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[Cites 7, Cited by 134]

Supreme Court of India

Punjab Produce And Trading Co. Ltd vs C.I.T. West Bengal, Calcutta on 29 July, 1971

Equivalent citations: 1971 AIR 2471, 1971 SCR 977, AIR 1971 SUPREME COURT 2471, 1971 TAX. L. R. 1761

Author: A.N. Grover

Bench: A.N. Grover, K.S. Hegde

           PETITIONER:
PUNJAB PRODUCE AND TRADING CO.	LTD.

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
C.I.T. WEST BENGAL, CALCUTTA

DATE OF JUDGMENT29/07/1971

BENCH:
GROVER, A.N.
BENCH:
GROVER, A.N.
HEGDE, K.S.

CITATION:
 1971 AIR 2471		  1971 SCR  977


ACT:
Income-tax  Act,  1922, s. 23A(9)'  Explanation	 (b)  (iii)-
Shares	of company carrying more than 50% voting power	held
by  less than six persons Affairs of company not  controlled
by less than six persons-Company whether one in which public
are  substantially interested-Whether one condition or	both
conditions  in cl. (b) (iii) of Explanation should  be	ful-
filled-Limitation  under s. 34(1) of Act whether  applicable
where additional super-tax is imposed under s. 23A.



HEADNOTE:
The  assessee company was incorporated under  the  erstwhile
Gwalior	 Companies  Act which did not make  any	 distinction
between	 public and private companies.	'The affairs of	 the
company	 were  not controlled by less than six	persons	 but
shares carrying more than 50% of the total voting power were
during	the  relevant  previous year held  by  less  than  6
persons.  After the company's assessment for the  assessment
year  1955-56  had  been completed  the	 Income-tax  Officer
levied	additional super-tax on the company under s. 23A  of
the  Income-tax Act, 1922 holding that it was not a  company
in which the public were substantially interested within the
meaning	 of sub-cl. (b) (iii) of the Explanation to cl.	 (9)
of s. 23A.  Under the Explanation a company is treated to be
one  in which the public are substantially interested if  it
is not a private company under the Indian Companies Act	 and
the affairs of the company or the shares carrying more	than
50%  3f	 the total voting power are at no  time	 during	 the
previous  year controlled or held by less than six  persons.
The authorities under the Act as well as the High Court,  in
reference, held against the assessee.  In appeal by  special
leave  to  this Court the assessee contended that  the	word
'or'   in  sub-cl.  (b)	 (iii)	aforesaid  had	 been	used
disjunctively  and  therefore if either	 of  the  conditions
mentioned  therein did not exist the company must be  deemed
to be one in which the public were substantially interested.
Reliance  was  placed on the decision of this Court  in	 the
case  of the State Company Ltd. in which the word 'or'	used
in sub-cl. (b) (ii) of the aforesaid Explanation was held to
have been used disjunctively.  It was also contended that on
the  facts and circumstances of the case the  imposition  of
the  additional super-tax under s. 23A without	recourse  to
the provisions of s. 34(1) was not valid.
HELD: (i) The language of sub-cls. (ii) and (iii) of cl. (b)
is  different.	 The former relates to a positive  state  of
affairs	 whereas the latter lays down  negative	 conditions.
The  word  'or' is often used to express an  alternative  of
terms defined or explanation of the same thing in  different
words.	 Therefore if either of the two negative  conditions
which  are  to	be  found  in  sub-cl.	(b)  (iii)   remains
unfulfilled,  the conditions laid down in the entire  clause
cannot be said to have been satisfied.	The clear import  of
the  word  'and' appearing there read with the	negative  or
disqualifying  conditions in sub-cl. (b) (iii) is  that	 the
assessee  was  bound to satisfy apart  from  the  conditions
contained in the other sub-clauses that its affairs were  at
no  time during the previous year controlled by less than  6
persons	 and  shares  carrying more than 50%  of  the  total
voting	power were during the same period not held  by	less
than 6 persons. [982F-G]
978
Star  Company Ltd.  V. Commissioner of Income-tax  (Central)
Calcutta, C.   A. No. 1204/68 dt. 29-4-70, distinguished.
Indian Steel & Wire Products Ltd.  Calcutta v.	Commissioner
of  Income-tax,	 West Bengal, Calcutta, I.T.R.	No.  204  of
1961, referred to.
(ii)An	order  made  by the  Income-tax	 Officer  directing
payment	  of  additional  super-tax  is	 not  an  order	  of
assessment within the meaning of s. 34(3) of the Act and  to
such  an order the period of limitation	 prescribed  thereby
does not apply. [983A-B]
M.M.  Parikh, I.T.O., Special Investigation  Circle  'B',
Ahmedabad  v.  ,Navanagar Transport and	 Industries  Ltd.  &
Anr., 63 I.T.R. 663, followed.



JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1344 of 1967.

Appeal from the judgment and order dated November 24, 1966 of the Calcutta High Court in Income-tax Reference No. 86 of 1962.

V.S. Desai, N. R. Khaitan, B. P. Maheshwari and Krishna Sen, for the appellant.

Jagadish Swarup, Solicitor-General, S. K. Aiyer and B. D. Sharma, for the respondent.

The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Grover, J.-This is an appeal by special leave from a judg- ment of the Calcutta, High Court in an Income tax Reference. The assessee is a limited company incorporated under the erstwhile Gwalior State Companies Act which did not make any distinction between a private company and a public company. The paid-up capital of the company was Rs. 25,00,000/- com- posed of 25,000 Ordinary shares of Rs. 100/- each. These 25,000 Ordinary shares were held by 17 share holders in all. It was also common ground that the shares carrying more than 50% of the total voting power were held by less than 6 persons during the accounting. period. The assessment year was 1955-56 the accounting year being the one ending on March 31, 1955. The total income assessed for the aforesaid year was Rs. 9,54,658/on which tax payable amounted to Rs. 4,05,492. The surplus available for distribution of dividend was Rs. 5,49,166/-. No dividend, however, was distributed although at the meeting held on June 8, 979 1955 the accounts which were approved showed a net profit of Rs. 6,81,298/-.

The controversy before the Income tax Officer centered on the applicability of the provisions of s. 23A of the Income tax Act 1922. According to the assessee that section was not applicable but the Income tax Officer came to the conclusion that since the shares carrying more than 50% of the total voting power were held by less than 6 persons the company was not one in which the public were substantially interested. As no justifiable reason for non-distribution of the requisite percentage of the dividend had been furnished s. 23A was applicable and 100% distribution was called for. In view of the provisions of s. 23A(1) additional :super tax of Rs. 1,37,291.50 poise was imposed subsequent to the completion of the assessment. The assessee went up in appeal to the Appellate Assistant Commissioner but the same was dismissed. The sole point that was argued before the Appellate Tribunal was whether the assessee fulfilled the conditions stated in sub-clause

(b) (iii) of the Explanation to s. 23A of the Act. This argument will be considered presently. The Tribunal, however, was not persuaded to accept the contention of the assessee. On an application being filed under s. 66(1) the Tribunal referred the following question on law for the opinion of the High Court :

(1)"Whether on the facts and in the circumstances of the case, the assessee company is one in which the public are substantially interested within the meaning of the Explanation to Section 23A of the Income tax Art, as it stood at the relevant time ? (2)Whether on the facts and in the circumstances of the case, the imposition of the additional super-tax under Section 23A without recourse to the provisions of Section 34(1) was legal and valid ?"
Section 23A of the Act confers power on the Income tax Officer to assess companies to super tax on non-distributed income in certain cases. We are concerned, in the present appeal, only with sub-s. (9) and the Explanation thereto. That sub-section provided inter alia that nothing contained in the section shall apply to any company in which the public are substantially interested. The text of Explanation the interpretation of which is the subject matter of dispute is as follows "Explanation.-For the purposes of this section a company shall be deemed to be a company in which. the public are substantially interested.
980
(a)If it is a company owned by the Government or in which not less than forty percent of the shares are held by the Government.
(b)If it is not a private company as defined in the Indian Companies Act 1913 (VII of 1913) and
(i)its shares (not being shares entitled to a fixed rate of dividend, whether with or without a further right to participate in profits) carrying not less than fifty per cent of the voting power have been allotted unconditionally to, or acquired unconditionally by, and were throughout the previous year beneficially held by the public (not including a company to which the provisions of this section apply) :
Provided that in the case of any such company as is referred to in sub-section (4), this sub-clause shall apply as if forthe words 'not less than fifty percent' the words not lessthan forty percent had been substituted.
(ii) the said shares were at party time during the previous year the subject of dealing in any recognised'stock exchange in India or were freely transferable by the holder to other members of the public-, and
(iii)the affairs of the company or the shares carrying more than fifty percent of the total voting power were at no time during the previous year controlled or held by less than six persons (persons who are related to one another as husband, wife, lineal ascendant or descendant or brother or sister, as the case may be, being treated as a single person and persons who are nominees of another person together with that other person being likewise treated as a single person) :
Provided that in the case of any such company as is referred to in sub-section (4), this clause shall apply as if for the words 'more than fifty per cent' the words 'more than sixty per cent' had been substituted. It is quite clear that clause (a) was not relevant and had no, application. It was also not disputed that the assessee had fulfilled the conditions contained in sub-clause (b)(i) and (b)(ii) of the Explanation. The sole question which had to be decided by the Tribunaland the High Court was whether the assessee had fulfilled theconditions set out in sub-clause (b)(iii) of the Explanation. It Was not found that the affairs of the company were, at any time, during the previous year controlled by less than 6 persons, the number six being arrived at- according to- the formula 981 laid down in sub-clause. The sole finding on which the decision went against the assessee was that shares carrying more than 50% of the total voting power were during the previous year held by less than 6 persons. The argument which has throughout been pressed on behalf of the assessee is that the word "or" which is to be found between the words "the affairs of the company" and 'the shares carrying more than.............. had been used disjunctively and therefore if either one of the conditions did not exist the assessee would be entitled to say that the conditions laid down in sub-clause (b)(iii) had been fulfilled. In other words if it was established that the affairs of the assessee were at no time, during the previous year controlled by less than 6 persons it would be a company in which the public were substantially interested even though the shares carrying more than 50% of the total voting power bad been held during the previous year by less than six persons. The Tribunal disposed of this contention in the following manner :-
"Sub-clause (iii) is divided into two parts; the first part relates to the affairs of the company being controlled by not less 6 persons and the second part relates to holding of shares carrying more than 50% of the total voting power by not less than 6 persons. Both these parts are joined with the main part of clause (b) by the use of the conjunctive word "and" so that the proper construction of the sub-clause (iii) would be as follows :- (1)If it is not a private company as defined in the Indian Companies Act, 1913 and the affairs of the company were at no time during the previous year controlled by less than six persons ;
(2)If it is not a private company as defined in 'the Indian Companies Act, 1913 and the shares carrying more than 50% of the total voting power were at no time during the previous year held by less than 6 persons."

According to the Tribunal sub-cl. (iii) of cl. (b) sought to impose two distinct and separate conditions, namely, (1) control of the affairs of the company and (2) requisite percentage of the voting power held by virtue of the holding of shares. In order that a company might be treated as one in which the public were substantially interested it had to show that not merely its affairs were controlled by not less the 6 persons but also that 50% of the total voting power had been held by not less than 6 persons. The High Court looked closely into the language of the Explanation and had no difficulty in coming to the conclusion that the condi- tions laid down in all the sub-clauses of cl. (b) had to be satisfied.

982

The difficulty, however, was created by the language of sub- cl.(b) (iii) in which the word "or" appeared in more than one place. In a previous Bench decision of the Calcutta High Court in an Income tax Reference (The Indian Steel & Wire Products Ltd. Calcutta v. The Commissioner of Income- tax, West Bengal, Calcutta) (1) the same point had arisen and it had been held that the conditions prescribed in sub- cl. (b)(iii) would not be satisfied by mere compliance with one branch of it. Both branches namely the control of the affairs by not less than 6 persons and the holding of shares carrying the requisite percentage of the total voting. power by not less than 6 persons would have to be fulfilled. On behalf of the assessee a good deal of reliance has been placed on a decision of this Court in The Star Company Ltd. v. The Commissioner of Income-tax (Central) Calcutta(1). In that case sub-clause (b)(ii) came up for consideration and it was held that the two parts of the explanation contained in that sub-clause were alternative. In other words if one part was satisfied it was unnecessary to consider whether the second part was also satisfied. Thus the word "or" was treated as having been used disjunctively and not conjunctively. The same reasoning is sought to be invoked with reference to sub-clause (b)(iii).

It is significant that the language of sub-clauses (ii) and

(iii) of cl. (b) is different. The former relates to a positive state of affairs whereas the latter lays down negative conditions. The word "or" is often used to express an alternative of terms defined or explanation of the same thing in different words. Therefore if either of the two negative conditions which are to be found in sub-clause (b)

(iii) remains unfulfilled, the conditions laid down in the entire clause cannot be said to have been satisfied. The clear import of the opening part of cl. (b) with the word "and" appearing there read with the negative or disqualifying conditions in sub-cl. (b) (iii) is that the assessee was bound to satisfy apart from the conditions contained in the other sub-clauses that its affairs were at no time during the previous year controlled by less than 6 persons and shares carrying more than 50% of the total voting power were during the same period not held by less than 6 persons. We are unable to find any infirmity in the reasoning or the conclusion of the Tribunal and the High Court so far as question No. 1 is concerned. (1) Income Tax Reference No. 204 of 1961.

(2) C. As. 1204 & 1205168 dt. 29-4-70.

9 83 The second question stands concluded by the decision of this Court in M. M. Parikh, I. T. O. Special Investigation Circle "B", Ahmedabad v. Navanagar Transport and Industries Ltd., & Another (1) in which it was held that an order under s. 23A of the Act made by the Income tax Officer directing payment of additional Super tax was an order of assessment within the meaning of s. 34(3) of the Act and to such an order the period of limitation prescribed thereby did not apply. In the result this appeal fails and it is dismissed with costs.

G.    C.					      Appeal
dismissed.
(1) 63 I.T.R. 663.
984