10 April 1973
Supreme Court
Download

COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, WEST BENGAL CALCUTTA Vs CALCUTTA DISCOUNT CO., LTD.

Case number: Appeal (civil) 495 of 1970


1

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 6  

PETITIONER: COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, WEST BENGAL CALCUTTA

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: CALCUTTA DISCOUNT CO., LTD.

DATE OF JUDGMENT10/04/1973

BENCH: HEGDE, K.S. BENCH: HEGDE, K.S. KHANNA, HANS RAJ

CITATION:  1974 AIR 1358            1973 SCR  (3) 952  1974 SCC  (3) 260

ACT: Income-tax-Right of assessee to avoid tax. Appellate      Tribunal--disposal     of      appeal      on technicalities--Duty to consider substance of the matter.

HEADNOTE: The assessee company floated a subsidiary company during the relevant  previous year and transferred to  that  subsidiary company  various shares held by it at a certain  rate..  The authorities  under the Income-tax Act, 1922, held  that  the assessee  and  its  subsidiary  were  two  different   legal entities,  that the transaction was a bona fide  transaction and that the assessee had not made any secret profits out of that  transaction.  The Income-tax officer, however,  valued the shares transferred at the market rate and held that  the assessee  company must be deemed to have made a profit.   In appeal,  the Appellate Assistant Commissioner set aside  the order of the Income-tax Officer and remitted the case to him for  finding  out whether the assessee had really  made  any profits  from the transaction.  The Tribunal  dismissed  the appeal  of  the  Income-tax  Officer  against  that   order, summarily, on the ground that the Income-tax Officer had not taken the necessary pleas that the decision of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner was incorrect in law.  On  reference, the  High Court held that the order of the Tribunal  was  an interlocutory  one  and  that  an  application  to  make   a reference to the High Court did not lie. Dismissing the appeal to this Court. HELD:     (1).   The Tribunal, instead of dealing  with  the substance  of  the  matter had  been  unduly  influenced  by procedural  technicalities.  The conclusion of the  Tribunal that  the appeal memorandum was not in accordance  with  law was also not correct as no specific formula is necessary for seeking  relief at the hand of any court or tribunal if  the necessary grounds are taken. [955D-E] (2)  But  the view of the Appellate  Assistant  Commissioner was correct and there was no necessity to decide whether the Tribunal erred in dismissing the appeal summarily. [958F-G] It is a well accepted principle of law that an assessee  can so  arrange  his  affairs as to  minimise  his  tax  burden. Hence, if the assessee in this case arranged its affairs  in such  a manner as to reduce its tax liability by starting  a

2

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 6  

subsidiary  company  and  transferring its  shares  to  that subsidiary company and thus forgoing part of its own profits and  at the same time enabling its subsidiary to  earn  some profits,  such  a  course is not  impermissible  under  law. [957E-F] Commissioner of Income Tax, Gujarat, v. A. Raman and Co.  67 I.T.R. II followed. Sri  Ramalinga  Choodambikai Mills Ltd. v.  Commissioner  of Income-tax, Madras, 28 I.T.R. 952, approved. Sharkey (Inspector of Taxes) v. Wernker, 1956 Appeal  Cases, 58 and Dooar’s Tea Co. Ltd. v., Commissioner of Agricultural West ,Bengal, 44, I.T.-R. G, distinguished and explained, 953

JUDGMENT: CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : C.A.No. 495  of 1970. Appeal by certificate from the judgment and order dated July 25, 1969 of the Calcutta High Court in Income-Tax  Reference No. 61 of 1966. S.C.  Manchanda,  S. P. Nayar and R. N.  Sachthey,  for  the appellant.   Sachin  Chaudhuri,    M.  C.  Chagla,   T.   A. Ramachandran and D. N. Gupta, for the respondent. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by HEGDE, S.-This is an appeal by certificate.  It arises from the decision of the Calcutta High Court in a reference under S. 66(1) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 (to be hereafter referred  to  as the ’Act’).  Three questions  of  law  were referred  to  the High Court for ascertaining  its  opinion. Those questions are :--               (1)   Whether  in  view of the fact  that  the               Tribunal’s  order dated 22nd July 1964 was  an               interlocutory order the Tribunal was competent               to  entertain an application purported  to  be               under  Section 66(1) of the Indian Income  Tax               Act, 1922, in respect of such order ?               (2)   If the answer to question No. 1 above be               in the, affirmative, whether on the facts  and               in the circumstances of the case the  Tribunal               exercised  its  discretion judicially  in  not               allowing the applicant’s petition for  raising               the additional grounds ?                (3)   Whether  on  the  facts  and   in   the               circumstances of the case, the Tribunal  erred               in  dismissing  the appeal  summarily  on  the               grounds stated in its appellate order dated 3-               9-1964 ? The High Court answered the first question in favour of  the assessee and came to the conclusion that it was  unnecessary to  answer  the  remaining two  questions.   Mr.  Manchanda, learned  counsel  for the Revenue did not seek  to  get  any answer  from  us on questions 1 and 2.  His  arguments  were confined to question No. 3. The material facts of the case as could be gathered from the case stated by the Tribunal are as follows-- Herein we are concerned with the assessment of the  assessee for  the assessment year 1947-48, relevant  accounting  year being  the  financial  year 1946-47,  The  assessee  company floated  a  subsidiary  company  named  Messrs.   Clive  Row Investment (Hold-  L797Sup.CI/73 954 ing)  Co.,  Ltd.,  during the  relevant  previous  year  and transferred  to that subsidiary company various shares  held

3

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 6  

by it.  In return the subsidiary company transferred to  the assessee   company  its  shares  of  the  value   of   Rs.1- 38,81,173/-.   The book value of the shares  transferred  by the   assesses   company   to  its   subsidiary   was   Rs., 1,66,69,391/-.  Thus the assessee company sustained a’  loss of  Rs. 27,02,398,/- but it did not claim that loss  in  the return made on, the ground that the transfer in question was made  to its own subsidiary.  The Income Tax Officer  valued the  shares  transferred  by the assessee  company  to  its, subsidiary at the market rate and on that basis came to  the conclusion that the assesses company must be deemed to  have made a profit of Rs. 1,02,40,546/-.  The Income Tax  Officer did  not  hold  that the transaction  between  the  assessee company  and its subsidiary was not a bona fide  transaction or  the assessee company had made any secret profits out  of that  transaction.  In other words, according to the  Income Tax  Officer even though the assessee company had  not  made any  profits in fact, it must be deemed to have made a  pro- fit  of  Rs.  1,02,40,546/- solely on the  ground  that  the market  value  of  the shares transferred  by  the  assessee company  to  its  subsidiary is much more  than  their  book value. Aggrieved  by  the decision of the Income  Tax  Officer  the assessee  went  up  in appeal  to  the  Appellate  Assistant Commissioner.   The Appellate Assistant Commissioner  opined that  the  basis  adopted  by the  Income  Tax  Officer  was unsustainable  and hence set aside the order of  the  Income Tax  Officer and remitted the case back to that Officer  for finding out whether the assessee had really made any profits in  the transaction in question.  As against that order  the Income  Tax  Officer  went up in appeal to  the  Income  Tax Appellate  Tribunal.   In the appeal memo  the,  Income  Tax Officer took only three grounds, namely :               "(1)  For  that  on  the  facts  and  in   the               circumstances   of   the  case   the   learned               Appellate Assistant Commissioner of Income-tax               should  have held that the shares  transferred               by  the  assessee company  to  its  subsidiary               during  the year of account should be  valued,               for  the  purposes  of  assessment  under  the               Indian Income-tax Act, at their market price.               (2)   For that the learned Appellate Assistant               Commissioner of Income-tax misappreciated  the               facts of the present case and wrongly  applied                             the  decision of the ,Madras High Cour t  in  28               I.T.R. 952.                (3) For that the learned Appellate  Assistant               Commissioner,  ignored the principle that  the               cases of the present type the sum to be  taken               for the disposal of the stock-in trade of  the               assessee is not what the assessee                                    955               has chosen to treat as his receipt but what he               would normally have received for it in the due               course of trade." He did toot plead that the order of the Appellate  Assistant Commissioner  was incorrect in law and therefore, should  be set  aside.  It appears that at the hearing the counsel  for the  assessee took the plea that as the Income  Tax  Officer had  not  taken the ground that the order of  the  Appellate Assistant  Commissioner  was  not in  accordance  with  law, consequently it should be set aside, the Tribunal could  not grant  the relief asked for by the Income Tax  Officer.   At that  stage,  as,  seen from the, records,  the  Income  Tax

4

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 6  

Officer applied for amending his appeal memo but that prayer was   rejected  by  the  Income  Tax   Appellate   Tribunal. Ultimately  the Tribunal dismissed the appeal of the  Income Tax  Officer  summarily on the ground that  necessary  pleas have  not  been taken.  Thereafter, at the instance  of  the Revenue the questions, set out earlier were referred to  the High Court. The  procedure adopted by the Tribunal appears to us  to  be some what strange.  The Tribunal instead of dealing with the substance  of  the  matter  appears  to  have  been   unduly influenced by procedural technicalities. we are also not im- pressed with the conclusion of the Tribunal that the  appeal memo  was not in accordance with law.  No specific  formula, is necessary for seeking relief at the hands of any court or Tribunal  if the necessary grounds are taken in  the  appeal memo. Had  we  come to the, conclusion that the  decision  of  the Income Tax Appellate Commissioner was wrong in law we  would have had no hesitation in answering the three questions for- mulated  above  in favour of the Revenue and  directing  the Tribunal  to reconsider the matter.  But’, in the view  that we  are taking the answers to those questions  would  become purely academic. The Appellate Assistant Commissioner came to the  conclusion that  the  assessee and its subsidiary  were  two  different legal  entities.  This conclusion was not and could  not  be challenged.  All the authorities under the Act have come  to the conclusion that the transaction between the assessee and its  subsidiary company was a bona fide transaction and  the assessee  had  not  made  any  secret  profits  out  of  the transaction  in question.  It may be that the  assessee  had transferred  its  valuable  shares  at  cost  price  to.-its subsidiary  in order to so arrange its affairs as to  reduce its tax burden.  The question whether such an arrangement is permissible or not, we shall presently examine. 956 As seen earlier the Appellate Assistant Commissioner came to the  conclusion-that  unless the income Tax Officer  on  the basis  of  material  before  him is  able  to  come  to  the conclusion that the assessee had really made profits in  the transaction,  it is not permissible for him to add  back  to the assessee’s return any fictional income.. In our  opinion that conclusion is fully in accordance with law. The  question  that when an assessee transfers some  of  his stock-in  trade to another person at a price less  than  the market  price,  whether that assessee can be  considered  to have made any profit merely because he has transferred  some of Ms stock-in trade not at the market price but at a lesser price,  came up for consideration before the High  Court  of Madras   in   Sri  Ramalinga  Choodambikai  Mills   Ltd.   v Commissioner  of  Income-tax, Madras(1) The facts  of  ’that case as set out in the head-note are a limited company  sold certain  goods showed in its stock-in trade to its  managing agency  firm  and  to  another firm  in  which  one  of  its directors  was interested.  The sales in question were  held to  be bona fide sales.  At the same time it was  held  that the goods were sold at a concessional rate.  The Income  Tax Officer  sought to tax the assessee therein after  computing the  profits earned by that firm on the basis of the  market price  of the goods, sold and not the actual price at  which those  goods  were sold.  The assessee challenged  the  said basis.  The Tribunal upheld the contention of the  assessee. It came to the conclusion that the assesses had, in reality, made  no  profits at all.  The High Court  agreed  with  the conclusion  reached by the Tribunal.  It opined that in  the

5

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 6  

absence  of any evidence to show either that the sales  were sham  transactions  or that the market prices were  in  fact paid  by the purchasers, the mere fact that the  goods  were sold  a,, a concessional rate to benefit the  purchasers  at the expense of the company would not entitle the  Income-tax department to assess the difference between the market price and  the  price paid by the purchasers, as profits,  of  the company. A somewhat similar question came up for consideration before this Court in Commissioner of Income Tax, Gujarat v.A. Raman and  Co. (2) It is unnecessary of set out the facts of  that case  and  it  is  sufficient  to  refer  to  the   relevant observations  in  the judgment. Shah J. (as  he  then  was), speaking  for  the Court stated the law at page  17  of  the Report thus:-               "The plea raised by the income-tax officer  is               that  income which could have been  earned  by               the assesses was not earned, and a part of the               income  was  earned  by  the  Hindu  undivided               families.  That  according to  the  Income-tax               Officer was brought about by a subterfuge               (1) 28 I. T. R. 952.               (2) 67 I. T. R. 11               957               or contrivance.  Counsel for the  Commissioner               contended that if by resorting to a "device or               contrivance’ income which would normally  have               been earned by the assessee is divided between               the  assessee and another person, the  Income-               tax  Officer  would be entitled to  bring  the               entire income to tax as if it had been  earned               by him.  But the law does not oblige a  trader               to make the maximum profit that he can out  of               his   trading  transactions.    Income   which               accrues to a trader is taxable in his hands  :               income  which  he  could  have,  but  has  not               earned, is not made taxable as income  accrued               to  him.  By adopting a advice, if it is  made               to  appear that income which belonged. to  the               assessee had been earned by some other person,               that income may be brought to tax in the hands               of the assessee, and if the income has escaped               tax  in  a  previous  assessment  a  case  for               commencing a proceeding for reassessment under               section 147 (b) may be made out.  Avoidance of               tax  liability  by  so  arranging   commercial               affairs  that charge of tax is distributed  is               not  prohibited.. A tax payer may resort to  a               device to divert the income before it  accrue$               or arises to him.  Effectiveness of the device               depends  not upon considerations of  morality,               but  on the operation of the  Income-tax  Act.               Legislative injunction in taxing statutes  may               not, except on peril of penalty, be  violated,               but it may lawfully be circumvented.’ It is a well accepted principle of law that an assessee  can so  arrange  his  affairs as to  minimise  his  tax  burden. Hence, if the assessee in this case has arranged his affairs in such a manner as to reduce his tax liability by  starting a  subsidiary  company and transferring its shares  to  that subsidiary  company  and  thus foregoing  part  of  its  own profits and at the same time enabling its subsidiary to earn some profits, such a course is not impermissible under law. Mr. Manchanda contented that a person should not be  allowed to adopt a device by which he gives up something through the

6

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 6  

tight  hand  and receives the same through  the  left  hand. According to him there is no difference between the assessee and  its subsidiary and, therefore, when the assessee  tries to make profits through its subsidiary, we must presume that the profits were made by the assessee itself.  In support of that contention he sought to place reliance on the  decision of  the  House of Lords in Sharkey (Inspector of  Taxes)  v. Wernher(1).  Therein, the assessee was a breeder of  horses. She  also had racing stables.  She transferred. some  horses from her stud to (1)  [1956] Appeal Cases 58. 958 the  stables.  In so doing she debited in her accounts  only the cost of  breeding the horses and not their market price. The  question  arose, whether in computing  her  income  the market price of those horses or merely the cost of  breeding them should be taken into consideration.  The House of Lords upheld  the  contention of the Revenue by majority  that  in computing  the profits of the assessee the market  price  of those horses should be taken into consideration.  The  ratio of this decision is similar to the ratio of the decision  of this  Court  in  Dooar’s Tea Co.  Ltd.  v.  Commissioner  of Agricultural  Income-tax,  West Bengal(1).  Therein,  a  tea garden  owner  raised in his own garden bamboo,  thatch  and some other agricultural produce.  He utilised those products for  the  purpose of its tea business.  The  question  arose whether  while  assessing  the tea garden  owner  under  the Bengal  Agricultural Income-tax,.  Act the cost  of  raising bamboo, thatch, etc., should be taken into consideration  or their  market  price  should be  taken  into  consideration. ’This  Court upheld the contention of the Revenue  that  the market  price  of  those  products  should  be  taken   into consideration  in computing the agricultural income  of  the assessee.   The ratio of the decision in Warnher’s as  well, as  in  Dooar’s  Tea  Co.’s case does  not  bear.  upon  the question of law arising for decision in this case.   Therein what the courts had to consider was where a person  carrying on  a trade disposes of a part of his goods not by  way.  of sale in the course of trade but for his own use, whether the production  cost of such goods or the market price of  those goods  should.  be taken into consideration.   But,  in  the present  case  we are called upon to consider  the  question whether  when  one  trader transfers his  goods  to  another trader  at  a price less than the market price,  the  taxing authority  can take into consideration the market  price  of those goods, ignoring the real price fetched.  As  mentioned earlier  the latter question is no more res Integra.  It  is concluded by the decision of this Court in A Raman and Co.’s Case (supra). For  the reasons mentioned above we are of the opinion  that the   conclusion   reached  by   the   Appellate   Assistant Commissioner  is in accordance with law and it would  be  an exercise  in futility to answer the third question  set  out above  in favour of the Revenue and remit the case  back  to the Tribunal.  In this view of the matter we do not’ propose to answer that question. In  the result this appeal fails and the same  is  dismissed with no order as to costs. P.V.S. Appeal dismissed. (1)  44 1 T. R. 6. 959