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1992 (9) TMI 42 - HC - Income Tax

Issues:
1. Whether ginning of cotton amounts to manufacture?
2. Whether the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal was correct in granting deduction under section 80HH to the assessee?
3. Whether the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal was correct in granting deduction in respect of investment allowance to the assessee for specific assessment years?

Analysis:
The judgment pertains to a reference under section 256(1) of the Income-tax Act, 1961, initiated by the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal at the request of the Commissioner of Income-tax. The primary issues revolve around the eligibility of the assessee, a cooperative society operating a ginning factory, for investment allowance under section 32A and deduction under section 80HH of the Act for the assessment years 1980-81 and 1982-83. The Tribunal had granted these deductions, prompting the reference to the High Court for opinion.

The Court analyzed the provisions of sections 32A and 80HH, emphasizing that the benefits of these sections are exclusively available to industrial undertakings engaged in the manufacturing or production of articles. To qualify for investment allowance under section 32A, the machinery or plant must be installed for the purpose of manufacturing or producing any article or thing. Similarly, section 80HH allows deductions for industrial undertakings involved in manufacturing or production of articles.

The crux of the matter was whether ginning cotton constitutes manufacturing or production of an article. The Court examined the ginning process, which involves separating cotton seeds from the fiber, and concluded that it indeed qualifies as a manufacturing process. Citing the Supreme Court's decision in a related case, the Court affirmed that ginned cotton and cotton seeds are distinct commercial commodities, indicating that ginning results in the production of articles.

Relying on legal precedents and the specific nature of the ginning process, the Court held that ginning of cotton amounts to manufacturing, making the assessee eligible for the investment allowance under section 32A and deduction under section 80HH. Consequently, all three questions posed in the reference were answered in the affirmative, favoring the assessee. No costs were awarded in the case.

This comprehensive analysis underscores the legal interpretation of the term "manufacture" in the context of ginning cotton and clarifies the eligibility of industrial undertakings like ginning factories for specific tax benefits under the Income-tax Act, 1961.

 

 

 

 

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