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Indian CasesSupreme Court of India

B.D. Bharucha, Bombay vs Commissioner Of Income-Tax, … on 21 March, 1967

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Supreme Court of India

B.D. Bharucha,Bombay vs Commissioner Of Income-Tax, … on 21 March, 1967

Equivalent citations: 1967 AIR 1505, 1967 SCR (3) 238

Author: V Ramaswami

Bench: Ramaswami, V.

           PETITIONER:
B.D. BHARUCHA,BOMBAY

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, CENTRAL BOMBAY

DATE OF JUDGMENT:
21/03/1967

BENCH:
RAMASWAMI, V.
BENCH:
RAMASWAMI, V.
SHAH, J.C.
SIKRI, S.M.

CITATION:
 1967 AIR 1505		  1967 SCR  (3) 238


ACT:
Income-tax Act (11 of 1922), s. 10(2)(xi)-capital or revenue
loss-Nature, how determined.



HEADNOTE:
The appellant, who was carrying on the business of financing
film  producers and distributors, had advanced a sum of	 Rs.
1,00,000  to a firm of film distributors.  Clause 3  of	 the
agreement  between the parties provided that  the  appellant
was  not entitled to any interest but that he was  to  share
with  the  distributors	 their profit and loss;	 and  cl.  7
provided  that in case the picture was not  released  within
the  stipulated time, the distributors would return  to	 the
appellant  all	the  moneys advanced by	 him  together	with
interest at 9% per annum.  There was delay in releasing	 the
picture	 and a dispute arose between the appellant  and	 the
distributors, which was settled.  The appellant found that a
sum  of Rs. 80,759 was irrecoverable.  He accordingly  wrote
it off as a bad debt and claimed it as a revenue loss  which
should be deducted under s. 10(2)(xi) of the Income-tax Act,
1922.  The department, the Appellate Tribunal, and the	High
Court on reference, held against the appellant, on the basis
of  cl.	 3 of the agreement, that the loss suffered  by	 the
appellant was a capital loss.
In appeal to this Court,
HELD  :	 Since	all payments reduce capital one	 is  apt  to
consider  a  loss  as a capital loss.	But  losses  in	 the
running	 of a business cannot be said to be of capital.	  To
find out whether an expenditure is on the capital account or
on  revenue  account, one must consider the  expenditure  in
relation to the business.  In the present case, the debt was
in  respect  of	 and  incidental  to  the  business  of	 the
appellant in the relevant accounting year, and the  accounts
of  his business were kept on mercantile basis.	 If  cls.  3
and  7 of the agreement are read together,  the	 transaction
would be a money-lending transaction or a transaction in the
nature of a financial deal in the course of the	 appellant's
business,  resulting  in  a loan  repayable  with  interest.
Therefore,  the	 loss suffered was a revenue  loss  and	 the
appellant was entitled to claim the deduction of the  amount
as a bad debt under s. 10(2) (xi) of the Act. [241H; 242E-F]
Reid's Brewery Co. Ltd. v. Male, 3 T.C. 279, applied.



JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1230 of 1966.

Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated August 27, 1962 of the Bombay High Court in Income-tax Re- ference No. 18 of 1961.

S. T. Desai, M. N. Shroff for 1. N. Shroff, for the appellant.

R. M. Hazarnavis, Gopal Singh, S. P. Nayyar for R. N. Sachthey, for the respondent.

The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Ramaswami J. This appeal is brought, by special leave, from the judgment of the High Court of Bombay dated August 27, 1962 in Income Tax Reference No. 18 of 1961. The appellant is an individual having income from House Property, Government Securities, Cinema Exhibition and financing film producers and distributors. During the period from March 3, 1952 to November 5, 1952 the appellant advanced a sum of Rs. 40,000/- to a firm of film distributors known as Tarachand Pictures. The appellant thereafter entered into an agreement dated January 5, 1953 with Tarachand Pictures under which the appellant advanced a further sum of Rs. 60,000/- in respect of the distribution, exploitation and exhibition of a picture called “Shabab”. According to cl. 2 of the agreement the distributors were to pay a lumpsum of Rs. 1,750/- by way of interest on the initial advance of Rs. 40,000/-. Clause 3 of the agreement read as follows :-

“No interest will run henceforth on this sum of Rs. 40,000/- as also on the advances to be made as provided hereinabove but in lieu of interest it is agreed that the Distributors will share with the Financier profit and loss of the Distribution, Exploitation and Exhibition of the picture SHABAB in the Bombay Circuit, two-third going to the Financier and one-third to the Distributors.” Clauses 4 and 5 were to the following effect “4. The Distributors shall on or before the 15th of every month submit to the Financier a Statement of Account of the business done during the previous month in respect of the picture ‘SHABAB’ in the territories of Bombay Circuit.”

“5. The Distributors shall keep the proper accounts of the business of the picture ‘SHABAB’ and the same as well as all documents, reports and contracts will be available to the Financier or his agent for inspection.”

Clause 7 read as follows:-

“In case the picture is not released in Bombay within 15 months from the date hereof the Distributors shall be bound to immediately return all the moneys so far advanced to the Distributors by the Financier. In that event the Distributors shall be bound to return all the moneys together with interest thereon @ 9% per annum.”

Clause 8 stated:

“In case of any breach being committed by the Dis-

tributors of any of the terms herein provided this agreement shall at once terminate and the moneys paid by the Financier shall be at once repaid by the Distributors to the Financier with interest @ 9% per annum.”

It appears that the distributors were not in a position to exhibit the film in Bombay within the stipulated time. When the film was ultimately released for exhibition it proved to be unsuccessful. The matter was taken to the City Civil Court and ultimately a consent decree was obtained in Suit No. 2061 of 1954 in the Bombay City Civil Court. In the end the appellant found that there was a balance of Rs. 80,759/- which was irrecoverable and he accordingly wrote it off as a bad debt on December 31, 1955 in the ledger account. For the assessment year 1956-57, the corresponding previous year being the calendar year 1955, the appellant claimed a loss of Rs. 80,759/- which he had written off as bad debt, under s. 10(2)(xi) of the Income-tax Act. By his assessment order dated July 31, 1957, the Income-tax Officer disallowed the claim on the ground that the moneys advanced by the appellant under the agreement could not be regarded as a dealing in the course of his financing business, but the true nature of the transaction, as evidenced by the agreement, was a venture in the nature of a trade. The Income-tax Officer accordingly held that the loss was a capital loss and it could not be allowed as a bad debt under s. 10(2)(xi) of the Income-tax Act. The appellant took the matter in appeal to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner of Income-tax who dismissed the appeal. The appellant preferred a second appeal before the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal which by its order dated February 19, 1960 rejected the appeal, holding that the loss of Rs. 80,759/- was a capital loss and not a loss of stock-in-trade. The Tribunal took the view that the transaction was not a joint venture with the distributors or any partnership business and that it was also not a mere financing deal or a part of the money-lending activities of the appellant. According to the Appellate Tribunal, the true nature of the transaction was an investment of the capital for a return in the shape of share of profits, and the loss suffered by the appellant was therefore a capital loss and not a revenue loss. As required by the appellant, the Tribunal stated a case to the High Court under s. 66(1) of the Income-tax Act on the following question of law:-

“Whether the aforesaid loss of Rs. 80,759/- is deductible under any of the provisions of the Act ?”

By its judgment dated August 27, 1962, the High Court answered the Reference in the negative and against the appellant.

On behalf of the respondent it was submitted that the High Court was right in taking the view that the appellant had advanced a sum of Rs. 1,00,000/- not with a view to earn interest thereon but with a view to making an investment in the business of Tarachand Pictures and get a return on the said investment by way of a share of profits in the said business. It was contended that the money was not lent for any definite term and no rate of .interest had been fixed under cl. 3. The argument was also, stressed that cl. 3 of the agreement stipulated that the appellant was to share with the distributors not only the profit but also the loss of the business, and in the case of no money-lending transaction is there a covenant between the parties that the money-lender will share the loss of the business for which the money is lent. In other words, it was argued that no money-lending transaction can have the attribute of the money-lender sharing the risk of the loss of the business for which the money is lent, nor could it be a feature of any purely financial deal. We are unable to accept the argument of the respondent that the transaction between the parties under the agreement dated January 5, 1953 was not a money-lending transaction or a transaction in the nature of a financial deal in the course of the appellant’s business. If cl. 3 of the agreement is taken in isolation there may be some force in the contention of the respondent that the term under which the appellant undertook to share the loss took the transaction out of the category of a money-lending transaction and the loss suffered by the appellant was therefore a capital loss. In the present case, however, cl. 3 of the agreement dated January 5, 1953 cannot be read in isolation but it must be construed in the context of cl. 7 which provides that in case the picture was not released in Bombay within 5 months from the date of the agreement, the distributors will return all the moneys so far advanced to them by the appellant together with interest thereon at 9% per annum. It is the admitted position in the present case that the picture was not released by ,the distributors till the stipulated date, namely, April 4, 1954 but it was released on May 28, 1954 and cl. 7 of the agreement there- fore came into operation. The result therefore is that on and from April 4, 1954 there was a contract of loan between the parties in terms of cl. 7 of the agreement and the principal amount became repayable from that date to the appellant with interest thereon at 9% per annum. It follows therefore that the appellant is entitled to claim the amount of Rs. 80,759/- as a bad debt under s. 10(2) (xi) of the Income-tax Act and the loss suffered by the appellant was not a loss of capital bat a revenue loss.

To find out whether an expenditure is on the capital account or on revenue account, one must consider the expenditure in relation to the business. Since all payments reduce capital in the ultimate analysis, one is apt to consider a loss as amounting to a loss of capital. But it is not true of all losses, because losses in the running of the business cannot be said to be of capital. The distinc-

tion is brought out for example, in Reid’s Brewery Co. Ltd. v. Male(1). In that case, the brewery company carried on, in addition to the business of a brewery, a business of bankers and moneylenders making loans and advances to their customers. This helped the customers in pushing sales of the product of the brewery company. Certain sums bad to be written off and the amount was held to be deductible. In the course of his judgment Pollock B. said :

“Of course, if it be capital invested, then it comes within the express provision of the Income-tax Act, that no deduction is to be made on that account.”

-but held that :

business can doubt that this is not capital invested. What it is is this. It is capital used by the Appellants but used only in the sense that all money which is laid out by persons who are traders, whether it be in the purchase of goods be they traders alone, whether it be in the purchase of raw material be they manufacturers, or in the case of money-lenders, be they pawnbrokers or money- lenders, whether it be money lent in the course of their trade, it is used and it comes out of capital, but it is not an investment in the ordinary sense of the word.”

In the present case, the conditions for the grant of the allowance -under s. 10(2)(xi) of the Income-tax Act are satisfied. In the first place, the debt is in respect of the business which is carried on by the appellant in the relevant accounting year and accounts of the business are admittedly kept on mercantile basis. In the second place, the debt is in respect of and incidental to the business ,of the appellant. It has also been found that the debt had become irrecoverable in the relevant accounting year and the amount had been actually written off as irrecoverable in the books of the appellant.

For these reasons, we hold that the judgment of the Bombay High Court dated August 27, 1962 should be set aside and the question referred to the High Court must be answered in the affirmative and in favour of the appellant. We accordingly allow this appeal with costs here and in the High Court.

V.P.S.       Appeal

allowed.

(1)  3 Tax Cas. 279.