Leave granted.
We are concerned with the following questions, which were
answered, in the judgment and order of the High Court at Madras (see [1985] 152
ITR 708), which is under appeal, in the negative and in favour of the Revenue
(page 712) :
" 1. Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances
of the case, and having regard to the provisions of section 36(1)(iii) of the
Income-tax Act, 1961, the Appellate Tribunal was right in holding that the
interest attributable to the loans borrowed by the assessee-firm for the purpose
of construction of Safire theatre should be allowed under the head 'Business'
especially when the theatre complex was sold as a going concern on July 31,
1965, and the business of exhibition of cinematographic films stopped on and
from July 31, 1965 ?
2. Whether the conclusion of the Appellate Tribunal that
the business carried on by the assessee as jewellers and in the running of the
cinema theatre, restaurant, etc., are composite is based on valid materials and
is a reasonable view to take on the facts and in the circumstances of the case ?
"
The assessment years with which we are concerned are the
assessment years 1967-68, 1968-69 and 1969-70.
The assessee ran a jewellery business. It then commenced
business also in the exhibition of cinematographic films. In 1961, it obtained
loans for building a cinema theatre. The said theatre was built in 1962 and was
run by the assessee until July 31, 1965, when it was transferred to another
firm. For the years during which the assessee exhibited films in the said
theatre the interest paid on the loans obtained for constructing it were allowed
by the Revenue as a deduction under the provisions of section 36(1)(iii) of the
Income-tax Act, that is to say, as being the amount of interest paid in respect
of capital borrowed for the purpose of the assessee's business. For the years in
question, however, the Income-tax Officer declined that deduction on the ground
that the business of exhibition of films in the said theatre was no longer in
existence ; therefore, the interest on borrowings attributable to this
particular business could not be allowed as a deduction in computing the profits
of the other business of the assessee. In appeal, the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner allowed the deduction as claimed by the assessee.
The Income-tax Appellate Tribunal noted the facts
aforementioned and found that there was no dispute that for the construction of
the said theatre the assessee had made heavy borrowings and the interest on such
borrowings had been allowed by the Revenue as a deduction as the assessee was
running the said theatre as its own business. The assessee had admittedly paid
the interest in question for the years under appeal in respect of the loans
which had been obtained for the purpose of investing in the business of
exhibition of films. The Appellate Assistant Commissioner had found that it was
not disputed that the moneys were borrowed for the purposes of the business of
exhibition of films and for the construction of the said theatre, the income
from which had been assessed in the earlier years. It was thus clear that at the
time when the borrowings were made they were made for business purposes. The
Revenue, the Tribunal noted, did not and could not challenge the correctness of
this. The Tribunal also found that there was force in the submission on behalf
of the assessee that the business carried on by the assessee as a jeweller and
in the running of the said theatre, restaurant, etc., were composite. The
assessee was carrying on both the businesses in jewellery and in the exhibition
of films till July 31, 1965, and that only thereafter was the activity of
exhibition of films discontinued. The liability to pay interest had arisen in
respect of the business carried on by the assessee till July 31, 1965. The
Tribunal, accordingly, upheld the decision of the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner to permit the deduction under section 36(1)(iii) of the Income-tax
Act.
The High Court considered the second question referred to
it first and came to the conclusion that, since the closing of the cinema
business had not affected in the least the assessee's old business in jewellery,
there was no interconnection, interlacing or interdependence between the
jewellery business and the cinema business. Unless there was such
interconnection, interlacing or interdependence, it was not possible to say that
both the businesses constituted a composite or the same business. It, therefore,
answered the second question against the assessee. In view of that answer, it
held that the borrowings made by the assessee for the construction of the said
theatre could not be allowed as a deduction under the head of
"Business" after the business of running the cinema theatre had been
closed as a result of the sale of the said theatre on July 31, 1965, as a going
concern to a different firm. Once the assessee had ceased to carry on that
business for which the amount was borrowed, the interest payments could not be
deducted as a business expenditure as, admittedly, the business had stopped and
no income accrued therefrom. The High Court relied upon the judgments that
related to the benefit of carry forward losses and carry forward depreciation.
Learned counsel for the assessee drew our attention to the
judgment of this court in B. R. Ltd. v. V. P. Gupta, CIT [1978] 113 ITR 647.
This court affirmed what had been held earlier in Produce Exchange Corporation
Ltd. v. CIT [1970] 77 ITR 739. Both these related to the meaning to be ascribed
to the expression "same business" for the purposes of setoff of carry
forward loss. In the former case, this court said (page 654 of 113 ITR) :
"The decisive test, as held by this court in Produce
Exchange Corporation's case [1970] 77 ITR 739 (SC) is unity of control and not
the nature of the two lines of business.... The fact that one business cannot
conveniently be carried on after the closure of the other may furnish a strong
indication that the two businesses constitute the same business. But the
decision of this court in Prithvi Insurance Co.'s case [1967] 63 ITR 632 (SC)
shows that no decisive inference can be drawn from the fact that after the
closure of one business, another may or may not conveniently be carried on....
Thus, the unity of control and the other circumstances adverted to above show
that there was dovetailing or interlacing between the business of import and the
business of export carried on by the assessee and that they constitute the same
business."
The fact that the Revenue had during the years when the
assessee carried on the business of cinematographic films permitted as a
deduction under section 36(1)(iii) the interest on loans obtained by the
assessee for the purpose of constructing the said theatre shows that at the time
when the loans were obtained the said theatre was a part of the business of the
assessee. It was interest on these loans, borrowed for the purpose of the
business of the assessee, which was being paid in the years in question and the
Tribunal was, in our view, right in concluding that such interest had to be
treated as a deduction under section 36(1)(iii). The loans had been obtained for
the purposes of the assessee's business. The fact that the particular part of
the business for which the loans had been obtained had been transferred or
closed down did not alter the fact that the loans had, when obtained, been for
the purpose of the assessee's business. The test of "same business"
appropriate for set-off of carry forward losses is not appropriate here.
Apart from this, the Tribunal found as a fact that the
business carried on by the assessee as a jeweller and in running the cinema
theatre, etc., was composite. In view of this finding also, the assessee was
entitled to the deduction of the interest paid on the loans aforementioned under
section 36(1)(iii) of the Income-tax Act.
The appeal is allowed. The judgment and order of the High
Court under appeal is set aside and the questions aforequoted are answered in
the affirmative and in favour of the assessee.
There shall be no order as to costs.