Legal Document View

Unlock Advanced Research with PRISMAI

- Know your Kanoon - Doc Gen Hub - Counter Argument - Case Predict AI - Talk with IK Doc - ...
Upgrade to Premium
[Cites 12, Cited by 279]

Supreme Court of India

Textile Machinery Corporation ... vs The Commissioner Of Income-Tax, West ... on 25 January, 1977

Equivalent citations: 1977 AIR 1134, 1977 SCR (2) 762, AIR 1977 SUPREME COURT 1134, 1977 2 SCC 368, 1977 TAX. L. R. 434, 1977 2 SCR 762, 107 ITR 195, 1977 46 TAXATION 103, 1977 (1) SCJ 438, 1977 2 SCWR 426, 1977 (1) ITJ 337, 1977 SCC (TAX) 282, 1977 UPTC 269

Author: P.K. Goswami

Bench: P.K. Goswami, Hans Raj Khanna, P.S. Kailasam

           PETITIONER:
TEXTILE MACHINERY CORPORATION LIMITED, CALCUTTA

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
THE COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, WEST BENGAL,CALCUTTA

DATE OF JUDGMENT25/01/1977

BENCH:
GOSWAMI, P.K.
BENCH:
GOSWAMI, P.K.
KHANNA, HANS RAJ
KAILASAM, P.S.

CITATION:
 1977 AIR 1134		  1977 SCR  (2) 762
 1977 SCC  (2) 368
 CITATOR INFO :
 MV	    1985 SC 421	 (50)
 RF&E	    1992 SC1622	 (9)


ACT:
	    Indian  Income-tax	Act,  1922--S.	15C(2)(i)--Scope  of
	Tests	for   determining  when	 benefit  of   the   section
	available--Reconstruction--Tests for determination.



HEADNOTE:
	    Section  15C  of the Indian Income-tax Act	1922,  which
	deals with exemption from tax of newly established industri-
	al  undertakings, provides in sub-s. 2(i) that	the  section
	applies,  among others, to any industrial undertaking  which
	is not formed by the splitting up, or the reconstruction  of
	business already in existence.
	    The	 assessee (appellant) was a heavy engineering	con-
	cern  manufacturing boilers. machinery parts and wagons.  In
	addition, it had started a Steel Foundry Division and a Jute
	Mill  Division.	 The bulk of the goods produced in both	 the
	divisions was used in the various divisions of the  assessee
	company.  The assessee's claim for exemption from tax  under
	s. 15C in respect of profits derived from both the companies
	was  rejected by the Income-tax Officer and its	 appeal	 was
	rejected  by  the Appellate Assistant  Commissioner  on	 the
	ground theft the .undertakings were an expansion and  recon-
	struction of the existing business.
	    On appeal, the Appellate Tribunal held that although the
	products manufactured in the two divisions were used in	 the
	assessee's  business,  the Steel Foundry and the  Jute	Mill
	Division  were	new  industrial undertakings,  in  that	 the
	machinery used in them was new, they were housed in separate
	buildings,   were: established under separate  licences	 and
	that both the new divisions were maintaining separate  books
	of account.
	    On reference, the High Court held that it was a case  of
	reconstruction	of the existing business because  the  goods
	produced  in  the two divisions were primarily used  in	 the
	assessee's engineering concern.
	Allowing the appeal.
	    HELD: The Tribunal was right in holding in favour of the
	assessee.  Section  15C is applicable to an  absolutely	 new
	undertaking for the first time started and in order to	deny
	benefit of the section, the, new undertaking must be  formed
	by reconstruction of the old business.	[768 B-C]
	    1. (a) In order to be entitled to the benefit of s. 15C,
	the assessee has to establish:
	   (1)	the investment of substantial fresh capital  in	 the
	industrial undertaking;
	   (2) employment of the requisite labour therein
	   (3)	manufacture or production of articles in the  under-
	taking;
	   (4)	earning of profits 'clearly attributable to the	 new
	undertaking; and
	   (5)	separate  and distinct indentity of  the  industrial
	unit set up.
	    (b)	 Once the new industrial undertakings  are  separate
	and  independent  production  units in the  sense  that	 the
	commodities produced or the results achieved are commercial-
	ly tangible products and the undertakings can be carried  on
	separately  without  complete absorption  and  losing  their
	identity in the old business, they are not to be treated  as
	being formed by reconstruction of the old business.  [772 H,
	773 A]
	763
	       (c)  The	 object of the section is to  encourage	 the
	setting	 up of new industrial undertakings by  offering	 tax
	incentives  within a certain period.  Sub-section (2) has  a
	negative  as  well as a positive aspect. Negatively,  a	 new
	undertakings  should  not be formed by splitting up  of	 the
	business  already in existence and by the reconstruction  of
	business  already  in  existence;  and	positively,  a	 new
	undertaking must produce results, that is to say, it has  to
	manufacture  or	 produce  articles at any  time	 within	 the
	stipulated period.  The new undertaking must not be substan-
	tially	the same as the existing business.  The	 words	"the
	capital .employed" are significant, for, fresh capital	must
	be employed in the undertaking claiming exemption.  Manufac-
	ture  or production of articles yielding additional  profits
	attributable to the new outlay of capital in a separate	 and
	distinct unit is the heart of the matter to earn the benefit
	from the exemption of tax liability under s. 15C.  The	fact
	that by establishing a new industrial undertaking the asses-
	see  expands its existing business would not deprive  it  of
	the  benefit  under s. 15C.  If	 an  industrial	 undertaking
	produces  certain machines or parts which  are	identifiable
	units  being marketable commodities and the undertaking	 can
	exist even after the cessation of the principal business  of
	the  assessee, it cannot be anything but a new and  separate
	industrial undertaking to qualify for appropriate  exemption
	under s. 15C.  [769 E-H, 770A]
	In the instant case, the principal business of the  assessee
	can  be carried on even if the two  additional	undertakings
	cease  to  function. The fact that a  portion  the  articles
	produced  in the new undertakings had been sold in the	open
	market to others is a circumstance in favour of the assessee
	that  the  new industrial units can function on	 their	own.
	Use of the articles by the assessee is not decisive 10	deny
	the benefit of s. 15C. There was no 'formation of any indus-
	trial  undertaking out of the existing business	 since	that
	can  take place only  when the assets of the  old   business
	are transferred substantially to the new undertaking.  Also.
	there ,ins no difficulty about ascertainment of the exempted
	profit	as  separate  books of accounts were  kept  and	 the
	undertakings were at separate places. [770 B-D. G-H]
	       The High Court was not right in holding that the	 two
	undertakings  were formed by reconstruction of the  existing
	business of the assessee.   [773 B-C]
	       2.  Reconstruction  involves that  substantially	 the
	same   business	 shall	be carried on and substantially	 the
	same  persons  shall carry it on.  But it does	not  involve
	that all the assets shall pass to the new company or  resus-
	citated	 company,  or that all the shareholders of  the	 old
	company shall be shareholders in the new company.   Substan-
	tially	the business and the person interested must  be	 the
	same. [771 C-D]
	South  African Supply and Cold Storage Company Wild v.	Same
	Company, [1904] 2 Ch. 268, followed.
	      Commissioner  of Income-tax Bombay City-1	 v.  Gackwar
	Foam  and  Rubber  Co.	Ltd. 35	 ITR  662,  Commissioner  of
	Income-tax  v.	Ganga Sugar  Corporation Ltd.  92  ITR	173,
	Rajeswari Mills Ltd. v. Commissioner  of  Income-tax Madras,
	50 ITR 29, Nagardas Bechardas & Brothers P. Ltd. v.  Commis-
	sioner	Income-tax Gujarat, 104 ITR 255,   Commissioner	  of
	Income-tax.   West  Bengal-I v.	 Electric  Construction	 and
	Equipment  Company  Ltd. 104. ITR 101  and  Commissioner  of
	Income-tax v. Hindustan Motors Limited, [1976] Taxation	 Law
	Reports 821, approved.
	Commissioner  of Income-tax v. Naya Sahitya 84 ITR 567,	 not
	approved.



JUDGMENT:

CIVIL-APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 772-773 of 1972.

From the Judgment and Order dated 9th/10th July, 1970 of the Calcutta High Court in I.T.R. No. 158 of 1966.

N. A. Palkhivala, Dr. D. Pal, U.K. Khaitan, S.R. Agar- wal and Parveen Kumar for the Appellant.

V.P. Raman, Addl. Sol. General, T.A. Ramachandran and R.N. Sachthey for the Respondents.

764

The Judgment of the Court was delivered by GOSWAMI, J. These two appeals by certificate are from the judgment of the Calcutta High Court since reported in Commissioner Income-tax, West Bengal-I v. Textile Machinery Corporation('). The two appeals relate respectively to two assessment years 1958-59 (calendar year 1957) and 1959-60 (calendar year 1958). The matter relates to the claim by the assessee for exemption of tax under section 15C of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 (briefly the Act). The matter came u13 before the High Court 'on a refer- ence under section 66(1) of the Act. The two questions referred to were as follows :--

"(1) Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances of the case, the Tribunal was right in holding that the Steel Foundry Division was an industrial undertaking to which section 15C of the. Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, applied ?
(2) Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances of the case, the Tribunal was right in holding that the Jute Mill Division set up by the assessee-company was an indus-

trial undertaking to which section 15C of the Indian Incometax Act, 1922, applied ?

The facts may briefly be stated:

The assessee (the appellant herein) is a heavy engineer- ing concern manufacturing boilers, machinery parts, wagons, etc. For the assessment years 1958-59 and 1959-60 the assessee claimed exemption of tax under section 15C of the Act in respect of the profits and gains derived from its Steel Foundry Division and a similar-claim for relief under section 15C in respect of its profits and gains derived from its Jute Mill Division for the year 1959-60. The assessee had previously in the earlier years bought from outside the castings manufactured in the Steel Foundry Division which was started in the assessment year 1958-59 and continued thereafter. Again, similarly in the year '1959-60, in addition to the manufacturing of castings in the Steel Foundry Division the assessee started the Jute Mill Division where the parts made out of the raw material supplied by the Boiler Division by machining and forging them were given to the Boiler Division of the assessee. It was found that out of a total sale of Rs.28,23,127/- of steel castings goods worth Rs.18,39,433/- were used in connection with the various Divisions of the company. In respect of the Jute Mill Division, the Incometax Officer found that out of the total sales of Rs.13,03,509/- sales. to the Boiler Division totalled Rs.11,89,812/- and sales to outside the Jute Mill Division totalled only a sum of Rs.1,13,6971/-. The Income-tax Officer and the Appellate Assistant Commissioner, on the above facts, held the under- takings as expansion and reconstruction of the business already existing and hence the assessee was not entitled (1) 80 I.T.R. 428.
765

to exemption under section 15C of the Act. The Income-tax Appellate Tribunal, however, allowed the appeal of the assessee and accepted the claim for exemption under section 15C. According to the Tribunal both the Steel Foundry and the Jute Mill Division of the assessee were new industrial undertakings. The above conclusion was reached on the basis of several facts found by the Tribunal. These arc that the machinery was new, was housed in a separate building and that industrial licences had to be obtained, for manufactur- ing the parts in question. According to the Tribunal the existing business of the assessee consisted of manufacturing boilers, wagons, etc. and for that purpose the assessee was purchasing the spare parts, forgings and castings from outside. The Tribunal came to the conclusion that the business of the new industrial undertakings was to manufac- ture those very spare parts. Hence the Tribunal concluded that it could not be said that the undertakings were formed out of the existing 'business to come within the mischief of the exclusion clause in section 15C(2)(i). The Tribunal rightly relying upon the Tara Iron and Steel Co. Ltd. and Others v. State of Bihar(1) also held that even though the manufactured products of the new industrial undertakings were mostly used in the assessee's other business of manu- facturing boilers, wagons, etc. the element of profit was there and the extent of the same could be ascertained as the assessee was maintaining separate books of account. In the reference at the instance of the Department the High Court answered both the questions in the negative and against the assessee. The High Court held as follows :--

"The goods which the steel foundry division and the jute mill division began producing for the assessee were also previous- ly used by the assessee in its business, but they were purchased from outside and this purchase from outside was replaced by produc- tion or manufacture from within the asses- see's own business. This change of producing one's own goods systematically used in the existing business instead of buying them from outside would only be a reconstruction of a business already in existence ...... In so far as they started producing and manufactur- ing themselves, the assessee was doing some- thing which was only a reconstruction of the business already in existence ........ The newness of the machinery of the steel foundry division and the jute mill division could not by itself make them new industrial undertakings. Separate housing of, and separate accounts for, the steel foundry division and jute mill division may be only parts of reconstruction of the same business and did not necessarily indicate a new indus- trial undertaking. The grant of a special licence for the steel foundry division did not make it an industrial undertaking to qualify for exemption from tax under section 15C, because the licence was for expansion of the existing industrial undertaking and the licence did not cover the jute mill division".

(1) 48 I.T.R. 123.

766

It is, however, admitted before us that both the units were covered by licences.

The controversy in these appeals centres round the true construction of section 15C(2)(i) of the Act and in particu- lar with regard to the scope and ambit of the expression therein, namely, the reconstruction of business already in existence. Is the High Court right in holding that the two industrial undertakings, namely, the Steel Foundry and the Jute Mill Division, are formed by reconstruction of the business already in existence differing from the con- trary conclusion reached by the Tribunal ? Before we proceed further, we will read section 15C as it stood during the material time:

"15C. Exemption from tax of newly estab- lished industrial undertakings.
(1) Save as otherwise hereinafter provided, the tax shall not be payable by an assessee on so much of the profits or gains derived from any industrial undertaking to which this section applies as do not exceed six per cent per annum on the capital employed in the undertaking computed in accordance with such rules as may be made in this behalf by the Central Board of Revenue.
(2) This section applies to any industrial undertaking which--
(i) is not formed by the splitting up, or the reconstruction of, business already in existence or by the transfer to a new business of building, machinery or plant, previously used in any other business;
(ii) has begun or begins to manufacture or produce articles in any part of taxable territories at any time within a period of thirteen years from the 1st day of April 1948, or such further period as the Central Govern-

ment may, by notification in the Official Gazette, specify with reference to any partic- ular industrial undertaking;

(iii) employs ten or more workers in a manufacturing process carried on with the aid of power, or employs twenty or more workers in a manufacturing process carried on without the aid of power;

Provided that the Central Government may, by notifica- tion in the Official Gazette, direct that the exemption conferred by this section shall not apply to any particular industrial undertaking.

767

(3) The profits or gains of an industrial undertaking to which this section applies shall be computed in accordance with the provisions of section 10.

(4) The tax Shall not be payable by a shareholder in respect of so much of any dividend paid or deemed to be paid to him by an industrial undertaking as is attributable to that part of the profits or gains on which the tax is not payable under this sec- tion.

(5) Nothing in this section shall affect the application of section 23A in relation to the profits or gains of an industrial under- taking to which this section applies.

(6) The provisions of this section shall apply to the assessment for the financial year next following the previous year in which.the assessee begins to manufacture or produce articles and for the four assessments immediately succeeding".

We are principally concerned in these appeals with clause (i) of sub-section (2) of section 15C and that also only with one part of it, namely, whether the industrial undertakings, Steel Foundry and the Jute Mill Division, are not formed by the reconstruction of the business already in existence.

The learned Additional Solicitor General submits that these two undertakings are not entitled to exemption under section 15C(2) as rightly so held by the High Court since they were formed by the reconstruction of the assessee's business already in existence, namely, the business of heavy engineering. He submits that setting up of a separate unit to do something in the course of pre-existing manufacturing process to aid the production of the same article as was being produced by the pre-existing industrial undertaking would not amount to starting of a new industrial undertak- ing. He further emphasises that production of the articles in the Steel Foundry and in the Jute Mill Division is only ancillary activity to the main business of the assessee and since the articles produced in these two supplemental undertakings help in producing the identical article which has been the end-product of the assessee's main business, section 15C(2) (i) cannot come to the aid of the assessee. According to Mr, Raman these two industrial undertakings cannot be said to be not formed out of the reconstruction of the business already in existence.

Section 15C(2)(i) only excludes three categories of industrial undertakings from the benefit of the section without referring to clauses (ii) and (iii) of that sub- section and other limiting provisions of the section which are not applicable in the instant case.

It is contended by Mr. Palkhivala that acceptance of the Additional Solicitor General's submission will amount to adding a fourth category of cases in sub-section (2)(i), namely, an industrial under-

768

taking which is an ancillary undertaking manufacturing certain articles to supplement the principal industrial activity. This, says Mr. Palkhivala, will be adding something to the section.

Section 15C is an exemption section. The benefit grant- ed under this section is a partial benefit so far as the quantum of the exempted profits of the new industrial under- taking as also for a limited period or periods as specified in the section. If the two industrial undertakings, about the existence of which there can be no controversy, as found by the Tribunal, cannot be held to. be formed by the recon- struction of the business already in existence, the benefit of section 15C will be available to the assessee. The principal object of section 15C is to encourage setting up of new industrial undertakings by offering tax incentive within a period of 13 years from April 1, 1948. Section 15C provides for a fractional. exemption from tax of profits of a newly established undertaking for five assessment years as speci- fied therein. This section was inserted in the Act in 1949 by section 13 of the Taxation Laws (Extensions to Merged States and Amendment) Act, 1949 (Act 67 of 1949) extending the benefit to the actual manufacture or production of arti- cles commencing from a prior date, namely, April 1, 1948. After the country had gained independence in 1947 it was most essential to give fillip to trade and industry from all quarters. That seems to be the background for insertion of section 15C.

It is also significant that the limit of the number of years for the purpose of claiming exemption has been pro- gressively raised from the initial 3 years in 1949 to 6 years in 1953, 7 years in 1954, 13 years in 1956 and 18 years in 1960. The incentive introduced in 1949 has been thus stepped up ever since and the only object is that which we have already mentioned.

Under sub-section (1) of section 15C the tax shall not be payable by an assessee on profits not exceeding six per cent per annum on the capital employed in the new industrial undertaking from the profits which alone exemption is claimed. Sub-section (2) of section 15C has a negative as well as a positive aspect. Negatively, the new industrial undertaking of the assessee should not be formed-

(1) by the splitting up of the business already in existence, (2) by the reconstruction of business already in existence, or (3) by the transfer to a new business of building, machinery or plant used in a busi- ness which was being carried on before April 1, 1948.

We agree that it is not possible to exclude any new indus- trial undertaking other than the three categories mentioned above.

769

We are concerned in these appeals with the type No. (2) mentioned above. Positively, the new industrial undertaking must produce result, that is to say, it has to manufacture or produce articles at any time within a period of 13 years from April 1, 1948. The further requirement under sub- section (2) is with regard to the personnel in the under- taking, namely, that ten or more workers have to work in the manufacturing process carried on with the aid of power -or twenty or more workers have to carry on work without the aid of power. The above element with regard to the number of workers engaged in the undertaking would go to. show that even small industrial undertakings, newly started, are within the exemption clause, where, for example, twenty workers may complete the industrial process without the aid of power. There is no controversy about the .positive aspects in 'these appeals.

Again, the new undertaking must not be substantially the same old existing business. The third excluded category mentioned above significant. Even if a new business is carried on but by piercing the veil of the new business it is found that there is employment of the assets of the old business, the benefit will be not available. From this it clearly follows that substantial investment of new capital is imperative. The words "the capital employed" in the principal clause of section 15C are significant, for fresh capital must be employed in the new undertaking claiming exemption. There must be a new under.taking where substan- tial investment of fresh capital must be made in order to enable earning of profits attributable to that new capital. The assessee continues to be the same for the purpose of assessment. It has its existing business already liable to tax. It produced in the two concerned undertakings commodi- ties different from those which it has been manufacturing or producing in its existing business. Manufacture of produc- tion of articles yielding additional profit attributable to the new outlay of capital in a separate and distinct unit is the heart of the matter, to earn benefit from the exemption of tax liability under section 15C. Sub-section (6) of the section also points to the same effect, namely, production of articles. The answer, in every particular case depends upon the peculiar/acts and conditions of the new industrial undertaking on account of which the assessee claims exemp- tion under section 15C. No hard and fast rule can be laid down. Trade and industry do not run in earmarked channels and particularly so in view of manifold scientific and technological developments. There is great scope for expan- sion of trade and industry. The fact that an assessee by establishment of a new industrial undertaking expands his existing business, which he certainly does, would not, on that score, deprive him of the benefit under section 15C. Every new creation in business is some kind of expan- sion and advancement. The true test is no.t whether the new industrial undertaking connotes expansion of the exist- ing business of the assessee but whether it is all the same a new and identifiable undertaking separate and distinct from the existing business. No particular decision in one case can lay down an inexorable test to determine whether a given case comes under section 15C or not. In order that the new undertaking -can be said to be not formed out of the already existing business, there 770 must be a new emergence of a physically separate industrial unit which may exist on its own as a viable unit. An undertakings is formed out of the existing business if the physical identity with the old unit is preserved. This has not happened here in the case of the two undertakings which are separate and distinct.

It is clear that the principal business of the assessee is heavy engineering in the course of which it manufactures boilers, wagons, etc. If an industrial undertaking produce certain machines or parts which are, by themselves, identi- fiable units being marketable commodities and the undertak- ing can exist even after the cessation of the principal business of the assessee, it cannot be anything but a new and separate industrial undertaking to qualify for appropri- ate exemption under section 15C. The principal business of the assessee can be carried on even if the said two addi- tional undertakings cease to function. Again, the con- verse is also true. The fact that the articles produced by the two undertakings are used by the Boiler Division of the assessee will not weigh against holding that these are new and separate undertakings. On the other hand the fact that a portion of the articles produced in these two new indus- trial undertakings had been sold in the open market to others is a circumstance in favour of the assessee that the new industrial units can function on their own. Use of the articles by the assessee is not decisive to deny the benefit of section 15C.

Section 15C partially exempts from tax a new industri- al unit which is separate physically from the old one, the capital of which and the profits thereon are ascertainable. There is no difficulty to hold that section 15C is applica- ble to an absolutely new undertaking for the first time started by an assessee. The cases which give rise to controversy are those where the old business is being car- ried on by the assessee and a new activity is launched by him by establishing new plants and machinery by investing substantial funds. The new activity may produce the same commodities of the old business or it may produce some other distinct marketable products, even commodities which may feed the old business. These products may be consumed by the assessee in his old business or may be sold in the open market. One thing is certain that the new undertaking must be an integrated unit by itself wherein articles are pro- duced and at least a minimum of ten persons with the aid of power and a minimum of twenty persons without the aid of power have been employed. Such a new industrially recognisa- ble unit of an assessee cannot be said to be reconstruction of his old business since there is no transfer of any assets of the old business to the new undertaking which takes place when there is reconstruction of the old busi- ness. For the purpose Of section 15C the industrial units set up must be new in-the sense that new plants and machin- ery are erected for producing either the same commodities or some distinct commodities. In order to deny the benefit of section 15C the new undertaking must be formed by recon- struction of the old business. Now in the instant case there is no formation of any industrial undertaking out of the existing business since that can take place only when the assets of the old business are transferred substantially to the new undertaking. There is no such transfer of assets in the two cases with which we are concerned.

771

We will now deal with the question whether the two undertak- ings the assessee are formed by reconstruction of the exist- ing business. The word 'reconstruction' is not defined in the Act but has received judicial interpretation. In re South African Supply and Cold Storage Company, Wild v. Same Company(1), Buckley, J. dealing with the meaning of the word 'reconstruction' in a company matter observed as fol- lows :--

"What does 'reconstruction' mean ? To my mind it means this. An undertaking of some definite' kind is being carried on, and the conclusion is arrived at that it is not desirable to kill that undertaking, but that it is desirable to preserve it in some form, and to do so, not by selling it to an outsider who shall carry it on--that would be a mere sale--but in some altered form to continue the undertaking in Such a manner as that the persons now carrying it on will substantially continue to carry it on. It involves, I think, that substantially the same business shall be carried on and substantially the same persons shall carry it on. But it does not involve that all the assets shall pass to the new company or resuscitated company, or that all the shareholders of the old company shall be shareholders in the new company or resusci- tated company. Substantially the business and the persons interested must be the same".

This concept of reconstruction was accepted by the Bombay High Court in the Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay City-I v. Gaekwar Foam and Rubber Co. Ltd. (1), dealing with section 15C of the Act. While adverting to the passage which we have just quoted the Bombay "Now fully appreciating the distinction which counsel for the Revenue has sought to make between the case of a reconstruction of a company and the case of reconstruction of a business, these observations, as we read them, are equally illuminating in the context of reconstruction of business already in existence in the case of a newly established industrial undertaking".

The Delhi High Court also in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Gangs Sugar Corpora-

tion Ltd.(a), accepted the above concept of 'reconstruction' in the following passage :-

"We have given the matter our earnest consideration and are of the view that in the reconstruction of business, as in the reconstruction of a company, there is an element of transfer of assets and of some change, however partial or restricted it may be, of ownership of the assets. The transfer, however, need not be of all the assets. It is none the less impera- tive that there should be continuity and preservation of the old undertaking though in an altered form.
(1) [1904] 2 Ch. 268. 35 I.T.R. 662.
(3) 92 I.T.R. 173.
772

The concept of reconstruction of business would not be attracted when a company which is already running one industrial unit sets up another industrial unit. The new indus- trial unit would not lose its separate and independent identity even though it has been set up by a company which is already running an industrial unit before the setting up of the new unit".

We endorse the above views with regard to reconstruction of business.

Reconstruction of business involves the idea of substan- tially the same persons carrying on substantially the same business. It is stated on behalf of the Revenue that the same company in the instant case continues to do the same business of heavy engineering---no matter certain spare parts necessary as components to completion of the end- product are now manufactured in the business itself. The fact that the assessee is carrying on the general business of heavy engineering will not prevent him from setting up new industrial undertakings and from claiming benefit under section-15C if that section is otherwise applicable. Howev- er, in order to be entitled to the benefit under' section 15C, the following facts have to be established by the assessee. subject always to the time-schedule in the section :--

(1) investment of substantial fresh capi- tal in the industrial undertaking set up, (2) employment of requisite labour therein, (3) manufacture or production of articles in the said undertaking, (4) earning of profits clearly attributa- ble to the said new undertaking, and (5) above all, a separate and distinct identity of the industrial unit set up.

We may add that there is no bar to an assessee carrying on a particular business to set up a new industrial undertaking on account of which exemption of tax under section 15C may be claimed.

The legislature has advisedly refrained from inserting a definition of the word 'reconstruction' in the Act. Indeed, in the infinite variety of instances of restructuring of industry in the course of strides in technology and of other developments, the question has to be left for decision on the peculiar facts of each case.

If any undertaking is not formed by reconstruction of the old business that undertaking will not be denied the benefit of section 15C simply because it goes to expand the general business of the assessee on some directions. As in the instant case, once the new industrial undertakings are separate and independent production units' in the sense that the commodities produced or the results achieved are commercially tangible products and the undertakings can be carried on 773 separately without complete absorption and losing their identity in the old business, they are not to be treated as being formed by reconstruction of the old business. The business of the assessee is of heavy engineering. The two new undertakings are independently producing arti- cles which may be of aid to the principal business but yet the undertakings are distinct and not reconstruction out of the existing business of the assessee. Use by the assessee of the articles produced in its existing business or the concept of expansion are not decisive tests in construing section 15C. The High Court is not right in holding the two undertakings as formed by reconstruction of the existing business of the assessee.

Several decisions have been cited at the bar before us. We approve of the conclusions in Commissioner of In- come-tax v. Ganga Sugar Corporation Ltd. (supra); Rajeswari Mills Ltd. v. Commissioner of income-tax, Madras(1); Nagar- das Bechardas & Brothers P Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income- tax Gujarat (2); Commissioner of Income-tax, West Bengal-I v. Electric Construction and Equipment Company Ltd.(3); Commissioner ofIncome-tax v. Hindusthan Motors Limited(4). The decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Naya Sahitya(5) does not represent the correct legal position and, hence, cannot be approved.

We may observe that we are not required to consider in these appeals how profit will be actually calculated in order to determine the quantum of exemption of six per cent of the profit on the capital employed. If difficulties are insurmountable and, therefore, profit cannot be ascer- tained, that will be a different question in the course of practical application of the section. That kind of a possi- ble difficulty should not weigh in the true construction of section 15C. In the present case the assessee claimed profit and there was no difficulty about ascertainment of the exempted profit as separate books of accounts were kept and the undertakings were at separate places. In view of the foregoing discussion, we are clearly of opinion that the High Court is not right in answering the two questions in the negative and against the assessee. On the other hand. the Tribunal was right in answering the two questions in the affirmative and against the Department. The two questions referred stand answered in the affirma- tive. The judgment of the High Court, is, therefore, set aside and the appeals are allowed with costs.

	P.B.R.					   Appeals allowed.
	   (1) 50 I.T.R. 29.
	   (2) 104 I.T.R. 255.
	   (3) 104 I.T.R. 101.
	   (4) [1976] Taxation Law Reports. 821.
	   (5) 84  I.T.R.  567.
	112 SCI/77--GIPF
	774