17 November 1976
Supreme Court
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COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, MADRAS Vs R.M. CHIDAMBARAM PILLAI ETC.

Bench: KRISHNAIYER,V.R.
Case number: Appeal Civil 17 of 1972


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PETITIONER: COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, MADRAS

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: R.M. CHIDAMBARAM PILLAI ETC.

DATE OF JUDGMENT17/11/1976

BENCH: KRISHNAIYER, V.R. BENCH: KRISHNAIYER, V.R. KHANNA, HANS RAJ

CITATION:  1977 AIR  489            1977 SCR  (2) 111  1977 SCC  (1) 431  CITATOR INFO :  F          1988 SC1435  (34)  RF         1991 SC1806  (8)

ACT:             Income  Tax  Act, 1922--S.  16(1)(b)--Income  Tax  Rules         1922--r.  24 Scope of--             Assessees  partners in firms owning tea estates   Salary         paid to partners  If whole salary exigible to tax.

HEADNOTE:             Rule 24 of the Income Tax Rules, 1922 states that income         derived  from the sale of tea grown and manufactured by  the         seller  shall be computed as if it were income derived  from         business  and 40 per cent of such income shall be deemed  to         be income, profits and gains liable to tax.             The  respondents were partners in firms which owned  tea         estates, the composite income of which consisted largely  of         agricultural  and  partly of   nonagricultural  income.   In         addition  to  their share in profits, the  respondents  were         entitled  to  salaries.   Rejecting the  contention  of  the         respondents that only 40% of the salaries which fell  within         the  non-agricultural income is exigible to tax and not  the         whole  income, the Income Tax Officer charged the  whole  of         their  salaries  to tax under s. 10 of the Income  Tax  Act,         1922.   The Appellate Asstt. Commissioner held in favour  of         the  respondents; but on appeal the Appellate Tribunal  held         in  favour of the Revenue.  The High Court allowed  the  re-         spondents’ appeal.         Dismissing the appeal to this Court,             HELD: Only 40 per cent of the income from the tea  sales         is taxable; the balance, namely, 60 per cent is agricultural         and  exempt.  60 per cent of the salaries to partners  comes         out  of this exempted gross sum and shares the  benefit  and         the Central Income-tax cannot break into its  inviolability.         [116 B]             1.  (a) The salary of a partner is but an alias for  the         return by way of profits, for the human capital.  The  imme-         diate reason for payment of salary was service contract  but         the causa causans is partnership.  [121 F]             (b)  A  partnership  is only a  collective  of  separate         persons and not a legal person in itself.  The salary stipu-         lated to be paid to a partner from the firm is in reality  a

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       mode of division of the firms profits.  [117 H]             (c)  In the income tax law a firm is a unit  of  assess-         ment,  by  special  provisions, but is not  a  full  person.         Since contract of employment requires two distinct  persons,         namely,  the  employer and the employee, there cannot  be  a         contract  of service. between a firm and one of  ,its  part-         ners.   Any  agreement  for remuneration of  a  partner  for         taking part in the conduct of the business must be  regarded         as  portion of the profits being made over as a  reward  for         the human capital brought in.  [113 F-G]         Lindley on Partnership referred to.             Dulichand,  [1956]  S.C.R. 154 and  Narayanappa,  A.I.R.         1966 S.C. 1303. followed.             (d) Payment of salary to a partner represents a  special         share. of the profits and is, therefore, part of the profits         and taxable as such.  Section 10(4)(b) stipulates according-         ly.  [114 A]             (2)  Under s. 16(1)(b) in computing the total income  of         an  assessee, when the assessee is a partner of a firm,  his         share shall be taken to be, any salary payable to him by the         firm increased or decreased respectively by his share in         112         the  balance  of the profit or loss of the  firm  after  the         deduction of any interest, salary etc. payable to any  part-         ner.  It is implicit that the share income of partner  takes         in his salary.  [114 F & H]             (3)  The portion of profits from tea sales by a  grower,         which  is  agricultural, is  insulated  from  incidence  and         exaction  by r. 24, which means that by that modus  operandi         60 per cent of the total income is set aside as representing         the agricultural sector, and the salary to partners paid out         of  it, being only profits, enjoys the same  invulnerability         to  exigibility that r. 24 confers on the agrarian  portion.         [115 B-C]             Karimtharuvi  Tea  Estates  [1963]  Supp.  1,  SCR  823,         Anglo-.American  Direct Tea Trading Co. [1968] 69  ITR  667,         671 and Tea Estate India [1976] 103 ITR 785, 795 applied.         Mathew Abraham [2964] 51 I.T.R. 467 overruled.

JUDGMENT:             CIVIL  APPELLATE JURISDICTION :Civil Appeals Nos. 17  to         21 of 1976.             (From  the  Judgment and Order dated the  5th  December,         1969 of the Madras High Court in Tax Cases Nos. 114 & 115 of         1964-Ref. Nos. 48 and 49 of 1964)         B.B. Ahuja and R.N. Sachthey for the Appellant.         S.  Swaminathan and Mrs. Saroja Gopalakrishnan for  Respond-         ents.         The Judgment of the Court was delivered by             KRISHNA IYER, J. A fine point of law, which lends itself         to  subtle spinning of gossamer webs of argument, falls  for         decision  in these appeals by certificate.  Were the  policy         of the law been plain, the language should have been clearer         and  the  labours  of courts could have  been  lesser.   The         arguments  have been exhaustive, the precedents,  in  profu-         sion,  cited to the point of no return and the  short  issue         expanded into learned length; but, at the end of the  foren-         sic  journey, we are hesitantly inclined to leave the  judg-         ment under appeal undisturbed as the law set out therein has         better appeal and theoretical soundness than the rival  view         point  well-presented by Sri Ahuja for the appellant  (Reve-         nue).   The  planning  and pruning of case  law  is  perhaps         necessary  if  time-consuming court proceedings  are  to  be

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       curbed.   ’All our life is crushed by the weight  of  words:         the weight of deed’, said Luingi Pirandello.  Heavy case-law         must not clog judicial navigation.             Next to abbreviate statement of the facts which  project         the  legal issue canvassed before us.  Two tea estates  were         owned  by two firms with several partners, two of whom  were         the respondents, in the two sets of appeals, C. As. 17 to 19         and  C.  As. 20 & 21 of 1972.  The tea sold  yielded  income         composite  in  character,  being  largely  agricultural  and         partly non-agricultural.  The  complex  situation  of appor-         tionment  between the two heads for purposes  of  income-tax         has  been taken care of by rule 24 of the Income-tax  Rules,         both the firms having been registered under the Act.             The  respondents-partners  were, in  addition  to  their         share  in profits, entitled to salaries for  services  under         the  firms.  The sole controversy turns on whether the  sums         so drawn as salaries were wholly         113         liable  to income-tax or only to the extent of  40%  thereof         which  fell within the non-agricultural sector.   Until  the         assessment  year ending with March 31, 1959, the  income-tax         was  so assessed that the whole of the  agricultural  income         i.e.,  60%  of  the  total income, was  out  of  bounds  for         income-tax  (which included 60% of the salaries of  the  re-         spondent partners).  But, for the years 1959/60 and 1960/61,         the  two assessment years involved in these appeals, a  dif-         ferent course was followed.  The mechanics is simple but the         bone of contention between the Revenue and the assessees  is         as  to  whether  any portion of the salaries  so  drawn  for         services rendered are at all agricultural income to be  non-         exigible to income-tax.             Departing  from the previous practice and in ’the  pres-         cient light of the law later laid down in Mathew Abraham(1),         the whole salary was subjected by the Income-tax Officer  to         income-tax  as income from other sources in terms of  s.  10         [The Income-tax Officer had almost anticipated Mathew  Abra-         ham(1)].  This computation was contested successfully before         the  Appellate  Assistant  Commissioner  but  that  decision         suffered a reversal before the Appellate Tribunal since,  by         then,  Mathew Abraham (supra) had been decided in favour  of         the  Revenue.  The case escalated to the High Court where  a         full Bench upset the earlier view and upheld the  exclusion-         ary  argument  of the assessees.  The  Revenue  has  arrived         before  us to assail the interpretation of S. 10(4) (b),  r.         24  and  of  other provisions the High  Court  has  adopted.         There  is  plausibility in both approaches but,  after  some         reflection on the scheme as expressed in the statutory text,         we are disposed to affirm the decision under appeal.  If the         intendment  of a legislation misfires in  court,  competency         being granted, the answer is amendment, not more litigation.             First  principles  plus  the bare text  of  the  statute         furnish the best guidelight to understanding the message and         meaning of the provisions of law.  Thereafter, the sophisti-         cated exercises in precedents and booklore.  Here the  first         thing  that  we  must grasp is that a firm is  not  a  legal         person  even though it has some attributes  of  personality.         Partnership  is  a  certain relation  between  persons,  the         product  of agreement to share the profits  of  a  business.         ’Firm’  is  a collective noun. a compendious  expression  to         designate an entity, not a person.  in income-tax law a firm         is a unit of assessment, by special provisions, but is not a         full  person;  which  leads to the next step  that  since  a         contract of employment requires two distinct persons,  viz.,         the employer and the employee, there cannot be a contract of         service, in strict law, between a firm and one of its  part-

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       ners.   So that any agreement for remuneration of a  partner         for  taking  part  in the conduct of the  business  must  be         regarded  as  portion of the profits being made  over  as  a         reward for the human capital brought in.  Section 13 of  the         Partnership Act brings into focus this basis of  partnership         business.             This  legal ideology expresses itself in the  Income-tax         Act in s. 10 (4) (b) and s. 16 (1) (b).  A firm, partner and         partnership, according to s. 2(6B) of the Act bear the  same         sense  as  in the Partnership Act. The taxable income  of  a         firm has to be its business profits, as         51 I.T.R. 467.         9 ----1458SCI/76         114         provided  in  s. 10(1), 10(2)and 10(4).  What  is  the  real         nature  of the salary paid to a partner visa vis the  income         of  the firm?  On principle, payment of salary to a  partner         represents  a special share of the profits and is  therefore         part  of the profits and taxable as such. And s.  10(4)  (b)         stipulates accordingly. Maybe, we may usefully read here  s.         10(1) and 10(4) to the extent relevant:                             "10(1)  The tax shall be payable  by  an                       assessee under the head ’Profits and gains  of                       business,  profession or vocation’ in  respect                       of  the  profit  or  gains  of  any  business,                       profession or vocation carried on by him.                       x        x        x        x         x                             (4)  Nothing in  clause (ix) or   clause                       (xv)  of  subsection (2) shall  be  deemed  to                       authorise  the  allowance of any sum  paid  on                       account of any cess, rate or tax levied on the                       profits  or gains of any business,  profession                       or vocation or assessed at a proportion of  or                       otherwise on the basis of any such profits  or                       gains;   and   nothing  in  clause   (xv)   of                       subsection (2) shall be deemed to authorise--                       x        x        x        x         x                             (b)  any  allowance in  respect  of  any                       payment by way of interest, salary, commission                       or remuneration made by a firm to any  partner                       of the firm;                       x        x        x        x         x             It is plain that salaries  paid to partners  are regard-         ed   by  the Income-tax Act as retaining  the  character  of         profits  and not excludible from the tax net,  whatever  the         reason  behind it be.  The procedure for computation of  the         total  income of a partner, found in s. 16(1) (b) also  fits         into this understanding of the law behind the law.   Section         16 (relevant part) reads thus:                       "16(1)  In  computing the total income  of  an                       assessee--                       x        x        x        x         x                             (b) When the assessee is a partner of  a                       firm, then, whether the firm has made a profit                       or a  loss,  his  share (whether a net  profit                       or a net loss shall be taken to be any salary,                       interest,  commission  or  other  remuneration                       payable  to him by the firm in respect of  the                       previous    year   increased   or    decreased                       respectively  by his share in the  balance  of                       the  profit  or  loss of the  firm  after  the                       deduction of any interest, salary,  commission                       or  other remuneration payable to any  partner                       in respect of the previous year:                       Provided  that of his share so computed  is  a

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                     loss,  such  loss may be set  off  or  carried                       forward  and  set off in accordance  with  the                       provisions of section 24;"         The anatomy of the provision is obvious, even if the  expla-         nation  or  motivation for it may be more than one.   It  is         implicit  that the share income of the partner takes in  his         salary.  The telling test-is that where a firm suffers  loss         the salaried partner’s share in it goes to depress his share         of  income. Surely, therefore, salary is a  different  label         for profits, in the context of a partner’s remuneration.         115         The  scheme of the Act, eyeing it with special reference  to         s. 10(4)(b) and 16(1)    (b), designateIs employee’s  salary         as  profit, where the servant is none  other than a  partner         i.e., co-owner of the business.If such be the   rationale of         the  relevant  provisions, the key to the  solution  of  the         problem is within easy reach.             Salaries are profits known by a different name and  must         be  treated as such for taxation purposes.  The  portion  of         profits from tea sales, by a grower, which is  agricultural,         is insulated from incidence and exaction by the Constitution         worked  out through r. 24.  Which means that by  that  modus         operandi we set aside 60% of the total income as  represent-         ing the agricultural sector, and the salary to partners paid         out of it, being only profits, enjoys the same invulnerabil-         ity  to  exigibility that r. 24 admittedly  confers  on  the         agrarian portion.         Shri  Ahuja  has an attractive counter-theory  which  merits         disturbing attention.  It is a variant version of the  ratio         in  Mathew  Abraham (supra).  He took us along  a  different         street  with  plausible  insights.  Ordinarily,  salary  for         services to an employer is salary all the same and there  is         no  agricultural  salary  as such. Therefore,  the  item  is         taxable  as salary income under s. 10.  The mere  fact  that         its  ultimate  source  was agricultural will  not  make  its         current complexion agricultural income, because the  payment         was  received  not as part of his profit  from  agricultural         property  but  as remuneration due to him for work  done  as         employee.  The source does not leave an indelible  stamp  on         the  stream  or its tributaries.  The nature of  the  income         being  salary, taxability is inevitable.   Section  10(4)(b)         is a special provision; so also s. 16(1)(b).  The Parliament         has  power to provide for possible leakages  and   safeguard         against   loss of revenue.  Oftentimes. partners siphon  off         substantial profits in the guise of salaries and sO  arrange         such  distribution of income via salaries that  tax  evasion         becomes legally protected.  To pre-empt such possibility the         law  has  gone  out of its way to  exclude  manipulation  by         including  salaries  as  profits.   This  special  provision         cannot alter the nature of salaries as is obvious in commer-         cial calculations,. striking of balance sheets, in suing for         unpaid  salaries  and the like.  Moreover, Indian  law  does         recognise  a  firm as a per.son for many  purposes  and  the         contrary  tenor  of  English law has no  tenability  in  our         country.  The very need for s. 10(4)(b) and 16(1)(b) stress-         es  that otherwise ’salary’ will  retain its true  character         and  not be regarded  as profits.  The  other categories  in         both  these  sections also bring home the purpose to  be  to         prevent evasion, not to inject jurisprudential changes.             Both  sides are armed cap a pie with rulings  for  their         respective  positions.  The weaponry in forensic  battle  is         precedentry; also their profusion is fraught with  confusion         for  the  laity  in the law.  We will  deal  with  citations         presently but going by basics we feel that albeit the force-         ful plea of Shri Ahuja, the Revenue is in the wrong.

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       The  whole  project of taxation of tea plantations  is  dis-         closed  in r. 24, Chidambaram Pillai(1) explains it  and  we         unfold it by reading here a relevant portion:                               "Income  derived from the sale of  tea                       grown and manu-                       factured   by  the  seller  in   the   taxable                       territories  shall  be                       (1) [1970] 77 I T R. 494, 503                       116                       computed  as  if it were income  derived  from                       business, and 40 per cent of such income shall                       be  deemed  to be income,  profits  and  gains                       liable to tax."             Plainly, only 40% of the income from tea sales is treat-         ed  as  taxable.   The balance viz.,  60%  is  regarded   as         agricultural   and exempt.  60% of the salaries to  partners         comes out of his exempted gross sum and shares the  benefit.         (Of  course,  this may be exigible, by the  same  token,  to         agricultural  income-tax, if there be any). The core of  the         logic--and  failure to grasp this has faulted the  reasoning         in  Mathew  Abraham(1)--is that the true  character  of  the         salary  (Le.,. the impugned 60%) is the same as that of  the         profits.   Both are agricultural and thus it is  clear  that         the amount does not escape tax if the State has--and now  it         has--a  levy  on agricultural income but the  title  of  the         State to tax this sum is valid, not of the Union.             We  may  now  embellish this brief  judgment  with  some         text-book references and citation of rulings.             Is  the  firm a person or a mere shorthand  name  for  a         collection  of  persons, commercially convenient   but   not         legally  recognised? Under s. 3 of the Partnership Act it is         not a person, but a relationship among persons.  Lindley, on         Partnership,(2) has this:                             "The  firm is not recognised by  English                       lawyers as distinct from the members composing                       it.   In taking partnership accounts  and   in                       administering   partnership   assets,   courts                       have  to  some extent adopted  the  mercantile                       view, and actions may now, speaking generally,                       be brought by or against partners in the  name                       of  their firm; but, speaking  generally,  the                       firm  as such has no legal  recognition.   The                       law, ignoring  the firm, looks to the partners                       composing it; any change amongst them destroys                       the  identity of the firm; what is called  the                       property  of the firm is their  property,  and                       what  are called the debts and liabilities  of                       the   firm   are   their   debts   and   their                       liabilities.  In point of law,. a partner  may                       be  the  debtor  or  the  creditor   of    his                       copartners, but he cannot be either debtor  or                       creditor of the firm of which he is himself  a                       member,  nor can he be employed by  his  firm,                       for a  man cannot  be  his  own employer."             The Indian law of partnership is substantially the  same         and  the reference in counsel’s submissions to the  Scottish         view   of  a  firm being a legal entity is neither here  nor         there.  Primarily our study must zero on the Indian Partner-         ship  Act and not borrow courage from foreign  systems.   In         Bhagwanji Morarji Gokuldas(3) the Privy’ Council ruled  that         the Indian Partnership Act went beyond the English  Partner-         ship Act, 1890, the law in India. attributing personality to         a partnership being more in accordance with the law of Scoff         and.  Even so, Sir John Beaumont, in that case, pointed  out         that the Indian Act

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         (1)  (1964) 51 I.T.R. 467.       (2) 12th Edition  p.  28;         Sweet & Maxwell.           (3) A.I.R. 1948 P.C. 100=(1948) 18 Comp. Cas. 205,209.          117         did not make a firm a corporate body.  Moreover., we are not         persuaded by that ruling of the Privy Council,  particularly         since  a pronouncement of this Court in Dulichand(1) strikes         a contrary note. We quote:                             "In  some systems of law  this  separate                       personality  of a firm apart from its  members                       has  received full and formal recognition  as,                       for instance, in Scotland.  That  is, however,                       not  the  English common law conception  of  a                       firm. English lawyers do not recognise a  firm                       as   an  entity  distinct  from  the   members                       composing  it.  ’Our partnership law is  based                       on  English  law  and  we  have  also  adopted                       notions  of  English  lawyers  as  regards   a                       partnership firm."               The  life of the Indian law of partnership depends  on         its own . terms although habitually courts, as a hangover of         the  past,  have been referring to the English  law  on  the         point.  The matter is concluded by the further  observations         of this Court:                             "It   is   clear  from   the   foregoing                       discussion  that the law, English as  well  as                       Indian, has, for some specific purposes,  some                       of  which are referred to above,  relaxed  its                       rigid   notions   and   extended   a   limited                       personality  to  a  firm.   Nevertheless,  the                       general  concept  of  a  partnership,   firmly                       established  in both systems of law, still  is                       that  a firm is not an entity or  ’person’  in                       law   but   is  merely   an   association   of                       individuals  and  a  firm  name  is  only   ’a                       collective  name  of  those  individuals   who                       constitute  the firm.  In other words, a  firm                       name is merely an expression,  only a  compen-                       dious   mode  of designating the  persons  who                       have   ’agreed   to  carry  on   business   in                       partnership.  According  to the principles  of                       English jurisprudence, which we have  adopted,                       for  the purposes of determining legal  rights                       ’there is no such thing as a firm known to the                       law’  as was said by James L.J., in  Ex  parte                       Corbett:  In  re Shand (1880) 14 Ch.  D.  122,                       1.26).   In these circumstances to import  the                       definition  of the word ’person’ occurring  in                       section  3(42)  of the  General  Clauses  Act,                       1897,   into   section  4   of   the    Indian                       Partnership   Act will, according to  lawyers,                       English   or Indian, be totally  repugnant  to                       the  subject of partnership law as  they  know                       and understand it to be."         In Narayanappa(2) the view taken by this Court accords  with         the position above stated.             The necessary inference from the premise that a partner-         ship  is  only a collective of separate-persons  and  not  a         legal person in itself lends to the further conclusion  that         the salary stipulated to be paid to a partner from the  firm         is  in reality a mode of division of the firm’s profits,  no         person  being  his own Servant in law since  a  contract  of         service postulates two different persons.         (1) [1956] S.C.R. 154.           (2) A./.R. 1966 S.C.  1300,         1303.

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       118             Counsel for the respondent cited the  ’Australian Income         Tax  Law  and Practice’ by F.C. Bock and F.F.  Mannix(1)  in         support of the proposition  that a partner’s  salary is  but         a  portion of the profits:                             "It  follows that where the  partnership                       income  consists of income from property,  the                       salary is  also income from property."             In  an  early  Madras case  Commissioner  of  Income-tax         v.B.S. Mines(2) the Madras High Court had held, with  refer-         ence  to the 1918 Income-tax Act: "We have no hesitation  in         answering  that  the drawings of the partners,  by  whatever         name they are described, are part of the profits and  there-         fore taxable", the question raised being one with  reference         to the character of salaries paid to partners.             Other cases from other High Courts have ,been brought to         our  notice  but  strong reliance was  placed  on  Ramniklal         Kothari(3)  of this Court for reaching the  conclusion  that         the  business of a firm was business of the  partners,  that         the profits of the firm were profits of the partners and         that  the expenditure incurred by partners in  earning  such         share was admissible for deduction in arriving at the  total         income under s. 10(1).              Contrary  views are not wanting in some rulings,  but  a         catalogue  of cases on the other side may be  productive  Of         confusion  and not resolution of conflict.  We abstain  from         that  enterprise and confine ourselves to the  statement  of         the law that although, for, purposes of the Income-tax  Act,         a firm has certain attributes simulative of personality,  we         have  to  take it that a partnership is not a person  but  a         plurality of persons.             Coming to basics over again, this  Court,  in  Karimtha-         ruvi  Tea Estates(1) and in Anglo-American Direct Tea  Trad-         ing  Co.(5) has set out the nature of and manner of  assess-         ment of composite income-tax derived by the sale of tea:                             "In  Karimtharuvi  Tea Estates  Ltd.  v.                       State   of   Kerala  this  Court   held   that                       Explanation  2  to  section 5  of  the  Kerala                       Agricultural  Income-tax  Act  added  in  1961                       disallowing    certain   deductions   in   the                       computation  of  agricultural income  did  not                       apply  to computation of  agricultural  income                       derived from tea plantations.  The reasons for                       this  conclusion may be summarised  thus:  The                       definition  of  agricultural  income  in   the                       Constitution  and the Indian  Income-tax  Act,                       1922,  is bound up with rule 24 of the  Income                       Tax Rules, 1922. Income derived from the  sale                       of tea grown and manufactured by the seller is                       to  be  computed under rule 24 as if  it  were                       income  derived  from business  in  accordance                       with  the  provisions  of section  10  of  the                       Indian Income-tax Act. The Explanation to                        (1)  1968  Edn.  Vol. 3,  p.  3092.       (2)                       (1922) 1 I.T.C. 176, i77 (F.B.).                        (3)  (1969)  74  I.T.R-57  (S.C.).        (4)                       [1963]. Supp. I, S.C.R. 823.                          (5) (1968) 69 I.T.R. 667, 672.                       119                       section 2(a)(2) of the Kerala Act adopts  this                       rule   of  computation.   Of  the  income   so                       computed,  40  per coat, is to be  treated  as                       income  liable to income-tax and the other  60                       per  cent  only is deemed to  be  agricultural                       income  within  the meaning of that expression

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                     in the Income-tax Act. The power of the  State                       legislature to make a law in respect of  taxes                       on   agricultural  income  arising  from   tea                       plantations  is  limited to  legislating  with                       respect to agricultural income so  determined.                       The  legislature cannot add to the  amount  of                       the  agricultural  income  so  determined   by                       disallowing  any item of deductions  allowable                       under rule 24 read with section 10(2) (xv)  of                       the  Indian Income-tax Act.  Explanation 2  to                       section  5  of the Kerala Act  if  applied  to                       income  from tea plantations would  create  an                       agricultural income which is not  contemplated                       by the Income-tax Act and the Constitution and                       would  be  void, and it  should  therefore  be                       construed  not to apply to the computation  of                       income from tea plantations."                       In  Tea Estate India(1) this Court  summarised                       the scope and implications of r. 24:                             "Income which is realised by sale of tea                       by  a tea company which grows tea on its  land                       and  thereafter subjects it  to  manufacturing                       process  in  its  factory  is  an   integrated                       income.  Such income consists of two  elements                       or   components.  One  element  or   component                       consists  of the agricultural income which  is                       yielded in the form of green leaves purely  by                       the land over which tea plants are grown.  The                       second  element or component consists of  non-                       agricultural  income  which is the  result  of                       subjecting green leaves which are plucked from                       the  tea  plants  grown  on  the  land  to   a                       particular   manufacturing  process   in   the                       factory of the tea company. Rule 24 prescribes                       the  formula  which  should  be  adopted   for                       apportioning  the income realised as a  result                       of  the  sale  of tea after it  is  grown  and                       subjected to the manufacturing process in  the                       factory.  Sixty  per  cent  is  taken  to   be                       agricultural  income and the same consists  of                       the  first element or component, while 40  per                       cent  represents non-agricultural  income  and                       the  same  comprises  the  second  element  or                       component.                             We   are   ’fortified   in   the   above                       conclusion  by two decisions of this Court  in                       the  cases of Karimtharuvi Tea Estate Ltd.  v.                       State  of  Kerala (supra)  and  Anglo-American                       Direct   Tea Trading Co. Ltd. v.  Commissioner                       of  Agricultural Income tax (supra).   In  the                       case of Karimtharuvi Tea Estates Ltd.  (supra)                       it was observed while dealing with the  income                       derived  from  the  sale  of  tea  grown   and                       manufactured  by the seller in the context  of                       rule 24:                             "Of the income so computed, 40 per  cent                       is,  under  rule 24, to be treated  as  income                       liable to income-tax and it would                       (1) 1976) 103 I.T.R. 785,795.                       120                       follow that the other 60 per cent only will be                       deemed to be ’agricultural income’ within  the                       meaning  of that expression in the  Income-tax                       Act."                       In  the  case  of  Anglo-American  Direct  Tea

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                     Trading  Co.  Ltd.  (supra)  the  Constitution                       Bench of this court held that income from  the                       sale  of  tea grown and  manufactured  by  the                       assessee  is derived partly from business  and                       partly from agriculture. This income has to be                       computed  as if it were income  from  business                       under the Central Income-tax Act and the Rules                       made thereunder.  Forty per cent of the income                       so  computed  is deemed to be  income  derived                       from   business   and   assessable   to   non-                       agricultural  income-tax.  The balance  of  60                       per   cent  of  the  income  so  computed   is                       agricultural income within the meaning of  the                       Central Income-tax Act."             It  follows that by statutory dichotomy, 60% of the  tea         income  is agricultural in character and central  income-tax         cannot  break  into its inviolability.  This  conceded,  the         flexible  arrangement among partners regarding  distribution         of  this  sum  may  take  many  forms   but   the  essential         agricultural character and consequential legislative immuni-         ty  cannot be lost because of tags and labels:  ’That  which         we  call  a rose, By any other name would smell  as  sweet’.         Needless   to  say,  the  position  is  different   if   the         situation.-is  of a stranger--not a partner--drawing a  sal-         ary.             With  ideological clarity, this legal position has  been         set  forth  by a learned author whom we refer(1) to  (by  no         means, rely on) compendious as his summary is:                             "Any interest, salary, bonus, commission                       or  remuneration  paid by a firm to   any   of                       its  partners  cannot  be deducted by the firm                       as  an expenditure in its  profit-computation.                       The  reason is this:  The partners in  a  firm                       are ultimately entitled to the entire  profits                       of the firm, according to their shares in  the                       business.   Therefore,  the entirety  of  such                       profits  should  be brought to charge  and  no                       portion  be exempted by giving’ the same  away                       to a partner as his salary, bonus, commission,                       remuneration or  interest.  A partner is bound                       to   find  the  necessary  finances  for   the                       partnership and hence any interest on  capital                       supplied by the partner is not deductible.   A                       partner’s  rendering  services  to  the   firm                       stands  on the same footing as  his  providing                       capital;  only instead of in money,  in  kind.                       Further,  no remuneration is permissible to  a                       partner  for  his rendering  services  to  the                       firm, since the carrying on of the business of                       the partnership is a’ primary duty which,  all                       the  partners, or some of the partners  acting                       for  all,  are  required  to  do  by  the  law                       relating to partnership.                             The matter may be looked at another  way                       too.  In law, a partner cannot be employed  by                       his firm, for a man can-                           (1)  Law  of Income-tax  by  A.C.  Sampath                       Iyengar,  6th Edn., 1973--pp.  10631064  (Vol.                       II).                       121                       not be his own employer.  A contract can  only                       be  bilateral and the same person cannot be  a                       party   on  both  sides,  particularly  in   a                       contract of personal employment. A supposition                       that  a partner is employed by the firm  would

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                     involve that the employee must be looked  upon                       as  occupying the position of one of his   own                       employers,   which   is   legally  impossible.                       Consequently,  when an arrangement is made  by                       which  a  partner works and receives  sums  as                       wages  for  services rendered,  the  agreement                       should  in  truth  be regarded as  a  mode  of                       adjusting  the  amount that must be  taken  to                       have  been  contributed to  the  partnership’s                       assets   by   a partner who has made  what  is                       really  a  contribution in  kind,  instead  of                       contribution   in  money.   Hence,   all   the                       aforesaid payments are non-deductible."                           The  contrary  view  favoured  by   Mathew                       (supra)  proceeds on the following reasoning:                             "Though  for purposes of computation  of                       income his share income of the firm is clubbed                       along with the allowance and commission, it is                       obvious  that the character of the receipt  of                       the  latter  amounts, though  related  to  the                       business,  cannot  be said to partake  of  the                       same  character of their receipt by the  firm.                       The  assessee  who is a managing  partner  was                       entitled  to receive the amount not by  virtue                       of the relationship between him and the  other                       members of the firm as partners but by  virtue                       of the special agreement between the  partners                       by which his services to the partnership  were                       agreed to be remunerated."                                                                       (p.                       471)             We regard this conclusion as unsound, the source of  the         error  being  a failure to appreciate that the salary  of  a         partner  is but an alias for the return, by way of  profits,         for  the  human capital--sweat, skill and toil are,  in  our         socialist  republic, productive investment---he has  brought         in for common benefit.  The immediate reason for payment  of         salary  was service contract but the causa causans is  part-         nership.             We  dismiss  the appeals. When this Court, as  the  apex         adjudicator  declaring the law for the country and  invested         with constitutional credentials under Art.  141, clarifies a         confused  juridical  situation, its substantial role  is  of         legal  mentor  of  the nation.  Such is the  spirit  of  the         ruling in Trustees of Port, Bombay(1).  If parties have been         fair,  the  costs  of the litigation must come  out  of  the         national exchequer, not out of as party’s purse.  We  direct         both sides to bear their costs throughout.         P.B.R.                                        Appeals   dis-         missed.         (1) [1974] 4 S.C.C 710         122