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Issues Involved:
1. Admissibility of deductions of Rs. 949 and Rs. 2,402 in the computation of the applicant's income for the charge years 1940-41 and 1941-42 under Section 10(2)(xii) of the Income-tax (Amendment) Act, 1939. 2. Validity of the re-assessment made for the charge year 1940-41 by adding back the amount of Rs. 949 under Section 34 of the Act. Issue-wise Detailed Analysis: 1. Admissibility of Deductions under Section 10(2)(xii): The assessee, a cloth merchant, incurred Rs. 3,351 in total expenses defending a trademark infringement suit and in subsequent compromise, which included Rs. 2,000 paid to the plaintiff and Rs. 1,351 in legal costs. The primary question was whether these expenses could be deducted under Section 10(2)(xii) of the Income-tax (Amendment) Act, 1939, which allows deductions for "any expenditure (not being in the nature of capital expenditure or personal expenses of the assessee) laid out or expended wholly and exclusively for the purpose of such business." The judgment compared the Indian Income-tax Act with the English Income Tax Act, noting that while the Indian Act provides explicit allowances for deductions, the English Act does not. The court referenced several cases, including: - Commissioner of Income-tax, Bihar & Orissa v. Kameshwar Singh: Affirmed that litigation expenses for defending business-related suits are deductible. - Commissioner of Income-tax, Burma v. Gasper and Co., Rangoon: Distinguished as it was decided under the pre-amendment Act and involved criminal charges, unlike the present civil suit. - In the matter of Amrita Bazar Patrika Ltd.: Not applicable as it involved defending criminal contempt charges, not business-related civil litigation. - Strong & Co., Ltd. v. Woodifield and Commissioner of Inland Revenue v. E.C. Warnes & Co., Ltd.: Distinguished as they involved penalties for legal infractions, not business expenses. - Scammell & Nephew Ltd. v. Rowles: Supported the view that expenses incurred to protect business interests through compromise are deductible. The court concluded that the expenditure was "laid out or expended wholly and exclusively for the purpose of such business" and was not capital expenditure. Therefore, the deductions claimed for the years 1940-41 and 1941-42 were permissible under Section 10(2)(xii). 2. Validity of Re-assessment under Section 34: Since the court answered the first issue affirmatively, the second issue regarding the re-assessment for 1940-41 became moot and did not require further decision. Conclusion: The court answered the first question affirmatively, allowing the deductions of Rs. 949 and Rs. 2,402 for the respective years. Consequently, the second question about the re-assessment did not arise. The amount of Rs. 200 deposited by the assessee for the reference was ordered to be refunded, and the Commissioner of Income-tax was directed to bear the costs of the reference, with counsel's fee set at Rs. 50.
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