19 August 1971
Supreme Court
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S. R. Y. SIVARAM PRASAD BAHADUR Vs THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX HYDERABAD

Case number: Appeal (civil) 1309 of 1968


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PETITIONER: S.   R. Y. SIVARAM PRASAD BAHADUR

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX HYDERABAD

DATE OF JUDGMENT19/08/1971

BENCH: HEGDE, K.S. BENCH: HEGDE, K.S. GROVER, A.N.

CITATION:  1972 AIR  260            1972 SCR  (1) 220  1971 SCC  (3) 726  CITATOR INFO :  RF         1973 SC 515  (10)  E&R        1992 SC1495  (13,16,19,29,30)

ACT: Income-Tax-Capital  and  Revenue-Interim  payment   received under  s. 50(2) of Madras Estates (Abolition  of  Conversion into  Ryotwari)  Act, 28 of 1948  whether  capital  receipt- Whether in lieu of interest on compensation.

HEADNOTE: The  assessee  was  a Hindu Undivided  Family.   Its  estate vested  in the State Government of Madras under  the  Madras Estates  (Abolition and Conversion into Ryotwari) Act  1948. It received interim payments under s. 50(2) of the Act.  The question  in  the  Income-tax proceedings  was  whether  the payment so received was a capital or a revenue receipt.  The Income-tax Officer and the Appellate Assistant  Commissioner held  that  it  was revenue.  The  Tribunal  held  that  the payments  were  made  to the assessee  as  compensation  for destroying its income producing assets and therefore must be considered as capital receipts.  The High Court decided that question in favour of the Department.. The assessee appealed to this Court by certificate. HELD:While it is true that the terminology used by  the legislature in respect of a payment is not conclusive of the true character of the payment, it would be proper to proceed on  the basis that the legislature knew what it was  saying. The  word compensation must be given its normal and  natural meaning.   In cl. (e) of s. (3) of the Act  the  legislature definitely  says  that the holder or holders of  the  Estate falling  within cl. (b) and (c) of s. 3 "shall  be  entitled only to compensation from the Government as provided in this Act".   From this it follows that all payments made to  them under  the Act are compensation payable to them  for  taking over their Estates. [325 D-F] Moreover  the final determination of the compensation  under s.  39  was  made  years after  the  Estate  vested  in  the Government,  though  some  advance  compensation  was  paid. Hence there was force in the contention of the assessee that the  interim  payments made were given as  compensation  for depriving  the assessees of the income that they would  have got  from their agricultural lands, which income  would  not

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have  been assessable to tax under the Act.  The quantum  of interim  payments  payable to the former  holders  of  those estates  was  determined by taking  into  consideration  the income  that the former owners would have received had  they continued  to  be the owner of those  Estates.   This  prima facie showed that the Government was compensating the former holders for taking away their income producing assets.  [325 H-326 C]. The  contention  that  the interim payment was  in  lieu  of interest  on  the compensation payable overlooked  the  fact that the liability of the Government to pay the compensation excepting to the extent provided in s. 54A arose only  after the compensation payable was finally determined under s. 39. The  interim payments were not fixed on the basis  of  esti- mated compensation.  They were fixed on the basis of loss of income  to the former owners.  Under these circumstances  it was  not possible to accept the contention that the  interim payments  were  paid in lieu of interest or even  that  they represented compensation for loss of interest (326 D-E] 321 Sub-section (8) of s. 50 instead of assisting the Department supports  the  case of the assessee. AR that  the  provision says is that the interim      payments  made under s.  50(2) are not to be considered as compensation     which       the Government  is required to deposit under s. 41(1) or to  any extent  8 to be in lieu of such compensation.  That  section does not say that   the    interim    payments    are    not compensation. It only says that it is no part     of     the compensation required to be deposited under s., 41 or to any extent    in  lieu of compensation. That does not mean  that it  cannot be compensation for the recurring loss caused  to the owner because of the taking    away    of   an    income producing asset without payment of compensation. [327  D-E]      Dr. Sham Lal v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Punjab,  53 I.T.R. 151,    Senairam   Doongarmall  v.  Commissioner   of Income Tax, Assam, 42    I.T.R.   392  and   Simpson   (H.M. Inspector of Taxes) v. Executors of     Bonner  Maurice  as, Executor of Edward Kay, (1929) 14 T.C. 580, relied     on. Raja   Rameshwara   Rao  v.  Commissioner   of   Income-tax, Hyderabad,     [1964]  2  S.C. R. 847 and Chandroji  Rao  v. Commissioner of Income-tax,   Madhya Pradesh, 77 I.T.R. 743, distinguished, Kumara Rajah of Venkatagiri & Ors. v. Income-tax Officer, A- Ward, Nellore & Ors. 64 I.T.R. 264, disapproved.

JUDGMENT: CIVIL  APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeals Nos.  1309  to 1312 of 1968. Appeals from the judgment and order dated August 2, 1967  of the  Andhra  Pradesh High Court in Case Referred No.  35  of 1963; and Civil Appeals Nos. 1257, 1260, 1262, 1313, 1314 and 1374  Of 1968. Appeals from the judgment and order dated August 2, 1967  of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in Writ Appeals Nos. 34 of      1966 etc. etc. Vedantha  Chari,  K. C. Rajappa and A. Subba  Rao,  for  the appellant (in C.As. Nos. 1409 to 1312 of 1968). B.Sen, P. L. luneja, R. N. Sachthey and B. D. Sharma, for the respondent (in C.As. Nos. 1309 to 1312 of 1968). V. Vedantha Chari, K. C. Rajappa, K. Rajendra Chawdhary  and Hari  Singh, for the appellants (in C.As. Nos.  1257,  1260, 1262, 1313, 1314 and 1374 of 1968).

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R.   N. Sachthey, for the respondents (in C.As. Nos. 1257, 1260,     1262, 1313 and 1314 and 1374 of 1968). P.   Ram  Reddy, T. A. Ramachandran and A. V. Nair, for  the interveners.      The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Hegde,  J.   The  common question of law  which  arises  for decision  in  these appeals by certificate, is  whether  the interim  payment  received by a former holder of  an  estate under S. 50(2) 3 22 of  the  Madras  Estates  (Abolition  and  Conversion   into Ryotwari)   Act  1948  (Madras  Act  26  of  1948)  (to   be hereinafter referred to as ’the Act’) whose Estate vested in the  Government under s. 3 of the Act was of capital  nature and not liable to tax. The  material  facts  bearing  on the  point  in  issue  are identical   in  all  these  appeals.   Hence  it  would   be sufficient  if  we set out the facts of Civil  Appeals  Nos. 1309 to 1312 of 1968 which were filed by the same  assessee. The  assessee in those appeals is a Hindu  Undivided  Family and  that family was the holder of the Estate  of  Devarkota and  Challappalli.   This Estate vested  in  the  Government under  the Act.  During the assessment years 1953-54,  1954- 55, 1956-57 and 1958-59, the assessee received some  interim payments.   The Income-tax Officer sought to  include  those payments in’ the assessment of the assessee in those  years. The assesses contended that those receipts were not  Revenue receipts  and hence not taxable.  He based his plea  firstly on  the ground that those receipts represented  agricultural income  or  alternatively  they were  capital  receipts  and lastly on the ground that the income having been apportioned among  the  principal  landholder  and  the  other   persons referred  to  in subs. (2) of s. 50 of the Act,  the  entire amount did not fall to be assessed in his hands.  All  these contentions were rejected by the Income-tax Officer.  Before the Appellate Assistant Commissioner, the assessee  repeated those contentions; but the Appellate Assistant  Commissioner rejected  them  and  upheld  the  order  of  the  Income-tax Officer.   On a further appeal to the  Income-tax  Appellate Tribunal, the Tribunal held that as those payments were made to  the assessee as compensation for destroying  his  income producing  assets they should be considered as  capital  re- ceipts and hence not liable to be taxed.  Thereafter, at the instance  of  the Commissioner of income-tax,  the  Tribunal referred the question-               "Where  on_the facts and in the  circumstances               of  the case, the interim compensation of  Rs.               80,843;  Rs.  40,422,  Rs.  1,21,146  and  Rs.               80,391 received by the assessee under  section               50  of  the  Madras  Estates  (Abolition   and               Conversion  into Ryotwari) Act, 1948 was of  a               capital nature and not liable to tax." under S. 66(1) of the Act for the opinion of the High Court. The  High  Court  answered that question in  favour  of  the Department.    Following  that  decision,  the  High   Court dismissed  the Writ Petitions filed by Shri V. V. V.  R.  K. Yachendra Kumar  Raja raising the very question that was the subject matter of the References.  The other appeals in this batch  of  appeals  arise from the decision  in  those  Writ Petitions. 323 For deciding the question whether the receipts with which we are  concerned in these appeals are capital receipts, it  is necessary to make a survey of the relevant provisions of the Act.   But before doing so, it is necessary to mention  that

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the  former  holders  of  Estates that  had  vested  in  the Government  under  the  Act were entitled  to  receive  four different   kinds  of  payments.   They  are:  (1)   advance compensation  under s. 54-A; (2 ) interim payments under  s. 50(2);   (3)  total  compensation  under  s.  41;  and   (4) additional  compensation under s. 54-B.  Now let us turn  to the relevant provisions of the Act. Section  3 of the Act provides in cl. (b) thereof  that  the entire  Estate,  including all interests  detailed  therein, shall  stand transferred to the Government and vest in  them free  from  all  encumbrances with effect on  and  from  the notified  date.  Clause , (c) of that section put an end  to all  rights  and  interests created in or  over  the  Estate before the notified date by the principal or any other land- holder.  Clause (e) of that section is important.  It  reads :               "That  principal or any other  landholder  and               any   other   person   whose   rights    stand               transferred  under  clause (b)  or  cease  and               determine, under clause (c), shall be entitled               only  to compensation from the  Government  as               provided in this Act." Section 21 provides for the survey and settlement of Estates for effecting Ryotwari settlement.  The manner of  effecting the  Ryotwari  Settlement  of  the  Estate  vested  in   the Government  is prescribed in sub-sections 2, 3, and 4 of  s. 22.   Sections 24 to 27 prescribe the manner of  determining the  compensation payable for the Estates taken  over.   The scale  of  compensation is laid down in s. 37.   Section  39 provides for determination of basic annual sum and of  total compensation.  Section 4 lays down that the Government shall deposit  in  the  office of ’the  Tribunal,  the  amount  of compensation in respect of each Estate as finally determined under  s.  39, in such form and manner and at such  time  or times  and in one or more installments as may be  prescribed by the rules made under s. 40.  Then, we come to s. 50.  Two clauses  of  that section relevant for our  present  purpose are:  sub-section (2) and (8) of that section.   Sub-section (2) says:               "After   the  notified  date  and  until   the               compensation   is   finally   determined   and               deposited  in pursuance of this  Act,  interim               payments  shall  be, made  by  the  Government               every fasli year prior to the fasli year in               324               which  the  said  deposit  is  made,  to   the                             principal  landholder and to the other   persons               referred to in section 44, sub-section (1), as               follows........               Sub-section (8) of s. 50 reads :               "No  interim payment made under  this  section               shall be deemed to constitute any part of  the               compensation  which the Government are  liable               to  deposit under section 41, subsection  (1),               or  to  any  extent  to be  in  lieu  of  such               compensation." Section  54-A provides for advance payment  of  compensation and  its apportionment etc.  That section provides that  "in the  case  of every estate not governed by section  38,  the Government   shall  estimate  roughly  the  amount  of   the compensation  payable in respect of the estate, and  deposit one-half of that amount within six months from the  notified date  in the office of the Tribunal, as advance  payment  on account of compensation."

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Section  54-B, provides for the payment of  additional  com- pensation  and its apportionment.  Evidently the  Government had estimated the total compensation payable to the  holders of all Estates that vested in it at 12-1/2 crores of rupees. Section 54-B provides that if the total compensation paid to the  holders  falls short of that sum, the balance  will  be distributed between the holders of the Estates abolished, in proportion   to  the  amount  of  compensation  as   finally determined in respect of each of them under s. 39.  The only other  provision  to  which reference may be  made  is  sub- section  (7) of s. 50 which in one of its  clauses  provides for payment of interest under certain circumstances. From  the  provisions  of  the Act, it  is  clear  that  the legislature  must  have been satisfied  that  the  enquiries relating  to  the determination of the compensation  of  the Estates  abolished was bound to take considerable time.   In the very nature of things, those enquiries were bound to  be prolonged.  We have earlier seen that the Estates  abolished vested  in  the  Government  as  soon  as  the  notification contemplated in section 3 was issued.  But the  compensation payable to the Estate holders became due only when the  same was  finally determined under section 39.  In  other  words, the  liability  of the Government to  pay  the  compensation finally determined arose only after the same was  determined under s. 39 though the Act provided for payment of half  the amount  of  compensation on the basis of  a  rough  estimate within six months from the date of vesting.  It may \also be noted  that there is no provision in the Act  providing  for payment of interest on the compensation payable as from  the date of vesting.  325 Now  we shall proceed to consider the question  whether  the interim payments made under the Act under s. 50(2) are reve- nue receipts or capital receipts.  It was urged on behalf of the assessee that those receipts were capital receipts.   In support  Of that contention, reliance was placed  on  clause (e) of section 3 as well as on the circumstance that  though the  Estate  abolished  vested  in  the  Government  on  the notified  date,  compensation became payable  to  them  only after  the  same was determined under s. 39.  On  the  other hand,  it  was urged on behalf of the  Department  that  the legislature  deliberately  made a  distinction  between  the compensation  and  interim  payment;  the  compensation  for abolished Estate were firstly paid as advance  compensation, neatly  as total compensation and-lastly as additional  com- pensation; the interim payments had nothing to do with  com- pensation;  they were recurring payments and they were  made in lieu of the interest payable on the total compensation- While   it  is  true  that  the  terminology  used  by   the legislature in respect of a payment is not conclusive of the true  character  of  that payment, it  would  be  proper  to proceed  on the basis that the legislature knew what it  was saying.  The word ’compensation’ is a well known  expression in  law.  When the legislature says that all  payments  made under the Act are in respect of the compensation payable  to the  former holders, unless there are clear  and  convincing circumstances  to show that one or more items of payment  do not form part of the compensation payable, we must hold that those payments are what they are said to be by the  statute. We must give the word "compensation" its normal and  natural meaning.  As seen earlier, in clause (e) of section 3 of the Act  the  legislature  definitely says that  the  holder  or holders of the Estate failing within clauses (b) and (c)  of section  3 "shall be entitled only to compensation from  the Government  as provided in this Act".  From this it  follows

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that   all  payments  made  to  them  under  the   Act   are compensation  payable to them for taking over their  Estates Statutes  which  take away others property,  by  and  large, provide  for  payment of compensation as from  the  date  of taking.   In the generality of those statutes, if  immediate payment is not made at the time of taking, provision is made for payment of interest on the compensation payable as  from the  date of taking.  In the Act, there is no provision  for payment  of compensation at the time of the vesting  of  the Estates  in the Government.  Nor is there any provision  for payment of interest on the compensation payable, as from the date  of  taking.   The compensation determined  has  to  be deposited  only after the enquiry under s. 39 was over.   We are  told  at the bar that the final  determination  of  the compensation  under  s. 39 was made years after  the  Estate vested  in the Government, though some advance  compensation was paid.  Hence there is 3 26 force  in the contention advanced on behalf of the  assessee that  the interim payments made were given  as  compensation for  depriving the assessees of the income that  they  would have  got  from their agricultural lands,  an  income  which would  not have been assessable to tax under the Act  if  it had  been received as agricultural income.  The  quantum  of interim  payments  payable to the former  holders  of  those Estates  was  determined by taking  into  consideration  the income  that the former owners would have received had  they continued  to  be the owners of those Estates.   This  prima facie shows that the Government was compensating the  former holders for taking away their income producing assets.   The interim payments do not appear to have any relationship with the compensation ultimately payable.  On the other hand,  it takes  note  of the loss of income incurred  by  the  former owners due to the abolition of the Estates.  The  contention that it was in lieu of interest on the compensation  payable overlooks  the fact that the liability of the Government  to pay  the  compensation excepting to the extent  provided  in section 54-A, arose only after the compensation payable  was finally  determined under s. 39.  The interim payments  were not fixed on the basis of the estimated compensation.   They were fixed on the basis of the loss of income to the  former owners.   Under these circumstances, it is not  possible  to accept  the  contention-that interim payments were  paid  in lieu of interest or even that they represented  compensation for loss of interest.  If the legislature intended that  the interim payments were to be mad-, in lieu of the payment  of interest  on  the compensation payable, nothing  would  have been easier than to say so in the Act.  The term  ’interest’ is  a  familiar  term  in  law.   In  this  very  Act,   the legislature had prescribed payment of interest under certain circumstances.  As observed by this Court in Dr. Sham Lal v. Commissioner  of Income-tax, Punjab(,’), the interest  is  a payment to be made by the debtor to the creditor when  money was  due to the creditor but was not paid or in other  words was withheld from the creditor by the debtor after the  time when the payment should have been made.  Proceeding further, this  Court observed in that case that interest  whether  it was  statutory  or contractual represented  the  profit  the creditor  would have made if he had the use of the money  to which  he  was  entitled to.  In the cases  before  us,  the assessees  were  not entitled to any compensation  till  the same  was determined under s. 39.  Therefore, no amount,  to which  they  were  entitled to. were,  withheld  from  them. Hence  on  that  account  they  were  not  entitled  to  any compensation in lieu of interest.

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It is true that while the Act calls the payments made  under S.   54-A,  54-B and 41. as compensation, the payments  made under 53. I.T.R. p. 151  327 section 50(2) is called interim payments.  This circumstance by itself will not be of much significance because, as  seen earlier,  s. 3 proceeds on the basis that all payments  made under  the Act are in the nature of compensation.   Possibly the  legislature  wanted  to  make  a  distinction   between compensation  paid for the loss of income and that  for  the loss  of assets.  Much reliance was placed on behalf of  the Department  on  sub-section  (8)  of s.  50  which  as  seen earlier, says               "No  interim payment made under  this  section               shall be deemed to constitute any part of  the               compensation  which the Government are  liable               to deposit under section 41, sub-section  (1),               or  to  any  extent  to be  in  lieu  of  such               compensation." In  our opinion, this sub-section, instead of assisting  the Department,  support  the case of the assessees.   All  that provision  says is that the interim payments made  under  s. 50(2)  are  not to be considered as compensation  which  the Government is required to deposit under s. 41 (1) or to  any extent  to  be in lieu of such compensation.   That  section does not say that the interim payments are not compensation. It only says that it is no part of the compensation required to be deposited under s. 41 or in lieu of such compensation. That  does not mean that it cannot be compensation  for  the recurring  loss  caused to the owner because of  the  taking away  of  an  income  producing  asset  without  payment  of compensation.   It  is not the contention of  the  assessees that  the interim payments made are part of the  total  com- pensation  payable  for  the  acquisition  of  the  Estates. According to them, it is a compensation for the  destruction or  taking away of an income producing asset of theirs  till the assets taken from them are compensated. Now  we  shall proceed to consider the  decided  cases.   We shall  first take up the cases relied on by the  appellants. The appellants placed great deal of reliance on the decision of  the Madras High Court in Shanmugha Rajeswara  Sethupathi v.  Income-tax  Officer,- Karakudi. (1)  The  question  that arose for decision therein was the very question that we are considering  in  these  appeals.   As  a  result  of  Madras amendment  after  Reorganization of States  on  November  1, 1956, cl. (e) of s. 3 as in force in Madras reads               "The principal or any other landholder and any               other  person whose rights  stand  transferred               under clause (b) or cease and determine  under               clause  (c)  shall be entitled  only  to  such               rights  and  privileges as are  recognised  or               conferred on him by or under this Act."               (1)44, I.T. R. p.853               328               Despite this change the Madras High Court came               to the conclusion that an interim payment made               under  section 50(2) was compensation  and  as               such was a capital receipt.  The same view was               taken  by  the  Madras High Court  in  M.,  S.               Chockalinga     Chettiar    and    Ors.     v.               Navaneethakrishna  Sivasubramania   Hirudalaya               Marudappa Pandayan- and Ors. (1) as well as in               Ramachandran v. A. N. Krishnamoorthy  Iyer.(2)               The  Andhra  Pradesh High, Court has  taken  a

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             contrary  view in the judgments  under  appeal               and  in  another judgment to  which  we  shall               refer presently.               In  Senairam  Doongarmall v.  Commissioner  of               Income-tax,  Assam(1)  this Court  was  called               upon  to  consider the nature of  the  payment               made to the assessee which owned a tea  estate               consisting of tea gardens, factories and other               buildings,  for  the purpose  of  growing  and                             manufacturing  tea.   The  factory  an d   other               buildings on the estate were requisitioned for               defence purposes by the military  authorities.               The  assessee  was paid compensation  for  the               years 1944 and 1945 under the Defence of India               Rules calculated on the basis of the  out-turn               of  tea that would have been  manufactured  by               the assessee during that period.  The question               was  whether the amounts of compensation  were               revenue  receipts taxable in the hands of  the               assessee.   The Court held that  the  receipts               were capital receipts and hence not liable  to               be  taxed.  It is true that in that  case  the               question   for   decision  was   whether   the               assessees  carried on business or not  in  the               years  1944  and  1945 and  not  whether  the.               receipts  in  question were taxable  in  come.               But  all  the same, some of  the  observations               made therein are of assistance in deciding the               point in issue in these appeals.  In that case               this   Court   ruled  that  the   amounts   of               compensation received by the assessee were not               revenue  receipts  and did  not  comprise  any               element  of  income.   In the  course  of  the               judgment  Mr. Justice Hidayatullah, J. (as  he               then was) speaking for the Court observed :               "The  compensation which was paid in  the  two               years  was no doubt paid as an  equivalent  of               the  likely  profits in those years;  but,  as               pointed  out  by Lord  Buckmaster  in  Glenbig               Union  Fireclay  Co. Ltd. v.  Commissioner  of               Inland Revenue and affirmed by Lord  Macmillan               in Van den Berghs Ltd. v. Clark :               "there is no relation between the measure that               is  used  for  the purpose  of  calculating  a               particular  result  and  the  quality  of  the               figure  that  is arrived at by  means  of  the               application of that test."               (1)   [1964] 1, Madras Law Journal p. 340;               (2)   [1964] 1, Madras Law Journal p. 153;               (3)   42, I.T.R. P. 392                329               This  proposition is as sound as it  is  well-               expressed,  and has been followed in  numerous               cases under the Indian Income-tax Act and also               by  this Court.  It is quality of the  payment               that  is  decisive of the  characters  of  the               payment  and not the method of the payment  or               its measure, and makes it fall within  capital               or revenue."               Again at pages 407 and 408 of the Report,  the               learned Judge observed :               "Now, when the payment was made to  compensate                             the assessee, no doubt the measure was  the out-

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             turn   of   tea   which   would   have    been               manufactured;  but that has little  relevance.               The  assessee was not compensated for loss  or               destruction  of or injury to a capital  asset.               The  buildings were taken for the time  being,               but  the injury was not so much to  the  fixed               capital as to the business as a whole."               Now  reference  may  be made to  some  of  the               observations  of Rowlatt J. in  Simpson  (H.M.               Inspector  of  Taxes) v. Executors  of  Bonner               Maurice as Executor of Edward Kay(1).  In that               case  a  naturalised British  subject  had  at               various dates deposited securities, stocks and               shares  in banks in Germany.  He  died  during               the  war.  After the peace Treaty  was  signed               claims of his representatives were admited  by               the  Mixed Arbitral Tribunal in I  respect  of               amounts   representing   partly   capital   of               securities  realised  by sale  or  redemption,               partly  interest  and dividends  and  interest               thereon, partly compensation under the  Treaty               computed  on the basis of interest on  certain               amounts.   The question was whether  the  com-               pensation  computed on the basis  of  interest               was not income for the purposes of income-tax.               The award of the Tribunal was made in  respect               of  these claims and part of the  compensation               was a sum calculated on the basis of  interest               in  respect of funds consisting  of  dividends               which had been held as an alien property under               the  German  law.  Dealing with  the  question               whether the compensation computed on the basis               of  interest  was or was not  income  for  the               purposes  of  income-tax,  the  learned  judge               observed : "The question is whether it is income at all.  It is  called compensation,   but   the  mere  word  in  the   Award,   CC compensation", does not decide the matter, one must look  at the  substance of what it was, and if it is  annual  profits and gains or income...... arising from a foreign possession, then  it is to be taxed.  The foreign Possession  must  have been  the  fund  in the hands of  the  Treuhander,  and  the Crown’s case is that this has been (1)[1929] 14, T.C. 580. 3 3 0 transmuted into sterling at the pre-war rate Of exchange and awarded with, annual interest ab initio.  The Treuhander did not  receive this money subject to any liability to hold  it at  interest.   No  doubt the German law  recognised  it  as remaining  the  property of Mr. Kay, but not so as  to  bear interest.   The  treaty did not give Mr. Kay  any  right  to interest, nor did it declare the Treuhander a trustee so  as to  found any consequential claim for interest; it  did  not empower  the Tribunal to give interest as such, or  to  make any declaration as to the character of the purpose for which the  Treuhander  had  held  the  money.   The  Treaty   gave compensation, and the tribunal which assessed the  principal sum  has assessed it on the basis of the interest.  I  think this  sum  first came into existence by the  Award,  and  no previous history or anterior character can be attributed  to it.   It is exactly like damages for detention of a  chattel and  unless it can be said that damages for detention  of  a chattel  can be called rent or hire, for the chattel  during ,the  period of detention, I do not think this  compensation can  be called interest.  I therefore think the Crown  fails

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on this point." In  the appeal court Lord Hanworth, M. R.  while  confirming the judgment of Rowlatt J., observed "The  duty to pay compensation was imposed upon them by  the Treaty.  The Statute does not apply it, and the root of  the payment   is  the  duty  to  pay  compensation........   For withholding  this  sum,  for  preventing  Mr.  Kay,  or  his executors,  exercising  the power of  disposition  over  his property,   the   Germans  have  been   compelled   to   pay compensation.   The  way to estimate  that  compensation  or damages-the sensible way no doubt-would be by calculating  a sum  in terms of what interest it would have  earned.   That has been done, but the sum that was paid has not been turned into interest so as to attach Income-tax to it.  It  remains compensation  and, for these reasons, it appears to me  that it is not a sum which attracts or attaches Income Tax to The  above observations undoubtedly support the case of  the appellants. On  the  side of the Department reliance was placed  on  the decision   of   this  Court  in  Raja  Ranuuhwara   Rao   v. Commissioner  of  Income-tax.   Hyderabad.(1)  Therein  this Court was called (1)[1964] 2, S.C.R. 847. 33 1 upon to decide the nature of the payment made under s. 14 of The Hyderabad, (Abolition of Jagirs) Regulation, 1358F under which the management of Estates was taken over.  Section  14 of  that  Regulation  provided that the  amount  payable  to Jagirdars  and  Hissedars under that Regulation  "shall  -be deemed  to be interim maintenance allowances  payable  until such  time  as the terms for the commutation of  Jagirs  are determined".    Section   3   of   The   Hyderabad    Jagirs (Commutation)  Regulation, 1359F laid down that  commutation sum  for a Jagir would be a certain multiple, of  its  basic annual revenue.  Section 6 of that Regulation provided  that the  commutation sum for each Jagir would  be  distributable between  the Jagirdar and Hissedars in certain  proportions. Subsection  (2)  of  s. 7 of  that  Regulation  stated  that payment  to a Jagirdar of the commutation sum of  the  Jagir shall constitute the final commutation as from the 1st April 1950  of his rights in the Jagir and if any payment  by  way of,   an  interim  maintenance  allowance  under  the   said Regulation,  that  is’, the former Regulation,  is  made  in respect of a period subsequent to the said date, the  amount of  such  payment  shall be  recovered  from  the  recipient thereof by deduction from his share in the, commutation  sum for  the  Jagir.   On  an interpretation of  s.  14  of  the Regulation  of  1358  F, this Court held  that  the  interim maintenance allowances paid under that section were  revenue receipts  on which income-tax can be imposed.  Some  of  the observations found in that judgment undoubtedly support  the case  of  the  Department.   But  we  must  see  under  what circumstances those observations were made. In  order to understand the ratio of that decision, we  must bear in mind the provisions of the two Regulations  referred to  hereinbefore.   The first Regulation  provided  for  the taking over of the management of the Estates and the  second Regulation   prescribed   the  mode   of   determining   the commutation  sum  in  respect  of each  jagir  and  for  its payment.  The character of the receipt which this Court  was called  upon to consider was the maintenance allowance  paid under s. 14 of the first of the two Regulations.  Under that Regulation,  the  Administrator  of  Jagirs  took  over  the management  of  the  Estates pending  making  provision  for determination of the commutation amount.  Provision in  that

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regard was made under the second Regulation.  Till the  pay- ment  of  the  commutation  sum,  the  Administrator  merely managed ,the Estates on behalf of the former owners of those Estates.  This is clear from ss. 5, 8, 11, 12, 13 and 14  of the  first  Regulation.   Under s.  5  thereof  the  quantum Jagirdars were required to hand over the possession of their Estates to the Jagir Administrator.  Section 8 required  the former   Jagirdars   to   pay   to   the   Government   ,the administration  expenses  of  their  Estates.   Section   11 provided for distribution of net income of an Estate between the Jagirdar 332 and his Hissedars who were entitled to a share in the income of the Estate.  Section 12(1) says               "From  the amount payable to any person  under               section 11, there shall be deducted the amount               of  any  maintenance  allowance  which   under               subsection  (2) is debitable to the  share  of               that person." Section  13  required the Jagir  Administrator  to  maintain separate  account  in respect of each Jagir and  afford  the concerned  Jagirdar and Hissedar reasonable  facilities  for the inspection of the same.  Section 14 reads :                "The   amounts  payable  to   Jagirdars   and               Hissedars under the Regulation shall be deemed               to  be interim maintenance allowances  payable               until   such  time  as  the  terms   for   the               commutation of jagirs are determined." It  is the character of the payments made under s.  14  that came  up  for consideration before this Court  in  Rameshwar Rao’s  case(1).  Quite clearly the  maintenance  allolwances paid  were  revenue receipts.  Hence that  decision  has  no bearing  on the question of law under consideration  in  the present  case.  The observations made by this Court in  that decision  must  be read in the light of the  facts  of  that case. The decision of Mr. Justice’ P. Jaganmohan Reddy (as he then was)  in Kumara Rajah of Venkatagiri and ors. v.  Income-tax Officer,  A-Ward-Nellore  and  anr. (  2  )  sitting  singly proceeded  on  the basis that the ratio of the  decision  of this   Court  in  Raja  Rameshwar  Rao’s  case  is   equally applicable to payments under s. 50(2) of the Act.  The  same view was taken by the judges of the High Court who  rendered the  decisions  under  appeal.  For  the  reasons  mentioned earlier both those decisions must be held to have  proceeded on an erroneous view of the decision of this Court. On  behalf  of  the  Revenue, reliance  was  placed  on  the decision  of this Court in Chandroji Rao v. Commissioner  of Income-tax, Madhya Pradesh(3).  To that decision both of  us were  parties.  The question for decision in that  case  was whether ’,he payments of interest made under s. 8(2) of  the Madhya  Bharat Abolition of Jagirs Act, 1951 was  a  Revenue receipt or a capital receipt.  That section provided for the payment  of  interest  on the compensation  payable  to  the Jagirdars by the Government under s. 8(1) for resumption  of their  Jagir  lands.   ’Ms Court held that  the  receipt  of interest under s. 8 (2) of that Act was a taxable (1)  [1964] 2 S. C. R. 847. (3) 77, I.T.R. 743. (2) 64, I.T.R. 264. 3 33 income.    The  Court  observed  that  there  was  a   clear distinction  between the compensation payable under s.  8(1) and  the  interest  payable under sub-s. (2) of  s.  8.  The payment  under  s. 8(2) was given to the  Jagirdar  for  his

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being  kept out of the compensation amount to which  he  was entitled  for  a period of ten years and that it was  not  a payment for the acquisition of the Jagir.  Therein the Court explained  the  distinction  between the  payment  made  for depriving  the use of a money to which a person is  entitled and  that made for the destruction or taking away  his  pro- perty,  the former being a revenue receipt and the latter  a capital receipt. For  the reasons mentioned above these appeals are  allowed. In  those cases where the question of law mentioned  earlier was  referred to the High Court for its opinion, the  answer given  by the High Court is discharged and in its  place  we answer  the question in favour of the assessee.  So  far  as the writ petitions are concerned the order of the High Court is  set  aside,  the  writ petitions  are  allowed  and  the concerned Income-tax Officers are prohibited from  including the  interim  payments received by the petitioner  under  s. 50(2) of the Act in his assessment.  The appellants shall be entitled to their costs in these appeals both in this  Court as well as in the High Court.  In this Court only one  hear- ing fee is allowed. G.C.                                                 Appeals allowed. 3-L1340Sup CI/71 334