19 September 1979
Supreme Court
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UKHARA ESTATE ZAMINDARIES (PVT.) LTD. Vs COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, WEST BENGAL, CALCUTTA

Case number: Appeal (civil) 13 of 1973


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PETITIONER: UKHARA ESTATE ZAMINDARIES (PVT.) LTD.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, WEST BENGAL, CALCUTTA

DATE OF JUDGMENT19/09/1979

BENCH: TULZAPURKAR, V.D. BENCH: TULZAPURKAR, V.D. BHAGWATI, P.N. PATHAK, R.S.

CITATION:  1980 AIR  340            1980 SCR  (1) 711  1980 SCC  (1) 540

ACT:      Income Tax Act, 1961-Assessee incorporated to take over certain zamindari  properties-Gave sub-leases  and  received salami-Also received  compensation for kind acquired-Amounts received  whether   income  or  capital-Tests  for  deciding whether a receipt is income or capital.

HEADNOTE:      The assessee was incorporated for the purpose of taking over cf  certain zamindari  properties. By  an indenture the assessee took  a lease of extensive zamindari properties for a  term  of  999  years  and  also  took  an  assignment  OF moveables. In  consideration of  the lease  and  assignment, fully paid  shares worth  Rs. 4.08  lakhs were issued in the new company  to the lessors. The quit rent receivable by the lessors was  a nominal  amount of  Rs. 100 per annum. Clause (3) (a)  of the  Memorandum of  Association showed  that the assessee was  primarily  incorporated  for  the  purpose  of taking over the assets of the lessor’s family, while cl. (b) empowered  the  assessee  to  purchase,  take  on  lease  or otherwise acquire  and to traffic in land and generally deal in or  traffic by  way of  sub-lease  with  land  and  house property. The assessee thereafter started giving out on sub- lease various  parcels of  land to  colliery  companies  for various terms of long duration.      Rejecting the  assessee’s  contention  that  the  total amount of  salami premia  and compensation  received by  the assessee in three assessment years were of a capital nature, the Income  Tax officer  treated the  amounts as income from business   and   taxed   them.   The   Appellate   Assistant Commissioner as  well as  the  Appellate  Tribunal  held  in favour of  the assessee  on the ground that She transactions of granting  sub-leases were  by way  of management  of  the property by  the assessee  and receipts on account of salami premia and  compensation on  acquisition  of  land  were  of capital nature not liable to be taxed as income.      On reference  the High  Court was  of the view that the assessee could  not be  regarded as  a purely family concern incorporated for  the preservation  and  management  of  the family assets but was a trading concern which dealt with the lease hold  rights in  the lands  as trading assets by using

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them to  earn income  and,  therefore,  salami,  premia  and compensation were trading receipts.      Allowing the appeal, ^      HELD: 1.  Having regard  to the  nature of  the various transactions it  is clear  that the  receipts on  account of salami etc.,  must be  regarded as  receipts  of  a  capital nature. Similarly  the amounts  of compensation  received by the assessee for compulsory acquisitions of portions of land partake the  character of  capital receipt  in  as  much  as compulsory acquisition  could not  be said to be a voluntary transaction, and compensation received would be a substitute for the capital asset lost by the assessee. [722D] 712      2. Ownership of property and leasing it out may be done as part  of a  business or  it may  be done  as land  owner. Whether it  is the  one or the other must necessarily depend upon the  object with which the act is done. Where a company is formed  with the  specific object of acquiring properties not with the view to leasing them as property but to selling them or  turning them to account even by way of leasing them out as an integral part of its business, it can be said that the company  has treated  them as  trader and  not  as  land owner.  In   deciding  whether  a  company  dealt  with  its properties as  owner one  must see  not to the form which it gave to the transactions but to the substance of the matter. [717 H]      3. On  the other  hand incidental sale of uneconomic or inconvenient plots  of  land  could  not  convert  what  was essentially an  investment into  a business  transaction  in real estate.  The purposes  or objects  for which  a limited company was  incorporated has  no decisive  bearing  on  the question whether  the income  is  of  capital  nature  or  a revenue receipt. The circumstance that a single plot of land was acquired  and was thereafter sold as a whole or in plots is not  decisive either.  Nor is  profit motive  in entering into  a   transaction  decisive.  The  question  whether  in purchasing and  selling land  the tax  payer entered  into a business activity  has to  be determined in the light of the facts and circumstances of each case. [719 C-D]      P.K.N. Company  v. Commissioner of Income Tax, 60 R 65. Karapura Development Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-Tax, West Bengal. 44 I.T.R. 622, discussed.      In the  instant case  the High  Court  had  erroneously treated the assessee as a trading concern qua its lease-hold interest in  the zamindari estate without actually examining the real nature and object of the transactions of sub-leases entered  into   by  the   assessee  with   several  colliery companies. In  coming to  this conclusion the High Court was influenced by  three factors:  (a) existence of power in the memorandum of association enabling the company to indulge in trafficking in  land by  way  of  sub-leases  of  land;  (b) declaration of  dividend at  a high rate and (c) creation of reserve fund by the assessee pursuant to certain articles of association. The special features of declaration of dividend and creation  of a reserve fund are not features peculiar to a trading  concern because a non-trading incorporated entity like an  investment company can declare dividends and create a reserve  fund. These  special features are not decisive of the question  whether the  incorporated entity  is a trading concern or  not. What  is of  importance is how it has dealt with its assets or properties.      4. The  assessee, which  had been  incorporated for the purpose of  preservation and management of the family estate of the  lessors had  dealt with  Its leasehold interest as a

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land owner  and not  as a  trader. This  was clear  from the Memorandum  and   Articles  of  Association  and  the  draft agreement  in   accordance  with  which  the  indenture  was executed. Nominal rent of Rs. 100 p.a. and the assignment of moveables in  favour of  the assessee also point to the same conclusion. Secondly,  since its  inception the assessee had not taken  lease of  any other  property from  anyone  else. Thirdly, the  transaction of  granting  subleases  of  coal- bearing and  other lands  were by  way of  management of the estate as  land owner.  Fourthly, though  the memorandum  of association  authorised  the  assessee  to  do  business  in collieries it  did not  work any colliery of its own not did it do any business as miners or coal dealers. [720 F-H] 713

JUDGMENT:      CIVIL APPELLATE  JURISDICTION: Civil  Appeal Nos. 13-15 of 1973.      Appeals by  Special Leave  from the  Judgment and order dated 12th/13th  August, 1970  of the Calcutta High Court in Income-Tax Reference No 69/66      P.  Burman,   Subrata  Ghosh   and  S.  Ghosh  for  the Appellant.      B.B. Ahuja and Miss A. Subhashini for the Respondent.      The Judgment of the Court was delivered by      TULZAPURKAR, J.-These  appeals by special leave involve a  common  question  regarding  the  taxibility  of  certain amounts  received  by  the  appellant  company  (hereinafter referred to  as "the assessee ’) during the three accounting years, namely,  1359 B.S.,  1360 B.S. and 1361 B.S. relevant to the assessment years 1953-54. 1954-55 and 1955-56 and the question  is  whether  those  amounts  represented  business income or receipts of a capital nature ?      The facts  giving rise  to the  question may briefly be stated: The  assessee was  incorporated on  July 3, 1920 for the  purpose   of  taking   over  the  Zamindari  properties pertaining the  Ukhara Estate  which belonged  to Rai Pullin Behari Singha  Bahadur and the late Gosta Behari Lal Singha. Therefore, on  incorporation, by  an Indenture dated July 5, 1920 the  assessee took  a lease  of the extensive Zamindari pertaining to  the said  Estate for  a term of 999 years and also took  an assignment  of movables,  including Government promissory notes  and jewellery  belonging to the members of the lessor’s  family and  the arrears  of rents  and cesses, debts, decrees,  etc. due by the tenants of the said Estate, the properties  passing to  the assessee  being specified in the schedule  appended thereto.  The consideration  for  the said lease  and assignment was fixed at Rs. 4,08,000/- which was paid  and satisfied  by the  assessee by  allotting  and issuing its  4,080 fully  paid up shares to the lessors. The quit rent  receivable by  the lessors  for the  lessors  Rs. 100/- per  annum and  the assessee also undertook to pay the revenue and  cesses payable  to the  superior  landlords  in respect of  the Zamindari.  Clause 3  of the  Memorandum  of Association set  out  the  various  objects  for  which  the assessee was  formed and  though sub-cl.  (a) thereof showed that the assessee was primarily incorporated for the purpose of taking  over the  assets of  the lessors  family upon the terms and  conditions  set  forth  in  the  Draft  Agreement referred to  in Article  3 of  the Articles  of Association, sub-cl. (b)  of  cl.  3  of  the  Memorandum  empowered  the assessee "to  purchase, take  on lease  or otherwise acquire and to  traffic in  land, house  and other property ....,...

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and generally  to deal  in or  traffic by  way of sub-lease, exchange or  otherwise with  land and  house property..... " The Estate taken on lease comprised substantial 714 coal bearing  lands and  mines which  the  assessee  started giving  on   sub-lease  in  various  parcels  to  well-known colliery companies  for  various  terms  of  long  duration. During the  three accounting  years in question the assessee granted several  sub-leases for which it received salami and premia and  there were  also acquisitions of the portions of the Estate  by the  Land Acquisition  Collector for which it received compensation.  The total  amount of  salami, premia and the  compensation received  by the assessee in the three accounting years  were respectively  Rs. 22,197/-, 188,417/- and 73,327/-  and the  question arose whether these receipts were business  income or  receipts of  a capital nature. The Income-tax officer  rejected the  contention of the assessee that the  receipts were  of a capital nature aud he included the said amounts in the total income of the assessee in each year as  its  business  income  holding  that  the  assessee carried on  business in  leasehold rights and real property. On appeal  by the assessee, however, the Appellate Assistant Commissioner reversed  the finding of the Income Tax officer and excluded  the amounts  in question from the total income of the  assessee following  the  decision  of  the  Tribunal rendered on  June 7,  1960, in  the assessee’s  case for the earlier assessment  year 1946-47,  1947-48 and  1948-49. The matter was  carried by  the Income-tax  Officer  in  further appeals to  the Tribunal,  but the  Tribunal by  its  common order dated June 29, 1963 dismissed the departmental appeals holding that  the receipts  were of  a  capital  nature  not liable to  be  included  in    the  taxable  income  of  the assessee. In  coming to  that conclusion the Tribunal mainly relied upon  cl. 3  (a) of  the Memorandum  of  Association, Article 3  of the Articles of. Association and the terms and conditions set  forth in  the Draft Agreement (in accordance with which  the Indenture  dated July  5, 1920 was executed) which  showed   that  the   assessee  had   been   primarily incorporated  for   the  purpose  of  the  conservation  and management of  the Family  Estate of  the lessors,  that, in fact, the  assessee was  not carrying  on  the  business  of taking leases and granting sub-leases inasmuch as it had not taken on  lease any  other property  from any one else since 1920 upto  date and  that the  transactions of granting sub- leases of  long duration  to various colliery companies were by way  of management  of real  property by  the assessee as owner of  lease-hold interest  and as  such the  receipts on account of salami, premia and compensation were of a capital nature. The  Tribunal relied  upon and  applied the ratio of the decision of the Madras High Court in P. K. N. Company v. Commissioner of Income Tax which has since been confirmed by this Court in 60 I.T.R. 65. 715 At the  instance of the Revenue the Tribunal referred to the High Court for his opinion the following questions:           "Whether on  the facts and in the circumstances of      the case,  the Tribunal  was justified in excluding the      sums of  Rs. 22,197/-,  Rs. 1,88,417/- and Rs. 73,327/-      from the  total income  of the  assessee for  the years      1953-54, 1954 55 and 1955-56 ?" The High  Court answered  the  question  in  favour  of  the Revenue by  holding that  the receipts were not of a capital nature and  were includible  in  the  total  income  of  the assessee as  its business  income. The  High Court  took the view that  the assessee  could not  be regarded  as a purely

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family  concern   incorporated  for   the  preservation  and management of  the family  assets  for  maintenance  of  the lessor’s family  especially as no provision had been made in its Memorandum  of Association  or Articles  of  Association conferring any  right or  share on  new members  that may be born in  the coparcenery,  it  being  admitted  that  Ukhara Zamindars constituted  a Mitakshara  Joint  Family.  Relying upon the  several objects  set  out  in  the  Memorandum  of Association, particularly  the one  indicated  in  cl.  3(b) (which permitted  trafficking  by  way  of  sub-leases)  and further relying  on what  it called  two special features of the assessee,  namely, declaration  of dividend and creation of reserve  fund by  it, the High Court held the assessee to be a  trading concern  and that it had dealt with its lease- hold rights  in the lands as trading assets by using them to earn  income?  rent,  royalty,  salami,  premia,  etc.  and, therefore, the  receipts by  way of  salami or  premia  were trading receipts and profits thereform were business income. In other  words, the  High Court held that the assessee as a trading concern  had dealt  with its  lease-hold interest in Zamindari property  not as  an owner  but as  a trader  and, therefore, the  receipts in  question were includible in the total income  of the  assessee as  business income. The High Court relied  upon the  decision of  this Court in Karnapura Development Co.  ltd. v.  Commissioner of  Income-Tax,  West Bengal. It  is this  view of  the High  Court that  has been challenged before  us by  the counsel  for the  assessee  in these appeals.      In support  of the  appeals counsel  for  the  assessee raised two  or three  contentions. In  the  first  place  he contended that  the High court was in error in coming to the conclusion that  the assessee was a trading concern and that it had  dealt with  its leasehold  interest in the Zamindari property as  a trading  asset by  using  the  same  to  earn income, rent,  royalty, salami,  premia, etc. He pointed out that in 716 coming to that conclusion the High Court had wrongly allowed itself to  be considerably  influenced by the three factors: (a) existence  of several  objects set  out in  cl. 3 of its Memorandum of Association, (b) declaration of dividend by it and (c)  creation of reserve fund by it, as according to him none of  these factors  would show  that  the  assessee  had actually dealt  with its leasehold interest in the Zamindari property as  a trader.  Secondly, he contended that the real question was whether after incorporation and after acquiring the  lease   of  the   Zamindari  Estate,   which   included substantial coal  bearing lands  and mines, the assessee had dealt with  its leasehold interest as a landowner or not and he urged  that the manner in which the assessee granted sub- leases of  the lands  in different  parcels to various well- known colliery  companies for various terms of long duration extending  over   900  years   clearly  showed   that   such transactions of granting sub-leases were transactions in the nature of management of the estate as owner of the land and, therefore,  the  receipts  by  way  of  salami,  premia  and compensation will  have to  be regarded  as  receipts  of  a capital nature  and in  that behalf  he placed reliance upon cl. 3(a)  of  the  Memorandum,  Article  3  of  Articles  of Association and  the  terms  and  conditions  of  the  Draft Agreement in  accordance with which the Indenture dated July 5, 1920  was executed,  which showed  that the  assessee had been primarily  incorporated for the purpose of preservation and management  of the family Estate of the lessors. He also pointed out  that admittedly  it was not the business of the

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assessee to  run collieries  nor did  it  in  fact  run  any colliery on  its own  but it  merely granted  sub-leases  of various parcels  of land  to colliery  companies which  were transactions by  way of  management of  the family Estate in fulfillment  of   the  primary   object  for  which  it  was incorporated. In  support of  his contentions he relied upon this Court’s decision in P. K. N. Co’s case (supra).      On the  other hand, counsel for the Revenue pressed for our  acceptance  the  view  taken  by  the  High  Court.  In particular, he  invited our  attention to  cl. 3(b)  of  the Memorandum of  Association  which  conferred  power  on  the assessee not  merely to purchase, take on lease or otherwise acquire and to traffic in land, house and other property but also "generally  to deal  in or traffic by way of sub-lease, exchange or otherwise with land and house property etc." and urged that the several transactions of granting subleases of coal bearing  lands and  mines to various colliery companies on payment  of rent,  royalty, salami  and  premia  must  be regarded as  business transactions entered into in pursuance of its  trading object  and, therefore,  the High  Court was right in  coming to  the conclusion  that the  assessee  had dealt with its rights in leasehold land as stock-in-trade or trad- 717 ing assets  and the  receipts by  way of  salami, premia  or compensation were its business income. For the reasons which we shall  indicate presently  it is impossible to accept the High Court’s  view in  the matter  and we have to uphold the conclusion reached by the Appellate Tribunal.      The legal principle or the test which should govern the question of  the type  that has  arisen in these appeals has been  clearly   enunciated  by   this  Court   in  Karnapura Development Co. Ltd. case (supra). The assessee in that case was a  company  formed  with  the  object,  inter  alia,  of acquiring and disposing of underground coal mining rights in certain coal  fields. The  Memorandum of  Association of the company enumerated  other objects, such as coal raising, but the assessee  restricted its  activities to  acquiring  coal mining leases  over large  areas, developing  them  as  coal fields and  then sub-leasing  them to  collieries and  other companies. The  leases were acquired for a term of 999 years and  were  sublet  for  the  balance  of  the  term  of  the respective leases  minus two  days. The company never worked the coal  fields with  a view  to raising  coal, nor  did it acquire or sell coal raised by the sub-lessees. As against a salami of Rs. 40/- per bigha which the assessee had paid, it realised from the sub-lessees Rs. 400/- per bigha as salami. In addition, the assessee charged certain royalties at rates higher than  those it  had agreed  to  pay  under  the  head leases. The  company  admitted  that  the  income  from  the royalties was  taxable. The question was whether the amounts received by  the assessee  as salami  for granting  the sub- leases constituted  trading receipts  in its  hands and  the profit therefrom  was assessable  to tax  under  the  Indian Income-Tax Act, 1922. Having regard to the objects for which the company  was formed  as well as the nature of operations which the  company indulged  in, this  Court held  that  the transactions of acquiring leases and turning them to account by way  of sub-leases were in the nature of trading activity within the  objects of  the company  and  not  enjoyment  of property as  land owner  and the  amounts received by way of salami were  trading receipts and the profits therefrom were liable to  income-tax.  Observing  that  the  dividing  line between the  two types  of operations was difficult to. find and after  referring to  a number  of decisions both English

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and Indian,  this Court at page 377 of the report enunciated the principle in the following words:           "Ownership of  property and  leasing it out may be      done as  a part  of business, or it may be done as land      owner.  Whether  it  is  the  one  or  the  other  must      necessarily depend  upon the  object with which the act      is done. It is not that no company can own property and      enjoy it 718      as property,  whether by itself or by giving the use of      it  to   another  on  rent.  Where  this  happens,  the      appropriate head  to apply  is "income  from  property"      (section 9),  even though  the  company  may  be  doing      extensive business otherwise. But a company formed with      the specific  object of  acquiring properties  not with      the view  to leasing  them as  property but  to selling      them or  turning them tc account even by way of leasing      them out  as an integral part of his business cannot be      said to  treat them  as land  owner but  as trader. The      cases which  have been  cited in this case both for and      against the  assessee company must be applied with this      distinction  properly   borne  in  mills.  In  deciding      whether a  company dealt  with its properties as owner,      one must  see not  to the  form which  it gave  to  the      transactions but to the substance of the matter "      The other  decision of  this Court in P. K. N. Cos case (supra) is equally important, for, certain aspects and their significance in determining the question in the instant case have been  clarified. In  that case  the partners of a firm, known as  ’P.K.N.’ formed  a private company and transferred to it  all their  assets and  properties consisting  of 3000 acres of rubber and coconut plantations besides vacant sites and houses.  The membership of the company was restricted to the members of PKN firm and in consideration of the transfer of all  the assets  and properties of the aggregate value of 16,50,000 dollars  to the company, the partners, of the firm were allotted  shares of the face value of 6,60,000 dollars, the balance remaining outstanding as a debt due to the firm. Limitations on  the admission  of the members to the company and other  attendant  features  indicates  an  intention  of conserving the  properties of  the members  of the  firm The Memorandum of  Association of  the company  specified, inter alia the  following objects:  (i) to purchase or acquire and to sell,  turn to account, dispose of and deal with property and rights of any kind, and (ii) to sell, manage, develop or dispose  of   or  otherwise   deal  with  any  part  of  the properties, rights  and privileges  of  the  company.  Large amounts of  money were  spent on cultivation and development of rubber  and coconut  plantations and  substantial in come was  derived   therefrom  but   certain   uneconomical   and inconvenient plots  were sold  by the  company in  1940  and 1941. Between the years 1942 and 1945, when Malaya was under Japanese occupation,  some further  plots of land were sold. Thereafter, in  1948, 1949  and 1950,  lands were  sold from time to  time at profit. As a result of these disposals, the total holding  of the  company was  reduced to  about  2,000 acres of rubber estates. some houses and the 719 Lee estate. The question was whether the profits realised by the   company during  the accounting  year relevant  to  the assessment year  1951-52 from  the sale of the properties to the tune of 1,41,326 Malayan dollars could be brought to tax ? on  these facts  this Court  Id that the primary object of the company  was to take over the sets of the firm, to carry on the  business of planters and to earn profits by the sale

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of rubber:  the acquisition  of the  estates was not for the purposes of  carrying on business in real estate. This Court further held  that the  incidental sale  of uneconomical  or inconvenient plots  of  land  could  not  convert  what  was essentially an  investment into  a business  transaction  in real estate.  The amount  of 1,41,326  Malayan dollars being capital  accretion   was  not  chargeable  as  income.  Such conclusion was  reached notwithstanding  that the Memorandum of Association  of the company conferred power on it to sell or turn  to account,  dispose of or deal with the properties and  rights   of  all   kinds.  This   Court  clarified  the significance of  three aspects  thus: (a)  the  purposes  or object for  which a  limited company was incorporated had no decisive  bearing   on  the   question  at  issue,  (b)  the circumstance that a single plot of land was acquired and was thereafter sold  as a whole or in plots was not decisive and (c) nor  was profit  motive in  entering into  a transaction decisive, but the question whether in purchasing and selling land the  tax-payer entered  upon a business activity had to be determined in the light of the facts and circumstances.      In the  instant case also the main question that arises for determination  is  whether,  after  acquiring  leasehold interest in  Zamindari Estate  in granting  the several sub- leases of  coal bearing  lands and  mines and  receiving the salami  and   premia  and   in  receiving  compensation  for compulsory acquisition  of its lands the assessee dealt with its leasehold  interest in  the lands  as a  land  owner  or carried on  business with  it treating  it as  its stock-in- trade or  trading asset  ? It  is obvious  that if  the case falls within  the former  category the  receipts by  way  of salami, premia and compensation will be capital receipts but if it  falls within  the latter the receipts will be trading receipts  and  profits  therefrom  business  income.  Having regard to the ratio of the decision in Karanpura Development Co’s. case  (supra) it  is  clear  that  for  deciding  that question regard must be had to the real nature and object or purpose of  the transactions  entered into  by the  assessee over the  years. Before we proceed to examine the nature and object or purpose of the transactions we would like to point out how and where the High Court has gone wrong in answering the issue  against the assessee. In the first place the High Court has  erroneously treated  the assessee  as  a  trading concern qua  its leasehold  interest in the Zamindari/estate without actually examining the real nature and object of the transac- 720 tions of  sub-leases  entered  into  by  the  assessee  with several colliery  companies. Secondly,  in arriving  at that conclusion the  High Court  has been  greatly influenced  by three factors  (a) existence  of the power in its Memorandum of  Association   enabling  the   assessee  to   indulge  in trafficking in  land by  way of  sub-leases of the land, (b) declaration of  dividend at  a  high  rate  of  25%  by  the assessee for  the  relevant  years  and  (iii)  creation  of reserve fund by the assessee pursuant to certain Articles of Association and  the High  Court has given such undue weight to these  factors  that  it  was  almost  regarded  them  as decisive factors.  P.K.N. Co’s case (supra) has clearly laid down that  the existence  of the  power in the Memorandum of Association  to   traffic  in  sub-leases  of  lands  though relevant  would  clearly  be  not  decisive.  In  our  view, declaration of  dividends and creation of a reserve fund are not features  peculiar to  a trading  concern,  for,  it  is equally conceivable  that a  non-trading incorporated entity like an  investment company  can declare  dividends and  may

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also create  a reserve  fund and, therefore, these so-called ’special features’  are not decisive of the question whether the incorporated  entity is  a trading  concern or  not.  In deciding that  question what  is of importance is how it has dealt with its assets or properties, whether as a land owner or a  trader treating the assets or properties as its stock- in-trade and  it is  the manner  of dealing with its assets, the real nature of the operations pertaining to them and the object with  which such  operations  are  done  that  assume importance. This  aspect has not been properly considered by the High Court.      Looking at the issue from the aforesaid angle there are several facts  and circumstances  emerging from  the  record which clearly  show that  the assessee has been dealing with its leasehold interest in Zamindari property as a land-owner and not  as a  trader. In  the first,  place,  as  has  been rightly found  by the  Tribunal, the  assessee was primarily incorporated for  the purpose of preservation and management of the  family estate of the lessors. This is clear from cl. 3 (a)  of the  Memorandum of  Association, Article  3 of the Articles of  Association and  the terms  and conditions  set forth in  the Draft  Agreement in  accordance with which the Indenture dated July S, 1920 was executed. That this was the primary object  also becomes  clear from  the facts  that  a nominal quit  rent of  Rs. 100/-  per year  was  payable  by the assessee  to the  lessors for the lease of the Zamindari Estate obtained  by it  for 999 years and that alongwith the lease the  assessee also obtained an assignment of moveables including  Government   promissory   notes   and   jewellery belonging to  the members of the lessors’ family; assignment of Government  promissory notes  and jewellery could only be for preservation and better management. The High 721 Court  felt  what  militated  against  the  concept  of  the assessee being  purely a family concern incorporated for the purpose of  preservation and management of family assets for the maintenance of lessors’ family was that no provision has been made  in its  Memorandum of Association and Articles of Association conferring  any right  or share  on new  members that may  be born  in the  Mitakshara Joint  Family  of  the lessors but  it is difficult to appreciate this view. On the other hand,  allotment of  shares of  the assessee  to a few members of  the lessors’  family and  absence of a provision conferring any  right or  interest in  the shares on the new arrivals  in   the  family   would  be   more  conducive  to preservation and proper management of the family assets.      Secondly, admittedly since 1920 up to date the assessee had not  taken lease of any other property from any one else except the lease of the Zamindari Estate under the Indenture dated July  S, 1920, a pointer to the fact that the assessee did not indulge in any business of acquiring other lands.      Thirdly,-and this  is vital-the  manner  in  which  the assessee dealt  with the  leasehold  interest  in  Zamindari Estate obtained under the Indenture dated July 5, 1920, over the years  clearly shows  that the  transactions of granting sub-leases of  coal bearing  lands and  mines ere  by way of management of  the Estate as land-owner. The Tribunal in its earlier order  dated June  7, 1960  for the assessment years 1946-47, 1947-48 and 1948-49 a copy of which had been made a part or  the record  of the  case, has  brought out  certain relevant facts  in that behalf. The Tribunal has pointed out that during  the first  11 years  of its  incorporation  the assessee did  not grant any sub-lease of land to any one. In 1339 B.S.  the assessee  received a  sum of  Rs. 7,500/-  on account of  salami or  premia from Burrakur Coal Co. Ltd., a

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party who was already a lessee under the predecessors of the assessee in  respect of  coal mining right in mouza Bankola; in 1340  B.S. there  was another  lease granted  to the said coal company where the premium was 2,893-7-0. Thereafter for several years there was no lease granted to anybody. In 1349 B.S. another  lease was  granted to the same Burrakur Coal., the premium  being Rs.  2268-12-0. In 1350 B.S. there was no lease granted  to anybody.  Then between  1351 B.S. and 1354 B.S. several sub-leases of different parcels of coal bearing lands and  mines were  granted by the assessee to well-known companies for  varying terms of long duration extending over 900 years for which the assessee received salami and premium but the  fact that  such sub-leases  were for  long duration extending to  over 900  years dearly  shows  that  the  same parcel of  land had  been dealt  with only once for granting the sub-leases.  In the  three accounting years relet to the assessment years in question in the instant case also sub 722 leases had  been  granted  of  different  parcels  for  long duration of  over 900  years. Such  manner of  dealing  with lease hold  interest by  the assessee over the years clearly shows that  these transaction of granting sub-leases were in the nature of acts done in the management of the Estate. The object in  granting such sub-leases was not to deal with the lease-hold interest  as a  stock-in-trade or  trading asset. The dealings  cannot be regarded as business transactions in real property.      Fourthly,  though   the   Memorandum   of   Association empowered  the   assessee  to  do  business  in  collieries, admittedly it  did not  in fact  run or work any colliery on its own  nor did  any business  as miners or coal dealers or coke manufacturers, mica dealers, etc.      Having regard  to the  above facts it seems to us clear that the  receipts on account of salami, and premia received by the  assessee during  the accounting  years in  question, must be  regarded as receipts of a capital nature. So far as the amounts  of compensation  received by  the assessee  for compulsory acquisition  or portions  of land  are concerned, the same  would obviously  partake the  character of capital receipt inasmuch as compulsory acquisition could not be said to be  a voluntary  transaction or  a voluntary deal entered into by the assessee with the Land Acquisition Collector and the compensation would be a substitute for the capital asset lost by the assessee.      In our  view, therefore,  the High  Court had  erred in answering the  question in  favour of  the Revenue  and  the Tribunal’s view  that the receipts in question were receipts of a  capital nature and. therefore, not includible in total income of the assessee, was correct.      In the  results the appeals are allowed and the Revenue will pay the costs of the appeals to the assessee. P.B.R.    Appeal allowed. 723