19 April 1960
Supreme Court
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SHOORJI VALLABHDAS & CO., BOMBAY Vs THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX/EXCESSPROFITS TAX, BOMBAY.

Case number: Appeal (civil) 305 of 1955


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PETITIONER: SHOORJI VALLABHDAS & CO., BOMBAY

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX/EXCESSPROFITS TAX, BOMBAY.

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 19/04/1960

BENCH: DAS, S.K. BENCH: DAS, S.K. KAPUR, J.L. HIDAYATULLAH, M.

CITATION:  1960 AIR 1162            1960 SCR  (3) 557

ACT:        Income-tax-Place of accrual of income-Business of transport-        ing  cargo  to Ports in and outside  British  India-Managing        Agency  commission,  a  Percentage  of   freightage-Managing        agents services performed in British India-Liability to  tax        of entire managing agency commission-Excess Profits Tax Act,        1940  (15 of 1940), s. 5, Proviso 3-Indian  Income-tax  Act,        1922 (II of 1922), s. 14 (2)(C).

HEADNOTE: The appellant was the managing agent of a company which was, at   the  relevant  time,  carrying  on  the   business   of transporting  cargo in boats which touched ports in  British India  and in the Indian State of Cochin and  other  States. Under the managing agency contract the remuneration  payable to  the  appellant was expressed in the following  terms:  " That the managing agent shall as and by way of  remuneration for  its services receive a commission of ten per  cent.  of the   gross   freight  charged  to  the   shippers...   Such remuneration shall be payable to the managing agents at  the place where the same is earned by the company unless  other- wise  requested  by  the  managing  agent."  The  Income-tax Officer  and  the Excess Profits Tax  Officer  assessed  the appellant  to  tax in respect of the whole of  the  managing commission  received  by it on the footing that  the  entire commission accrued or arose in British India.  The appellant claimed  that  a  part of  the  managing  agency  commission accrued  in the Indian States and not in British  India  and that  it  would  be  entitled to  an  apportionment  of  the managing  agency commission and to claim exemption from  tax in  respect of the commission which accrued outside  British India under s. 14(2)(c) of the Indian Income-tax Act,  1922, and the third proviso to s. 5 of the Excess Profits Tax Act, 1940.  The Appellate Tribunal found that except booking  and collecting  some freight at Cochin, all other important  and responsible  work of managing the company was done from  the head office at Bombay and not from Cochin: Held,  that normally the commission payable to the  managing agent  of a company accrues at the place where the  business is  actually  done,  that  is, where  the  services  of  the managing  agent are performed, and as on the finding in  the

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present  case  the appellant practically performed  all  the services  at Bombay, the commission which it  earned  though computed  on the percentage of freight, accrued or arose  in British India. Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras v. K.  R. M. T. T.  Thia- garaja Chetty and Co., [1950] S.C.R. 258, followed. Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay v. Ahmedbhai Umarbhai and Co.,  Bombay, [1950] S.C.R. 335 and Commissioner of  Income- tax, Bombay Presidency and Aden v. Chunilal B. Mehta, [1938] 6 I.T.R. 521, distinguished, 73 558 Sall and industries Agencies Ltd., Bombay v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay City, [1950] 18 I.T.R. 58, considered.

JUDGMENT:        CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION:  Civil Appeal No. 305 of 1955.        Appeal  by special leave from the judgment and  order  dated        March 31, 1952, and March 2,1953, of the Bombay High  Court,        in Income-tax Reference No. 48 of 1951.        R.J.  Kolah,  Sohrab N. Vakil and S. N. Andley,  for  the        appellant.        C.K.  Daphtary, Solicitor-General of India, R.  Ganapathy        Iyer and D. Gupta, for the respondent.        1960.  April 19.  The Judgment of the Court was delivered by        S.K.  DAS, J.-This is an appeal with special  leave  from        the  judgment and orders dated March 31, 1952, and March  2,        1953, of the High Court of Bombay in an Income-tax Reference        No.  48 of 1951 made by the Income-tax  Appellate  Tribunal,        Bombay,  under s. 66(1) of the Indian Income-tax Act,  1922,        and s. 21 of the Excess Profits Tax Act, 1940.        We  may  shortly  state  the  relevant  facts  first.    The        assessee,  Messrs.  Shoorji Vallabhdas and Company,  Bombay,        appellant  herein,  is a firm registered  under  the  Indian        Income-tax  Act.   It  held the  managing  agency  of  three        companies,  namely-(1) the Malabar Steamship  Company  Ltd.,        (2) the New Dholera Steamships Ltd., and (3) the New Dholera        Shipping and Trading Company Ltd., for the periods  material        in  this  case.  The appellant as also the  aforesaid  three        managed  companies were resident in the taxable  territories        within  the  meaning  of the  Indian  Income-tax  Act.   The        business  of the Malabar Steamship Company Ltd. and  of  the        New  Dholera  Steamships Ltd. was to carry  cargo  in  cargo        boats  which touched ports in British India,  Cochin  State,        Travancore  State and ,Saurashtra, as they were then  known.        The  appellant  became  the managing agent  of  the  Malabar        Steamship  Company Ltd. with effect from April 1, 1943,  and        the  firm consisted of Shoorji Vallabhdas and his two  sons.        Formerly, Shoorji Vallabhdas alone was the managing agent of        the  Malabar  Steamship Company Ltd. and a  managing  agency        agreement dated September 16,        559        1938,  was  executed  between the  managing  agent  and  the        managed  company,  and  that  agreement  as  varied  by  two        subsequent deeds dated June 26, 1942, and December 7,  1943,        constituted  the  contract of managing  agency  between  the        appellant  and  the  managed company.   Under  the  managing        agency  contract the remuneration payable to  the  appellant        after  September  1, 1943, was expressed  in  the  following        terms:        "  That the remuneration of the Managing Agents as and  from        1st  September  one thousand nine  hundred  and  forty-three        shall  be ten per cent. (10%) on the freight charged to  the

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      shippers  instead of annas fourteen per ton as mentioned  in        clause  (1) of the said first supplemental  agreement  dated        the 26th day of June, 1942."        The  managing agency agreement dated June 8,  1946,  between        the  appellant and the second managed company,  New  Dholera        Steamships, Ltd., provided inter alia as follows:        "  That  the  Managing  Agents  shall  as  and  by  way   of        remuneration for their services in relation to the  shipping        business  of  the Company receive a commission  of  ten  per        cent.  (10%)  of the gross freight charged to  the  shippers        and/or  passage  money  charged  to  the  passengers.   Such        remuneration shall be payable to the Managing Agents at  the        place  where  the  same  is earned  by  the  Company  unless        otherwise   requested   by   the   Managing   Agents.    The        remuneration  of  the  Managing Agents in  relation  to  the        business  of  the Company other than the  shipping  business        shall  be (10%) ten per cent. on the gross profits that  may        be earned in such business."        It may be stated here, however, that no question arose as to        the  remuneration  of  the Managing  Agent  in  relation  to        business  other than shipping business, because no  business        other  than shipping business was carried on by the  managed        company during the relevant period.        The  third managed Company, viz., the New  Dholera  Shipping        and  Trading Company Ltd., confined its business during  the        relevant accounting period to stevedoring and trading  only.        The managing agency agreement also dated June 8, 1946,  with        the, third        560        managed  company  provided  inter alia for  the  payment  of        remuneration in the following terms:        "  That  the  Managing  Agents  shall  as  and  by  way   of        remuneration for their services receive a commission at  the        rate  of  25 per cent. of the net profits  of  the  company.        Such remuneration shall be payable to the Managing Agents at        the  place where the same is earned by the  Managing  Agents        unless otherwise requested by the Managing Agents."        The   appellant  was  assessed  to  income-tax   for   three        assessment  years,  namely, 1945-1946, 1946-1947  and  1947-        1948,  the  previous years being the financial  years  1944-        1945,  1945-1946 and 1946-1947 respectively.  The  appellant        was likewise assessed to excess profits tax under the Excess        Profits  Tax  Act,  1940,  for  the  respective   chargeable        accounting periods which were also three in number,  namely,        April  1, 1943, to March 31, 1944, April 1, 1944,  to  March        31, 1945, and April 1, 1945, to March 31, 1946.  The Income-        tax Officer and the Excess Profits Tax Officer assessed  the        appellant  to  tax in respect of the whole of  the  managing        agency commission received from the three managed  companies        on  the footing that the entire managing  agency  commission        accrued or arose in British India.  The appellant went up in        appeal  to  the Appellate Assistant  Commissioner  from  the        assessment  orders on the ground inter alia that a  part  of        the  managing  agency  commission received  from  the  three        managed  companies  accrued  in the  Cochin  and  Travancore        States  and  not in British India and was  therefore  exempt        from tax under the relevant provisions (as they stood at the        material  time) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, and  the        Excess  Profits Tax Act, 1940.  Thus, the dispute was  about        the place of accrual of the in. come in question.  As to the        managed  companies, the Income-tax authorities accepted  the        position  that  the profits of the three  managed  companies        partly  accrued  in British India and partly in  the  Indian        States;  but they did not accept the claim of the  appellant        that  part of its managing agency commission from the  three

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      managed  companies  accrued  or  arose  in  the  Cochin  and        Travancore States.  The Appellate Assistant Commissioner  by        different orders all dated        561        May  4,1950, dismissed all the appeals.  The Appellant  went        in  appeal  to the Income-tax Appellate  Tribunal.   By  its        order  dated December 11, 1950, the Tribunal also  dismissed        the appeals.        The  appellant then made an application to the  Tribunal  to        refer certain questions of law which arose out of its order,        to the High Court of Bombay.  The Tribunal referred two such        questions:        " (1) Did a part of the managing agency commission earned by        the assessee accrue or arise in the Cochin State inasmuch as        the  managing agency commission is computed on the basis  of        the  freight  earned by the managed company  in  the  Cochin        State or otherwise?        (2)Did the whole or part of the dividend income accrue  or        arise in the Cochin State ? "        The  expression  Cochin  State in  the  questions  obviously        referred to both Cochin and Travancore States.  On March 31,        1952,  the  reference came up for consideration  before  the        High  Court,  and  after hearing  Counsel,  the  High  Court        reformulated the first question as follows:        "  Where  the actual business of managing  agency  was  done        which yielded the commission which is sought to be taxed?  "        The   High   Court  directed  the  Tribunal  to   submit   a        supplemental statement of the case on the first question  as        reformulated.   The  second  question  was  not  pressed  by        learned counsel for the appellant and does        not now survive.        The Tribunal submitted a supplemental statement of the  case        on  August  29, 1952.  The reference was  finally  heard  on        March  2, 1953, and the High Court answered the question  by        saying that the actual business of the managing agency which        yielded the commission was done at Bombay and not at Cochin.        In  arriving at the conclusion the High Court  proceeded  on        the  footing that the finding of the Tribunal in effect  was        that barring freight and collecting it at Cochin, all  other        important  and  responsible  work of  managing  the  managed        companies was done from the        head office at Bombay.        It has been argued on behalf of the appellant that the  High        Court erroneously reformulated the question,        562        and  that the real question of law is whether on  the  facts        and  circumstances  of the case, any part  of  the  managing        agency commission accrued outside British India so that  the        appellant  would  be  entitled to an  apportionment  of  the        managing  agency commission and to claim exemption from  tax        in  respect of the commission which accrued outside  British        India  under s. 14(2)(c) of the Indian Income-tax Act,  1922        (as  it  then stood) and the third proviso to s.  5  of  the        Excess   Profits  Tax  Act,  1940.   It  has  been   further        contended, that in view of the findings of the Tribunal that        (a,)  the commission earned was a percentage of the  freight        and  passage money received by two of the managed  companies        in  Cochin  and  Travancore  States,  (b)  a  part  of   the        commission was payable there and (c) a part of the  services        was  also  rendered by the appellant as  managing  agent  in        those  States, the High Court was in error in coming to  its        conclusion that the whole of the managing agency  commission        accrued  or  arose in Bombay.  While we agree  with  learned        counsel  for  the appellant that the real question  in  this        case  is whether any part of the managing agency  commission

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      accrued outside British India, we do not agree with him that        the High Court was wrong in reformulating the question.  The        Tribunal formulated the, question as though the  computation        of  the  appellants  remuneration on the  basis  of  freight        determined the place of accrual; in this the Tribunal was in        error, and the High Court rightly pointed out that the  test        to  be  applied  was  not how the  remuneration  was  to  be        computed   or  quantified,  but  where  the  services   were        performed by the appellant, which yielded the profits sought        to  be  taxed.   The High  Court  rightly  reformulated  the        question  on that basis, and asked the Tribunal to submit  a        supplemental   statement  of  the  case  on  the   materials        available  and placed before it by the appellant bearing  on        the question as reformulated by the High Court.        What  did  the Tribunal find in this case as  to  the  place        where the actual business was done, i.e., the services  were        performed by the appellant as managing agent, which  yielded        the commission ? After referring to the agreements  relating        to the computation of remuneration, the Tribunal said in its        order dated        563        December  11,  1950, that (a) from time to time one  of  the        partners of the appellant firm went to Cochin to, attend  to        the  business, (b) the managed companies had an  officer  in        Cochin,  and  (c)  the payments said to have  been  made  to        certain  employees  at  Cochin  were  fictitious.   In   the        supplementary  statement, the Tribunal pointed out  that  it        was  not known whether the’ partner who went to Cochin  went        in  his  capacity as partner of the appellant firm or  as  a        director of one of the managed companies; the appellant firm        had  rented  a  flat  at Cochin on  Rs.  20  per  month  and        maintained  some employees at Cochin for  securing  freight;        and the local office of the appellant firm at Cochin  rented        at  Rs.  10 per month maintained only  one  book  containing        cash,  journal  and  ledger.   The  Tribunal  concluded  its        supplementary statement thus:        "As for the staff maintained at Cochin, it was alleged  that        K. P. Joshi and subsequently G. H. Narechania were paid  Rs.        18,000  each year.  The so-called payment was disallowed  by        the  Appellate Tribunal.  It observed that debit entries  in        regard  to  the  salaries  paid by  the  asessee  firm  were        collusive  and  fictitious.   As for  the  presence  of  the        partners of the assessee firm at Cochin, it appears from the        Appellate   Assistant  Commissioner’s  order  that  it   was        admitted  before him that none of the partners of  the  firm        ever  attended  to  the  company’s  business  at  Cochin  or        Alleppey.        "There  is  no clear evidence on the record as to  what  the        assessee  firm  did  as the managing  agents  of  the  three        managed companies; in other words, how the assessee firm was        carrying  on the managing agency business.  The partners  of        the assessee firm (not necessarily all) were on the Board of        Directors  of  the  managed companies.  They  held  a  large        number  of  shares in the managed  companies.   The  Malabar        Steamship  Co.  Ltd.  had an office of its  own  "to  secure        freight ". The Cochin office of the assessee firm, as far as        one could make out, did practically nothing, except  receive        10%  of  the  gross freight at Cochin and  retain  the  net,        income therefrom ",        564        fact  reached  by  the  Tribunal-where  did  the  commission        payable  to  the  managing  agent accrue ?  It  is  well  to        remember  that the problem in this case is not so much  when        the  commission  accrued  as where it  accrued,  though  the        question as to where and when may be interlinked.  We  think

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      that  normally,  the  commission -payable  to  the  managing        agents of a company accrues at the place where the  services        are  performed  by the managing agents.  It was so  held  by        this  Court in K. R. M. T. T. Thiagaraja Chetty and  Company        v.  Commissioner  of  Income-tax,  Madras,  No.  2(1).   The        assessee  in that case, Thiagaraja Chettiar, claimed that  a        portion  of the commission or-edited to it in the  company’s        accounts  accrued  to  it in the  Indian  States  where  the        company  had  opened branches for selling yarn  and  as  the        commission  was  not remitted to British India, it  was  not        assessable to tax.  This Court observed:        "The  short answer to this argument is that the business  of        the  company  was  carried on in  British  India,  that  the        commission  earned  by the firm on the profits made  by  the        company in the States arose out of one indivisible agreement        to  charge  the  reduced commission of 5 per  cent.  on  the        profits of the company and that the managing agents had been        doing the business of the agency in British India and not in        the  States.  It is not suggested that the  managing  agents        performed any functions in the States."        The  same  question  of  the place of  accrual  arose  in  a        somewhat  different context in Commissioner  of  Income-tax,        Bombay Presidency and Aden v. Chunilal B. Mehta (2) where  a        person  resident in British India and carrying  on  business        there  controlled transactions abroad, and the question  was        it he was liable to pay tax upon profits derived by him from        contracts  made for the purchase and sale of commodities  in        various  markets-Liverpool,  London,  New  York,  etc.   The        assessee  disputed his liability in respect of such  profits        on  the  ground  that they were not profits  "  accruing  or        arising  in British India ". It was held that the mere  fact        that the profits made depended on the exercise in        (1) (1953) 24 I.T.R 535.        (2) [1938] 6 I.T.R. 521.        565        British  India of knowledge, skill and judgment on the  part        of  the  assessee  did not mean that the  profits  arose  or        accrued in British India, and there was no necessity &rising        out   of  the  general  conception  of  a  business  as   an        Organisation  that  the profits of the business  must  arise        only  at one place, namely, the place of central control  of        the business.  Delivering the judgment of the Privy  Council        in that case, Sir George Rankin observed:        "  The words "accruing or arising the British India" may  be        taken, provisionally and in the first place, as an  ordinary        English  phrase  which derives no special meaning  from  the        Act.   The  alternative " accruing or arising  in"  and  the        antithesis between these words and the words " received in "        or " brought into " afford no safe inference of any  special        meaning.   " Profit accruing or arising in British  India  "        are words which in their ordinary meaning seem to require  a        place to be assigned as that at ’which the result of trading        operation comes, whether gradually or suddenly, into        existence".........................................        "  Their Lordships are not laying down any rule  of  general        application to all classes of foreign transactions, or  even        with respect to the sale of goods.  To do so would be nearly        impossible and wholly unwise.  They are not saying that  the        place   of  formation  of  the  contract  prevails   against        everything  else.  In some circumstances it may be  so,  but        other  matters-acts  done under the contract,  for  example-        cannot be ruled out a priori.  In the case before the  Board        the contracts were neither framed nor carried out in British        India; the High Court’s conclusion that the profits  accrued        or  arose outside British India is well-founded."

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      A  similar view was expressed in two earlier decisions:  (1)        In  Re: The Aurangabad, Mills Ltd.(") where a reference  was        made  to  Commissioner of Taxation v.  Kirk,  (1900)  Appeal        Cases, page 588 and it was pointed out that the circumstance        that  the affairs of the company were directed  from  Bombay        was  not  the determining test was the test  was  where  the        processes        (1)  [1921] I.L.R. 45 Bom. 1286,        74        566        which  yielded  the  income were carried out  and  that  was        outside  British India; (2) The Commissioner of  Income-tax,        Bombay  Presidency  v.  Messrs.   Sarupchand  Hukamchand  of        Bombay,  a  firm  (1)  where  the  assessees  acted  as  the        secretaries,  treasurers  and  agents  of  a  mill   company        registered  at Indore, outside British India, and under  the        terms  of agreement, the assessees were entitled  to  charge        and  receive as selling agents commission on the gross  sale        proceeds  of all cloth produced by the mill and the  company        opened  a shop in Bombay for the sale of cloth  produced  by        the  mill  which  was managed by the  assessees.   The  sale        proceeds were sent to Indore and the assessees were paid the        commission  at Indore.  The question arose whether the  com-        mission  was liable to be assessed to income-tax in  Bombay,        and  it was held that the income accrued in  British  India.        In Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay v. Ahmedbhai  Umarbhai        and Co, Bombay (2) this Court dealt with a case where a firm        resident  in  British  India  carried  on  the  business  of        manufacturing  and selling groundnut oil; it owned some  oil        mills  within  British India and a mill in  Raichur  in  the        Hyderabad  State  where oil was manufactured.   One  of  the        questions for decision was whether the profits of that  part        of the business, viz., the manufacture of oil at the mill in        Raichur  accrued or arose in Raichur within the  meaning  of        the  third  proviso to s. 5 of the Excess Profits  Tax  Act,        1940.   A majority of Judges held that the profits arose  in        Raichur,  and in a composite business, the profits need  not        arise at one place only but may arise at more than one place        and  an  apportionment  may be  necessary.   This  was  not,        however, a case of managing agency.        We now come to the decision in Salt and Industries  Agencies        Ltd., Bombay v. Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay City(3) a        decision  of the same learned Chief Justice, in  respect  of        which  learned counsel for the appellant has made some  very        serious  comments.  The facts of that case were these :  the        assessees,  a  company  incorporated  in  Bombay  were   the        managing  agents of another company incorporated  in  Bombay        and having its salt works at Aden and at Kandla in the Kutch        (1) [1930] I.L.R. 55 Bom. 231  (2) [1950] S.C.R. 335.        (3) [1950) 18 I.T.R. 58.        567        where the board of directors met, the books of account  were        maintained  and  various types of work  connected  with  the        company were done.  Under the managing agency agreement  the        assessees  were entitled to a commission at the rate  of  12        1/2  per  cent. per annum on the annual net profits  of  the        company and in any event a minimum of Rs. 30,000 per  annum.        The  agreement  also  provided  that  such  portion  of  the        commission  as  was attributable to the net profits  of  the        company  arising or accruing in the Indian State was  to  be        paid  to  the managing agents in such State  and  that  with        regard to the minimum commission half of it was to be.  paid        in  the State.  In pursuance of the assessees’  articles  of        association  the  board  of directors  passed  a  resolution        delegating  a  particular director to  guide  the  company’s

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      operation  in  the  State of Kutch and during  the  year  of        account  that director supervised the salt works at  Kandla.        The question was whether the sum of Rs. 88,O65  representing        assessee’s  commission  attributable to the  salt  works  at        Kandla  accrued  or  arose at Kandla or  in  British  India.        First, the learned Chief Justice referred to the test to  be        applied  in  order  to determine where the  profits  of  the        assessee company accrued or arose, and he said that the test        was to find out where the actual business of the company was        done which yielded the profits sought to be taxed.  In  that        connexion he said:        "  The work of the managing agents must be looked upon as  a        unit   and  not  as  divided  up  into  so  many   different        categories,  to each one of which a certain portion  of  the        commission  earned by the managing agents can be  attributed        or allocated.".        He  then  went  on to consider when the  right  to  managing        agency  commission  arose  in  that case  and  came  to  the        conclusion, which was decisive in his opinion, that it arose        when  all  the accounts of the working of the  company  were        submitted to the head office in Bombay and the profits  were        determined therefore, the sum of Rs. 88,065 accrued or arose        to the assessees in Bombay and not in the Indian State  both        for purposes of income-tax and excess profits tax.        568        Now,  learned counsel for the appellant has no quarrel  with        the decision in so far as it laid down that (a) the test  is        to  find  out where the business is actually  done,  i.  e.,        where  the  services  are performed, and (b)  the  right  to        managing  agency commission arose in that case when all  the        accounts of the working of the company were submitted to the        head  office  in  Bombay and the  profits  were  determined.        Learned  counsel  has contended that in the case  under  our        consideration the services were performed partly in  British        India and partly in Cochin and the right to managing  agency        commission arose as soon as the freight was paid at least in        respect of two of the managed companies.  He has  submitted,        however,  that the learned Chief Justice was in error if  he        intended  to lay down a rule of universal  application  that        the  work of the managing agents must always be looked  upon        as  a unit and can never to be divided into categories.   It        is  contended that the services of a managing agent  can  be        performed at more than one place, and legally it is possible        to  apportion the commission and attribute a part of  it  to        services rendered outside the taxable territories.        We consider it unnecessary in the present case to decide the        question   of   performance  of   services   and   resultant        apportionment,  if  any, on a  theoretical  or  hypothetical        basis,  because  the case can be disposed of ’on  the  short        ground   that   on  the  findings  of  the   Tribunal,   the        remuneration  of the managing agents accrued at Bombay.   We        had  referred  earlier  to  the  findings  reached  by   the        Tribunal.  These findings show that except for an attempt at        make-believe,  no  services  were really  performed  by  the        appellant at Cochin.  No doubt, some freight was secured and        paid  for  at Cochin.  But the managed company also  had  an        office at Cochin to secure freight.  It has been argued that        under  the  terms  of the managing  agency  agreements,  the        managing agents employed the staff, etc., and for two of the        companies  which  carried on the  cargo  business,  securing        freight  was  the  principal part  of  the  managing  agency        business.  The High Court, however, rightly. pointed out:        569        "  In our opinion, it is not possible to read  the  managing        agency  agreement in that light.  All that clause 2  of  the

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      agreement  does  is to lay down the standard  by  which  the        commission  is  to be computed and determined, and  it  lays        down  two  different  standards,  one  with  regard  to  the        shipping  business  and the other with regard to  the  other        businesses,  but  as  far as the business  of  the  managing        agency is concerned their responsibilities and their  duties        are integrated duties and responsibilities which are set out        in the different clauses of the agreement.  It is impossible        to  contend  that  they had not to  supervise,  control  and        manage  the shipping business and, as we have  already  said        the  business of a shipping company is vastly more  detailed        and  responsible than the mere task of finding people to  go        by  ship  or send their goods by ship and for  that  purpose        paying  freight.   Freight is merely  the  resultant  profit        which  accrues  to a shipping company.  In order  that  that        profit  should result the company has got to have ships,  it        has got to have seaworthy ships, it has got to have  sailors        and  officers,  it  has got to look to the  repairs  of  the        ships,  the renovation of the ships and the replacements  of        the  ships.   All  this is part of  the  shipping  company’s        business and all this business had to be attended to by  the        managing  agents and the question is, where did they  attend        to  this business.  The finding on this question  is  clear.        The finding, in effect, is that barring booking freight, and        collecting  freight  at  Cochin,  all  other  important  and        responsible work of managing the managed companies was  done        from the head office at Bombay and not from Cochin."        On the findings reached, the position in law is quite clear.        The  decisions to which we have referred  clearly  establish        that normally, the commission payable to the managing agents        accrues  at the place where the business is  actually  done,        that  is,  where  the services of the  managing  agents  are        performed.  In this case the appellant practically performed        all  the  services at Bombay, and therefore  the  commission        which it earned though computed on the percentage of freight        and/or  passage  money  in respect of  two  of  the  managed        companies, accrued or arose in British        570        India.  As to the third managed company whose  business  was        stevedoring and trading and the remuneration was payable  at        25 per cent. of the net profits, there can be no doubt  that        the  remuneration  accrued at Bombay.  Therefore,  the  High        Court of Bombay correctly answered the question against the        appellant.        The  appeal accordingly fails and is dismissed  With  costs.        Appeal dismissed.