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[Cites 11, Cited by 11]

Supreme Court of India

Indore Malwa United Mills vs Commissioner Of Income-Tax, (Central) ... on 19 November, 1965

Equivalent citations: 1966 AIR 1466, 1966 SCR (2) 651, AIR 1966 SUPREME COURT 1466

Author: R.S. Bachawat

Bench: R.S. Bachawat, A.K. Sarkar, J.R. Mudholkar

           PETITIONER:
INDORE MALWA UNITED MILLS

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
COMMISSIONER OF INCOME-TAX, (CENTRAL) BOMBAY

DATE OF JUDGMENT:
19/11/1965

BENCH:
BACHAWAT, R.S.
BENCH:
BACHAWAT, R.S.
SARKAR, A.K.
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.

CITATION:
 1966 AIR 1466		  1966 SCR  (2) 651
 CITATOR INFO :
 RF	    1971 SC 206	 (9)
 R	    1976 SC1172	 (4,8)


ACT:
     Income-tax	 Act,  1922, s. 4(1)  (9)--Assessee  a	non-
resident--Receiving  cheques  by  post	from  Government  of
India--Post   office  whether  agent  of  assessee   or	  of
Government  of	India--Income  whether	taxable	 in  British
India.



HEADNOTE:
     The  appellant-company  carried  on  the  business	  of
manufacturing  textile	goods at Indore and had	 offices  at
Indore and Bombay.  During its account years 1942 to 1947 it
supplied  goods to the Indian Stores Department,  Government
of  India.   The purchase orders were placed by	 the  latter
with  the  appellant at Indore which was then in  an  Indian
State.	  On  receipt  of  bills  from	the  appellant	 the
Government of India used to draw cheques on the Reserve Bank
of  India,  Bombay, in favour of the appellant and  used  to
send them by post to the appellant at Indore.  The appellant
used to deposit the cheques with the Imperial Bank of  India
Indore for the purpose of realisation from the Reserve	Bank
of  India.  In connection with the assessment years  1943-44
to 1948-49 the question that arose in income-tax proceedings
was whether the profits of the appellant--a non--resident-in
respect	 of the supplies were received by the  appellant  in
British India and therefore taxable under s. 4(1)(a) of	 the
Indian	Income-tax Act, 1922.  The departmental	 authorities
held that the payment was received by the appellant at	Bom-
bay  where  the	 cheques were  encashed	 but  the  Appellate
Tribunal  took	the view that the payment  was	received  at
Indore.	  In reference the High Court held on the  basis  of
this  Court's  decision	 in Commissioner  of  Income-tax  v.
Kirloskar  Bros.   Ltd.	 (1954)	 25  I.T.R.  547  which	 had
meanwhile  been delivered that the cheques were received  by
the  assessee through its agent, the post office in  British
India  and  further held that the Revenue  authorities	were
entitled  to raise the contention for the first time in	 the
High  Court.   With certificate the appellant came  to	this
Court.
      HELD : (i) Whereas in the present case the question of
law  in issue between the parties and referred to  the	High
Court  is the broad question whether or not the assessee  is
liable	to  pay	 tax on the ground that	 the  sale  proceeds
including  the	profits	 of the sale were  received  by	 the
assessee  in British India, the Revenue authorities  may  be
permitted to argue for the first time at the hearing of	 the
reference that on the facts found by the Tribunal, the	post
office	was  the agent of the assessee for  the	 purpose  of
receiving the cheques representing the sale proceeds and the
assessee  received the sale proceeds in British India  where
the chequest were posted though this aspect of the  question
was not argued before the Tribunal and though the only point
there  argued was that the proceeds were received at  Bombay
where the cheques were encashed. [655 H]
     Commissioner  of Income-tax v. M/s.  Ogale Glass  Works
Ltd. [1955] 1 S.C.R. 185, Zoraster & Co. v. Commissioner  of
Income-tax, [1961] 1 S.C.R. 210 and Commissioner of  Income-
tax,  Bombay v. Scindia Steam Navigation Co. Ltd., [1962]  1
S.C.R. 788, referred to.
      The  New Jahangir Vakil Mills Ltd. v. Commissioner  of
Income-tax [1960] 1 S.C.R. 249 and Keshav Mills Co. Ltd.  v.
Commissioner   of   Income-tax,	  [1965]   2   S.C.R.	908,
distinguished.
652
     (ii) If  by an agreement, express or  implied,  between
the  creditor  and  the debtor or  by  request,	 express  or
implied,  by the creditor, the debtor is authorised  to	 pay
the debt by a cheque and to send the cheque to the  creditor
by  port,  the post office is the agent of the	creditor  to
receive the cheque and the creditor receives payment as soon
as the cheque is posted to him. [656 G]
      Commissioner of Income-tax v. M/s.  Ogale Glass  Works
Ltd.,  [1955]  1  S.C.R.  185, Jagdish	Mills  Ltd.  v.	 The
Commissioner  of Income-tax, [1960] 1 S.C.R. 236, Norman  v.
Ricketts,  (1886) 3 Times Law Reports 182 and Thairlwall  v.
The Great Northern Railway, [1910] 2 K.B. 509, relied on.
      (iii)  In	 the  instant case cl. 9 of  the  terms	 and
conditions of the contract read with the prescribed form  of
the bills and the instructions regarding payment showed that
the parties had agreed that the assessee would submit to the
Government of India, Department of Supply, New Delhi,  bills
in  the prescribed form requesting payment of the  price  of
the  supplies by cheques together with signed  receipts	 and
the  Government	 of  India would pay the  price	 by  crossed
cheques	 drawn in favour of the assessee.  Having regard  to
the  fact  that the assessee, was at Indore and	 the  Supply
Department of the Government of India was at Now Delhi,	 the
parties	 must have intended that the Government	 would	send
the cheques to the assessee by post from New Delhi, and this
inference  was supported by the fact the cheques used to  be
sent  to the assessee by post.	In the	circumstances  there
was  an	 implied  agreement between  the  parties  that	 the
Government  of	India would send the cheques by	 post.	 The
Government  of India was entitled to ignore  the  subsequent
request	 of the. assessee for cheques on an Indore bank	 and
the  assessee received payment of the price as and when	 the
cheques on the Reserve Bank of India Bombay, were posted  in
British India in accordance with the contract (657 D; 658 Al
     Thairlwall v. The Great Northern Railway, [1910] 2 K.B.
509 and Commissioner of Income-tax v. Patney & Co. (1959) 36
I.T.R. 488, referred to.
      On the above view the profits in respect of the  sales
were taxable under s. 4(1) (a) of the Indian Income-tax Act,
1922.



JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 10061011 of 1963.

Appeal from the judgment and order dated September 25, 1959 of the Bombay High Court in Income-tax Reference No. 36 of 1955.

G. S. Pathak, B. Dutta, R. J. Kolah and J. B. Dadachanji, for the appellant.

Niren De, Addl. Solicitor-General, Gopal Singh and R. N. Sachthey, for the respondent.

The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Bachawat, J. These appeals arise out of proceedings for assessment of income-tax of the appellant Company (hereinafter referred to as the assessee) for the assessment years, 1943-44, 1944-45, 1945-46, 1946-47, 1947-48 and 1948- 49, the relevant 653 accounting years being the Calendar years, 1942, 1943, 1944, 1945, 1946 and 1947 respectively.

During the relevant accounting years, the assessee was a nonresident. It carried on the business of manufacturing textile goods at Indore then situated in an Indian State, and had offices at Indore and Bombay. The assessee supplied goods to the Indian Stores Department, Government of India, under purchase orders placed by the latter with the assessee at Indore. Duplicate copies of the purchase orders signed on behalf of the assessee at Indore used to be sent to the Government of India in British India. The goods used to be inspected at Indore by an inspecting officer of the Government and the inspection certificates were issued at Indore. One of the conditions of the contract was that the delivery would be F.O.R., Indore, and the freight from Indore would be borne by the Government of India. The goods used to be despatched by railway from Indore station and the railway receipts used to be made out in the name of a representative of the Government. There were two types of purchase orders, namely, (1) purchasewar order and (2) bulk purchase order. Clause 9 of the bulk purchase order was in these terms "9. Payment : Unless otherwise agreed between the parties, payment for the delivery of the stores will be made on submission of bills in the prescribed form in accordance with the instructions given in the Acceptance of Tender by cheque on a Government Treasury in British India or on a branch in British India of the Reserve Bank of India or the Imperial Bank of India transacting Government business."

From the judgment of K. T. Desai, J. it appears that in the High Court both parties agreed that the aforesaid cl. 0 was one of the terms on which all the goods were supplied by the assessee. In paragraph 2 of the petition for leave to appeal to this Court and, paragraph 3 of the appellant's statement of case also, the assessee stated that the contracts between the parties were subject to the aforesaid cl. 9. The prescribed form of the bill (Form No. WSB. 116) which the assessee was required to submit to the Goverment of India, Department of Supply, contained inter alia, the following receipt clause Received payment one anna Please pay by cheque receipt stamp on to Self on Bank original only Bank Treasury Contractor's at.........................

signature Contractor's signature."

654

Instructions Nos. 13 and 14 with regard to payment were as follows :

"13. If payment is desired to be made to the Con- tractor's Bankers or other parties, the endorsement must be completed on the Bill Form (W.S.B. Form No. 116) and signed separately and the word 'Self' scored out; in addition, a power of attorney will be necessary in such cases, except when payment is desired to a Bank mentioned in the second schedule to the Reserve Bank Act.
14. Payment in all cases will be made to the Contractors by the Accounts Officer named in the Acceptance of Tender by means of crossed cheques, unless a specific request is made to the contrary for the issue of an open cheque on the bill."

The assessee used to make out bills in the prescribed form. The receipt clause in the completed bill used to be in the following terms : "Please pay by cheque to self on a bank at Indore."

The receipt clause in the bill used to be signed in advance on behalf of the assessee on a one anna stamp. The bills with the signed receipts of the assessee then used to be sent to the Controller of Supplies, New Delhi after the latter was debited with the amounts of the bills in the books of the assessee. On receipt of the bills, the Government of India used to draw cheques on the Reserve Bank of India, Bombay in favour of the assessee and used to send them by post to the assessee at Indore. On receipt of the cheques, the assessee used to credit the Controller of Sup- plies in its books with the amount of the cheques, and then used to deposit the cheques in their account with the Imperial Bank of India, Indore, and thereupon, the Bank used to credit the assessee in the aforesaid account with the amount of the cheques.

The question is whether on these facts the profits of the assessee, a non-resident, in respect of the supplies were received by the assessee in British India and, therefore, taxable under s. 4(1) (a) of the Indian Income- tax Act, 1922. Before the Appellate Tribunal and at all stages of the assessment proceedings, the contention of the revenue authorities wag that the profits were received at Bombay where the. cheques on the Reserve Bank of India, Bombay were encashed. By its order dated March 13, 1953, the Appellate Tribunal negatived this contention, and held that the amounts of the cheques were received by it at Indore. On the application of the Commissioner of Income- tax, Central 655 Bombay under s. 66(1) of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922, the Tribunal by its order dated March 4, 1955 referred the following question of law to the Bombay High Court:

"Whether the assessee Company is liable to pay tax in the taxable territories on the ground that the sale proceeds, which included the profit element therein, were received in the taxable territories ?"

In its order dated March 4, 1955, the Tribunal referred to the decision of this Court in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Kirloskar Bros. Ltd.(1) decided on April 19, 1954, and stated that on the facts of the case, a contention might arise that the assessee had requested the Government to send the cheque by post and the post office as the agent of the assessee, had received the cheques in British India, but the Tribunal pointed out that this contention had not been raised before it.

The reference under S. 66(1) was heard by a Division Bench of the Bombay High Court consisting of J. C. Shah and S. T. Desai, JJ. J. C. Shah, J. answered the question referred to the High Court in the affirmative, whereas S. T. Desai, J. answered it in the negative. The matter then went before the third Judge, K. T. Desai, J. who agreed with J. C. Shah, J. and answered the question in the affirmative. The majority of the Judges held that the cheques were received by the assessee through its agent, the post office in British India and the Revenue authorities were entitled to urge this contention for the first time in the High Court. The assessee now appeals to this Court on a certificate granted by the Bombay High Court.

In the appeals before us, the following two questions arise (1) Was the post office the agent of the assessee to receive the cheques representing the sale proceeds on its behalf, and did the assessee consequently receive the sale proceeds through its agent in British India; and (2) whether the Revenue authorities could raise this contention for the first time at the hearing of the reference before the High Court, though this contention was not raised by it before the Tribunal or at any stage of the assessment proceedings ?

Where, as in this case, the question of law in issue between the parties and referred to the High Court is the board question whether or not the assessee is liable to pay tax on the ground that the sale proceeds including the profits of the sale were received (1) (1954) 25 I.T.R. 547.

656

by the assessee in British India, the Revenue authorities may be permitted to argue for the first time at the hearing of the reference that on the facts found by the Tribunal, the post office was the agent of the assessee for the purpose of receiving the cheques representing the sale proceeds and the assessee received the sale proceeds in British India where the cheques were posted, though this aspect of the question was not argued before the Tribunal and though the only point there argued was that the sale proceeds were received at Bombay where the cheques were encashed. See The Commissioner of Income-tax v. Messrs. Ogale Glass Works Ltd(1) Zoraster & Co. v. Commissioner of Income-tax(2). See also Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay v. Scindia Steam Navigation Co. Ltd.(3). The decision in The New Jehangir Vakil Mills Ltd. v. The Commissioner of Income- tax(4 ) relied on by the assessee is distinguishable. There, the question of law referred to the High Court was "Whether the receipt of the cheques at Bhavnagar amounted to receipt of sale proceeds in Bhavnagar ?", and this question was not broad enough to cover the enquiry whether there were postings of the cheques at the request of the assessee and receipts of the cheques by the assessee through the post office in British India. The precise point decided by this Court in the New Jehangir Vakil Mills'(4) case was that the High Court has no jurisdiction under s. 66(4) to direct the Tribunal to collect evidence not already on the record and to make it a part of a supplementary statement of case, and this decision was followed and affirmed recently in Keshav Mills Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax("). But, in the instant case, the High Court did not call for any supplementary statement of case. Nor is the question of law referred in this case a narrow one as in the New Jehangir Vakil Mills' case(4) so as to exclude consideration of the contention that the assessee received the sale proceeds through its agent, the post office in British India. We are, therefore, satisfied that the Revenue authorities can raise this contention for the first time in the High Court.' The next question is whether the post office was the agent of the assessee to receive the cheques representing the sale proceeds and whether the assessee received the sale proceeds in British India where the cheques were posted. Now, if by an agreement, express or implied, between the creditor and the debtor or by a request, express or implied, by the creditor, the debtor is authorised to pay the debt by a cheque and to send the cheque to the creditor (1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 185.

(3) [1962] 1 S. C.R. 788,814.

(5) [1965] 2 S.C.R. 908.

(2) [1961] 1 S . C.R. 210.

(4) [1960] 1 S.C.R. 249.

657

by post, the post office is the agent of the creditor to receive the cheque and the creditor receives payment as soon as the cheque is posted to him. See The Commissioner of Income-tax v. Messrs. Ogale Glass Works Ltd.(1), Jagdish Mills Ltd. v. The Commissioner of Income-tax(2 ) approving Norman v. Ricketts(1), Thairlwall v. The Great Northern Railway(3). In Messrs. Ogale Glass Works' case(1), there was an express request by the assessee at Aundh to its debtor in Delhi to remit the amount of the bills by cheques. In Jagdish Mills case (2), there was a stipulation between the assessee and its debtor that the debtor in Delhi should pay the assessee in Baroda the amount due to the assessee by cheques, and this Court held that there was by necessary implication a request by the assessee to the debtor to send the cheques by post from Delhi, thus constituting the post office its agent for the purpose of receiving the payments. In the instant case, cl. 9 of the terms and conditions of the contract read with the prescribed form of the bills and the instructions regarding payment show that the parties had agreed that the assessee would submit to the Government of India, Department of Supply,- New Delhi, bills in the prescribed form requesting payment of the price of the supplies by cheques together with signed receipts and the Government of India would pay the price by crossed cheques drawn in favour of the assessee. Having regard to the fact that the assessee was at Indore and the Supply Department of the Government of India was at New Delhi, the parties must have intended that the Government would send the cheques to the assessee by post from New Delhi, and this inference is supported by the fact that the cheques used to be sent to the assessee by post. In the circumstances, there was an implied agreement between the parties that the Government of India would send. the cheques to the assessee by post. Mr. Pathak argued that the assessee had requested the Government to pay money by cheques on a bank at Indore and as that request was not complied with and the Government of India sent instead cheques on the Reserve Bank of India, Bombay, there was no effective request by the assessee to the Government to send the cheque by post. But independently of any subsequent request by the assessee, the contract between the parties authorised the Government of India to pay the price by cheques drawn on the Reserve Bank of India, Bombay and imported a request by the assessee to the Government of India to send the cheques by post. (1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 185.

(2) [1960] 1 S.C.R. 236.

(3) (1886) 3 Times Law Reports. 182.

(4) [1910] 2 K.B. 509.

658

The Government of India was entitled to ignore the subsequent request of the assessee for cheques on an Indore bank and the assessee received payments of the price as and when the cheques on the Reserve Bank of India, Bombay were posted in British India in accordance with the contract. In Thairlwall v. Great Northern Railway(1) Lord Coleridge, J. observed :

"The real question is whether the posting of the warrant was payment of the amount of the dividend. To establish that it was, the defendants must prove a request by the plaintiff or an agreement between the plaintiff and the defendants that payment should be made by means of a warrant posted to the plaintiff. If such a request or agreement is proved, then payment is established by posting even although the instrument is lost in the post : Norman v. Ricketts(2)."

Mr. Pathak contended that the assesseee and the Government of India had agreed that the sale proceeds would be paid to the assessee in Indore outside British India, and therefore the rule in Messrs. Ogale Glass Works' case(3) did not apply, having regard to the decision in Commissioner of Income-tax v. Patney & Co.(4). We are not inclined to accept this contention. There is nothing on the record to show that there was any express agreement between the parties that the sale proceeds would be paid to the assessee at Indore. We are satisfied that the post office was the agent of the assessee for the purpose of receiving the cheques representing the sale proceeds and the assessee received the sale proceeds in British India where the cheques were posted, and consequently, the profits in respect of the sales were taxable under S. 4 (1) (a). The High Court, therefore, rightly answered the question in the affirmative.

Mr. Pathak and following him Mr. Kolah submitted that the assessee would have led additional evidence to disprove the contention that the post office acted as its agent, had that contention been raised before the Tribunal, and the Revenue authorities should not, therefore, have been allowed by the High Court to raise the new contention. On being asked what additional evidence would have been led by the assessee, counsel said that the assessee would have led evidence to show (a) that the purchase orders were accepted by the assessee under compulsion of the (1) [1910] 2 K.B. 509. (2) (1886) 3 Times Law Reports 182. (3) [1955] 1 S.CR. 185. (4) (1959) 36 I.T.R. 488.

659

Defence of India Act and Rules and consequently there was no voluntary request by the assessee for payment by cheques, and (b) the Imperial Bank of India, Indore, as the statutory agent of the Reserve Bank of India, Bombay, paid the amount of the cheques to the assessee at Indore. But counsel was unable to show any provision of the Defence of India Act or Rules under which the assessee was obliged to accept the purchase orders, and we need not, therefore, enquire into the correctness of counsel's assumption that acceptance of the purchase orders under compulsion of law would have negatived the contention that the post office acted as the agent of. the assessee. And if the assessee received payment by cheques posted in British India, the fact that subsequently the Imperial Bank of India, Indore as the statutory agent of the Reserve Bank of India, Bombay paid the amount of the cheques at Indore would not take the case of the assessee out of the purview of S. 4 (1) (a). We are, therefore, satisfied that the assessee was not prevented from adducing any material evidence by reason of the omission of the Revenue authorities to argue the new point before the Tribunal. We do not, therefore, think it necessary to express any opinion on the question whether the Court should refuse to allow the Revenue authorities to raise a new contention where by reason of their omission to raise the contention before the Tribunal, the assessee had been prevented from adducing material evidence on the point. In the result, the appeals are dismissed with costs, one set.

Appeals dismissed.

660