12 November 1965
Supreme Court
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RUSSA H. MEHTA TRUST, BOMBAY Vs COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, BOMBAY CITY I

Case number: Appeal (civil) 589 of 1964


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PETITIONER: RUSSA H. MEHTA TRUST, BOMBAY

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, BOMBAY CITY I

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 12/11/1965

BENCH: SHAH, J.C. BENCH: SHAH, J.C. SUBBARAO, K. SIKRI, S.M.

CITATION:  1966 AIR  866            1966 SCR  (2) 579

ACT: Merged States (Taxation Concession) Order, 1949 Paragraph 4- Assessee  resident in former British India--Income  accruing in former Indian State--If entitled to rebate.

HEADNOTE: By  the  Taxation  Laws  (Extension  to  Merged  States  and Amendment) Act of 1949 the Income-tax Act. 1922 was  applied to  the territories of the former Indian States  which  were merged  with the former British Indian Provinces  under  the States  Merger (Governors’ Provinces) Order. 1949.  By  such application,  the  income  received, accrued  or  arisen  or deemed  to  be  received, accrued or arisen  to  any  person resident  within  the territory of the merged  State  became chargeable to income-tax.  With a view to avoid hardship  to residents  of  former Indian States, caused  by  the  sudden application  of  the  high rates of  taxation,  the  Central Government  issued the Merged States (Taxation  Concessions) Order  of  1949 under a. 60A of the Income-tax  Act.   Under Paragraphs  6 and 6A of Us Order income of residents of  the merged  States  became charageable to tax under  the  Indian Income-tax  Act, but the income of any previous year  ending after  31st March 1948 was to continue to get for a  limited Period the-benefit of lower rates of tax operative under the law  in force in the States before merger.  This  concession was  to  apply, under paragraph 4 of the Order, only  to  so much of the income, profits and gains included in the  total income of an assessee as would, had-he been resident in  the taxable  territories, have been exempt under s. 14(2)(c)  of the  Income-tax Act if the Taxation Laws Extension  Act  had not  bee  passed, that is, in respect of income  arising  or accuring to him :within territory of the merged State. In  the Calendar years 1948 and 1949, the assessee, who  was resident  and  ordinarily resident within British  India  in 1948, received certaining as dividend in the State of Baroda which was one of the merged States.  The Income-tax  Officer upheld  its  claim that the dividend income had  accrued  or arisen in the Baroda State and as the income was not brought into  British  India, it was exempt from liablility  to  tax under  s.  14(2)(c) of the Income-tax  Act.   The  Appellate Tribunal  held  that  the dividend income  arose  in  Baroda

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State,   but  by  reason  of  the  definition  of   "taxable territories" in s. 2(14A) of the Income-tax Act, the  income attracted  liability  to  tax and did not  qualify  for  the rebate  equal to the difference between the British  Indian -rate  and the Baroda State rate in respect of the  dividend income, under paragraph 6 of the Taxation Concessions Order. The High Court also, on a reference, held that the  assessee was not entitled to the rebate. In appeal to this Court, the assessee contended that by  the application   of  the  Taxation  Laws  Extension  Act,   all residents in the taxable territory become liable to pay  tax at the Indian rates, but with a view to maintain the  status quo ante, it was intended by the Taxation Concessions Order, to  restore the State rates of taxation to residents in  the former Indian States, and also to continue the exemption  in respect of the income of the former British India residents, arising or accruing 5 80 in  the  territory of the merged States  within  the  limits prescribed by s.    14(2) (c). HELD : in terms the concession is not given to residents  of the  territories of British India, and the context does  not warrant an implication to the contrary. [587 C-D] There  is  nothing in paragraph 4 of the  Concessions  Order which  seeks  to grant exemption from liability  to  tax  in respect  of income which prior to merger of the  States  was not liable to tax by virtue of s. 14(2) (c), but has,  since the  application  of the Income-tax Act, become  so  liable. The  paragraph  applies  to  income.  which  would,  if  the Taxation  Laws Extension Act had not been passed, have  been regarded as accuring or arising in an Indian State, and  the assessee  would  in respect of that income, had  he  been  a resident  of the taxable territory before merger, have  been exempt  under  s.  14(2)(c).   It  is  true  that  by   this interpretation  of paragraph 4 British Indian residents  are denied  the benefit of the exemption -under s.  14(2)(c)  in respect of income arising or accruing in the territories  of the  merged  State.  But the use of the expression  "had  he been  resident in the taxable territories" implies that  the benefit  is  not to tenure to persons who  were  before  the merger entitled to the exemption under s. 14(2)(c). [587  A- B, D]

JUDGMENT: CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 589 to  590 of 1964. Appeal  by special leave from the judgment and  order  dated October  - 12, 13, 1961 of the Bombay High Court in  Income- tax Reference No. 56 of 1956. K.   N.  Rajagopal  Sastri,  J.  B.  Dadachanji,   for   the appellants. A.   V. Viswanatha Sastri, R. Ganapathy Iyer, R.  H.  Dhebar and R. N. Sachthey, for the respondent. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Shah, J The appellant is a private trust, and was within the meaning of S. 4A and 4B of the Income-tax Act, 1922 resident and  ordinarily resident within British India in 1948.   The appellant  held 1000 shares in an investment company  styled Home Mehta and Sons Ltd. (hereinafter called ’the  Company’) which  carried  on the business of investing  in  shares  in companies  registered  in British India and  in  the  former Indian States.  Dividends from the British Indian  companies were  received  by the Company at its registered  office  at

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Bombay, and dividends from the Indian States’ companies were received  by  the  Company  at  its  registered  office   at Billimora in the State of Baroda. In  the calendar years 1948 and 1949 the appellant  received at  Billimora  Rs. 65,000 and Rs. 2,10,000  respectively  as dividend  in  respect of shares held by it in  the  Company. The  2nd  Income-tax Officer, A-I Ward, Bombay,  upheld  the claim  of  the appellant that its dividend  income  received from the Company 581 at  Billimora had accrued or arisen in the Baroda State  and as  the  income was not brought into British India,  it  was exempt from liability to tax by virtue of s. 14(2)(c) of the Income-tax Act.  The Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay held that the income accrued or arose to the appellant in  Bombay where  the  dividend was declared, and was on  that  account liable  to be assessed under the Income-tax Act, 1922.   The Commissioner accordingly directed the Income-tax Officer  to pass orders imposing tax on the dividend income received  by the  appellant from the Company.  On appeal, the  Income-tax Appellate Tribunal held that the dividend income accrued  or arose  at Billimora and not at Bombay, but by reason of  the definition of "taxable territories" the income which accrued at  Baroda attracted liability to tax under  the  Income-tax Act and did not qualify for rebate under paragraph 6 of  the Merged States (Taxation Concessions) Order, 1949. The following questions were referred by the Tribunal  under s.   66(1)  of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, to the  High Court: of Bombay for its opinion               "(1)   Whether   on  the   above   facts   and               circumstances  of  the case  the  assessee  is               entitled  to  rebate equal to  the  difference               between  the  British Indian rate  and  Baroda               State rate in respect of the dividend income ?               (2)   Whether  on the facts and  circumstances               of  the  case the dividend income  accrued  or               arose to the assessee at Bombay ?" The High Court held, following its earlier judgment in Mrs., Kusumben D. Mahadevia, Bombay v. The Commissioner of Income- tax, Bombay City, Bombay(1) that the Merged States (Taxation Concessions)  order, 1949 did not apply to the income  of  a resident  assessee and therefore the first question must  be answered in the negative.  The High Court declined to answer the  second  question.  With special leave granted  by  this Court, the appellant has appealed to this Court. Income received by the Company from its transactions in  the Indian  States was retained at its office in  Billimora  and dividend’  declared  out  of that income  was  paid  to  the appellant  at the registered office in the State of  Baroda. This  dividend  it  is common ground was  not  brought  into British  India.   To appreciate the claim  that  the  income qualifies for rebate under paragraph 6 of the Merged  States (Taxation Concessions) Order, 1949, the (1)  Income-tax  Ref.  No. 28 of 1955 decided,  on  February 20, 1956 (unreported). p. C.I‘./66-7 5 82 relevant  statutory developments in tax laws  to  effectuate the merger of the former Indian States since August 15, 1947 may be briefly set out.  Under s. 14(2) (r.) of the  Income- tax  Act, added by Act 23 of 1941 and amended by Act  22  of 1947, it was enacted that :               "The   tax   shall  not  be  payable   by   an               assessee  .  .  . in respect  of  any  income,               profits  or gains accruing or arising  to  him

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             within  an  Indian State unless  such  income,               profits or gains are received or deemed to  be               received in or are brought into British  India               in  the previous year by or on behalf  of  the               assessee, or are assessable under section  12B               or Section 42." By paragraph 3 of the States’ Merger (Governors’  Provinces) Order,  1949, it was provided that the States  specified  in Sch.  11 shall, as from August 1, 1949, be  administered  in all  respects  as  if  they formed  part  of  the  Provinces specified  in the Schedule, and by paragraph 4 all the  laws in  force  in  the  merged States or  in  any  part  thereof immediately before August 1, 1949, were to continue in force until   repealed,  modified  or  amended  by   a   competent Legislature  or  other competent authority.   The  State  of Baroda  was one of the States specified in the Schedule  and it  was  to  be administered as if it  formed  part  of  the Province  of Bombay.  The Indian Income-tax Act was  applied to the merged States by s. 3 of the Taxation Laws (Extension to  Merged  States  and  Amendment)  Act  67  of  1949  with retrospective  effect  from  April  1, 1949,  and  by  s.  7 corresponding  laws  relating to income-tax  in  the  merged States  were repealed.  It was provided that if  immediately before  the 26th day of August, 1949, there was in force  in any  of  the merged States any law relating  to  income-tax, supertax  or business profits tax, that law shall  cease  to have effect except for the purposes of the levy,  assessment and collection of income-tax and super-tax in respect of any period not included in the previous year for the purposes of assessment  under  the  Indian  Income-tax  Act,  1922,   as extended to that State by s. 3, or, as the case may be,  the levy, assessment and collection of business profits tax  for any  chargeable  accounting period ending on or  before  the 31st day of March, 1948, and for any purposes connected with such levy, assesssment or collection.  By the application of Act  67  of 1949, and the repeal of  laws  corresponding  to those  applied  to the merged States by S. 3,  residents  in former British India and in the merged States were sought to be treated equally.  But the result was a sudden  imposition of  high rates of taxation under the Indian  Income-tax  Act read with the appro- 583 priate Finance Acts upon the residents of the merged States. With a view to cushion the impact, the Central Government in exercise  of  the powers conferred by s. 60A of  the  Indian Income-tax   Act   granted  certain  exemptions   from   and reductions  in  the  rates of- tax and  made  certain  other modifications in the tax structure in its application to the merged  States.   By paragraph 3 (i) of  the  Merged  States (Taxation Concessions) Order, 1949 the expression "Act"  was defined  as meaning the Taxation Laws (Extension  to  Merged States  and Amendment) Act 67 of 1949.  Paragraphs 4,  5,  6 and 6A of the Order as amended or added by the  notification dated March 11, 1949, provided :               4.    "The  provisions of paragraphs 5, 6,  9,               10 and 11 of this Order shall apply to only so               much of the income, profits and gains included               in  the total income of an assessee as  would,               had  he  been resident in British  India  have               been exempt under clause (c) of subsection (2)               of  section 14 of the Indian  Income-tax  Act,               1922, if the Act had not been passed."               5.    "(1)  The income, profits and  gains  of               an) previous year ending after the 31st day of               March, 1948, which is a previous year-

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             (i)   for  the  merged State  assessment  year               1948-49, or               (ii)  for   the merged State  assessment  year               1949-50,shall  be  assessed under  the  Indian               Income-tax  Act, .1922, if, and only if,  such               income, profits and gains have not, before the               1st  day of August, 1949, been assessed  under               the State law.               (2)   Where  the  income,  profits  and  gains               referred to in sub-paragraph (1) have not been               assessed  under the State law, they  shall  be               assessed  under  the  Indian  Income-tax  Act,               1922,  and  the tax payable thereon  shall  be               determined as hereunder-               (i)   the  tax on the amount of  such  income,               profits and gains included in the total income               shall be computed at the Indian rate of tax;               (ii)  the  amount of such income, profits  and               gains  shall be commuted under the  State  law               aid  the  tax thereon computed at  the  merged               Slate rate of tax;               584               (iii) the  amount,  if any, by which  the  tax               computed  under  clause (i)  exceeds  the  tax               computed under clause (ii) shall be allowed as               rebate  from the first mentioned tax, and  the               amount  of  the  first  mentioned  tax  as  so               reduced shall be the tax payable.               (3)   For the purposes of this paragraph-               (a)   the merged State assessment year 1948-49               means  the assessment year which commences  on               any date between the 1st April, 1948, and  the               31st December, 1948, both dates inclusive; and               (b)   the merged State assessment year 1949-50               means  the assessment year which commences  on               any  date between the 2nd January,  1949,  and               the 31st July, 1949, both dates inclusive."               6.    "(1)  The income, profits and  gains  of               any previous year ending after the 31st day of               March,  1948,  which  does  not  fall   within               paragraph  5 of this Order or of any  previous               year   commencing  after  the  previous   year               referred  to  in the said paragraph  shall  be               assessed  under  the  Indian  Income-tax  Act,               1922,  but the tax payable on so much  of  the               income as pertains to the period ending before               the   1st  day  of  August,  1949,  shall   be               determined as hereunder-               (i)   the  tax  on  so  much  of  such  income               included in the total income shall be computed               (a)  at the Indian rate of tax and (b) at  the               rates  of  tax in force in  the  merged  State               immediately  before  the 1st  day  of  August,               1949;               (ii)  the  amount  by which the  tax  computed               under sub-clause (a) of clause (i) exceeds the               tax  computed under sub-clause (b)  of  clause               (i) shall be allowed as rebate from the  first               mentioned  tax,  and the amount of  the  first               mentioned  tax as so reduced shall be the  tax               payable.               (2)   Where  any  previous year  falls  partly               before  and partly on or after the 1st day  of               August,  1949, the income, profits  and  gains               pertaining  to the period falling  before  the

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             said   date  shall,  unless   the   Income-tax                             Officer,   having   regard   to   any   special                             circumstances, otherwise               585               directs  with the approval of  the  Inspecting               Assistant  Commissioner of Income-tax,  be  in               the  proportion  which the period  before  the               said date bears to the whole previous year."               6A.  "The  income, profits and  gains  of  any               previous year, referred to in paragraph 5 or 6               of  this Order, which accrue or arise  without               the  taxable  territories to a person  who  is               resident but who would not be resident in  the               taxable  territories if the Act had  not  been               passed,  shall be charged to tax in  the  same               manner and to the same extent as specified  in               the  said  paragraph 5 or 6, as the  case  may               be." By  the  application  of the Income-tax Act,  1922,  to  the territories  of the merged States, income received,  accrued or arisen or deemed to be received, accrued or arisen to any person  resident within the territory of the  merged  States became  chargeable  to tax under that Act.  With a  view  to avoid  hardship  caused by the sudden  application  of  high rates  of  taxation, the Central  Government  exercised  its powers  under  s.  60A  of the  Indian  Income-tax  Act  and modified  the tax levy so as to give certain exemptions  and benefits  to  residents in the areas of  the  former  Indian States.   By  paragraph  6 of the  Merged  States  (Taxation Concessions)  Order, 1949, in respect of the income  of  any previous  year ending with March 31, 1948 which  accrued  or arose  to persons who were residents in the  territories  of the merged States, benefit of the same rate of income-tax to which  it  was subject in the merged State  was  granted  by providing  that the difference between tax computed  at  the Indian  rate and the State rate shall be allowed as  rebate. In  respect  of  income of residents in  the  merged  States arising  outside the taxable territories, a  similar  rebate was to be given (paragraph 6A).  The result was that  income of  residents of the merged States became chargeable to  tax under  the Indian Income-tax Act, but it was to continue  to get  for a limited period benefit of the lower rates of  tax operative  under  the  law in force  in  the  States  before merger.   This  concession or benefit was to  apply  by  the express provisions contained in paragraph 4 only to so  much of  the  income,  profits and gains included  in  the  total income of an assessee as would, had he been resident in  the taxable territories, have been exempt under cl. (c) of  sub- s.  (2) of S. 14 of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, if  the Act had not been passed. Counsel  for the appellants claims that paragraph 4  applies to income of all assessees resident within British India  as defined 586 in  S.  2(3A)  at  the relevant  time,  and  not  merely  to residents  in the territories of the merged States.   It  is contended  that by paragraph 4 it was intended not  only  to give the benefit of the State rate of taxation to  residents of  the  former  Indian States which were  merged  with  the Provinces  under  the States Merger  (Governors’  Provinces) Order,  1949,  but also to preserve the  benefit  which  was conferred by S. 14(2) (c) of the Income-tax Act to residents of the territories of British India before August 15,  1.947 in respect of income arising or accruing to them within  the

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teffitory  of  the merged States.  It is said  that  by  the application  of Act 67 of 1949 all residents in the  taxable territory became liable to pay tax at Indian rates, but with a  view to maintain the status quo ante, it was intended  by the  Taxation Concessions Order, 1949 to restore  the  State rates of taxation to residents in the former Indian  States, and also to continue the exemption in respect of the  income of  the former British Indian residents arising or  accruing in  the  territory of the merged States  within  the  limits prescribed by S. 14(2) (c).  But paragraph 4 of the Taxation Concessions  Order,  1949, is not susceptible  of  any  such interpretation.  Paragraph 4 of the Order, and ss. 3, 4, 4A, 4B  and  S.  14(2) (c) of the Income-tax Act  must  be  read together.   The Indian States specified in the  Schedule  to the  States Merger Order on their merger with the  Provinces of  British India ceased to be separate entitles and  became part  of British India, and by the application of Act 67  of 1949   the  Indian  Income-tax  Act  was  applied   to   the territories   comprised  within  British   India.    Section 14(2)(c) undoubtedly remained in force even after the merger of  the Indian States effected by the States  Merger  Order, but  its operation was restricted.  After the merger of  the States,  income arising or accruing within the territory  of such merged State, could not be deemed to be income  arising or accruing within an Indian State, for the State had ceased to exist, and the income was for the purpose of s. 4 of  the Income-tax  Act  income  arising or  accruing  to  a  person resident  within the taxable territories.  There is  nothing in paragraph 4 of the Concessions Order which seeks to grant exemption  from liability to tax in respect of income  which prior  to  merger  of the States was not liable  to  tax  by virtue  of S. 14 (2) (c), but has since the  application  of the Income-tax Act become so liable. The claim that paragraph 4 applies to income of residents of former British India which was exempt from taxation under S. 14(2) (c) is belied by the plain words of the Order.   Para- graph  4  does not substantively grant any  exemption  :  it merely  designates  income to which the  provisions  of  the Order granting 587 exemption will apply.  It applies to income which would,  if Act  67 of 1949 had not been passed, have been  regarded  as accruing  or  arising in an Indian State, and  the  assessee would  in respect of that income had he been a  resident  of the taxable territory before merger, have been exempt  under s.  14(2)  (c).  The use of the expression "had  he  been  a resident’  implies  that  the benefit is  not  to  enure  to persons who were before the merger entitled to the exemption under S. 14(2) (c). The Order provides that paragraphs 5, 6, 9, 10 and 11  apply to  a  slice of income and not to the entire  income  of  an assessee, and by the express terms, it is that slice of  the income,  as  would, had the assessee been  resident  in  the taxable territories, have been exempt under cl. (c) of  sub- s. (2) of s. 14 of the Indian Incometax Act, if the Taxation Laws  Act,  1949,  had  not  been  passed.   In  terms   the concession  is not given to residents of the territories  of British   India,  and  the  context  does  not  warrant   an implication to the contrary. It  is  true  that by this interpretation  of  paragraph  4, British  Indian  residents  are denied the  benefit  of  the exemption under S. 14(2) (c) in respect of income arising or accruing  in  the territories of the former  merged  States. But  that denial is the result of merger of the States  into British  India.  The operation of s. 14 (2) (c)  had  become

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restricted by the modification of the definition of  British India.   Since  that amendment, income accruing  or  arising after  the  merger in Indian States  outside  British  India alone would be exempt under s. 14 (2) (c) - There is nothing in the Concessions Order which suggests that it was intended to ensure continuance of the exemption under s. 14(2) (c) to residents  of British India as it was before merger,  as  if the  merger had not taken place.  The use of the  expression "had he been resident in the taxable territories" introduces a fiction : it grants the benefit of s. 14(2) (c), though on the  express terms it is not available, to a person who  was not  before  the merger covered thereby, and in  respect  of income which would have been, if the Merger Act had not been passed,  exempt from taxation in his hands, if he  had  been resident  in British India.  In our view, Chagla, C.J.,  was right  in observing in Mrs. Kusumben D. Mahadevia’s  case(1) that :               "A  person resident in a Merged  State,  whose               income   accrued  to  him  there,  could   not               possibly claim exemption under Section 14  (2)               (c).  Such an exemption could "only be claimed               by   a   person  resident   in   the   taxable               territories.  In order to give this particular               (1)   Income-tex Ref.  No. 28 of 1955  decided               on February 20, 1956 (unreported).               588               concession  to  a resident in a  merged  State               this paragraph was enacted, and the particular               language  which we find in this paragraph  was               used."               In  the  view  we  have  taken  on  the  first               question,  it  is  unnecessary  to  record  an               answer on the second question.               The  appeals therefore fail and are  dismissed               with costs.               Appeals dismissed. 589