25 September 1973
Supreme Court
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WORKMEN Vs MANAGEMENT OF SIJUA (JHERRIAH) ELECTRIC SUPPLY CO. LTD.

Case number: Appeal (civil) 2446 of 1967


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PETITIONER: WORKMEN

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: MANAGEMENT OF SIJUA (JHERRIAH) ELECTRIC SUPPLY CO.  LTD.

DATE OF JUDGMENT25/09/1973

BENCH: REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN BENCH: REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN DWIVEDI, S.N. GOSWAMI, P.K.

CITATION:  1973 AIR 2766            1974 SCR  (1) 760  1974 SCC  (3) 473

ACT: Bonus  Act--Three  items, the rebate  payable  to  consumers under  Electricity Supply Act 1948, Development  Rebate  and Development Reserve under Income Tax Act 1961, whether to be deducted from profits for the purpose of ascertaining bonus.

HEADNOTE: The  dispute between the respondent company and the  workmen arose in respect of the permissible additions and deductions to  be made to the profits for the purpose  of  ascertaining the bonus payable to the workmen under the provisions of the Bonus  Act.   The controversy between the  Company  and  its workmen  was  in relation to three items  mentioned  in  the profit  and loss account which were also the subject  matter of  the  reference.   The  first  item  related  to  a   sum representing  the  rebate  payable to  the  consumers  under paragraph 11(l) of the VI Schedule to the Electricity Supply Act  1948.   The second one related to a sum on  account  of Development  Rebate under Income Tax Act 1961 and the  third one related to a sum in respect of Development Reserve.  The appellants,  however,  challenged the first  and  the  third items before this Court. Partly allowing the appeal, HELD  : (i) The computation and payment of bonus  under  the Bonus Act is provided on unit-wise basis in accordance  with the  formula laid down under the Act.  In the present  case, the  payment of bonus is related to the profits of the  year subject to the maximum bonus and the amount available by way of  set-on.  As, the Company is not a Banking  Company,  the method  of computation of gross profits is laid down in  the If  Schedule of Bonus Act.  S. 6 enumerates  the  deductions that  have to- be made out of the gross profits in order  to arrive at the available surplus. The  sums  liable to be deducted from  gross  profits  under Section  6  are  : (a) Any amount  by  way  of  depreciation according to s. 32(l) of the Income Tax Act or according  to the provisions of the Agricultural Income-Tax law. (b)Any  amount  by  way of development  rebate  which  the employer is entitled to deduct from his income. (c)  Any direct tax which the employer is liable to pay, and (4)  Such  further  sums  as specified  in  respect  of  the

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employer in the 3rd Schedule etc. The   appellants  contended  that  rebate  payable  to   the consumers cannot be deducted so as to reduce the net  profit share in the profit and loss account. [764G-765G] (ii)According  to  the  workmen, a rebate  payable  to  the consumers of electricity cannot be deducted so as to  reduce the net profit shown in the profit and loss account  because entry  I  of the second Schedule to the Bonus Act is  "  not profit  as per profit and loss account".  Para 11(i) of  the VI  Schedule to the Electricity Supply Act provides that  if the  clear  profit  of  a licensee  exceeds  the  amount  of reasonable  return, the excess has to be divided into  three equal  portions and one portion has to be given as a  rebate to  the consumers.  If rebate is given to the  consumers  in respect  of the electricity consumed by them, and for  which payment has already been made, it is apparent that the price of electricity which the consumers will pay after  receiving the  rebate, would be the actual price paid by them for  the electricity consumed.  Therefore, any amount in the hands of the  undertaking liable to be returned to the  consumers  as rebate  cannot be taken into account in computing the  gross profits of the 7 61 undertaking.   It is only after deducting this  amount  that the  actual  revenue of the undertaking could  be  computed. Therefore,  the  amount  to be returned  as  rebate  to  the consumers is a deductible item. [766B] Poona Electric Supply Ltd. v. C.I.T. Bombay, [1965] 3 S.C.R. 878 and Jabulpur Bijilighar Karmachari Panchayat V. Jabalpur Electric Supply Company Ltd. and Another [1972] 1 S.C.R. 60, referred to. (iii)As  regards  the sum of  the  development  reserve which  the  workmen disputed, and which was  deducted  under item 6 of the III Schedule to the Bonus Act, it appears from the  Affidavit filed in the High Court by the  Company  that theparticulars   of   development  reserve   incurred   in preceding 4 years included the     1964-65.   According   to the   workmen,   only  a  sum  of  Rs.  10,555   being   the proportionate   development   reserve  calculated   on   the development rebate for the year 1964-65 was permissible, but no addition could be made for the proportionate  development reserve in respect of the years 1961-62, 1962-63, and  1963- 64  and  as  under  the  proviso  to  Sub-Paragraph  (i)  of Paragraph  5-A  of the VI Schedule to the  Act,  "reasonable return  had  to be provided for the company"  in  each  year which could not be provided because there was no  sufficient fund available for development reserve from 1961-62 to 1963- 64.  All the sums which should have been appropriated in the years  of  account  preceding the  year  in  question,  were appropriated  in  the  year  1964-65.  Item  6  of  the  III Schedule  to  the  Bonus Act  provides  that  any  "employer falling  under item No. 1, 3, 4 and 5 etc., in  addition  to the  sums deductible under any of the aforesaid  items  such items as are required to be appropriated by the licencee  in respect of the accounting year to a reserve, under the Sixth Schedule  to that Act. shall also be deducted."  The  words, ’required  to  be appropriated" indicate  that  the  Company should be obliged under the Sixth Schedule to appropriate an amount  to  the development reserve funds.   The  words  "in respect of" have a wide connotation.  The first  requirement for the applicability of item 6 of the Sixth Schedule to the Act is a legal obligation on the company to appropriate  the amount   to  the  development  reserve  fund.   The   second requirement is that the appropriation made must be connected with or related to the accounting year. [767 D-F; 768 F-H]

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(iv)Sub-paras  (1)  and  (2) of paragraph V-A  of  the  Act provides that there shall be a Development Reserve to  which shall be appropriated in respect of each accounting year,  a sum  equal  to the amount of Income-tax and  Supertax  etc.. provided  that  if in any accounting year,  a  clear  profit etc.,  falls-short of the reasonable return. the sum  to  be appropriated  to the Development Reserve in respect of  such accounting year shall be reduced by the amount of the  short fall,  and  under  sub  para (2), any  such  amount  may  be appropriated in annual instalments spread over a period  not exceeding five years. [769C] (v)The  words "that accounting year" refer to the year  of account in respect of which appropriation to the Reserve and the  deduction under the Bonus Act is being considered.   In the  present  case, the deductions for  the  years  1961-62, 1962-63 and 1963-64 are not being considered, nor have there been.  any  appropriations in terms of paragraph VA  of  the Sixth  Schedule  to  the Act in  the  respective  accounting years.   There  is nothing in sub-paragraphs (1) or  (2)  of paragraph  VA  of  the  Sixth  Schedule  to  the  Act  which justifies the submission that what has not been appropriated for  the earlier years could be appropriated in the year  of account.   In this view, the only amount that is  deductible on  account  of  development reserve  as  contended  by  the appellants is Rs. 10.5551- in respect of the accounting year 1964-65. [770A]

JUDGMENT: CIVIL  APPELLATE  JURISDICTION : Civil Appeals Nos.  2446  & 2447 of 1967. From  the Judgment and Order dated the 26th March,  1968  of the  Patna  High Court in C. W. J. C. Nos. 121  and  137  of 1967. A . B. N. Sinha and A. K. Nag, for the appellants. 7 62 Lal  Narain  Sinha, Solicitor General of India,  Alok  Kumar Verma ;and B. P. Singh, for respondent No. 1. R. C. Prasad, for respondent No. 2. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by JAGANMOHAN  REDDY,  J. The Management  of  Sijua  (Jherriah) Electric  Supply Company Ltd.-the respondents-had  initially offered  only 4 per cent. bonus to all the employees of  its establishment  because  the  allocable  surplus  which   was available  was less than 4 per cent.   Subsequently,  having regard  to the decision of the Madras High Court it  revised the  calculations  of  allocable  surplus  and  offered   to distribute to its employees under the Payment of Bonus  Act, 1965  (hereinafter  termed ’the Bonus Act’), a  sum  of  Rs. 34,492/-.   The workmen (Appellants) refused to accept  this amount  as the management had failed to furnish the  details or the basis of computing the amount which was being offered to them.  A dispute was thus raised, and it was referred  to conciliation.   It  appears that during  these  conciliation proceedings, both the parties agreed to the following  terms of settlement :               "  (1) The Union agree to accept  the  present               offer of the management purely on  provisional               basis  without prejudice to their  claim  for.               higher  bonus  for  the  year  1964-65.    The               management agree to distribute this amount  as               early as possible.               (2)Both  the parties agree to refer to  the               Industrial   Tribunal  for  adjudication   the

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             following  points of difference in respect  of               calculation of available surplus for the  year               1964-65  to  settle the issue  of  payment  of               bonus for that year.               (a)   Whether  a sum of Rs. 18,086/-  provided               for   in  the  profit  and  loss  account   as               provision   for   rebate   to   consumers   in               accordance  with  6th Schedule  of  the  Elec-               tricity Supply Act, 1948 should be added  back               to  arrive  at the gross profit for  the  said               accounting year in accordance with the Payment               of  Bonus  Act?  If so,  whether  this  amount               should also be deducted from the gross  profit               to arrive at available surplus ?               (b)   Whether  deduction of following  amounts               from  the gross profit is in  accordance  with               the provisions of the Payment of Bonus Act.               (i)    Rs.    23,455/-    on    account     of               development rebate allowable under the Income-               tax Act.               (ii)  Rs.  35,682/- on account of  development               reserve." Pursuant  to  the  above agreement, the  Governor  of  Bihar referred  for  adjudication of the Industrial  Tribunal  the disputes  referred  to in sub-clauses (a), (b) (i)  and  (b) (ii)  of  clause  (2) of the  said  agreement.   Before  the Tribunal  it was contended on behalf of the appellants  that the  amount  in sub-clause (a) of the  reference  cannot  be ,deducted  from the gross profits because it is a rebate  to consumers and 763 is  paid  from out. of profits.  It  cannot,  therefore,  be shown  in the revenue accounts of the company as an item  of expenditure  and  must  be added back  for  the  purpose  of calculation  of  bonus.  In respect of the  amount  in  sub- clause  (b) (i) of the reference the contention is  that  it cannot be deducted as a rebate and if it has to be deducted, it  has to be added back also.  It was lastly  contended  in respect  of  the  amount  in  sub-clause  (b)  (ii)  of  the reference  that the deduction is not contemplated by item  6 of the Third Schedule to the Bonus Act. On January 16, 1967, the Tribunal gave the following award               (1) Inrespect of the sum of Rs.  18,086/-               it held-               (a)   that   although   the   aforesaid    sum               represented  the amount of rebate  payable  to               the  consumers and not to be retained  by  the               company,  nonetheless it was a profit for  the               purpose  of computation in order to arrive  at               the  amount  which the workers should  get  as               bonus;               (b)   that   the  aforesaid  amount   of   Rs.               18,086/-  which  has  been  retained  by   the               management  to  be returned to  the  consumers               later  on, must be taken as a  reserve  within               the meaning of Item 2(c)        of the  Second               Schedule of the Bonus Act, 1965, and has to be               added back; and               (c)   that  the sum of Rs. 18,086/- which  was               deemed  to  be a reserve and had to  be  added               back under item 2(e) of the Second Schedule of               the Bonus Act was not an amount to be deducted               as a reserve under               s.    6(d)  of the Bonus Act  and,  therefore,               could not be deducted for the purposes of  the

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             computation of profits for payment of bonus.               (2)That  in  regard to the  amount  of  Rs.               23,455/- the Tribunal held that merely because               the company has, for some reason or the other,               omitted to mention the aforesaid amount in the               profit and loss account that would not prevent               the  same being added back  particularly  when                             the  same is being claimed as  deducti on  under               the provisions of the Bonus Act.   Accordingly               it  came to the conclusion that the  deduction               of Rs. 23,455/- on account of the  development               rebate  allowed under the Income-tax Act  from               the gross profits without adding back to it is               not in accordance with the Bonus Act.               (3)In  so  far as the sum of  Rs.  35,682/-               which  has been both added and  deducted,  the               Tribunal held that the amount has been rightly               deducted under clause (d) of s. 6 of the Bonus               Act  for  the  purpose  of  arriving  at   the               available surplus. By  a writ petition the respondents challenged the  validity of  the award which was against them, and the workmen  by  a separate  writ petition contested the validity of the  award which  was  against them.  The High Court which  heard  both these petitions together came to the 76 4 conclusion that the decision of the Tribunal on item (1) (a) of  the reference directing the respondents to add back  Rs. 18,086/- for calculating the gross profits was wrong and  it was accordingly quashed.  The remaining portion of the award which  disallowed  the deduction of the said  sum  from  the gross  profits was maintained.  As regards item (b)  (i)  of the  reference relating to the sum of Rs. 23,455/- shown  as development  rebate, it held that the portion of  the  award which  directed  that  it should be added back  to  the  net profits to calculate the gross profits under clause (2)  (d) of  the Second Schedule of the Bonus Act was also wrong  and it  was  accordingly quashed.  In respect of  the  award  on clause (b) (ii) of the reference it maintained the award  of the  Tribunal.  In the result of respondents’  petition  was allowed and the appellants’ petition dismissed.  Against  the  aforesaid  decision,  these  appeals  are  by certificate granted by the High Court. The dispute between the company and the workmen, as  already stated,  arose in respect of the permissible  additions  and deductions  to  be made to the profits for  the  purpose  of ascertaining  the  bonus payable to the  workmen  under  the provisions  of  the  Bonus Act.  The  balance-sheet  of  the company  for  the year ending March 31,  1965,  showing  the profit and loss account was duly published, and there was  a controversy  between the company and its workmen as  regards three  items mentioned in the profit and loss account  which were  also the subject-matter of the reference.   The  first item  related  to  a sum of Rs.  18,086/-  representing  the rebate payable to the consumers under paragraph II(i) of the Sixth  Schedule  to  the  Electricity  (Supply)  Act,  1948- hereinafter  called  ’the  Electricity  (Supply)  Act’;  the second  one related to a sum of Rs. 23,455/- on  account  of development rebate allowable under the Income-tax Act, 1961; and  the  third  one related to a sum  of  Rs.  35,682/-  in respect of development reserve. The  learned  Advocate for the appellants, however,  at  the outset indicated that he was not challenging the decision of the High Court in respect of the second item of Rs. 23,455/-

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deducted  under  the Income-tax Act,  1961,  as  development rebate.   This leaves the first and the third items, one  in respect of Rs. 18,086/- which has been directed by the  High Court  to  be deducted on account of rebate payable  to  the consumers under Paragraph II(i) of the Sixth Schedule to the Electricity  (Supply) Act, and the third item in respect  of Rs. 35,682/- on account of development reserve. It  may  be mentioned that the computation  and  payment  of bonus under the Bonus Act is provided on unit-wise basis  in accordance  with the formula laid down under that  Act.   As far  as  this  case is concerned, the payment  of  bonus  is related  to the profits of the year subject to  the  maximum bonus and amount available by way of set-on.  As the company is  not  a banking company to which the  First  Schedule  is applicable,  the method of computation of gross  profits  is laid down in the Second Schedule to the Bonus Act.   Section 6 enumerates the deductions that have to be made out of  the gross  profits in order to arrive at the available  surplus. The  deductions consist of depreciation development  rebate, direct taxes and items mentioned in the  765 Third  Schedule.   It may be  observed  that  rehabilitation grant  is  left  over as an item  of  deduction  from  gross profit,  which is a departure from what was required  to  be deducted  under  the  Full  Bench  formula  of  the   Labour Appellate   Tribunal.   The  amount  of   depreciation   and development  rebate are to be arrived at as  provided  under the  Income-tax Act.  In case of depreciation,  however,  it one employer has been paying bonus to his employees under an award, agreement, or settlement made before the commencement of  the Bonus Act and subsisting at such commencement  after deducting  from  the gross profits,  then  the  depreciation deducted,  at  the  option of the  employer,  shall  be  the notional   normal   depreciation.   Section   2(4)   defined "allocable  surplus"  as  meaning "(a)  in  relation  to  an employer,  being  a company (other than a  banking  company) which  has  not made the arrangements prescribed  under  the Income-tax Act for the declaration and payment within  India of  the dividends, payable out of its profits in  accordance with the provisions of Section 194 of that Act,  sixty-seven per  cent, of the available surplus and includes any  amount treated  as  such  under sub-section  (2)  of  section  34." "Available  surplus" is defined in s. 2(6) as  meaning  "the available  surplus  computed  under Section  5."  Section  4 provides  for  computation of gross profits  in  the  manner provided by the First Schedule in the case of a banking com- pany and in other cases in the manner provided by the Second Schedule.  By s. 5 the available surplus’ in respect of  any accounting  year  is the gross profit for  that  year  after deducting  therefrom the sums referred to in s. 6. The  sums liable to be deducted from gross profits under s. 6 are :               (a)   any   amount  by  way  of   depreciation               admissible  in accordance with the  provisions               of  sub-s. (1) of s. 32 of the Income-tax  Act               or  in accordance with the provisions  of  the               agricultural  income-tax law, as the case  may               be;               (b)   any amount by way of development  rebate               or development allowance which the employer is               entitled  to deduct from his income under  the               Income Tax Act;               (c)   any  direct  tax which the  employer  is               liable  to  pay  for the  accounting  year  in               respect  of  his  income,  profits  and  gains               during that year; and

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             (d)   such  further sums as are  specified  in               respect of the employer in the Third Schedule. Counsel  for the workmen says that the Company has  shown  a certain  amount  as its net profit in the  profit  and  loss account.   Rebate  payable to the consumers  of  electricity cannot  be deducted so as to reduce the net profit shown  in the  profit and loss account, because entry I of the  Second Schedule  to the Bonus Act is "net profit as per profit  and loss account".  It may be mentioned that Paragraph II(i)  of the Sixth Schedule to the Electricity (Supply) Act  provides that if the "clear profit" of a licensee exceeds the  amount of  reasonable  return, the excess has to  be  divided  into three  equal  portions.  One portion has to be  given  as  a rebate  to  the consumers; another portion is set  apart  as Tariffs and Dividends Control Reserve; and the third 7 66 portion  is kept apart for distribution as  a  proportionate rebate on the amounts collected from the sale of electricity and meter rentals or carried forward in the accounts of  the licensee for distribution to the consumers in future in such manner  as  the State Government may direct.  A  perusal  of Paragraph  11(i)  of the Sixth Schedule to  the  Electricity (Supply)  Act would show that the portion that is set  apart as  a  rebate to the consumers has not been described  as  a reserve  in the same manner as the other portions have  been described, for the simple reason, that the amount has to  be returned  to  the  consumers in the form of  a  rebate.   If rebate  is  given  to  the  consumers  in  respect  of   the electricity  consumed  by  them and for  which  payment  has already  been  made,  it  is  apparent  that  the  price  of electricity  which  the consumers will in  fact  pay,  after receiving the rebate, would be the actual price paid by them for  the  electricity consumed.  To put it  differently  the charges  paid  by the consumers of  electricity  before  the rebate  is  given to them would be treated  as  payments  on account  or provisional payments, and it is only  after  the end of the year when rebate is ascertained and paid to  them in  accordance  with  the  provisions  of  the   Electricity (Supply)  Act  that  the charges  recovered  for  supply  of electricity  could  be  said  to  be  finalised.   On   this assumption  it would appear that any amount in the hands  of the  undertaking liable to be returned to the  consumers  as rebate  cannot be taken into account in computing the  gross profits of the undertaking.  It is only after deducting this amount  that  the actual revenue of the  supply  undertaking could  be computed.  If this assumption is correct,  and  we think it is, then the amount to be returned as rebate to the consumers  is  a  deductible item.   We  cannot  accept  the contention of the learned Advocate that this item, not being an  expenditure  necessary  for earning  a  profit,  is  not deductible.  The basic assumption underlying the  contention that  consumers’ rebate has been deducted as an  expenditure has no validity.  In Poona Electric Supply Co. Ltd. v.  Com- missioner  of  Income-fax,  Bombay(’),  this  Court,   while dealing  with the Income-tax Act, considered the  effect  of Paragraph  II(i)  of the Sixth Schedule to  the  Electricity (Supply) Act and held that the amounts set apart for  rebate and  for  which  deduction was claimed were a  part  of  the excess amount paid to the assessee company and reserved  for being returned to the consumers.  They did not form part  of the assessee’s real profits and, therefore, to arrive at the taxable  income of the assessee from the business  under  s. 10(l)  of  the Income-tax Act, the said amounts  had  to  be deducted from its total income.  Even thought this case  was decided  under  the  Income-tax Act, the  provision  of  the

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Electricity (Supply) Act which we have interpreted was  also interpreted  by  this  Court  in  that  case.   In  Jabalpur Pijlighar  Karamchari Panchayat v. Jabalpur Electric  Supply Co.  Ltd. & Anr.(2) the question was again considered  by  a Bench  of this Court to which one of us  (Jaganmohan  Reddy, J.,) was a party.  At P. 75, it was observed by reference to what the Tribunal had held:               "This  goes  to show that the  rebate  to  the               consumers is not to be utilised by the company               except  for distribution to the  consumers  as               may be directed.  If the company cannot               (1) [1965] 3 S. C. R. 8 1 8.               (2) [1972] 1 S. C. R. 60,                767               have  the benefit of it, it stands  to  reason               that  the _worker cannot ask for a  share  and               the  claim of the appellant for  inclusion  of               this sum must be rejected." In  our  view there is no doubt that the amount  payable  as consumers’ rebate under the Electricity (Supply) Act has  to be  deducted before profits could be compulted and has  been rightly held to be deductible by the High Court. The  last  item  of  reference is whether  the  sum  of  Rs. 35,682/can  be legally appropriated by the licensee  to  the development reserve in respect of the accounting year  1964- 65  and deducted under item 6 of the Third Schedule  to  the Bonus  Act.   It  appears  that before  the  High  Court  an affidavit was filed by the company which gave particulars of the  break  up of the development reserve of  Rs.  35,682/as having  been  incurred  in  the  four  years  including  and preceding  the  year 1964-65 for which the bonus  was  being considered.   The proportionate development reserve for  the year  1961-62  was  Rs. 4,864/-; for the  year  1962-63  Rs. 1,671/-;  for the year 1963-64 Rs. 18,602/and for  the  year 1964-65 Rs. 10,5551-.  On behalf of the workmen it was urged that  only  a sum of Rs. 10,5551-  being  the  proportionate development reserve calculated on the development rebate for the  year 1964-65 was permissible, but no addition could  be made for the proportionate development reserve in respect of the  years  1961-62, 1962-63 and 1963-64.  The  argument  on behalf  of  the company which was accepted  by  the  learned Judges of the High Court was that the funds in the hands  of the company did not permit of any sum being appropriated  as development reserve in the years 1961-62, 1962-63 and  1963- 64,  and  as  under  the proviso  to  sub-paragraph  (1)  of paragraph  VA  of  the Sixth  Schedule  to  the  Electricity (Supply)  Act "reasonable return had to be provided for  the company". which could not be provided because there were not sufficient funds available for development reserve, all  the sums  which  should have been appropriated in the  years  of account preceding the year in question were appropriated  in the   year  1964-65.   The  High  Court  thought  that   the development  reserve had to be calculated for each  year  in the manner indicated in sub-paragraph (1) of paragraph VA of the Sixth Schedule to the Electricity (Supply) Act, but  the actual  appropriation  may be spread over a period  of  five years  in order to ensure that the reasonable return to  the licensee  is  not  impaired.  Though  normally  the  "annual instalments" specified in sub-paragraph (2) of paragraph  VA of  the Sixth Schedule to the Electricity (Supply)  Act  may indicate  that some amount must be appropriated every  year, but on a strict construction of sub-paragraph (2) along with the proviso to sub-paragraph (1) of paragraph VA, it was  of the  view  that in order to secure a reasonable  return,  no amount may be available for appropriation to the development

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reserve in some years, and that in such contingencies, there seems to be no legal bar if the instalments for some of  the years   are  reduced  to  zero,  and  the  entire   sum   is appropriated in a succeeding year, provided that the maximum period  of five years is not exceeded.  It was also  pointed out  by the learned Judges that the actual language used  by the Legislature in item 6 of the Third Schedule to the Bonus Act shows that any sum which is "required to be appropriated by the 768 LIcensee  in  respect of the accounting year  to  a  reserve under the Sixth Schedule to that Act shall also be deducted" showed  that  the emphasis was on the sum  "required  to  be appropriated" in respect of the accounting year and not  the sum  calculated in respect of the accounting  year.   Hence, the  various  sums calculated as  development  reserve.  for preceding  years also, if permitted by sub-paragraph (2)  of paragraph  VA  of  the Sixth  Schedule  to  the  Electricity (Supply) Act to be appropriated in the accounting year 1964- 65  will  come  within  the scope of item  6  of  the  Third Schedule to the Bonus Act and hence deductible. The  arguments  before  us  have  also  followed  the   same contentions which found favour with the High Court, but,  in our  view,  those  contentions  are  not  supported  by  the language  of item 6 of the Third Schedule to the Bonus  Act. That item is as follows Item No. 6 Category of employer Any  employer  falling under Item No. 1 or Item  No.  5  and being  a  licensee  within the meaning  of  the  Electricity Supply Act, 1948. Further sums to be deducted In  addition  to  the  sums  deductible  under  any  of  the aforesaid   items,   such  sums  as  are  required   to   be appropriated  by the licensee in respect of  the  accounting year to a reserve under the Sixth Schedule to that Act shall also be deducted (emphasis added). The  view of the High Court would have been correct, if  the words  in Item 6 were "such sums as are appropriated by  the licensee in the accounting year to a reserve under the Sixth Schedule to that Act." If these words were there, it may  be that  the allocations of development reserve in  respect  of the  previous years in the accounting year would  have  also become  deductible.  But the High Court has  overlooked  the expressions  "required  to be appropriated  ....  under  the Sixth Schedule to that Act" and "in respect of".  The  words "required  to  be appropriated" indicate  that  the  Company should  be  obligated  under  the  Sixth  Schedule  to   the Electricity  Supply  Act  to appropriate an  amount  to  the development reserve funds.  The words "in respect of" have a wide connotation and being colourless are generally intended to  convey a connection or relation between the two  subject matters  to which they refer.  In the context in which  they have  been  used, they mean "connected with" or  "  relating to".  The first requirement for the applicability of Item  6 of  the  Sixth  Schedule to  the  Electricity  (Supply)  Act should,  therefore, be a legal obligation on the Company  to appropriate an amount to the development reserve fund.   The second  requirement is that the appropriation made  must  be connected with or related to the accounting year.  Clause  5 (a)  (i)  of the Sixth Schedule to that Act also  speaks  of appropriation to the development reserve "in respect of each and  every accounting year".  The phrase  "accounting  year" does not appear to have been defined  769

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in that Act.  Instead, the expression "the year of  account" is defined in s. 2(14) of that Act.  It means the  financial year in relation to a licensee.  The expression  "accounting year"  has  been defined in s. 2(l) of the  Bonus  Act.   In respect of the Company, it would mean "the period in respect of  which  any profit and loss account of the  Company  laid before it in annual genera, meeting is made up, whether that period  is a year or not." The Company prepared  its  profit and  loss account in 1964-65.  So for purposes of Item 6  in the Third Schedule, the accounting year of the Company would be  1964-65.  Section 5 of the Bonus Act provides  that  the available surplus "in respect of any accounting year"  shall be  the  gross  profits  for  that  year,  after   deducting therefrom  the  sums referred to in section  6.  The  amount which  could be deducted is the amount which is required  to be appropriated by the   licensee   in   respect   of    the accounting year 1964-65. A reference to sub-paragraphs   (1) and (2) of paragraph VA of the Sixth Schedule     to     the Electricity  (Supply)  Act does not justify  the  submission that  the  sums which could have been appropriated  for  the years 1961-62, 1962-63 and 1963-64 were the amounts required to   be  appropriated  in  the  accounting   year   1964-65. Paragraph VA, in our view, deals only with appropriation  to a development reserve for the year of account, which in this case would be 1964-65, and if in that year the whole of  the development  reserve  could  not  be  appropriated  to   the reserve,  sub-paragraph  (2)  of paragraph  VA  permits  the appropriation in annual instalments spread over a period not exceeding   five  years  from  the  commencement   of   that accounting  year.  Sub-paragraphs, (1) and (2) of  paragraph VA of the Electricity (Supply) Act which are relavant are as follows :               "VA.  (1) There shall be created a reserve  to               be  called  the Development Reserve  to  which               shall  be  appropriated  in  respect  of  each               accounting  year a sum equal to the amount  of               income-tax  and super-tax calculated at  rates               applicable  during  the  assessment  year  for               which  the accounting year of the licensee  is               the   previous   year,  on   the   amount   of               development  rebate to which the  licensee  is               entitled for the accounting year under  clause               (vi)  (b) of sub-section (2) of section 10  of               the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922.                Provided, that if in any accounting year, the               clear    profit   [excluding    the    special               appropriation  to be made under item  (va)  of               clause  (c) of sub-paragraph (2) of  paragraph               XVII] together with the accumulations, if any,               in  the Tariffs and Dividends Control  Reserve               less  the  sum calculated as  aforesaid  falls               short of the reasonable return, the sum to  be               appropriated  to  the Development  Reserve  in               respect  of  such  accounting  year  shall  be               reduced by the amount of the short-fall.               (2)   Any  sum to be appropriated towards  the               Development   Reserve   in  respect   of   any               accounting year under subparagraph (1), may be               appropriated in annual instalments spread over               a  period  not exceeding five years  from  the               commencement of that accounting year."               770 As we have noticed earlier, the words "that accounting year" refer   to  the  year  of  account  in  respect   of   which appropriation  to  the reserve and the deduction  under  the

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Bonus Act is being considered.  In this case, the deductions for  the  year 1961-62, 1962-63 and 1963-64  are  not  being considered, nor have there been any appropriations in  terms of  paragraph  VA of the Sixth Schedule to  the  Electricity (supply)  Act in the respective accounting years.  There  is nothing in subparagraphs (1) and (2) of paragraph VA of  the Sixth  Schedule  to  the,  Electricity  (Supply)  Act  which justifies the submission that what has not been appropriated for  the earlier year could be appropriated in the  year  of account.   In this view, the only amount that is  deductible on account of development reserve as contended by the appel- lants  is  Rs. 10,555/- in respect of  the  accounting  year 1964-65.  The award of the Tribunal and the judgment of  the High Court directing the deduction of Rs. 35,682/- cannot be sustained  and  are  set  aside.   Instead  we  direct   the deduction of Rs. 10,555/- only. The  result is that the appeals are partly allowed,  but  in the circumstances each party will bear their own costs. S.C.                                                 Appeals partly allowed. 771