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1970 (5) TMI 19 - HC - Income TaxAssessee (manufacturer) due to the change in method of distribution of yarn, received the wholesale price from wholesale dealer and distributed to quotaholder his margin of profit - taxability of a receipt - taxable income
Issues Involved:
1. Whether the sum of Rs. 36,318 was income of the assessee liable to be taxed under the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, in the assessment year 1953-54. Issue-wise Detailed Analysis: 1. Nature of the Sum of Rs. 36,318: The core issue was whether the sum of Rs. 36,318, which was transferred to the profit and loss account by the assessee, constituted taxable income. The assessee, a private limited company, was involved in the supply of yarn, and under a specific arrangement by the Textile Commissioner, the manufacturers were required to sell yarn to wholesale dealers and pay the margin of profit to quota holders. The sum in question was part of this margin, credited to a "quota holders margin account." 2. Treatment by Income-tax Authorities: Initially, the Income-tax Officer treated this amount as the income of the assessee. However, the Appellate Assistant Commissioner deleted the addition, following an earlier Tribunal decision. The Tribunal, upon appeal by the Income-tax Officer, reversed this decision, noting that the quota holders had "dissolved" and the law of limitation prevented them from claiming the amounts. The Tribunal concluded that since the assessee had treated the amount as its own, it should be taxable. 3. Character of the Receipt: The court emphasized that the entire amount received by the assessee as the wholesale price did not constitute its income. The assessee was only entitled to the ex-mill price, and the excess amount was to be held in trust for the quota holders. The court cited Greene M. R. in Morley v. Tattersall, stating that the nature of a receipt for income-tax purposes is fixed at the moment it is received and subsequent treatment in the accounts does not alter its character. 4. Precedents and Comparisons: The court referred to several precedents: - Upper India Sugar Exchange Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax: Similar principles were applied where brokerage amounts held in a fiduciary capacity were not considered income. - Commissioner of Income-tax v. Sandersons and Morgans: Unpaid accumulations received by solicitors from clients were held to be clients' money, not the solicitors' income. - Kohinoor Mills Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax: Unclaimed wages barred by limitation were still considered a subsisting debt, not income. 5. Distinguishing Cases: The court distinguished the present case from others cited by the revenue: - Maharajadhiraja Sir Kameshwar Singh v. Commissioner of Income-tax: The character of income was altered by the title under which it was received, unlike the present case. - Punjab Steel Scrap Merchants' Association Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax: The amounts received were trading receipts from the outset. - Commissioner of Income-tax v. Punjab Distilling Industries Ltd.: The charge was part of the sale consideration. - Chhatrasinhji Kesarisinhji Thakore v. Commissioner of Income-tax: Payments were directly related to taxable rent and royalty. - V. S. S. V. Meenakshi Achi v. Commissioner of Income-tax: Payments from a fund for maintaining plantations were revenue receipts. - Badri Narayan Balakishan v. Commissioner of Income-tax and Ikrahnandi Coal Co. v. Commissioner of Income-tax: Sales tax amounts were trading receipts from the outset. 6. Conclusion: The court concluded that the sum of Rs. 36,318 did not constitute the income of the assessee liable to tax under the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922. The question was answered in the negative, and the assessee was entitled to costs assessed at Rs. 200. Judgment: Question answered in the negative. The sum of Rs. 36,318 was not the income of the assessee liable to tax under the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922. The assessee was entitled to costs assessed at Rs. 200, with counsel's fee assessed at the same figure.
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