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Abstract
The decisions of the Bombay and Rajasthan High Courts in Sesa Goa Ltd. v. Jt. CIT [2020] 117 taxmann.com 96and in Chambal Fertilizers & Chemicals Ltd. v. Jt. CIT [ ] 102 CCH 202 respectively have sparked a new polemic in tax law with reference to deductibility of education cess as business expenditure. The judgments effectively tend to reduce the size of the education cess pie, which was levied as a public policy imperative to finance educational requirements of the underprivileged. The object of this article is to examine the legal issues vis-à-vis the judgments of the two High Courts and to place them in perspective in the context of law as it exists today.
Introduction
The recent judgments of the two High Courts in Sesa Goa Ltd.1 and Chambal Fertilizers & Chemicals Ltd.2cases have created quite a controversy with the revenue gearing up to assail them before the Apex Court and the taxpayers scurrying to file additional grounds before various judicial fora to claim deduction of education cess as business expenditure. While the High Courts have attempted to trace the history of this levy, the aim of this article is to examine whether the courts have been able to correctly appreciate its historical evolution in correct
Assumption of Deductibility under section 37(1): No Adjudication
It may be noticed at the outset that in both the cases, the High Courts have examined the question whether ‘education cess’ is included in section 40(a)(ii) of the Income-tax Act 1961 and having answered this question in negative, both the Courts have assumed that since it is not included in section 40(a)(ii), it becomes allowable under section 37(1) of the Act. They did not examine the allowability of education cess in terms of the requirements of section 37(1) at all. For instance, the Rajasthan High Court in Chambal Fertilizers & Chemicals Ltd’s case (supra) was examining the following question of law:
Whether under the facts and circumstances of the case the Ld. ITAT has not erred in holding that the education cess is a disallowable expenditure under section 40(a)(ii) of the Act?”
Likewise, the Bombay High Court in Sesa Goa Ltd’s case (supra) framed this question in the following terms:
“17. Therefore, the question which arises for determination is whether the expression “any rate or tax levied” as it appears in Section 40(a)
(ii) of the IT Act includes “cess”. The Appellant – Assessee contends that the expression does not include “cess” and therefore, the amounts paid towards “cess” are liable to be deducted in computing the income chargeable under the head “profits and gains of business or profession”.”
From the above, it is manifest that the High Courts did not adjudicate on the allowability of education cess under section 37(1) and merely proceeded on the assumption that it was so allowable if it was not hit by section 40(a)(ii).
Interplay of Section 37(1) and Section 40(a)(ii)
However, when one looks at the scheme of the Act and examines the interplay of the provisions of section 40(a)(ii) and section 37(1), it becomes clear that in the scheme of the twin provisions, it is the allowability of an expenditure or an item or a claim, which has to be first examined under section 37(1) and only if the said expenditure, item or claim is found to pass muster under section 37(1), then a further examination is to be necessarily made whether the said expenditure, item or claim is hit by the embargo placed in section 40(a)(ii) of the Act. This is clearly evident from section 40(a)(ii) which starts with a non-obstante clause, which reads as follows:
“40. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in sections 30 to 38, the following amounts shall not be deducted in computing the income chargeable under the head “Profits and gains of business or profession”,—
The Effect of Non-obstante clause in Section 40
In that view of the matter, the allowability of education cess shall have to be examined first under the terms of section 37(1) i.e. whether the said expenditure has been ‘laid out or expended wholly and exclusively for the purposes of business or profession’. The fundamental question, therefore, which arises for consideration is whether education cess is an expenditure ‘laid out or expended wholly and exclusively for the purposes of business or profession’. The answer to this question is clearly in negative because ‘education cess’ is not expenditure at all. Rather, it is a charge upon the profits, similar to income tax. Any expenditure to earn a profit cannot be a part of the profit itself. It is an application of an income and not an expenditure ‘laid out or expended wholly and exclusively for the purposes of business or profession’ so as to pass the tests envisaged under section 37(1). This principle was enunciated by the House of Lords in Ashton Gas Company v. Attorney General3. The following observation of Earl of Halsbury is illuminating in this regard:
“Profit is a plain English word; that is what is charged with income- tax. But if you confound what is the necessary expenditure to earn that profit with the income-tax, which is a part of the profit itself, one can understand how you get into the confusion which has induced the learned counsel at such very considerable length to point out that this is not a charge upon the profits at all. The answer is that it is. The income-tax is a charge upon the profits; the thing which is taxed is the profit that is made, and you must ascertain what is the profit that is made before you deduct the tax – you have no right to deduct the income-tax before you ascertain what the profit is. I cannot understand how you can make the income-tax part of the expenditure.”
This view of the House of Lords was noted with approval by the Supreme Court in CIT v. Oriental Fire & General Insurance Co. Ltd.4
The Ashton Gas Company’s case (supra) decisionwas followed by the Gujarat High Court in L.M. Maneklal Industries Ltd. v. CIT5, wherein the question arose whether surtax was an expenditure ‘laid out or expended wholly and exclusively for the purposes of business or profession’ under section 37(1). Answering in negative, the Court held thus:
A contention similar to the one, raised in the instant case, came up for consideration in the case of Ashton Gas Co. v. Attorney General [1906] AC 10 (HL). That was a case in which it was statutorily provided that the profits of Ashton Gas Co. to be divided amongst the shareholders in any year should not exceed the rate of 10 per cent per annum on the ordinary share capital. The company distributed 10 per cent as dividend tax-free. It was urged on behalf of the company that the income-tax was a charge on the profits before distribution to the shareholders which had to be deducted before arriving at the profits and calculating the dividend. It was urged that the tax was charged upon the company and the company was entitled to adopt principle on which it had acted. Buckley, J adjudged and declared that the profits ought to be calculated as inclusive and not exclusive of the amount payable for the year in respect of the income-tax on the profits proposed to be divided. This decision was affirmed by the Court of Appeal. On further appeal to the House of Lords, Earl of Halsbury, L.C. observed as follows:
“Profit is a plain English word; that is what is charged with income- tax. But if you confound what is the necessary expenditure to earn that profit with the income-tax, which is a part of the profit itself, one can understand how you get into the conclusion which has induced the learned counsel at such very considerable length to point out that this is not a charge upon the profits at all. The answer is that it is. The income-tax is a charge upon the profits; the thing which is taxed is the profit made before you deduct the tax— you have no right to deduct the income-tax before you ascertain what the profit is. I cannot understand how you can make the income-tax part of the expenditure. I share Buckley, J.’s difficulty in understanding how so plain a matter has been discussed in all the Courts at such extravagant length.”
As pointed out above, in the instant case, what is being charged is the total income of the assessee after making adjustments as provided in the Act. It is the profit which the assessee has made which is being taxed.
Applying the ratio of the decision of the Supreme Court, surtax cannot be said to be an expenditure incurred wholly and exclusively for the purpose of the business of the assessee. Payment of surtax had nothing to do with the conduct of the business of the assessee. It was not an expenditure incurred for the purpose of business or for the purpose of earning profit. It is only after the profit or income is earned that, as pointed out above, the question of payment of surtax would arise. It is an event which takes place after the income is earned and not in the course of or in the process of earning income. It is out of the profits or income earned that surtax is to be paid. In other words, payment of surtax is application of the profits after they are earned. As discussed above, surtax is levied on excess chargeable profits computed in the manner laid down in the Act. It is a levy on the total income computed under the Act after it is adjusted in accordance with the First Schedule to the Act. Computation of income for the purpose of the Act has to precede the assessment of surtax under the Act. Unless and until computation of total income under the Act is made, the question of chargeable profits and levy of surtax under the Act does not arise. Admittedly, income-tax is not an admissible deduction for the purpose of computing profits and gains or the total income under the Act. In our opinion, surtax stands on the same footing as income-tax inasmuch as it is also a tax on the total income computed under the Act after its adjustment under the Act. Payment of both income-tax and surtax is application of income after it is earned and not an expenditure incurred for the purpose of business. It is not a deduction before one arrives at the profits inasmuch as it is not payment for the purpose of earning profit. We are, therefore, unable to accept the assessee’s contention that payment of surtax is an expenditure laid out wholly and exclusively for the purpose of business and, therefore, allow able deduction under section
Since payment of surtax is not allowable deduction under section 37, the question whether it comes within the mischief of section 40(a)(ii) does not arise. In other words, it is not necessary to consider whether the prohibition contained in section 40(a)(ii) is applicable to the payment of surtax. The view similar to the one taken by us has been taken by the Calcutta High Court in Molins of India Ltd. v. CIT [1983] 144 ITR 317, the Karnataka High Court in CIT International Instruments (P.)Ltd. [1983] 144 ITR 936, Full Bench of the Kerala High Court in A.
Education Cess Fails the Test at the First Stage Itself
5. Thus, ‘education cess’ fails the test of deductibility at the first stage itself
i.e. under the terms of section 37(1) and, therefore, there is no further need to examine the embargo under section 40(a)(ii). This aspect of law was not noticed in Sesa Goa Ltd. and Chambal Fertilizers & Chemicals Ltd’s case (supra) and their lordships proceeded in a reverse way to examine the prohibition contained in section 40(a)(ii) and thereafter, simply assumed the allowability of ‘education cess’ as an expenditure ‘laid out or expended wholly and exclusively for the purposes of business or profession’ under section 37(1).
Prohibition Under Section 40(a)(ii)
Coming to the proscriptions mentioned in section 40(a)(ii), the question to be asked here is whether the bar contained in section 40(a)(ii) operates qua ‘education cess’, even if one were to assume the deductibility of ‘education cess’ under section 37(1) of the Act. To put it simply, the real question would be to see whether ‘education cess’ is tax so as to fall within the mischief of section 40(a)(ii).
The Explanatory Memorandum to Finance Bill 2012
It may be noticed here that education cess was introduced as an additional surcharge as explained in the Explanatory Memorandum to Finance Bill The relevant excerpt from the said Memorandum reads as follows:
“(2) Education Cess — For assessment year 2012-13, additional surcharge called the “Education Cess on income-tax” and “Secondary and Higher Education Cess on income-tax” shall continue to be levied at the rate of two per cent. and one per cent, respectively, on the amount of tax computed, inclusive of surcharge, in all cases. No marginal relief shall be available in respect of such Cess.”
An ‘additional surcharge’ is, therefore, nothing but ‘tax’, as held by a three- judge Bench of the Supreme Court in CIT v. K Srinivasan6. The following words of Grover J elucidate the law in unequivocal terms:
“In our judgment it is unnecessary to express any opinion in the matter because the essential point for determination is whether surcharge is an additional mode or rate for charging income tax. The meaning of the word “surcharge” as given in the Webster’s New International Dictionary includes among others “to charge (one) too much or in addition………………….. ” also “additional tax”. Thus, the meaning
of surcharge is to charge in addition or to subject to an additional or extra charge. If that meaning is applied to s. 2 of the Finance Act 1963 it would lead to the result that income tax and super tax were to be charged in four different ways or at four different rates which may be described as (i) the basic charge or rate (In part I of the First Schedule); (ii) Sur- charge; (iii) special surcharge and (iv) additional surcharge calculated in the manner provided in the Schedule. Read in this way the additional charges form a part of the income tax and super tax.”
This judgment in K Srinivasan’s case (supra), however, was not considered by their lordships of the Bombay High Court and the Rajasthan High Court in Sesa Goa Ltd. and Chambal Fertilizers & Chemicals Ltd.’s case (supra).
The Select Committee Report on Income-tax Bill 1961
Coming to the Select Committee Report on Income-tax Bill 1961 dated 10th August 1961 and the subsequent circular of the CBDT F. No. 91/58/66-ITJ(19), dated 18th May, 1967), relied upon by the High Courts in Sesa Goa Ltd. and Chambal Fertilizers & Chemicals Ltd.’s case (supra), it may be appreciated that at the relevant point in time, there was no cess on income-tax under the old Income-tax Act ‘Cess’ was levied by different states as ‘local levies’ under state legislation. The evidence of the same is available through a plethora of cases before various judicial fora at relevant time. These items of ‘cess’ were of nominal amount and were sometimes revenue in nature. It was these kinds of ‘cess’ which were under consideration before the Select Committee on Income-tax Bill 1961, as evident from the minutes of the Select Committee meeting dated 20th June, 1961 (when Shri B.P. Khaitan, speaking for Indian Chamber of Commerce, Calcutta, took up the issue of proposal from Income-tax Bill 1961 on clause 40(a)(ii), which is extracted herein below:
“Shri B.P. Khaitan: Coming to clause 40, item 2 in sub-clause (a) provides that any sum paid on account of any cess, rate or tax, levied as a proportion of the profits, will not be allowed to be deducted in computing business income. I submit that it should be clarified. Take, for instance, the cess on coal. That should be deducted in computing business income.
Shri Morarji Desai: We will consider this.”
11. Accordingly, when the Select Committee deliberated on the proposal, it was concerned with those state levies, which were either nominal in amount or were sometimes revenue in nature as evident from para 27 of the Select Committee Report dated 10TH August, 1961 itself which is reproduced herein below for easy reference:
“27. Clause 40.—The Committee are of the view that all cesses should be allowed as business expenses because they are of small amounts and though sometimes computed on the basis of profits they are really of the nature of revenue expenditure. Therefore, the word “cess” occurring in item (a) (ii) has been omitted.
The Committee further feel that in sub-clause (b) reference to Hindu undivided family, association of persons and body of individuals should be omitted.
The clause has been amended accordingly.”
Thus, the context of the Select Committee Report and the subsequent clarification by the CBDT vide its circular F. No. 91/58/66-ITJ(19), dated 18th May, 1967 was the ‘cess’, levied under state legislation such as coal cess, state duty cess and other cesses levied by the local bodies/states, which is obviously outside the prohibition contained in section 40(a)(ii) of the Act and not the cess on Income-tax which has been introduced as surcharge as clarified in the Explanatory Memorandum to the Finance Bill, As has been stated in the preceding para, ‘education cess’ was introduced as an additional surcharge on income tax, which is income tax only in view of the law laid down by a three-judge Bench of the Supreme Court in K Srinivasan’s case (supra). The context of the Select Committee Report and the consequent clarification by the CBDT vide its circular F. No. 91/58/66-ITJ(19), dated 18th May, 1967 was, therefore, not considered by their lordships in Sesa Goa Ltd. and Chambal Fertilizers & Chemicals Ltd.’s case (supra). Thus, there is no doubt that presbyter is only priest writ large, as it is said. Education cess is tax manu brevi.
The Jaipuria Samla Case
13. The Apex Court’s holding in Jaipuria Samla Amalgamated Collieries Ltd.7, which has been referred to in Chambal Fertilizers & Chemicals Ltd.’s case (supra) to argue and hold that ‘profits or gains of any business or profession’ has reference only to profits as per section 28 of the Act, and any rate or tax levied upon profits not ‘assessed on the basis of profits’ should be an allowable expense. Since education cess was not levied upon profits determined as per section 28 of the Act, it was held to be an allowable
14. This argument appears acceptable at first blush. It may, however, be noted that Jaipuria Samla Amalgamated Collieries Ltd.’s case (supra),
which followed the Privy Council decision in CIT v. Gurupada Dutta8 in the context of ‘cess’ levied under the Bengal Cess Act, 1880, is no longer good law under the Income-tax Act 1961 as held by the Supreme Court in Smith Kline & French (India) Ltd. v. CIT9, where BP Jeevan Reddy J explicated the law in the following terms:
“6. The learned counsel for the appellants placed strong reliance upon the decision of this Court in Jaipuria Samla Amalgamated Collieries Ltd. v. CIT [1971] 82 ITR 580 to contend that a tax has to be computed in accordance with the provisions of the Act to fall within the mischief of section 40(a)(ii). Inasmuch as the surtax is computed on a basis different from the basis prescribed in the Act, it is contended, it cannot fall within the four corners of section 40(a)(ii). It is not possible to agree with this contention either. The said decision was rendered with reference to sub-section (4) of section 10 of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1922 which corresponds to sub-clause (ii) of clause (a) of section 40 of the present Act. The question therein was whether the amount payable as (i) road and public works cess levied under the Bengal Cess Act, 1880 and (ii) the education cess levied under the Bengal (Rural) Primary Education Act, 1930 falls within the mischief of section 10(4). This Court held that they do not. A perusal of the decision shows that the road and public works cess was levied on immovable property to provide for construction and maintenance of roads and other works of public utility. Under section 5 of the Bengal Cess Act, 1880 all immovable property, with certain exceptions, was subjected to payment of road cess and public works cess. Section 6 of the Bengal Cess Act provided that the said cesses shall be assessed on the annual value of lands and, until provision to the contrary was made by Parliament, on the annual net profits from mines, quarries, tramways, railways and other immovable property at such rates as were to be determined in the manner prescribed. Similarly, the education cess was also levied under section 29 of the Bengal (Rural) Primary Education Act, 1930, on immovable property on which the road and public works cesses were assessed. The rate at which the education cess was to be levied depended upon the character of the property; in respect of mines and quarries, it was leviable at the rate of three and a half pice on each rupee of annual net profits. It is thus abundantly clear that the levy of aforesaid cesses was upon the immovable properties and not on profits. It is no doubt true that the tax was measured with reference to the net profits of business but it is well-settled by a series of decisions of this Court that the measure by which a tax is computed does not determine the character of the tax vide Union of India v. Bombay Tyre International AIR 1984 SC 420 and Goodricke Tea Co. v. State of West Bengal 1995 (1) Suppl. SCC 707. It is, therefore, idle to contend that the said decision helps the assessee’s case in any manner. The cesses considered in the said decision were not taxes ‘levied on the profits or gains of any business or profession or assessed at a proportion of or otherwise on the basis of any such profits or gains’ within the meaning of section 40(a)(ii) as explained hereinabove. The learned counsel, however, relied upon the following observations in the said decision: “the words ‘profits and gains of any business, profession or vocation’ which are employed in section 10(4) can, in the context, have reference only to profits or gains as determined under section 10 and cannot cover the net profits or gains arrived at or determined in a manner other than that provided by section 10. The whole purpose of enacting sub-section (4) of section 10 appears to be to exclude from the permissible deductions under clauses (ix) and (xv) of sub-section (2) such cess, rate or tax which is levied on the profits or gains of any business, profession or vocation or is assessed at a proportion or on the basis of such profits or gains. In other words, sub-section (4) was meant to exclude a tax or a cess or rate the assessment of which would follow the determination or assessment of profits or gains of any business, profession or vocation in accordance with the provisions of section 10 of the Act…… These profits arrived at according to the provisions of the two Cess Acts can by no stretch of reasoning be equated to the profits which are determined under section 10 of the Act. It is not possible to see, therefore, how section 10(4) could be applicable at all in the present case”. The learned counsel pointed out that this Court has in the said decision approved the decision of the Privy Council in CIT v. Gurupada Dutta [1946] 14 ITR 100 and has further observed that the Parliament must be deemed to have accepted the view taken by the Privy Council by not changing the language of the relevant provision in the Act [section 40(a)(ii)].
7. We are unable to see as to how these observations help the assessees herein. Firstly, it may be mentioned, section 10(4) of the 1922 Act or section 40(a)(ii) of the present Act do not contain any words indicating that the profits and gains spoken of by them should be determined in accordance with the provisions of the Act. All they say is that it must be a rate or tax levied on the profits and gains of business or profession. The observations relied upon must be read in the said context and not literally or as the provisions in a statute. But so far as the issue herein is concerned, even this literal reading of the said observations does not help the assessee. As we have pointed out hereinabove the surtax is essentially levied on the business profits of the company computed in accordance with the provisions of the Act. Merely because certain further deductions [adjustments] are provided by the Surtax Act from the said profits, it cannot be said that the surtax is not levied upon the profits determined or computed in accordance with the provisions of the Act. Section 4 of the Surtax Act read with the definition of ‘chargeable profits’ and the First Schedule make the position abundantly
8. We may mention that all the High Courts in the country except the Gauhati High Court have taken the view which we have taken herein. Only the Gauhati High Court has taken a contrary view in the decisions in Makum Tea Co. (India) Ltd. CIT [1989] 178 ITR 453 and Doom Dooma Tea Co. Ltd. v. CIT [1989] 180 ITR 126. The decision of the Gauhati High Court in Makum Tea Co. (India) Ltd.’s case (supra) is under appeal before us in Civil Appeal Nos. 3976-77 of 1995. Similarly, Civil Appeal No. 3246 of 1995 is preferred against the decision of the Gauhati High Court following the decision in Doom Dooma Tea Co. Ltd.’s case (supra). On enquiry, the office has informed that no Special Leave Petition/Civil Appeal has been filed against the decision in Doom Dooma Tea Co. Ltd.’s case (supra). For the aforesaid reasons, we cannot agree with the view taken by the Gauhati High Court in the aforesaid decisions.
Thus, in view of the judgment of the Supreme Court in Smith Kline & French India Ltd.’s case (supra), no requirement can be read into section 40(a)(ii) to the effect that for disallowing any rate or tax levied on profits, the said profits and gains should be determined in accordance with the provisions of the Act.
Conclusion
‘Education cess’, therefore, fails the fundamental tests of deductibility under section 37 and is also hit by the mischief of section 40(a)(ii) of the Income-tax Act, 1961 in view of law laid down in K Srinivasan and Smith Kline & French India Ltd.’s case (supra). Income-tax and ‘Education Cess’ are levied under the same provisions of the Constitution of India10under the identical mandate provided in Article 246 thereof, which enables governments to formulate law for levy of Sesa GoaLtd. and Chambal Fertilizers & Chemicals Ltd.’s case (supra), therefore, may not have been correctly decided in view of the law laid down by the Supreme Court, the statutory position and the constitutional scheme in this regard.
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