12 April 1961
Supreme Court
Download

M/s. RAJPUTANA TEXTILES (AGENCIES) LTD. Vs THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, BOMBAY CITY

Bench: DAS, S.K.,KAPUR, J.L.,HIDAYATULLAH, M.,SHAH, J.C.,AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
Case number: Appeal (civil) 282 of 1955


1

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 9  

PETITIONER: M/s.  RAJPUTANA TEXTILES (AGENCIES) LTD.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, BOMBAY CITY

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 12/04/1961

BENCH: KAPUR, J.L. BENCH: KAPUR, J.L. AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA DAS, S.K. HIDAYATULLAH, M. SHAH, J.C.

CITATION:  1962 AIR 1267            1962 SCR  (1) 917  CITATOR INFO :  RF         1963 SC 835  (12)

ACT: Income Tax--Business  transaction--Whether adventure in  the nature        of       trade--Intention       of         the assessee--Profits--Whether      revenue      or      capital receipt--Advisory  jurisdiction--Points--not  taken   before High-Court--Whether  could  be  raised  before  the  Supreme Court--Taxation  on Income (Investigation  Commission)  Act, 1947 (30 of 1947), s. 8(5).

HEADNOTE: The assessee company was promoted with the idea of obtaining the Managing Agency of the Appollo Mills from M/s.   Sassoon JUDGMENT: total  of 25 lakhs shares of RS. 2 each.  According  to  the agreement the assessee company bad to take the whole of  the block  of  shares belonging to the Sassoons and pay  at  Rs. 4-4-0  per share Rs. 12-1/2 lakhs for the  managing  agency. As the assessee company had only RS. 20 lakhs as its paid up capital,  it  was necessary to sell 13 lakhs odd  shares  in order  to pay off the Sassoons both for the Managing  Agency and the shares.  Therefore during the course of negotiations the  promoters  of  the assessee  company  entered  into  an agreement  with some brokers for the sale of  Rs.  19,76,000 shares.   As  a result of the sale of  shares  the  assessee company  received a sum of Rs. 16,52.600 as excess over  the purchase  price  which amount on taxation was  held  by  the Income-tax  Officer  not  to be profits  and  therefore  not taxable.   The case of the assessee company was referred  to the Investigation Commission.  The Commission found that  it was not the intention of the assessee company to retain  the whole  block  of shares and that the sale of  13  lakhs  odd shares was an adventure in the nature of trade, and directed that  appropriate  assessment  be  made,  under  the  Indian Income-tax Act and Excess Profits Tax Act.  At the  instance of  the  assessee company the question was referred  to  the High  Court  under  S.  8(5)  of  the  Taxation  on   Income (Investigation Commission) Act, 1947, which held that  there

2

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 9  

were materials to justify the finding of the Commission that the  purchase and sale of about 13 lakhs odd shares  was  an adventure  in the nature of trade.  An appeal was  taken  to the Supreme Court against this order. Held, that in considering the question whether the  transac- tion was or was not an adventure in the nature of trade, the court  had to take into consideration the intention  of  the assessee 918 keeping in view the "legal requirements which are associated with the concept of trade or business" In the present case, the transaction that consisted of  buy- ing the managing agency of the Mill Company and the block of shares held by Sassoons was inescapably one of a  commercial nature  and  had all the attributes of an adventure  in  the nature If of trade. Held, further, that the jurisdiction which this Court  would exercise  in  appeal was of the same character that  a  High Court  would exercise.  Thus the question under Art.  14  of the  Constitution could not be raised in  these  proceedings because  this Court like the High Court was  exercising  its advisory  jurisdiction  and its power was  confined  to  the question which arose before the High Court. M/s.   Ramnarain Sons (Pr.) Ltd. v. Commissioner of  Income- tax,  Bombay,  [1961]  2  S.C.R.  904,  Tata  Hydro-Electric Agencies,  Bombay v. The Commissioner of Income-tax,  Bombay Presidency & Aden, (1037) L.R. 64 I.A. 215, Commissioner of, Income-tax,  Central and United Provinces, Lucknow  v.  M/s. Motiram  Nandram, (1939) L.R. 67 I.A. 71, Jones v.  Leeming, [1930) A.C. 415, Commissioner of Inland Revenue v. Reinhold, (1953) 34 T.C. 389 and Saroj Kumar Mazumdar v.  Commissioner of Income-tax, West Bengal, Calcutta, [1959] SUPP. 2  S.C.R. 846, distinguished. Kishan  Prasad & Co. v. Commissioner of Income-tax,  Punjab, [1955] 27 I.T.R. 49, Edwards v. Bairstow, [1956] A.C. 14 and G.  Venkataswami Naidu & Co. v. The Commissioner of  Income- tax, [1959] SUPP. 1 S.C.R. 646, discussed.

& CIVIL APPELLATE, JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 282 of 1955. Appeal  by special leave from the judgment and  order  dated March  20,  1953,  of the Bombay High  Court  in  Income-tax Reference No. 31 of 1951. A.   V.  Viswanatha  Sastri  and  I.  N.  Shroff,  for   the appellants. K. N. Rajagopal Sastri and D. Gupta, for the respondent. 1961.  April 12.  The Judgment of the Court was delivered by KAPUR,  J.-This is an appeal against the judgment and  order of the High Court of Bombay in a reference under s. 8(5)  of the Taxation on Income (Investigation Commission) Act,  1947 (Act  XXX  of  1947), hereinafter  termed  the  ’Act’.   The assessee company was the applicant before the High Court and is the appellant 919 before  us and the Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay  City, was  the respondent in the High Court and is the  respondent here  also.  Being a reference under s. 8(5) of the Act,  it was heard and decided by three judges of the High Court. The assessee company is a private limited company which  was incorporated  on May 6, 1943, with a paid up capital of  Rs. 20  lacs.  It was promoted by two groups of persons who  for the  sake of convenience may be called the  ’Morarka  Group’ and the ’Bubna Group’.  The Apollo Mills Co., Ltd. of Bombay

3

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 9  

with a capital of Rs. 50 lacs divided into 25 lacs shares of Rs. 2 each, had as its Managing Agents M/s.  E. D. Sassoon & Co.  Ltd., who for the sake of brevity, will be referred  to in  this  judgment as the Sassoons’.   They  held  19,76,000 shares  out of the 25 lacs.  The promoters of  the  assessee company entered into an agreement with the Sassoons on April 27,  1943,  by which the Sassoons agreed to  transfer  their Managing  Agency in the Mill Co. for Rs. 12-1/2 lacs to  the promoters  of  the assessee company and the whole  of  their holding  of 19,76,000 shares at Rs. 4-4-0 per  share,  i.e., for  Rs. 83,98,000.  These shares were to be transferred  to the promoters or to the company which they were proposing to float.   By  clause (3) of this agreement the  sale  of  the Managing  Agency  and the transfer of the shares was  to  be simultaneously completed and neither party could require the completion  of  the one without the other.  On  November  1, 1943,  a tripartite agreement was entered into  between  the Sassoons  as  Assignors,  the promoters of  the  company  as Confirming  Parties and the assessee company  as  Assignees. By that agreement the Managing Agency rights were  for-.ally transferred  to  the  assessee company  so  also  the  Share Certificates for the whole of holding of the Sassoons in the Mill Co. and the necessary blank transfer deeds went) Before  the  agreement  of April 27, 1943,  and  during  the course  of negotiations with the Sassoons the  promoters  of the  assessee company entered into an arrangement with  some share  brokers for the sale of a large portion of the  total holding of 19,76,000 shares 920 of the Mill Co. The price of these shares varied from Rs. 5- 8-0 to Rs. 5-13-0.  In all 10,00,000 shares out of the total holding of the Mill Co. were sold to these brokers and: they in  turn  sold these block of shares in smaller  lots  to  a number of purchasers.  Some shares were sold later; 1,20,000 shares were transferred to 13 nominees of the Morarka  Group at  cost price.  As a result of sale of all these  13,74,000 shares the assessee company received a sum of Rs.  16,52,600 as excess over the purchase price.  The remaining shares the assessee  company retained.  The assessee company  submitted that the profits of the entire holding of the shares had not been  worked out and had therefore not been  transferred  to the profit and loss account. The assessee company was taxed by the Income-tax Officer but the  sum of Rs. 16,52,600 which was the excess of  the  sale price  over the purchase price of 13,74,000 shares was  held not  to be profit and therefore not taxable.  When  the  Act came  into  force  the  case of  the  assessee  company  was referred  to  the Investigation Commission  by  the  Central Government and the Investigation Commission made its  report on  November 9, 1949, in Case No. 406A.  By this report  the Commission  directed  that appropriate  assessment  be  made under  the  Indian Income tax Act for  the  assessment  year 1945-46 and the Excess Profits Tax Act for the corresponding chargeable accounting period. At the instance of the assessee company the Commissioner  of Income-tax,  Bombay  City, by his order dated May  1,  1951, referred the following question to the High Court:               "Whether on the facts found by the  Commission               the  sum  of Rs. 16,52,600  being  the  excess               price realised by the sale of 13,74,000 shares               of the Mill Company, was ’profit’ and as  such               taxable or whether it was either of the nature               of a capital appreciation or a casual and non-               recurring  receipt  and as  such  exempt  from               taxation   under  Section  4(3)(vii)  of   the

4

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 9  

             Income-tax Act." The High Court reformulated the question as follows:- 921               "Whether  there were materials to justify  the               finding  of the Tribunal that the  transaction               of  purchase and sale of 13,74,000 shares  was               an adventure in the nature of trade?" and  answered the question so formulated in the  affirmative and   therefore  against  the  assessee  company.   In   its application  for  reference  under s. 8(5) of  the  Act  the assessee  company  wanted some other questions  also  to  be referred but the Investigation Commission only referred  the question which has been set out above.  The assessee company therefore  took out a Notice of Motion on November 8,  1952, which  was  dismissed by the High Court on the  ground  that either the questions which were sought to be raised did  not arise  out  of the finding of the Commission  or  they  were included  in  the  question  which  had  been  referred  and answered by the High Court.  Although the High Court did not so  hold,  the Notice of Motion was barred  by  time,  being filed  after more than six months allowed under s. 66(2)  of the Indian Income-tax Act.  Against this judgment and  order of the High Court the assessee company has come in appeal to this Court by special leave. This  appeal  is brought against the judgment  of  the  High Court  answering the question referred and therefore in  its advisory  jurisdiction.  The jurisdiction which  this  Court exercises  in appeal is of the same character and  therefore any question which was not referred to the High Court cannot be  allowed  to be raised at this stage.   Consequently  the constitutional  question in regard to  discrimination  under Art. 14 of the Constitution which is now sought to be raised cannot  be  raised.   The main  question  which  would  then survive  for decision is the nature of transaction  relating to  the  sale of 13 lacs odd shares and whether or  not  the sale  was an adventure in the nature of trade and  therefore the  amount of Rs. 16,52,600 the excess of sale  price  over the  purchase  price of the share is a Revenue  Receipt  and therefore  taxable  profits or is it a Capital  Receipt  and therefore  not liable to tax.  The Investigation  Commission by their order dated May 1, 1949, found:- 922 (1)  that  a distinction should be made between the  6  lacs shares which the assessee company intended to and did retain and  the  13 lacs odd shares which it intended  to  and  did sell;  the former was kept in order to enable  the  assessee company to make their Managing Agency rights effective. (2)  During  the negotiations between the Sassoons  and  the promoters  of  the. assessee company, the promoters  of  the assessee  company  had  started  negotiations  with  certain brokers  for the transfer of 13 lacs odd shares  soon  after the  arrangement  between  the  Sassoons  and  the  assessee company was completed. (3)  From the very beginning the intention of the  promoters of  the  assessee company was to sell all the  13  lacs  odd shares and in pursuance thereof they were sold. (4)  The paid up capital of the assessee company was Rs.  20 lacs  only and according to the agreement they had  to  take the whole block of shares belonging to the Sassoons and  pay for  the shares as well as for the Managing Agency  both  of which  were  separately  valued in the  agreement.   It  was therefore necessary and it was intended to sell the 13  lacs odd  shares  in order to pay off the Sassoons both  for  the Managing  Agency and the shares.  The inference  drawn  from this  by  the Commission was that a distinction  had  to  be

5

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 9  

drawn  between the 6 lacs shares which the assessee  company intended  to retain and did in fact retain and the  13  lacs odd shares which they intended to sell and did sell. (5)  that the intention to sell which the  assessee  company entertained  from the very outset was a complete  answer  to the  argument that the acquisition was in the nature  of  an investment.  In giving its finding the Commission said:-               "Aggregating the 121 lakhs paid for the Manag-               ing Agency right and the full price of 6 lakhs               and  odd  shares at Rs. 4-4-0 per  share,  the               capital  investment must amount to  121  lakhs               and  251  lakhs, i.e., 38 lacs  and  odd.   By               deducting   therefrom  the  profits   of   Rs.               16,52,600,   the  Company  showed  a   capital               investment  of  Rs.  21,54,200  and  with  the               addition 923               of  a few sundry items, it was brought  up  to               Rs. 22,06,408 (see para 7 supra)." From this finding the inference drawn by the Commission  was that the sale of 13 lacs odd shares was an adventure in  the nature of trade. The  High Court reformulated the question which has  already been quoted and it was contended that the High Court was  in error  in narrowing down the scope of the question  referred by  the Commission.  It is not necessary to adjudicate  upon this argument because in our opinion taking the question  as referred  to be a proper question arising out of the  report of the Investigation Commission the answer to the first part thereof  would,still be in the  affirmative.   Inconsidering the  question  whether  the  transaction is  or  is  not  an adventure  in  the  nature of trade we  have  to  take  into consideration the intention of the assessee keeping in  view the  "legal  requirements  which  are  associated  with  the concept of trade or business".  The inference from the facts found  by  the Investigation Commission, i.e.,  whether  the assessee company’s transaction in purchasing and selling  13 lacs  odd shares is or is not an adventure in the nature  of trade  is  a mixed question of law and fact  and  the  legal effect of the facts found by the Investigation Tribunal is a question  of  law.  See M/s.  Ramnarain Sons (Pr.)  Ltd.  v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay (1). It was argued on behalf of the assessee company that: (1) that the dominant idea with which the whole  transaction was  entered into was to obtain the Managing Agency  of  the Apollo Mills; (2)  that the assessee company was forced to buy  the  whole block  of  shares, i.e., 19,76,000 shares  by  the  Sassoons because  they  were not prepared to part with  the  Managing Agency without the whole of their stock in the mill company; (3) that as the assessee company did not not have sufficient amount  of money, their capital being only Rs. 20  lacs,  it was to implement the tripartite agreement dated November  1, 1943, that the sale was made; and (1)  (1961] 2 S.C.R. 904, 908. 924                (4) that the Memorandum of Association of the               assessee company showed that it was a  holding               company  and dealing in shares was not one  of               its objects. The  agreement  shows  that  the  Sassoons  had   separately evaluated  the  Managing Agency and the shares held  in  the Apollo Mills Co. As the Investigation Commission has  found, it was never the intention of the assessee company to retain the whole block of shares.  Before the agreement was entered

6

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 9  

into  they had made arrangement for the sale of the bulk  of shares  which  were to be transferred by  the  Sassoons  and therefore  division of the shares into two sets was made  by the  promoters  of  the assessee company  and  the  assessee company  themselves and was not the result of anything  done by the Investigation Commission. In;  support  of  his  contention that  the  amount  of  Rs. 16,52,600 was in the nature of Capital Receipt, reliance was placed  on the judgment of this Court in  M/s.   Ramnarain’s case  (1) but there are certain features and  details  which distinguish that case from the present case.  It was held in that  case that the question had to be decided in the  light of  the intention of the assessee and the assessee  in  that case  bad  purchased the shares of the Dawn Mills not  as  a business transaction.  That was clear from the fact that the assessee bad purchased the shares at Rs. 2,321-8-0 per share and the market price was only Rs. 1,610, and the purpose  of acquisition  of  such  a large block of shares  at  a  price exceeding  the  market  price by a million  rupees  was  the acquisition  of  the  Managing  Agency,  which  yielded  the inference  that  the intention of purchasing the  shares  in that case was not to acquire them as a part of the trade  of the assessee in shares but for obtaining the Managing Agency of  the  Mills.  There was no separate price  paid  for  the Managing  Agency and the shares purchased and  the  Managing Agency acquired were both assets of a capital nature and the shares  did  not  constitute  stock-in-trade  of  a  trading venture.   In  the  present case the  facts  as  shown  were entirely different. (1) [1961] 2 S.C.R 904, 908. 925 Counsel  for  the  assessee company also  relied  on  Kishan Prasad & Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Punjab (1). In that case the Managing Director of the company which  was formed  for the purpose of carrying on general business  and trade of commercial undertaking and dealing in bills, hundis and other securities, entered into an agreement with a sugar syndicate by which the company was to be given the  Managing Agency  of a Mill of the sugar syndicate when such mill  was erected  in lieu of the company subscribing shares  worth  3 lacs,  and undertaking to sell shares worth 2 lacs.  It  was further  provided  that  if the mill  was  not  erected  the assessee  company was to be paid a commission on the  amount invested  by  them.   The Managing  Director  died  and  the assessee  company  sold the shares and thus received  Rs.  2 lacs more than they had expended.  The question was  whether Rs.  2  lacs  were receipts from business  and  not  a  mere appreciation  in capital.  It was held that that amount  was not a result of an adventure in the nature of trade but  was merely the result of an investment.  It was found as a  fact that  the  object of the company was merely  to  obtain  the Managing  Agency of the mill which would have been an  asset of  an enduring nature bringing profits but there  was  from the  very inception no intention on the part of the  company to  resell  the shares either at profit  or  otherwise.   It appears that it was not contested that the conclusion to  be drawn  from  those  facts was that  the  investment  in  the purchase  of  shares in the circumstances of the case  of  a capital  nature,  and  profits  arising  therefrom  were  an accretion to the capital.  In that ease the court was trying to find out the intention of the assessee (the company)  and taking all the circumstances into consideration it, came  to the conclusion that it was a case not of profits arising out of an adventure in the nature of trade but the, intention of the assessee company was to invest its monies and  therefore

7

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 9  

the  excess  arising  out  of sale  of  the  shares  was  an accretion  to the capital.  That case must be taken to  have been decided on its facts as (1) [1955] 27 I.T.R. 49. 926 indeed was the decision in M/s.  Ramnarain Son’s case (1). Counsel  for the assessee company referred to  other  cases: Tata Hydro-Electric Agencies, Bombay v. The Commissioner  of Income-tax,  Bombay Presidency & Aden (2);  Commissioner  of Income-tax, Central and United Provinces, Lucknow v. Messrs. Motiram  Nandram (3), Jones v. Leeming (4) and  Commissioner of Inland Revenue v. Reinhold (5).  It is unnecessary to re- view  these  cases in any detail because  they  are  clearly distinguishable  in  material respects and were  decided  on their  own special facts.  In Tata Hydro-Electric  Agencies’ case  (2) the question for decision was whether 25%  of  the commission  earned which was paid to the two financiers  was expenditure  deductible under s. 10(2)(ix) and it  was  held that  it was not because the obligation to make the  payment was  in consideration of acquiring the Managing  Agency  and the  right  to conduct business and not for the  purpose  of producing profits in the conduct of business.  Similarly  in Commissioner  of Income-tax v. Messrs.  Motiram Nandram  (3) the  expenditure  was for securing the agency which  was  to carry on business.  Sir George Rankin said at p. 81:               "The  question in such a case a,% the  present               must   be   "what  is  the   object   of   the               expenditure?" and it must be answered from the               standpoint  of the assessees at the time  they               made it-that is, when they were embarking upon               the  business  of organizing  agents  for  the               company." Jones v. Leeming (4) was a case of an isolated  transaction. The  finding  was that it was not in the  nature  of  trade. Commissioner  of Inland Revenue v. Reinhold(5) was’  decided on  its own facts.  Another case decided by this court  upon which  counsel  for  the appellant relied  was  Saroj  Kumar Mazumdar   v.  Commissioner  of  Income-tax,  West   Bengal, Calcutta (6) but that case was also decided on its own facts and it was held that there was no clear evidence in  support of (1)  [1961] 2.C.R. 004, 908 (3)  (1939) L. R. 67 I. A. 71 (5)  (1953) 34 T-C. 389. (2)  (1937) L. R. 64 I. A. 215. (4)  [1930] A.C. 415. (6)  [1959] SUPP. 2 S C.R. 846. 927 the  inference of the Appellate Tribunal that the  land  was purchased  with the sole intention of selling it later at  a profit. The English and Scottish cases on which the appellant relied were considered by the House of Lords in Edwards v. Bairstow (1).In  that  case the assessees who  were  the  respondents embarked  on  a  joint venture to purchase  and  complete  a spinning  plant agreeing between themselves not to  hold  it but  to make a quick resale.  With that object in view  they approached and there were diverse negotiations and the whole plant was sold in about two years’ time at a profit of about pound  18,000 and for that purpose incurred  commission  for help  in effecting sales, for insurance and other  expenses. The General Commissioners found that it was not an adventure in  the nature of trade to justify an assessment to  income- tax under Case 1 of Schedule D to the Income-tax Act,  1918. It was held that the facts led inevitably to the  conclusion

8

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 9  

that the transaction was an adventure in the nature of trade and that the Commissioner’s inference to the contrary should be set aside. Counsel for the respondent next relied on a Judgment of this Court in G. Venkataswami Naidu & Co. v. The Commissioner  of Income-tax (2) in which it was held that the presence of all the  relevant  factors  may  help  the  Court  to  draw  the inference that the transaction is in the nature of trade but it  is  not  a matter of counting the number  of  facts  and circumstances  for  and against.  What is  important  is  to consider  the  distinctive  character and it  is  the  total effect  of  all  the relevant factors  that  determines  the character   of  the  transaction.   All  these   cases   are illustrative.   As  was said by Gajendragadkar, J.,  in  the above mentioned case the totality of circumstances of a case and  the pros and cons have to be considered  and  inference drawn from those facts whether a particular transaction  was in  the nature of trade or was merely an investment and  the resulting  excess from the transaction was therefore  profit which was taxable or was merely an accretion to the capital. In the instant case (1) [1956] A.C. 14. (2) [1959] SUPP. 1 S.C.R. 646. 928 the pi of its from the transaction that consisted of  buying the  Managing  Agency of the Mill Company and the  block  of shares held by the Sassoons were in our view the profits  of an  adventure  in  the nature of  trade.   The  two  groups, Morarka  and  Bubnas,  put Rs. 20  lacs  into  the  assessee company  which  was  floated  for  the  acquisition  of  the Managing  Agency and shares of the Mill Company  which  were beyond  the holding capacity of the assessee company.   That company  never intended to hold the whole block  of  shares. It or its promoters before even entering into the  agreement of  purchase and during the course of negotiations  for  the purchase  had  entered  into  arrangements  with   different brokers  for  the sale of shares or at least of  a  bulk  of those  shares which were subsequently sold at a  profit  and but  for  that  sale the transact-ion could  not  have  been completed  by the assessee company.  The purchase of  shares was not with the intention of holding them, the intention of the  assessee  was just the contrary and by the  sale  at  a profit  of  the shares actually sold  the  assessee  company expected   to  and  did  finance  the  completion   of   the transaction  and  thus was enabled to  secure  the  Managing Agency  and  keep  6 lacs shares.  This  inescapably  was  a transaction  of  a  commercial  nature.   It  had  all   the attributes  of  an adventure in the nature  of  trade.   The contention that dealing in buying and selling of shares  was not   one  of  its  objects  is  without   substance.    The Investigation  Commission found that dealing in  shares  was within  the objects of the assessee company and this is  one circumstance in the totality of the circumstances which must be  considered, though by itself it is not determinative  of the  question.  All the circumstances lead to the  inference which was rightly drawn by the Investigation Commission  and by  the  High Court.  The answer to the first  part  of  the question  referred  by  the  Investigation  Commission  must therefore be in the affirmative. It  was  contended that the question should  not  have  been reframed  and  we  have therefore proceeded  to  answer  the question as framed by the Investigation Commission.  In  our opinion the question even as framed must be answered in  the affirmative. 929

9

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 9  

The  Notice of Motion to raise other questions in  the  High Court  was rightly dismissed.  Apart from the fact that  the Notice  of  Motion  was  barred by time  and  there  was  no application  for condonation of delay, the  questions  which were  sought  to be raised were rightly held  either  to  be covered  by the question answered  or they did not arise  at all.  The  constitutional  question under  Art.  14  of  the Constitution  cannot be raised in these proceedings  because as we have said above this Court is exercising its  advisory jurisdiction  and  its power is confined  to  the  questions which arise in an appeal. This appeal must therefore be dismissed with costs.                                    Appeal dismissed.