S.J. Vazifdar, C.J. - This is an appeal against the order of the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal, partly allowing the appellant''s appeal against the
order of the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) pertaining to the assessment year 2003-04.
2. By an order dated 12.07.2010 the Division Bench admitted the appeal on the following substantial questions of law: -
1. Whether the Tribunal is right in law in holding that income earned by the assessee on account of interest received from employees is eligible for
deduction u/s 80P(2)(a)(i) of the Income-tax Act?
2. Whether the Hon''ble Tribunal is right in law in holding that deduction u/s 80P(2)(a)(i) of the Income-tax Act is allowable on the provision for
non performing assets?
3. Whether the Tribunal is right in law in holding that the interest on reserve funds is attributable to the business of providing credit facility to
members and is eligible for deduction u/s 80P(2)(a)(i) of the Income-tax Act?
4. Whether the Hon''ble Tribunal is right in law in holding that interest on account of call deposits is attributable to the activity of providing credit
facility to the members and is eligible for deduction u/s 80P(2)(a)(i) of the Income-tax Act?
3. As is evident from the questions of law, the dispute essentially centers around Section 80P(2)(a)(i) which in so far as it is relevant to this appeal
reads as under: -
Deduction in respect of income of co-operative societies.
80P. (1) Where, in the case of an assessee being a co-operative society, the gross total income includes any income referred to in sub-section (2),
there shall be deducted, in accordance with and subject to the provisions of this section, the sums specified in subsection (2), in computing the total
income of the assessee.
(2) The sums referred to in sub-section (1) shall be the following, namely: -
(a) in the case of a co-operative society engaged in
(i) carrying on the business of banking or providing credit facilities to its members, or
(ii) a cottage industry, or
xxx xxx xxx
the whole of the amount of profits and gains of business attributable to any one or more of such activities.
4. In view of the manner in which the matter proceeded before the authorities under the Act and before us it is necessary at the outset to mention
that Mr. Sanjay Bansal, learned senior counsel appearing on behalf of the respondent-assessee, has contended that the assessee claims the
deduction under Section 80P(2)(a)(i) both on the basis that it is engaged in carrying on the business of banking as well as on the basis that it is
engaged in providing credit facilities to its members. The Tribunal, however, considered the assessee''s case only on the basis that it is carrying on
the business of providing credit facilities to its members.
The Tribunal has not considered whether the assessee is also carrying on the business of banking.
We have not accepted the assessee''s case based on it being engaged in carrying on the business of providing credit facilities to its members. The
assessee must, therefore, have an opportunity of establishing its case that it is also engaged in carrying on the business of banking as well. We
intend permitting the assessee to raise this contention before the Tribunal upon remand.
5. It is necessary, therefore, to deal with this appeal in two parts. The first is whether it is open to the assessee to contend in this appeal which is
filed by the Revenue that it is carrying on the business of banking. The second is a consideration of the appeal on the basis of the Tribunal''s order
which as we mentioned is only based on the assessee''s business of providing credit facilities to its members.
6. Ms. Urvashi Dhugga, learned counsel appearing on behalf of the Revenue contends that the assessee is not entitled to raise this contention as it
had given up the same before the Tribunal. It is submitted that before the Tribunal even the assessee did not press its case that it was also carrying
on the business of banking. It is necessary, therefore, firstly to determine whether the assessee gave up or did not press this contention before the
Tribunal. In deciding this point, it will be necessary to refer to what transpired before the authorities in the assessee''s case for other assessment
years.
7. In this appeal which pertains to the assessment year 2003-04, the assessee admittedly raised the contention that it is engaged in carrying on the
business of banking. This is evident from the order of the CIT(A) which deals with the issue in considerable detail. That there are contradictory
findings in this regard is another matter. The CIT(A) partly allowed the assessee''s appeal. However, on the items which are the subject matter of
this appeal, the CIT(A) held in favour of the assessee. It may only be noted that the CIT(A) held that the AO was not justified in assessing the
income of interest on reserve fund under the head ""income from other sources"" as it is income from baking business and is exempt under Section
80P(2)(a)(i).
8. We now refer to what transpired in respect of the proceedings relating to the other assessment years which pertain to the period prior to the
decision of the Tribunal in the present case which is dated 25.03.2009.
(A) Ms. Dhugga in support of her contention that the assessee had abandoned the plea of banking before the Tribunal in the present case and in
the other connected cases, relied upon the papers and proceedings in ITA-644-2009 which relates to the assessment year 2002-03. She firstly
relied upon the following paragraphs in the order of the CIT(A) dated 03.03.2008 in that case which read as under: -
3. However, the assessee vide its letter dated 28/01/2008 has amended ground No.1 & 6 as under:
Ground No.1:
In A.Y. 2003-04, wherein the issues involve were same, the Ld. CIT (Appeals) held that assessee is engaged in providing credit facilities to its
members and therefore the income arising therefrom is exempt from tax u/s 80P(2)(a)(i) though not as Bank. Ground No.1 is therefore amended
accordingly and the income is claimed exempt u/s 80P(2)(a)(i) being providing credit facilities to its members.
9. The assessee in its amended grounds of appeal has accepted the position as held by the Assessing Officer that the assessee is not engaged in the
business of banking. Since the assessee has accepted the stand of the Department, this ground of the assessee becomes infructuous.
(B). Paragraph 3 of the order of the CIT(A) quoted above does not state that the assessee had abandoned its plea that it carried on the business
of banking. It appears to us that having succeeded before the CIT(A) in respect of the assessment year 2003-04 the assessee sought to have the
appeals pending before the CIT(A) disposed of in terms of the order of the CIT(A) for the assessment year 2003-04 as in respect of the issues in
question the assessee had even succeeded on the ground that it carried on the business of providing credit facilities to its members.
(C). What is stated in paragraph 9 is only an inference drawn by the CIT(A) on the basis of what is stated in paragraph 3. It is not a reference to a
fact. It is in any event not clear if it is on the basis of the record. What is stated in paragraph 3 does not, at least unequivocally, indicate that the
assessee had abandoned its case that it carries on the business of banking. The letter dated 20.01.2008 referred to in paragraph 3 is not available.
Nor is the amended memorandum of appeal filed by the assessee before the CIT(A). The reliance to the amendment of ground Nos.1 and 6 by
the letter dated 20.01.2008 is admittedly in respect of the assessment year 2002-03.
(D). The original memorandum of appeal, however, is available and it was produced before us. In grounds No.1 and 6 the assessee had
admittedly clearly contended that it is doing the business of banking and its entire income is, therefore, liable to be exempted under Section 80P(2)
(a)(i). The original ground Nos.1 and 6 read as under: -
1. That the order of the learned Assessing Officer that the assessee is not doing the business of Banking is erroneous. Since inception for more
than 30 years it is accepted by the Department that assessee is doing the business of Banking and its entire income has been held exempt under
Section 80-P(2)(a)(i) has been held to be exempt not only by the learned Assessing Officer but also by Hon''ble Tribunal following Supreme Court
judgments. The learned Assessing Officer was, therefore, not justified in not allowing its entire income of Rs.32,25,35,660/- (as computed) exempt
under Section 80-P(2)(a)(i).
6. That the learned Assessing Officer was further not justified in assessing income of Rs.4,31,53,411/- under head ""Other Sources"". It is income
from Banking business and is exempt under Section 80- P(2)(a)(i).
(E). The case was, therefore, expressly pleaded in the appeal. The order of the Tribunal does not state that the assessee abandoned this plea. The
amendment to the memorandum of appeal filed before the CIT(A) in respect of assessment year 2002-03 is not available. Paragraph 3 of the
order of the CIT(A) does not state that the assessee abandoned its plea. These facts, therefore, in any event lean in favour of the assessee to the
effect that it had neither abandoned its case nor admitted that it did not carry on the business of banking.
(F). There is an important fact that militates against Ms. Dhugga''s contention that the assessee had abandoned its case that it carried on the
business of banking. In the present case, pertaining to assessment year 2003-04, as well, the impugned order of the Tribunal in the appeal before
us records the contention on behalf of the Revenue as under: -
3....The claim of exemption u/s 80P(2)(a)(i), which is in dispute before us, relates to (i) Interest from employees = Rs.87,60,051/-, (ii) Interest on
reserve funds = Rs.3,98,94,432/-, (iii) Interest on loans to non-members = Rs.25,07,307/-, (iv) Interest on call deposit account =
Rs.5,84,41,396/- & (iv) Disallowance on provision of non-performing assets (NPA) = Rs.16,75,070/-......
5. The stand of the Revenue is that the assessee is not eligible for the exemption u/s 80P(2)(a)(i) because the assessee is not doing the business of
banking. The learned DR pointed out that the Assessing Officer has concluded that the Banking Regulation Act,1949 does not cover the assessee
and therefor, it could not be said that the assessee was in the business of banking as defined in the Banking Regulation Act, 1949. According to the
learned CIT DR, the objects of the assessee are merely to provide credit facility to its members and it is only on this basis that it can be considered
that Section 80P(2)(a)(i) is admissible to the assessee. So, however, in so far as the afore-stated incomes are concerned, namely interest on loans
given to employees, non-members, on call deposits and reserve funds, the same cannot be said to be as an activity of providing credit facilities to
its members and, therefore, the Assessing Officer was justified in denying the exemption u/s 80P(2) (a)(i) to the said incomes.....
Had the assessee in fact abandoned its case that it was engaged in the business of carrying on banking or had conceded that it was not carrying on
the business of banking, this contention would never have been raised by the Revenue. In that event, it would not have been necessary for the
Revenue to have raised this contention. On the contrary, it would have been contented on behalf of the Revenue, as it was before us, that the
assessee had abandoned its case or had in fact conceded this point.
9. It is difficult to imagine the assessee having abandoned its case that it also carried on the business of banking. It is even more difficult to accept
the contention that the assessee admitted that it did not carry on the business of banking. Apart from the order of the CIT(A) which we have
quoted above, our attention was not invited to any other material which could be of assistance in deciding this issue. Considering the facts and
circumstances of the case, we would lean in favour of permitting a party, be it the Revenue or the assessee, of having its case decided on merits
rather than on a concession.
10. To us it appears obvious that the Tribunal decide the appeal on the present issue in favour of the assessee on the basis that it was engaged in
carrying on the business of providing credit facilities to its members and, therefore, did not consider it necessary to deal with the assessee''s claim
on the basis that it was also engaged in carrying on the business of banking.
11. The contention that the assessee abandoned its case that it was engaged in carrying on the business of banking or that it had admitted that it
was not engaged in carrying on the business of banking is therefore, rejected.
12. Faced with this, Ms. Dhugga contended that even this aspect cannot be gone into in the present appeal as the appellant has not filed an appeal
or cross-objections in this appeal. This submission is not well founded.
13. Section 260A(7) of the Act and Order 41, Rule 22 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, read as follows: -
Appeal to High Court.
260A. ..... ..... ..... .....
[(7) Save as otherwise provided in this Act, the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (5 of 1908), relating to appeals to the High Court
shall, as far as may be, apply in the case of appeals under this section.]
Order 41 : Appeals from Original Decrees.
.....................
Rule 22. Upon hearing, respondent may object to decree as if he had preferred separate appeal. - (1) Any respondent, though he may not have
appealed from any part of the decree, may not only support the decree but may also state that the finding against him in the court below in respect
of any issue ought to have been In his favour; and may also take any cross objection] to the decree which he could have taken by way of appeal,
provided he has filed such objection in the Appellate Court within one months from the date of service on him or his pleader of notice of the day
fixed for hearing the appeal, or within such further time as the Appellate Court may see fit to allow: Explanation: A respondent aggrieved by a
finding of the court in the judgment on which the decree appealed against is based may, under this rule, file cross objection in respect of the decree
in so far as it is based on that finding, notwithstanding that by reason of the decision of the court on any other finding which is sufficient for the
decision of the suit, the decree, is, wholly or In part, in favour of that respondent.
(2) Form of objection and provisions applicable thereto - Such cross objection shall be in the form of the memorandum, and the provisions of rule
1, so far as they relate to the form and contents of the memorandum of appeal, shall apply thereto.
(3) Omitted
(4) Where, in any case in which any respondent has under this rule filed a memorandum of objection, the original appeal is withdrawn or is
dismissed for default, the objection so filed may nevertheless be heard and determined after such notice to the other parties as the court thinks fit,
(5) The provisions relating to appeals by indigent persons shall, so far as they can be made applicable, apply to an objection under this rule.
14. Mr. Bansal''s reliance upon the following observations in judgment of the Supreme Court in <�>Ravinder Kumar Sharma v. State of
Assam, (1999) 7 SCC 435 is well founded. Paragraphs 20, 21, 22 and 23 of the judgment read as follows: -
20. So far as the explanation was concerned, the Law Commission stated (p. 298) that it was necessary to ""empower"" the respondent to file
cross-objection against the adverse finding. That would mean that a right to file cross-objections was given but it was not obligatory to file cross-
objections. That was why the word ""may"" was used. That meant that the provision for filing cross-objections against a finding was only an enabling
provision.
21. These recommendations of the Law Commission are reflected in the Statement of Objects and Reasons for the amendment. They read as
follows:
Rule 22 [i.e. as it stood before 1976] gives two distinct rights to the respondent in appeal. The first is the right of upholding the decree of the court
of first instance on any of the grounds on which that court decided against him; and the second right is that of taking any cross-objection to the
decree which the respondent might have taken by way of appeal. In the first case the respondent supports the decree and in the second case he
attacks the decree. The language of the rule, however, requires some modification because a person cannot support a decree on a ground decided
against him. What is meant is that he may support the decree by asserting that the matters decided against him should have been decided in his
favour. The rule is being amended to make it clear. An explanation is also being added to Rule 22 empowering the respondent to file cross-
objection in respect to a finding adverse to him notwithstanding that the ultimate decision is wholly or partly in his favour."" (emphasis supplied)
Mookerjee, J. observed in <�>Nishambhu Jana case [(1984-85) 86 CWN 685] (see p. 689) that ""the amended Rule 22 Order 41 of the
Code has not brought any substantial change in the settled principles of law"" (i.e. as accepted in <�>Venkata Rao case [AIR 1943 Mad
698 : ILR 1944 Mad 147 (FB)]) and clarified (p. 691) that
it would be incorrect to hold that the explanation now inserted by Act 104 of 1976 has made it obligatory to file cross-objections even when the
respondent supports the decree by stating that the findings against him in the court below in respect of any issue ought to have been in his favour"".
22. A similar view was expressed by U.N. Bachawat, J. in <�>Tej Kumar Jain v. Purshottam [AIR 1981 MP 55] that after the 1976
Amendment, it was not obligatory to file cross-objection against an adverse finding. The explanation merely empowered the respondent to file
cross-objections.
23. In our view, the opinion expressed by Mookerjee, J. of the Calcutta High Court on behalf of the Division Bench in Nishambhu Jena''s case
(supra) and the view expressed by U.N. Bachawat, J. in Tej Kumar''s case (supra) in the Madhya Pradesh High Court reflect the correct legal
position after the 1976 Amendment. We hold that the respondent-defendant in an appeal can, without filing cross-objections attack on adverse
finding upon which a decree in part has been passed against the respondent, for the purpose sustaining the decree to the extent the lower Court
had dismissed the suit against the defendants-respondents. The filing of cross-objection, after the 1976 Amendment is purely optional and not
mandatory. In other words, the law as stated in Venkata Rao''s case (supra) by the Madras Full Bench and Chandre Prabhuji''s case (supra) by
this Court is merely clarified by the 1976 Amendment and there is no change in the law after the Amendment.
15. The assessee''s case is stronger for there is no finding by the Tribunal against it on the issue as to whether it is engaged in the business of
carrying on banking. The Tribunal, as we noted earlier, did not think it necessary to decide this issue as it found that the assessee was entitled to
succeed on another basis. There is in fact, therefore, nothing in the order of the Tribunal on this issue. In such a situation, there is no question of
requiring the assessee to file cross-objections or an independent appeal. It often happens that certain issues are not dealt with by a Court or
Tribunal although they may have been pressed especially where the Court holds in favour of a party on a different basis. This, as is apparent, is
what has happened in the present case. The submission, therefore, that the assessee is not entitled to raise this point in the absence of cross-
objections or a separate appeal is rejected.
16. Whether the assessee was at the relevant time engaged in carrying on the business of banking or not is a mixed question of law and of fact.
Considering the manner in which the proceedings have been dealt with it may be necessary to consider leading additional evidence. We refrain,
therefore, from deciding this issue and would leave it to the Tribunal to decide the same.
17. This brings us to a consideration of the questions of law on the admitted basis that the appellant is engaged in carrying on the business of
providing credit facilities to its members.
18. The four questions of law indicate the four sources of income namely interest from the amounts advanced to the assessee''s employees, interest
on reserve funds invested by the assessee, interest on the loans advanced by the assessee to non-members and interest on call deposits made by
the assessee. There is also the issue of disallowance on the provision of non-performing assets (NPA).
19. It would be convenient to deal with question No.1 last.
Re: Question No.2: -
20. As far as the disallowance on provision of non-performing assets (NPA) is concerned, it is admitted that the assessee would be entitled to the
same only in the event of it being found that it is also engaged in carrying on the business of banking. It does not arise under Section 80P(2)(a)(i)
on account of the business of providing credit facilities to the assessee''s members.
21. Question No.2 is, therefore, answered against the assessee insofar as the claim is based only on the assessee being engaged in carrying on the
business of providing credit facilities to its members.
Re: questions No.3 and 4: -
22. Ms. Dhugga''s submissions in support of her case on these two questions of law were essentially the same. We, therefore, deal with them
together.
23. The assessee earned interest income of about Rs.3.99 crores on the investment of its reserve funds. The AO disallowed the claim on the basis
that the interest was not earned on account of providing credit facilities to the assessee''s members but was earned on surplus funds kept by the
assessee in banks to earn income. The CIT(A) allowed the claim on the ground that interest invested out of reserve funds is to be treated as arising
on account of the activity attributable to the assessee''s business of providing credit facilities to its members. The Tribunal dealt with the term
attributable"" in Section 80P(2)(a)(i) and held that the income may be said to be incidental and in proximity to the business of the assessee of
providing credit facilities to its members. The Tribunal relied upon its earlier judgment including the judgment of the Special Bench of the Tribunal.
The Tribunal rejected the department''s contention that the surplus funds had been invested not for providing further credit to their members but to
maximize profits for utilisation in other areas.
24. The assessee also earned interest income of about Rs.5.84 crores from call deposits made with various banks. This income was also earned
by the assessee placing its surplus funds as deposit with banks for short terms with a view to ensure that the funds did not remain idle. The AO
declined this claim also on the ground that interest was not earned from the business of providing credit facilities to the assessee''s members. The
CIT(A), however, allowed the claim. The Tribunal upheld the decision holding that such interest was attributable to the business of providing credit
facilities to the assessee''s members.
25. Ms. Dhugga submitted that after the decision of the Tribunal dated 25.03.2009, the Supreme Court delivered the judgment in
<�>Totgar''s Co-operative Sale Society Ltd. v. Income Tax Officer (2010) 3 SCC 223. She submitted that the judgment covers the
case in favour of the Revenue. In that case, the assessee was also a Cooperative Credit Society which provided credit facilities to its members and
also marketed the agricultural produce of its members. The society had surplus funds which it invested in short term deposits with banks and in
Government securities on interest. The question before the Supreme Court was whether such interest income would qualify for deduction as
business income under section 80P(2)(a)(i) of the Act. The Court was only concerned with interest income on short term bank deposits and
securities. Paragraphs 15, 16, 17, 18, 20 and 21 of the judgment read as under:-
15. At the outset, an important circumstance needs to be highlighted. In the present case, the interest held not eligible for deduction under Section
80-P(2)(a)(i) of the Act is not the interest received from the members for providing credit facilities to them. What is sought to be taxed under
Section 56 of the Act is the interest income arising on the surplus invested in short-term deposits and securities which surplus was not required for
business purposes. The assessee(s) markets the produce of its members and wholesale proceeds at times were retained by it. In this case, we are
concerned with the tax treatment of such amount. Since the fund created by such retention was not required immediately for business purposes, it
was invested in specified securities. The question before us is whether interest on such deposits/securities, which strictly speaking accrues to the
members'' account, could be taxed as business income under Section 28 of the Act? In our view, such interest income would come in the category
of ""Income from other sources"", hence, such interest income would be taxable under Section 56 of the Act, as rightly held by the assessing officer.
16. In this connection, we may analyse Section 80-P of the Act. This section comes in Chapter VI-A, which, in turn, deals with ""Deductions in
respect of certain incomes"". The headnote to Section 80-P indicates that the said section deals with deductions in respect of income of cooperative
societies. Section 80-P(1), inter alia, states that where the gross total income of a cooperative society includes any income from one or more
specified activities, then such income shall be deducted from the gross total income in computing the total taxable income of the assessee Society.
An income, which is attributable to any of the specified activities in Section 80-P(2) of the Act, would be eligible for deduction. The word ""income
has been defined under Section 2(24)(i) of the Act to include profits and gains. This sub-section is an inclusive provision. Parliament has included
specifically ""business profits"" into the definition of the word ""income"". Therefore, we are required to give a precise meaning to the words ""profits
and gains of business"" mentioned in Section 80-P(2) of the Act.
17. In the present case, as stated above, the assessee Society regularly invests funds not immediately required for business purposes. Interest on
such investments, therefore, cannot fall within the meaning of the expression ""profits and gains of business"". Such interest income cannot be said
also to be attributable to the activities of the Society, namely, carrying on the business of providing credit facilities to its members or marketing of
the agricultural produce of its members. When the assessee Society provides credit facilities to its members, it earns interest income. As stated
above, in this case, interest held as ineligible for deduction under Section 80-P(2)(a)(i) is not in respect of interest received from members. In this
case, we are only concerned with interest which accrues on funds not required immediately by the assessee(s) for its business purposes and which
have been only invested in specified securities as ""investment"".
18. Further, as stated above, the assessee(s) markets the agricultural produce of its members. It retains the sale proceeds in many cases. It is this
retained amount"" which was payable to its members, from whom produce was bought, which was invested in short-term deposits/securities. Such
an amount, which was retained by the assessee Society, was a liability and it was shown in the balance sheet on the liability side. Therefore, to that
extent, such interest income cannot be said to be attributable either to the activity mentioned in Section 80-P(2)(a)(i) of the Act or in Section 80-
P(2) (a)(iii) of the Act. Therefore, looking to the facts and circumstances of this case, we are of the view that the assessing officer was right in
taxing the interest income, indicated above, under Section 56 of the Act.
20. A number of judgments were cited on behalf of the assessee(s) in support of its contention that the source was irrelevant while construing the
provisions of Section 80-P of the Act. We find no merit because all the judgments cited were cases relating to cooperative banks and the assessee
Society is not carrying on banking business. We are confining this judgment to the facts of the present case. To say that the source of income is not
relevant for deciding the applicability of Section 80-P of the Act would not be correct because we need to give weightage to the words ""the whole
of the amount of profits and gains of business"" attributable to one of the activities specified in Section 80-P(2)(a) of the Act.
21. An important point needs to be mentioned. The words ""the whole of the amount of profits and gains of business"" emphasis that the income in
respect of which deduction is sought must constitute the operational income and not the other income which accrues to the society. In this
particular case, the evidence shows that the assessee Society earns interest on funds which are not required for business purposes at the given
point of time. Therefore, on the facts and circumstances of this case, in our view, such interest income falls in the category of ""Other income"" which
has been rightly taxed by the Department under Section 56 of the Act.
26. The judgment cannot be restricted to cases where the amount invested was the sale proceeds of the produce of an assessee''s members
marketed by the assessee. The judgment applies to funds not immediately required for business purposes. Funds not immediately required for
business purpose include the amounts received towards the sale price of the produce. However, it is not such funds alone that can be said to be
not immediately required for business purposes. An assessee such as the respondent may have funds from other sources which are not immediately
required for business purpose as well. They would include advances from other entities for the purpose of the assessee in turn using the same for its
business of providing credit facilities to its members. If such funds instead of being advanced to the assessee''s members are invested with banks
the income from such investments equally cannot be said to be attributable to the assessee''s business of providing credit facilities to its members.
Thus, the income in the present case is not from providing credit facilities to the assessee''s members but from the investment with non-members
including commercial banks.
27. The judgment of a Division Bench of this Court dated 10.05.2011 in <�>Commissioner of Income Tax-II, Chandigarh v. M/s
Punjab State Cooperative Federation of Housing Building Societies Ltd., (ITA-643-2010) supports this view. In that case also, the
assessee was a Cooperative Federation and claimed a deduction under the same section. The Tribunal held that the interest income was incidental
to the business of the assessee of providing credit facilities to its members. In that appeal, the following question of law were raised and the
Division Bench answered the same as follows:-
Whether on the facts and in the circumstances of the case and in law the order of the Hon''ble Tribunal is perverse in holding that interest income
from commercial banks being attributable to the business activity of the assessee, qualifies for deduction u/s 80P(2) (a)(i) of the Act, ignoring the
facts that direct source of income is not the loans advanced to the members of the society and it is only the interest income from commercial banks
in the form of fixed deposits and saving banks accounts?
4. Plea on behalf of the revenue is that interest received by the assessee from commercial banks was not covered by Section 80P(2) (a)(i). It has
nothing to do with the interest income on the loan advanced to the members. Reliance has been placed on the judgment of the Hon''ble Supreme
Court in <�>The Totgars Cooperative Sale Society Ltd. v. I.T.O., 2010 (35) DTR 25 holding that interest on bank deposits or
Government securities derived by a Cooperative Society could not be attributed to the activities of the Society of providing various facilities to its
members and was taxable under Section 56 being income from other sources. It appears that since the judgment of the Tribunal is prior to the
judgment of the Hon''ble Supreme Court relied upon on behalf of the revenue, the Tribunal did not have advantage of the law laid down therein.
The matter is, thus, covered in favour of revenue by the judgment of Hon''ble Supreme Court. Contrary view of the Tribunal cannot be sustained.
5. In view of above, following the judgment of the Hon''ble Supreme Court in The Totgars Cooperative Sale Society Ltd. case (supra), we decide
the question in favour of the revenue. The appeal is allowed.
28. By an order dated 03.09.2012, the Supreme Court granted leave to appeal against this judgment in Petition(s) for Special Leave to Appeal
(Civil) No(s). 22745/2011 but declined to grant any stay. We are bound by this judgment. It is not open to us to refuse to follow it on the ground
that it has not considered the judgment of the Supreme Court in its correct perspective. We are, in any event, in respectful agreement with the
interpretation of the Division Bench of Totgar''s case.
29. Our view is also supported by a judgment of the Gujarat High Court in the case of <�>State Bank of India (SBI) v. Commissioner of
Income Tax (Guj.), (2016) 142 DTR (Guj.). (The name of the appellant in the reported case is incorrectly shown as State Bank of India (SBI).
Even the website of the Gujarat High Court indicates the wrong name in the title. Through the Gujarat High Court, we verified that in the original
proceedings the name of the appellant is correctly shown as ""State bank of India Employees Co-op. Credit & Supply Soc. Ltd., Main Branch,
Bhadra, Ahmedabad."")
One of the questions in that case was ""Whether on the facts and in the circumstances of the case, the Tribunal was justified in holding that interest
income of Rs.16,14,579/- on deposits placed with SBI was exempt under section 80P(2)(a)(i) of the IT Act?"" In that case, the appellant was a
Cooperative Society registered under the Gujarat Cooperative Societies Act, 1961 and had as its object the acceptance of deposits from salaried
persons of the State Bank of India with a view to encourage thrift of providing credit facilities. The appellant earned interest income from the State
Bank of India. It contended that interest income was business income and was exempt under Section 80P(2)(a)(i). The CIT in proceedings under
Section 263 rejected the contention. The Tribunal was of the view that both the deposits were made in banks so that the funds are not kept idle.
The motive for making the deposit cannot change the character of the interest income earned on deposits made to one arising from the business of
providing credit facilities to the assessee''s members. The Division Bench of the Gujarat High Court referred inter-alia to the judgments referred to
by Mr. Bansal before us. The Division Bench dealt with Section 80P(2)(a)(i) and the judgment of the Supreme Court in Totgar''s case (supra) and
held as follows: -
12. ...Thus, in the case of a co-operative society engaged in carrying on the business of banking or providing credit facilities to its members, what
is deductible under section 80P of the Act is the whole of the amount of profits and gains of business attributable to any one or more such
activities. The Supreme Court in Totgars Cooperative Sale Society (supra) has, while giving a precise meaning to the words ""profits and gains of
business"" mentioned in section 80P (2) of the Act, observed that the assessee in that case regularly invested funds not immediately required for
business purposes and was of the view that interest on such investments, therefore, cannot fall within the meaning of the expression ""profits and
gains of business"". It was held that such interest income cannot be said to be attributable to the activities of the society, namely, carrying on the
business of providing credit facilities to its members or marketing of the agricultural produce to its members. The court further held that the words
the whole of the amount of profits and gains of business"" emphasise that the income in respect of which deduction is sought must constitute the
operational income and not the other income which accrues to the society. The court observed that in that particular case, the evidence showed
that the assessee-society earned interest on funds which were not required for business purpose at the given point of time. Therefore, in the facts
and circumstances of the case, the court was of the view that, such interest income falls in the category of ""Other income"" which had rightly been
taxed by the Department under section 56 of the Act.
13. In the opinion of this court, in case of a society engaged in providing credit facilities to its members, income from investments made in banks
does not fall in any of the categories mentioned under section 80P(2)(a) of the Act. In the case of Totgars Co-operative Sale Society (supra), as
rightly submitted by the learned counsel for the respondent, the court was dealing with two kinds of activities: interest income earned from the
amount retained from the amount payable to the members from whom produce was bought and which was invested in short-term
deposits/securities; and the interest derived from the surplus funds that the assessee therein invested in short-term deposits with the Government
securities. This is further clear when one peruses the decision of the Karnataka High Court from which the matter travelled to the Supreme Court
wherein it was the case of the assessee that it was carrying on the business of providing credit facilities to its members and therefore, the appellant-
society being an assessee engaged in providing credit facilities to its members, the interest received on deposits in business and securities is
attributable to the business of the assessee as its job is to provide credit facilities to its members and marketing the agricultural products of its
members. This court is, therefore, of the view that the above decision is not restricted only to the investments made by the assessee therein from
the retained amount which was payable to its members but also in respect of funds not immediately required for business purposes. The Supreme
Court has held that interest on such investments, cannot fall within the meaning of the expression ""profits and gains of business"" and that such
interest income cannot be said to be attributable to the activities of the society, namely, carrying on the business of providing credit facilities to its
members or marketing of agricultural produce of its members. The court has held that when the assessee society provides credit facilities to its
members, it earns interest income. The interest which accrues on funds not immediately required by the assessee for its business purposes and
which has been invested in specified securities as ""investment"" are ineligible for deduction under section 80P(2)(a)(i) of the Act. For the above
reasons, this court respectfully does not agree with the view taken by the Karnataka High Court in Tumkur Merchants Souharda Credit
Cooperative Ltd. v. Income Tax Officer Ward-V, Tumkur (supra) that the decision of the Supreme Court in Totgars Co-operative Sale Society
(supra) is restricted to the sale consideration received from marketing agricultural produce of its members which was retained in many cases and
invested in short term deposit/security and that the said decision was confined to the facts of the said case and did not lay down any law.
14. Thus, in the light of the principles enunciated by the Supreme Court in Totgars Co-operative Sale Society (supra), in case of a society engaged
in providing credit facilities to its members, income from investments made in banks does not fall within any of the categories mentioned in section
80P(2)(a) of the Act.... .... ....
15. On behalf of the appellant, reliance has been placed upon bye-law 7 of its Bye-laws, which as translated into English reads thus: ""When the
funds of the society are not in use, the same shall be invested or kept in deposit in accordance with the provisions of section 71 of the Co-
operative Societies Act."" The objects of the society as stated in the Bye-laws are:
(1) to encourage thrift, self-sufficiency and co-operation amongst members of the society;
(2) to inculcate the concept of savings amongst the members;
(3) to give credit to the members at reasonable rates when the occasion arises; and
(4) to carry out all activities for achieving the objects of the society. Thus, the objects of the appellant society do not contemplate investment of
surplus funds received from its members. Insofar as Bye-law 7 is concerned, it may be noted that the same falls under the heading ""fund"" and not
under the objects of the society. Thus, the object of the society is to provide credit facilities to its members and it is the income earned out of the
credit advanced to the members that is allowable as a deduction under section 80P(2)(a)(i) of the Act. The learned counsel for the appellant has
relied upon various decisions wherein the assessee was a banking company. In the opinion of this court, since the appellant admittedly does not
carry on any banking business, the said decisions would not be applicable in the facts of the present case.
(emphasis supplied)
30. We are entirely in agreement with the judgment of the Gujarat High Court especially the observation that the judgment of the Supreme Court is
not restricted only to the investments made by the assessee from the amounts retained by it which were payable to its members and that the
judgment also applies in respect of other funds not immediately required for business purposes.
We reproduced paragraph 15 of the judgment only to indicate that we uphold the appellant''s case only on the ground that the assessee is not
entitled to the said deduction on the basis that it is engaged in carrying on the business of providing credit facilities to its members. We do not
express any opinion as to whether the appellant would be entitled to the said benefit in the event of it being held that the assessee is also engaged in
carrying on the business of banking. That is an issue that the Tribunal would decide upon remand pursuant to this order.
31. Mr. Bansal relied upon the judgment of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in Commissioner of Income Tax v. Andhra Pradesh State
Cooperative Bank Ltd. [2011] 336 ITR 516 (AP). The judgment is distinguishable. In that case, the respondent-assessee was a Cooperative
Society engaged in the business of banking and it was held that the assessees were subject to the regulations of the Reserve Bank of India Act,
1934 and the Banking Regulation Act, 1949. The Division Bench distinguished the judgment of the Supreme Court in Totgar''s case (supra) on the
ground that the Supreme Court was not dealing with the case relating to cooperative banks. The present appeal is not being considered on the
basis that banking is the assessee''s business either.
32. Mr. Bansal relied upon the judgment of the Karnataka High Court in Tumkur Merchants Souharda Credit Cooperative Ltd. v. Income-tax
Officer, Word-V, Tumkur [2015] 55 taxmann.com. 447 (Karnataka). In that case, the assessee-Cooperative Society provided credit facilities to
its members and earned interest from short term deposits with banks and from savings bank accounts. The interest income earned by the assessee
by providing credit facilities to its members was deposited in banks for a short duration which earned interest. The question was whether this
interest was attributable to the business of providing credit facilities to the members. The Division Bench held as follows: -
8. Therefore, the word ""attributable to"" is certainly wider in import than the expression ""derived from"". Whenever the legislature wanted to give a
restricted meaning, they have used the expression ""derived from"". The expression ""attributable to"" being of wider import, the said expression is
used by the legislature whenever they intended to gather receipts from sources other than the actual conduct of the business. A Cooperative
Society which is carrying on the business of providing credit facilities to its members, earns profits and gains of business by providing credit
facilities to its members. The interest income so derived or the capital, if not immediately required to be lent to the members, they cannot keep the
said amount idle. If they deposit this amount in bank so as to earn interest, the said interest income is attributable to the profits and gains of the
business of providing credit facilities to its members only. The society is not carrying on any separate business for earning such interest income. The
income so derived is the amount of profits and gains of business attributable to the activity of carrying on the business of banking or providing
credit facilities to its members by a co-operative society and is liable to be deducted from the gross total income under Section 80P of the Act.
9. In this context when we look at the judgment of the Apex Court in the case of M/s. Totgars Cooperative Sale Society Ltd., on which reliance is
placed, the Supreme Court was dealing with a case where the assessee-Co-operative Society, apart from providing credit facilities to the
members, was also in the business of marketing of agricultural produce grown by its members. The sale consideration received from marketing
agricultural produce of its members was retained in many cases. The said retained amount which was payable to its members from whom produce
was brought, was invested in a short-term deposit/security. Such an amount which was retained by the assessee-Society was a liability and it was
shown in the balance sheet on the liability side. Therefore, to that extent, such interest income cannot be said to be attributable either to the activity
mentioned in Section 80P(2)(a)(i) of the Act or under Section 80P(2) (a)(iii) of the Act. Therefore in the facts of the said case, the Apex Court
held the assessing officer was right in taxing the interest income indicated above under Section 56 of the Act. Further they made it clear that they
are confining the said judgment to the facts of that case. Therefore it is clear, Supreme Court was not laying down any law.
10. In the instant case, the amount which was invested in banks to earn interest was not an amount due to any members. It was not the liability. It
was not shown as liability in their account. In fact this amount which is in the nature of profits and gains, was not immediately required by the
assessee for lending money to the members, as there were no takers. Therefore they had deposited the money in a bank so as to earn interest. The
said interest income is attributable to carrying on the business of banking and therefore it is liable to be deducted in terms of Section 80P(1) of the
Act. In fact similar view is taken by the Andhra Pradesh High Court in the case of Commissioner Of Income-Tax III, Hyderabad v. Andhra
Pradesh State Cooperative Bank Ltd., reported in (2011) 200 TAXMAN 220/12. In that view of the matter, the order passed by the appellate
authorities denying the benefit of deduction of the aforesaid amount is unsustainable in law. Accordingly it is hereby set aside. The substantial
question of law is answered in favour of the assessee and against the revenue. Hence, we pass the following order.
Appeal is allowed.
(The reproduction is from the original website of the Karnataka High Court).
There is an important distinction. The Division Bench expressly held in paragraph 10 that interest income was attributable to the business of
banking and, therefore, liable to be deducted under Section 80P(2)(a)(i) of the Act. At the cost of repetition, we have not considered whether the
assessee carries on the business of banking. If it is established upon remand that the assessee carries on the business of banking the result may be
different. In any event assuming that the judgment is not distinguishable on this ground, we would with respect disagree with the same in view of the
judgments that we have already referred to and on the basis of our interpretation of Totgar''s case. In any event, we are with respect unable to
agree with the observations that the Supreme Court in Totgar''s case (supra) did not lay down any law.
33. For the same reason, the judgment of the Karnataka High Court in Guttigedarara Credit Co-operative Society Ltd. v. Income-tax Officer,
Ward 2(2), Mysore, [2015] 60 taxmann.com 215 (Karnataka) is of no assistance to the respondent-assessee.
34. In these circumstances, questions No.3 and 4 are answered in favour of the Revenue and against the assessee. The judgment of the Tribunal in
that regard is set aside.
Re: question No.1 : -
35. The assessee would be entitled to the benefit of Section 80P (2)(a)(i) in respect of the interest earned on advances to its employees only if
employees fall within the ambit of the term ""members"" in that section. We reiterate that in the event of it being held that the assessee carries on the
business of banking it may be a different matter even if the employees are not members as we have in fact held.
36. The assessee''s employees cannot be said to be members. The term ""members"" is not defined in the Income Tax Act, 1961. In U.P.
Cooperative Cane Union Federation Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income Tax [1999] 237 SC 574, the Supreme Court considering the claim
again under Section 80P(2)(a)(i) held: -
The expression ""members"" is not defined in the Act. Since a cooperative society has to be established under the provisions of the law made by the
State Legislature in that regard, the expression ""members"" in section 80P(2)(a)(i) must, therefore, be construed in the context of the provisions of
the law enacted by the State Legislature under which the co-operative society claiming exemption has been formed. It is, therefore, necessary to
construe the expression ""members"" in section 80P(2)(a)(i) of the Act in the light of the definition of that expression as contained in section 2(n) of
the Co-operative Societies Act....
37. We must, therefore, turn to the provisions of the Punjab Cooperative Societies Act, 1961 which we were informed, applies to the assessee.
Section 2(g) of the Punjab Cooperative Societies Act, reads as follows:-
2. Definitions. ... ... ...
(g) ""members"" means a person joining in the application for the registration of a cooperative society and a person admitted to membership after
such registration in accordance with this Act, the rules and the bye-laws and includes a nominal and an associate member and the Government
when it subscribes to the share-capital of a society.
The definition of members does not include employees.
38. In the circumstances, question No.1 is also answered in favour of the Revenue and against the assessee.
39. In these circumstances, the order of the Tribunal is set aside. The questions of law are decided in favour of the assessee but only on the basis
that the assessee is engaged in carrying on the business of providing credit facilities to its members. The Tribunal shall decide the appeal afresh only
on the question as to whether the assessee is also engaged in carrying on the business of banking. In the event of the finding being against the
assessee, it would not be entitled to succeed on the issues before us, in any event. However, in the event of the Tribunal finding that the assessee is
engaged in carrying on the business of banking, the Tribunal shall decide as to whether on that basis the assessee is entitled to the benefit of Section
80P(2)(a)(i) or under any other provision in respect of the claims that are the subject matter of this appeal.
40. The appeal is accordingly disposed of.