Whether the income of Rs. 11,80,53,083 and Rs. 25,13,561 derived by the appellant from procurement of wheat and paddy as agent of Food Corporation of India/Government is exempt under s. 10(29) of the Act along with rental income from warehouses, the business of the appellant being one integrated

High Court Of Punjab & Haryana

Haryana Warehousing Corporation vs. Assistant Commissioner Of Income Tax

Section 10(29), 22, 28(i)

Asst. Year 2002-03

Adarsh Kumar Goel & L.N. Mittal, JJ.

IT Appeal No. 16 of 2008

17th October, 2008

Counsel Appeared :

Rajesh Garg, for the Appellant : Yogesh Putney, for the Respondent

JUDGMENT

Adarsh Kumar Goel, J. :

The assessee has preferred this appeal under s. 260A of the IT Act, 1961, against the order dt. 9th Feb., 2007 passed by the Tribunal, Chandigarh Bench “A” for the asst. yr. 2002-03 proposing the following substantial questions of law :

“(i) Whether the income of Rs. 11,80,53,083 and Rs. 25,13,561 derived by the appellant from procurement of wheat and paddy as agent of Food Corporation of India/Government is exempt under s. 10(29) of the Act along with rental income from warehouses, the business of the appellant being one integrated ?

(ii) Whether if the answer to question No. 1 is in the negative, the common expenses incurred by the appellant can be apportioned notionally towards taxable and non-taxable income ? (iii) Whether the income from rent of warehouses received by the appellant, is to be computed under the head ‘Income from house property’ even though it is derived in the course of its business ?”

2. The assessee is a warehousing corporation and claimed exemption under s. 10(29) in respect of income received from procurement of wheat and paddy as agent of Food Corporation. This claim was not allowed on the ground that exemption under s. 10(29) was confined to income derived from letting of godown from warehousing or storage, etc.

3. We have heard learned counsel for the parties.

4. The plea of the assessee that income will fall under the head of “House property” instead of “business” was also rejected. The Tribunal has remanded the matter to the AO on the question of apportionment of expenses. Learned counsel for the Revenue points out that question (i) is covered against the assessee by the judgment of the Supreme Court in Orissa State Warehousing Corporation vs. CIT (1999) 153 CTR (SC) 177 : (1999) 237 ITR 589 (SC) which has been followed by this Court in the case of the assessee in IT Ref. No. 120 of 1998 Haryana Warehousing Corporation vs. CIT decided on 6th Sept., 2006. The issue cannot, thus, be held to be substantial question of law.

5. Question No. (ii) relating to apportionment of expenses towards taxable or non-taxable income, having been remitted back to the AO also not be held to be substantial question of law.

6. As regards question No. (iii), the finding recorded by the Tribunal is as under : “The next issue raised is that the authorities below erred in holding that providing of storage facility to FCI is only incidental and part of business receipts and that the whole receipt from FCI is composite trading receipt, therefore, cannot be split up under various heads and further erred in holding that the assessee is storing its own goods and thus cannot let out the premises to itself in respect of providing of storage facilities to FCI. The same submissions were reiterated by the representative of the authority. On a perusal of record and after hearing the rival submissions, it is seen that this issue has already been adjudicated upon in ITA No. 1263/Chd/2004 (asst. yr. 200001) vide paras 4 and 5 (p. 2 of the order) wherein the assessee conceded that this issue is covered against the assessee, vide order dt. 1st Sept., 2004 (ITA Nos. 681 to 683/Chd/2002) for the asst. yrs. 1997-98 to 1999-2000. The Tribunal held that the rent received by the assessee on account of providing storage facilities, etc. is part of its business income, therefore, has to be computed under the head ‘Profits and gains of business’ and not ‘Income from house property’. Respectfully, following the same, this ground of the assessee is dismissed.”

7. From the above, It is clear that it is the case of the assessee itself that providing storage facility to FCI, is its main business and not merely incidental business. If this is so, income derived from storage facility will not be covered by the head “Income from house property”. There is nothing to show that the assessee challenged the treatment of the said income as “Income from business” in the previous year as noticed in the impugned order.

8. Learned counsel for the assessee relies on the judgment of the Madras High Court in CIT vs. IndianWarehousing Indutries Ltd. (2002) 258 ITR 93 (Mad) wherein the assessee claimed income from warehousing to be income from business but the assessing authority held the same to be a rental income. However, the appellate authority and the Tribunal held the same to be business income. On the basis of the judgment of the Hon’ble Supreme Court in East India Housing & Land Development Trust Ltd. vs. CIT (1961) 42 ITR 49 (SC), the Hon’ble High Court upheld the claim of the assessee. In East India Housing & Land Development Trust Ltd. (supra), it was not regular business of the assessee to let out the warehouses. The business of the assessee was to promote and develop markets and in that context, income of the assessee from rent was held to be rental income and not income from business. The said judgment could not have any application to the case of an assessee whose main business is of letting out warehouses for storage, etc., as in the present case.

The Hon’ble Supreme Court applied the test whether income was directly covered by one head. It was held that if income was covered directly under one head, the head of income will be such head. Applying the said test, we are of the view that income of the assessee in the present case falls directly under the head of business and not under the head of income from house property.

In S.G. Mercantile Corporation (P) Ltd. vs. CIT (1972) 1972 CTR (SC) (SC) 8 : (1972) 83 ITR 700 (SC) : AIR 1972 SC 732 the Hon’ble Supreme Court held that the paramount consideration to decide whether income was from business or property, is the nature of business of the assessee. Reference was made to earlier judgment of the Hon’ble Supreme Court in Karanpura Development Co. Ltd. vs. CIT (1962) 44 ITR 362 (SC), taking the view that where letting out of premises and collection of rent was a part of business, the income will be business income. Following this view, it was held that income of the assessee in the said case was business income. In view of above, we respectfully disagree with the view of the Madras High Court in Indian Warehousing Indutries Ltd. (supra).

The matter being covered against the assessee by the judgments of the Hon’ble Supreme Court discussed above, the question raised cannot be held to be substantial question of law.

Accordingly, the appeal is dismissed.

[Citation : 328 ITR 23]

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