Facts of the Case

  • The respondent-assessee was a franchisee of M/s. Pepsi Food (Pvt.) Ltd. (Pepsi). Under this Franchisee Agreement, the assessee held exclusive rights for bottling, selling, and distributing Pepsi beverages within a specified territory in Haryana.
  • Issue 1 (Visi Cooler Charges): Pepsi had leased Visi Coolers from M/s. 20th Century Finance Corporation Ltd. and installed them across various franchisee and distributor locations, including the assessee's premises. Pepsi recovered a proportionate share of the hire charges ($₹3,45,177$) from the assessee. The Assessing Officer (AO) and CIT(A) disallowed this deduction under Section 37 on the grounds that there was no direct written agreement between the assessee and the finance corporation.
  • Issue 2 (Advertisement Expenses): The assessee spent $₹91,99,946$ on the advertisement and publicity of Pepsi products. The AO initially disallowed $10\%$ of these expenses. On appeal, the CIT(A) increased the disallowance to $50\%$, reasoning that the expenditure was exorbitantly high, there was no explicit cost-sharing agreement with Pepsi, and the advertisement primarily enhanced Pepsi's brand/trademark goodwill rather than directly benefiting the assessee.

Issues Involved

  1. Whether an expense incurred as a reimbursement for hiring commercial equipment (Visi Coolers) used directly in the assessee's business can be disallowed under Section 37(1) solely due to the absence of a formal written agreement between the primary lessor and the assessee.
  2. Whether advertisement and publicity expenses incurred voluntarily by a franchisee to maximize territory sales can be partially disallowed under Section 37(1) because a third party (the franchisor/brand owner) also derives an incidental brand benefit.

Petitioner’s (Revenue's) Arguments

  • The Revenue contended that the written agreement with Pepsi clearly stipulated that Pepsi remained the sole owner of the trademark and goodwill. It was argued that the benefits of the promotional activities exclusively enured to the brand owner.
  • The Revenue pointed out that the promotional and advertisement material did not mention the name of the assessee; instead, it featured only Pepsi’s trademark, brand, and corporate identity. Thus, the CIT(A) was justified in apportioning $50\%$ of the expenditure to Pepsi.

Respondent’s (Assessee's) Arguments

  • The assessee maintained that the Visi Coolers were physically installed and utilized within its designated distribution territory to store and sell products, directly facilitating its operational business. Pepsi had also provided a certificate verifying the recovery of these hire charges.
  • Regarding promotional costs, the assessee argued that Clause 18 of the franchise agreement authorized it to undertake advertising to maximize sales volume within its allocated territory. The entire expenditure was laid out voluntarily and exclusively for commercial expediency to drive business revenue.

Court Order / Findings

  • Regarding Visi Coolers: The High Court affirmed the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal's (ITAT) view, ruling that since the coolers were factually installed at the premises of the assessee and used for business operations, the expenditure represents valid business hire charges. Denial of deduction merely due to the lack of a direct written agreement with the third-party financier is unsustainable.
  • Regarding Advertisement Expenses: The High Court dismissed the Revenue's appeals, holding that the expenditure fulfilled all statutory criteria under Section 37(1).
  • The court reiterated that once a direct nexus is established between the expenditure and the purpose of the business, the Revenue cannot sit in the "arm-chair of a businessman" to dictate the necessity or scale of an expense.
  • Relying on established precedents, the court observed that if an expenditure is incurred voluntarily for commercial expediency to promote sales, it cannot be disallowed simply because a third party (Pepsi) also gains an incidental benefit.

Important Clarification

  • Interpretation of Section 37(1): The Court highlighted the legislative transformation of Section 37(1), noting that the word "necessity" was deliberately omitted during the drafting stage of the 1961 Act and replaced with "ordinarily". Consequently, an expense does not need to be under a compelling legal obligation to be deductible; commercial expediency and voluntariness are sufficient.
  • "Wholly" vs. "Exclusively": The word "wholly" pertains to the quantum of the financial outlay, whereas "exclusively" denotes the underlying motive, objective, and operational purpose of the expenditure.

Section Involved

  • Section 37(1) of the Income Tax Act, 1961: General business expenditure/deductions.

Link to download the order -https://delhihighcourt.nic.in/app/case_number_pdf/2011:DHC:13220-DB/AKS25012011ITA8362010_104338.pdf

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