03 May 1979
Supreme Court
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SASSOON J. DAVID & CO. (P) LTD., BOMBAY Vs C.I.T., BOMBAY

Case number: Appeal (civil) 2501 of 1972


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PETITIONER: SASSOON J. DAVID & CO. (P) LTD., BOMBAY

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: C.I.T., BOMBAY

DATE OF JUDGMENT03/05/1979

BENCH: VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J) BENCH: VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J) UNTWALIA, N.L.

CITATION:  1979 AIR 1441            1979 SCR  (3) 878

ACT:      Indian Income Tax Act 1922-Section 10(2) (xv)-Scope of- Retrenchment compensation  paid to  employees whose services were  terminated-If   an  allowable   deduction-"Wholly  and exclusively" meaning  of-Benefit to  third  party-Whether  a consideration for not allowing deduction.

HEADNOTE:      In January,  1956 the assessee company whose assets had been valued  at Rs. 155 lacs as on December 31, 1955 decided to terminate the services of 22 of its employees with effect from  31st   March,  1956   and  to  pay  them  retrenchment compensation and compensation for termination of employment. Thereafter Davids,  who  held  the  shares  of  the  company entered into an agreement with Tatas to sell to them all the shares  for  Rs.  155  lacs.  The  agreement  provided  that compensation and  gratuity  payable  to  the  Directors  and employees whose services had been terminated and the annuity payable to the managing director should be deducted from the purchase consideration. The assessee claimed deduction under s. 10(2)(xv)  of the Indian Income Tax Act, 1922 of a sum of Rs. 1.64  lakhs paid by way of retrenchment compensation and compensation  for   termination  of   service   during   the assessment year  1957-58 and  a sum  of Rs. 16,885 which was the amount  of annuity paid to the managing director in each of the three succeeding assessment years.      The Income  Tax officer  disallowed the  amounts on the ground that  the services of the directors and employees had been terminated  not as  business expediency but because the purchasers of  the shares  made it  a  condition  under  the agreement.      On  appeal   the  Appellate   Assistant   Commissioner, affirming the  view of the Income Tax Officer, held that the decision to  pay compensation could not be said to have been taken solely  with a view to the business requirement of the company.      Dismissing the assessee’s appeal the Appellate Tribunal held that the expenses had not been incurred for the purpose of the company but purely as a result of the bargain between Davids  and  Tatas  and  assuming  that  the  payments  were beneficial to  the assessees  by reason  of the reduction in its establishment  expenses, no  deduction could  be allowed under s.  10(2) (xv)  since the  payment  was  made  to  the

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benefit of a third party.      Relying principally  upon the decision of this Court in Gordon Woodroffee Leather Manufacturing Co. v. The Commr. of Income-tax, [1962] Supp. 2 SCR 211, the High Court held that the amount  involved in  the case  did not  satisfy the test applicable to  the expenditure  allowable under s. 10(2)(xv) of the Act and, therefore, disallowed the expenditure of Rs. 1.27 lakhs out of a sum of Rs. 1.64 lakhs on the ground that it had not been incurred for commercial expediency. The High Court also  disallowed the  annuity  paid  to  the  managing director in the succeeding three assessment years. 879      Allowing the assessee’s appeals ^      HELD: 1(a)  The three  tests laid down by this Court in Gordon Woodroffee’s  case viz.,  (1) that the payment should have been  made as  a matter  of practice which affected the quantum of salary, (ii) that there was an expectation by the employee of  getting a  gratuity and  (iii) that  the sum of money was  expended on  the ground  of commercial expediency and in order indirectly to facilitate the carrying on of the business of  the assessee  have to be read disjunctively. So read the  present case  which satisfied  the third test fell under s.  10(2) (xv) of the Act. The High Court was in error in holding  that the  amount in question did not satisfy any of the  tests applicable  to the expenditure allowable under the section. [893H]      (b) In  order to  claim deduction  under the section an assessee has  to show  that the  expenditure in question (1) was not  an allowance  of the nature described in any of the clauses (i)  to (xiv)  of the  section, (ii)  was not in the nature of  a capital expenditure or personal expenses of the assessee and  (iii) had been laid out or expended wholly and exclusively for  the purposes of his business, profession or vocation. [891G]      (c) Even assuming that the motive behind the payment of retrenchment  compensation   was  that   the  terms  of  the agreement of the sale of shares should be satisfied, as long as the  amount had  been laid  out or  expended  wholly  and exclusively for  the purpose of the business of the assessee there could  be no  good reason  for denying  the benefit of this section  if there  was no  other impediment  to do  so. [891H]      In the  instant case  the assessee  company was neither dissolved  nor   was  its   business  undertaking  sold.  It continued to  exist as  a juristic  entity and  continued to function even after the transfer of its shares to Tatas. The expenditure was  laid out  for the  purpose of  the assessee company’s own  trade and not for the trade of Tatas who were only shareholders  of  the  company.  As  a  result  of  the expenditure the  company was  benefited and  it was possible for it  to  earn  more  profits  as  a  consequence  of  the reduction in  the wage  bill. It  cannot be  said that Tatas were in any way benefited financially by reason of reduction in the  consideration payable by them for the shares. [893B- C]      Gordon Woodroffae  Leather  Manufacturing  Co.  v.  The Commissioner of  Income-tax, Madras, [1962] Supp. 2 SCR 211, applied.      (i) Commissioner  of Inland Revenue v. Patrick Thomson, Ltd. (in Liquidation),      (ii) Commissioners  of Inland Revenue v. J. & R. Allan, Ltd. (In liquidation),      (iii) Commissioners  of Inland  Revenue v.  Pattigrew & Stephens, Ltd., 37 T. C. 145, referred to.

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    Commissioner of  Income-tax, Gujarat  v.  Laxmi  Cement Distributors (P)  Ltd., 104 ITR 711, Commissioner of Income- tax, Bombay City I v. Fairdeal Corporation (P) Ltd., 108 ITR 280; Commissioner  of Income-tax,  Bombay City  I  v.  Patel Cotton Co. Pvt. Ltd., 108 ITR 846; approved. 880      (d) Moreover  it is  too late in the day whatever might have been  the position  about two decades ago, to treat the expenditure incurred  by the management in paying reasonable sums by  way of  gratuity and  retrenchment compensation  or compensation for  termination of  services as  not  business expenditure. Such  expenditure would  ordinarily fall within the scope of s. 10(2)(xv) of the Act. [889C]      2. The  argument that  since there  was no necessity to retrench the  services of all the employees, the expenditure could not  be treated as one laid out wholly and exclusively for the  purpose of  business has  no force.  The expression "wholly  and   exclusively"  does  not  mean  "necessarily". Ordinarily it  is for  the assessee  to decide  whether  any expenditure should  be incurred  in the course of his or its business. Such  expenditure may  be incurred voluntarily and without any  necessity and  if it  is incurred for promoting the business  and to  earn profits  the assessee  can  claim deduction  under  the  section  even  though  there  was  no compelling necessity  to incur  such expenditure.  The  fact that somebody  other than the assessee was also benefited by the expenditure should not come in the way of an expenditure being allowed  by way  of deduction under the section, if it satisfies otherwise the test laid down by law. [894D-G]      In the  instant  case  the  company  thought  that  its business could  be carried  on  with  a  smaller  number  of employees and  the only  way to  reduce the  number  was  to terminate  the   services  of   all  employees   by   paying compensation and to re-employ only some of them. Thereby the company reduced  its expenditure  on wages  payable  to  its employees. It  could not therefore be said that compensation was paid  with an  oblique  motive  and  without  regard  to commercial considerations or expediency. [895F]

JUDGMENT:      CIVIL APPELLATE  JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2501 of 1972.      From the  Judgment and  order  dated  5-2-1970  of  the Bombay High Court in Income Tax Reference No. 58/73.                             AND             CIVIL APPEAL NOS. 2502-2504 OF 1972      From the  Judgment and  Order dated 25th/26th Feb. 1971 of the Bombay High Court in Income Tax Ref. No. 87/63.      V. S.  Desai, Dinesh  Vyas, K.  J. John and Sree Narain for the Appellants in all the appeals.      Hardyal Hardy,  Champat Rai,  B. B. Tawekley and Miss A Subhashini for the Respondent in all the appeals.      The Judgment of the Court was delivered by      VENKATARAMIAH, J.-Since  these appeals  by  certificate involve a  common question  of law, we find it convenient to dispose them of by this common judgment. 881      Civil Appeal  No. 2501  of 1972  is filed  against  the Judgment of the High Court of Bombay in Income Tax Reference No. 58  of 1963 and Civil Appeals Nos. 2502-2504 of 1972 are filed against  the judgment of that High Court in Income Tax Reference No.  87 of 1965. The assessee, M/s Sasoon J. David & Co.  Pvt. Ltd.  (hereinafter referred to as ’the Company’)

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is the appellant in all these cases and the assessment years are 1957-58,  1958-59, 1959-60  and  1960-61,  the  relevant calendar years being 1956, 1957, 1958 and 1959 respectively.      The Company  is an  investment company  and its  shares were  originally  held  either  directly  or  through  their nominees by  Sir Percival  David, Lady  David and  Mr. V. P. David (hereinafter  collectively referred  to as  ’Davids’). The issued capital of the Company consisted of 1000 ordinary shares of  the face value of Rs. 10,000/- each. According to the valuation  made by  the  auditors,  the  assets  of  the Company were  worth Rs. 155 lacs as on December 31, 1955. At a meeting  of the  directors of the Company held on December 2, 1955,  a resolution  was  passed  recommending  that  the employees of  the Company  whose names  were set  out in the statement attached  thereto be  paid certain sums or annuity as set  out against  the names of each of them as and by way of   retrenchment    compensation   and   compensation   for termination of  employment and  also for  long and  faithful services rendered  by them  to the  Company in  the past and that  their  services  might  be  terminated.  It  was  also resolved to  call an  extra-ordinary general  meeting of the shareholders of  the Company  to consider and if thought fit to approve  the recommendation  made  by  the  directors  as stated above.  Accordingly an extra ordinary general meeting of the  shareholders of  the Company was held on January 17, 1956 but  it  was  adjourned  to  January  25,1956.  On  the adjourned date,  the meeting  passed a  resolution approving the  recommendation   made  by  the  directors  to  pay  the employees retrenchment  compensation  and  compensation  for termination of  employment and  also additional retrenchment compensation and  compensation for termination of employment in the  case of some of them and to terminate their services on or  after April  1, 1956.  Thereafter  an  agreement  was entered into  between Davids and Tata Sons Ltd. (hereinafter referred to  as ’the  Tatas’) on  March 23, 1956 agreeing to sell the 1000 shares held by Davids or their nominees in the Company in  favour of  Tatas or  their nominees for a sum of Rs. 155  lacs. The  said agreement  inter alia provided that the sum  voted by  the Company  for  payment  of  gratuities and/or as  compensation for  loss of  employment to existing directors and employees of the Company with respect to their services upto  and inclusive of March 31, 1956 and a further amount of 882 Rs. 16,188/- payable to the Managing Director, Mr. Mathalone should be  paid in  accordance with  the resolution  by  the Company and  the amount  so paid should be deducted from the purchase price of Rs. 155 lacs agreed upon. It also provided that Davids  should arrange to terminate the services of all employees with  effect from  March  31,  1956  and  also  to arrange that all directors (including the Managing Director) resign their  offices and  Tatas or  their  nominees  should thereafter be entitled to appoint or elect all or any of the members of  the  staff  and  directors  (including  existing directors and  members of  the staff) of the Company as they deemed fit.      Of the  22 employees  covered by  the resolution of the directors  dated   December  2,   1955   followed   by   the confirmation  at   the  extra-ordinary  general  meeting  of January 25, 1956, 9 were re-employed and 13 persons were not re-employed. In the books of the assessee, there was a debit for a total sum of Rs. 1,64,899/- during the accounting year 1956, the details for which were as follows:- Amount payble to the 22 employees as per resolution dated 2-12-1955 and 25-1-1956

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                                            Rs 1,04,626/- Amount described as "additional retrechment compensation and compensation for termination of employment and also for long and faitful services", as per resolutin No. 2 dated      Rs    6,000/- Compensation for termiantion of pension      Rs   21,200/- Annuity of Shri A.E. Joseph, former Director as per resolsution dated 2-12-1956           Rs   16,885/- Amount described as "compensation for loss of office. Managing Director Mr. R. Mathalone"  Rs   16,188/-                                              -------------                Total :                       Rs 1,64,899/-                                              -------------      It should  be mentioned  here  that  A.E.  Joseph,  the former Director  of the  Company had  to be  paid as per the resolution of  the Company  Rs. 16,885/-  by way  of annuity during a period of five years commencing with 1956.      During  the   assessment  year  1957-58,  the  relevant previous year  being 1956,  the Company claimed deduction of Rs. 1,64,899/-  referred  to  above  before  the  Income-tax Officer under section 10(2) (xv) of the 883 Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 (hereinafter referred to as ’the Act’). During  each of the three succeeding assessment years with which  we are  concerned, the Company claimed deduction of Rs.  16,885/- being  the annuity paid to Mr. A. E. Joseph pursuant to the resolution. During the assessment year 1957- 58, the claim in respect of the entire sum of Rs. 1,64,899/- was disallowed  by the Income-tax Officer on the ground that the  services  of  the  directors  and  employees  had  been terminated not  because of  business expediency  but because Tatas, the  purchasers of  the shares  made it  a  condition under the  agreement. The relevant part of the order read as follows:-           "Thus, it emerges that the expenditure of the type of gratuity  would be  allowable u/s  10(2) (xv) only if the persons retiring  had such expectancy or they accepted lower salaries in  such expectation  and hence it was an incentive to existing  employees of  future employees. As against that we find  that  here  even  before  the  Tatas  took  up  the management of  the company,  services of  the employees  and directors were  terminated and  the amount  of  compensation fixed. The  fact that  there was  no expectancy or custom of such gratuity  with the  company is clearly borne out by the fact  that   many  of   the  employees  whose  services  are terminated had  put in  a number of years of service in some cases even going upto 40 years. As against this the assessee has been  pleading that  most of the employees were very old and that as a result of change of staff the Company was able to effect  considerable economy.  However, I understand that some of  the old employees were reinstated and as stated the whole transaction  was a  part of the overall transaction of purchase of  shares and  passing over of control. The manner in which  the services  of all  the employees  under the old management were  terminated is  also significant.  Thus I am unable to see how this expenditure can fall u/s. 10(2) (xv). I am  unable to  find any  distinction between  compensation paid to  employees and  those paid to directors and also any distinction between outright compensation paid to a director and annuity  paid to  a director.  None of  the expenses are allowable and  I add  the whole  amount claimed  by  way  of gratuity, compensation for loss of employment and annuity or compensation for  loss of  office to  a director  or  former director."      Aggrieved by  the decision  of the  Income-tax Officer,

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the Company  filed an  appeal before the Appellate Assistant Commissioner of 884 Income-tax.  The   Appellate  Assistant  Commissioner  after taking  into  account  the  records  before  the  Income-tax Officer and  the statement  filed by  the Company before him found that  the Income-tax  Officer was right in disallowing the claim even though he was of opinion that the Company had by the  termination of  services of  the directors  and  the employees by  payment of  gratuity and/or  compensation been benefited. The relevant part of his order was as follows:-           "The only contention remaining to be considered is that the  Income-tax Officer  was wrong in disallowing a sum of Rs. 1,64,899/- paid to certain employees and directors as compensation for  termination of services. The circumstances leading to  the  payment  of  this  compensation  have  been narrated in  detail in  the order of the Income-tax Officer. It is strongly urged that the termination of the services of the persons  concerned was  of great  benefit to the Company even considering  the payment  of the compensation since the establishment expenses  were very substantially reduced as a result. From the information furnished to me, this statement is no  doubt quite  justified. However,  it is seen that the termination of  the services and the payment of compensation were  not   done  wholly   with  a   view  to  the  business requirements of  the company,  but were  bound up  with  the changing of hands of the shares of the company. According to the agreement  for the sale of all the shares of the company the sellers  had to arrange to terminate the services of all the employees  and also  arrange that all directors resigned their offices.  It is expressly stated that this requirement was to enable the purchasers to appoint or elect all members of the  staff and directors. As a matter of fact some of the persons to  whom compensation  had been paid for termination of services were immediately re-employed by the Company. The decision to  pay compensation cannot in the circumstances be said to  have been  taken solely with a view to the business requirement of  the company  though incidentally the company might have  been benefited  by it.  In view of what has been stated  above.  I  feel  that  the  Income-tax  Officer  was justified in  his action.  The appellant has referred to the Bombay High  Court decision  in the  case of  F.E.  Dinishaw Ltd., but  the facts  in the  present case are not identical with those of the case mentioned."      On further  appeal to  the Tribunal by the Company, the Tribunal affirmed  the  order  of  the  Appellate  Assistant Commissioner holding 885 that the  inference drawn by the Income-tax Officer that the payments in question were motivated by the reorganisation of share-holding had  not been  challenged by the Company; that the reference  made to the said payments in the agreement of sale of  shares led  to  such  an  inference  and  that  the expenditure had  not been  incurred for  the purpose  of the Company but purely as a result of the bargain between Davids and Tatas.  It was  further held  by the  Tribunal that even assuming that  the payments  were beneficial to the Company, no deduction  could be  allowed since  they had been made to benefit third  parties. Accordingly  the Tribunal  dismissed the appeal.      An application  made under  section 66(1)  of  the  Act before the  Tribunal was  rejected. Thereafter  the  Company filed an  application before  the High Court of Bombay under section 66(2)  of the  Act and  the High  Court directed the Tribunal  to  state  a  case  and  to  refer  the  following

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questions of law for its opinion:-           "(1) Whether the Tribunal erred in law disallowing the amount of Rs. 1,64,899/- as a deduction under section 10 of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 ?           (2)  Whether there was any evidence to justify the Tribunal’s finding that the payment of Rs. 1,64,899/- or any part thereof  was made in view of and in order to effectuate the agreement  entered into between the old shareholders and the new  shareholders and that the payment had no commercial purpose behind it ?           (3)  Whether in  any event the sum of Rs. 16,188/- paid to  the Managing  Director by way of pay in lieu of six months’ notice was allowable as a deduction under section 10 of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 ?"      Accordingly, the  Tribunal drew  up a  statement of the case and referred the above questions. Later on the Tribunal referred under  section 66(1)  the following question of law arising out  of the  orders of assessment for the assessment years 1958-59, 1959-60 and 1960-61 in respect of the annuity paid to Mr. A. E. Joseph:-           "Whether  in  computing  the  assessee’s  business income of the accounting years 1957, 1958 and 1959, relevant for the  assessment years  1958-59, 1959-60 and 1960-61, the sum of Rs. 16,885/- is an admissible deduction under section 10(2)(xv) of the Act? 886      It is  not necessary  to refer  to  the  other  matters involved in  the orders  of assessment of the years 1958-59, 1959-60 and  1960-61 and  to the various stages of the cases until they reached the High Court.      Income-tax Reference  No. 58 of 1963 arising out of the assessment proceedings  of the  year 1957-58  was heard by a Division Bench  of the  High Court  of Bombay and decided on February 5,  1970. The  High Court  found that  out  of  Rs. 1,64,899/- referred  to in  question No.1  only a sum of Rs. 21,200/- which  was commutation  of liability for payment of pension to  some retired  employees and/or  widows  of  such employees and  a sum  of Rs. 16,188/- paid to Mr. Mathalone, Managing Director  in lieu  of six months notice that had to be given  prior to termination of his service were allowable as deductions and that the Company was not entitled to claim deduction  of  the  remaining  sum  of  Rs.  1,27,511/-.  It accordingly answered question No.1 in the negative in so far as the  sum of  Rs. 1,27,511/-  (excluding two  items of Rs. 21,000/- and  Rs. 16,188/-) was concerned, question No. 2 in the affirmative  in so  far as the amount aggregating to Rs. 1,27,511/- (excluding  the two items of Rs. 21,200/- and Rs. 16,188/-)  was   concerned  and   question  No.   3  in  the affirmative. The  High  Court  was  of  the  view  that  the expenditure of  the sums amounting to Rs. 1,27,511/- paid to the employees  and a  director of  the  Company  by  way  of retrenchment compensation or compensation for termination of service had  not been incurred by the Company for commercial expediency and/or  considerations. It accordingly disallowed the claim made by the Company to the extent indicated above. The Income-tax  Reference case  arising from  the assessment orders relating  to assessment  years 1958-59,  1959-60  and 1960-61 came before another Division Bench of the High Court and that  Division Bench  following the decision rendered by the High  Court earlier  disallowed the claim of the Company for deduction  in respect  of the payment of Rs. 16,885/- to Mr. A.  E. Joseph in each of the accunting years relative to the assessment years in question. Aggrieved by the judgments of the  High Court  of Bombay,  the Company  has filed these appeals.

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    We are concerned in these appeals with the claim of the Company in  respect of  a sum  of Rs.  1,27,511/- out of Rs. 1,64,899/- referred  to in  questions Nos.  1 and  2 in  the reference relating  to the  assessment year  1957-58 and the claim in  respect of  payment of Rs. 16,885/- made to Mr. A. E. Joseph  during each  of the  three succeeding  years. The undisputed facts of the case are: The shares of the Company 887 were held  by  Davids  or  their  nominees  till  they  were transferred to  Tatas; that  according to the valuation made by the  auditors of  the Company,  its assets were worth Rs. 155 lacs  as on  December 31, 1955; that at a meeting of the directors held  on December  2, 1955,  it had  been resolved that the  services of  22 employees  should be terminated by paying retrenchment  compensation; that  on January 25, 1956 at the extra-ordinary general meeting of the shareholders of the Company,  it was  resolved that  the  employees  of  the Company be  paid certain sums or annuity set out against the names  of   each  of  them  and  their  services  should  be terminated with effect from April 1, 1956; that an agreement was entered  into between Davids and Tatas on March 23, 1956 regarding the  sale of  the shares  in favour  of the Tatas; that the said agreement referred to the resolution passed at the meeting  of the  shareholders of  the Company;  that the Company paid retrenchment compensation according to the said resolution and  that the  Tatas deducted  from the  purchase price the  sum payable by the Company in accordance with the resolution of  the Company  from out of the consideration of Rs. 155  lacs  which  they  had  agreed  to  pay  under  the agreement dated  March 23,  1956 to  Davids. Apart  from the resolution of  the Board  of Directors  of the Company dated December 2,  1955, the  resolutions  passed  at  the  extra- ordinary general  meeting of the shareholders of the Company held on January 25, 1956, the agreement dated March 23, 1956 entered into  between Davids and Tatas, the books of account of the  Company showing  payments made by the Company by way of retrenchment  compensation and  the fact that 9 of the 22 employees  whose  services  had  been  terminated  had  been reemployed, there  was no  other evidence before the Income- tax Officer.  The Income-tax  Officer presumably  because of the proximity  of the  dates of the resolutions, the date of the  agreement   and  the   dates  on   which   retrenchment compensation  was   paid  to   the  employees  came  to  the conclusion that  the retrenchment  of the employees had been effected as  a part  of the  bargain  entered  into  between Davids and  Tatas and  therefore compensation  paid  to  the employees on  retrenchment of  their  services  and  to  the director on the termination of his service had not been paid in the  course of  the business  of the  Company by  way  of commercial expediency.  He accordingly  disallowed the claim of the Company under section 10(2) (xv) of the Act. Although the Appellate  Assistant Commissioner  in the  course of his order observed that the Company had been benefited by reason of the  retrenchment of  the service  of the employees as it had resulted  in the  reduction of  the expenditure  on  the establishment, he  disallowed the  claim on  the  very  same ground on  which the Income-tax Officer had rejected it. The Triunal proceeded  to dispose  of the  case before it on the basis that 888 the inference  drawn by  the  Income-tax  Officer  that  the payments  were  motivated  by  the  re-organisation  in  the shareholding had  not been  questioned by the Company either before the Appellate Assistant Commissioner or before it. We do  not  find  in  the  order  of  the  Appellate  Assistant

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Commissioner that  any  concession  had  been  made  by  the Company to  the effect  that the  finding of  the Income-tax Officer referred  to above  was correct.  In the  grounds of appeal before  the Tribunal, the Company had stated that the Appellate Assistant  Commissioner erred in holding that "the decision to  pay compensation cannot in the circumstances be said to  have been  taken solely with a view to the business requirement of  the Company  though incidentally the Company might have benefited by it." The appellants submitted before the Tribunal  that the  above amount was expended wholly and exclusively for the purpose of their business and as such it should have  been deducted  as  an  admissiable  expense  in computing their  income liable  to income-tax.  The Tribunal while deciding  the question whether the sums paid by way of compensation were  deductible or  not observed that the fact that a reference to payment to the staff of compensation had been made  in the  agreement led  to the inference that such payment was  a part of the bargain between Davids and Tatas; that on account of such payment, the purchasers had actually been benefited  while the  Company had  to make  payment  in order to  give effect  to the  agreement and therefore there was no  commercial  purpose  involved  in  making  the  said payment. The  Tribunal also held that even assuming that the Company was  benefited by  payment of compensation by reason of  reduction  in  its  establishment  expenses,  since  the payment had  been made  as a  result of  the bargain between Davids and  Tatas, it  could not  be allowed as a deductible expenditure. It  should be stated here that the Tribunal did not  reverse   the  finding   of  the   Appellate  Assistant Commissioner that  the Company  had been  benefited by  such payment. In fact it did not go into the question whether the payment had  really resulted  in any benefit to the Company. The High Court, however, in the course of its judgment found that on account of the retrenchment of the employees and re- employment of  only 9  of them,  the yearly wage bill of the Company for salaries was reduced from Rs. 1,14,197/- in 1955 to Rs.  67,268/- in  1956 and  thereafter in  1957 and  1958 respectively to Rs. 54,124/- and Rs. 54,960/-.      In the  instant case,  it is  necessary to bear in mind that the  Company was neither dissolved nor was its business undertaking sold. It continued to exist as a juristic entity even after the transfer of its 889 shares by  Davids to  Tatas. On  account of such transfer of shares, the  transferees no  doubt  gained  control  on  the Company. But  one important  fact of the case which was lost sight of by the High Court and the Tribunal was that neither Davids nor  Tatas derived  any direct  benefit  out  of  the payment of  retrenchment compensation  to the employees even though such retrenchment might have facilitated the transfer of shares.  It is  also not  the case of the Department that the payment  was excessive.  That there  was  a  substantial reduction in  the  wage  bill  in  the  future  years  as  a consequence of retrenchment was also not disputed. It is too late in  the day  now, whatever  may have  been the position about two  decades ago, to treat the expenditure incurred by a management  in paying  reasonable sums by way of gratuity, bonus,  retrenchment   compensation  or   compensation   for termination of  service as  not business  expenditure.  Such expenditure  would  ordinarily  fall  within  the  scope  of section  10  (2)  (xv)  of  the  Act  which  authorised  the deduction of  any expenditure  not being  in the  nature  of capital expenditure  or personal  expenses of  the  assessee laid out  of expended wholly and exclusively for the purpose of business or profession or vocation.

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    The  High   Court,  however,   declined  to  allow  the deduction of  the sums  referred to  above  in  these  cases principally relying  upon the  decision  of  this  Court  in Gordon  Woodroffee   Leather  Manufacturing   Co.   v.   The Commissioner of  Income-tax, Madras(1).  The facts  of  that case were  briefly thus: One J. H. Phillips was the Director of the  assessee Company in that case from the year 1940. On March 22, 1949, he wrote a letter to the assessee expressing his intention to resign from its Board as from April 4, 1949 and requested that his resignation be accepted. On March 24, 1949, the  Board of  Directors  of  the  assessee  passed  a resolution  that   his  resignation   be  accepted   and  in appreciation of  his  long  and  valuable  services  to  the assessee he  be paid a gratuity of Rs. 50,000/- out of which the assessee  was to pay Rs. 40,000/- and its Managing Agent was to  pay Rs.  10,000/-. Subsequently  the resolution  was approved  at  the  extra-ordinary  general  meeting  of  the assessee. Accordingly  a sum of Rs. 40,000/- was paid by the assessee  to  Mr.  J.  H.  Phillips.  The  assessee  claimed deduction of  the said  sum of  Rs. 40,000/-  under  section 10(2) (xv) of the Act. The Income-tax Officer as well as the Appellate Assistant  Commissioner disallowed  the said claim on the  ground that  the Company had no pension scheme; that the  payment  was  voluntary  and  that  the  entry  in  the assessee’s books clearly indicated that the payment was 890 a capital  payment. The  Tribunal upheld  the order  of  the Appellate Assistant  Commissioner. It held that according to the resolution  the gratuity was paid "for long and valuable services  to  the  assessee",  that  there  was  nothing  to indicate that Mr. J. H. Phillips had accepted a lower salary in expectation  of getting  a gratuity  at the  end  of  his service; that  there was  no such  practice in the assessee- company; that during the course of his service, he was being remunerated at  a graduated scale of salary and a commission of 2  1/2% on  the profits;  that there  was no "expectancy" that at the end of the service there would be recompense for faithful and efficient service and that he had been suitably rewarded by  being given  a commission  on the  profits  "in order to  whip up  his enthusiasm". It was also found by the Tribunal that  in the  books of the assessee, the amount had not been  debited in  the profit  and loss  account but  was debited to the appropriation account thereby indicating that it was an extra payment or a payment made in the nature of a capital expense.  On a  reference under section 66(1) of the Act, the High Court of Madras answered the question relating to the  above item  of expenditure  against the assessee. On appeal, this  Court affirmed the decision of the High Court. While holding  that the  claim made  by the assessee did not satisfy  the  proper  tests  for  claiming  exemption  under section 10(2)  (xv) of  the  Act,  this  Court  observed  as follows:-           "In our  opinion the  proper test to apply in this case is,  was the payment made as a matter of practice which affected the  quantum of  salary or was there an expectation by the  employee of  getting a  gratuity or  was the  sum of money expended on the ground of commercial expediency and in order indirectly  to  facilitate  the  carrying  on  of  the business. But  this has  not been  shown and  therefore  the amount claimed  is not  a deductible  item  under  s.  10(2) (xv)."      After quoting  in the  course of its judgment the above passage, the High Court proceeded to observe as follows:-           "Having  regard   to  the   test   applicable   in connection with the contentions made by Mr. Palkhiwala, what

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required to  be investigated  is  whether  the  payments  in question were  made  as  a  matter  of  practice  which  had affected the  quantum of  salary or  whether  there  was  an expectation  by   the  employees   (whose   employment   was terminated) of  getting a  gratuity or,  in the alternative, the above sums were expended on the 891      ground of commercial expediency and in order indirectly to facilitate the carrying on of the business."      After making the above observation, the High Court held that the  Company had  not placed  any evidence to show that there was a practice in the Company to pay compensation even though its attention was drawn that in the past i.e. between 1946 and 1952, the Company had paid such compensation in two cases on the basis of one month’s basic salary for each year of service.  It also  rejected the  case of the Company that the amount  involved had  been expended  on  the  ground  of commercial expediency  and in order indirectly to facilitate the carrying  on of  the business of the Company even though it observed  that the  yearly wage  bill of  the Company was reduced after  such payment.  The High  Court held  that the consideration of  reduction of  the wage bill was foreign to the decision  taken by the Company to terminate the services of the  employees and  to pay them retrenchment compensation and observed that the purpose of the payment so far as could be ascertained  from the  contents of the resolutions of the Board of  Directors and  the  Company  when  read  with  the relevant contents of the agreement for sale was the carrying out of  the obligation  arising under the agreement. It also held  that   the  fact   the  expenses  became  reduced  was insufficient  to   record  a  finding  that  the  amount  of retrenchment   compensation    was   paid   for   commercial considerations  or  expediency.  From  the  perusal  of  the judgment of  the High  Court it  becomes clear that the High Court placed  more emphasis  on the  motive with  which  the amount was  expended than  the fact that the expenditure had been incurred in connection with the business of the Company and that  such expenditure  resulted in the reduction of the annual wage bill of the Company in the future years.      In order to claim deduction under section 10(2) (xv) of the Act,  an assessee  has to  show that  the expenditure in question (i) was not an allowance of the nature described in any of  the clauses  (i) to (xiv) of section 10(2); (ii) was not in  the nature  of a  capital  expenditure  or  personal expenses of  the assessee  and (iii)  had been  laid out  or expended wholly  and exclusively  for the  purposes  of  his business, profession  or vocation.  Even assuming  that  the motive behind  the payment  of retrenchment compensation was that the terms of the agreement of the sale of shares should be satisfied,  as long  as the  amount had  been laid out or expended wholly  and exclusively  for  the  purpose  of  the business of the assessee, there appears to be no good reason for denying 892 the benefit  of section 10(2) (xv) of the Act to the Company if there is no other impediment to do so.      The facts  of these  cases are  very close to the facts found in  (i) Commissioners  of Inland  Revenue  v.  Patrick Thomson Ltd.  (in liquidation), (ii) Commissioners of Inland Revenue v.  J. &  R. Allan,  Ltd.  (in  liquidation),  (iii) Commissioners of  Inland Revenue  v.  Pettigrew  &  Stephens Ltd.(1). The  respondent-companies in  the said  cases  were subsidiaries  of   a   Company   called   Scottish   Drapery Corporation Ltd.,  the control  of which was acquired by the House of Fraser Ltd. Changes of organisation which were made

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in accordance  with the  policy of  the House of Fraser Ltd. involved the  termination of the contracts of service of the Managing Directors  of the respondent-companies and also the eventual liquidation  of those  companies. Certain sums were paid  by   the  companies   to  the  managing  directors  in connection with  the cancellation  of their  contracts,  the payments being  expressed in  the first  two cases  to be in satisfaction of  rights to  future remuneration,  and in the third  to   be  in   lieu  of  notice.  Before  the  Special Commissioners, the  companies contended  that  the  payments made by  them to  the Managing  Directors in connection with the cancellation of their contracts had been made to relieve them from  onerous contracts  and were allowable deductions. The Crown  contended that  the payments were not expenses of the companies’ businesses but were incidental to the schemes by which  those businesses  were acquired  by the  House  of Fraser Ltd.  and were made primarily for the benefit of that company.  The   Commissioners,  however,  decided  that  the deductions claimed were allowable. Upholding the findings of the Commissioners, the Lord President observed at page 156:-           "In my  opinion the  contention put forward by the Crown is  unsound and the Special Commissioners were correct in rejecting  it. Admittedly in this case no question arises in regard  to the words "wholly and exclusively", and if the Crown’s contention  is unsound  it is  not disputed that the disbursement in  question falls  within section  137(a).  To succeed in  their contention  the Crown  must establish  two matters.  In   the  first   place  it  must  show  that  the liquidation involved  a discontinuance  of the trade carried on prior  to it by the Respondent Company and the subsequent operation of  a new  trade carried on by House of Fraser. In the second  place it  must  show  that  the  expenditure  in question was laid 893      out for  the purposes  of the  new trade.  Without both these steps,  its argument fails. In my opinion neither step in the argument is made out."      In the  present case  also, it is seen that the Company continued to  function even  after its  control passed on to the hands  of Tatas and the expenditure in question was laid out for  the purpose  of the Company’s own trade and not for the trade  of Tatas  who were  only the  shareholders of the Company. We  cannot overlook  the  distinction  between  the Company and its shareholders. As a result of the expenditure in question,  the Company  was in  fact benefited and it was possible for it to earn more profits as a consequence of the reduction in  the wage  bill. It was suggested in the course of  the   arguments  before  us  that  Tatas  were  actually benefited by  the payment  in  question  because  the  price payable by  them for  the shares  was reduced  by the amount spent by  the Company.  We do not find any substance in this contention. Admittedly  the assets  of the  Company had been valued as  on December  31, 1955  at Rs. 155 lacs. Naturally the total  value of  the shares  of the Company would be Rs. 155 lacs  which Tatas  had  agreed  to  pay.  Subsequent  to December 31, 1955, the Company had by passing the resolution incurred the  liability to pay retrenchment compensation and compensation for  termination of service as stated above. On account of  the said  resolution, the  total  value  of  the assets of  the Company  was reduced by the amount payable to the employees by way of compensation. It is natural that the purchaser of  the shares would ordinarily claim reduction in the consideration payable for the shares by the amount which the Company  had undertaken  to pay as assets of the Company became reduced to that extent. It cannot, therefore, be said

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that the  Tatas were  in any  way benefited  financially  by reason of the reduction in the consideration payable by them for the  shares. We  feel that the expenditure in respect of which deduction is claimed by the Company in this case falls within the third test laid down by this Court in the case of Gordon  Woodroffee   Leather  Manufacturing   Co.   v.   The Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras (supra) viz. that the sum of money  had been  expended on  the  ground  of  commercial expediency  and   in  order  indirectly  to  facilitate  the carrying on  of the  business. We  are of  the view that the three tests  laid down  by this Court in the above case viz. (i) that  the payment  should have  been made as a matter of practice which  affected the  quantum of  salary; (ii)  that there was  an expectation  by  the  employee  of  getting  a gratuity and (iii) that the sum of money was expended on the ground of  commercial expediency  and in order indirectly to facilitate the carrying on of the business of the 894 assessee have  to be  read disjunctively  and if they are so read, the present case which satisfies the third test should be held  as falling  under section 10(2)(xv) of the Act. The High Court of Gujarat in Commissioner of Income-tax, Gujarat v. Laxmi  Cement Distributors  Pvt. Ltd.  (1) and  the  High Court of Bombay in Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay City I v. Fairdeal  Corporation Pvt. Ltd.(2) and in Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay  City I  v. Patel Cotton Co. Pvt. Ltd.(3) have also  understood the  principle underlying the decision of this Court in Gordon Woodroffee Leather Manufacturing Co. v. The  Commissioner of  Income-tax, Madras  (supra) in  the same way. The High Court was, therefore, in error in holding that the  amount involved  in the  case did  not satisfy the test applicable  to the  expenditure allowable under section 10(2) (xv) of the Act.      The next  contention urged  on behalf of the Department was that since Davids and Tatas were indirectly benefited by the retrenchment  of the  services of  the employees  of the Company and  payment of compensation to them and since there was no  necessity  to  retrench  the  services  of  all  the employees, the  expenditure in question could not be treated as an  expenditure  laid  out  wholly  and  exclusively  for business purposes of the Company. It has to be observed here that the expression "wholly and exclusively" used in section 10(2)(xv) of the Act does not mean ’necessarily’. Ordinarily it is  for the  assessee to  decide whether  any expenditure should be  incurred in  the course  of his  or its business. Such expenditure may be incurred voluntarily and without any necessity and  if it  is incurred for promoting the business and to  earn profits, the assessee can claim deduction under section 10(2)  (xv) of  the Act  even though  there  was  no compelling  necessity  to  incur  such  expenditure.  It  is relevant to  refer at  this stage to the legislative history of section  37 of the Income-tax Act, 1961 which corresponds to section 10(2) (xv) of the Act. An attempt was made in the Income-tax Bill  of 1961  to lay down the ’necessity’ of the expenditure as  a condition  for  claiming  deduction  under section  37.   Section  37(1)   in  the   Bill   read   "any expenditure....laid out  or expended wholly, necessarily and exclusively for  the purposes  of the business or profession shall  be   allowed  ...."  The  introduction  of  the  word ’necessarily’  in  the  above  section  resulted  in  public protest. Consequently  when section  37 was  finally enacted into law,  the word  ’necessarily’ came  to be  dropped. The fact that somebody other than the assessee is also benefited by the 895

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expenditure should  not come  in the  way of  an expenditure being allowed  by way  of deduction under section 10(2) (xv) of the  Act if it satisfies otherwise the tests laid down by law. This  view is in accord with the following observations made by this Court in The Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras v. Chandulal Keshavlal & Co. Petlad(1)           "Another fact  that emerges  from these  cases  is that if  the expense  is incurred for fostering the business of another  only or  was made  by  way  of  distribution  of profits or  was wholly  gratuitous or  for some  improper or oblique purpose  outside the  course of  business  then  the expense is  not deductible. In deciding whether a payment of money is  a deductible  expenditure one  has  to  take  into consideration questions  of commercial  expediency  and  the principles of ordinary commercial trading. If the payment or expenditure is  incurred for the purpose of the trade of the assessee it  does not  matter that  the payment may inure to the benefit of a third party (Usher’s Wiltshire Brewery Ltd. v. Bruce)  (6 T.  C.  388).  Another  test  is  whether  the transaction is  properly entered  into  as  a  part  of  the assessee’s legitimate  commercial undertaking  in  order  to facilitate the  carrying on  of  its  business;  and  it  is immaterial that a third party also benefits thereby (Eastern Investments Ltd.  v. The  Commissioner of  Income-tax,  West Bengal) (1951)  S.C.R. 594.  But  in  every  case  it  is  a question of fact whether the expenditure was expended wholly and exclusively  for the purpose of trade or business of the assessee."      In the  instant case,  it was  the case  of the Company that many  of the employees were old and superfluous and the business could  be carried  on with a smaller number and the only way  in which  they could  reduce  the  number  was  to terminate the  services of  all the employees by paying them compensation and  thereafter re-employing some of them only. If the Company felt that that was a method which would inure to its  benefit, it  cannot be  said  that  the  payment  of compensation was  made with  an oblique  motive and  without regard to  commercial considerations or expediency. The High Court,  therefore,   erred  on   the  facts   and   in   the circumstances of  the case  in holding  that the  sum of Rs. 1,27,511/- was  not deductible  under section  10(2) (xv) of the Act and in answering questions Nos. (1) and (2) referred to it  in Income-tax Reference No. 58 of 1963 arising out of the assessment 896 order for  the year  1957-58 against  the  assessee  and  in favour of  the Department  to the  extent of Rs. 1,27,511/-. Similarly it  erred in disallowing the claim made in respect of Rs.  16,885/- for each of the three succeeding assessment years.      We, therefore,  allow these  appeals and  hold that Rs. 1,27,511/- was  also deductible  under section  10(2)(xv) of the Act  during the  assessment year  1957-58 and sum of Rs. 16,885/- referred  to above  was allowable  as  a  deduction during each  of the  three succeeding  assessment years. The Department shall  pay costs  to the  appellant. (Hearing fee one set only). P.B.R.                                      Appeals allowed. 897