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1969 (4) TMI 12 - HC - Income Tax

Issues Involved:
1. Whether the sum of Rs. 55,951 is allowable as a deduction from profits for the year ending April 12, 1959, as a bad and doubtful debt or as a trading loss.

Detailed Analysis:

1. Nature of the Debt and Deduction Claim:
The assessee, a private limited company engaged in financing motion picture production, entered into multiple agreements with a film producer, culminating in a settlement on April 1, 1957, where the producer's debt was reduced to Rs. 10,000, and the remaining amount was waived. The assessee claimed the waived amount as a bad and doubtful debt under section 10(2)(xi) of the Income-tax Act, 1922, for the assessment year 1959-1960.

2. Tribunal and Revenue's Rejection:
The Tribunal and revenue authorities rejected the claim, noting that the assessee made further advances to the debtor and that the debtor had other assets and had repaid other creditors. Additionally, the film produced with the advanced money generated collections, and the assessee eventually credited Rs. 10,554 to the debtor's account, indicating that the debt was not irrecoverable.

3. Appellate Assistant Commissioner's Allowance:
The Appellate Assistant Commissioner allowed the deduction, reasoning that the return of the excess credit by cheque showed the debt had become bad.

4. Tribunal's Doubt on Agreement Validity:
The Tribunal doubted whether the terms in the debtor's letter dated April 1, 1957, constituted an agreement, viewing it as a mere request to scale down the debt. It also noted that the debtor did not repay the Rs. 10,000 within the stipulated period, and the assessee continued to credit subsequent realizations to the same account.

5. Assessee's Argument:
The assessee argued that the debt amounted to a trading loss and should be allowed as a deduction, emphasizing that the statutory provision is not exhaustive and that a debt becomes bad if it is difficult or impossible to recover, which is a question of fact.

6. Court's Interpretation:
The court held that a trading loss has a wider connotation than a bad debt and that the real profits chargeable to tax cannot be arrived at without setting off legitimate trading losses. It acknowledged that the arrangement on April 1, 1957, was bona fide and binding, confining the assessee's right to the terms of that arrangement.

7. Trading Loss and Deduction Timing:
The court noted that trading losses must be accounted for in the year they occur. The loss in question occurred in the year the debt was written off (1957-58), not in the year the deduction was claimed (1959-60). The court emphasized the importance of adhering to statutory provisions and rejected the argument that the revenue's earlier attitude should influence the deduction's timing.

8. Precedents and Legal Principles:
The court referenced several cases, including Chitnavis, Karamsey Govindji, Indore Malwa United Mills Ltd., and Associated Banking Corporation of India Ltd., to illustrate that losses must be deducted in the year they occur. The court concluded that the assessee's claim for the subsequent year could not be allowed based on these precedents.

Conclusion:
The court ultimately answered the question against the assessee, stating that the sum of Rs. 55,951 could not be allowed as a deduction from its profits for the year ending April 12, 1959, and awarded costs to the revenue.

 

 

 

 

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