19 February 1996
Supreme Court
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LIFE INSURANCE CORPORATION OF INDIA,BOMBAY Vs COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX, BOMBAY

Bench: VERMA,JAGDISH SARAN (J)
Case number: Appeal Civil 295 of 1979


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PETITIONER: LIFE INSURANCE CORPORATION OF INDIA,BOMBAY

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX, BOMBAY

DATE OF JUDGMENT:       19/02/1996

BENCH: VERMA, JAGDISH SARAN (J) BENCH: VERMA, JAGDISH SARAN (J) VENKATASWAMI K. (J)

CITATION:  1996 AIR 1720            JT 1996 (2)   336  1996 SCALE  (2)258

ACT:

HEADNOTE:

JUDGMENT:                       J U D G M E N T J.S.VERMA.J. :      A  reference  was  made  by  the  Income-tax  Appellate Tribunal under  Section 256(1)  Of the Income-tax Act, 1961, at the  instance of  the assessee,  to the Bombay High Court for deciding  seven questions  of law  arising  out  of  the Tribunal’s order.  The first  six questions were answered by the High  Court in favour of the assessee, while the seventh question was  answered against  the assessee. This appeal by special leave  is  by  the  assessee  challenging  the  High Court’s decision  only in  respect of  the seventh  question decided against the assessee. That question is as under:      "Whether on  the fact  and  in  the      circumstance of the case,the sum of      Rs.23,959/-being  the   refund   of      income-tax    received    by    the      Corporation       during        the      undervaluation period in respect of      the income-tax  upto the assessment      year 1956-57  of the life insurance      bus  insurers   of  the   erstwhile      insurers whose  business  had  been      taken  over   by  the  Corporation,      should be  allowed as  a deflection      while computing  the income  of the      assessee under  Rule 2(1)(b) of the      First Schedule  to  the  Income-tax      Act, 1961?" In this  appeal, no  further  reference  to  the  other  six questions is necessary.      The  assessee   Life  Insurance  Corporation  of  India (Corporation) is  a statutory  Corporation established under the Life  Insurance Corporation  Act, 1956  with effect from 1st September, 1956. The relevant assessment year is 1963-64 for which  the accounting period ended  on 31.3.1963. During

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the relevant assessment year,  the assessee received refunds of  income-tax   of  3,02,90,898/-  in  the  life  insurance business.  The  assessee  contended  before  the  Income-tax officer that  the entire amount of refund was not includable in the  revenue account  and treated as profits and gains of the assessee  for the  assessment year  under consideration. The Income-tax  Officer rejected the contention and included the entire  amount in the revenue account. In the assessee’s appeal, the  Appellate Assistant  Commissioner held that out of the  amount of  Rs. 3,02,90,898/  included in the revenue account, the  sum  of  Rs.  2,73,50,939/-  only  was  to  be excluded but  the balance  amount had  to be  included.  The assessee as  well as  the revenue  preferred appeals  to the Tribunal.      Before the  Tribunal, it  was contended  by the revenue that in  computing the profits of the assessee under Section 44 read  with Rule  2(1)(b) of  the First  Schedule  to  the Income-tax Act,  1961, the  Income-tax Officer can make only such adjustments  to the surplus or deficit disclosed by the actuarial valuation  which are  permissible under  the rule; that the  rule permits adjustment by way of exclusion of any surplus or  deficit included  therein which  was made in any earlier inter-valuation  period  relating  to  the  assessee itself and  not to  that of its predecessor in the business. It was contended that a part of the refund Of taxes received by the Corporation had not been included in the surplus of the earlier  inter-valuation period relating to the assessee but of  its predecessor  since the  refund was in respect of the taxes  paid by the predecessor prior to the formation of the Corporation  on 1st  September, 1956.  It was  contended that the  words "included  therein"  used  in  Rule  2(1)(b) indicated that  the surplus or deficit in any earlier inter- valuation period  must relate to that of the Corporation and not its  predecessor. The  decision of the Bombay High Court in  Bombay   Mutual  Life   Assurance   Society   Ltd.   vs. Commissioner of  Income-tax. Bombay  City, [1951] 20 ITR 189 was distinguished.   The contention of the assessee was that the payment  of taxes  which gave  rise to the refund having been made  prior to the formation of the Corporation, by the predecessor, there  was  no  occasion  for  the  surplus  or deficit  in   any  earlier  inter-valuation  period  of  the Corporation  being  required  to  be  looked  into  for  the purpose. Reliance  was placed  on  Section  7  of  the  Life Insurance Corporation Act, 1956 (for short "the LIC Act") to contend that  the Corporation  stepped into the shoes of its predecessor for  all practical  purposes including the legal consequences  flowing   from  the  refund  received  by  the Corporation as the successor of its predecessor in business.      The Tribunal accepted the contention of the revenue and held as under :-      ".........But only  such portion of      the refunds which has been included      in the  surplus or  deficit made in      the earlier          intervaluation      period alone has to be excluded. On      the analysis of the refunds and the      assets to  which they  related, the      Appellate Asstt. Commissioner found      that this  sum of  Rs.2,73,50,939/-      only had  entered into  the surplus      of   the   earlier   intervaluation      period  out   of  Rs.3,02,90,898/-.      Therefore,  only  that  portion  is      allowable u/s.2(1)(b)  and has been      rightly allowed  by  the  Appellate

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    Asstt.  Commissioner.  Disallowance      of the  balance of  the tax  refund      was quite in order because they did      not come  out of  the assets  which      were included in the surplus of the      earlier inter valuation period."      The above-quoted  question was  referred to  the  High- Court for  its decision  at the  instance  of  the  assessee Corporation, under Section 256(1) of the Income-tax Act. The High  Court upheld  the  view  taken  by  the  Tribunal. That decision  of the  High Court  is reported in [1978] 115 ITR 45  (Life Insurance  Corporation of  India.  Bombay  vs. Commissioner of  Income-tax. Bombay  City-III). The relevant part of  the High Court’s judgment, rejecting the assessee’s contention, is as under :-      "It is  difficult  to  accept  this      submission.  Rule   2(1)(b)  is  an      artificial mode  of computation  of      profits of  an assessee who carries      on life  insurance business.  These      profits are  arrived  at  by  first      determining the  annual average  of      the  surplus  after  adjusting  the      surplus or  deficit as disclosed by      the  actuarial  valuation  made  in      accordance with  the Insurance Act,      1938, in respect of the last inter-      valuation    period.     What    is      contemplated  by  rule  2(1)(b)  is      that if  there  is a surplus of the      earlier   inter-valuation   period,      which was entered in the accounting      while finding  out the  surplus for      the  inter-   valuation  period  in      question, then  that surplus has to      be deducted  for  the  purposes  of      finding out  the surplus in respect      of the assessment year in question.      It is  necessary to  remember  that      when an actuarial valuation is made      by an  actuary  on  behalf  of  the      company,    first    Of    all    a      consolidated  revenue   account  is      prepared, which  would show  on the      one  side   the  amount   of   life      insurance fund  at the  end of  the      period for  which the  consolidated      revenue account  is  prepared.  The      actuary then  finds out what is the      net liability  of the company under      the  current   policies  and  after      fixing the  net  liability  on  the      current policies,  he deducts  that      liability from  the life  assurance      fund and the result is the surplus.      If  this  is  the  concept  of  the      surplus to  be found  on  actuarial      valuation, then  it is obvious that      before a  surplus is  asked  to  be      deducted on  the ground  that  that      part of  the  surplus  was  carried      forward  from  the  earlier  inter-      valuation period,  it must be found      as a  fact that  what is now sought      to  be  deducted  was  shown  as  a

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    surplus  of   the  earlier   inter-      valuation  period.   Rule   2(1)(b)      operates   in    respect   of   the      particular assessee  whose  profits      of the  life insurance business are      under  computation.  Accepting  the      contention of  the learned  counsel      for the assessee would mean that we      would have  to add  to the language      of rule  2(1)(b) so  that it should      be so  construed that what is to be      taken  into   account  is  not  the      actual  surplus   which  has   been      carried  forward  into  the  inter-      valuation period  in  question  but      also  some  amount  which  must  be      deemed to have been carried forward      into  the  surplus  of  the  inter-      valuation period.  It is, no doubt,      true  that   the  legal  effect  of      section 7 of the Life Insurance Act      is that  the assets  of the insurer      who carried  on the  life insurance      business are  vested  in  the  Life      Insurance  Corporation,   but   the      legal effect of that vesting cannot      be imported  into the provisions of      rule 2(1)(b)  where a  precondition      has  to   be  satisfied   before  a      deduction in respect of the surplus      is  made,  the  precondition  being      that that  surplus has  to be shown      as a surplus Of the previous inter-      valuation period. There is no scope      for reading  into rule  2(1)(b) any      additional powers  for the  income-      tax authorities  to  so  amend  the      figure of surplus that is different      from the  actual surplus  which  is      shown on the basis of the actuarial      valuation. ........"                             (at page 55)      In substance, the High Court declined to give effect to Section 7  of the  LIC Act on its view that the provision in Rule 2(1)(b)  alone was  decisive and  it could not be given effect to,  it the  legal effect of Section 7 of the LIC Act is to be taken into account. Apparently, the High Court took the view that Rule 2(1)(b) cannot be reconciled with Section 7 of  the LIC  Act.The question  is  whether  this  view  is correct.        The   relevant  provisions   in  the  Life  Insurance Corporation Act, 1956 are as under:-           "7.  Transfer  of  assets  and      liabilities  of  existing  insurers      carrying on  controlled business. -      (1) On  the  appointed  day*  there      shall be  transferred to and vested      in the  Corporation all  the assets      and liabilities appertaining to the      controlled    business    of    all      insurers.           (2) The assets appertaining to      the  controlled   business  of   an      insurer shall  be deemed to include      all  rights  and  powers,  and  all

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    property,   whether    movable   or      immovable,  appertaining   to   his      controlled business,  including, in      particular, cash  balances, reserve      funds,  investments,  deposits  and      all other  interests and  rights in      or arising  out of such property as      may be  in the  possession  of  the      insurer and all books of account or      documents    relating     to    the      controlled business of the insurer;      and liabilities  shall be deemed to      include all  debts, liabilities and      obligations of  whatever kind  then      existing and  appertaining  to  the      controlled business of the insurer.      xxx              xxx            xxx     ___________      * 1st September, 1956."           "9. General  effect of vesting      of controlled business. -(1)..           (2) If  on the  appointed  day      any suit,  appeal  or  other  legal      proceeding of  whatever  nature  is      pending by  or against  an insurer,      then, in  so far  as it  relates to      his controlled  business, it  shall      not abate, be discontinued or be in      any way  prejudicially affected  by      reason  of   the  transfer  to  the      Corporation of  the business of the      insurer or  of anything  done under      this Act,  but the  appeal or other      proceeding   may    be   continued,      prosecuted  and   enforced  by   or      against the    Corporation."      Sub-section (1) of Section 7 clearly provides that from the appointed  day in  1956, all  the assets and liabilities appertaining to the controlled business of all insurers, are to  be   transferred  and   vested  in  the  Life  Insurance Corporation of  India. Sub-section  (2) of  Section 7 enacts the legal fiction by virtue of which "all rights and powers, and all property, whether movable or immovable, appertaining to his  controlled business,  including, in particular, cash balances, reserve funds, investments, deposits and all other interests and  rights in  or arising out of such property as may be  in the  possession of  the insurer  and all books of accounts or documents relating to the controlled business of the insurer"  were deemed  to be  the assets  of an  insurer which came  to be  transferred and vested in the Corporation from the  appointed day, and so also all the liabilities. In other words, from the appointed day, the Corporation stepped into the  shoes of all such insurers. Section’9 provides for the general  effect of  vesting of  controlled business  and sub-section  (2)   therein   expressly   enacts   that   the Corporation stepped  into  the  shoes  of  the  predecessor- insurer from  the appointed  day in  respect  of  any  suit, appeal or  other legal proceeding of whatever nature pending by or against an insurer.      This legal  fiction enacted  in Section  7(2)  includes within the  assets transferred and vested in the Corporation of all  such insurers  any amounts  which were  due  to  the predecessor-insurer and  which  remained  to  be  recovered. Section 9(2)  enabled the Corporation to prosecute any legal proceeding of whatever nature for the purpose of recovering

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amounts due  to the  predecessor on the appointed day. There is no  dispute that  any liability of the insurer also stood transferred similarly  to the  Corporation. Accordingly,  if any amount  remained due  towards taxes to be recovered from the predecessor,  it was  a  liability  transferred  to  the Corporation and  the Corporation  became liable to discharge the same.  It is  also not  in dispute  that it  is only  by virtue of  this character of the Corporation that the amount refunded as  excess tax  paid prior  to the appointed day by the predecessor  came to  be refunded  to the Corporation to whom all the assets of the predecessor stood transferred and vested from  the appointed  day in  1956.  It  is  also  not disputed  that   the  opening   balance  inherited   by  the Corporation from the predecessor on the appointed day had to be deducted  under Rule 2(1)(b) and the amount shown as such was so  deducted. It  is further  not disputed  that if this excess amount of tax paid by the predecessor had not been so paid and  the question  of refund  did not  arise, then this extra amount  would have  formed a  part  of  the  inherited opening balance  with the  Corporation and  deduction of the same would  have been given under Rule 2(1)(b). The question is : Whether, the refund having been made to the Corporation only because  of the  provision in Section 7 of the LIC Act, the same  result should  not follow  on the  wording of Rule 2(1)(b) ?      Rule 2(1)(b)  of the  First Schedule to the Income- tax Act, 1961 is as under:-           "2. Computation  of profits of      life insurance  business. -(1)  The      profits and gains of life insurance      business shall  be taken  to be the      greater of the following           (a).............           (b) the  annual average of the      surplus arrived at by adjusting the      surplus or deficit disclosed by the      actuarial   valuation    made    in      accordance with  the Insurance Act,      1938 (4 of 1938), in respect of the      last inter-valuation  period ending      before  the   commencement  of  the      assessment year,  so as  to exclude      from  it  any  surplus  or  deficit      included therein  which was made in      any earlier  inter-valuation period      and any  expenditure  or  allowance      which is  wot deductible  under the      provisions of  [Sections 30  to 43-      Al* in  computing income chargeable      under the  head "Profits  and gains      of business     or profession".      ------------      *Subs. by  Finance (No.  2) Act  of      1967 (w.e.f. 1-4-1967).      It is  obvious that  in the  surplus or  deficit in any inter-valuation period  relating to  the  Corporation  which came to  be formed  only on  the appointed day in 1956, this amount could  not be  reflected since it related to a period prior to  the formation of the Corporation. The law does not contemplate or require the performance of an impossible act- lex non  cogit ad impossibilia. It is now to be seen whether the expression  "included therein"  in Rule 2(1)(b) is alone sufficient to negative the logical legal effect of Section 7 of the LIC Act.      The legal  fiction enacted  in Section  7(2) of the LIC

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Act must  be taken  to  its  logical  conclusion.  For  this reason, the amount of refund made to the Corporation because of the  excess tax  paid by  the predecessor  prior  to  the appointed day on which the Corporation was formed, must form a part  of the  assets of  the predecessor  which came to be transferred and  vested in  the Corporation on the appointed day in  1956 on  the formation  of the  Corporation. For the same reason,  this amount of refund, even though made later, must also  be deemed to be included in the inherited opening balance shown  by the  Corporation  in  the  earlier  inter- valuation period which undisputedly had to be deducted under Rule 2(1)(b).  It follows that because of this legal fiction being required  to be  taken to  its logical conclusion, the amount so  refunded to  the Corporation must be deemed to be included  in  the  earlier  inter-valuation  period  of  the Corporation. On  this conclusion,  the requirement  of  Rule 2(1)(b) is  satisfied since  the  amount  is  deemed  to  be included  in  the  earlier  inter-valuation  period  of  the Corporation itself. The expression "included therein" which is the basis of the view taken by the Tribunal and the High Court  and is also the contention of the revenue before us, must  be construed  to mean also the amount deemed to be included therein because of the legal effect of Section 7 of the LIC Act.      The High  Court failed to appreciate the true import of the decision in Bombay Mutual Life Assurance Society Ltd vs. Commissioner of  Income-tax. Bombay City, [1951] 20 ITR 189, to take the view that the decision turned on the application of Rule  3(b) of  the Schedule which made certain provisions for the  purposes of  computing surplus  for the purposes of Rule 2;  and that  the latter  part of  Rule 3(b)  was given effect to  because it  was found that that amount was liable to be included as a part of the surplus. The significance of that decision  in the present context is in the observations of Chagla, C.J. speaking for the Bench, as under :-      "With regard  to these  two sums we      would like  to add  that as  we are      holding that these two amounts form      part of  the surplus  and therefore      liable  to   tax  although  in  the      accounts of  the company, they have      not been  shown as  forming part of      the    surplus,    Sir    Jamshedji      apprehends that  when in fact these      amounts are  shown as  part of  the      surplus  in   future   the   taxing      authorities will  tax  this  amount      over again.  Now it  is clear  that      when you  determine the surplus for      the purposes  of Rule 2(b) you have      to deduct  from it  any surplus  or      deficit included  therein which was      made in  any earlier intervaluation      period.       Therefore   if    the      Department proposes to tax this sum      of Rs.2,72,946  and also the sum of      Rs.1,00,000 it  can only  be on the      basis that these two amounts formed      part of  the surplus. Therefore, in      future if  these  two  amounts  are      shown in the actuarial valuation as      part of  the surplus they would not      be liable  to tax over again as the      position in  law is  clear  and  we      have no  doubt that  the Department

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    will act  in  accordance  with  the      directions we  are giving  in  this      reference."                            (at page 198)      The principle  enunciated in  the above  passage to  be noticed is :      "........in  future  if  these  two      amounts are  shown in the actuarial      valuation as  part of  the  surplus      they would  not be  liable  to  tax      over again  as the  position in law      is clear. ....." This aspect has been overlooked by the High Court.      A harmonious  construction of the provisions of the LIC Act, particularly Section 7 therein, and Rule 2(1)(b) of the First Schedule  to the  Income-tax Act,  1961, requires this construction to  be made.  Unless this  is done, full effect cannot be  given to  Section 7  of the LIC Act, for which we find  no   reason.  Since   the  requirement  of  harmonious construction  leads   to  this   result  which  is  also  in consonance with  logic and  justice of  the cause, we do not find any reason to take a different view.       Consequently,  the appeal is allowed. The judgments of the High Court and the Tribunal are set aside. The aforesaid question is  answered in  favour of the assessee and against the revenue. No costs.