06 October 1971
Supreme Court
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J.& K., HIMACHAL PRADESH Vs PRABHU DAYAL


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PETITIONER: J.& K., HIMACHAL PRADESH

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: PRABHU DAYAL

DATE OF JUDGMENT06/10/1971

BENCH: HEGDE, K.S. BENCH: HEGDE, K.S. GROVER, A.N. KHANNA, HANS RAJ

CITATION:  1972 AIR  386            1972 SCR  (1) 911  CITATOR INFO :  RF         1973 SC 515  (10)

ACT: Income-tax-Capital  or Revenue-Compensation for giving up  a capital asset is capital receipt.

HEADNOTE: The  assessee was instrumental in discovering the  existence of  Kankar  deposits in the erstwhile Jind State.   He  also brought  about an agreement between one S and the  State  of Jind  for  the acquisition of sole  and  exclusive  monopoly rights  of manufacturing cement in the State. The  agreement was  entered  into  an  April 2,  1938  and  was  to  remain operative initially for a period of 25 years which could  be extended  to  100  years  at the option  of  S.  The  latter transferred his rights to a public limited company on May 4, 1938.  For the Services rendered by the assessee the company by  agreement  dated  May  27, 1938  agreed  to  pay  him  a Commission  of 1 % on the yearly net profits earned  by  the company from the said cement factory.  The agreement was  to subsist  so long as the original agreement dated April  2  , 1938 subsisted.  The company paid the assessee’s  commission up  to 1950 but not thereafter.  The assessee filed  a  suit which  resulted  in  a compromise  decree  under  which  the assessee  was  to be paid Rs. 15,000 as commission  for  the years 1951 & 1952 and Rs. 15,000 as commission for the year 1953.   Further  he  was to be paid Rs.  70.000  by  way  of compensation  for the termination of the  agreement  between him  and  the  company  as  from  January  1,  1954.    That compensation was received by the assessee on June 11,  1954. The Income-tax Officer held that the sum of Rs. 70,000 was a remuneration paid once and for all for the services rendered by  the  assessee  and as such taxable in  his  hands.   The Appellate Assistant Commissioner upheld the said order.  The Tribunal  however  held that the amount in  question  was  a capital  receipt  and the same view was taken  by  the  High Court  in answering the reference.  In appeal to this  Court by the Revenue, HELD  :  (i) Business as understood in  the  income-tax  law connotes some real, substantial and systematic or organised course  of activity or conduct with a set purpose.   Even  a single  transaction  may  sometimes  amount  to  a  business

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transaction  but the present transaction was not  one  such. This  was a case dealing with the stray activity of  a  non- business  man.   Hence it was difficult to  agree  with  the Revenue in its contention that the agreement entered into by the  assessee  with the company should be  considered  as  a business activity. [994 E-F] In  the determination of the question whether  a  particular receipt  is capital or an income it is not possible  to  lay down  any single test as infallible or any single  criterion as  decisive.   The question must ultimately depend  on  the facts of the particular case and the authorities hearing  on the  question  are valuable only as indicating  the  matters that  have to be taken into account in reaching a  decision. That however is not to say that the question is one of fact, for  these  questions between capital  and  income.  trading profit  and non-trading profit, are questions  which  though they  may  depend to a very great extent on  the  particular facts of each case do involve conclusions of law to be drawn from those facts. 994 G-H] 992 It  is now well settled that a distinction has to  be  drawn between  a  payment made for past services or  discharge  of past   liabilities  and  that  made  for  compensation   for termination of an income producing asset.  The, former  does not lose its revenue nature but the latter being a  payment: for destruction of a capital asset, must be considered as  a capital receipt. [997 D] The  assessee  possibly  by  some  fortuitous   circumstance discovered  Kankar  in  some  place  in  Jind  State.   This circumstance  gave  him  an opportunity to  bring  about  an agreement  between  the  State of Jind and  S,  and  when  S transferred  his right to a new.company in the formation  of which  the  assessee  had a hand, be  was  promised  certain yearly commission on the net profits earned by the  company. None of these activities, of the assessee can be  considered as  a  business  activity  but yet  did  acquire  an  income yielding  asset  as a result of these activities.   But  the compromise  decree destroyed that asset and in its place  he was  given  Rs. 70,000 as compensation.  ’This  payment  was neither  in respect of services rendered by him in the  past nor  towards the accumulated commission due to him.  It  was paid as compensation to him because he gave up his right  to get commission in future to which he was entitled under  the agreement.  It was a price paid for surrendering a  valuable right which was a capital asset.  Therefore the receipt must be considered as a capital receipt. [998 F-H] Narain  Swadeshi  Weaving Mills v.  Commissioner  of  Excess Profits I tax, 26 1. T. R. 765, Commissioner of  Income-Tax, Nagpur  v. Rai Bahadur Jairam Valji & Ors., 35  I.T.R.  148. Yan  Den Berghs Ltd. v. Clark, 19 T.C. 390-(1935)  2  I.T.R. Supp.  17, Senairam Doongarmal v. C.I.T., Assam,  42  I.T.R. 392 and Kettlewell Bullen & Co. Ltd. v. C.I.T., Calcutta, 53 I.T.R. 261, applied.

JUDGMENT: CIVIL  APPELLATE  JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal  No.  1693  of 1968. Appeal from the judgment and order dated January 4, 1967  of the  Punjab and Haryana High Court in  Income-tax  Reference No. 44 of 1962. O.  P.  Malhotra, R. N. Sachthey and B. D. Sharma,  for  the appellant. V. S.  Desai and A. G. Ratnaparkhi, for the respondent (L.R.

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No.2). The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Hegde, J. This is an appeal by certificate from the decision of   the  High  Court of Punjab and Haryana in  a  Reference under s.  66(1)  of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922  (to  be hereinafter referred to as the Act).  The question  referred to the High Court for its opinion was :               "Whether on the facts and in the circumstances               of  the case, the receipt of Rs.  70,000/-  by               the  assessee  on  11-6-1954  was  revenue  or               capital in nature."  993 The  High  Court  held that the  said  receipt  was  capital receipt.   Aggrieved  by that decision the  Commissioner  of Income-tax came up in appeal to this Court. We  shall  now  refer to the material  facts  found  by  the Incometax  Appellate  Tribunal as can be gathered  from  the case  stated.  The assessee was assessed as  an  individual. The  relevant  assessment year is  1955-56,  the  accounting period for the same ended on Asad sudi 1, S.Y. 201 1. The  assessee was instrumental in discovering the  existence of Kankar deposits in Jind State.  He also brought about  an agreement  between one Shanti Parsad Jain and the  erstwhile State  of  Jind,  now  a  part  of  Punjab  State  for   the acquisition  of  sole  and  exclusive  monopoly  rights   of manufacturing cement in the said Jind State.  That agreement was  entered into on April 2, 1938. The same was  to  remain operative for a period of 25 years, which term was liable to be  extended to 100 years at the option of the  said  Shanti Parsad Jain or his nominee.  Shanti Parsad Jain  transferred his rights under that agreement to a public limited  company by name M/s.  Dalmia Dadri Cement Ltd. on May 4, 1938.   The assessee was one of the promoters of the said company. For the services rendered by the assessee, the Dalmia  Dadri Cement Co. by an agreement dated May 27, 1938 agreed, to pay him a commission of 1 % on the yearly net profits earned  by the  company from the said cement factory.   That  agreement was to subsist so long as the original agreement dated April 2, 1938 subsisted. The  agreement dated May 27, 1938 between the  assessee  and the  Dalmia  Dadri Cement Co. was acted upon till  1950  and thereafter the company did not pay the commission agreed  to be paid.  Consequently the assessee filed a suit against the company  claiming the commission due to him.  The said  suit ended  in a compromise and the compromise was made a  decree of court.  Under that decree the assessee was to be paid Rs. 15,000/  as commission for the years 1951 and 1952  and  Rs. 15,000/- as commission for the year 1953.  Further he was to be  paid  Rs.  70,000/-  by  way  of  compensation  for  the termination of the agreement between him and the company  as from January 1, 1954.  That compensation was received by the assessee on June 11, 1954. The  assessee’s  claim  that the sum  of  Rs.  70,000/-  was capital  receipt  and  hence not taxable in  his  hands  was rejected by the Income-tax Officer.  That officer held  that the  said sum of Rs. 70,000/- was a remuneration  paid  once and for all for the services rendered by the assessee and as such  taxable in his hands.  This decision was  affirmed  by the  Appellate  Assistant Commissioner, who  held  that  the amount of Rs. 70,000/- was a lump sum 994 compensation  received for the services rendered; hence  the same  was  a receipt in the ordinary  course  of  assessee’s business  and  consequently  it was  taxable  as  a  revenue receipt.

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Aggrieved  by that order the assessee took up the matter  in appeal to the Tribunal.  The Tribunal held that the  company by  paying the said compensation of Rs. 70,000/-  terminated the contract which enabled the assessee to receive from  the said company a commission of one per cent of the net profits and as such the said receipt by the assessee was capital and not revenue. Thereafter at the instance of the Commissioner the  question set  out  earlier  was referred to the High  Court  for  its opinion which, as mentioned earlier, was answered in  favour of the assessee. It  was  not the case of the Revenue that the  assessee  was engaged  in the business of discovering Kankar or any  other mineral.   He appears to have found Kankar by  mere  chance. It  is also not the case of the Revenue that  the  assessee was  engaged  in the business of bringing  about  agreements between parties.  In fact. it is not the case of the Revenue that the assessee "as engaged in any business.  There is  no evidence to show that he was a business man.  His  discovery of  Kankar  as  well  as his  part  in  bringing  about  the agreement mentioned earlier were stray acts, possibly  occa- sioned by fortuitous circumstances. Business  as understood in the income-tax law connotes  some real,  substantial  and systematic or  organised  course  of activity  or conduct with a set purpose-see the decision  of this Court in Narain Swadeshi Weaving Mills v.  Commissioner of Excess Profits Tax(1).  By this statement we do not  mean to  say  that  under no circumstance  a  single  transaction cannot  amount to a business transaction.  But this  is  not one such.  Herein we are dealing with the stray activity  of a non-business man.  Hence it is difficult to agree with the Revenue in its contention that the agreement entered into by the assessee with the Dalmia Dadri Cement company should  be considered as a business activity. In  the determination of the question whether  a  particular receipt  is capital or an income, it is not possible to  lay down  any single test as infallible or any single  criterion as  decisive.   The question must ultimately depend  on  the facts of the particular case and the authorities bearing  on the  question  are valuable only as indicating  the  matters that  have to be taken into account in reaching a  decision. That,  however,  is not to say that the question is  one  of fact,  for  these  questions  between  capital  and  income, trading  profit or no trading profit, are  questions  which, though  they  may  depend  to a very  great  extent  on  the particular (1)  26 I.T.R. 765. 995 facts  of  each case, do involve conclusions of  law  to  be drawn  from  those  facts--see  Commissioner  of  Income-tax Nagpur v. Rai Bahadur Jairam Valij and ors.(1). The  controversy whether a particular receipt is capital  or revenue  has engaged the attention of this Court as well  as of the High Courts in numerous cases.  It is, by no means an easy  question  to  decide.   It  is  neither  feasible  nor profitable  to refer to those cases because in the  ultimate analysis  the decision in those cases rests on the facts  of each  case.  But the case nearest to the case before  us  is that decided by the House of Lords in Van Den Berghs Ltd. v. Clark(2).  The facts of that case were as follows : The assessee therein received a sum of pound 450,000 in full settlement  of all claims and counter-claims  which  existed between  the  assessee  and  a  Dutch  company.   Both   the companies had been engaged in the business of  manufacturing and  dealing  in margarine and similar products.   They  had

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entered  into pooling arrangements at as early a date as  in 1908  under which they bound themselves to work in  friendly alliance  and  to share their profits  of  their  respective business in margarine in specified proportions.  This  basic agreement of 1908 was being added to and varied from time to time  particularly  in 1913 and 1920 and,  under  this,  the agreement  was to subsist until 1940.  In 1922 the  assessee made  a  claim  against the Dutch company  for  about  pound 450,000  as the amount due to it by the Dutch company  under the  agreements recited just previously.  This  was  however repudiated and the Dutch company claimed that far from owing any moneys to the assessee, moneys were owing to them.   One of the methods suggested for putting an end ’to the  dispute was  by  a  termination of the  agreement  between  the  two companies but this was resisted by the assessee company.   A settlement   was,  however,  reached  in  1927  whereby   in consideration  of the payment by the Dutch company of  pound 450,000  to  the assessee as damages,  the  agreements  were determined as at 31st December, 1927 and each party released the  other  from all claims thereunder.   The  question  was whether  this sum of pound 450,000 was a revenue receipt  on which  the income-tax could be levied against the  assessee. The  matter  came up before Finlay J. He  held  against  the Crown.  According to him the sum received was not a  revenue receipt.  This decision was reversed by the Court of  Appeal but was restored on a further appeal by the House of  Lords. Finlay  J.  in  the course of his  judgment  formulated  the question to be considered by him in these terms               "I agree with Mr. Latter that there are  three               questions here.  The first is : What was  this               payment for? (1) 35 I.T.R. 148. (2) 19 Tax Cases 390= (1935) 3, I.T.R. Supp. 17. 996               The  second  is  : If  a  Payment  for  future               rights, is it assessable ? The third  question               is : Ought it to go into the year 1927." The learned judge’s answer to the first question was that it was a payment for future rights.  He held that it was really a  payment for cancelling such rights as subsisted in  the assessee  between 1928 and 1940.  Having answered the  first question in that manner the learned judge held on the second question  that it was not assessable.  In arriving  at  that conclusion he reasoned thus               "Not  without hesitation, I have come to  the,               conclusion   that   it  is   not   liable   to               assessment.  I think that the agreement  being               an agreement whereby this company had a  share               in  the  profits  of another  company,  was  a               capital asset.  I think that the case is to be               distinguished  from the case where there is  a               cancellation   of  a  contract  made  in   the               ordinary course of the company’s business ....               But it seems to me that where one gets, as one               does  here, not a contract made in the  course               of  the company’s business--for it is not  the               business  of  this  company  to  make  pooling               agreements or to make agreements whereby  they               acquired  shares  in the business  of  another               company-it  seems to me that where one gets  a               payment made in respect of the cancellation of               that agreement, that, truly is a sum  received               by way of capital and not an income receipt at               all." Lord Macmillan who delivered the leading judgment of House

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Lords put the case thus               "Now what were the appellants giving up?  They               gave   up   their  whole  rights   under   the               agreements  for thirteen years  ahead.   These               agreements  are  called in  the  stated  cases               ’pooling  agreements’  but  that  is  a   very               inadequate description of them, ’for they ’did               much  more  than  merely embody  a  system  of               pooling   and   sharing   profits.    If   the               appellants  were merely receiving in  one  sum               down  aggregate  of profits which  they  would               otherwise  have  received  over  a  series  of               years,  the lump sum might be regarded  as  of               the same nature as the ingredients of which it               was composed.  But even if payment is measured               by  annual receipts, it is not necessarily  in               itself  an  item  of  income.....  The   three               agreements  which the appellants consented  to               cancel were not ordinary commercial  contracts               made in the course of carrying on their trade;               they  were not contracts for the  disposal  of               their  products  or  for  the  engagements  of               agents or other employees necessary for the  997 .lm15 conduct of their business : nor were they merely  agreements as  to  how  their trading profits  when  earned  should  be distributed  as  between the contracting  parties.   On  the contrary,  the  cancelled agreements related  to  the  whole structure of the appellant’s profit making apparatus.   They regulated  the  appellant’s activities,  defined  what  they might  and  what they might not do, and affected  the  whole conduct of their business.  I have difficulty in seeing  how money  laid  out  to  secure,  or  money  received  for  the cancellation  of,  so  fundamental  an  Organisation  of   a trader’s   activities   can  be  regarded   as   an   income disbursement  or  an income receipt.... In my  opinion  that asset,  the congeris of rights which the appellants  enjoyed under the agreements and which for a price they  surrendered was a capital asset." It  is now well settled that a distinction has to  be  drawn between  a  payment made for past services or  discharge  of past   liabilities  and  that  made  for  compensation   for termination  of an income producing asset.  The former  does not  lose its revenue nature but the latter being a  payment for  destruction of a capital asset, must be  considered  as capital receipt. The  distinction  between a capital receipt  and  a  revenue receipt  came  up  for consideration before  this  Court  in Senairam Doongarmal v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Assam(1). The  assessee  therein owned tea estate  consisting  of  tea gardens,  factories  and  other  buildings,  carried  on   a business of growing and manufacturing tea.  The factory  and other buildings on the estate were requisitioned for defence purposes   by  the  military  authorities.    The   assessee continued to be in possession of the tea gardens and  tended them  to preserve the plants but the manufacture of tea  was completely stopped.  The assessee was paid compensation  for the year 1944-45 under the Defence of India Rules calculated on  the  basis of the out-turn of tea that would  have  been manufactured  by  the  assessee  during  that  period.   The question  was  whether  the  amounts  of  compensation  were revenue receipts taxable in the hands of the assessee.  This Court  held  that the first consideration before  holding  a receipt  to be profits or gains of business within s. 10  of

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the Income-tax Act was to see if there was a business at all of  which  it  could  be said  to  be  income’  The  primary condition of the application of section 10 was 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. Where  an  assessee  did not carry on business  at  all  the section  could not be made applicable and  any  compensation for requisition of (1) 42, I.T.R. 392. 998 assets  that  he received could not bear  the  character  of profits  of  a business.  The Court further  held  that  the amounts  of compensation received by the assessee were  not revenue receipts and did not comprise any element of income. It  is  true that in that case the Court  did  not  consider whether the income in question could have been considered as income from other sources but, the ratio of that decision is that the compensation paid being in respect of sterilisation of an income producing asset, the same should be  considered as a capital receipt. The only other decision we need make; reference is the deci- sion  of  this Court in Kettlewell Bullen and  Co.  Ltd.  v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Calcutta(1).  Therein this Court observed that it cannot be said as general rule that what is determinative of the nature of a receipt on the cancellation of  a  contract  of  agency  or  office  is  extinction   or compulsory cessation of the agency or office.  Where payment is  made  to  compensate  a person  for  cancellation  of  a contract which does not affect the trading structure of  his business  or deprive him of what in substance is his  source of  income,  termination  of the  contract  being  a  normal incident  of the business, and such cancellation leaves  him free  to carry on his trade though freed from  the  contract terminated,   the   receipt  is  revenue;   where   by   the cancellation  of  an  agency the trading  structure  of  the assessee  is impaired, or such cancellation results in  loss of  what  may be regarded as the source  of  the  assessee’s income,  the payment made to compensate for cancellation  of the  agency agreement is normally a capital receipt.,  These decisions lay down the tests to be applied in distinguishing a capital receipt from a revenue receipt.  With the guidance thus  afforded, let us now take a second look at  the  facts found  for answering the question referred.   The  assessee, possibly, by some fortuitous circumstance discovered  Kankar in some place in Jind State.  This circumstance gave him  an oportunity to bring about an agreement between the State  of Jind  and  Shanti Prasad Jain and when  Shanti  Parsad  Jain transferred his right to a new company, in the formation  of which  the  assessee  had a hand, he  was  promised  certain yearly commission on the net profits earned by the  company. None  of these activities of the assessee can be  considered as  a  business activity but yet he did  acquire  an  income yielding  asset  as  a result of his  activities.   But  the compromise  decree destroyed that asset and in its place  he was  given  Rs. 70,000 as compensation.   This  payment  was neither  in respect of the services rendered by him  in  the past nor towards the accumulated commission due to him.   It was paid as compensation to him because he gave up his right to get commission in future to which (1)  53, I.T.R. 261. 999 he  was entitled under the agreement.  It was a  price  paid for surrendering a valuable right which in our opinion was a capital asset.  Therefore that receipt must be considered as a capital receipt.

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For  the reasons mentioned above this appeal fails  and  the same is dismissed with costs. G.C.                              Appeal dismissed 1000