H.N. Seth, J.@mdashThis is a petition under Article 226 of the Constitution. The petitioner, Messrs. Thakur Das Shy am Sunder, prays for a writ of certiorari for quashing the order of the Additional Commissioner of Income Tax, U.P., Lucknow, dated 15th of January, 1972.
2. The petitioner is a commission agent carrying on its business in Shahjahanpur, It claims that in the district of Shahjahanpur there is a long standing custom according to which the commission agents charge on every transaction of sale of goods worth Rs. 100, a sum of 15 paise from the person to whom goods are sold and 10 paise from the person whose goods are sold through them as dharmada. This charge is over and above the commission which a commission agent is entitled to receive from both the parties. Dharmada so collected is a customary levy which is realised and credited by the commission agent in a separate account known as dharmada account. This amount is held by them on trust to be utilised specifically and exclusively for charitable purposes. During the accounting year, relevant to the assessment year 1970-71, the petitioner received and credited a sum of Rs. 2,400 in its dharmada account. The Income Tax Officer, Shahjahanpur, treated this receipt as the petitioner''s income and brought it to tax. Being aggrieved by the order of the Income Tax Officer, the petitioner filed a revision before the Commissioner of the Income Tax, U.P., Lucknow, which was rejected on January 15, 1972. The Additional Commissioner held that the amount in dispute was received by the petitioner during the course of business transaction and was undoubtedly its trading receipt; the ownership in the funds vested entirely in the petitioner, who was free to spend the amount according to its own discretion. In the circumstances, the Income Tax Officer was justified in treating the amount of dharmada received by the petitioner as its trading receipt and in including it in its income. The petitioner then filed the present writ petition before this court contending that the amount of dharmada collected by it was not its income and the Income Tax authorities had no jurisdiction to include the same in its total income.
3. Learned counsel for the petitioner pointed out that the petitioner had been collecting dharmada and crediting the same in the dharmada account for the last several years. From this account it had been making contribution to charity from time to time. For the assessment year 1968-69, when a similar question arose for consideration, the Appellate Assistant Commissioner of Income Tax held that the amount realised as dharmada was not the income of the petitioner and as such it was not liable to be taxed in its hands. During the accounting year relevant to the assessment year 1970-71 also the petitioner received a sum of Rs. 2,400 as dharmada for being credited to its dharmada account which was already in existence.
4. The Division Bench, before which the petition came up for hearing, thought that on the point raised in this petition there is a conflict between two decisions of this court, viz., in the cases of
5. Petitioner''s allegation that in the district of Shahjahanpur there is a custom according to which the commission agents realise dharmada from their constituents and spend the same on charity has not been controverted by the respondents. It is also clear that in pursuance of that custom the petitioner opened an account several years before the previous year relevant to the assessment year 1970-71, in which all the amounts realised by him as dharmada were being credited and as and when occasion arose, the amount in that account was being utilised for charity. It can also be safely presumed that in this case the parties which in the relevant accounting year entered into transactions through the petitioner were aware of the trading custom and they paid dharmada to the petitioner with the knowledge and understanding that the amount so paid by them was to be credited to the fund which had already been opened by the petitioner for purposes of charity.
6. As pointed out by the Supreme Court in the case of
7. The question, therefore, that arises for consideration is whether if while entering into business transactions through the petitioner, various parties made contribution to its dharmada fund, such contributions constituted the petitioner''s income.
8. In the case of
"In our opinion, the true test is whether the amount sought to be deducted, in truth, never reached the assessee as his income. Obligations, no doubt, there are in every case, but it is the nature of the obligation which is the decisive fact. There is a difference between an amount which a person is obliged to apply out of his income and an amount which by the nature of the obligations cannot be said to be a part of the income of the assessee. Where by the obligation, income is diverted before it reaches the assessee, it is deductible; but where the income is required to be applied to discharge an obligation after such income reaches the assessee, the same consequence, in law, does not follow. It is the first kind of payment which can truly be excused and not the second. The second payment is merely an obligation to pay another a portion of one''s own income, which has been received and is since applied. The first is a case in which the income never reaches the assessee, who even if he were to collect it, does so, not as a part of his income, but for and on behalf of the person to whom it is payable."
9. In the instant case what we find is that there was a custom in the market according to which commission agents realised dharmada from their constituents. The constituents paid that amount to the commission agents knowing that the same was being collected over and above the commission which was payable by them to the commission agents. This amount, under the custom, had to be spent on charities. The amount was being paid by the constituents for being made a part of the fund which had already been established by the commission agent for purposes of charity. From the very beginning it was clear to both the parties, viz., the one paying dharmada and the other receiving the same, that it was being received by the petitioner for being credited to an already existing fund for charity. Accordingly, when this amount reached the petitioner it did not in truth reach him as its income.
10. Learned counsel for the revenue placed strong reliance on the case of
11. Reliance was also placed on the case of
12. Learned counsel for the revenue then relied upon the case of Kanpur Agencies Private Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income Tax. In that case the assessee who was the sole selling agent of a cotton mills realised from the purchasers, on each bale of goods, some amount towards charity and the same was collected and credited in a separate account in the assessee''s books which was styled as Marwari charitable account. The Tribunal found that although the amount was realised by the assessee from its customers apparently on the ground of charity and although the amount was credited to the account "Marwari Charitable Society", the disbursement of the amount was entirely within the discretion of the assessee and the assessee was not bound to devote any amount to. the Marwari Charitable Society. It was held that the amount having been realised by the assessee from its customers as a part of and in connection with the sale transactions must be treated as its business income. It will be seen that in that case the Tribunal did not accept the case of the assessee that the amount realised by the assessee from its customers had necessarily to be spent on charity. According to the findings arrived at in that case, the amount had been realised by the assessee for its own purposes and it had full discretion to spend the amount for any purpose whatsoever. The amount was not held in trust by the recipient and there was no binding obligation on it to apply the same for charitable purposes. In the case before us, however, the amount has been realised for the purposes of a fund reserved for charity. The facts of this case cited by the learned counsel for the revenue are, therefore, quite distinguishable.
13. Learned counsel for the revenue further relied on the case of
14. In view of the aforesaid discussion, we agree with the proposition laid down in the case of
15. Learned counsel for the revenue then relied upon the observations made by the Additional Commissioner in his order dated 15th January, 1972, where he mentioned that the petitioner could not he held to be a trustee in respect of dharmada receipts inasmuch as it is well-settled that in the case of a trust the trustees have no dominion over the funds and no benefit is received by them. As, in the instant case, the ownership of the funds, realised by way of dharmada, vests entirely in the petitioner who is free to spend the amount according to its own discretion its position qua the dharmada account is not that of a trustee. The petitioner owns the amount which in fact is its income. We are unable to accept the submission that as the ownership of the amounts credited to the dharmada.dharmada. account vest in the petitioner and it enjoys some discretion with regard to its disposal it cannot be said that its position is that of a trustee. The question whether the position of the petitioner, when he received the amount, was that of a trustee or not will depend upon the actual custom which obliged the constituents to pay dharmada. As stated earlier, the petitioner''s case that the amount realised as dharmada has got to be spent on charity has not been controverted by the respondents. Under the law relating to trust, legal ownership over the trust fund and the power to control and dispose it of always vests in the trustee. Accordingly, merely because in this case the legal ownership over the amount deposited as dharmada vested in the petitioner, it cannot be said that its position was not that of a trustee. Discretion vested in a trustee to spend the trust amount over charities will not affect the character of the deposit. In the case of
16. We are of opinion that in order to determine whether a particular receipt, by whatever name it is termed, is or is not the income of an assessee its real nature and quality has to be considered. If it was received under a custom, the answer to the question will depend on the nature of obligation treated by that custom. In this case it is not disputed that the petitioner received dharmada under a custom according to which it was obligatory upon it to spend the amount so collected on charity alone. The petitioner had created a fund for that purpose and dharmada collected by it had to be credited to that fund. In the circumstances we are of opinion that the amount so collected was not received by the assessee as its income. We further consider that there is no real conflict in the two decisions of this court, viz., that in the case of Bijli Cotton Mitts Ltd v. Commissioner of Income Tax and Kanpur Agencies Private Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income Tax.
17. In view of the aforesaid discussion the petition succeeds and is allowed with costs. The order passed by the Additional Commissioner of Income Tax dated 15th January, 1972, is set aside and that part of the assessment order dated 24th February, 1971, passed by the Income Tax Officer, Shahjahanpur, which provides for the adding back of a sum of Rs. 2,400 (representing dharmada) in the petitioner''s total income for assessment year 1970-71 is quashed. The Income Tax Officer is directed to modify his assessment order accordingly.