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Issues Involved:
1. Whether the unclaimed balances represent the revenue income of the assessee liable to tax under the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922. Issue-wise Detailed Analysis: 1. Whether the unclaimed balances represent the revenue income of the assessee liable to tax under the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922: The assessee, a limited company dealing in scrap iron, followed a practice where permit holders deposited an amount calculated based on the approximate quantity of scrap iron required. The actual quantity supplied often differed, leading to unclaimed balances when the deposited amount exceeded the purchase price. These unclaimed balances, after three years, were transferred to the profit and loss account as per a resolution passed by the board of directors on November 23, 1953. For the assessment years 1954-55 and 1955-56, the Income-tax Officer did not include these unclaimed balances in the income, considering them not to represent revenue receipts. However, for the assessment year 1956-57, the unclaimed balance was treated as a realization from trading activity and included in the revenue receipt. The Commissioner of Income-tax revised the assessments for the years 1954-55 and 1955-56 under section 33B of the Indian Income-tax Act, holding that the unclaimed balances represented revenue income. The Appellate Assistant Commissioner, however, excluded the unclaimed balance for the year 1956-57 from the total income, considering it not assessable. The Tribunal, upon appeal, had differing opinions among its members. The Accountant Member held that the unclaimed balances did not represent revenue income, while the Judicial Member believed they did. The President of the Tribunal, agreeing with the Judicial Member, concluded that the payments made were by way of price and thus revenue receipts. The Tribunal's President relied on several facts: - The payments were subject to adjustment for any shortage or excess. - The assessee did not show the amount as a liability in its balance-sheet. - The amounts were considered revenue receipts according to the method of accounting employed by the assessee. The High Court referred to the Supreme Court's decisions in Lakshmanier and Sons v. Commissioner of Income-tax and Punjab Distilling Industrial Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax, which were more pertinent than the Court of Appeal's decision in Morley v. Tattersall. In Lakshmanier & Sons' case, advance payments for goods were considered revenue receipts, not borrowed money. Similarly, in Punjab Distilling Industries, security deposits were part of the consideration for sales and thus trading receipts. The High Court concluded that the unclaimed balances in the present case were payments towards the price of scrap iron, making them trading receipts with a profit-making quality. Consequently, they were revenue receipts liable to tax under the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922. Judgment: The High Court answered the referred question in the affirmative, confirming that the unclaimed balances for the assessment years 1954-55, 1955-56, and 1956-57 represent the revenue income of the assessee liable to tax. The respondent was entitled to costs assessed at Rs. 200 for all three references. Separate Judgments: - GROVER J.: Provided a detailed analysis and concluded that the unclaimed balances were revenue receipts. - MEHAR SINGH J.: Agreed with the conclusion. Final Decision: Question answered in the affirmative.
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