COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX VS GRACE COLLIS
2001 P T D 2539
[248 I T R 323]
[Supreme Court of India]
Present: S. P. Bharucha, N. Santosh Hegde and Y. K. Sabharwal, JJ
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME‑TAX
Versus
Mrs. GRACE COLLIS and others
Civil Appeals Nos.4437 to 4445 of 1997, decided on 23/02/2001.
(Appeals from the judgment and order, dated June 3, 1996, of the Kerala High Court in ITR. Nos.269 to 277 of 1985).
(a) Income‑tax‑‑‑
‑‑‑‑Capital gains‑‑‑Computation‑‑‑Amalgamation of companies‑‑‑Shares in amalgamated company received by shareholder of amalgamating company‑‑ Transfer of such shares‑‑‑Cost‑‑‑To be taken to be cost of shares in amalgamating company‑‑‑Indian Income Tax Act, 1961, Ss.2(47), 47(vii) & 49(2)‑‑‑Indian Companies Act, 1956, Ss.391(l) & 394.
(b) Income‑tax‑‑‑
‑‑‑‑Transfer‑‑‑Definition‑‑‑"Extinguishments of any rights" in capital assets‑‑ Not confined to extinguishments by transfer or exchange‑‑‑Includes extinguishments of right of holder of shares in amalgamating company by allotment of shares in amalgamated company‑‑‑Indian Income Tax Act, 1961, S.2(47).
(c) Words and phrases‑‑‑
------Transfer"‑‑‑"Extinguishment of any rights" ‑‑‑[Mrs. Grace Collis v. CIT (1997) 226 ITR 55 (Ker.) reversed].
Pursuant to a scheme of arrangement, company A was amalgamated with company C. All the assets and liabilities of company A (the amalgamating company) were transferred to company C (the amalgamated company), in consideration of the amalgamated company issuing to the members of the amalgamating company 14 equity shares of Rs.100 each, credited as fully paid up in the amalgamated company in lieu of each share held in the amalgamating company. The assessees, who were shareholders in the amalgamating company, sold 45,318 shares of the amalgamated company for the aggregate sum of Rs.48,72,523, i.e., at Rs.107.50 per share. The Income‑tax Officer computed the capital gains from the transfer of shares by the assessees by applying the provisions of section 49(2) of the Income Tax Act, 1961, read with section 47(vii), whereunder the cost of the shares in the amalgamating company was to be treated as the cost of the shares in the amalgamated company which were allotted by the amalgamated company in lieu of the shares held by them in the amalgamating company. Since the assessees had not furnished the cost at which they had acquired the shares in the amalgamating‑company, the Income‑tax Officer adopted the face value of the respective shares for determining their cost, and subjected to tax the difference between the value at which they had sold the shares allotted to them and the cost ascertained on the basis of the face value of the shares in the amalgamating company. The Appellate Tribunal upheld the assessment by resort to section 49(2). The High Court, on a reference, held: (i) that there was no "transfer", for the purposes of capital gains, by the assessees to the amalgamated company: and (ii) that the Tribunal was not right in holding that section 49(2) applied to the sale of shares by the assessees; but that the taxing authorities could consider taxing the transaction on the basis that the cost was Rs.100 per share and their sale was at Rs.107.50 per share. On appeal to the Supreme Court:
Held, that the rights of the assessees in the shares which they held in the amalgamating company stood ‑extinguished upon the amalgamation of the amalgamating company with the amalgamated company, and, therefore, there was a "transfer" within the meaning of section 2(47). It was, therefore, a transaction to which section 47(vii) applied and, consequently, the cost to the assessees of the shares in the amalgamated company had to be determined in accordance with the provisions of section 49(2); the cost of the shares in the amalgamated company which were sold, was deemed to be the cost of acquisition of the assessees of their shares in the amalgamating company:‑
Held also, that, having regard to the fact that the assessees could have disclosed, without prejudice to their contentions, the cost at which they had acquired the shares in the amalgamating company, there was no reason to differ from the view of the Income‑tax Officer in the method adopted for computing the capital gains.
The definition of "transfer" in section 2(47) clearly contemplates the extinguishment of rights in a capital asset distinct from and independent of such extinguishment consequent upon the transfer thereof. It is not correct to view the expression "extinguishment of any rights therein" as not extending to mean the extinguishment of rights independent of or otherwise than on account of transfer. To read so is to render the expression ineffective and its use meaningless. The expression includes the extinguishment of rights in a capital asset independent of and otherwise than on account of transfer.
Vania Silk Mills (P.) Ltd. v. CIT (1991). 191 ITR 647 (SC) disapproved.
Mrs. Grace Collis v. CIT (1997) 226 ITR 55 (Ker.) reversed.
CIT v. Rasiklal Maneklal (HUF) (1989) 177 ITR 198 (SC) ref.
M.L. Verma, Senior Advocate (P.S. Narasimha and Ms. Sushma Suri, Advocates with him) for Appellant.
Joseph Vellapally, Senior Advocate (S. Rajappa, V. Balaji and P.N. Ramalingam, Advocates with him) for Respondents.
JUDGMENT
S.P. BHARUCHA, J.‑‑‑These are appeals by the Revenue against the decision of a Division Bench of the High Court of Kerala (see (1997) 226 ITR 55) on a reference application at the instance of the assessees under section 256(1) of the Income Tax Act, 1961. The High Court was called upon to answer the following three questions (page 59):
"(1) Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances of the case, the Tribunal was right in holding that on the amalgamation of Ambassador Steamships (Pvt.) Ltd., with Collis Line (Pvt.) Ltd., there was a transfer by the assessees of their shares in Ambassador Steamships (Pvt.) Ltd.?
(2) In case the answer to question No.1 above is in the affirmative, whether the Tribunal was right in holding that the transfer was made in consideration of the allotment to the assessees of shares in Collis Line (Pvt.) Ltd.?
(3) Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances of the case, the Tribunal was right in holding that section 49(2) of the Income Tax Act, 1961, applied to the sale of the shares of the assessees in Collis Line' (Pvt.) Ltd. which were obtained by the assessees on the amalgamation of Ambassador Steamships (Pvt.) Ltd. with Collis Line (Pvt.) Ltd.?"
The High Court answered the first question in the negative and in favour of the assessees, namely, that there was no transfer. In view of this answer. it held that the second question did not .arise. It answered the third question in the negative and in favour of the assessee. Even so, it held that the taxing authorities could consider taxing the assessees on the basis of .the transaction whereunder the share of Rs.100 was sold for Rs.107.50.
The assessees were shareholders of Ambassador Steamship (Pvt.) Ltd. The High Court of Kerala sanctioned a scheme of arrangement under sections 391(2) and 394 of the Companies Act, 1956, whereby Ambassador Steamship (Pvt.) Ltd. ("the amalgamating company) was amalgamated with Collis Line (Pvt,.) Ltd. ("the amalgamated company"). The scheme contemplated the transfer by way of amalgamation of all assets and liabilities of the amalgamating company to the amalgamated company in consideration of the amalgamated company issuing to the members of the amalgamating company 14 equity shares of Rs.100 each, credited as fully paid up, in the amalgamated company for each share held in the amalgamating company. Upon amalgamation, the amalgamating company would cease to function and the amalgamated company would take overall its business, assets and liabilities and carry on its business. The sanctioned scheme stated: "As the residue of the consideration for the said transfer, the transferee‑company shall issue to the members of the transferor‑company 14 equity shares of Rs.100 each in the transferee‑company credited as fully paid up in respect of each share held by him or her in the transferor‑company...".
The assessee sold 45,318 shares of the amalgamated company of the face value of Rs.100 each which they had acquired under the scheme to one B.K. Chatterji and his associates on February 29, 1976, for the aggregate sum of Rs.48,72,523. This meant that they had sold each share for Rs.107.50.
For the assessment year 1976‑77, the previous year whereof ended on March 31, 1976, the Income‑tax Officer levied capital gains tax upon the assessees in respect of the sale to Chatterji and others. The Income‑tax Officer applied the provisions of‑section 49(2) read with section 47(vii) for the purposes of computing the capital gains. Thereunder, the cost of the shares of the amalgamating company is the cost of the shares of the amalgamated company that the assessee surrendered in exchange under a scheme of arrangement. The assessee had not furnished to the Income‑tax Officer information as to the cost at which they had acquired the shares of the amalgamating company. Accordingly, the Income‑tax Officer noted that under the scheme the assessees had received 14 shares of the face value of Rs.100 each in the amalgamated company for one share of the face value of Rs.100 in the amalgamating company. He multiplied the number of shares of the amalgamated company that the assessee had sold by their face value of Rs.100 and divided the result by 14 to arrive at their cost. The price at which the assessees had sold the shares less their cost as aforesaid was the capital gain that the Income‑tax Officer subjected to tax. The Income‑tax Officer rejected the contention of the assessees that sections 49(2) and 47(vii) were not attracted as the assessees had not become the owners of the shares of the amalgamated company in consideration of the transfer of their shares in the amalgamating company. '
The order of the Income‑tax Officer was confirmed by the Commissioner of Income‑tax (Appeals). The matter went up before the Tribunal and the Tribunal upheld the appellate order. From out of the order of the Tribunal, the questions aforestated were referred to the High Court and answered as set out above.
For the purposes of appreciating the controversy in this appeal, it is necessary to set out the relevant provisions of the Act as they obtained at the relevant time.
Section 2(47) defines "transfer", in relation to a capital asset, to include the sale, exchange or relinquishment of the asset or the extinguishment of any rights therein or the compulsory acquisition thereof under any law. Section 45 states that any profits or gains arising from the transfer of a capital asset effected in the previous year shall be chargeable to income‑tax under the head "Capital gains" and shall be deemed to be the income of the previous year in which the transfer took place. Section 47 states which transactions are not to be regard as transfers. Nothing contained in section 45 applies, by reason thereof, to:
"(vii) any transfer by a shareholder, in a scheme of amalgamation, of a capital asset being a share or shares held by him in the amalgamating company, if‑‑‑
(a) the transfer is made in consideration of the allotment to him of any share or shares in the amalgamated company; and
(b) the amalgamated company is an Indian company."
Section 49 sets out how cost is to be computed with reference to various modes of acquisition. It says, in subsection (2):
"Where the capital asset being a share or shares in an amalgamated company which is an Indian company became the property of the assessee in consideration of a transfer referred to in clause (vii) of section 47, the cost of acquisition of the asset shall be deemed to be the cost of acquisition to him of the share or shares in the amalgamating company."
In CIT v. Rasiklal Maneklal (HUF) (1989) 177 ITR 198, this Court was concerned with a case of acquisition of shares consequent upon a scheme of amalgamation virtually identical to the scheme before us. At that time capital gains were chargeable to tax by reason of section 12B of the Indian Income‑tax Act, 1922, which stated thus:
"12B.Capital gains.‑‑‑(1) The tax shall be payable by an assessee under the head 'Capital gains' in respect of any profits or gains arising from the sale, exchange, relinquishment or transfer of a capital asset effected after the 31st day of March, 1956, and such profits and gains shall be deemed to be income of the previous year in which the sale, exchange, relinquishment or transfer took place."
The question this Court was called upon to consider read thus (page 201): "Whether, on the facts and to the circumstances of the case, the sum of Rs.49,350 could be assessed in the hands of the assessee as capital gains as having accrued to the assessee by exchange or relinquishment as provided for under section' 12B of the Act?" This Court held that no exchange was involved in the transaction. An exchange involved the transfer of property by one person to another and, reciprocally, the transfer of property by that other to the first person There had to be a mutual transfer of ownership of one thing for the ownership of another. In the case before the Court the assessee could not be said to have transferred any property to anyone. When he was allotted shares of the amalgamated company, he was entitled to such allotment because of his holding 90 shares of the amalgamating company. The holding of the 90 shares in the amalgamating company was merely a qualifying condition entitling the assessee to the allotment of the 45 shares in the amalgamated company. The dissolution of the amalgamating company deprived the holding of the 90 shares of that company of all value.
Learned counsel for the assessee submitted that no capital gains tax could be levied upon the assessee in respect of the sale by them of their shares in the amalgamated company because there was no provision in the Act with regard to the manner of determination of the cost of these shares. This was for the reason that section 49(2) prescribed the mode of determining the cost where the shares in an amalgamated company had become the property of the assessee in consideration of a transfer, as referred to in section 47(vii); that is to say, a transfer by a shareholder in a scheme of amalgamation of shares held by him in the amalgamating company if the transfer was made in consideration of the allotment to him of shares in the amalgamated company. The decision in Rasiklal's case (1989) 177 ITR 198 (SC) had held that there was no transfer of any property to any one by the assessee in circumstances identical to those before us.
This, however, is not the end of the matter for section 2(47) defines "transfer" to include "the extinguishment of any rights" in a capital asset.
In this regard, our attention was drawn by learned counsel for the assessees to the decision of a Bench of two learned Judges of this Court in Vania Silk Mills (Pvt.) Ltd. v. CIT (1991) 191 ITR 647. This was a case in which the appellant‑company carried on the business of manufacture and sale of artsilk cloth: It purchased during the year 1957, machinery and gave it on hire to Jasmine Mills at an annual rent. Jasmine Mills, as bailee of the machinery, insured it against the fire alongwith its own machinery., The insurance policy contained a reinstatement clause requiring the insurer to pay the cost of the machinery as on the date of the fire in case of destruction or loss. A fire did break out in the premises of Jasmine Mills causing extensive damages, inter alia, to the machinery which became useless as a result. On settlement of the insurance claim, Jasmine Mills received an amount from the insurance‑company. From out of it, it paid Rs.6,32,533 to the appellant on account of the destruction of the machinery. The Income‑tax Officer brought to tax the sum of Rs.3,50,792, being the difference between the insurance amount received by the appellant for the machinery and the original cost thereof,, as a capital gain. The Appellate Tribunal held that the insurance amount was not received by the appellant on the transfer of a capital asset but on account of the damage to its machinery and that section 45 of the Act was not attracted. On a reference, the High Court reversed the decision of the Tribunal. This Court held in appeal therefrom that when an asset was destroyed there was no question of transferring it to others. The destruction or loss brought about the destruction .of the right of the owner of the asset in it, but it was not on account of 'a transfer but on account of the disappearance of the asset. The extinguishment of the right in an asset on account of the extinguishment of the asset was not a transfer of the right but its destruction. The destruction of the right on account of the destruction of the asset could not be equated with the extinguishment of the right on account of its transfer. Section 45 of the Act was, therefore, not attracted. The fact that while paying for the total loss or damage to the property the insurance company took over such property or whatever was left of it did not change the nature of the insurance claim, which was an indemnity or compensation for the loss. The payment of the insurance claim was not in consideration of the property taken over by the insurance company, for one was not consideration for the other. This Court then, having so very rightly held that section 45 was not attracted, went on to consider the definition of "transfer" and it said (page 653):
"It is true that the definition of 'transfer' in section 2(47) of the Act is an 'inclusive' definition, and therefore extends to events and transaction which may not otherwise be 'transfer' according to its ordinary, popular and natural sense. It is this aspect of the definition which has weighed with the High Court and, therefore, the High Court has argued that if the words 'extinguishment of any rights therein' ate substituted for the word 'transfer' in section 45, the claim or compensation received from the insurance company would attract the said section. The High Court has, however, missed the fact that the definition also mentions such transactions as sale, exchange, etc., to which the word 'transfer' would properly apply in its popular and natural import. Since those associated words and expressions imply the existence of the asset and of the transferee, according to the rule of noscitur a sociis, the expression 'extinguishment of any rights therein' would take colour from the said associated words and expressions and will have to be restricted to the sense analogous to them. If the Legislature intended to extend the definition to any extinguishment of right, it would not have included the obvious instances of transfer, viz., sale, exchange, etc. Hence, the expression 'extinguishment of any rights therein' will have to be confined to the extinguishment of rights on account of transfer and cannot be extended to mean any extinguishment of right independent of or otherwise than on account of transfer."
Learned counsel for the assessees relied upon 'this decision to contend, again, that there had been no transfer by the assessees of their shares in the amalgamating company and that, therefore, the case would still not fall within the meaning of the expression "extinguishment of any rights therein" in section 2(47). By reason of the decision, the expression "extinguishment of any rights therein" had to be confined to the extinguishment of rights on account of a transfer and could not be extended to refer to the extinguishment of rights independent of or otherwise than on account of transfer.
Learned counsel for the Revenue submitted that having held that the payment in settlement of the insurance clam was not in consideration of, the transfer to the insurer of the damaged machinery and that, therefore, there was no transfer within the meaning of section 45, it was unnecessary for this Court in Vania Silk Mills (Pvt). Ltd.'s case (1991) 191 ITR 647 to go on to consider the definition in section 2(47) and the meaning to be attached to the expression "extinguishment of any rights therein". In his submission, the decision in Vania Silk Mills (Pvt.) Ltd.'s case (1991) 191 ITR 647 (SC) was to this extent obiter dicta. The definition in section 2(47) of "transfer" included sale and exchange. In each of those cases there was an extinguishment of the right of the seller or exchanger in the capital asset. To restrict .the extinguishment of rights to extinguishment on account of transfer was, in learned counsel's submission, to render the expression "extinguishment of any rights therein" otiose and to nullify the effect of their use in the definition.
We have given careful thought to the definition of "transfer" in section 2(47) and to the decision of this Court in Vania Silk Mills (Pvt.) Ltd.'s case (1991) 191 ITR 647. In our view, the definition clearly contemplates the extinguishment of rights in a capital asset distinct and independent of such extinguishment consequent upon the transfer thereof. We do not approve respectfully, of the limitation of the expression "extinguishment of any rights therein" to such extinguishment on account of transfer or to the view that the expression "extinguishment of any rights therein" cannot be extended to mean the extinguishment of rights independent of or otherwise than on account of transfer. To so read the expression is to render it ineffective and its use meaningless. As we read it, therefore, the expression does include the extinguishment of rights in a capital asset independent of and otherwise than on account of transfer.
This being so, the rights of the assessees in the capital asset, being their shares in the amalgamating company, stood extinguished upon the amalgamation of the amalgamating company with the amalgamated company. There was, therefore, a transfer of the shares in the amalgamating company within the meaning of section 2(47). It was, therefore, a transaction to which section 47(vii) applied and, consequently, the cost to the assessees of the acquisition of the shares of the amalgamated company had to be determined in accordance with the provision of section 49(2), that is to say, the cost was deemed to be the cost of the acquisition by the assessees of their shares in the amalgamating company.
Upon this reading of the law, our answers to the questions are:
(1) In the affirmative and in favour of the assessee
(2) Does not arise.
(3) In the affirmative and in favour of the Revenue
We have already set out how the Income‑tax Officer computed the capital gain and see no reason to take another view, having regard to the fact that the assessees could have disclosed, without prejudice to their contentions, the cost at which they had acquired their shares in the amalgamated company. We are at a loss to understand the reasoning of the High Court in giving to the Revenue the liberty to consider taxing the assesees on the basis that it was "a transaction by itself whereunder a share of Rs.100 each was sold a$ a share of Rs.107.50".
We are obliged to learned counsel for their assistance.
The appeals are allowed. The judgment and order under appeal is set aside. The questions are answered as already indicated.
There shall be no order as to costs.
M.B.A./953/FC Appeals allowed.