Mundulpoor Coal Co. Ltd. Vs Commissioner of Income Tax

Calcutta High Court 1 Jan 1965 Income-tax Reference No. 131 of 1962 (1965) 01 CAL CK 0026
Bench: Division Bench
Acts Referenced

Judgement Snapshot

Case Number

Income-tax Reference No. 131 of 1962

Hon'ble Bench

Masud, J; G.K. Mitter, J

Advocates

A.C. Mitra, D. Pal and P.L. Khaitan, for the Appellant; S. Mukherjee and B. Gupta, for the Respondent

Acts Referred
  • Income Tax Act, 1922 - Section 24(2)

Judgement Text

Translate:

Masud, J.@mdashThe facts under which this reference u/s 66 (1) of the Income Tax Act, 1922 arises may be briefly stated as follows :

The assessee company had its mines known by the name Mundulpoor Coal Co., Ltd. In Ranigunj Coal Fields In Bihar. This business was closed down on March 10, 1957 which falls within the accounting year relevant to the assessment year 1957-58. The accounting period ended on March 31, 1957, During the relevant assessment year the assessee suffered a loss of Rs. 1,72,463/- from this mine. On March 14, 1957 the assessee took up a contract for raising coal from the colliery belonging to Central India Coal Fields Ltd. known as Khas Badjans Collieries. The said loss amounting to Rs. 1,72,463/ was sought to be carried forward for the purpose of deduction against future profits of the assessee''s other venture u/s 24(2) of the Act. The Income Tax Officer refused to carry forward the said loss on the ground that the loss suffered by the assessee had arisen out of a business which had been abandoned. On appeal the Appellate Assessment Commissioner confirmed the order of the Income Tax Officer by adding a further ground that the subsequent undertaking of coal raising contract although of allied nature could not be treated as continuation of the assessee''s previous business, namely, coal mining at Mundulpoor. The assessee appealed against the said order to the Appellate Tribunal but the said appeal was dismissed. On these facts, the question of law that arises is as follows:

"Whether in the facts and circumstances of the case the two activities of the appellant company, i.e., the raising of coal from its coal mines and that from the mines belonging to other company constituted the same business or different business for that purpose of carry forward and set-off of losses determined for the assessment year 1957-58 u/s 24(2) of the Income Tax Act, 1922?"

2. Dr. D. ''Pal, learned counsel for the assesses, has submitted that the losses suffered by the assessee in its coal mining business should have been set off against the assessee''s business under the contract of coal raising from the colliery belonging to Central India Coal Fields Ltd. According to him, the coal mining business of the assessee and the contract business were different activities of the assessee''s same business and they could not be called distinct from one another. Under the Memorandum of Association of the assessee company, he added, it was competent for the assessee company to hold collieries as proprietors and also to do mining business which would include raising of coal on contracts. He further submitted that the same labour and staff which were running the Mundulpoor Mining business were diverted to the contract business of coal raisings from the colliery belonging to Central India Coal Fields Ltd. and, as such, the control and the structure of profit making in so far as the assessee was concerned were inter-dependent between the two businesses.

3. The short point to be decided In this case is whether the assessee''s business under the contract of coal raising could be described as continuation of the assessee''s coal mining business at Mundulpoor within the meaning of Section 24 (2) of the Act. The relevant provisions of Section 24 (2) read as follows :-

"Where any assessee sustains a loss of profits or gains in any year, being a previous year not earlier than the previous year for the assessment for the year ending on the 31st day of March, 1940 in business, profession or vocation and the loss cannot be wholly set off under Sub-section (1) so much of the loss as Is not so set off or the whole loss where the assessee had no other head of Income shall be carried forward to the following year, and

(i) where the loss was sustained by him In a business consisting of speculative transactions, it shall be set off only against the profits and gains, if any, of any business in speculative transactions carried on by him in that year;

(ii) where the loss was sustained by him in any other business, profession or vocation, it shall be set off against the profits and gains, if any, of any business, profession or vocation carried on by him in that year; provided that the business, profession or vocation in which the loss was originally sustained continued to be carried on by him in that year;

(iii) if the loss in either case cannot be wholly so set off, the amount of loss not so set off, shall be carried forward to the following year and so on.............. .........."

4. Thus, it is clear that under this section the assessee''s loss in its coal mining business at Mundulpoor could be carried ''forward for set off in future years against the profits or gains derived by the assesses from its business under the contract of coal raising provided that the assessee''s coal mining business at Mundulpoor could be held to have been continued in the relevant assessment year; Or in other words, we shall have to find out whether the assessee''s coal mining business and the assessee''s business under the contract of coal raising could be described as different activities of the assessee''s same business. In the instant case, the Tribunal has come to a finding that the two businesses of the assessee do not subsist at the same time end the assessee''s business under coal raising contract was started after the previous business of coal mining at Mundulpoor had been disbanded or closed. Further, there is no evidence to show that previously at any stage the assessee carried on a business under contract of coal raising, from the collieries belonging to others.

5. The Supreme Court following the dictum of Rowlatt, J., in Scales v. George Tomson and Co. Ltd., (1927) 13 Tax Cas 83 at p. 89, has laid down the principles which should govern the cases u/s 24 (2) in Setabgunj Sugar Mills Ltd. Vs. The Commissioner of Income Tax, Central, Calcutta, , where Hidayatullah, J. at P. 274 (of ITR) : (at p. 362 of AIR) has stated:-

"The (earned Judge also observed that what one had to see was whether the different ventures were so interfaced and so dovetailed in each other as to make them into the same business. These principles have to be applied to the facts, before a legal inference can be drawn that a particular business is composed of separate businesses and is not the same one. No doubt, findings of facts are involved because a variety of matters bearing on the unity of the business have to be investigated; such as unity of control and management, conduct of the business to the same agency, the inter-relation of the businesses, the employment of same capital, the maintenance of common books of account, employment of same staff to run the business, the nature of different transactions, the possibility of one being closed without affecting the texture of the other and BO forth. When, however, the true facts had been determined, the ultimate conclusion is a legal inference from proved facts, and it is one of mixed law and fact, on which depends the application of Section 24(2) of the Act."

6. Thus, it is clear that the sameness of the business activities of the assessee does not depend upon any casual or fortuitous connection. Applying the aforesaid test, we are of opinion that the assessee''s business under the contract of coal raising cannot be described as the continuation of the assessee''s coal mining business. It is nobody''s case that the assessee company is not competent to carry on the business under the contract of coal raising from other collieries. The two ventures of the assessee''s business may be perfectly permissible, under the Companies Act. But that by itself cannot be relevant factor in determining the sameness of the business. Apart from the fact that the coal mining business which involves the sale of coal after raising the coal from company''s own colliery is substantially distinct from business under the contract of coal raising from other collieries, In the instant case, the assessee''s new venture of coal raising from other colliery has not been handled by the assessee in the past. In fact, in the instant case, this new activity of the assessee has only been commenced after the old and the main venture of the assessee has been abandoned. Lastly, in the instant case, there is no inherent or factual inter-connection or inter-dependence of one venture upon the other nor could it be said that the closure of one would vitally affect the business of the other. Far from inter-dependence in this case, there is clear finding that a new venture has been undertaken by the assessee after abandonment or closure of its previous venture.

7. Dr. Pal relied upon K.S.S. Soundarapandia Nadar and Bros. Vs. Commissioner of Income Tax, where the Madras High Court held that dealing in forward contracts carried on by the assessee in the Rangoon grain market was the part of the general business of the assessee as dealers in rice and grain and that, therefore, they were entitled to set off the loss against the profits of the relevant year u/s 24(2) of the Act. Although Satya Narayana Rao, J. adopted the observations of Rowlatt, J. in (1927) 13 Tax Cas 83 (supra) it is difficult to follow how Rowlatt, J''s observations could be made applicable to the facts of that case in favour of the assessee. In any event, the facts ''Of that case are clearly distinguishable from the instant case. There the assessee for the first time entered into dealings in forward contracts in the assessment year 1938-39. In the next accounting year relevant to the assessment year 193940 the assessee bought only ready goods and did not enter into forward contracts. Again in the accounting years for two assessment years 1940-41 and 1941-42 the assessee bought ready goods and also entered into forward contracts. Thus, this is not a case where the losses suffered by the assesses in its one venture is being sought to set off against the profits and gains of a new venture of the assessee,

8. Dr. Pal next relied on Commissioner of Income Tax, West Bengal Vs. International Industries Ltd., Calcutta, , the facts of which may be stated as follows :

The assessee company which was authorised by Its Memorandum of Association to carry on various lines of business carried on only Celluloid business in the year 1944-45 and other lines of business, such as, Managing Agency, Share dealings and Joint ventures, in the year 1945-46. The Appellate Tribunal found that the Celluloid business was entirely different from the assessee''s other activities which were started only after the Celluloid business was closed and that the Celluloid business was sold off after March, 1944 and nothing of it was left in the year 1945-46. The Calcutta High Court held that as the business carried on by the assessee in the year 1945-46 was different from the business carried on by it in the year 1944-45, the IKS sustained by the latter could not be carried forward and set off against the profits of the former under the terms of Section 24 (2).

9. In our opinion, this judgment far from supporting the assessee''s case diminishes the force of the assessee''s contention. At p. 56 (of ITR) : [at p. 128 of AIR) Chakravartti, J. relied on the findings recorded by the Tribunal 4n the additional statement of the case, namely:

"We have no hesitation in coming to the conclusion that the Celluloid business was entirely different from the other activities of the assessee company. The other activities were started only after the Celluloid business was closed. The accounts of the other activities were no doubt written up in the same books, but all it comes to is that the same set of books were continued after the close of the Celluloid business. When the other activities were started, there was no Celluloid business."

In the said case also after the closing down of the Celluloid business the services of the same staff were utilized. On the facts found by the Tribunal, Chakravartti, J. has rightly come to the conclusion that the losses sustained in the Celluloid business could not, u/s 24(2), be set off against the profits of the subsequent business.

10. For the reasons stated above the question of law should be answered in the following way:-

In the facts and circumstances of the case the two activities of the Appellant Co., i.e., the raising of coal from its own coal mines and that from the mines belonging to other company constituted different business for the purpose of carry forward and set off of losses determined for the assessment year 1957-58 u/s 24(2) of the Income Tax Act, 1922. The assessee shall bear and pay the costs of this reference.

C.K. Mitter, J.

11. I agree.

From The Blog
Madras High Court to Hear School’s Plea Against State Objection to RSS Camp on Campus
Feb
07
2026

Court News

Madras High Court to Hear School’s Plea Against State Objection to RSS Camp on Campus
Read More
Delhi High Court Quashes Ban on Medical Students’ Inter-College Migration, Calls Rule Arbitrary
Feb
07
2026

Court News

Delhi High Court Quashes Ban on Medical Students’ Inter-College Migration, Calls Rule Arbitrary
Read More