Facts of the Case

  • Franchisee Agreement: The respondent-assessee entered into a franchisee agreement with M/s. Pepsi Food (Pvt.) Ltd. ("Pepsi") for manufacturing, bottling, selling, and distributing Pepsi-branded soft drinks within a designated territory in Haryana.
  • Visi-Cooler Hire Charges: Pepsi leased visi-coolers from M/s. 20th Century Finance Corporation Ltd. and installed them across various distributors and franchisee locations, including the assessee's premises. Pepsi recovered a proportionate share of the hire charges (₹3,45,177) from the assessee. The assessee claimed this reimbursement as a business expenditure under Section 37 of the Income Tax Act.
  • Disallowance by AO & CIT(A): The Assessing Officer (AO) and the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) [CIT(A)] disallowed the visi-cooler hire charges solely due to the absence of a formal written agreement between Pepsi and the assessee.
  • Advertisement & Publicity Expenses: The assessee incurred an advertising and publicity expenditure of ₹91,99,946 to maximize product sales within its territory. The AO disallowed 10% of this amount on the grounds that the advertising primarily benefited the Pepsi brand and its goodwill rather than the assessee. The CIT(A) enhanced this disallowance to 50%, stating the expenditure was exorbitantly high, lacked an explicit written agreement for cost-sharing, and exclusively promoted Pepsi's trademark.
  • Tribunal's Ruling: The Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT) reversed the decisions of the lower authorities, allowing both the visi-cooler hire charges and the advertisement expenses in full, prompting the Revenue to appeal to the High Court.

 Issues Involved

  1. Whether a claim for deduction under Section 37(1) of the Income Tax Act for visi-cooler hire charges can be denied solely on the ground that there was no written agreement between the franchisee (assessee) and the principal (Pepsi), despite uncontroverted proof of physical installation and actual payment.
  2. Whether advertisement and publicity expenses incurred by a bottling franchisee are fully deductible under Section 37(1) of the Act when the expenditure promotes a third-party trademark (Pepsi), given that the increased sales directly generate business profits for the franchisee within its allocated territory.

 Petitioner’s (Revenue's) Arguments

  • No Written Agreement: The Revenue contended that there was no written agreement governing the sharing or payment of visi-cooler hire charges or advertisement costs between the assessee and Pepsi.
  • Ownership and Benefit of Trademark: The Revenue argued that under the franchise agreement, Pepsi retained absolute ownership of the trademark and goodwill. Since the advertisement material exclusively highlighted Pepsi’s brand names, logos, and addresses without mentioning the assessee, the expenditure enured solely to the benefit of Pepsi.
  • Justification for Apportionment: It was urged that the CIT(A) acted within proper bounds by apportioning and disallowing a percentage of the expenses because the franchisee was not legally compelled to bear marketing costs that disproportionately built the principal's brand equity.

Respondent’s (Assessee's) Arguments

  • Factual Incurrence and Proof: The assessee argued that the physical presence of the visi-coolers on its business premises and the actual payment/reimbursement of ₹3,45,177 to Pepsi were fully verified and supported by a confirmation certificate issued by Pepsi.
  • Commercial Expediency: The marketing and advertisement activities were carried out under Clause 18 of the franchise agreement, which authorized the assessee to promote the beverages to maximize sales volumes.
  • Third-Party Benefit Insignificant: The assessee maintained that as long as the expenditure was laid out wholly and exclusively to drive its own localized bottling and distribution sales, the incidental benefit flowing to the trademark owner (Pepsi) could not legally compromise the deductibility of the expenditure.

Court Order / Findings

  • Visi-Cooler Expenses Allowed: The Delhi High Court held that the ITAT was right in deleting the disallowance. The absence of a formal written contract cannot override undisputed facts showing that the coolers were operational at the assessee's site, the payments were genuine, and the assets were fundamental to the business operation.
  • Advertisement Expenses Allowed: The High Court dismissed the Revenue's appeals, confirming that the entire advertisement expenditure was deductible under Section 37(1). The Court emphasized that the words "wholly and exclusively" govern the quantum and the motive/objective of the business spend, respectively, but do not mean "necessarily".
  • Business Autonomy over Reasonableness: Citing established precedents, the Court noted that tax authorities cannot step into the "arm-chair of the businessman" to dictate what constitutes a reasonable expenditure. If the expense has a direct nexus with promoting the assessee's business volumes, it satisfies Section 37(1) even if a third party's trademark benefits concurrently.

 Important Clarification

  • The "Wholly and Exclusively" Doctrine: The Court clarified that "wholly" refers to the quantum of the expenditure, while "exclusively" refers to its motive, objective, and purpose.
  • Incidental Third-Party Benefit: Under Section 37(1), an expenditure incurred voluntarily out of commercial expediency to promote business profits cannot be disallowed merely because a third party derives an incidental advantage from it.

 Sections Involved

  • Section 37(1) of the Income Tax Act, 1961 (General Business Expenditure)
  • Sections 30 to 36 of the Income Tax Act, 1961 (Reference context for statutory exclusions)

Link to download the order - https://delhihighcourt.nic.in/app/case_number_pdf/2011:DHC:463-DB/AKS25012011ITA9662010.pdf 

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