Commissioner of Income Tax, Madras Vs.
M/S. Madurai Mills Co. Limited [1973] INSC 44 (9 March 1973)
KHANNA, HANS RAJ KHANNA, HANS RAJ HEGDE, K.S.
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
CITATION: 1973 AIR 1357 1973 SCR (3) 662 1973
SCC (4) 194
CITATOR INFO:
R 1977 SC 999 (8) RF 1985 SC1416 (60) C 1991
SC2104 (7)
ACT:
Income-tax Act, 1922, s. 12B-Capital
Gains-Voluntary liquidation of private limited company--Distribution of assets
to shareholders’--Surplus received by shareholders whether attracts tax on
capital gains--Distribution of assets whether amounts to sale, exchange
relinquishment or transfer within meaning of s. 12B.
Interpretation of statutes-Proviso which
existed in original law dropped in amended law--Inference to be drawn.
HEADNOTE:
Three private limited companies in which the
assessee held shareswent into voluntary liquidation in December 1959, ID the
course of the liquidation proceedings the liquidators made distribution in the
year of account relevant to the assessment year 1961-62, and the assessee
company got cash or assets in lieu of the amounts due in respect of the three
companies. The Revenue took the view that by reason of the distribution of
assets of the three private companies under liquidation by the liquidators
there had been a capital gain which was assessed by the Income-tax Officer at
Rs.
95,944/-. The Appellate Assistant
Commissioner upheld the order of the Income-tax Officer. He took the view that
the surplus arose out of the exchange of shares held by the assessee company in
the three companies and therefore the surplus ought to be brought to tax. In
further appeal the Tribunal held that there was no exchange or transfer of
shares and assets in question but the transaction could be viewed as a
relinquishment. The High Court held, in reference, that where a liquidator
distributes the assets of the company which has gone into voluntary liquidation
he is performing a legal function and there is no element of sale,, transfer,
exchange or relinquishment involved in such distribution. The Revenue appealed
to this Court, Dismissing the appeal,
HELD : (i) The distribution of the assets of
the companies in liquidation does not amount to a transaction of sale,
exchange, relinquishment or transfer so as to attract section 12B of the Act.
When a shareholder receives money representing his share on distribution of the
net assets of the company in liquidation, he receives that money in
satisfaction of the right which belonged to him by virtue of his holding the
shares and not by operation of any transaction which amounts to sale, exchange,
relinquishment or transfer. In the circumstances it was difficult to bold that
the assessee company was liable to pay tax on capital gains as contemplated by
section 12B of the Act in respect of the amount of Rs. 95,944/[667D] (ii) If
the language of subsection (1) of section 12B of the Act is clear and does not
warrant the inference that distribution of assets on liquidation of a company
constitutes sale, transfer or exchange the said transaction of distribution of
assets would not change its character and acquire the attributes of sale,
transfer or exchange because of the omission of a clarification in the first
proviso to sub-section (1) of section 12B of the Act, even though such a
clarification was there in 663 the third proviso of the section inserted by the
earlier Act (Act 22 of 1947). it is well settled that considerations stemming
from legislative history must ,not be allowed to override the plain words of a
statute. A proviso cannot be construed is enlarging the cope of an enactment
when it can be fairly and property construed without attributing to it that
effect. Further if the language of the enacting part of the statute is plain
and unambiguous and does not contain the provisions which are said to occur in
it, one cannot derive those provisions by implication from a proviso.
[669D] Commissioner of Income-tax U. P. v,
Bankey Lal Vaidya , [1971] 79 I.T.R. 594 and Commissioner of Income-Tax v.
Dewas Cine Corporation [1968] 68 I.T.R. 240, applied.
Commissioner of Income-tax v. Associated
Industrial Development Co. P. Ltd. [1969] 73 I.T.R. 50 and Commissioner of
Income Tax V. R. M. Amin, [1971] 82 I.T.R.
194, approved.
Anderson v. Commissioner of Income Tax,
[1960] 39 I.T.R. 123, distinguished.
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal
No. 1394 of 1970.
Appeal by certificate from the judgment and
order dated February 28, 1969 of the High Court at Madras in Tax Case No. 124
of 1965.
S. C. Manchanda, P. L. Juneja and R. N.
Sachthey, for the appellant.
S. T. Desai and T. A. Ramachandran, for the
respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KHANNA, J.-This appeal on certificate has been filed by the Commissioner of
Income Tax against the judgment of Madras High Court whereby that court
answered the following question referred to it under section 66(1) of the
Indian Income Tax Act, 1922 (hereinafter referred to as the Act) in the
negative in favour of the assessee respondent :
" Whether on the facts and circumstances
of the case, the Tribunal was right in holding that the sum of Rs. 95,944/is
liable to tax under Section 12B(2) ?" The matter relates to assessment
year 1961-62. The assessee is a public limited company carrying on the business
of manufacture and sale of yarn. The assessee held shares in the following
companies as under :
(1) Indian Mills Supply Company (Private)
Limited, 2,760 shares of the face value of Rs.
100/(2) Harveys (Private) Limited, 1,000
shares of the face value of Rs. 100/664 (3) Pendyan Weaving Mills (Private)
Limited, 1,800 shares of the face value of Rs. 100/-.
The above three companies went into voluntary
liquidation in December, 1959. In the course of the liquidation proceedings,
the liquidiators made distribution in the relevant year of account and the
assessee company got cash or assets in lieu of cash of the amount of Rs.
4,57,858, Rs.
1,41,739 and Rs. 1,83,175 in respect of
Indian Mills Company (Private) Limited, Harveys (Private) Limited and Pandyan
Weaving Mills (Private) Limited respectively. The revenue took the view that by
reason of the distribution of assets of the three private companies under
liquidation by the liquidators, there had 'been a capital gain of Rs. 96,735.85
in respect of Indian Mills Supply Company (Private) Limited and Rs. 41,168-88
in respect of Harveys (Private) Limited making a total of Rs. 1,37,904.73. Out
of that, loss amounting to Rs. 41,960.56 in respect of Pandyan Weaving Mills
(Private) Limited was deducted, leaving a balance of Rs. 95,944.00. The
assessee company at first showed the sum of Rs. 95,944.00 as capital gains but
subsequently it filed a statement showing a loss of Rs. 59,104 on the basis
that the cost of shares distributed by the liquidators should be taken at the
figure at which they had been acquired by the companies which distributed the
shares. The Income-tax Officer assessed the assessee company to capital gain at
the sum of Rs. 95,944. Aggrieved by the order of the Income-tax Officer the
assessee filed appeal before the Appellate Assistant Commissioner and on being
unsuccessful there, filed further appeal before the Income Tax Appellate
Tribunal. The main contention which was raised on behalf of the assessee was
that the transaction in question involved no sale, exchange, relinquishment or
transfer and as such, the amount in question was not capital gain under section
12B of the Act. The Appellate Assistant Commissioner was of the view that the
surplus arose out of the exchange of shares held by the assessee company in the
three companies and therefore the surplus ought to be brought to tax. The
Tribunal held that there was an exchange or transfer of shares and assets in
question. The transaction, according to the Tribunal, could also be viewed as a
relinquishment.
The assessee was consequently held liable to
pay tax on the sum of Rs. 95,944 under section 12B of the Act. The question
reproduced above was thereafter, on the application of the assessee, referred
to the High Court.
The High Court while answering the question
in the negative held that when a liquidator distributes the assets of a company
which has gone into voluntary liquidation, he is performing a legal function
and there is no element of sale, transfer, exchange or relinquishment involved
in such distribution. The judgment of the High Court is reported in (1969) 74
T.T.R. 623.
665 Before dealing further, we may mention
that capital gains were charged for the first time by the Income Tax and Excess
Profit Tax (Amendment) Act, 1947 (Act 22 of 1947) which inserted section 12B in
the Act. It taxed capital gains arising after March 31, 1946. The tax on
capital gains was virtually abolished by the Indian Finance Act, 1949 which
confined the operation of that section to capital gains arising before April 1,
1948. Capital gains tax was, however, revived with effect from April 1, 1957 by
the Finance (No. 3) Act of 1956. Sub-section(1) of section 12B along with its
first proviso was as under :
"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 to which the sale, exchange, relinquishment
or transfer took place :
Provided that any distribution of capital
assets on the total or partial partition of a Hindu undivided family or under a
deed of gift, bequest or will, shall not for the purposes of this section be
treated as a sale, exchange, relinquishment or transfer of the capital assets Sub-section
(2) of section 12B prescribed a statutory formula for purposes of computation
of capital gains. Subsection (3) of section 12B was as under:
"Where any capital asset became the
property of the assessee by succession, inheritance or devolution or on any
distribution of capital assets on the total or partial partition of a Hindu
undivided family or on the dissolution of a firm or other association of
Persons or on the liquidation of a company or under a deed of gift, or transfer
on irrevocable trust, its actual cost allowable to him for the purposes of this
section shall be its actual cost to the previous owner thereof, and the
provisions of sub-section (2) shall apply accordingly; and where the actual
cost to the previous owner cannot be ascertained, the fair market value at the
date on which the capital asset became the property of the previous owner shall
be deemed to be the actual cost thereof........" Perusal of sub-section
(1) of section 12B reproduced above shows that the liability to pay tax on
account of capital gains can arise only if the assessee makes profits or gains
arising from the sale, exchange. relinquishment or transfer of a capital asset
effected after March 31, 1956. The question with which we are concerned is
whether the distribution of assets of the companies which 666 had gone into
voluntary liquidation by the liquidators to the assessee company resulted in a
transaction which amounted to sale, exchange, relinquishment or transfer.
Mr. Manchanda on behalf of the appellant has
argued in this Court that the transaction in question amounted to sale or
transfer. We, however, find ourselves unable to accede to this contention. The
act of each of the liquidators in distributing the assets of the company which
had gone into voluntary liquidation did not result in the creation of new
rights. It merely entailed recognition of legal rights which were in existence
prior to the distribution. According to observations on page 512 of Buckley's
Commentaries on the Companies Act, thirteenth edition, a liquidator is only a
trustee in the sense that the property of the company ceases upon the winding
up to belong beneficially to the company and passes into his custody, to be
applied by him as directed by the statute. It is further observed on page 513 :
"The question whether a liquidator in a
voluntary winding up is a trustee within the meaning of the Trustee Act, 1925,
and as such entitled to the benefit of ss. 30 and 61 of that Act, was
discussed, but not decided, in Re Windsor Steam Coal Co. (1) Semble, a
liquidator is in the position of a trustee for the members when distributing
surplus assets in specie in a winding up, so that no beneficial interest passes
in the property conveyed or transferred, within the Finance (1909-1910) Act,
1910, s. 74(6), and ad valorem stamp duty under that section is not payable on
conveyances or transfers of the property to the members." When a
shareholder receives money representing his share on distribution of the net
assets of the company in liquidation, he receives that money in satisfaction of
the right which belonged to him by virtue of his holding the shares and not by
operation of any transaction which amounts to sale, exchange, relinquishment or
transfer. In the circumstances, we find it difficult to hold that the assessee
company is liable to pay tax on capital gains as contemplated by section 12B of
the Act in respect of the amount of Rs. 95,944.
In the case of Commissioner of Income-tax
U.P. v. Bankey Lal Vaidya(2) (to which one of us was a party) the respondent
who was a karta of a Hindu undivided family, entered into a partnership with D
to carry on the business of manufacturing and selling pharmaceutical products
and literature relating thereto. On the dissolution of the partnership, its
assets, which included goodwill, machinery, furniture, medicines, library and
copyright (1) [1929] 1 Ch. 151. (2) [1971] 79 I.T.R, 594.
667 in respect of certain publications, were
valued at Rs.2,50,000. Since most of the assets were incapable of physical
division, it was agreed that the assets be taken over by D and the respondent
be paid his share of the value of the assets in money and accordingly the
respondent was paid Rs. 1,25,000. Question arose whether the sum of Rs.
65,000 being part of the amount received by
the respondent could be brought to tax as capital gains under section 12B of
the Act. It was held by Shah J., speaking for the Court, that the arrangement
between the partners of the firm amounted to a distribution of the assets of
the firm on dissolution and that there was no sale, exchange or transfer of the
respondent's share in the capital assets to D. The sum of Rs. 65,000, it was
accordingly held, could not be taxed as capital gains. The receipt of money by
the respondent was, in the opinion of the Court, nothing but a receipt of his
share in the distributed assets of the company.
Reliance in that case was placed, as has been
done also in the present case, on behalf of the revenue upon the ease of James
Anderson v. Commissioner of Income Tax.(1) The said case was distinguished and
was found to be of not much avail to the revenue. In that case the assessee who
held a power of attorney from the executor of a deceased person, sold certain
shares and securities belonging to the deceased for the purpose of distributing
the assets amongst the legatees.
The excess realised by sale was treated by
the department as capital gains. The contention of the assessee was that since
the sale of the shares and securities fell within the purview of the third
proviso to section 12(B)(1), it could not be treated as a sale of capital
assets but this contention was rejected by this Court. James Anderson's case,
in our opinion, is not of such assistance to the revenue as in that case there
was no distribution of capital assets between the legatees. On the contrary,
the assessee had in pursuance of the authority given to him by the executor of
the deceased sold the shares and securities and the said sale had resulted in
capital gain. In the present case there has been no sale of receipt of price
but only a distribution of the assets of the companies which had gone into
voluntary liquidation. Such a transaction does not amount to sale, exchange,
relinquishment or transfer of the assets. The revenue, in the circumstances,
cannot derive much assistance from that case.
In the case of Commissioner of Income Tax v.
Dewas Cine Corporation (2) this Court while dealing with section 10 (2) (vii)
of the Act observed that the expression "sale" in its ordinary
meaning is a transfer of property for a price, and adjustment of the rights of
the partners in a dissolved firm by allotment of its assets (1) [1960] 39
I.T.R. 123. (2) [1968] 68 I.T.R. 240.
668 is not a transfer nor it is for a price.
In that case the assets were distributed among the partners and it was
contended that the assets must in law be deemed to be sold to the individual
partners in consideration of their respective shares, and the difference
between the writtendown value and the price realised should be included in the
total income of the partnership under the second proviso to section 10(2)
(vii). This Court in this context observed that a partner may in an action for
dissolution insist that the assets of the partnership be realised by sale of
its assets, but property allotted to a partner in satisfaction of his claim to
his share, could not be deemed in law to be sold to him.
In Commissioner of Income Tax v. Associated
Industrial Development Co. P. Ltd. (1) a Division Bench of the Calcutta High
Court held that the amount received by a shareholder on the liquidation of a
company was not assessable to capital gains as there was no sale, exchange,
relinquishment or transfer of the capital assets. Similar view has also been
taken by the Gujarat High Court in Commissioner of Income Tax v. R. M. Amin .
(2).
We are, therefore, of the view that
distribution of the assets of the companies in liquidation does not amount to a
transaction of sale, exchange, relinquishment or transfer so as to attract
section 12B of the Act.
Mr. Manchanda on behalf of the appellant has
invited our attention to the third proviso to sub-section (1) of section 12B as
originally enacted by the Income Tax and Excess Profit Tax (Amendment) Act
wherein it was stated, inter alia, that any distribution of capital assets on
the dissolution of a firm or other association of persons or on the liquidation
of a company shall not for the purpose of section 12B be treated as sale,
exchange or transfer of capital assets. It is urged that the omission of such
distribution of capital assets in the first proviso to subsection (1) of
section 12B, as revised by the Finance (No. 3) Act of 1956, would show that the
legislature wanted the distribution of capital assets on dissolution of a firm
or other association of persons or the liquidation of a company to be treated
as sale, exchange or transfer. This contention, in our opinion. is not
well-founded. It appears to us that the cases of the distribution of capital
assets on dissolution of a firm or other association of Persons or liquidation
of a company were mentioned in the third proviso under the earlier Act, as a
matter of clarification to allay fears even though the language of sub-section
(1) of section 12B was not intended to apply to such cases. Provisos, as
mentioned on page 221 of Craies on Statute Laws, Sixth Edition, are often
inserted to allay fears. A proviso is inserted to guard against the particular
case (1) [1969] 73 I.T.R. 50. (2) [1971] 82 I.T.R. 194.
669 of which a particular person is
apprehensive, although the enactment was never intended to apply to his case or
to any other similar case at all.
We have already stated earlier that the
distribution of assets by a liquidator on the voluntary winding up of a company
cannot constitute sale, transfer or exchange for the purpose of sub-section (1)
of section 12B of the Act. If the language of sub-section (1) of section 12B of
the Act is clear and does not warrant the inference that distribution of assets
on liquidation of a company constitutes sale, transfer or exchange the said
transaction of distribution of assets would not, in our opinion, change its
character and acquire the attributes of sale, transfer or exchange because of
the omission of a clarification in the first proviso to sub-section (1) of
section 12B of the Act, even though such a clarification was there in the third
proviso of the section inserted by the earlier Act (Act 22 of 1947). It is
well-settled that considerations stemming from legislative history must not be
allowed to override the plain words of a statute (see Maxwell on the
Interpretation of Statutes, Twelfth Edition, page 65). A proviso cannot be
construed as enlarging the scope of an enactment when it can be fairly and
properly construed without attributing to it that effect. Further, if the language
of the enacting part of the statute is plain and unambiguous and does not
contain the provisions which are said to occur in it. one cannot derive those
provisions by implication from a proviso (see page 217 of Craies on Statute
Law, Sixth Edition).
In the light of what has been discussed
above, the difference between the language of the first proviso to section
12(B)(1), as inserted by Finance (No. 3) Act of 1956 and the third proviso to
section 12(b) (1), as inserted by Act 22 of 1947, cannot be of such material
help to the revenue.
Reference has also been made by Mr. Manchanda
to section 46 of the Income Tax Act, 1961 which contains a Provision for
charging with capital gains the money or assets received by a shareholder on
the liquidation of a company. The liability under that section arises from it,
express Provisions. It cannot, however, be said that such a liability would
also arise even in the absence of such provisions under the Act of 1922.
The appeal consequently fails and is
dismissed with costs.
G.C. Appeal dismissed.
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