29 August 1972
Supreme Court
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COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX POONA Vs M/s. MANNA RAMJI & CO.

Case number: Appeal (civil) 156 of 1969


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PETITIONER: COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX POONA

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: M/s.  MANNA RAMJI & CO.

DATE OF JUDGMENT29/08/1972

BENCH: KHANNA, HANS RAJ BENCH: KHANNA, HANS RAJ HEGDE, K.S. REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN

CITATION:  1973 AIR  515            1973 SCR  (1)1068  1973 SCC  (3)  43  CITATOR INFO :  F          1976 SC 640  (12)  RF         1982 SC1153  (12)  R          1987 SC 500  (39)

ACT: Indian   Income  Tax,  1911-Capital  Receipts  and   Revenue Receipts--Compensation  paid  by Govt. for loss  of  earning where   the  business  premises  are   requisitioned-Whether Revenue Receipts.

HEADNOTE: The  respondent was carrying on timber business in  premises consisting  of  office  room and six  sheds,  In  1944,  the premises  were requisitioned under the Defence of India  Act for  storing  food grains.  On request  of  the  respondent, however, the office room was released wherein the  appellant continued  to carry on the timber business.  The  respondent claimed  compensation of Rs. 1,25,500 for loss  of  earnings which  was awarded.  The Income Tax Officer brought  to  tax the  said  amount  attributing the earning  to  business  of timber,  as revenue receipts.  On respondent’s  motion,  the following  question  was referred to the High Court  by  the Income  Tax  Appellate  Tribunal : "whether,  on  facts  and circumstances of the case, the sum of Rs. 1,05,074  received by  the  applicant as compensation from the  ’Government  is taxable  as income of the applicant or is a capital  receipt in its hands." The High Court answered the question  against the Revenue. On appeal by the revenue, HELD:On  the facts found by the Tribunal, namely,  that  the compensation was claimed and awarded for loss of profits the respondent continued the said business in its usual name and style  in  the same office premises, and the  profit  making apparatus itself was not destroyed, the compensation  amount partakes  the  character of profits  and  therefore  Revenue receipts. [1072E] Held  further,  the  present  is  not  a  case  wherein  the respondent  firm  was permanently deprived of  a  source  of income.  On the contrary, the present is a case arising  out of   requisition  of  the  premises.    Requisition   unlike acquisition,  is  of a temporary nature.   The  compensation

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paid to the respondent represents the supposed profit  which the  respondent  would  have earned  during  the  years  the premises remained tinder requisition.[1072G] but  which  profit the respondent could not earn because  of the requisition. Commissioner  of Income Tax/Excess Profits Tax, Bombay  City v.  Shamsher Printing Press, [1960] 39 I.T.R. 90.,  referred to. Also held, the method of computing the compensation  payable for  loss of earnings does not alter the real  character  of essential  nature of the receipt of the compensation in  the hands  of  the  respondent.   The  Arbitrator  awarding  the compensation on the basis of two years’ purchases cannot be assailed. [1073E] The Glembold Union Fireclay Co. Ltl. v. The Commissioner  of Inland  Revenue,  12 T.C, 427 and  Senairan  Doongarmall  v. Commissioner  of  Income Tax, [1961] 42 I.T.R.  392  (on  p. 397), relied upon. Commissioner  of  Income Tax, Nagpur v. Rai  Bahadur  Jairam Vahi and Others [1959] 35 I.T.R. 148, S.R.Y. Sivaram  Prasad Bahadur  v.  Commissioner  of Income  Tax,  Andhra  Pradesh, [1971] 82 I.L.R. 527 and Commissioner of Income Tax,  Punjab Haryana,  Jammu and Kashmir and Himachal Pradesh  v.  Prabhu Dayal [1971] 82 I.T.R. 804, held not applicable. Karnani Properties, Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income Tax, West Bengal [1971] 82 I.T.R. 547, referred to. The appeal was allowed, 1069

JUDGMENT: CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 156 of 1969. Appeal by certificate from the judgment and order dated  the 10th  and  11th February, 1967 of the Bombay High  Court  in Income-tax Reference go. 35 of 1962. B.   B.  Ahuja,  R.  N. Sachthey and S. P.  Nayar,  for  the appellant. R.   M. Hajarnevis, S. Balakrishnan, G. P. Sahasrabhudhe and N.   M. Ghatate, for the respondent. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Khanna, J. This appeal on certificate granted by the  Bombay High  Court is directed against the judgment of  that  court whereby  it  answered  the question  referred  to  it  under section   66(1)   of  the  Indian  Income  Tax   Act,   1922 (hereinafter  referred  to  as the Act)  in  favour  of  the respondent assessee. The reference arose out of the assessment made upon the res- pondent  firm for the assessment year 1951-52,  the  account year  for which is the, Samvat year 2006 (that  is,  October 22, 1949 to November 9, 1950).  The respondent was  carrying on  business for several years in the past in  timber  under the  name  and style of Manna Ramji & Co.  in  Bhavani  Peth Poona  City.  The business premises consisted of  an  office and six sheds used for storing wood and timber of all kinds. The  respondent  firm  constructed the  six  sheds  for  the purpose  of its business after taking the site thereof on  a long  lease.   On  May  19,  1944  the  Collector  of  Poona requisitioned  the  premises  of the  respondent  under  the Defence of India Act as from May 19, 1944 for the purpose of using  them as store houses for food grains.  Initially  the requisition  order  covered  the six sheds as  well  as  the office  of  the  respondent,  but  at  the  request  of  the respondent  firm the Collector agreed to allow it to  remain in possession of the office premises.  In October, 1944  the

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respondent  made  a  claim for Rs. 1,85,200  on  account  of compensation for the requisitioned premises.  In June,  1946 the  Collector offered referred to pay compensation  at  the rate   of  Rs.  310  per  month.   The  respondent   feeling dissatisfied  with  the offer of the  Collector,  moved  the Government   for  a  reference  to  arbitration  under   the provisions  of the Defence of India Act.  The  Civil  Judge, Senior  Division, Poona was thereafter appointed  arbitrator on   November  10,  1947.   The  Government  appointed   its Consulting Surveyor as an assessor to help the arbitrator in determining the amount of compensation.  As against that the respondent  appointed an architect as its  assessor.   There was  considerable  difference in the estimates  of  the  two assessors  regarding the amount of compensation  payable  to the respondent. 1070 The  Civil Judge, who had been appointed  arbitrator,,  gave his award  on April 15, 1948.  The operative part  of  the award of the arbitrator was as under :               "The  Government  do pay compensation  to  the               claimants as follows :               (1)   Rs.  210/-  per month for  rent  of  the               premises from the 15th May 1944 till the  date               of restoring the premises to the claimants.               (2)   A lump sum of Rs. 1,25,500/- for loss of               earnings.               (3)   A  sum  of Rs. 100/- in respect  of  the               wooden frames.               (4)   Interest  at 3% on Rs.  1,25,500/-  from               the  15th  November,  1944 till  the  date  of               actual payment." The Government was also ordered to pay Rs. 2,000/- as  costs to  the respondent.  The Government filed an appeal  against the  award of the arbitrator, but the same was dismissed  by the  High  Court  on August 7,  1949.   The  respondent  was thereafter  paid  the  amount of Rs.  1,70,330-10-0  in  the Samvat year 2006.  The above amount included Rs. 1,25,500 on account  of lump sum for loss of earnings and Rs.  2,000  on account of costs of arbitration. In  computing the respondent’s total income the  Income  Tax Officer  brought  to  tax the two sums of  Rs.  22,180/-  on account  of  rent  receipts and Rs.  20,551  on  account  of interest.   Besides that. the Income Tax Officer brought  to tax  the sum of Rs. 1,50,074/under section 10 of the Act  by attributing it to the respondent’s business in timber.  This figure of Rs. 1,05,074/- was arrived at by deducting out  of Rs.  1,25,500 a sum of Rs. 20,426/ which, according  to  the Income Tax Officer, had been spent by the respondent in  the claim proceedings against the Government over and above  the amount of Rs. 2,000/- which had been awarded as costs by the arbitrator.  The respondent feeling aggrieved by the finding of  the  Income  Tax Officer that the sum  of  Rs.  1,05,074 was,business  and taxable receipt filed appeal  against  the order  of the Income Tax Officer.  The  Appellant  Assistant Commissioner accepted the respondent’s appeal and held  that the above amount was capital receipt.  On further appeal  by the department, the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal held  that the sum of Rs. 1,25,500 was a revenue receipt as it had been received  on account of the loss of earnings of  the  timber business.   The respondent was, however. allowed to set  off the losses of Rs. 4,572 and Rs. 490, which bad been  brought forward from the assessment years 1949-50 and 1071 1950-51, against the sum of Rs. 1,05,074.  On being moved by the respondent, the Tribunal referred the following question

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to the High Court               "Whether,   on   the   facts   and   in    the               circumstances  of  the case, the  sum  of  Rs.               1,05,074/-   received  by  the  applicant   as               compensation from the Government is taxable as               income  of  the  applicant  or  is  a  capital               receipt in its hands ?" The  High Court  held  that the  amount  received  by  the respondent  for  the  requisitioning of  the  six  sheds  or godowns was in the nature of capital receipt in the hands of the  respondent-firm for the damage sustained in the  profit making apparatus.  It was, in the opinion of the High Court, not a revenue receipt and as such, not taxable. In appeal Mr. Ahuja on behalf of the appellant has  assailed the judgment of the High Court and has urged that the sum of Rs.  1,05,074  received  by the  respondent  was  a  revenue receipt and not a capital receipt as the amount  represented the  compensation  payable for loss of  earnings  consequent upon  the  requisition of the sheds of the  respondent.   As against that, Mr. Hajarnavis on behalf of the respondent has urged that the amount in question was a capital receipt  and the decision of the High Court in this respect was  correct. In  our  opinion, the contention advanced on behalf  of  the appellant  is  well  founded and that the  sum  in  question represents a revenue receipt and not a capital receipt. In order to resolve the controversy as to whether the sum of Rs.  1,05,074  received  by the  respondent  was  a  revenue receipt  or a capital receipt, we must try to ascertain  the true  nature  and character of the  payment.   Although  the distinction  between capital receipt and revenue receipt  is well recognised, the task of assigning it to the appropriate head  in border line cases is not free from  difficulty  and becomes  one of such refinement.  Decided cases can  provide illustrations   and  afford  indications  of  the  kind   of considerations  which  may relevantly be borne  in  mind  in approaching  the problem.  In the final  analysis,  however, the  controversy would have to be resolved in the  light  of the  facts  and circumstances of each individual  case.   It would,   therefore,   be   ,relevant  to   look   into   the circumstances  under  which the payment was  made.  In  this respect  we  find  that after the sheds  of  the  respondent had been requisitioned, the respondent commenced proceedings for  claiming  compensation.   The  Civil  Judge  Poona  was appointed   arbitrator   to   determine   the   amount    of compensation.   In  the  course of  proceedings  before  the arbitrator, the respondent filed written statement  claiming compensation,   inter  alia,  for  loss  of  profits.    The arbitrator by his award dated April 15, 1948 1072 awarded  a sum of Rs. 1,25,500 for loss of earnings  to  the respondent.  In addition to that we have the finding of  the Tribunal  that  the respondent firm during  the  period  for which the claim for compensation was made had been  carrying on  business in its usual name and style in the same  office premises in which it used to carry on business prior to  the requisition of the godowns by the Government.  The effect of the  requisition of the godowns, according to the  Tribunal, was  not  to stop the business of the  respondent.   On  the contrary, the respondent continued to carry on the  business though  at a reduced scale.  The finding of the Tribunal  in this respect was as under :               "As  already pointed out, the office  premises               remained  with  the  assessee  firm  and   the               business  of disposing of  the  stock-in-trade               continued  to  be directed  from  that  place.

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             Thus this was not a case of a business  coming               to a standstill altogether but it is a case of               carrying  on  the same business on  a  smaller               scale.   Even this business was carried on  by               the assessee firm in its usual name and  style               from  the same office premises from  which  it               used  to carry it on prior to the  requisition               of the godowns by the Government...... If  any               injury was caused to the assessee’s  business,               including  the capital assets it held for  the               purpose  of carrying on that business, it  was               to the volumes of the business and not to  the               profit making apparatus itself." In the light of the above findings of fact, we have no doubt that  the amount received by the respondent for the loss  of earnings  was  revenue receipt.  It can hardly  be  disputed that  if the respondent firm had been earning profits  as  a result  of  its business during the years  the  premises  in question  remained under requisition, the said profit  would have been treated as revenue receipt and liable to be  taxed as  such.  The amount received in lieu of the profits  which would  have  been  earned  if  the  premises  had  not  been requisitioned,  in  our opinion, would partake of  the  same character as the profits.  The present is not a case wherein the respondent firm was permanently deprived of a source  of income.  On the contrary, the present is a case arising  out of   requisition  of  the  premises.   Requisition,   unlike acquisition,  is  of a temporary nature and  though  it  may extend  over  some years, it has not the element  of  perma- nence.  The compensation’ paid to the respondent  represents the  supposed profit which the respondent would have  earned during the years the premises remained under requisition but which  profit the respondent could not earn because  of  the requisitions. A case somewhat similar to the present case is  Commissioner of Income Tax/Excess Profits Tax, Bombay City v. Shamsher 1073 Printing Press(1).  The respondent firm in that case had for the purpose of its business a printing press.  The  premises in  which  he  press was housed were  requisitioned  by  the Govermnent  and the respondent had to shift its business  to another place.  Of the various sums paid as compensation for the requisition, the Government paid Rs. 57,435 towards  the claim  of  the  respondent "on  account  of  the  compulsory vacation of the premises, disturbance and loss of business". It was held by this Court that the sum of Rs. 57,434 had not been  received  by  the respondent for  any  injury  to  its capital  assets, including goodwill.  The above sum, it  was further held, had been received as compensation for loss  of profit and was a revenue receipt liable to tax. Reference   has   been  made  by  Mr.  Hajarnavis   to   the observations  in the award of the arbitrator  regarding  the manner  of  computing  the  compensations  payable  to   the respondent for the loss of earning.  The arbitrator in  this connection  took  the  view that the  amount  of  two  years purchase made by the respondent would be the most  equitable and fair figure for determining the amount of  compensation. The  lump sum payable to the respondent for loss of  earning was  thus found to be Rs. 1,25,500.  The important thing  to note  is  that the above sum was paid to the  respondent  on account  of  loss of earning.  The method of  computing  the cornpensation  payable for the loss of earning would not  in our  opinion,  alter  the real character  or  the  essential nature  of the receipt of the said compensation in the  hand of  the  respondent, As observed by Lord Buckmaster  in  the

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case  of  The  Glennboig Union Fireclay  Co.   Ltd.  v.  The Commissioners  of Inland Revenue (2 ) "there is no  relation between  the  measure  that  is  used  for  the  purpose  of calculating  a  particular  result and the  quality  of  the figure  that  is arrived at by means of the  application  of that test".  The above observation was quoted with  approval by  this  Court  in  the case  of  Sonairam  Doongermall  v. Commissioner of Income Tax(3) and it was held that it is the quality of payment that is decisive of the character of  the payment and not the method of the payment or its measure as makes it fall within capital or revenue. Reliance  has been placed by Mr. Hajarnavis on the ratio  of the  decision  of  this  Court  in  the  case  of   Senairam Doongarmall (supra).  The assessee family in that case owned a tea estate consisting of tea gardens, factories and  other buildings  and  carried  on  the  business  of  growing  and manufacturing  tea.  The factory and other buildings on  the estate  were requisitioned for defence purposes by  military authorities.  Though the assessee continued in possession of the tea gardens and tended them to preserve the plants,  the manufacture of tea was stopped completely.  The (1)  [1960] 39 I. T. R. 90. (2) 12 T. C. 427. 19-LI72Sup.CI/73,   (3) [1961] 42 I. T. R. 392, 387. 1074 assessee  was paid compensation for the years 1944 and  1945 under the Defence of India Rules, calculated on the basis of the out-turn of tea that would have been manufactured by the assessee  during  that  period.  This Court  held  that  the amount  of  compensation received by the  assessee  was  not revenue receipt and did not comprise any element of  income. In  arriving at that conclusion, the Court took note of  the fact  that  tax was payable by an assessee  under  the  head "Profits  and gains of a business" in respect of a  business carried  on by him.  As the assessee had not carried on  any business  at all, the compensation received by the  assessee was  held to be not profit of business.  This case,  in  our opinion, cannot be of much help to the respondent because in the  present  case, as observed earlier,  the  Tribunal  has expressly  found  that the respondent was  carrying  on  the business during the relevant years. Reliance  has  also been placed by Mr. Hajarnavis  upon  the decision of House of Lords in the case of The Glenboig Union Fireclay  Co. Ltd. (supra).  The assessee in that  case  was carrying  on business for the manufacture of fireclay  goods and  had taken in connection with that business  a  fireclay field  on  lease, over part of which ran the  lines  of  the Caledonian  Railway.  The railway administration  prohibited the  assessee  from excavating the field  within  a  certain distance  of  the rails and paid  compensation  therefor  in accordance with the provisions of a statute.  It was held by the  House, of Lords that this was a capital receipt as  the compensation  was really the price paid "for sterlising  the assets   from  which  otherwise  profit  might   have   been obtained".  It would follow from the above that the fireclay field  was  accepted to be a capital asset which was  to  be utilised   for   the  carrying  on  of   the   business   of manufacturing fireclay goods.  When the assessee was  prohi- bited from exploiting the field, it was considered to be  an injury  inflicted  on his capital asset.  The  case  of  The Glenboig  Union Fireclay Co. Ltd. (supra) was  cited  before this  Court  in Commissioner of Income Tax,  Nagpur  v.  Rai Bahadur Jairam Valji and Others(1) and Senairam Doongarmall (supra) and was distinguished on the ground that it  related to the sterlisation and destruction of a capital asset.   In

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the  present  case  there  has  been  no  sterlization   and destruction of the capital asset of the respondent firm.  As such,  the  case  of The Glenboig Union  Fireclay  Co.  Ltd. cannot afford much assistance in the present case. Reference has also been made by Mr. Hajarnavis to the  cases of S. R. Y. Sivaram Prasad Bahadur v. Commissioner of Income Tax,  Andhra  Pradesh (2 ) and Commissioner of  Income  Tax. Punjab,,  Haryana, Jammu & Kashmir and Himachal  Pradesh  v. Prabhu Dayal(3). Sivaram Prasad Bahadur’s case related to (1) [1959] 35 I. T. R. 148. (2) [1971] 82 I. T. R. 527. (3) [1971] 82 I.  T. R. 604. 1075 interim  payments made under the Madras  Estates  (Abolition and  Conversion into Ryotwari) Act, 1948 to a former  holder of  an  estate which had been abolished  during  the  period between  the  taking  over  of the  estate,  and  the  final determination  and deposit of compensation under  that  Act. It  was held to be a capital receipt and not liable to  tax. Prabhu   Dayal’s  case  related  to  an  assessee  who   had discovered  by  chance the existence of kankar in  the  Jind State.  The assessee, brought about an agreement between the State and one Shanti Prasad Jain for the acquisition of sole and  exclusive  monopoly rights  for  manufacturing  cement. Shanti   Prasad  Jain  transferred  his  rights  under   the agreement to a company of which the assessee was one of  the promoters.   For the services rendered by him,  the  company agreed to pay the assessee a commission of 1 per cent on the yearly net profits earned by the company.  The agreement was acted upon till 1950 whereafter the company did not pay  the commission to the assessee.  The assessee filed a suit which ended  in  a compromise.  In terms of  the  compromise,  the assessee  was  paid certain amounts as  commission  for  the years 1951, 1952 and 1953 and a further sum of Rs. 70,000 by way  of compensation for the determination of the  agreement between  him  and  the  company as  from  January  1,  1954. Question  which arose for determination was whether the  sum of  Rs.  70,000  was  capital receipt in  the  hand  of  the assessee.   The  assessee,  it was found,  had  not  engaged either in the business of discovering kankar or any minerals or  in the business of bringing about agreement between  the parties.   There  was,  indeed, no evidence that  he  was  a business  man.  It was held that none (if the activities  of the  assessee could be considered to be  business  activity. The  compromise, in the opinion of this Court, destroyed  an income yielding asset of the assessee and in its place he  , was given Rs. 70,000 as compensation.  The sum of Rs. 70,000 was accordingly held to be capital receipt.  It is  manifest from  the narration of the facts of Sivaram  Prosad  Bahadur and  Prabhu  Dayal’s   cases that  there  is  no  similarity between  those cases and the present case.  As  such,  these two decisions cannot be of any avail to the respondent. It  may also be mentioned that Mr. Hajarnavis  has  assailed the  findings of fact of the Tribunal.  In this  respect  we are of the view that the Tribunal is the final fact  finding authority.   It is for the Tribunal to find facts and it  is for  the  High  Court and this Court to  lay  down  the  law applicable  to the facts found.  Neither the High Court  nor this Court has jurisdiction to go behind or to question  the statement  of facts made by the Tribunal.  The statement  of case is binding on the parties and they are not entitled  to go behind the facts of the Tribunal in the statement.   When the  question referred to the High Court speaks of  "on  the facts and circumstances of the case", it means on the  facts and circumstances

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1076 found by the Tribunal and not on the facts and circumstances as  may be found by the High Court (see  Karnani  Properties Ltd. v.   Commissioner of Income Tax, West Bengal(1). As  a result of the above, we accept the appeal,  set  aside the  judgment  of  the High Court and  answer  the  question referred  by the Tribunal in favour of the  department.   In our  opinion,  the  sum  of Rs.  1,05,074  received  by  the respondent  as compensation from the Government was  taxable as  income of the respondent and was not a capital  receipt. In  the circumstances of the case, we leave the  parties  to bear  their own costs of this Court as well as in the  High Court. S.B.W.                    Appeal allowed. (1) [1971] 82 I. T. R. 547. 1077