V.M. Bros. Pvt. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income tax , (SC) BS87462
SUPREME COURT OF INDIA

Before:- D.P. Wadhwa and S.S.M. Quadri, JJ.

Civil Appeal No. 657 of 1994 with 4012-13 of 1998. D/d. 10.4.2000.

V.M. Salgaocar and Bros. Pvt. Ltd. - Appellant

Versus

Commissioner of Income-tax - Respondent

WITH

Commissioner of Income-tax, Bangalore - Appellant

Versus

Shivanand V. Salgaocar - Respondent.

For the Appearing Parties :- G.Saramajan, Mukul Mudgal, Ms. Shobha, S.K. Mehta, Dhruv Mehta, Ranbir Chandra, K.C. Kaushik, Ms. Sushma Suri, S.K. Dwivedi, Advocates.

A. Income Tax Act, 1961, Section 17(2)(iii) - Income Tax - Perquisite - Non charging of interest on debit balance in the summing account of Directors of company - Enjoyment of loan or credit free of interest or at concessional rate not amounting to benefit or perquisite - Appellate Tribunal held that there was no evidence to show that borrowed funds were directly diverted for Director's benefit - Law interpreted by Supreme Court in assessee's favour.

[Paras 23 to 25]

B. Income Tax Act 1961, Section 261 - Income Tax - Appeal before Supreme Court - Non charging on interest on debit balance of company's Directors - Assessee taking the plea that Supreme Court has upheld High Court's order for assessment year 1980-81 while dismissing appeal in Civil Appeal No. 424 of 1999. It cannot take different view for assessment year 1979-80 - Apparent subsistane in assessee's Submission accepted.

[Para 9]

C. Constitution of India, Articles 133 and 136 - Special Leave Appeal - Doctrines of merger not applying on dismissal of SLP under Article 136 - Differnt considrations applicabel when SLP under Article 136 and Appeal provided under Article 133 are dismissed - In the former case, Supreme Court not considering it a fit case to exercise its jurisdiction - It is not so when appeal is dismissed by non speaking order - Here doctrine of merger applicable - Supreme Court is uploding the decision of High Court Tribunal - Doctrine of merger not applying when SLP is dismissed under Article 136 - On dismissal of appeal, High Court's order merging with Supreme Court's.

[Para 8]

D. Interpretation of Statutes - Amendment made by 1984 Amendment Act providing guidance to interpretation of existing provisions.

[Para 18]

Cases Referred :-

Commissioner of Income-tax v. C. Kulandaivelu Konar, (1975) 100 ITR 629 .

Addl. Commissioner of Income-tax v. A.K. Lakshmi, (1978) 113 ITR 368 .

Commissioner of Income-tax v. V.M. Salgaocar and Brothers Pvt. Ltd., (1992) 198 ITR 738.

P. Krishna Murthy v. Commissioner Income Tax, (1997) 224 ITR 183.

Commissioner Income Tax v. M.K. Vaidya, (1997) 224 ITR 186.

Commissioner of Income-tax v. M.K. Vaidya, (1997) 224 ITR 186.

Supreme Court Employees Welfare Association v. Union of India, (1989) 4 SCC 187.

Indian Oil Corporation Ltd. v. State of Bihar, (1986) 4 SCC 146.

Union of India v. All India Services Pensioners Association, (1988) 2 SCC 580.

Commissioner Income Tax v. C. Kulendaivelu Konur, (1975) 100 ITR 629 (Mad).

Additional Commissioner of Income-tax v. Late A.K. Lakshmi, (1978) 113 ITR 368 (Mad).

Commissioner Income Tax v. S.S.M. Lingappan, (1981) 129 ITR 597 (Mad).

Commissioner Income Tax v. C. Kulendaivelu Konur, (1975) 100 ITR 629 .

Commissioner Income Tax v. Vazir Sultan Tobacco Co. Ltd., (1988) 173 ITR 290 (AP).

Commissioner Income Tax v. P.R.S. Oberoi, (1990) 183 ITR 103 (Cal).

Indian Oxygen Ltd. v. Commissioner Income Tax, (1994) 210 ITR 274 (Cal).

Commissioner Income Tax v. P.R.S. Oberoi, (1990) 183 ITR 103.

JUDGMENT

D.P. Wadhwa, J. - Civil Appeal No. 657 of 1994 is directed against the judgment dated February 7, 1992 of the Division Bench of the Karnataka High Court now reported as (1992) 198 ITR 738 delivered on Reference made to it by the Income-tax Appellate Tribunal ('Appellate Tribunal' for short) under Section 256(2) of the Income-tax, 1961 (for short, the 'Act'). Reference was at the instance of Revenue. Following questions arose for the determination of the High Court:

High Court answered both the questions in negative and in favour of the Revenue. The assessee, a Company, felt aggrieved and sought leave to appeal under Article 136 of the Constitution which was granted. In this case for the assessment year 1979-80, the Income-tax Officer had disallowed a sum of Rs. 5,21,241/- being 15 per cent of the amount standing to the debit of the directors in the books of the assessee company by applying the provisions of Section 40-A(5) and Section 17(2) of the Act. The Income-tax Officer found that the assessee, which was a company, was borrowing large sums by paying interest @ 15 per cent per annum. This interest was claimed by the assessee as deductible expenditure. Income-tax Officer found that the directors of the assessee company were drawing amount from the company without paying interest. He, therefore, held that when the company borrowed loans by paying 15 per cent interest and it advanced loans to its directors without any interest, to the extent of the interest, the company could have charged, a benefit was granted to the directors and hence the said amount of interest on the amount advanced to the directors was not to be deducted as an expenditure in view of Section 40-A(5). On appeal filed by the assessee the Commissioner of 'Income-tax (Appeals) upheld the orders of the Income-tax Officer. Assessee took the matter further in appeal before the Appellate Tribunal which deleted the additions made by this Income-tax Officer. Appellant Tribunal held that no evidence had been laid by the Revenue to show that borrowed funds were directly diverted for the benefit of the directors and non-chargeable interest on the debit balance in running account would not amount to providing perquisite. The Appellate Tribunal also observed that the Taxation Laws (Amendment) Act, 1984 for the first time provided that the difference in interest between the prescribed rate and that charged by an employer to the employee should be treated as perquisite. The stand of the Revenue was that as long as there was a benefit whether direct or indirect the provisions of Section 40-A(5) were attracted. High Court in coming to its decision relied on two cases of the Madras High Court in Commissioner of Income-tax v. C. Kulandaivelu Konar, (1975) 100 ITR 629 and Addl. Commissioner of Income-tax v. A.K. Lakshmi, (1978) 113 ITR 368 . Appellate Tribunal had also observed that non-charging of interest on the debit balance in running account of the directors would not constitute perquisite and that if such a general proposition is accepted, the disallowance under Section 40-A(5) would be on par with the disallowance under Section 36(1)(iii) which provision provides for deduction to be allowed in respect of the amount of interest on capital borrowed for the purposes of the business or profession.

2. In Civil Appeals Nos. 4012-13 of 1998 it is the revenue which is aggrieved. For the Assessment Years 1980-81 and 1981-82 in the case of the respondent Sri Shivanand V. Salgaocar, a director of M/s. V.M. Salgaocar and Brothers Pvt. Ltd. following question of law was referred to the High Court by the Appellate Tribunal under Section 258(1) of the Act :-

3. High Court answered the question so referred in the affirmative in favour of the assessee and against the revenue with the following observations:-

4. Leave to appeal was granted by this Court to the revenue and this appeal was to be heard along with Civil Appeal No. 657 of 1994.

5. Assessee Shivanand V. Salgaocar was a director of M/s. V.M. Salgaocar Brothers Pvt. Ltd. During the assessment years in question the company advanced certain sums to the assessee without charging any interest thereon. Income-tax Officer held that non-charging of interest on the debit balance would amount to perquisite in the hands of the assessee within the meaning of Section 17(2) of the Act. He computed the value of the perquisite at the rate of 15% of the debit balance standing in the name of the assessee in the accounts of the company and brought the same to tax in the hands of the assessee. On appeal filed by the assessee. Commissioner of Income-tax (Appeals) relying on the decision of the Appellate Tribunal in the case of the assessee himself for the earlier year held that non-charging of interest on the debit balance could not be regarded as perquisite in the hands of the assessee and deleted the addition made by the Income-tax Officer. Revenue took the matter to the Appellate Tribunal in appeal, who upheld the order of the Commissioner of Income-tax (Appeals) holding that no ground had been made out by the revenue to depart from the view taken by the Appellate Tribunal earlier. On the reference made to the High Court by the Appellate Tribunal at the instance of the revenue the same was dismissed by order dated December 12, 1997, which we have noted above.

6. There are two matters which would be of relevance while considering these appeals and which we note:-

7. High Court by order dated August 1, 1997 answered the first question in the affirmative in favour of the company relying on its two decisions in Commissioner of Income-tax v. M.K. Vaidya, (1997) 224 ITR 186 and P. Krishna Murthy v. Commissioner of Income-tax, (1997) 224 ITR 183. Second and third questions were also answered in the affirmative in favour of the assessee holding that these questions were covered by its earlier decision in I.J.R.C. No. 24/92.

8. Still aggrieved revenue came to this Court on appeal (C.A. No.424 of 1999) on a certificate granted by the High Court under Section 261 of the Act. This Court by order dated January 25, 1999 dismissed the appeal just stating "The appeal is dismissed."

9. An amendment on similar lines was also made in Section 40-A2 of the said Act to provide that the amount of interest referred to item (a) or item (b) as the case may be, of sub-clause (vi) of Section 17(2) of the said Act, shall be regarded as perquisite provided by the assessee to his employee for the purposes of Section 40-A(5) of the said Act. These amendments were intended to take effect from April 1, 1985. However, subsequently, the Finance Act, 1985, sought to omit both aforesaid provisions with effect from the date of their insertion, namely. April 1, 1985. Clause 20 of the Memorandum explaining the provisions of the Finance Bill, 1985, stated that as a measure of relief to salaried taxpayers, the Bill seeks to omit the aforesaid provision with effect from the date of its proposed insertion, namely, April 1, 1985. In consequence thereof, sub-clause (vi) of Clause (b) in Explanation 2 to Section 40A(5) of the Income Tax Act, which defines the term "perquisite" for the purposes of the said section to include the perquisite value represented by interest-free loans or loans at concessional rates of interest, was also deleted along with the deletion of sub-clause (vi) of Clause (2) of Section 17 of the said Act. Thus Clause (vi) was to be in operation from April 1, 1985. However, it was omitted by enacting the Finance Act, 1985. Thus, it is omitted from the very date of its insertion, i.e. April 1, 1985. Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT) issued Circular incorporating the objectives sought to be achieved by omission of Clause (vi). It is Circular No. 421 dated June 12, 1985. Earlier CBDT had issued a Circular No. 387 dated October 16, 1984 explaining the objectives in inserting new sub-clause (vi) in Section 17(2). It may also be noted that after Clause (vi) was inserted in Section 17(2) by the Amendment Act, 1984. Income-tax Ruels were also amended by incorporating Rule 3(a) to work out enacted Clause (vi). This Rule 3(a) was also deleted after the omission of Clause (vi).

10. Different considerations apply when a special leave petition under Article 136 of the Constitution is simply dismissed by saying 'dismissed' and an appeal provided under Article 133 is dismissed also with the words 'the appeal is dismissed.' In the former case it has been laid by this Court that when special leave petition is dismissed this Court does not comment on the correctness or otherwise of the order from which leave to appeal is sought. But what the court means is that it does not consider it to be a fit case for exercise of its jurisdiction under Article 136 of the Constitution. That certainly could not be so when appeal is dismissed though by a non speaking order. Here the doctrine of merger applies. In that case, the Supreme Court upholds the decision of the High Court or of the Tribunal from which the appeal is provided under Clause (3) of Article 133. This doctrine of merger does not apply in the case of dismissal of special leave petition under Article 136. When appeal is dismissed order of the High Court is merged with that of the Supreme Court. We quote the following paragraph from the judgment of this Court in the case of Supreme Court Employees Welfare Association v. Union of India, (1989) 4 SCC 187.

11. It was, therefore, contended that once this Court in Civil Appeal No. 424 of 1999 has dismissed the appeal it has upheld the order of the High Court in the case of Assessment Year 1980-81 and it cannot take a different view for the Assessment Year 1979-80. There appears to be subsistence in the submission of the assessee.

12. There has been difference of opinion among the High Courts on the question if non-charging of interest could be considered as perquisite under Section 17(2) of Section 40-A(5). We may refer to some of the judgments of the High Courts.

13. In the case of Commissioner Income Tax v. C. Kulendaivelu Konur, (1975) 100 ITR 629 (Mad) the assessee who was the managing director deposited various moneys and was also withdrawing moneys from an account in his name. For the year ending on 31st March, 1963, there was an overdrawal to the extent of about Rs. 60,000. The company did not charge any interest on these overdrawings, though it was paying interest on its borrowings. The Income-tax Officer disallowd the interest-free advance to the director in the hands of the company. He added also the relevant amount as a perquisite in the hands of the assessee who was a director. When the matter came on appeal to the Tribunal it set aside the assessment and at the instance of the Commissioner the matter was brought to this court on reference. It was held that in order to bring a benefit or advantage within the provisions of Section 17(2)(iii) it must have a legal origin and since any unauthorised advantage taken by an employee without the authority of the employer would create a legal obligation to restore such advantage, it would not amount to a benefit or advantage within the meaning of Section 17(2)(iii).

14. In Additional Commissioner of Income-tax v. Late A.K. Lakshmi, (1978) 113 ITR 368 (Mad) the question before the High Court was if the Appellate Tribunal was right in holding that a particular sum was not includible in the hands of the assessee as perquisite under the provisions of Section 17(2) of the Act. The case related to the assessment to Income-tax of a director of a company. The Income-tax Officer considered the use of the amounts made available by the company free of any interest payable to the company as a benefit derived by the assessee without cost coming within the ambit of Section 17(2)(iii). The Income-tax Officer had also relied on Section 17(2)(iv). The Appellate Tribunal considered both the aspects and came to the conclusion that neither Section 17(2)(iii) nor Section 17(2)(iv) had any application and, therefore, held that the amounts in question for the relevant assessment years relating to the assessee could not be treated as a perquisite within the meaning of Section 17(2) of the Act. High Court referred to the definition of 'perquisite' as given in Section 17(2) and observed :-

High Court then held :-

15. In Commissioner Income Tax v. S.S.M. Lingappan, (1981) 129 ITR 597 (Mad) the question before the High Court was if the free use of the company's car by the director was a perquisite or benefit within the meaning of Section 2(24) of the Act and assessable to income of the assessee. The assessee was a HUF. Karta of the HUF was the director of a company and has obtained the benefits in the shape of the use of the company's assets viz., motor car, telephone, etc. In the assessment of the company there was a disallowance of the expenditure relating to the above assets under Section 40(c) of the Act on the ground that the expenditure was excessive and unreasonable having regard to the legitimate business needs of the company. In the case of the assessee the Income-tax Officer took into account the possible extent of the use of the company's assets, tiz., motor car, telephone, etc. and evaluated the benefits obtained by the assessee under Section 2(24)(iv) of the Act. Assessee contended that the amounts so evaluated could not be perquisites in the hands of the assessee. High Court referred to its earlier decision in the case of Commissioner Income Tax v. C. Kulendaivelu Konur, (1975) 100 ITR 629 and held that even if a benefit had been conferred on the director unilaterally without the aid of any agreement between the parties a benefit could be taxed as a perquisite under Section 17(2)(iii) and (iv).

16. In Commissioner Income Tax v. Vazir Sultan Tobacco Co. Ltd., (1988) 173 ITR 290 (AP) one of the questions before the High Court was "Whether, on the facts and in the circumstances of the case, the difference between the concessional rate of interest and the prevailing market rate of interest on the loans advanced to the employees was not a perquisite under Section 40-A(5)." The assessee was a public limited company. In answer to the question the Court said :-

17. In Commissioner Income Tax v. P.R.S. Oberoi, (1990) 183 ITR 103 (Cal) the question before the court was whether the appellate Tribunal was justified in deleting certain amounts from the total income of the assessee on the ground that the provisions of Section 2(24)(iv) of the Act were not attracted. In this case the assessee was a director of the Hotel Oberoi, a private limited company. He was maintaining running account with the company. During the assessment years in question the Income-tax Officer found that the assessee had overdrawn amounts over lakhs of rupees from his account in the company. Income-tax Officer further found that the company did not charge any interest on the overdrawn amounts from the assessee. He therefore, held that the assessee got a benefit from the company in the shape of getting funds without any obligation to pay interest thereon and as the assessee was a director of the company he invoked the provisions of Section 2(24)(iv) of the Act and calculated certain sums as the value of the aforesaid benefit being interest calculated @ 12% per annum on the overdrawn amounts. Income-tax Officer, therefore, taxed the aforesaid sums under the head "other sources." Appellate Tribunal found that there was nothing to show that the company borrowed any money for making advance to the assessee and/or paid any interest on the overdrawn amount which, but for such payment, would have been paid by the assessee. The Tribunal also found that there was arrangement between the assessee and the said company not to charge interest on either side in terms of resolution of the Board of Directors and that in the past the assessee had substantial credit balances with the company on which the company never paid interest to the assessee. It was, therefore, held by the High Court that the interest free loans obtained by the assessee from the company were not benefits or perquisites within the meaning of Section 2(24)(iv) of the Act. High Court noticed the amendments made by the 1984 Amendment by insertion of sub-clause (vi) in Section 17(2) and its omission by the Finance Act, 1985. Section 2(24)(iv) which has been invoked in this case also used the expression "the value of any benefit or perquisite" which corresponds to the expression "the value of any benefit or amenity" appearing in the definition of "perquisite" as contained in Section 17(2)(iii). Section 40-A(5), Explanation 2(b) also seeks to include within the expression "perquisite" the value of any benefit or amenity granted or provided free of cost or at a concessional rate to the employee by the assessee. High Court, therefore, said that the grant of loan without charging any interest could not be considered as a benefit or a perquisite within the meaning of Section 2(24)(iv) of the Act.

18. In Indian Oxygen Ltd. v. Commissioner Income Tax, (1994) 210 ITR 274 (Cal) following its earlier decision in Commissioner Income Tax v. P.R.S. Oberoi, (1990) 183 ITR 103 it was held that the grant of interest-free loans by the assessee to its employees did not amount to perquisite, benefit or amenity whether for the purposes of Section 17(2) and/or Section 40-A(5) of the Act. The question before the courts was whether notional interest calculated on interest-free loans granted by the assessee company to its employee could be taken as perquisites for the purposes of disallowance under Section 40-A(5) of the Act. High Court said that the Section was admittedly applicable only where the assessee incurred expenditure which resulted directly or indirectly in the payment of any salary or in the provisions of any perquisite (whether convertible into money or not) to its employees. It was nobody's case that in providing interest-free loans by the assessee to its employees any expenditure had been incurred by the assessee-company.

19. High Court in its judgment, which was impugned in Civil Appeal No. 424 of 1999 had relied upon the decision of its own High Court in the case of Commissioner of Income-tax v. M.K. Vaidya, (1997) 224 ITR 186 (Kant) and in P. Krishna Murthy v. Commissioner of Income-tax, (1997) 224 ITR 183 (Kant). In the case of M.K. Vaidya High Court sought to distinguish the judgment now impugned before us in Civil Appeal No. 657 of 1994 (Commissioner of Income-tax v. V.M. Salgaocar and Brothers Pvt. Ltd.), (1992) 198 ITR 738 stating that that decision had no bearing on the facts of the case before it because the Bench was concerned with Sections 36 and 40-A(5) of the Act and it was a case where having borrowed large sums of moneys by paying interest at the rate of 15% per annum a part was obviously drawn by the directors without compensating the assessee-company, without paying any interest and the Bench in that case was not concerned with Section 17(2). High Court then said:-

20. We are of the view that distinction was not correctly drawn. Amendment made by the 1984 Amending Act was both to Section 17(2) and Section 40-A(5). In the impugned judgment reference in fact had been made to inclusion of sub-clause (vi) in Clause (2) of Section 17. Moreover, High Court in the impugned judgment did not consider the amendments made by the Amending Act, 1984 on the ground "it is difficult to see how this amendment can have any bearing upon the interpretation of the then existing provisions of the Act." We do not think this approach was also correct. An amending provision can certainly give guidance to interpretation of the existing provisions. The judgments of the Madras High Court, which relied upon by the High Court in the impugned judgment were for the period prior to the 1984 amendment and the Madras High Court had no occasion to consider the impact of the amendments to Section 17(2) and Section 40-A(5) of the Act.

21. In Commissioner of Income-tax v. M.K. Vaidya, (1997) 224 ITR 186 the question before the High Court was: "Whether on the facts and in the circumstances of the case, the Appellate Tribunal is right in law in rejecting the Revenue's ground that the difference in interest rate between Government loans and that on the loan obtained by the assessee should be treated as perquisite?" High Court answered the question in affirmative in favour of the assessee. High Court said that it was never intended to treat the interest free loan advance for house building purposes as a "perquisite" under Section 17(2)(iii). In this case the assessee was an employee of the company which advanced him certain amounts as loan free of interest for the purpose of house building. In the course of assessment proceedings of the assessee, the Assessing Officer held that the interest free loan was a benefit which should be valued as a "perquisite" under Section 17(2). Revenue contended that the interest free loan was a benefit which should be treated as a perquisite under Section 17(2)(iii) and for the purpose of computation, Rule 3(2) was attracted and the principle underlying Clause (vi) as inserted in Section 17(2) by the Taxation Laws Amendment Act, 1984 could be looked at for the purpose. Section 17(2)(iii) reads as under :

22. While Clauses (a) and (b) cover the special cases of those employed by a company, Clause (c) covers all categories of employees (Government and non-Government), including other categories of company employees, provided their salaried income is above Rs. 18,000. There is no income limit to attract the persons covered by Clauses (a) and (b).

23. In the case of Clause (c) those whose annual income under the head "Salaries" (as stated therein) is below Rs. 18,000 are not covered. High Court after referring to Clause (vi) as inserted in Section 17(2) by the 1984 Amendment Act, its omission by the Finance Act, 1985 and the two circulars of the CBDT, said that two inferences are inevitable: (1) in the year 1984, while enacting the Taxation Laws (Amendment) Act, 1984, Parliament thought that Section 17(2)(iii) did not cover the cases of loans granted to employees for house building purposes. (2) Clause (vi) which was inserted, was omitted again to grant tax relief to the salaried taxpayers. In other words, salaried taxpayers were not to be burdened with the tax by including the value of the interest free loan or loan at a concessional rate of interest granted for house building purposes, to an employee, by his employer.

24. In P.Krishna Murthy v. Commissioner of Income-tax, (1997) 224 ITR 183 (Kant) the assessee challenged refusal of the Assessing Authority to grant him exemption from computing taxable income of a certain amount being given as interest subsidy. The company of which the assessee was an employee reimbursed the assessee the interest paid on loan taken by him for building purposes. High Court following its earlier decision in M.K. Vaidya's case, (1997) 224 ITR 186 held that the order of the Assessing Authority insofar as it related to the inclusion of interest subsidy amount as taxable income of the assessee was wrong and the High Court set aside the same. High Court noticed that the Division Bench in the earlier case held that the legislature never intended to treat the interest as "perquisite" under Section 17(2)(iii) of the Act.

25. We quote with approval the following passage from the judgment of the Calcutta High Court in P.R.S. Oberoi's case, (1990) 183 ITR 103:

26. Taxation Laws Amendment Act, 1984 which amended Sections 17(2) and 40-A(5) by inserting Clause (vi) in both the Sections and its subsequent repeal by the Finance, Act, 1985 is significant. By the 1984 Amendment Act. Parliament wanted to carve out a particular exception from otherwise exclusionary clauses for the purpose of computation of Income-tax. This provided a clear direction to interpret the provisions of Sections 17(2) and 40-A(5) before insertion of Clause (vi). The circulars of CBDT were also provides as to how Revenue itself understood the effect of the amendments and what was the law before the Amending Act, 1984. High Court in the impugned judgment could not have brushed aside the consideration of the Amending Act, 1984 and its subsequent repeal by the Finance Act, 1985 by terming them of no consequence. High Court of Karnataka in case of Commissioner of Income-tax v. M.K. Vaidya, (1997) 224 ITR 186 and the Calcutta High Court in the case of P. Krishna Murthy v. Commissioner of Income-tax, (1997) 224 ITR 183 have correctly understood and applied the provisions of the Amendment Act, 1984 and that of Finance Act, 1985 while interpreting the provisions of Sections 17(2) and 40-A(5) of the Act. As noted above, the Appellate Tribunal in C.A. No. 657 of 1994 held that there was no evidence presented by the Revenue to show that the borrowed funds were directly diverted for the benefit of the Director. This finding of the Appellate Tribunal did not find favour with the High Court which said that it would be will-nigh impossible to expect proof from the Revenue that the monies that were advanced to directors were monies that were borrowed monies. High Court said that ordinarily the funds borrowed by a company would fall within the hotchpot and intemingle with its own funds. High Court appears to have gone beyond the finding of the Appellate Tribunal which was not permissible. In the later cases, Karnataka High Court itself relied on the provisions of the Amendment Act, 1984 and its repeal by the Finance Act, 1985 to interpret the provisions of Sections 17(2) and 40-A(5). Distinguishing features which the High Court in the case of Commissioner of Income-tax v. M.K. Vaidya, (1997) 224 ITR 186 pointed with reference to the impugned judgment (1992) 198 ITR 738 appear to us to be rather obscure. Interpretation of law has to be uniform.

27. Thus having regard to the dismissal of the appeal of the revenue in Civil Appeal No. 424 of 1999 and state of law is interpreted by us, particularly, keeping in view the amendment by Taxation Laws (Amendment) Act, 1984 and its repeal by the Finance Act, 1985 and the circulars of the CBDT we answer the questions in affirmative, i.e., in favour of the assessee.

28. Accordingly Civil Appeal No. 657 of 1994 is allowed and Civil Appeal No. 4012-13 of 1998 dismissed. There shall, however, be no order as to costs.

Order accordingly.