COMMISSIONER OF INCOME TAX VS HINDUSTAN TIMES LTD.
2002 P T D 1255
[241 I T R 509]
[Delhi High Court (India)]
Before Arun Kumar and D.K. Jain, JJ
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME‑TAX
Versus
HINDUSTAN TIMES LTD.
I T.C. No.47 of 1998, decided on 02/08/1999.
(a) Income‑tax‑----
‑‑‑‑Reference‑‑‑Capital or revenue expenditure‑‑‑Tribunal finding that expenditure had been incurred to maintain and preserve asset‑‑‑Tribunal justified in holding that expenditure was revenue in nature‑‑‑No question of law arose, from its order‑‑‑Indian Income Tax Act, 1961, Ss.37 & 256(2).
(b) Income‑tax‑‑‑
‑‑‑‑Reference‑‑‑Investment allowance‑‑‑Fire‑fighting equipment‑‑‑Tribunal finding that fire‑fighting equipment formed part of industrial undertaking for purposes of business of printing and publishing newspapers and magazines‑‑ Tribunal was justified in holding that assessee was entitled to investment allowance in respect of such fire‑fighting equipment‑‑‑No question of law arose from its order‑‑‑‑Indian Income Tax Act, 1961, Ss.32A & 256(2).
Held, dismissing the application to direct reference, (i) that the Tribunal found that the expenditure of Rs.31,56,117 was incurred by the assessee to preserve and maintain an already‑ existing plant, i.e., air conditioning plant and no new asset was brought into existence. Accordingly, the Tribunal allowed the entire said expenditure as revenue expenditure. No question of law arose from its order.
(ii) That the Tribunal found that the fire‑fighting equipment formed part of the industrial undertaking for the purpose of business of the assessee, which was printing and publishing of newspapers and magazines and, therefore, the requirement under section 32A of the Income Tax Act, 1961, .was satisfied. Accordingly, it allowed the claim made by the assessee regarding investment allowance in respect of fire‑fighting equipment. No question of law arose from its order.
R.D. Jolly with Ms. Prem Lata Barisal for Petitioner.
JUDGMENT
By this petition under section 256(2) of the Income Tax Act, 1961 (for short "the Act"), the Revenue seeks a direction to the Income‑tax Appellate Tribunal to state the case and refer the following questions, in respect of the assessment year 1985‑86, for the opinion of this Court:
"(1)On the facts and in the circumstances of the case and in law whether the Tribunal was correct in holding that the expenses of Rs.31,56,117 spent by the assessee on repairs and replacements of central air conditioning plant were of Revenue nature?
(2)On the facts and‑the circumstances of the case and in law whether the Tribunal was correct in holding that a deduction of Rs.9,07,358 was allowable to the assessee under section 32A(2)(b)(iii) on fire fighting equipments?"
During the course of the assessment proceedings, the Assessing ‑Officer noticed that the assessee‑company had claimed Rs.31,56,117 as repairs and replacement of central air‑conditioning plant and insulated chilled water piping re‑routing. Rejecting the stand of the assessee that the said expenses were incurred on current repairs to maintain and preserve an already existing asset; the Assessing‑ Officer held that the assessee had renewed or replaced a substantial part of the existing plant whereby it got a benefit of enduring nature. He accordingly directed that the said amount shall be capitalised, on which depreciation will be allowed to the assessee. The Assessing Officer also noticed that the assessee had claimed investment allowance of Rs.2,01,839 on the cost of fire‑fighting equipment. Holding that the fire‑fighting equipment was not integral part of plant and machinery directly connected with the publication or other business activities carried only by the assessee, the Assessing Officer rejected the said claim. The assessee's appeal to the Commissioner of Income‑tax (Appeals) was unsuccessful.
The assessee carried the matter further in appeal to the Appellate Tribunal. The Tribunal found that the expenditure of Rs.31,56,117 was incurred by the assessee to preserve and maintain an already existing plant, i.e., air‑conditioning plant and no new asset was brought into existence. Accordingly, the Tribunal allowed the entire said expenditure as revenue expenditure. In so far as the claim of investment allowance on fire‑fighting equipment was concerned, the Tribunal found that the fire‑fighting equipment was in the industrial undertaking for the purpose of business of the assessee, which is printing and publishing of newspapers and magazines and, therefore, the requirement under section 32A(2)(b)(iii) was satisfied. Accordingly, it allowed the said claim made by the assessee.
It is with reference to this order, the above questions have been proposed for reference.
Having heard learned counsel for the parties, we are of the view that the order of the Tribunal being based on the appreciation of facts, it does not give rise to the proposed questions.
As notice above while allowing the expenditure incurred by the assessee on the air‑conditioning plant the Tribunal has found as a fact that the said expenditure was incurred to preserve and maintain an already existing plant: This is a pure finding of fact and the same having not been challenged by the Revenue, no fault can be found with the order of the Tribunal holding the said expenditure to be revenue in nature. Similarly, while allowing the claim of the assessee for investment allowance on the cost of fire‑fighting equipment, the Tribunal has held that the said equipment formed part of the industrial undertaking for the purpose of business of the assessee of printing and publishing of newspapers and magazines. Again, 'this finding is no challenged as perverse or unreasonable in the proposed Question No.2. Thai being so, the Tribunal has correctly come to the conclusion that the assessee is entitled to investment allowance on the said equipment.
No question of law arises from the order of the Tribunal. The application is accordingly dismissed.
M.B.A./617/FCApplication dismissed.