Madhav Prasad Jatia Vs. Commissioner of
Income Tax, U.P., Lucknow [1979] INSC 86 (17 April 1979)
TULZAPURKAR, V.D.
TULZAPURKAR, V.D.
BHAGWATI, P.N.
CITATION: 1979 AIR 1291 1979 SCR (3) 745 1979
SCC (3) 634
CITATOR INFO:
R 1989 SC1866 (16)
ACT:
Income-Tax Act 1922, Section 10(2) (iii),
10(2) (xv)- Deduction against business income-Conditions to be satisfied under
Section 10(2) (iii) and 10(2) (iv) for claiming deduction, explained-Words and
Phrases-"For the purpose of business", scope of.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant-assessee carried on
money-lending and other businesses and derived income from various sources such
as investment in shares, properties and business.
Pursuant to her promise to donate a sum of
Rs. 10 lacs for setting up an Engineering College to commemorate the memory of
her late husband, she actually made over a sum of Rs. 5.5 lacs by depositing
the same in a joint account opened in the name of the District Magistrate,
Bulandshahr and Smt.
Indermani Jatia for the College. The balance
of Rs. 4.5 lacs was left with the assessee and was treated as a debt to the
institution and interest thereon at 6% per annum with effect from October 21,
1955 was to be finally deposited in the technical institute account. Though in
the books of accounts, on November 21, 1955, a sum of Rs. 10 lacs was debited
to her capital account and corresponding credit was given to the account of the
institute, the assessee actually paid the sum of Rs. 5.5 lacs to the
institution on January 7, 1956 from the overdraft account which she had with
the Central Bank of India, Aligarh.
In the assessment proceedings for the
assessment years 1957-58, 1958-59, 1959-60, the assessee claimed the deduction
of these sums-Rs. 20,107/- Rs. 25,470/- and Rs. 18,445/- being the respective
items of interest paid by her to the bank on Rs. 5.5 lacs during the samvat
years. The assessee contended that she had preferred to draw on the overdraft
account of the bank for the purpose of paying the institution in order to save
her income earning assets, namely, the shares, which she would have otherwise
been required to dispose of and therefore, the interest paid by her should be
allowed. As regards interest on the remaining sum of Rs. 4.5 lacs (which was
left as a loan with the assessee) that was debited to her account, the assessee
claimed that it was a permissible deduction.
The taxing authorities took the view that the
claim for deduction was not admissible either against business income under
section 10(2) or against income from investments under section 12(2) of the
Income Tax Act, 1922. The appeals preferred to the Appellate Tribunal failed.
The references made to the High Court went against the assessee.
Dismissing the appeals by special leave, the
Court
HELD: 1. Under section 10(2)(iii) of Income
Tax Act, 1922, three conditions are required to be satisfied in order to enable
the assessee to claim a deduction in respect of interest on borrowed capital,
namely, (a) that money 746 (capital) must have been borrowed by the assessee,
(b) that it must have been borrowed for the purpose of business and (c) that
the assessee must paid interest on the said amount and claimed it as a
deduction. [755B-C]
2. As regards the claim for deduction in
respect of expenditure under s. 10(2) (xv), the assessee must also satisfy
three conditions namely (a) it (the expenditure) must not be an allowance of
the nature described in clauses (i) to (xiv); (b) it must not be in the nature
of capital expenditure or personal expenses of the assessee and (c) it must
have been laid out or expended wholly and exclusively for the purpose of his
business. [755C-D]
3. The expression "for the purpose of
business" occurring in s.10(2)(iii) as also in 10(2)(xv) is wider in scope
than the expression "for the purpose of earning income profits or
gains" occurring in s. 12(2) of the Act and, therefore, the scope for
allowing a deduction under s. 10(2)(iii) or 10(2)(xv) would be much wider than
the one available under s. 12(2) of the Act.
[755D-E] Commissioner of Income Tax v.
Malayalam Plantations Ltd., 53 ITR 140 (SC); applied.
4. Neither there had been any confusion of
the issue nor any wrong approach had been adopted by the taxing authorities,
the Tribunal or the High Court. The case of the assessee had been considered
both by the Tribunal as well as by the High Court under s.10(2) (iii) or 10(2)
(xv) and not under s.12(2). In fact, in Reference No. 775 of 1970 the questions
framed by the Tribunal in terms referred to s.10(2)(iii) and 10(2)(xv) and
proceeded to seek the High Court's opinion as to whether the sums representing
interest paid by the assessee to the Central Bank on the overdraft of Rs. 5.5
lacs for the concerned three years were allowable as deduction under either of
the said provisions of the Act and the High Court after considering the matter
and the authorities on the point had come to the conclusion that such interest
was not allowable as a deduction under either of the said provisions. [743D-G]
5. It is true that the High Court did refer
to the decision of the Bombay High Court in Bhai Bhuriben's case but that
decision was referred to only for the purpose of emphasising one aspect which
was propounded by that Court, namely, that the motive with which an assessee
could be said to have made the borrowing would be irrelevant. In fact the High
Court found that there was no material to show that the assessee, in the
instant case, would necessarily have had to employ the business assets for
making payment to charity.
The High Court actually considered the
assessee's case under section 10(2) (iii) and 10(2) (xv) and disallowed the
claim for deduction under these provisions principally on the ground that the
said borrowing of Rs. 5.5 lacs was unrelated to the business of the assessee.
[745G-H, 755A-B] Bhai Bhuriben Lallubhai v. Commissioner of Income Tax, North
Cutch and Saurashtra, 29 I.T.R., 543; explained.
(6) In the instant case:
(a) The amount of Rs. 5.5 lacs having been
actually parted with by the assessee on January 7, 1956, and having been
accepted by the institute the same being deposited in the joint account of the
assessee and the District 747 Magistrate, Bulandshahr for the Engineering
College, the gift to that extent was undoubtedly complete with effect from the
said date. [756A-C] (b) The said payment made by the assessee by drawing a
cheque on the overdraft account was a borrowing which was made to meet her
personal obligation and not the obligation of the business and as such
expenditure incurred by the assessee by way of payment of interest thereon was
not for carrying on the business nor in her capacity as a person carrying on
that business. Such expenditure could by no stretch of imagination be regarded
as business expenditure.
[756C, F] (c) It is true that initially on
November 21, 1955 the capital account of the assessee was debited and the
college account was credited with the sum of Rs. 10 lacs in the books of the
assessee but making of these entries in the assessee's books would not alter
the character of the borrowing nor would the said borrowing be impressed with
the character of business expenditure for admittedly, the assessee maintained
only one common set of books in which were incorporated entries pertaining to
her capital, assets and income from all her difference sources. The borrowing
was completely unrelated to the purpose of the business and was actually used
for making charity. It is, therefore, clear that the interest that was paid on
the sum of Rs. 5.5 lacs to the bank by the assessee for the three concerned
years was rightly held to be not deductible either under section 10(2) (iii) or
under section 10(2) (xv) of the Act.
[756F-H, 757A] Commissioner of Income Tax,
Bombay City II v. Bombay Samachar Ltd., Bombay, 74 ITR 723; Commissioner of
Income Tax, Bombay City IV v. Kishinchand, 109 I.T.R. 569;
distinguished.
(d) Both the Tribunal as well as the High
Court were right in taking the view that the certificate dated October 17, 1958
was of no avail to the assessee inasmuch as it merely stated that the assessee
had promised a donation of Rs. 10 lacs on October 21, 1955, out of which Rs.
5.5 lacs were deposited in the joint account maintained in the name of the
assessee and the District Magistrate, Bulandshahr for the college and the
remaining sum of Rs. 4.5 lacs was left as a loan with the assessee and interest
thereon at 6% per annum was to be finally deposited in the technical institute
account. The Tribunal and the High Court were also right in taking two views
that beyond making entries in the books of account of the assessee there was no
material on record to show that the assessee had actually made over a sum of
Rs.
4.5 lacs to the college or that the college
had accepted the said donation with the result that the amount credited to the
college account in her books represented her own funds and lay entirely within
her power of disposition and that being so, the interest credited by the
assessee on the said sum of Rs. 4.5 lacs and the accretion thereto continued to
belong to the assessee, and, therefore she was not entitled to the deduction in
respect of such interests, and [758C-G] (e) If no trust in favour of the
college in regard to the amount of Rs. 4.5 lacs could be said to have come into
existence either on October 21, 1955 or November 21, 1955 or on any other
subsequent date during the relevant years, no deduction in respect of interest
credited by the assessee to the account of the college over the said sum can be
allowed.
[759A-B] 748
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal
Nos. 1831- 1833 of 1972.
Appeals by Special Leave from the Judgment
and Order dated 22-9-1971 of the Allahabad High Court in I.T.
References Nos. 775/70 and 342/64.
S. C. Manchanda and Mrs. Urmila Kapoor for
the Appellant.
V. S. Desai and Miss A. Subhashini for the
Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
TULZAPURKAR, J.-The assessee, Smt. Indermani Jatia, widow of Seth Ganga Sagar
Jatia of Khurja, carried on money- lending and other businesses and derived
income from various sources such as investment in shares, properties and
businesses. However, the capital, assets and income in respect of different
sources of income were incorporated in one common set of books. With a view to
commemorate the memory of her deceased husband, on October 21, 1955 she
promised a donation of Rs. 10 lacs for setting up an Engineering College at
Khurja to be named "Seth Ganga Sagar Jatia Electrical Engineering
Institute Khurja". She also promised a further sum of Rs. 1.5 lacs for the
construction of a Female Hospital at Khurja but this subsequent donation of Rs.
1.5 lacs was to include the total interest that was to accrue on the sum of Rs.
10 lacs earlier donated to the college. In pursuance of the promise made on
October 21, 1955 she actually made over a sum of Rs. 5.5 lacs by depositing the
same in a joint account opened in the names of the District Magistrate,
Bulandshahr and Smt. Indermani Jatia for the college while the balance of Rs.
4.5 lacs was left with the assessee and was treated as a debt to the
Institution and interest thereon at 6% per annum with effect from October 21,
1955 was to be finally deposited in the Technical Institute account. These
facts become clear from a certificate dated October 17, 1958, issued by the
District Magistrate, Bulandshahr which was produced before the Appellate
Tribunal.
The aforesaid transaction came to be recorded
in the books of the assessee as follows: At the beginning of the accounting
year (Samvat year 2012-13-accounting period 13- 11-1955 to 1-11-1956) relevant
to the assessment year 1957- 58 the capital account of the assessee showed a
net credit balance of Rs. 23,80,753. Initially on November 21, 1955, a sum of
Rs. 10 lacs was debited to her capital account and corresponding credit was
given to the account of the said Institute. At the close of the said accounting
year (i.e. on 749 1-11-1956) after debiting the aforesaid sum of Rs. 10 lacs
the capital account showed a net credit balance of Rs. 15,06,891. Thereafter,
during the same year of account the assessee actually paid only a sum of Rs.
5.5 lacs to the institution on January 7, 1956 from the overdraft account which
she had with the Central Bank of India Ltd., Aligarh.
At the beginning of the accounting year the
amount outstanding in the overdraft was Rs. 2,76,965; further overdrafts were
raised during the accounting year with the result that at the end of the year
the liability of the assessee to the bank was Rs. 9,55,660; among the further
debits to this account during the year was said sum of Rs. 5.5 lacs paid to the
Engineering College on January 7, 1956.
The balance of the promised donation, namely,
Rs. 4.5 lacs was, as stated earlier, treated as a debt due by her to the
Institute and accordingly she was debited with interest thereon at 6% per annum
with effect from October 21, 1955.
In the assessment proceedings for the
assessment years 1957-58, 1958-59 and 1959-60 the assessee claimed the
deduction of three sums-Rs. 20,107/-, Rs. 25,470/- and Rs. 18,445/- being the
respective items of interest paid by her to the bank on Rs. 5.5 lacs during the
Samvat years relevant to the said assessment years. The assessee contended that
she had preferred to draw on the overdraft account of the bank for the purpose
of paying the institution in order to save her income earning assets, namely,
the shares, which she would have otherwise been required to dispose of and,
therefore, the interest paid by her should be allowed. As regards interest on
the remaining sum of Rs. 4.5 lacs (which was left as a loan with the assessee)
that was debited to her account, the assessee urged that she was also entitled
to claim the same as a permissible deduction; the claim in respect thereof,
however, was made for the assessment years 1958-59 and 1959-60. As regards the
three sums paid by way of interest on Rs. 5.5 lacs to the bank, the taxing authorities
took the view that said claim for deduction was not admissible either against
business income under s. 10(2) or against income from investments under s.
12(2) of the Indian Income Tax Act, 1922. So also the claim for deduction of
interest credited to the college account on Rs. 4.5 lacs was disallowed. The
assessee preferred appeals to the Appellate Tribunal. It was contended on
behalf of the assessee that she had promised a donation of Rs. 10 lacs to the
Engineering College on October 21, 1955, that the obligation to pay the said
amount arose on November 21, 1955 when the amount was debited to her capital
account and the corresponding credit was given to the account of the
institution, and that out of this total donation a sum of Rs.5.5 lacs was actually
deposited in the joint account of the 750 assessee and the District Magistrate,
Bulandshahr on January 7, 1956 for which the overdraft with the Central Bank
was operated and hence the interest was deductible as business expenditure. As
regards interest on Rs. 4.5 lacs that was debited to her account and credited
to the Institute's account it was urged that this balance amount was kept in
trust for the institution and hence the accruing interest thereon which was
debited to her account should be allowed as a deduction. In support of these
submissions a certificate issued by the District Magistrate, Bulandshahr dated
October 17, 1958 was produced before the Tribunal. The Appellate Tribunal,
however, confirmed the disallowance of interest claimed in respect of the sum
of Rs. 5.5 lacs holding that the said sum of Rs. 5.5 lacs over-drawn from the
bank was not borrowed for business purposes but was borrowed for making over
the donation and, therefore, the claim could not be sustained under s. 10(2) of
the Income Tax Act, 1922. As regards the interest accruing on the sum of Rs.
4.5 lacs in favour of the Engineering College, the Appellate Tribunal held that
no donation of that sum had been made by the assessee, that it was at best a
promise by the assessee to the District Magistrate to pay that amount for
purpose of charity and the mere entries in the assessee's own account book
crediting the trust, which had yet to come into existence, would not amount to
a gift or charity for a trust and as such the interest credited to the account
of the Engineering College was also disallowed.
Meanwhile, Smt. Indermani Jatia died and her
legal heir Madhav Prasad Jatia was substituted in the proceedings.
On the question whether the interest on Rs.
5.5 lacs was deductible for the assessment years 1957-58, 1958-59 and 1959-60,
the Tribunal declined to make any reference to the High Court, whereupon the
assessee applied to the High Court under s. 66(2) and upon the application
being allowed, the Tribunal referred the question whether interest on the
overdraft of Rs. 5.5 lacs-the sums of Rs. 20,107 (for the assessment year
1957-58), Rs. 25,470 (for the assessment year 1958-59) and Rs. 18,445 (for the
assessment year 1959- 60)-paid to the Central Bank was allowable as a deduction
under s. 10(2)(iii) or 10(2) (xv) of the Indian Income Tax Act, 1922 (being
Income Tax Reference No. 775 of 1970). As regards the deduction of interest on
Rs. 4.5 lacs claimed for the assessment years 1958-59 and 1959-60, the Tribunal
itself made a reference to the High Court under s. 66(1) and referred for the
opinion of the High Court the question whether in the facts and circumstances
of the case the interest credited by the assessee to the account of Ganga Sagar
Jatia Engineering College on the sum of Rs. 4.5 lacs 751 and accretion thereto
was an admissible deduction for each of the said two years (being Income Tax
Reference No. 342 of 1964). The High Court heard and disposed of both the
references by a common judgment dated September 22, 1971. In the Reference No.
775 of 1970, the case of the assessee was that there was an obligation to pay
Rs. 10 lacs to the Engineering College, that for the time being the assessee
decided to pay Rs. 5.5 lacs, that it was open to the assessee to pay the amount
from her business assets or to preserve the business assets for the purposes of
earning income and instead borrow the amount from the bank and that she had
accordingly borrowed the amount from the bank and, therefore, since the
borrowing was made to preserve the business assets, the interest thereon was
deductible under s. 10(2) (iii) or 10(2) (xv) of the Act. The High Court
observed that there was nothing to show that the assessee would necessarily
have had to employ the business assets for making payment of that amount, and
secondly, it was only where money is borrowed for the purposes of business that
interest paid thereon becomes admissible as a deduction, and since, in the
instant case, the sum of Rs. 4.4 lacs was admittedly borrowed from the Bank for
making payment to the Engineering College it was not a payment directed to the
business purposes. According to the High Court the mere circumstance that
otherwise the assessee would have to resort to the liquidation of her
income-yielding assets would not stamp the interest paid on such borrowings
with the character of business expenditure. After referring to the decisions
one of the Bombay High Court in Bai Bhuriben Lallubhai v. Commissioner of
Income-Tax, Bombay North Cutch and Saurashtra and the other of the Calcutta
High Court in Mannalal Ratanlal v. Commissioner of Income-Tax Calcutta, the
High Court rejected the contention of the assessee and held that interest paid
on Rs. 5.5 lacs in any of the years was not deductible either under s. 10(2)
(iii) or 10(2) (xv) of the Act and answered the questions against the assessee.
As regards the question referred to it in
Income Tax Reference No. 342 of 1964, the High Court took the view that there
was nothing on record before it to establish that the assessee had actually donated
the entire amount of Rs. 10 lacs to the Engineering College, that the
certificate issued by the District Magistrate, Bulandshahr on October 17, 1958
merely showed that a balance of Rs. 4.5 lacs was left as a loan with the
assessee and that the interest accruing thereon from the date of the initial
donation "was to be finally deposited in the account of the Technical
Institute" and that though the assessee had made 752 entries in her
account books crediting the trust with the interest on the amount, the trust
had not yet come into existence and as such the amount credited represented her
own funds and lay entirely within her power of disposition.
With such material on record, the High Court
confirmed the Tribunal's view that Rs. 4.5 lacs had not been donated by the
assessee on October 21, 1955 in favour of the Engineering College and,
therefore, the interest credited by the assessee in favour of the Institute on
the said sum and the accretion thereto continued to belong to the assessee and
as such she was not entitled to the deduction claimed by her and accordingly
the question was also answered against the assessee. On obtaining special leave
the original assessee represented by her legal heir has preferred Civil Appeals
Nos. 1831-1833 of 1972 to this Court.
Mr. Manchanda appearing for the appellant has
raised two or three contentions in support of the appeals. In the first place
he has contended that though the deduction claimed by the assessee in this case
was on the basis of business expenditure falling under either s. 10(2)(iii) or
10(2)(xv), the taxing authorities, the Tribunal and the High Court have
confused the issue by considering the claim for deduction under s. 12(2) of the
Act. According to him the scope for allowing the deduction under s. 10(2)(iii)
or 10(2)(xv) was much wider than under s. 12(2) of the Act. He urged that by
applying the ratio of the decision in Bhuriben's case (supra), which was
admittedly under s. 12(2) of the Act, to the facts of the instant case the
lower authorities as well as the High Court had adopted a wrong approach which
led to the inference that the deduction claimed by the assessee was not
admissible. Secondly, he urged that considering the case under s. 10(2) (iii)
or 10(2) (xv) the question was when could the obligation to pay Rs. 10 lacs to
the Engineering College be said to have been incurred by the assessee and
according to him such obligation arose as soon as the donation or gift was
complete and in that behalf placing reliance upon the certificate dated October
17, 1958, issued by the District Magistrate, Bulandshahr, as well as the
entries made by the assessee in her books, he urged that the gift was complete
no sooner the capital account of the assessee was debited and the college
account was credited with the said sum of Rs. 10 lacs on November 21, 1955,
especially when her capital account had a credit balance of Rs. 15,06,891 after
giving the debit of Rs. 10 lacs; the gift in the circumstances would, according
to him, be complete then as per decided cases such as Gopal Raj Swarup v. 753
Commissioner of Wealth-Tax, Lucknow Naunihal Thakar Dass v. Commissioner of
Income-Tax, Punjab. He further urged that though the sum of Rs. 5.5 lacs was
actually paid by the assessee by borrowing the amount on January 7, 1956 from
the overdraft account with the Central Bank of India Ltd. the said overdraft
was a running overdraft account opened by her for business purposes and if from
such overdraft account any borrowing was made interest thereon would be
deductible under s. 10(2)(iii) or 10(2) (xv) as being expenditure incurred for
the purposes of the business. According to him, once a borrowing was made from
an overdraft account meant for business purposes, the ultimate utilization of
that borrowing will not affect the question of deductibility of interest paid
on such borrowing under s. 10(2) (iii) or 10(2) (xv) and in that behalf he
placed reliance upon two decisions of the Bombay High Court, namely,
Commissioner of Income-Tax, Bombay City II v. Bombay Samachar Ltd., Bombay and
Commissioner of Income Tax, Bombay City-IV v. Kishinchand Chellaram. He,
therefore, urged that the High Court had erred in sustaining the disallowance
in respect of interest paid by the assessee on Rs. 5.5 lacs to the Bank in the
three years in question as also the disallowance in regard to the interest
credited by the assessee to the account of the Engineering College in the two
years in question on the sum of Rs. 4.5 lacs and the accretion thereto.
On the other hand, Mr. Desai for the Revenue,
disputed that there was any confusion of the issue or that any wrong approach
had been adopted by the lower authorities or by the High Court as suggested by
learned counsel for the appellant. He pointed out that initially the assessee
had specifically raised the plea that the borrowing of Rs. 5.5 lacs had been
resorted to with a view to save income- yielding investments, namely, the
shares and, therefore, both the alternative cases as to whether the interest
paid on Rs. 5.5 lacs was an admissible deduction either against business income
under s. 10(2) (iii) or income from investments under s. 12(2) were considered
by the taxing authorities and the taxing authorities held that such interest
was not admissible under either of the provisions.
He pointed out that so far as the Tribunal
and the High Court were concerned the assessee's claim for deduction under s.
10(2) (iii) or 10(2) (xv) had been specifically considered and negatived. He
sought to justify the view of the Tribunal and the High Court in regard to the
disallowance of interest paid by 754 the assessee on the sum of Rs. 5.5 lacs to
the Bank in the three concerned assessment years as also the disallowance of
interest credited by the assessee to the account of the Engineering College on
the sum of Rs. 4.5 lacs and the accretion thereto; as regards the sum of Rs.
5.5 lacs he contended that the real question was not as to when the obligation
to pay to the college was incurred by the assessee but whether the obligation
incurred by the assessee was her personal obligation or a business obligation
and whether the expenditure by way of payment of interest to the Bank was
incurred for the purpose of carrying on business and as regards the sum of Rs.
4.5 lacs whether the trust in favour of the college had at all come into
existence on October 21, 1955 or November 21, 1955 as contended for by the
assessee and on both the questions the view of the Tribunal and the High Court
was right. As regards the two Bombay decisions, namely Bombay Samachar's case
(supra) and Kishinchand Chellaram's case (supra), he urged that the ratio of
the decisions was inapplicable to the instant case.
At the outset we would like to say that we do
not find any substance in the contention of learned counsel for the appellant
that there has been any confusion of the issue or that any wrong approach has
been adopted by the taxing authorities, the Tribunal or the High Court. After
going through the Tribunal's order as well as the judgment of the High Court we
are clearly of the view that the case of the assessee has been considered both
by the Tribunal as well as by the High Court under s. 10(2) (iii) or 10(2) (xv)
and not under s. 12(2). In fact, in Reference No. 775 of 1970 the questions
framed by the Tribunal in terms referred to s. 10(2)(iii) and 10(2) (xv) and
proceeded to seek the High Court's opinion as to whether the sums representing
interest paid by the assessee to the Central Bank on the overdraft of Rs. 5.5
lacs for the concerned three years were allowable as a deduction under either of
the said provisions of the Act and the High Court after considering the matter
and the authorities on the point has come to the conclusion that such interest
was not allowable as a deduction under either of the said provisions It is true
that the High Court did refer to the decision of the Bombay High Court in Bai
Bhuriben's case (supra) but that decision was referred to only for the purpose
of emphasizing one aspect which was propounded by that Court, namely, that the
motive with which an assessee could be said to have made the borrowing would be
irrelevant and that simply because the assessee in that case had chosen to
borrow money to buy jewellery it did not follow that she had established the
purpose required to be proved under s. 12(2) that she borrowed the money in
order to maintain or preserve the fixed deposits or helped her to earn
interest. This is far from say- 755 ing that the ratio of that case has been
applied by the High Court to the instant case. In fact, the High Court found
that there was no material to show that the assessee in the instant case would
necessarily have had to employ the business assets for making payment to
charity. The High Court actually considered the assessee's case under s. 10(2)
(iii) and 10(2) (xv) and disallowed the claim for deduction under these
provisions principally on the ground that the said borrowing of Rs. 5.5 lacs
was unrelated to the business of the assessee.
Proceeding to consider the claim for
deduction made by the assessee under s. 10(2)(iii) or 10(2)(xv), we may point
out that under s. 10(2) (iii) three conditions are required to be satisfied in
order to enable the assessee to claim a deduction in respect of interest on
borrowed capital, namely, (a) that money (capital) must have been borrowed by
the assessee, (b) that it must have been borrowed for the purpose of business
and (c) that the assessee must have paid interest on the said amount and
claimed it as a deduction.
As regards the claim for deduction in respect
of expenditure under s. 10(2)(xv), the assessee must also satisfy three
conditions, namely, (a) it (the expenditure) must not be an allowance of the
nature described in clauses (i) to (xiv), (b) it must not be in the nature of
capital expenditure or personal expenses of the assessee and (c) it must have
been laid out or expended wholly and exclusively for the purpose of his
business. It cannot be disputed that the expression "for the purpose of
business" occurring in s. 10(2) (iii) as also in 10(2) (xv) is wider in
scope than the expression "for the purpose of earning income profits or
gains" occurring in s. 12(2) of the Act and, therefore, the scope for
allowing a deduction under s. 10(2) (iii) or 10(2) (xv) would be much wider
than the one available under s. 12(2) of the Act. This Court in the case of
Commissioner of Income Tax, Kerala v. Malayalam Plantations Ltd has explained
that the former expression occurring in s. 10(2) (iii) and 10(2)(xv), its range
being wide, may take in not only the day-to-day running of a business but also
the rationalisation of its administration and modernisation of its machinery;
it may include measures for the preservation of the business and for the
protection of its assets and property from expropriation, coercive process or
assertion of hostile title, it may also comprehend payment of statutory dues
and taxes imposed as a pre-condition to commence or for the carrying on of a
business; it may comprehend many other acts incidental to the carrying on of
the business but, however wide the meaning of the expression may be, its limits
are implicit in it; the purpose shall be for the purposes, of business, that is
to say, the expenditure incurred shall be 756 for the carrying on of the
business and the assessee shall incur it in his capacity as a person carrying
on the business.
So far as the claim for deduction of interest
paid by the assessee on the sum of Rs.5.5 lacs to the Bank in the three
concerned years is concerned, the real question that arises for determination
is whether the particular borrowing of Rs. 5.5 lacs was for the purposes of
business of the assessee or not? The amount of Rs. 5.5 lacs having been
actually parted with by the assessee on January 7, 1956, and having been
accepted by the institute the same being deposited in the joint account of the
assessee and the District Magistrate, Bulandshahr for the Engineering College,
the gift to that extent was undoubtedly complete with effect from the said
date. The said payment was made by the assessee by drawing a cheque on the
overdraft account which she had with the Central Bank of Indian Ltd., Aligarh.
In regard to this overdraft account the
Tribunal has noted that at the beginning of the accounting year the amount
outstanding in the said over-draft was Rs. 2,76,965, that further overdrafts
were raised during the accounting year with the result that at the end of the
year the assessee's liability to the bank in the said account rose to Rs. 9,56,660
and that among the further debits to this account during the year was said sum
of Rs. 5.5 lacs paid to the college on January 7, 1956. On a consideration of
the aforesaid position of the overdraft and the other material on record, the
Tribunal has recorded a clear finding of fact which has been accepted by the
High Court that the said borrowing of Rs. 5.5 lacs made by the assessee from
the Bank on January 7, 1956 had nothing to do with the business of the assessee
but the amount was directly made over to the college in part fulfilment of the
promised donation of Rs. 10 lacs with a view to commemorate the memory of her
deceased husband after whom the college was to be named. In other words the
borrowing was made to meet her personal obligation and not the obligation of
the business and as such expenditure incurred by the assessee by way of payment
of interest thereon was not for carrying on the business nor in her capacity as
a person carrying on that business. Such expenditure can by no stretch of
imagination be regarded as business expenditure. It is true that initially on
November 21, 1955 the capital account of the assessee was debited and the
college account was credited with the sum of Rs. 10 lacs in the books of the
assessee but in our view making of these entries in the assessee's books would
not alter the character of the borrowing nor would they said borrowing be
impressed with the character of business expenditure, for, admittedly, the
assessee maintained only one common set of books in which were incorporated
entries pertaining to her capital, assets and income from all her different
sources.
It is, therefore, clear to us that the
interest that was paid on the sum 757 of Rs. 5.5 lacs to the bank by the
assessee for the three concerned years was rightly held to be not deductible
either under s. 10(2)(iii) or under s. 10(2) (xv) of the Act.
The two Bombay decisions on which reliance
was placed by the counsel for the appellant, namely, Bombay Samachar's case
(supra) and Kishinchand Chellaram's case (supra) are clearly distinguishable
and do not touch the issue raised in the instant case before us. In the former case,
the assessee had during the relevant assessment years paid amounts of interest
on capital which was borrowed from outsiders and had claimed deduction in
respect of such interest. It was not disputed that the capital borrowed by the
assessee from the outsiders was admittedly used by the assessee for the purpose
of its business. The taxing authorities had taken the view that if the assessee
had collected outstandings which were due to it from others it would have been
able to reduce its indebtedness and save a part of the interest which it had to
pay on its own borrowings, that the assessee could not be justified in allowing
its outstandings to remain without charging any interest thereon while it was
paying interest on the amounts borrowed by it, and that to the extent to which
it would have been in a position to collect interest on the outstandings due to
it from others, it could not be permitted to claim as an allowance interest
paid by it to outsiders. The High Court held that such a view was clearly unsustainable
and observed that it is not the requirement under s. 10(2) (iii) that the
assessee must further show that the borrowing of the capital was necessary for
the business so that if at the time of the borrowing the assessee has
sufficient amount of its own the deduction could not be allowed and the High
Court further took the view that in deciding whether a claim of interest on
borrowing can be allowed the fact that the assessee had ample resources its
disposal and need not have borrowed, was not a relevant matter for
consideration. The decision in Kishinchand Chellaram's case (supra) was
rendered in the peculiar facts which obtained in that case. The Tribunal had
recorded a clear finding that since the business of the assessee was that of
banking there was no borrowal as such but only acceptance of deposits by the
assessee from its clients which were made by the assessee in the course of and
for the purposes of its business. In those circumstances the Tribunal took the
view that the aspect as to how these deposits, which were admittedly received
by the assessee from the depositors in the course of its banking business, were
subsequently utilized would not be material for the purpose of deciding the
question whether interest paid by the assessee on these deposits should be
allowed under s.
10(2) (xv) of the Act and the High Court
refused to interfere with that view of the Tribunal and rejected the Revenue's
application for a Reference. In the instant 758 case admittedly the borrowing
of Rs. 5.5 lacs had been made by the assessee to meet her personal obligation
and not the obligation of her business. The borrowing was completely unrelated
to the purpose of the business and was actually used for making charity. On
these facts it will be clear that the interest paid on such borrowing cannot be
allowed as deduction either under s. 10(2) (iii) or 10(2) (xv).
Turning to the question of interest credited
by the assessee during the assessment years 1958-59 and 1959-60 to the account
of the Engineering College on the sum of Rs. 4.5 lacs and the accretion thereto
the real question is whether the gift or donation of Rs. 4.5 lacs was complete
and a trust of that amount came into existence in favour of the college as has
been contended for by the assessee. The only material on which reliance has
been placed by the assessee in this behalf consists of the entries made in the
assessee's books of accounts and the certificate dated October 17, 1958 issued
by the District Magistrate, Bulandshahr but from this material it is difficult
to draw the inference suggested by the counsel for the appellant. In our view
both the Tribunal as well as the High Court were right in taking the view that
the certificate dated October 17, 1958 was of no avail to the assessee inasmuch
as it merely stated that the assessee had promised a donation of Rs. 10 lacs on
October 21, 1955, out of which Rs. 5.5 lacs were deposited in the joint account
maintained in the name of the assessee and the District Magistrate, Bulandshahr
for the college and the remaining sum of Rs. 4.5 lacs was left as a loan with
the assessee and interest thereon at 6% per annum was to be finally deposited
in the Technical Institute account. The Tribunal and the High Court were also
right in taking the view that beyond making entries in the books of account of
the assessee there was no material on record to show that the assessee had
actually made over a sum of Rs. 4.5 lacs to the college or that the college had
accepted the said donation with the result that the amount credited to the
college account in her books represented her own funds and lay entirely within
her power of disposition and that being so, the interest credited by the
assessee on the said sum of Rs. 4.5 lacs and the accretion thereto continued to
belong to the assessee, and, therefore, she was not entitled to the deduction
in respect of such interests. Counsel for the assessee attempted to contend
that the obligation to make over the said sum of Rs. 4.5 lacs could be said to
have become enforceable on the basis of promissory estoppel but in our view, no
material has been placed on record by the assessee to show that acting on the
promised donation the college authorities had actually incurred any expenditure
towards construction or acted to their prejudice during the accounting period
relevant to the assessment years 1958-59 and 1959-60 so as 759 to support the
plea of promissory estoppel. Of course, if in any subsequent years the assessee
is in a position to place any material before the taxing authorities or the Tribunal
or the Court which would support the plea of promissory estoppel the position
in such years may be different. It is thus obvious that if no trust in favour
of the college in regard to the amount of Rs. 4.5 lacs could be said to have
come into existence either on October 21, 1955 or on November 21, 1955 or on
any other subsequent date during the relevant years, no deduction in respect of
interest credited by the assessee to the account of the college over the said
sum can be allowed.
In the circumstances, in our view, the High
Court rightly answered the questions referred to it against the assessee in
both the references. The appeals are accordingly dismissed with costs.
V.D.K. Appeals dismissed.
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