25 October 1962
Supreme Court
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A. V. THOMAS & CO., LTD., ALLEPPEY Vs THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX,(BANGALORE) KERALA

Bench: KAPUR,J.L.
Case number: Appeal Civil 214 of 1962


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PETITIONER: A. V. THOMAS & CO., LTD., ALLEPPEY

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX,(BANGALORE) KERALA

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 25/10/1962

BENCH: KAPUR, J.L. BENCH: KAPUR, J.L. DAS, S.K. SARKAR, A.K. HIDAYATULLAH, M. DAYAL, RAGHUBAR

CITATION:  1964 AIR  569            1963 SCR  Supl. (2) 608

ACT: Income  Tax-Deduction-Bad  debt-Expenditure-Amount  advanced for  purchase of shares-Indian Income-tax Act, 1922  (11  of 1922), ss. 10(2) (xi) and (xv).

HEADNOTE: The  assessee  company  was incorporated  in  1935  and  its Memorandum  of  association authorised it,  inter  alia,  to promote and to undertake the formation and establishment  of other  companies  and to assist any company  financially  or otherwise.  There was another company known as the  Southern Agencies  Ltd.  and Mr. A. V. Thomas was  director  of  both these  companies.  In 1948 the Southern Agencies Ltd.  began the promotion of a company to be known as the Rodier Textile Mills  Ltd.,  with a view to buying up a Mill known  as  the Rodier Textile Mills.  The assessee company made an  advance of Rs. 6 lakhs odd to the promoter for the purchase of  6000 shares  of the new company.  The public took no interest  in the   new  company  and  the  whole  project   failed.    No application  for  shares was made on behalf of  the  assesee company  and no share was acquired.  The  Southern  Agencies Ltd.,  however,  did  not  return  the  entire  amount.   On December  7, 1951, it paid back only Rs. 2 lakhs  which  was received in full satisfaction.  The balance of Rs. 4,05,071- 8-6  was  written off on December 31, 195 1, which  was  the close  of the year of account of the assessee company.   For the  assessment year 1952-33 the assessee company claimed  a deduction of that amount as a bad debt actually written off, or alternatively as an Expenditure, not of a capital  nature laid out or expended wholly and exclusively for the  purpose of its business.  777 Held,  (1)  that  the amount advanced for  the  purchase  of shares  was of a capital nature and, therefore, the  balance was not allowable as an expenditure under s  10 (2) (xv) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, as it was not the  business of  the assessee company to buy agencies and sell them;  and in any event the amount was expended in 1948 and not in  the year of account ending December 31, 1951.

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(2)  that  it  was not a bad debt under s. 10 (2)  (xi).   A debt  in  such cases is an outstanding  which  is  recovered would have swelled the profits.  It is not money handed over to  some  one for purchasing a thing which that  person  has failed to return even though no purchase was made. Curtis  v.  J. & G. Old field Ltd., (1925) 9 Tax  Cas.  319, Arunachalam Chettiar v. Commissioner ’of Income-tax,  (1936) L. R. 63 I. A. 233, Badridas Daga v. Commissioner of Income- tax,  [1959] S. C. R. 690 and Commissioner of Income-tax  v. Abdullabhi Abdulakadar, [1961] 2 S.C.R. 949, relied on.

JUDGMENT: CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 214 of 1962. Appeal  from the judgment dated July 8, 1960 of  the  Kerala High Court, Emakulam, in Income-tax Referred Case No. 10  of 1957. S.   T. Desai and Sardar Bahadur, for the appellant. K.   N. Rajagopal Sastry, R. N. Sahthey and P.    D.  Menon, for the respondent. 1962.  October 25.  The judgment of the Court was  delivered by HIDAYATULLAH,  J.-The  assessee, A.V. Thomas  &  Co.,  Ltd., Alleppey,  claimed  a deduction of Rs. 4,05,072-8-6  in  the assessment year 1952-53 as a bad debt which was  written-off in  its books of account on December 31, 1951.   This  claim was  disallowed.   After  sundry  procedure,  the  following question  was  considered by the High Court  of  Kerala  and answered against the assessee company :-               "Whether on the facts and the circumstances of               the case, the Tribunal was correct in holding               778               that the amount of Rs. 4,05,071-8-6 claimed by               the assessee Co. as a deduction was not admis-               sible either under section 10(2) (xi) or 10(2)               (xv) ?" The High Court certified the case as fit for appeal to  this Court  and  this  appeal  has been  filed  by  the  assessee company.  The Commissioner of Income-tax (Bangalore) Kerala, is the respondent. The  assessee  company was incorporated in 1935 and,  as  is usual   with  companies,  its  Memorandum  of   Association, authorised  it to do multifarious businesses.  According  to clauses 1, 5, 18 and 23, it was authorised "to be interested in,   to  promote,  and  to  undertake  the  formation   and establishment  of other companies", to make investments  and to  assist  any company financially or  otherwise.   At  the material  time  the assessee company  had  three  directors, whose names are given below 1.   A. V. Thomas 2.   S. Sankaranarayana lyer and 3.   J. Thomas. There  was  another  private limited company  known  as  the Southern  Agencies Limited, Pondicherry, and  its  directors were :-- 1.   A. V. Thomas 2.   S. S. Natarajan, and 3.   C, S. Ramakrishna Karayalar. There was a mill in Pondicherry known as Rodier Textile Mill belonging to the Anglo French Textiles Limited, Pondicherry. The  assessee  company averred that  the  Southern  Agencies Ltd., took up in 1948 the promotion of a limited company  to be known as Rodier Textile Mills Ltd., Pondicherry, with 779

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a  view  to buying and developing the Rodier  Textile  Mill. The  assessee  company,  so  it  was  stated,  financed  the Southern  Agencies Ltd., Pondicherry, by making  over  funds aggregating to the sum of Rs. 6,05,071-8-6.  This amount was not  given  directly  by the assessee  company  but  at  its instance by India Coffee and Tea Distributors Ltd.,  Madras. The assessee company further stated that though an entry  in its own books dated December 31, 1948, showed this amount as an  advance for purchase of 6,000 shares of Rs. 100 each  in the  Rodier- Textile Mills Ltd., the main intention  of  the assessee  company  was to assist and  finance  the  Southern Agencies  Ltd.  within the terms of the  assessee  company’s Memorandum.   The subscription list for the  Rodier  Textile Mills Ltd. remained open from January 5 to January 20, 1949. No application for shares was made on behalf of the assessee company  and the shares were not acquired.  The public  took no interest in the new company which was being promoted  and the whole project tailed. On  September 1, 1950, the assessee company approved of  the action of Mr. A. V. Thomas in making the said advance and on September 18, 1950, a resolution was passed by the Board  of Directors  of  The assessee company that the amount  of  Rs. 6,00,000  should  be  shown as an advance  for  purchase  of shares  in the Rodier Textile Mills Ltd. (in formation)  and the balance of Rs. 5,072-8-5 be shown under sundry  advances due  from  the promoters of the new company.   The  Southern Agencies  Ltd. however, did not return the’  entire  amount. On December 7, 1951, it paid back Rs. 2,00,000 which appears to have been received in full satisfaction.  Though as  late as June 12, 1951, the advance was considered to be good  and recoverable,  the  balance was written off on  December  31, 1951,  which  was the close of the year of  account  of  the assessee  company.  It was this amount which was claimed  in the assessment year 1952-53 as a bad 780 debt   actually   written  off,  or  alternatively   as   an expenditure,  not of a capital nature, laid out or  expended wholly  and  exclusively  for the purpose  of  the  assessee company’s business. The  Income-tax  Officer, Alleppey, held that the  debt  was written  off at a time when it was neither bad nor  doubtful and the claim to write it off was premature.  He, therefore, disallowed  it.   An  appeal  was  taken  to  the  Appellate Assistant  Commissioner  and  he upheld  the  order  of  the Income-tax  Officer  though on a different ground.  He  held that  the  advance was made for the  purpose  of  purchasing shares of the new company then in formation and it was  thus made  for  the  acquisition of a capital  asset,  which  was either the control of the new company or ""to gain its good- will likely to result in the grant of agency rights" to  the assessee company.  According to the Commissioner, the  loss, if any, was of a capital nature and the question whether the claim  of bad debt was premature or otherwise did not  arise for  consideration.   The Appellate  Assistant  Commissioner also  held  that the deduction could not be  claimed  as  an allowance  under  s. 10(2)(xv) of the Income-tax  Act.   The assessee  company  appealed to the Tribunal.   The  Tribunal upheld the order of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner but on  a third ground.  The Tribunal accepted that one  of  the objects  of  the  assessee company  was  the  promotion  and financing  of other companies for gain but this  advance  of Rs.  6,00,000  was not made by the assessee company  in  the normal course of its business.  It was rather a  transaction "actuated  only  by  personal motives".   In  reaching  this conclusion the Tribunal observed that the advance was  made-

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to  Southern Agencies Ltd. which was not a company  promoted by  the assessee company, that between these  two  companies there  was  no  previous  business  connection  and  at  the assessee  company had no expectancy of a financial  benefit. The Tribunal held that the                             781 Rodier  Textile  Mills  Ltd.,, Pondicherry,  was  not  being financed  or promoted by the assessee company and  that  the statement  by  the  assessee  company  that  it  would  have received  some agency right was not supported  by  evidence. The  Tribunal  was  of the opinion  that  this  advance  was probably due to the " substantially common ownership of  the assessee  company  and the Southern Agencies  Ltd.,  of  two individuals, namely, A. V. Thomas and S. S. Natarajan."  The Tribunal thus held that this deduction could not be  claimed as it was given out of "’personal motives" and not as a part of the business of the assessee company. The  assessee company demanded a case but it was refused  by the  Tribunal.  The assessee company in its application  for the case had propounded three questions as under :-               "(i)  Whether on the facts and in the circums-               tances of the case, the sum of Rs. 4,05,072-8-               5 can be claimed by the assessee as a bad debt               written  off under the provisions  of  Section               10(2) (xi) of the Act,               (ii)  Whether on the facts and in the circums-               tances of the case, the assessee can claim the               sum  of  Rs.  4  ’.05,072-8-5  as  permissible               deduction under Section 10(2) (xv) of the Act,               and               (iii) Whether co the facts and in the circums-               tances of the case, the assessee is  permitted               to claim the deduction of the said sum of  Rs.               4,05,072-8-5  as a proper debit and charge  it               to the Profit and Loss account of the assessee               company." These questions show that the deduction was claimed (i) as a loss in the doing of the business under 782 s.   10(1); (ii) as a bad debt actually written off under s. 10(2)(xi);  and (iii) as an expenditure laid out wholly  and exclusively  for  the  purpose  of  the  business  under  s. 10(2)(xv)  of  the  Income-tax Act.   The  assessee  company applied  to  the High Court and the High  Court  directed  a reference  on  the single question which  has  been  quoted. That  question shows that the High Court did not direct  the case under s. 10(1) of the Act.  The Tribunal had considered the case from the point of view of the business and had held that  this  was  not  an advance in  the  normal  course  of business but one out of ""personal motives".  The High Court apparently  had  not  accepted  that  the  matter  could  be considered under s. 10(1) and framed the question under cls. (xi)  and (xv) of s. 10(2).  The question as propounded  and considered  by  the High Court related to  the  two  clauses only.   An  attempt was made before us to  raise  the  issue under  s.  10(1) and to claim the deduction as  an  ordinary business  loss.  We disallowed the argument because  in  our opinion  the question as considered in the High  Court  does not embrace it.  The assessee company should have  requested the High Court at some stage to frame a question that  there was  no  material for the Tribunal to reach  the  conclusion that  this was not a business transaction but a case  of  an advance out of personal motives.  It was contended before us that the High Court in calling for a reference on the single

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question  had  stated that that question would  cover  three matters.  The first two ’here mentioned in the question  and the  third  which was said to be implicit  was  whether  the Tribunal  was competent to decide a case which had not  been made  out by the Department at an earlier stage.  But  this was  not the same thing as saying that the Tribunal  had  no material  before it on which it could reach  the  conclusion that  this  was  not an advance in the  ordinary  course  of business by the assessee company.  No doubt, the High  Court in  its  order  calling  for a statement  of  the  case  has observed that there was no dispute at any  783 earlier  stage that this was not in the ordinary  course  of business, but that conclusion of the High Court in the order it  made  under s. 66(2) can have no  relevance  or  binding force.   Indeed,  the High Court was in error  in  giving  a finding  of  its  own  and it is  not  surprising  that  the Tribunal protested against this finding.  It was open to the High  Court  to  frame  a question  whether  there  was  any material  to support the finding of the Tribunal and to  ask the  Tribunal to state a case thereon.  Not having done  so, the question as framed drives the assessee company to  prove its case either under s. 10(2)(xi) or under s.   10(2)(xv) and it is from these two angles that the case will be considered by us.  Clauses (xi) and (xv) of s. 10(2) read as follows :- "(2)  Such profits or gains shall be computed  after  making the following allowances, namely               x        x       x        a               (xi)  when the assessee’s accounts in  respect               of  any  part of his business,  profession  or               vocation are not kept on the cash basis,  such               sum,  in  respect of bad and  doubtful  debts,               due to the assessee in respect of that part of               his  business, profession or vocation, and  in               the case of an assessee carrying on a  banking               or money-lending business, such sum in respect               of  loans made in the ordinary course of  such               business   as  the  Income-tax   Officer   may               estimate to be irrecoverable but not exceeding               the    amount   actually   written   off    as               irrecoverable in the books of the assessee :                             (Proviso omitted)               (xv)  any expenditure (not being an  allowance               of the nature described in any of the  clauses               (i)  to (xiv) inclusive, and not being in  the               nature of capital expenditure or               784               personal expenses) laid out or expended wholly               and  exclusively  for  the  purpose  of   such               business, profession or vocations". In support of its case, the assessee company stated that  as there  was  no  dispute about the facts  that  this  was  an advance in the ordinary course of business it     should  be treated as a trading loss or alternatively as     a bad debt or an expenditure claimable under s.    10(2)(xv).       The assesses company relied strongly upon certain Ledger entries of  the  Rodier  Textile  Mills Ltd. in  the  books  of  the assessee company.  These have been marked as Annexures A.  1 to A. 3. The High Court also referred to these accounts  and they  have  been  construed as showing, that  there  was  an attempt by the assessee company to acquire a capital  asset. These accounts began in 1948 and ended on December 31, 1951. The  accounts  are headed "Personal  Ledger."  In  December, 1948, sundry amounts totalling Rs. 6,05,071-8-5 are shown as

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amounts  "paid to you by Indian Coffee and Tea  Distributors Ltd.,  Madras,  towards purchase of shares." On  January  1, 1949,  the  account  opened  with a  debit  balance  of  Rs. 6,05,071-8-5.   Nothing appears from the accounts  who  this "’you"  was.   A number of reversing entries  were  made  in respect  of certain amounts and then on December  31,  1949, the amount was shown as follows :-      By advance for sundry expenses      due from the promoters of new      company debited to this trans-      ferred                                  5,071-8-5      By balance                             6,00,000-0-0      1950 opened with entry on January I-      To Balance                             6,00,000-0-0      and closed with an entry      By Amount paid to Southern      Agencies Ltd,                          6,00,000-0-0  785 This was shown as an opening balance on January 1, 1951.  On December  7,  a payment of Rs. 2,00,000 was  shown  and  Rs. 4,00,000 were transferred for writing off.  On December 31., 1951,  Rs. 4,00,000 were written off and so also the  amount of  Rs. 5,072-8-5.  The last amount included a sum of  Rupee 1,  hire for carriage which was also written off  after  the entry had been reversed. From these accounts it is quite clear that to begin with the amount was shown as an advance for purchase of shares of the Rodier  Textile Mills Ltd.  If this was the purpose, it  was not  an  expenditure on the revenue side.   The  High  Court correctly  pointed out that it was not the business  of  the assessee company to buy agencies and sell them.  The  shares were being acquired by the assessee company so that it might have  the lucrative business of selling agency  and  similar other  agencies from the Rodier Textile Mills  Limited.   As late  as  December 15, 1952, the Chairman  of  the  assessee company stated in his speech as follows :-               "You are aware that an advance was made to the               Southern   Agencies  (Pondicherry)   Ltd.   to               acquire for us shares in Rodier Textile  Mills               Ltd.  It was felt that when the promotion  and               working  of Rodier Textile Mills Ltd.,  became a   fait   ac compli,   our   company    stood               considerably to gain by securing their  agency               for handling their goods." This  clearly  shows that the assessee company  intended  to acquire  a capital asset for itself This purpose  takes  the case  of  the assessee company out of S.  10(2)(xv)  of  the Income-tax Act, because no expenditure can be claimed  under that  clause  which  ’is  of  a  capital  nature.   By   the declaration of the Chairman of the assessee company the case under  s.  10(2)(xv) becomes completely untenable.   In  any event, the 786 amount  was not expended in the year of account ending  with December 31, 1951 : it was expended in 1948. It remains to consider the case under s. 10(2)(xi).  In this connection,   we   were  referred  to  the   Memorandum   of Association  to show that it was one of the objects  of  the assessee company to promote other companies and this  amount was  paid  to Southern Agencies Ltd. to promote  the  Rodier Textile  Mills  Ltd.   There is no doubt  that  the  objects mentioned  in the Memorandum of Association of the  assessee company  include  the  promotion  and  financing  of   other companies.   A Memorandum, however, is not conclusive as  to the  real  nature of a transaction.  That nature has  to  be

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deduced  not from the Memorandum but from the  circumstances in  which the transaction took place.  Here,  the  different versions  given  in  the books of account  of  the  assessee company belie the assertion that this was an amount paid  to promote  the  Rodier Textile Mills Ltd.   Even  though  this money  was  available  on  December  31,  194  8,  and   the subscription list for the shares remained open from  January 5 to 20, 1949, no application for a single share was made on behalf  of the assessee company.  The entry till the end  of 1949  was  that  the amount was laid  out  for  purchase  of shares.  It was only subsequently that it was shown to be an advance  to the Southern Agencies Ltd.  In fact,  the  entry comes only at the end of 1950 when it is set down "By Amount paid to Southern Agencies Ltd." The assessee company raised three contentions in support  of the case that this became a bad and doubtful debt which  was actually written off : (a.) that the High Court was wrong in saying  that before the assessee could claim  the  deduction under  s.  10(2)(xi) it must prove that it had in  the  past purchased  and  sold agencies, (b) that the  object  of  the assessee company was to apply for shares but as it did not                             787 apply for shares the transaction between it and the Southern Agencies  remained  an  advance in the  ordinary  course  of business,  and (c) Southern Agencies having failed  to  give back the money the assessee company was within its rights to write off this bad and doubtful debt. Now,  a question under s. 10(2)(xi) can only arise if  there is a bad or doubtful debt.  Before a debt can become bad  or doubtful it must first be a debt.  What is meant by debt  in this connection was laid down by Rowlatt, J., in Curtis v.1. & G. Oldfield Ltd.,(1) at p. 330 as follows :--               "When the Rule speaks of a bad debt it means a               debt which is a debt that would have come into               the  balance sheet as a trading debt  ’in  the               trade that is in question and that it is  bad.               It does not really mean any  debt which,  when               it was a good debt, would not have come in  to               swell the profits." A  debt in such cases is an outstanding which  if  recovered would have swelled the profits.  It is not money handed over to  someone  for purchasing a thing which  that  person  has failed  to return even though no purchase was made.  In  the section a debt means something more than a mere advance.  It means something which is related to business or results from it. To be claimable as a bad or doubtful debt it must  first be shown as a proper debt.  The observations of Rowlatt, J., were applied by the Privy Council in Arunachalam Chettiar v. Commissioner  of  income-tax(2),  at  p.  245,  where  their Lordships observed as follows:-               "Their   Lordships   moreover  can   give   no               countenance  to  a  suggestion  that  upon   a               dissolution  of partnership a partner’s  share               of the losses for several preceding years  can               be  accumulated  and  thrown  into  the  scale               against (1) (1925) 9 Tax Cas. 319, 330. (2) (1936) L. R. 63 I. A. 233, 245 788               the income of another partner for a particular               year.  No principle of writing off a bad  debt               could  justify such a course, whether  in  the               year  following the dissolution or., as  logic               would permit, in some subsequent year in which               the  partner’s  insolvency  has  crystallised.

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             The ;’bad debt" would not, if good, have  come               in  to swell the taxable profits of the  other               partner." This  Court  also  approved the dictum of  Rowlatt,  J.,  in COMMissioner of Income-tax v. Abdullabhai Abdulkadar (1)  at p.  550  and  referred to the  observations  of  Venkatarama Ayyar, J., in Badridas Daga, v. Commissioner of Income,-tax, (2)  where  the learned judge speaking for this  Court  said that a business debt "springs directly from the carrying  on of  the  business and is incidental to it and not  any  loss sustained  by the assessee, even if it has  some  connection with his business." Section 10(2)(xi) is in two parts.   One part deals with an assessee who carries on the business of a banker  or money-lender.  Another part deals  with  business other  than the aforesaid.  Since this was not a loan  by  a banker or money-lender, the debt to be a debt proper had  to be one which if good would have swelled the taxable profits. Applying  these tests, it is quite obvious that  an  advance paid  by  the assessee company to another  to  purchase  the shares  cannot  be  said to be  incidental  to  the  trading activities  of  the assessee company.  It was  more  in  the nature  of a price paid in advance for the shares which  the Southern Agencies had a right to allot in the Rodier Textile Mills  Ltd.  This cannot, therefore, be described as a  debt and  indeed  the  changes in the books  of  account  of  the assessee  company  clearly show that  the  assessee  company itself was altering the entries to convert the advance  into a debt so as to be able to write it off and claim (1) [1961] 2 S.C.R. 949, 954. (2) [1959] S.C.R. 690. 789 the benefit of s. 10 (2) (xi).  In our opinion, s. 10(2)(xi) was  inapplicable to the facts of this case.  In the  result the  appeal  must fail and it is  dismissed.   The  assessee company shall pay the costs of the respondent.                               Appeal dismissed.