2004 (9) TMI 52
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....1 and 1992-93. In these appeals, the Assessing Officer included the excise duty and sales tax collection in the total turnover of the assessee for computing the deduction under section 80HHC. On appeal by the assessee, the Commissioner of Income-tax (Appeals) upheld the action of the Assessing Officer. On further appeal to the Tribunal, the Tribunal following the decision of the Bombay High Court in the case of CIT v. Sudarshan Chemicals Industries Limited [2000] 245 ITR 769 accepted the contention of the assessee and allowed the appeals. The said order of the Tribunal is put in issue in the present appeals. Mrs. Pushya Sitharaman, learned standing counsel for the Department placed before us the working sheet and contended that the removal of the excise duty and sales tax element from the total turnover would increase the percentage of the export profit which would not be in the same proportion as business profit. She further contended that for the purpose of calculation of the deduction under section 80HHC, the total turnover is to be taken into account and the total turnover, even from the point of view of sales tax laws, would include the excise duty and sales tax paid on ....
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....merchandise manufactured or processed by the assessee, the profits derived from such export shall be the amount which bears to the profits of the business, the same proportion as the export turnover in respect of such goods bears to the total turnover of the business carried on by the assessee;... (c) where the export out of India is of goods or merchandise manufactured or processed by the assessee and of trading goods, the profits derived from such export shall,- (i) in respect of the goods or merchandise manufactured or processed by the assessee, be the amount which bears to the adjusted profits of the business, the same proportion as the adjusted export turnover in respect of such goods bears to the adjusted total turnover of the business carried on by the assessee; and (ii) in respect of trading goods, be the export turnover in respect of such trading goods as reduced by the direct and indirect costs attributable to export of such trading goods: Provided that the profits computed under clause (a) or clause (b) or clause (c) of this sub-section shall be further increased by the amount which bears to ninety per cent, of any sum referred to in clause (iiia) (not being ....
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.... assessee's till as the money belonging to him. In order that an amount can be included in the total turnover it must either be the purchase or the sale price or something incidental to the transfer of the goods dealt with by the assessee. In other words the turnover must relate to the purchase or the sale of the goods made by the assessee. The incidental expenses such as freight and insurance have been specifically excluded. When the definition of total turnover excludes incidental expenses such as freight and insurance, which amount has to be borne by the assessee for safe transportation of his goods from and out of his pocket, it is highly impossible to accept the contention that the term "turnover" would include itself the excise duty and sales tax components which are all indirect taxes and the assessee has to collect and pay it over to the Government and such statutory dues will not have any element of profit of business. The definition "export turnover" read along with "total turnover" would show that they include anything which has nexus with the sale proceeds. On the other hand they would not encompass with them anything which has no connection whatsoever to the sale....
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...., the turnover should be restricted to such receipts which have an element of profit in it. It is only the actual sale price which is relevant. Anything charged by the assessee by way of excise duty and sales tax cannot be taken into account as they do not have any element of profit. Even, according to accounting principles, such levies do not form part of the profit and loss account. In fact, they are shown as liability in the balance-sheet. In the circumstances, the above two items cannot be included in the total turnover." The Division Bench of this court in which one of us is a party (K. Raviraja Pandian J.) in the case of CIT v. Madras Motors Ltd./M.M. Forgings Ltd. [2002] 257 ITR 60, while answering the question in that case, whether the Tribunal was right in its conclusion that the total turnover in section 80HHC of the Act is only the turnover relating to the export business of the assessee and not the turnover relating to other business of the assessee? Agreed with the decision of the Bombay High Court in the following terms: "The Bombay High Court in a somewhat similar situation in the decision reported in CIT v. Sudarshan Chemicals Industries Limited [2000] 245 ITR....
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