ASSISTANT COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX VS THANTHI TRUST
2001 P T D 2426
[247 I T R 785]
[Supreme Court of India]
Present : S.P. Bharucha N. Santosh Hegde and Y. K. Sabharwal, JJ
ASSISTANT COMMISSIONER OF INCOME‑TAX
Versus
THANTHI TRUST
Civil Appear Nos.4406 to 4410 with 4395 to 4402 of 1996, 4759 to 4761 of 1998, 5772 and 497 to 499 of 2000, decided on 31/01/2001.
(Civil Appeals Nos.4406 to 4410 of 1996 are from the judgment and order, dated December 19, 1994 of the Madras High Court in W. Ps. Nos. 198 to 202 of 1989).
(Civil Appeals Nos.4395 to 4402 of 1996 are from the judgment and order, dated December 19, 1994, of the Madras High Court in W.Ps. Nos. 203, 6632, 6633, 10838 of 1989, 14032 of 1991, 4827 of 1992 and 2228 and 8971 of 1993).
(Civil Appeals Nos.497 to 499 of 2000 are from the judgment and order, dated October 15, 1998, of the Madras High Court in W.Ps. Nos.6193 of 1995, 266 and 267 of 1998).
(a) Income‑tax‑‑‑
‑‑‑‑Charitable trust‑‑‑Newspaper held under trust‑‑‑Charitable purpose‑‑ Education and relief to the poor‑‑‑Requirement that business should be carried on in the course of actual carrying out of primary purpose of trust‑‑ Applies to both business held under trust and business run by trust but not held as corpus‑‑‑Not fulfilled‑‑‑Change of law‑‑‑Requirement that the trust should have a public religious purpose‑‑‑Not satisfied‑‑‑Further change of law‑‑‑Requirement that business should be incidental to attainment of objectives of trust‑‑‑Satisfied‑‑‑Indian Income Tax Act, 1961, Ss. 11(4A) [before and after amendment in 1992 & 13(1)(bb)].
(b) Interpretation of statutes‑‑‑‑
‑‑‑‑Ambiguity‑‑‑Provision to be construed in manner that benefits assessee.
(c) Res judicata‑‑‑
‑‑‑‑Decision on earlier provisions with language akin to but not rendered in the context of specific provision for later period‑‑‑Not res judicata for later period.
(d) Words and phrases‑‑‑
-------Trust", "institution", refer to entities differently constituted ‑‑‑[Thanthi Trust v. Asst. CIT (1995) 213 ITR 626 and Thanthi Trust v. CBDT (1995) 213 ITR 639 reversed].
The founder of a daily newspaper which was founded in 1942, created a trust on March 1, 1954, the business of the newspaper as a going concern being the trust property. The objects of the trust were originally to establish the newspaper as an organ of educated public opinion for the Tamil reading public. On July 9, 1957, the founder executed a supplementary deed making the trust irrevocable and again on July 28, 1961, he executed another supplementary deed directing that the surplus income of the trust shall be devoted to the following purposes; establishing and running a school or college for teaching journalism; establishing and/or running or helping to run schools, colleges or other educational institutions for teaching arts and science; establishing and/or running or helping to run hostels for students or orphanages; and other educational purposes. The question was whether the income of the trust was exempt from income‑tax under the Income Tax Act, 1961, for the following three periods; (i) assessment years 1979‑80 to 1983‑84, for which periods section 13(1)(bb) required that the business should be "carried on in the course of carrying out of a primary purpose of the trust or institution"; (11) assessment years 1984‑85 to 1991‑92, for which periods section 11(4A) provided that the exemption from tax will not apply unless the business was carried on by a trust wholly for public religious purposes and the business consisted of printing and publication of books or was of a kind notified by the Central Government; and (iii) for the assessment years 1992‑93, 1995‑96 and 1996‑97, for which period section 11(4A), as amended in 1992, required that the business carried on by a trust should be "incidental to the attainment of the objective of the trust ...." The Madras High Court in three different judgments held that the income of the trust was exempt from income‑tax. On appeals to the Supreme Court:
Held, (i) reversing the judgment of the High Court (1995) 213 ITR 626) relating to the assessment years 1979‑80 to 1983‑84, that the business of the trust was not carried on in the course of the actual carrying out of the primary purpose of the trust as required by section 13,(1)(bb) and its income was not, therefore, exempt from tax. The business of the trust was the running of a newspaper and that business did not directly accomplish, wholly or in part, the trust's objects of relief of the poor and education.
Thanthi Trust v. Asst. CIT (1995) 213 ITR 626 reversed.
(ii) Reversing the judgment of the High Court (1995).213 ITR 639) relating to the assessment years 1984‑85 to 1991‑92, that the trust was not wholly for public religious purpose and it was not an institution; and, therefore, the trust did not fall within the provisions of section 11(4A), as it then stood, and was not entitled to exemption from tax.
Thanthi Trust v. CBDT (1995) 213 ITR'639 reversed.
(iii) Affirming the decision of the High Court (1999) 238 ITR 635) relating to the assessment years 1992‑93, 1995‑96 and 1996‑97, it not being disputed that the income of the newspaper business had been employed to achieve its objectives of education and relief to the poor, that the trust was entitled to exemption from tax for those assessment years as the business of the trust was incidental to the attainment of the objectives of the trust namely, the objectives of education and relief of the poor.
Thanti Trust v. Assistant Director of Income‑tax (1999) 238 ITR 635 affirmed.
A public charitable trust may hold a business as part of its corpus. It may carry on a business which it does not hold as part of its corpus. But the distinction has no consequence in so far as section 13(1)(bb) is concerned.
Section 13(1)(bb) will apply to a public charitable trust for the relief of the poor, education or medical relief that carries on a business, regardless of whether or not that business is held by the trust in trust, i.e., as part of its corpus; even a business that is held by such a trust as a part of its corpus is carried on by the trust and, therefore, section 13(1)(bb) with apply to such a trust. The words used in section 13(1)(bb) are wide enough to control not only the profit from an activity carried on in the course of the actual carrying out of the purpose of the trust or institution but also income from the corpus of the trust property if the corpus of the trust includes a business. The exemption under section 11 will not be available unless the business is carried on in the course of actually accomplishing the primary purpose of the trust; the business must, therefore, be carried on in the course of the actual accomplishment of relief of the poor, education or medical relief.
Trusts and institutions are separately dealt with in the Income‑tax Act. The expressions refer to entities differently constituted.
The scope of subsection (4A) of section 11, as amended in 1992, is more beneficial to a trust or institution than the scope of the subsection before the amendment. As it stands amended in 1992, all that is required for the business income of a trust or institution to be exempt from tax is that the business should be incidental to the attainment of the objectives of the trust or institution. A business whose income is utilised by the trust or the institution for the purposes of achieving the objectives of the trust or the institution is a business which is incidental to the attainment of the objectives of the trust or institution.
In the case of the ambiguity in the language employed the provision must be construed in a manner that benefits the assessee:
Held also, that the earlier decision in CIT v. Thanthi Trust (1982) 137 ITR 735 (Mad.) rendered in relation to earlier periods when section 13(1)(bb) was not in the Act did not operate as res judicata for a decision relating to subsequent periods after section 13(1)(bb) was added.
CIT v. Thanthi Trust (1982) 137 ITR 735 (Mad.) explained.
Adityan (S.B.) v. First ITO (1964) 52 ITR 453 (Mad.); CIT v. Dharmodayam Co. (1977) 109 ITR 527 (SC); CIT v. Krishna Warriar (P.) (1964) 53 ITR 176 (SC); CIT (Addl.) v, Surat Art Silk Cloth Manufacturers Association (1980) 121 ITR 1 (SC) and Thanthi Trust v. ITO (1973) 91 ITR 261 (Mad.) ref.
Harish N. Salve, Solicitor‑General of India and M.L. Verma and K.N. Shukla, Senior Advocates (Nikhil Sakhardande. K. Misra, Ms. Sushma Suri and T.C. Sharma, Advocates with them) for Appellants.
Dr. Debiprasad Pal, Senior Advocate (Tripurari Ray, Ms. Priay Hingorani and Vineet Kumar, Advocates with him) for Respondents.
S. Prasad, Advocate for Respondent (in C. As. Nos.4759 to 4761 of 1998).
JUDGMENT
S.P. BHARUCHA, J.‑‑‑One S.K. Adityan founded a daily .newspaper called the Dina Thanthi in 1942. On March 1, 1954, he created a trust called the "Thanthi Trust". The property that he settled upon trust was the business of the said newspaper as a going concern. The objects of the trust were to establish the said newspaper as an organ of educated public opinion for the Tamil reading public and to disseminate news and to ventilate opinion upon all matters of public interest through it. On July 9, 1957, Adityan executed a supplementary deed of trust that declared that the trust was irrevocable. On July 28, 1961, Adityan executed another supplementary deed of trust. Thereby he directed that the surplus income of the trust, after defraying all expenses, should be devoted to the following purposes:
‑‑establishing and running a school or college for the teaching of journalism:
‑‑‑establishing and/or running or helping to run schools, colleges or other educational institutions for teaching arts and science;
‑‑‑establishing scholarships for students of journalism, arts and science;
‑‑‑establishing and/or running or helping to run hostels for students;
‑‑‑establishing and/or running or helping to run orphanages; and
‑‑‑other educational purposes.
On November 6, 1961, the Income‑tax Officer proposed to disallow the claim of the trust for exemption under section 4(3)(i) of the Indian Income‑tax Act, 1922, for the assessment years 1955‑56 to 1961‑62. The trust challenged the correctness of the tentative decision by filing a writ petition in the High Court of Judicature at Madras. On June 25, 1961, the trustees of the trust took out an originating summons in the High Court and therein, on March 2, 1962, the High Court upheld the validity of the supplementary deed of trust and held that the trustees of the trust were bound to devote the surplus income of the trust to the purposes mentioned therein. On October 4, 1963, the High Court allowed the writ petition filed by the trust and quashed the Income‑tax Officer's tentative decision S.B. Adityan v. First ITO (1964) 52 ITR 453 (Mad.). The claim for exemption made by the trust under section 4(3)(i) of the 1922 Act for the assessment years 1955‑56 to 1961‑62 was thereafter allowed.
For the assessment year 1962‑63 the claim made by the trust for exemption under section 11 of the Income Tax Act, 1961 ("the Act"), was allowed on February 28, 1969. The Income‑tax Officer then impounded the books of account of the trust relevant to the assessment years 1965‑66 to 1967‑68 and he demanded the production of books of account relevant to the assessment years 1962‑63 to 1964‑65. This was the subject‑matter of challenge in a writ petition filed‑by the trust. On March 23, 1969, the trust was issued three notices under section 148 of the Act to reopen its assessments for the assessment years 1965‑66 to 1967‑68. These notices were challenged in a writ petition filed by the trust. Notices were, thereafter, issued to the trust to reopen its assessment for the assessment years 1956‑57 to 1961‑62 and these were the subject‑matter of a writ petition filed by the trust. On December 21, 1972, a Division Bench of the High Court of Madras quashed the notice for reopening the assessments for the assessment years 1956‑57, 1958‑59, 1960‑61 and 1961‑62. It upheld the notice that related to the assessment years 1957‑58, 1959‑60, 1965‑66, 1966‑67 and 1967‑68 Thanthi Trusty. ITO (1975) 91 ITR 261).
On January 29, 1981, a Division Bench of the High Court dismissed references under the Act in respect of the assessment of the trust for the assessment years 1968‑69 and 1969‑70 (CIT v. Thanthi Trust 1982) 137 ITR 735 (Mad.). The High Court held (page 763):
"The founder of the trust has clearly evinced an intention to create a public charitable trust as seen from the preamble and clause (3)(k) of the original trust deed and the charitable objects referred to in the schedule to the decree in C.S. No.90 of 1961 have to be fulfilled from and out of the income from the business which is directed to be held under trust or other legal obligation. Those charitable objects fall within the first two categories referred to in section 2(15), viz., relief of the poor and education. It is to carry out and fulfil those objects the business is carried on. Thus, the primary purpose is to carry out the charitable objects and the business is carried on as a means in the course of the actual carrying out of that primary purpose and not as an end in itself. While the predominant object of the trust is the carrying out of the charitable objects referred to in two of the three categories of charitable purpose referred to in section 2(15), the carrying on the business such is actually the property held under trust or other legal obligation is incidental, and the profit resulting from the business can be taken to be a by‑product."
The Revenue preferred a petition for special leave to appeal a against the judgment of the High Court on the said reference. In so far as it related to the eligibility of the trust to claim the exemption under section 11 of the Act, leave was declined.
Having set out the background, we now come to the first of the three controversies before us. It relates to section 13(1)(bb), which was introduced into the Act with effect from April 1, 1977, and remained on the statute book until omitted with effect from April 1, 1984. The relevant portions of section 11 and section 13(1)(bb) then read as follows:
11. Income from property held for charitable or religious purposes.‑‑‑(1) Subject to the provisions of sections 60 to 63, the following income shall not be included in the total income of the previous year of the person in receipt of the income ‑‑
(a)income derived from property held under trust wholly for charitable or religious purposes, to the extent to which such income is applied to such purposes in India:...
(4)For the purposes of this section 'property held under trust includes a business undertaking so held...
13(1). Nothing contained in section 11 or section 12 shall operate so as to exclude from the total income of the previous year of the person in receipt thereof‑‑ ....
(bb)in the case of a charitable trust of institution for the relief of the poor, education or medical relief, which carries on any business, any income derived from such business, unless the business is carried on in the course of the actual carrying out of a primary purpose of the trust or institution."
The claim of the trust for exemption for the assessment years 1979‑80 to 1983‑84 was rejected, having regard to the provisions of section 13(1)(bb). The rejection was challenged in a writ petition filed by the trust in the High Court. The High Court upheld the contention of the trust, Thanthi Trust v. Asst. CIT (1995) 213 ITR 626 (Mad.). This is the first decision of the High Court that is under appeal by the Revenue.
The High Court relied upon its earlier decision in the case of the trust, reported in CIT v. Thanthi Trust (1982) 137 ITR 735 (Mad.), which had become final and binding on the Revenue, namely, that the primary purpose of the trust was to carry out is charitable objects and that the business is carried on only as a means in the course of the actual carrying out of the purpose of the trust. It said that it had, therefore, (page 637) "no hesitation in holding that the requirement of the last portion of section 13(1)(bb), namely, 'unless the business is carried on in the course of the actual carrying out a primary purpose of the trust or institution' is satisfied. We must also point out here that though the decision in CIT v. Thanthi Trust (1982) 137 ITR 735 (Mad.), was rendered by the Division Bench, with regard to the assessment years 1968‑69 and 1969‑70, and section 13(1)(bb) of the Act was introduced with effect from April 1, 1977, inasmuch as the finding rendered by the Division Bench in the said decision is in the express language of section 13(1)(bb) of the Act, it is not open to the Revenue to contend that the decision in CIT v. Thanthi Trust (1982) 137 ITR 735 (Mad.), will not be applicable to the petitioner's case in respect of the assessment years in question,, after the introduction of section 13(1)(bb) of the Act".
Section 11(4A) was introduced into the Act with effect from April 1, 1984. So far as it is relevant, section 11 then read thus:
"11. Income from property held for charitable or religious purpose.‑‑ (1) Subject to the provisions of sections 60 to 63, the following income shall not be included in the total income of the previous year of the person in receipt of the income‑‑‑
(a)income derived from property held under trust wholly for charitable or religious 'purposes, to the extent to which such income is applied to such purposes in India... " '
(4)For the purposes of this section 'property held under trust' includes a business undertaking so held, and where a claim is made that the income of any such undertaking shall not be included in the total income of the persons in receipt thereof, the Income‑tax Officer shall have power to determine the income of such undertaking in accordance with the provisions of this Act relating to assessment; and where any income so determined is in excess of the income as shown in the accounts of the undertaking, such excess shall be deemed to be applied to purpose other than charitable or religious purposes.
(4A)Subsection (1) or subsection (2) or subsection (3) or subsection (3A) shall not apply in relation to any income, being profits and gains of business, unless‑‑‑
(a)the business is carried on by a trust wholly for public religious purposes and the business consists of printing and publication of books or publication of books or is of a kind notified by the Central Government in this behalf in the Official Gazette; or
(b)the business is carried on by an institution wholly for charitable Purposes and the work in connection with the business is mainly carried on by the beneficiaries of the institution, and separate books of account are maintained by the trust or institution in respect of such business."
The trust claimed the benefit of the exemption under section 11 in respect of the assessment years 1984‑85 to 1991‑92. The Income‑tax Officer rejected the claim. The trust filed writ petitions challenging the rejection. The High Court upheld the claim of the trust Thanthi Trust v. CBDT (1995) 2131TR 639 (Mad.). It is held that inasmuch as the business that was carried on by the trust was itself held under trust for public charitable purposes and it was carried on only for the purpose of carrying out the charitable objects of the trust, as had been found in the earlier judgment, the provisions of section 11(4A) had no application. This is the second decision of the High Court under appeal by the Revenue.
Section 11(4A) was substituted with effect from April 1, 1992, and it now read thus:
" 11(4A) Subsection (1) or subsection (2) or subsection (3) or sub section (3A) shall not apply in relation to any income of a trust or an institution, being profits and gains of business, unless the business is incidental to the attainment of the objectives of the trust or as the case may be, institution, and separate books of account are maintained by such trust or, institution is respect of such business."
The Income‑tax Officer rejected the claim of the trust for exemption under the amended section 11(4A). A writ petition was filed in the High Court, and, relying upon the earlier decision, the High Court quashed the orders of assessment for the assessment years 1992‑93, 1995‑96 and 1996‑97 Thanthi Trust v. Assisstant Director of Income‑tax (1999) 238 ITR 635 (Mad.). This is the third decision under appeal by the Revenue.
In so far as section 13(1)(bb) is concerned, the learned Solicitor General appearing for the Revenue, submitted that a business, to be excepted from the clutches of section 13(1)(bb), must be one carried on in the course of the actual carrying out of a primary purpose of a public charitable trust. In other words, it must be a business carried on in the course of actually carrying out the work of relief of the poor, education and medical relief. Any business carried on for generating revenue, which revenue is used for furthering the charitable purpose for which the trust was established, is not an activity in the course of the primary purpose of the trust and does not fall within this exception.
Dr. Pal, learned counsel for the trust, drew a distinction between a business that was held under trust and a business that was carried on by a trust. He submitted that there was a difference between income derived from a business that was a property or part of the corpus of a public charitable trust and income derived from a business which was carried on by such a trust but which was not held under trust; in other words, there was a legal obligation to use the income for a public charitable purpose of the trust in the first case and not in the latter. This Court had noted the distinction in Addl. CIT v. Surat Art Silk Cloth Manufacturers Association (1980) 121 ITR 1 (SC); CIT v. P. Krishna Warriar (1964) 53 ITR 176 (SC) and CIT v. Dharmodayam Co. (1977) 109 ITR 527 (SC). The provisions of section 13(1)(bb) applied only to a public charitable trust which carried on a business that it did not hold in trust. They did not apply to a public charitable trust, such as the trust which held the business in trust.
No judgment of this Court has been pointed out to us in which the provisions of section 13(1)(bb) have been interpreted. Only passing references thereto are to be found iii some of the judgments aforementioned.
A public charitable trust may hold a business as part of its corpus. It may carry on a business which it does not hold as a part of its corpus. But it seems to us that the distinction has no consequence in so far as section 13(1)(bb) is concerned. Section 13(1)(bb) provides, so far as is relevant to this case, that the provisions of section 11 shall not operate so as to include in the total income of the previous year of a public charitable trust for the relief of the poor, education or medical relief which carries on any business, any income derived from such business unless the business is carried on in the course of the actual carrying out of a primary purpose of the trust. Section 13(1)(bb), therefore, will apply to a public charitable trust for the relief of the poor, education or medical relief that carries on a business, regardless of whether or not that business is held by the trust in trust, that is, as a part of its corpus. Even a business that is held by such a trust as a part of its corpus is carried on by the trust and, therefore, section 13(I)(bb) will apply to such trust.
A judgment of this Court which comes closest to putting a meaning to section 13(1)(bb) is the concurring judgment of R. S. Pathak, J. (as he then was) in Addl. CIT v. Surat Ari Silk Cloth Manufacturers Association (1980) 121 ITR 1. He said (page 34): "when it was found that judicial decisions had held the restrictive clause ('not involving the carrying on of any activity for profit') in section 2(15) to control the fourth head ('the advancement of any other object of general public utility') only, and not also the first three hands ('relief of the poor, education and medical relief') in the definition, Parliament attempted to secure its original intent by enacting section 13(1)(bb). The two provisions represent the mode of finding finance for working out the purpose of the trust or institution, by deriving income from the corpus of the trust property and also from an activity carried on in the course of the actual carrying out of the purpose of the trust or institution. 11 The learned Judge did not, it will be seen, analyses section 13(1)(bb), nor, in the context of the case before him, was he required to Upon analysis, it appears to us that the words used in section 13(1)(bb) are wide enough to control not only the profit from an activity carried on in the course of the actual carrying out of the purpose of the trust or institution but also income from the corpus of the trust property if the corpus of the trust includes a business. This is for the reason that a trust or institution carries on the business that is part of its corpus just as much as a trust or institution carries on a business that is not a part of its corpus, and section 13(1)(bb) operates in respect of "a charitable trust or institution for the relief of the poor, education or medical relief which carries on any business." (emphasis supplied).
The requirement of section 13(1)(bb) is that the exemption under section 11 will not be available to such a trust that carries on any business unless the business is carried on "in the course of the actual carrying out of the primary purpose of the trust", that is to say, unless the business is carried on in the course of actually accomplishing a primary purpose of the trust; the business must, therefore, be carried on in the course of the actual accomplishment of relief of the poor, education or medical relief. As an example, a public charitable trust for the relief of the poor, education and medical relief that carries on the business of weaving cloth and stitching clothing by employing indigent women carries on the business in the course of actually accomplishing its primary object of affording relief to the poor and it would qualify for the exemption under section 11.
The business that the trust carries on is that of running a newspaper. That business, though it is held by the trust as a part of its corpus, and, therefore, in trust, does not directly accomplish, wholly or in part, the trust's objects of relief to the poor and education. Its income only feeds such activity. It cannot be held to be carried on in the course of the actual accomplishment of the trust's objects of education and relief of the poor. It is, therefore, not possible to accept the argument on behalf of the trust that it is entitled to the exemption under section 11.
The High Court, in the first judgment under appeal, held that it was not open to the Revenue to contend that the earlier decision in CIT v. Thanthi Trust (1982) 137ITR 735 would not apply to the case of the trust for the assessment years in question after the introduction of section 13(1)(bb) of the Act because the finding rendered in that decision was in the express language of section 13(1)(bb). We are unable to agree. The earlier decision was not rendered in the context of section 13(1)(bb). That provision was not on the statute book at that time. That the provision employees language akin to that employed in the earlier decision cannot mean that in a proceeding directly related to that provision the Revenue is barred by reason of the principles of res judicata from contending that the income of the trust is not exempt under that provision.
This brings us to the second controversy, relevant to the assessment years 1984‑85 to 1991‑92 during which period of time subsection (4A) of section 11, as originally enacted, was in operation. It was contended by the learned Solicitor‑General that by reason of subsection (4A) the income derived from a business held under trust wholly for charitable or religious purposes would not be included in the total income of the previous year in the case only of (a) trust for public religious purposes, if the business was of printing and publishing books or of a notified kind; or (b) an institution wholly for charitable purposes, if the work in connection with the business was mainly carried on by the beneficiaries of the institution, provided that separate books of account had been maintained in respect of such business.
Learned counsel for the trust laid emphasis on the fact that in the Bill to introduce subsection (4A) into section 11, subsection (4) thereof had been proposed to be deleted, but it had been retained when the Bill was passed. A business held under trust had, therefore, not been intended to be excluded from the benefit of section 11 by reason of the enactment of subsection (4A). This was also evident from the fact that subsection (4A) did not mention in its non obstante clause subsection (4).
Subsection (4) of section 11 remains on the statute book, and it defines property held under trust for the purposes of that section to include a business so held. It then states how such income is to be determined. In other words, if such income is not to be included in the income of the trust, its quantum is to be determined in the manner set out in subsection (4).
Subsection (1)(a) of section 11 says that income derived from property held under trust only for charitable or religious purposes, to the extent it is used in the manner indicated therein, shall not be included in the total income of the previous year of the trust. Subsection (4) defines the words "property held under trust" for the purposes of section 11 to include a business held under trust. Subsection (4A) restricts the benefit under section 11 so that it is riot available for income derived from business unless (a) the business is carried on by a trust only for public religious purposes and it is of printing and publishing books or any other notified kind or (b) it is carried on by an institution wholly for charitable purposes and the work in connection with the business is mainly carried on by the beneficiaries of .the institution, provided, in both case, that separate books of account are maintained by the trust or the institution in respect of such business. Trusts and institutions are separately dealt with in the Act (section 11 itself and sections 12, 12A and 13, for example). The expressions refer to entities differently constituted. It is thus clear that the newspaper business that is carried on by the trust does not fall within subsection (4A). The trust is not only for public religious purposes so it does not fall within clause (a). It is a trust not an institution, so it does not fall within clause (b). It must, therefore, be held that for the assessment years in question the trust was not Lion contained in section 11 in respect of the income of its newspaper.
We now address the third controversy, which relates to subsec tion (4A) of section 11 as substituted with effect from April 1, 1992. The learned Solicitor‑General submitted that while the substituted subsection (4A) gave trusts and institutions a wider latitude than the earlier subsection (4A), it had still to be construed to mean that a trust or institution would not get the benefit of section 11 unless the business it carried on was carried on in the course of the actual carrying out of the primary purpose of the trust or institution. Dr. Pal, on the other hand, submitted that the substituted subsection (4A) was couched in wide language and a trust was entitled to the benefit of section 11 if it utilised the income of its business for the purposes of achieving its objections.
The substituted subsection (4A.) states that the income derived from a business held under trust wholly for charitable or religious purposes shall not be included in the total income of the previous year of the trust or institution if "the business is incidental to the attainment of the objective of the trust or, as the case may be, institution" and separate books of account are maintained in respect of such business. Clearly, the scope of subsection (4A) is more beneficial to a trust or institution than was the scope of subsection (4A) as originally enacted. In fact, it seems to us that the substituted subsection (4A) gives a trust or institution a greater benefit than was given by section 13(1)(bb). If the object of Parliament was to give trusts and institutions no more benefit than that given by section 13(1)(bb), the language of section 13(1)(bb) would have been employed in the substituted subsection (4A). As it stands, all that it requires for the business income of a trust or institution to be exemption is that the business should be incidental to the attainment of objectives of the trust or institution. A business whose income is utilised by the trust or the institution for the purposes of achieving the objectives of the trust or the institution is, surely, a business which is incidental to the attainment of the objectives of the trust. In any event, if there be any ambiguity in the language employed, the provision must be construed in a manner that benefits the assessee. The trust, therefore, is entitled to the benefit of section 11 for the assessment year 1992‑93 and thereafter. It is, we should add, not in dispute that the income of its newspaper business has been employed to achieve its objective of education and relief of the poor and that it has maintained separate books of account in respect thereof.
Accordingly, Civil Appeals Nos.4406 to 4410 of 1996, 4395 to 4402 of 1996, 4759 to 4761 of 1998 and 5772 and 2000 are allowed inasmuch as they relate to the assessment years 1979‑80 to 1991‑92 and the two judgments of the Madras High Court relating thereto (reported in Thanthi Trust v. Asst. CIT (1995) 213 ITR 626 and Thanthi Trust v. CBDT (1995) 213 ITR 639), are set aside, Civil Appeals Nos.497 to 499 of 2000 are dismissed. There shall be no order as to costs.
M.B.A./995/FCOrder accordingly.