The judgment of the court was delivered by
KAPUR, J.--These five appeals pursuant to special leave
are directed against the order of the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal by which
five appeals before it, two in regard to income-tax assessment for 1947-48 and
1948-49 and the other three against business profits tax assessment for the
three chargeable accounting periods covered by the same accounting periods, were
disposed of. By the Income-tax Officer and by the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner the matter was decided in the income-tax assessment appeal relating
to the year of assessment 1947-48. The question in all these appeals is common
and it relates to depreciation under section 10(2)(vi) of the Income-tax Act
(hereinafter termed the Act). The appellant before us is the Jogta Coal Co. and
the respondent, the Commissioner of Income-tax, West Bengal. The appellant
company was incorporated on September 14, 1945.
The facts leading up to these appeals are that two
brothers E. C. Agabeg and A. A. Agabeg were lessees of a coal mine situate in
village Jogta in the Jharia coal field area which belonged to the Raja of
Jharia. The two brothers installed on the land leased to them plant and
machinery and erected buildings and inclines and started working the coal mine.
On April 10, 1935, the two brothers constituted themselves into a private
limited company called Agabeg Brothers Ltd. On July 19, 1945, Agabeg Brothers
Ltd. agreed to transfer to S. K. Bajpai all its right, title and interest in the
leasehold property with other mokarari pottahs (perpetual leases) and a decree,
which was passed in its favour, together with all appurtenances including
houses, huts and other erections belonging to the vendor, all machinery, plant,
stores, furniture etc. and "the benefit of the uncompleted balance of all
orders and contracts for the supply of coal existing at the date of the
completion of the sale". To this agreement were attached two schedules
giving the list of the properties which were to be sold. Rs. 1,00,000 were paid
as earnest money and the balance was to be paid at the time of the sale. The
allocation of the purchase money was this, that out of Rs. 23,00,000, Rs.
13,00,000 were to be deemed to be paid in respect of the price of the
underground and surface rights and other appurtenances and benefit of the
assignment of the balance of uncompleted orders and contracts and Rs. 10,00,000
as the value of the machinery, stores, furniture, stocks, etc. Another clause of
the contract was that the company was to go into voluntary liquidation to give
effect to the agreement for sale. There were certain leasehold rights in favour
of third parties. Under clause 12 of the agreement those third parties were to
attorn to the appellant on the completion of the sale. On October 15, Agabeg
Brothers Ltd. went into voluntary liquidation and two liquidators were
appointed. On December 28, 1945, an indenture evidencing the sale in favour of
the appellant was executed to which the parties were the liquidators,
debenture-trustees, Bajpai and the appellant (Jogta Coal Co.). By the sale deed
all the properties which were agreed to be sold under the agreement of July 19,
were sold to the appellant. The balance of the sale price, i.e., Rs. 22,00,000,
which was remaining due was paid to the vendors in accordance with the terms of
the agreement and acknowledged in the sale deed.
The accounting periods were the two years ending December
31, 1946, and December 31, 1947, and the assessment years were 1947-48 and
1948-49. The point in controversy before us is the amount on which the appellant
was entitled to calculate deduction allowance for purposes of depreciation under
section 10(2)(vi) of the Indian Income-tax Act.
The Income-tax Officer held that the appellant paid the
whole of the price as recited in the deed of sale, that is, Rs. 23,00,000 but he
was of the opinion that the allocation of this sum on the different assets as
mentioned in the sale deed was not correct and that a portion of the
consideration was for the purchase of the goodwill. In his order he said :
"The colliery was well established and had its own
clientage which the assessee company secures without much effort. For such
reasons it is only essential that some part of consideration may be apportioned
under the head goodwill" ;
And he estimated the value of the goodwill at Rs. 7,50,000
and the rest he valued as follows :
Land including shafts and inclines
which are estimated at Rs. 80,000 ... Rs. 10,00,000
Buildings ... 2,00,000
Plant and machinery ... 3,50,000
-----------------------
15,50,000
-----------------------
The appellant went in appeal to the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner who also accepted the estimate made by the Income-tax Officer and
dismissed the appeal. The matter was taken to the Appellate Tribunal and in a
short order the Tribunal held that the consideration paid was Rs. 23,00,000 but
it put its own estimated value on the different kinds of assets which were
purchased. It held :
"The cost price of the various assets, in the
circumstances, has necessarily to be estimated with reference to the prevailing
market conditions :
(1) Land and buildings ... 9,20,000-0-0
(2) Shafts and inclines ... 80,000-0-0
(3) Buildings ... 3,00,000-0-0
(4) Plant and machinery ... 6,00,000-0-0
(5) Goodwill ... 4,00,000-0-0"
Against this order the appellant applied for a reference
to be made to the High Court under section 66(1) of the Income-tax Act but the
Tribunal was of the opinion that no question of law arose and dismissed the
application. The appellant then applied to the High Court under section 66(2)
and raised seven questions of law. The High Court held that the case did not
fall under section 66(2) of the Act and therefore the Tribunal could not be
directed to make a reference and it discharged the rule. As stated above the
Tribunal decided all the appeals of the appellant by one order. Five appeals
have therefore been brought in this court by special leave, and the question
involved in all the appeals is what is the amount on which the depreciation
under section 10(2)(vi) of the Act is to be calculated.
Counsel for the appellant contended that once it was
accepted by the Tribunal that the total value of the lands, buildings, shafts
and inclines was Rs. 13 lakhs and Rs. 23 lakhs had actually been paid it was not
open to the Income-tax authorities or the Appellate Tribunal to vary the amount
paid by the appellant as the price of plant and machinery and to hold that Rs.
10 lakhs included the price of another asset also. He conceded that it was open
to the Appellate Tribunal to hold that the amount stated to have been paid was
fictitious and that something less than Rs. 23 lakhs was as a matter of fact
paid but it was contended that the Tribunal had no jurisdiction to hold that
although the amount was actually paid, it was not the price of the assets
purchased by the appellant but was paid for something else also. In the contract
to sell and in the final sale deed there is no mention of the sale of any
goodwill. The amount of Rs. 10 lakhs is shown in the contract of sale as the
value of machinery, stores, furniture, fittings, etc. In the sale deed the same
is made clear, that is, Rs. 13 lakhs were deemed to be paid in respect of
underground and surface rights and other appurtenances and the assignment of the
balance of the uncompleted orders and contracts and Rs. 10 lakhs were deemed to
be the value of machinery etc. There is no mention of the sale of goodwill in
the sale deed itself. Goodwill has been described as :
"The benefit arising from connection and reputation
which includes the probability of the old customers going to the new firm which
has acquired the business ; but this last phrase is not of itself adequate. That
which the purchaser of a goodwill actually acquires, as between himself and his
vendor, is the right to carry on the same business under the old name with such
addition or qualification, if any, as may be necessary for the protection of the
vendor from liability or exposure to litigation under the doctrine of 'holding
out' and to represent himself to former customers as the successor to that
business."
There is no doubt that there is no specific mention of the
sale of goodwill in the sale deed but counsel for the respondent submitted that
in the resolution for liquidation which was passed by Agabeg Brothers Ltd. on
October 15, 1945, the sale of Jogta Colliery was mentioned. The resolution was :
"That the sale of Jogta Colliery for Rs. 23 lakhs be and the same is hereby
approved" and therefore what was sold to the appellant was amongst other
things the goodwill. Goodwill is a commercial term and is well understood in
business and is an asset which is capable of valuation. In the sale deed it is
not mentioned as such. This raises two questions : (i) Was the amount of Rs. 10
lakhs paid by the appellant only for the asset which he purports to have
purchased or was it for something else also ? (ii) Is it open to the Tribunal to
disregard the price which the appellant actually paid for the assets he
purchased as evidenced by the sale deed and hold that this price although paid
was not for those assets only but also included another asset ?
It was contended that it is a question of law as to
whether the Tribunal has jurisdiction to go into the question and reduce the
price which the appellant is proved to have paid and say that the price paid was
not only for the asset purchased but also for something else. In other words is
it within the jurisdiction of the Tribunal to conjecture as to what should be
the cost of the asset to the assessee.
The section of the Income-tax Act which applies for the
purpose of depreciation and which is the subject-matter of discussion in this
appeal is section 10(2)(vi) which is as follows :
"Such profits or gains shall be computed after making
the following allowances, namely :--
"(vi) in respect of depreciation of such buildings,
machinery, plant, or furniture being the property of the assessee, a sum
equivalent, where the assets are ships other than ships ordinarily plying on
inland waters to such percentage on the original cost thereof to the assessee as
may in any case or class of cases be prescribed and in any other case, to such
percentage on the written down value thereof as may in any case or class of
cases be prescribed.
The words which require to be considered are "on the
original cost thereof to the assessee". It has been held by the Privy
Council in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Buckingham & Carnatic Co. Ltd.,
that the word assessee in section 10(2)(vi) refers to the person who owns the
property in question and who is being assessed and not the predecessor and
depreciation allowance is to be based on the original cost of such property to
such person (i.e., assessee) and therefore the cost to be considered for the
purpose of calculating the depreciation allowance is the original cost of the
purchaser who is being assessed and not the written down value to his
predecessor. We do not think that there is any doubt on the wording of the
section or on the interpretation that has been put upon those words that the
cost to be calculated for the purpose of depreciation allowance is the cost to
the assessee and not to the person who makes the sale but still the question
remains whether the Appellate Tribunal has the jurisdiction to hold that what
the appellant has actually paid as the price of a particular asset is not its
real price and the price paid includes the price of some other asset which must
have been purchased.
Counsel for the appellant referred to Craddock v. Zevo
Finance Co. Ltd. where it was held that in determining the profits made by the
company the correct figure of costs of investments made by the company is not
the market value of the goods but the actual price paid by the company. This
matter was taken to the House of Lords by the Revenue but the appeal was
dismissed. It does not appear from the report as to the reasons for it : See
Craddock v. Zevo Finance Co. Ltd. In Konstam's Income-tax, 12th Edition,
paragraph 126, the law is stated thus :
"If a finance company acquires securities by
purchase, the initial figure at which these should be entered for the
calculation of profits is not their estimated market value at any given date,
but their cost. "
Counsel for the Commissioner relied on the judgment of the
Lahore High Court in Pindi Kashmir Transport Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of
Income-tax. In that case certain business concerns carrying on business of road
transport were amalgamated and formed into a private limited company which took
over from their predecessor vehicles and route permits in consideration of
allotting to them fully paid up shares. The company sold some of the vehicles
and claimed to have incurred a loss. The income-tax authorities in computing the
original cost to the company for the purpose of making a depreciation allowance
held that they were not bound to accept the nominal value of the shares
transferred as the actual cost of the vehicles to the company inasmuch as the
value of the vehicles had been unduly inflated. It is not necessary for us to
say whether that case is correctly decided or otherwise. In that case the
English decision in In re Wragg Ltd., and Craddock v. Zevo Finance Co. Ltd.,
were sought to be distinguished on facts but those authorities lay down that so
long as the purchaser honestly regards the consideration for the transfer as
proper and pays it his estimate cannot be critically examined and the transfer
remains unimpeachable.
Whether the law applicable should be as laid down in the
English cases or in the cases decided by the Lahore High Court it is not
necessary to decide because we think that the following two questions of law
arise out of the order of the Appellate Tribunal and a reference should have
been made to the High Court. These two questions were sought to be raised by the
appellant under section 66(1) of the Act and again before the High Court under
section 66(2) of the Act :
"(1) Whether on the interpretation of the sale deed
it can be said that any good-will was purchased by the assessee ?.........
(7) Whether in view of the said proviso to section
10(5)(a) the Income-tax Officer on the facts and circumstances arising out of
this case was competent to go behind the conveyance and fix a valuation of his
own in the way he has done ?"
Question No. 1 was not allowed by us to be argued because
the matter was not taken in the statement of case on behalf of the appellant and
the only question which survives for consideration is the second one, i.e., No.
7, and this question, as it is or with modifications, should have been referred
to the High Court.
We therefore direct that the question with the necessary
modifications, if any, be referred and the case stated in accordance with
section 66(1) of the Income-tax Act. As to costs, in the event of the case being
decided in favour of the appellant it will be entitled to the costs incurred in
this court but if it fails in the High Court it will have to pay the costs of
the Commissioner in this court. The case is therefore remitted with the
direction that the Tribunal should proceed in accordance with law and the
directions given above.
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