The judgment of the court was delivered by
GROVER J.--These appeals by special leave from a judgment
of the Calcutta High Court arise out of certain questions of law which were
referred relating to the assessment for the assessment year 1956-57, the
relevant accounting year being from September 1, 1954, to August 31, 1955. The
assessee owned a colliery called the Western Kajoria Colliery, hereinafter
referred to as "colliery". It entered into an agreement with another
company on November 29, 1954, to sell the colliery to it. According to this
agreement the vendor was to sell and the purchaser was to buy as on and from
September 1, 1954, all the underground rights, etc., of the colliery with the
machinery and other articles detailed in the schedules annexed to the agreement.
It is not necessary to give the details of the other stock-in-trade which the
purchaser was to purchase. The sale was to be completed within one year from the
date of the execution of the agreement. According to clause 7 of the agreement,
pending completion of the sale or delivery of possession of the premises to the
purchaser, the vendor was to carry on business on behalf of the purchaser and
run the said colliery as on and from September 1, 1954, on the account and at
the cost of the purchaser. The purchaser was to get all the profits and was
liable for all the losses from that date. The price fixed for the colliery was
Rs. 3,50,000. The book value of the assets was Rs. 4,80,290. In the relevant
assessment year the loss of Rs. 70,290 was claimed by the assessee. The
Income-tax Officer rejected the claim for deduction of the loss from the
assessee's other income on the ground that during the accounting period the
assessee did not carry on the business of colliery since the transfer took place
with effect from September 1, 1954. After making adjustment for certain assets
which, according to the Income-tax Officer, were not entitled to depreciation he
determined the figure of loss to be Rs. 11,257. This loss was also disallowed.
The Appellate Assistant Commissioner upheld the order of the Income-tax Officer.
The Appellate Tribunal, however, accepted the contention of the assessee that it
carried on business till November 29, 1954, but did not allow the loss as the
Tribunal was of the view that it had resulted from a closing down sale.
There was another item of dividends received from certain
shares held by the assessee during the relevant accounting year. The Income-tax
Officer included these dividends in the company's income under section 12 of the
Income-tax Act, 1922, hereinafter called "the Act". The assessee
failed to satisfy the authorities that the income received on account of the
dividends could be set off against the loss in business of earlier years brought
forward. The Tribunal made a reference of the following two questions under
section 66(1) of the Act :
" (1) Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances
of the case, the sum of Rs. 11,257 being a claim for loss on sale of assets on
which depreciation was allowable in earlier years is allowable under section
10(2)(vii) in computing the total income of the assessee ?
(2) Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances of the
case, dividend income was to be taken as income, profits and gains of business
of the company and set off against losses brought forward from earlier years
under section 24(2) ? "
Since certain other questions had been sought to be
referred by the assessee in respect of which the Tribunal declined to make a
reference the assessee moved the High Court and the High Court directed that the
following questions be referred :
" (3) Whether, on the facts and circumstances of the
case, the interest income from Western Kajoria Collieries Ltd. is income taxable
under section 10 of the Indian Income-tax Act or under section 12 of the said
Act ?
(4) Whether, on the facts and circumstances of the case,
there was any material to hold that the loan of M/s. Shree Vijoy Corporation
Ltd. was an accommodation loan not advanced during the normal course of
money-lending business ?
(5) If the answer to question No. (4) is that the loan was
a business loan whether the debt had become bad in the year of account and
deductible in computation of the total income ?
(6) Whether, on the facts and circumstances of the case,
the Tribunal was right in refusing to allow set-off of earlier year's business
losses under section 24(2) ? "
The two references were dealt with together by the High
Court.
On the first question the High Court was of the view that
the sale was a closing down sale and the net result of the transaction was that
the assessee was working the colliery from September 1, 1954, for and on account
of the purchaser. While recognising that the coal business was not stopped as
from September 1 1954, the High Court came to the conclusion that it was on
account of the purchaser that the business was carried on and any profits or
losses which might have resulted until the actual sale were to be those of the
purchaser and the vendor was to get only the price fixed together with interest.
The first question was answered against the assessee. The second question was
also answered against the assessee on the view that no colliery business in the
relevant year was carried on by it and therefore no question of set-off could
arise. The third and the fourth questions were answered in accordance with the
findings of fact given by the Tribunal and against the assessee. The fifth
question was not pressed and was not answered. The sixth question was covered by
the second question and, therefore, no answer was returned with regard to it as
well.
In the present appeals we are concerned with the first and
the second question. It has been submitted on behalf of the appellant that the
loss of Rs. 11,257 was allowable under section 10(2)(vii) of the Act in
computing the total income of the appellants The Tribunal had recorded a finding
which was one of fact ; that in the relevant accounting year the appellant did
carry on the colliery business. The finding of the Tribunal had not been
challenged by the department by raising an appropriate question and, therefore,
it was not open to the High Court to go against the finding of the Tribunal and
hold that the business was carried on for and on account of the purchaser. At
any rate it was an indisputable fact that the appellant carried on the business
up to November 29, 1954, and it was only by virtue of the agreement made on that
day that it agreed to treat the business as having been transferred to the
purchaser with effect from September 1, 1954. By means of the agreement it was
not possible to alter the actual state of affairs, namely, the carrying on of
the business by the appellant.
In our judgment there is a good deal of substance in the
above contentions urged on behalf of the appellant. The Tribunal had, in clear
and unequivocal terms, upheld the contention of the appellant that it had
actually carried on the business till November 29, 1954. Section 10(2)(vii)
provides that profits or gains shall be computed after making the allowance in
respect of any such building, machinery or plant which had been sold, etc., the
amount, by which the written down value thereof exceeds the amount for which the
building, machinery or plant is actualy sold or its scrap value. The first
proviso requires that such amount should actually be written off in the books of
the assessee. It is difficult to see how all the conditions necessary for the
allowance under the above provisions were not satisfied. The colliery business
was carried on by the appellant during part of the relevant accounting year. The
machinery and plant had been used for the purpose of the business. The sale of
the colliery took place during the accounting year. The loss of Rs. 11,257 was
written off in the books of the appellant. The present case appears to be
covered by the decision of this court in Commissioner of Income-tax v. National
Syndicate in which all the above conditions for the applicability of section
10(2)(vii) were held to be present. It was said that there was no other
condition to be found in the section or in the Act which had to be complied
with. There was nothing to show that the business of the assessee should have
been carried on for the whole year or that the machinery or plant should have
been used for the whole of the accounting period or if the assessee worked, only
for a part of the year and then sold out the loss that he incurred was not a
business loss. The decisions which were relied upon by the High Court are hardly
of much assistance in the matter and are distinguishable on facts. The first
question should have been answered in favour of the assessee.
On the second question once it is accepted that the
colliery business was carried on for a part of the relevant assessment year the
assessee would be entitled to get a set-off under section 24(2) of the Act if
the shares on account of which the dividends were received formed part of the
assessee's trading assets. It is well settled by the decisions of this court
(see Commissioner of Income-tax v. Cocanada Radhaswami Bank) that section 6 of
the Act classifies the taxable income under the several heads but the scheme is
that income-tax is one tax and section 6 only classifies the taxable income
under different heads for the purpose of computation of the net income of the
assessee. While sub-section (1) of section 24 provides for setting off the loss
under one of the heads mentioned in section 6 against the profits under a
different head in the same year, sub-section (2) provides for the carrying
forward of the loss for one year and setting off the same against the profits or
gains of the assessee from the business in the subsequent year or years. It was
emphasised in the aforesaid decision that sub-section (2) of section 24 in
contradistinction to sub-section (1) is concerned only with the business and not
with its heads under section 6 of the Act. Dividends are included in the meaning
of income under sub-section (1A) of section 12 which is the residuary head.
Applying the principles adverted to before, the amount of dividends would form a
part of the income from the business of the assessee if the shares were a part
of the assessee's trading assets and the assessee would be entitled to a set-off
as claimed against the loss from its business incurred during the previous
years. It does not appear to have been disputed at any stage that the shares
formed part of the stock-in-trade of the share dealing business of the assessee.
There could be no reason, therefore, for the assessee not being entitled to the
setoff claimed. The High Courts have consistently taken the view that business
loss carried forward from earlier years can be set off against dividend income
derived from shares held as stock-in-trade (vide Commissioner of Income-tax v.
Shrikishan Chandmal and Commissioner of Income-tax v. Bhavnagar Trust
Corporation (P.) Ltd.). The second question, therefore, should have been
answered in favour of the assessee. In the result the appeals are allowed with
costs in this court and the decision of the High Court is set aside only with
regard to questions 1 and 2, the answers to which are returned as already
indicated. One hearing fee.
Appeals allowed.