M/S. E. D. Sasoon & Co. Ltd.
Bombay Vs. The C.I.T. Bombay City [1972] INSC 196 (29 August 1972)
ACT:
Income-tax Act 1922, S. 25(3)-Company taking
over several businesses carried on by a firm which had paid tax under the Act
of 1918 Whether shares & securities business taken overIf one of several
businesses not taken over whether company can claim, benefit under section
25(3).
HEADNOTE:
The appellant company purchased the business
of a partnership firm towards the end of 1920, The firm bad carried on business
as bankers, commission agents, agents of joint stock companies and dealers in
shares and securities foreign exchange etc., in and outside India. Pursuant to the agreement of purchase the appellant company took over the business
of the firm and also purchased shares and securities worth Rs. 1,93,79,521-3-1
at market value as on 31st December 1920. It further purchased between 1st January 1921 to 31st January 1921 from the market further shares and securities worth
Rs. 4,28,05,627 in the ordinary course of his business. In the year of
assessment 1949-50 the appellant company discontinued its business and claimed
exemption on Rs. 33,40,057 under s. 25(3) of the Income,tax Act 1922. This
claim was rejected by the Income-tax officer on the ground claimed and obtained
a deduction (1)that in the year 1921 the assesses in respect of appreciation in
shares and securities amounting to Rs.9,26,708 and (2) it had discontinued one
of the business which the firm was doing namely dealing in stocks and shares.
The Tribunal held that the business was assessed to tax under the Act of 191
& but found that the shares and securities were purchased by the company
from the partnership firm not with the intention of dealing in securities but
as an investment. The High Court in reference held that the company was a
dealer in shares and securities immediately after it took over from the firm.
On a different question the High Court gave its answer against the assessee.
Both parties appealed to this Court with certificates. The assessee did not
press its appeal.
In the appeal on behalf of the Revenue it was
contended that the Tribunal had found that the shares and securities business
carried on by the firm was not taken over by the company and therefore the
company was not carrying on the same business as the firm with the result that
'it could not claim the benefit of s. 25(3).
Dismissing the Revenue's appeal,
HELD : An assessee to obtain relief under s.
25(3) has to satisfy their condition. Firstly, that the business, profession or
vocation must be one on which tax was at any time charged under the 1918 Act.
Secondly, the case must be one where them has not been a succession after 1st
April 1939 attracting the application of sub-s. (4). Thirdly, the business must
be discontinued; such discontinuance amounting to a complete cessation of
business and not merely a succession or change of ownership. [1090C] In
sub-section (3) there is a clear reference to the business and not to the
assessee and therefore the subsection applies even if the person claiming the
relief was not himself charged under the 1918 Act but his predecessorin-interest
was so charged. [1090F] The High Court had taken into consideration the
assessment Order for the years 1921-22 and 1922-23 dated the 10th January, 1923
for the 1085 conclusion that the assessee company was taxed on profits on
dealings in shares and stocks in respect of those years which in its view
showed beyond doubt that the company was trading in shares and securities for
the year 1921 immediately after it took over from the firm. Even otherwise also
there was sufficient material on the record to hold that the entire business of
the firm which included dealing in shares and stocks was taken over by the
assessee company as a going concern, that large holdings of stocks and shares
were transferred to the assessee company and that there is no evidence to show
that for the years 1920-21, 1921-22 and also for subsequent years, the assessee
company was not dealing in shares. on the other hand the Statement of the case
clearly disclosed that the company purchased in the market during the period
1st January, 1921 and 31st December 1921, shares and stock worth Rs.
4,28,05,627 in the ordinary course of its business. The logical inference which
arose from the above circumstances was that the assessee company carrying on
the same-business as that of the firm including dealing in shares and stocks.
There was also no material on, record which would justify the Incometax
Authorities or the Tribunal in coming to the conclusion that the shares and
'stocks which were transferred to the assessees company were only intended to
be held as investments. [1093F-1094B] There was no doubt that to Income-tax
Officer had omitted for some to include in the income Rs., 9,76,708 being the
appreciation of shares and stocks for the accounting year 1921 for which the
assessment year is 1922-23, but that is not to say that the assessee cornpany
did not deal in shares and stocks in that year. [1094E] In any case
irrespective of the question whether the assessee company was dealing in shares
after it had taken over the business from the Am, it was clear that the company
was, carrying on several other businesses which it had taken over from the firm
as a going concern. Even where one or two businesses activities were
discontinued after the assessee company took over, nonetheless it would not
justify the Court in holding that the business of the firm which was taken over
had been discontinued, because under s. 25(3) there is no restriction to the
applicability of the exemption only to income on which the tax was payable
under any particular head. [1094G-H] Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay City 1
v. Chugandas & Co., 55 I.T.R. 22. applied.
Commissioner of Income-tax, Bo bay v. P. E.
Polson, 13 I.T.R. 384. Executors of Estate of Dubash v. Commissioner of
Income-tax, 19 I.T.R. 182 and O.R.M.M.S.P. SV. Firm v.
Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras, referred
to.
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeals
Nos. 26 and 162 of 1969.
Appeals by certificates from the judgment and
order dated October 13, 14 and 16, 1967 of the Bombay High Court in Income-tax
Reference No. 98 of 1962.
S. T. Desai, R. J. Kolah, D. H. Dwarkadas, M.
L. Bhakta, A. K. Verma, J. B. Dadachanji, O. C. Mathur and Ravinder Narain for
the appellants in C.A. No. 26 of 1969 and respondent in C.A. No. 162/69.
1086 S. Sen, J. Ramamurthi, B. D. Sharma, R.
N. Sachthey and S. P. Nayar, for the respondent in C.A. No. 26/69 and appellant
in C.A. No. 162 of 1969.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by P.
Jaganmohan Reddy, J. These two appeals are by certificate against the judgment
of the High Court of Bombay answering four out of the five questions referred
to it in favour of the assessee and one question in favour of the revenue.
A partnership firm (hereinafter referred to
as the firm) comprising of some of the members of the Sassoon family was
carrying on business under the name and style of E. D.Sassoon & Co. for a
number of years prior to 1920 at Bombay, Calcutta, Karachi, Hongkong, Shanghai,
London, Manchester, Basra and the Persian Gulf. The business which it was
carrying on was that of the bankers, commission agent, agents of joint stock
companies, dealers in shares and securities, foreign exchange etc. In the
accounting year 1919 the firm incurred net loss of Rs. 12,37,41312-2 but in
1920 it seems to have made large profits mostly "in London Exchange
Account". It however claimed depreciation in shares and securities
amounting to Rs. 9,26,730-5-8 shown under the head depreciation in shares and
securities. On 8th September 1920 and 4th December 1920 two companies were
incorporated in Bombay the former was known as the Bombay Trust Corporation
Ltd. and the latter as E. D. Sassoon & Co.Ltd. (hereinafter called the
'assessee company'). The Bombay Trust Corporation carried on business in Bombay
which comprised mainly the business of dealers in shares, securities and
foreign exchange. This company (B.T.C.) had by the end of December 1920
investments in shares and securities to the extent of Rs. 3,23,78,494/-. By the
end of 1921 investments in shares and securities had risen to Rs. 4,31,32,212/and
by the end of December 1922 these investments had risen to Rs, 10,43,78,511/-.
Though these facts have been given in the statement of the case, as we shall
presently show, they are not germane for the determination of the questions
before us.
The assessee company was incorporated with
several objects one of which was "To acquire and take over as a going
concern the business now carried on at Bombay, Calcutta, Karachi, Hongkong,
Shanghai, London, Manchester, Basra and Bagdad and all or any of the assets and
liabilities of the proprietors of that business in connection therewith, and
with a view thereto, enter into the Agreement referred 1087 to in clause 4 of
the Company's Articles of Association and to carry the same into effect with or
without modification." Clause 4 of the articles of association of the
company provided that the assessee company shall forthwith enter into the
agreement mentioned in cl, 3 of the, Memorandum of Association with such,
modifications, if any as the directors shall approve. On June 30, 1961 the
agreement referred to was finally executed by the assessee company.
The said agreement provided inter alia for
purchase of the business of the said firm and its assets including shares, and
debentures for valuable consideration therein set out at the market price
prevailing on 31st December 1920 which purchase was to be completed on or
before that date. It appears that pursuant to the said agreement the company
took over the business of the said firm and also purchased shares and
securities worth Rs. 1,93,79,521-3-1 at market value as on 31st December 1920.
It further purchased between 1st January 1921 to 31st January 1921 from the
market further shares and securities worth Rs. 4,28,05,627 in the ordinary
course of its business.
According to the Income-tax Officer in the
accounting year 1921 there was no dealing in shares and securities. At the end
of the year 1921 as was done by the predecessor firm in the year 1920 the
assessee company valued the securities and shares at the prevailing market
rates which showed an appreciation of Rs. 9,26,713 on its valuation at the
market rate. The appreciation of Rs. 9,26,730-5-8 was however not taxed because
it is alleged that the assessee company had contended that this appreciation
should be delated from the computation of income. At the relevant time during
the course of the assessments the assessee company's accounts were examined by
the examiner of accounts who made the following note on 12th October, 1922:-"With
regard to the second item it would be seen from the last year's "B"
form put up herewith with the company is a habitual dealer of shares has set
off against profits of 1920 the loss of shares and securities (depreciation).
Hence appreciation of Rs. 9,27,70867 will have to be taxed this year." On
the above report the Income-tax Officer endorsed on the 23rd December, 1922 as
follows :"NOTE :-Shares and securities of Rs.6,55,895/and Rs. 3,28,112/book
entry securities being valued at the end of the year and appreciation or
depreciation brought into account. These securities are being taken over by the
new company. B.T.C. Ltd. Bombay shows 1088 this on the instructions from the House,
only and these items may therefore be disregarded for the income-tax
purposes." It may be mentioned that the firm was being assessed for the
year 1921-22 under the Income-tax Act 1918 on the income of the, ,accounting
year 1921 and for the assessment years 1922-23 to 1948-49 the assessee company
was being assessed under the Act of 1922. In the year of assessment 1949-50 the
assessee company discontinued its business and claimed exemption on Rs.
33,40,057 under S. 25 (3) of the Act. This claim was rejected by the Income-tax
Officer on the ground (1) that in the year 1921 the, assessee claimed and
obtained a deduction in respect of appreciation in shares and securities
amounting to Rs. 9,26,708/and (2) it had discontinued one of the businesses
which the firm was doing namely dealing in stocks and shares.
The assessee company appealed and the
Appellate Assistant Commissioner held that on the evidence it was clear that
the business which was discontinued in the year of assessment was not charged
to tax under the Act of 1918 on the income from share dealings either for the
accounting years 1918 or 1919, 1920 ,or for the accounting year 1921. As the
assessment to tax on the share dealings was a basic requirement for exemption
under S. 25(3) and that not having been established the question of granting
any relief under the said provision did not arise:. The Tribunal in appeal
though it held that the firm was assessed to tax under the Act of 1918
nevertheless negatived the relief on the ground that the assessee company did
not intend to do the business of dealing in securities acquired from the old
firm. On an application by the assessee company for reference under s.
66 (1) the following five questions were
referred to the High Court :"(1) WHETHER on the facts and in the circumstances
of the case the assessee. company is entitled to claim exemption under Section
25(3) of the Act? (2) WHETHER on the facts and in the circumstances of the case
the loss suffered on the sale of property in Shanghai was allowable as a
revenue deduction out of profits of the year? (3) WHETHER on the facts and in
the circumstances of the case the assessee company is entitled to deduct Rs.
3,70,943/the amount transferred to the Superannuation Fund against income of
the year? (4) WHETHER on the facts and in the circumstances of the case the
assessee company is en1089 titled to claim a sum of Rs. 2,92,672/transferred
after the liquidation of the company as against the profits of the company ?
(5) W14ETHER on the facts and in the circumstances of the case the assessee
company is entitled to set off the loss of Rs.3,28,825/'suffered in 1948 as
against profit of 1949-50 ? Except for the second question, the High Court
answered the other four questions against the revenue, the appellant in Civil
Appeal No. 162 (NT) of 1969. On the second question its answer was in favour of
the revenue and against the assessee company in respect of which it has filed
Civil Appeal No. 26 of 1969.
On behalf of the revenue it is submitted that
question No. 1 is the crucial question in that the determination of what is
meant by discontinuance of business, profession or vocation, for purposes of s.
25(3) would also furnish the answers to the other questions in the appeal. No
arguments were addressed to us on those questions.
Sub-s. (3) of s. 25 under which the relief is
being claimed is, as follows :"(3) Where any business, profession or
vocation on which tax was 'at any time charged under the provisions of the
Indian Income-tax Act, 1918 (VII of 1918), is discontinued, then, unless there
has been a succession by virtue of which the provisions of sub-section (4) have
been rendered applicable no tax shall be payable in respect of the income,
profits and gains of the period between the end of the previous year and the
date of such discontinuance, and the assessee may further claim that the
income, profits and gains of the previous year shall be deemed to have been the
income, profits and gains of the said period. Where any such claim is made, an
assessment shall be made on the basis of the income, profits and gains of the
said period, and if an amount of tax has already been paid in respect of the
income, profits and gains of the previous year exceeding the amount payable on
the basis of such assessment, a refund shall be given of the difference."
This provision has been enacted to give relief to a tax payer upon whom extra
burden had been imposed due to a change in the basis of assessment as a result
of the Act of 1922. Under the 1918 Act the tax liability was imposed on the
income accruing or arising in the year of assessment while under the 1922 Act
the liability was in respect of income accruing or arising in the 1090 previous
year. Thus when the Act came into force in 1922 it entailed two assessments in
respect of the income of the same year, that is, the income of the, year
1921-22 which had been assessed during the currency of that year under the 1918
Act was subjected to tax once again under the Act as the income of the previous
year for the assessment year 1922-23. In view of this hardship, sub-s. (3)
provided that in the case of discontinuance of any business, profession or
vocation which was at any time charged under the 1918 Action tax is payable in
respect of the period between the end of the previous year and the date of
discontinuance. An assessee to obtain relief under the above sub-section has to
satisfy three conditions. Firstly, that the business, profession ,or vocation
must be one on which tax was at any time charged under the 1918 Act. Secondly,
the case must be one where there has not been a succession after the 1st April,
1939 attracting the application of sub-s. (4).
Thirdly, the business must be 'discontinued',
such discontinuance amounting to a complete cessation of business and not
merely a succession or change of owner-ship. In the case of Commissioner of
Income-tax, Bombay v. P.E.
Polson(1) which was also referred to by
Patanjali Sastri, J. in Executors of Estate of Dubash v. Commissioner of
Income-tax (2 ) the Privy Council has pointed out that the purpose and ,effect
of sub-section 3 was clearly to give relief to a tax payer who but for it would
in the aggregate be charged with tax once in respect of every year's income and
twice in respect of one year's income. There is no dispute in this case that
the, assessee company had discontinued its business from the 28th December 1948
when it went into liquidation. The only dispute is, whether the assessee
company carried on the business of the firm which was assessed to tax under the
1918 Act and whether the firm was charged to tax under the 1918 Act. It may be
mentioned that in sub-s. (3) there is a clear reference to the business and not
to the assessee and therefore that subsection applies even if the person
claiming the relief was not himself charged under the 1918 Act but his
predecessor in-interest was so charged. It is contended on behalf of the
Revenue that the assessee company did not carry on the same business as that
carried on by the firm in that the business in dealing in shares and stocks
which the firm was carrying on was not carried on by the company which merely
held those shares as investment and did not deal in them.
It has been noticed earlier that the firm was
carrying on several businesses one of which was dealing in shares, and stocks
and when the assessee company took over the assets and liabilities of business,
it is said relying on the observations of the Tribunal that all. those
businesses except the business of dealing in shares and stocks was taken over and
that the shares and stocks which it held (1) 13 I.T.R. 384.
(2) 19 I.T.R. 182.
1091 were held for and on behalf of the
B.T.C. It is accordingly contended that the assessee company was not carrying
on the same business.
It may be mentioned that one of the principal
objects of the assessee company as indicated in the memorandum of association
was to acquire and take over as a going concern the business carried on by the
firm E. D. Sassoon & Co. The assets of the firm were taken over even prior
to the agreement which was entered into on the 30th June, 1921.
The Income-tax Officer thought that the
assessee's treatment of its profit and loss arising out of the business of
dealing in shares have not been uniform. He also concluded that in respect of
the successive years at least upto 1938 the department has been treating the
transactions on its merits, but thereafter the assessee company was treated as
a regular dealer in shares and security; that. only a portion of the shares and
security represent stock in trade; that there was no uniform valuation of the
stocks and investments, that in the year 1921 the deletion of the item of
appreciation of shares and security amounting to Rs.
9,76,708 which it was alleged was agreed to
clearly on the assessee's contention that it was only an investor; and that the
business of dealing in shares and security of the assessee company had not in
the aggregate been charged to income-tax in respect of every year's income and
twice in respect of one year's income inasmuch as the number of assessments
made on this business was far less than the number of assessment made during
its life. That apart this business according to the Income-tax Officer was not
in existence at all in 1921 as the assessee company was not dealing in shares and
it was not at all charged to tax under the Act of 1918.
The conclusions of the Appellate Assistant
Commissioner in respect of the accounting years 1918, 1919 and 1920 during
which period the firm was in existence and during the year 1921, the assessee
company was functioning are given as follows :" 1918-There is no evidence
that any assessment was made on the firm and the appellant has failed to prove
that any income of the firm was charged to tax.
1919-This was a year of huge loss and no tax
was charged.
1920-There was no positive. income from
shares or share-dealings.
It is also not necessary to consider tax
payments by the firm during these years because the entire stock-in-trade of
the business in share-dealings and securities belonging to the firm was taken
over by another Limited Company the B.T.C. Ltd., assessed separately and the
appellant did not succeed to that business at all.
1092 1921-No income-tax was charged on the
company at all there being a net loss of more than Rs.
12 lakhs." It may be, mentioned that the
statement that no tax was charged for the year 1918 is contrary to the material
on record nor was the Assistant Appellate Commissioner justified in holding
that the entire stock in trade of business in share dealings and security belonging
to the firm was taken over by another limited company, the B.T.C.
Limited because the Appellate Tribunal on
both these points has not confirmed those findings. The Tribunal summarised its
conclusions as follows :"(i) For the assessment year 1918 E.D.Sassoon
& Co., a firm was assessed to tax under the Act of 1919;
(ii) For the year 1919 as there was huge,
loss no tax was charged;
(iii) In 1919 however the said firm had
included in the profit and loss account, profit and loss on securities and
shares.
(iv) For the year 1920 there was huge profit
and the shares and securities were transferred to the assessee company at the
then market value of the shares and securities;
(v) Over Rs. 9,00,000/of losses were claimed
by the said firm as a result of revaluation and allowed by the Income-tax
authorities in the assessment of the said firm for the year 1920;
(vi) The said firm was being held by the
Department to be a dealer in shares and securities and the profit was brought
to tax.
(vii) The applicant company neither intended
originally to do the business, nor took over the business of dealing in
securities from the old firm." From the findings of the Tribunal given in
(ii), (iii), (iv) and (v), it is apparent that it did not accept the findings
of the Appellate Assistant Commissioner that the tax was not charged under the
Act of 1918 on the income from the dealings and shares for the accounting years
1919 and 1920.
It nonetheless as noticed earlier, affirmed
the order of the tax authorities on the ground that the business the company
took over from the firm, was not the same business, which the firm was doing;
at any rate, in the year in which the assessee company took it over inasmuch as
the 1093 assessee company neither intended originally to do the business, nor took
over the business of dealing in securities from the old firm. The only question
is whether the Tribunal was justified in holding that the assessee company was
not continuing the business which the firm was doing prior to the sale of its
business to the assessee company.
The conclusions in item (vii) of the above
summary seems to be somewhat conflicting with those, in item (iv), but this
apparent contradiction is sought to be reconciled by limiting the conclusion in
clause (iv) to only the transfer of shares and securities to the assessee
company after which the assessee company did not intend to do any business of
dealing in shares and stocks. But this attempt to reconcile and explain the
aforesaid two findings is unconvincing for not only does the Tribunal not find
that after the transfer of shares and stock, to the assessee company by the
firm that it did not hold these shares and stocks but also it did not hold that
the assessee was not dealing in the business of stocks and shares. On the other
hand, the Appellate Assistant Commissioner considering the claim of loss in
respect of Shanghai Property sold by the assessee company observed : "Ever
since the incorporation of the company on 4-12-1920 as a Private Limited
Company and till it went into liquidation on 29-12-1948, the assessee's
business activities consisted of :...... (v) Dealings in Shares and
Securities." The High Court has taken into consideration the assessment
Orders for the years 1921-22 and 1922-23 dated 10th January, 1923 for the
conclusion that the assessee company was taxed on profits on dealings in shares
and stocks in respect of those years which in its view showed beyond doubt that
the company was trading in shares and securities for the year 1921 immediately
after it took over from the firm.
Even otherwise also there is sufficient
material on the record to hold that the entire business of the firm which
included dealing in shares and stocks was taken over by the assessee company as
a going concern that large holdings of stocks and shares were transferred to
the assessee company and that there is no evidence to show that for the years
1920-21, 1921-22 and also for subsequent years, the assessee company was not
dealing in shares. On the other hand, the Statement of the case clearly
discloses is stated earlier that the assessee company purchased in the market
during the period 1st January, 1921 and 31st December 1921 shares and stocks
worth Rs. 4,28,05,627/in the ordinary course of its business. The logical
inference 1094 which arises from the above circumstances is that the assessee
company was carrying on the same business as that of the firm including dealing
in shares and stocks. There is also no material on record which would justify
the Income-tax Authorities or the Tribunal in coming to the conclusion that the
shares and stocks which were transferred to the assessee's company were only
intended to be held as investments.
It was again contended on behalf of the
revenue that the records of assessments for the accounting year 1921 not only
showed that the appreciation in shares and stocks of Rs.9,76,708/was excluded
but income from dividend and securities amounting to Rs. 12,85,408/was not
taken into account, and was assessed in the hands of B.T.C. Limited.
This is based on the order of the Income-tax
Officer notwithstanding the fact that the examiner of accounts had pointed out
that the company is habitual dealer in ,,;hares and stocks and that the
appreciation will have to be taxed.
On behalf of the assessee it is contended
that the question pertaining to this aspect was sought to be raised in the
application under s. 66(1) and when it was not referred an application was made
before the High Court for framing a question dealing with this aspect. The High
Court, however, in the view it took, did not think that that question need be
framed. There is no doubt that the Income-tax Officer had omitted for some
reason to include Rs. 9,76,708/being the appreciation of shares and stocks for
the accounting year 1921 for which the assessment year is 1922-23. but that is
not to say that the assessee company did not deal in shares and stocks in that
year, nor is there any basis for the Income-tax Officer and, the Appellate
Assistant Commissioner in holding that B.T.C. Ltd. took over the share holding
from the firm and not the assessee company. The Tribunal on the other hand held
that the shares were transferred to the assessee company. There is no mention
in its order that these shares were transferred to B.T.C. and not to the assessee
company. The shares and securities were only transferred to the B.T.C. Ltd. in
1922.
In any case, irrespective of the question
whether the assessee company was dealing in shares after it had taken over the
business from the firm, it is clear that the assessee company was carrying on
several other businesses which it had taken over from the firm as going
concern.
Even where one or two businesses activities
are discontinued after the assesses company took over, nonetheless it would not
justify us in holding that the business of the firm which was taken over has
been discontinued, because under s.25 (3 ) there is no restriction to the
applicability of the exemption only to income on which the tax was payable
under any particular head. This is what was held by this Court in Commissioner
of Income1095 tax, Bombay City-1 v. Chugandas & Co.(1) Shah, J., after
noticing that what is to be regarded as income, profits and gains of business,
profession or vocation within the meaning of section 25(3) for which exemption
may be obtained on discontinuance had given rise to difficulties, observed at
page 22 :-"Now clause (3) of section 25 expressly provides that income of
a business, profession or vocation which was charged at any time under Act 7 of
1918 to tax is. on discontinuance of that business, profession or vocation,
exempt from liability to tax under Act II of 1922 for the period between the
end of the previous year and the date of such discontinuance........ When,
therefore, section 25(3) enacts that tax was charged at any time on any
business, it is intended that the tax was at any time charged on the owner of
any business. If that condition be fulfilled in respect of the income of the
business, under the Act of 1918, the owner or his successor-in-interest qua the
business, will be entitled to get the benefit of the exemption under it if the
business is discontinued. The section in terms refers to tax charged on any
business, i.e.. tax charged on. any person in respect of income earned by
carrying on the business, Undoubtedly, it is not all income carried by a person
who conducted any business, which is exempt under sub-section (3) of section
25; non-business income will certainly not qualify for the privilege. But there
is no reason to restrict the condition of the applicability of the exemption
only to income on which the tax was payable under the head "profit and
gains of business, profession or vocation." The legislature has made no
such express reservation and there is no warrant for reading into subsection
(3) it may be noticed does not refer to chargeability of income to tax under a
particular head as a condition of obtaining the benefit of the exemption. . . .
. But the exemption under section 25(3) is general, it is not restricted to
income chargeable under section 10 of the Act." This case was referred to
and followed in the case of O. R M. M. SP. SV. Firm v. Commissioner of
Income-tax, Madras(2).
It appears to us that in any view of the
matter the assessee company was entitled to relief under section 25(3), as
such, the judgment of the High Court has to be confirmed. The learned (1) 55
I.T.R. 22. (2) 63 I.T.R. 404.
1096 Advocate for the assessee has indicated
that he does not press the Civil Appeal No. 26(NT) of 1969 which deals with the
second question.
In the result, both these appeals fail and
are dismissed with G.C. Appeals dismissed.
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