JUDGEMENT
SHAH,J. -
(1.) FOR the year of account ending March 31, 1955, Afco Private Ltd.-a private limited company-earned a total income which was finally computed
in assessment proceedings by order of the Income-tax Tribunal, at Rs. 49,
843/-. The company declared a dividend of Rs. 11, 7121- on July 13, 1955, and before the close of the year of assessment 1955-56 declared an
additional dividend of Rs.5, 612/-, thereby distributing in the aggregate
dividend which was not less than 60% of the total income, reduced by the
income-tax and super-tax payable by it. The company then claimed rebate
at the rate of one anna in the rupee on the amount computed according to
Schedule 1, Part 1, Item B read with s. 2 of the Finance Act 15 of 1955.
The Income-tax Officer and the Appellate Assistant Commissioner rejected
the claim because in their view the claimant was a company to which the
provisions of s. 23A of the Income-tax Act could not be made applicable.
In appeal, the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal, Bombay ', reversed the
order of the Income-tax authorities. The Tribunal opined that the
expression "cannot be made applicable" in Item B of Part 1 of Schedule 1
of Finance Act 15 of 1955 must be read in conjunction with s. 23A of the
Income-tax Act, and the benefit of rebate provided by the Finance Act,
1955, cannot be denied to a Private Company if the conditions prescribed in s. 23A(1) are fulfilled.
(2.) THE following question referred by the Tribunal to the High Court of judicature at Bombay was answered in the affirmative :- "Whether on the
facts and in the circumstances of the case, the assessee company having
distributed dividends of over 60% of the company's total income less
income-tax and super-tax payable thereon is entitled to the rebate of 1
anna per rupee on the undistributed balance of profits as provided in
clause (1) of the proviso to item B of Part 1 of the 1st Schedule to the
Finance Act of 1955 ?"By the Finance Act 15 of 1955 Schedule 1 Item B
read with s. 2 of the Act rates of tax were prescribed in the case of
companies. Item B providedthat "in the case of every company- Rate
surcharge on the whole of total income Four annas one twen- in the tieth
of rupee the rate specified in the pre-
ceeding column.
Provided that in the case of a company which, in respect of its- profits liable to tax under the Income-tax Act for the year ending on the 31st
day of March, 1956, has made the prescribed arrangements for the
declaration and payment within the territory of India, of the dividends
payable out of such profits., and has deducted super-tax from the
dividends in accordance with the provisions of sub- section (31) of
section 18 of that Act- (i) where the total income, as reduced by seven
annas in the rupee and by the amount, if any, exempt from income-tax,
exceeds the amount of any dividends (including dividends payable at a
fixed rate) declared in respect of the whole or part of the previous year
for the assessment for the year ending on the 31st day of March, 1956,
and the company is a corn any to which the provisions of section 23A of
the Income-tax Act cannot be made applicable, a rebate shall be allowed
at the rate of one anna per rupee on the amount of such excess ; (ii)x x
x x" By s. 23A(1) of the Income-tax Act at the material time the
Income-tax Officer was authorised to order a company to pay super-tax, at
the rate of eight annas in the rupee in the case of a company whose
business consisted wholly or mainly in the dealings in or holding of
investments, and at the rate of four annas in he rupee in the case of any
other company, on the undistributed balance of the total income of the
previous year, that is to say, on the total income reduced by the amounts
of income-tax and super-tax and any other tax payable under any law in
excess of the amounts allowed in computing the income, and in the case of
Banking companies in addition to the taxes, funds actually transferred to
a reserve fund, and the dividends actually distributed, if any, where in
respect of any previous year the profits and gains distributed as
dividend by the company within the twelve months immediately following
the expiry of that previous year were less than 60% of the total income
of the company of that year as reduced by the amounts aforesaid, unless
the Income-tax Officer was satisfied that having regard to losses
incurred by the company in earlier years or to the smallness of the
profits made in the previous year, the payment of a dividend or a larger
dividend than that declared would be unreasonable. It is manifest that
the order under s. 23A(1) would (excluding certain procedural conditions)
be ordinarily made if the company has distributed by way of dividend
within the twelve months immediately following the expiry of the
accounting year less than the prescribed percentage of the total income
as reduced by the, amount of taxes paid in the case of non- Banking
Companies and reserve fund in addition thereto in the case of Banking
Companies By the first paragraph of sub-s. (9) of s. 23 A it is provided
that "Nothing contained in this section shall apply to any company in
which the public are substantially interested or to a subsidiary company
of such company if the whole of the share capital of such subsidiary
company has been held by the parent company or by its nominees throughout
the previous year." This clause is followed by two explanations.
Explanation 1, in so far as it is material to this case, provides :-
"Explanation 1-For the purposes of this section, a company shall be
deemed to be a company in which the public are substantially interested-
(a) x x x x (b) if it is not a private company as defined in the Indian
Companies Act, 1913 (VII of 1913), and (i) x x x x (ii) x x x x (iii) x x
x x Explanation 2.- x x x x"Section 23A was enacted to prevent evasion of
liability to pay super-tax by shareholders of certain classes of
companies taking advantage of the disparity between the rates of
super-tax payable by individuals and by the companies. The rates of
super-tax applicable to companies being lower than the highest rates
applicable to individual assessees, to prevent individual assessees from
avoiding the higher incidence of super-tax by the expedient of
transferring to companies the sources of their income, and thereby
securing instead of dividends the benefit of the profits of the company,
the Legislature had by Act XXI of 1930, as modified by Act VII of 1939,
enacted a special provision in s. 23A investing the Income-tax Officer
with power, in certain contingencies prescribed in the section to order
that the undistributed balance of the assessable income reduced by the
amount of taxes and the dividends shall be deemed to have been
distributed at the date of the general meeting. By the Finance Act 15 of
1955 s. 23A (1) was amended and the Income-tax Officer was directed to make an order that the Company shall be liable to pay super-tax oil the
undistributed balance at the rates prescribed under the section. But by
virtue of sub. s. (9) of s. 23A the or- der can be made only in respect
of a company in which the public are not substantially interested or of a
subsidiary company of such company if the whole of the share capital of
such subsidiary company has been held by the parent company or by its
nominees throughout the previous year, and by cl. (b) of the first
explanation thereto a private company as defined in the Indian Companies
Act, 1913, is not a company in which the' public are substantially
interested. It is, therefore, competent to the Income-tax Officer to pass
an order under s. 23A (1) if the conditions thereof are fulfilled
directing payment of super-tax by a private company at the rates
prescribed by the Finance Act 15 of 1.955 on its undistributed balance.
To reduce the rigour of this provision the Legislature has provided for
inducement in the form of rebate on the difference between nine annas in
every rupee of the total net income, and the amount of dividend declared,
to companies which have declared dividends so as not to attract the
application of an order under s. 23A. But that benefit is admissible only
in favour of companies to which the provisions of s. 23A of the Act
cannot be made applicable.The Income-tax authorities held that the
expression company to which the provisions of s. 23A of the Income-tax
Act cannot be made applicable' is descriptive of a class of companies
against which in no circumstances can an order under s. 23A of the Indian
Income-tax Act be made, and private limited companies being companies in
respect of which an order under s. 23A of the Income-tax Act can be made
if the conditions prescribed relating to distribution of dividend are
fulfilled, the benefit of rebate is not admissible in their favour. The
Tribunal and the High Court held that the expression "'cannot be made
applicable" only refers to a state of affairs in which having regard to
the circumstances an order under s. 23k of the Indian Income-tax Act
cannot be made. In our judgment the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal and the
High Court were right in so holding. The Legislature has used the
expression "cannot be made applicable" which clearly means that the
applicability of s. 23A depends upon an order to be made by the
Income-tax Officer, and not upon any exclusion by the provisions of the
Act. Before an order can be made under s. 23A of the Income-tax Act, the
Income- tax Officer has to ascertain (i) whether the company conforms to
the description in sub-s. (9) of s. 23A; if it does' the lncome-tax
Officer has no power to make an order ; and (ii) if the company is not
one which falls within cl. (9) of s. 23A whether having regard to
inadequacy of the declaration of dividend, an order for payment of
super-tax should not, because of the losses incurred by the company in
the earlier years, or to the smallness of the profits in the previous
year, be made. Satisfaction of the Income-tax Officer as to the existence
of several conditions prescribed thereby- even if the company is one
which does not fall within sub-s. (9) of s. 23A is a condition of the
making of the order. The language used by the Legislature clearly
indicates that it is only when an order under s. 23A will not, having
regard to the circumstances' be justified that the right to obtain rebate
under the Finance Act 15 of 1955 is claimable. The Legislature has not
enacted that the benefit of rebate is admissible only to companies
against which the order under sub-s. (1) of s. 23A can never be made. The
Legislative history as disclosed by the earlier Finance Acts supports
this interpretation of the relevant provision. In the Finance Acts prior
to 1955 rebate under Part I of the 1st Schedule Item B was admissible if
the company had in respect of profits liable to tax under the Indian
Income-tax Act made the prescribed arrangements for declaration and
payment of dividends payable out of the profits and had deducted
super-tax from the dividends in accordance with s. 18(3D) & (3E), where
the total income reduced by seven annas in the rupee' and the amount
exempt from income-tax exceeded the amount of any dividends declared and
no order had been made under sub-s. (1) of s. 23A of the Income-tax Act.
The right to rebate arose under those Finance Acts if no order under s.
23A was made. The Income-tax Officer had therefore to decide even before completing the assessment of the company whether the circumstances
justified the making of an order under S. 23A, and unless an order under
s. 23A was made the assessee became entitled automatically to the rebate
of one anna in the rupee. Such a provision led to delay in the disposal
of assessment proceedings and caused administrative inconvenience. It
appears that the Legislature modified the scheme of granting rebate in
enacting the Finance Act of 1955 with a view to simplify the procedure
and avoid delays, and not with the object of depriving the private
limited companies as a class, of the benefit of rebate which was
permissible under the earlier Acts.Counsel for the Income-tax
Commissioner invited our attention to the Finance Acts of 1956 and 1957
and contended that the Legislature in dealing with the right to rebate
under Part II relating to the rates of super-tax used phraseology which
restricted the right of rebate only to public companies. Ie must be
noticed that even under the Finance Act of 1955 by Part II of Schedule 1,
item D, a rebate of three annas per rupee of the total income was to bf
allowed to companies in respect of profits liable to tax under the
Income-tax Act for the year ending March 31, 1956, if the company had
made prescribed arrangements for payment of dividend payable out of
profits and for reduction of super-tax from dividends in accordance with
the provisions of sub-s. 3D of s. 18 of the Act and the company was a
public company with a total income not exceeding Rs. 25, 000/-. This
provision was slightly modified in the Finance Act of 1956 where the
rebate admissible was at the rate of five annas in the rupee, (other
condition being fulfilled) if the company was a public company with total
income not exceeding Rs. 25, 000/to which the provisions of s. 23A could
not be made applicable. Under the Finance Act of 1957 rebate was
admissible in favour of companies "referred to in sub-s. (9) of s. 23A of
the income-tax Act with total income not exceeding Rs. 25, 000/-." All
these provisions about rebate were enacted in prescribing the rates of
super-tax. In the Finance Act of 1955 the Legislature in dealing with the
right of rebate under Part I prescribing rates of income-tax, made it
admissible in respect of companies to which provisions of s. 23A of the
Income-tax Act could not be made applicable, whereas under Part II
prescribing rates of super-tax, rebate was made admissible in respect of
public companies having income not exceeding the prescribed amount and
rebate at a lower rate where the income exceeded the prescribed limit. If
it was intended by the Legislature to exclude private limited companies
from the benefit of rebate the Legislature would have adopted the same
phraseology as was used in that Act in dealing with the rebates in
prescribing rates of super-tax. The legislative history instead of
supporting the case of the Income-tax Department yields inference against
their interpretation.We are therefore of the view that the High Court was
right in holding that the company was entitled to the rebate claimed by
it. The appeal therefore fails and is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.;