JUDGEMENT
S.K. Mal Lodha, J. -
(1.) IN compliance with the order dated September 12, 1978, of this court passed in D.B. INcome-tax Case No. 2 of 1976, the INcome-tax Appellate Tribunal, Jaipur Bench, Jaipur (" the Tribunal " herein), has referred the following three questions for our opinion :
" 1. Whether the INcome-tax Appellate Tribunal had any material to arrive at its conclusion that diesel of Rs. 14,026 (18,000 litres) recorded on July 4, 1970, in the cash book and the stock register of the applicant-firm represented the suppressed stock ?
(2.) WHETHER the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal was, at any rate, justified in holding that the aforesaid sum of Rs. 14,026 was liable to be included in the total income of the applicant-firm as ' income from undisclosed sources ' ?
Whether the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal was correct in holding that the purchases of diesel worth Rs. 14,026 recorded on July 4, 1970, was ' an expenditure ' within the meaning of Section 40A(3) of the Income-tax Act, 1961 ? "
2. The assessee-petitioner carries on business in petrol, diesel, kerosene, motor parts, etc., at Banswara. The accounting year of the assessee-firm for the assessment year ended on October 30, 1970. On July 4, 1970, the assessee debited in its cash book a sum of Rs. 14,026 against the purchase price of 18,000 litres of diesel. The quantity of diesel purchased recorded in the stock register on July 4, 1970, is as under :
" 1,500, 1,000, 2,100, 1,500, 2,100, 1,800, 1,500, 2,100, 2,100, 1,500 = 18,000 litres.
3. In the cash book, the assessee made an entry in respect of purchase of diesel in one lump sum. The assessee did not obtain purchase voucher. However, Kalimuddin, partner of the assessee-firm, submitted an affidavit to the effect that during Samvat year 2026, the firm had purchased 18,000 litres diesel worth Rs. 14,025.75 from various private parties to meet the temporary scarcity in the area. According to the assessee-firm, the said purchases were recorded in one lump sum in the books of account on July 4, 1970. The case of the assessee-firm was that no single purchase of diesel so recorded was of the value of Rs. 2,500 or more. The Income-tax Officer by his order dated December 15, 1972, held that the assessee was in possession of diesel amounting in value of Rs. 14,026 on July 4, 1970, whose source of acquisition remained not explained. He, therefore, invoked the provisions of Section 40A(3) of the Income-tax Act, 1961 (No. XLIII of 1961) (for short "the Act" herein), and considered the payment to be an expenditure. It was taken as inadmissible under the aforesaid provision. On appeal by the assessee, the Appellate Assistant Commissioner affirmed the order of the Income-tax Officer, vide his order dated April 30, 1983. He opined that no private party can deal in diesel unless licensed to do so. If the purchases were from the licensed and established dealers, there is no reason why the assessee should not get purchases verified from them. He did not place reliance on the " self-created evidence " and it was taken that it did not prove the assertion of the assessee. He also maintained the applicability of Section 40A(3) of the Act. The assessee went up in further appeal before the Tribunal. The Tribunal in its order dated October 20, 1974, observed as under :
" We are, therefore, of the opinion that the purchase in question on July 4, 1970, has not been proved. The inference of the Income-tax Officer that the stock of 18,000 liters of diesel sold is the suppressed stock in the circumstances is correct. It could not have been acquired in one day. From the evidence on record and having regard to human probabilities, it is also clear to us that it must have been bulit up gradually. The payment of Rs. 14,026 from the cash book on July 4, 1970, would not be the source of this gradual acquisition of this stock, for it is the alleged outgoing of cash against the alleged purchases on July 4, 1970 alone. Once the purchases are shown not to have been there on July 4, 1970, the source loses its value as explaining the acquisition of diesel. The authorities were, therefore, in our opinion, right in adding the value of this diesel as the assessee's income from undisclosed sources as the timing and source of their acquisition remains unproved and unexplained. "
On the question of the applicability of Section 40A(3) of the Act (as there is only one entry in respect of the payment of the price of diesel purchased), it was held by the Tribunal that it was only one payment. The assessee's contention was repelled that the word " expenditure " does not include purchase. An application filed by the assessee under Section 256(1) of the Act was rejected on February 14, 1975. The assessee filed an application under Section 256(2) of the Act to this court praying for stating the case and referring the questions of law arising out of its order. In pursuance of that, the aforesaid questions have been referred for our opinion.
We have heard Mr. Rajendra Mehta, learned counsel for the assessee, and Mr. B. R. Arora for the Revenue. We have also examined the order dated October 22, 1974, of the Tribunal and having considered that order and the facts and circumstances of the case, we consider it proper to deal with question No. 3 first. Before we do that, we may mention that the Tribunal, as stated above, came to the conclusion that the payment of Rs. 14,026 is clearly caught in the net of Section 40A(3) of the Act. It, therefore, affirmed the order passed by the authorities below that the aforesaid amount was rightly added back in terms of Section 40A(3) of the Act as an alternative. One of the partners, namely, Shri Kalimuddin, of the assessee-firm filed an affidavit explaining the entries in the stock book and cash book in the following terms :
" That during S.Y. 2026, the above firm had also purchased diesel (18,000 litres) worth Rs. 14,025.72 from various private parties to meet its temporary scarcity in the area and the said purchases were recorded in one lump sum in the firm's books of account on July 4, 1970, and was of the value of Rs. 2,500 or more. "
The stand taken by the assessee was not accepted by the Income-tax Officer. It was held by him that this purchase is not verifiable and, therefore, the assessee was in possession of diesel amounting to Rs. 14,026 on July 4, 1970, and its source of acquisition is not explained. The Income-tax Officer observed that the assessee has inflated the purchase of diesel by this amount, by introducing a fictitious entry while actually no purchase has been made corresponding to this entry. The Appellate Assistant Commissioner, as stated above, affirmed that finding. Before the Tribunal, the contention on behalf of the assessee was that the word " expenditure " does not include a "purchase". It was rejected by the Tribunal on the ground that "expenditure" denotes an outgoing and the payment for purchase is an outgoing inasmuch as the price paid for the purchase of labour or the purchase of expertise, management, etc. It is this finding of the Tribunal which forms the subject-matter of question No. 3. We may read the material part of Section 40A:
" 40A. Expenses of payments not deductible in certain circumstances.--(1) The provisions of this section shall have effect notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained in any other provision of this Act relating to the computation of income under the head ' Profits and gains of business or profession'......
(3) Where the assessee incurs any expenditure in respect of which payment is made, after such date (not being later than the 31st day of March, 1969) as may be specified in this behalf by the Central Government by notification in the Official Gazette, in a sum exceeding two thousand five hundred rupees otherwise than by a crossed cheque drawn on a bank or by a crossed bank draft, such expenditure shall not be allowed as a deduction :
Provided that where an allowance has been made in the assessment for any year not being an assessment year commencing prior to the 1st day of April, 1969, in respect of any liability incurred by the assessee for any expenditure and subsequently during any previous year the assessee makes any payment in respect thereof in a sum exceeding two thousand five hundred rupees otherwise than by a crossed cheque drawn on a bank or by a crossed bank draft, the allowance originally made shall be deemed to have been wrongly made and the Income-tax Officer may recompute the total income of the assessee for the previous year in which such liability was incurred and make the necessary amendment, and the provisions of Section 154 shall, so far as may be, apply thereto, the period of four years specified in Sub-section (7) of that section being reckoned from the end of the assessment year next following the previous year in which the payment was so made :
Provided further that no disallowance under this sub-section shall be made where any payment in a sum exceeding two thousand five hundred rupees is made otherwise than by a crossed cheque drawn on a bank or by a crossed bank draft, in such cases and under such circumstances as may be prescribed, having regard to the nature and extent of banking facilities available, considerations of business expediency and other relevant factors. "
(3.) THE word " expenditure " has not been denned in the Act. THE various expenditures of which deductions are allowable are dealt with in Sections 30 to 37 of the Act and Section 40A(3) deals with only those deductions. THE word " expenditure " in some other context was referred to by the Supreme Court in Indian Molasses Co. (Private) Ltd. v. CIT [1959] 37 ITR 66 and it was observed therein as follows (headnote):
" ' Spending ' in the sense of ' paying out or away ' of money is the primary meaning of ' expenditure '. ' Expenditure ' is what is paid out or away and is something which is gone irretrievably. Expenditure, which is deductible for income-tax purposes, is one which is towards a liability actually existing at the time, but the putting aside of money which may become expenditure on the happening of an event is not expenditure."
It is well-settled by a catena of cases of some of the High Courts of the country that the word " expediture " in Section 40A(3) cannot be limited or restricted to expenditure which is allowed as a deduction under Sections 33 to 39 being overall expenses such as rent, taxes, repairs, insurance, salary, etc., deductible from the gross income and is liable to tax.
The word " expenditure " in Section 40A(3) according to us has wide import and it includes expenses which are taken into account while determining the gross profit.
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