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Western India Oil Distribution Co. Ltd. Vs. Commissioner of Income-tax, Bombay-i - Court Judgment

SooperKanoon Citation
SubjectDirect Taxation
CourtMumbai High Court
Decided On
Case NumberIncome-tax Reference No. 37 of 1969
Judge
Reported in[1980]126ITR497(Bom)
ActsIncome Tax Act, 1922 - Sections 10(2) and 12
AppellantWestern India Oil Distribution Co. Ltd.
RespondentCommissioner of Income-tax, Bombay-i
Appellant AdvocateI.M. Munim, Adv.
Respondent AdvocateR.J. Joshi, Adv.
Excerpt:
direct taxation - unabsorbed depreciation - sections 10 (2) and 12 of income tax act, 1922 - whether unabsorbed depreciation relating to assessment years 1943-44 to 1954-55 could be allowed as set-off in assessment years 1959-60 to 1962-63 - income in 1943-44 to 1962-63 was from pursuit of business, profession or vocation - unabsorbed depreciation in these years liable to be carried forward and assessee was liable to have benefit of proviso to section 10 (2) (vi) - income assessed under section 12 for 1954-55 - assessee not entitled to re-agitate question in later year that correct head of income was section 10 and not section 12 - held, unabsorbed depreciation relating to 1943-44 to 1953-54 allowed as set-off in 1959-60 to 1962-63 and unabsorbed depreciation relating to 1954-55 cannot be.....s.k. desai 1. the assessee is a public limit company. in this reference, we are concerned with the assessment years 1959-60, 1960-61, 1961-62 and 1962-63, for which the relevant accounting years are the calendar years 1958, 1959, 1960 and 1961, respectively. the assessee-company was established some time in 1932 with the object of importing petroleum and petroleum products from abroad and distributing the same in india. for the purpose of the said business the assessee owned assets by way of installations such as storage tanks, pipelines, etc., and land together with the buildings built thereon. during the second world war, the said installations and other immovable properties were requisitioned by the government under the defence of india act on several different dates between june 14,.....
Judgment:

S.K. Desai

1. The assessee is a public limit company. In this reference, we are concerned with the assessment years 1959-60, 1960-61, 1961-62 and 1962-63, for which the relevant accounting years are the calendar years 1958, 1959, 1960 and 1961, respectively. The assessee-company was established some time in 1932 with the object of importing petroleum and petroleum products from abroad and distributing the same in India. For the purpose of the said business the assessee owned assets by way of installations such as storage tanks, pipelines, etc., and land together with the buildings built thereon. During the second world war, the said installations and other immovable properties were requisitioned by the Government under the Defence of India Act on several different dates between June 14, 1942, and December 11, 1942. These assets were subsequently released to the assessee in stages on January 31, 1948, September 2, 1948, and November 4, 1948. The assets were used by the government for the same purpose as the assessee was using them all along prior to the requisitioning, i.e., for storage and distribution of petroleum and petroleum products though the distribution was now made by the government to its various departments and not to private consumers. for such requisitioned assets the Government paid compensation by way of hire charges to the assessee; the last of such amounts was paid to the assessee for the period January to August, 1949, in the accounting year 1949 relevant to the assessment year 1950-51. Although the assessee could not carry on its business after the requisitioning of these assets by the Government, it did continue for some time to do limited business of buying and selling petroleum and petroleum products. During the accounting years 1942 to 1946, the assessee had made both purchases and sales of petroleum and petroleum products.

2. Up to the assessment year 1942-43, for which the accounting year is the calendar year 1941, the income earn by the assessee was being assessed as income from business. It may be mentioned, however, that in the last assessment some small income received by way of rents of installations temporarily leased out was separately assessed as income from other sources. In the calendar year 1942, a regular rent (or compensation) in the amount of Rs. 97,000 was received from the government towards charges payable for the requisitioned assets. Accordingly, for the assessment year 1943-44, the question arose whether this was income from business or whether it was income from other sources. Rejecting the assessee's claim that it was business income, the ITO held that this was in the nature of rent received from hire of plant and hence to be considered as income from other sources. Now, as we have already mentioned, the assessee had continued to do the business on a small scale of dealing in petroleum and petroleum products; this was continued up to 1946. Thus for the assessment years 1943-44 to 1947-48 there was some small income from business and fairly substantial income from other sources, the latter being the amounts received from the Government for the requisitioned assets. From the assessment year 1948-49 to the assessment year 1954-55, the assessee's only income was from rent or amounts in respect of the assets requisitioned by the Government. It may be stated that after the assets were released by the Government, the assets had been leased out to certain private parties, who paid amounts by way of rents and hire charges to the assessee. In respect of these amounts the income received by the assessee was also treated by the ITO as income from other sources.

3. For the first time after 1946, the assessee on January 1, 1954, place an order for the purchase of oil and the shipment in pursuance thereof was received on July 31, 1954, i.e., in the accounting year 1954, relevant to the assessment year 1955-56. Thus, once again the assessee was carrying on business in petroleum and petroleum products which had not been actively carried on during the assessment years 1948-49 to 1954-55. The ITO in the assessment made for the said assessment year 1955-56 held that the business which the assessee had carried on in that year was a new business, though of dealing in the same petroleum products. The income from such business was directed to be considered under s. 10 of the Indian I.T. Act, 1922. It may be mentioned that in that year there was loss in business and, m therefore, it appears that the claim for set-off of the unabsorbed otherwise considered by the ITO. The same position continue in the assessment years 1956-57 and 1957-58, there being once again loss determined in the those years. For the assessment year 1958-59, the ITO appears to have allowed the set-off of the loss of the assessment year 1955-56, but once again we find no indication in the order of the ITO as to how the claim for unabsorbed depreciation of the earlier years was dealt with. For the said assessment year, the total income was determine at nil. We then go to the assessment year 1959-60, which is the first of the years under consideration in this reference. There is indication in this order that the ITO considered the unabsorbed depreciation from the assessment year 1955-56 onwards only as available for set-off in the subsequently years. Thus, in computing the income for that year, which was ultimately determined at nil, the ITO allowed the set-off of the loss of the assessment years 1955-56, 1956-57 and 1957-58. The position in the remaining years is similar and in all these years the assessee's claim for set-off of the unabsorbed depreciation of all the past years from 1939-40 onwards was rejected by the ITO in the relevant assessment years.

4. The assessee went in appeal to the AAC, who passed a common order dealing with these several appeals. In his view, from the assessment year 1955-56, when the assets in question were returned by the government to the Company the assessee was carrying on the same business as it was carrying on during the preceding years. On the facts of the case, he negatived the view of the ITO that the assessee-company had started a new line of business from the assessment year 1955-56. The AAC was further of opinion that even during the earlier period when the assets of the assessee-company were taken over by the Government, the income receive by the assessee was rightly assessable under head 'Business' and the unabsorbed depreciation for this period would, therefore, be available for being set off against the income arising during the years in question. Accordingly, the ITO was directed to work out the unabsorbed depreciation of the appellant-company from the assessment year 1939-40, and allow the same to be set off against the income assessable during this year.

5. Being aggrieved by the order of the AAC, the ITO filed appeals to the Tribunal. Before the Tribunal, the following contentions were advanced on behalf of the department :

'(1) Whether the AAC was right in allowing the set off of the unabsorbed depreciation of the earlier years when the ITO had already given a finding that the old business had long ceased to be carried on and a new business has been started in the accounting year relevant to the assessment year 1955-56

(2) Whether the AAC was competent to give a direction that the income of the earlier years should be treated as income from business and allow the set-off of the past years' unabsorbed depreciation accordingly when the relevant assessments has become final, treating the income of some when the relevant assessments had become final, treating the income of some of the years as income from other sources

(3) Whether the AAC was right in directing the set-off of the unabsorbed depreciation relating to the income computed under the head 'Income from other sources' under s. 12 of the Act for some of the years against the income computed under the head 'Business' under s. 10 of the Act in the subsequent years

(4) Whether the unabsorbed depreciation relating to the assets no longer in existence could in any case be so allowed to be set-off ?'

6. The findings of the AAC were supported by the assessee and it was urge; (i) that some business was carried on by he assessee throughout except for the interregnum caused during the period of inactivity due to compulsion, its commercial assets being requisitioned by the Government; (ii) that the letting out of such commercial assets, which were exploited by the Government for the same purpose as that of the assessee, amount to carrying on the same business as had hitherto been carried on; (iii) that even if letting out of the assets amounted to a different business, the unabsorbed depreciation relating thereto was still allowable in the instant years; and (iv) that even assuming assuming there was no business activity at all, the unabsorbed depreciation computed under s. 12 could none the less be allowed against income from business computed under s. 10 in the years in question.

7. On a consideration of the entire material and evidence on record, the Tribunal came to the conclusion that the assessee had not discontinued its business in the sense that it had completely given it up during the accounting years relevant to the assessment years 1943-44 to 1954-55, though income by way of lease rent received during some of the years may have been assessed as 'income from other sources'. Its finding, therefore, was that the assessee had been carrying on business throughout, though during the years 1943-44 to 1954-55, the business that the assessee was carrying on prior to 1943-44 was in a state of suspense. According to the Tribunal, the assessee during this period was deriving income from business which was by way of exploiting its commercial assets through others. It may be mentioned that this finding, which is in favour of the assessee, has not been challenged by the department in the appropriate manner and may, therefore, be regarded as having been final.

8. On a second question, however, which was whether in view of the fact that for some of the years the income assessed was or has been only income under the head 'Income from other sources' and the fact that the assessments for the relevant years 1943-44 to 1954-55 had become final, the unabsorbed depreciation relevant to these years can still be allowed as set-off in future years, the Tribunal found against the assessee. In its view, the assessments which had once become final could not be subsequently challenged unless the matter was alive. Counsel for the assessee had submitted that whether the depreciation was allowable under s. 12 or s. 10, the depreciation was identical inasmuch as it was on the same assets and was, therefore, the unabsorbed depreciation computed in terms of sub-s. (3) of s. 12 read with clause (vi) of sub-s. (2) of s. 10 thereof can equally be treated as unabsorbed depreciation under clause (vi) of sub-s. (2) of s. 10. The Tribunal had no hesitation in rejecting this argument. On the third question as to whether the unabsorbed depreciation relating to the assets which were no more in existence and could yet be allowed as a set-off in future years so long as the business, of which they were the assets, continued, the decision of the Tribunal was against the department and in favour of the assessee. This part of the decision of the Tribunal appears to have been accepted by the department and is not the subject-matter of the reference before us.

9. On these facts, the following question of law is referred to the High Court for its opinion :

'Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances of the case, unabsorbed depreciation relating to the assessment years 1943-44 to 1954-55, both inclusive, could be allowed as a set-off in the assessment years 1959-60 to 1962-63, both inclusive ?'

10. Before dealing with the statutory provision and the authorities which were cited at the bar and submitted for our consideration, it may be mentioned that the copies of the assessment orders of the assessee for the years 1943-44 to 1954-55 are annexed as annexs.'A-1' to 'A-12'. In the first of these years, it is found in para. 3 of the order that the loss to be carried forward is indicated at Rs. 2,38,675. Similarly, in the next assessment order for the year 1944-45, in para. 4 there is a statement that depreciation amounting to Rs. 75,546, we find the observation of the officer three years, it may be noted, that the total income arrived at (15) is nil and there is no tax liability on the company. We find, however, a change from the next assessment order in which full set-off is allowed and no tax liability on the company. We find, however, a change from the next assessment order in which full set-off is allowed and no tax liability found, but the earlier observation that the loss or depreciation is carried forward is missing. In the assessment order for the year 1950-51, certain profit for the year was found, but this was set off against the unabsorbed depreciation pertaining to the assessment year 1939-40. It appears, however, that this was subsequently sought to be rectified and a fresh order was passed for that assessment year, holding that the total income of the assessee was at Rs. 1,11,117 without any set-off. For the year 1951-52, a loss of Rs. 1,91,885 was found. For the assessment year 1953-54, a profit of Rs. 26,203 has been found to be the total income of the assessee, on which it was liable to pay income-tax and super-tax. This brings us to the assessment year 1954-55. In this year, it appears that certain installations had been sold by the assessee-company during the year of account for rupees nine lakhs, the original cost of such installations was Rs. 2,77,401 and its written down value as at the beginning of the year was Rs. 48,451. Thus, the department sought to a to the profits the balancing charge of Rs. 2,28,950 under the proviso to s. 10(2)(vii); this was sought to be read along with s. 12 of the Indian I.T. Act, 1922. However, after taking this item into account, but allowing a set-off of the balance of the unabsorbed depreciation for the assessment years 1942-43 and 1943-44, the total income was found by the ITO at nil.

11. It appears that the matter was thereafter carried further by the assessee and ultimately in CIT v. Western India Oil Distributing Co. Ltd. : [1971]81ITR32(Bom) , a Division Bench of this court decided that the provisions of the second proviso to s. 10(2)(vii) of the Indian I.T. Act, 1922, by which the excess realised over the written down value on the sale of any building, machinery or plant in respect of which depreciation had been allowed should be deemed to be profits, were not applicable in computing income assessable under s. 12 of the Act. In view of this decision, it was obvious that the sum of Rs. 2,28,950 could not be included within the assessee's assessable income.

12. In this reference excepting the last of the assessment years in consideration, which may be governed by the I.T. Act, 1961, we are concerned with the provisions contained in the Indian I.T. Act, 1922. For the assessment years in question, i.e., 1943-44 to 1954-55, the source of income and the carrying forward of the loss or depreciation of a particular year would be governed clearly by the provisions of the Indian I.T. Act, 1922. Section 6 of the said Act gives the several heads of income chargeable to income-tax. One of such heads of income is 'Profits and gains of business, profession or vocation', which we find subsequently dealt with under s. 10 of the said Act. Another of such heads of income is 'Income from other sources' which is dealt with under the provisions contained in s. 12 of the said Act. In respect of profits and gains of business, profession or vocation, an allowance by way of depreciation is provided for in s. 10(2)(vi), and the proviso to s. 10(2)(vi) allows an assessee to carry forward unabsorbed depreciation. It provides that an allowance or part of the allowance by way of depreciation, to which effect has not been given, shall be added to the amount of allowance for depreciation for the following year, and the same is to e deemed to be part of such allowance for that year, and this process is to continue for the succeeding years. In respect of 'income from other sources' provide for under s. 12, it is sub-s. (3) which brings in the allowance by way of depreciation by providing as follows :

'12. (3) Where an assessee lets on hire machinery, plant or furniture belonging to him, he shall be entitled to allowances in according with the provisions of clauses (iv), (v), (vi) and (vii) of sub-section (2) of section 10.'

13. It will be perceived that by reason of this sub-section the assessee would be entitled to an allowance by way of this sub-section the assessee income from other sources but will not be permitted to carry it forward, which facility is made available to the assessee by reason of the proviso to s. 10(2)(vi). Section 24 of the Indian I.T. Act, 1922, provides for set-off of loss in computing the aggregate income. Sub-section (1) thereof provides that where an assessee sustains a loss of profits or gains in any year under any of the heads mentioned in s. 6, he shall be entitled to have the amount of loss set off against his income, profits or gains under any other head in that year. There are, however, certain provisos and Explanations to this, which are not material for our purposes. Sub-section (2) of s. 24 provides for carrying forward of the loss to the following year for loss of profits or gains in any business, profession or vocation. There are certain restrictions and conditions but clause (iii) of sub-s. (2) provides that if the loss cannot be wholly set off in the following year, the amount of loss not so set off shall be carried forward to the following year, and so on. But there is a limit of eight years provided beyond which such loss cannot be carried forward, sub-section (3) of s. 24 provides that when, in the course of the assessment of the total income of any assessee, it is established that a loss of profits or gains has taken place which he is entitled to have set-off under the provisions of this section, the ITO shall notify to the assessee by order in writing, the amount of the loss as computed by him for the purposes of this section. These, in our opinion, are the statutory provisions which are relevant for the purpose of deciding the question arising in this reference.

14. The principal attack of the learned counsel for the assessee was on the principle of finality which found favour with the Tribunal and the application thereof which resulted in prejudice to the assessee. The Tribunal held that during the years 1943-44 to 1954-55 the income earned by the assessee ought to have been considered to be income from business and not as income from other sources. However, the ITO treated the income as income from other sources. The assessment had not been carried further in appeal and inasmuch as the assessee had accepted it, it had become final and the question, therefore, could not be re-agitated and the earlier conclusion upset in the subsequent assessment years which were under consideration before it. It was submitted that this approach of the Tribunal was neither proper nor correct. This was sought to be supported by reference to a decision of the Supreme Court in New Jehangir Vakil Mills Co. Ltd. v. CIT : [1963]49ITR137(SC) . The relevant portion of the headnote of that decision, to which our attention was drawn, reads as follows (Headnote) :

'For years prior to the calendar year 1944, the assessee was treated as an investor and not a dealer in shares and, in the relevant assessments, profits or losses therefrom were not taken into consideration in computing its taxable income. For the assessment year 1945-46, the assessee was treated as a dealer in shares in the relevant accounting year 1944, and for the purpose of computing the profits that arose out of sales of shares in 1944 the position of the assessee in 1943 was considered, and it was held that the assessee had indulged in share-dealing in that year also and, on that basis, the cost price of the shares sold in 1944 was taken :

Held, that though the question which directly arose before the taxing authorities was whether the assessee in 1944, the question of the position of the assessee in 1943 also arose in determining how the profits made in 1944 should be computed. Therefore, it was not correct to say that the position of the assessee in 1943 was completely outside the scope of the assessment proceedings for 1945-46. In determining or computing profits made by the sale of shares in 1944, the assessing authorities had to decide whether the assessee started its share-dealing activities on January 1, 1944, or at an earlier date. It was, therefore, open to the taxing authorities to consider the position of the assessee in 1943. The circumstance that in an earlier assessment relating to 1943 the assessee was treated as an investor did not e top the assessing authorities from considering, for the purpose of computation of the profits of 1944, as to when the trading activities of the assessee in shares began. Nor could it be said, because it was held that the trading activities began in 1943, that the assessment relating to the year 1943 was being reopened. What was being done was only to compute the profits of 1944, which the authorities were entitled to do, by finding out when the trading activity in shares began. In matters of taxation there can be no question res judicata. The decision given by an Income-tax Officer for one assessment year cannot affect or bind his decision for another year. Generally the doctrine of res judicata or estoppel by record does not apply to such decisions.'

15. We are afraid that this decision, far from supporting the assessee, suggest that the Supreme Court did not look with favour upon the reopening of the earlier assessments but in its view what was being done in the facts of the case before it was not to reopen an earlier assessment but consider the correct legal position for the year 1944, for which purpose the position of the assessee in 1943 and his dealings in 1943 could be considered. These dealings, according to the Supreme Court, could be gone into to determine the true position of the assessee as a dealer or investor in 1944 although the conclusion that he was an investor in 1943 must remain undisturbed in the assessment proceedings for the subsequent years.

16. Our attention was then drawn by counsel for the assessee to CIT v. Manmohan as : [1966]59ITR699(SC) . The facts in the said case before the Supreme Court were as follows. By an agreement dated January 2, 1931, the branches, sub-agencies and pay offices. As treasurer various duties had to be performed by the assessee. Under the said agreement, the assessee was entitled to monthly allowances subject to a maximum of Rs. 2,250 per month. In addition he was entitled to Rs. 350 per month for traveling expenses. In the previous year relating to the assessment year 1950-51, the assessee had suffered a net loss of Rs. 38,027 in the performance of his duties. The ITO who computed the loss in the year to be set off against the income of the subsequent year. This was on the ground that the remuneration received by the assessee was 'salary' within the meaning of s. 7 of the I.T. Act. The claim to set off this loss of 1950-51 against the income of 1951-52 was again made in the assessment year 1951-52 but was rejected by the ITO. The matter was carried further. The AAC confirmed the order of the ITO. The Income-tax Appellate Tribunal, however, found in favour of the assessee holding that what the assessee was receiving was income arising from pursuit of a profession or vocation within the meaning of s. 10 and the loss suffered during the preceding year was liable to be set off against the assessee's income from that source in the year under consideration. The matter was carried further to the High Court, which agreed with the Tribunal, and with a certificate granted, an appeal was subsequently preferred to the Supreme Court. The question which was answered in favour of the assessee by the High Court and with which we are concerned, was whether the assessee could claim a set-off of the loss suffered by him in the preceding year 1950-51 against this profits in the year under consideration, i.e., 1951-52, having failed to prefer an appeal against the refusal by the ITO making the assessment for the year 1950-51 to allow the assessee to carry forward the loss under s. 24(2) of the Act. Shah J. (as he then was) speaking for the Supreme Court answered this question as follows (p. 702) :

'The second question presents little difficulty. In making his order of assessment for the year 1950-51, the Income-tax officer declared that the loss computed in that year could not be carried forward to the next year under section 24(2) of the Income-tax Act, as it was not a business loss. The Income-tax Officer has under section 24(3) to notify to the assessee the amount of loss as computed by him, if it is established in the course of section 24(2) confers a statutory right (subject to certain conditions which are not material) upon the assessee who sustains a loss of profits in any year in any business, profession or vocation to carry forward the loss as is not set off under sub-section (1) to the following year, and to set it off against his profits and gains, if any, from the same business, profession or vocation for that year. Whether the loss of profits or gains in any year may be carried forward to the following year and set off against the profits and gains of the same business, profession or vocation under section 24(2) has to be determined by the Income-tax Officer who deals with the assessment of the subsequent year. It is for the Income-tax Officer dealing with the assessment in the subsequent year to determine whether the loss of the previous year may be set off against the profits of that year. A decision recorded by the Income-tax Officer who computes the loss in the previous year under section 24(3) that the loss cannot be set off against the income of the subsequent year is not binding on the assessee.'

17. If this decision be properly analysed, it would seem that the application of the principle of finality, which has been submitted for our acceptance by counsel for the revenue and which found favour with the Tribunal has been rejected by the Supreme Court in a substantially similar set up when it opined that the decision of the ITO in the preceding year that the loss cannot be set off against the income of the subsequent year is not binding on the assessee despite the fact that he has rested content with that decision and not carried further the matter by way of appeal. To put it in other words, in the assessment year 1950-51, the ITO, dealing with the assessee's case, held that there was a net loss but that this could not be carried forward inasmuch as the income received by the assessee was not from the pursuit of any business, profession or vocation. For the succeeding year 1951-52, the assessee contended that his income was from pursuit of business, profession or vocational and sought to set off the preceding year's loss against the income for the succeeding year. This contention was urged despite the fact that in the preceding year the income had been held to be from a source other than a business, profession or vocation, and on that ground the carrying forward of the loss had not been allowed. It was held by the court that the income of the assessee for both years must properly be regarded as having arisen from the pursuit of a vocation and, further, that because of this the assessee was liable to have the preceding year's loss set off against the income for the assessment year 1951-52. It brushed aside the argument of the revenue that the preceding year's decision by the ITO had become final and by reason of such finality the assessee in 1951-52 would not be entitled to set off the loss incurred in 1950-51, although the correct legal position was that the income was from the pursuit of a business, profession or vocation and that, if this was so, the assessee was entitled to carry forward the loss.

18. It was submitted by counsel for the assessee that a similar approach must be followed by us and applied to the facts of the case. It is true that in the assessment years under consideration the ITO held that the correct head of the assessee's income was 'Income from other sources' under s. 12 and in some of the assessment years it was on this express footing that the carrying forward of the unabsorbed depreciation was not permitted, whilst in others, excepting the first three (as we have pointed out earlier), the only conclusion reached by the ITO was to hold that the assessee was not liable to pay tax but without computing or specifying that there was unabsorbed depreciation liable to be carried forward. It was submitted on behalf of the assessee that although the assessee had not canvassed the issue further or gone in appeal from the ITO's decisions in these years, any such finding was not binding on the assessee and that the issue could be gone into or even re-agitated by the assessee for the years in question when set-off was claimed. In these years, i.e., the later years when set-off is claimed, according to counsel for the assessee, it would not be open for the department to submit that the matter had become final for these earlier years by reason of the assessment orders for these years, against which appeals had not been preferred. It appears to us that this submission will have to be accepted in view of the decision of the Supreme Court in Manmohan Das' case : [1966]59ITR699(SC) from which we have attracted a passage earlier. In order to satisfy ourselves we referred to standard text books on the subject and found that various authors on the subject had understood the decision of the Supreme Court in the same sense in which we have understood it. The position as to quantification of the amount of loss appears to be different. Mr. Joshi, on behalf of the revenue, drew our attention to another decision of the Supreme Court in CIT v. Kaushal Chand Daga : [1961]42ITR177(SC) , which was a matter concerning finality of the amount of loss determine in the preceding years. The Supreme Court in that decision, which need not be examined in detail, held that inasmuch as the ITO had failed to notify the loss computed by him by an order in writing as required by s. 24(3), the computation would not be regarded as final but would be allowed to be re-agitated and re-determined in a subsequent year. This decision would suggest, although we express no final opinion on the point, that if the quantification of loss is properly made and duly notified by following the prescribed procedure, such quantification may be impressed with the principle of finality if the matter is not carried further. However, the principle of finality as may be applicable to the question of quantification f the amount of loss does not appear to be applicable to the determinations of the source of income and the decision whether the loss can or cannot be allowed to be carried forward by reason of the determination of the source. This is the clear result of the decision of the Supreme Court in Manmohan das' case : [1966]59ITR699(SC) . As far as carrying forward of loss and carrying forward of unabsorbed depreciation are concerned, although there are some important differences between the provisions, a few of which we have indicated earlier in this judgment, these differences are not material as far as this aspect of the matter is concerned, although there are some important differences between the provisions, a few of which we have indicated earlier in this judgment, these differences are not material as far as this Manmohan Das' Case : [1966]59ITR699(SC) is realise, it would appear that if in an earlier year it has been held that the correct head of income applicable to the assessee's case is under s. 12, i.e., 'Income from other sources' and by that reason the benefit of carrying forward of unabsorbed depreciation is denied to the assessee, such a decision will not bind the assessee in the subsequent year in which he wants to claim the set-off. He can have the question determined in the later year although in the earlier year in which the decision was given the assessee rested content with the order of he ITO and did not carry the matter further.

19. Mr. Joshi faintly argued that the principal : [1966]59ITR699(SC) ple laid down in Manmohan Das' case : [1966]59ITR699(SC) should be restricted to the immediately succeeding year and cannot be applied in cases where in question is sought to be redetermined or re-agitated after the lapse of a number of years as was the case before us. There is no substance whatever in this contention. The Supreme Court has clearly observed that the decision in the earlier year is not binding on the assessee. If that decision does not bind the assessee despite the fact that he has not carried the matter further, it will not bind him in the very next year or the year thereafter or in any following year. The fact that the question is sought by the assessee to be redetermined and re-agitated after a lapse of a number of years would seem to have no bearing on the application the principle commended by the Supreme Court.

20. It may be mentioned that Mr. Munim had also sought to justify his criticism of the approach of the Tribunal with reference to the decisions of the Delhi and the Bombay High Courts. We have not referred to these decisions in the view that we have taken that the point is covered by the decision of the Supreme Court in Manmohan Das' case : [1966]59ITR699(SC) . We also found these to have little bearing on the question under consideration.

21. We have now to apply the principle enunciated in the said case to the facts elicited by the Tribunal in the statement of case, which we have briefly set out earlier in this judgment. It would appear that for all the years which are mentioned in the question referred to us, i.e., 1943-44 to 1954-55, the correct head of income of the assessee was not 'Income from other sources' but 'Income from business, profession or vocation'. This was a finding of the Tribunal which has been accepted by the Commissioner. If that was so, it would follow that the unabsorbed depreciation in any of these years was liable to be carried forward and the assessee was liable to have the benefit of the special provision contained in the proviso to s. 10(2)(vi) of the Indian I.T. Act, 1922. The assessee is not precluded from claiming a set-off in respect of the same for the assessment years in question. However, as indicated earlier, we find that there is some difficulty for the last of the years in question, i.e., 1954-55. It is found that in this year the assessee had obtained a distinct pecuniary advantage by assessment of its income under s. 12 and not under s. 10. By reason of such assessment the assessee contended that the provisions contained in the proviso to s. 10(2)(vii) were not applicable when its income was being assessed under s. 12; an this point was decided in favour of the assessee in the decision of the High Court, viz., in CIT v. Western Indian Oil Distributing Co. Ltd. : [1971]81ITR32(Bom) , which we have referred to earlier. For this year, it was submitted on behalf of the revenue that the revenue was not merely resting its argument on the contention that the assessment under s. 12 for this year should be regarded as final, merely because it was so held by the ITO and that the assessee had not gone further; it was submitted that in addition to such argument, which was equally available for the other years as for this year, the revenue relied upon the fact that the assessee had taken benefit of the fact that its income was assessed under s. 12 and that where it had taken such a benefit it could not subsequently be permitted to submit that the correct section or the head under which its income ought to be assessed is s. 10. Such estoppel was claimed against the assessee on the well-known principle of 'approbate and reprobate'. Mr. Munim submitted that the assessee had not sought assessment under s. 12 but that when the department assessed its income as 'income from other sources' under s. 12, the assessee was entitled to make the submission that the provisions of s. 10(2)(vii) were not applicable. It is clear to us that for this assessment year, i.e., 1954-55, the assessee had secured a definite pecuniary advantage by reason of its income being assessed as 'income from other sources' under s. 12; whilst retaining that pecuniary advantage it cannot be permitted to re-agitate the question in a later year and submit that correct head of income was not under s. 12 but under s. 10. For this year, then, because of this special circumstances, the assessee would not be entitled to carry forward the unabsorbed depreciation, if any, for that year and set off the same against the income for any succeeding year.

22. In this view of the matter, the question referred to us is answered as follows :

On the facts and in the circumstances of the case, the unabsorbed depreciation relating to the assessment years 1943-44 to 1953-54, both inclusive, could be allowed as set-off in the assessment years 1959-60 to 1962-63. However, the unabsorbed depreciation relating to the assessment year 1954-55 cannot be allowed as set-off in the assessment years 1959-60 to 1962-63.

23. The assessee has succeeded substantially and the result must be that it will be entitled to the costs of the reference from the revenue. There will be an order accordingly.


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