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Issues Involved:
1. Whether the payment of Rs. 15,497 and Rs. 20,598 constituted revenue expenditure. 2. Whether there was an outright sale of the business by Shri Nagi Reddy to the assessee. Issue-wise Detailed Analysis: 1. Whether the payment of Rs. 15,497 and Rs. 20,598 constituted revenue expenditure: The assessee, a registered firm, entered into an agreement on November 15, 1958, with Shri B. Nagi Reddy to run the business of "Chandamama Publications" for a fixed sum of Rs. 5,000 per annum plus 10% of the net profits each year. The assessee paid Rs. 15,497 for the assessment year 1962-63 and Rs. 20,598 for 1963-64, claiming these as business expenditures. The Income-tax Officer disallowed these claims, viewing them as capital expenditures. The Appellate Assistant Commissioner upheld this disallowance. The Tribunal, however, allowed the claims, treating the payments as revenue expenditures, citing the decisions in *Commissioners of Inland Revenue v. 36/49 Holdings Ltd.* and *Travancore Sugars and Chemicals Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax*. The Tribunal's view was that even if the agreement amounted to an outright purchase, the payments were revenue expenditures because they were indefinite and tied to the profits, not to a fixed capital sum. The High Court agreed with the Tribunal, referencing the Supreme Court's decisions in *Travancore Sugars and Chemicals Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax* and *Devidas Vithaldas & Co. v. Commissioner of Income-tax*, which distinguished between capital and revenue expenditures based on the nature of the payment and its relation to the profits. 2. Whether there was an outright sale of the business by Shri Nagi Reddy to the assessee: The Tribunal held that the transaction was an outright sale. However, the High Court noted that the second question regarding the outright sale was not properly before them as it was referred at the instance of the assessee in an application filed by the revenue. Despite this, the court considered whether the first question encompassed the nature of the transaction and agreed that it did. The High Court concluded that even if the transaction was an outright sale, the nature of the payments was such that they could be considered revenue expenditures. The payments were indefinite, related to the profits, and not tied to a fixed purchase price, aligning with the principles laid out in the cited Supreme Court cases. Conclusion: The High Court answered the first question in T.C. No. 87 of 1968 and the only question in T.C. No. 175 of 1969 in the affirmative, holding that the payments constituted revenue expenditures. The court refrained from answering the second question in T.C. No. 87 of 1968 as it was not properly before them. The assessee was awarded costs in T.C. No. 87 of 1968, with no order as to costs in T.C. No. 175 of 1969.
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