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1995 (3) TMI 64 - HC - Income Tax

Issues Involved:
1. Whether the compensation of Rs. 20,000 paid by the assessee-company to S. Zoraster and Co. is allowable as business expenditure.

Issue-wise Detailed Analysis:

1. Nature of Compensation as Business Expenditure:

The primary issue was whether the compensation of Rs. 20,000 paid by the assessee-company to S. Zoraster and Co. could be classified as business expenditure under Section 37 of the Income-tax Act for the assessment year 1974-75. The assessee-company had entered into an agreement to purchase a cinema building to liquidate a liability of Rs. 15,00,000 owed to S. Zoraster and Co. The agreement stipulated that if the assessee failed to fulfill the agreement within five years, it would pay Rs. 20,000 as compensation. The assessee later realized that its memorandum of association did not permit it to run a cinema, leading to the payment of compensation.

Tribunal's Findings:

The Income-tax Appellate Tribunal found that the compensation was paid to clear old outstanding dues and that the expenditure was in the nature of exploration for a project that was later abandoned. Consequently, it allowed the compensation as business expenditure.

Legal Precedents:

Several judgments were considered to determine the nature of the expenditure:
- CIT v. M. Ct. M. Corporation Pvt. Ltd. (1995) 211 ITR 95: The Madras High Court held that forfeited advance amounts constituted income as they represented compensation for loss of income or profits.
- CIT v. Balaji Chitra Mandir [1985] 154 ITR 777: The Andhra Pradesh High Court differentiated between compensation affecting the trading structure (capital receipt) and normal business incidents (revenue receipt).
- CIT v. Rai Bahadur Jairam Valji [1959] 35 ITR 148: The Supreme Court held that compensation for termination of a contract entered in the ordinary course of business is a revenue receipt.
- Glenboig Union Fireclay Co. Ltd. v. IRC [1922] 12 TC 427: The House of Lords classified compensation for sterilization of a capital asset as a capital receipt.
- Swadeshi Cotton Mills Co. Ltd. v. CIT [1967] 63 ITR 65: The Supreme Court observed that payments to avoid larger capital expenditure are capital in nature.

Court's Conclusion:

The High Court analyzed whether the expenditure was capital or revenue in nature. It noted that the compensation was paid due to the non-fulfillment of a contract for acquiring a capital asset (cinema building). The court emphasized that the compensation was related to a capital asset and not stock-in-trade. The court concluded that the expenditure was of a capital nature, as it was intended to acquire an asset capable of being exploited as a business asset.

Final Judgment:

The court held that the compensation paid by the assessee to S. Zoraster and Co. was a capital expenditure and not allowable as business expenditure under Section 37 of the Income-tax Act. The reference was answered in favor of the Revenue and against the assessee.

 

 

 

 

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