23 August 1972
Supreme Court
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COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX U.P. LUCKNOW Vs M/S. GANGADHAR BAIJNATH GENERAL GANG, KANPUR

Case number: Appeal (civil) 1746 of 1968


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PETITIONER: COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX U.P. LUCKNOW

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: M/S.  GANGADHAR BAIJNATH GENERAL GANG, KANPUR

DATE OF JUDGMENT23/08/1972

BENCH: HEGDE, K.S. BENCH: HEGDE, K.S. REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN KHANNA, HANS RAJ

CITATION:  1973 AIR 1011            1973 SCR  (1) 928  CITATOR INFO :  R          1987 SC 500  (38)

ACT: Income-tax   Act   (11  of  1922),  s.10-Partners   of   two Partnerships joining to form a third partnership-Partners of one partnership going out of new firm-Receipt of payments as compensation-If capital or eevenue.

HEADNOTE: Six persons, three of whom were partners of B-firm having  a selling  agency  of  S-company, and three  others  who  were partners  of  J-firm having quota rights in  the  S-company, formed  a  partnership the BJ-firm.  There was, no  deed  of partnership   and  the  partnership  of  the   BJ-firm   was terminable at will.  The B-firm continued to exist  carrying on  various  other  business activities.   The  BJ-firm  was appointed  as managing agents of the S-company.  Later,  the three  persons belonging to B-firm went out of  the  BJ-firm and  for  doing  so, they were paid a  sum  of  money  which included  compensation  as  per the terms  of  an  agreement between  the B and J groups.  The BJ-firm continued  as  ,he managing agents of the S-company.  The appellant, B-firm, in appeal  to this Court, while admitting that the  portion  of the  compensation  which represented profits was  a  revenue receipt, contended, that the remaining portion purporting to be  made up of compensation for giving up (a) its  mianaging agency  rights, (b) its selling agency rights, and (c)  its, goodwill, was not a revenue receipt but a capital receipt. HELD  :  The  entire sum reecived by  the  appellant  was  a revenue  receipt  assessable under s. 10 of the  Income  Tax Act, 1922. [938F-G]. (1)  The question whether a particular receipt is capital or revenue is largely a question of fact. [935A] (2   )  (a) The BJ-firm was not a partnership of  two  firms because  two  firms cannot join in a  partnership,  but  was really  a  partnership  consisting  of  six  partners.   The appellant-firm had various business activities one of  which was  to  join  the  BJ-firm to  carry  on  certain  business activities.   The  appellant’s representatives  by  entering into  the  partnerG; 937D-E ship were merely carrying  on  a trading activity. [935F-H; 937A-D-E] (b)  The  managing  agency rights as well  as  any  goodwill

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vested  with the BJ-firm.  By going out of the  BJ-firm  the partners  representing  the appellant-firm  had  surrendered their  rights in the partnership to the  remaining  partners and obtained payments for surrendering their rights. it  was a case of cancellation of a contract which had been  entered into the ordinary course of business, and not one of parting with  any  managing agency right.  The payment  received  in settlement  as a result of the termination, of the  contract represents  the profits which the assessee would  have  made had the contract been performed. [936G-H; 937A-B, D-E] Commissioner of Income-tax, Nagpur v. R. B. Jairam Valli and Ors. 35 I.T.R. 148, followed. 929 (c)  It  was not a case of the only trading activity of  the appellantfirm  coming  to an end.  Only one of  its  trading activities  had  been put an end to and  hence,  the  amount received  could  not  be  considered  as  compensation   for stopping its business. [937E-F] Therefore, the compensation paid for the termination of  the contract is not a capital receipt. [937F] (3)  (a)  The selling agency of the appellant firm bad  been transferred to the BJ-firm even at the time when the BJ-firm was formed. On the  day when the partners of the B-firm left the  BJ-firm  it was an asset of the BJ-firm and  hence  the compensation  paid could only relate to the  termination  of the contract of partnership and not to the transfer of sell- ing agency. [937F-G] (b) Assuming that indirectly the selling agency right of the appellant  firm  was affected, it was only  one  of  several trading  activities  of the appellant firm and  the  trading structure of the assessee-firm was not at all affected.  The appellant-firm  merely  replaced  one  trading  activity  by another   by  utilising  the  compensation   for   acquiring controlling  shares in two other companies. In  such  cases. the amount received for the cancellation of an agency,  does not  represent  the  price paid for the lose  of  a  capital asset, but is in the nature of income. [937G-H; 938A] Gillanders Arbuthnot and Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income- tax, Calcutta, 53 I.T.R. 28B, and Kettlewell Bullen and  Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner  of Income-tax Calcutta, 53 I.T.R. 261, followed.

JUDGMENT: CIVIL  APPELLATE JURISDTCTION: C. A. Nos. 1746 and  2022  of 1969. Appeal  by  certificate from the judgment  and  order  dated October 22, 1965 of, the Allahabad High  Court in Income-tax Reference No. 286 of 1960. S. T. Desai and S. Mitra, B. B. Ahuja and B. D. Sharma for           the appellant. (in C.A. No. 1746 of 1968.) H.   K. Puri, for the respondent (in C.A. No. 1746 of 1968.) H. K. Puri and S. K. Dhingra, for the appellant (in  C.A.No. 2022 of 1968). S.   T. Desai, S. Mitra, O. P. Malhotra and B. B. Ahuja and B.   D. Sharma, for the respondent (in C.A. No. 2022/68). The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Hegde, J. These are appeals by certificate from the decision of the High Court of Allahabad in a Reference under s. 66(1) of  the Income-tax Act, 1922 (to be hereinafter referred  to as the Act). The Income-tax Appellate Tribunal (Allahabad bench) refer- red  to,  the  High  Court for  its  opinion  the  following questions :

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             "(1)   whether  on  the  facts  and   in   the               circumstances of the case, the receipt  of.Rs.               35,01,000/-  constituted income liable to  tax               under section 10 of the Income-tax Act ?               10--L172Sup.c I/73               930               (2)   Whether   it   was  competent   to   the               Appellate Assistant Commissioner to invoke the               provisions of section 12-B for the  assessment               of Rs. 35,01,000/- when the Income-tax Officer               had  assessed the amount under Section  10  of               the Income-tax Act ?               (3)   Whether   on  the  facts  and   in   the               circumstances  of the case the receipt of  Rs.               35,01,000/- was taxable under section 12-B  of               the Income-tax Act ?" The High Court answered the first and the second question in favour    Revenue and on the third question it recorded  its opinion  that on the facts and in the circumstances  of  the case, the receipt in question was not taxable under S.  12-B of the Act. Aggrieved by the decision of the High Court the Commissioner of Income-tax has brought Civil Appeal No. 1746 of 1968  and the assessee Civil Appeal Ng. 2022 of 1968. The  material facts of. the case as could be  gathered  from the  statement of case are these: The is a partnership  firm carrying  on  business of financing,  moneylending,  selling agencies  and  the like pursuits.  The  relevant  assessment year  is  1948-49,  the  concerned  accounting  year  ending October, 1947.  On April 29, 1946 the three partners of  the assessee  firm  enterred  into an  agreement  with  Gajadhar Jaipuria, R. S. Puran Mal Jaipuria and Mangloo Ram Jaipuria. The terms of the agreement as found by the Tribunal, were               (1)   That  the  partners  should  acquire  on               joint  account,  the shares  of  the  Swadeshi               Cotton Mills Co. Ltd. and Eland Ltd.               (2)   The  partners, of the assesse firm  (who               will hereinafter be referred to as the  ’Bagla               Group’) and the remaining three partners  (who               will   hereinafter  be  referred  to  as   the               "Jaipuria  Group") were to invest  the  amount               required  to  acquire the shares  in  question               equally   and  all  benefits   including   the               managing agency, selling agency, quota  rights               should  be  enjoyed in joint account  but  the               selling  agency which was in the hands of  the               assessee  firm  should continue to be  in  its               hands   till  the  Dussebra  of   that   year.               Similarly  the quota rights which were in  the               hands of the Jaipuria Group should continue in               the  hands of that Group till the Dussehra  of               that year.               931               (3)   Neither  party should acquire any  share               in  his separate account or have any  interest               directly or indirectly to the exclusion of the               other. Till  the  date of the formation of  this  partnership,  the assesee  firm consisting of "Bagla Group" were  the  selling agents of the Swadeshi Cotton Mills Co., Ltd.  The "Jaipuria Group"  which was a different firm were enjoying some  quota rights  in that mill.  In pursuance of the  agreement  above referred  to  the new partnership "Bagla-Jaipuria  and  Co." purchased shares of the Swadeshi Cotton Mills Co. Ltd.   For that  purpose both the groups contributed equally.   But  no

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partnership  deed as such was entered into by the  partners. On July 16, 1946, an agreement was entered into between  the Swadeshi  Cotton Mills Co., Ltd. and the Bagla Jaipuria  and Co.  appointing  the latter as the managing  agents  of  the Company  for a period of twenty years.  On October 7,  1946, another  agreement was entered into by the partners  of  the Bagla  Jaipuria and Co. whereby it was decided that  one  of the  two Groups would retire from the business  with  effect from  October  6, 1946 subject to the terms  and  conditions specified  in that agreement.  The relevant clauses of  that agreement read thus :                "It is agreed that one or other of the  Bagla               or  Jaipuna groups shall retire from the  said               partnership  with  effect  from  6th  October,               1946.   The continuing group shall pay to  the               retiring group their shares of the capital and               interest thereon and compensation which  shall               include  the price of goodwill, and the  share               of the retiring partner in the profits of  the               firm  upto 5th October 1946.  The question  as               to  which of the said two groups shall  retire               and what amount of compensation shall be  paid               by the continuing group to the retiving  group               shall  be  determined by auction held  in  the               manner-set  out  hereinafter.   Such   auction               shall be held forthwith.  The auction shall be               conducted by Dr. Brijendra Swarup, Advocate of               Kanpur  and  Mr. B. P. Khaitan,  Solicitor  of               Calcutta.  Only partners shall be entitled  to               attend auction.  Rai Bahadur Rameshwar  Prasad               Bagla  and Sjt.  Mangtoram Jaipuria will  give               bids on behalf of their respective groups  and               the  respective groups shall be bound by  bids               so   given  by  their   aforesaid   respective               nominee.   The  group  offering  to  pay   the               highest   compensation   shall   continue   as               ’partners  in  the firm and  the  other  group               shall retire as herein provided." The continuing group shall pay to the retiring group  within 10 days from the date of the auction the following:                             932 (a)  The amount of capital contributed by the retiring group with interest calculated at the rate of 4 1/2%. (b)  And compensation money ascertained as aforesaid." In  the  auction  held in pursuance of  this  agreement  the Jaipuria  Group  outbid the Bagla Group.   Consequently  the Bagla  Group  retired from the business on  receipt  of  the following amounts Rs. 97,11,699-on account of capital. investment Rs.  1,77,232-on account of interest on  capital  investment and Rs. 35,01,000-on account of compensation as provided in  the agreement. The Jaipuria Group paid those amounts to the Bagla Group  on October  7,  1946.  A separate receipt was executed  by  the Bagla  Group  in respect of the receipt of  Rs.  35,01,000/- That receipt recites : "Received  from Seth Gajadhar Jaipuria, Rai  Sahib  PuranmuU Jaipuria  and  Seth  Mungturam  Jaipuria  the  sum  of   Rs. 35,01,000/- as solatium and compensation for surrendering to the Jaipuria group our right, title and interest in  running concern  of  Bagla  Jaipuria  & Co.  who  inter-  alia  were appointed  the Managing agents of the Swadeshi Cotton  Mills Co.,  Ltd. for a period of twenty years under  an  agreement dated  16th  July,  1946 and  with  expectation  of  further

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renewals of like period." The asessee firm resigned as selling agents with effect from October  5, 1946.  Jaipuria group continued in the name  and style of Bagla Jaipuria and Co. In  the  course of the assessment for  the  assessment  year 1948-49 the Income-tax Officer brought to tax the sum of Rs. 35,01,000/as  mcome.   He  overruled the  objection  of  the assessee  that  it,was  a compensation  for  giving  up  the managing  agency  right.   Aggrieved by  the  decision,  the assessee  took  up  the matter in appeal  to  the  Appellate Assistant    Commissioner.     The    Appellate    Assistane Commissioner   affirmed  the  decision  of  the   Income-tax Officer.  He further held that the case also fell within the scope  of s. 12-B of the Act.  Thereafter the assessee  took up  the  matter  in  appeal  to  the  Income-tax   Appellate Tribunal.   It  was contended before the Tribunal  that  the receipt  in question cannot be considered as  income  coming within  s. 10 of the Act as the same was a capital  receipt. It was further contended that the Appellate Assistant                             933 Commissioner  had  no competence to convert  the  assessment made under s. 10 into one under s. 12-B and at any rate  the receipt in question does not come within the scope of s. 12- B.  The Tribunal rejected the first two contentions.  But it agreed with the assessee that the receipt in question cannot be  brought  to tax under s. 12-B.  At the instance  of  the assessee, the Tribunal submitted for the opinion of the High Court  questions  1  and 2 referred to earlier  and  at  the instance  of the Commissioner of income-tax, it referred  to the High Court Question No. 3. This  case  came  up for hearing before  this  Court  on  an earlier  occasion.  By our order dated August 12,  1971,  we called upon the Tribunal to submit a supplementary statement of case on certain points viz. :               (1 )  Was  any compensation payable under  the               agreement either directly or by implication in               respect  of  the assessee’s surrender  of  its               share in the managing agency.  If so, what  is               the  amount  of compensation payable  in  that               regard.               (2)   Was  any compensation payable under  the               agreement  directly or by implication in  lieu               of the assessee giving up its selling  agency.               If  so  what  is the  amount  of  compensation               payable in respect of that right.               (3)   Did  the  assessee  give  up  any  other               rights  under the agreement.  If so, what  are               those  rights and what is the value  of  those               rights ?               (4)   The agreement says that the compensation               includes "the price of goodwill and the  share               of the retiring partner in the profits of  the               firm upto 5th October, 1946".               (a)   was  there any goodwill; if so what  was               its value and               (b)   What  part of the compensation  received               by ’the assessee as can be attributed  towards               the  profits  earned  by  the  association  of               persons  calling itself M/s.   Bagla  Jaipuria               Company uptill 5th October, 1946. The  Tribunal submitted the supplementary statement of  case called  for  on November 24, 1971.  Dealing with  the  first question, the Tribunal observed:               "It  will thus be seen that  compensation  was               paid by the Jaipuria Group to the Bagla  Group

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             (a)  partly for the surrender of its share  in               the Managing Agency               934               right,  (b) partly for giving up  its  selling               agency  right and (c) partly for  the  profits               earned  by the Bagla Group upto  5th  October,               1946.   There is, however, no material on  the               record on the basis of which it may be  possi-               ble to split up the quantum of compensation in               respect  of each of the above three  items  at               (a),  (b) and (c).  Therefore, our  answer  to               query  No. (1) is that the com- pensation  was               payable  under the agreement  dated  7-10-1946               not directly but by implication in respect  of               the  assessee’s surrender of its share in  the               Managing  Agency right but it is not  possible               to determine the quantum for want of  material               on the point." Dealing with point No. 2, the Tribunal’s answer is the  same as  of point No. 1. Dealing with point No. 3,  the  Tribunal observed that the only other right given up by the  assessee under  the  agreement  was  the goodwill  but  there  is  no material on record on the basis of which its value could  be ascertained.  On point No. 4 (a), the Tribunal observed:               "Regarding  query  No. (iv) (a), made  by  the               Supreme  Court,  there was certainly,  in  our               opinion goodwill of the partnership firm  M/s.               Bagla  Jaipuria & Co. as it was appointed  not               only the Managing Agents of a very big  cotton               mill  for a period of 20 years in 1946,  at  a               time  when there was Government  control  over               cloth  and  textile Mills and  their  managing               agents were making huge profits, but had  also               the  sole-selling  agency  of  the  Co.   viz.               Swadeshi  Cotton Mills’Ltd.  The  goodwill  of               M/s.   Bagla  Jaipuria &  Co.,  also  included               besides,  right to managing agency  commission               etc.  the selling agency of the Baglas,  which               they  were  holding since 1911 and  the  quota               rights  of the Jaipurias, which they had  been               holding since the quota system was  introduced               by  the Central Government, during the  Second               World War.  There is, however, no material  to               value the goodwill separately."               On  point No. 4(b), this is what the  Tribunal               has observed:               "Regarding query No. (iv) (b) the compensation               of  Rs. 35,01,000/- no doubt includes  payment               towards  the  share  of  its  profit  in   the               partnership firm of M/s.  Bagla Jaipuria & Co.               from  29-4-1946 to 5-10-1946 but it  is  again               regretted  that  there is no material  on  the               basis   of  which  the  compensation  can   be               computed as attributable to this aspect of the               matter." The  question  for decision is whether the  receipt  of  Rs. 35,01,000/- is a capital receipt or a revenue receipt.   The ques- 935 ion whether a particular receipt is a capital or revenue  is largely  question  of fact but often we come  across  border line  cases which do present difficulties in arriving  at  a conclusion.   As  oberved by this Court in  Commissioner  of Income-tax, Nagpur v. ,Z. B. Jairam Valji and Ors.(1).-               "The question whether a receipt is capital  or

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             income    has   frequently   come    up    for               determination  before  the  courts.    Various               rules have been enunciated as furnishing a key                             to  the solution of the question, but as  often               observed by the highest authorities, it is not               possible  to  lay  down  any  single  test  as               infallible or any single criterion as decisive               in  the determination of the  question,  which               must  ultimately  depend on the facts  of  the               particular  case, and the authorities  bearing               on   the   question  are  valuable   only   as               indicating  the matters that have to be  taken               into account in reaching a decision.  Vide Van               Den  Berghs Ltd. v. Clark(2).  That,  however,               is  not  to say that the question  is  one  of               fact,  for,  as  observed in  Davies  (H.   M.               Inspector of Taxes) v. Shell Company of  China               Ltd.("). "these questions between capital and income, trading  profit or  no trading profit, are questions which, though they  may depend  no  doubt to a very great extent on  the  particular facts  of  each case. do involve a conclusion of law  to  be drawn from those facts." As  we  are  of opinion, for the  reasons  to  be  presently stated,  that  the receipt of Rs. 35,01,000/- is  an  income from  business and as such was liable to be brought  to  tax under  s.  10, we have not thought it necessary to  go  into other two questions. Before  examining  the legal position, it  is  necessary  to emphasise  certain. salient features of this case.  The  new partnership   named  Bagla  Jaipuria  and  Co.  is   not   a partnership  of  two  firms.  Two firms  cannot  join  in  a partnership.  Really it was a partnership consisting of  six partners;  three of whom were partners of one firm  and  the other three partners of another firm.  This new partner.,hip came  into existence on April 29, 1946.  These partners  did not enter into a deed of partnership.  This partnership took over  as  managing agents of the Swadeshi Cotton  Mills  Co. Ltd.  on July 16, 1946.  Three of the partners belonging  to Bagla Group went out of the partnership on October 6, 1946. Though  the  three  named members of the  Bagla  Group  were partners of the new firm, the benefit of the new partnership was  to enure to the old firm of which those  three  persons were partners. (1)  35 I.T.R. 148.                     (2) [1935] 3  I.T.R. (Eng.  Cas.) 17. (3)  [1952] 22 I.T.R. (Supp.) 1 936 That  old  firm not only continued to be  in  existence  but continued  to carry on various business activities.  It  may be noted that the firm Bagla Jaipuria & Co. continued to  be in  existence.   It coatinued to be the managing  agents  of Swadeshi  Cotton Mills Co. Ltd.  Its goodwill, it  any,  was not parted with.  What really happened was that three of the partners  of that firm went out of the partnership  and  for doing  so  they  were  paid  Rs.  35,01,000/which  sum  also included the profits earned by the Bagla Jaipuria & Co. from the  date  it came into existence, till the  three  partners belonging  to  the Bagla Group went out of  the  partnership leaving  the partnership firm intact.  There is  no  dispute that  the portion of the compensation which represents  past profits is a revenue receipt.  The only question is  whether the  remaining  portion  was a Revenue  receipt  or  Capital receipt.   The remaining portion of the receipt purports  to

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be  compensation given to the three partners for  giving  up what  are  called (i) the managing agency  rights  (it)  the selling  agency  rights and (iii) the  goodwill.   We  shall first take up the question relating to the goodwill and  the mananaging agency rights. It  was urged on behalf of the assessee that as a result  of the  agreement  dated  October 7, 1946,  the  assessee  firm parted,  with its managing agency rights which but for  that agreement would have continued for a period of twenty  years with  a possibility of renewal.  The managing  agency  right given up under that agreement is a capital asset of the firm and  therefore any compensation paid for the  extinguishment of that right is a capital receipt.  It was also argued that one  of the rights that the assessee firm parted with  under that agreement was the goodwill of the company which is also a capital asset.  Consequently compensation paid in  respect of the same must also be considered as capital receipt. In our opinion the aforementioned arguments are  fallacious. The managing agency rights vested with the Bagla Jaipuria  & Co. Similar is the case so far as the goodwill is  concerned assuming  that any goodwill had been built up by that  time, Bagla  Jaipuria & Co. continues to be in existence.  It  had not  parted  with managing agency rights  nor  its  goodwill taken  away.   What  has  happened  is  that  the   partners representing  the assessee firm in Bagla Jaipuria & Co.  had surrendered their rights in the partnership to the remaining partners  and  obtained certain  payments  for  surrendering their rights.  This is not a case of parting with any agency rights.  This is really a case of cancellation of a contract which  had  beet  entered into in  the  ordinary  course  of business.  Such contracts are liable, in the ordinary course of  business, to be altered or terminated on terms  and  any payment received in settlement of the rights as a result  of the termination of the contract really repre- 937 sents the profits which the assessee would have made had the contract  been  performed.   As osberved by  this  Court  in Jairam Valji’s case (supra) :               "when  once  it is found that a  contract  was               entered   into  in  the  ordinary  course   of               business,  any compensation received  for  its               termination   would  be  a  revenue   receipt,               irrespective of whether its performance was to               consist  of a single act or a series  of  acts               spread over a period, and in this respect,  it               differs from an agency agreement." As  seen  earlier no deed of partnership  had  been  entered into.’  Therefore the same was terminable at will.   Any  of the partners of the firm could have brought the  partnership to an end.  Consecluently the possibility of termination  of a  partnership  of the type with which we are  concerned  is inherent in the very course of business. The  facts  set out in the statement of case show  that  the assesseefirm  had  various business activities; one  of  its business activity was to join Bagla Jaipuria & Co. to  carry on    certain   business   activities.     The    assessee’s representatives by entering into that agreement were  merely carrying on a trading activity.  Such being the case, it  is not  possible  to hold that the compensation  paid  for  the termination of the contract is a capital receipt. It  is  not the case of the assessee that its  only  trading activity  had  come to an end.  It had  several  activities. Just  one  of its trading activity had been put an  end  to. Hence   the   amount  received  cannot  be   considered   as compensation for stopping its business.

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Now we come to the transfer of the selling agency to  Bagla- Jaipuria  &  Co. This is not a right transferred  under  the agreement  dated  October  7, 1946.   That  right  had  been transferred  to  Bagla Jaipuria & Co. even at the  time  the partnership was formed.  On October 7, 1946, the was no more the  owner  of that selling agency.  On that day it  was  an asset of BaglaJaipuria & Co. Hence the compensation paid can only   relate  to  the  termination  of  the   contract   of partnership  and not to the transfer of the selling  agency. Assuming  that agreement of October 7, 1946  has  indirectly affected the selling agency right of the assesse , the  same was  one of the several trading activities of  the  assessee firm.  On the basis of the material on record, the Hi& Court held that after the Bagla Group gave up its interest in  the Bagla Jaipuria & Co., the assessee firm with the aid of  Rs. 35,01,000/-  received as compensation  acquired  controlling sham  in two other companies namely the India  United  Mills Ltd. and the Muir Mills Ltd.  From this it is clear that the trading 938 structure of the assessee firm was not affected.  It  merely replaced  one  trading activity by another.   In  Gillanders Arbuthnot  and  Co.  Ltd.  v.  Commissioner  of  Income-tax, Calcutta(1),  this  Court held in the case  of  an  assessee having  vast  array  of business  including  acquisition  of agencies in the normal course of business, the determination of an individual agency is a normal incident not  affect-ing or  impairing  its  trading structure.  In  such  cases  the amount  received for the cancellation of an agency does  not represent  theprice  paid for the loss of a  capital  asset; they were of the nature of income. In  Kettlewell Bulleun and Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner  of  In- come-tax Calcutta(1), this Court after considering,  various decisions rendered by the courts in U.K. and in this country about  the principles which govern the determination of  the nature  of  compensation received on the termination  of  an agency observed:               "On  an analysis of these cases which fall  on                             two sides of the dividing line, a  sat isfactory               measure   of  consistency  in   principle   is               disclosed.   Where, on a consideration of  the               circumstances payment is made to compensate  a               person  for cancellation of a  contract  which               does  not affect the trading structure of  his               business, nor deprive him of what in substance               is  his source of income, termination  of  the               contract  being  a  normal  incident  of   the               business and such cancellation leaves him free               to carry on his trade (freed from the contract               terminated)  the receipt is revenue; where  by               the  cancellation  of an  agency  the  trading               structure of the assessee is impaired, or such               cancellation  results in loss of what  may  be               regarded  as  the  source  of  the  assessee’s               income  the  payment made  to  compensate  for               cancellation   of  the  agency  agreement   is               normally a capital receipt." For the reasons mentioned above we hold that the entire  sum of  Rs. 35,01,000/- received by the assessee was  a  revenue receipt assessable under s. 10. In  the  result Civil Appeal No. 2022 of 1966  is  dismissed with  costs.  On our indicating our tentative conclusion  on the  first question referred to the High Court  the  learned SolicitorGeneral  appearing  for the revenue did  not  press

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Civil Appeal No. 1746 of 1968.  It is accordingly  dismissed with no order as to costs. V.P.S.           939