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1982 (9) TMI 24 - HC - Income Tax

Issues Involved:
1. Nature of payments made for technical consultancy services.
2. Whether the payments for consultancy services should be classified as capital or revenue expenditure.

Summary:

Issue 1: Nature of payments made for technical consultancy services

The tax cases revolve around a technical collaboration agreement between an Indian company (assessee) and an American company, Mansfield Rubber and Tyre Company Inc. The agreement covered two main aspects: (i) planning and setting up a tyre factory in Madras, and (ii) continuous supply of information and technical consultancy services for running the factory. The consideration for each aspect was distinct: a lump sum of 100,000 dollars for the factory setup and 500,000 dollars worth of equity shares for the supply of plant and machinery. These payments were acknowledged as capital expenditure by the assessee and were not claimed as deductions.

Issue 2: Classification of payments for consultancy services as capital or revenue expenditure

The dispute arose over the payments for consultancy services provided by Mansfield for running the factory. The Income Tax Officer (ITO) allowed 75% of these payments as revenue expenditure but disallowed 25% as capital expenditure. The Appellate Assistant Commissioner (AAC) and the Appellate Tribunal disagreed with the ITO, holding that the entire payment was revenue expenditure.

The Department challenged this decision, questioning whether the entire payment of royalties to Mansfield was revenue expenditure and thus deductible. The court examined the collaboration agreement, particularly clauses 1(g) and 2(f), which detailed the services provided by Mansfield and the calculation of fees based on the gross sale price of the products.

The court concluded that the fees were intended as consideration for technical consultancy services necessary for running the factory, distinguishing it from the capital expenditure for setting up the factory. The court rejected the argument that the enduring benefit of the technical know-how implied a capital nature, citing that enduring benefit alone is not the acid test for capital expenditure. The court referenced the Supreme Court's clarification in the Empire Jute Co. case, emphasizing that the character of the expenditure and the nature of the advantage must be considered.

The court found no basis for partial disallowance of the consultancy fees as capital expenditure, stating that the payments were part of the factory's running expenses and should be treated as revenue expenditure. The court also dismissed the relevance of previous cases cited by the Department, focusing on the specific terms of the agreement in question.

Conclusion:

The court answered the question of law in the affirmative, ruling in favor of the assessee. The Department was ordered to pay the costs of the reference, with counsel's fee set at Rs. 500.

 

 

 

 

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