K. C. P. LIMITED VS COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX
2001 P T D 1518
[245 I T R 421]
[Supreme Court of India]
Present: S. P. Bharucha, R. C. Lahoti and N. Santosh Hegde, JJ
K.C.P. LIMITED
versus
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME‑TAX
Civil Appeal No.7652 of 1996, decided on 09/08/2000.
(Appeal from the judgment and order, dated December 29, 1994, of the ‑Andhra Pradesh High Court in R.C. No. 12 of 1987).
Income‑tax‑‑‑
‑‑‑‑Income‑‑‑Accrual of income‑‑‑Assessee manufacturing and selling sugar‑ Sale of sugar at price higher than levy price fixed by Government‑‑‑Interim order in 1970 by High Court permitting sale at such higher price‑‑‑Amount in excess of levy price retained in separate account in accounting year relevant to assessment year 1972‑73‑‑‑Amount transferred to Sugar Equalisation Fund in 1997‑‑Excess amount was realised in ordinary business activities‑‑‑Retention in separate account and subsequent transfer to Sugar Equalisation Account did not change character of receipt in assessment year 1972‑73‑‑‑Amount was a trading receipt in assessee's hands in assessment year 1972‑73‑‑‑Indian Income Tax Act, 1961.
If a receipt is a trading receipt the fact that it is not so shown in the account books of the assessee would not prevent the assessing authority from treating it as a trading receipt. It is the true nature and quality of the receipt and not the head under which it is entered in the account books which is decisive. Eventually if the amount so collected is passed on to the State Government or refunded to the purchasers, the assessee would be entitled to claim deduction of the sum when so paid or refunded.
The principle of law laid down in CIT v. Hindustan Housing and Land Development Trust (1986) 161 ITR 524 (SC) is to be read in the light of the facts of that case.
The assessee‑company manufactured sugar and other items. It followed the mercantile system of accounting. In the assessment year 1972‑73 the levy price of sugar was fixed at Rs.120.30 per quintal. The assessee challenged the order appointing a ceiling on the price of sugar by filing a writ petition in the High Court. On March 31, 1970, the High Court of Andhra Pradesh passed an interim order, which, inter alia, permitted the assessee to sell sugar at the rate prevailing prior to the said notification, i.e., at Rs.131.01 plus excise duty pending further orders. Protected by the interim order, the assessee continued to sell sugar at the rate of Rs.131 per quintal. During the assessment year 1972‑73, the appellant‑company collected an amount of Rs.14,96,130 in excess of the levy‑price of sugar fixed by the Government for that year. The writ petition preferred by the assessee before the High Court of Andhra Pradesh came to be dismissed on February 18, 1971. With the dismissal of the writ petition, the interim order passed by the High Court came to be vacated automatically. Neither had the interim order of the High Court specifically cast a liability on the assessee to refund the amount to the purchasers of the sugar from whom the excess amount was realised in the event of the petition being dismissed nor did the final order of the High Court direct it to refund the amount. All that the interim order meant was that upon the dismissal of the writ petition, the assessee could no longer charge the price of Rs.131 plus excise duty. With effect from April 1, 1976, the Levy Sugar Price Equalisation Fund Act, 1976, came into force. It provided, inter alia, that the amounts representing all excess realisations made by producers irrespective of whether such excess realisations were made before or after the commencement of this Act shall be credited to a fund known as Levy Sugar Price Equalisation Fund established under section 3 of the Act. The vires of this Act were also subjected to challenge by the assessee in a writ petition which was ultimately dismissed. The matter was brought in appeal before the Supreme Court and that appeal was still pending. The Income‑tax Officer treated the amount of Rs.14,96,130 as part of the trading receipts of the company for the assessment year 1972‑73. The Commissioner of Income‑tax (Appeals) and the Tribunal held that the amount was not taxable. The High Court held that the amount was taxable. On appeal to the Supreme Court:
Held, dismissing the appeal, that the excess amount of Rs.14,96,130 was realised by the assessee in the ordinary manner of its business activities and as the price of sugar sold by it. The amount was retained by the assessee as price of the sugar sold by it though the right of the assessee to realise the amount was the subject of dispute. Though the excess amount was retained in a separate account that would not make any difference. Merely maintaining a separate account under a heading given by the assessee would not alter the nature of the receipt if it is actually a trading receipt. Secondly, nothing was available on record to find out how and in what manner the separate account was maintained by the assessee. The transfer of the amount to the Sugar Equalisation Fund of the Government would not have any bearing on the taxability of the amount which was a trading receipt in the assessment year 1972‑73.
CIT v. K.C.P. Ltd. (1995) 216 ITR 602 affirmed.
Chowringhee Sales Bureau (P.) Ltd. v. CIT (1973) 87 ITR 542; 31 STC 254 (SC); CIT v. Bazpur Cooperative Sugar Factory Ltd. (1988) 172 ITR 321 (SC); CIT v. Chodavaram Cooperative Sugars Ltd. (1987) 163 ITR 420 (AP); CIT v. Hindustan Housing and Land Development Trust Ltd. (1986) 161 ITR 524 (SC); CIT v. Mysore Sugar Co. Ltd. (1990) 183 ITR 113 (Kar.); CIT v. Seksaria Biswan Sugar Factory (Pvt.) Ltd. (1992) 195 ITR 778 (Bom.); Jonnalla Narasimharso & Co. v. CIT (1993) 200 ITR 588 (SC); Punjab Distilling Industries Ltd. v. CIT (1959) 35 ITR 519 (SC) and Sinclair Murray & Co. (Pvt.) Ltd. v. CIT (1974) 97 ITR 615; (1975) 35 STC 142 (SC) ref.
R.F. Nariman and T.A. Ramachandran, Senior Advocates (Mrs. Janaki Ramachandran, K. Ram Kumar and Ms. L. Roopa, Advocates with them) for Appellant.
Dr. Gauri Shankar, Senior Advocate (Ranbir Chandra, S. Rajappa and Ms. Sushma Suri, Advocates with him) for Respondent.
JUDGMENT
R.C. LAHOTI, J.‑‑‑By the impugned order of the High Court, the following question of law referred by the Income‑tax Appellate Tribunal to the High Court (see (1995) 216 ITR 602) under section 256(1) of the Income Tax Act, 1961, has been answered in the negative, i.e. in favour of the Revenue and against the assessee (page 603):
"Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances of the case, the Appellate Tribunal .is right in law in upholding the order of the Commissioner of Income‑tax deleting Rs.14,96,130 being the excess realisation over and above the authorised price on sale of sugar?
The aggrieved assessee has come up in appeal.
The appellant‑company manufactures sugar and other items. It follows the mercantile system of accounting. In the assessment year 1972‑73, the levy price of sugar was fixed at Rs.120.30 per quintal. The appellant challenged the order appointing ceiling on the price of the sugar by filing a writ petition in the High Court. On March 31, 1970, the High Court of Andhra Pradesh passed an interim order which, inter alia, read as under:
"....the operation of notification issued by the respondent herein namely ,the Union of India, Ministry of Food and Agriculture, Community Development and Cooperation, New Delhi, dated February 20, 1970, and March 1, 1970, in so far as it relates to Zone No.2 be and hereby is suspended pending further orders on this petition and it is further ordered that the petitioners be and hereby are permitted to sell sugar at the rate prevailing prior to the said notification, i.e., at Rs.131.01 plus excise duty pending further orders on this petition."
Protected by the interim order, the appellant continued to sell sugar at the rate of Rs.131 per quintal. During the assessment year 1972‑73, the appellant‑company collected an amount of Rs.14,96,130 in excess of levy price of sugar fixed by the Government for that year. The Income‑tax Officer treated the amount of Rs.14,96,130 as part of the trading receipt of the company for that year. In an appeal preferred by the company, the Commissioner of Income‑tax held that the said amount could not be brought to tax. The Revenue preferred an appeal before the Appellate Tribunal which was dismissed. However, the abovesaid question of law was referred by the Tribunal for the opinion of the High Court at the instance of the Revenue. The High Court answered the question in the negative as already stated.
The writ petition preferred by the appellant before the High Court of Andhra Pradesh came to be dismissed on February 18, 1971. With the dismissal of the writ petition, the interim order passed by the High Court came to be vacated automatically. It is pertinent to note that neither the interim order of the High Court had specifically cast a liability on the appellant‑company to refund the amount to the purchasers of the sugar from whom the excess amount was realised in the event of the petition being dismissed nor did the final order of the High Court direct the appellant to refund the amount. All that the interim order meant was that upon the dismissal of the writ petition, the appellant could not longer charge the price of Rs.131 plus excise duty. The fact remains, as was admitted at the Bar that the amount continued to remain with the appellant‑company and was not refunded to the purchasers.
Then came into force, with effect from April 1, 1976, the Levy Sugar Price Equalisation Fund Act, 1976. It provided, inter alia, that the amounts representing all excess realisations made by producers irrespective of whether such excess realisations were made before or after the commencement of this Act shall be credited to a fund known as Levy Sugar Price Equalisation Fund established under section 3 of the Act. It is not disputed that the amount of Rs.14,96,310 was liable to be transferred by the appellant‑company to the said fund. However, the vires of this Act were also subjected to a challenge by the appellant filing a writ petition which was ultimately dismissed. The matter was brought in appeal before the Supreme Court and that appeal is still pending.
According to Shri R.F. Nariman, learned senior' counsel for the appellant‑company, the excess amount was collected by the appellant under interim orders of the Court. The amount though received by the appellant, could not have been appropriated by it as its own. The excess realisation did not accrue to the assessee. It was liable to be refunded to the purchasers of the sugar in the event of the writ petition filed by the appellant‑company being dismissed by the High Court and, therefore, it was a liability of the appellant‑company. The Income‑tax Officer and the High Court have erred in treating the excess amount as trading receipt of the company. Dr. Gauri Shankar, learned senior counsel for the Revenue, has, on the other hand, submitted that the excess amount was realised by the appellant‑company as price of the sugar sold by it during the course of its trading activities and, therefore, it has been rightly held by the High Court to be a trading receipt of the appellant‑company.
We will refer to the law laid down in a few cases by this Court. In Chowringhee Sales Bureau (P.) Ltd. v. CIT (1973) 87 ITR 542 (SC), the appellant as an auctioneer effected sales of, furniture and realised from the buyers in addition to the commission Rs.32,986 as sales tax. The appellant neither paid this amount to the actual owner of the goods on whose behalf the goods were auctioned nor deposited the same in the State Exchequer upon the plea that the `statutory provision creating that liability upon it was not vatic The amount was also not refunded to the persons from whom it had beer collected. This Court held the amount of Rs 32,986 to be the trading or business receipts of the auctioneer (appellant)
To the same effect are the decisions of this Court in Sinclair Murrary & Co. (Pvt.) Ltd. v. CIT (1974) 97 ITR 615 ,and CIT v. Bazpur Cooperative Sugar Factory Ltd. (1988) 172 ITR 321. In these cases it has been the consistent view of this Court that if a receipt is a trading receipt the fact that it is not so shown in the account books of the assessee would not prevent the assessing authority from treating it as a trading receipt. It is the true nature and quality of the receipt and not the head under which it is entered in the account books which is decisive. This Court has further observed that eventually if the amount so collected is passed on to the State Government or refunded to the purchasers, the assessee would be entitled to claim deduction of the sum when so paid or refunded.
In Punjab Distilling Industries Ltd. v. CIT (1959) 35 ITR 519 (SC), the assessee carried on business as a distiller of country liquor and sold tire produce to licensed wholesalers. The Government devised a scheme entitling the distillers to charge the wholesalers a price for the bottles in which the liquor was supplied, at the rates fixed by the Government which price was bound to be repaid on return of the bottles. The distiller collected from the wholesalers certain amount as security deposits though not authorised by the Government scheme. This security deposit was also returned as and when the bottles were returned. This additional sum was entered by the assessee under the heading "Empty bottles return deposit account". A question arose whether the assessee could be. assessed to tax on the balance of the amounts of these additional sums left with the assessee after the refunds were made. This Court held that in realising the additional amount described as security deposit, the assessee was really charging an extra price for the bottles. The additional amounts taken were an integral part of the commercial transaction of the sale of liquor and bottles and when they were realised they were the moneys of the assessee d remained thereafter the moneys of the assessee: They were the assessee's trading receipts and, therefore, the balance of these additional sums left in the hands of the assessee after the refunds were assessable to tax. This Court further held that it did not make any difference that the additional amount was entered in a separate ledger under the head "Empty bottles return deposit account" as the assessee's style of writing up the account books in a particular manner could not alter the real nature of the receipts.
In Jonnalla Narasimharao & Co. v. CIT (1993) 200 ITR 588 (SC), the appellant, a commission agent, collected in the assessment year 1968‑69 certain amounts by way of sales tax under the name "rusum" inasmuch as it disputed its liability to pay sales tax by filing various legal .proceedings. The accounts were maintained on the mercantile system. In 1970. there was a retrospective amendment in the relevant sales tax law as a result of which the appellant's liability was upheld by the lofts. The tax (i.e., the amount of "rusum") was remitted to the State later on and consequent upon the said amendment. This Court held that' in so far as the assessment year 1968‑69 was concerned the amounts collected in the name of 'rusum" constituted business receipts of the appellant.
In the case at hand, the excess amount of Rs.14,96,130 was realised by the appellant‑company in the ordinary manner of its business activities and as the price of sugar sold by it. The amount was retained by the assessee as price of the sugar sold by it though the right of the appellant‑company to realise the amount was the subject of dispute. The interim order of the High Court, looking to the phraseology employed therein, would not make any difference in the nature of receipts by the assessee. Though learned senior counsel for the appellant submitted that the excess amount was retained in a separate account that would also not make any difference in our opinion. Firstly, the consistent view of this Court, as noticed hereinabove" is that merely maintaining a separate account under a heading given by the assessee would not alter the nature of the receipt if it actually be a trading receipt. Secondly, nothing is available on record to find out how and in what manner the separate account was maintained by the assessee.
It was lastly submitted by learned senior counsel for the appellant that in the year 1997, the appellant has transferred the amount to the Sugar Equalisation Fund of the Government. Suffice it to say that such transfer in the year 1997 does not have any bearing on the taxability of the amount which was a trading receipt in the assessment year 1972‑73.
Learned senior counsel for the assessee‑appellant relied on three decisions by different High Courts and submitted that in identical facts and circumstances the price of sugar realised in excess of the levy price was held not to be a trading receipt of the assessee and hence not liable to tax. The decisions so relied on are: CIT v. Mysore Sugar Co. Ltd. (1990) 183 ITR 113 (Kar.); CIT v. Seksaria Biswan Sugar Factory (Pvt.) Ltd. (1992) 195 ITR 778 (Bom.) and CIT v. Chodavaram Cooperative Sugars Ltd. (1987) 163 ITR 420 (AP). We have carefully perused the decisions. It is clear from the facts stated by the High Courts that in each of the cases the assessee's right to realise the excess price was the subject‑matter of dispute pending in the High Court and the High Courts had passed different interim order pursuant to which the respective assesssee were collecting the excess price. Though the interim orders of the High Courts are differently worded in the three cases, one common feature of all the orders is that the realisation of the excess price 'by the respective assessee was hedged by several conditions one of which was that the assessee shall refund the amount received in excess of the price fixed in the event of the pending dispute being decided adversely to the assessee by the Court. Thus the receipt of the amount by the assessee was clearly associated with a liability to refund the amount, which liability was ascertainable and quantified. Such is not the case at hand. The High Court of Karnataka and Bombay have in their decisions referred to and applied the decision of this Court in CIT v. Hindustan Housing and Land Development Trust Ltd. (1986) 161 ITR 524. The facts of the case before the Supreme Court were that certain lands belonging to the assessee‑company were first requisitioned and then compulsorily acquired by the State Government. On an appeal preferred by the respondent‑company, the arbitrator made an award directing compensation to be paid for requisition and acquisition. The arbitrator's award was promptly challenged by the State Government before the High Court. Pending the appeal, the State Government deposited the amount in the Court which the assessee‑company was permitted to withdraw on furnishing a security bond for refunding the amount in the event of the appeal preferred by the State Government being decided in its favour. This Court found that the entire amount was in dispute in the appeal filed by the State Government; that the dispute was "real and substantial; and that the amount deposited by the State Government was permitted to be‑ withdrawn by the assessee subject to a security bond for refunding the amount in the event of the appeal being allowed. On these facts, this Court held that there was no absolute right to receive the enhanced amount at that stage and if the appeal was allowed and in its entirety, the right to payment of enhanced amount would have fallen altogether. The principle of law laid down by this Court in the case of Hindustan Housing and Land Development Trust Limited (1986) 161 ITR 524 is to be read in the light of the facts of that case. Thus none of the decisions relied on by learned senior counsel for the appellant is of any assistance to him.
For the foregoing reasons, we find ourselves in agreement with the view taken by the High Court. The appeal is devoid of any merit. It is dismissed with costs.
M.B.A./521/FC Appeal dismissed