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33. The facts of the case of the assessee are exactly similar to the facts before the Hon'ble Calcutta High Court in the case of Betts Hartley Huett and Co. Ltd. (supra). In that case, it was held that the transaction between the head office of the assessee and its branch in India was a transaction between the principal and principal. In law, there cannot be a valid transaction of sale between the branch and its head office. As it is ultimately based on a proposition that no person can enter into contract with one self. Debiting or crediting one's account cannot alter the legal position. Applying the same principle as enunciated by the Hon'ble Calcutta High Court, it cannot be said that the transactions between the branches gave rise to an income assessable under the Income-tax Act. The substance of the entire transaction, in our view, appears to be pure accounting lapses on the part of the bank or its branches to properly reconcile the transactions. In fact, it is always understood that all these accounts must have cancelled each other. It did not take place that way due to human errors or lack of advice forthcoming as regards the closure of the accounts. In any case, any imbalance in the inter branch accounts, in our considered view, cannot give rise to a taxable income under the Income-tax Act. The Assessing Officer as well as CIT-DR has heavily relied upon the decision of the Hon'ble Supreme Court in the case of T.V.Sundaram Iyengar & Sons Ltd. - 222 ITR 344. In that case, the assessee received the deposits from customers in the course of its business and transferred the amounts which were not claimed by the customers to its profit & loss account. The Assessing Officer was of the view that the sums in question have become the income of the assessee because of the expiry of limitation period or other statutory or contractual rights. The amounts had the character of income and therefore, assessable to tax. The Hon'ble Supreme Court held that although the amounts received originally were not in the nature of an income, the amounts remained with the assessee for a long period 33 unclaimed by the trade parties. By the lapse of time, the claim of the deposit became time barred and the amount attained a totally different quality. It became a definite trade surplus. The assessee itself treated the money as its own money and taken the amount to its profit & loss account. The amounts were assessable in the hands of the assessee. Here, in this case, the facts are slightly different. The amounts are lying in the accounts which are known as inter branch accounts. It is expected that all these inter branch accounts should get squared up on consolidation. Due to human error of accounting or lack of proper advise from different branches, the amounts in question have remained either in debit or credit in different inter branch accounts and the bank has admittedly not reconciled these accounts for over a long period of time. It is very difficult to say that these have traces of income either at the time of receipt or at the time of write off to the profit & loss account. In fact, the Reserve Bank of India has permitted them to close these differences to the profit & loss account with a rider that the sums in question are not permitted by the Reserve Bank of India to be used in the form of distribution of dividends and it was specifically made clear by the Reserve Bank of India that the obligation to discharge the liabilities arising thereunder is upon the bank. Meaning thereby, there is no question of the amounts being treated as income in the hands of the bank. We must appreciate that these transactions in the inter branch accounts are mere accounting entries. When the transactions were made to these accounts initially, these were not in the nature of income either of the branches involved or of the bank as a whole. It is a part of transactions on the real accounts and not on what is known as revenue accounts. Therefore, it is difficult to say that the amounts in question bear the same character as unclaimed deposit received from the customers by the assessee T.V.Sundaram Iyengar & Sons Ltd.