04 April 1997
Supreme Court
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M/S MADRAS INDUSTRIAL INVESTMENTCORPORATION LTD. Vs THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX,TAMIL NADU I, MADRAS

Bench: S.C. AGRAWAL,SUJATA V. MANOHAR
Case number: Appeal Civil 3531 of 1982


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PETITIONER: M/S MADRAS INDUSTRIAL INVESTMENTCORPORATION LTD.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX,TAMIL NADU I, MADRAS

DATE OF JUDGMENT:       04/04/1997

BENCH: S.C. AGRAWAL, SUJATA V. MANOHAR

ACT:

HEADNOTE:

JUDGMENT:                       J U D G M E N T Mrs. Sujata V. Manohar, j.      The appellant  is public  limited company.  The present appeal filed  by it  pertains to  the accounting year ending June 30, 1967 relevant to the assessment year 1968-89.      On December  10, 1966  a public issue of the debentures of the  appellant company  was made.  The total value of the debentures was Rs. 1.5 crores repayable with interest at the rate of  5-3/4% per  annum. The  debentures were issued at a discount of  2%, redeemable  after 12 years. The issue price of a debenture of Rs. 100/- was Rs. 98/-. The total discount on the  issue of Rs. 1.5 crores amounted to Rs. 3 lakhs. For the Rs.  10,000/- written  off as  discount on  the previous issue.      The Income-tax  offer by  his  assessment  order  dated January 31,  1969 disallowed  the claim of the appellant for deduction of  Rs. 22,500/-  on the  ground that  discount on bonds and debentures was not allowable as an expenditure. On appeal,   the Appellate  Assistant Commissioner by his order dated July  4, 1969  held that  the discount  allowed at the time of  the issue of debentures was to be treated as a part of the  expenditure for  such issue. He upheld the claim for deduction of  Rs. 12,500/- But rejected the claim as regards Rs. 10,000/-  on the  ground that  it related do discount on debentures issued  in an  earlier year  and hence it did not pertain to the relevant previous year.      The  assessee  then  preferred  an  appeal  before  the Appellate Tribunal. The assessee contended. Inter alia, that (1)  The  Appellate  Assistant  Commissioner  had  erred  in sustaining the  disallowance of  Rs. 10,000/-  on the ground that it  related to  an earlier  year and  (2) The Appellate Assistant Commissioner  having held that discount allowed at the time  issued of  debentures was to be treated as part of the expenditure incurred for such issue, should have further allowed a  sum of Rs. 2,87,000/- being balance amount of the total discount  of Rs.  3,00,000/- relating  to the issue of debentures of Rs. crores. Before the Tribunal the department contended that  the appellant-company  had,  for  the  first time, made  a new claim before the Tribunal for deduction of Rs. 2,87,500/-  and the  Tribunal  had  no  jurisdiction  to

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examine this  claim. This  objection  was  rejected  by  the Tribunal. The  Tribunal held  that the  expenditure  of  Rs. 3,00,000/- was  incurred during  the relevant  previous year although it  was proportionately written of over a period of 12 years. The expenditure of Rs. 3,00,000/- was allowable as expenditure incurred  for accountancy  purposes this  amount was spread  over 12  year and  only Rs. 12,500/- was written off, being the proportionate amount for 6 months ending with June  30,  1967,  cannot  make  difference.  Therefore,  the Tribunal allowed  a deduction of Rs. 2,87,500/- also. On the application of  the Department,  the Tribunal stated as case under Section  256(1) of  the Income-tax  Act,  1961  to  be decided  by   the  Madras  High  Court.  The  following  two questions were referred to the Madras High Court:-      "(1) Whether  on the  facts and  in      the circumstances  of the case, the      Tribunal    was     justified    in      permitting the  assessee  to  raise      the  contention   that  the  entire      amount of  Rs. 3,00,000/- being the      discount relating  to the  issue of      debentures  for   Rs.  1.5   crores      during the  relevant previous  year      was to  be allowed as a permissible      deduction?      (2) Whether on the facts and in the      circumstances  of   the  case,  the      Tribunal was  justified in  holding      that the  assessee had  incurred an      expenditure   of   Rs.   3,00,000/-      during the  relevant previous  year      by was  of  discount  paid  to  the      persons who  had subscribed  to the      debentures issued by it for Rs. 1.5      crores during the relevant previous      year and  the same was allowable as      a revenue expenditure?"      The Madras  High Court  by its judgment and order dated November 5, 1987 (reported in 1980 124 ITR 454) answered the first question in favour of the appellant-assessee. The High Court reframed the second question as follows:      "Whether there  was any expenditure      in the  sum of  Rs. 2,87,500/-  and      whether     it      was     revenue      expenditure?"      It held  that the  discount of  Rs. 3,00,000/-  did not represent any  payment made  to any  one  so  to  constitute expenditure. It  held that  no expenditure  was laid  out or incurred by  the assessee/appellant  company which  could be allowed as  a deduction.  It noted  that out  of  the  total discount of  Rs. 3,00,000/-  a discount  of Rs. 12,500/- had been allowed  by the  Tribunal which  the Department  ha not challenged. Hence the High Court was concerned only with the balance amount  of Rs.  2,87,500/- which the High Court held could not  be  considered  as  expenditure.  Therefore,  the second  part   of  the   question  whether  it  was  revenue expenditure or not, did not require consideration.      The present  appeal is  filed by  the appellant-company against the  second question  as reframed by the Madras High Court and  answered as  above. We  have  first  to  consider whether the  discount of  Rs. 3,00,000/- on debentures which were issued by the appellant company is expenditure incurred by the  appellant company  for the purposes of its business. The appellant-company  actually received  Rs. 1.47 crores as against which   it  incurred a  liability to return a sum of

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Rs. 1.50  crores with  interest at  the end of 12 years (the date of  redemption).  This  liability  which  the  assessee incurred to  pay the amount of Rs. 3,00,000/- in addition to what it  actually received,  is being  written off  over the period of 12 years. Can it be treated as expenditure? In the case of  Indian Molasses  Co. (Private) Ltd. v. commissioner of Income-tax,  West Bengal  (1959 37  ITR  66)  this  Court considered the  meaning of "expenditure" under Section 10(2) (xv)  of  the  Income-tax  Act  1922.  The  High  court  was concerned with sums which were transferred by the company to trustees to  take out  an annuity  policy on the life of the managing director  or the  longest life  policy in favour of the managing director and his wife. There was a provision in the policy  for surrendering  the annuity  for a capital sum after giving  notice. The  payment by  the  company  to  the trustees  was   contingent  and  the  liability  itself  was contingent.  The   Court  said  that  expenditure  which  is deductiable for  income tax purposes is one which is towards a liability  actually existing at the time. Putting aside of money which  may become  expenditure on  the happening of an event is  not expenditure. Dealing with what is expenditure, this Court  said (page  78) that  "expenditure" is  equal to "expense and  "expense" is  money laid out by calculation ad intention. The  idea of spending in the sense of "paying out or away"  money is  the primary meaning. Expenditure is what is paid  out or  away, something that is gone irretrievably. In the  case of Calcutta Co. Ltd. v. commissioner of Income- tax, West  Bengal (1969 37 ITR 1) decided in the same month, the assessee  bought  lands  and  sold  them  in  plots  for building purposes.  The assessee  undertook to  develop  the plots by  laying out  roads, Providing  a  drainage  system, installing  lights   etc.  when  the  plots  were  sold  the purchasers paid  only a  portion of  the purchase  price and undertook to  pay the  balance in  instalments. The assessee under took  to carry  out the development of these plots. In the relevant  accounting year, the assessee who followed the mercantile system  of accounting,  actually received in cash only a  sum of Rs. 29,392/- towards the sale price of lands; but it  credited in  its accounts  the sum  of Rs.  43,692/- representing the  full sale  price of  land and  at the same time it  also debited  an estimated  sum of  Rs. 24,809/- as expenditure for  the development  it had undertaken to carry out even  though that  amount was  not actually  spent.  The Department disallowed  this expenditure. Upholding the claim of the  assessee to  deduction, this  Court  said  that  the undertaking given  by the  assessee imported  a liability on the assessee which accrued on the dates of the deeds of sale though that liability was to be discharged at a future date. It  was   thus  an   accrued  liability  and  the  estimated expenditure which  would be incurred in discharging the same could be  deducted from  the profits  and gains of business. The difficulty  in  the  estimation  of  liability  did  not convert the  accrued liability  into a conditional one. This Court said that the expression ’profits or gains’ in Section 10(1) of  the Income-tax  Act, 1922  had to be understood in its commercial  sense; and  there could be no computation of such profits  and  gains  until  the  expenditure  which  is necessary for the purpose of earning the receipt is deducted therefrom, whether  the expenditure  is actually incurred or the liability  in respect thereof has accrued even though it may have to be discharged at some future date.      Thus "expenditure"  is not  necessarily confined to the money  which  has  been  actually  paid  out.  It  covers  a liability which  has accrued  or  which  has  been  incurred although it  may have  to be  discharged at  a future  date.

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However,  a  contingent  liability  which  may  have  to  be discharged in future cannot be considered as expenditure.      In the case of Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay North v. Chandulal  Keshawalal and  Co.  (1960  38  ITR  601)  the assessee-firm was  the  managing  agent  of  a  company.  In accordance with the managing agency agreement the commission for the relevant accounting year was a sum of Rs. 3,09,114/- . But  at the  request of  the managed  company the assessee agreed to  accept a  sum of  rupees one  lakh  only  as  its commission.  The  Appellate  Tribunal  found  that  (i)  the financial  position   of  the  managed  company  was  rather unsatisfactory, (ii)  that the assessee had been remitting a part of  whole of  its commission  in that past whenever the profits of  the managed  company were  unsatisfactory, (iii) that the  waiver was neither a bounty nor mala fide and (iv) that the  business of the assessee was so linked up with the managed company  that if  the latter  was put  on a  sounder position the  assessee would  get a larger commission in the future. It  held that the part of the commission remitted by the  assessee   was  given  up  for  reasons  of  commercial expediency and  was  business  expenditure  allowable  under Section 10(2)(xv)  of the  Income-tax Act  1323. In deciding whether a  payment of  money is  deductible expenditure, one has to  take  into  consideration  questions  of  commercial expediency  and   the  principles   of  ordinary  commercial trading. What  is relevant  to note in this case is that the assessee had  not paid out any amount but had relinquished a part of its claim.      In the  case of  Commissioner of  Income-tax, tax, West Bengal v.  Indian Jute  Mills Association (1982 134 ITR 68), Sabyasachi Mukharji, J. as he then was, in the Calcutta High Court,   considered    the   meaning   of   the   expression "expenditure"  and   said  that   the  expression   must  be understood  in   the  context  in  which  it  is  used.  The Legislature  has   used  the   expression  "allowances   and depreciation" in  several sections  in the scheme in Chapter IV of the Income-tax Act, 1961. Section 37 of the Income-tax Act,  1961,   enjoins  that   any  expenditure   not   being expenditure of the nature described in Section 30 to 36 laid out or  expended wholly  and exclusively  for the purpose of the business  or profession  should be  allowed in computing the income  chargeable under  the head "Profits and gains of business or profession". In Sections 30 to 36 the expression "expenses incurred" as well as "allowances and depreciation" has been  used. Therefore,  the Legislature  was  using  the expression "any  expenditure "  in Section 37 to cover both. He  intrepreted   Section  44A  and  the  term  "expenditure incurred" occurring  there in the light of Sections 30 to 36 (1). In  that case,  the Calcutta High Court was required to consider the  claim of  the assessee which was a non-trading association to  depreciation on  furniture,  air-conditioner etc. which  were debited  in  its  account.  The  Department contended that  the assessee  could not  claim  depreciation since it  was a  none-trading association. The Calcutta High Court held  that having regard to the purpose of Section 44A the depreciation claimed should be construed as "expenditure incurred"  and   the  assessee  would  be  entitled  to  the beneficial construction  of the provision. The Calcutta High Court differed  in that  case from  the view  taken  by  the Madras High  Court in  the judgment which is under challenge before us.      Therefore, although  expenditure primarily  denotes the idea  of   spending  or   paying  out,   it  may,  in  given circumstances, also  cover an  amount of  loss which has not gone out of the assessee’s pocked but which is all the same,

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an amount  which theassessee  has had  to give  up. It  also covers a  liability  which  the  assessee  has  incurred  in presenti although  it is  payable in  futuro.  A  contingent liability  that   may  arise  in  future  is,  however,  not "expenditure". It  would also  cover  not  just  a  one-time payment but a liability spread out over a number of years.      The question  whether a  discount on  bounds should  be treated as  "expenditure", directly  arose before the Madhya Pradesh High Court in the case of M.P. Financial Corporation v. Commission  of Income-tax  (1987 165  ITR 765. The Madhya Predesh High  Court was  required to  deal with a case where State Financial  Corporation had issued bonds at a discount. The Court  held that the expression "expenditure" as used in Section  37   of  the  Income-tax  Act,  1961  may,  in  the circumstances of a particular case, cover an amount which is really loss  and the  said amount  has not gone out from the pockets of  the assessee. In the case of issue of bonds at a discount, it said that the same principles as are applicable in the  case of  issue of debentures at a discount, would be attracted. The  amount of  discount, in  effect,  represents deferred interest  and an assessee would not be justified in claiming deduction  of the  entire amount of discount in the accounting year  in question.  But it  would be  entitled to proportionate deductions  spread over  the period  for which the bonds remain outstanding. The High Court has relied upon a passage in Spicer and Pegler’s "Book-Keeping and Accounts" (seventeenth edition) at page 240 which is as follows:-      "The discount  on the  issue is, in      effect,  deferred   interest,   and      should accordingly  be written  off      over the  period having  the use of      the    money    raised    by    the      debentures, unless  a sinking  fund      is created  to accumulate  the full      redemption  price,   including  the      discount."      It has  also relied  upon  a  paragraph  in  Batliboi’s "Principles and Practice of Auditing" which is as follows:-      "When  debentures   are  issued  at      discount,   an    account    styled      ’Discount on  Debentures  Account’,      will be  debited with  the discount      allowed   on    the   issue.    The      debentures account will be credited      in the books at their nominal value      and will  appear at that value as a      liability in the balance-sheet. The      loss  thus   arising  need  not  be      completely written  off in the year      in which the debentures are issued,      since the  benefit  to  be  derived      from  the   amount  borrowed   will      continue  till  be  debentures  are      redeemed. Where  the debentures are      redeemable at  the end  of a  fixed      period, a  proportionate amount  of      discount should  be written  of out      of revenue  ever year  during which      the debentures are outstanding."      The Madhya  Pradesh High  Court also  referred  to  the judgment of  the Madras  High Court which is under challenge before us  and differed  from it, preferring the decision of the Calcutta  High Court  in the  case  of  Commissioner  of Income Tax  v. Indian  Jute Mills  Association (supra).  The Madhya Pradesh  High Court  held that the assessee would not

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be justified  in claiming  deduction of the entire amount of discount in  the accounting  year in  question but  it would nevertheless be  entitled to  proportionate deduction spread over  the   period  for   which  the   bonds  would   remain outstanding.      Therefore,  when  a  company  issues  debentures  at  a discount, it  incurs a liability to pay a larger amount than what it  has borrowed, at a future date. We need not go into the question whether this additional liability equivalent to the discount,  which is  incurred in presenti but is payable in future,  represents deferred  interest or  not. That  may depend upon  the totality  of circumstances  relating to the issue of  debentures, including  its terms.  The  liability, however, to  pay the  discounted amount  over and  above the amount received for the debentures, is a liability which has been incurred  by  the  company  for  the  purposes  of  its business  in  order  to  generate  funds  for  its  business activities. The  amounts so  obtained by issue of debentures are used  by the  company for  the purposes of its business. This would, therefore, be expenditure.      Section 37(1)  further requires  that the  expenditures should not  be of  a capital  nature. In  the case  of India Cements ltd.  v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras (1966 60 ITR 52)  the appellant-company had obtained a loan of Rs. 40 lakhs from  the Industrial  Finance Corporation secured by a charge on  its fixed assets. In connection with this loan it spent a  sum of  Rs. 84,633/-, etc., and claimed this amount as business  expenditure. This  Court considered whether the expenditure so  incurred was business expenditure or whether it was  capital expenditure. This Court quoted with approval the observations  of Shah, J. in Bombay Steam Navigation Co. Ltd. v.  Commissioner of  Income-tax (1965  56 ITR 52 at 59) that whether a particular expenditure is revenue expenditure incurred for the purpose of business must be determined on a consideration of all the facts and circumstances, and by the application  of   principles  of   commercial  trading.  The question must  be viewed  i the  larger context  of business necessity or  expediency. If  the outgoing or expenditure is so related  to the  carrying on  or conduct of the business, that it  may be  regarded as an integral part of the profit- making process  and not  for acquisition  of an  asset or  a right of a permanent character, the possession of which is a condition  of   the  carrying   on  of   the  business,  the expenditure may  be regarded  as revenue  expenditure.  This Court went  on t  observe that the provisions of the English Income-tax Act  in this  regard are  somewhat different from those of  the Indian  Income-tax Act.  It  referred  to  the English case  of Taxes  Land and  mortgage  Co.  V.  William Holtham (1894  3 Tax cases 255, 260) where a mortage company had raised  money by  the issue of debentures and debentures stock and  incurred expenses in this connection. The English High Court  said that  the expenses would not be deducted as trading expenses  because the  amount paid  was for  raising capital. Differing  from the observations made therein, this Court observed  that a  loan is  a liability  and has  to be repaid and  in its  opinion it  is erroneous  to consider  a liability as  an asset or an advantage. This Court disagreed with the  English view  that borrowing money by the issue of debentures was  an acquisition of capital asset and that any commission or expenditure incurred in respect thereof was of a capital  nature. It  said; "we are of the opinion that (a) the loan  obtained is  not  an  asset  or  advantage  of  an enduring nature;  (b) that  the  expenditure  was  made  for securing the use of money for a certain period; and (c) that it is  irrelevant to consider the object with which the loan

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was obtained.  Consequently, in  the  circumstances  of  the case, the expenditure was revenue expenditure within Section 10(2)(xv)", The same ratio would apply here also.      Our attention was drawn to the case of Lomax (Inspector of Taxes)  v. Peter  Dixon and  son, Ltd,  a decision of the English Court  of Appeal  reported in  (12 Suppl.  ITR  513) where the  English Court  had treated discount or premium in the hands of the recipient as a receipt of a capital nature. But the character of payment in relation to the payer can be different from the character of that payment in the hands of the recipient.  In the light of the ration laid down by this Court  in  the  case  of  India  Cements  Ltd.  (supra)  any liability incurred  for the  purpose or  obtaining the  loan would be revenue expenditure.      The Tribunal,  however,  held  that  since  the  entire liability to  pay the  discount had  been  incurred  in  the accounting year  in question,  the assessee  was entitled to deduct  the   entire  amount   of  Rs.  3,00,000/-  in  that accounting year.  This conclusion  does  not  appear  to  be justified looking to the nature of the liability. It is true that the liability has been incurred in the accounting year. But the  liability is a continuing liability which stretches over a  period of  12 years.  It is,  therefore, a liability spread over  a  period  of  12  years.  Ordinarily,  revenue expenditure which is incurred wholly and exclusively for the purpose of  business must  be allowed in its entirity in the year in  which it  is incurred.  It cannot  be spread over a number of  year even  if the  assessee has written it off in his books  over a  period of  years. However,  the facts may justify an  assessee  who  has  incurred  expenditure  in  a particular year  to spread  and claim  it over  a period  of ensuing years.  In fact,  allowing the entire expenditure in one year might give very distorted picture of the profits of a particular  year. Thus  in the case of Hindustan Aluminium Corporation Ltd.  v. Commissioner  of Income-tax, Calcutta-I (1983, 144 ITR 474) the Calcutta-High Court upheld the claim of the  assessee to  spread out a lump sum payment to secure technical assistance and training over a number of years and allowed a  proportionate deduction in the accounting year in question.      Issuing  debentures  at  a  discount  is  another  such instance where,  although  the  assessee  has  incurred  the liability  to   pay  the   discount  in  year  of  issue  of debentures, the payment is to secure a benefit over a number of years.  There is  a continuing benefit to the business of the company  over the  entire period.  The liability should, therefore, be spread over the period of the debentures.      The appellant, therefore, had, in its return, correctly claimed a  deduction only  in respect  of the  proportionate part  of   discount  of   Rs.  12,500/-  over  the  relevant accounting period in question. In this connection, we agreed with the reasoning and conclusion of the Madhya Pradesh High Court  in   the  case   of  M.P.  Financial  Corporation  v. Commissioner of  Income-tax (supra).  The view  that we have taken is  also in  conformity with  accounting  practice  of showing the  discount in  "discount on  debentures  account" which is written off over the period of the debentures."      The appellant  is, therefore,  entitled to deduct a sum of Rs. 12,500/- out of the discount of Rs. 3,00,000/- in the relevant year.  The balance  expenditure of  Rs.  2,87,500/- cannot be  deducted in  the  assessment  year  in  question. Question No. 2 (as reframed) therefore, which is the subject matter of  appeal before  us, is answered in the negative in so for  as it  related to the deduction of Rs. 2,87,500/- in the assessment  year in question though for reasons entirely

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different from  those given  by the  High Court.  The second part  of   the  reframed   question  is   answered  in   the affirmative. But only proportionate part of the discount can be deducted in the assessment year in question. Question No. (as reframed)  therefore, which  is the  subject  matter  of appeal before  us, is  answered in the negative in so for as it relates  to  the  deduction  of  Rs.  2,87,500/-  in  the assessment year  in question  though  for  reasons  entirely different from  those given  by the  High Court.  The second part  of   the  reframed   question  is   answered  in   the affirmative. But  only a  proportionate part of the discount as set  out earlier.  The appeal  is disposed of accordingly and the  judgment of the High Court is set aside. There will be no order as to costs in the circumstances of the case.