--Not  conclusive--Object and effect  of  the expenditure  to be looked into--’Once for all payment’  made by manufacturer to a foreign company for supply of technical know-how etc. for increasing production improvisation in the process and technology supplemental to existing business--No new venture--Whether the payment made is a revenue  expendi- ture qualifying for deduction.

HEADNOTE:      The appellant-assessee, a company engaged in the  manu- facture of penicillin, in order to increase its  production, entered  into an agreement with a Japanese firm (Meiji)  for supply  of  sub-cultures of  penicillin  producing  strains, technical  know-how,  training, written description  of  the process  on a pilot plant, design and specifications of  the main equipment in such pilot plant, and to advise the asses- see in the largescale manufacture of penicillin for a limit- ed period of two years.     As  per the agreement, the assessee paid Rs.2,39,625  to Meiji  and  claimed the same as revenue expenditure  in  its Income  tax  assessment  for the  assessment  year  1964-65. Disallowing  the claim the Income Tax Officer held that  the expenditure was for the acquisition of an asset or advantage of an enduring benefit and thus a capital outlay. The Appel- late  Assistant  Commissioner  confirmed the  order  of  the Income Tax Officer.     The further appeal of the assessee was dismissed by  the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal holding that the payment  made to Meiji was ’once for all payment’ made for the acquisition of a capital asset.     At  the instance of the assessee, the Tribunal  referred to  the High Court, the question as to whether the sum  paid to Meiji was a revenue expenditure. The High Court  answered the question in the negative. The present appeal is  against that order of the High Court. The assessee also moved an application before the High Court 303 seeking  a direction to the Tribunal to refer another  ques-

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tion  of law as to whether a new plant was obtained  or  in- stalled  by  the  assessee consequent  upon  the  agreement. Declining  to  interfere, the High Court observed  that  the Tribunal  has  not recorded a finding to the effect  that  a completely  new plant was obtained by the assessee  and  the Tribunal’s  decision that the assessee, had obtained  a  new process  and  a new technical know-how from  Meiji  was  not without evidence.     Against the above order of the High Court, the  assessee preferred  an appeal to this Court, which was formally  dis- posed  of  with  a direction to the Tribunal to  draw  up  a supplementary statement of the case and refer for the  opin- ion of this Court, the further question of law as sought for by the assessee; and such a question to be considered in the present appeal.     On  behalf  of the assessee, it was submitted  that  the Tribunal was influenced by an erroneous assumption that  the agreement, envisaged the setting up of a new plant,  whereas the  objective  of the agreement was only  to  increase  the yield of penicillin in the existing plant itself.     The Revenue contended that there was a new venture based on a new technology and know-how of unlimited duration which required a new plant for its commercial exploration. Allowing the appeal,      HELD:  1. The financial outlay under the agreement  was for  the  better  conduct and improvement  of  the  existing business  ’and  should, therefore, be held to be  a  revenue expenditure.  There is also no single  definitive  criterion which,  by  itself, is determinative  whether  a  particular outlay  is  capital or revenue. The ’once for  all’  payment test  is also inconclusive. What is relevant is the  purpose of the outlay and its intended object and effect, considered in  a common-sense way having regard to the business  reali- ties.  The  rapid strides in science and technology  in  the field  should make this Court a little slow and  circumspect in  too  readily pigeon-holing an outlay, such as  this,  as capital. The circumstance that the agreement in so far as it placed  limitations on the right of the assessee in  dealing with the know-how and the conditions as to  non-partibility, confidentiality and secrecy of the know-how incline  towards the  inference that the right pertained more to the  use  of the know-how than to its exclusive acquisition. [319A,  B-C; 317D-E] CIT v. CIBA of India Ltd., [1968] 2 SCR 696; CIT, Bombay v. 304 Associated Cement Co. Ltd., JT 282 (2) 287, relied on.     2.  The  idea of ’once for all’  payment  and  ’enduring benefit’ are not to be treated as something akin to statuto- ry conditions; nor are the notions of "capital" or "revenue" a  judicial fetish. What is capital expenditure and what  is revenue are not eternal verities but must needs be  flexible so  as  to  respond to the changing  economic  realities  of business. The expression "asset or advantage of an  enduring nature" was evolved to emphasise the element of a sufficient degree of durability .appropriate to the context. [313C]       Herring v. Federal Commissioner of Taxation, [1946] 72 CLR 543, referred to.     3.  In  computing the income chargeable under  the  head "Profits and Gains of Business or Profession", section 37 of the Income-tax Act enables the deduction of any  expenditure laid-out or expended wholly and exclusively for the  purpose of the business or profession, as the case may be. The  fact that an item of expenditure is wholly and exclusively  laid- out  for purposes of the business, by itself, is not  suffi- cient  to  entitle  its allowance in  computing  the  income

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chargeable  to tax. In addition, the expenditure should  not be  in the nature of a capital-expenditure. In the  infinite variety  of situational diversities in which the concept  of what is capital expenditure and what is revenue arises it is well nigh impossible to formulate any general rule, even  in generality  of  cases sufficiently accurate  and  reasonably comprehensive, to draw any clear line of demarcation. Howev- er,  some broad and general tests have been  suggested  from time  to  time to ascertain on which side of  the  line  the out-lay  in any particular case might reasonably be held  to fail.  These  tests are generally efficacious and  serve  as useful servants; but as masters they tend to be  over-exact- ing. The question in each case would necessarily be  whether the  tests  relevant and significant in one set  of  circum- stances  are  relevant and significant in the case  on  hand also. [310C-F; 312G]     City of London Contract Corporation v. Styles, [1887]  2 TC  239; Vallambrosa Rubber Co. v. Farmer, [1910] 5 TC  529; British Insulated Helsby Cables Ltd. v. Atherton, [1926]  AC 205;  Assam  Bengal  Cement  Co.  Ltd.  v.  Commissioner  of Income-tax,  [1955] 27 ITR 34; Sitalpur Sugar Works Ltd.  v. Commissioner  of Income-tax, [1963] 49 ITR (SC) 160;  Laksh- miji  Sugar  Mills Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner  of  Income-tax, [1971] 82 ITR 376 (SC); Travancore-Cochin Chemicals Ltd.  v. Commissioner  of  Income-tax, [1977] 106 ITR 900  (SC);  Sun News Papers 305 Ltd.  & Associated News Papers Ltd. v. Federal  Commissioner of  Taxation,  [1938] (61) CLR 337; Regent Oil Co.  Ltd.  v. Strick, [1966] AC 295 and B.P. Australia v. Commr. of  Taxa- tion  of the Commonwealth of Australia, [1966] AC  224;  re- ferred to.     4.  The improvisation in the process and  technology  in some areas of the enterprise was supplemental to the  exist- ing  business  and  there was no material to  hold  that  it amounted to a new or fresh venture. The further circumstance that  the  agreement pertained to a product already  in  the line  of  assessee’s established business and not to  a  new product  indicates that what was stipulated was an  improve- ment  in  the  operation of the existing  business  and  its efficiency  and profitability not removed from the  area  of the day-to-day business of the assessee’s established enter- prise. [318G-H]     5. There was no material for the Tribunal to record  the finding that the assessee had obtained under the agreement a ’completely  new plant’ with a completely new process and  a completely  new technical know-how from Meiji.  Indeed,  the High Court recognised the fallacy in this assumption of  the Tribunal  that  a completely new plant was obtained  by  the assessee,  though,  however, the High Court  attributed  the inaccuracy to what it considered to be some inadvertence  or misapprehension on the part of the Tribunal in that  regard. But the High Court was inclined to the view that a complete- ly  new  process and technical know-how  was  obtained  from Meiji  under the agreement. Certain assumptions  fundamental to, and underlying, the approach of the High Court are  that the  agreement envisaged a new process and a new  technology so alien to the extent infra-structure, equipment, plant and machinery  in the assessee’s enterprise as to amount  to  an entirely new venture unconnected with and different from the line of assessee’s extant business. It is in that sense that the  expense was held not incurred for the purposes  of  the day-to-day business of the assessee but for acquiring a  new capital  asset. But mere improvement in or updating  of  the fermentation-process  would not necessarily be  inconsistent

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with  the relevance and continuing utility of  the  existing infra-structure,  machinery  and  plant  of  the   assessee. [315A-D; 317B]      The New Encyclopaedia Britannica, Micropaedia, Vol. II; Encyclopedia  of Chemical Technology, Kirk Othmen, 3rd  Edn. Vol. 2, referred to.

JUDGMENT:      CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION:  Civil Appeal No.  43(NT) of 1975. 306     From  the  Judgment  and Order dated  23.1.1974  of  the Gujarat High Court in Income Tax Reference No. 78 of 1970.     T.A.  Ramachandran, Mrs. J. Ramachandran and S.C.  Patel for the Appellant.     C.M. Lodha, M.N. Tandon and Ms. A.S. Subhashini, for the Respondent. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by     VENKATACHALIAH,  J.  This appeal by  the  assessee,  The Alembic  Chemicals  Works Co. Ltd., arises out  of  and  are directed  against the judgment dated 23.1.1974, of the  High Court of Gujarat in Income Tax Reference 78 of 1970, answer- ing  in favour of the Revenue a question of law referred  to it  under Section 256(1) of the Income Tax Act, 1961,  (Act) by the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal.     2.  On 8.6.1961, the assessee, a company engaged in  the manufacture  of antibiotics and pharmaceuticals was  granted licence for the manufacture, on its plant, of the well-known antibiotic, penicillin. In the initial years of its  venture the  assessee was able to achieve only moderate yields  from the  pencillin-producing  strains used by it  which  yielded only  about 5000 units of penicillin per millilitre  of  the culturemedium.     In the year 1963, with a view to increasing the yield of penicillin,  the assessee negotiated with M/s.  Meiji  Seika Kaishna  Limited ("Meiji" for short), a  reputed  enterprise engaged  in the manufacture of antibiotics in  Japan,  which agreed  to supply to the assessee the  requisite  technical- know-how  so  as to achieve substantially higher  levels  of performance  of  production--of more than  10,000  units  of penicillin per millilitre of ’cultured--broth’--with the aid of  better technology and process of fermentation  and  with better  yielding penicillin-strains developed by Meiji.  The negotiations  culminated  in an agreement  dated  9.10.1963, whereunder  Meiji,  in consideration of the ’once  for  all’ payment   of  50,000  U.S.  dollars  (then   equivalent   to Rs.2,39,625)  agreed  to supply to the  assessee  the  "sub- cultures  of the Meiji’s most suitable penicillin  producing strains",  the technical information, know-now and  written- description of Meiji’s process for fermentation of  penicil- lin alongwith a flow-sheet of the process on a pilot  plant; the design and specifications of the main equipments in such pilot-plant;  arrange  for  the visits to  and  training  at assessee’s expense, 307 of  technical  representatives of the  assessee  to  Meiji’s plant at Japan and to advise the assessee in the large scale manufacture  of penicillin for a period limited to  2  years from the effective date of the agreement. It was also stipu- lated  that the technical know-how supplied by Meiji was  to be  kept confidential and secret by the assessee  which  was prohibited  from  parting  with the  technical  know-how  in favour of others or to seek any patent for the process.

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   3.  In the proceedings for assessment to Income-tax  for the  assessment-year  1964-65  the  assessee  claimed   that Rs.2,39,625 paid under the agreement to ’Meiji’ was one laid out  wholly and exclusively for the purpose of the  business and  claimed  its deduction as a  revenue  expenditure.  The Income-tax Officer, on the view that the expenditure was for the  acquisition  of an asset or advantage  of  an  enduring benefit,  held  it to be a capital outlay and  declined  the deduction.  This  view was affirmed by the  Appellate  Asst. Commissioner in the assessee’s first appeal.     The  Income-tax  Appellate  Tribunal,  Ahmedabad  Bench, dismissed  the further appeal of the assessee  holding  that the  arrangements with Meiji envisaged the setting-up  of  a large commercial plant for the production of the  antibiotic modelled  on the lines of the pilot-plant and  that,  there- fore,  the  out-lay could not be treated as  an  expenditure laid-out  on and for purposes of the existing business,  but must be regarded as one incurred for a new venture on a  new process  with a new technology on a new type of  plant.  The Tribunal  held that the payment was ’once for  all  payment’ and  was  made for the acquisition of a capital  asset.  The Tribunal inter-alia held:                        "The sub-cultures and the information               design  and flow sheet etc., were to  be  fur-               nished  once  for all. Meiji  also  agreed  to               advise  the assessee in respect of any  diffi-               culty  the assessee may encounter in  applying               the  subcultures and informations obtained  by               the  assessee  from Meiji to the  large  scale               manufacture of penicillin. It is apparent from               the agreement and the correspondence which has               been made available to us that Meiji agreed to               give  the designs etc., not only for  a  pilot               plant  but for the manufacture  of  penicillin               according  to  Meiji’s process  on  commercial               scale.  The  assessee has to put in  a  larger               plant modelled on the pilotplant."                     " .........  It is in consideration  for               Meiji’s agreeing to               308               supply  the assessee with complete details  of               the  technical know-how, the  design,  subcul-               tures, flow sheet and written descriptions  of               the  process  once for all that  the  assessee               paid to Meiji the stipulated sum of $ 50,000."                        "   .........  It would  thus  appear               that  the  payment was made  for  acquiring  a               capital asset in the shape of technical  know-               how  and other allied information. It was  not               made  in  the  course of carrying  out  of  an               existing business of the assessee but was  for               the  purpose of setting up a new plant  and  a               new process. It would, therefore, appear  that               the  revenue authorities have rightly  treated               the payment as of capital nature."                        "   .....   The  process  which   the               assessee took over from Meiji was not the same               as  it was working heretofore. In the  present               case  the outlay was incurred for  a  complete               replacement  of the equipment of the  business               inasmuch  us a new process with a new type  of               plant was to be put up in place of old process               and old plant  ..................."               (Underlining Supplied)                   4.  At  the instance of the  assessee  the

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             Tribunal  stated a case and referred the  fol-               lowing question of law for the opinion of  the               High Court:                         "Whether the sum of Rs.2,39,625  was               a revenue expenditure admissible to the asses-               see  for  the purpose of  computation  of  its               total income?"                   The  High  Court  by  the  judgment  under               appeal  answered the question in the  negative               and  against  the assessee. This part  of  the               judgment is assailed by the assessee in CA  43               of 1975.                   5.  The  reasoning of the  High  Court  in               support of its conclusion was on the following               lines:               "  ....  It is true that the  expenditure  was               manifestly laid out for the purpose of obtain-               ing  benefits and advantages such as  sub-cul-               tures of penicillin producing strains,  design               of a pilot and exchange of technical personnel               with  a  view to acquiring know-how.  But  the               finding of the Tribunal, as we               309               read it, is that all the benefits which asses-               see  received  under the agreement were  as  a               part  of the transaction which was  undertaken               with  the ultimate view of a setting-up a  new               plant and a new process. In view of the  find-               ings  recorded by the Tribunal, no  conclusion               other  than that the expenditure was  incurred               once and for all with a view to bringing  into               existence an asset or advantage for the endur-               ing benefit of the manufacturing trade of  the               assessee  is  possible.  The  expenditure  was               incurred  for  introducing a  new  process  of               manufacturing and with a view to installing  a               new  plant, even if not immediately then at  a               later  stage, and on that conclusion the  only               possible answer to the first question referred               to  us can be in the negative and against  the               assessee."               (Emphasis Supplied)                   Before  the High Court, the assessee  also               moved  an application under Section 256(2)  of               the  Act--ITA No. 24 of 1971--for a  direction               to  the Tribunal to refer another question  of               law, also stated to arise out of the order  of               the  Tribunal. The question of law  respecting               which  the supplementary reference was  sought               was this:                         "Whether  there was any evidence  or               material before the Tribunal to hold that  (1)               a  completely new plant with a completely  new               process  and  new technical know-how  was  ob-               tained by the assessee from Messrs Meiji under               the  said agreement, dated 9.10.1963; and  (2)               to  work  out that process separate  plant  or               machinery  had  to be  designed,  constructed,               installed and operated? The High Court dismissed this application observing that the Tribunal had no where recorded a finding to the effect  that a  completely  new plant was obtained by the  assessee  from Meiji  and that the finding of the Tribunal that  under  the agreement the assessee had obtained a new process and a  new technical  know-now  from Meiji was  not  without  evidence.

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Against  the dismissal of ITA 24 of 1971 by the High  Court, the assessee has preferred Civil Appeal No. 44 of 1975.     6. On 24.2.1987, this Court while directing the Tribunal to  draw up a supplementary statement of the case and  refer for  the opinion of this Court the further question  of  law which,  according to the assessee, arose out of  the  Tribu- nal’s  order and which was the subject-matter of the  asses- see’s appeal in C.A. 44 of 1975, however, disposed of that 310 appeal formally, leaving the question of law arising out  of the  supplemental reference to be considered in the  present appeal  i.e. CA No. 43 of 1975. The Tribunal has since  sub- mitted  the  supplementary  statement of the  case  and  has referred  that  question of law also. This is how  both  the questions of law, are now before us. While in regard to  the first  question the correctness of the opinion  rendered  by the High Court requires to be examined, the second  question has  to be answered for the first-time as the  reference  is called by this court directly.     7. We have heard Shri T.A. Ramachandran, learned  Senior Counsel  for  the assessee and Shri  Lodha,  learned  senior counsel for the revenue.     In  computing  the  income  chargeable  under  the  head "Profits and Gains of Business or Profession", section 37 of the ’Act’ enables the deduction of any expenditure  laid-out or  expended wholly and exclusively for the purpose  of  the business or profession, as the case may be. The fact that an item  of expenditure is wholly and exclusively laid-out  for purposes  of the business, by itself, is not  sufficient  to entitle its allowance in computing the income chargeable  to tax.  In  addition,  the expenditure should not  be  in  the nature of a capital-expenditure. In the infinite variety  of situational  diversities  in which the concept  of  what  is capital  expenditure and what is revenue arises it  is  well nigh  impossible  to  formulate any  general-rule,  even  in generality  of  cases sufficiently accurate  and  reasonably comprehensive, to draw any clear line of demarcation. Howev- er,  some broad and general tests have been  suggested  from time  to  time to ascertain on which side of  the  line  the out-lay  in any particular case might reasonably be held  to fall.  These  tests are generally efficacious and  serve  as useful servants; but as masters they tend to be  over-exact- ing.     One of the early pronouncements which serves to indicate a  broad  area  of distinction is City  of  London  Contract Corporation  v. Styles, [1887] 2 T.C. 239 where Bowen,  L.J. indicated  that the out-lay on the "acquisition of the  con- cern"  would be capital while an outlay in "carrying-on  the concern"  is revenue. In Vallambrosa Rubber Co.  v.  Farmer, [1910] 5 TC 529 Lord Dunedin suggested as ’not a bad  crite- rion’ the test that if the expenditure is ’once for all’  it is  capital  and if it is ’going to recur every year  it  is revenue. In the oft quoted case on the subject, viz, British Insulated  Helsby  Cables Ltd. v. Atherton,  [1926]  AC  205 Viscount Cave L.C. said: "But when an expenditure is made, not only once and for 311               all,  but with a view to bringing into  exist-               ence an asset or an advantage for the enduring               benefit  of trade, I think that there is  very               good reason (in the absence of special circum-               stances leading to an opposite conclusion) for               treating  such  an  expenditure  as   properly               attributable not to revenue but to capital."                   .8.  In  Assam Bengal Cement Co.  Ltd.  v.

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             Commissioner  of Income-tax, [1955]27 ITR  34,               this Court observed:               "If  the expenditure is made for acquiring  or               bringing into existence an asset or  advantage               for the enduring benefit of the business it is               properly attributable to capital and is of the               nature of capital expenditure. If on the other               hand it is made not for the purpose of  bring-               ing into existence any such asset or advantage               but  for  running the business or  working  it               with  a view to produce the profits, it  is  a               revenue expenditure."                         "The aim and object of the  expendi-               ture  would  determine the  character  of  the               expenditure  whether it is a capital  expendi-               ture or a revenue expenditure."     In Sitalpur Sugar Works Ltd. v. Commissioner of  Income- tax, [1963] 49 ITR (SC) 160; Lakshmiji Sugar Mills Co.  Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax, [1971] 82 ITR 376 (SC) and in Travancore-Cochin Chemicals Ltd. v. Commissioner of  Income- tax,  [1977] 106 ITR 900 (SC) the enunciation made in  Assam Bengal  Cement  Company’s case [1955] 27 ITR  34,  which  in turn,  referred  with  approval to Lord  Cave’s  dictum  was affirmed.     In Sun News Papers Ltd. & Associated News Papers Ltd. v. Federal Commissioner of Taxation, [1938] 61 CLR 337 Dixon  J while  indicating that the distinction between  revenue  and capital corresponds with the distinction between the  "busi- ness entity, structure or organisation set up or established for the earning of profit" on the one hand and "the  process by  which  such an organization operates to  obtain  regular returns" on the other, however, went on to say that:               "The business structure or entity or organiza-               tion  may  assume any of  an  almost  infinite               variety  of shapes and it may be difficult  to               comprehend under one description all the forms               in which it may be manifested  ....  "               312               The learned judge further observed:               "  .....  There are, I think, three matters to               be considered, (a) the character of the advan-               tage sought, and in this its lasting qualities               may play a part, (b) the manner in which it is               to  be  used, relied upon or enjoyed,  and  in               this and under the former head recurrence  may               play  its  part and (c) the means  adopted  to               obtain it; that is, by providing a  periodical               reward or outlay to cover its use or enjoyment               for  periods commensurate with the payment  or               by  making a final provision or payment so  as               to secure future use or enjoyment  .....  "     9. In Regent Oil Co. Ltd. v. Strick, [1966] AC 295  Lord Reid emphasised the futility of a strict application of  and exclusive  dependence on any single principle in the  search for the true-position and pointed out the difficulty arising from  taking  too literally the general statements  made  in earlier cases and seeking to apply them to a different  case which  their  authors certainly did not have  in  mind.  The Learned Lord also identified as another source of difficulty the  tendency in some cases to treat some one  criterion  as paramount and to press it to its logical conclusion  without proper  regard to the other factors in the case.  Lord  Reid further said:               "So  it is not surprising that no one test  or               principle  or rule of thumb is paramount.  The

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             question  is ultimately a question of law  for               the  court,  but is a question which  must  be               answered in the fight of all the circumstances               which  it is reasonable to take into  account,               and  the weight which must be given to a  par-               ticular circumstance in a particular case must               depend  rather on common sense than on  strict               application of any single legal principle."     The  question in each case would necessarily be  whether the  tests  relevant and significant in one set  of  circum- stances  are  relevant and significant in the case  on  hand also. Judicial metaphors, it is truly said, are narrowly  to be  watched,  for, starting as devices to  liberate  thought they end often by enslaving it. The non-determinative quali- ty, by itself, of any particular test is highlighted in B.P. Australia  v.  Commr.  of Taxation of  the  Commonwealth  of Australia, [1966] AC 224. Lord Pearce said:               "The  solution  to the problem is  not  to  be               found by               313               any  rigid test or description. It has  to  be               derived from many aspects of the whole set  of               circumstances  some of which may point in  one               direction,  some in the other. One  considera-               tion  may point so clearly that  it  dominates               other  and vaguer indications in the  contrary               direction.  It is a common sense  appreciation               of all the guiding features which must provide               the ultimate answer  ....  "               (Emphasis Supplied)     The  idea of ’once for all’ payment and ’enduring  bene- fit’  are not to be treated as something akin  to  statutory conditions; nor are the notions of "capital" or "revenue"  a judical  fetish.  What is capital expenditure  and  what  is revenue are not eternal varities but must needs be  flexible so  as  to  respond to the changing  economic  realities  of business. The expression "asset or advantage of an  enduring nature" was evolved to emphasise the element of a sufficient degree  of durability appropriate to the context. The  words of  Rich J. in Herring v. Federal Commissioner of  Taxation, 1946.72 CLR 543, dealing with an analogous provision in sec. 51  of  Income-tax Assessment Act of Australia  may  be  re- called.               "   .......   Lord  Cave L.C.,  in  using  the               phrase ’enduring benefit’ in British Insulated               and Helsby Cables Ltd. v. Atherton, 1926  A.C.               205,213  (HL), was not thinking of  advantages               that  are  permanent. There  is  a  difference               between  the lasting and the everlasting.  The               time  over  which  the thing  ’endures’  is  a               matter  of degree and one element only  to  be               considered.  Horses in the old days and  motor               trucks  in  these  days are  plant  and  their               acquisition  for the purpose of  transport  in               business  usually involves a capital  expendi-               ture.  But  the horses were not  immortal  any               more   than   the  trucks   have   proved   to               be  .........  "                   10.  Shri Ramachandran submitted that  the               approach  to the question by the Tribunal  was               influenced  by  an erroneous  assumption  that               Meiji’s agreement envisaged the imperative  of               a  totally new plant, for the exploitation  of               Meiji’s   improved  fermentation   technology.               Learned  counsel invited our attention to  the

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             following passage in the order of the Tribunal               where this postulate is found:                         "On the other hand, a completely new               plant  with  a completely new  process  and  a               completely new technical know-how was obtained               by the assessee from Meiji and it               314               was in consideration of obtaining this techni-               cal  know-how that the assessee made the  pay-               ment of $ 50,000."     Shri Ramachandran submitted that the Tribunal had failed to  take  into account that even before the  agreement,  the assessee had set up a plant for the production of penicillin at  an out-lay of more Rs.66 lakhs and that the  purpose  of the agreement with Meiji was only to increase the yield;  of penicillin and that no new venture envisaging the setting up of  a new plant was ever intended by the assessee. The  pro- duction  of  penicillin which was the  established  line  of business  of the assessee, says learned counsel, was  to  be improved upon with the use of an improved process of fermen- tation  with new penicillin producing strains  isolated  and developed  by  Meiji  so as to increase the  unit  yield  of penicillin per milli-litre of the culture-medium. The supply of the technical know-how and the flow sheet of the  process and  the  written description of the specifications  of  the pilot plant from Meiji were incidental to and for the effec- tive exploitation of the high penicillin yielding strains of the culture to be supplied by Meiji. Learned counsel submit- ted that the whole range of the operations envisaged by  the agreement,  pertained  to the area of  the  "profit  earning process"   and   not  the  "profit  earning   machinery   or apparatus". The cost relationship between what was  involved in  the improvisation of the process and the  investment  on the  plant  did,  says counsel,  indicate  that  the  extant "profit earning machinery" was not sought to be  supplanted. Learned  counsel also urged that there was no  material  for the  Tribunal to hold that the use of new process and  tech- nology  from Meiji amounted to a new venture not already  in the  line  of the assessee’s existing business  or  that  it required  the  erection of a new plant discarding  and  sup- planting  the  huge  investment  already  existing.  Learned counsel  submitted that it was no body’s case that with  the introduction  of  the  Meiji process  of  fermentation  with improved penicillin strains the existing plant and machinery of  over Rs.66 lakhs had become obsolete and  irrelevant  or that the assessee had had to set up an altogether new  plant to work out the improvised Meiji-process of fermentation.     Learned  counsel  for the Revenue,  however,  sought  to maintain  that  all the criteria relevant  to  the  question indicated  that  the assessee had acquired a  new  technical know-how for a new process which required the setting-up  of a  new  plant.  There was, according to Shri  Lodha,  a  new venture based on a new technology and know-how of  unlimited duration  which  required  a new plant  for  its  commercial exploitation. There were, according to Shri Lodha, both  the acquisition of 315 an enduring asset, and the commencement of a new venture.     11. On a consideration of the matter we are persuaded to hold  that there was no material for the Tribunal to  record the finding that the assessee had obtained under the  agree- ment a ’completely new plant’ with a completely new  process and a completely new technical know-how from Meiji.  Indeed, the High Court recognised the fallacy in this assumption  of the Tribunal that a completely new plant was obtained by the

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assessee,  though,  however, the High Court  attributed  the inaccuracy to what it considered to be some inadvertence  or misapprehension on the part of the Tribunal in that  regard. But the High Court was inclined to the view that a complete- ly  new  process and technical know-how  was  obtained  from Meiji  under the agreement. Certain assumptions  fundamental to, and underlying, the approach of the High Court are  that the agreement dated 9.10.1963 envisaged a new process and  a new-technology so alien to the extant infrastructure, equip- ment, plant and machinery in the assessee’s enterprise as to amount  to  an entirely a new venture unconnected  with  and different from the line of assessee’s extant business. It is in that sense that the expense was held not incurred for the purposes of the day to day business of the assessee but  for acquiring a new capital asset.     12.  The business of the assessee from the  commencement of its plant in 1961, it is undisputed, was the  manufacture of penicillin. Even after the agreement the product manufac- tured  continued to be penicillin. The agreement with  Meiji stipulated  the supply of the "most  suitable  sub-cultures" evolved  by Meiji for purposes of augmentation of the  unit- yield  of  penicillin milli-litres  of  the  culture-medium. Scientific  literature  on the bio-synthesis  of  penicillin indicates  that  penicillin is derived from  a  fermentation process. Some penicillins are obtained from direct fermenta- tion  and some others by a combination of  fermentation  and subsequent   chemical  manipulation  of   the   fermentation product.  The manufacturing process, it is stated,  consists of four processes: Fermentation, isolation, chemical modifi- cation  and  finishing.  Referring to the  common  basis  of commercial production of penicillin in the New Encyclopaedia Britannica, (Micropaedia, Vol. VII) it is mentioned:                       "penicillin, antibiotic, the discovery               of  which  in 1928 by  Sir  Alexander  Fleming               marked  the  beginning of  the  antibioticera.               Fleming observed that colonies of Staphylococ-               cus   aureus  (the  pus-producing   bacterium)               failed  to  grow in those areas of  a  culture               that had been accidentally contaminated               316               by  the green mold Penicillium notatum.  After               isolating the mold, he found that it  produced               a  substance  capable of killing many  of  the               common bacteria that infect human beings. This               antibacterial substance, to which Fleming gave               the  name penicillin, was liberated  into  the               fluid in which the mold was grown. This  proc-               ess is the basis of all commercial  production               of penicillin  .......  "                                               (p.       850)               (Emphasis Supplied)                   In  Encyclopedia  of  Chemical  technology               (Kirk  Othmer)  III Edn. Vol. 2  it  is  found               mentioned:               "   ....  The specific characteristics of  the               industrial   microbial  strains,  media,   and               fermentation conditions cannot be described in               detail since these facts are considered  trade               secrets.  The origin of strains,  and  general               principles  of culture maintenance,  fermenta-               tion equipment, innoculum preparation,  media,               and  fermentation  conditions  for  penicillin               and  cephalosporin  production,   are   public               knowledge and are reviewed here. ..........................

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                      Fleming’s   original  strain  of   P.               notatum   provided   only   low   yields    of               penicillin  ..............  Superior  penicil-               lin  producing strain of P.  chrysogenum  have               since  been  obtained by random  screening  of               variant strains following mutation  induction.               All of the present day high-yielding industri-               al  strains are descendants of the  NRRL  1951               strain.........."               "Once a high-yielding strain has been  isolat-               ed,  it  is  essential that  the  organism  be               maintained  so  that  it  remains  viable  and               capable  of  producing the antibiotic  at  its               original  rate (54)  ...........  Under  suit-               able  conditions highyielding strains  can  be               preserved  for  many  years  without  loss  of               viability       or        antibiotic-producing               ability  .....  "               (p. 899-90)     We  are  inclined to agree with Shri  Ramachandran  that there was no material for the Tribunal to hold that the area of improvisation was not a part of the existing business  or that the entire gamut of the 317 existing manufacturing operations for the commercial produc- tion  of  penicillin in the assessee’s  existing  plant  had become obsolete or inappropriate in relation to the  exploi- tation of the new sub-cultures of the high yielding  strains of penicillin supplied by Meiji and that the mere  introduc- tion  of the new bio-synthetic source required the  erection and  commissioning  of a totally new and different  type  of plant and machinery. Shri Ramachandran is again fight in the submission  that the mere improvement in or updating of  the fermentation-process  would not necessarily be  inconsistent with  the relevance and continuing utility of  the  existing infra-structure, machinery and plant of the assessee.     13.  It would, in our opinion, be unrealistic to  ignore the  rapid  advances  in Researches  in  antibiotic  medical microbiology  and to attribute a degree of endurability  and permanance to the technical know-how at any particular stage in this fast changing area of medical science. The state  of the Art in some of these areas of high priority. research is constantly updated so that the know-how cannot be said to be the element of the requisite degree of durability and  none- phemerality to share the requirements. and qualifications of an  enduring capitalasset. The rapid strides in science  and technology  in  the field should make us a little  slow  and circumspect in too readily pigeon-holing an outlay, such  as this  as capital. The circumstance that the agreement in  so far as it placed limitations on the right of the assessee in dealing  with  the know-how and the conditions  as  to  non- partibility,  confidentiality  and secrecy of  the  know-how incline towards the inference that the right pertained  more to  the use of the know-how than to its  exclusive  acquisi- tion.     In  the present case, the principal reason  that  influ- enced  the option of the High Court was that the  initiation and exploitation of the new-process brought in their wake  a new  venture  requiring  an altogether  new  plant.  We  are afraid,  this view may not be justified. Clauses 2, 4 and  6 of the agreement provide:                         "(2) For and in consideration of the               subcultures,  design, flow sheet  and  written               description to be furnished by Meiji to  ALEM-               BIC PURSUANT to paragraph (1) hereof,  Alembic

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             shall pay to MEIJI in advance and in lump sum,               such  as  amount as MEIJI is able  to  collect               Fifty thousand U.S. Dollars ($ 50,000) net  in               Tokyo after deducting any taxes and charges to               be imposed in India upon MEIJI with respect to               the said payment to MEIJI."               318               "4.  MEIJI  will give advice,  to  the  extent               considered  necessary be MEIJI, on any  diffi-               culty  ALEMBIC may encounter in  applying  the               subcultures and informations obtained by ALEM-               BIC from MEIJI to the large scale manufacture.               The  above provision shall be in  force  after               MEIJI’s  receipt  of the amount set  forth  in               paragraph (2) hereof until the end of two  (2)               years  from the effective date of this  agree-               ment  ..."               "(6)  Any of the subcultures and  informations               obtained  by ALEMBIC from MEIJI shall  be  re-               garded as strictly confidential by ALEMBIC and               its  personnel  and shall be used  by  ALEMBIC               only  in its Penicillin G plant in India,  and               shall  not be disclosed to any  other  person,               firm  or  agency,  governmental  or   private.               Alembic  shall  take all reasonable  steps  to               ensure  that such subcultures and  information               will  not be communicated. ALEMBIC shall  take               all  possible precautions against  the  escape               from its premises of the strain obtained  from               MEIJI of propagated therefrom.               ALEMBIC shall not apply for any patent to  any               country in relation to any of the  subcultures               and  information  obtained  by  ALEMBIC   from               MEIJI."               As notified earlier the Tribunal in the course               of its order, held:               "   ......  Meiji agreed to give  the  designs               etc.,  not only for a pilot plant but for  the               manufacture of penicillin according to Meiji’s               process on commercial scale. The assessee  has               to  put  in  a larger plant  modelled  on  the               pilotplant."               (Emphasis Supplied)     Having regard to the terms of Clause 4 of the agreement, this conclusion is non-sequitur.     The improvisation in the process and technology in  some areas  of  the enterprise was supplemental to  the  existing business and there was no material to hold that it  amounted to a new or fresh venture. The further circumstance that the agreement  pertained  to a product already in  the  line  of assessee’s  established  business and not to a  new  product indicates that what was stipulated was an improvement in the operations  of the existing business and its efficiency  and profitability  not removed from the area of the day  to  day business of the assessee’s established enterprise. 319     14.  It appears to us that the answer to  the  questions referred  should be on the basis that the  financial  outlay under the agreement was for the better conduct and  improve- ment of the existing business and should, therefore, be held to  be a revenue expenditure. Reference may also be made  to the  observations  of this Court in C.I.T.v. CIBA  of  India Ltd., [1968] 2 SCR 696 at 705.     There  is also no single definitive criterion which,  by itself,  is  determinative whether a  particular  outlay  is

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capital or revenue. The ’once for all’ payment test is  also inconclusive. What is relevant is the purpose of the  outlay and its intended object and effect, considered in a  common- sense  way  having regard to the business  realities.  In  a given case, the test of ’enduring benefit’ might break-down. In  Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay v. Associated  Cement Co. Ltd., (JT 282 2 287 at 290) this Court said:               "  .....  As observed by the Supreme Court  in               the  decision in Empire Jute Co. Ltd. v.  Com-               missioner    of   Income-Tax,    [1980]    124               I.T.R.S.C.p.  1 that there may be cases  where               expenditure, even if incurred for obtaining an               advantage  of enduring benefit, may, none  the               less,  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               principles  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  ......  "     15. In the result, for the foregoing reasons the  appeal succeeds and is allowed and the question of law referred  to the  High Court for its opinion in Income Tax Reference  No. 78  of 1970 is answered in the affirmative and  against  the revenue. The judgment under appeal is set-aside.,      Likewise,  the supplementary question of law raised  in ITA  24 of 1971 before the High Court and  now  constituting the  subject-matter of the supplementary reference  made  by the  Tribunal to this Court is answered in the negative  and against Revenue. The  appeal is accordingly allowed, but with no order as  to costs. G.N.                                            Appeal   al- lowed. 320