24 November 1965
Supreme Court
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KESORAM INDUSTRIES & COTTON MILLS LTD. Vs COMNMISSIONER OF WEALTH TAX, (CENTRAL) CALCUTTA

Case number: Appeal (civil) 539 of 1964


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PETITIONER: KESORAM INDUSTRIES & COTTON MILLS LTD.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: COMNMISSIONER OF WEALTH TAX, (CENTRAL) CALCUTTA

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 24/11/1965

BENCH: SUBBARAO, K. BENCH: SUBBARAO, K. SHAH, J.C. SIKRI, S.M.

CITATION:  1966 AIR 1370            1966 SCR  (2) 688  CITATOR INFO :  F          1967 SC 595  (3,6,9)  RF         1967 SC1895  (19)  E          1968 SC 331  (8)  R          1968 SC1047  (7)  R          1969 SC 408  (5)  R          1969 SC 612  (12,19)  R          1970 SC 352  (6,7)  R          1971 SC2458  (2)  F          1972 SC2600  (12)  F          1973 SC 996  (2)  R          1974 SC1265  (7)  R          1975 SC2016  (13)  R          1977 SC 142  (7)  RF         1979 SC 982  (7)  R          1981 SC1562  (4,6,7,13)  R          1981 SC2105  (14,24,43)  F          1984 SC 157  (3)  R          1984 SC 302  (1)  R          1984 SC 495  (2)  F          1985 SC 924  (9)  RF         1992 SC 847  (53)

ACT:      Wealth Tax Act (27 of 1957), ss. 2(m) and  7--Provision for  paying  Income-tax--If deductible  debt--Provision  for payment of dividend--When deductible--Scope of s. 7.

HEADNOTE:      In the profit and loss account of the appellant company for  the accounting year ending 31st March 1957,  a  certain sum of money was shown as the amount of dividend proposed to be  distributed for that year; and its balance-sheet  as  on that  date showed the value of its fixed assets and  another sum  as  a provision for tax liability under  the  Incometax Act. 1922.  In computing the net wealth for the purposes  of Wealth  Tax Act, 1957, the Wealth Tax Officer  accepted  the said valuation of the fixed assets under s. 7(2) of the Act, rejecting  the appellant’s plea that :,each item  should  be valued at the market rate under s. 7(1).  He also disallowed the  claim  of  the  appellant in  respect  of  the  proposd dividend and estimated tax liability on the ground that  the

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said  items were not debts within the meaning of s. 2(m)  of Act, on the- valuation date 31st March 1957.  The order  was confirmed by the Appellate Tribunal and by the High Court on a reference to it.       In appeal to this Court,       HELD  :  (i) The Wealth Tax Officer was  justified  in taking the value ,of the assets of the assessee as shown  in its balance-sheet on the relevant valuation date [693 F]       Under  s. 7, in the, case of an assessee, carrying  on business, the Wealth Tax Officer may determine the net value of  the assets of the business as a whole, having regard  to the balance-sheet of the business as on the valuation  date, and,  when the assessee himself had shown the net  value  of the assets at a figure, the Officer rightly accepted it.  It was  open to the assessee to convince the  authorities  that the; figure was inflated for acceptable, reasons but no such attempt was made,. [693 B, F, G]     (ii)  As on the valuation date nothing further  happened than a recommendation by the directors as to the amount that might be, distributed as dividend, it could not be held that there was any debt owed by the assessee to the share-holders on  the valuation date.  Therefore, the amount set apart  as proposed  dividend by the directors was not a debt  owed  by the  company  on the valuation date and  therefore  was  not deductible in computing the assessee’s net wealth under  s.. 2(m); [694 E]      (iii)(Per  Subba Rao and Sikri JJ).  The  liability  to pay  the tax is a debt within the meaning of s. 2(m) and  it arose  on the valuation date during the accounting year  and therefore,  was  deductible in computing the net  wealth  of the: assessee. [708 H]       Under  s. 3 of the Wealth Tax Act, the net  wealth  of the assessee is assessable as on the valuation date, at  the rate  or rates specified in the Schedule to the  Act.   "Net wealth"  is the amount by which the aggregate value  of  the assets if the assessee as on the said date is in excess 689 of the aggregate value of the debts owed by it.  A debt owed with in the meaning of s. 2(m) can be defined as a liability to  pay  in praesenti or in futuro an ascertainable  sum  of money.    A  debt  is  a  present  obligation  to   pay   an ascertainable sum of money, whether the amount is payable in praesenti  or in futuro, debitum in praesenti, solvendum  in futuro.   But  a  sum payable upon a  contingency  does  not become  a debt until the said, contingency has happened.   A liability to pay income-tax is a present liability though it becomes  payable after it is quantified in  accordance  with ascertainable  data.  Under ss. 3 and 67B of the  Income-tax Act, the assessee is liable to pay incometax and  supper-tax on its income: ascertained during the accounting year ending with 31st March, at the. rates prescribed under the  Finance Bill  or the previous Finance Act, whichever is  less.   The tax is to be charged in accordance with, and subject to, the provisions  of the Income-tax Act; but the charge win be  in accordance  with  the rates prescribed,  under  the  Finance Act.,  The  primary  object of the Finance Act  is  only  to prescribe  the rates so that the tax can. be  charged  under the  Income-tax  Act.   Section  67B  also  shows  that  the charging section is only s. 3 of the Income-tax Act and that s. 2 of the Finance Act only gives the rates for quantifying the tax; for, s. 67B gives an alternative for quantification in  the contingency of the Finance Act not being, passed  on 1st  April of the year.  The conclusion will then flow  that the tax liability at the latest will arise. on the last  day of  the accounting year.  There is thus a prefected debt  at

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any  rate on the last day of the accounting year and  not  a contingent   liability.    The   rate   is   always   easily ascertainable.  If the Finance Act is passed, it is the rate fixed  by  the  Act; if the Finance Act  has  not  yet  been passed, it is the rate proposed in the Finance Bill  pending before  Parliament  or the rate in force  in  the  preceding year, whichever is more favourable to the assessee.  All the ingredients  of  a  debt  are  present.   It  is  a  present liability of an ascertainable amount; [697 E; 703 E, F;  704 C, E, H; 705 A-B, 708 A-C]      Wallace  Brothers  and  Co.  Ltd.  v.  Commissioner  of Income-tax  Bombay, (1948) 16 I.T.R. 240  (P.C.);  Chatturam Horilram  Ltd.   V..  Commisssioner  of  Income-tax,  Bihar, (1950) 27 I.T.R. 709 (S.C.) and Kalwa Davadattam v. Union of India, (1963) 49 I.T.R. 165 (S.C.) followed.      Commissioner  of Wealth Tax, Bombay v.  Standard  Mills Co.  Ltd., (1963) 50 I.T.R. 267 and Commissioner  of  Wealth Tax, Kerala v. Travancore Rayon Ltd., (1964) 54 I.T.R.  332, disapproved.       Looking  at  the  problem from  the  standpoint  of  a businessman  or looking at the question from  a  commonsense view,  one; will reasonably hold that the net wealth  of  an assessee, during the accounting year is the income earned by him minus the tax payable by him in respect of that  income. [697 A]       Per Shah J. (dissenting); The liability to pay the tax is not a debt arising on the valuation date and therefore is not  deductible in computing the net wealth of the  assessee under s. 2(m).       A  debt involves a present obligation incurred by  the debtor  and a liability to pay a sum of money in present  or in  future.  The liability must however be to pay a  sum  of money,  that  is, to pay an amount which  is  determined  or determinable  in the light of factors existing it the  date, when the nature of the liability has to be ascertained,  but the   expression   does  not  include   liability   to   pay unliquidated damages nor obligations which are inchoate.  or contingent. [711 A, C]       Under  s.  3 of the Income Tax Act,  liability  to  be taxed  becomes effective not later than the last day of  the year  of account.  But the liability to may tax arises,  not from the estimate made, but only when 690 the Finance Act becomes operative on the first day of  April of ’,he assessment year either by enactment of an Act or  by virtue  of  s.  67B of the  Income-tax  Act.   Section  67B, however,  operates only on the first day of the  assessment year,  that  is, after the valuation date  and  not  before. Therefore, the existence on the Statute Book of s. 67B  does not  convert what is an inchoate liability on the  valuation date  into a completed or ,effective liability to  pay  tax. Hence, the liability to pay tax, in the present case, at the earliest,  arose on the first day of April 1957,  but  that, under  the Wealth Tax Act, is not the valuation  date.   The liability  to  pay wealth tax becomes  crystallised  on  the valuation  date though the tax is levied for the  assessment year,  and  on  the  valuation date  there  is  normally  no completed or effective charge for income-tax payable for the assessment year, because, the liability to tax did not  give rise  to  any obligation  to pay a  sum  of  money  either determined or determinable in the light of factors  existing on that date. [712 D-E; 716 C-F; 717 A]     To  a commercial man the distinction  between  liability which arises ’immediately and a liability to arise in future may be blurred : but that in law is a real distinction and a

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liability which arises in the year of assessment may not  be projected into the account of the previous year. [716 G]     There is no warrant for the argument that  substantially s.  7(2)  is  a definition section, which  extends  for  the purposes of the Act their definition of the "net wealth" of assessees carrying on business.  Neither cl. (a) nor cl. (b) of the; section is directed towards the determination of the net  wealth,  and it would be impossible to  hold  that  the Legislature intended that the net wealth for the purpose of the charge to tax under s. 3 should be the net value of  the assets as determined under s. 7(2). [719 B-D]      The  power conferred upon the Wealth Tax Officer by  s. 7(2)  is to :arrive at a valuation of the assets and not  to arrive  at  the  net wealth of the  assessee.   The  section merely  provides machinery in certain special cases for  the valuation of assets, and it is from the aggregate  valuation of  assets  that  the net wealth chargeable to  tax  may  be ascertained.   It does not contemplate determination of  the net wealth, because, net wealth can only be determined  from the net value of the assets by making appropriate deductions for  debts  owed  by the asseessee.   Section  7(2)(b)  only contemplates cases where a company not resident in India  is carrying  on  business  and it is not  possible  to  make  a computation  in  accordance  with cl.  (a)  because  of  the absence  of a separate- balance sheet of the company.  [718 B, D-F]      Chatturam Holliram Ltd. v. Commissioner of  Income-tax, Bihar and Orissa, 27 I.T.R. 709 (S.C.) referred to.      Wallace  Brothers  and  Co.  Ltd.  v.  Commissioner  of Income-tax,   Bombay,  ’16  I.T.R.  240  (P.C.)  and   Kalwa Devadattam  v.  Union  of  India,  49  I.T.R.  165   (S.C.), explained.

JUDGMENT:      CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 539  of 1964.      Appeal  from the judgment and order dated May 14,  1962 of  the Calcutta High Court in Wealth Tax Reference No.  178 of 1960.      N.   A.  Palkhivala, S. T. Desai, R. K.  Chaudhury,  S. Murthi .and B. P. Maheshwari, for the appellant.  691       A.  V.  Viswanatha  Sastri,  N. D.  Karkhanis,  R.  N. Sachthey,  B.  R.  G.  K. Achar and R. H.  Dhebar,  for  the respondent.      The Judgment of Subba Rao and Sikri, JJ. was  delivered by Subba Rao J. Shah,    J. delivered a dissenting Opinion.      Subba  Rao,  J.  Kesoram Industries  and  Cotton  Mills Limited,  the  appellant herein, is a  company  incorporated under  the Indian Companies Act.  Its subscribed capital  at the  end  of the relevant accounting year ending  March  31, 1957, was Rs. 2,29,99,125/-.  The original cost of the  said assets  was Rs. 2,30,32,833/-.  During the year ended  March 31,  1950, the company made a revaluation of its assets  and added  an  amount of Rs. 1,45,87,000/- to the costs  of  the said fixed assets.  After certain adjustments, the value  of the  fixed assets was fixed at Rs. 2,60,52,357/-.  The  said fixed  assets  of the assessee were shown  in  the  balance- sheets issued by the assessee from time to time at the added value less depreciation calculated on the original cost.  In the  balance-sheet of the relevant accounting year also  the said amount was shown as the value of the fixed assets.   In the  profit and loss account for the said year a sum of  Rs.

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15,29,855/- was shown as the amount of dividend proposed  to be distributed for that year.  The said amount was  declared as dividend at the General Body Meeting of the assessee held on  November 27, 1957.  ’The said balance-sheet as on  March 31, 1957, also showed a provision for taxation amounting  to Rs.  1,03,69,009/- and as against the said amount a  sum  of Rs. 84,76,690/- was shown as the +.axes paid during the said accounting year.      In computing the net wealth for the purposes of  Wealth Tax  Act,  1957, the Wealth Tax Officer  accepted  the  said valuation of the fixed assets under s. 7(2) of the said Act, rejecting  the  plea of the assessee that each item  of  the assets  should  be valued at the market rate under  s.  7(1) thereof.   He also disallowed the claim of the  assessee  in respect  of the proposed dividend and  estimated  income-tax and  super-tax  on the ground that the said items  were  not debts  on the valuation date, i.e., March 31,  1957,  within the meaning of s. 2 (m) of the Wealth Tax Act.  Or)  appeal, the  said  order was confirmed by  the  Appellate  Assistant Commissioner  except to the extent of outstanding demand  of income-tax  for  Rs.  30,305/-.   On  further  appeals,  the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal, Calcutta Bench "A", not  only disallowed  the claims of the assessee but also allowed  the appeal of the Department in regard to Rs. 30,305,/-, subject to  certain directions given by it.  At the instance of  the assessee, the following three 692 questions were referred to the High Court under s. 27 of the Wealth Tax Act:               (1)   Whether,  on  the  facts  and   in   the               circumstances  of  the case,  the  Wealth  Tax               Officer  was justified in taking the value  of               the  assets  of the assessee as shown  in  its               Balance Sheet on the relevant valuation date.               (2)   Whether,  on  the  facts  and   in   the               circumstances  of the case, in  computing  the               net  wealth  of  the assessee  the  amount  of               proposed  dividend  was  deductible  from  its               total assets.               (3)   Whether,  on  the  facts  and   in   the               circumstances  of the case, in  computing  the               net wealth of the assessee, the amount of  the               provision for payment of income-tax and super-               tax  in respect of the year of account  was  a               debt  owed within the meaning of Section  2(m)               of  the  Wealth  Tax Act, 1957,  and  as  such               deductible in computing the net wealth of  the               assessee.      The High Court answered the three question against  the assessee.Hence the present appeal.      Mr. Palkhivala, learned counsel for the assessee raised before  us  the  same arguments  as  he  had  unsuccessfully pressed  before the High Court.  We shall take each of  them seriatim for our consideration.      The first question is whether the High Court was  right in   agreeing   with  the  Tribunal  that   the   assessee’s revaluation  of  the  assets  should  be  accepted  for  the purposes of the Wealth Tax Act.  Section 7 of the Wealth Tax Act  lays down how the value of assets is to be  ascertained for the purposes of the said Act.  It reads               (1)   The value of any asset, other than cash,               for  the  purposes  of  this  Act,  shall   be               estimated to be the price which in the opinion               of  the Wealth Tax Officer it would  fetch  if               sold in the open market on the valuation date.

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             (2)   Notwithstanding  anything  contained  in               subsection (1)--               (a)   where  the  assessee is  carrying  on  a               business for which accounts are maintained  by               him  regularly,  the Wealth-tax  Officer  may,               instead 693               of  determining separately the value  of  each               asset  held by the assessee in such  business,               determine  the net value of the assets of  the               business  as  a  whole having  regard  to  the               balance-sheet  of  such  business  as  on  the               valuation  date  and making  such  adjustments               therein  as the circumstances of the case  may               require. Under  this section in the case of an assessee  carrying  on business the Wealth-tax Officer may determine the net  value of  the assets of the business as a *hole having  regard  to the balance-sheet of the business as on the valuation  date. The  balance-sheet,  as indicated earlier, as on  March  31, 1957,  showed  the appreciated value on revaluation  of  the assets at Rs. 2,60,52,357/-.  As the value of the assets had increased,  a.  corresponding balancing  figure,  viz.,  Rs. 1,45,87,000/-  was introduced in capital reserve  surplus  : that  figure  represented the increase in the value  of  the assets.   It  was argued that the revaluation was  done  for other purposes, that it did not represent the real value of the  assets  and that fact was also reflected  by  the  said amount representing the difference being shown as a  capital surplus.  Apart from the a argument raised, there is nothing on  the  record  to disclose why the  said  figure  did  not represent  the correct value of the assets.  We do not  also see how the fact that the said increase was shown as capital surplus would detract from the correctness of the  valuation for the corresponding balancing figure had to be  introduced in  the balance-sheet.  Under S. 211 of the  Companies  Act, 1956 every balance-sheet of a company must give a true  send fair  view of the state of its affairs as at the end of  the financial year.  When the assessee himself has shown the net value of the assets ,it a figure, the Wealth-tax Officer, in our  view,  rightly  accepted it, as no  one  could sanction better  the value of the assets than the  assessee  himself. It was open to the assesee to convince the authorities  that the said figure was inflated for accountable reasons; but it did  not  make any such attempt.  It was also  open  to  the Wealth  Tax  Officer  to  reject the  figure  given  by  the assessee  and to substitute in its place another figure,  if he  was. for sufficient reasons, satisfied that  the  figure given  by the assessee was wrong.  But he did not  find  any such  reasons to do so.  Where he accented the figure  shown by the assessee himself, he did the right thing and there is nothing  to  complain about.  The High Court  was  right  in answering the first question in the affirmative. The second question does not called for a detailed  scrutiny Under s. 2(m) of the Wealth-tax Act, "net-wealth" means  the CI/66-14 694 amount  by which the aggregate value computed in  accordance with the provisions of the said Act of all the assets of the assessee on the valuation date is in excess of the aggregate value  of  all the debts owed by the assessee  on  the  said date.   The Directors of the assessee company showed in  the profit  and  loss account a sum of Rs. 15,29,855/-  as  the amount  of dividend proposed to be distributed for the  year ending March 31, 1957; but the said dividend was declared by

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the company at its General Body Meeting only on November 27, 1957.   The  question  is whether the amount  set  apart  as dividend by the Directors, was a debt owed by the company on the valuation date.      The Directors cannot distribute dividends but they  can Only  recommend  to  the General Body  of  the  Company  the quantum of dividend to be distributed.  Under S. 217 of  the Indian  Companies  Act,  there shall be  attached  to  every balance-sheet  laid  before a company in general  meeting  a report  by  its board of directors with  respect  to,  inter alia, the amount, if any, which it recommends to be paid  by way  of  dividend.   Till the company in  its  general  body meeting   accepts  the  recommendation  and   declares   the dividend, the report of the directors in that regard is only a recommendation which may be withdrawn or modified, as  the case may be.  As on the valuation date nothing further  hap- pened than a mere recommendation by the directors as to  the amount  that  might be distributed as dividend,  it  is  not possible  to  hold  that  there was any  debt  owed  by  the assessee  to  the shareholders on the valuation  date.   The High  Court  rightly  answered the second  question  in  the negative.      The third question raised a serious controversy between the  parties.   On this question the High  Court  held  that although  the assessee was liable to pay income-tax  on  the valuation  date, the actual amount of the liability was  not ascertained until some time after the passing of the Finance Act  and  determination made by the  income-tax  authorities and,  therefore,  no debt was owed by the  assessee  on  the valuation  date.   In  that  view,  it  answered  the  third question in the negative.       A   few  facts  relevant  to  this  question  may   be recapitulated.  Under the Wealth Tax Act, 1957, the  Wealth- tax  Officer  valued the net wealth of the  assessee  as  on March  31,  1957, which was the valuation  date  as  defined under  the  said Act.  The Finance Act came  into  force  on April 1, 1957.  The question is whether the liability to pay income-tax and super-tax became a debt owed by the  assessee on March 31, 1957, or on April 1, 1957 : if it 695 was a debt on the latter date, it could not be deducted from the  gross  assets  of the assesses to  arrive  at  the  net wealth,  if  it was on the former date, it  could  be.   Mr. Palkhivala  argued  that the liability to pay tax  arose  by virtue of the charging section, i.e., S. 3 of the Income-tax Act,  and  that  it arose not later than the  close  of  the previous  year  though  the  quantification  of  the  amount payable  was postponed till the Finance Act was  passed  and that,  therefore it being a liability in praesenti  existing on the valuation date, it was a debt owed by the assesses on the said date.  Mr. A. V. Viswanatha Sastri, learned counsel for  the  Revenue, argued that the  expression  "debt  owed" meant  an obligation to pay an ascertained amount, that  the said  obligation to pay incometax arose only on the  passing of  the  Finance Act and that, therefore, on  the  valuation date  no  debt was owed by the assessee  to  the  Department within the meaning of s. 2(m) of the Wealth Tax Act.    AT  the  outset  it  will be  convenient  to  gather  the material provisions of the relevant Acts at one place.  They read                           WEALTH TAX ACT, 1957.                   Section  2(m).   "net  wealth"  means  the               amount  by which the aggregate value  computed               in accordance with the provisions of this  Act               of all the assets, wherever located, belonging

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             to   the  assesses  on  the  valuation   date,               including  assets required to be  included  in               his net wealth as on that date under this Act,               is in excess of the aggregate value of all the               debts  owed by the assessee on  the  valuation               date.........                   Section 3. Subject to the other provisions               contained  in this Act there shall be  charged               for  every  financial year commencing  on  and               from  the  first  day of April,  1957,  a  tax               (hereinafter  referred  to as  wealth-tax)  in               respect of the net wealth on the corresponding               valuation  date  Of  every  individual,  Hindu               undivided  family and company at the  rate  or               rates specified in the Schedule.                   Section   2  (q).   "valuation  date"   in               relation  to any year for which an  assessment               has to be made under this Act, is the last day               of the previous year as defined in clause (11)               of  Section  2  of the Income-tax  Act  if  an                             assessment  were to be made under that  Act  for               that               year ................. 696                       INCOME-TAX ACT, 1922               Section 2. (II) "previous year" means-               (i)  in  respect  of any  separate  source  of               income, profits and gains-               (a)  the twelve months ending on the 31st  day               of March next preceding the year for which the               assessment is to be made, or, if the  accounts               of  the assessee have been made up to  a  date               within the said twelve months in respect of  a               year  ending on any date other than  the  said               31st day of March, then, at the option of  the               assessee, the year ending on the date to which               his accounts have been so made up.      Section 3. Where any Central Act enacts that income-tax shall  be charged for any year at any rate or rates, tax  at that  rate or those rates shall be charged for that year  in accordance with, and subject to the provisions of, this  Act in  respect  of the total income of ’the  previous  year  of every individual, Hindu undivided family, company and  local authority,  and  of  every firm and  other  association  of persons  or the partners of the firm or the members  of  the association individually.      Section 55.  In addition to the income-tax charged  for any  year, there shall be charged. levied and paid for  that year in respect of the total income of the previous year  of any  individual,  Hindu  undivided  family,  company,  local authority,   unregistered  firm  or  other  association   of persons, not being a registered firm, or the partners of the firm   or  members  of  the  association  individually,   an additional  duty of income-tax (in this Act referred  to  as supplier-tax)  at the rate or rates laid down for that  year by a Central Act.........      Section  67B.  If on the 1st day of April in  any  year provision  has  not yet been made by a Central Act  for  the charging of income-tax for that year, this Act shall  never- theless  have effect until such provision is so made  as  if the  provision  in force in the preceding year or  the  pro- vision   proposed  in  the  Bill  then  before   Parliament, whichever is more favourable to the assessee, were  actually in force.

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697 THE  FINANCE (NO. 2) ACT, 1957 (ACT NO.  XXVI of  1957)  (It received the assent of the President on September 11, 1957).     Section  2.  (  1 ) Subject to the  provisions  of  sub- sections (2), (3), (4) and (5) for the year beginning on the 1st day of April, 1957,-               (a)  income-tax shall be charged at the  rates               specified  in  Part I of the  First  Schedule,               and, in the cases to which Paragraphs A, B and               C of that Part apply, shall be increased by  a               surcharge  for  purposes of the  Union  and  a               special   surcharge   on   unearned    income,               calculated  in  either  case  in  the   manner               provided therein; and               (b)  super-tax  shall,  for  the  purposes  of               section 55 of the Indian Income-tax Act,  1922               (XI  of 1922) (hereinafter referred to as  the               Income-tax  Act),  be  charged  at  the  rates               specified   in   Part   11   of   the    First               Schedule............. A  gist of the said provisions, excluding the  controversial points,.  relevant to the assessment under scrutiny  may  be given thus Under s. 3 of the Wealth-tax Act, the net  wealth of  the  assessee was assessable as on the  valuation  date, i.e., March 31, 1957, at the rate or rates specified in  the Schedule  to  the said Act.  "Net Wealth" is the  amount  by which  the aggregate value of the assets of the assessee  as on the said date is in excess of the aggregate value of  the debts  owed  by  it on the said date.  Under  s.  3  of  the Income-tax  Act, the assessee was liable to  pay  income-tax and   super-tax  on  its  income  ascertained   during   the accounting  year  ending with March 31, 1957, at  the  rates prescribed  under the Finance Bill or the  previous  Finance Act  whichever  was  less, as the Finance Act  of  1957  was passed  only  in  September, 1957.   On,  those  facts,  the question  is  whether the liability of the assessee  to  pay income-tax and super-tax arose on the valuation date,  i.e., March  31,  1957, the last day of the  accounting  year,  or subsequently  during the assessment year, i.e.,  during  the period April 1, 1957 to March 31, 1958.      Looking  at  the  problem  from  the  standpoint  of  a businessman  or looking at the question from  a  commonsense view,  one will’ reasonably hold that the net wealth  of  an assessee during the accounting year is the income earned  by him minus the tax payable by him in respect of that  income. If a person earns Rs. 1 ,00,000/- during the accounting year and  has  to  pay Rs. 60,000/- as tax  in  respect  of  that income, it will be incongru- 698 ous  to suggest that his wealth at the end of that  year  is Rs.  1,00,000/-.  A reasonable man will say that his  income is  ,Only Rs. 40,000/-, which represents his wealth  at  the end  of the year.  But it is said that what is just  is  not always  legal.  This Court has, on more than  one  occasion, emphasized the fact that the real income of an assessee  has to  be ascertained on commercial principles subject  to  the provisions of the Income-tax Act.  Is there any provision in the Wealth-tax Act which compels us to come to a  conclusion which is unjust on the face of it ?      The  problem presented can satisfactorily be solved  by answering   two  questions,  namely,  (1)  what   does   the expression  "debt  ,owed"  mean  ? and  (2)  when  does  the liability to pay income-tax and super-tax under the Income- tax  Act  become  a debt owed within  the  meaning  of  that expression ?

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    If  we  ascertain the meaning of the word  "debt",  the expression  "owed" does not cause any difficulty.  The  verb "owe" means "to be under an obligation to pay".  It does not really add to the meaning of the word "debt".  What does the word  "debt" mean ?  A simple but a clear definition of  the word  is found in Webb v. Stenton(1) wherein Lindley,  L.J., said:               ".......... a debt is a sum of money which  is               now  payable  or will become  payable  in  the               future  by  reason of  a  present  obligation,               debitum in praesenti, solvendum in futuro." This  view  was accepted by the other  Lord  Justices.   The Court  of  Appeal  in  O’Driscoll  v.  Manchester  Insurance Committee (2 ) considered the word "debt" in the context  of fees  payable  by  National  Insurance  Committee  to  Panel Doctor.   The  Insurance Committee entered  into  agreements with the panel doctors of their ,district by which the whole amounts   received  by  the  committee  from  the   National Insurance  Commissioners were to be pooled  and  distributed among the panel doctors in accordance with a scale of  fees. The Court held that where a panel doctor had done work under his   agreement  with  the  insurance  committee,  and   the committee  had received funds in respect of medical  benefit from the National Insurance Commissioners, there was a  debt owing or accruing from the insurance committee to the  panel doctor  which  might  be attached, though  the  exact  share payable to him was not yet ascertained.  It was argued there that  there could not be a debt until the amount  had  been ascertained and in support of that contention cases relating to unliquidated damages were cited.  Dis- (1) (1883) 11 Q.B.D. 518,527. (2) (1915) 3 K.B.D. 499, 512, 515, 517. 699 tinguishing those cases on the ground that there was no debt until  the verdict of the jury was pronounced assessing  the damages   and  judgment  was  given,  Swinfen  Eady,   L.J., observed:                   "Here  there  is  a  debt,  uncertain   in               amount,which  will  become  certain  when  the               accounts   are  finally  dealt  with  by   the               Insurance  Committee.  Therefore, there was  a               "debt" at the material date, though it was not               presently  payable  and  the  amount  was  not               ascertained." Phillimore,  L.J.,  dealing with the argument based  on  the fact  that  the sums were not ascertained at the  time  they were sought to be attached, observed               "No  doubt  these  debts  were  not  presently               payable, and the amounts were not, on April 9,               1914,  ascertained in the sense that  no  on-,               could say what the result of the  calculations                             would be, but it was certain on that d ate  that               a payment would become due from the  committee               to  the  doctors  out of the  balance  of  the               moneys  in  the  hands of  the  Committee  for               1913...........               So also Bankes, L.J. observed               "Dr.   Sweeny fulfilled that condition, and  a               debt  arose, though the amount of it  was  not               ascertained on April 9, 1914, and was not then               payable."     This   judgment  in  substance  ruled  that  a   present liability  to  pay an amount in future, though  it  was  not ascertained  but  was ascertainable, was a  debt  liable  to

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attachment.     The  word "debt" was again considered in Inland  Revenue Commissioners  v. Bagnall, Ltd. (1) in connection  with  the excess  profits  tax.  There, the Board  of  Inland  Revenue accepted  an  offer of pound 10,000 made by  the  respondent company’s   accountants  in  settlement  of  their   earlier liability.   That offer was accepted only on  September  22, 1937.   The  company contended that the sum was a  debt  due from the respondent to the Inland Revenue as from January 1, 1935.   As the offer was not accepted, it was held that  the sum was not a debt.  It was argued that even if there was  a liability on January 1, 1935, that liability did not  become a debt within the meaning of the Finance (No. 2) Act,  1939. Adverting to that argument, Macnaghten, J., observed:               "It  is  true  that the word  ’debt’  may,  in               certain connections, be used so as to cover  a               mere liability, but I (1) [1944] 1 All. E.R. 204,206. 700               think  that  in  this Act it is  used  in  the               proper  sense of an ascertained sum  and  that               the contention of the Attorney-General is well               founded." This  decision,  while holding that in the context  of  the, Finance,  Act of 1939 there was no debt until the  liability was quantified, conceded that the expression "debt" was wide enough  to take in a liability; it also did not  define  the scope  of  the  expression "ascertained",  that  is  to  say whether   the   said  expression  would  take   in   amounts ascertainable.     The,  King’s Bench Division in Seabrook Estate Co.  Ltd. v.  Ford(1) held that money in the hands of a  Receiver  for debentureholders  was  not  a debt  owing  or  accruing  and therefore,  was not liable to attachment.  But Hallett,  J., accepted the following proposition laid down by Rowlatt, J., in O’Driscoll v. Manchester Insurance Committee(2);      "........Where  a debt is established in praesenti,  it is not sufficient objection to say that the exact amount  of the debt will be the subject of a calculation which has  not yet been made and, it may be, cannot yet be made." This question fell to be decided again in Dawson v.  Preston (Law  Society,  Garnishee)  (3) .  The  question  there  was whether  a sum representing damages paid to legal  aid  fund could  be  attached  by  a  creditor  of  a  legally   aided plaintiff.  At the time when the garnishee order was  sought to  be issued a part of the decree amount was with  the  Law Society, subject to any charge conferred on the Law  Society to  cover  the prescribed deductions which  remained  to  be quantified,  e.g.  deduction  for the  taxed  costs  of  the action.   The  Court held that there was  an  existing  debt although  the payment of the debt was deferred  pending  the ascertainment  of the amount of the charge in favour of  the Law Society.  Ormerod, J., observed :                    "......  that  is merely  a  question  of               ascertaining  the  debt which has to  be  paid               over  to  the  assisted person  and  does  not               prevent that debt from being an existing  debt               at the material date." This decision also recognized that, if there was a liability in praesenti, the fact that the amount was to be ascertained did not make it any the less a debt.      In  Dunlop  & Ranken Ltd. v. Hendall  Steel  Structures Ltd.(Pitchers  Ltd.-Garnishees)  (4) it was  held  that  the issuing of the (1)  [1949] 2 All.E.R. 94, 96.

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(3)  [1955] 3 All.E.R. 314, 318. (2)  [1915] 3 K.B.D. 499. (4)  [1957] 1 W.L.R. 1102,1104.  701 architect’s  certificate  was just as much a  necessity  for investing a cause of action in sub-contractors as it was  in the main, contracts,, and the judgment debtors had no  right to  be  paid,  and therefore there was no  debt,  until  the architect  had certified the amount to be paid for the  work ordered  by  the gamishees.  On that reasoning it  was  held that  no  garnishee  order should have  been  made.   Strong reliance was placed on this decision in support of the  con- tention of the Revenue that there could not be a debt if the ascertainment of the debt depended upon a certificate to  be issued  by  a third party.  But a perusal  of  the  judgment shows that in such contracts a certificate by the  architect was   a  condition  for  imposing  a  liability  and   that, therefore,  till such a condition was completed  with  there could  not  be any debt.  This decision does not  throw  any light  on  the  question that now  arises  before  us.   The principle of the matter is well put in the Annual  Practice, 1950, at p. 808, thus :                   "But the distinction must be borne in mind               between  the case where there is  an  existing               debt, payment whereof is deferred, and a  case               where  both the debt and its payment  rest  in                             the  future.   In the former case ther e  is  an               attachable  debt, in the latter case there  is               not.   If  for  instance, a sum  of  money  is               payable  on  the happening of  a  contingency,               there  is no debt owing or accruing.  But  the               mere  fact that the amount is not  ascertained               does not show that there is no debt." In our view this is a full and accurate statement of law  on thesubject  and the said statement is supported  by  English decisions we have discussed earlier.       We  shall  now  notice some of the  decisions  of  the Indian Courts on this aspect.        A  special  Bench of the Madras High Court  in  Sabju Sahib v.Noordin Sahib(1) held that a claim for  unliquidated sum  of  money  was not a debt within  the  meaning  of  the Succession  Certificate Act, 1889, s. 4(1) (a).   The  claim was  to  have an account taken of the  partnership  business that  was carried on between the deceased and others and  to have  the  share  of the deceased paid over to  him  as  the representative of the deceased.  Shephard, Officiating C.J., said                       "It is quite clear that this is not  a               debt,  for there was at the time of the  death               no present obligation to pay a liquidated  sum               of money.  The claim is one about which (1) (1899) I.L.R. 22 Mad. 139,141, 702               there  is no certainty; it may turn  out  that               there is nothing due to the plaintiff." Subramania Ayyar, J., did not consider that claim as a  debt for the that the liability arising from the obligation of  a partner  to account to the other partners could not be  held to  be  a debt in the accepted ordinary legal sense  of  the term  for the obvious reason that the liability was  not  in respect of a liquidated sum.  An obligation to account  does not give rise to a debt, for the liability to pay will arise only  after  the accounts were taken and the  liability  was ascertained.   In the context of the Succession  Certificate

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Act, such an obligation was rightly held not to be a debt.      The decision of a Full Bench of the Calcutta High Court in  Banchharam Majumdar v. Adyanath Bhattacharjee(1)  throws considerable  light on the connotation of the word  "debt"., Jenkins, defined that word thus:       "......  I take it to be well established that a  debt is  a  sum  of money which is now  payable  or  will  become payable in future by reason of a present obligation."       Mookerjee,  J.,  quoted  the  following  passage  with approval   from  the  judgment  of  the  Supreme  Court   of California in People v.Arguello (2) :                     "Standing alone, the word  ’debt’  is as               applicable  to a sum of money which  has  been               promised  at a future day as to a sum now  due               and  payable.   If  we  wish  to   distinguish                             between  the two, we say of the former  that  it               is a debt owing, and of the latter that it  is               a debt due.  In other words, debts are of  two               kinds  : solvendum in praesenti and  solvendum               in future............... A sum of money  which               is  certainly and in all events payable  is  a               debt, without regard to the fact whether it be               payable  now  or  at a  future  time.   A  sum               payable upon a contingency, however, is not  a               debt,  or  does not become a  debt  until  the               contingency has happened." This   passage  brings  out  with  clarity   the   essential characteristics  of a debt.  It also indicates that  a  debt owing is a debt payable in future.  It also distinguishes  a debt from a liability for a sum payable upon a contingency.      A  Full  Bench of the Madras High  Court  in  Doraisami Padayachi  v. Vithilinga Padayachi(3) ruled that "a  promise to pay the (1) (1909) I.L.R. 36 Cal. 936, 938-939, 941. (2) (1869) 37 Calif. 524. (3) (1917) I.L.R. 40 Mad. 31. 703 amount  which  may be found due by an arbitrator  on  taking accounts  between  the  parties is not a promise  to  pay  a ’debt’  within the meaning of s. 25 of the  Indian  Contract Act, 1872, the amount not being a liquidated sum." This  was because the liability to pay the amount arose only after the arbitrator  decided that a particular amount was due to  one or other of the parties.     The  Calcutta  High  Court  in  Jabed  Sheikh  v.  Taher Mallik(1)  held that "a liability for mesne profits under  a preliminary   decree  therefor,  though  not  a   contingent liability,  does  not  become  a  ’debt’  till  the   amount recoverable, if any, is ascertained and a final decree for a specified sum is passed".  That conclusion was arrived at on the basis of the principle that a claim for damages does not become a debt till the judgment is actually delivered.     We have briefly noticed the judgments cited at the  Bar. ’Mere  is no conflict on the definition of the word  "debt". All  the decisions agree that the meaning of the  expression "debt" may take colour from the provisions of the  concerned Act:  it  may  have different shades of  meaning.   But  the following definition is unanimously accepted :                   "a  debt  is a sum of money which  is  now               payable  or will become payable in  future  by               reason  of  a present obligation:  debitum  in               praesenti, solvendum in futuro."      The said decisions also accept the legal position  that a  liability depending upon a contingency is not a  debt  in

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praesenti  or in futuro till the contingency happened.   But if  there  is  a  debt the fact that the  amount  is  to  be ascertained  does  not make it any the less a  debt  if  the liability   is  certain  and  what  remains  is   only   the quantification of   the  amount.   In  short,  a  debt  owed within the meaning of s. 2 (m) of the Wealth Tax Act can  be defined as a liability to pay in   praesenti or in futuro an ascertainable sum of money.       With this background let us look at the provisions  of the  Income-tax  Act and the decisions bearing  on  them  to ascertain  whether a liability to pay income-tax and  super- tax  on the income of the accounting year is a  debt  within the meaning of s. 2 (m) of the Wealth Tax Act.       The  first  question is, whether s. 3  of  the  Indian Income-tax  Act, 1922, or s. 2 of the Finance (No.  2)  Act, 1957,  is the charging section.  The Revenue  contends  that the Finance Act is the charging section and that, therefore, the  liability accrued only on the first day of April  1957, while the assessee says that s. 3 of the (3) (1941) 45 C.W.N. 519. 704 Income-tax Act is the charging section and that the  Finance Act only prescribed the rate of tax payable.     Uninfluenced by judicial decisions let us at the  outset look at the relevant provisions of the two Acts.  Under S. 3 of  the  Incometax Act, where any Central  Act  enacts  that income-tax  shall  be charged for any year at  any  rate  or rates, tax at that rate or those rates shall be charged  for that year in accordance with, and subject to the  provisions of,  the said Act.  The expression charged" is used both  in the case of the Central Act, i.e., the Finance Act, and  the Income-tax Act.  It could not have been the intention of the Legislature  to  charge the income to income-tax  under  two Acts.    Necessarily,  therefore,  they  are  used  in   two different senses.  The tax is to be charged for that year in accordance  with,  and  subject to, the  provisions  of  the Income-tax  Act; but the said charge will be  in  accordance with  the  rates  prescribed under the  Finance  Act.   This construction  will harmonize the apparent  conflict  between the two Acts.  When you look at s. 2 of the Finance Act,  it shows  that  income-tax  shall  be  charged  at  the   rates specified  in Part I of the First Schedule,  and  super-tax, for the purpose of s. 55 of the Income-tax Act, 1922,  shall be  charged at the rates specified in Part 11 of  the  First Schedule.  The primary object of the Finance Act is only  to prescribe the rates so that the tax can be charged under the Income-tax  Act.   The Income-tax Act is  a  permanent  Act, whereas  the Finance Act is passed every year and  its  main purpose is to fix the rates to be charged under the  Income- tax  Act for that year.  That should be the construction  is also  made clear by s. 55 of the Income-tax Act,  Thereunder super-tax  shall be charged for any year in respect  of  the total  income of the previous year of any individual,  Hindu undivided  family,  company etc. at the rate or  rates  laid down  for that year by a Central Act.  This  section  brings out  the distinction between a tax charged and the  rate  at which  it is charged.  This construction is also  emphasized by  s. 67B of the Income-tax Act, whereunder if on  the  1st day of April in any year provision has not yet been made  by a Central Act for the charging of income-tax for that  year, the Income-tax Act shall nevertheless have effect until such Provision  is  so made as if the provision in force  in  the preceding  year or the provision proposed in the  Bill  then before  Parliament.  whichever  is more  favourable  to  the assessee,  was  actually  in force.   This  shows  that  the

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charging section is only s. 3 of the Income-tax Act and that s. 2 of the Finance Act only gives the rate for  quantifying the  tax;  for,  this  section  gives  an  alternative   for quantification  in  the contingency of the Finance  Act  not having 705 been  made  on the 1st day of April of that year.   Even  if such  an Act was made, the charge under the  Income-tax  Act should  be  imposed  and worked out only  in  terms  of  the provisions   of  the  Income-tax  Act.   If  that   be   the construction,   the  conclusion  will  flow  that  the   tax liability  at the latest will arise on the last day  of  the accounting year.     The decisions cited at the Bar though at the first blush appear  to be conflicting they do not in effect run  counter to the said conclusion.      The,  first decision is that of the Judicial  Committee in  Commissioner  of Income-tax v. Western India  Turf  Club Ltd.(1). Therein, the Judicial Committee held that the  rate of  super-tax payable by a company fixed by the Finance  Act would  apply, though an incorporated association was  formed into  a company only on April 1, 1925.  In  that  connection the  Board, adverting to the argument that the  rate  should have   been  only  that  applicable  to  an   unincorporated association,, observed :               "The argument which has been used in favour of               the  appeal seems to involve the fallacy  that               liability to tax attached to the income in the               previous  year.  That is not so. No  liability               to tax attached to the income of this  company               until  the passing of the Act of 1925, and  it               was  then to be taxed at the rate  appropriate               to a company." The  observations appear to be rather wide.  Be that  as  it may, the subsequent decisions of the Judicial Committee made it abundantly clear that the liability to tax arises  during the  accounting year though its quantification is  postponed to a later date.      In  Maharaja of Pithapuram v. Commissioner  of  Income- tax,Madras ( 2 ) . the Privy Council explained the scope  of s. 3 of the Income-tax Act, 1922.  Lord Thankerton, speaking for the Board, laid down two principles, namely, (i)  "under the  express  terms of s. 3 of the  Indian  Income-tax  Act, 1922, the subject of charge is not the income of the year of assessment,  but the income of the previous year;  and  (ii) "the  Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, as amended from  time  to time, forms a code, which has no operative effect except  so far  as  it is rendered applicable for the recovery  of  tax imposed  for a particular fiscal year by a Finance  Act."  A combined  reading  of the said two principles leads  to  the position  that  though the Income-tax Act has  no  operative effect till the Finance Act is passed, after the passing  of the  said Act, the charge to tax would be under the  Income- tax Act in terms of the relevant (1) (1927) L R. 55 I.A. 14,17. (2) (1945) 13 I.T.R. 221, 223. 706 provisions  of  the  said  Act.  In  Doorga  Prosad  v.  The Secretary  of  State(1)  the Judicial  Committee  held  that income-tax  was calculated and assessed by reference to  the income of an assessee for a given year, but it was due  when demand  was made under ss. 29 and 45 of the Income-tax  Act. The Judicial Committee in that decision was not  considering the  question of liability to pay income,-tax but  only  the payability.

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    The  Federal  Court  in Chatturam  v.  Commissioner  of Incometax, Bihar(2), after considering the relevant  English decisions, held that the liability to pay tax was founded on ss.  3 and 4 of the Income-tax Act which were  the  charging sections.   It  quoted  with approval  the  observations  of Sargant,  L.J.,  in  Williams v.  Henry  Williams,  Ltd.(3). wherein  the  learned  Judge held  that  the  liability  was definitely  and finally created by the charging section  and the  subsequent provisions as to assessment and so  on  were machinery only for the purpose of quantifying the liability.       The  Privy Council again in Wallace Brothers and  Co., Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay(4) in Clear terms eXpoUnded the scope of a tax liability under the  Income-tax Act.  It held that,               "  ........  the rate of tax for the  year  of               assessment may be fixed after the close of the               previous   year   and  the   assessment   will               necessarily  be made after the close  of  that               year.   But  the liability to  tax  arises  by               virtue  of the charging section alone, and  it               arises  not  later  than  the  close  of   the               previous  year, though quantification  of  the               amount payable is postponed." This decision clarifies what the Judicial Committee meant in Maharaja  of  Pithapuram  v.  Commissioner  of   Income-tax, Madras(5)  when it said that the Income-tax Act  would  come into  operation  after the Finance Act was passed.   It  was referring not to the liability but to the quantification  of the amount under that Act.    This Court in Chatturam Horilram Ltd. v. Commissioner  of Income-tax,  Bihar(") reviewed the legal position  vis-a-vis the  question of charge to income-tax under  the  Income-tax Act.   The  facts  in that case  were  the  assessee-company carrying on business in Chota Nagpur was assessed to tax for the  year  1939-40 but the assessment was set aside  by  the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal on (1) (1945) 13 I.T.R. 285. (3)  Not reported. (5)  (1945) 13 I.T.R. 221. (2)  (1947) 15 I.T.R. 302, 308. (4)  (1948) 16 I.T.R. 240, 244. (6)  (1955) 27 I.T.R. 709, 716.  707 March 28, 1942, on the ground that the Indian.  Finance Act, 1939, was not in force during the assessment year 1939-40 in Chota  Nagpur which was a partially excluded area.  On  June 30, 1942, a Regulation was, promulgated by which the Indian. Finance  Act of 1939 was brought into force in Chota  Nagpur retrospectively  as  from  March 30,  1939.   Thereupon  the Income-tax Officer made an order holding that the income  of the assessee for the year 1939-40 had escaped assessment and issued  to the assessee a notice under s. 34 of the  Income- tax  Act.  The validity of the notice was questioned.   This Court, speaking through Jagannadhadas, J., held that  though the  Finance Act was not in force in that area  in  1939-40, the  income of the assessee was liable to tax in  that  year and, therefore, it had escaped assessment within the meaning of  S.  34  of the Income-tax Act.  The.  reasons  for  that conclusion were given by the. learned Judge thus                   "Thus,   income  is  chargeable   to   tax               independently  of the passing of  the  Finance               Act but until the Finance Act is passed no tax               can be actually levied." The learned Judge also added                   ".......according to the scheme of the Act

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             the quality of chargeability of any income  is               independent  of  the passing  of  the  Finance               Act." This  Court,  therefore, accepted the  principle  that  the, liability to, pay tax arose under the Income-tax Act, though its quantification depended upon the passing of the  Finance Act.   If  there was no liability under the  Income-tax  Act during the relevant accounting year, no question of  escaped assessment during that year would have arisen in that  case. The  same  principle was reiterated by this Court  in  Kalwa Devadattam  v. Union of India(1).  There, the  question  was whether liability of a Hindu undivided family arose,  before or after partition of the family.  In that case, this  Court speaking through Shah, J., stated in clear terms thus:                   "Under the Indian Income-tax Act liability               to pay income-tax arises on the accrual of the               income,  and not from the computation made  by               the  taxing  authorities  in  the  course   of               assessment  proceedings; it arises at a  point               of  time not later than the close of the  year               of account." The  learned  Judge  expressed  his  concurrence  with   the observations  of the Privy Council in Wallace  Brothers  and Co.,  Ltd.  v. Commissioner of Income-tax(2) which  we  have extracted earlier. (1) (1963) 49 I.T.R. 165,171. (2) (1948) 16 I.T.R. 240. 708      To  summarize.A debt is a present obligation to pay  an ascertainable sum of money, whether the amount is payable in praesenti or in futuro : debitum in praesenti, solvendum  in futuro.  But a sum payable on a contingency does not  become a  debt  until  UP the said  contingency  has  happened.   A liability to pay income-tax is a present liability though it becomes  payable after it is quantified in  accordance  with ascertainable data.  There is perfected debt at any rate  on the  last  day of the accounting year and not  a  contingent liability.  The rate is always easily ascertainable.  If the Finance Act is passed, it is the rate fixed by that Act;  if the  Finance  Act has not yet been passed, it  is  the  rate proposed  in the Finance Bill pending before  Parliament  or the  rate in force in the preceding year, whichever is  more favourable  to  the  assessee.  All the  "ingredients  of  a "debt"  are  present.   It  is a  present  liability  of  an ascertainable amount.     Looking  from a practical standpoint also, there  cannot possibly  be any difficulty in ascertaining  the  liability. As the actual assessment will invariably be made  subsequent to  the  close  of  the ’accounting  year,  the  rate  would certainly be available to the authorities concerned for  the purpose of quantification.     The  High Courts of Bombay, Gujarat and Kerala have  ex- pressed conflicting views on this question.  The Bombay High Court  in  Commissioner of Wealth-tax,  Bombay  v.  Standard Mills Co.  Ltd.(1) came to the conclusion that the point  of time  at which the tax got attached to the income  and  the. tax  was imposed on the person would be the passing  of  the Finance Act.  A Division Bench of the Gujarat High Court  in Commissioner of Wealth-tax, Gujarat v. Raipur  Manufacturing Company,  Limited(2) held that the liability  to  income-tax arose  under  the  Income-tax Act, that it  accrued  on  the valuation date and did not arise for the first time when the Finance   Act  was  passed.   The  Kerala  High   Court   in Commissioner  of  Wealth-tax, Kerala  v.  Travancore  Ravons Limited(3)  held  that the said liability did not  become  a

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debt  until  April 1, 1959, when the rate of  tax  for  that accounting year would be available.      For  the reasons we have stated earlier, we agree  with the  conclusion arrived at by the Gujarat High  Court.   We, therefore,  hold that the liability to pay income-tax  is  a debt within the meaning of s. 2(m) of the Wealth-tax Act and it arises on the valuation date during the accounting year. 709 We will close the discussion on this subject with the  words of   Earl  Jowitt  "in  British  Transport   Commission   v. Gourley(1):               "The  obligation to pay tax-save for those  in               possession   of  exiguous  incomes-is   almost               universal in its application.  That obligation               is ever present in the minds of those who  are               called  upon  to pay taxes,  and  no  sensible               person  any  longer regards the  net  earnings               from his trade or profession as the equivalent               of his available income." We  are glad that our conclusion coincides with the  current conception of net wealth in the commercial sense.     Mr. Palkhivala, learned counsel for the assessee, raised an  alternative  contention  in  regard  to  the  manner  of ascertaining  the  net wealth of an assessee carrying  on  a business  based on s. 7(2) (a) of the Wealth Tax  Act.   The said section has already been extracted in the earlier stage of  the judgment.  The argument of Mr. Palkhivala  was  that sub-s.  (2)  of  S.  7 of the Wealth  Tax  Act  provided  an alternative  method  of valuation of the net  wealth  of  an assessee who was carrying on a business, that the expression " net wealth of the assets of the business as a whole" had a distinct  meaning in accountancy, that the  expression  "net value"  meant only "net wealth" and that it was  arrived  at only  after  deducting  the  liabilities  of  the   business disclosed in the balance-sheet from the value of the assets. Mr. A. V. Viswanatha Sastri, on the other hand, argued  that S.  7(2)  of  the  Wealth  Tax  Act  only  dealt  with   the ascertainment of the value of the assets of a business as  a whole  and that it had nothing to do with  the  liabilities. Learned  arguments  were advanced in support  of  the  rival contentions.   But,  in  the  view  we  have  taken  on  the expression "debt owed" found in s. 2 (in) of the Wealth  Tax Act,  it  is  not necessary to express our  opinion  on  the alternative contention raised on behalf of the assessee.      In  the  result, we, answer the first question  in  the affirmative;  the second question, in the negative; and  the third  question, in the affirmative.  We accordingly  modify the  order of the High Court.  As the parties  succeeded  in part and failed in part, they will bear their own costs here and in the High Court.       Shah,  J.  I  am  unable  to  agree  with  the  answer propounded by Subba Rao, J., on the third question  referred to the High Court. (1) L.R. [1956] A.C. 185,203. Sup.CI/66--15 710     In  the  balance-sheet of the company for  the  year  of account  ending  on March 31, 1957, provision was  made  for income-tax  liability  estimated  at  Rs.  1,03,69,009   and against this amount credit for Rs. 84,76,690 paid as advance tax  was  taken.   The Company claimed  in  proceedings  for assessment  of  wealth tax for the assessment  year  1957-58 that  in  the computation of net wealth the balance  of  Rs. 18,92,319  was liable to be deducted from the net  value  of the  total  assets  as a debt owed by  the  Company  on  the

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valuation  date.   This  claim was  disallowed  by  the  tax authorities,  and by the High Court in a reference under  S. 27 of the Wealth Tax Act, 1957.      The  Wealth  Tax Act, 1957, was brought into  force  on April  1, 1957.  Section 3 of the Act imposes a  charge  for every financial year commencing on and from the first day of April,  1957,  for tax in respect of the net wealth  on  the corresponding  valuation  date of  every  individual,  Hindu undivided family and company at the rate or rates  specified in the Schedule.  The expression "valuation date" by s. 2(q) means in relation to any year for which an assessment is  to be made the last day of the previous year as defined in  cl. (11 ) of S. 2 of the Income-tax Act if an assessment were to be  made  under  that Act for that year.   "Net  wealth"  as defined in S. 2(m) at the relevant time meant the amount  by which  the aggregate value computed in accordance  with  the provisions  of the Act of all the assets, wherever  located, belonging  to the assessee on the valuation date,  including assets required to be included in the net wealth as on  that date  under the Act, is in excess of the aggregate value  of all  the  debts owed by the assessee on the  valuation  date other  than......... Charge of the wealth tax under the  Act is,  it is plain,: on the terms of S. 3 imposed on  the  net wealth of the assessee computed on the valuation date  after adjusting  the debts owed by the assessee on that  date  and permitted  to be taken into account.  Unlike the  Income-tax Act the Wealth Tax Act prescribes the rate of tax, and prima facie  by S. 3 of the Act liability to pay  wealth-tax  gets crystallized on the valuation date, and not on the first day of the year of assessment.       Counsel  for  the Company claims that  in  determining liability  for  wealth-tax,income-tax  which  would   become payable  on the income, profits or gains for the  assessment year  may  be deemed a debt owed in the previous  year,  and liable to be adjusted in determining the aggregate value  of debts for the purpose of S. 2(m).  The expression "debt"  is a sum of money due from one person to another : it  involves an obligation to satisfy liability 711 to  pay a sum of money.  The liability must be  an  existing liability but not necessarily enforceable in praesenti :  an existing liability to pay a sum of money even in future is a debt,  but the expression does not include liability to  pay unliquidated  damages nor obligations which are inchoate  or contingent.   Lord  Justice Lindley in  Webb  v.  Stenton(1) observed that "a debt is a sum of money which is now payable or will become payable in the future by reason of a  present obligation".  That definition for the purpose of the  Wealth Tax  Act  correctly describes the concept of debt.   A  debt therefore  involves  a present obligation  incurred  by  the debtor  and a liability to pay a sum of money in present  or in  future.  The liability must however be to pay a  sum  of money,  i.e.,  to  pay  an amount  which  is  determined  or determinable  in the light of factors existing at  the  date when the nature of the liability has to be ascertained.      In resolving the problem whether an amount estimated by the  Company in its balance-sheet on the valuation  date  as payable  to  satisfy  income-tax liability in  the  year  of assessment,  the nature of the charge imposed by the  Indian Income-tax  Act, 1922 upon income earned by an  assessee  in the  previous year must first be considered.  Section  3  of the Income-tax Act provides :                    "Where   any  Central  Act  enacts   that               income-tax  shall be charged for any  year  at               any  rate or rates tax at that rate  or  those

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             rates  shall  be  charged  for  that  year  in               accordance with, and subject to the provisions               of, this Act in respect of the total income of               the  previous year of every individual,  Hindu               undivided family, company and local authority,               and  of  every firm and other  association  of               persons  or  the partners of the firm  or  the               members of the association individually." Charge  imposed by the Income-tax Act is on  the  assessable entities enumerated in s. 3 in respect of the income of  the previous  year  and  not  on  the  income  of  the  year  of assessment.   But the charge is for the tax for the year  of assessment,  and  levied at the rate or rates fixed  on  the total income of the assessable entity computed in accordance with and subject to the provisions of the Income-tax Act.      The Income-tax Act is the basic and permanent  statute. Tax  under that Act is directed to be charged in  accordance with and subject to the provisions of the Act in respect  of the income of the previous year of the assessable  entities, but the charge imposed (1) [1883] 11 Q.B.D. 518,527. 712 by  the Income-tax Act is an inchoate or incomplete  charge. Until  the Annual Finance Act is passed, imposition  of  the charge of income-tax does not on the plain words used in  S. 3,  become complete or effective, for, income-tax is  to  be charged  in  accordance with the Income-tax  Act,  when  the Finance  Act  for  the year enacts that  the  tax  shall  be charged at the rate or rates prescribed thereby.   Liability to be taxed is therefore declared by the Income-tax Act, but the liability does not give rise to a present ,obligation to pay a sum of money until the Finance Act becomes  operative. It  may  be recalled that the liability  to  pay  wealth-tax becomes crystallized on the valuation date though the tax is levied  for the assessment year, and on the  valuation  date there  is  normally  no completed or  effective  charge  for income-tax pay,able for the assessment year.      Section 67B, inserted in the Act by the Income-tax  Law (Amendment)  Act 12 of 1940, on which reliance is placed  by the Company was enacted merely to maintain continuity of the levy  of  tax.   It operates only on the first  day  of  the assessment  year,  i.e., after the valuation  date  and  not before.   If  on  the first day of the  financial  year  the Finance  Act for charging income-tax for that year  has  not been  enacted, the basic provisions of s. 3 of the Act  read with  the provisions in force in the preceding year or  with the provision then introduced in the Bill before  Parliament whichever  is more favourable to the assessee applies.   The existence  on  the statute book of s. 67B does  not,  in  my judgment,  convert  what  is an inchoate  liability  on  the valuation date, i.e., on the last day of the previous  year, into a completed      Decisions of Courts on the nature of the charge created by s.3 of the Income-tax Act are unanimous, In  Commissioner of   Income-tax  v.  Western India Turf  Club  Ltd.(1),  the Western   India   Turf   Club-which   was   originally    an unincorporated association, was registered on April 1,  1925 as  a company limited by guarantee.  The company was  sought to  be assessed to supertax on the income in the  assessment year  commencing on April 1, 1925 at the rate applicable  to an unincorporated association.  The Judicial Committee  held that  for the purpose of super-tax the total income  not  of the company but of its predecessor-in-title had to be taken, but the tax-payer being a company falling within Part 11  of the Third Schedule of the Finance Act 13 of 1925, it had  to

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pay  tax at the rate applicable to a registered company  and not to an unincorporated association.  In dealing with the (1) L.R. 55 I.A. 14. 713 contention of the Commissioner of Income-tax that  liability to  tax  attached to the income of the  previous  year,  and therefore   the   rate  applicable  to   an   unincorporated association applied, the Judicial Committee observed:               "The argument which has been used in favour of               the  appeal seems to involve the fallacy  that               liability to tax attached to the income in the               previous year.  That is not so.  No  liability               to tax attached to the income of this  company               until  the passing of the Act of 1925, and  it               was  then to be taxed at the rate  appropriate               to a company." In Western India Turf Club’s case(1) income of the  previous year  was  earned by an unincorporated association,  and  if liability to tax attached to the income of the previous year it  would  have  been  taxable on  that  footing.   But  the Judicial Committee held that the income of the company which came  into  existence in the year of assessment  had  to  be taxed,  and  liability did not attach to the income  of  the company till the Finance Act was enacted.     In  Maharajah of Pithapuram v. Commissioner  of  Income- tax, Madras(2), by certain deeds of trust and settlement the Maharajah  of Pithapuram had settled properties on  each  of his daughters with a provision reserving to himself power to revoke  the settlements or to make fresh dispositions as  he deemed fit.  For the assessment year 1939-40, the Income-tax authorities  held  that  the income  of  the  previous  year derived  from  the assets comprised in the  deeds  would  be deemed to be the income of the assessee under S. 16(1)(c) of the  Income-tax Act.  The Judicial Committee held  that  the assessee  was  rightly  assessed  to  income-tax  under   s. 16(1)(c)  in respect of the income of the previous year  and observed :                     "   .   .  .  .it should  be  remembered               that  the  Indian  Income-tax  Act,  1922,  as               amended from time to time, forms a code, which               has no operative effect except so far as it is               rendered  applicable for the recovery  of  tax                             imposed  for  a  particular fiscal  ye ar  by  a               Finance  Act.   This  may  be  illustrated  by               pointing  out that there was no charge on  the               1938-39 income either of the appellant or  his               daughters,  nor  assessment  of  such  income,               until the passing of the Indian Finance Act of               1939, which imposed the tax for 1939-40 on the               1938-39  income  and  authorised  the  present               assessment." (1) L.R. 55 I.A. 14. (2) 13 I.T.R. 221. 714 It  has  also  been  observed by  this  Court  in  Chatturam Horliram Ltd.  v.  Commissioner  of  Income-tax,  Bihar  and Orissa(1):               "It is by virtue of this (S. 3 of the  Income-               tax  Act) that the actual levy of the tax  and               the rates at which the tax has to be  computed               is determined each year by the annual  Finance               Acts.   Thus, under the scheme of the  Income-               tax  Act, the income of an  assessee  attracts               the  quality of taxability with  reference  to

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             the  standing  provisions of the Act  but  the               payability  and the quantification of the  tax               depend  on the passing and the application  of               the  annual  Finance  Act.   Thus,  income  is               chargeable  to tax independent of the  passing               of  the Finance Act but until the Finance  Act               is passed no tax can be actually levied." In  that case, the assessee company was assessed to tax  for the   assessment  year  1939-40,  but  the  assessment   was discharge  because  the  Finance Act of 1939  had  not  been extended   to  the  Chhota  Nagpur  area  in  the  year   of assessment.   Bihar  Regulation  4 of  1942  was  thereafter promulgated, by which the Finance Act was brought into force as from March 30, 1939.  The Incometax Officer then issued a notice under S. 34 of the Income-tax Act, 1922, for bringing to  tax escaped income, and the assessee company  challenged the validity of the notice.  This Court held that the income of  the company was chargeable to tax by the Incometax  Act, but  unless the Finance Act was extended to the area in  the assessment year 1939-40, legal authority for  quantification of  the  tax, and for imposition of liability  therefor  was lacking.     Counsel for the Company however sought to contend,  not- withstanding  the  view expressed in the cases  cited,  that under the Income-tax Act, 1922, liability to pay  income-tax arises  at the latest on the last day of the previous  year, and that being the valuation date under the Wealth Tax  Act, in  computing  wealthtax, income-tax payable  for  the  year ending  March 31, 1957, could be regarded as a debt owed  by the Company on the valuation date.  Counsel relied upon  the following  observations  made by the Judicial  Committee  in Wallace  Brothers and Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner  of,  Income- tax, Bombay City(2) :               "The general nature of the charging section is               clear.  First, the charge for tax at the  rate               fixed  for the year of assessment is a  charge               in  respect  of  the income  of  the  previous               year’, not a charge in respect of the income (1) 27 I.T.R. 709. (2)  16 I.T.R. 214, 244  715               of  the year of assessment as measured by  the               income  of the previous year.  That  has  been               decided and the decision was not questioned in               this appeal.               "Second,  the  rate  of tax for  the  year  of               assessment may be fixed after the close of the               previous   year   and  the   assessment   will               necessarily  be made after the close  of  that               year.   But  the liability to  tax  arises  by               virtue of the ,charging section alone, and  it               arises  not  later  than  the  close  of   the               previous  year, though quantification  of  the               amount payable is postponed."     Reliance was also placed upon the judgment of this Court in  Kalwa  Devadattam  and  Others v.  Union  of  India  and Others(1)  in  which the observations made by  the  Judicial Committee were, repeated.     But  the observations in both the cases were dicta,  and have no bearing on the question falling to be determined  in those  cases.  In  Wallace  Brothers  &  Co.’s  case(2)  the principal  question which was referred for determination  by the  High  Court was about the validity of S. 4A(c)  and  S. 4(1)(b)(ii) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, by virtue of which  the appellant company was assessed to  income-tax  on

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income  which  arose without British  India.   The  Judicial Committee  held that the Indian Parliament had power to  tax foreign income under the legislative head "taxes on income", if there was between the person sought to be charged and the country   seeking  to  tax  him  a  sufficient   territorial connection.    In  considering  the  question  whether   the Parliament  had  power to enact the impugned  sections,  the Judicial  Committee explained the scheme of  the  Income-tax Act as stated earlier.     In  Kalwa  Devadattam’s case(1) this Court  was  dealing with  a  case in which properties of a  joint  Hindu  family consisting of a father and his three minor sons were sold by public auction to satisfy liability to pay income-tax  which was assessed by appropriate proceedings under the Act.   The sons  thereafter  sued the Union of India and others  for  a declaration that the order of assessment were unenforceable, and  that the sale was without jurisdiction and  illegal  in that the properties sold at the auction in pursuance of  the assessments did not belong to the joint family, and that  in any event because there has been before the assessments were completed  intimation to the Income-tax Officer  that  there had  been  severance of the undivided  family.   This  Court rejected the claim to set aside the sale.  It is clear  that in Kalwa Deva- (1) 49 I.T.R. 165 (S.C.). (2)  16 I.T.R. 240. 716 dattam’s  case(1), assessment proceedings were held  by  the Income-tax  Officer to assess income of the Hindu  undivided family in the relevant years of assessment and the sale  was challenged  on  the ground that the property  sold  did  not belong to the family, and the assessments were  procedurally irregular.   The  Court  was not concerned  to  express  any opinion  on the question whether liability of the  undivided family  to  pay  tax arose before the  years  of  assessment commenced.    In  my judgment on the terms used in s. 3 of the  Income- tax  Act, liability to be taxed becomes effective not  later than the last day of the year of account.  But the liability to  pay  tax  arises  only  when  the  Finance  Act  becomes operative  on the first day of April of the assessment  year either by enactment of an Act or by virtue of s. 67B of  the Income-tax Act.     The  Company  sought to deduct in its  balance-sheet  an estimated  amount  as the probable amount of  tax  which  it would  have to pay in the year of assessment.  Out  of  this amount   advance  tax  was  deducted.   We  have   held   in Commissioner  of  Wealth  Tax  (Central)  Calcutta  v.  M/s. Standard  Vacuum  Oil  Co. Ltd.(1)  that  liability  to  pay advance  tax arises when a demand notice is issued under  s. 18A  of the Act.  For the balance taken into account in  the balance-sheet there was no liability arising in the previous year which could be regarded as a debt owed by the  Company. Liability to be assessed to tax may and does arise under  s. 3  on  the  last  day of the  year  of  account.   But  that liability to tax did not give rise to any obligation to  pay a  sum  of money either determined or  determinable  in  the light  of factors existing on that date.  The  liability  at the  earliest  arises on the first day of April,  1957,  but that under the Wealth Tax Act is not the valuation date.     It  is not, in my judgment, open to the Court to  put  a strained   construction  upon  the  Act  merely  because   a businessman may regard a liability to be taxed on the income of  the  previous  year, as liability to  pay  tax  on  that income.   To  a  commercial  man  the  distinction   between

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liability which arises immediately and a liability to  arise in  future  may  be  blurred : but that in  law  is  a  real distinction,  and  a liability which arises in the  year  of assessment  may  not be projected into the  account  of  the previous  year.   The provisions of the  statute  cannot  be ignored  on  what are called "business  considerations"  and existence of a liability to pay a debt which has not in  law arisen  cannot be assumed.  It is true that the Company  did earn profits in the previous year, and for (1) [1966] 2 S.C.R. 317.  717 the  purpose of its balance-sheet it could make an  estimate but  that estimate had no relevance in ascertaining  whether tax  payable in the assessment year would be regarded  as  a debt  owed-’  on the valuation date.  Liability to  pay  tax arose  not from the estimate, but from the Finance  Act:  it arose when the Finance Act became operative and not  earlier than that.     The  alternative  argument  raised by  counsel  for  the Company from s. 7(2) has, in my judgment, no force.  Section 7 of the Act provides :                   "(1)  The value of any asset,  other  than               cash,  for the purposes of this Act, shall  be               estimated to be the price which in the opinion               of  the Wealth-tax Officer it would  fetch  if               sold in the open market on the valuation date.                    (2)   Notwithstanding anything  contained               in sub-section(1),-                     (a)  where the assessee is carrying on a               business for               which   accounts   are   maintained   by   him               regularly, the Wealth-tax Officer may, instead               of  determining separately the value  of  each               asset  held by the assessee in such  business,               determine  the net value of the assets of  the               business  as  a  whole having  regard  to  the               balancesheet  of  such  business  as  on   the               valuation  date  and making  such  adjustments               therein  as the circumstances of the case  may               require;                     (b)  where the assessee carrying on  the               business,  is a company not resident in  India               and  a computation in accordance  with  clause               (a) cannot be made by reason of the absence of               any  separate balance-sheet drawn up  for  the               affairs of such business in India the  Wealth-               tax  Officer  may take the net  value  of  the               assets  of  the business in India to  be  that               proportion  of the net value of the assets  of               the  business as a whole wherever  carried  on               determined as aforesaid as the income  arising               from  the  business in India during  the  year               ending  with the valuation date bears  to  the               aggregate  income from the  business  wherever               arising during that year." By   the  first  sub-section  the  Wealth-tax   Officer   is authorised  to estimate for the purpose of  determining  the value  of any asset the price which it would fetch, if  sold in the open market on the valuation date.  But this rule  in the case of a running business may often be inconvenient and may not yield a true estimate of 718 the  net  value of the total assets of  the  business.   The Legislature  has therefore provided in sub-s. (2)  (a)  that where  the  assessee  is carrying on a  business  for  which

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accounts  are  maintained by him regularly,  the  Wealth-tax Officer  may  determine the net value of the assets  of  the business  as a whole, having regard to the  balancesheet  of such  business  as  on  the valuation  date  and  make  such adjustments  therein  as the circumstances of the  case  may require.  But the power conferred upon the Tax Officer by S. 7(2)  is to arrive at a valuation of the assets, and not  to arrive  at  the net wealth of the  assessee.   Section  7(2) merely  provides  machinery  in certain  special  cases  for valuation of assets, and it is from the aggregate  valuation of  assets  that  the net wealth chargeable to  tax  may  be ascertained.   Power conferred upon the Tax Officer to  make adjustments as the circumstances of the case may require, is also  for the purpose of arriving at the true value  of  the assets  of  the  business.   Sub-section  (2)(a)  of  s.   7 contemplates  the  determination  of the net  value  of  the assets  having regard to the balancesheet and  after  making such  adjustments  as  the circumstances  of  the  case  may require.   It does not contemplate determination of the  net wealth,  because net wealth can only be determined from  the net value of the assets by making appropriate deductions for debts owed by the assessee.  Clause (b) of sub-s. (2) of  S. 7 also does not support the contention of the assessee  that for  the purposes of the Act net value of the assets  of  an assessee carrying on business is the same as his net wealth. Clause (b) of sub-s. (2) contemplates cases where a  company not resident in India is carrying on business and it is  not possible  to  make computation in accordance  with  cl.  (a) because  of the absence of a separate balance-sheet  of  the Company.   The Wealth-tax Officer is then entitled  to  take the  net value of the assets of the business as a whole  and to find the net value of the assets in India by  multiplying the total value of the business with that fraction which the income  arising from the business in India during  the  year ci3ding on the valuation date bears to the aggregate  income from the business wherever arising during the year.  This is an   artificial   rule  adopted  with  a   view   to   avoid investigation  of  a  mass of ’evidence which  it  would  be difficult  to secure or, if secured, may  require  prolonged investigation.   The adoption of an artificial rule  in  cl. (b) of S. 7(2) is also for determination of the net value of assets  and  not  for determination of  net  wealth  of  the foreign company.  It is true that cl. (a) expressly  confers power  upon  the  Tax Officer to  make  adjustments  in  the valuation of assets in the balance-sheet, and in cl. (b)  no such  power  is conferred.  But it must be  remembered  that under cl. (b) the Tax Officer’s 719 powers  in  determining  the income  of  a  foreign  company arising from the business in India and the aggregate  income from  the business wherever arising are not subject  to  any artificial rule.    The  argument raised by counsel for the assessee is  that substantially S. 7(2) is a definition section, which extends for  the  purposes  of the Act the definition  of  the  "net wealth"  of  assessees carrying on business.   There  is  no warrant  for this argument in the language used in S.  7(2). Counsel was unable to suggest any rational explanation  why, if  what  he contends was the intention,  Parliament  should have adopted this somewhat roundabout way of incorporating a definition of net wealth in a section dealing with valuation of assets.     In  my judgment, neither cl. (a) nor cl. (b) of S.  7(2) is directed towards the determination of the net wealth, and it would be impossible to hold that the Legislature intended

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that  the net wealth, for the purpose of the charge  to  tax under  S.  3  should  be the net  value  of  the  assets  as determined under sub-s. (2) of S. 7.      The appeal must therefore stand dismissed with costs.                            ORDER      In  accordance with the opinion of the majority,  Civil Appeal  No. 539 of 1964 is partly allowed and  parties  will bear  their  own costs here and in the  High  Court.   Civil Appeal No. 66 of 1965 is allowed with costs.      Civil  Appeal No. 67 of 1965 is  unanimously  dismissed with costs. 720