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Issues Involved:
1. Whether the profits and gains from future delivery contracts entered into with parties outside British India, where no delivery was taken or given, accrued or arose in British India. 2. Whether the profits or gains from future delivery contracts, where delivery was mutually given or taken outside British India, accrued wholly or partly in British India. Issue-wise Detailed Analysis: 1. Profits from Contracts with No Delivery: The High Court at Bombay addressed two questions of law regarding the taxability of profits from contracts made for the purchase and sale of commodities in foreign markets. The assessee, a resident of British India, was assessed for the year ending March 31, 1934, with a total income of Rs. 12,95,726. The Income-tax Officer and the Assistant Commissioner held the assessee liable for tax on profits derived from contracts in foreign markets, arguing that these profits accrued or arose in British India. The assessee disputed this liability, claiming that such profits did not accrue or arise in British India. The first question considered whether profits from future delivery contracts, where no delivery was taken or given, accrued or arose in British India. The High Court concluded that the whole of the profits referred to in both questions accrued or arose outside British India. The Commissioner had argued that the exercise of skill and judgment in Bombay and the giving of directions from Bombay meant that the profits accrued in British India. However, the High Court disagreed, stating that the place where the profits arose should be based on the transactions themselves, not the location from which instructions were sent. The Court emphasized that the profits were the result of transactions conducted in foreign markets, specifically in New York, where the contracts were executed and settled. The fact that the assessee made decisions and issued instructions from Bombay did not mean that the profits accrued in Bombay. The Court noted that the profits arose from the difference between the purchase and sale prices in New York, and the brokers in New York held the money resulting from these transactions. 2. Profits from Contracts with Delivery: The second question considered whether profits from future delivery contracts, where delivery was mutually given or taken outside British India, accrued wholly or partly in British India. The Commissioner had suggested that part of the profit could be said to have accrued in British India. However, the High Court found that since the deliveries occurred outside British India, the profits did not accrue in British India. The Court reiterated that the location of the profits should be determined based on the transactions themselves, not the place from which instructions were issued. The profits from the contracts were realized in foreign markets, and the brokers in those markets held the resulting funds. General Principles and Conclusion: The Court rejected the argument that all the profits of a business carried on in Bombay should be considered as accruing or arising in Bombay. It emphasized that profits should be assessed based on the specific transactions and the locations where they were conducted. The Court also noted that the Indian Income Tax Act did not support the view that the place of direction or control of a business determined the location of the profits. The Court concluded that under the Indian Income Tax Act, a person resident in British India carrying on business there and controlling transactions abroad is not liable to tax on the profits of such transactions unless the profits have been received in or brought into British India. The profits in question, which arose from contracts executed and settled in foreign markets, did not accrue or arise in British India. The appeal was dismissed with costs, and the High Court's decision was upheld. The judgment highlighted the importance of considering the specific transactions and their locations when determining the taxability of profits under the Indian Income Tax Act.
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