30 July 1997
Supreme Court
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THE COMMONWEALTH TRUST LTD., CALICUT, KERALA Vs THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX, KERALA II, ERNAKULAM

Bench: S. C. AGRAWAL,D. P. WADHWA
Case number: Appeal Civil 2978 of 1982


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PETITIONER: THE COMMONWEALTH TRUST LTD., CALICUT, KERALA

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX, KERALA II, ERNAKULAM

DATE OF JUDGMENT:       30/07/1997

BENCH: S. C. AGRAWAL, D. P. WADHWA

ACT:

HEADNOTE:

JUDGMENT:                             WITH             CIVIL APPEAL (N.T.) NO. 2979 OF 1982                       J U D G M E N T D.P. Wadhwa, J.      These two  appeals by  certificate under Section 261 of the Income  Tax Act, 1961 (for short ‘the Act’) are directed against the  judgment dated  November 27, 1981 of the Kerala High Court.  The judgment  is now reported in (1982) 135 ITR 19 (F.B.).  The following  two questions were decided by the High Court:      "1.  Whether on  the facts  and  in      the circumstances  of the case, the      Tribunal  is   right  in   law   in      deleting Rs.1,260/-  towards  house      rent under Section 40 (a)(v) of the      Income-tax Act, 1961?      2.   Whether on  the facts  and  in      the circumstance  of the  case, the      Tribunal was  justified in  holding      that the  assessee did not have the      right of  substituting  the  market      value as  on 1.1.54  in respect  of      depreciable assets?      While the  first question  was referred at the instance of the  revenue, the  second question was at the instance of the assessee.  Both the  question were, however, answered by the High  Court in  favour of  the revenue  and against  the assessee.      The impugned judgment in so far as it answers the first question has been overruled by this Court in Commissioner of Income Tax,  Bombay and  others vs. Mafatlal Gangabhai & Co. (P) Ltd.  and other (1996) 7 SCC 569. Accordingly the answer to this  question has  to be given in favour of the assessee and against the revenue.      It is  the second  question  in  which  arguments  were addressed before us. While the revenue gets support from the decisions of  the High  Courts  of  Gujarat,  Allahabad  and Calcutta for  upholding the  impugned judgment, the assessee gets support  from the  decision of  the Bombay  High Court. Gujarat,  Allahabad  and  Calcutta  decisions  are  reported

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respectively in  Rajnagar  Vaktapur  Ginning,  Pressing  and Manufacturing Co.  Ltd. vs.  CIT (1975)  99 ITR 264, CIT vs. Upper Doab Sugar Mills (1979) 116 ITR 240 and India Jute Co. Ltd. vs. CIT (1982) 136 ITR 597. Bombay decision is reported in Goculdas  Dossa and Co. and other vs. J.P. Shah and other (1995) 211 ITR 706.      To understand  rival contentions  we may briefly advert to the facts of the case.      The assessment  year is  1971-72, the  accounting  year being  1970-71.   The  assessee,   a  limited  company,  was possessed  of   considerable  properties   at  Calicut   and Mangalore.  It   owned  these  properties  right  from  1920 onwards. The assessee had been allowed in the previous year. During the  period relevant  to the  assessment year 1971-72 the assesee  sold some  of these  properties on which it had already claimed  depreciation. The  Calicut Weaving  Factory was sold  for Rs.  20,000/-, its  original value  being  Rs. 10,000/-.  The   assessee   has   incurred   an   additional expenditure of  Rs. 979/-  on this  property. As noted above depreciation has  been allowed  on the value of the property in the  earlier years.  In computing  the capital  gains the assessee showed  a capital loss of  Rs.  78/- on the sale of this property.  This  the  assessee  did  on  revaluing  the property as  on January  1,  1954.  The  assessee  sold  its Mangalore building  for Rs. 2,25,000/-. Its original cost as adjusted came to Rs. 76,680/-. IN respect of these buildings also depreciation  has  been  claimed  and  allowed  in  the previous  years.   Here  again  the  assessee  revalued  the building as  on January 1, 1954 and on that basis showed the capital gains  at Rs.  44, 713/-.  The stand  taken  by  the assessee was  that it had the option under Section 55(2) (i) of the  Act either  to adopt  the written  down value of the building or  the value of the building as on January 1, 1954 and it  has chosen  the  latter.  the  Income  Tax  Officer, however, took  the view  that the  assessee did not have the right to  substitute the value as on January 1, 1954 because the assets  were depreciable  assets to  which Section 50(1) applied  which   was  a  special  provision  in  respect  of depreciable assets and the provision as contained in Section 55(2)(i) allowing option which was general provision was not applicable in the case of depreciable assets. The Income Tax Officer,  therefore,   substituted  the  original  value  an arrived at  a capital  gain of  Rs. 9021/-  in the  case  of Calicut property and Rs. 1,46,320/- in the case of Mangalore buildings. On  appeal filed  by the  assessee the  Appellate Assistant Commissioner  agreed with  the Income Tax Officer. He was  also of  the view that the assessee did not have the right to  substitute value  as on January 1, 1954 in respect of depreciable  assets. The assessee then went to the Income Tax Appellate  Tribunal and the Appellate Tribunal dismissed the appeal  but at the instance of the assessee referred the aforesaid second  question for  the  decision  of  the  High Court. The  High Court agreed with the view of the Appellate Tribunal and  decided the question in affirmative, in favour of the  revenue and  against the  assessee.  On  certificate granted by  the High Court under Section 261 of the Act this appeal has come before us.      Before we  consider the judgments of the High Courts it will be  appropriate to  set out  the relevant provisions of law. These  would be  Section 32(1)(iii), 41(2) and 43(6) in Part D  and Section  45, 48,  49, 50  and 55 in Part E under Chapter IV relating to computation of total income :      "32. Depreciation.-  (1) in respect      of   depreciation    of    building      machinery, plant or furniture owned

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    by the  assessee and  used for  the      purposes   of   the   business   or      profession,      the      following      deductions shall,  subject  to  the      provisions  of   Section   34,   be      allowed -      (iii) in  the case of any building,      machinery, plant or furniture which      is sold,  discarded, demolished  or      destroyed  in   the  previous  year      (other than  the previous  year  in      which  it  is  first  brought  into      use),  the   amount  by  which  the      moneys payable  in respect  of such      building,   machinery,   plant   or      furniture, together with the amount      of scrap  value, if any, fall short      of the written down value thereof:      41(2) Where any building, machinery      plant or  furniture which  is owned      by the  assessee and  which was  or      has been  used for  the purpose  of      business  or  profession  is  sold,      discarded, demolished  or destroyed      and the money payable in respect of      such building,  machinery, plant or      furniture,  as  the  case  may  be,      together with  the amount  of scrap      value, if  any, exceed  the written      down value,  so much  of the excess      as does  not exceed  the difference      between the  actual  cost  and  the      written   down   value   shall   be      chargeable to  income-tax as income      of the  business or  profession  of      the  previous  year  in  which  the      moneys payable  for  the  building,      machinery,   plant   or   furniture      became due:      Provided that  where  the  building      sold,  discarded,   demolished   or      destroyed is  a building  to  which      Explanation   5   to   Section   43      applies, and  the moneys payable in      respect of  such building, together      with amount of scrap value, if any,      exceed   the    actual   cost    as      determined under  the  Explanation,      so much  of the  excess as does not      exceed the  difference between  the      actual cost  so determined  and the      written   down   value   shall   be      chargeable to  income-tax as income      of the  business or  profession  of      such previous year.      Explanation.-  Where   the   moneys      payable in respect of the building,      machinery,   plant   or   furniture      referred  to  in  this  sub-section      become due  in a  previous year  in      which the  business  or  profession      for  the   purpose  of   which  the      building,   machinery,   plant   or      furniture  was  being  used  is  no      longer in existence, the provisions

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    of this  sub-section shall apply as      if the business or profession is in      existence in that previous year."      43 (6) "written down value" means-      (a) in the case of assets, acquired      in the  previous year,  the  actual      cost to the assessee;      (b) in  the case of assets acquired      before  the   previous  year,   the      actual cost  to the  assessee  less      all depreciation  actually  allowed      to him under this Act, or under the      Indian Income-tax  Act, 1922 (XI of      1922), or  any Act repealed by that      Act, or  under any executive orders      issued when  the Indian  Income-tax      Act, 1886  (II  of  1886),  was  in      force:      Provided that  in  determining  the      written down  value in  respect  of      building, machinery  or  plant  for      the purposes of clause (ii) of sub-      section   (1)    of   section   32,      "depreciation   actually   allowed"      shall  not   included  depreciation      allowed under  sub-clauses (a), (b)      and (c)  of  clause  (vi)  of  sub-      section (2)  of section  10 of  the      Indian Income-tax  Act, 1922 (XI of      1922), where  such depreciation was      not deductible  in determining  the      written down value for the purposes      of the said clause (vi).      Explanation      1..................................      Explanation    2...................      ...............      Explanation 2A........ ............      .... .........      Explanation      3..................................      "45.  Capital   gains.  -  (1)  Any      profits or  gains arising  from the      transfer   of   a   capital   asset      effected  in   the  previous   year      shall, save  as other wise provided      in sections  53,  54  and  54B,  be      chargeable to  income-tax under the      head "Capital  gains", and shall be      deemed to  be  the  income  of  the      previous year in which the transfer      took place.      48.   Mode   of   computation   and      deductions.-  The income chargeable      under  the   head  "Capital  gains"      shall be computed by deducting from      the full value of the consideration      received or accruing as a result of      the transfer  of the  capital asset      of following amounts, namely :-      (i) expenditure incurred wholly and      exclusively in connection with such      transfer :      (ii) the cost of acquisition of the      capital asset  and the  cost of any

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    improvement thereto.      49. Cost  with reference to certain      modes of acquisition. (1) Where the      capital asset  became the  property      of the assessee-      (i)  on   any  ********************      assets  on  the  total  or  partial      partition  of   a  Hindu  undivided      family;      (ii) under a gift or will;      (iii)    (a)     by     succession,      inheritance or devolution, or      (b) on  any distribution  of assets      on the  dissolution of a firm, body      of individuals or other association      of person, or      (c) on  any distribution  of assets      on the liquidation of a company, or      (d) under a transfer to a revocable      or an irrevocable trust, or      (e) under  any such  transfer as is      referred  to   in  clause  (iv)  or      clause  (v)   or  clause   (vi)  of      Section 47,      the  cost  of  acquisition  of  the      asset shall  be deemed  to  be  the      cost for  which the  previous owner      of the  property  acquired  it,  as      increased  by   the  cost   of  any      improvement of  the assets incurred      or borne  by the  previous owner or      the assessee, as the case may be.      Explanation.- In  this  sub-section      the expression  "previous owner  of      the property"  in relation  to  any      capital asset  owned by an assessee      means the  last previous  owner  of      the capital  asset who  acquired it      by a mode of acquisition other than      that referred  to in  clause (i) or      clause (ii) or clause (iii) of this      sub-section.      (2)    x                          x      x                x      50. Special provision for computing      cost of  acquisition in the case of      depreciable  assets.  -  where  the      capital  asset   is  an   asset  in      respect of  which  a  deduction  on      account of  depreciation  has  been      obtained by  the  assessee  in  any      previous year either under this Act      or under the Indian Income-tax Act,      1922  (XI  of  1922),  or  any  Act      repealed  by  that  Act,  or  under      executive orders  issued  when  the      Indian Income-tax  Act, 1886 (II of      1886), was in force, the provisions      of  Section  48  and  49  shall  be      subject    to     the     following      modifications:-           (1) The written down value, as           defined  in   clause  (6)   of           Section 43,  of the  asset, as           adjusted, shall  be  taken  as

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         the cost of acquisition of the           asset.           (2) Where  under any provision           of Section  49, read with sub-           section (2) of Section 55, the           fair market-value of the asset           on the  1st  day  of  January,           1954,  is  to  be  taken  into           account at  the option  of the           assessee, then,  the  cost  of           acquisition   of   the   asset           shall, at  the option  of  the           assessee, be  the fair market-           value of the asset on the said           date, as reduced by the amount           of   depreciation,   if   any,           allowed to  the assessee after           the   said    date,   and   as           adjusted.      55. Meaning of "adjusted", "cost of      improvement"    and     "cost    of      acquisition". (1)  For the purposes      of sections 48, 49 and 50, -      (a)  "adjusted",   in  relation  to      written down  value or  fair market      value, means diminished by any loss      deducted or increased by the profit      assessed, under  the provisions  of      clause (iii) of sub-section (1), or      clause (ii) of sub-section (1A), of      section 32  or sub-section  (2)  or      sub-section (2A)  of section 41, as      the case  may be,  the  computation      for this  purpose being  made  with      reference to  the period commencing      from the  1st day of January, 1954,      in cases  to which  clause  (2)  of      section 50 applies;      (b) "cost  of any  improvement", in      relation to  capital assets, -      (i) where  the capital asset became      the property  of the previous owner      or the  assessee before the 1st day      of  January,  1954,  and  the  fair      market value  of the  asset on that      day  is   taken  as   the  cost  of      acquisition at  the option  of  the      assessee, means  all expenditure of      a capital nature incurred in making      any additions  or  alternations  to      the capital  asset on  or after the      said date  by the previous owner or      the assessee, and      (ii) in  any other  case, means all      expenditure  of  a  capital  nature      incurred in making any additions or      alterations to the capital asset by      the assessee  after it  became  his      property, and,  where  the  capital      asset became  the property  of  the      assessee  by   any  of   the  modes      specified  in  sub-section  (1)  of      section 49, by the previous owner,      but   does    not    include    any      expenditure which  is deductible in

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    computing  the   income  chargeable      under   the   head   "interest   on      securities",  "Income   from  house      property", "Profits  and  gains  of      business or profession", or "Income      from  other   sources",   and   the      expression "improvement"  shall  be      construed accordingly.      (2) For  the purposes of Section 48      and 49,  "cost of  acquisition", in      relation to a capital asset, -           (i) where  the  capital  asset           became  the  property  of  the           assessee before the 1st day of           January, 1954,  means the cost           of acquisition of the asset to           the  assessee   or  the   fair           market value  of the  asset on           the 1st  day of January, 1954,           at the option of the assessee;           (ii) where  the capital  asset           became  the  property  of  the           assessee by  any of  the modes           specified in  sub-section  (1)           of section 49, and the capital           asset became  the property  of           the previous  owner before the           1st  day   of  January,  1954,           means the  cost of the capital           asset to the previous owner or           the fair  market value  of the           asset  on   the  1st   day  of           January, 1954,  at the  option           of the assessee;           (iii) where  the capital asset           became  the  property  of  the           assessee on  the  distribution           of the  capital  assets  of  a           company on its liquidation and           the assessee has been assessed           to income-tax  under the  head           "Capital gains"  in respect of           that asset  under section  46,           means the fair market value of           the  asset   on  the  date  of           distribution;           (iv)                         x           x                    x           (v) where  the capital  asset,           being a  share or a stock of a           company, became  the  property           of the assessee on-           (a)  the   consolidation   and           division of  all or any of the           share capital  of the  company           into shares  of larger  amount           than its existing shares,           (b)  the   conversion  of  any           shares  of  the  company  into           stock.           (c) the  reconversion  of  any           stock  of   the  company  into           shares,           (d) the sub-division of any of           the share  of the company into

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         shares of smaller amount, or           (e) the conversion of one kind           of shares  of the company into           another kind,  means the  cost           of acquisition  of  the  asset           calculation, with reference to           the cost of acquisition of the           shares, or  stock  from  which           such asset is derived.      (3) Where  the cost  for which  the      previous   owner    acquired    the      property cannot be ascertained, the      cost of acquisition to the previous      owner means  the fair  market value      on the  date on  which the  capital      asset become  the property  of  the      previous owner."      (Section 32(1-A)(ii)  and Section  41(2-A) would not be relevant for our purposes and therefore not reproduced).      We may  now consider  the judgments  of the High Courts referred to during the course of arguments. In R.V. Ginning, Pressing &  Mfg. Co.  Ltd. vs.  C.I.T.  (1975)  99  ITR  264 (Gujarat), the  assessee company  was under  liquidation. In the accounting  year relevant to the assessment year 1968-69 some of  the assets  being building and machinery were sold. These assets  were purchased  before January  1,  1954.  The assessee had  obtained depreciation  on the said assets. The assessee claimed  that it  should be permitted to substitute the market  valuation of  the machinery  and building  as on January 1,  1954 as  the cost of acquisition for purposes of computation of  capital gains.  This  was  rejected  by  the revenue authorities.  The question before the High Court was whether the assessee was entitled to substitute the value as on January  1, 1954,  as the  cost  of  acquisition  of  the building and machinery. The High Court answered the question in negative   in  favour of  the  revenue  and  against  the assessee by holding as under:      "We  have   set  out  the  relevant      section 48, 49 and 50. On the plain      reading of  section  50,  we  think      that it is only those assessees who      acquired depreciable  assets in any      one of  the modes  prescribed under      section 49 that have the benefit of      option to  select either  the  fair      market  value   of  the  assets  on      January 1,  1954, or  the  cost  of      acquisition by  the previous owner.      It is an admitted position that the      applicant-company   is    not    an      assessee   acquiring    depreciable      assets  in   any   of   the   modes      mentioned   in   section   49   and      clearly, therefore, this case falls      within    section     50(1)    and,      therefore,   in    case   of    the      applicant-company for  purposes  of      computation of  capital  gains  tax      adjusted  written   down  value  as      defined in clause (6) of section 43      of the  Act would  be the  cost  of      acquisition of the assets."      In CIT  vs. Upper  Doab Sugar  Mills (1979) 116 ITR 240 (Allahabad)  during   the  accounting   period  relevant  to assessment year  1964-65 the  assessee sold  machinery.  The

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claim of  the assessee  that it was entitled to exercise the option  of  treating  the  fair  market  value  as  cost  of acquisition was rejected by the ITO. In appeal, however, the assessee’s plea.  He  held  that  Section  50(2)  read  with Section 55(2)  (ii) of  the Act  was  applicable  and  these sections gave  an option  to the assessee to compute capital gains by  adopting fair  market value  of the  assets as  on January 1,  1954. The  revenue went  up  in  appeal  to  the Appellate Tribunal  which upheld  the view  of the  AAC  and dismissed the  appeal. At  the instance  of the  revenue the Appellate Tribunal  referred the  question to  the Allahabad High Court  as to  whether in  determining the capital gains arising to  the assessee,  provisions of  Section 50(2)  and Section 55(2)(ii)  were applicable.  The court  answered the question in  the negative  in favour  of the  department and against the assessee. It observed as under:      "The language  used makes  it clear      that s.50  of the  I.T. Act.  1961,      applies  to  cases  of  depreciable      assets,  and  that  the  provisions      thereof  are   mandatory.  It  will      prevail   over    s.55(2)   firstly      because it  expressly modifies  the      provisions of  s.48,  and,  in  the      next  place,   it  is   a   special      provision for  depreciable  assets.      S.55, on  the other hand, is only a      definition section.  The definition      of "cost  of acquisition"  given by      its sub-s.(2)  is only for purposes      of ss.48  and 49.  S.55(2) does not      apply to  s.50 and  cannot  prevail      over it.  In other  words, the cost      of  acquisition  of  a  depreciable      asset is  bound to  be computed  in      accordance with  s.50, even  though      the capital asset may also on facts      be within  the purview  of sub-sec.      (20 of  s.55.  If  the  case  of  a      depreciable  assets  owned  by  the      assessee from  before 1st  January,      1954,  were   to  be   governed  by      s.55(2) then  there was no occasion      or need to enact sub-s.(2) of s.50.      Under sub-s.(2) a special provision      has been  made for  capital  assets      which are  covered by  s.49 as well      as    s.55(2),    namely,    assets      indirectly acquired  and which were      owned by  the previous  owner  from      before 1st January, which are owned      by the  assessee  as  the  original      owner sub-s.(1)  of  s.50  applies,      even though the asset may have been      owned by  the assessee  from before      1st January,  1954. In  such a case      s.50(1) does  not contemplate  that      the assessee  can  treat  the  fair      market value of the asset as on 1st      January,  1954,   as  the  cost  of      acquisition. The written down value      of the asset has to be taken as the      cost of acquisition."      In Prime  Product Pvt.  Ltd. Kanpur  vs. CIT (1979) 116 ITR 473 (Allahabad), the High Court took the same view as in

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Upper Doab Sugar Mills case.      In India  Jute Co.  Ltd. vs.  CIT (1982)  136  ITR  597 (Calcutta), the  question before  the court  was whether the Appellate  Tribunal  was  right  in  holding  that  for  the computation of the profits under the head "Capital gains" in respect of  the depreciable  assets  which  had  become  the assessee’s property  before 1st January, 1954 and which were sold  by  it  during  the  previous  year  relevant  to  the assessment year 1962-63, it was not entitled to seek the aid of Section  55(2)(i) of  the Act  and opt for and substitute their fair market value as on 1st January, 1954, as the cost of acquisition thereof in place of their written down value? The Court  answered the  question in  the affirmative and in favour of  the revenue.  The court  observed that Section 48 dealt with the general mode of the computation and deduction and  that  heading  of  Section  50  was  significant  which provides  for   "Special  provision   for   computing   cost acquisition in  the case  of depreciable  assets". The court then further observed as under:      "If a special mode is provided then      the general  meaning given  by sub-      s.(2)  of  s.55  could  not  apply.      Furthermore,   this    well-settled      canon  of   construction  that  the      definition in a section provided in      a certain  provision of an Act must      be  limited      to   the   purpose      indicated in  that sub-section  and      it   could    not    extended    by      construction  unless   there  is  a      clear implication  to that  effect.      In this  case,  it  is  significant      that sub-s.(2)  of  s.55  does  not      mention that  for  the  purpose  of      "this chapter"  or "this  group  of      sections" the  cost of  acquisition      in relation  to the  capital assets      should  be   as  indicated  in  the      different clauses  as indicated  in      sub-s.(2) of  s.55 but  limits  the      purposes of  the  different  clause      only to  ss.48 and  49 and  thereby      excluding  the  operation  of  "the      special provision of computing cost      of   acquisition   of   depreciable      assets". Where  there is  a special      provision dealing with a particular      provision,  the  special  provision      must prevail."      In coming  to  this  conclusion,  Calcutta  High  Court followed the  decisions of  the Allahabad  and Gujarat  High Courts.      The Kerala  High Court  Court  (F.B)  in  the  judgment (1982) 135  ITR 19  which is  in the  appeal before  us also followed two decisions of the Allahabad High Court mentioned above. The  court said  that though  Section 55(2)  gave  an option to an assessee to choose one of the two values as the cost of acquisition for the purpose of Section 48, in a case to which  Section 50  applied, Section  48 had  to  be  read subject to  the modification  and, consequently,  the option would not  be available  and that  the cost  of  acquisition would have  to be  taken in  such a case as the written down value as  defined in cl.(6) of Section 43. The High Court in the impugned judgement then observed as under:      "We  are  not  impressed  with  the

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    contention of  the learned  counsel      for the  assessee  that  since  the      definition of "cost of acquisition"      in  s.55(2)   will  apply  for  the      purpose of  s.48 and this is a case      to  which   s.48  would  so  apply,      s.55(2) must govern despite s.50 of      the Act.  That would  be to  render      s.50 inoperative. We do not see why      we  should   resort   to   such   a      construction.  While   the   option      contemplated under  s.55(2) of  the      Act will be available in every case      where capital  gains is  determined      in accordance with s.48, that would      not  be  the  case  where  what  is      applicable is  not s.48 as such but      s.48  as   modified  by  s.50.  The      special provision  must necessarily      operate in  such a  case so  as  to      render  the  option  under  s.55(2)      unavailable and  also to equate the      cost of  acquisition in such a case      with  the  written  down  value  as      defined in cl.(6) of s.43."      Full Bench  of the  Bombay  High  Court  has,  however, struck a different note. In Goculdas Dossa and Co. and other s vs.  J.P. Shah  and others  (1995) 211  ITR 706,  the High Court disagreed with the views of Gujarat, Allahabad, Kerala and Calcutta  High Courts and held that the assessee who had purchased a  depreciable asset  prior  to  January  1,  1964 (substituted for  1st January,  1954 by  Act 29 of 1977 with effect  from   1.4.78)  was   entitled  to   the  option  of substituting the  fair market value on that date as the cost of acquisition  for computing  its  capital  gains.  In  the Bombay case the assessee had purchased land, building, plant and machinery  of a  factory much  prior to January 1, 1964. The assessee sold the building, land, plant and machinery in the accounting year relevant to the assessment year 1981-82. The  assessee  had  claimed  depreciation  on  building  and machinery year  after year.  In the return of income for the relevant assessment  year while  working out  the  long-term capital gains,  the assessee  substituted  the  fair  market value of land, building and machinery as on January 1, 1964, as the  cost of  acquisition by  exercising the option under Section  55(2).   The  Income-tax   Officer  held  that  the assessee, in  view of  Section 50,  did not have that option since it  had acquired  the property voluntarily by purchase and not  in the  circumstance mentioned  in Section  49. The Income-tax Officer  further held that the written down value of the  said depreciable assets as adjusted, along with cost of its  improvement would  be the  correct price for working out the  capital gains  and on  that basis,  issued a demand notice under  Section 156  of the  Act.  On  appeal  by  the assessee Commissioner  of  Income-tax  (appeal)  upheld  the order of the Income-tax Officer. The assessee filed a second appeal before  the Appellate  Tribunal but since there was a challenge to  the validity  of Section  50 writ petition was filed  in   the  High  Court.  The  High  Court  elaborately discussed the  relevant provisions  of the Act. It disagreed with the  views of the other High Courts that Section 50 was a special  provision and  would, therefore, prevail over the general provisions  of Section  55(2). The  High Court  said both the  provisions operated upon different and independent areas and  that Section  55(2) was the only source of option

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while Section  50(2) was  not the  source of option. It said Section 50  specified that  only  Section  48  and  49  were subject to  the modification  mentioned therein and that the option given  in Section  55(2)  was  not  made  subject  to Section 50.  The High Court was of the view that it appeared that it  was not  brought to  the notice  of courts that the question of  the purchaser-assessee  being entitled  to  the option or  not had  to be  determined only  on the  basis of Section 50(1) read with Section 48 and 55(2) and not Section 50(2) of the Act. It went as to add:      "No doubt,  the assessee purchasing      a depreciable asset and an assessee      acquiring it  otherwise can be said      to belong  to different classes but      we are  unable  to  see  what  that      classification has  to do  with the      object sought to be achieved by the      provision,  viz.,  to  prevent  the      assessment of illusory capital gain      on    account    of    inflationary      conditions and  decreasing value of      money. It  would make no difference      whether  the  capital  asset  which      gave rise  to the  capital gain has      been  acquired   by  the   assessee      either by purchased or by gift. The      classification     between      the      depreciable   and   non-depreciable      assets  and   between   these   two      classes of  assessees have no nexus      to   the   object   of   enactment.      Contrary  interpretation   has  the      potentiality of  making section  50      irrational     and,      therefore,      violative  of  article  14  of  the      Constitution. It  is settled  legal      position that,  there has  to be an      attempt  to   save   a   piece   of      legislation,   if    possible,   by      reading it  down so  as to  make it      constitutional. No  doubt, wordings      employed  in   section  50(2)   are      clumsy. One  way of reading its, is      to  disregard   the  reference   to      section 49  because  the  right  to      substitute; the  fair market  value      as the  cost of acquisition springs      from section  55(2) and not section      49. Such  exercise of  reading down      and modifying  the  provisions  has      been undertaken  in some cases like      Manubhai A. Sheth v. N.D. Nirgudkar      (1981) 128  ITR  87  (Bom)  and  A.      Sanyasi Rao v. Government of Andhra      Pradesh [1989]  178 ITR 31 (AP). It      seems necessary  to do  so in  this      case also".      The basic question that involves in the present case is if an  assessee,  who  has  acquired  capital  asset  before January 1, 1954 otherwise than by any of the modes mentioned in Section  49 and  sold it  after January  1, 1954  is also entitled to  have  the  quantum  of  taxable  capital  gains computed in the manner provided by clause (i) of sub-section (2) of  Section 55  of the  Act?  High  Courts  of  Gujarat, Allahabad, Calcutta and Kerala have, however, held that this

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could not  be so  as Section 50(1) being a special provision for computing cost of acquisition in the case of depreciable assets it  would override  the general provisions of Section 55(2)  which   according  to  these  High  Courts  would  be applicable  to   the  cases  of  non-depreciable  assets  or depreciable assets  where depreciation had not been claimed. Bombay High  Court on  the other  hand has not followed this line of reasoning.      In the  present case  it is  not disputed  that  it  is Section 48  which is  applicable and  not Section  49. Under Section 48  to compute  the income chargeable under the head "Capital  gains",   the  value   consideration  received  on transfer of  the capital  asset is  to be  deducted  by  the expenditure  incurred  on  the  transfer  and  the  cost  of acquisition of  the  capital  asset  and  the  cost  of  any improvement thereon.  The expenditure  that might  have been incurred on  the transfer  of capital  asset and the cost of any  improvement   thereon  are   not  the  subject  of  any controversy in  the  case  before  us.  Section  49  is  not applicable as  the capital  asset was not acquired by any of the modes mentioned in that section. Coming to Section 50 it states, in so far as it relevant, that when depreciation has been obtained on the capital asset, the provision of Section 48 is  subject to  the modification  that "the  written down value, as  defined in clause (6) of Section 43 of the asset, as adjusted,  shall be  taken as  the cost of acquisition of the asset".  It is  the expression  "as adjusted"  of  which meaning has  been given  in section 55(1)(a) and it is to be applied  while  considering  the  applicability  of  Section 50(1). Under  section 55(1)(a)  the expression "adjusted" in relation to  written down  value of fair market value, means diminished by  the loss  deducted or increased by any profit assessed under the provisions of clause (iii) of sub-section (1) of  Section 32  or sub-section (2) of Section 41, as the case may  be, and  in case to which clause (2) of Section 50 applies the  computation for  this purpose  being made  with reference to  the period  commencing from  the  1st  day  of January, 1954.  Significantly the  words "as  adjusted" have been used  in order  to avoid  the possibility of there been used in  order to  avoid the  possibility of  there being  a double tax  where the  question of  any terminal (balancing) allowance under Section 32 or balancing charge under Section 41  is   involved.  Therefore  in  its  application  of  the expressions  "as   adjusted"  the   written  down  value  as ascertained according to sub-section (6) of Section 43 shall be  adjusted   with  either   subtraction  of  the  terminal (balancing) allowance  or with  addition of  the  amount  of balancing charge,  if any,  allowed out of or taken into the business income.  Where the  capital asset  is sold for less than the  written down  value the  difference or  deficiency between the sale price and the written down value is allowed as a  deduction  in  computation  of  the  business  profits (Section 32(1)(iii))  which  is  termed  as  "balancing  (or terminal) allowance"  and where  the asset  is sold for more than the written down values, the sale price being less than the cost, the excess realised over the written down value is charred as business profits (Section 41(2)) and is termed as "balancing charge". Part D of Chapter IV of the Act does not provide for  the circumstance when the depreciated asset has been sold  for a  price which  is more  than the  cost. This considered under  the provisions  of Part  E of  Chapter  IV dealing under the provisions of Part E of Chapter IV dealing with capital  gains and more particularly Section 50 falling under Part  E. While now sub-section (1) of Section 55 which uses the  expressions "adjusted"  and "cost  of improvement"

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applies for  the purposes  of Section  48, 49  and 50,  sub- section (2) of Section 55 which uses the expression "cost of acquisition" is for the purpose of Section 48 and 49.      In commercial  parlance  computation  of  capital  gain would mean  the actual  gains  measured  by  the  difference between the  sale price  and the  cost of acquisition. It is the "cost  of acquisition" that is required to be determined under the  provisions of  Section 48,  49, 50  and 55.  Both under Section  48 and 49 cost of acquisition will have to be determined and  adjusted as  provided in  Section 50 and 55. Section 55(2)  gives an  option to  both kinds of assessees, that is,  those who have purchased the capital asset as well as those  who have  acquired it by any of the mode mentioned in  Section   49  to   substitute  of  the  actual  cost  of acquisition the fair market value of the asset as on January 1, 1954.  Section 55(2),  however, makes  it clear  that the option is  available only for the purposes of Section 48 and 49 and  it is not available for a case falling under Section 50.  Though   the  provisions  of  Section  55(2)  would  be available to  every kind  of capital  asset whether the same has enjoyed the depreciation allowance or not whether in the hands of the assessee or the previous owner, the assessee in whose case depreciation allowance has been availed of before the transfer  of the  capital asset  the meaning of "cost of acquisition" as  stated in Section 48 and 49 would appear to have been modified in the manner stated in Section 50. Thus, where the assessee has not availed of depreciation allowance in  respect   of  the   capital  asset  Section  50  has  no application. In  this view  of the  matter  there  does  not appear to  be any conflict between the provisions of Section 50 and  55(2). Section  55(2) would  be  applicable  to  all assets depreciable  or non-depreciable  for the  purposes of arriving at  the cost of acquisition under Section 48 and 49 but Section 50 carves out a category of those capital assets which been  subjected to grant of depreciation allowance and this section  50 therefore  provides a  special  method  for determining the cost of acquisition in such cases. Provision of Section  55(2) is not subject to the provision of Section 50. These are the provisions of Section 50(2) which only are subject to  the provisions of Sections 55(2), 48 and 49. Now to sections  48 and  49 the provision of Section 55(2) would apply as  modified by  those of  Section 50.  Section 50  is applicable where  the assessee  has  obtained  deduction  on account of  depreciation in  respect of the capital asset in question and  in that  case Section  55(1)  also  come  into operation view of the expression "adjusted" which is defined therein in  clause (a)  of  Section  55(1).  The  expression "adjusted" is for the proposes of Section 48, 49 and 50. For the purpose  of applying  Section 55(2),  Section 48  and 49 will have  to applied as modified by Section 50. It follows, therefore, where the capital asset purchased by the assessee is a depreciable or non depreciable asset, the assessee will have the  option for  substituting for  its actual  cost  of acquisition its  fair market value as on 1.1.54 but where it is  a   depreciable  asset  and  the  assessee  has  enjoyed depreciable allowance  his cost of acquisition shall have to be determined as provided in Section 50.      Viewed from  this angle Section 50(1) has no dependence on the  provisions of  Section 55(2). There is no mention of "fair market  value" in  Section 50(1)  and besides that the adjustments stated  there are  with reference to the written down value only which has nothing to do with the fair market value. We  conclude, therefore,  that in  the  present  case where the  capital asset is depreciable and the assessee has availed of  deduction on account of depreciation the cost of

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acquisition shall  have to  be determined  in  term  of  the provision of  Section 50  read with Section 48. All the High Courts including  Bombay High  Court are  of the  view  that Section 50(2) does not apply to any capital asset other than that which  has been  acquired by any of the modes mentioned in Section 49. It does not apply to the case of a person who has himself  purchased  the  asset  which  has  enjoyed  the depreciation allowance.  To us  is appears  Section 50 is in absolute terms  specially providing  for fixing  the cost of acquisition in  the case  of depreciable  asset only.  It is difficult to  accept the  view of the Bombay High Court when it brings  into operation Article 14 of the Constitution and the  judgment  proceeds  more  on  the  basis  of  equitable consideration than  the clear  provision of law. Bombay High Court has  even read down and modified the provisions, which would appear  to be  rather unnecessary. We uphold the views of the  Gujarat, Allahabad  and Calcutta  High Courts and of the Kerala High Court in the impugned judgment. The impugned of the High court whereby question No.2 has been answered in favour of  the revenue  is, therefore, upheld and the appeal in so  far as  it relates  to question  No.2 is  accordingly dismissed.      We may  also note  that since  the relevant  provisions have been  amended with  effect  from  April  1,  1988,  the controversy of  the like  the  one  raised  in  the  present proceeding does no longer survive.      There will be no order as to costs.