D.K. Dhanuka, J.@mdashThe Income Tax Appellate Tribunal has referred the following two questions to this court u/s 256(1) of the Income Tax
Act, 1961 :
(1) Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances of the case, the premium of Rs. 4,50,000 paid by the assessee-company to the Maharashtra
Industrial Development Corporation under the agreement dated July 6 22, 1966, for temporary water supply connection was expenditure of a
revenue nature ?
(2) Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances of the case, the contribution of Rs. 1,56,800 paid by the assessee-company to the Maharashtra
Housing Board under the aforesaid scheme towards the building of houses for its employees was expenditure of a revenue nature ?
2. Relevant facts pertaining to question No. 1 are us under :
The assessment year is 1967-68. The assessee-company manufactured textile machinery, viz., ring frames, carding engines and looms. On July 22,
1966, an agreement was arrived at between the assessee-company and the Maharashtra Industrial Development Corporation (""M. I. D. C."", for
short) for temporary water supply connection from 24"" steel pipelines and 16"" prestressed concrete pipes laid on the Thane-Belapur Road. The
said agreement recited that the assessee-company had applied to M. I. D. C. for a temporary water supply connection, since the assessee-
company was in urgent need of water for their factory for industrial production and residential consumption in the factory estate. It appears from
the said agreement that M. I. D. C. had agreed to provide water supply connection to the assessee-company on a temporary basis till a final
agreement was entered into between the parties. Clause 16 of the said agreement provided that the said agreement shall remain in force for a
maximum period of not more than nine months and thereafter the parties shall enter into a final agreement which will be acceptable to both the
parties. The terms and conditions of the subsequent agreement were kept open for negotiation between the parties. Clause 16 of the agreement
does not provide for renewal of the agreement on the same terms. Under the said agreement, M. I. D. C. agreed to supply the booked demand of
1,00,000 gallons of water to the assessee-company per day. The assessee-company agreed to pay the estimated water charges from time to time
as may be demanded by M. I. D. C., i.e., at the rate of Rs. 2,75 per 1,000 gallons. Clause 1 of the said agreement reads as under :
(1) A temporary water supply connection will be given to NMM (i.e., the respondents-assessee herein) by MIDC for the present as the capital
contribution charges of Rs. 4.5 lakhs shall be paid by NMM.
3. Prior to the entering into said agreement, M. I. D. C. had already laid the pipeline and had incurred all the expenditure. The pipeline belonged to
M. I. D. C. at all times. The pipeline continued to belong to M. I. D. C. It was the case of the assessee-company before the assessing authorities
that the assessee had incurred the said expenditure during the course of running its business and not to acquire any capital asset or any advantage
of enduring nature. The assessee claimed deduction of the said amount as a revenue expenditure. The assessee contended that the assessee had to
incur the said expenditure in the course of its business and from the point of view of commercial expediency. It was the contention of the Revenue
at all times that the assessee had acquired an enduring advantage under the said agreement, as the said agreement was bound to be renewed on the
expiry of nine months and the said sum of Rs. 4,50,000 was to be treated as a capital contribution of the assessee-company towards acquisition of
a capital asset.
4. The Income Tax Officer took the view that the said amount of Rs. 4,50,000 was liable to be treated as capital expenditure. The Appellate
Assistant Commissioner agreed with the said view of the Income Tax Officer. The Income Tax Appellate Tribunal in appeal came to the
conclusion that the said expenditure was liable to be viewed as a premium for obtaining the water supply and not as contribution to the cost of
laying the pipeline. The Tribunal also came to the conclusion that the assessee-company had not acquired any benefit of enduring nature under the
said agreement as the said agreement was merely a temporary agreement. The Tribunal came to the conclusion that the assessee-company had
merely paid the said sum of Rs. 4,50,000 as a contractual consideration for obtaining water supply for its business in addition to its obligation to
pay the water charges at a particular rate. It was also emphasised by the Tribunal that the pipeline belonged to M. I. D. C. and continued to so
belong. Applying the relevant tests as laid down in Gotan Lime Syndicate Vs. Commissioner of Income Tax, Rajasthan and Delhi, , the Tribunal
came to the conclusion that the said expenditure was liable to be considered as of a revenue nature and was thus liable to be allowed as a revenue
deduction.
5. Shri Jetley, learned counsel for the applicant-Revenue, has submitted that the assessee had obtained an enduring advantage under the said
agreement dated July 22, 1966, and that it will not be correct to state that the said agreement was for a period of nine months only inasmuch as the
said agreement contemplated the entering into of a further agreement also. Shri Jetley submitted that the assessee had made a capital contribution
of Rs. 4,50,000 not for the purpose of availing of the facility of water supply for a period of in e months only. In our judgment, the Tribunal is right
in the view which it took. The said agreement on its plain interpretation, in the light of the recitals preceding the operative part thereof, clearly states
that the said agreement shall remain in force for a maximum period of not more than nine months. Merely because the parties may or may not
arrive at a subsequent agreement in the future, it does not follow that the arrangement evidence by the said agreement dated July 22, 1966, was
not a temporary arrangement.
6. Shri Jetley, learned counsel for the applicant-Revenue, relied upon clause 1 of the said agreement dated July 22, 1966, in which the said amount
of Rs. 4,50,000 has been described as ""the capital contribution charges"" paid by the assessee to M. I. D. C. Learned counsel for the Revenue also
emphasised the note marked ""J"" forming part of the accounts of the assessee for the year ended December 31, 1966, relevant to the assessment
year 1967-68, to the following effect :
J. Miscellaneous expenses include an amount of Rs. 4.50 lakhs paid to the M. I. D. C. as the company''s (i.e., the assessee''s) share of the capital
cost of its water pipeline from Thane to Belapur.
7. Merely because the said amount is so described in the accounts of the assessee-company, it does not follow that the said expenditure is not a
revenue expenditure. The Income Tax Officer, in his order, has clearly stated that the said amount of Rs. 4,50,000 was debited by the assessee to
the works expenses account. Therefore, the above referred description of the said amount in the account of the assessee-company cannot be
conclusive for the purpose of deciding the question under consideration and the agreement is liable to be interpreted having regard to its recitals
and operative clauses.
8. Shri Jetley, learned counsel for the applicant-Revenue, relied upon the judgment of the Hon''ble Supreme Court in Travancore-cochin
Chemicals Ltd. Vs. Commissioner of Income Tax, Kerala, . In this case, it was held by the Hon''ble Supreme Court that the assessee had obtained
an enduring advantage by construction of a new road in the area of the factory. Having regard to the totality of the facts and circumstances of that
case, the Hon''ble Supreme Court held in that case that the contribution made by the assessee to the Government towards construction of a new
road in the area of the factory was liable to be treated as a capital expenditure. It shall be convenient to refer at this stage to the judgment of the
Hon''ble Supreme Court in Lakshmiji Sugar Mills Co. P. Ltd. Vs. Commissioner of Income Tax, New Delhi, . In this case, it was held by the court
that the contribution made by the assessee towards the construction and development of roads between the various sugarcane producing centres
and the sugar factories was liable to be considered as a revenue expenditure, as the said expenditure was incurred by the assessee for the purpose
of facilitating the running of its motor vehicles and was, therefore, incurred for running the business or working it with a view to producing profits
without the assessee gaining any advantage of an enduring benefit to itself. The criterion to be applied is to see whether the assessee has obtained
any advantage of an enduring benefit under the said agreement dated July 22, 1966.
9. Shri Jetley, learned counsel for the applicant-Revenue, also relied on the judgment of the Hon''ble Supreme Court in L.B. Sugar Factory and Oil
Mills (P) Ltd., Pilibhit Vs. Commissioner of Income Tax , U.P., Lucknow, . It was held by the Hon''ble Supreme Court in this case that the
contribution made by the assessee had nothing whatsoever to do with the business of the assessee. It was, therefore, held that the expenditure in
question was not a revenue expenditure. The question to be asked is whether the expenditure was incurred in the ordinary course of business or
commercial expediency or was the expenditure incurred to acquire a capital asset or to acquire an enduring benefit. This case is clearly
distinguishable and is of no assistance to the Revenue.
10. Shri Jetley learned counsel for the applicant-Revenue, relied upon the judgment of our High Court in Fancy Corporation Ltd. Vs.
Commissioner of Income Tax, . In this case, the assessee-company attempted to install a borewell at its new factory site. The attempt failed. The
question before the court was whether in expenditure incurred by the assessee was a revenue expenditure or a capital expenditure or a capital
expenditure. It was held by the court that the expenditure incurred would have been a capital expenditure had the well been successfully bored, as
it would have added to the fixed capital of the assessee and would have become a part of its capital assets. It was held by our High Court in this
case that, as the expenditure was incurred in attempting to obtain a capital asset by boring a well, there would be no doubt that the expenditure
was in the nature of a capital expenditure. This case has no relevance at all in the consideration of the first question arising in this reference. In the
instant case, there is no question of the assessee trying to acquire a capital asset, as the asset in question always belonged to Maharashtra Industrial
Development Corporation and continued to so belong. This case, therefore, has no bearing on the subject.
11. Shri Mehta, learned counsel for the respondents-assessee, relied upon the judgment or our High Court in Commissioner of Income Tax,
Bombay City-iv Vs. Excel Industries Ltd., . In this case, the assessee had made payment for overhead service line which was to remain the
property of the Gujarat Electricity Board and the question before our High Court was whether the payment made, was allowable as revenue
expenditure. It was held by our High Court that since the service line remanded the property of the electricity board, the assessee had not acquired
any capital asset or an enduring benefit or advantage and the object of making the payment was purely one of commercial expediency. It was held
by the court that the payment made by the assessee to the electricity board towards the cost of laying the overhead service line constituted revenue
expenditure and was an allowable education. It appears to us that this case is on all fours and the facts of the case under consideration are almost
identical with the facts of this case. We are in complete agreement with the ratio of the judgment in Commissioner of Income Tax, Bombay City-iv
Vs. Excel Industries Ltd., as well as the finding to fact recorded by the Tribunal. We do not consider it necessary to refer to other authorities cited
by counsel on either side on this question.
12. We, accordingly, answer question No. 1 in the affirmative and in favour of the assessee.
13. We shall now proceed to deal with the second question under consideration. The relevant facts for consideration of the second question are as
under :
During the year ended December 31, 1966, the assessee paid a sum of Rs. 1,56,800 to the Maharashtra Housing Board as contribution towards
the cost of certain tenements in lieu of the right conferred on the assessee to allot the tenements for the use of its workmen. Our attention has been
invited by learned counsel on both sided to the copy of the scheme framed by the Maharashtra Housing Board to assist the employers in solving
the problem of providing houses to their workmen. Under the said scheme, the State Government or its approved agencies like the Maharashtra
Housing Board and the Vidarbha Housing Board have undertaken to construct houses for the industrial employers so as to solve the problem of
housing their workmen. The said Scheme provides that the ownership of houses will vest in the State Government or the Housing Boards, as the
case may be. Clause 2 of the said Scheme is directly relevant. The said clause reads as under :
2. The allotment of houses will be entrusted to a managing committee consisting of an equal number of representatives of the employer and of his
workers with a chairman nominated by the Government. The employer may, however, at his discretion allot up to 15% of the houses, out of turn,
to workers who are eligible workers in accordance with the standard allotment rules prescribed in Appendix ''P'' to the S. I. H. Scheme.
14. Thus, for all times to come, the employer is empowered to allot 15% of the tenements out of turn to the workers who are eligible workers in
accordance with the standard allotment rules. Even in respect of the rest of the tenements, the allotment is to be made by a managing committee
consisting of an equal number of representatives of the employer and of his workers with a chairman nominated by the Government. Thus, in sub-
stance, a right of an enduring nature has been conferred under the scheme on the assessee to allot the tenements constructed to their workmen.
Merely because the title to the said tenements vests in the State Government or the Housing Boards, it does not follow that the assessee has not
acquired any advantage of an enduring nature. On this aspect, it shall be convenient first to refer to the judgment of our High Court in Cooper
Engineering Ltd. Vs. Commissioner of Income Tax, Bombay City-I, Bombay, . In the case of Cooper Engineering Ltd., the material facts were as
under :
The Maharashtra Housing Board had built tenements under a similar subsidised industrial housing scheme for housing industrial workers of the
assessee in accordance with the scheme sanctioned by the Government. The tenements belonged to the State Government. It the occupant of a
tenement ceased to be an employee of the assessee, he was required to vacate the tenement and the responsibility of evicting the employee was
that of the State Government. It was held by our court that though the building in which the tenements were situate and the land upon which the
buildings stood were not owned by the assessee, the assessee had obtained an advantage of enduring nature by incurring the expenditure in
question inasmuch as the assessee had secured the advantage of housing its employees for a long period. It was observed by our court that the
buildings would stand for a considerable period. It was, therefore, held that the assessee by making a contribution to the State Housing Board had
derived advantage of an enduring nature and, therefore, the expenditure incurred therefore was of a capital nature and was not deductible. We are
in complete agreement with the view taken in the above case and we see on material difference between the facts of the case before the High
Court in Cooper Engineering Ltd. Vs. Commissioner of Income Tax, Bombay City-I, Bombay, and the facts of this case.
15. Shri Mehta, learned counsel for the respondent-assessee, has however, invited our attention to another judgment of our High Court in
Commissioner of Income Tax, Bombay City-I Vs. Hingir Rampur Coal Co. Ltd., . In that case, the agreement between the assessee and the Coal
Mines Labour Housing Board was to remain in force for a period of 15 years only. Having regard to the facts of that case, the High Court came to
the conclusion that the assessee in that case could not be said to have acquired an enduring advantage. Having regard to the said finding it was held
that the expenditure incurred by the assessee was allowable as revenue expenditure. In our case, the scheme does not confer the right on the
assessee to allot tenements to its employee only for a limited period. The assessee shall continue to have the right to make the allotment of the
tenements to its workmen to the extent provided in clause 2 of the scheme for all times to come. This case is clearly distinguishable.
16. It is, however, necessary to refer to one more case before we conclude the discussion on the point. In Commissioner of Income Tax Vs. T.V.
Sundaram Iyengar and Sons (P.) Ltd., , the High Court of Madras had held on the facts of that case that the expenditure incurred was a
permissible deduction as revenue expenditure incurred wholly and exclusively for the purpose of the assessee''s business. If one closely analyses
the facts of that case, it will be clearly found that a finding was recorded in that case that the assessee had incurred the expenditure in that case
more as a matter of commercial expediency than anything else. This case was, therefore, rightly distinguished by our High Court in Cooper
Engineering Ltd. Vs. Commissioner of Income Tax, Bombay City-I, Bombay, , by making the following observations (p. 70) :
The emphasis in the Madras judgment is upon the commercial expediency which made the assessee contribute towards the housing scheme. Such
commercial expediency resulted in the finding that the expenditure was incurred for the purposes of the assessee''s business and was, accordingly,
deductible. No question of commercial expediency arises in the matter before us.
17. We agree with the above point of view.
18. Shri Mehta, learned counsel for the respondent-assessee, has invited our attention to the judgment of the Hon''ble Supreme Court in
Commissioner of Income Tax Vs. T.V. Sundaram Iyengar and Sons P. Ltd., . The appeal of the Revenue against the above-referred judgment of
the High Court of Madras in the very same case, viz., Commissioner of Income Tax Vs. T.V. Sundaram Iyengar and Sons (P.) Ltd., , was
dismissed by the apex court.
19. In our case also, there is no finding of fact that the assessee made the contribution for providing tenements to its workmen to the Maharashtra
Housing Board as a matter fort commercial expediency. The facts of this case bear close analogy with the facts of the case in Cooper Engineering
Ltd. Vs. Commissioner of Income Tax, Bombay City-I, Bombay, . We are of the view that the above-referred judgment of the High Court of
Madras was rightly distinguished in the above-referred Bombay judgment. Accordingly, it makes no difference to the result of this case that the
appeal against the above-referred judgment of the High Court of Madras was dismissed by the Hon''ble. Supreme Court. Since the Madras case
bears no analogy to the facts of our case, we need not follow the same. With respect, we have come to the conclusion that the judgment of our
High Court in Cooper Engineering Ltd. Vs. Commissioner of Income Tax, Bombay City-I, Bombay, continues to hold the field.
20. In view of the above discussion, we answer the second question in the negative and in favour of the Revenue.
21. There shall be no order as to the costs of the reference.