State of Kerala & Ors Vs. Bhavani
Tea Produce Co. Ltd. [1965] INSC 202 (7 October 1965)
07/10/1965 SIKRI, S.M.
SIKRI, S.M.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ) WANCHOO, K.N.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
SHAH, J.C.
CITATION: 1966 AIR 580 1966 SCR (2) 63
CITATOR INFO :
F 1969 SC 302 (10) E 1980 SC1109 (4)
ACT:
Madras Plantations Agricultural Income-tax
Act, 1955 (as extended to Kerala State) s. 3-Charge of income-tax on income-tax
previous year-Accounts wintained on mercantile system-Coffee supplied to Coffee
Board under s. 25 of the Coffee Act, 1942 and price entered in accounts though
not received--Price received in next accounting year--Income when accrues--Sale
when occurs-Whether in year of supply or year in which price received.
HEADNOTE:
Under s. 3 of the Madras Plantations
Agricultural Income-tax Act, 1955 (as extended to Kerala State) income-tax was
to be assessed in each financial year on the income of an assessee during the
previous Year. The first assessment under the Act could be for 1955-56 so, that
income of any period before April 1, 1954 could not be taxed under the Act. The
respondent company was assessed for the years 1955-56 and 1956-57 on its income
of the relevant previous years. The company objected to the inclusion in its
income for these years of certain sums on the ground that they represented
income of the period before April 1, 1954 to which the Act did not apply. The
controversy was in respect of certain sales -of coffee which, according to the
company, took place in its accounting years ending March 31, 1953 and March 31,
1954. The sales were to the Coffee Board under s. 25 of the Coffee Act and as
the company maintained its accounts on the mercantile system the price was also
entered in the accounts at the time of the sale itself although it was received
later i.e. in the previous years relevant to the assessment years 1955-56 and
1956-57. The Appellate Assistant Commissioner of Agricultural In-come-tax and
the Appellate Tribunal held that the income arose when the price was received
and thus upheld the inclusion of the income from the aforesaid sales in the
assessment for 1955-56 and 1956
57. The company filed writ petitions in the
High Court challenging the said assessments. A single judge decided in favour
of the company and so did the Division Bench. The State of Kerala appealed by
special leave to this Court.
HELD : All Coffee which the Coffee Board
obtains under the Coffee Act is put in a pool and gets mixed up with other
coffee. Coffee in the Pool is disposed of on behalf of the Coffee Board which
pays only a proportionate price to the planter. -Even though the planter does
not actually sell coffee to the Coffee Board there is in reality a sale by
operation of law as a result of which the planter ceases to be the owner of
coffee the moment he has handed over his produce to the Coffee Board, The fact
that the price is received later does not make it any the less a sale. [99 H;
1100 A-B] The system of accounting must make
a difference as to the time when the income arises. If it were a cash system
income would be taxable when actually received but in the mercantile system it
would be taxable in the year in which the relevant entry is made about the sale
of the coffee to the Coffee Board. [100 C] 93 The appellant company maintained
its accounts on the mercantile system. When it handed-over coffee to the Coffee
Board it entered the price of coffee according to the valuation of the Coffee
Board in its books of. account although it did not receive payment immediately.
The payment for coffee handed over before April 1. 1954 was received after that
date. No doubt actual payment was received in the previous years relevant to
the assessment years 1955-56 and 1956-57 but coffee was handed over to the
Coffee Board in the earlier years for which no, tax could be demanded. The High
Court therefore rightly held that the income in question was not taxable in the
said assessment years. [99 F-G; 101 A] Puthuthototam Estates (1943) Ltd. v.
Agricultural Income-tax Officer, Coimbatore, 34 I.T.R. 765, Puthuthotottam
Estates (1943) Ltd. v. Agricultural Income-tax Officer, 45 I.T.R. 87
I.T.R. 353, referred to.
& CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil
Appeals Nos. 650 and 651 of 1964.
Appeals by special leave from the judgment
and order dated January 9, 1962 of the Kerala High Court in Writ Petitions Nos.
154 and 155 of 1961.
P. Govinda Menon and V. A. Seyed Muhammad,
for the appellants.
M. C. Setalvad, O. P. Malhotra, J. B.
Dadachanji, O. C. Mathur and Ravinder Narain, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Hidaytullah J. These two appeals by special leave arise from two petitions
under Art. 226 of the Constitution in the High Court of Kerala questioning the
assessment to Agricultural Income-tax of Bhavani Tea Produce Co., Ltd.
(respondent) under the Madras Plantations Agricultural Income-tax Act, 1955 (as
extended to Kerala State) for the assessment years 1955-56 and 1956-57
respectively. The High Court decided that certain receipts were not taxable in
those assessment years and the State of Kerala is the appellant before us.
The assessment year in each case ended on
March 3 1, of the year and tax was leviable on the results of the previous
year. For the first of the two assessment years, corresponding to the previous
year ended on March 31, 1955 the net agricultural income was assessed at Rs.
1,32,198/and a tax of Rs. 45,443/1/ was demanded by the Department and in the
succeeding assessment year, corresponding to the previous year ended on March
31, 1956, the amounts of net agricultural income and the tax were respectively
Rs. 1,24,339 and Rs. 42,810/5/The assessee Company claimed that Rs. 97,090/in
the first year and Rs. 10,09-51/in the second year were not taxable although 94
received by the company from the Coffee Board during the relevant accounting
years. The Company contended that these payments were in respect of coffee
delivered by the Company to the Coffee Board under s. 25 of the Coffee Market
Expansion Act 1942, in the years 1952-53 and 1953-54, that is to say, prior to
April 1, 1954 when the Madras Plantations Agricultural Income Tax Act came into
force and were not assessable, as the accounts were maintained on the
mercantile system and the amounts were shown in 1952-53 and 1953-54. This plea
was not accepted by the Agricultural Income-tax Officer, Coimbatore. His
assessment orders are dated May 18, 1956 and July 15, 1957 respectively. The
Company appealed, but the Appellate Assistant Commissioner by orders passed on
December 19, 1958 dismissed the appeals.
The Company appealed further. By a common
order dated January 25, 1966 the Agricultural Income Tax Appellate Tribunal
dismissed the appeal in respect of the assessment year 1955-56. In the other
appeal the conclusion was the same but the case had to be remanded to ascertain
some matters not connected with the present controversy. In both the cases the
Department had held that the income was derived in the relevant previous year
and this opinion was upheld by the Appellate Tribunal. The Appellate Tribunal
observed that "amounts actually received in the 'previous year' as the
price of coffee from the plantation should be regarded as income derived from
the plantation in that year irrespective of the year to, which the crop
belongs." The Company did not apply for revision under s. 54 of the
Agricultural Income Tax Act, but instead filed petitions under Art. 226 of the
Constitution against Agricultural Income-tax Officer, Coimbatore, Appellate
Assistant Commissioner of Agricultural Income-tax, Kozhikode and Agricultural
Income-tax Appellate Tribunal, Trivandrum. The petitions were heard by Mr.
Justice Vaidialingam who accepted the contention of the assessee company and
canceling the assessment orders impugned before him directed the Agricultural
Income-tax Officer to make a reassessment of the total income excluding the
sums of Rs. 97,090/in the first year and Rs. 10,095/in the second year. The
judgment was pronounced on August 18, 1961. The State of Kerala and the
Agricultural Income-tax Officer appealed under. the Letters Patent. The appeal
was sumarily dismissed on January 9, 1962. It is from this judgment that the
present appeals have been filed.
The only question is whether the two amounts
were rightly excluded from the assessable Agricultural income for the two
assessment years. The answer to this question depends on whether 95 under the
scheme of the Madras Plantations Agricultural Income Tax Act read with the
scheme of the Coffee Act it can be said that the income was only received when
the payment was received or 'when the produce was handed over to the Coffee
Board and under the mercantile system of accounting it was entered in the books
of account of the assessee company. If the answer is that income was received
when the crop was handed over to the Coffee Board and the entry was made in the
books of account under the mercantile system, the judgment under appeal must be
considered to be right but if it is the other way, then the action of the
Department was correct. We shall now consider this question.
Before we proceed we shall analyse the
provisions of the two Acts with which we are concerned. The Madras Plantations
Agricultural Income Tax Act consists of 65 sections. It is not necessary to
give a full analysis of that Act. For our purpose it is sufficient to refer to
some of the provisions only. Section 2 defines "Agricultural income",
inter alia, as any income derived from a plantation in the State and
Explanation II says that Agricultural income derived from such plantation by
the cultivation of coffee means that portion of the income derived from the
cultivation, manufacture and sale of coffee as may be defined to be
agricultural income for the purpose of the enactments relating to Indian
Income-tax Act. "Plantation" in the Act means any land used for
growing certain crops including coffee. Section 3 lays charge of agricultural
income-tax and for our purpose we need -read only the first subsection. It is :
"3. Charge of agricultural income-tax'.
(1) Agricultural income-tax at the rate or
rates specified in Part 1 of the Schedule to this Act shall be charged for such
financial year commencing from the 1st April 1955 in accordance with and
subject to the provisions of this Act, on the total agricultural income of the
previous year of every person (2) Section 4 defines "Total agricultural
income" as the total agricultural income-tax any previous year of any
person from a plantation situate within the State. We are not concerned with
the other sections. Some deal with the computation of agricultural income, the
expenses which may be deducted, the method of accounting, exemption from the
tax under the Act and computation and carrying forward of loss, Some others
establish Income-tax Authorities, 96 Appellate Tribunal and provide generally
how returns of assessment should be made and sundry matters which have no
relevance here. It is thus clear that the income, which is sought to be taxed
was the kind of income which is taxable under the Act. This income was derived
from coffee grown on a plantation situated within the State and the only
question is in which year the income can be said to be received by the assessee
company.
To ascertain this we have to turn to the
provisions of the Coffee Market Expansion Act of 1942 because the sale of
coffee was not made directly by the assessee but by a Board established under
the Coffee Market Expansion Act. That Act replaced an Ordinance of the
Governor-General (Ordinance No.
30 of 1940) passed to assist the coffee
industry by regulating the export and sale of coffee. As a result of the
outbreak of the Second World War Indian coffee had lost some of its important
foreign markets and there arose a great slump in the price of coffee. A Coffee
Control Conference convened to consider the situation, suggested steps that
could be taken to save the coffee industry in India. Its recommendationsled to
the passing of the Ordinance of 1940. A second Coffee Control Conference was
held in 1941 and after its recommendations were considered by the Standing
Advisory Committee of the Legislature attached to the Commerce Department, the
present Act was passed. This Act has been frequently amended and today it is
called the Coffee Act after the amendment of its title in 1954. We have
referred, and shall refer, to it by this name. The, Coffee Act constituted a
Board which was known as the Indian Coffee Market Expansion Board, now called
the Coffee Board. The Coffee Board is a body corporate (having perpetual
succession and a common seal) with power to acquire and hold property, both
movable and immovable and to contract (S. 5). The Coffee Act imposes a duty of
customs on all coffee produced in India and exported from India (s.
1 1 ) and a duty of excise on all coffee
which an estate registered under s. 14 is permitted, under a scheme of internal
sale quota allotted to it, to sell in the Indian market, whether such coffee is
actually sold or not, and on all coffee released for sale in India by the
Coffee Board from its surplus pool (S. 12).. The proceeds of these duties
(though first credited to the Consolidated Fund of India) may be paid to the
Coffee Board and when so paid are credited to a General Fund (s. 13). All
owners of coffee estates of not less than 10 acres are required to register
with a Registering Officer appointed in this behalf by the State Government and
the registration once made continues till it is cancelled (s. 14). The Central
Government fixes the price or prices at which coffee may be sold wholesale or
97 retail in the Indian Market and no registered owner or licensed curer or
dealer can sell coffee wholesale or retail in the Indian market at a price or
prices higher than the price or prices fixed by the Central Government (s. 16).
Section 17 next provides "17. Sale of
coffee in excess of internal sale quota.
No registered owner shall sell or contract to
sell in the Indian market coffee from any registered estate if by such sale the
internal sale quota allotted to that estate is exceeded nor shall a registered
owner sell or contract to sell in the Indian market any coffee produced on his
estate in any year for which no internal sale quota is allotted to the
estate." The internal sale quota is fixed by s. 22. Under that section the
Coffee Board allots to each registered estate an internal sale quota for the
year. Unless with the previous sanction of the Central' Government the Coffee
Board decides that no internal sale quota shall be allotted, the Board allots
to each registered estate an internal sale quota for the year. The internal
sale quota is a fixed percentage, common to all registered estates, of the
probable total production of the estate in the year as estimated by the Board.
For the purpose of fixing the quota the registered owner is required to furnish
such returns as the Board may demand. The surplus pool to which we have
referred means the stock of coffee accumulated by the Board out of the amounts
delivered to the Board under s. 25. That section is a long section of six
sub-sections and they need to be carefully considered. It provides that all
coffee produced by a registered estate in excess of the amount specified in the
internal sale quota allotted to that estate shall delivered to the Coffee Board
by the owner of the estate for inclusion in the surplus pool. (sub-s. 1).
Delivery of coffee must be made to the Coffee Board in such places and at such
times and in such manner as the Coffee Board may direct and the Coffee Board
may give directions for partial delivery to the surplus pool at any time
whether the internal sale quota has been exceeded or not and the Coffee Board
may reject any defective consignment (sub-s. 2).
Coffee delivered to the Coffee Board for
inclusion in the surplus pool must represent fairly in kind and quality the
produce of the estate, and such coffee remains under the control of the Coffee
Board and the Coffee Board is responsible for its storage, curing (when
necessary) and marketing (sub. s. 3). The Coffee Board must prepare, from time
to time, a differential sale for the valuation of such coffee. In accordance
with that scale the Coffee Board must classify each consignment delivered for
inclusion in the surplus 98 pool and make an assessment of its value based on
its quantity, kind and quality (sub-s. 4). Sub-section (5) is not material.
Subsection (6) then provides as follows "25. Surplus coffee and surplus
pool (6) When coffee has been delivered or is treated as having been delivered
for inclusion in the surplus, pool, the registered owner whose coffee has been
so delivered or is treated as having been so delivered shall retain no rights
in respect of such coffee except his right to receive the payments referred to
in section 34." Section 34, which is here referred to, reads "34.
Payments to registered owners.
The Board shall at such times as it thinks
fit make to registered owners who have delivered coffee for inclusion in the
surplus pool such payments out of the pool fund as it may think proper.
(2) 'The sum of all payments made under subsection
(1) to any one registered owner shall bear to the sum of the payments made to
all registered owners the same proportion as the value of the coffee delivered
by him out of the year's crop to the surplus pool bears to the value of all
coffee delivered to the surplus pool out of that year's crop Provided that in
calculating the sum of all payments made under sub-section (1) and the value of
the coffee delivered to the surplus pool out of the year's crop, respectively,
any payment accepted by a registered owner as final payment in immediate
settlement for coffee delivered by him for inclusion in the surplus pool and
the value of any such coffee shall be excluded." We may refer to one other
section and that is section 33 which confers on the Board power to borrow on
the security of the coffee so delivered. It reads as follows "33. Power to
borrow.
The Board may, subject to any prescribed
conditions borrow on the security of the general fund or the pool fund for any
purposes for which it is authorised to expend money from such fund, or on the
security of the coffee 99 delivered or treated as delivered for inclusion in
the surplus pool for any purposes for which it is authorised to expend money
from the pool fund." The failure to register, contravention of s. 25,
making of a false return, obstruction and contravention of the other provisions
of the Coffee Act, some of which we have not found necessary to mention here,
are constituted offences and there is provision for punishment and penalty. The
Coffee Board is also given the power to seize coffee withheld from inclusion in
the surplus pool. In this way, the marketing of coffee is made the duty of the
Coffee Board and the right of a party who has made contributions to the surplus
pool is merely to receive payment for coffee which is handed over. The quantum
of payment is determined, at first according to the differential scale of
valuation prepared by the Coffee Board. It must be remembered that under s.
34(2) the payment is in the proportion which the value of coffee delivered by
the owner bears to the value of all coffee delivered to the surplus pool out of
one year's crop. But an owner need not wait and may accept an immediate
settlement for his coffee. It follows that coffee delivered to the Coffee Board
becomes the property of the Board no sooner it is delivered. The Coffee Board
can borrow money by pledging it and is not required to return any part of that
coffee to the producer. It only sells it and gives to the planter price
proportionate to the value of all coffee in the surplus pool for that year,
unless the planter settles for an immediate payment.
The appellant Company maintains its accounts
on the mercantile system. When it handed over coffee to the Coffee Board it
entered the price of the coffee according to the valuation of the Coffee Board
in its books of account although it did not receive payment immediately because
as has been shown above the payment is delayed unless immediate settlement is
made. The payment for coffee handed over before April 1, 1954 was received
after that date. No doubt actual payment was received in the previous years
relevant to the two assessment years, but coffee was handed over to the Coffee
Board in the earlier years for which no tax could be demanded. Was there a sale
to the Coffee Board ? The answer must be in the affirmative. The Coffee Board
is neither a trustee nor even an agent of the planter. It is not accountable to
the owner, except as to payment for coffee received and valued according to the
differential prices. All coffee which the Coffee Board obtains under the Coffee
Act is put in a pool and gets mixed up with other coffee. Coffee in the pool is
disposed of on behalf of the Coffee Board. The Coffee Board only pays a
proportionate 100 price to the planter. Even though the planter does not
actually sell coffee to the Coffee Board there is in reality a sale by
operation of law as a result of which the planter ceases to be the owner of
coffee the moment he has handed over his produce to the Coffee Board. He is then
entitled to receive payment and is not concerned any more with his coffee. The
unsold coffee is not returned to him and he does not enjoy any rights of
ownership in it. The Coffee Board can pledge it and sell it as and when it
likes. In these circumstances it is plain that the handing over of coffee by
the planter amounts to a sale to the Coffee Board and the payment of the price
is from the sale of all the coffee in the surplus pool unless the planter
settles for immediate payment. The system of account must make a difference. If
it were a cash system income would be taxable when actually received but in the
mercantile system it would be taxable in the year in which the relevant entry
is made about the sale of coffee to the Coffee Board.
We were referred to some rulings of the Madras and the Kerala High Courts. In Puthuthottam Estates (1943) Limited v. Agricultural
Income-Tax Officer, Coimbatore,(1) Rajagopalan J. held that there was nothing
in the Madras Plantations Agricultural Income-tax Act or the Rules thereunder,
which exempted produce gathered earlier than 1st April, 1954 from taxation if
payment was received in any previous year relevant to an assessment year under
the Madras Plantations Agricultural Income-tax Act. The judgment of Rajgopalan
J. was reversed on appeal in Puthuthottam Estates (1943) Ltd., v. Agricultural
Income-Tax Officer(1). Rajamannar C.J., and Jagadisan J. held that, if the sale
took place after 1st April 1954, tax was payable no matter if the produce was
of an earlier year but if the sale took place earlier than that date, tax would
not be payable even if the price was realized later. In the Kerala High Court
distinction was made between entries under cash and mercantile systems of
bookkeeping. In Amalgamated Coffee Estates Ltd. v. State of Kerala(3) the
assessee followed the mercantile system and payments entered in the accounting
period April 1, 1953 to March 31, 1954 were held not taxable even though
actually received after April 1, 1955. The reasoning in these two cases is the
same as in this judgment. It is, therefore, not necessary to refer to them.
The judgment under appeal follows the earlier
decision of the same Court and the Divisional Bench decision of the Madras High
Court, and in our opinion the High Court have taken the right view of the
matter.
(1) 34 I. T. R. 764.
(2) 45 I. T. R. 87.
(3) 45 T. T. R. 353.
101 The High Court was thus right in holding
that there was no sale in the years relevant to the assessment years for which
the tax demanded. The sale had taken place in the earlier years over which the
Agricultural Income-tax Act did not operate. The appeals will therefore be
dismissed with costs. One set of hearing fees.
Appeals dismissed..
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